Horn#1 Edifion nsion PJear^^iguUed forget Little Differences *",Tv The Weather *!i U.S. Weather Hurra, Mild THE PONTIAC PRESS VOL. 120 NO. 269 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1962 —32 PAGES Study Results in $2.5 Million Project Plan 6 Lanes, 4 Bridges From Telegraph Road to U75 Freeway The Michigan State High-—wayDepartmenl loday"ait-nounced it will n^e a r 1 y double its original plan for improving Square Lake , Road south or Pontiac. ~ A just-completed engineering study ha^resulted in plans for an estimated $2.5 million project calling for construction of a six-lane divided highway and four bridges from Telegraph Road to 1-75. Department officials estimate half the cost will be financed by federal funds and half by the state. No local funds will bp required since the project lies outside the Pontiac City Limits. The project is tentatively slated to go under contract late in 1964, according to the department’s current construction schedule. Originally, the proposed project called for modernization of Square Lake Road from Woodward Avenue to 1-75 at roughly half the Cost. The engineering study revealed thattraffie-en thethoroughfare warranted extending modernization westward to Telegraph, according to Highway Commissioner John C. Mackie. “The entire route is now taxed to capacity,” Mackie noted. “Traffic studies predict a traffic flow of more than 1,700 vehicles per hour when the new highway is built to provide a cross-connection be-tweenU.S. 24, U.S. 10 and 1-75.” The study recommends building median barriers on Square Lake Road from Telegraph to Wood-ward.- — HYPNOTIZED — All the dreams and hopes of Christmas are expressed in the face of Sandra Dec Eggert, 2, of 1280 Bramble Drive, as she admires the mechanical Santa Claus in a First Federal Savings & Loan Association of Oakland. building...................«............-------------------- ... Negotiators in Cuba for Prisoner Release It also recommends purchasing property for access and right-of-way from Telegraph to Woodward and on the north sidev of Square Lake Road from west of Lahser Road to a point east of Opdyke Road. HAVANA (UPI)—New York attorney James B. Donovan and other negotiators arrived today to close a deal with Premier Fidel Castro for the pre-Christmas ransom of 1,113 Cuban invasion prisoners. A four-engined Pan American World Airways transport landed at Havana’s Ranchoe Boyeros Airport at 11.35 a.m., EST after an*~ hour’s flight from Miami. Existing subdivision roads will remain open with the exception of Devon Road and Marlborough Drive. Two bridges will be built.over Opdyke. As it arrived, U.S. freight planes were roaring into Miami with huge cargoes of medicines and foodstuffs demanded by Castro for the prisoners’ release. Warm Tomorrow) May Rain Thursday One new bridge will carry west bound traffic over the Grand Trunk Western Railroad main line and the existing bridge there will be modernized. News Flash UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (UPI) —' Two top U. N. officials on the Congo problem sped here today from opposite sides of the world, giving rise to speculation that a new crisis was brewing In that African country’s affairs. Donovan and three members of the Cuban Families Committee-Alvaro Sanchez Jr., Mrs. Berta Barreto and Mrs. Virginia Betancourt—^left atKnntl^ special Pan American World Airways flight for the Cuban capital at 9 A.M. EST. They had been waiting for more than 24 hours for a Fidel Castro go-ahead. The flight was PAA’s first trip to Havana since Oct. 20 when President Kennedy ordered a sea blockade of Cuba pending Soviet withdrawal of offensive weapons. The three Cuban members of the delegation all have relatives among the prisoners captured during the ill-fated Bay of Pigs invasion In April 1961. The group had waited all night for Cuban government approval of their trip, and the departure this morning indicated it was forthcoming only shortly before they took off. Before they left, arrangements (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) What a wonderful weatherman we have. He brings us mild temperatures and sunny skies when we need it the most. Thirty-three was the lowest recording in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. The thermometer reading at 2 p.m. was 39. lyicaiiorirnerwiHjr'sriiw Pontiac YMCA will be held Jan. 13, Robert M. Crltchfleld, program chairman^ announced today. Circuit Coart Judge H. Russel Holland will be the guest speaker at the 8 p. m. ceremony. An open house will follow the dedication. Tfie two-story addition to the recreation facility at 181 Mount Clemens St., along with renovations to the old building, cost approximately $676,000. It Is expected that the building will be open to members before the first of the year. Christmas shoppers better take advantage of a predicted high of 40 tomorrow. There’s a chance of rain Thursday. Tonight’s low is expected to be Morning westerly winds at 1 mile per hour will become light and variable late today and to- Air All Views of Constitution. Agrees Romney Next Governor Names Robert Dan Hof. to Executive Staff LANSING — Gov.