Til* W§ath§i^ I , CJ. ffMihtr «iru CiMMiy (D«UIU Hi* i> ' «}l , PONTIAC PRESS ' i f GREETINGS FROM BOSS ~ Teamster Union President James Hoffa, arriving in Nashviile, Tenn., yesterday lor his conspiracy trial in federal couri, shakes handa with ah unidentified cab driver at the airport. Hoffa is charged with conspiring to violate the Taft-Hartley law. Hoffa Trial X)j^ns in Nashville Court NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The conspiracy trial of Teamsters Union President James R. Hoffa opens in federal court today. The judge, the Justice Department and defense lawyers agree it could last into the winter. U.S. Dist. Judge William E. Miller said he has “pushed everything aside for this case.” Hoffa, who arrived by plane Sunday from Detroit, settled himself in a.comfortable downtown hotel suite from which he eiicpects to^ conduct the affairs of his 1.5‘miHion » member union for the duration of the trial. Newsmen who met Hoffa at the airport heard him lash out at U.S. Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy, a frequent Hoffa target. ★ a ♦ “Bob Kennedy is using the taxpayers’ money for his own personal vendetta,” Hoffa said. He contended the attorney general is “usurping the powers of his office, making his own policies and starting out just like Hitler did. If we continue like we are in America we will have no personal rights.” Hoffa Is accused of conspfar-lag to violate the Taft-Hartley Act, and with Illegally obtaining a million dollars through' a dummy company from a Michigan firm whose employes belong to the Teamsters Union. At his arraignment last June he pleaded innocent and remained free under $3,000 bond. “We will beat this case just like we have all the others,” the 49-year-old labor leader said at the time. A federal grand jury returned an Indictment May 18 against Hoffa dhd Commercial Carriers, Inc., a Detroit auto transport firm. Commercial Carriers entered a plea of no contest and Miller reserved judgment until after Hof-fa’s trial. , FEDERAL CHARGE 'The indictment charged Hoffa and Owen Brennan, a Teamsters ^ vice president who died last year, conspired with Commercial Carriers to form Test Fleet Corp. chartered here in 1949. In Today's Press i 'Back JFK' I Don’t criticise President 1 during Cuban crisis— I PAGE D12. Necfc and Neck Predictions on elections tough to make—PAGE Bl. Berlin Tunnels 300 to 400 refugees manage to escape—PAGE BJ. i Area News...... . . . .D1 Astrology..........B* Brady .. . ........B* Comics ............B* Editorials ........Al ...n.DI BO-Bll TVARadIo Programs Dll WUsoa, Earl Dll Women’s Pages,.. B1-B4 UF Reaches 2J Pet. of Goal Announce $189,900 of $706,125 Is Collected The Pontiac Area United Fund campaign has received $189,900 or 26.8 per cent of its $706,125 goal, Fred V. Haggard, drive chairman, announced t^ay. ’The Advance Gr*s group, under Walter K. Willman, has campaigned since Sept. 26 seeking to meet a new high of $86,817. Will-reports $46,167 or 53 per cent collect^ so far. Despite discouraging setbacks, Willman said, the over-all picture looks good. He pointed to the following company gifts, all Increased from over a year ago. Michigan Bell Telephone $4,800 Detroit Edison Co. ......8,810 Pontiac State Bank.......2,750 J. L. Hudson Co......... 1,800 Roy Annett, Inc....... 300 He also gave warm praise to other large company contributors, including Grand Trunk Railroad, $1,000; Community National Bank $7,500; and The Pontiac Press, $3,000. WOMEN’S DIVISION Haggard added that the Women’s Division, under Mrs. Joseph Fox, had collected $8,271 of its $28,213 goal. The division started its lO^lay campaign on Oct. 10. Thewreceipts break down Into $4,015 from Pontiac; $1,070 Ckimmentlng on the Industrial Division, Haggard noted that fai- way for two weeks and received “a treiAendous boost” with the General Motors firm contribution of $133,000. Ted Bloom, division chairman, says a further industrial report will be due at the end of this week. Total goal for the division is $407,700, representing 00 per cent of the entire campaign goal. COMMERCIAL DIVISION The Commercial Division headed by Bruce Annett also has started producing results. Haggard said. The greatest progress has been made by the campter Plans group raising $45,333 against a of $115,819, or 39.1 per cent of its goal. — ; The chairmaa Is Charles to Address US. on Televisioi ★ ★ ★ Crisis Threat Triggers Drop in Stocli'Mart Nervous Rumors Run Through Wall Street as Leaders Meet N^W YORK (D -r The ^ock market broke sharply today under the heaviest selling since last May’s “big drop.” Worries over international develt^ments were blamed as triggering the plunge. Wall street was swept by nerv-vous rumors, fuelqd by President Kennedy’s secret session with top congressional leaders and the intensified fighting between Red China and India. It is not unknown news that is causing this,” one analyst noted. “If you don’t know what to expect next, that’s what you worry about.” News that the President would address the nation on radio and television at 9 p.m. (Pontiac time) tonight made it unlikely the uncertainty could be resolved before the market close at 3:39 p.m. Prices were off more than $1 earljr this afternoon, with some issues taking deeper cuts., At noon the Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was off 6.15 at 567.14 and Standard & Poor’s SOO-stock index was down .94 at 54.65. The high-speed quotation tape ran 17 minutes behind transactions in the excited trading that saw 2.18 million shares trade hands by noon. That compares with 1.68 million at the same time Friday. Around noon, however, the tape appeared jo be catching up slightly. By DICK HANSON Murder charges against’ two men who admitted their part in the slaying of Peter Perva were pending today as Prosecutor George F. Taylor investigated the roles two wome nin the death. A 20-year-oId ex-convict. Richard Drobil of Belleville admitted killing the 44-year-old Inkster^ faUierof six “as 8 fSvor”^ for hb ex-father-in-law, Taylor said. He said his former father-in-iw, Stanley Maroiey, 48, of 22899 Middle Belt Road, Farm-admitted being Mrs. Perva’s lover and ordered her husband’s execution. According to Maroley’s formal statement yesterday, Mrs. Perva, 40, knew of her husband’s slaying the day before she reported him missing to Inkster police. ★ * * Perva’s unidentified body was found in a well-concealed grave in Independence Township Wednesday several hours before the missing report was received, according to Pontiac state police. Maroiey said he toM Mrs. Perva of the murder by telephone Tuesday night, only hours after the slaying. A\so, Drobil said he told his ex-wife, Nina Maroiey, 20, that he had killed Perva. He said she accompanied him the previous weekend to the spot where he dug the grave and left it waiting for the man marked for death. WWW According to Drobil, Nina didn’t believe he was going to murder Perva. Drobil said she didn’t believe him afterward when he told her the job was done. TUylor said he planned to charge the two men with flrs^ U. N. Due to Debate on Peiping UNITED NATIONS MV-While (k)mmunist China and India battle on their border, the U.N. General Assembly opens debate today on the annual Communist attempt to seat the Chinese Reds In the United Nations. Delegates generally predict would lose the Communists ’The Soviet Union was scheduled to lead off the afternoon its resolution that would have the 109-natlon sembly replace Chinese Communist delegates on all U.N. Bodies. Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian A. Zorin, was believed likely to contend that the United Nations was only hurting Itself by keeping out the Communist government controlling a fifth of the world’s population. Nationalist Chinese delegate L|u (jhieh planned to reply with tlw argunaent that the Chinese peq>ie had repudiated the Pelpinf regime by fleeing the Chinese mainland in droves. Liu was expected to < that the Chinese Communists committing aggression India ahd should he kept out of the United Nations because the U.'N. charter limits the membership to "Peace-loving states.” U.S. delegate Adlai E. Steven-listed to speak third, fol- der the chairmanship < Brannock. has raised 93,3 against its quota of $10,955, 21.8 per cent. i ru-^iSupTjKii "• "• ghaiilstan and Morocco. A veto on ttie fkivlet resolution (Continued bn Page 2, Col. i) 2 Pendinjir Admits Slaying Inkster Mari'as q Favor' NEW DELHI, India MV-Prime Minister Nehru declared today that the independence of India is threatened by Chinese Chnunu-nist attack. it it It If necessary, ‘ everything else must be sacrificed to meet the threat to the freedom of the Indian people, Nehru said in s broadcast. He said India is facing a “powerful and unscrupulous opponent.” He spoke at the end of the third day of a Chinese offensive said he was waiting for state police to complete their investigation to determine how involved the two women might be. He said that knowing of a murder, and failing to report it to the authorities isn’t a crime in itself. it it it However, Taylor said there is the women knowingly aided in Perva’s slaying. According to Drobil, he drove the victim’s car to a laundromat at Eight Mile Road and Woodward Avenue after kiUing him, where he met Nina. He said she drove her car behind him to the spot where he abandoned Perva’s car near the Greyhound bus station in Detroit, (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) India in Danger— Nehru Fear Red China Threat western India. Using tanks in one place against lightly supplied Indian troops, the Chinese continued to press forward. Today, Indian defense officials announced, the Chinese attacked near the junction of the Indian-Tibet-Burma border at the extreme end of the frontier. There were indications of an impending Chinese atUick in the center of the northeastern frontier too. Using tanks in the western sector, in Ladakh, they captured four more Indian posts near Pangong Lake where they threatened the Chushul Airfields, India’s only landing strip for supply in the remote lofty region. The Chinese opened a new ^-tion of front at Kibitoo at the eastern end of the North East Frontier near Burma, the said, with an attack at 3 a.m. Radio Peiping said earlier Indi- an troops attacked a tion in the Chayul This is possibly although there is bet about 200 posi-of Tibet, same area, in Tl-wwt of the here the Indian spokesman said the new fighting was raging. The Chayul area in Tibet Is about 10 miles north of the border claiRKd by India and about SO Forecast Tonight Colder Weather Considerable cloudiness and colder temperatures are scheduled for the area tonight and tomorrow. Following a low of 39 this evening, the temperature is expected to reach a high of 56 tomorrow. it it it ’The forecast for Wednesday Is parUy cloudy and continued cool. RAlBlall registered fbor-tenths of an ladi in dewatawa Pontiac from 19 a. m. Saturday ’til the same time today. Today’s winds are from the southeast at 10 to 18 miles per hour; they will shift north to northwest tonifdit and tomorrow. Forty-two was the lowest the read preceding 8 a. m. today. At 2 p. m. the mercury measured 51. miles northeast of Thagla Ridge near the Bhutan border where the fighting started at dawn Saturday. CONCENTRATING TROOPS About half way fieiwaen Kibitoa and Thagla ridge, the Chinese are also concentrating troops, the Indian spokesman said. The troops are in Longju, a vDlage that the Chinese cap- guards in August 1959, kUling three of them in the first bloodshed of the dispute over 51J89 square miles of Himalayan bor- Uigenmsis Brings Action resident ^TroubI* Spot Mysforyi National Security Unit, Cabinet Also to Meet ifroia Oar Nawi wires WASHINGTON President Kennedy today recalled top congressional leaders to the capital and decided to address the na* tioii on television a 6 p.m. (Pontiac time) on an international situation of the “highest national urgency.” There was no official indication of the nature of the crisis. There was no hint whether it concerned Cuba, Berlin or India, where the Chinese Communists have launched armed attacks on the northern borders. The White Itouse announced that Kennedy also had scheduled meetings of the National Security Council, the Cabinet and congressional leaders of both parties this afternoon. ★ ★ ★ *The Defense Department set up a briefing for reporters at 7 p.m., an hour after Kennedy addresses the nation. There was no statement oa.the nature of the briefing, but indications were that it related to The spokesman declined to speculate on whether a Chinese attack was imminent at Longju, but indicated build-ups have led to other attacks in recent days. Indian Prime Minister Nehru the PresideBt might announce. White House press'^ secretary Pierre Salinger declined to elaborate on his phrase "a subject of the highest national urgency." He said the television and radio networks had been asked to set aside a half hour for the address to the Russia Silent on Conflict, Page D-^3 sought to tighten relations with neighboring Himalayan states. Peiping fadio, whldi says the Chinese are fighting In self-defense against Indian aggression reported an outbreak of fighting in a new area on the north side of the border claimed by India. It said Indian troops at Hsialin-kung launched “a violent attack” and that (k>mmunist troops "were compelled to hit back.” Hsialinkung is in the Chayul (CkmUnued on Page 2, Col. 7) Democratic and leaders in Congress were asked to report to the White House at ‘ p.m. (Pontiac Time). LBIlN CAPITAL Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson already was In Washington. Teacher Dies in Crash While Crop Dusting ROMEO — A 27-year-oId Lapeer Junior High School teacher was killed shortly before noon yesterday when his light plane plummeted to earth and caught fire while he was dusting for mice in an orchard just west Of here. The victim was Clarence D. Boyer, 825 Liberty St., Lapeer, who left Lapeer Airp^ about 11 a.m. bn a cropnlostlnt assignment at Ronum. Orchards. Beyer made one pass at the fleU at an alUtude of about 58 feet, then IbrotUed the idaae up and made a sharp baak le the left. According to Roi Trooper Robert J. Kenney, who witnessed the mishap, the plaha apparently lost air sptNul on the mvimt — n wterewn , UW 1110,01 UW pi«n, vwiraniu --wjrv., tUTII Slid CTSShed. . that resins of thfr U^t rian^that cr^ year«)d Upeer Junior High School teacher. j MUTE EVIDENCE - A skeleton Is all, the life of the pilof,’Clarence D. Boyer, 27- sentatives, including xdwirmen and top minority members of tha Armed Services and Foreign Relations Committees of Congress, were asked to attend the coofer- Salhigcr saM Air Force plaBcs were sent to brhf the seuaters portatlon was arollable. ’The chairman Of the GOP com ^t for any strong stand ttw l^ident wuits to taka on Cubn and Berlin.” BACKS STRENGTHENING Rep. Bob Wilson. R-Ca)lf. aaldl that "whatever move tha President has decided to maka-lt II involves strengthening our stand —I know that 1 speak for Republican congressmen and the Rqwb* licans who will ba elactod Nov. i in saying that w« wig glva thu in every way.” In London, Bril quarters appeared myiftlfied and uneasy about tha air crisla ni* ported tn Washington. .. AuthorMattve d I p I a ■ a 81 • ' j . , THE POMTIAC PBKSS. MONDAY. OCTOBER ». IBM , Leadffi Launch 10-Day State Campaign Ity Hw Auoektod Pwm 1 WhUe Swtlraw rtlcta to •nine Democratic leaden wlfl the vice pnsideRt today, Ida Re-Invade Michigan in the next 10 publican challenger. George Ro^ days to make one last pitch to win nay, jdanned to swing outstato tor votes for the Itov. 0 electian. a aeries of rallies and speaking^ * * yy pearances in Muskegon. Vice Presidfit pyndon B. John- * „ V “"“sdrmivnTDiffiSrt Sunday;- what la biUed as a “nonpoUUcal” his custom, but Swalnson spent a speech at the National Auto Show, busy day visiting churches, raUies ^^momw, however. he’U roB and a Uidte^Auto Workers edu-uphto sleeves and start canqw>ii^ <»ii<>>»l<°°>Mi^ ^ ing in Grand Riqiids for Gov. area. Swalnson and othtf state Demo> Former PresHmit Harry S. Truman, due in Detroit Saturday, also is expeotod to do a IH-tte poUticking for the state Democratic flcket. “ Fivrdayrbefon the Nov. Odec-tion, President Kennedy will reaffirm his support of Swalnson in anothw visit to the^Motor Oty— his second in less than a month. ★ W w' „ For good measure, Anthony J. Celebresae, secretary of health, education and welfare, wiU show up two days before t|ie election to put in a ipbd word for the Presi-dent’s hotly contested medicare plan for toe aged. ^ Bentley Has Big Edge on Staebler In other campaigning in the Motor City Sunday, NeU Staebler, Democratic candidate for Congressman-at-iarge, bis three-point program for education. Staebler called for expanded college-facilitiesra^ self*" federal loan fund for aU students and establishment of youth opportunities program to aid dropKNits and hig^ school nad-uates who do not go on to college. “The youth activities program would help our noncoliege students and high school dropmits thnw^ such programs as the Domestic Peace Coti» and toe Youth Conservation Corps," he sakl. * e * Democratic Sen. Philip A. Hart, meanwhile, plugged his party’s candidates and talked on his proposed bin to bring "moraBty to the marketolace” in a whirlwind weekend tour M^Berrioi County. •’’lb me, bad packaging and labeling practices pose a threat to this nation,’’ Hart toM some 225 members of the southwestern chapter of the Michigan Credit Union League at St. Joseph Saturday night DETROIT m - Republican Alvin M. Bentley holds a 4.S percentage point lead over his Democratic opponent Neil Staebter in the race for Midiigan’s congressman-at-large, according to the latest Detroit News poll. it it * The poll gives Bentley, former Michigan congressman and Owosso industrialist, 51.3 per cent of the statewide total to 46.8 for Staebler. Ralph W. Muncey, Socialist Labor candidate received one per cent and toe poll said 1.1 per cent of voters Interviewed ’The News poB is compiled by MarkeiCpinion Research Co. Sunday, the News poll showed RepubBcan gubematwial candidate George Romney leading Democratic Gov. Swalnson by 52 per cent to 47.3 per cent. WWW The results of today’s poll showed Bentley picking up an additional six-tenths of a per cent and Staebler dropping eight-tenths of a per cent since the last poB. The poll said Bentley now holds 34.3 per cent of industrial Wayne County to 63.4 for Staebler. WWW Bentley’s outstate showing Is stronger than Romney’s but he trails the GOP gubernatorial candidate in industrial areas. U.N. Debates Peiping Seat (Continued From Page One) was likely between Thursday and Monday. Many observers remarked that there seemed to be leiM enthusiasm for the Red Chinese cause this year ti The Soviet resolution was defeated then 48^, with 20 nations abstaining. Both Communist and antl-Com-munist diplomats predicted the Soviet proposal would lose again, but each side was hopeful of getting a few more votes than last year. WWW ia was considered unlikely to enter into the debate, though it was expected to vote for the Soviet resolution. Indian delegation sources said over the weekend that their government still favored seating Communist China despite their new holder fighting. Raul Tours Island HAVANA (UPI) ~ The armed forces ministry said in a commu-nlcpie that Raul Castro is on an extended inspection tour of the island’s defense InstaBations. dogs led by David Cook, 23, of 1500 Tull Road, Waterford Township, to the grave hidden beneath leaves in the woods near Stickney and Pine Knob Roads. WWW Perva had been shot once behind the right ear from close range. The bullets lodged in his brain causing instant death, according to Det. Lt. WUliam Caulkins. In his signed statement for toe The Weather FnU U4L Weather Burean Report PONTIAC AND ViaNITY - Mostly cloody today with scattered showers likely by afternoon. High 51. Considerable clondiness and colder tonight and Tuesday. Low tonight 39. High Tuesday 56. Mostly southeasterly winds at 16 to 18 mfles today and north to northwest tonight and Tuesday. towMt t«np*nitur* pr*c4dlns I • At S t.in.: Wind Ydocllf, S mp.l M*nn temptrttura . , |u“s VaS Moon MU TMoMloy «t l;ll p.m. Snndof't T««p*nilnro Cbort Alpono S« 3> Fort Worth 7P ■sconobt , >t II Jockionvlllo ao Or. Ropldt M to Kuim) CItr NATIONAL WEATHER - Showers are torocast for to-nUit to Wyoming, the upper Mississippi Valley and tower t.^1^ MOa told eastern New York. It will be cooler from too Nppto MIsBiisIppI Valfoy through the Ohio and Tennessen valMys and tow AltaDtlc coastal states. IMMOVABLE - John Poison, 40, of 291 N. Saginaw St., is in fair condition at Pontiac General Hospital after smashing his car into toe above home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Braden, 262 Baldwin Ave. The Braden home was the second city dwelling that was seriously damaged Sunday. The home of WiB Simmons at 60)4 Pleasant View St., was damaged when Faye Leaf, 41, of 20 Beaudette St., tost control of her car and rammed into the foundation. She was treated at Pmitiac General Hospital for minor injuries and re- leaders SuirnnoRod to Capital by-IFK (Continued From Pi«e One) While apeculatton over the weMumd had emphaelied Cuba as the likelieet aouroa of eonoem, era ImUcattons toat Eo- Bimiiitoiun Area Newt. Hearing Slated Tonight on Proposal for Sewer Thera was fresh qieculation that the heart of mystery-laden meetings Ifr the eqdtol over the wetocend toy in Europe - quite nibly at the storm center of rlin. inwng tooee at the White House this morning were Uewel-^ Thompson, former ambassador to the Soviet Union and now Martin Hilienbrand, director of the State Departmaat’s Ctorman FOr 38 hours Washh«lea has been alive with coajeetwe toat a new crisis was brewtog to Cuba. In answer to questions, however, SaBngor said be did not believe that Edward Martin, assistant secretary of state tor inter-American affairs, participated in the White House talifo this morning. (Continued From Page One) and then drove him to her traUer FOUND BY DOGS Perva’s body was found asked him to get rid of Perva and provided the gun, leaving further detafls up to DrobB. Drobil said Perva didn’t know who he was, and that he followed Perva’s car en route to work Monday morning. it it it The next nroming, Drobil said, he stationed himself at a stop sign where he knew Perva would stop his car. When he did Drobil said he jump^ in and pointed the gun at Perva, ordering him to drive out to Pontiac. it * * My boss wants to see you about the way you’ve been treating your wife,’’ Drobil said he told his victim. They stopped for gas on the way, Drobil told the prosecutor. Drobil said he knew the wooded spot from a camping tr^ he made as a boy. Drobil said when they arrived at toe secluded scene be toM Perva toat he was going to tie him up and inject a drug ia his arm to dull his senses so toat he wouMn’t recopise his boss who was waiting to see Perva In a nearby (nonexistent) cabin. Drobil said the hypodermic needle contained air. This would have killed Perva if injected into his blood stream, Lt, Caulkins But Perva rebelled. Turning away, he said “You’ll have to kill me first,’’ according to Drobil. Drobil said he then fired once. He said he t h e n took Perva’i wallet containing |9 and his car keys before dumping his body into the grave. ONE MISTAKE Det. Charles Leaf said Drobil made one mistake in an otherwise well-planned murder. He left a single fingerprint on the steering wheel of Perva’s car before aban-ming it. A * ♦ Police were able to trace the fingerprint through crime files at Lansing. Drobil was convicted of assaulting a Detroit police officer in 1959 and served 1)4 years at the Ionia state reformatory. * ★ ♦ Taylor said at first they were almost convinced that Perva had been slain by professional kiltors because of the thorough planning involved. •We probably waali never have found Psrva’e body H It hadn’t been fortoose dofs«" hr saM. However, Det. Leaf saM ha was siaqiiclous of Mrs. Perva when Mw failed to register the pn^ note of grief while identifying her hue-band’s body. The next day he asked her If she had any boyfriends, and she told him about Maroley, Leaf said. She also toM us that Maroley had an ex-son-in-law (DrobU) who was an unsavory character whom she felt was capable of murder,’' Leaf said. REAL BREAK Finding Drobil's fingerprint in the car was a real break in the case,” Leaf added. Both Drobil and Maroley were arrested at DrobU’s home in Belleville Saturday. They offered no resistance, Leaf said. Maroley talked first, saying he had wanted to pt rid of Perva for a long time because of toe way he treated his wife, Taylor saM. Maroley said he had met Mrs. Perva three years ago in a bar and that they had bron intimate since, the prosecutor continued. He said Perva knew this and warned him to stay away from his wife several times. Mrs. Perva attempted to divorce her husband on two occasions. They have six children, one of whom is an epBeptic patient in Caro. Drobil said he hoped that doing a favor for Nina’q father would help him gain a reconciUation with his ex-wife. They were divorced last spring. “I thought I would solve a lot of problems for everybody by getting rid of Perva,’’ DrobU said in his statement. He said afterward he dumped Perva’s wallet and the shovel in a pond near the murder scene and concealed the pistol in the hose connection between the en-gihi iihd heater of Perva’s car. it it it State police were searching the pond for Perva’s wallet and the shovel used to dig his grave today. TTie gun was recovered'from the car and was being sent to the state police laboratory at East Lansing for a balUstics test. Death of Ex-Resident Probed for Foul Play The possibility of foul play Is being probed in the deatii of a former Pontiac man, Douglas D. Miller, who was found dying in his Meridian Township home near Lansing Saturday. Miller, 40, was the son of a prominent Pontiac businessman, Frank MUIer of 66 Chippewa Road, former owner of the D and D Dry Cleaners on W. Huron St. The younger MiUer was found lying with head injuries in a pool of blood In toe bnlMIng’s the Ingham (founty sheriff’s office reported. it it it Sheriff Kenneth L. Preadmwe said his department was probing ‘certain aspects at the scene An emergency operation failed, and Miller died later that day, Reporter Sore After Meeting Bird Hunter The condition of Miller’s car indicated it had struck a tree and mailbox not far from the house, he added. Miller was vice president of Capital Business Service, Inc;. of Lansing. He was separated from his wife and Uved alone. . BY DICK HANSON Ithough I have been h_-for IS years, I learned more about it Saturday by being shot in the leg. It was the opening day of pheas-nt season. * * * I learned: STAY WELL AWAY FROM ANY HUNTERS YOU DON’T KNOW AND CAN TRUST IM-PLiaTLY. Our party of five (all good. Broira City area when two strange hnaters ajpproached In foU view about II yarns In front. One of them shot at a bird that ran out from cover hi front of * * * lucky. Most of the shot Iwailucky. pissedMtwom loatlikr boots sb • fowmon A A 'A My follow himtara ran to nqr aM]j .utnoonawasiUotofstlha' name of too recUess sfranglsr. “e ran to hIs car and sped off. d Will as be Today I can’t run ai « to see whether there was foul play or not.’’ MlBcr was involved fat a traffic mishap shortly before he reached his home, foU d toe cellar stairs and sk his skull on toe cement II Offer Gp, Crafts in Rec Program ’The lyaterford Township Recre-at ion Department’s gym and crafts program will begin SatU^ day at three locations: Featuring athletic activities in gymnasiums and arts and crafts projects in pdjolning rooms, the program will be conducted at Don-riaon Elemerttary School, CTary Junior High School and at the Community Activities, Inc., buBd- Sessions will be conducted each Saturday through April, 1963. Details may be obtained by calling the recreation department. Soblwn't Ashtt Fbwn toWiblnUnitMiStalM KGNDON (UFt) ashfo^ Sobieh w«a Itowit badt. to New York today, hur maaOm after he jumped $188,888 ban and fled the United States to eqcapn a lifo pris-A sentence. The remains of Soblen, who (nhmlttod sulcMa, were ( signed to his wlfo, DIM Sobis. I refused to answer when asked if the urgent subject covered more than one Icountry. Adced if the situation cquM lead to some kind of message to the United Nations, Salinger said he could not reply at this time. JOINS DEUBERA’nONS Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy, the President’s brother, also tocto part in the White House driiber-ations before noon. Much of the speculation about C^ba centered on the fact the Navy was conducting maneuvers in the Caribbean. island of Vieqnes' was cat-cried abruptly today. ’The Defense Department said the practice landing had been called off because ships of the Navy’s amphibious force had been scattered by a hurricane. I A spokesman also said the cancellatiob had nothing to do with the crisis talks in the capital. Meanwhile the Defense Department said that 1,200 Marines have been flown by mBitary transports from Camp Pendleton, Calif., into the Puerto Rico maneuver area. It had earlier been reported that the Marine rifle battaUon was destined for Camp Lejeune, N. C, Teacher Killed While Crop Dusting (continued From Page One) first causing the plane to spin around. It caught fire trapping the pilot inside. The. plane,, a .super. Piper PA18A, was owned by Robert MneUer of South Haven. ’The accident happened 300 yards south of 32-Mile Road, Just west of the vBlage limits. A A W Federal Aeronautics Administration and Civil Aeronautics Board officials were to investigate the mishap at the scene today. BIRMINGHAM - Iha i sily of liwtalliiM a relief •««« to serve property ou Ruttner Avenue wfll be decUed after A pubUe hearing at to-nifbt’a City Comminion meeb Ihe hearing, echeduled for I p.m., IB the result of a petition presented to Binningham offr dais in July, 1988. by rssidsnte of Rufbmr Aveiwe between Grant Street and Woodward Ave- flooded besemoBts hi the e Ito reddMds siikeirihe^ to take aetisn hi solving the Atfer OompBing a stud^ on tiw situation, the aty Engineering DNMimient saM a reUd sewer couM be constructed for mated $8,100. URGESHEARING The State Health Department said that a construction permit couM not be issued until the Red Run endosure and the Dequindre »r, both part of the l^ Towns ReUef Drain project. Were under construction, City Engineer William T. Killeen requested that the hearing be scheduled for tonight because he said the 12-Towns projects soon wiB be under way. Birmingham Mayor Florence H. WUlett will act as chairman of a special traffic safety conference cosponsored by the Michi-i[an Safety Commission and the klichigan Citizens Highway Safety Action (fommittee Nov. 12. The conference, which will be heM at Michigan State University, Is to decide a brief simplified action program of state priorities for traffic improvement. Cochairman of the program will be Milon Grinnell, editor of Mr. Davis v . the Univwsily of Michigan in 1933 and from Wayne State Law SdMOl to 1938. He was a number of Trigon Friiternity, University of Mi(^an Chib in Detroit, and Detroit and Michigan Bar Asso- tha *‘Mkhigan Pamsr" and diaimian of tbs cltissns' 8ettoD KOynoto addrassos will bs giv-an by Boeretoiy of Stito JanoM M. Hsra. chairaian of the safety commission, and Dr. Lynn M. • • ‘ of Dsn D. Davis Service for Don D. Davis, 53, of 18S Topviow Road, wBl be at 11 ajn. Tuesday in BeB Chapel of the WBliam R. Hamilton Co. Burial wBl be in White Chapel MMnbrial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Davis, Hoopitol. Royal Oak, after a long Surviving are his wife, Dorothy and two sisters. LBJ May Drop Car Show Talk Crisis Might Force Canceling of Speech Soviet Wants to Swap Balalaika for Bagpipes LONDON (UPI) - A Welsh number of parliament, turned from a three-week visit to the Soviet Union, brought back the latest East-west trade overture. Emrys Hughes said yesterday the Pushkin secondary school of Moscow would like to swap a Russian balalaUca for a set of Scottish bagpipes. Holy Cross Non Dead ">**«*'• DETROIT (UPI) - Vice President Lyndon Johnson’s scheduled visit to ahe 44th National Automobile Show was in doubt today because of a Washington crisis that forced President Kennedy to call important national leaders back to Washington. A ■ A A . Johnson’s office had not canceled the engagement by 12:30 p.m., but the Vice President earBer had cut short a campaign trip to Hawaii by half a day to return to Washington. Johnson was to sub (or Kennedy at the ante show. He was scheduled to arrive here at 4:38 p.m. and leave Michigan tomorrow after some political speechmaking in western Michigan on behalf of Democratic state candMates. The shqw is being held for only the second time in Detroit after 42 previous appearances in New York City. It features nearly 400 cars and trucks ranging from the compacts to a 27-ton CMC COLUMBUS, Ohio (API-Mother Constantine, 69, provincial superior of the Sisters of the Holy Cross, Eastern Province, died Sunday after a long Biness. She was born Catherine CeceBa Ryan in DanvBle, IB. over 305,000 persons already have flocked to the show since it opened Friday night with an invitational preview attended by 50,000. A total of 188,764 persons yesterday. India Fears Commies area of Tibet, ancT is about 50 miles northeast of Thagla Ridge, which India claims as her northeastern border near the Bttle Himalayan state of Bhutim. (Continued From Page One) youngsters Texas In D lamb callad "Boc, typical at the State Filr of received $200 for her Hampshire Ui the medium wool elasB« dolars as she saM her last Indian defense officials said the Red (Tiinese launched a surprise attack at dawn Saturday from positions inside Indian territory. The Chinese accused the Indians of launching hostlUties. Indian defense officials admitted loss of at least seven border posts in the northeastern sector and In the Ladakh theater 988 miles to the northwest - both Both Prime Minister Jigme Dorji of Bhutan and the crown prince of Sikkim, Maharaja Kumar Palden Thondup Namgyal, arrived in New Delhi for emergency talks. AAA India is reported to have asked Bhutan for permission to send in a military defense force. Red (^ina has clalnied a part of south- Bhutan Is an Independent country, but India by treaty handles Its foreign relations and has a mission in the country to train Its small mBitary force. Sikkim is an Years ago. Red China’s Mao Tsedung saM both Bhutan and flikkim shouM be a part of China by right of treaties with oM Chl- 10 to Train for Spaco WASHINGTON O-. The Ai Force announced today the name of 18 more bfricero ptefced fo fratohii aa sparo pilots and spao THE POimAC PBESSi MOKCAY. OCXOBBR M, III62 Russians Closer to Alaska than Cuba By BdB CONSIDINE . NEW YORK - Rul__________ ■re i lot ckMMr to Americtti toll than Uwlr rodnt •ntotooemmta and fiahing harhor In Cuba.. Far aa wt know, they’ve got nothing they can throw over the M milea of water between Caatroland and Key Weat. ★ ★ ★ But they are only a few good that nobody aacept RaaaIana|iiow wOl faU to hit ita appointed could navigate or flah the watera target, the moon, of North America from the Bar- Amerieaaa learn a little more Ing Strait to approtomately the .pprechle the IMh poalUon of today’a Seattle — and! itate a little more each day. on a IW-mlle limit baaia, to b^ n«, incredible load which brought certain tharp retorta property. Ratmanov (or Big Diomede) laland in the Bering Strait is 2.4 milea from our Little Dio- It hat been that-o-way for a long time now, 1 ‘ ----------- One, blatoricaUy dnd~iUll topl- continenta are no longer aubjecta tor any new colonial eatabllah-' yeong and vigereaa enea, a bat United Statep frontier. Many have accepted that chal- commercial toreat bnd, five Undo of bear (blade, griady, polar, Kodiak and glacier), enor-moua airfielda and radar aitea whicji help keep the peace of the Americm bnge. One, Lp«mU Thomaa Jr. who b married to Pan-Am’a Sam Pryor’a daughter, ia running for In the early 1800’a. Alaska as a base, Russian colonizers moved as far south down the continent as the environs of present day San FYancisco. ___Russia’s declarationL-Jn^ Rusab owned Alaska from the tlnM of ib discovery in 1741 by the Danish voyager Vitus Bering, commisahmed by the ’Taar, until Ita tab to the U. 8. in 1897 during the adminbtration of Ureal- nearly im-certainly never I mBfteirt of Secretary d ^mm IL Seward’i Report Arresting Aides of Al-Badr CAIRO (if) ~ ’The Middb East News Agency Correspondent reported from San’a today that the Yemeni revobtionary regime has arrested all tribal Sheikhs who helped Imam Mohammad A-Badr escape from it. The haggling had begun during President Buchanan’s terra. He dfered |S million for Alaska’s SW,400 square miles, two and a half times today’s ’Texas. That’s a million dolbri Jshl toan the cost of a Boeing 707 or Douglas DCB. Russb turned It down, but sold on March 30, 1007, (or 17,800,000 ttaa H biliien la Osh and mlnerab abne.__ Abska has 44,000,000 i ^ y of the Rlissian Bear than anyinow under dw gun. her ana ; of the ¥ne VorWl We just wanted you to know. This N«wi5»3 •vam Congress from there. My friend Carroll Colvb Baer, who once wasted time In the endless debates of a New York press club, aends/^ "b hai* btrepid full-page spread b the Anchorage Daily Times about the building of one of the world’s toughest roads, the Copper River bgh- pbyed on June 21 in Fairbanks by the Uf^ of the midnight sun, both quick and slow silver, petrified prehistoric monsters, cabbages the size of watermelons and a city named Nome. Seems an early map-maker, finding no known name fw that. SlHsSIIIIIIST0NnEsrTIIESM7f8r Ihase SUPER-nSCOWI SKOALS OAMtlMK No Purchtue Romirod--GoiYomJ?S^E TICKET ai SmHS-^You Hay Win! 2-Pe.Sleepe MORE THAN WORTH IT As-oL last week, when the toth anniversary of the formal transfer of Abska hrom Russb to the U. S. was cebbrated, Abska had paid for herself countless times over b dolbrs and even mme tbies in strategic vabe b today’s tense wb'ld. After all these years, the gold n his chart. It became Nome. And the highest irtounbb in , the worb from base to top, Mt. McKbby, more active volcanoes than any other pbee in the worb, and more poise about the proxim- Vdbus soil b ISM came withb a mil-Hoa dolbrs of the original purchase price, and b addition to them 13S,NS ’Dray onnees there The dispatch sab they will be tried by a milibry court. ___ ___ than the! was the silver, tb, cool, oU, littie Ranger V whteh btew a fishing, timber, Jade, tars, and fuse to space the other day and| tourtom. Stoce IMS, Abska has Al-Badr escaped to the Washa region Sept. 27 after rebel army artillery unib attacked hb palace in San a. The Washa Sheikhs granted the fleeing Imam refuge and helped him to escape to other proroyaiist tribal unib b northern Yemen, the dispatch said. King Hussein of Jordan has assured Al-Badr that J o r d a n will stand by him, repor ts from Amman said. Dearborn Man Killed in Canadian Crack-Up WINDSOR, Ont. (JB ^ Leonard Cudb, 30, of Dearborn, Mich., was Wiled early yesterday when his car hit a bridge abutment near Essex, 15 miles southeast of here. A passenger, Patricia Bucca-furri, 31, of Detroit, was reported in serious condition with head and leg injuries at a Windsor hospital. Bring is Tost Favorite" Odor now-boot tho iwoh ter photo arMtlnp cords. Choico of oil now Christmas dosigns, oil comploto with moiling onvolopos ... boy now at lowpst prbos, vou II pay much moro lotor. Color photo cords owollablo too. CAMERA DEPT. — Main Floor REPAIR^ Only at Simms Complete WATCH MERHADL Plus Needed Parts tor 95 YOUR WATCH Will Boi O Disassembled, Cleaned and Oiled O Worn or Broken Ports O Genuine Factory Parts Used O Watch Adjusted and Electronically Timed O Full Year Guarantee on Labor Repairing *' Badly rutted watches, automatics and chronos at small extra cost. Simms low pries of $7.95 Includes needed ports such osi stems, crown, main springs, or bolqnce stalls. Hurry this week lor needed ,wotch repolrs. Qvsrhsul and Cleaning of Watch, only. 8” WATCH DEFT. -Main Floor FINAL nusAit ODD LDTS-REMNiUlTS-DISCOimilUED ITEMS THIS IS OUR m COUNTER ^ molding ncA TOFS LAST WEEK ^1 1 II 19* I Jr umLEUMwTuMUM # wall % ^ 9 REMIUUITS ^ 16'J riuiwoorL THE FLOOR SHOP NS.SAMIANSr. FE 44211 tiHirrI hsiuhn hleM OPENFRLHOILIHB THE PONTIAC PEESS. MONDAY, OCTOBERJij 1662 Estes Stands Trial in Texas TYLER. Tex. (AP)~Billle Soi Estes, the West Texas promoter whose empire of fertiliser tanks, grain storage and cotton allot-ihents is in bankruptey, is to go on trial here today on criminal QUESTION: WHAT IS WIREPHOTO? ANSWER: News photographs have a vital part in a modem newspaper. The problem used to be to get a phot^aph of a distant event fast enough so that it could be printed while the story it told was still news. Then, in 1935, The Associated Press, a news cooperative cor trollled by a large number of newspapers, started “Wirephoto. , The process begins with a news photographer (1) taking a picture He rushes a print to one of 40 different sending points. It^ is — placed on a roll. As the roll turns around in the sending pachinO ring with an electric beam focuses on it (2) and turns its dark and light areas into elechic signals. It will be the state’s third attempt to try him on charges pf theft and swlndlihg. Foiir indich ments charge him with theft of a contract for fertilizer tanks, swindling a farmer, embezzlement of the contract and theft of the tanks. If convicted, Estes, 37, could be sentenced to prison for a term ranging from 2 to 20 years. * '■ .....* The case was transferred from Peeoi last June lawyers said they could not get an impartial jury in Estes’ h«ne town. When the case was/called here Sept. 25, his attorpeys won a postponement on the ground that key witnesses were not available. Estes arrived in Tyler Sunday morning. After attending church Old Car Jolts Town, Turns Out to Be Live Wire . CUMBERLAND, Ind. (AP)-At 6:10 p.m.. the burglar alarm at the bank began jangling. Lights and traffic signals blacked out A fire sprang up in a, vacant lot I Teleplione lines want dMd, Authorities later blamed it all Slate Another N-Blast Over Johnston Island HONpLULU/(APl-The Unlted|Wednesday - and 1:30 a.m. HST , Statas will iry to make It two in - v m - •« KST. / a row In tiie high altitude nuclear test series Tuesday night with a scheduled sug megaton blast 'ab^e Johnstcm Island in the Pa- An Army Nike-Hercules rocket SSS? »«* «*Pected to be used to loft said the hood flew off the, 18-year- ^ ^ ^ warhead to a firing old Indiana^lis youthX .«to •» g he drove along lI.S/40 Sunday night. The waywapd metal sheet soared over thp car and sliced through teleidfbne lines and a 13,000-yolt electrical cable. Power/ was restored to this small suburb east of Indianapolis two hours later UKS nuvivai wvaiiivou IV a altitude of 20 to 30 mUes, the same height as Friday night’s . successful shot that was clearly ' visible on the Hawaiian Island of ' Kauai. LARGER LOAD Wednesday - 7:30 a.m. EST. The device will carry tyox plosive power of 20,000 tp4 million tons of TNT. larger than Frl-day’s low yield paytoad. the test prbbabbTwTL — of the last two high level blaste ‘ in the 1962 Pacific nuclear series. The final shot could come as ear-ly as this Weekend. * w ■* The Atomic Energy Commission u^’t say. but several more air drops — nuclear devices released from airplanes-are believed programed. . American scientists LARGER UIAD gramed.. American scientists Mrs. Donna uoiuns oi The shot is planned between have set off 31 nuiflearr blasts ^kww nam^ wrtheastern 1:80 p,m. HST - 2:30 ajh. EST since last AprU. district vice president. _________ Columriilt SAGINA mental well enemy Is Wrlth-.olumnist Sydnej umJ a seminar on alco-at Delta College Satur- “if we ultimately destroy our-aerves as Individuals or as a civilisation, it will be doe to our Irrationalities," he said to 400 persons attending the event spon-by the Tri-County Commit- >LUMtlNG n 0-2000 n 5-7501 Business Woman in Post HOUSTON (» - Clarifca Carlson of Bay Cito was dectod natl^l vice president of the American Business Women’s Association at its convention here Saturday- , * * V Mrs. Dorina Collins of Battle and Walmat IH$URANCe\ Does BLADDER tM tMjWnV M he spent rposl of the day confer-■) his attorneys Otsego Ski Club Head President of Hotel Body GAYLORD 144-The new presi dent of the Michigan Hotel and Motor Hotel Association is Ken Fisher, manager of Otsego Ski Club. These are flashed out over special wires. Newspapers all over the country pick up the signals on their receiving machines turf pkitiiMMi by either (3,-left) fecusing them through ano^r electric eye onto sensitized film to obtain a negative, or J3, below) having them turned directly teto a final positive flcture by another device called Photofn. Eight minutes later, the editor of the newspaper can have a picture to engrave and put in his next edition so you (4) will be „ able to sec it. He was installed in office Satur- ★ dr ★ day at the group’s 49th annual FOR YOU TO- DOi Look at a photograph In your newspaper meeting by Richard D. McLain, and see if you can tell why part of it seems light in color and why manager, of Dearborn Inn and part of it seems dark. outgoing presidCTt/_ ORCHARD 3FSQ//IM DINETTES CHOICE OP GLEAMING CHROME OR BRASS AND ammHE Smart 9-Pc. 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SAGINAW PONTIAC ' i , PONTIAC j , MONDAY, OCXOBEB 1962 Hatch of Plane Flies Open With Hissmg ^ancf Big Bang BOSTON (I^^HiMing wund and axplMkm-lUw noiia cama Juat ba> for a atawardeia fan to har daath from tha hatehway of an AUa-ghany AirUnas plana but FMay Mill FVancoiaa da Moriara. », of Waahington and Paria, waa tha atowardaaa who plungad lAOD {aat to a maadow in Farmington, Conn., whan tha roar hatch of tha Katharlna Lacy, 20, of Brook* ROYALTY DANCES - Princesa Margaret dances with her husband, Lord Snowdon, at the members’ ball of the Royal Institute of British Architects in London this weekend. They attended the bail shortly after flying down from Edln^ burgh, Scotland. I Miss da Mb* rtara aboard the plana, told of tha tragic events in an interview. was la tM lavatsry at tha tlBBW If the aeddrat,'' Mte wn trar maadans noisa. Ilka a> aspla* sien. Itkasckadnatothaflaar British Stand on Indian Side London Rtoffirmi Rods Aro Aggroisort LONDON W-*Britianraaf* firmad today its belief that India the viciim of Communist Chi- T started to crawl to tha cabin aisle, but the copilot, already ly* ing on the ftoor near the open hatch, told me to stay where 1 was. I was terribhr frightened. I tboii^t it was a bomb.” HISSING SOUND Miss Lacy said a hissing sound was coming from the hatch hmg before the accident and that it hadi>ero duUed'hy stuffing pillow cases into the door crevicas. She said Miss da Moriara was standing near the door to ante the passengers that tha plane was baginning its descant over Hartford. ^ always made tha lents,” tha Broo stawai^ess said, “because the passengers got a kick out of har French accent." Charles Mack, M, of Sprtaf- In doing so, a Foreign Office! spokesman declined to discuss specific details of tha flaranip serious fighting between the two DISCU88INOARMS Other ported privately, Indian authorities arC Informal^ discussing with the British i|s wan I asJlM jynericana poasibte^ NOW... You Can Buy A Lycra * Girdle for only ^3.99! The New, Sensational STRIDE-EZE L^CRA GIRDLE by Lido Compare With Girdles Selling for Much More a Light at a buHerfly's wing • Stops tummy, midriff and thigh bulges • In tiaet small thru 2XL Smooth owoy tomlhy bulge with a feolher-llght lyero girdle by LIdol Soft, conrq|llng, yet weighs only 3-ouncet... almost os eomforloble os your own skin. Can't moke thighs bulge, long waistline eliminates tommy "roll". Bep of all It's many dollors lower than other Lycra girdlesl Try one todayl NOTIONS ... Street Floor Phone FE 4^511 “At least one of the girls,” he said, “had been holding her hands to her ears to shut out the noisa long belture tha accident.” In Washington, Civil Aeronautics Board investigators said the explosion-like noisa was caused by the sudden decompression of the plane’s cabin. ★ A Edward Slattery of toe CAB said, “It’s toe same type of noise you would hear if you broke a paper bag filled with air.” He said toe plane would be flown from Brpdley Field, Conn., to Washington for a more complete investigation. Public Told Again About Cigarettes NEW YORK (^>-Tho American Cancer Society, opening its five-day annual meeting here today, estiniates that 280,000 Americans will die of cancer next ye«r. Of that number, nearly 41,0N will succumb to lung cancer, the society predicted, adding that 7S imr cent of those cases could be preveuted if people did not smoke cigarettes. The Tobacco Institute, which speaks for the industry, maintains that no conclusive scientific proof has been offered that cigarettes cause cancer. nent offi^ i ’, meapwlBfe„!th Certain specialized types of equipment appear to be needed ■. ■, toe Indiana in toe meuntainous terrain where armed fwces M the two sides are batOing ut a border dispute. The New Delhi . however, has not yet made a fmr-mal request' to this country for weapons. ATTITUDE SAME Answering questions at a daily tltude toward the Indian-Chineae crisis was spelled out by Foroign Secretary Lord Home at the United Nations Sept. 27 — and he added that toe praition, in London’s view, has not changed. ★ _ ♦ e,. Lord Home said at that time: “The Chinese now are 150 miles inside Indian territory. India has been forced to rearm. Everybody knows they are peaceful people. Everybody knows they are being subjected ‘ Weigh Religious Issue ATHENS (AP) - n» Greek Orthodox Holy Synod is deliberating on stoether King Paul and Queen Frederlka should be godparents to a son of Francis Noel-Baker, British Laborlte member of Parliament. Hare Warns Candidates to Follow Poster Rules LANSING (DPI) seeking office in the Nov. 6 election were warned today to keep toeir placards off polling places, and freeways. Secretary of State James M. Hare, who is also supervisor of elections in Michigan, also urged candidates not to nail or tack posters on trees on either public or private lands. BBAUTIFUL COVBRABB FOB THB PROBLBM SKIN... 1>JTgJWFURE(*)Vi^^ •4l|pill|wMltkeu«mMth MAX FACTOR'8 Hem OM4NU MMImM fm MW •empiMton, tkMring Wtmbhm from tighl ln»lonlly. r*« to euel Pure Mo9lsfeoblheeyi*llh»ls#ksA fhof help* ileP h««l*du •• “i**"^ ml» *okw...Nro atogh eliWe ire* M H ifaitoflevw ilfeoVi uf ehonoee eoloft nyeuwithonoirilicpilc BE THE FIRST TO 4 in « puMte Brings You the 7 A.M. 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It sold more than a million. ory. It’s the one where Berman referred to an ahline captain crooked smile but straight And where Berman, frantically trying to tell a stewardess the vdng Is ON FIRE, gets the CLASSIC nasal answer: “Coffee, tea or milk?" “We haven’t time for coffee, tea or milk,’’ Berman shouts. “We ere doomed.’’ “WeUr then," replies the stew- airlines as a deskftil of combined orders from the Civil Aeronautics Board and Federal ». lUnee Berman first ee-It, .the following events havatranspired: —Some airlines have taught their stewardesses NOT to say, “Coffee, tea or milk" for the simple reason that passengers were laughing every time the phrase was uttered, —Many pilots have made open efforhi to improve cabin. PA announcements after Berman’s s^fliy[ of their clipped, metallic voices. .... .. ..... (Sample: “We’U be cruising at an altitude of... of... Oh, I dunno, about 18,(i00feet ”) - —At least one airline put the irp cups for airsickness bags It of sight in ■ out of svht in the seat pockets because Berman remarked it Billy Graham Sweeps Latins Off Their Feet BUENOS AIRES (AP)-A tail, Bible-carrying American has been in Buenos Aires three days and has swept the troubled Argentine public temporarily off its feet. Evangelist Billy Graham, In a barrage of personal and television appearances Sunday, said he would like to “see the spiritual flame for Christ sweep across a troubled country." VATICAN CITY (AP) - The Roman Catholic bishops o f t h e United States have named the Most Rev. John F. Dearden, archbishop of Detroit, as treasurer of the National Catholic Welfare Conference Board. He also was elected to the doctrinal commission for faith and morals, one of 10, 24-member commissions guiding the Roman Catholic Ecumenical Council. The most Rev. Allen J. Babcock, bishop of Grand Rapids, was named head of the lay organizations department. “Argentina certainly has its share of difficulties,” Graham said. “But like everjfwhere throughout the world, they are not so great that they cannot be overcome. Argentines, as we In the United States, now need a stronger push for honesty, integrity morality." The evangelist told newsmen on his arrival that he has more or less adopted “a hands-off policy on politics” during his Latln-American tour. “What I say can hardly conflict with the political situation of a country,” he said. Graham, who has been drawing overflow crowds everywhere, said he has come.acro8S “no antagonism whatsoever” from the Roman Catholic clergy or Catholics themselves. “On the contrary,” he i “Catholic bishops in every large city have offered me their welcome.” Argentina is Graham’s last stop on his Latin-American tour. Dearden Selected to Welfare Post Sitt«r Florence Says That's All, Brother LONDON (UPI) - A British brewery announced today it changed its plans to name its new pub near St. Thomas’ Hospital “The Sister Florence,” in honor of famed British nurse Florence Nightingale, because a hospital nurse named Sister Florence objected. The pub’s new name: “The Pillbox.” ‘ was the first thing ha saw when ha took his seat. Barman’s monologue waa outright aatira and even verbaT caricature, buti itt contained enough truth to make the air- 8PBAK8TRUTH “Just like that adage, ‘Many a truth is spoken in jest’,” Bier-man chuckles. “If I hadn’t touched on some problems that are very real to an airline passenger, people wouUn’t h a v e been laughing so hard.” flying himself but still thinks the airlines are guilty of “Immature jmdjcUldisA prac--tices." “For example,” Berman says, “Take the announcement they make bn every landing — ‘Fbr your own comfort, the captain asks that you keep your belts fastened until the plane has come to a stop and the engines have been turned off.’ “Hell, everyone knows it’s for safety, not comfort. ’The airlines areTust afrajd to use the word ‘safety.’ “H the plane stopped suddenly you’d push your head through the seat in front of you. Furthermore, seat belts aren’t comfortable. They’re binding and have you ever tried to reach a lighter in your pocket when the belt was fastened?” Berman has flown several times to Europe and suspects someday he’ll write a skit about Trans-Atlantic a ir travel. “The part that always gets me is when the stewardess demonstrates the use of lifejackets and confides where they’re located— and then never tells you how to get the thing out from under the seat,” Shelley complains. “I’m always too embarrassed to ask. You know, you like to feel sophisticated about air travel.” SKITI8DEAD Berman himself does not regard the airline bit as his favor ite. He hasn’t used it since Dec. 17,1960 - the day two airliners collided over New York City with a death toll of nearly 140. THmline Stereo Automatic Player AIX 4 SPEEDS Dual Speaker SjratM NEW The •99 |95 Good Housekeeping of Pontiac SI W, lluroo St. FE 4-156S Ptsn Hew te Fh Up Year genie fsr tlie lelMaiftl OnUINt eRIBITM. MOSiUCHLE I2”x1i” 000 lstOIUU.ITT t Nr Sheet PURE VINYI. TILE l OC Npular I mt$. LIFE GUARANTEE GENUINE FpRMIGR SALE 39* PONTIAO'S UUIOIST TIUeEllIER ( IS 26%,.l « jN ■ njUTIO WALL TILE CARPET $495 SALE 0*4* VA -in popular Mfld and tt OUR OWN INtTALUTION WORK OONI BY IXF^ OMn mitH ntan., Fii tR QtOf NpMbr DO-IT-YOURSELF Genuine CERAMIC WALL TILE ALLOOLONS MotR. Commerwlal Vw Ft. ■-r&dt-— ntn itTiMATit r *f StoNl If You Don’t Buy Prom Us, Wo Both Lose Nonoy! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! “I bought an English-language paper, and that was it for the airline aklt, It stopped being funny. “Actually. I had aourad onJt_ WBer because my prBe iaughi^ at it and when ttmtlmg/ “I was in Italy that day and someone asked me if I had heard about the accident,” he recalls. pens, I know the material had it. But the coUlsion made tip my mind and I keep refusing to revive it even though It’s still the most requested skit I have.” Berman admits the Ut won him immediate friends in the ■towardeiiet ask Mm te make the cabhi PA amMoocemeats. This Is a mistake. Barman in-varliblpniMistijie wriig airport and the wrong alclliie.' . “Wo have just landed in Cincinnati,” he will proclaim to startled passengers on an American Airlines plane that has just landed in Los Angeles, “and we want to thank you for fly-IngTWA." Despite the hatchet job he did on pilots and stewardesses (pr steward!,” a Berman-ese 'm-pression that has been adopted e airlines as official lan- K), he has received many f" from crew members thanking him for the ribbing. “Ones I got a letter from aa fessioa," 8belley says, ^’but so kelp me that was the only gri^. Even alrliiie exeentives liked the skK. “Eastern asked me to do it at Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker’s fgtvweir party when he retired Eastern’s president’* ' Berman got a plaque in i960 from the National Aviation Club in Washington - inscribed, "To the mail who has done the least for commercial aviation.” “I earned U,” saya Shelley proudly. S. African Men Armed JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP)-The Jkdiannesburg Star re-p(^ the surrounding area soon have ipore than 6,000 men under arms as commandos to guard public installations against sabotage or assault. Focus on Fashion Good vision is important. , . ond so is your appearance-^ Nu-Vision has over ^ frome styles for your selection. contour, colors to compliment every complexion, designs to dramatize every personality. Nu-V»itpn offer* ecompleta opticel jervie# frwludlns exemfnstion, contect lenses, precision lens vituiing, lest repair service and complete eyeglass . manufacturing facilities. NVisipn I. ITIINMAN. O.D.. 109 NORTH SAGINAW ST. Pbeoe FI 2.2199^ iiy 9:10 te 5:10. FrMar 9:10 to iilO DIVIDED PAYMENTS AVAILABLE You'll weor witk complete fashion confidence Here are just a few from our vosf selection Count on Penney's for e A. Bengaline faille weave with Sanforized plu.s finish, smartly styled with two hip pockets—snap front closing—figure flat- ^ 05 tering tuclft. 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OCTOBKIt 22^ 1062 _ Ruth Peers in the Looking Glass arid Cries Fiddle-De-Dee By Rimi MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON I dreamed I VOS In Wonderland, and adien I itepped Utfough ' the I>»lcing Slass ind began reading the lewspapers, everything aeemed like 1960 again, but with a Mad HatU^ twist... Praddent Eisenhohter was out ‘ ^vigotously. than ever,'but blasting away at the administration’s mishandling oI the Cuban crisis. Jdu F. Kennedy, who had been using the same verse and now demanding that Coba be kept ont of the political dhma. Was everyone mixed up exicept me? There vras Ike, pleading With Maryland voters to send Kennedy’s step^brother-in-law, Newton St^s, to Congress, while JFK was urging his defeat. ALL bBxEDIF Burial Insurance Sold by Mail $1,000 life insurance . . -* ‘ wiU not burden your k with funeral and other expenses. This NEW policy is especially helpful to those between 40 and 90. No medical examination necessary.' OLD LINE LEGAL RESERVE UFE INSURANCE. ... No agent will call on you. Free information, no obligation. Tear out this ad right now. . . . Send your name,, addtess and year of birth to: Central Security Life Insurance Co., Dept. V-196. 1418 West Rosedale, * Fort Worth 4. Texas. I shifted my bemused eyes to Connecticut, where Dee was plugging away for the election of an Alsop to the governorship, but Kennedy was telling the same voters to scuttle this brother of his ardent suporters, writers Joe Stewart Alsop. I drifted over to the White Hniise and saw Jacqueline Ken-, nedy hiding behind the bushes on the White House lawn to observe the ceremonial reception for Algerian strongman Ahmed pen Bella. This reassured me. She must have resumed her job as an inquiring photographer, and was stealing a shot. ★ > Other shots rang out, however, and when a child beside her winced at the 21-gun salute, someone discovered them and called put, “First Lady.” This seat me stral^t to the Tortoise, where I deinumded to know less about what wm going on. He peered over his tor- Marriage Licenses “This is iihat we mean by getting Americf m o via g tkn, he added: “Very, very,* very slowly. Desperately I peered ardund for Vice President Nixon, and felt instantly at home. He was Ireimtlessi lorm* J. cooper, Jirfrea F. Lee. Rocheslor and Noreen ’a«sper*'M.**^uchon, 3231 0»tl»nd ind An. SouthfUld .nd Dor*. L.' Jensen, Boynl 0»Jt »nd Oood«ll, Sdndlson Meljb'-Co*, «» W. Colgate and - 130 Hudson ..........J. Maut*. Reynoldsburg, _ , ...... -----a^^rniTAldrene A^MIk*lson;-mrinlng | PaniC-StriCkenpI fUShed tO thC O. Keen*, Detroit I C Combs. Southfield Lftke Orion tnd M»ry against the Communist menace from within, and challenging his opponent to televised debates. I knew where I was, I thought, until I switched the dial and saw a 3sry W. C Rinehart, fronting him, ^ RUNS TO RED QUEEN senith A Miracle. Lake Orion Gordon L. Stevens, alTJ Aubur Linda L. Bliss. Roche-*" Joseph O. DeVrlendt, _ ...... . Enenlord. Farmington • ------r. Blrmlnghi .....____ Birmingham ■nimp E. Brooks. Holly and Patricia Terry. Dreyton Plnins p. pUuti. Dreyton M. Le»ch, CUrkrton lam E. BBllard, Rese Md Patricia A. Ferguipn. E. Red Queen to tell her someone had fouled up toe n... match,^^buLJihfi._iiiM»ppfirLLJ’Qff I tried to look toward Russia, but a WaU obstructed my vision. “SUly girl,” she chided, "Don’t yod know that the East Berliners have a New Frontier, too?” Ttoops were garrisoned in Dixie, and I moaned to myself, Poor Ike, with so nmeh trouble in Uttle Rock.” But the miUtary planes kept Students hanging effi^ of Kennedy instead of Eisenhower, and when I stumbled over to toe Duchess she lulled: “Tiit, tut, child. Everything is the same because it’s so different.” The March Hare told me to take seme more tea, aad although J^JMn’tJuwe-aay.Jt heip^ a lot, because I Unme-saw your head! Can’t you see that Khrushchev is still in toe Kremlin?’ a camel driver.” the March Hare you must nut at toast twice aU droltod. When I asked, camel driver?” the Mock Turtle sneered and said, VReally, you are very dull.” Indignantly I pultod myself up to my full three inches and said, ~ am not dull. This to 1960 and the three big trouble spots of toe BerUn. Cuba ‘ itoeast AsiaTTou’ve brought to date on Berlin Cuba, but what about. . .?’ tog Xyj^ like in the last campaiga. “She looks more kiasaj^e than (aat as that.' J looked at Congreu. Everyone was running, except a few senators who could stay in the same place this year without trying. Kennedy aeemed to he run- ning ... Ike was running, •!-though I thought he couldn't run again ... It was an too confusing! I peeped throu^ toe tooking glass at Jackie Kennedy r " * " humbly, “wnat's the Red Queen shrieked. “That’s why the Republicam have a new slogan, 'Let’s get Kennedy moving again’." In desperation I tried to ran back thrwgh the mirror, but the tyrannical Queen snickered: “Faster! Faster! A slow sort of country! Now, here,. takes all the running you can do, to keep in the same place. If want to get somewhere else. JUNK CARS^ AND TRUCKS WANTED -HIGHEST PRICES PAID- WePickVp FE 2-0200 iMEimi \\m The Mostest for the Leastest!!! 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OCTOBER i«, im Biert By im NEWSOM Unnmi«iN«*iAMlyit Notas from tiM fortlgn nm e bios: DANOBRnONAUI AI|orIlii Promlor Ahmad Ban BaUa’a immounMinants againat tional rafarmdum which ia to 4a> (tatiiraFraneh pnaldanta wUl ba alactod by^d popuiarvota. actofr yculatlon In evacuation of Frei^ bases In Algeria, including the 8a* hara and the Frendi air and naval basaatMoni'^dmbir... .. ★ t Such a canmaign would ba to ra> open the Bvian which lad to Algerian paaiDa and would andangar iha whole pnh pam QtTi«nch iconomic^^a^ anca to indapandent Algeria. nie<;^Ai«j.ie____________ nw French government believes President diaries de OauUe the maaaiva vote de QauUe asked for but probably would be ‘ tidarmuirquituhg. Eying Algerian ntal tbs hilt would be conaulladeltbardi- Motivatii« against a foimpober Base Win about cr par cmt 0 votes cast hi the Oct. SIeonsttta*rdcdy or throupi embassy ohus-a Speculation that Premier Nikita Khrushchev might risit Bw United States aboady b leading to talk Macmillan b tUnktag of a pos-sibb Washtagten bip if Khnh ahehev makes it. Ihera also b talk of summit* Londm and Paris. Da GauUe b unlikely to attend WastOantaaCtaiMalorlM* rad AdiMNMr b to vib Ke» nady Nev. t and kb opiataas poet any Khmahchav vMt to the United Stataa, and, ineidenlally. ta United Nations, to be acooiit* led by apme new BarUn crbb ServicbSttforWifa “»»» of lit U. S< Spoco Chief tae ____Himabyan. range down to tlw pbto of the Brahmaputra Rb- dlan uppb pbWlikely"«tri up air drops to fronttarposb. STAMFORD, Conn. (IMbrvioa will ba hdd here next Sunday for Ifrs. fria EUen Johnson, wib of Roy W. 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She's so beautiful, she cannot h^p being a disappointment to some people; her voice, for instance, is talked abOut and sometimes derisively. , “She is intelligent and politically-oriented, but she does not allow fheH)rientation to go on view, as Eleanor Roosevelt did. bands, and have kept calendars — mentally, if not physically--with a date cfa’cled on them, the happy date when they caiUeavc ...... -• ■ 0 VlB the While House and live again That is because of her beauty: l^e is so close to being a movie star in her appearance, that p<^ pie think she should have all ' accoUntrements of a great professional actress. You know, there are no sub-goddesses ... “At any rate, she’s playing a. Toiei»w.-She’i playinrtt well, After we’ve passed that date she has circled bn the calendar in the second floor of the While what date would it be? ti8te,\ was a (diilanthropist all over the world, was' modiest and had all the virtues. But the depression hid her nuny beauties from the public. “The most politically astute? Probably Eleanor Roosevelt, pnd she nmy have been the most outspoken. When the Bpiniah Civil war tdi ping on aJshe heard PresidOTt Lyndon B Johnsro has taken issue with unnamed U.S. diplomats who have criticized his handshaking and fojksy <^ts Maybe Janri7I»0? -“tHe^^ witlrofdliiaiY citizens while tour- PULLY GUARANTEED Aftochmantg Included $1.25 Week Fite Heme Deaenitratioi OB 4-1101 ' Within 25 Mile Rodips CURTS APPLIANCES Faeurr AMktriitS Wklt« D«>l«r NIW LXATION <4SI HATCHIRY ROAD OR 4-1101 WmI m M-W to AIntort U4.. N*rto to H»toh«r|’ Tani Well I BlMk« Hitthrry Rd. OR«a Hnd*y »nd Fridar ‘Ul I F. M. know who the woman is.” Perry Wolff is a pioneer docu-mentaiy producer for television. He produced, after lengthy research and conferences with the First Lady the TV special, “A Tour of the White House with Mrs. John F. Kennedy” Wolff did so much research for the show, and came up with many fascinating facts about the White House and its inhabitants, that he’s put them all together in a handsome book of pictures and text named — “Well, what else could I name it?’’ — “A Tour of the White House with Mrs. John F. Kennedy.’’ He has become a great student of the dames of the White House, a First Lady fancier. He talks about them as if they were personal friends, and lists them in categories, as he and history see them: “The most beautiful — no question, if you ask me, Angelica Van Buren. She was her father-in-law, widower Martin Van Buren’s, ofj-fi'cial hostess. Trouble is, Angelica went to London and saw Queen Victoria crovvned, so she got , ‘queen fever.’ Several first ladies ing Writing in the latest issue of the State Department Newletter, a monti....................... had It, later, but ilNi was probably the worst. She wore a crown. “The most charming — Oolley Madison, of course. And the moat likeable. First, she wrote like Jane Austen. She had dynamism and pts. be had a sense of LBJ Defends Handshaking, Chats Abroad among U.S. diplomats here anfl overseas, John^n said: ‘Since the history bf nations began, heads of state and their ministers have ridden in regal and dipified aloofness past ttie people over whom they had domination. “We cannot demonstrate the essence and spirit of the American political system—in which the just powers derive from the people themselves—unless we leave our limousines abroad, as we would at home. “After all, what dignity are we trying to prove—that of the office of the vice president or that of the human race?’’ Since becoming vice president, Johnson has traveled 75,000 miljes on six trips to 18 countries. In his signed article, Johnson named no U S. diplomat by name, but criticized those at foreign posts ‘who would rather keep out of sight undei| the mistaken impression that our ways of political leadership are a national liability.’’ used to sauff. i two baaUea. a big one‘far the that's gsod eaoagb rocoaiiMad- The most underrated First tady was Lou Hoover. loover. She spoke is «qi«cto(f to wiiMn Rr:ow-flai .If Venua Doe. 14." some refugees were trapped in Madrid, she cabled FDR, ‘ARE YOU OR THE STATE DEPART- America’s first la^es have been fascinating. Not all were intelligent or attractive; one or two were bad influences on their hus-eountry; a few have loved the limeli|d>t, but most have looked forward eagerly to the )>eaceful post - presidency. Some were crafty, one was Judg^ legally insane; all are fascinating. As for Jacqueline Kennedy, she took her college degree in history, Wolff says, so she likely knows her “place” as well as anyone. Norwegian King Visits London for Two Weeks LC^DPN (UPI) - King Olav V of Norway arrived here last night for a private visit at the conclusion of his five^lay state visit to Scotland. The king will spend two weeks here, staying at the Norwegian ambassador’s residence. The so-called “rare earths” not particularly rare. Most of these chemical elements are more common than gold or silver. Some, like lanthanum, cerium and neodymium, are more abundant than lead. does it take to build f/ariner II Steams On. WASHHipTON (iB-Tbe . . of MsrliMr II was released today by the National Aenmiwlics and Space Administration. Mariner II. launched AOg. Venua Dec. M. Mariner at 7 a.m. (Pontiac time) today: Distance from the ,earth-»,499,188 miles. Distance from Venus—22,710,147 miles. Radio signal: Good. Tokt Ice 0«am Bribt VALDOSTA, Ga. W -Cltyh'pU employes got free ice cream when a local vendor read Uwt they were dtaaningtHeiruwn. ■, * ■ w w Id one of the an4iloyes, po-lice U.D. W. Whaley: ★ ★ w - “I think he (the vendor) was The Dome of the Rock in Jenisaleip in a spot sacred to Jew, Christian and Moslem. Here tile great temple; Vddoita City Pmployw *»»» “> -Tub«^f T( /AayB. NEW YORK (EPD-4W0 what’s on the tube before you brush your teeth. . The (foUapiible T\ibe Mamifao* tursrs Council says mayonnaise now is beiiig packed in metal tubea like toothpaste. . 