-elect George Romney told the seven Democratic Ad Board members today he “agreed with the desirability of full, fair and accurate discussion of the new constitution.” Romney said he would cooperate with them toward that end “If you will join in keeping its consideration from being dominantly partisan in character.” The statements were contained in a three-page letter Romney drafted as his answer to the Democrats who last week asked Him to join them in presenting all sides of the proposed constitution to the electorate. At the news conference, Romney also announced the appoint-ment of Robert J. Danhof of Mus-tt as his executive assistant for legislative programs. Romney said he also has selected B. W. Reeve, ah Iron Mountain industrialist, to an unpaid post with the State' Economic Development Commission. The appointment of Danhof was the third announced by Romney for his top executive staff. He last week, named Glenn S. Allen Jr. of Kalamazoo to the $15,500 post of state controller, and selected Dr. Walter D. DeVries of Grand Rapids as executive assistant for program development and agency liai- To Air Skybolf at Tete-a-Tete Plans for Joint Military Aid to India, Crisis in Cuba on /Summit/ Lilt WELCOME TO NASSAU - President John F. Kennedy is greeted with a handshake by British Prlriie 'Minister Harold Macmillan on h;i» arrival in Nassau from Washington today ro?;frieif meeting in the Bahama islands. Be^ tween them is Lord Hume, Britain’s foreign Automobile Executives Pleased at 1963 Outlook - NASSAU, Bahamas UP)— President Kennedy and British Prime Minister Har: old Macmillian stressed close U.S-British friendship — overriding various differences — in a meeting today under a brilliant tropical sun.. In a series of little summit talks ending late Thursday, they are expected to discuss such diverse matters bs a formula for ending their split over the Skybolt missiles and plans for joint military aid to India. They also plan to survey the world situation in the wake of the "♦ Cuban crisis and try to figure out whether there is any profit to be the Wedt in the Soviet CiiBa and the Russia-Red China division. Still to be filled are executive assistant jobs for legal affairs, public information and appointments and office management. Romney said he had discussed the legal affairs assignment with Atty. Gen. FrankHKelley, who DETROIT <#)—In glowing year-end statements, two auto industry executives expressed optimism yesterday that 1963 looks promising for auto makers and other business activities as well. Lynn Townsend, president of Chrysler Corp., said it was hard to find anything but optimism among automobile men and attributed this feeling to the high levels of employment and income, the atmosphere of strong consumer confidence and the availability of credit at reasonable rates.* Frederic Donner, chairman of General Motors Corp., predicted must designate the appointee s auto sales for the new.year should assistant attorney general. It was learned that Richard V.an Dusen of Birmingham, a dose Romney adviser, will be named to the post as soon as Romney and Kelley work out an understanding on some technical and procedural problems. approximated 1962 totals of about seven million cars and one million trucks if continued high levels of economic activity and consumer confidence prevajl. Donner noted that “a fresh spirit of optimism concerning the general economic outlook A crowd estimated at 2,500— Bahamans and visitors—watched from the flag-decked airport balcony and sidewalks as Kennedy’s, huge silver and blue jet plane rolled to a stop shortly before 11 a.m. THOMAS MITCHELL The plane had twice overflown Windsor Field to kill time, havr lng made a fast flight of less than two hours from Andrews Air Force Base, Md., near Washington. Macmillan praised the weather, a warm contrast with fall conditions in both Washington and London. The prime minister, wearing a light grayish tan suit, said he had. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Actor s Actor Topp Gets Mitchell Dies | Term for Killing Cancer Claims Second Great Star in 2 Days has been apparent durjhg the past two months,” and added “the most recent measures of economic activity provide sound reasons for this growing confidence. He pointed to continued reyon le^we+s—In -mdustriat^production, employment and personal incomes and said, “Recent surveys of business capital investment, plans indicate a continued highj rate of expenditures in this vital' part of the economy. Townsend noted (hat certainj changes seem to be taking place lin public attitudes toward private j enterprise and its importance, imj national and International affair and he added that these changes could prove very important in theTJ 7() wM hejd Q. ,y (eW hours coming year. Lfter hjs death / in accordanc The Chrysler president said a|wjlh hjs finfl, wjsh - real improvement has been evi-| ............ • j Seventeen - year • old Sheldry Idcnt in public understanding of the Mltchel s widow, .Susan, dls- „ wa„ given (he man, |role of profits and the profit en j dosed this, today, explaining: | (|atory^,fc |cn,cnoe foP „rst. IcrgROT rrerrnti’rprtze systrnr-m' —Tnmrm^' wanted ThTnpr very’-aejfrFefiHurileF^y"riPtfOII' OWfPF creating prosperity and economic I private and that is the way he Judge Clark J. Adams, growth and pointed to the increas- got them, lng fimouhl of talk about the need ..yye had our own services very for tax reductions ns “one of the quietly. Wc had a beautiful, beau-clearest signs of this improve-U|fu| funeral here just for the im-ment." jmedlate family.” HOLLYWOOD iji — Private Thomas Mitchell. who died yesterday of The convicted slayer of Oakland County’s First Assistant Corporation Counsel, Charles A. was sentenced yesterday to spend the rest of his life in I Jackson Prison. Topp will not be eligible for | parole under t(ie "natural life” Both auto makers predicted continued good business for the automobile Industry._____—— Donner said General Motors an ti'cipates a good year for Itself, for the automobile Industry and for the general economy in 1963. He noted Chrysler’s car produc tion in the fourth quarter of 1902 ______>ond only to 1955 and Its truck output 50 per dent above last year aniLthe Le.it since 1956. His business manager said no public services are planned for nn urtiir'g actor, boil, ed by his colleagues with the highest awards of stage, .screen, and television. m THE SEASON - Peering out. fromi . .. . • behind a stack of Christmas parcels at the flee expects to handle a word 87 million Pontiac Post Office, Is Kenneth B. Jackson, pieces of mall this holiday season. See Story 4189 Solvey St),, Drayton Plains. The post of- on Page 2. . , , r , n ; ) Shopping Days Till, Christmas 2ND IN 2 DAYS Mitchell succumbed at his Beverly Hills home, the second can-‘t victim in two days among the famous names Of Hollywood. The other was Charles Laughton. —They appeared once together in a movie—“The Hunchback of Notre Dame” in 1939. The bushy-browed Mitchell, who had the face of an Irish leprechaun and the soul of devilish poet, was most famous (on his role of Scarlett O’Hara’s father in “Goto With The Wind.” The only way he can ever be deased from prison during his lifetime would' be by a commutation of his sentence or a par-RBW-flWTIi^ ™ ;”r'’ Topp was found guilty Dec. 4 of the May 16 knife killing of the 50-year-old Davis, in the attorney’s Pontiac Township home. The youth stabbed Davis four times with a knife he found in the kitchen of the home. He Ibroke into the house after „ escaping from Pontiac State Hospital and began looking for a likely place to rob, accord, lng to his statement after ill’ , arrest. Three sanity hearings, last summer, Including one before a jury, resulted in findings that Topp was mentally competent to stand trial. '-in-Law NEW YORK (AP) — I bom actor Peter Lawford admits “being related to the President of the United States Is a very great honor. But it is not, and ; never will be a career.” Candidly and often humorously, , Lawford tells in the current issue' of McCall’s magazine how it feel; to be a man with a reasonably well-known name who is suddenly known as “the brother-in-law — ” ★ A 1 A ■/ Lawford recalls a politician's 1960 prediction that “When Jack gets to the White Hoyse, he’ll make Bobby the attorney general. ~Tedd£^HHrun~ft$ GDiigress in Massachusetts, and Sarge Shriver will probably become governor of Illinois. Hie big question is, what ' are they going to do with Peter Lawford?” ’ ------------~-f—— As an actor who is pretty much a California-casual-siyle