3C>iA.lVl4C>P^3C> DOWNTOWN CHICAGO nr MORE? ■.. WMT FOB?... MW Rl WATS AT WHO ADMIRAL Portable TV with FREE Stand Slim, lightweisht pratoble TV 155 tq. in. of viewable picture area. 17,000 view-oble picture power. Rolloway ‘ included. pleitlc end fabric. NO MONEY OOWN-TERMS TO FIT YOUR BUDGET! It depends on how you go about it. One way brings security immediately—n the stroke of a pen. Life insurance. From the moment you receive your policy, your family is guaranteed more money than you could save in years. Nothing else gnaTantccs this full protection right from the start. It if one of the unique advantages of life insurance. Are you making the most of the tmique advantages your life insurance offers ? Here’s how to find out I Unless you have reviewed your policies with your life insurance agent recently, you may not be making the most of the choices and opportunities they offer. Ask your agent how the unique advantages of life insurance can be used to guarantee funds for children’s education ... to pay off a mortgage... provide cash for emergencies .., even to bring you a retirement income you can’t outlivcl Sec your life insurance agent regularly. He’s trained to help you make your policies even more valuable. Institute OF Life Insurance Central Source of Information About Life Insuranct 488 Madison Avenue, New "Vork 22, N. Y, WHEN BdMEONE’S COUNTIN6 ON YOU., .VOU CAN COUNT ON ‘UPE INSURANCE LAYAWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS AND SAVE! PHILG013tu.fi REFRIGERATOR Spaeleut 13 out an idiotic 14-yaar 'THE PONTIAC PRESS, Crompton velveteen in a trio tjantly collared with Bishop k and holiday affairs. Beauty Aids Need Care j Most womeiri today are using more beautifying requisites and cojors than at any other time in history, but many of them are inadvertently wasting some of their make-up by not caring for it in the most economical manner. Women Set Fall Agenda ’The fall agenda for the Anna Gordon Unit, Women’s Christian Temperance Union, was reviewed at a workshop meeting Thursday in the Oakland Avenue Presbyterian Church. . w Mrs. Firlink A. Denver, president, will be a delegate to the state convention Wednesday through Friday in Ypsilantl. She will be guest speaker at the Mary Morton Unit’s pre-Thanksgiving dinner on Ndv. 15, The district convention Nov. 7 in the First Baptist Church, Royal Oak, was also announced. The Anna Gordon Unit will present the memorial service on this occasion. Miss Williams Honored at Bridal Shower Carolyn Juanita Williams was honored at a bridal shower Friday in the home of Mrs. Kurt Bemman Jr. of Parkin- Attending the evening affair, ere the honoree's mother Mrs. Charles Williams, Watkins Lake, and Mrs. K. E. Bemman of Holly, mother of the future bridegroom, Paul V. A Nov. 16 wedding In the Big tmd little sisters look begmlkg in their mtOck‘ ing dresses by Yblaiule. Their black Crompton velveteen jumpers are beaiiUfully apptiqued with hearts at tite umistline and accented with their own special cotton print blouse. „ . , Q: I am a siiq» woman in the mid-Ms. I m to business five days a wAk and on a Saturday I like to get into my ■ ‘ I out into the country the weekend. Sometimes ”i friend will go with me tjpt very often I alone. ____l/would like to know is this:/Would it be |Woper for mo to go alone into the 1 lounge of the hotel h I am staying to have ; in the evening? / If the hotel in which you t staying is a smalt coun-r-tope hotel, your going in-the cocktail lounge for a k would be quite all right, /but not if it is a large oom-' mercial hotel. ■ • ★ dr ★ I Q; My husband and I and two other couples are planning to go to a night club this - Saturday liight to celebrate my birthday. The other women and myself would like to wear evei^ drewes but bur , husbands refuse to wear tuxedos. Must we forego wearing evening dresses because of this or would it be proper for in to wear them even though the men will be wearing business suits? A: Untii a few years ago it ’wouM have been very cheapening for women to be seen wearing evening dresses in a night club accompanied by men in business suits. Today, while still not correct, it is seen more and more often and no one will think any-, thing about it if jfou wear < simple evening gowns Your requisites will continue to provide their beautifying effects longer and better if you keep them clean and protected. When allowed to gather dust and grime in unkempt cases and trays, or left open to become dry or faded, they are needlessly When not in use, keep containers closed for best protection. Keep all your make-ups away from heat and like to lose 25 pounds next few montlV^ friend is due back le Navy and I am to let him see me _ so fat. 'What can I do to lose weight fast?” DIET PSYCHOLOGY Excess poundage is due to several reasons but the n conunon is simply the fact we eat nuire calories than we bum up in work or exercise. And most of the highly pulh licized diets will help you streamline your figure if you will follow them to the letter; But s^ial factors demollidt our resolve and often ruin our dieting schedule. For example, a famous German scientist named Bayer used a group of hens as the subject fw a very interesting experiment in eating. He would starve the hens for a period of 24 hours to make sure they had a hearty appetite. Then, if he placed one hungry hen in front of a 100-gram pile of wheat, she would peck away till she had (xm-sumed an average of SO grams. . After that, Nte’d stop, apparently quite satisfied. But if he placed a similar hungry hen in front of a much larger pile of grain, she wouldn’t stop at the SOgram mark, but would actually peck away till she had eaten M to 50 additional grams of wheat. Aplied to us human dieters, that would suggest we better not sit down in frmit of a table groaning with viands. Instead, we should have -mand according to the amount of food, as well as;, the frequency of servings, placed before us. As a third variation, Prof. Bayer let a hungry hen stand before a {die of r peak aWay till she stopped of her own free will. Then he placed another-hungry hen bMlde her. As it began to eat, the first and: suimosedly “filled’’ hen, would immediately begin eating some more. saw wmild then keep on tiB she consumed 60 per cent more wheat. And if 3 h hens were friac she’d devour e 60 per cent (Alway* wnta t» Or. Cnnt Ut wn ot tbte B«wi|wp«r, misiMint • lone 4-c*nt •tampM, Mit*^ lop* Mid M oonti to «om Wplnp •nd prtBttaif coot* whoa jrou for on* olMo bookloto.) . Home Club Elects Its Officers Officers tor the Better Home and Garden Club w«re elected at the i meeting’njuraday in D e V 0 a Tables. Assisting Mrs. W. M. Mor-' ' i president, will Mrs. Joe D. DuffieM, first vice president; Mrs. J. L. Slaybaugh, seeond vice president; Mrs. Alfred Rothweiler, recording secretary; Mrs. Barney McKevits, financial secretary; Mrs. Ral|di Parker, corresponding secretary; and Mrs. E1 b e r t Wilmont, treasurer. Mrs. George Ciissman gave the histny of the cosmos, ex-‘ t flower of the month. Committee for the day included Mrs. CJyde Arnfanrson, Mrs. Mabel I. Ibdd, Mrs.Le» Roy Hecox, Mrs. Morgan and Mrs. Duffield. Women s Section suits. Qi Within the next week Marks 60th Year rehearsal. A friend of i told me that It is bad ^ok for . ^''a. brWe to refiM itortto'lhe-Wldlling. i| toems ai much ' bytorian Church is irianned. Oakland County Alumnae Chapter of Delli Beta Soiw-ity wUl celebrate the 60th anniversary of Its founding at a Fount’s Day luncheon Saturday at the Villaga Woman’s Club. Mrs. Russell T. CostellPi Orchard Lake, will be one of the sneakers at the meeting. Shell natlohalvpan' Other —................... Mrs. Winfield C. Hinmah, Pit president, Mrs. George Betker, collegiate province itotoment ia true? Ar tt la’''i|»‘"Old tion that fbr a hride to taae part in heir owe wedding re-Mary Jo Kurk, haarsal would bring her bad college chepter director at luck. Mang bridep fearing to Wayne State UMveralty. defy, this aiiparatltion, do Mrs. Kenneth T. Haven, baveathers aland in for them chard Lake, Is endownwnt in, at the rehearsal. But there citeirman,forthegt»«p.-% . O' is no reaaon why a bride, A * w who is not superstitious. Reservations ara behg tak- may. not take part in tiia rt-en hy Mrs. . haM tf sha wls£s to do Lutm M Blrrolnfftiw . • ih • These Guild Ten members of All 5ainl.t Episcopal Church, (from left) Florence Schlosser of West Huron Strem, Mrs. Donald £. Harrison of Mark Avenue and Mrs. Rodley SUkey of Elb T 5' ' ' l‘ ' ’‘l , , , ' X'‘ -- 'toe I*0^iAC lygSSb HOtoAY, OdTOl Lia8&2 /f The town of Flln Flon In Manl-ibuUd on the natural rock ^ of toba, SOO milca north of the inter- the terrain. Sewer airf water Ilw national hotter is known as "The are laid above ground in insulated Town on the Rocks."/as it was I boxes. Anyone eon cleon^oor elothmg, but the proof is the finished product! -Since 1929 Fox has speciolized in perfection . . . using only the most modern eqtnpment and ^tBchniqueF to give you confidence always that no motter what the occasion you'll olwoys look your very best. Every garment is thoroughly inspected before leaving our plant, revitalized with like-new freshness through our expert cleaning processes. Try us just one time, ypu'll see why our customers return year after year. Quality ^Cleaning Since 1929 Pick-Up and Delivery Service Available 719 West Huron FE 41536 Collar, Cuff Scrubbers-^ Attention EAST LANSING -> Here’a pood news for ccdlan and cuffs on eynthe* tie fiber ahbrta to get tiiem now working to permanently eliminate the static electrical attraction of {Soil to certain wea^ points of synthetic fiber clothing. Oeegan reports. Cotton of itself does not attract soil, haaaplalns,^ but the static gaaUtiee cF many current synthetic materials do, and often pose a stubborn washday problem. Deegan spoke on synthetics and det«t|[entsbef«w a Michigan Institutional Laundry Conference Oct. 4 at The Kellogg Center for Continuing Education, Michigan State University. On the subject of detergents, he has a tip for housewives. Stand fast in the face of enthusiastic advertising, he advises, and continue to use the type of detergent rec-Onunended by the maker of your particular washing ma- puroufdi carelUl study, they know the type of detergent which works best. There’s still one thing you can get for a penny nowadays — your incorrect weight... Today’s kids I are very versatile; they can think iup a dozen ways not to around the house ... One local I restaurant boasts it’s so homelike 'you have to wash your own dishes. -Earl Wilson PLAYTEX WILL PAY YOU*l TO TRY THE NEW... PLAYTEX LIVING BRA WITH SHEER ELASTIC Strtkh-«v«r®, shatr alastic madw without rubbor New lightnessl New coolnesti New beauty. Plajftex wants you to know the comfort of strotch-ever. It is sure once you try It you'll wear It always. So buy yours today at Federol'si Well mall the coupon and Playtex will send you $11 Stretch-ever elastic is machine washable with detergents, even bleach; won't yellow, pucker or stretch ... lasts and Ibsts. Choose nylon lace or cotton-Dacron* polyester cups. Sizes 32A to 42C. Shop now and sovel •Ituf. TM. DuPont Corp. 3’* Longlint . .6.95 eVSHY FASHION NBEDS ITS OWN FOUNDATION .. . fef Fod-ero/'i oxportly irainad eor$ofloros fit you corroctly for comfort, OPIN IVIRY NIGHT TO 9 Monday through Saturday DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS ,■ 1 ................ E. Jems, Avemo, and Leonard George Cyr Jr., son of the Leonard C, . Cyrs of Southfield, MRS. LEONARD GEORGE CYR, JR. Cyr-Jones Vows Marry in Evening Priscilla Ann Jones held a satin-covered Bible which belonged to her great-greatgrandfather aa she exchanged nuptial vows with Leonard Ge^ Cyr Jr. Saturday in the First United Missitmary Church. The candlelight evening ceremony was performed by Rev. 0. P. Eastman of Calvary United Missionary Church, Detroit, assisted by Rev. W. K. Burgess. A reception followed in the church Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Floyd E. Jones of Joslyn Avenue and the Leonard G. Cyrs of South-field. SATIN GOWN Pearl and sequin applique accented the bride’s princess gown of white delustered satin styled with chapel train. Her silk illusion veil fell from a satin pillbox. Attending their sister were Susan Leigh Jones, piaid of honor: Mrs. Durwood Shawl, Royal Oak, and Mrs. A. Tren- bridesmaids with Mrs. Robert Jlmerson. Nosegays of white pompons and pink rosebuds cwnple-..........air dresses of ^icia Loree Kent was flower giri ami Gregory A. Reich-ard carried the rings. Best man was David Keller, South Bend, Ind. Seating some 300 guests were Robert Keller, Versailles, Ky.. A. TVenton Kent, Robert Jlmerson, J. Julian Baker and Durwood Shawl. After their eastern honeymoon, Mr. Cyr who is a graduate of University of Michigan, and his bride will live on Westway Drive. iCiiWPUiHwrg College Student News John W. Oawwn Jr., who was seloclad to do spodal resoarch in dwtalstry at -tba Oak Rldga (TaniLl Institute of Nudoar Studloo. has boon olielod prMldeat of tho Juno graduating class at David Officers of tho Juno class will take charge of all activities of June 'Love-Struck' Woman Nabs Her Mon at 90 WORCESTER, England (UPI)*-Mrs. Louisa Lloyd, ‘‘tovo-struck” at age M, announced last night aha will marry the Hyear-old man she climbed a fire escape to catch. haam and her Inlondid, William arane, ai« botii T^ dents at an old peoplo's home here. It will be her third marriage, CNme’s socood, "It was love at first sight," Louisa bubUed today. "I t William on a park bench. He was * hit shy, but finally he got around to; inviting me to have a cup of tea with "I was love-struck," jrtie said. "He was livitg in another old people’s home at the time and I made it my business to visit him there regulariy.v she said. “Once he was confined to bed with a cold and I was forbidden to visit him. ★ ★ ★ "That didn’t daunt me," she said. “I went up the fire escape and William was waiting at the top to welocme me." didates and will sqrve through the bOI, winter and Dawson, son of the i Dawsons of Asoott Street, is ■ senior at Lipscomb, mejor- aetivw hi the c fan efatt), having besa tdseted as Its prasi^t fids sprlnr for the 1NI4S school year. Miss Henry is Honoree November bride-elect Myrla Jean Henry, opened gifts of linens following a luncheon Saturday at Devon Gables.-Mrs. Harold Baldauf of Monroe Street was hostess. Mrs. Gordon C. Henry of James K Boulevard attended her daughter’s party. Victor ScKbclcher, when he became France’s under secretary of state for the colonies in 1848, freed Martinique's 72,000 slaves. ' Arriving from Hazel Crest, 111., were Mr. Gerrit Brand, mother of the future b rid e-groom; Thomas Gerrit Brand and his sister, Mrs. William Vallow. Bcckwith-EvaiR SPECIAL CLEARANCE SALE! GIDEON WILTON ^3? Handsome 'dll wool pile scroll Wilton In a wide and beautiful selection of colors at Beckwith-Evons . . . Yours for only . COME IN! FIND OUT HOW TO WIN A O’ X 12’ CARPET FREE! WORTH SlSfPS! RRINO IN THE COEPON RELOW "^{i“ NOTHim TO BUY. NOTHING TO WRITE. r.M. F R E E Name ....... No. and Street City ......... PLEASE PRINT State . OJPflV DAILY TIL 9^EXCEPT TVESDAY TIL 6 ISeckwitk-Cuons I'lNR PLOqR "COVRRIliOS 4990 Dixie Highway, Orayton Ploini OR 44)433 Music Club Has Recital Mrs. Carl aifford of North Telegraph Road Was hostess to the Chopin Music Club Sunday afternoon. A program of piano solos and duets was presented by members. Those taking part were Lejgh Brewster, Vicki Ramos, Elizabeth KImmins, Diane Haskill. Marcia Brinson and Mary Ellen Keefer. Others were Patricia Henning, Vickie Leczel, Georgia Burklow, Cheryl Saville, Janet Aldea and Linda Luen-berger. More students include Cynthia Young, Laura Seiss, Alice Schurrer, Sandra Yullle, Donna Luenberger, Belinda Keefer, Penny Pepper and Jean Ann Keefer. At Albion College, JoeUyn K. Prout. daughter of Rev. and Mrs. W. Cadman Prout of WUUams Ufca RMd, has bMn initiated to the Pi Bata W)l Sorority. - 5-- - ^ Martha L. Kanm,^h iil pledged the Zata fhu Alpha Sorority. Her parents UonelKamms of Peril of Park Street namies J. McClellend, eon of the Harold L McCMIendi of Pontiac TraQ hae been named a distinguished cadet In the Air Force ROTC unit at Michigan College of Mining and Technology, Hough- Students at Northwood Institute, Midland, have elected class officers and representatives to the Student Senate for the schoM year. Freshman officers include Richard Smith, from Avondale High School, president, and William Trieloff, Romeo High School, graduate treas- Among sophomore officers are Jack Graham, Avondale High, vice president, and Audry Cummings, Rochester High School, secretary. Student Senate representatives include Vicki Corpron, Pontiac Central High School, women’s dormitory. Ndvy Mothers to Plan Gifts Pontiac Navy Mothers Club will meet Nov. 1 at the Naval Training Center. Plans for Thanksdving baskets and Christmas gilts to Battle Creek and Dearborn Hospitals and spns of members on active duty will be discussed. The next regular meeting of the Past Conuhanders Club of Southeast Michigan will be at the Veterans Memorial Building In Detroit, Dec. 4. r-'-X THE PONTIAC PRESS, MQXDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1962 / Wih Wi0r Own Car Is the Errand Boy ByRirnilfILLETT Ncwipspn EntcrpriM Awi« “The trouble with a twoHsar family li that a man never where His wue ii.” eaya a young husband. “When we had cn^ one car I could call my wife at any hour of the day and find her at home. Now that she has a car of her own I can never catch her> at home.” There’s a lot of truth in the husband’s complaint that wives on wheels don't qnmd much time athonte. Bnt It's net beeanie Oe wiy*s .pOOr awn ^earare. >What keeps a wife with a car on the road a good part of each day Is chauffering and errand running. The wife with a car ered. She drives to a ket and picks them out herself. The wife with a car doesn’t ask her hushand to go to the JUDITH ANN FOX Mrs. Dora Fox of Melrose Avenue and George Fox of Wayne announce the engagement of their daughter Judith Ann to Charles Aubrey Phillips, son of Mr. and Mrs. Taylor C. Phillips of Sterling Avenue. A Dec. 22 wedding is planned. hotpgn . 518 W. Huron Street Near General Hospital FE 4-3669 %umode .^iWlCtrA-ytAK. SA1£1 S..ml,«o, N/LONS Full-Fashioned Plain or Micro Aa Hwr QUALiiy 2 N. Saginaw St. Perniantntn Tinting and Bleaching MURRAY SISTERS Beauty Studio LA DAME Beauty Salon, Inc. Open Daily 9-5 Thursday 9-8. a few stops on Oe way hom£ from work. She does all of And thon there are alt the errands the children think up for her to do, the overdue library books to be returned, the cookies to be drrqiped off for a school affair, the forgotten gym shoes to be rushed to school before gym And when the lucky wife with a car of her own isn’t running errands she is chauffeuring, taking kids to school and picking them up, driving them to dancing I, to games and birthday parties. And then, because she is on wheels and can get to them, there are all the meetings she is expected to attend as a "responsible member of the community.” The housewife with a car of her own doesn’t stay at home much — that’s true. But that’s because with a car of her own she is everybody’s chauffeur and everybody’s errand boy. Drive right out and buy him Ruth Milieu’s booklet, “Happier Wives (hints for husbands).” Just send 25 cents to Ruth Millett Reader Service, care of ’The Pontiac Press, P. 0. Box 489, Dept. A, Radio City Station, New York 19, N. Y. Booth chairmen for the Zonta Club of Pontiac’s fifth annual fair look over the floor plan for Wednesday’s 1 to 9 p.m. event. They are (from left) Mrs. Neal J. Scott, Mrs. Grace Olsen, Mrs. Earl Clark, Mrs. Beecher Fawcett, chairman, and Mrs. Ralph Williams will tend their wares during the fair in the First Federal Savings and Ij>an of Oakland club rooms. St Dunstan’s All Set Theater Fetes to Precede Opening St. Dunstan’s Theater Guild of Cranbrook begins its fail season Friday with a round of parties preceding its black tie and red carpet opening of “Wake Up, Darling.” Entertaining before the 9 o’clock curtain that evening will be Franklyn Donegan, Guild president, and his wife, the John S. Coppins, the David Raymonds and the William B. Saunders. Also among Friday’s hosts and hostesses are Mr. and Mrs. Darrell C. Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. James Stalker and Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hago- ’Fhe Garvin M. Bawdens plan- a supper party for the Brown-Upton Rites Wed in Joslyn Presbyterian Church Orchid-tippOd white gladioli banked the altar in Joslyn Avenue United Presbyterian Church for the Saturday vows of Judith Jo Upton to Henry Elbert Brown. Rev. Edmond I. Watkins officiated. Daughter of the Kenneth C. Uptons of West Hopkins Street, the bride appeared in white Chantilly lace touched with seed pearls and sequins, styled with chapel train. A Jeweled crovm caught her French illusion veil. Orchid gardenias, white carnations and Stephanotis comprised her bouquet. Mrs. Paul Smith, matron of honor, wore violet silk taffeta and chiffon over a matching sheath and carried violet carnations and pink roses. Cathy Hagan and the bride’s sister Vivian, who were bridesmaids, wore orchid taffeta and chiffon and carried orchid and pink carnations. Tammy Ann Upton was her sister’s flower girl. -Paul SmUb ,^iiliaod as best man. Ushers" were James Harrod, Clarkston, and the bridegroom’s brothers, Ronald of Pontiac and Donald of Union Lake. They are the sons of the Harold L. Browns of East Columbia Avenue. After the church reception, the newlyweds left for Niagara Falls, N. Y. ’They will live on Monroe Street. Coppertone gardenias accent^ Mrs. Upton’s champagne lace dress. The mother of the bridegroom, chose pink lace and corsage of white and silver gardenias. cast following Friday’s performance. Included in the list of players are Mrs. E. E. Wilson who has the female lead opposite Lawrence M. Finn. Dinner parties are planned before Saturday’s presentation by Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Raisch, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Scott and L. James Schneider. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Wilson will hold the cast party at their home following the final performance of “Wake Up, Darling” Nov. 3. The show runs this Friday and Saturday, and Nov. 1, 2 and 3. Sunspots in 19G0 caused one of the worst worldwide communita-tion^ biMkouts In rtcent years. lhBrS>iWjv'lhe United Slates was cut off from most of Europe and the Far East. Social Use, Food, Drink, Built Tables Social functions and the food and drink served at them, created demand for specific table shapes and. When afternoon tea became an important element in English life, a table from which to serve It wib designed. The narrow, half round table with drop leaves, called a hunt-table, was designed for the convenience of serving stand-up, pre-hunting breakfasts. Both types are still made with finely veneered tops. Ceres, the daughter of Saturn and Ops, was the goddess of agriculture in Roman religion, worship included fertility rites and rites for the dead. Ceres’, most-famous temple was on Aventine Hill, her chief festival was Cer-| ealia. Institute Club Me&mT The Business Institiite Women’s Club met Saturday afternoon in the library of the Institute. Cohostesses were Jllrs« Lillian Quayle and Mrs. C, E. Van ’Trease. - Mrs^RtcKardTuEn^esented an outline of the Nancy Taylor course now being offered at the Institute. Mray Parker and Mrs. Sol .ji ■ !•: plnntbe mietiiif. Ddrrlnf IMi each mendMfr idO Miig a bower In wfildl mate, m bnlNb It ef. of brightly cetorsd or SAVE irrjsJtsr* ' fumlluro,.. or wish to on Reupholatering —or have your worn pkKot New Custom Furniture rebuilt end recovered . . you can bo sure of during our annual FALL WtaiAM V Saee/ ■ furniture bultdfrtl' since 1932. Phono today... wo'll be glad to bring fabric samples to your. home and give you a free esthneta. - No obligation, of courso. WUXIAM WRIGHT Furniiiiro Mokoro md (fpkolatorora ' 270 Orchard Lake FE 4-0558 vurontoed B Veen wMDayo OmA "MOVIE PRODUCER PRAISES VOORHEIS" ’’FINEST DRY - CLEANING AND FINISHING ANYWHIRI" (clatlies woro from: Cintom Shop ShirtnMkon, Slii Ava., N.Y. Crlpps Impeitan and Cutsaai. Fonntalnbloaa, Miami; Castam Caiualaira, Laa Vogat.) tow MONEY-SAVING SKIRTS-PUIN SWEATERS Wo CloMi and Sclantifically Spot Thom VOORHEIS "I Hour" CLEANERS Mm.: 4160 W. WillM., M 'PmNaa BrMeh: 1»I Sulfliite-Av*. jStMwful It’s getting hard to find happy endings in books-expedally bank bqoks .... The man who v that “a job well done never needs doing again” has never weeded a garden — M e d i c i n e has advanced to the point where an ounce of prevention is worth about |20 - Earl Wilson. We're Celebrating Our 23rd Anniversary OEUMNG THE NEW SENSAllONAL PERMANENTS I IMPEIUALITCKMANENT | I OIL BATH $y:39 I Keg. $17.50 PERMANENT j COLDWAVE 1 In Oiir Jlndgct Dept. ^ I I For FroLIcm llnir $949 ^ , iUnnplela ^ Exlraordinnry 8peelnl Reg. $2S FEUMANENT Now Only $1250 With Any Service MELLO MIST IIAIU .SPRAY I 2 c 100 I UK HELENE CUimS .SPRAY | Heg.$2.S0 69« I Alt Permanents Unconditionally Guatanteed THE FINEST PERMANEm'S IN THE couNnarohrAiNABLE oniyatamibe’S VALUABLE COUPON NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY OpmFrtdoyHH9PM. Phone 11; S-9257 Beauty Salon FREE $250 Qifi Witli Etirll Pcniiuiicut | ____________________J X X Noi'Ut Saginnw Between Eewrenee and Pike |St. % MONTGOMERY WARdI Stoit H01111: 9 A. n. to 9:00 p. n. tktn Salviday B—i#-. THE PONTIAC ^RESS, MONDAV, OCTOBER 22, 1962 Ou coiMnimption Increased slx.|ehergy consumption merely dou-i told while total United Statesibled In the past 30 years. =All Permanents^ COMPLITE WITH COT AND SET *3* NONE HIGHER Shanroo lad Sat $1.95 Expert licensed operators to give you on eosy-to-tnonoge hofrcoty “long Ic3^^ peirnonem ; coming hoirstyle. No oppointment necessary, permanent complete in two hours. HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY SHOE Open Mornines et I A. M. 78 N. Saginaw Over toiley Mkt. 333-9660 By MRS^ MUtmSL UWRENCE Dear Mrs. Lawrencw: Last mimmer while our 16-year-oM daughter was visiting Mends. I had ha* room dona over. Nothing about it is right. Last ni^t she said I fiad dom-lated her by not giving her the around to see us. However, today I am thinking of trick and treat because I am presenting my trick and treat Jiiet this -week. NEW FALL SELECTION VeDOR MILLINERY AND SUPPLY M« N. Bar 81. alt m. CI*M«M St. FE E-M«7 BiMk E.cft B«l«rt OpSpS* BS. fram Ponl COME TO PONTIAC’S MOST COMPLETE CORSET SHOP . . . where our graduate cor-setieres will help you to a proper fit regardless of figure type and sizes. DON’T GUESS . . . be sure at the Bobette Shop. • Extra control of zippered styling with famous comfort and ease of all elastic Skipples. • Flattening lace front paneL • Controlling side and back panels. • Waltt-nipplng band. « Longleg Pantie 889 gives super-smooth thigh control; split-shield and all-erastic, stay-put leg are important, too. • Matching girdle 989 also available—same sllmtoing features. Both in White, S.M.L.XL. FORMFIT FIBER FACTS: rigid m«t*rl«l pH nylon; •Ipstle, acftato, nylon, rubber, coUon, Polyeeler. FORMFIT FIBER FACTS: acetate, nylon, rubber, cotton, polyaotar alaetic, txelualva ol ornamantatlon. Vie Our Convenient Charge Account PARK FREE —<• We will staEup your parking for 1 hour. A FREE BUS TOKEN is yours if you take the bus. BOBETTE 16 N. Saffinaw St. SHOP fc: I Heart — newest pillow star! Trio smocked on reverse side. Pattern 783: transfers: directions 14xl4-inch square; 12x13 heart; 112x15 oval. I Thirty-five cents (coins) for this pattern — add 10 cents for each pattern f6r Ist-class mail. Send to Laura Wheeler, care of The Pontiac Press, 124 Needle-craft Dept., P. 0. Box 161, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, This is a shorty which you will find pleasant to use and which gives you a loss of about five pounds in seven days. It tricks the pounds while it gives you ■ treats. N. Y. Print plainly pattern num-'ber, name, address and zone. I Newest rage — smocked acces-I series plus 208 exciting needle-craft designs in our new 1963 iNeedlecraft Catalog — just out! I Fashions, furnishings to crochet, jknit, sew, weave, embroider, quilt. Plus free pattern. Send 25 cents now! Lose That Fat Midriff No one will deny that a bulging midriff is an unlovely thing. Here’s one effective midriff shrinker : Stand with legs apart and hands clasped behind your neck. Bend over at the waist and try to touch your left" knee with your right elbow. Return to standing position, and repeat, touching right knee with' left elbow. First few times will be difficult; soon you’ll find it easy. Buy a few long-line bras. They will keep your silhouette looking trim until you’ve actually made it so with exercise and diet. Don't Let Your Child Dominate YOU clianee to choose the wellpaper and furniture herself, Nfy I band is as angry as I am i thinks we should try to rat the new furniture to the store ANSWER: Why go te aU tl Ireuble to prove that ya« wi not ’’dominatfaig” her? It you were tr^ to, you oe^ teinly didn’t get away, with It. Your daughanr is clearly able to resist any suspicion of domina- So we don't have to worry about her. Instead, let's concern ih you. Why Lose 5 Pounds in 7 Days Trick or Treat Diet Here By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN TL will soon be tricir or traat night and the kids will be conung feel that this is really an sual diet, and a boon to late fall reducers, because it gives you lots of variety and items of food you will really enjoy. Also, by adding more butter and sugar and whole milk and larger portions for the rest of the family, you can use the same menus for the entire family. SPECIAL OCCASIONS Perhaps you look forward to some special occasion which is important to you when you are going to meet new people. Maybe you want to wear a lovely dress for a certain time but five pounds too much makes this impossible. . If you have a lot of weight to lose yon may want a diet which pampers you with good food and a quick loss of five pounds to encourage you to continue at a slower pace for a longer time. Five pounds can slip up on us so fast (it only takes one uninhibited weekend for me). When this happens, the clothes which looked so well on us lose their charm even if we can squeeze ourselves into them. Sometimes just a gain of five pounds makes this impossible if the clothes were well fitted to start with. Josephine Lotvmun starts her trick and treat menus today. From them you may prepare your shopping list for the next visit to your store. So, here I am, with first aid for those of you who have procrastinated. I am giving you the menus for tomorrow so you will know what to market for if you wish to use this diet for this week. BREAKFAST Six ounces orange juice One-half cup oatmeal Four ounces skim milk and two teaspoons sugar on oatmeal One slice of protein bread toast Black coffee LUNCHEON Salad made of four tablespoons of cottage cheese, one medium tomato cut In chunks and one hard cooked egg, also cut into pieces. You can add three tablespoons of reducing dressing Two saltines Eight ounces skim milk DINNER Four ounces baked ham (cut off fat) One cup broccoli seasoned with lemon and paprika or thyme Orange custard If you would like to have my trick and treat diet in booklet form send 10 cents ,and stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request for it. The booklet also contains a recipe for low calorie orange custard. Address Josephine Lowman in care of this newspaper. Tomorrow: “A Diet Needn’t Be Dull, and Here’s One That Isn’t.’ Edward Peocoke. an English Shrimp cocktail (six medium- orientall.st and Biblical scholar, siz^ shrimp, one tablespoon-1 discovered the missing Suriac ver-ful of chili sauce and lemon !slons of the four New Testament Juice) j epistles. you say to yourself. "OK, I totde a chance on my knowledge of what would ideaiw this chlidY' I hwt, which is no reason at all why 1 should feel apologetic or fear to take another chance oir pleasing her . . ." Aa a matter el fact. It wenid be a fiat idea to say iMt that to her. We parents often fall to please adflleseent bhlldren because.they feel obliged to oppose us on general principle. They have to try and make us feel fuddy-duddy. narrow-minded, clumsy and unimportant so that they can feel very modern, liberal • minded, graceful and important. But tWs meOi^ ttey use for the reinforcement of their own self-esteem has nothing to do with us. We don’t have, to renuiin meekly 4R4he4doLm«plitod'‘Do^ inatlng’^ or "Interfering” or “Old-FashionjMl” because they shove us into' it. It is fine for everyone concerned to say to the belligerent adolescent: "Alright. This time the choice I’ve made for you seems to be a flop. But don’t fool yourself. Because I have picked out the wrong furniture for your room doesn't mean that I can choose anything right for you again. So I’m warning you. If I see a sweater or a ti« ‘ think would be becoming to you I shall feel free to buy it just as you feel free to hate it or love it.” The point is, they can be ‘dominating” too. Like all dominators, they can make us f?el /so utterly worthless tliat we forget that the issue is just our mtsjudgment of the kind of wallpaper they liked. Because (heir forces of development compel them to try to push us t " as blundering idiots is no reason why we have to stay pushed. We have to bounce back every time they try it. Printed Pattern 4540: Teen Sizes 10,12,14,10. Size 12 takes 2 yards 64-inch. Thirty-five cents in coins for tliia pattern — add 10 cents for each pattern for Istclasji mailing. Send to Anne Adams, The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St, New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS with ZONE, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. OVER 100 ANSWERS to "what-lo-wear” — in our new full color Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog. Casual, dressy, school >- all sizes! .Send 35 cents now. Shower Held for Bride-to-Be Sandra Kay Arnold was honored at a bridal shower Friday evening in the home of Mrs. Ralph Weir of Fid-dis Street. Mrs. Ted Nolde shared hostess honors. Among some 25 guests were the November bride-elect’s mother, Mrs. Oliver B. Arnold of Going Street. Mrs. Lester F. Christensen, of South Tasmania Avenue, mother of Miss Arnold’s fiance Seaman 3.C. Gary Christensen, and his sister Shyriec were also present. ★ DINETTES ★ for Kitchen or Dining Areas Sturdy tables end chairs in decorator colors and patterns to harmoniie with your room. Table tops are durable high pressure plastic for carefree use. Chairs ere comfortably padded and covered with washable plastic. You can save an extra dollar on any purchase of any Dinette Set if you bring this ad with you. Walnat Gralii Table, 36x48, extending to 60” and 6 brown and white chairs . . , Bronzetona legs. $699^ tS^hite Slarduit Drop Leaf Table, 30x25 with leaves down, 30x48 with leaves raised. Two brown and white chairs. Bronzetone legs. Extra J C if 95 chairs available. . .1 Fci. 04 30x40x41 Table and 4 Chairs. Choice of black end white— brown and white — yellow and white. Chrome or bronze-tone legs. $4995 5 Flecae . 36" Round Colonial Table — Extends with one leaf to 48” oval. Plastic top of beautiful maple graining; 4 attractive chairs, washable plastic, upholstered in color and skirted. All 5 Piecae Only . $5995 Our afore la toll of hrigbf, aesr tornitore al Jowor pricea mode poeaible hr our lower otretbeod. OmalUr-mlad*d people aim pleoaed wilb our votoee %98* Bell Pork Wieners . 59* SAVE 7-_ BUTTEKMIII' vakiet* KROGER WNin bread large 20-OZ. LOAF PACKER'S LABEL *^^OMATO cAnup 14-OZ. BOHLE 2'o*39* DEL AAONTE HALVES OR SLICED SAVE 20‘ GREAAAY KROGER PEAHUl butter 2"5R SAVE 9' BORDEN'S ELSIE SNERBET ICE CREAM 2'"49 7s. NO.” FRESH SNO-WHITE 15' PEACHES 4-99‘ WHITE OR PASTEL COLORED FACIAL TISSUE ^ KLEENEX SAVE 10*-KROGER FRESH CRISP ^ SALTINES..........19 KROGER PLAIN. SUGAR OR COAABINATION DONUTS19 49 (olfiifB Cheese 39* | V\QRTON'S FROZEN APPLE, CHERRY, COCOANUT OR Pumpkin Pie.. "”^.29 WITH THIS COUPON I' Noboil Bleach c OAliON FUSTIC CONTAINER 1M«. tlmlt • SAVE 10*-TASTY SAVE 12*-BORDEN'S CREAMED 30-OZ. CTN. WITH THIS COUPON Norriieiii Tissue j CowfoN ▼Olid at Hroffor In Iho Poalloe IfolL iTerth Petry M.. WITH THIS OOUPON-SPOTIIOHT InstantCoffee c BIG lO-OZ. JAR ■UM eelli et Krecm >■ ike rwU»« Mall. NeHk Perrr ill.. MIreele Draytea Plaha, Virita Lake, Vllea sa« Oifenl Ikra Vaee4a>, W, UM. - " ------------ WITH THIS COUPON-BREAST O' CHICKEN MICHIGAN GROWN MEN'S LUXURY QUAUTY Chunk Ihna T ; 4-99‘i ceaiaa valM al Kr*t»r la Ike Paallke Men,- Nertk rrm M.^ i*.*’*T*«*^ rietae. VMM fcaklj I Tata., Oel. <1. ; LONO SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS " — * PUUV SANPORIZID CONVIRTNII CUNS ONLY _ OOMPARAMI VAUtl *5.95 1 100 EXTRA S TOP VALUE STAMPS S WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE OF ■ ANY 4 KROGER BREAD ! OR BUNS raJ? ■ CaepM ealM al KiMer^ki^tkc VMUae isoIxtvavMUiSfanipel SO ixfiwvSSiSlainDt Z m j A urn «. m urn mu mi mu me me mdbu flilllii £ru£* JTitoi memn MM J B-6 THE PONTIAC PRES^, MONDAY. OCTOBBtt 22. 1<>62_, Deifis and G^P Candidates Racing * WAfflflNCTON (AP) - With electon day only two week* from Tuesday no strong political tide deems to be running for either the Democrats or the Republicans. , PersonaUUes often appear to overshadow party labels, pointed .up-'by indicationa in- a number of states that voters may elect a Democratic senator and a Republican governor or vice versa. At stake in the Nov. 6 voting will be 38 Senate seats-five of them for unexpired terms—and all 435 House seats. Thirty-five governors will be named. * * * A nationwide Survey by The Associated Press fails to disclose any major upheaval in sight in the political makeap o f Congress, where the Democrats now have heavy majorities in the Senate and House. Best bet for any Republican surge apparently is in the state-house races, with GOP candidates given, a chance to oust Democrats in big swing states like California, Ohio, Michigan and Pennsylvania. PREDICTIONS HARD In many cases political weathw-vanes were fluttering too uncertainly to make forecasters comfortable. The AP survey of the election outlook pulled together the opinions of newspaper political writers, polls taken by newspapers politics] writers, bureau chleh As of now, the- signs point to minor Republican gains In the House—probably |es8 than a do^ en seats; ho advance in the, Sen- romnev-swWin The contest fw governor of en seats: no advance in me, a*n-| auiAmobUe ate and maybe^n net Josa of one or two, and possible capture o f a down of the 34 governorships now held by Democrato. * a ★ Here ore some of the crosscountry highiighU turned up by the AP survey: In Massachusetts the Book Published; Ailing Mrs. FDR Unable to Assist conservative teanings put him out of st^ ‘ hMksUke Dirl^ of nifaiois, seems to bo on the‘road to victory. His oppon ant is Rap. Stdnay R. Yatos of man George Ropmey inaking his poUUcal debut, is rated too close to call as of now. Romney Istry-ing to unseat Democratic Gpv. John B. Swainson. An old hand at politics. Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller la an odda^n favorite to win re-elec-tkm in New York, a result that his adnnirers hoperwlRpropel him Into position to capture the Re- in 1984. Not only is Rockefeller picked to take the measure of his Democratic-liberal foe Robert M. Mor- ______j, bbt RepUbiHcea Sen. Je* cob K. JavHs also is expected to win rweleetlon over New York lawyer Janies B. Donovan. Two fumer Cabinet members-* one from the Eisenhower administration and one from the Kennedy admlnlstratlon-are bkhl^ for elective off^. SBATON-MORRISON Fred A. Seaton, who was Elsenhower’S secretary of. the Interior, is running for governor of Nebraska against the Democratic incumbent, Frank B. Morrison. The battle is rated a standoff, fliare Rapul^ In Ooimseticiit, Kennedy’s for- Powell, defeatod foi mer sacretary of welfaro, Ab^ ham Riblcofr, Is blddlnf for the Senate seat of retiring Republican Sen. Prescott Bush. are inclined to give Riblcoff a slight edge. New England’s pollUcal waters also are being stirred by a republican rumpus in New Hampshire. by John PUlsboiT. has thrpwn his support to the Democratic r inee, John W. King. KING-PILLSBURY wikuaw. I. Ii«n Hot. Hampshire’s beat Plllabury. This is not eapect-ed, however, to shake the GOP’s hold on House and Senate seats. In the South the Democrats are seats In Virginia and elsewhere. challei«es In some states. I Republican hopes of a major upset in Dixie c«rt«f «i toe Tsm gulMmatorial race where tte GOP candidate^ Jack Cm. Is pit-tod aga^-JobwConnMiyr^^e^ friend of Vice Presidmt Lyndon B. Johnson and Kennedy’s former seertoaryof theNavy. While Connally general^ Is fa-Mvd, he nmortedly could In „twble if toe Democrato don’t tom out a big vote. NEW YORK (UPD - Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt’s 14th book was published today, but the former first lady was too ill to help the publisher launch it. The book, “Eleanor Roosevelt’s Book of Common Sense Etiquette,’’ was published by the MacMillan Co. Mrs. Roosevelt remained bed at her apartment. She is still suffering from the effects of an anemic condition complicated by a lung Infection, which caused her to be hospitalized at Columbia- dent’s youngest brother, Edward M. Kennedy, looks far out to front In his race for the Senate against his Republican opponent, George Cabot Ledge. BM$ubllcan Gov. John A Volpe Is given the edge in his re-election bid. NIXON-BROWN In California former Vice President Richard M. Nixon, is locked in nigged battle for the governorship with Democratic incumbent Edmund G. Brown. Most polls put Brown somewhat ahead. Republican Sen. Thomas. H. Kuchel is favored to fight off the challenge of Richard Richards, stole senator from Los Angeles. Pennsylvania Is another example of a state where the Senate and gubernatorial races seem to be going to different directions. Democratic Sen. Joseph S. Clark is rated a winner over Rep. James E. Van Zandt, his conservative Republican foe. In the governor’s race Rep. William W. Scranton is given a slight edge over Richardson DUworth, former Demorcatlc mayor of Philadelphia. DiSALLE-RHODES In neighboring Ohio, Democratic Gov. Michael V. DiSalle is regarded by most political writers participating to the survey as somewhat of an underdog against his GOP challenger. State Auditor James A. Rhodes. Medical Center for three weeks. The modem jet airliner •bout u half mile of hydraulic plumbing, connecting 275 components. MIMEOeRAPHINfi SRVICE Bulletins, Letters, etc. FAST SERVieE SalM 39 Oakland FI 4*9591 AD LIBS by Lorry Hurb "And in « pinch, it*i good fee slicing hurd boiled ^ggs, too.** PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS II sell onything . . . from Air Compressors Wheelborrows. AIRPUNIS NIMROD TRAILIRS AIR COMPRnSORS FLUMR ROIS BOATS and TRAILIRS FUMFS CARFINTIR TOOLS RUGS CIMmr MIXIRS MNDIRS CHAIN FALLS SCAFFOLDING DRILLS ' SOD CUTTRRS DRAG LINIS TILLIRSS ILICTRIC SANDIRS TAILIS FKNCI SAWS FURNACKS TRACTORS CARDIlf TOOLS TRAILnS HIDCI CLIFPIRS WALLFAPIR UWN TOOU WHIIL CNAIRS Don't store It in the attic when you can convert it to CASH . . . quickly and economically. To Plon on Ad Just DIAL Ff 2-8181 One of bur ceuitAeus od-visers will help you word your od if you dosire. MHESMAYSIM GET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BEUL GIFT STAMPS Blue Ribbon Farms Baf Swiss Steaks Center Blade Chuck Cuts 6911 Blue Ribbon Farms Beef Round Steaks Whole Center Slices 79i| Blue Ribbon Farms Beef Rib Steaks 7-inch Cut 891 Blue Ribbon Farms Beef Sirloin Steaks All Choice Cuts 99L Blue Ribbon Farms T-Bone or 1»*i Club Steaks Table Trimmed MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY ONLY CAMPBELL'S Tomato Soup ktg. Con S Limit 4 With coupon ond $2.00 or more purchost (except beer, . wine ond clgorettei) I Sotordey, Ocfebsr 27. W# reserve the riffcf te II FoodtClub "Chef's Blend" — With Coupon », VALUABLE WHIOIEY COUPON COFFEE » “ White or Assorted Toilet Tissue—Limit 4 Rolls With Coupon OEISIY '=^-10' Betty Crocker White, Yellow os. Devils Food—Special Labal, 2-Layer —• With Coupon jm CAKE MX Breast-O'Chicken Chunk Style — With (Coupon TUNA Sove With ThU Coupon Dahey, Aaieitad Calart Toilat Tiuua In 2-Roll Limit Pock, Rail IV Coupon eead Thru Sat., Mmll One Coupan Per C . VALUABLE WRIOLtY COUMN ^ VALUABLE WRIQIEY COUPON ^ J Sova 18c With This Coupon It •roait O'CkIckoR Chunk Tuna Cauaan eaed Thru Sat., Oct. tr. Limit Oita Caupon Par Coatamor. Country Churn "AA" 93 Score Mel-0-Crust, Enriched—*Save Hcd BrMd d Swiss Miss) Frozen ’ nuMpkinPlo ’r , Otog Birds Eye Whole Kernel 09^ Cut Corn dH |n « Delcrest —<• Sava 20c ° Instant Colfoo Spicad Luncheon Meat U.S. No. 1 Foncy Hand-Picked Michigan SNOW or JONATHAN APPLES 99’ 2Vii-lnche$ and up 20-lbs. Net Weight or More yx-Bushal Cln. ER G \ ■ Study Alliance Tough Job to Find Ways to Holp Lgtins MEXICO CITY (iU») - AoMrt-cm flnancc nlnistmijiiUiciid today t)> 117 to immp more prograii Into the Allimce for Pragrei. After • formal, iaauguratlu. meeting thli afternoon, the mln^ ; latura will atart Tueaday on a wedt’a review of the proUema of the alUance/They hope to find Ciibm policy to Prealdmt Ken-nody when they met in tiigton, and the Ur-.S» I • appdatid.|o underfOuid------ I atlon, the newapaper Le Figaro JOBISTOUGH Their Job la a tough one. The aUianoe aima at achieving on the Latin-Americm continent a pKpI abcid^i^ economic rev^ ohittain within 10 yeara. The paper puhllahed an interview Ben Bella gave two of ita correapondenta in Algiera on hla return from the United tSatea and Cuba. . Al- Eaparta after a three-week review ol the program warned the finance minlatera Sunday: “The taak of breaking with the paat and reatructurbig p aociety characterized in mmy cifM by economic and aocial rigiditiea cannot be aUzed in a few yeara." Thia waa echoed by U. S. Sec-. _ retary of the Treaaury Dottglaa AlScru' Dillon who aaid, “There are no that have been centuries cenniries. ------ ••We must not expect miracles, country which has always demom Thiels, after all, rS-year pro- ^ Cuban Policy Topic Again for Ben Bella PARIS m - Algerim Premier UPPSALA. Sweden (UPI) The Solvet Union exploded a multimegatoo nuclear device in the atmosphere at its Novaya Zemlya testing ground, in the Arctic today ®*‘* i the situ- oni amum gerla’a policy el namllBameat and nenlraUty In world af- Ho said i* phraie^^^^^ IW WUU HW •wiwawo.y views" wim which a Joint communique described hla talks with Cubm Prime Minister Fidel Cas- 26-Megaton Blast Set Off by Soviets Ch^Sweerin Duda said the explosion had a yield equlvelanLto U million tons of TtfT. The spcdteaman saht Uils waa the 16th explosion monitored by Uppsala in the current Soviet test aeries. RomoncB on tho Rocki Aftor Girl Slip! Up PACIFIC PALISADES, Calif. ,dro — The love affair between Marietta Jackson, .22, and her boy frtendL Louto Aunquoe,_went on iim rocin yetamrday. Fleeing Louis* amorous advances at a beach party. Marietta slipped between a narrow cubm Prime Minister rioei w»-jeita suppea neiwero « ««.vw tro referred only to auoh matters gap in the boulders on a rock as agrarian reform and opposi- jetty and. had to be freed by tion to cotonlalism, racial dis- nnrf firemen. JUST FRIENDLY . Bm Bella said his visit to Cuba was part of a general policy of maintaining friendly relations twith all countries friendly to nnirauw “An invitation had been sent to up for me three times, and was slimply replying Tto the invitation of a The world’i oldest preserved, fully IdenUfled ship Is Sweden's ••Vasa." The 1,400-ton armed galleon capsized and sunk In Stockholm harbor on the first day of her maiden voyage In 1628. The ship was raised Intact in 1961 and will be restored as a historic monument. support for Algeria, iS^Tr himisS s mitt^ by the United States, especially because nomic experts was not bright. ---- «mlc experts was not bright. There are no signs of prompt * * * Improvement in LaOn-Amerlcan “But one cannot refuse the in-issnKrrR OTAGNANT vft***®" Continual stagnation of internal because opinion in the neighboring state is very sensitive economies, the experts said MARKETS STAGNANT UHlUinUII markets is impeding progress. boring state is very sensii The magnitude of the flight of Cubans would not have private capital from Latin Amer- derstood," Ben Bella said, lea “is a source of special con- Agrarian reform nleasures are opp^ in many sectors. Many reform programs lack essential measures to provide credits, markets and increased pgricUltural production. Tax reform programs are moving but no substantial results are likely soon because of weak public administration. The housing shortage is becom ing more acute. I Reds Give j Details on Twin Orbit MOSCOW fllM) - Russia’s mil-Uon-mile space twins orWW within four miles ol ea^ othw lost August then ended thek lengthy trip 1.864 miles ,^rt before returning to earth, Prav-da repoded tod^. ^ The Communist party nevwpa-per, In a special article deiling with the results of the four-day flight of Ma). Andrian Nlkolayev and the three-day journey of I-t. Col Pavel Popovich, displosed new details about the record-breaking accomplishment. The two and one-half page report made no mention of future Marjetta wasn’t injured ’ Louis wat SAITS SHOE REPAIR EXPERT WORKMANSHIP While You Wait or Shop Service NOURSl M0N.-THUM. M FIII.-IAT.lto1 Fh.tlM2M MallArM rip showed “man wBI be able I work normally for long erlods’’ in weightlessness and fliAits lasting several h^red roper training. 8oth cosmonauts felt “fine” •oughout and received "abso-ely safe” doses of radiation, WWW a said the aims of the were to check the design of the Vostok spaceships for flights lasting several days, an^ to develop the complex method of placing a second spaceship near one launched earlier. The American hIgh-AltItude nuclear test over the Pacific July 8 formed “an artificial radiation belt.. . which would have been most dangerous to the cosmonauts’ health” if they had entered it, Pravda said. But it added that by the time Vostok 4 Vostok 2 and V< launched Aug. 11 and Aug. 12 re-apectlvely, ^the intensity of radiation caused by the American ... exploehm had diminished to a permissible level at the altitude the ships were flying.” Pakistan, carved out of India In 1941,. comprise tero uneuunl peris, with Weri Pakistan sepa-rated from East Paklnstan nearly snilos by sea. ' "I BannuatFROteHiiNMEBr 4 Populor VariwtiM • TUiltay • Batf • Salisbury FOOD FAIR /MARKETS W.T.ORANT CO MIRACLE MILE SHOPPINO CENTER Jutt Say **€hargtt It** Montha to Pay OPINDAIU 10A.M.-CP.M* THE GREATEST WATCH VALUE EVER OFFERED AT THIS PRICE | CaRAVELLEv* THE ECONOMV FRICtO OUAIIIY WATCH/ A PRODUCT OF BULOVA ciflon erifltmtnthlp (o tnett tht hiih quality Caravstla tpa* cilieationt - auurlns you of lift parformanco-at tha prica yoii ordinarily pay for ar •- larlor watch. Il’i ----- naptaco you ci rn - or sivsl toa. Srllllant chroma ftallhad caw with atalnlan atial back. 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CwsplaMlalseNae HOOVER CLEANERS Free ♦39“ Gat Our Law Diaeount Frieat on All Color TVs FRETTER APPLIANCE ij MIRACLE MILE CENTER 1 UKYVAJrcfej wDEcr*. 1 L Abjn NPnrsFfi'^j (DfclWtEN RKtaLjt J «rau 3} S. TELEGRAPH AT SQ. LAKE RD. \jl OPEN: Mon. thru Fri. 9:30 a.m.-lOp.m. FE 3-7051 Sat. 9-9--Sim. Cio: >, JONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, OCTOBER ^2, 1962 1,^ N. C. mod » fonn in llcvqlutionniy d«y«. Water was iritMi. Dirai^ hollow logs ‘ R«d Shopper. UnHappy'7'^,'““ isfies tium for fit and style. say» V; M.S(dkoIov,diief state planning | / MOSCOW (AP) - Only 40 to 45 Soviet shoppers out of 100 can spedaiist in the sewing industry. for the finest in HOME MODERNIZATION! ralbnVkr FE4-15M _ IrC lumber & HARDWARE- MSlOMtAMO^^PONTIAC PI*^fB4tS^ Mania Ojo^s Civic Bit fa No Avail 'Worid's Soul lost/ Archbishop Says LOS ANGELES (AP) - The world has, by and large, lost its soul, the Archbishop of . ~ bury says. Dr. Arthur Michael B spiritual leader of the (^urch d England and the Anglican (Communion. spohe to more than 1,000 persons at the University of Cali- ;.ONDON (AP) — Anne Mae-Xlonald, a shapely mother of four, becaine a roadside vamp to slow down fast drivers. JnJetching halter ton and fig- __________________ - ______________ ure-hugging jeans/she tooluipid'fMa bQa^JHew-here,-Sualdy.jlght stand outside the viilage of Grave-ley on the busy Great North Road. Then she wiggled her hips and gave the hitch-hiking thumb sigh to every passing motorist. When truck drivers pulled up to Ifer^her ^ M, Mrs. MacDonald, 31, smiled sweetly and said: ‘Thank you for stopping. I do hope you will observe the speed limit through our village.” Mrs. McDonald, said she had written eixtimes to the Transport Ministry asking that it do something about the many drivers who ignored the village’s. 30-mift-an-hour speed limit. I saw drivers whistling at pretty girls in the village and that gave me a new idea,” she said. Mrs. MacDonald now has abandoned Ker vamp technique. "The drivers were all as nasty as possible," she said. "I'm shocked. it would take the type of language used by truck drivers to describe my opinion of them.” Crew Lands Jet'by Hand^ TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - When an Eastern Air Lines Jetliner kMt hydraulic ’pressure, crewmen hand'cranked the gear and flaps while Capt. James Osborne brought the plane in to a safe landing. The plane, with 65 passengers and seven crew members night. He said "races and nations are not using the world’s resources in fellowship, are exploiting- their neighbors and aggrandizing themselves, trying to dethrone (tod.” He said pride is "the supreme rebellion against (tod. MOBILE, Ala. rainy weather, 223,618 persons turned out Sunday to receive Type II Sabin oral polio vaccine. The total represents more than 71 per cent of the county’s 1960 population. More than 304,000 persons rfr ceived the |^pe II vaccine September in a two-day program. from Boston and New York, en ihute to Fort ‘ Osborne, from North Stamford, Conn., said a fuel pump leak had '' ss of all but Vk gallon of the 5.4 gallons of fluid on the right side of the Boeing 720 Jet. 223,618 Given Vaccine , « Grizzly bears are bom during Against Polio in Mobile the parent’* hiberiiatloti- an» nfp.lf»b|. iMinilurail .nmua-PT ter Mae for It month*. time 4>r ■(Uuetment. 146 W. HUROM FE 2-9251 140 N. SA6IMAW FE 4-9970 *IKAKI SiaVKII AT THIS fTORi ONLY K * THB PONTIAC PRESS. MOKPAY, OCTOBER 22. 1962 By BRUNO L. IEARN8 Sport! EdR0r»PwtlMPr«M NEW YORK - Ev«b bting with • new teem cen't help mirler-Iwck MUt Plum agelnet the New York Olente. . Fkinr feoed the Giente for the TOO MANY RAMS ~ Waterford Our Lady of the Lakes* halfback Tim Davis (with ball) had too many St. 4rrederlck players close In on him and the Laker runner settled for a shM gain on this play yesterday afternoon. John Zavaksy (26), Fred Medina (14) and Larry Walters (21) prepare to finish the tackle started by Marcelo Gallardo (35) and an unidentified Ram defender. * Giants 'Hold' Over mardied for the tying toudidown with Phil King going over from the one. EVERYTHING WRONG for Detroit. On the next series I Lynch Intercepted Milt Plum’s tinuously in the 17«14 sefoack before ajXB Yankee Stadium fans. During his days with the Cleveland Browns. Plum found no way to beat the Giants. He won o^. lost eight and tied one including yesterday. “Their defense beat s to be given more treatment this week. LIONS’ NO^ All of foe 62,000 fans in Yankee Stadium and all TV viewers Andy RobusteUl throwan elbow at Tom Watkins after a play early in the game. Everyone that Is except the officials. Ar Phol,lti ‘COME BACK HERE’ . Jim Gibbons (80) of the Lions is tackled from behind by a Giant piayer after grabbing a pass and making a pass in yesterday’s game. The Giants won, 17-14. Defensive back Gary Lowe was also missed yesterday when he collapsed in foe locker room prior to the game. Lowe was given a shot to ease pains in his legs and fell to the floor immediately afterward. Dr. Richard Thompson gave The Giants revealed they had practiced all week on rushing the Lions’ on kicks and punts. Em Tunnell who scouted Detroit in all five previous games thought that by applying pressure on Yale Lary it nnight save the Giants distance on his booming punts. ’The plans worked. The Giants not only blocked Lary’s punt leading to the tying touchdown, but also blocked a field goal and almost blocked an extra point. It was the first punt Lary had blocked on him since Baltimore did it in I960. Yesterday was one of Lary’s poorest days punting as he averaged only 35 yards per try. PASS NEVER ’THROWN - New York Giants quarterback Ralph Gugliclmi is tackled by Alex Karras of the Lions as he tries to get off a pass in the second quarter. Backing up Karras is Darris McCk>rd (78). MSU*8 Saimes Called ^Greatest* Grid Starvation for Elliotts LAFAYETTE, Ind. (UPl) ■ Everyone feels sorry for Pete Elliott, the victory-starved coach of Illinois' football team, but gloom is starting to run in the family. Brother Rump is equally in need of sympathy Jit Michigan, where his Wolverine squad hasn’t scored in two hours and 18 minutes of football. The haplessness of Michigan was never as evident as it was here Saturday when Purdue ran Bump’s boys out of Ross-Ade Stadium, 37-0. Michigan, blanked by M i c h-Igan State the week before, hasn’t been In the end tone since Dave Rafaney ran seven yards agninst Army Oct. 8. Hie SO points Michigan has ■cored In tour games (13 against Nebraska and 17 against Army) Is only eight more than tallied by pete’s winless Illinl. It all points to a point battle when Pete and Bump clash at Ann Arbor Nov. 10. TRICKERS Purdue quarterback Ron Di Gravio forep a 54-yard scoring pass to halfback Tom Fugate on his team’s first play from scrimmage. The sideline pass had Michigan completely fooled. Di Gravio, a Junior who had an outstanding sophomore year but had been rendered ineffective in "That one really unnerved ns,” said Elliott. ‘‘It was like getting knocked out on the first punch of a fight.” It was the second straight week Mkhlgan, was foiled on trickery. A fake field goal by Michigan State tarned into a touchdown and Purdue’s first three games, kept Mike Bloom for 58 touchdown the Boilermakers moving. Purdue ran up a 23-0 lead in foe first 18 minutes, foe second score coming on its eighth play from scrimmage — a 34-yard pass play from DI Gravio to halfback Chuck King. Harvey Chapman’s fumble on his own 34 set up foe Purdue touchdown. Omer Ohi booted a 23yard field goal on foe final play of the first quarter to make it 184) and shortly afterwards, DI Gravio hit halfback Dick Tiger Is Favored yards. DUFFY LAUDS SAIMES SOUTH BEND (UPI) - If Duffy Daugherty could vote In the Heis-man trophy election, George Salims would be at foe tqp of his ballot. He is in my mind the best football player in foe country today,” foe Michigan State coach said after the Spartans’ 31-7 route of Notre Dame Saturday. "Saimes has a great day for us every week but he was greater than ever agafaiat Notre Dame,” DuHy remarked of his team’s SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-BrlUsh Empire middleweight champion Di» Tifsr of Nigeria continues foe favorite to lift the World Boxing Associatioh crown from Gene Fullmer Tuesday night. chusetta ns the lINHxmnd champion while foe WBA cMIs Fullmer Odds have flucuated between 7-5 and 35 and should Tigec live up to them, he could put the Britii^ Boxing Board in a difficult position. FOr the British boxing fathers recognise Paul Pender of Massa- INTERNAL CONFLICT Should Tiger wrest the WBA version of the title from Fullmer, would he be recogtiised in Britain as foe world chanipion or would that recognition Just come in the Americas and foie Orient? Tiger is 33 told gets his title shot because a proposed Pende^ Fullmer fight failed to materiallM In a hassle over money. Even Irish mentor Joe Kuharlch, who is fighting a "Daugherty-for-boach’’ faction on the golden dome caoqms, had high praise for the senior fullback. “Saimes is a real All-American. A good, solid all-around football ' laid Kuharich. RUNS WILD The 186-pound bomber from Canton. Ohio, chilled an Irish-hearted crowd of 60,118 with touchdown of 54, 49 and 15 yards. His yardage was 153 — or 20 1^rdi Oaliwd (^etl iDWreepUd l»r .....^ WEBXXND I ■r Tk* AumIuM Prm . •IrtkmuiA, UIV4, JAIiAn. YORK—DoUf Jo York, oloppcd Bob footoi ^ODO—Wl miilit*—R ChMiiilor (t ymri tiolJ soA». )wrd n») Wf|ttr Phils' Maudi Nips Dark as NL's Best Manager NEW YORK (AP) - “I don’t want to be Just another big league manager," Gene Mauch said after he was named to handle foe Philadelphia Phils at foe outset of the 1960 season. "I want to be the best In the business." and was an infielder with six major league teams. He was a playing manager with Atlanta n! foe Soutbern Association In 1883 ____also guldM Mifaineapolis of the American Association in 1968 Mauch’s ambition was realiisd today when he was selected National League manager-of-foe-year for 1982 In foe'annual Associated Press poll. The 83year-old skipper drew 33 votes in foe bailout of members of ("* Baseball Writers Association. The voting was extremely close with Alvin Dark of foe pennant-winning San Francisco Giants being named on 31 ballots and Walter Alston of the npuwNip Los Angeles Dodgers ranking third with 27 votes. There were 108 ballots cast and foe voting was based on regular performances of foe WON PENNANT Dark, In his second season as Giants’ skipper, won the pennant after a playoff with the Dodgers. San Francisco, traiiing Los An-geies in the final week, tied foe Dodgers on the last day. The Gi- foe pennant by defeating Loa An* geies, two out of three games. Alston had his Dodgers leading _ie league most of the eeaaon before the team cMlapsed eompieto* ly during the waning wedcs. The loss of pitcher Sisdy Koufax a finger tajury proved a key factor in the Los Angeles demise. Freddie Hutdtinson of Ondn-naU. NL managerof-foe-year In TORRID FINISH The Phils were foe ho( in foe last month of the 1962 season, winning 19 of their last 26 games. They wound up In seventh place, only 2Mi games behind foe sixfo-plaoe St. Uuis Cardinals. Philadelphia won 81 and loot 80 and played better than .800 ball after foe first AllGtar The Phils finished eighth and last in Mauch’s first two seasons. In 1901. the team lost a record 23 straight games and a total of 107. Even with the 13team expansion, Philadelphia didn’t figure to ffoirii higher than eighth in 1982. But foe Phils’ youth program blossomed behind Mauch’ Inspl-rationalt leadership. Pitchers Art Mahaff^, Dennis Bennett. Chris Short, Dallas Greeh and Jack Hamiibm all looked . and durable Jack Baldschun was a bullpen stalwart. ^n Demeter, Tony Gontales and Johnny Cafoaon formed a 380 hitting oUtfieM while shortstop Ruben Amaro and catcher day Dalyriiaple contbnied to msof d< Mauch began in pro ball In INS Bing by Hank 1961, was fourth in the baBotliig - *- • I finishod with IS votes. The Reds fl third after winning the priuiant in 1961. Other managers receiving votes were Casey Bteniri of foa lOih-place New York Mote (2), and Harry Craft el foe eltfitlH>laM tough of the fourtiHitoee PiOte' . -------‘ (tench). Servicemen at Um in Tiger Tour, 9-(i TOKYO (AP)~’Ilia Detroit H* gers Ntufiied to Jiwan ftipl Okihiwn Sunday nlgMaftevlMfb ' team efuJil ing an servlcen »8in tl THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 2g. 1002 Get your car a new Midas muffler GUARANTEED for As long as you own your car Free installation takes bnlv 15 minutes at your Budget Plan Available • No Down Payment • No Charge! Up to t Monibt ti Par OPiN DAILY 8:3D A.M. Mon.. Tuet.. Wed., Thuri. 'Ill 5:30 —Friday 'til 7 Saturday 'til 5 P.M. 43S S. SaeiHAW re MOio ________________Mlougaa 0 Kalamauo 1*. AlMon U Olivet 3J. Ahnt ' Wiivn'e State 0, Weatem Ruerve Western Winona I .....2«. Lafayette a »n^*.n‘ii‘&ar.han 13 Colgate 1«. Princeton IS Connecticut U. Maine S Dartmouth ID. Holy Cross 0 Oettysbur^ *&olumbla’lJ''* ** John Clvrroil 26. Allegheny 0 Navy 26. Boston Collegr S New Hampshire 16. Vermont 6 Penn 16. Brown 15 heart, are having a ball with the Washington. Redskins this year. Trouble is, hone of ihelr Sunday Playmates from around the National Football League appreciate their antics. I. Boston U. 7 Pittsburg 8. Richmond 1.. —, Rutgers 2>. Lehigh 1} Slippery Rock State 20. Westminster 13 vinanova 22. Delawara 10 Washington and Lee 22. Johns Hopkins 6 Washington and Jefferson 16. Thiel It W. Virginia 27, George Washington 25 Williams t Bowdoin 0 Yale 26. Cornell 6 MUIWEST ----- 43r Wooefer O—-------- ------ ■ gl* Tech It 3^ Kenyon It nsTon ear vrow« Auburn 17. Oeort Baldwin-Wallace Bethany 13. Case ______ Bowling Green 45, Kent State 0 israaiey re, waDaan r Denison 7, Mt. Union 0 -gMike.l0,_Wlchlta 0 _ North________________ Ohio U. 12. Miami |0. Ohio .Wesleyan Wheaton 28. Washington (St. L.) Xavier (O.) 23. Dayton 6 A1 b ■ 27 Te n Duke 16. Clemson 0 ■ State 18. Georgia 0 islsslppl 21, tulane - -islsslppl State 0, H........... North Carolina 10, South Carolina H -------10, Presbyterian ‘ Tampa 10, Presbyterian 0 Virginia It. Wake Forest 13 VMI 20, Davidson 7 William and Mary 31. Furman , SOUTHWEST Baylor 35, Texas Tech 6 jpilgluuh Young 37. Montana 0 Iowa State 57, Colorado 1* Missouri 23. Oklahoma State 5 North Texas State It. Cincinnati’ 5 Oklahoma 13. Kanaas 7 SMU % Rice 7 Texas 7, Arkansas 3 TCU 20. Texas A « M It Tulsa as. Louisville 7 Utah 7, New Mexico 7 (tie) W. Texas State 20. New Mexico State I This high-flying quarterback-halfback duo went whizzing right through the Philadelphia Eagles Sunday for*a 27-21 victory that set Washington solidly in the Eastern Conference lead with four victories. and-lwoties,JheJalter;. not counting in the percentages. But school may be out real soon foi* this frolicsome pair. This week, they do battle with this second-place New York Giants and their crunching defense that shocked Detroit 17-14 Sunday. GIANTS TWICE Washington must face the Giants twice yet this season, and also try to master Pittsburgh’s awesome defense led by Big Dad- WE8T Montana State 3L Idaho 15 Oregon 35. Air Force 20 Oregon State 40. Pacific U. 0 Southern Cal. 32. California 6 Utah State 21. Colorado State 0 Washington It. Stanford 0 HIGH SCHOOL-------------- St. David 10. Clement 6 Cleveland U. School 7, Cranbrook 0 Shlurday's Late Callage Seoret By The AaMclated Preu Richmond j- ........... EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pci. PI Washington ...... 4 0 2 1.000 1( New York ........ t 2 0 .667 13 Dallas Isoo 107 : Pittsburgh I, Temple 13 teulhern Mississippi 3 I Carolina Chattanooga 34. Middle Tennessee 13 Eastern Kentucky 14. Austin Peay 7 SOUTHWEST Texas 7. Arkansas 3 Baylor 26, Texas Tech 6 Mississippi State 9. Houston 3 State 20.^ New Mexico State 12 tale 14, The Citadel 7 14, Trinity. Tex. 6 Canadian's TD Tosses Top Toronto, 27-24 , HAMILTON, Ont. (AP)-Frank Cosentino, a 24-year-old Canadian quarterback, stole the limelight from import Joe Zuger by coming off the bench in the third quarter to fire two touchdown passes that gave the Hamilton Tiger-cats an uphill 27-24 victory over the Toronto Argonauts in their Canadian Football League Eastern Conference game Sunday. The victory shot the Tiger-cats back into undisputed possession of first place by two points over the Ottawa Rough Riders. "Bud" NICHOLIE INSURANCE 44 M». Clemsnt St., fonfioc Ft 3-7858 HUNTER'S ipeciali or 2-K. HHTMG SIIT axlwrily dMoad and prasond... plas “WATER REPELLENT” 39 PICKUP and DELIVERY Foalioc Atoa Only. c niiEiisoii 141 iMlyn Avt. car. Manifield .......... CLEANERS W/i«r« Qualify Counli R 2-C424 Win Paced by Star Duo By JACK CLARY By The Aaaoolated Preaa Snead and Bobby dy Lipscomb and Ernie Stautner two times, in addition to games against the Baltimore Colts, Oal-tna rieveiand The Steelers dropped into, third plaqe, losing to offense jjynamo Itellas 42-27, but are still very much in the Eastern title picture with a:* 3-3 recojfd, compared to the Giants’ 4-2. Cleveland upended the.St. Louis Cardinals 34-7, Chicago’s Bears won over Baltimore 35-15 and the Minnesota Vikings kept the Los Angeles Rams wihless with a 38-14 victory. any musclemen this season, and may find their newly-found success doesn’t mean a thing when it comes to facing the likes of a front wall headed by New York’s Jim Katcavage, Rosey Grier and Co. NFL Standings Snead has found Mitchell a wonderful target so far, hooking up Sunday for two touchdown passes. But his protection had not been pressed by overwhelming physical strength such as possessed by the Giants and Steelers. Still, five victories in the next eight games could mean the Easton title even if the GiantsLplay a torrid 6-2 in the same span. Lo8 Angelea ....... 0 6 0 .000 SUNDAY S RESULTS Waahington 27, Philadelphia 21 - eland 34. Bt. Loula 7 ,a 42. PIttaburgh 27 York 17. Detroit 14 igo 35. Baltimore 15 Oreen Bay 31, San Franclaco 13 -----rsota 38, Loa Angelea 14 NEXT SUNDAY'S 8 Chicago at Detroit ----land at Pittsburgh Bay at Baltimore lefphli Snead and the ‘Skins showed no signs of letting up. The former Wake Forest ace hit Mitchell with TD tosses of 28 and 29 yards while Mitchell set up one of Bobby Khayat’s two field goals with a. 74-yard kickoff return. Snead completed 15 of 25 passes for 279 yards, with Mitchell snaring eight for 145 yards. Former Eagle Bobby Freeman set up one touchdown. with an interception and another ex-Eagle, Billy Barpes also scored a .touchdown. AFL Standings EASTERN DIVISION HouRton .......... 2 » 0 .286 133 162 Tic ......... 2 5 0 •- ““ WESTERN DIVISION » .833 204 121 .286 117 214 _________________ON Ofnver ............ 6 1 0 .856 188 115 - IH ............ 