fellow, Lawford refers to himself as "the bit player in the background,” and answers the question: "They’re still wondering what to do with me.” / “My career has been-satisfying and very rewarding,” said Lawford, and “I have perhaps the world’s most Interesting in-laws.” PLAYS NfeW ROLE Lawford said, "That one of them, my brother-in-law Jack, is President of the United States of America 1 stiff flnffptfag^ffatr* 7$ whelming! It is a fact to be handled with awe and respect. I have learned to play my role as the off-beat brother-in-law.” . Lawford’s relationship to the Kepnedys subjects him to considerable "needling,” the actor admits. In fact, he adds, needling him is one of the President’s favorite activities. He says Jacque-llhe enjoys if, .too. A a ★, * Lawford fondly recalls his first meeting with the Kennedy farm ily at Christmas in Palm Beach, Fla. He recalled that Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Kennedy could not have beerrmore gracioua, ixying -toputTrsTigKfly’stage-irightened .suitor of Pat’s at ease. The evening stands out so clear- Ly, said Lawford, “I know exactly-what I wore—loafers, white trousers, a blue blazer, and, so help me. bright-red socks.” in an almost overwhelming situation.” 1.,:^ Describing his childHood, Law* forth said: */I grew up as an only, '‘Mr. Kennedy couldn't seem to take his eyes from the socks,” said Lawford. WAS ACCEPTED - " f . The following April 23 Lawford was married to Pat. "JFK — a senator at the tlme-Bobby, and Ted were my ushers,* and they ribbed me in the traditional manner. They*also made me-feet accepted,” the actor said. Lawford tells-how he^ound the— -“rough and tumble of a large, gregarious family” foreijjn ' to . him. "And thus,” he said, ‘I her came by marriage — an outsider somewnat taught child with all the traditional British reserve.” Lfe said Jie considered the Ken- , nedys handling of" the situation wise, in his case, “They never forced their political and religious concepts on me. T wasn’t even pushed into their touch-football games,” he said. “Actually,” the actor asserted, “it took two years of exposure to. • the Kennedy family esprit before I began to get the message that the secret was participation. “Jt was Pat’s father who really did the trick. He was an old movie hand, himself. Back in 1927, he. was an .executive , with Pathe and RKO pictures, apd show business wasn't way out to him. Since he r eenter * family activities, encouraging his children to join in the fun and ^competition; he didn’t find it difficult' to ease me in. ,A a A "And finally it dawned on me,” -said Lawford, “that all my life 1/ had been missing much in family fusion on the grand scale.” ' V '* , Lawfordsays “when the/ Ken-nedys take you to heart- /ou become one of them- My four children will never be kmerp. for they , too, are full-fledged members of the tribe.” The actor reveals an intimate letter to- hls/youngest' daughter, Robin, from the president! DEAR ROBIN “Dear Robin: “Welcome to the ybungest mem-ber of the clan- pur entrance is timely as we need a new left: end en the team. . "Here’s hoping that you do not acquire Unpolitical assets of your parents,/the prolific qualities of your godfather, or the problems of your uncle. With my warmest regards. Z. VUncle Jack”. -/Robin’s godfather is Bobby; the learn,of course, is the touch-fqot-ball squad, and the dan is the Kennedy family. Congress Plans Probe Into Skybol WASHINGTON (AP)-The fight over the Skybolt missile appeared to be broadening today with a congressional investigation in the offing. AAA Sen. Richard B. Russell, chairman of the Senate Armed Service Committee, said the whole matter of dropping or continuing the pro- posed missile wUtbe investigateteffliJMiystaff have voted There were these other develop-Tn favor of continuing Skybolt. —A, Pentagon spokesman said the controversial missile is at least two years behind schedule. —President Kennedy indicated he will back Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara’s reported recommendation that Skybolt be dropped. informant said* the four {No Understanding Yet' K learning, Says JFK WASHINGTON W- President Kennedy believes the Cuban crisis taught Soviet Premier Khrushchev “how dangerous a world we live in’’ bqt that it will be some time before the United States Will “come to any real understanding* with him. If the Communists would devote their energies to demonstrating paint a rosy picture of U.S.