5 1 0 .833 204 121 Diego ..........3 4 0 .429 182 206 aiul ,0 6 0 .OW' SUNDAY'S REStLTS Dii'lir SATURDAY'S RESULT Buffalo 14. Oakland 6. night NETX FRIDAY'S SCHEDULE Oakland at Boston., night SUNDAY'S _ .. New York Dallas at Hoiutton Buffalo at Denver NEXT SUNDAY'S SCHEDULE SUNDAY'S RESULTS ^TUESDA^Y’S OJiMES NHL Standings NATIONAL I.EAGUF, New BF^SULI Mnnlrcal 7, Bn.loh 3 10 3. Chloaiio I troll 3, **"'"tukS|VaVS tJAMKS die Lebaron >- three to Frank Clarke of 3, 45 and 13 yards, ' ripping the Steelers. Clarke " year. Bobby Layne hit on two tojiichdowns, but Dallas* rookicr^ ladden defense stomped down a Steelers* uprising in the final period with a key interception by Don Bishop. Jim Ninowski tossed TD passes of 37 yards to John Brewer, 39, to Ray Renfro and 4 yards to Jiinmy Brown as Cleveland kept Eastern title hopes a-glimmer-ing. Fran throws to Doug Mayberry, ley Ferguson and Tonnuny Mason, finally helped the Vikings to their first win in six starts. Zeke Brat- ---------------- HEADED FOR FIRST DOWN - Clar- kowski passed 43 yards to Duane ence p^akg the Eagles, former Flint Cen-Allen and Dick Bass scored the tral High and Michigan State star, eludes other Rams’ touchdown on a 5- tacklers yesterday after taking a pass yard juant. _________ j______________________________ Sonny Jurgensen, sitting out most of the first half, tossed a pair of TD passes for the Eagles, now last in the Eastern Conference after having been considered a title contender less than a month ago. Dallas’ pepped up offense got five touchdown passes from ' ★ ★ ★ NBA Standings PasliM* yardage ^107^ ^^123 SnKed "1 "1 ’TODAY'S PRO BASKETBALL By Tb* AMocIaltd Prnt NBA EASTERN DIVISION Waa Lo>l Prt. Brhiad Bo«lon 1 0 1.000 - BROWNS CARDINALS hlVw^York !! ! ! V: 1 Ml -Clnclnnall 0 J .000 1 WESTERN DIVISION CMcmIo* 1 I ^500 'k 1.0, ^ngrlM 1 2 .M3 j Detroit * Boaton 149. New York 118 Syracuse 105. Ik>8 Aiigeleii 102 Chicago 113. CInclimatl 100 81. Louis 120. Detroit til ItlrEE KNOTTY PINE GUN RACK A bcautllul 'rack, In handiomely IlnKhcd iolid Knotty pine. Holds 3 rlllo* as ill(.sirated on horn shaped hangers. 1 TarSentbn, with set AT Phatotai against the Washington Redskins. 4Ie was hauled down after making enough yards for a first down. Packers Roll 31-13; Bears Rout Colts Hornung Out as Green Bay Beats 49ers MILWAUKEE «P)'- The Green Bay Packers survived a sluggish start and rebounded to belt the San Francisco 49ers 31-13 Sunday for their sixth straight victory in defense of the National Football League championship. With scoring ace Paul Horqung on the bench with a twisted knee, the Packers had the ball for only of plays in the first 16 minutes and trailed 6-0 on a pair of field goals by Tom Davis. Fullback Jim Tayor then ignited his mates with an l&-yard dash for Green Bay’s inilial first down and only 3:45 left in the opening half. Five plays later, Tom Moore, Hornung’s replacement, took the ball from Taylor on a reverse and skirted end on a 14-yard scoring jaunt. TAKE LEAD Jerry Kramer booted the Packers into a 10-6 halftime advantage with a 27-yard field goal at 14:49 of the second quarter. Abe Woodson regained the lead for the 49ers with an 85-yard return with a punt early in the third period, but the Packers bounce right back to go in front to stay. After Herb Adderley carried the kickoff back from his end zone the 37, the Packers went the distance in just six plays. Taylor, who nelteid 160 yards to boost his league leading rushing total to 742, capped the march by turning right end behind blocking guard Jerry Kramer and racing 17 yards for the touchdown. A lew minutes later, Hank Gremminger picked off a John Brodie pass and returned to the San Francisco 33. On the third play Taylor swung wide to his left, cut back, picking up blockers and scooted 25 yards for another touchdown. The i’ackers, the NFL's only undefeated, untied entry, who have won 14 straight games, including exhibitions, since a 22-21 defeat by the 49crs last Dec. 10, marched 80 yards for their final touchdown at the outset of the fourth quarter. Bart Starr climaxed the move with a nine-yard pass to Ron Kramer, who made a diving catch in the end zone, ---- PCKKRS I. Kramar klek) ^inqi Period Chicago Push Nets Triumph From Our Wire Services CHICAGO - A big 4th quarter push led by quarterback Bill Wade, sent the Chicago Bears into a 2ud place tie with Detroit after a 35-15 romp over the Baltimore Colts. Both teams passed for over 900 yards but the Bears forward wall put on a tremendous rush against Johnny Unitas in the second half to stop the Colts. . Wade had a bad first half with Baltimore leading 15-14, after three periods but he finished the day with 13 of 26 and three touchdowns. Jimmy Orr grabbed two of Unitas’ passes for touchdowns with a safety adding the other two points in the third quarter. Joe Marconi scored twice in the final period and Joe Morris took a 33 yard pass from Wade. FOOTBALI, DANCERS — Looking like tvyo dancers, Jimmie Orr (28) of Baltimore takes a pass in the end zone to score under the nose of Chicago’s Bill George yesterday. DeQver After 1st Place in AFL Western Division MONTEREY, Calif. (AP)-Rog-er Penske has won $18,000 in eight days with a sports car that was a wrecked heap when he traded for it less than a year ago. By the Associated Press Anyone who has been waiting for the Denver Broncos to fade from the American Football League’s Western Division race has been wasting his time. The rejuvenated Broncs are in it to stay, and they’re evidently not settling for anything less than first place. Denver held a one-half game lead over the Dallas Texans in the Western Division race today after Sunday’s come-from-behind 20-10 victory over two-time AFL champion Houston. Dallas was able to stay close only thanks to Tommy Brooker’s 42-yard field goal in the final 51 seconds that gave the Texans a 20-17 victory over the New York Titans in a brawl-filled game. half way mark. Behind 10-6 going into the final period, the 14-year pro veteran teamed with AFL scoring leader Gene Mingo to get the Broncos in front to stay. Mingo caught one pass for 19 yards, then sped to the Houston 3-yard line on a 29-yard run to set up *rrlpucka’s TD toss to Bob Scarpitto for the clincher. Donnie Stone added the final TD on a 20-yard run later in the period. George Blanda had kicked a field goal and engineered a 90-yard drive, capped by Billy Cannon’s 2-yard touchdown plunge to put the Oilers ahead. Ibis over-e a pair of field goals by Mingo in the first half. These were the only scheduled Sunday games, after Buffalo edged Oakland 14-6 Saturday night. GAINED LEAD Once more it was Old pro Frank Tripucka at the controls for the Broncos, now 6-1 at the season’s Meet DON WILUAMS AT BILL SPf NCI RAMBLIR DON SAYS: I'm glad to be back with Bill, and since seeing the new RAMBLERS . . . it's a thrill to sell themi SMtha A ’63 RAMBLER at DON WILLIAMS Bill Spence, Inc. RAMBLER 132 S. Moln Sf.j Clarkston «2S-S861 The 25-year-old Gladwyne, Pa., sales engineer won his second straight major event when he captured Sunday’s $20,000 Pacific Grand Prlx despite winning nei- ther opts igo-mile h it Pen Brooker, a rookie from Alabama, helped cap another powerful performance by quarterback Lcn Dawson and halfback Abner Haynes. Dawson passed 78 yards to Haynes for the Texans’ first then the former North State star went over from the one-yard line for another TD. TWO BATTLES Haynes touched off some late-game brawling. He was Involved in an altercation with Titans’ linebacker Jerry Fields after being driven out of bounds and was put out of the game. With only 34 seconds left, another battle broke out but was quickly subdued. Penske 'Wreck' Wins 18 Grand in Pacific Prix But Penske was second in each race over the nine-turn Laguna Seca course and carted home the top money when Dan \ Gurney dropped from the second mat and Lloyd Ruby had turn trowle in the first. \ Penske won $13,000 a week ago at the Riverside Grand Prix with his Zerex-Duralite-Climax Car. over-all prize plus $1,000 each for his heat finishes. ! for jfour oonvonlmci ! I ...ityourcoininimll | I T* «SOO I I tobuyclollNt,ra$ilr.inylilllil ! . Whon you want money for ! I any good reeeon. we’re I I the kind of people who I ! undarataiiid. ! I Call, write or etmp U * ^ THE THING TO DO IN ^ 8 HIGH SCHOOL i % AT HOMf IkTsPARE TIME f ^ You muW bo 17 er ever and bava latt icbaal. Wrtfa far TRII ’ ^ ^ SI page High kbeel leeklat and FRII LISSOM teday. R Amtrloan Sthool. Phan* DU 3-7035 P.P. ^ P.O. B0| 13. Alltn Park. Mlalitfan ^ 8»nd m4 y«ur lr*« 55-pao* HIsh B• ■ . ... Aft ... J| *. 3,7D0 council fathers gatin dirad In 3t. Pater’s BasiUca to The job of putting a modern is an area where not too much olics and the daily office or look on Catholicism’s face is x%n* tored in the 70 or more topics that..................* ---------- ihen .. ^)Osed “Constitution on Sacred Liturgy’’-a single topic divided into eight chapters that fill five Air« lip tiw firaf to a long list Qf hnnklets—happened to be, the first delay or disagre<»nent is expect* ed, unlike topics dealing with such delicate nutters as church-state world’s Catholic bishops. REUG10U8 AREA > ‘Liturgy is a purely religious topics following their election of 10 working commission. topic ready, one source Another explained that liturgy were burled anung the other said one of the experts 'Militia to Handle' Integration MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) Sources .close to Gov.-nominee George C. Wallace say he wants a state militia to deal with emer-g^ies resulting from any racial integration attempts or other sources in the state. VIDALIA, La. (UPI) - T*h e countdown began today for the ticklish job of raising four giant chlorine tanks from the Mississippi River and removing a potential threat to about 80,000 persons in The information came heels of an announcement that five Negro students would apply f(Hr admission to the University of Akbama in the next few days. UVallace said during his catn-paign last spring that, if necessary, he would stand in the door of any Alabama school to block integration during his - four-year tairm. A state militia would be available should the Alabama National Guard be called into federal service, the source noted. UNDER GOVERNOR The militia would answer to the governor and not be subject to federal call. Wallace declined to conunent on file state militia idea or on the announcement by integration leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. that Negro coUege students would apply soon to transfer to the uni- ‘ A fedm'pl court order ended legaegatton at the university when Autherine Lucy was admitted in Fdiruary 1956. Rioting broke out on the campus and Miss Lucy was removed for her own safety. She was later expelled after she accused school officials of consirir-ing with the mob. ',■■■» University sources^id# ified Negroes have applied for admission since. Divers Get Set to Raise Tanks advising the council. Liturgy includes both the form . and.the prayers of the Mass, the munity form of worship, as apart sacraments administered to Cath- from private prayer.’’ A team, of 12 divers worked to-ay to clear away three lii ^iftwood and other debris lodged at the upstream end of the barge. Ihey expected to complete the job before nightfall. The next step will be to maneuver two barges with powerful cranes faito position and lower a raising platform atop one of the tanks. Authorities have issued repeated statements to assure residents in a 30-mile radius of the sunken barge that changes of the liquid chlorine escaping from.the tanks were remote. If the chlorine should escape and mix with moisture, it would form the same type of poisonous gas used in World War I. This would force removal of inhabitants of six counties in Mississippi and Louisiana. Engineers say it will take one day to place, the raising platform to a tank and another to raise it. Bad Show for Edna LONDON (UPI) - The British Kennel Club said today it had banned Edna Batters, 27, from its shows for life because she tried to a judge during' a show in which her poodle Bunty was entered. PRESTONE TUES.-WED. ONLY OCIWER 23nl-24th 6 P.M. to 9 P.M. ,WI1H 1HIS COUPON PRESTONE 99* CONSUMERS CENTER DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORE 178 N, Soejinaw St, DOWNTOWN IH>NTiAC . ,,, of prayers that every jirleit say. So-called “secondary devotions’’ like novenasAnd the rosary are intended to bring the faithAil closer to Mass and the saom^ but they are not properly part of the liturgy. •There I. a very fundamental and social Idea in the Mturgy." * * ♦ * explained a Jesuit scholar taking part in the council. “It is a The council fathers sembly were to reading of the council prepari NE PRICE AS ADVERTISED!—"SUPER-RIGHr' QUALnnr ^'SUPER-RIGHr' PORK CHOPS Loin End Portion Whole or RihHaK JITRc Center “4/ Cut L> nv 1 •OT CUT INTO ROASTS OR CHOPS AT YOUR REQUEST Coif niry Style SporeRibr QUAIITY IB. CAP'N JOHN'S Fish Portions 2 -99c COD OR HADDOCK SAVE 10c—JANE PARKER Pumpkin Pie SEASONAL EACH JANE PARKER Potato Chips fill 59c Idfol for I^Morts, Carools ond Solods BSMAIUS LB. 10^ UB. PKG. BACON ILOOOD { "SUPER-RIGHT" BRAND FANCY 47c s 53< “SUPER RIOHr COUNTRY STYLE LOWEST PRICE IN YEARS->Whlta Albocor* A&P Tuna Fish 4^ 99c Thick-Sliced 2 Siiced Beef Liver. . • LOWEST PiftCE IN YEARS—Sultono Brond Prune Plums 5 iu. is-or OOf* No. m CANS tPtfC AAP BRAND Appiesauce . IONA BRAND Tomatoes . . K)NA BRAND Sweet Peas • Prune Juice SUNSWEn , Ketchup Azof'S!, 2 QUART » somE %ITrC 49c 12c Cut Green Beans CAN A&P Beets . • ASP BRAND Orange Juice iiR 12c ti'N 12c Your Choice ORANGE or CHERRY POPSICLES CHEERIO CHOC COVERED Ice Crean Bars 2 Pkga. of 0 Sannybiook Giado T LARGE EGGS DOZEN IN CTN. 49‘ Except Boer and Win# ONE 3-LB. BAG OP MICHIGAN No. 1 ORADI VEUOWONKMS MONv Tuts. OR WIO. OCTOBER aind. aSrd, adtit -Oood In oil ABP Super Morkolf l« One Per Nmlly—Adult* Only A&P's EVERYDAY LOW PRICES Tomato Seep . . SuhoiM Cora 10c WHOii t-la. IAa KIRNIL • * • CAN IVC au-oz. |A|k • * o CAN IvC Potato Stix .. .’c«?^l0c PiRoappIo Jaice' AtP Saaerkraut Giapefrait Jake lOc . . . 10c " . . 'iSl- 10c Poril: B Baaas«»'»» . Maine SanBaes . Whale Petatoas • • CAN AfP Pamphia • a e * ^ Tomatp Juk9 uwY* • Taalalm Ciiit lUlili 9011 MASON lOc •liiHIn MnrgviMl I " ^ 14B CTNS. QTRfD | 14 ""50* I m ^**1* COUPON ■ All pricoe In Nile ed effactiva thru TuoMlay, Oct. aSrd , In oil iMtem Mkhigan ABP Super Morkote ISM-01 Iflik • • CAN I VC ^ . aooz. 1A|» o 0 o ON. life on*T ATiunt^ rACiric n uper J<|arhets |plwWli||.l»j»i»r«.y<>wtoi>iy^ ------ . i \V'w^;J■ -V^7--ii^L’,;' V « 1 1 / /« PLUS-LOW, LOW MEAT PRICES PLUS-ROADSIDE PRODUCE PRICES PLUS-WEEK LONG SUPER SPECIALS PLUS-GOLD BELL STAMPS ■ Oyen Ready DUCKS U.S. Insp. 3V2-5 lb. Avg. Sugar Cured HAMS Shank Cut 6-8 lb. Avg. Leg, Rump or Sirloin ^ . -■'. .. MoxwelLHouie, Hills Bros.,. 1-Lb. ^ " Chase & Sanborn or Beech|Nut Coh 'v: Michigan Made ib! DiMMkAUil. |nM& '1 Top Frost • VanllM •Chotiolata •n,,.. .j t,:. Gal;; Ntapditsn witf,;Jij, coffee CS49* vvtth Thlt CauiMM ciMI MM PttlMMM (M* €»pt SMr, WIM aMl Twmimm (■» SI* Cowimriiu nI* CMh ilmtt «M j r Cu*t«nMr. I * Drayton Ploins SOSO OIxtr Hwv« • 536 N. Perry «» Poddock ' I '.SOMflhil.'Hwy. «r«w« SAT. at8AM 1 *398 Auburn Ave. *50 Si Saginaw •Walled. Lii „ ^ at Auburn wmm ^iMi ^ BIG VALU ,,:,.......f.„ ................................. Wk'^wr^ '^'fn iiRAoiyrHif] ^' f«rtnt«4 by "r ^ ■ KRAFT I CREAMY Mirade Whip PILLSBURY Flour 49 ELNA YELLOW CLING SLICED or HALVES 5 Lb. Bag EVERYDAY NEW LOW PRICE GerberV - HiiHf - Beech-Nu^^ Baby Food Now Ivory Day, Low Frico Old ^ou Now Ivory Doy, Lew Prieo Old You Prico - Sovo . Neyr Ivory Dey, Lew Price Old VOM Price Sove New Ivory Dey, Lew Price DIL MONTB—303 CAN Whole Tomatoes 4/^1 Mgn FAMO-»S*LR. - 2/S3*BiEI Pancake Flour 49' 53° ig 1-LB. CAN Sanka Coffee 73' 77' gg Hi Protein Cereal 2/39' CONTADINA—2Viagli 33* MVi Brand Milk 35' 38' JlSSj 4-OZ. Mario Olive Oil 23' ' liiimm narr^ur. 27' gg Hnk Mmon 69* suNswirr—32Ot. 43* gg Water C^tnuts 39* M.R. Domino Dots 21* 2-LB. CAN 23* 1^ Hillt Coffee 1” gg GALLON Mazola Oil 24. 2" gg Oam Chowder 29* DOMINO-JH-OZ. Cinnomon Sugar 2/33* 2/37'ig Hills Coffee 45' 69' gg DOLI—B^Z. Fruit Cocktail 2/33* •uliMgii UPTON a PK4NI. 2/39*01 Onion Soup 35* 2.LR. Navy Beans 25' 1-LB. CAN 29' gg Beechnut Coffee 67' 71' gg MONARCH DIITITI€>--l*0lj Sliced Boots 2/27« .mm PRANOO.AMIRICAN 2/33* gg MI9. Noodle Dinn. 59* «M«OZ. Kellogg Crumbs 21' mm CMASI t lANBORN—1-LB. CAN 25' BH Coffee 67' 71' gg MONAMH nntlU—MI. Kernel Corn 2/» MM UmiH*-IOI CAN 2/35'gg Vog Ail 2/35* 2i*tii Robin Hood Flour 1” ^rnmm CMASI A SANB0RN-2-LB.—10c eH Ubol 2’« ng Coffee 1'* i» gg MONARCH Oimnc—AOZ. Bortlett Pears 2/43< 2/49*gg lino Tomatoes lO* i« 2» 2»» V* 75* 53* 63* 43* 43< 33* 39* <3* 2/: 3/3S* '< 'iC'^r ^ v-h' r iifi ",‘^;*^^V( t %!/f''i'''^' - ”'^ ' 'V ' \ ^ ' Ifi^"'^ 4 llrOZ. Wheaties UIIY$—4«-OZ. Tomato Juice 3/95‘ 3/M KiLLoaa—i^z. Sugar Corn Pops 29^ 32‘ •V4-OZ. Trix Cereal 29« 32* 38* 43* Post Tens 44* 47* N.I.C^1ZOZ. SpicCtSpan 29* 31* 8PMIAL Brillo, Large 27* 29* SUPRIMI Stool Wool 2/23* 2/25' LARGI Ivory Soap 2/35* 2/37‘ BATH Zest Soap 2/43* 2/45' lilOULAR Dial Soap 2/29^2/31* WASH «. WAX—12-OZ. •* Vista 1” 1" . BODY SHUN—PT. yista 1** V’ JOHNSONS—14-OZ. Pledge Bomb P’ P’ l-OZ. Johnsons Pride 77* 79* Johnsons Glo Coot P* lOOD CLUB CORN Oll-I-LB. Margarine 2/59* 2/65* ■ORDINS—B-OZ. Gem Rolls 19* BITTY CROCKIR—1S-OZ. Pizxa Mix 39* BIRDS lYI—10-OZ. Strawberry Ha|ves3/89* DINING INN—ll-OZ. Chicken Dinners 2/89* DINING INN—11-4JZ. Turkey Dinners 2/89* DINING INN—11-OZ. Beef Dinners 2/89* DINING 4NN—1I.OZ. Salisbury Dinners 2/89* PILUBURY Whiti Angel Food Cake 45* LIPTON—100-CT. Tea Bags P’ 2-PAC Knorr Soups 37* 25* 43* 3/99* 49* 49* 49* 49* 49* 1” 39* Bakery Feature* Vienna Bread Mel-O-Crust ^l^3S* \ ' Sandwich Breads M«l-0-Crult CinnamiBii BeOS Mal-O-Ctutt Jl'lj 33*' LAMB SALE Shoulder Roust Lean 0 'Mm C Tender ■P^P7b Shoulder Steuks It 59* Ihmb Rlh Chops 79! 791 SMOKEHOUSE SPECIALS FISH NET SPECIALS 49* 45ii Lean Wafer Sliced Boiled Ham Mich. Grade 1 Sliced Bologna Mich. Grade 1 Cooked or jm ^ Boor Salami 49 ib Hickory Smoked |||| q Roasted Sausage 59i Old Heidelberg Tiny Link Breakfast Sausage 59! Mackies Micji. Grade 1 Headless and Dress^ Fresh Lake Smelts Fresh, Pan Ready Lake Perch Fillets Nova Scotia Fresh Cod Fillets Delicious Broiled Bwerdffish Steaks 21S 49S Romney Heads for Dem Fort CarriM Campaign to Muikogon Stronghold EN ROUTE WITH ROMNEV W — Republican George $ormy carried hia campaic “ * again today in a continuing.^ to crack Dentocratic voting Joritiea in tiie Nov. 6 election for governor. —The target fliiatimr^ ^ gon, an outatata atronghold for tbe Democrata. Romney waa 1o fly there for an all'4ay round apeechea apd ralliea, then return to Detroit for the annual National Automobile ishow banquet. Romany apent Sunday at home, aa la hi« Campaign cm* tom, and hoped to ahake oft the effecta of a nagging head cold that woraened alli^tly in Satmv day’a full day of ralliea and handahaklng tomra in a drli-lUng rain.' I The GOP candidate pauaed Sat-tvday in hia queat for aupport to ten a gathodhg of nemqmper editora in Detroit that Gov. Swaim aon had, in 24 inatancea, ch credit for legialation and pro> grama that were the work of Republicans, or other unite of gov- He accused Swainson of “political piracy” in taking credit for certain accomplishments in the past two years, saying the list of 24 examples “bears out the fact that he takes credit for what others did and seeks scapegoats for his failures.” RomUey, asked to comment on the latest Detroit News poll which showed he holds a 4.7 percentage point lead in voter preferences, said his oWn organlu-tion t. using the same polling service-bad come np with fig- but by different margins. Romney said the poll conducted by Market-Opinion Research Co. for the GOP was conducted on a broader basis than that of the News, however, ao the variation in results didn’t necessarily indicate a conflict. Will Hear Speech by Clerk-Register WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP Oakland County Clerk-Register Daniel T. Murphy will be guest speaker at tomorrow night’s meeting of,the White Lake Township Republican Club. ’The meeting will be held at 8 p. m. tonwrrow in the White Lake Township Hall, 7525 Highland Road. filurphy, who Is seeking re-election to his present post on the Republican ticket Nov. 6, will be available for a question- and-answer session following his talk. 'if EN ROUTE WITH SWAINSON (A — Gov. Swainson, exprening confidence that his campaign is going well, scoffed today at pub-lice opinion polls showing him to be trailing his Republican challenger, George Romney. BUT THEY UVED - Contrary to the evidence in this picture that occupants of this car must cortainly have peridied in the thmw crash on Bowerman’s’ curve, south of Romoo, early Saturday morning, tliey all are alive today. Eleven persons were injured in the mishap. The driver and one pas-. senger in this car, both seriously hurt, are still in the Conununity hospital near Almont while the other two were treated and released. They were on their way north on Van Dyke for the opening day of the small game hunting season. School Yearbooks Win* A total of eight yearbooks published by Oakland County schools have received awards of excellence from the Columbia Scholastic Press Association in New York. ril and Methodius Seminary, St. Mary’s College and St. M a r y ’ s Preparatory School at Orchard Lake. Named first-place Michigan win-sr in the colleges-universities division by t^ association was the Eagle” published by Saints Cy- 2-Cor Collision on Van Dyke Injures Driver other top winners in the state were Southfield High School’s “Blue and Gray,” Royal Oak I High School’s “Oak” and Berkley High School’s “Bear ’Tracks.” Announced earlier were medalist honors for Birmingham S e a-High School’s “Piper,” first-pteerstafoTfowet^^forBirmtifiSham^ Groves High School’s “Talon” and second-place awards for B1 o o m-field Hills High School’s “Hill-crest” and Birmingham Derby Junior High School’s “Cycle.” WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP -A 67-year-oid St. Clair Shores man is in satisfactory condition today, after being hospitalized for ininjuries sustained in a two-car collision at 6:25 p.m. I^aturday on Van Dyke, south of 30-Mile Road. James Zweekly, owner of a St. Clair Shores tool company, suffered head and Internal Injuries when he collided with a car driven by Mrs. Alva L. Brooks of 116 Spring St., Romeo. Mrs. Brooks told Romeo and state police that she was headed north on Van Dyke when the two cars met. She said she saw no headlights. Police were unable to question Zweekly and thus unable to termine which cHrection he was driving. He had been hunting near Imlay City. State JC Withholds OK of Vigilance Tax Group GRANDVILLE (u3^ - The Michigan Junior Chamber of Commerce voted yesterday to withhold official sanction of the vigilance t a X committee of suburban Detroit, pending an executive board meetlpg in Lansing, Nov. 9. The committee, which is staging an all-out fight against municipal income taxes on nonresidents, sent a delegation to the meeting here asking support in its campaign. The Grand Rapids delegatioa .. of the Jaycecs moved, however, to place the issue before the governmental affairs commi^ wait for the state Jaycee group to take action and said the committee would go directly to the indi-'idual chapters for help. In other action, more than delegates moved to set up a er-education drive in support of the proposed new state constitution by voting an initial $200 to send speakers and mall literature to Michigan voters. tee. Berkley Mayor George Kuhn who heads the tax committee, said the organization would not AnnouncB Engagement of Highland Girl HIGHLAND-Aimouncement is made of the engagement of Sharon Lea Matthael to Theodore W. Rachar by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. 3484 Highland Blvd. The prospective bridegroom Is ion of Mr, amf " Rachar, 87M Wehvi the I and Mrs. Guy Avon Township. A wedding Is planned. Car Hits Tree Killing Youth LAPEER — A 19-year-old boy died of injuries sustained in an accident in ’Tuscola County at 12:1(5 p.m. Saturday when his car apparently went out of control and struck a tree. Earl Piust, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin W. Faust el l»4 Da-ley Road, died at f til p.m. Saturday in Marlette Conmaaily Hospital of mvKiple fractaires and hiteraal injwies. State Police reported biat Faust was driving west on M48 one mile of Kbipton. They said his car apparently went out of control aiid croaaad the road to the south shoulder. It thm went off the road where it hit a tree. the 22nd annual conference and short course on yearbook production at Columbia University the weekend. ’The awa^d^ Uere innouiidsd at Awards for yearbook excellence irent to 35 Michigan schools. Nine of the 35 schools, competing against more than 1,400 others from throughout the U.S., were rated as “medalist” winners. bk School Borrowing IMLAY aTY — Approval has een given for the Imlay City School District to borrow $25,000 against anticipated state aid by the State Department of P u b 1 i Instruction. Sayf Evidence of leod by GOP Inconclusive “I aTways think back to the primary of 1989,” he mM, "when the experts said I couldn’t win ~ bntvl did. And they always said Oj WALLED LAKE - Now living in Brighton are Mr. and Mrs. Victor L. Burra who exchanged Auptisd vows in a recent tancHe*f^ lil^t ceremony in St; Idatthews Lutheran Church. Mennen Williams couldn’t win — but he did.” Swainson, who succeeded Williams as governor, was expected by maiw observers in 1^ to lose his primary battte Tor m Democratic gubernatorial nomination to James M. Hare, now secretary of state. Officiating at the rites was the Rev. L. A. Kinne. The bride, the former Mary Eleanor Nelson, is the dangb-tor of Mr. and^Mw. B. A.-Nel^ son of 3353 Westwind Drive. Parents ri the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Howies of Results of the 1 a t e s t Detroit News poll on the Swainson-Rpm-ney campaign were released Stmday and indicated that Rom-had scored a substantial gain in the statewide sampling in recent weeks. But’Ihe Detroit Free Press reported that a secret Democratic poll showed toe two candidates to be neck-and-neck, with both Swainson and Romney getting 47 per cent, and toe remaining 6 per cent of toe voters still undecked. Swainson followed another busy Sunday schedule with appearance at four churches, a fund-raising dinner in Grosse Pointe, a United Auto Workers educational conference, and rallies in Taylor Township. Today, he was scheduled to de- liver the keynote address at a conference of the National Rehabilitation Association in Detroit, meet with Democratic legislators and candidates in Lansing and attend a National Automobile s;|)ow dinner with Vice President Lyhdon B. Johnson. Wed in Lutheran Rite Living in Brighton For her wedding the telde chose a gown of princess taffeta and Alennm lace. Appliques of the iace outlined the wide scoop neckline and the three-quarter length sleeves. The bell-shaped skirt, highlighted by a large bow at the waist, extended into a chapel train. liflLFORD - Several Irate area farmers, stiU seething over t h e wholesale slaughter of a family of deer Oct. 8, have eontrflxitod ail addiUonal $109 reward for arreat anid convlcithm of the culprHa- . PariRBrs at Milford Add $100 to Howard The Milford 'Dirfle Oub and the Tri-County Sportsmen’s Club bad each donated |2S in an effort to obtain information regarding the off-seastm killings. A large buck, a doe and two fawns were discovered by Robert Sinclair of 1715 Old Plank walk down -toe road. He found toe remains hi a thickly wooded area on toe east side of toe road Proud Lake Recreation A r e a manager, A1 Masini, said the deer bad been shoUv shotgun ahiga^ Thehindquartersandsirlobiseo-thms of the buck and doe had been stripped and parts of both fawna MRS. VICTOR L. BURM ’The bouffant veil was held by a jeweled iace crown, and the bride carried a bridal bouquet of roses, fugi chrysanthemums and ivy. Mrs. Donald Reynolds of East Lansing was matron of honor for her sister. Bridesmaids were Elaine Zucchet and Mary Lang, both of Orchard Lake; Diane Fries of Detroit; and the bridegroom’s sisfor, Rosella Burm‘of Walled Lake. Jerry Swartz and Larry Staurch, both of Novi. Following a reception in toe church parlors, the couple left for a honeymoon in i Michigan and Wisconsin. Julie Ann and Janet Beth Coomes were flower girls while the bridegroom’s nephew, Keith Howie, was ring bearer. Henry L. Bender of Croswell 'as bec^ man. Ushers were Richard Daugherty and John Dihiick-ley, hito of Walled J#ker. and “This is the first time in my 14^ years of work in this area that any deer had been deliberately killed on state land,” Masini said. District 1 Candidates to Speak in Clarkston CLARKSTON - Candidates for state representative from District I will meet head-on-’Thursday at 8;30 p,m. in the Clarkston Community Center. Incumbent Republican Lloyd Anderson and Democrat John Coleman will express their views con-con in a program sponsored by the Clarkston Community Women’s Club. A question and answer p - TralfW accidents have killed 1,252 peiv> sons in Michigan so far this year, • by state police showed today. This toll at this date last year y 1,233. It's Rocking the Nation . A Revival of the Traditional American Rocker! The White House surgeon recommends rocking os a healthy way to relax , . . and onyone who remembers being rocked os a child will odd his approval. And, as for the chairs themselves, interior decorators ^ are using them more and more for that “homey" touch. SEWINO ROCKER Armlm roctew ii or mop)* MODERN CANE SEAT boston ROCKER DacoroWd in qold on * ^7*® FARM HOU?S ROCKER RiMmoptn (Inlih or wdy hordwood. $3995 0XJjaXJRJBJLN r\axmt\ire BR.JL-X'TOlir oxxxm iX’WTr. . SHOP MON., THURS. AND Ml. Tlli 91 CONVINtINT MR PAWKIRBI ' /atftff.viATdVwAf* I >iill Confusion in Grading Can Harm Student By LESLIE X NASON, ED.D. ^ministratora to elimii\ate ■ Ptatanap of EdacatioB, Ualvenity of Seothcn Callfoniia Many teaudien guard their rlidit to grade as they please as something tnallenable, like freer dom of qieech or religion. That’s fine--as long as it does not harm other pe// t GETTING YbU LOOSE: HE I FROMTH'MEADLOCK /ANO, ^ YOU GOTOM THAT kc . I 1 ALWAYS SAID AtAOS WAS BATTY, BUT HE'S 60 FAR 60(J& . rw, KJOW. if You eivlG MII\A AN ACORN]) l4EA(?*)f ^300/ Lig:'i / iAA« I IP A rofzt=r VI Mint // . "5 A Srr HE’LL cum UPATBE& TO HIDE rr.'-^WAHTED METOlNiNEST MV ♦SOO Wm HIM IN TH' BIRTHDAY CAK& OANOLe BaSIN6S6/«-^Chinese boundary b-a Bhlpping firm carrying goods to Cuba o-the outer limit of the Van Allen belts 2 This is United Nations Week. With Uganda, the UN has....members. a-110 b-109 O-180 3 Elections for the UN Security Council called attention to the fact that the Council has..... seats, five of them permanently aaaigned. a-20 b-11 0-16 4 The U.S. joined its.........allies. Great Brttain, jpakli ____Itoan, Australia, Franoe, New Zealand, Philippines, and Thailand, in semi-annual military a-NATO b-CENTO o-SEATO 6 Because of Project Mercury results, scientists plan to ..... the Gemini flight series, a-eliminate b-use more crew control in o-double the length of PART II-WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points for each word that you can match with its correct meaning. 1- promulgate 2- adepA 3- hostlle r 4- provoks 5- deteot PART III-NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can correctly match with the clues. 1-J.Q. Wtoson 2-Gerhard Sohroeder 8-Andral Gromyko 4-Walter Sohlrra* Jr. a-Weto Germany’s Foreign Minister -b-reoelved NASA Dis-tlngulshed Servloe Award o-Coago's Premier d-Soviet Foreign lUn- 6-Cyrllle Adcxda e-Amsrloan Nobel Prlae winner . * VK, iMk. MteRw I STUDENTS ValosWe Reftotnec Material Fer " ■ iv'<- ' s ■ THE PONTIAC PEESS. MONDAY, QCTOBEft ^ 1962 HURON flilbll NoU-dwH^ Story Links Doris Day to Union Funds £OS ANGELES Doris Day and restaurateur To«ts Shdr have been involved in Teamsters Union Peiaion !fund loans dr commitments totaling Timei reported yesterday in a copyright^ story.' The Times dispatch saM the Teamsters fund had loanea'11.8 million and committed another $S million to a nationwide chain «f hutury motor hoteb in which Misa Day is a major in- The Times also said , Shor’s new restaurant in mWtown Man* hattan was financed by $4.2 mil* lion froni the fund........ . The money, according to the article, came from the $180 million central states, southeast and southwest area pension fund based in Chicago. Teamsto-President James Hoffa was identified as one of ffie tru^ees of Eliza’s Father Thinks Baek IM «rtt\akH«b Amortean coun-lwhieh opened a line for aerviee in fiiy ta build a rahwad was Chtlal»M. 'Fair Lady' Memories Persist You can buy art International trip by air for only $2.80. That’s the fare from Copenhagen, Den^ mark, to Malmoe. Sweden. By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-TeievisioB Writer H 0 L L y W OOD. - 'Memories of “My Fair Lady". When the record-breaking musi-cal cloaetL after sHTand a half years on Broadway recently, it evoked a rush of memories. Stanley Holloway, who devoted the better part of four years to playing Eliza’s rakish father ini New York and London, has a few memories of he mused. “There was the first nothing of Harrison’s sdhenM until this year. He received a tottw proposing the engagement, was NBWABCSHOW The result is “Our Man ■ on ABC Wi It could be a longer engagement for Holloway than “My Lady,” judging from the reviewer reaction. If the s' Oh, I remember many nights," jht we played a Sunday night benefit before our own pndfs-sion. The response was so.enormous the stagehands waived their usual finishing time so they could worjc overtime. !Ihere-waa the night a-LSOtk pound piece of scenery fell back-stage with a great crash. Rex Harrison was doing a number and he didn’t miss a note; he said later he thought someone was shooting at him. KEY WEST, Fla. (AP)-A control tower is being built at Key West airport and construction round-the-clock to complete^it. “There was the night I heard commotion in the theater but kept on singing. I learned later that a man had fainted in the stalls (orchestra seats)^ They had to carry him out over people’s ids. 'One time Rex was out with a bad throat and his understudy played the matinee. What with nerves and all, the poor bOy was steadily losing his voice. At the evening performance the audience couldn’t even hear him. The curtain rang up at 8:35 and down at 9:15. OPENING NIGHT And, of course, there was opening night. There was never anything quite iike that.” Unbeknown to Holloway, there was a man in that audience who would have a profound effect Pmy Como and Dick Van Dyka --‘Higgins could look forward to the same steady employment of Is neighbor at Screen Gems, Haiel." ~ - Tlie pnqMct doesn’t faae Holloway, a chunky, vigorous 72-yearoU. " enjoy living here,” said the r, who had never before worked in, the. Hollywood studios. Servicemen Pour Info Key West ploded Sunday night at the home of Walter Ekigene McCarron, son of the Republican candidate for Ro(d( County assessor, in suburban Oak Park. pldy room and broke windows in The tower is needed to handle a big increase in traffic, informed source said. The airport, which has not needed a control tower in the past, is a few miles south of the naval air station at Boca 'iChica. Frequent airport visitors said servicemen were pouring into this island city, locat^ 90 miles from Cuba. Construction crews appeared suddenly at the airport Sunday and by late in the day the tower was operating on a makeshift basis. A Key West lumber yard hurriedly opened its doors to provide materials. Suspense grew throughout Florida. Leaves were canceled at the Boca Chica Naval Air Station, where a battalion of Marines arrived during the weekend. ★ * * 1 Macdill Air Force Base at Tampa in west-central Florida also was reported on the alert. Residents in the area reported heavy his future. He was Paul Harrison, may»m«iU .ol plam a producer-writer of radio and television. Back in 1951, Harrison had created a radio show called “Higgins, Sir,” starring Harry McNaughton, thO old bottle of Phil Baker’s trouple, McNaughton died, and so did bigtime network radio, and the show went into limbo. While watching Holloway strut through “Get Me to the Church on Time, ’ Harrison pondered: “If I I ever put ‘Higgins’ on television,] that’s the man I want to do it.” Holloway, one of England’s great musical comedians, knew] hauling chrgo mark(^ “Explosives.” The base was placed on an alert last Friday. ★ ' ★ Readiness drills were staged at Jacksonville’s Mayport Naval Station Saturday. Bomb Home of Son of GOP Candidate ^WCAGCMAPl-A bomb^^ house and in an adjoining home. No one was injured. McCarron. whose father, Walter Edward McCarron was former Cook County coroner, estimated damage at $5,000. Young McCarron, 34, his wife, Mary, 32, and their three children, Timothy, 10, Michael, 7. and Marisinne, 4, were in' the house when the bomb, apparently placed at a basement window, exploded. Copper production in Montana in 1961 totaled 103,840 tons, 13 per cent above 1960 and the highest in 17 years. ^ZZaKEECOl •Mh nantti sUmmi Miir •«€• mruumsin ^oHniimNiF lufleiiiiz REQUUII raiOf s UDY AND THK TRAMt> ,l:00-3i55-AiS0-9i4$ ALMOST ANMIS 3(20-5ilS-8i10 FREE TlOXm ON NEW TEMPIst-OQT. 29 NOWI “Mtl«nLi«^WUDIRS" SPENCER TRJCV BURT LANCASTER RICHARD WIOMARR MARIEHE DIETRICH JUDY GARLAND MAtlMIllAN SCHELL MONTGDMERY CLIFT ■"It's the talk of the Town' EXICimVE UmCHEOMS Served from 11 A. M. fverydey-—Also COMPLETI DINNERS PRIME RIBS •f BEEF Served Everyday i '• George end Morie Slonoker's 2325 S. TELEGRAPH RD. MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER THE WORLD'S /uno SHCfii See the exciting '63s together for the first time in one gigantic exhibition! See the world’s biggest showing of new U. S. cars and trucks—more sizes, styles and spe cial features than ever! And In beautiful new Convention Arena— the exciting musical revue America Drives AheedI Broadway stars! Brilliant dancing, color and soundl Original musici Spectacular entertainment four times daily! Added attraction todayl At 2:30 PM a daz-zlinf fashion show, featuring the etylea of 44th NATIONAL AUTOMOBILE SHOW COBOHAU-DETROIT-OCT.20-28 ADl|LTS$1.00 CHILDREN 35c More and More People Are Switching to Gee . THERE IS A REASON ONLY AT GEE’S WILL YOU FIND ALL THESE FEATURES WHICH ADD UP TO COMPLETE HEATING SATISFACTION! • One of Pontiac’s oldest and largest Independent Home-Owned Distributors of Quality Fuel Oil, with 37 years continuous service to customersi • Prompt, dependoblo automatic supply assures ustomers of never being vrithout plenty of Quality Fuel Oil! • New, modem GMC Trucks, meter equipped for accuracy and radio dispotched for better servicel • Budget terms remove big fuel bills in colder mortthsi • Holden Red Stamps plus L personalized service! YOU CM BEFaO OH No Manor Whoro You LIvo... You, Too, Con En|8vS«li# l>ep®n«*«Wo Warmth, ^ Comfort and Economyl Gea'i fiaat of naw, modarn GMC frucki (malar aqoippad for accuracy and radio diipotchod for bottm^ MrvicoJ dolivor bailor qualily fual oil ih Ponlioc, Drayton Plaino, Wolorford, Clarkslon, Orion, Rochostor, Auburn Haights, Bloomflaid Hills, Ktago Horboo, Wollod Loko and tho surMunding arta ... May wo Includ# your homo on our ovor growing till of lotisfiod cuflomori? ... Just dial PE 5-818T. -Mtafloe Coll goon!- Wo Cony o Comfdolo Uno «f All Rogulor Orodof of COAI “iITTU JOB" STOKER COAL YOU PONT KNOW WEL... KNOW YOUR fUfal PEAUlfc** ^oytuo MEsa MpypAY, octobeb gai loeg / JSsM'. MARKETS Tha following art tO| produce by growera and Mid by them In whoteaala package lota. Quotatlona are fiunlahod by the Detroit Bureau of Martceta, at o< Wednesday. Prtkiuct oiarkM alid dunrply In heavy trading early thia afternoon. Wall Street me Jittery about aa yet un- The ydter tape ran as much as » minutes behind transactions. Ito worst lag since July 10. Large NEW YORK W - Boi . drifted lower shortly after the opening of the trading today. Governments suffered the largisr II IlM, cudumbni, piokl* < CuoumlMri. •Ilotri, *' pm, - ‘•*‘-■hi Horstr^to' One over the o^ter dealer in U.S. Treasury issues quotes distant maturities off 4/32 to 8/32, intermediates off 2/32 to 4/32 and wol. < Pkiwupi. «*Ua Pni, BiMktir*, bi p«pp«n, CbiwuM. P«pp«n> hoi, bu. I, M-lb. b I, U-lb. b Acr but a.M Squktl^ HuMjtrd^u. iS Celerr. C CollMd, I Eodlvo, t Kndivo. t Lottiieo. Bibb. pk. . TlOlnO. bli._^.j firm ;.T................ IIROh, Ml............... Poultry and Eggs DETROIT TOWI.TRT 19-20; turkeys: young T4>bis DETROIT, Oct. aa (API paid per down »l Detroll oelvere llocludlni U.B ' Whitci ~Or»de A lu i.ri,e 3»-M; Urge 37(. i,r.T3a?^‘Sr..i*a.a‘ib‘ large 37>.b-2g: Checke a3-ai. CHIOAaO lale buying pricee unohange jrc M-l”ar'. PC ” — • Egge irregular; ‘erii a B 57V.,----------. wholetaje buying , _____ „ . higher: 70 per oenl or better grade A whilee 30'^; mlkio M: medium* 75: etandarde 31; dUrttei U; cheoka 77. OHICAOO POjytTRT _ ^ cniOAQO. Oct. aa IAP^—tlva PouUry: lid 'whTli Livestock good a llva; at Xici‘ DETROIT LIVRSTOCK ler aleera and helfata., ouallt* ^arply Wupp’fr'i^ t'T: oowa In ambllar lupply; a altera and hellart t--itrong; oowa fully tte»< .....-• htgb choloe nnd W sa loprima tleart. *>1®® Sateera 75.16-75.75: mixed high g^ b Lw choice eteeri 3l-aa.75nqod ite. u-al: meet choice bellere al-ai: g^ low choice hellere 75-37: uMIttP «o»* ‘ “"“Jofl, *iarrow"*ilnd 1»U «®-fy %.i'.»‘.7ii:‘iiin5“j4VSJi ^Vebieri*aoO; fully eteady. prim# jafonrut^iru-Si' allttp t,000; Ik;, alaughter ^oloi and l» |£’fk.r«.S ;; at'andard 76-71: ughter lambt 7Se high-ten ateady to atrpng; i wooled inmbi ai.5j- CHICAflO I.IVEBTOCR omoAoo, o^ 77 la 315 lb* >”»i "r*- ™ choice with few prin a* S bd SSS! aW??; rt 8.16; utility and commercial com H.» Sife Jn“d’"j;^nm%'fcl.ri”ulf. iliK:!!!;! me t7*o!l!l5*(»: euil mJih’-part deek thorn (daughter jamMibyi let DlrMeng^ 11 i Rumops^ Fly, Mart Skids Lower NEW YORK (AP)-The stock Wocks og key, stocks were edin The military butUkip In the Caribbean, combined with the President’s calling tjH top Congressional leaders to a conference, left Wall Stnset buzzing with all kbida of rumora. Tha market observed Its tradition of selling oH on uncertain^. In addition, last week’s decline left the list in a vulnerable oon-and the Dow Jones industrial averaged cracked through the suKiort level of about S7l which had acted as a downside ‘floor” on July 18 and Oct. were taken by more volatile bills off 1/32 to 2/32. The downturn in treasury issues was generally expected after last week’s strong rally, one " * Among corporates, trading dur-[ thell ■ ■ -------- ing the first hour was heavy but price changes mostly were snail. RORVIK, Norway (AP) - Rescue ships and planes found 20 bod- Many key stocks were off a M «nd at least 20 ^r^ were or more and wider ' ‘ - » JMJickerJtiipe_hegan-to^ up in the afternoon and some of losses Whether the calming - down pro-would continue or whether the market would be subjected to a renewed avalanche of selling remained to^ke seen. list were affecM by the selling wave. General Motors was down more than a point but shaved the loss-to a bit. less than a-point. Find 20 Bodies in Korway Sea ArK>th«r 20 Misting as Lin«r Abandondd liner Sanct £ abandoned in stormy seas. Five mehoaU wMiJi JffitaLofjttL survivors — 22 passengers and 0 crewmen— were picked up in the icy Norwegian Sea. Gale force wind e‘ahd poor visibility hampered rescue iqierations. Agents for the liner said she eanled a ww ia^ of Federal Reserve Just Store-Minding? AP By SAM DAWSON they can lend to those who want aerve to Iztek their time sjw^ '- -**--*‘-** *“—*—awwii' cral Reserve board a to borrow to stock up tor the holiday trade, or to meet wlnter’t In- sluggish economy or Just minding the store? Many in WaU Street incline to the latter view of the board’s cautious move to expand, credit. Some even question whether changes in credit polkgr andjpm-ey rates would influence builtoM activity right now the way they did a few years back. One of the Fed’s duties each fall is to Journey through procesfdng plants to grocery shelves. discount Or the Fed can cut the discount rato-what .it charges member banks to borrow from it. Thiu, " Usually the rewrve banks do this by buying short-term government securities from the commercial banlo. This gives banks cash lngidepo8ils.TlM 1787 million, on which banks couM \ pyramid up to 14.0 MUion in toiM \ . ^ -A- III bomw that much. In other an- money from the Fed and lend it iDUt at a profit to itself. Either way, increased activity is accommodated in thp fall. Board — for reasons that Involve world conditions as tic economic probIem*-has dwi-en to let the banks have more money to lend by lowering the AU imjioitont 8^^ the 40 nef4 r *4^ reported, bat toey were imabie to give the exact nnmber M passengers, as ticketo coaU be beoght aboard ship. The New York Stock Exchange Military planes searched the sea off orayw’swet etaoin etaoin etaoi off Norway’s west coast. Officials said there were several small islands where some survivors may have landed. I Xxcluu^ wttb 'is«a 77 17 UH U uS U6b nib- tb ? “iTS S -?S r. sa S% S-b:: H 3 aovb 45>/b 65<.b-l . .... S3%-Vt *?a 146 Mli 15 - 17 _________ 17 ttb 7V« 7Vb4 ^ ‘S ^ T S't:- *i It £ IIS 1 laCb I7V. lavi- J4 H( fi sa sjtr-' I mb i7'/b mb- vb 77 77V4 - “ ‘ 1 is g£ “ 17 at’* 7M4 70Tb' II 37 mm 77% ( to 45% 45% 45% 5? t?a i?a 53 75% 75% 75T^ % mMIUl t. •n MoMri SRitl’sl .- - m Pub Ut I 75b 17 ifi m Tlr#* .45 ..jrbtr Prod i OB Pae Cp lb Oetlj Oil OlUbttb 1.105 _ -- gsrs'» " ss onS UB = a- 'W Jaliir,! Bkbcock W 1.55 7 57 51% 41Tb- % “ 'siTiS *ssasasa=a * 4S s sa s.b-1% Aire .55 7 13% U% Mm .. i! is' Wt' 17% 17%^, i 8^ S sEi ilal^ii'ii SHffi iiBill's ?»r ‘s_s% sa sr a Homo Fin 1.45 Houit LAP I M How# Bnd .771 Hupp Cp ,15r s na sa V: w sa vv* «%- 17 15% mb mi- 47 77 35% 354»- 15 4STb 45% 4S%-17 75% 75 75 - I 5% 4% 4%, 15 57% 57 Olios 15% 16% l6Vb-) 5 554b 75% 604b 71 13% 17 17 - *7 ‘7% “% ”'b^4b -s>^.sa7saia 17 77 77% 77%-r^ 4ra .3to .-.JO In .lOf a BW 1.55 47 75Tb 35% a04b- 45 35% 75 75Tb- U 77 77 as .. s S’* sa ^ * s 8% sa Sit:a "£8?‘p5r *,”7%Vkl'j ....if'cr‘“*7? isa ‘s% ‘s%i ChiT#l#r 1 55 54% 53% 74 -1 err Flnon 1.50 74 75% 35% Tllb-l; Ctttu 7.45 It 45% 55 45,— Cfc» BI ni 7 16 57 51% tl%- 11 saga” Ar 8 ^ 1% CBS 1.40b .. »8£4r m If Hl5h4r 5r*«# -It S#05Dd trodf r «J>ublle Olimiii (iMliulrlidi . t l4Tb-^'% 50 »a s s -1% 34 71% 70% 354^1% 44 71% 71% 71%— % ? H» S S£| lit “ 15 75 15% 154i- % 6 7 75 77% 77%-T# 5 M% 51Tb Mlg 1 )1 17% 17 > 17Vb+ % ■K— T 78% 774b 154b-% K#y# Roth-.^ !! IL «ia Kantasoott 7.78# 75 55% 754* 594b— % K*m C Ld 7.45 » ®J^ « MV. : K#rr 6loOa# .50 51 15% 30 70 -1' K.r«. ..«.*! 8% 1 t:V- »! sa 71% iiai % Kroiar I.IO Ks«H%r 8 *ja fm ‘ir.; «iKl %•? iS § S ^ i w sa S'* 8 c#m.... ■" fr#n##m#r l.i Tmntllron - S.S”i«“S« T T:. “! SS S8 Sfc ... 1 5 37% r « - gsrpiSl ;S* ■ -■ -#» Cp i.or MAlt 1# Ing eight bodies, while a Norwegian air force flying boat reported seeing another 12 bodies in the water. The modem 2,172-ton liner went Li^thouse Island, winds 4 miles south of Nordoeya aground last night in gale force The ship messaged that It pulled itelf clear, but it had been holed by the grounding. Thirty mluntes later it radioed that it was taking a considerable amount of water and abandon ship was ordered. .........ISk'W- TSS“ " mEdri M _ ki lUbleot to tUtutory limit. I OU «_T— tt 15% 15 15 — 50 84 83% 8S%- 14 36% 37% 37%-l 75 11% 11% 11Tb- % 64 49% 49 49 -1% 7 43Tb 47% 474i- % 7 18% 15% 164b- ■' 15 74% 74% 74Tb- 17 78% 75 “ Stocks of Local Interest Fl8ur«# oner dacimki polnta #rk klsbtba . BM Aakkd .8 ‘ m.T Loutkikoa Oa#<». .78.7 76,4 lont. Cham. Co. Pld. 10 10.3 Bormon Storaa ...... J-J PJdir8"ldpgufBowar Baaiinfa 34 34 j ijHwSr Au^Wearint ::: ajJ ».i ......................... |j “vbr5» nlrMatoh .15 nlypilPd. .80 8 8 77% TiTi- 7T 70% 75Tb —V— 1 as 28 36 - % 45 75% 774i 774i-I% 4 3li^ 30% 30%-IV, -w— !® illy iuy~^ on. Vnltao oih’arwiaa notad. apael «tra dlvMindt ora not inoludad. plurt|Sk*dY8dand**d^cl5^« in isirplw^aUMk, dlvMand, ^l^lar-^ 'EtttS i. ■'siir«p.%-*i SI«*olSit83r7.i.« Treasury Position Congressman William S. .Broomfield gets some mail thM pleases him ^ some that does i A letter he liked was one from U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Frederick G. Dutton, who praised Broomfield for "all your help on the State Department’s legislative program this past session.” NOT SO PLEASANT Another - one not ate «» ing — was a second letter from Ken Morris, codirector of UAW-CIO Region One, which includes Pontiac. Morris criticized what he termed Broomfield’s “obvious reluctance to dlsccss your record u an told " issued a second invitation for Broomfield to speak before UAW members and answer their questions. Morris also suggested an alternative of appearing on t h e UAW’s daily radio or television shows. M a guide to tba (W.P7«0 mata trading range o« tha aaburltlaa.^ AIIT Corp.^ ............... DafrolUr’*66oblle. Homaa i, Eleotronlos Intenmi “Aaa'pipe Una'S 73.' Varnora Olntar Ala .... . ...... J.S I Wtakatonn-a,^^. . . . ...... M |0;j (HymuTott. gij-i*®-- kX Mtaa. Ini Mtaa. Ini--- Putnnm Orowth Talavlelon Blaclr -Nomlnnl quatatlona Engineer Succumbs BOSTON (AP) - Henry DeWltt mith, 74, of New York, a prominent mining engineer, died Sunday. Smith was vice president the Newmont Mining Cqrp. and O’lAiep Copper Go. In South Africa and the Tsumeb mine In Southwest Africa. 87 57% 67% «nir-i% «al7j5S“ .“**t2.S *14 fe®|4t''Lld ; IJ :: (elaar Indue *j| ^hntoo 17 Music Director Diet WYE MILLS, Md. (AP) - The Rev. P. Mason Willis, 65, whd had dirvicted the musical religious na “The Asbbry Story" at churches in nine eastern Methodist conferencee, died Sunday. He bom in Beloit, Wis. Broomfield Likes Letter of Praise. Dislikes Other The result is to releaM i ipressingtl Fed has expanded t hinds hy considerably mere Ibui The legal mlninwm on time and saving depotot leaema la 3 per TOe^imeHlin Federal Reserve down from 5 per qeid. Many bankers hold that lOgal ieservea on these forms of de^ts should be ellmfaiatod altogelher. So the Fed is using a method money to mu uy amaiue .*•» 46.. «^- *— amount they must keep on re- ^ t i, INIEIINAnONAL REALM But the board probably had its eye as much on the intomatioiuil situation and the U.S. Treasury’a Like everyone else. Republican strange to get-such a letter Just as President Kennedy whs preparing to visit Michigan Nov. 1 to c a m p i g n on behalf of his (opponent. Morris’ letter took exception to a statement, about his earlier, Invitation, by Broomfield tiiat, “Thia is the first time any labor organization has asked me to appear to speak in my 14 years in public office.’’ M 0 r r i s said Broomfield made the same statement two years ago in response to a similar Invito- Broomfield has declined an earlier invitation to debate his opponent, George J. Fulkerson, before a meeting of Pontiac area UAW members. He had said the late adjournment of (kingress had made it difficult for him to meet previous commitments without taking on neW ones. He said the same thing after receiving Morris’ second letter. AT A STRANGE TIME A member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Broomfield says he is “one of the most ardent supporters of President Kennedy’s bipartisan foreign polliy.” Dutton’s letter said, “You are certainly one of the coming congressional leaders in the field of foreign policy and I took forward to working with yon.” Broomfield remarked it was General Support Ups Grain Futures CHICAGO (AP) - Strong general support boosted grain fiitures prices well over a cent a butoiei in spots today in active early transactions on the board of trade. Brtocers said the demand largely was of the scare variety and d toti (Crisis had developed in U.S. &»--eign relations in view of word that Pmident Kennedy had 'summoned top congressional leaders to Washington. Short interests were active buyers in all pits as offerings became relatively scarce. Soybeans moved up as much as two cents during the first several minutes. Wheat, com and rye advanced a cent or some contracts. •niia.. Grain Pricti aUTAO^ ®AP)"- Si :;!1 Patrillo'iWifaDiai CHICAGO w Marie Petritto, 08, wife of James C. PetrlUO, re-tiled president of the AtiMrlean Federation of Musicians, died,,Saturday after in iltoeis of eevWal mondis with p lum af‘ the banks. Buying iqi short-torm government securities to give banks tiie extra funds they normally need in the fall has anottwr lesuIHNia the Treasury is eager Just now to avoid. R sends the yield on thMc securities down. And investara are tenqited to turn to European money markets where returns are much hlid^r. ’This outflow of dollars would In-rease tiie deficit in the nation’s balance of payments-a deficit strtvlng miiditUy to pare. It was tids excess of the outflow of dM-lari over inflow over tiie last five years that led to the TIreasurys loss of more than |6 billion in «»“• . . . Hisbef Suffers HearfAffd(J( FREMONT (AP) - Stephen S. Nisbet, 66, constitutional convention president and prominent civic leader, was in Gerber Memorial Hospital at Fremont today after second “severe heart, attack.” His wife issued si statement which said he was stricken about f p.m. yesterday and was in “very critical condition although he had a very good night last i^t.” Doctor Lambert Geerllngs, family physician, asked that Nisbet have “absolutely no visitors, no calls, no flowers.” Nisbet siiffered his first heart attack last September while on vacation. He had retired in December, 160, as a vice-president of Ge^ her Products Co. The other method i of sivplying funds-4ower- ing the discount rato-wbo coidd Hiwmu(di the saiiM undesired result since most short-term interest rates would tiim down tt the discount rate did. The money managers have been pursuing a pcdicy (tt keeping shortterm interest rates hi^ enouj^ to discourage the flight (tt the dollar to other lands. At the same Unto they have fried to keep the supidy of credit eaey enough to encourage the economy to grow. It his been a delhnde balan^ JolH-liut ier in recent months be- SEASONAL NEEDS Making more funds avallOblt to the banks now Is aimed at caring for the usual season trade demands without affecting Interest But as to being a spur to ttid economy-tliat’s another i “ leeway in their reserves, and hope tha demand for sound and profit- |i # - Og* *4|l By ROGER B. SPEAR the stocks you mentioa, but there 0. “I am 20 years eM iad reasotw why I advise ag^ a city fireman with ne family at ipsent. I want to buy some geed $1,000 a year. Would Americaa Photocopy and Atlas Chemical be good choices, er cenid you them at this time. Apeco to a fine company, but It to running up against severe competition. For the first time, its earnings this dragged behind those of a year earlier. Af A. It always gives me considerable pleaBure to assist someone in Atlas Chemical to a solid situation, but its < help, we need it badly and always get it. In certain respects, I like botii and it to not a growth situation. For your purpoees, I zuggost FMC and Nortl^ lUinoto Gas. News in Brief A miniature camera valued at $30 was reported stolen Saturday from the glove compartment of a car parked at Airway Lanes, 4825 M59, Waterford Township. Harold Sellers of Warren, told police the compartment hqd been forced open. Judy Findley, 2413 Watertord Township, told police Saturday that she discovered her pocket was picked of $32 while shopping at the Pontiac Mall. The raa reportedly ne w pMCk M ( with a rubber band. Christ Church Crauhreok Rummage Sale Thursdiw. Nov a.m.-2 p.m, Loiw iPlne I Crahbrook ftd. Bhwnttteld 24. $ a m. • 3 p.n>- AuspleeU ln^ Eastern Star, m 8. Q. ”We kmm Just • $l$l aid $11 • msulh. Rto Itova $li$l. Caa ysu advhe us kow ta apperthu (Nw monay-ziiad tilia ef stock, ete?”OJL A. My first suggestion to you would be to get together and agree on a definite investment plan and stick to it. Deckle righf away what your objective to: Inoine, longterm growth or speculation. Thtiw to nothing ao unrewarding (War lili (tt Bto(ks, often «i hot t^a that irMypaytttl. U group to young aiM MMsft forward to tl * the fWiirt. If that to BO, I would buy growth aaehMtva^ Ai a itorter, I auggoet ------------ ‘aT^i on of Capniia, Htf ahm« hi i|it%ie nuatoHaj. nritoMagniFhi tito West Ooaat gaaolhM andiMlahl Ik’S' (oonnaewnM) l ;: THE POKTIAC press. MONDAY, OCTOByB 22, im Pontiac, Nearby Area Deaths Sarvtefl for; former Waterford 'fownahip resident Mrs. Elmest (Edna) Best, 7S. of 300S() .aark ; St., New Haven, will be Tuesday j* j P tte PuncM Funeral follow in Centennial Cemetery, also in New Haven. Mrs. Best died Friday at St. Joee^ Hospital, Mt. (Heinens. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Joseph Drilps of New Haven and Mrs. Harold Simmons of New Jersey. MRS. LOUIS BILES Service for Mrs. Louis (Margaret) Biles, 67,.of 98 S. Edith St., will be 10 a.m. Wednesday at - 4he.lIuntooa FjrneraLHom Mth and Mrs. Jam» Schatzley of 59 Monrof St., was held at 1:15 p.m. today at Perry Mount Park Cemetery. ' Kelli Anne died Saturday shortly after birth at Pohtlac Osted-ithic Hospital. Funeral " Funeral Home. AUGUSTIN VERES Augustin Veres, 71, of 121 Prall St., died yesterday. His body Is at the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home. WILLIAM A. ARMSTRONG AVON TOWNSHIP - Service for WiUiam H. Armstrong, 70. of 2625 Melvin St., will be 10 a.m. Wednesday at the William R. Po-tere .Funeral Home, Rochester. burial to follow at Perry Park. Mrs. Biles died yesterday after a long illness. Surviylng besides her husband are two sons, Sgt. Robert W. Hol-3 tjgfl jjjfand Warren Holman of Detroit, and two broth-ers. . HOWARD J. CLARK Howard J, Clark, 44, of 4076 S. Shore Drive, Watkins Lake, Waterford Township, died in Brandon Township. His body is at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. MRS. JOSEPH McNALLY Service for former Pontiac resident Mrs. Joseph (Margaret) McNally will be at 9:30 a. m. Thursday from St. Jerome’s Catholic Church at Indian Rocks, Fla. She died in her sleep this morning at her home in Indian Rocks. Her husband formerly owned McNally’s Men’s- Store and was a part owner of the former Le-Roy Kirk Toggery Shop in Pontiac. She was long active in civic and religious affairs here in Pontiac. HORACE G. NAYLOR Service for Horace G. Nayloi 61,1190 Tailor Rd.. will be 3 p.m. Wednesday at D. E. Pursley Funeral Home with burial at White Chapel Cemetery. He died Saturday in Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, as the result of a hunting mishap. A set-up man for General Motors ’IVudc and Ckiach Dlv., Mr. Naylor was born in Mayflower, Ark. He came to Pontiac 26 years ago. Surviving besides his wife, Bonnie, are a daughter, Mrs. Lois Jones M Mayflower; three sons, Michael, Thomas and James, all at home; his step-m other Etta Lewis of MayHower and four grandchildren. Also surviving are four brothers and four sisters. HENRY A. POLZIN ’The Rosary will be recited for Henry A. Polzin, 37, of 2086 Oakdale, Waterford Township, at 8 p.m. ’Tuesday at the Coats Funeral Home. Service will be Wednesday at 11 a.m. at St. Benedict’s Catholic Church, with burial in Michigan Memorial Gardens, Flat I^k. Mr. Polzin, part owner of Club Tahoe, a member of St. Benedict’s Oiurch and the Waterford Optimist C3ub, died yesterday at Mercy Hospital, Port Huron following an automobile accident. Surviving besides his w 1 f Gloria are his parents Mr. an Joseph Polzin of Pontiac; f i v sons, Robert, Bernard, Charles, Henry and. Joseph, all at home; one dau^ter, Debra, also at home; two sisters; and two brothers. HARRY J. RICE Service for Horry J. Rice, 69, of 156 Ogemaw Rood will be at 11 a.m. Tu^ay in St. Benedict Catholic Church. Burial will follow in Mt. Hope Cemetery, llie Rosary will be said at 8 p.m. this evening in Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Surviving besides his wife Ruth are two daughters. Mrs. Eddie O’Brien of Pontiac and Mrs. Howard Deeter of Waterford Township; five grandchildren; a brother Mward of Pontiac; and two sisters. KELU ANNE SCHAT7XEY Graveside service for Kelli Anne Schatzley, daughter of Mr. Wednesday at Hillcrest Cemetery, Jackson. Owner of Bill’s Barber Shop-in Brooklands, Mr. Armstrong died this morning of a heart attack. He was a member of River Rouge Lodge jsfo.^J’&AM.--------- - i^urviving are his wife Corrin, eight sons, two stepchildren, a brother and two sisters. for ooib — -- Coupe. Berlkl Ni ...i ot public uuetlo. Mtlicct bidder. Cur «( M N. 8»r-— MRS. GRILLE F. HOOK ORCHARD LAKE — Service tot Mrs. Grille (Margaret) Hook, 68, of 3730 Orchard Lake Road, will be 1 p^m. Wednesday at C. J. God-hardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Burial will follow in Perry Mdtint Park Cemetery, Pontiac. Mrs. Hook died Saturday in Pontiac Osteopathic Hospitol fol-iowing^ab Drayton Plaint Mon Dies in 2*Cor Collision A Drayton Plaint man was Jlled early Sunday in a twtxar crash on U.S.25 in St. Clair Township, St. Cfoir County. Dead is Henry A. Polzin, 36, of Mr. and bfrs. Edwin Faust of ....................... Mayfield Township, are three sis- 2086 Oakdale R^.' ters, Mrs. Irene Laldler of Lapeer and Darlene and Geraldine Faust both at home: two brothers, Edwin and Gerald, both at home; gratrifafoer, Ernest Papke of Co- Blames Opposition for School Bill Death Congressman Williams. Broomfield, R-Oakland County, today blamed “intraparty squabbles” among Democrats tor the failurr^f federal aid to colleges THOMAS W. AULPH TROY — Service tor Thomas Aulph, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Aulphrof 412 Starr Drive, will be at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow at the Price Funeral Home. Private graveside service will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. The baby died Saturday, one day after birth, at Mt. Carmel Mercy Hospital, Detroit. Surviving besides his parents are a brother, William D: and a sister, Maria Sue, both at home; and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Sherwood, and Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Aulph, all of Troy. MRS. GLENN BAIRD OXFORD TOWNSHIP - Service tor Mrs. Glenn (Nellie) Baird, 68, of 806 Olive Road, will be 10 a m. tomorrow at St. Joseph Catholic Church, Lake Orion. Burial will follow in Linden Cemetery. Mrs. Baird died Saturday in Pontiac General Hospital after an illness of several weeks. ’The Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. today in the Bossardet Funeral Home, Oxford. Surviving besides her husband are a daughter, Mrs. Marie Shae of Lake Orion: a son, Clifford of Oxford; a brother; six grandchildren and one great-grandchild. MRS. WnXIAM D. BlRDWELL AVON TOWNSHIP - Mrs. Wil liam B. (Mary E.) Birdwell, 40, of 3868 Alida $t.. died today at Ardmore Hospital, Ferndale, after a brief illness. Her body is at the Pr«;e Funeral Home, Troy. ROY A. BORLAND ROMEO — Service for Roy A. Borland, 68, of 222 Prospect St. will be 11 a.m. Wednesday at Roth’s Home for Funerals. Burial will be in Forest Lawn Cemetery, Saginaw. A retired employe of the Ford Motor Co., Mr. Borland died yesterday at the Community Hospital after a short illness. He was a life member of Pioneer Lodge F&AM, of Sagihaw, and of the Royal Arch Masons, No. 17, of Romeo. •He also was a member of Romeo Lodge No. 19, Order of the Eastern Star, and a past con of the American Legion Post No. 109 in Romeo. Surviving are his wife Harriett; a daughter, Mrs. Joyce Griffin of Romeo: a granddaughter; a stepsister, Mrs. Earl Zimmerman of Rochester; and a step-brother, Alva Braid of DuranJ. q.YDE C. CRANE WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - Service for Clyde C. Crane, 80, of 2660 Pine Lake Road, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will follow in Pine Lake Cemetery. Mr. Oane died yesterday in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac, after an illness of three days. He was past president of Hofftpan Combustion Engineering Co. of Detroit. Surviving are his wife Mathilda; three daughters, Evelyn and Marion, both at home, and Mrs. David Brown of Lathrup Village; tour sons, William of Beverly Hills, Clyde C. Jr. of Reed City, John of Pine liSke and Donald of Anaheim, Calif.; a sister and eight grandchildren. retired stenographer and a member of the Blue Star Mothers of Keego Harbor. Surviving besides her husband _re; a daughter, Mrs. Russel ThoU of Keego Harbor; a son. Oral N., of Orchard Lake; a brother. Al-vine H. Pickering of Keego Harbor; six grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. JAMES F.’TEE’TS INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP — Service for James F. Teets, 79, of 8^ dixie Highway, will be 10 a. m. Wednesday at the Diener Funeral Home, Utica. Burial will follow in Johnson Cemetery, Sno- er. Mr. Teets died yesterday at Martha T. Berry Hospital, Mount Clemens, after a lengthy illness. He was a retired carpenter. Surviving are three sons, Norman of Clarkston, Virgil of Warren and Harland of Utica; four daughters, Mrs. Bernard Laurie of Toledo, Ohio, Miss Alveretta Teets, Mrs. Norman Morang and Mrs. Vincent Kepsel, all of Utica; two sisters; 13 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren, HENRY A. WHITE/ DEERFIELD TOWNSHIP Service for f(wmer Deerfield Township resident White, 73, of New Hudson, will be at 3 p. m. tomorrow at Muir Brofoers Funeral Homor Lapeer, Burial will be in Mount Hope Cemetery, Lapeer. Mr. White died Saturday after a long illness at the New Hudson home of his daughter, Mrs. Holla Keeran, with whom he had been living. Surviving besides his daughter are another daughter, Mrs. Dear-aid Brim of North Branch; and 11 grandchildren. GARNALD WILLIAMS PONTIAC TOWNSHIP - Service for Garnald Williams, 69. oi 3078 Simmons Court, will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Pontiac Burial will follow in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac. Mr. Williams died Saturday in Pontiac General Hospital shortly after being struck by a car. He journed 87th (fongress. Broomfield said efforts reach a compromise on the vital college aid bill were stalled “because stubborn men stood more on false pride than in meeting the needs of our hatidn.” IS tie tiac Motors Division. Surviving are his wife Maudy; three daughters, Mrs. Louise Koz-ler of Pontiac, Mrs. Ada Cummings of Ozona, Fla., and Mrs. Ivy Honeysuckle of Muskegon; two sons, Barney Sellix of Memphis, Tenn., and Jeryl of Muskegon; two brothers, a sister; and 12 grandchildren. The family requests memorial contributions be made to the Heart Fund. EARL C. FAUST MAYFIELD TOWNSHIP-Serv-Ice for Earl C. Faust, 19, of 2234 Daley Road, will be at 1 p.m. tomorrow at St. Paul’s Lutheran Church, Lapeer. Burial will be in Stiles Ciemetery, Lapeer. He died Saturday at Mqrlette Hospital from injuries suffered in an auto accident near Kingston.. His body will be at the Muir - w art Funeral Home until noon tomorrow. Surviving besides his pan Dem Split Hit rBratfli in weekend traffic accidents In Ttwre were three double fatab including two youngsters Who died Hfo~roeently wk Grand Tlapids. City. The Associated Press count began at 6 p,m. Friday and ended at midnight Bun^y. CUHord T. Lee Jr., 8. of Nan* kin Township was struck f n.d killed by a car near his bene Sunday. Florence Harig, 50, of Grand Rapids, was strode and killed by an auto Saturday night as s h e walked a 10 n a a road mMlh_i)I Hemr House and Senate Conference Committee killed the bill designed to help colleges meet the “challenge of tomorrow” by doing nothing for three weeks until Congress adjourned. A bill to help colleges build new classrooms and laboratories was rassed by the House with bipar-:isan support, but the Senate acked on a scholarship progn turned down by the House ‘1 cause it would have wreckqdme student loan program feet, ” Broomfield “’The scholarshia^lan would lave permitted students majoring in flycastjng or basketweav-ing to hava/hn education at federal exppn^, while those in vital scienUm fields would have had fy back loans,” he explained. Hare Campaigning in City, Area Today Secretary of State James M. Hare was to bring his campaign tor re-election to Pontiac today with a talk at a luncheon at the Elks Temple on Orchard Lake Avenue. Hare is scheduled to attend tea at the home *f Mrs. Carlos Richardson, 2326 Carlos, Waterford Township, at 2 p.m. before moving to Kingsley Inn in Bloomfield Hills for a reception honoring Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, wife of the Vice President. A two-car head-on collision U.S. 25 in St. Clair Township killed Henry Polzin, 38, of Drayton Plains Sunday. Waldemar Neuman, 23, of Kalamazoo. was killed Sunday when Waterford to Open Paving Bids Today Bids on paving bonds for Kempf nd Preston streets will be open^ at 7:fo p.m. today and reviewed by the Waterford Township. Board. was a retired employe of the Pon- The board will also hear a re- port from the insurance committee on motor vehicle insurance bids opened at last week’s meet- g In other business the board will consider a request from the fire department for new uniforms. ’The request was submitted several weeks ago but tabled until the 1963 budget had been established. Two Yoimgsteni Die on Motorcycle IS Killed in S;ate Weekend Traffic *Wot«rfordl AAqn Found Pfjod in Hit Automobile Ito My of • Watorford Ibwn-•Up naan waa found in Ua car ywt(^ north of OrtonvUIo hy By no Atsoeiated Press his auto ran Off U.S. 131 north of Fifteen peifons lost their lives win, died Saturday night te a two- . ;; .T p , car collision in Gla^in County.l™ "* AHogan County Inte^ ene mile east ef Mflllaeiwi hi ivmtwmitftogm Stua £iy. cfoKdt h" lives of Mrs. Phaehe (ClenMM, S3, of esHtrai Uito aad Thenua Roseacraatt, il, it Vassar,' KrisKrenkeI,16.ofHaslett, killed Saturday when his car ran 0^ an Ingham (founty road and Ut a troe.^ Mrs. Emilie Reyndma, 65, of Grand Rapids, died Satur^ in a twoH!8r smash-up five miles north of Kalamazoo. Earl Faust, 19, of Lapeer, whs killed Saturday when his car veered off M46 west of Kingston in Tuscola (founty and hit a tree. Wesley B. Algeutedt and BOa-nie Morgan, both 15 of Rogers aty, were killed Friday night Area Man, Teen jlled Hunting head-oil with a car pn ail7M66 hill west of Rogers City. Sherman Robinson, 44, of Mar-cellus, died Friday night when his car flipped over on a Casa County road. Wei totalities Mark 1st lend itr State A Pontiac Township mOn was le of two victims of gunfire on the first weekend of Southern Michigan’s small game season. Killed by a rifle slug was Horace Naylor, 61, of 1190 Taylor ;oad. ’The other fatality was a 15-year-old boy, David ColliHS of Petersburg. Hunting in Monroe County, David was hit in the back of the head by a shell from the gun of a companion, Thomas Layman, 16, also of Petersburg. Naylor was fatally injured at 10:15 a.m. Saturday while hunting WlfoflloiMs ora form fiiur miles north of Brown City. He was accompanied by hia three sons, James; 25, Mike, 19, and tom, 14; and Paul McNear-ney, 20, of 165 Chamberlain St. The group was Joined by the owner of the farm, Howard Gumming and his son, Sandusky state police said. ★ * w The group was proceeding over irregular terrain, when the elder Gumming suddenly saw Naylor slumped near a tree. Naylor hit by 22 - caliber bullets, once above the right eye and once in the knee. None of the group had fired. A stray shot from an unidentified hunter was suspected. Naylor died in Detroit’s Ford Hospital at 3:25 p.m. Among dozens of injured, a 32-year-old Coldwater man was in critical condition today after dergoing surgery tor removal of a shell or pellet in a Battle Creek The man, Bill Noble, was wounded by an unidentified hunter. His companions said none of their group fired. Howard BardweU, 48. of GM- Loroy Grssne, 89, of South HavM, md his wife Gladys, 35, dlad Friday nij^t In a ca^tnlck A tWVMi GOP Hopeful to Visit Here Norman 0. Stockmeyer, Republican candidate tor secretary of state, will lunch with Pontiac area realtors and visit the Ckmnty (tourthouse on a campaign swing through Oakland County tomor- >w. A Detroit realtor and former chairman of the Wayne County Republican organization, ^k-meyer also will attend informal coffees and tour county shopping centers. He will address the Oakland (tounty Young Republican Club at the Birmingham YMCA at 6:45 p.m. Hart to (jimpaign With Neil Staebler U.S. Senator Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., will accompany Democratic Congress-at-large candidate Neil Staebler to a luncheon ton senior citizens at UAW-CIO Local 653 at 386 Kennett St. Thursday. The luncheon will be one>of several stops by the pair during the day’s campaigning through Oakland County. Also on their schedule is a breakfast in Royal Oak with city commissioners and city managers of southern Oakland communities, greeting shoppers at Northland Center, and several informal coffees. A coroner’s report elated that Howard J. Clark. 