- Soviet relations in the interview. The Cuban crisis, he said, has made successful negotiations with the Kremlin more difficult because the Russians — through deception — tried 16 change the balance of power by sneaking missiles into Cuba. Nike Zeus Project Must Wait, Pago 18' how their system works instead of trying to change the balance of power “we could have a long pe-riod of peace,” Kennedy said. But It Is, he said, the Red Chinese and Soviet determination to make a Communist world in a nuclear age that “makes the ’60s so dangerous.” However, in a chatty interview that set a television “first” Monday night, the President said, “We ought to be rather pleased with thwarting the threat of Communist domination. The President made no effort to President Kennedy indicated he favors dropping Skybolt when, in his radio-television appearance Monday night, he said: $350-MILLION OUTLAY We put in $350 million Into Skybolt. No other country has put anything into the actual manufacture of Skybolt. If we complete it, the British would have bought a hundred missiles, we would have bought a thousand. It would have cost us $2.5 billion.” AAA Britain has been depending on Skybolt for its main nuclear deterrent, and the matter is expected to come before Kennedy and British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan at their talks in Nas- “So it is going to be some time before it is possible for us to come to any real understanding with Mr. Khrushchev.” Kennedy has virtually written off the possibility of effective international inspectieieot Cuba* or of any Communist territory, for some time to come. He took a dim view of prospects for an inspection agreement U.S. demand in the Cuban dispute and a key theme In American disarmament proposals,. ‘The Camera I think is actually going to be our best inspector,” he said, because “a totalitarian system must exist only in crecy” and “they are not going to open it.” Hie President said, in fact, that even when Soviet Premier Khrushchev offered international inspection of Cuba he had no hope this would actually come about. Full U.S. Weather Bureau Re’port PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Considerable cloudiness, slightly warmer today, high 38. Partly cloudy and cool tonight, low t5. Wednesday partly cloudy and mild, high 40. Light and variable winds. * An informant said the Joint Chiefs of Staff-Air Force Gen. Curtis E. LeMay; Adm. George W. Anderson, chief of naval operations: Army Gen. Earle G. Wheeler and Marine Gen. David M. Shoup—had unanimously approved going ahead with Skybolt and believe it can be made operational by its late 1964 target date. *• A A McNamara reportedly is recommending the missile be dropepd because of serious technical and money problems. FAVOR DEVELOPMENT The Joint Chiefs were pictured as favoring continued development because it would give the United States a wider choice of nuclear weapons and would require the Soviet Union to spend up to $40 billion to develop an air defense system against the bombers which would carry the Skybolt. / Concrete Collap/es, Four Feared Defad TULLAHOMA, Tenn/ (AP) — Rescue workers dug /through a mass of concrete and ^teel at the bottom of a 250-foot,deep rocketi test'cell today, searching for four believed killed in the collapse of a 304-tpn pie-shaped wedge of concrete. freshly poured concrete, which set off a chain-reaction col-pse Monday, was the first of six gments designed to cap the $10-illion test cell. It crashed rough floors placed about 5C »t apart in the huge hole, carry-g additional tons of concrete and ;el to the bottom. The 150-foot diameter hole was as ted through Tennessee lime->ne for a facility to simulate .... atmospheric conditions at 10,000 feet f(Fa roctretM6slef eff JJjlaine with a half-million-pound 30 [thrust. N. Carolina Family 'Adventure7 Four to 13 Children Overnight BIRMINGHAM—The City Commission will hold a public hearing Feb. 11 on four rezoning requests In Birmingham. The date was set last night. In other action, the commis- }■' sion agreed to allow construction j i of an access drive on the west side of Woodward Avenue north of I Christmas in differgnj.coun-Smith Street. The 104-foot-long drive, to be|< financed by special assessment, wifi be located in front of the Becker Orthopedic Appliance Co. at 1776 S. Woodward Ave, CHARLOTTE, N.C: (AP) - Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Meyers will fill 13 stockings next week—nine more than last year—on the,first Christmps of what Mrs. Meyers described as “the greatest adventure a family can have.” Early this year Meyers read a news account of the traffic accident that claimed the lives of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Baker near Battle Lake, Minn., Jan. 13, leaving their nine children orphans. Myers telephoned the pastor of his Roman Catholic church here and said, “I want to adopt those children.’^ The mass adoption was arranged by Catholic charities. «'• Monday, the. children arrived here by airline. The' youngsters, ranging in age from 2 to 13, could be seen grinning and waving even before the airliner came to a halt. e.M»er the Meyi Then the Meyers, who already have two adopted children and have twoof their own, met their hew children. Moments later, Meyers emerged from the plane with 2-year-old Phillip in his arms. Karen Meyers, 11, came down the plane ramp arm-in-arm with a new sister, Pauline Ray Baker, 13. ★ A A The Meyers, who decided when they were married that they wanted at least a dozen kids, have a big home that’a built for children, with seven bedrdohft Iml a large, shaded b a c k y a r d that has a stream running through it. Father Jarzembowski Is Dead at 72 Negotiators in Cuba for Prisoner Release ihmM uillthl In % upper Mississippi Valley, in the Lakes area and on the slopes of the Rockies, while rain will fall on • Just. Arrived! DELAYED SHIPMENT Over 500 HARD-TO.GET TIMEX Watches Including Newest Models for Men and Women —Now at SIMMS— DISCOUNT PRICES $ 6’5 TIMEX.Watches 6J $ 7" TIMEX Watches T $ 9M TIMEX Watches 8* JT4" TIMEX Self-Wind 135 $19M TIMEX 17 Jewel 18® $39®5 TIMEX Electric 35® L All ftrlcM Effectlvo TONITE—WED,—THURS. • While Quantities LaM • . “ 625 Famous “TIMEX" Children's CHARACTER WATCHES AU lt.ee value* Mlokty Moult. Hopeloni "" •tdy, Zorn,, snow \V Cinderella, Allot, eU ill Waieh0i Are-Fully Guaranteed by~ Famoan Makar* SUNDRIES / —Mein «Mr ; v, .: 1 ■ : I Vj -% '/r. 7"v'iAUMkMr *.""^~7------™oat,C . - THE PONTIAC PRESS, TtJBSPA¥> DECEMBER 18, 1962 INNER-FLEECE Lined OPERA STYLE MEN’S 0PERA Slippers $3.95 Vatue-Now 299 Worm fleece lining, popular opera styling in deep qurgahdy color, pliable leather Holes and rubber heels. All tint 7 to 12. d JfMJ iAJMD, l98 N. Saginaw — Basement Confesses Beating Counterfeiter. Does Poor His Family to Death FREEHOLD, N. J. W-Gabrlel Richard Trifari, bloody-eyed from gashes he said he tore into his face, was held here today after Id confession that lie bludgeoned LEBANON, Pa. (AP)-The face of Alexander Hamilton on a $10 hill seemed to be smirking, so t variety store clerk called police. 4 * ★ v Lt. John Feather of the Lebanon police confirmed Monday that WWwas iHdieed phopy, “one of the poorest counterfeiting jobs in circulation.” Four of them have been passed here since Sat- JUST ARRIVED! Only 50 KING-SIZE Bedspreads Feather said the b..v printed with faded green ink oh cheap paper;---- Factory Representative Hera WEDNESDAY—-2 Prit3frgair. REMINGTON Electric Shaver RECONDITIONED I his father, mother, brother and j sister to death. j “God told me to*do It because they were ;bad,” police I quoted Trifari as saying. | Trifari, 26, was placed ,ib the county jail here without charges pending-air examination by doe-tors. j The alleged confession late last .night came after the four bodies were found bludgeoned with a crowbar at the Trifari chicken farm. (Aaventsemtatt— anwim. •or symptomatic relief at SINUS CONGESTION colds misariis l lay favor A “WARM GIFT” to Please Jft* Wttnen ’^BLANKETS weak. 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Sugar and flour canliterc hold S pound*, coffee arid lea hold IVi pound* each.* 24-pc.tabieware STAINLESS STEEL | Service for 6 3>9 “Regular $&0^volue—eemp|e»e,: service (or 6—tarnish and rust-Pliuyfor Yourselfl A , proof stainless Steel forks, or, Gift-Giving V knlv«< ‘P0?"5- '"“‘P00"*- 1 v v 1 Never need polishing. Set of 4 Fiberglas Tray Tables^ 77 Simms Low Price 8 Alcohol and stain resistant tray tops with«brass finished frames and legs . . jumbo 16x22 irich w , trays fit over th» top.