44, of 4076 South Shore Drive, died fowi carbon monoxide poiaoning. Ha had been missing ainca Tliundqr. A hoea R Prescription for business Ixealtb by Great-West Life Offlee Owihead Bxpeaee 1^ — eaHrdy^ of peoifo «iiM«l to profcMiooH prMtice. As a p nea or woman, this policy mmUm you to mau.^ olBoe should abwiioo resulting from ticknen or aoddaot to* isnupt your ngutor torome. It leimbuisM you for the odh» nspensss (net, Mtaitos. uliUtiM; etc.) that yo« incur whito TIw |4aa b dsailfo--yoiv oveifread expeasse detarmtoe (ha amountof your beaefit (up to $1,000 monthly) and Incidentally, iba prmaiunu an tax-deductible. Call a OieatrWart Ufa nprosHttalivo for dalaila. Curtis E. Patton 3148.TlktonAve. FE 4-3739 Great-West Life Otb Charge Invasion Set HAVANA W’l - The newspaper Revolucion gave frontpage space under a banner headline today to Washington dispatches reporting a crisis atmosphere in Washington and accused the United States of “preparing aggression” against Cuba. eA or. 'iJiA Minot" Details Do Not Exist . . . In tho conducting of o funeral, than ora mora than fifty items of service provided. Every one is important and must be done well. That is why we soy minor details do not exist. We perform every duty with great core, knowing that it is important to you. Om Oar *Prtrnimm SS5 WEST HURON ST. FONTJAC Druyton FlUn*.. FMneral will b« h«M W«dntid«y. O«lob«r 34 »t >1 dm. *t 81. B«n«dlct > C»U>oll« Church, , IhUrmrot In Mlchluun Memorlhl 0«rd«nii, fl»t Kock. Mr. Poliln will lie In •icte at the CohU Puneral Homt. Drnyton Pining______________ ricsrocfoBiR ao. ia«a, habbV J, l»« Ogemnw; •« huabnnd of Ruth Rice: d e t ■ (ether of Mre. Bddle O'Brien nnC Mre. Hownrd C. Deeter; deni brother o( Mre Thomne Me-CnrUiy, Mre. Bruce Cnrroll nnd tdwnrd Rice;, n todiv-.i. - the Spnrke-Oririn .Pn"'*;.*' Punerel eerrlce will be held T^'"-day. October aa at 11 a m. at 8t. Banedlot a Catholic Church. Interment In Mt. Hope cemetery Mr. Rice will lie In elate at the loved Infant .dauahle- »' and Paula Bchaterey: daughter of Mr —t Podge am MteaTM^ria-.m at perry Mt. Park Cemetery, with Rej. DonaW were by "the* Sparke-Orll/Ilh guetln. lai Prall 8i : •!* PuneTal arrangemente arb pending at the b. fc. Pureley nmerel Home whefe Mr. Veree will lie Pontiac Towdehlp; age df; beloved huebend of Maudy Bpence WllTlama; dear falh- -* *"• I.oulee Koaler, Mre. ...._ Ciimminge. Barney Being, ivy Honeyeuckle end Jery.„ Heme; dear brother of Henry Wllllame. Mre, Ivy ppdyke and Jeryl C. Wllllame; aleo eurvived bv la grandclilldren, Puneral eervice will be held Tueeday, nrtnher 71. at II a m at thf Voorheee Blpte Cliapel wim Rev * J!*V/\trp«k^ nuame' will flejn elate are the Voorheee-- neral H< Where Buyer and Seller Meet Pontiac Press Want Ads What to Do With Two? Sell the Bttri one With • Pontiac PreM Want Ad Dial FE 2-8181 Iislifall'AlMMidiliilM 414 4 4f SibM _4# CARNIVAL Ry DItA Turnw M Nmns k* prtTl-r. Ww COMMERCE AREA $500 DOWN BRICK RANCH Mom*. !)•«#; »!«••>«». ]»“«• ^‘rSfntiT lueALTT Bwr twin, 1% »-7WI. Huron tad M«l). » •Ht »«»•«». • ' roerooMon room. C*rpoUiMi.. $lJ,. ~..............—mo, xo«*in» ot»t. n «-mm. SPOTLIMS «-nCA^LD witli oxpoulve (■mill' kitchen, floorinf, MACKDAT we*. fuoie' 75' *1110 Jot. On!? Eur lemu or OWNER WILL EX-CHANGE (or em*!! I»rm w hmM; j£S57.^?iS^^jN,.r •LBEpma ROOM, PRIVATE HOME Trwle lour preient home ---; -- on ■ ne'o S-bedroom i_. to nlect (rom. Clark Real Balate NEAR M8UO, NICE ( ROOM . to deowAtod. MU baacmenL ---iiaM. iara(0. 5M.M0. Tri^- 55M5M tk (Ire. ■ ROOM POE OENTLEMAN, Baeement with apartment and (■■ heat, condition Ibrough- MBR OMLTjJRBAKniABLB. lUH _________B^»._____________ ' Vacant. 4 rooms, oas heat. • --- ------Avalon, at Au- _________■ Eve«. or Sa' WEST snBURBAW I7t month plua taaea. I badro I bathe, lof TSallS. W. W. ROBS R054BB NEW 3- and 4-Bcdroom Brick Homes UIM from downtown pon T$69 W«at Side asTAafiAiW kllotiaB and uvaklaet room, nleo tOMiMBt tor rooroatton r^. One kti^SMtoto awl lovtii w. Ravo East Side An oxooMkmali' sood bui. lane Araoro homo. ^ bae* mint, sb* boat, sarasa. low price indtonna. Brewer Real Estate GILES NORTH SIDE SdVom homo In noal and clean oondlUon. on (enood latd. sarasa. waU-h car^. aluminum atorma •eraane. SS.SW «lth aaa> tarmi BY OWNER . 150 Acres... -=»— ---------- srsur‘^isu”'.» KENT.l Toniif. smash's GI TERMS CITY WEST 4-BEDROOM RANCH HAfibYMANi Another... Pobtlaa. 5 Acres... gjsAiuasi"- Humphries FE i-9236 Plaaeant I with ^ t »S! LIVE IN PEACE W al haauiuui ta- ir sarase. i (Ina ratum Ss'Ss Exch^ge 1 on four numar. A * OR Trade' LTY-CQL rns'aa FT., rioreboom at iais - ■auto Cma Avanua. Owner SSSm —aTm a 4lrjdad toltflwo. LAKE PKIVILEGtES GOOD LOCATION Hat twhew PiWWfty 474 Srit Hwiw__________ 4» I ACRE Tau'U Ilka Ilvlns to Ibto t bad-raam ranch Imwm; S car attached sarasa. neat at a^. owner wlU price mMn»n w— saa tt todayl WATERFORD Rl .. roomf*S*FA*‘baK paved pajto. OR MMjk area. aaU OR ASMS 1 HODRR. LOT t _______!ao\w «gt.&a*m**SAV^- ABRDR00M.^S^R OARAOB. 1 r ma dowm*ciSw'^^n : Don, McDonald ucEiwro^ypnjiEE -NEW HOUSES- M Medal at Star Fanttaa Tral Near WaUad Lake. $190 Moves You In ■Badracm. all brick. MU-baccmcnl atlacbad sarhsa. USilia ft. lot In cludadi fork RuUdlns Co. Opai OtU| ond Sundoar lAT p.m. CPU SHSm____ $9,500 aj»jsiiST“► 'Featuring: t ‘3 Bedrooihs ^Brick Ranch Attached Garage I Gas Heat pialred Streets Lawe Rolling Lots JFHA. Terms I had to slap Jimmy tonight! He went to sleep twice!” Sale Hmsss 49 Sale Houses HOYT“ CLARESTON MI8 Ahedroom colonlol. oxtro lorse llvins nxini. 12x31. 'Dlnlns room, klloban. Ub hatha, brick Ibap^. Lew Hilemani—Pontiac's _ . >na«er wanniui «••• TRADEX NICHOLIE Tour ooulti lor what lou rotUi wont — now or oxIaA Ins homaa — am alia — an» dlraolkm. Tw naad no monar - L*t Da Solve Tour Real Ealata Problamt. “Today’s Top Trades” Talk About Space * true (amtti home — itnxUah Him. savan-room biiek. Smith Wideman 0PgffH?lgm4M6 •fa-fe-irM! MILLER ■ 1 ...... (or on oppolotmont (too proptriv. CAST 8IDK vonr tttrMUvt S btd-room homo on I loU, hrooit> r-hVa'^dT^catt-V RS5«anuJ"8!S"‘d.:rpi:: Realtor-Exchangor 1011 W. Huron — FE A15» Ml PERRY PARE Ififodel Open iaily 12 to 8 di>28.2S63 BDILDIWOCO. P(|ij Quick Sale laoao;!>iow vocaal. 3H bo .1. 1 .niie to do,.. VMlav Red RdT Hollj. ART METER NEW h6USES Jby owner I. Abedroom ■torma and s< d btaament. Ci OR A5S3I._________ LAROE FAMIUBS jciuanu Loxa aalotaa — lovali Abadroom brick. Lorsa noma, an-tiralv carpatied axcapi 1 ^bedroom. P^’tetha. lorsa racraatlcn room M'baaamant, automotle heat. A 3^ sarasa. IMi loto. nioali land-—apad. A real home lor o lorsa mllTl Friead attraettvali —' COLORED NCOMB - BUS PER MO. - 3 .J>ARTHENTS - 3 PRIVATE BATHS - AOTOMOBILB HEAT - ---BASEMENT - LOW DOWN ____NT - THIS ONE WILL PAT FOR ITSELF. BUNGALOW S ROOMS AND BATH - LOADS OF FLOWERS AND TREES ~ NEW OARAOE - FENCED LOT - MANY OTHER FINE FEATURES - LOW DOWN PAYMENT. WRIGHT , f 353 Oakland Ava._FE AM41 WEBSTER Templeton $500 Down b«4room h ^tlon. ntn ^•??^l.\iSalanr.*'- rA^toSTtiJiLrS; Lal£wa'’^?w /“J?Xs/TEr*' beautiful hilltw sites 8 ACRES S3a.“r.r;«JSiitt BaautUul apat lor horaac. MH PB°Mm w OR AI23I after 7:15 IaDD'SINC. / 3SS5 Lapaar Bd. (Parri M3I)_. , M-ll I ACMS;^. COFFIN. !i Sole Pereis * »*«■! - FARM fUIM^^^ PARM RUILDmo m Fontloe or FUi badreem home. WATERFORD AREA * -idroom ranch homo, port brick. baUi. automatlo heal, decorat-Larga lot. S2S0 movaa you In. out. Fanoad yard. l.Mrcor Pavad drlvawai. Only SB.SCO with aaay larma or laaa for eoab. K. L. Templeton, Realtor East of Toslyn Immodloio poaam poaaoaaloa botas, of- William Miller S70 W. Huran , ^Opon S to a gmaa from U.B. 15 Q’AYLiORD **citf2wo “ wSr MrMcn^w Wm kampsen s XX L Y ¥ XXV Haallv and BuUdlnx Co. _ HERE IS A REAL scad buy la m older home. 3 bedroom. 3 elory. largo Iron! porch and 3 car so- Evea. CaU Mr. Caatall.FE 3-7273 NICHOUB-HAROER CO. 53>b W. Huron St. FE ling apaoo. Attached I'b-car i ge. Oat furnace. Excallent c< lion. 514,500 with tarme. C. A. WEBSTER. REALTOR OA A3515 MY 3-H Country Estate 2-bedroom bungalow with (amlly room ond (Ireploco. full hi- Homes - Farms /-rnroso^Lors? 1 i. VXLiiXO workehoo. 37x40. Plowing etreom roe. Ideal tor ho lake' PRIVILBOES with thta attractive Xroom home near US 10 JOHN80H AND CASS area. Ursa Down I T)orothy Snyder Lavender ir sarasa. $5,500 larma. 'ftoni Northern High Area bungalow ■' ■M “ your n ^ dc d rm. I LAKE ANGELUS 0 rm. ntodern home with lull hi ment. Ooa heat. New wall to i carpeting; Two car garage. Qt ftSLfXbcTTMy* OPEN U TO S DAILY SPOTUTB BDILDINO CO. _______FE44)lg5____ COLORED ■ 3 Bedrooms "0" DOWN DON’T MISS OUT ON THIS CHANCE OF A LIFETIME lake. Private park and lake prlvl-legea. Conelder trada. priced to eel), call WATERFORD REALTY, OR 3-4525. HIITER aTT WEST SIDE. S rooma. bathe, lotc ol cloiete. baiemi... •un porch, 3-car sarago, vacant, a raal buy. NORTH SIDE. Lbedroom. plaeterad walle. oak floore. ceramic I ' baeement. gaa heat. Only II w In thia 3 11 AC Mr......... .......... Large 50x130 lot. Only on........... WEST SIDE INCOME - Lovely 5 rooma with (Ireplace (or you plua an cxeellent 4 rm. apt, to rent, Two gaa Mmacee.- Nice, ahady Cad 8t. Thla properly la In per-condition ar- *' ■*— ' 3-BEDROOM HOME, wood (loora. I'b loto, (enced yard, lake privileges, close to Drayton shopping oenlor. 17.950. 1500 down with 4 per cent Inlereci or only "--m with 414 per cent inter """"to 'I'lBlMirt! some have luU bar---------- —' (Ireplaees — aome b BE SURE TO READ OUR FARM AD n Dtatrlot. Two oar garage. t 5-2015 MA 8-1341 OR 4-0562 DORRIS • here, l^ke FRONT W. W. ROSS HOMES CaU OE MS3I Mr Datalla SSOSMOVEEIOHTDt 1 Saward n4sr .Aubuni. Xbed-■n. MU bwWmant. IwM kiteb-dining araa. Oaa haaf, carpet 1 drapes. Oorliar loir — loan Dungaiow. uvvrwuaiua nyi-a Lak«. gaa beat, ntoelv tand-iped, IVb-car sarasa. S5.58S. S7S Jito7 No brokera.TTE 5-4484. -jr my 3 bedroom bungalow, gaa heat, paved atwt. Small down paynwnt wUl *— die. 454 Third St. HAYDEN LAXEFRONT. STM doara. Immediate goaeeialOQ on this good 3 bedroom NORTHERN HIGH AREA. E. Ma field. 1800 down. 3 Mrooin. i lumaeo. itb ear taraga and lent back yard. WILUAM8 LAKE. Sl.OM devAi and 5M par montb for thla 3 bedroom In vary good condition. 3-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL $9,995-$LOOO DOWN Xtlioto' bSSl 7* i..m*“ ” BY D#NERI west side, 4 BED-rooma. newly decorated, larga I-* lentied, aaay larma. S5 Lincoln. 3Y OWNfeR m eptnoa St. ~ Hoar Northern brick I rafo. Oas heal. wp, OUPUCATE ON YOUR LOT J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 3534404 Open *|[ 10751 Highland Rd. D Naat S-bedroom brick home, w lo-wall earpeting In living roc.... oheory kltonan. Mil baaamanl. gaa heal, wall landeeaped yard srilh flowsra. shrubs. S beautiful tress. Selling for SO.OOe. T< HANDY MAN SPECIAL - I room ranch, large Ilybig i plenty ef elosete, MU bacei . alum, tiding, lot 05x305. Llvahla bM ne^JnlilUgs. Selllns (or 17, IDEAL FOR RETIRIbMBNT - OOiy ------------- Only REAL ESTATE SACRIFICE: BUl (amlly home, or Income (our rooms, flreplaoe and hai on first door, four large bw rooms and bath on aeoond (loo largo alllo. Batemanl. gas hoa twiiear garage, large lot, oSi iral loeatlon. Prlood al: 5I0.« with 51.1100 down. FOR COLoBiD: lOBAL nni itxrniiwHginT — cu» tdiuom homo aettlw on nlooly Isntl-•e^ lot. Appla.,peaoh and apri- . living room, dining ......... ...Chen on (Irsi floor Three bedroong end bnlh u1p he*aT l>rtoed*“at: *SlwSr^^ No down payment. "WE NEED USTINOS" John K. Irwin 5-Fainily Brick basement, oil eteem heat. Paved street and drive. 3-cer tarage. 55.000 doijiyjOr trade. 10 Acres—4 Bcdrm.5. EeauUtuUp. restored farm homa In plolureeque seillug ot pines. Ollrn modern kllch-en, 3 balbi, oarpeted Ihru-oul. Basemenl. oU heal. Good Phont|FB 3-9440 - EVE. FE 14X435 35 E. Ht_ Open Evenmge and Sunday 1-4 EE 8-0466 re opportun-100 down. and kitchen. Full bath. 15 loot lam-llv room with second (Ireplace. Barbecue ^rlll an^ ^luerle. Knotty •bout 2 yvf tty ft 119.91 FRANKLIN BLVD, FOR THE INVESTOR - TTita 3-fnmllv homf loomtfd on WMt fldf. ^7.', Ptr ifr gfrfgt. mo. Upper, two 4*room ep vote bfUi »re 919 to m week. Pull bMement. 2'prVv'!ffsr«.'^..sii: ■xaa aoS Inauranea. Laka. RAY O'NEl'l, REALTY FE XTIOS I OPPIca oraN s-l Warren Stout, Realtor ” poR*Y2Sici'iuuJtfcAri! us?** ... jiarorod (1x1-.. -. ineiil. gas heal and hot wator recrealim room, well kepi grounds. PH A lerms l> desired Quick possession, call now! “Bud" Nicholie. Realtor 49 HI. Clemens At. I'K 5-1201 After 6 P.M., El': 2-3370 Near I'isher Bodv Lovley 3 bedioom bungalow, fes lures a larga 14x11 living room 19x14 kllohcn. full balli, porch, -oar garage, axira lealures. Just 59.905, Terms or owner wUI toade lor a largar homa. Need More Space? Hera Is your aniwor, 4 bedrooms. 11x14 living rtHMii. i stpA-rate dbilng room, (ainlly stood kttoben. (ull biklh. ponto. 1 car garaga. Just 515.505 full prtoa. or eww will Irado (or A amaltor Trad* •— Yea Realtor Discount — No Bass & Whitcomb ^^JIEALTpRS I HUNTERS. 59 ACRES. 4 IS north of tsrion City, Alcona —Atv Fheas Clara Uilev. F> 1-oios between J a.m and 9 p.m. Mon, throujjh rri.______/ leieft SI MOBILE SITES. DON'T RENT. BUY Utt-Acreefe I, birtoBvWe. 1595 H lo! ...- — Insutaled. Lot 59x179, 51.900. Call after I p.m. LI PI105. 4924 Thomoroft. Royal Oak. MIcb- fan. Roy Raamor. _____ ____ NLV lOOO'bbWNXir THIS (JHblfci 4 aero buUdIns site. Nortlieru lllah area. ’ REAGAN profltob...........- ___________ m wlh a Diinmum prodiMl hi ment backad by a complete llnsne-llonal advertising program. No Iranchlsa (eo on Initial oiler. Thera to good money to he made h4ia as a working operator or •!-lent partner Investor. For full In-lormatlon. wtihout obllgailon, wrllo Jack Coraiell, Pres., ftighi Renlal —ducts. 131 Mill Slresl, Clncto-I 10. Orlo. gppoS'Toiiiifir ” BUILD YOUR OWN ALUMINUM WINDOWS AND DOORS Exclusive distributorship available (or nationally known "tension Sealed Aluminum prime and storm windows, residsnilal and llghl commercial doors, awnings, porch en-iMitlo covers. Meat bidlvldual or allied or more year-Exoellenl added Sef ‘iwBr or wood w Rodulrti imfll rrur' )| apace. "Tenskm l 9. Fw dalalla eon Paw PA^faJlletn 40 SPUAlRIi ACRES *uo WhW»v:^.rw..*7.7y* pj^ MIW. ewb or torma, VVKR- i5.*HT*B:&*ssr 4-IS31 a •" TTKKfs;’" Ha ssnafcf. no nalaa. JuM I nlta raUIni aarta tor toe iwina yos _ OKTOKVtUJI^. . Very ei thla profltfbU hardwtro. !«V Mtomii of apMtoua unlli and ifrit ownora homo on now ht- sb?de* -V PARTRIDGE misalon. h«rdU>p. beautiful red and vhlle, and whitewall tires too. ESTATE STORAGE -------------- PULL PRICE. Low WeeU’y Payment $5.80 IW Estate Storage Co. CORVITTB, AUTOMATIC ■—nsmieslon. $800 W. Walton.' corvette 1861. OL 1-6731 APTER 1960 CORVAIR 4-DOOB SEDAN, walU, Only 81.195. Easy terma. PAThBRSON CHEVROLET ca, 1000 S- WOODWARD AVB.. BIR-M1WQHAM~MI 4dU38. 1980 cHBVROiiT niMLA I960 CHEVROLET EDOpR SEDAN. 6 oyllader. poworfllda. radio, heat- EaayT*r^%Ar«RTON^ CHEVROLET CO. 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE. RIRMINOHAM. Ml 6-$735. I960 CHEVROLET IMPALA 4-DOOl nardlt p, V8 angina, autc~*“-ar ataarlng and brakaa. er^*$llw MINOHAM. Ml 4-3735. or, 6 nllndar, powargUda, n atar. Fawn balga llnlah. $1 uy tamii. PAnERSON Cb I. $1,695. r CHBV- ________________ ,._JDWARD AVE. BIRMDIOHAM. Ml 4-2735. 1961 CORVAIR ‘■TOO" ^DOOR, POW- SC ..... 1961 CORVAIR $1495 SHELTON Dpan Mon.-'T^aa., Thura. -8:30 to Wed.. Frl,. Sat. 8:30 to 6 1 CHEVROLET IMPALA 4-DOOR ---- V8 angina.----------- ig and bra ... ____________ only $1--- Baay terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET ---------- ---------- 1961 CORVAIR "TOO” 6-DOOR t ’■jfr'bi a finish. Only $1,695. Easy ---- ------------ CHEVROLET------------- ------ WARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. Ml 6-2735. 1960 BUICK power brakes, dynaflow, radi neater, whitewall liras. Hera Is real beauty with beautiful beige finish and trm to match. Priced to $1995 SHELTON Hochftter Ponttac'Bi 1 •«on., iuoie, mur*. Wa SUPER M^ICONVERfr-ble. Silver with while lop, .lisrr red Interior. A ear you would b« proud to own and It can he yours for only jU$6 at SUBURBAN OLDSMOBILK. 855 S. WOOD- Immaculat iner. low mil BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER $66 S, Woodward B'OlCf''- Eleelru "3I$" wllh power s.-. Ing. power hrokee. Dynaflow, i dIo. heotor. whilowo" Uful ivory tinlih. 1 Iho Mg, MS. BulokI $3195 . Yee. folki, IVe SHELTON OL 1-1133 m Main SI. healer, power eteering loa. AaMnalia. A T I by PonllM ^ ei SHELTON 1961 PONTIAC O-PASSBNOER Wa6-OB. 61.950. OB 66)$6$. __ imFTontiac STABcaiifr door hardtop, jiower ------ brakea, a-tone All leather Interior. —- s-oaaS: TO!. h, $I$0 dow te of $37.43 I LLOYD'S SHELTON Main St. I-$I33 1 Mon., niee.. Thure. 1:10 to $ wed., prt., Sot. $;$$ to 6 1$5$ PONTIAC CATALINA SJ^OOR . 1956 CHEVROLET wagon. eUek.ehllt. Fine runnln *Su‘rP?US MOTORS _____________Solei, 1076 Saldwln iiir~hoNNiiViLLiB. r, hardtop, many egtrss, oleod, low mileage, OR 4-I063. er^hs?' luU 1737 ofter 6, OLIVER BUICK RED HOT SPECIALS THESE CARS MUST GOJ- sfdP IN and SEE the "All New" Rambler for 1363 BUICK Skylark Conv 63005 ____________________Ortoor . 1301 BUICK Convertible . 1959 RENAULT 6-door 1950 BUICK 3-Door 1089 FORD Wagon 196$ PLYMOUTH grtoor, VI. auto-matte. $750 1H9 DOOOE 3-door hordtop. VI, Ml-l$M*^Mb§TM 4-Door wagon, VI. 1190* F^D**'i-loor*wafOif. VI, outo-matte. $119$. 1090 DOOOE Polar*, 2-door hardtop. 1963 WE STILL HAVE IMO FALCON. 4rtoor, automatic. 1959 CHRYSLER. 4dIoor hardtop. 1962 Ramblers Four New 1962 Ramblers 3 Company Cars 1959 PLYMOUTH Pury. I^oor JjKd-lop, automatic. 9M6. 1950 VALIANT Wagon. $1,350. 1051 BUICK 2-door. $505 .... 6-door wagon 1950 PORD Wagon, nt 1957 CHEVY 4-door, at______ 1950 FORD 4-door, eharp I $ 590 OLIVER BUICK —33 Yeore— 310 Orchard Laka FE 2-9101 iOM RAMBLiR. 6-DOOR SEDAN, new tires, good ongme, imro $195 lull price. . BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER 606 8. Woodward ■ ■ fromPonllf' 61 6-3900 1962 TEMPEST mission, rsdlo. heater, tiree. BeautUul jvory flr‘-‘ custom trim. Ouarantc lusl miles. $2295 SHELTON 1959 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE RED convertible, fully equipped for your driving pleasure. Our pleasure is ■ offer It to you for only $1,6''* -------------- -ILDSMOBIIJ!, 555 SUBURBAN OLE WOODWARD, MI 6X605. _____ OCl PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE. FE 6-3736 " 1961 PONTIAC wr hardtop, hydramallc, haat-radlo and power. A her -"' -' 1962 FALCON .......leaU and --- radio. Fort-O-Malle ttanamUslon. radii Really a dre $2095 SHELTON In Our Opinion Wo Olfor Tht BEST DEAL Finest Service COMPLETE LINE OF PARTS FOR.RAMBLER ALSO ALL IMPORTS Factory Trained Mechanics Pontiac’s Only Rambler Dealer Superior Rambler 550 OAKLAND AVE. ROSE RAMBLER SUPER MARKET 1955 BUICK Bulek rlda. Hero’s on* thouMo’l mla* $195 SHELTON Roche KiNG AUTO SALES mw.jjrgtm. •957 DOOOE 6rtoor. V3. automatic. 1957 PLYMOUTH. Fury, hardtop, big l966TMVY*o(myertlblo, VI. Sensational Pi ice I Select - Used Cars ■ SEE us BEFORE SAYING YES TO A DEAL 19.58 Pontiac Catalina 3-door hardtop, with radio, b*al< Hydramallc transmisolon. Pow stoerlng and h r a k a • . tri-nower carba, red and White flnleh. A real beauty1 $965 I960 Rambler American R 6c R Motors 1959 CHEVROLET Imnala Sport Coup*. V8 engine, Powergllde. rsdlo. healer and whitewall Urea. All while flnleh wllh lurquoU* Interior. A b*aull-| ful ear. $1495 SHELTON OL 1-6133 ..........J. 6:30 1., Sat. 1:36 to 6 Special 1959 Pontiac heater, hydramsilc tram power, whitewall lire*. Act lor a real good car at a r $995^ PONTIAC RETAIL STORE .65 Mt. Clemens St. FE 3-7954 10 RAMBLER STATION WAOONI Uial’i full of Ramblers. BIRMINGHAM RAKBLER CONWAY’S USED CAkS 1936 Chevy 3rtoor. Sharp 1955 Chevy I. euto.............1385 1659 Chevy 6. 3-door ..........6965 1696 Port. Irtoor, silok ..... $115 1957 Ford 6. slick ......... 3175 7011 Cooley Lake Bd. 36----- 1962 BUICK Elactra "335" Convertible. Power •leering, brakes and window*.- er seal. You name It. It hi Save $1,000 . SHELTON |^k Qt 1-3131 .i:36tof wed., Fll., Sat. $:30 to 6 1960 Studebaker Regal Delux* goloor sedan. Radio, heal er. whitewall Urea. 3-ton* areei finish A venr^e looking car. 1961 Rambler Convert. 1961 Falcon 2-Door with full custom group. Unto glws. black and whit* finish! $1466 1961 Rambler Convert. with standard ebm. radio, heel er. whllewallt. bucket seats $1685 1960 Falcon 2-Door 1961 Rambler Custom 1961 Metro Hartop op vails — Auw» so miles per aaiiop. Red wllh a while lop. and wo have two to ehoosa from, on* black and whilel $1165 1961 Rambler American Delux* Sdoor station waton with radio, heater. whH*w*n*. low 1961 Rambler American l6loor deluxe wllh heater, while-wall*, apsrkling red flnleh on ttiU '63 trade Ini $1244 BILL SPENCE Rambler - Jeep . 32 S. MAIN ST. flsrkslon ma $-1181 ISiTSki^wr-- SHELTON- BELOW CDSTI 6$ ^CH^w|^5foil Birmingham Rambler 1 min, iroin Fontts* _ buy yuur new OLDSMOBILE HOUGH?EN & SON 1960 PONTIAC for uite W66k^y. $1550 la good SHELTON Russ Johnson's One-Owner Trades 1363 RAMBLBIt l-DOOR SEDAN 1963 TEMPEST 6-DOOB SEDAN 1636 TEMPEST CONVERTIBLE 1663 PORD OALAXIB 566 X-L wnoiir •l••rinlr end brakes, auh to. Low miles an I. Sava on t 1666 PONTIAC VENTURA HARDTOP Hydramallc. Power steering Pow-ei brakes Thl* Is a real sharp car. I960 PONTIAC 6-DOOR SEDAN . Hydramallc Power steering and Power brake* Low mllee and txirn nice. MINOHAM Trade In. New tires at 1956 PONTIAC 6-DOOR SEDAN ^ Power eteering. Power brekes, H; dramatlo. whitewall tires. Rune per- 1659 PONTIAC 6-DOOR HARDTOP .lydramallo Irani..............^ healer A real eharpte. You hettei first for this on*. BRAND NEW 1962 RAMBLER SPECIALS 61.665 Including^ takes and plate* SELECT USED CARS 1696 Port 3-door sedan 6661 1651 Dodge 4-Door Hardtop 1657 Rambler SluUon Wh«i 1655 Chevrolet Convertible 1966 Lincoln Premier* 15 MANY OTHERS TO CHOOSE FROOM Don’t Buy Any New or Used Car or Truck Before You Have Seen Us! HOMER HIGHTS . . ■■ •MOTORS, INC' 7.... Chevrolet Pontiac/- Bulcfc' V OA 8-2528 Oxfdrd , THE POKTIAC FEESS. MpyPAY. OCTOBBE 22, jm r-Today's. TelevMon, Programs-- I iir M ii ii/iilM «• ««i«M to ikM^ f>4l (4) (7) Nmn, Weather, SporU 7;N (3)PhU8Hven (4) George Pierrot {THSmdMbrteaWtm (N) WHttanWord 7tN(t)ToTeUthenuai (4) Pierrot (Gont) (7) CheyttUM (9) Movie (Cont.) (W) Wayot Uto IsM (t) Hennesey (4) IVe Got a Secret , (7) Cheyenne (Cont.) (9) Movie (Cont.) (50) Poisons, Pests, People tt39(3)l4KllleBaU (4) Saints and Sinners (7) RUleman (9)Fe8titral 9ill (2) Danny Thomas (4) Saints (Cont.) (7) StoneyBurke (9) Movie: “The DevU’s Pass,” (56) Guest Traveler 9:39 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Price Is Right (7) Stoney Burke (Cont.) (9) Movie (Cont.) 19:99 (2) Loretta Young (4) Telephone Hour (7) Ben Casey (9) News 19:11 (9) Weather 19:29 (9) Telescope UAW 19:19 (2) Peter Gunn (4) Telephone Hour (Cont.) (7) Ben Casey (Cont.) (9) Don Messer’s Jubilee 11:99 (2) News , (4) News 11:29 (2) Movie: “China.” (1942) in Oilna f to JaiNHMia hi or- St*. Loretta Yoong, Alan Ladd. (7)1 Movie: “Combat (llto^ ^hrrHNt WoHd. War n, a new lo-ti immadiidehi reSentcd by a tough ae^ ' John Ireland, Lon Iter, Hal Mtodb, E. Stone. 11:19 (4)|lbnigbt Show (7) Big Payoff /(M) French Lesson lg:ll (M) German Lesson 11:91 (2) McCoys (4) (Cbior) Price b Right (7)------------ (9) 11:11 (M) Spanish U:SI (2) Pete and GI (4) Concentration (7) Youre for a Song TukoAV MORNING daasnnw|B U:lMS)News ______ . TUESDAY APrERNOON ISill (2) Love of Lib (4) First Impression (7) Jane W^nan (N) Beading tor Teachers 11:19 (2) Search br Tomonow (4) TVtttb or Consequences fill (4) 1:19(2)' 1:21 (2) ^ the Farm Front 1:29 (2) ■ •;39 (2) College Of the Air (4) Continental Classrooni (7) Funews 7:11 (2) B*Wana Don (4) Today (7) Sagebrush Shorty 7:31 (7) J<£my Ginger 1:11 (3) Captain Kangaroo 8:19 (51) French for Teachers N (7) Jack LaLanne tti49 (M) Spanish 12:41 <2) Guiding Light (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go 8:49 (56) Spanish Li BiUboard 8:99 (9) I 9:81 (2) December Bride (4) living (9)Movb: “The Sun Never Seto,“|>art8 (9) Ches Helene (81) NumericaUy So 9:19 (9) Nursery School Time 9:29 (2) Millionaire (9) Friendly Giant (81) English V 9:49 (9) Misterogers 9:59 (2) TV Editorial 12:99 (9) News 12:91 (4) News (7) News (9) Pbyback .1:11 (2) Star Perfwmance (4) Best of Groucho (7) Gale Storm (9) Movb: “As the Earth Turns.” 1:19 (56) French Lesson 1:89 (2) As the World Tums (4) Peopto Are Funny (7) One Step Beyond (56) World Hbtory 1:59 (4) Faye Elizabeth 2:19 (2) Password (4) Merv Griffin (7) Day in Court (56) MatbeSoatics for You r r r r r r r 6 r r r 12 19 14 i6 18 17 II li 111 22 21 28 2T 9T 9T 93 r 97 ' 42 M 48 W 81 84 88 88 87 88 80 81 62 U 84 85 88 Jt (7) Camouflage I) Spanish Lesson 2:29 (2) Divorce Court (7) Seven Keys* (56) Careers 2:99 (4) News 2:89 (4) Loretta Young (7) Queen for a Day 2:29 (2) ToTeUtheTVuth (4) Young’Doctor Malone (7) ^ Do You Trust? (9) Scarlett HIU 3:51 (2) News 4:69 (2) Secret Storm (4) Make Rooip for Daddy (7) ApMrican Bandstand (9) Rurie Dazzb 4:39 (2) Edge of Night (4) Here’s Hollywood, (7) Discovery ’62 (9) Popeye and Pals 4:29 (7) American Newsstand 4:59 (4) News 9:69 (2) Movie: “The Quarterback.” (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Action Theater (56) What’s New? 9:39 (56) 'ftavel 9:49 (56) News Magazine ' 9:59 (4) Carol Duvall Russ Ambassador to Brazil Drowns RIO DB JANEIRO (UPD -vbt Ambassador to Brazil Ilya 8. Tdiemyschov and another So- yesterday in heavy breakers and a strong undertow when fliey went swimming at a beach near here. Police said the body of Vklery Yarlkov, who was swimming with the ambassador and a third Russian, had not been found but he was presumed drowned. Nearby swimmers saved the third .m The drownings occurred at Barra da Tljuca, a beach resort 18 miles fi s from Rio. -Toiday's Radio Programs-- SlW-wn, Kv«nln|r CWtMrt I wroN, m«i, wiinii W0AH, I, Sm4m iMa wxra u$ AiiM •iissKH* WVON, miMB WCAB. U.N. WMfe WCAS, J. lUHl.r* Tinuuisr MOUNmo Voln ot Afria. itite-wniL wmjuu WWJt. m>i. llarMB. isir WfO, M*. WmM tiii»-cnaw. xtMMiv CMiuat ' viiasaav astaaaoow M&r- ■wsw.vs'-** rjHt Mm mm rxvs. wiatw M««i >-WJR. m«i, a *a. rttOioM ' “Mr World's CIrm After Successful mnus, (AP) - history today and left as part of Us le^ a 199-milIkm chic cam « ter and a sdenoe A The 19 mWioolh ticket, counting several thousand that weren’t before the gates closed for the lest time at midnight Amday. Officials had said nine miiUoo tick- dal success. The fair -opened AprU21. STADIUM CROWDED Approximately ISAM crowded into the outdoor stadium lor a climactic program whiqhieatured opora riar Patrice MunseL At an afternoon ceremony, the llO-million six-building UB. sci-enoe pavilion was turned over to the non-profit Pacific Sdenoc Cen- FAREWELL IN SEATTLE — Thousands thronged to SeatUe World’s Fair grounds yesterday as the six^nonth exhibition neared its scheduled midnight end. Many paused to watdi the International Fountain. In the left background b the Coliseum. Shingle-roofed building in right foriground b pavilion of Yugoslavia. In addition to the pavilion, per- To Insure Christmas Deli^eiy Start Readying Overseas Mail It you have friends, rebtives or loved ones serving in the Arn^ Forces overseas, it is not too early to start thinking a mailing Christmas parcels. The post office reminds us that the period November 1-20 has been designated for the mailing of Christmas presents and packages by surface transportatten to members of our Arimd Forces stationed abroad. Postal officials offer the following suggestions for the correct packaging Afartlcic*-All articles should be packed in boxes of wood, metal, solid fiberboard or strong double-faced corrugated fiberboard. WRAP SECURELY All fiberboard boxes should be securely wrapped in heavy paper and bound with strong cord. Sufficient cushioning material should be used to prevent any rattling or loosening of articles within the package. In addition to the articles nor-noally prohibited in the mails, matches of all kinds and lighter fluid may not be mailed to over-military addresses. Check with your postmaster about such items as cigarettes. and various other items which may be prohibited in parcels ad- dressed to iwine laUitiiry post of* nited tor parcels if they am to have a reasonable expectation of delivery prior to Christmas. fices. Domestic rates of postage Meredith Back at Ole Miss OXFORD. Miss. (AP)«-Ja H. Meredith resumes his fourth week of classes at the University of Mississippi today after spending the weekend in Memphis, Tenn. The 29-year-oId Negro arrived on Campus Sunday night with about 10 U.S. marshals. He ate in the university cafeteria. UAW Booits Detroit DETROIT (B-The United Ante Workers Union has donated 829,-000 to Detroit’s new Metropolitan Imhutrial Development Coip. and UAW President Walter Reuther said he hopes business will chip in, too. TV Features By united Press Intematlenal LUCY SHOW, 8:30 p.m. (2) Lucy mislays M,000. SAINTS AND ! ‘Three Colunms of Anger.” ' Hunter guests a soldier looking for a long-lost brother. A slip showing list of contents and addressee should be enclosed hi toe parcel. must be fully prepaid. Airmail artides weighing not in excess of 8 ounces are chargeable at the rate of seven cents par ounce; those weighing over 8 ounces are chaigeable at the rate d 80 cento a pound. SAIGON (UPD-Tha commander in chief of America’s Pacific command, Adm. Harry D. Felt, wound up a four-day visit to South Viet Nam today and said he found toe antiguerrilla war against Communist Viet Cong forces making significant progress. Addresses must be legible and complete, and should be prepared by typewriter or pen and ink. Greeting cards for the Armed Forces overseas should also be mailed within the periods desig- “The rate of exdumge Is more in favor of South Viet Nam now,” he said. This was a reference to the number of battll casualties suffered by both sides in the shadowy jungle war in which the United States is deeply involved. He said the Communists are losing from five to six times as n as government finrees. Taylor Sees Great Things in Anita's Acting Career By EARL WHBON NEW YORK—Wouldn’t it be amusing now If Aitita Ekberg, tta Swedish body bountiful, made off with Marla Callas’^ friendly wigh-borhood millionaire, Aristotle Onassis, locks, stocks and yachts? ^ u « Anita’s long-time love, good-looking Rod Taylor, now broken off from her “temporarily,” says: ★ ★ ★ Onassis was reported seen on the fringes of Bob Hope’s "Call Me Bwana” which Anita's fUming with Hope in London. Taylor, the gallant, said he’d seen “glimpses of great things” in Anita’s acting . .. he envisages her as an Ingrid Bergman-type “Everybody saU she coulda’t take off 20 pounds ... she dll... tecklag herself in a room and liviug on warm tea... she’s more Interested In a home, dMMrea, four dogs and a stave, thaa behig a sex symbol ... she doesn’t want to play a caricatare of a.wemaa ... hi Italy she can’t avoid R.” ★ dr ★ “Why that about Italy?” I asked. “A beautiful bosomy blonde in Italy has no choice,” Taylor said. “Ki|ow what happens at a football game in Italy? The don’t watch the football game. They watch Anita,” ★ dr ★ THE AAIDNIGHT EARL . . ., Jack Piar signed for his first cafe stint-May 2, Harrah’s, Lake Tahoe... Jason Robards and Lauren Bacall are being flooded with scripts to do together on B’way ... The Twist is still big-^oey Dee was offered $17,5(10 for a week’s cafe stint in Alaska Day’s husband Marty Melcher’II buy the radio station in his home town. North Adams, Mass ... The Riviera town of BeauUeu’ll' redesigned to please David Niven (who owns most of It). Admiral Sees Gains in South Viet Nam Hgglifig ltS44tt OiAiii MSWI aUtaAM* MidwBOt CollegBf to Vie in Management Conteit BLOOMINGTON, Ind. OB-Del- ta Ck)llege of MicMgan and eight ■ rs of the otiMT niembers of the newly ganized “Mid-Amorka Academic Ckinference,’’ win begin this week a novel of intercollegiate competition in corporate Teams of business and economics students at the nine colleges will participate in a aix-mo^ lesson in free enterprise. Tha program Is sponsored by Indiana University’s graduate achool of Miss Teon-Age America Contest It Under Woy DALLAS, Tex. (AP)-Poiaa and Ities Judges s(^t in the 79 tesforr" - ------------- MissTeen-AipiAiiMri* preliminary jud|^ began SOFT WATER $3 nit 3 MONTH ffard Water Trouble? CALL US We Service All Meken UNDSAY SOFT WATER CO. nfWw if Mice. Ueodmih tea. 88 Nawhany St. fl S4H1 TheNEiriSSS CONSOU TVs Are HERE! Borgoins in 1962 GE Grid RCA Victor while they last. Trade-ins accepted os d o w n payment. Opeii Yil 9 Sof. Yil 7 Mon.*Fri. Site. Ct. SaSW.Hnimi PI 4-1525 TY SEBVICI •nd SALiS W A A On Friday, the winner will he introduced to the nation Vli a 19-minuto CBS netwoit tdevlshx^ SONOTpNE Houfe of Heeving 29 E. CORNELL V EARL’S PEARLS: Maybe a man really does love bia wifa as much as he does his dog. But (says the (kxrhran, Ga. Journal) you paver hear him whlatllng around the neighborhood half the night trying to get her to come back. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: The fallout danger, sayi ()uote. Is nothing new. Every husband Is exposed to it each time he opens the hall cloaet. Behind every suooessfrd man staiidf a wt who wants to go to Miami Beach for tha winter. Tkat’i ewi. STONY BURKE, 9 p.m; (7) 'Point of Honor.” Stoney tries to convince lad there’s more to honor than physical strength. BEN CASEY, 19 p.m. (7) Legacy From a Stranger.” Casey attompte to save life qf dooined alayw and give I" TELBPilONB HOUR, 19 p.m. (4) Fealum inchula Cyril Rlt- diaraetoia Jm^GlIbart and Sulll- Barbara Cook ohiglng Broadway ^ itpiaalotClaiNlio Arrau play- Carli IFraeci aad Erik Briihn daneinc G OaliiMi pto do doux. <5« , LET US BUILD YOU A BASEMENT THE COST OF AN ADDITION . V»l9l0TMvf«yMHlPln i WlUvaEr to ADDITIONS toOARAQIS GRAVES CaU Vt Anytiml DR 4-1511 CONSOLIDATE Yom DEBTS Bocome Dobt Frto the Sensible Wqy. Arrange W a Schedule of Payments to Fit Your Income. to NO LIMIT TO AMOUNT • Requirements: YGur Sincere Desire to Get Out of l?ebt PhoiM FE 8-0456 MiehigaR Crodit Con89H9n 702 Fontiec Dele leek ili|» ! j „ __________I itoaNtetlea.if ......... -MteUpaa Mtrnmm MCtedM CoaopBaai |oImi' 'HoNOiDf'" Oliiiloo 5^ i |Esci THIS PONTIAC wirmy; mmmwn» tm Back JFK on Cuban Dealings, Says Ike :|!