*One table has casters and serves as rack for the others. ‘MIRRO-MATIC’ 4-Quart Pressure Cooker 99 j SAVE on CHRISTMAS TREE NEEDS Speed c6olt lit Vhrd iHe time, preiefves flavor ond color of vegetables and cooks meats to a juliy tend#rne»s. Unbreakable control-yoy-coril-hear which regulalei pre»lure at 15 pounds, Heavy 11-gauge alumlnum With strong plastic, handles, 'SS? Light Sets 181 Indoor tree llg* set with multiple series when one bulb goes out, others Hoy fe Assorted color bulbil; 0-714 Lite Bulbs j ,»H..f..tet rumc. I jo. Km* ; Illuminated Angel 6 ef^^llf *6 98 y“lUt> r Imported multiple ^ bulb* In ouorttd 0 mleieus fe 32° . ■■ j Fomous Noma lO strands of s ^„ge| (or outdoor use. Weatherproof 1 —wl irtrUt. e p|0,tic. 4-foot lead cord ond aftfpoh : , plug. At pictured. Only S3 lift*, WALL or DOOR - Aluminum Hanging Tree With 6 Satin-Glo Ornaments $2.98 Volue - 2 foot +98 hanging tee with ornaments. Decorative indoor Holiday dec-qrgllon. I* ‘NOMA’ 10 LITES and Holly Set $5.98 Value For Mori Alt Chrlttmat Tree• ALL METAL TREE STANDS $1.00 Value 8 2 22 Ac thown — reol looking holly garland with plump red berriic*. Ten lamp* bright colon, cord with 3 add-on outlet*. For Indoor, ,^»,#g****»*g*»4**f**o»**»**u»** Full O'/j-Ft. 52 Branches Aluminum Tree ^99 Complete With Stand A lifetime tree, all aluminum tree with 52 branches, bright aluminum , tree With aluminum center pole rpf painted wood) can be used year after year. __ ELECTRIC APPLIANCES at DISCOUNT ’TOASTMASTER’ Automatic Toaster $19.95 Value - Model 8131 On Sale Automatic 2 slice pap- Lm me RH| up toaster With toast, gM g shade selector, and ■ ff ■ crumb tray. Chtoito*7^’™“_ ; finish with black trim B8 N. SADINAVY - 2nd Floor DISDUUI ;W....JH THE I^NTtAC:,,pRES5>--\^.t?i&^QAY,. t)JSCEMBfeR y!ll8, 1962 ^Writer Pegler Plans Column (or Birchers ft i; ri BELMONT, Mass. (UPI) - Columnist Westbrook Pegler will begin a montjily column next Feb-i ruary for American Opinon magazine, the organ of the John Birch Society. * a* \ ^SEr'llw’ JSCBtt Staniey, the magazine's Sing editor, said last night 8 first column will be a '•friO(M,rol Hie late Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt. * The magazine is operate by Robert Welch, Grander of the Birch Society. Stanley said the Infon of 15,OM. Pegler resigned recently after many years as a columnist for the Hearst Cofp. iRmting as a two-yoay callege with only 59 students in 1942, Fair-leigh Dickinson University in New Jersey now has 16,000 students, 748 teachers, a 66 million endowment fund and properties valued ~ million . Michigan Woman Dies in Car-Truck. Crash, SAN PIERRE, Ind. W - Indi-na State Police said Mrs. Gratchen Kellogg, 56, of Fremont, Midi., was killed and two other persons injured yesterday when their dar crashed head-on with a truck on U. $. 421 here. ... Alton Kellogg, 59, the driver of the ear and the victim’s husband, and another passenger, Velda Westcott, 58, also or Fremont, were injured. M2 County Board of Education Looking for Cheap Lease The Oakland County Board of and the board of education wouldjcupied its building at the County Education Is worried lest it be — jg| evidted-by its landlord, the County Board of Supervisors. ____ y* .al A new statute no longer requires pay.lhe county for these services. ASKS LEASE- Service Center since 1958. *Tlirb Emerson , asked that the county’s corporation counsel 7be UOUIARDjOHniOnJ 1 [ Every Wednesday and Friday FRENCH FRIED TARTAR SAUCE rhottm jounronj where sea food is a specialty: 3860 DIXIE HI8HWAY at DRAYTON PLAINS that....... ........ . . vide quarters for the county educators. .tvTr1..... ■ it .Schools Supt. William J, Emerson yesterday asked the supervisors’ ways and means committee to recommend leasing the education building to the County Board of Education for “a low rate.” He suggested that the rate be 'at least as favorable as t h o s | charged by the board of super-visors to the County Road Commission, Pontiac state police post the Crippled Children’s Society. Both the society and the state police lease their property from the county for $1 a year, accdrtF tag to John C. Austin, chairman of the County Board of Auditors. And the road commission pays nothing by resolution of the ptrvisors.-----•—— ^-1 Emerson told the committee that the education building is suited to serve the Board of Education "for many years to come” and said the board would be happy remain v The county could continue maintain the building and provide the utilities as it does now, he said, The wkys andmeanscommittee took th Jpi^ and decided to recoimtaend a study by the buildings and grounds.com- The board| bjPedqcatiori cation financed and built two wings since moving there from county offices' at 1 Lafayette St. The new statute, which could mean evlctk).i, becomes effective 90 days after the state legislature reconvenes after the first of the year. ■ Y'W ■ Limitations of thevstatwte are no oversight. Legislators intended to makecountyboardsof education entirely independent of county governing bodies. | Education expenditures no longer WiU be included in county budg- school for county wards of the court, The nurse's home was built in 1928 for $45,690. TheJBoard of Edu the county as a nurses’ home in conjunction