£rrs^^“ c- WASHINGTON (AP)-Former ^ President Dwight D. Eisenhower ^ lays political snipers should hold their fire while President Kennedy is try to deal with an international crisis. To subject him to canq>aign attacks udiile he is attempting to cope with a current foreign pol-icy problem............... have personally kept still jbout it.” Commenting on Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro, Eisenhower said: “While it is true die activities and the acUons of the man began to provd his real situation and his teal intentions before I left offi(%, the fact was that it vide the nation, Eisenhower said In a taped television interview— Afi6<=-Politics^2-=broadeastiSun-day. DEFENDS DECISIONS At the same time the former president stoutly defended the Republican party’s right to disquss policy matters that are history and the general long-range attitude of the nation toward its whole position in the world. “Any pronouncements he may make respecting an-hn^nding crisis is almost sacrosanct as far as I am concerned,” Eisenhower said. “If anyone argues with him, and the bigger the following this opponent gets, the more it divided our country.” POUCY ‘SAD’ Eisenhower’s comments came In the wake of congressional campaign cross-fire over the Conunu-nist regime In Cuba and the Berlin crisis. Last Monday, in a Boston speech, Eisenhower joined in the fray, criticising Kennedy for conduct “a dreary foreign policy... too sad to talk about.” In that stinging attack, Eisenhower termed “a strange departure from fact” a quote he ab^ tributed to Kennedy that “during eight years of Republican administration our foreign policy drifted aimlessly about.” were still trying to save rather Eisenhower said Sunday, heard the last of it. At least I hope so.” i Eisenhower said it was the Democrats who first brought lip foreign policy, accusing his Republican administration of drifting for eight years, and that he h{d responded to this in his Boston remarks. “I do not believe we should fail to discuss things that are history,” Eisenhower said. ‘A loyal iqynnitlim has got a perfect rlflht to discuss it without rancor.” BYPASSES CUBA At the same time Elsenhower brushed aside as “none of my business” a request for conunent on calls by some Democrats and R^blicans for an immediate invasion of Cuba. Of the last Cuban Invasion—the April 1961 Bay of Pigs fiasco-Eisenbower said he has never expressed an opinion about it at all. Noting it occurred three month after the Kennedy administration had taken over, Eisenhower said; “I do not know enough about its complete details to comment upon it, and so while others have, others of my party and I suppose some of the other party have, ' Briton Pleads Guilty to Spying Charge LONDON Wl-Willlam Vassall, 98, a British Admiralty clerk, pleaded guilty today to spying for the Soviet Union. He was sentenced tp 18 years In prison. Atty. Gen. Sir John Hobson told the court Vassall for the last six years has supplied Russian agents “secret information of the highest At a previous preliminary hearing Vassall said he was blackmailed into spying for the Soviet Union after photographs were taken of him in homosexual acts during a drinking party with some Russians ip Moscow. He was employed in the office Of the British naval attache at the time.’ Start Tour of Russia by diplomatic means than any thing else.” CUBA THE Last Tuesday, campaign high command declared that foreign pollcy-Cuba In particular—is “the dominant issue of the 1962 campaign.' we were asked to state the issue in one word that word would be Cuba-symbol of the tragic irresolution of the administration.” Rep. William E. Miller, naUonal party chairman, wi» joined in the statement by Sen. Barry Gold-1 Rep. Bob Wilson, of ■ iGOPh “If Reached Sunday night at Htaf* ara Felle. N. Y„ Miller aaiil in a telephone interview there la no Cuba’s place in the campaign. If a aipiation we A formal statement. issiMtLat House-GQP-cainpaign cwnmltt lirthrfUture wtfr Cubi aST the 'All we’re siting la that they (the Kennedy administration) a hell of a mistake in Cuba. “We feel we have a pnqper place In this country at this time to offer suggestions for dealing Cuban situation,” Miller said. If they atot a current policy ward cAta we’ll support it: The reason we’re offering suggeationB is because they apparently have no policy toward Cuba, they’re suppuling^ AMai Stevenson’s statement that It’ll wither C. WEEDOR LONDON, (AP)-vSir Roger Ma-Idns, head of Britain's Atomic Energy Authority and cx-ambas-swlor to Washington, and his wife.] are going to Russia Monday for a lOKiay visit. I •r Oar [HOMIMAKEH'S 'PACKAGE" POLICY V' • DONTGAMBLEONOVERMYING! advertised “come-on” apeclals . . . at rock-bottom prices or your money refunded! And at Highland you always get: • 100% SAWSF^ON GUAKANTEEP . • FAMOUS BR^S • BIG SELEOTOPW • EASIEST TERMS • ™ERT SERVI^ • FAST DEJ4VEBY • QUALIFIED 8AEE8 HELP WHY SHOULD YOU PAY MORE ELSEWHERE THAN THE DISCOUNT PRICE YOU PAY AT HIGHLAND? LANDERS MADE BY UNIVERSAL STEAM-HRY moN TemB. diaL In.tant twitoh Cram itMm to . dry. Top qnality bnil|. On. year wamnty. ♦5»9 S-TUBE TABLE RADIO Powerfol raperhet-erodyn. chatSi.. Ai-Iraethre cabinet. In $599 9-TRANSISTOR FM-AMRADia IPs portable ... S built-in nnteiinas — one teleseopee 30”. With cany case, earphone and battery. 6-TRANSISTOR Pocket RADIO Shift poekat aim. Ex. ira iaiin 2%” apmiber. Slld^ral. dial usm in- lariat. Bat incL ♦11“ NEW LARGER CAPACITYl 02-SPEEDS e 12-lb. CAPACITY • DISPENSER FILTER AUTOMATIC WASHER »199** Highland low priced with trade. Free Delivery, Installation and Service. Full Guarantee. ORDER BY PHONE • NO MONEY DOWN NOW INSTALLED ON YOUR WALL FREE OF CHARGEt Mir CENERALa ELECTRIC STEREO COMBINATION with FM-AM and STEREO-FM RADIO 4-tpced ohangar, i^peakar.. Full il«i«o coniroli. Tape and tpaiker jaokt. 45 RPM ipindl. and ax* leniion cordii i> cludMi. Magnificent v.naeraand lolid kardwoodt Aimiture eabineiry. Completely installed on your wall... ORDER BY PHONE-^NO MONEY DOWN Optional lega are available. w Newest 1963 PORTABLE a BattMuDanble Dipole Aulenaaiad Handle Foil - poww Iranif.nnw RCA WHIRLPOOL Automatic Electric DRYER Terrific value. 2ngju, but indicated build-ups have led to other attacks in recent days. Or ★ * Indian Prime Minister Nehru ( Continued on Page 2 Col 6) The report that leadera of both parties had been called to the capital sprang up as myataty deepened over si^ that a major intemationat development is Teacher Dies in Crash While Crop Dusting ROMEO - A 27-year-old Lapeer Junior High School teacher was killed shortly before noon yesterday when his light plane plummeted to eArth and caught fire while he was dusting for mice In an orchard just west of here. it it it The victim was Clarence D. Boyer, 825 Liberty St., Lapeer, who left Lapeer Airport about 11 a.m. on a crop-dusting assignment at Romeo Orchards. Boyer made oqe pass at the field at an altitude of about SO feet, then throttled the plane up and made a sharp hank to the left. ★ w ♦ According to Romeo State Trooper Robert J. Kenney, who witnessed the mishap, the plane apparently lost air speed on tho turn and croohod. ' ' ' MUTE EVIDENCE A skeleton la all that remains ol this light plane that oraahed and InilriMd near Romeo y^|toiday, daHming the Ufe of tho pilot, Clarence D. Boyar, 27-year-old Lapeer Junior High School toachar. NEW YORK (AP) -'Ihe stoch market drwped sharply today under the first heavy trading h weeks antU specnlaUoii of mi important action In Wa$hliit|toa. A flurry of weekend activity by Washington offteiaM and a military build-up lit the Carlo, bean had Indicated $uch a move, perhaps concerning Cuba. DECUNES COMMENT White House Press Secretary Pierre Salinger declined comment on the possibiliW that the ranking members of Congress were being assembled for a briefing from the presklenL it . . » Defense Da- of an ampUbioas maneuver in which more dm 6,061 Marines were to have landed at Vieques Island near Puerto Rico tomorrow. A Pentagon spokesntldt attributed the decision to the scethMr-ing of ships assigned to tiw maneuver by a Caribbean hurricane. ★ it. e ■ The department did not voluh-teer the Information. Il made tin Puerto Rico. it it * ' Senate Republican leader Emmett M. Dirksen of lUioeia aahl bi Chicago that he had been ask«jl to fly to Washinglm “on ar|^ C. Aiends, of lllhmls, enUtlfm "Mise GOP leader, uMo bad b^ immoned. “ft could be Cuba irlln... maybe I tor help,’’ Dirksed “Rather than J WM’t speculate,^ nority leader sdU. Dirksen dm UalJettoptokMidi^;’,s Itepefto idiippi'llf Tfie Vfwlhw VJ. Wuifitr Bwmi rcnctti Cloudy and colder. THE PONTIAC PRE VOL, 120 NO. 220 if. if, if: if. if. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, 5IONDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1962 —40 PAGES JFK Summons Leaders Hoffa's Conspiracy Trial Opens in Nashville Court NASHVILLE. Tenn. (AP)-Thci conspiracy trial of Teamsters Union President James R. Hoffa opens in federal court today. The judge, the Justice Department and defense lawyers agree it could last I into the winter. ★ ★ ★ U.S. Dist. Judge William E. Miller said he has “pushed everything aside for this case." Hoffa, who arrived by plane Sunday from Detroit, settled himself in a comfortable downtown hotel suite from which he expects to conduct the affairs of his 1.5-million-mcmber union for the duration of the trial. LASHES BOBBY Newsmen who met Hoffa at the airport heard him lash out at U.S. Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy, a frequent Hoffa target. “Bob Kennedy is using the taxpayers’ money for his own personal vendetta," Hoffa said. He contended the attorney general is “usurping the powers of his office, making his own policies and starting out just like Hitler did. If we continue like we are in America we will have no personal rights." Hoffa Is accused of conspiring to violate the Taft-Hartley Act, and with illegally obtaining a million dollars through a dummy company from a Michigan firm whose employes belong to the Teamsters Union. At his arraignment last June he pleaded innocent and remained free under $3,000 bond. “We will beat this case just like we have all the others," the 49-year-old labor leader said at the time. ■k ★ ★ A federal grand jury returned an indictment May 18 against Hoffa and Commercial Carriers, Inc., a Detroit auto transport firm. Commercial Carriers entered a plea of no contest and Miller reserved judgment until after Hof-fa’s trial. FEDERAL CHARGE The indictment charged Hoffa and Owen Brennan, a Teamsters vice president who died last year, conspired with Commercial Carriers to form Test Fleet Corp., chartered here in 1949. Commercial Carriers was accused of setting up Test Fleet and throwing a lucrative auto hauling business its way. Stock in Test Fleet later was transferred to Mrs. Hoffa and Mrs. Brennan under their maiden names, Josephine Poszywak and Alice John.son, tlic indictment .said, and Hoffa Brennan received profits of $1,-008,0.W from Test Fleet’s operation from 1949-58. I Specifically, Hoffa is charged [with violating a Taft-Hartley Act provision which prohibits union officials from receiving payments other than wages from employers. A second count charges him with conspiring with Commercial Carriers to violate this Taft-Hartley| provision. Maximum sentence on conviction Is one year in prison and a $10,000 fine on each charge. Inkster Man 'as a Favor' Charges of Murder Pending Against 2; Probe Role of Woman By DICK HANSON Murder charges against two men ^who admitted their part in the slaying-of Peter Perva were pending today as Prosecutor George F. Taylor investigated the roles of two women in the death. A 20-year-old ex-convict Richard Dubril of Belleville admitted killing the 44-year-oId Inkster father of six “as a favor” for his ex-father-in-law, Taylor said. He said the former father-in-law, Stanley Maroley, 46, of 22600 Middle Belt Road, Farm-Ington, admitted being Mrs. Perva's lover and ordered her GREE’TINGS FROM BOSS - Teamster Union President James Hoffa, arriving in Nashville, Tenn., yesterday for his conspiracy trial in f^erai court, shakes hands with an unidentified cab driver at the airport. Hoffa is charged with conspiring to violate the Taft-Hartley law. According to Maroley’s formal statement yesterday, Mrs. Perva, 40, knew of her husband’s slaying the day before she reported him missing to Inkster police. ★ ★ ★ Perva’s unidentified body was found in a well-concealed grave in Independence Township several hours before Charge Invasion Sef HAVANA — The newspaper Revolucion gave frontpage space under a banner headline today to Washington dispatches reporting a crisi.s atmosphere in Washington and accu.scd the United States of “preparing aggression' against Cuba. I'- I'l» i In Today's Press 'Badt JFK' I Don't criticize President i during Cuban crisis— f PAGE D12. I Neck and Neck I Predictions on elecUons I tough to make—PAGE B6. Berlin Tunnels 300 to 400 refugees manage to escape—PAGE B5. S, Aren News .........Dl dgy.............D2 .............1)2 s ..............D2 I Editorials ..........A6 I Markets .............DS I Obituaries ..........D6 ......... . B8-BU srs ............D4 TV & Radio Programs DU Wilson. Earl .......Dll Women's Pages ... BLB4 UF Drive Reaches 26.8 Pet of Goal LBJtoTalk at Auto Show Will Tour Display, Address 2,500 The Pontiac Area United Fund campaign has received $189,900 or 26.8 per cent of its $706,125 goal, Fred V. Haggard, drive chairman, announced today. The Advance Gifts group, under Waiter K. Willman, has campaigned since Sept. 26 seeking to meet a new high of $86,817. Willman reports $46,167 or'53 per cent collected so far. Despite discouraging setbacks, Willman said, the over-all picture looks good. He pointed to the following company gifts, all Increased from over a year ago. Michigan Bell Telephone $4,609 Detroit Edison Co. ..... 3,800 Pontiac Slate Bank ..... 2,750 J. L. Hudson Co..........1,800 Roy Annett, Inc............... 300 He also gave warm praise to other large company contributors, including Grand Trunk Railroad, $1,000; Community National Bank $7,500; and The Pontiac Press, $3,000. WOMEN’S DIVISION Haggard added that the Women’s Division, under Mrs. Joseph Fox, had collected $5,271 of its $28,213 goal. The division started its 10-day campaign on Oct. 16. The receipts break down Into $4,095 from Pontiac; $1,076 from l4iko Angelus, and $100 from Waterford Township. Commenting on the Industrial Division, Haggard noted that in-plant solicitation has been under way for two weeks and that it received “a tremendous boost" with tlie General Motors firm contribution of $133,000. Ted Bloom, division chairman, says a further industrial report will be due at the end of this week. Total goal for the division is $467,760, representing 66 per cent of the entire campaign goal. COMMERCIAL DIVISION The Commercial Division headed by Bruce Annett also has started producing results, Haggard said. The greatest progress has been made by the Chapter Plans group raising $45,333 against si quota of $115,010, or 30.1 peir cent of Its goal. The chairman Is Charles l^wn. DETROIT (UPIl-Vice President .yndon B. Johnson will visit the 44th National Automobile Show today. wee Johnson, subbing for President Kennedy who declined an invitation, will tour the display of 1963 cars and trucks in late afternoon and will address a black tie banquet for 2,500 industry leaders and guests tonight. The vice president was scheduled to arrive about 4:30 p. m. today. He will leave Michigan tomorrow afternoon after some political specchmak-ing in western Michigan on behalf of Democratic state candidates. The show which Johnson will see has been called the biggest and most spectacular display of new cars evdr seen In America. The sponsoring automobile manufacturers association hopes over one million persons will atteijd before the show ends Oct. 28. wee The show Is being held for only the second time in Detroit after 42 previous appearances In New York City. It features n' ’ cars and trucks ranging from the compacts to a 27-ton GMC cement mixer. e e e Over 309,000 persons already have flocked to the show since it opened Friday night wi vitatlonal preview attended by 50,000. A total of 188,764 persona jammed the huge exhibition hall yesterday. RICHARD DUBRIL STANLEY MAROLEY NEW DELHI, India OB - Tlie Chinese Communists are u s i n g tanks on the western end of the Indian border and have launched a new attack on eastern India near Burma, an Indian spokesman said today. The Chinese are concentrating the missing report was received, acc*ording to Pontiac state police. Maroley said he told Mrs. Perva of the murder by telephone Tuesday a(ght, only hours after the slayHig. Also. Drobil said he told his ex-wlfe, Nina Maroley, 20, that he had killed Perva. He said she accompanied him the previous weekend to the-spot where he dug the grave and left it waiting for the man marked for death. According to Drobil, Nina didn’t bclieVe he was going to murder Perva. Drobil said she didn’t belieVe him afterward when he told her the job was done. Taylor said he planned to charge the two men with first-degree murder today. But he said he was waiting for state police to complete their investigation to determine how involved the two women might be. He said that knowing of a murder and failing to report it to the authorities isn’t a crime in itself. e * e However, Taylor said there is a question at this time whether the women knowingly aided in Perva’s slaying. According to Drobil, he drove the victim’s car to a laundro-mot at Eight Mile Road and Woodward Avenue after killing him, where he met Nina. He said she drove her car bc- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Use Tanks Against India New Attack by Chinese their troops at another point on India’s North East Frontier, halfway between the two places where fighting is now blazing, the spokesman added. Reporting on the third day of fighting between Chinese troops U. N. to Begin Debating Seal for Peiping Regime UNITED NATIONS (^) —While Communist China and India battle on their borijer, the U.N. General Assembly opens debate today on the annual Communist attempt to seat the Chinese Reds in the United Nations. Delegates generally predict the Communists would lose again. The Soviet Union was scheduled to lead off the afternoon debate on its resolution that would have the 109- -------------------♦nation assembly replace _ . I Chinese Communist dele- Expect Cloudy, Colder Weather to Hit Pontiac and Indian soldirs along the disputed Himalayan frontier, the spokesman indicated the Chinese Were still advancing, lliey captured four more posts at the souftern end of the Ladakh battlefront in northwest India, one of them falling to tanks after they had turned back two previous Chinese assaults, he said. WWW The Chinese opened a new section of front at Kibitoo at the eastern end of the North East Frontier near Burma, the spokesman said, with an attack at 3 a m. Radio Peiping said earlier Indian troops attacked a Chinese position in the Chayul area of Tibet. This is possibly the same area, although there is a Chayul In Tibet about 200 miles west of the area near Burma where the Indian spokesman said the he# fighting was raging. The Chayul area fn Tibet about 10 miles north of the border Considerable cloudiness and colder temperatures are scheduled for the area tonight and tomorrow. Following a low of 39 this evening, the temperature is expected to reach a high of 56 tomorrow. •k Hr it The forecast for Wednesday is partly cloudy and continued cool. Rainfall registered four-tenths of an inch in downtown Pontiac from 10 a. m. Saturday 'til the same time today. Today’s winds are from the southeast at 10 to 18 miles per hour; they will shift north to northwest tonight and tomorrow, w w w Forty-two was the lowest the thermometer read preceding 8 1. today. At 1 p. m. the mercury measured 50. gates on all U.N. bodies. Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian A. Zorin, was believed likely to contend that the United Nations was only hurting itself by keeping out the Communist government controlling a fifth of the world’s population. Nationalist Chinese delegate Liu Chieh planned to reply with the argument that the Chinese people had repudiated the Peiping regime by fleeing the Chinese mainland in droves. Liu was expected to conted that the Chinese Communists were committing aggression against India and should be kept out of the United Nations because the U.N. charter limits the membership to Peace-loving states." U.S. delegate Adlal E. Stevenson was listed to speak third, followed by representatives of Afghanistan and Morocco. A vote on the Soviet resolution was likely between Thursday and Monday. Many obsjervers remarked that there seemed to be less enthusiasm for the Red Chi- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Russia Silent on Conflict, Page D-3 claimed by India and about 50 miles northeast of Thagla Ridge near the Bhutan border where the fighting started at dawn Saturday! CONCENTRATING TROOPS About half way between Kibitoo and Thagla ridge, the Chinese are also concentrating troops, the Indian spokesman said. The troops are In Ungju, a village that the Chinese captured from Indian border guards in August 1050, killing three of them In the first bloodshed of the dispute over 51,000 square miles of Himalayan borderlands. The spokesman declined to speculate on whether a Chinese attack was imminent at Longju, but indicated build-ups have led to other attacks in recent days. WWW Indian Prime Minister Nehru ( Continued on Page 2 Col 6) Teacher Dies in Crash While Crop Dusting ROMEO — A 27-year-oId Lapeer Junior High School teacher was killed shortly before noon yesterday when his to earth and caught fire while he dusting for mice in an orchard just west of here. WWW The victim was Clarence D. Boyer, 825 Liberty St„ Lapeer, who left Lapeer Airport about 11 a.m. on a crop^iustlng assignment at Romeo Orchards. Boyer made one pass at the field at an altitude of about 80 feet, then throttled the plane up and made a sharp bank to the left. w , w w According to Romeo State Trooper Robert J. Kenney, who witnessed the mishap, the plane apparently lost air speed on the turn and crashed. ^ ' Cuba Is Hinted as Reason for Urgent Call Congress Hoads Race Back to Capital for Emergency Briefing WASHINGTON WI — President Kennedy"^^ asked today for time on television to address the nation on “a subject of the highest national urgency” at 6 p.m. (Pontiac time) this evening. From Our News Wires WASHINGTON — President Kennedy today summoned Democratic and Republican congressional leaders back to the capital, apparently for an emergen* cy briefing on some still? undisclosed international crisis. The White House telephoned House and Senate leaders early this morning and urged them to rush back to Washington imme NEW YORK (AP) -Hm stock market dropped sharply today under the first heavy trading in weeks amid specnlatlon of an important action la Wa$hln|loa. diately. In some cases, at least, military jets were placed at their disposal. There was no official hint of the precise nature of the crisis. Much of the speculation centered on Cuba, hovmver. According to a report from Mexico City, there was stroag speculathm there that Kennedy might announce a blockade ol Cnba. Hemisphere econemk and finance mlnbters ore meeting in the Mexican caRttaV to review the AlUanoe for Progress. The report that leaders of both parties had been called to the capital ajM-ang up as Utystory deepened over si^ that a major International devehmment is imminent WWW A flurry of weekmd activity by Washington officials and a military bulld-up In the Caribbean had Indicated such a move, perhaps concerning Cuba. OECUNES COMMENT White House Press Secretary Pierre Salinger declined comment on the possibility that the ranking members of Congress were being assembled for a tolof-ing from the president i, the Defense Department announced “caaedt lation" of an amphlbions ma« neuver in wfakh more tikm 6,000 Marines were te have landed at Vieques Iibmd near Puerto Rico toatorrow. A Pentagon spokesman attrlh-uted the decision to the scattering of ships assigned to the maneuver by a Caribbean hurrloaim. W w w. The department did not vcIlUl* teer the Infornmtlon. It made tbn .from about Puerto Rico. t ♦ 4 Senate Republican leader Buarw ett M. Dirksen of lUlnols enid In Chicago that he had been adtod to fly to Washington ”on urmmt business" and that tton. C Arends, of Illinois. asSi House GOPleMtok. alsohadhS MUTE EVIDENCE - A skeleton is all that remains of this light plane thai and burned near Romeo y^rday, the life of the pilot, Clarence D. Boyer. 27-year*o|^ Lapeer Junior High School teaphCr. “It couU be Cuba... It miiMlii Berlin... maybe India has adfli for help," Dirkwtt) laM blfarS “ItotWtlwn justtoeelllM wcn*t speculato,” the Senato S* nority leader sold. Dirksen made the cowrowlu Uel Jet to pkdt him ity. Reports qaldtly came Ml (Conu^ on Pagi'^Ookij THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONPAY. OCTOBER 22. 1062 Documeittary Producer Coiiimenti Special Place in History Seen for Jacqueline BY PHYLUS BATTEIXE ‘'She chooses to stay out of the NEW YORK — There are not|limelight, and yet she is not many men who would venture to put Mrs. Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy in her place -r- biit Perry Wolff wanted to have a fling at it ★ ♦ * “Jackie Kennedy, I think, will have a very special place. In his-lor\ , I mean. * * ★ “She is intelligent and political- tiring, as Bess Turman and Mamie Eisenhower “Most first ladieii In America's history have looked upon the presidency as almost a death sentence for their husbands, and have kept calendars — mentally, if not physically— ly-oriented, but she dot's not allow i with a date circled on them, the the orientation to go on view, as! happy date when they can leave Eleanor Roosevelt did. j the White House and live again New 7« (oTfowInt purnoMi: (11 to oontWnr ond »oU ''P®",*.?™' IHMtl to odopt on Air*«m«n^t o^f CorpMlIfoS* " MloVlITo"*%orporoUon; with ond Into Ohio roit Prolihi. ino.. on Ohio corporollon; ond 111 to troni-oot «uoh othor bmlnon- " ANN'M'NiiMAli' Ootobor II. IS Mid Wooomiior'i. ImI PonfiaCr Nearby Area Deaths MRS. ERNEST BEST Service for former Waterford Township resident Mrs. Ernest (Edna) Best. 75, of 30050 Clark St., New Haven, will be Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the Duncan Funeral Home in New Haven. Burial will follow in Centennial Cemetery, also in New Haven. Mrs. Best died Friday at St. Joseph Hospital, Mt. Clemens. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Joseph Drilps of New Haven and Mrs. Harold Simmons of New Jersey. MRS. LOUIS BILES Service for Mrs. Louis (Margaret) Biles. 67, of 98 S. Edith St., Hunloon Funeral Home, with burial to follow at Perry Mount Park. Mrs. Biles died yesterday after a long illness. Surviving besides her husband re two sons, Sgt. Itobert W. Holman 0 fFt. Polk, La., and Warren Holman of Detroit, and two brothers. HOWARD J. CI.ARK Howard J. Clark. 44, of 4076 S. Shore Drive, Watkins Lake, Waterford Township, died in Brandon Township. His body is at the Donclson-Johns Funeral Home. HORACE C. NAYLOR Service for Horace G. Naylor, 61, 1190 Taylor Rd.. will be 3 p.m. Wednesday at D. E. Pursley Funeral Home with burial at White Chapel Cemetery. He died Saturday in Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, as the result of hunting mishap. A set-up man for General Motors Truck and Coach Div., Mr. Naylor was born in Mayflower, Ark. He came to Pontiac 26 years ago. Surviving besides his wife, Bpn-le, are a daughter, Mrs. I..ois Jones of Mayflower: three sons, Michael, Thomas and James, all at home; his step-m other Etta Uwis of Mayflower and four grandchildren. Also surviving are four brothers and four sisters. HENRY A. POLZIN The Rosary will be recited for Henry A. Polzin, 37, of 2086 Oakdale, Waterford Township, at 8 p.m. Tue.sday at the Coats Funeral Home. Service will be Wednesday at II a m. at .St. Benedict’s Catholic Church, with burial in Michigan Memorial Gardens, Flat Rock. Mr. Polzin, part owner of Club Tahoe, a member of St. Benedict’ Church and tlie Waterford Optimist Club, died yesterday at Mercy Hospital, Port Huron following a automobile accident. Surviving besides his wife Gloria are his parents Mr. and Jo.seph Polzin of Pontiac; five sons, Robert, Bernard, Charles, Henry and Joseph, all a^ home; one daughter, Debra, also at home; two sisters; and two broth-rs. HARRY J. RICE Service for Harry J. Rice, f 156 Ogemaw Road will be at 11 H.m. Tuesday in St. Benedict Catholic Church. Burial will follow in Mt. Hope Cemetery. The Rosary will be said at 8 p.m. this evening 1 Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Surviving besides his wife Ruth are two daughters, Mrs. Eddie O’Brien of Pontiac and Mrs. Howard Decter of Waterford Township; five grandchildren; a brother Edward of Pontiac; and two sisters. KELLI ANNE SCHATZLEY Graveside .service for Kelli Anne Schatzley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Schatzley of 59 Monroe St., wore to be held at J:15 p.m. today at Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Kelli Anne died Saturday shortly after birth at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital. Funeral arrangements were by the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. WILIJAM A. ARMSTRONG AVON TOWNSHIP ~ Service for William H. Armstrong. 70, of 2625 Melvin St., will be 10 Wednesday at the William R. Po-tere Funeral Home, Rochester. Iraveside service will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at Hillcrest Cemetery, Jackson. Owner of Bill’s Barber Shop In Brooklands, Mr. Armstrong died this morning of a heart attack. He a member of River Rouge lANlge No. 511, F&AM. Surviving are his wife Corrin, eight sons, two stepchildren, a brother and two sisters. ’niOMAS W. AULPH TROY — Service for Thomas lUlph, Infant son of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Aulph, of 412 Starr Drive, will be at 9:.30 a.m. tomorrow at the Price Funeral Home. Private graveside service will be In White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. The baby died Saturday, one day after birth, at Mt. Carmel Mercy Hospital, Detroit. Surviving besides his are! a brother, William D. and a Brothers Funeral Home until noon sister, Maria Sue, both at home; and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Sherwood, and Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Aulph all of Troy. MRS. GLENN BAIRD OXFORD TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. Glenn (Nellie) Baird, 68, of 806 Olive Road, will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at St. Joseph Catholic Church, Lake Orion. Burial will follow in Linden Cemetery. Mrs. Baird died Saturday in Pontiac General Hospital after an illness of several weeks. The Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. today in tlie Bossardet Funeral Home, Oxford. Surviving besides her husband re a daughter, Mrs. Marie Shae of Lake Orion; a son, Clifford of Oxford: a brother; six grandchildren and one great-grandchild. MRS. WILLIAM D. BIRDWELL AVON TOWNSHIP - Mrs. William B. (Mary E.) Birdwell, 40, of Alida St., died today at Ardmore Hospital, Ferndale, after a brief illness. Her body is at the Price Funeral Home, Troy. ROY A. BORLAND ROMEO — Service for Roy A. Borland, 68, of 222 Prospect St. will be II a.m. Wednesday at Roth’s Home for Funerals. Burial will be in Forest Lawn Cemetery, Saginaw. A retired employe of the Ford Motor Co., Mr. Borland died yesterday at the Community Hospital after a short illness. He was a life of Pioneer Lodge No. 79, F&AM, of Saginaw, and of the Royal Arch Masons, No. 17, of Romeo. He also was a member of Romeo Lodge No. 19, Order of the Eastern Star, and a past commander of the American Legion Post No. 109 in Romeo. Surviving are his wife Harriett; a daughter, Mrs. Joyce Griffin of Romeo; a granddaughter; a stepsister, Mrs. Earl Zimmerman of Rochester; and a step-brother, Alva Braid of Durand. CLYDE C. CRANE WES’l’ BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for Clyde C. Crane, 80, of 2660 Pine Lake Road, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Horn Pontiac. Burial will follow in Pine Lake (Jemetery. Mr. Crane died yesterday in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac,._____ after an Illness of three days. He living. was past president of Hoffman] Surviving besides his daughter Combustion Engineering co. of,are another daughter, Mrs. Dear-Detroit. jald Brim of North Branch; and Surviving are his wife Mathil-jll grandchildren, da; three daughters, Evelyn and Surviving besides his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Faust of Mayfield Township, are three sisters, Mrs. Irene Laidler of Lapeer and Darlene and Geraldine Faust both at home; two brothers, Ed win and Gerald, both at home; grandfather, Ernest Papke of Co-lumbiaville; and his grandmother, Mrs. Martha Faust of Ortonville. MRS. GRILLE F. HOOK ORCHARD LAKE - Service for Mrs. Grille (Margaret) Hook, 68, of 3730 Orchard Lake Road, will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at C. J. God-hardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Burial will follow in Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac, Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital following a lengthy Illness. She was a retired stenographer and a member of the Blue Star Mothers of Keego Harbor. Surviving besides her husband are; a daughter, Mrs. Ru.sselTholl of Keego Harbor; a son. Oral N., of Orchard Lake; a brother, Al-vine H. Pickering of Keego Harbor; six grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. JAMES F. TEETS INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP — Service for James F. Teets, 79, of 8500 Dixie Highway, will iw 10 a. m. Wednesday at the Diener Funeral Home, Utica. Burial will follow in Johnson Cemetery, Sno-er. Mr. Teets died yesterday at Martha T. Berry Hospital, Mount Clemens, after a lengthy illness. He was a retired carpenter. Surviving are three sons, Norman of Clarkston, Virgil of Warren and Harland of Utica; four daughters, Mrs. Bernard Laurie of Toledo, Ohio, Miss Alveretta Teets, Mrs. Norman Morang and Mrs. Vincent Kepsel, all of Utica; two sisters; 13 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. HENRY A. WHITE ' DEERFIELD TOWNSHIP -Service for former Deerfield Township resident Henry A. White, 73, of New Hudson, will be at 3 p. m. tomorrow at Muir Brothers Funeral Home, Lapeer. Burial will be in Mount Hope Cemetery, Lapeer. Mr. White died Saturday after a long illness at the New Hudson home of his daughter, Mrs. Rolla Keeran, with whom he had been Two Youngsters Die on Motorcycle oi|nj 15 Killed in State Weekend Traffic Sectional Conference PITTSBURGH (UPI) Ripre* ienteUves from 18 states win at> tend the northeast states confer* ence on the prevention of alco* holism which opens Ijere today. By The Associated Press Fifteen persons lost their lives in weekend traffic accidents in Michigan. There were three double fatals including two youngsters who died when their motorcycle collided with a car on a hill west of Rogers City. The Associated Press weekend count began at 6 p.m. Friday and ended at midnight Sunday. Clifford T. Lee Jr., 2, of Nankin Township was struck and killed by a car near his home Sunday. Florence Harlg, 50, of Grand Rapids, was struck and killed by auto Saturday night as sh walked along a road ROfth of Grand Rapids. ★ * ★ A two-car head-on collision on U S. 25 in St. Clair Township killed Henry Polzin, 36, of Drayton Plains Sunday. Waldemar Neuman, 23, of Kalamazoo, was killed Sunday when Area Man, Teen Killed Hunting 2 Fatalities Mark 1st Weekend in State his auto ran off U.S. 131 north of Plainwell. Howard Bardwell, 48, of Gladwin, died Saturday night in a two-car collision in Gladwin County. A twotlUIU44uCr National I Bank Oi BONIIAC