with the now-de-futtct County Contagions Hospital next door. - ihe4wnw‘-ho8pit^is4)ow-ustdp^jj^ggjjpj^j-gjjjg^r|0jj hence. forth will take its pnnual request for operating funds directly to the County Allocation Board for sep^ arate consideration. Be modern with MOEW NEW : KITCHEN FAUCET * * 8 m %&£■ . HER ■ All.YEAR RIFT! EVANSON PLUMBING ond HEATING O Cloverporl Roe Phone: Ot Hill IwR S TORE MIRACLE MILE Holiday Special! Men’s 2 Pant Suits Regular *75°° and *79” SjH W Fine imported All Wool worsteds and. sharkskins ip handsome blacks, ncy/ys, browns, and greys. Excellent value In fine clothing. All Gifts Boxed Free Always A Wonderful Gift— A LION STORE GIFT CERTIFICATE Christmas TopcoatSpecial Imported velours, Saxonies and Herringbones In the popular Jplit-raglan, box apd full raglan models. Regular $65 and $69.95 Regular $75 and $79.95 Use A lien Charge for Your Christmas Biffs ST B0IH BN YANKEE SISKS YANKS SLASH PRICES OF 4 FAMOUS NAME mJhIugkts (ELECTRIC SHAVERS ,fJlSmi TO SELL OPT BY CHRISTMAS HEMIlHGTOIl^ Rou-i-twn® H0 TRADE NECESSARY NO 0IMMICKS «tr toWSW-50 N0RELC0 30 FLamNfi HEAD SPEED SHAVER Factory List *29" 99 With rotary blades O • Swival action L • Fastarshavingl •More Pt>v**rfa> intlde - mora com’ " mm FLIP TOP SHAVER* Factory List Price $19.93 1C98 YOUR CHOICE OF MODELS: MORELCO—SUNBEAM—REMINGTON SCHICK—PRICED fo SELL of COST and BELOW COST 10 CLOSE OUT UY CHRISTMAS! NO DEALERS WHILE QUANTITIES ARE AVAILABLE SCHICK |99 now automatic g blade*- wHad- | SHAVEiASTER $32.50 UST 'tmwjna shaver El 1.50 LIST obla h^d. W°'h* f 8P*1|1 i/ k m22»-2-~ 1 j I SUPER SPEED 1 1 •N*WM»rgleaf 1 | ust J m -sunk**^ SHAVEMASTER $27.50 LIST 15" I LADY 68N8EW1J 1/ $21 *50 UST U 1 4 A99 1 ' * SPEE8 3CHICIC1 in Llf | SMIWC9IWCT ^ I 1 w l popAliOY W*09* I right |#b • »how 1 1 Millar. .. •WjjMieMn - . • *^MUST /H PMRYirt M0STCAUIt51 SOUTH SASiiiAW I m "■THE PONTIAC PRESS, JuESD.AY>-.JjEpE^BliB~ 18, Mr.Shnoo'sZoo . By LUCRECE BEALE Copyright, 1962 Santawasaocool and calm that Ur. Shnoo forgot his fright and even the monkeys seemed unafraid, they climbed on the bacte-of tha reindeer and clung their hands together and jab- 9 the branches of the great antlers with their' tails. • When they were all on, Mr. StaMMijwa Ptece,on, Horace’s head. 'Then 'Santa gave the signal and away they flew. * '* Up, up and over the., flamea they went and'oh, how the people below cheered and carried on to see them safe at last! Just for fun, the deter zoomed famp into tije sky and, wild .with freedom and the wonder of it all, they swept up and down playing hide and seek in the clouds. They played leap frog and somersaulted over the moon and did swan dives through the stars. On and on they went, aurglng round and round die whole great sky. The monkeys clung to the antlers and Mr. Shnoo fastened his legs around Horaee’s chk They had a ride they would never for* 1 At last it was over. The reindeer glided gently back to their reindeer pasture. But the" monkeys had not had enough- They ‘ up and down and bered furiously. It was clear they wanted another ride, ' - -, ★ ,★ But Mr. Shnoo said, no.they’d had enough’but' since they liked the reindeer so much they could stay in the reindeer stables until hew cages wtfre buffit The old monkey house had burned to the ground. condition—provided, of course, it stays that way1.” "I want tp remind you that my money Is due me tomorrow,” said Crookshank. “If yon fall to make It the zoo becomes mine/’ Yes,” said Mr. Shnoo, sipping * bis coffee, y- V- ;• •-.< IT want payment before the Queen's visit,” said Crookshank. By now it fras daylight. Santa and.Mr. Shnoo went off to Mr. Shnoo’s office for breakfast which they cooked on a little,stove, Mr. Shnoo kept by his desk. While they were eating CSrookshank came in.'. He said, “What with the fire and all, the zoo Is In very bad shape. Perhaps yon had better call off the Queen’s inspection.” -^Not-afe-ally said Mr.Shnoo, _ “THe -monkeya are' fine in the reindeer stables and the Queen will find everything ejsd in good BUY Where 2 They Specialize ==. . in Bibles WORLDI KINO JAMES VERSION gift says more than the Holy Bible ... handsomely * bound, beautifully illustrated .. . presented to Mother by her favorite person. World Bibles are available in editions appropriate for all, including large-type editions and complete reference Bibles. Prices from $2.50 to $12.75. See our display. CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALE 39 OAKLAND AVE. “After the Queen’s visit,*' corrected Mr. ShnooJL“Ihave until sundown according to ihe agree-ment.” “Hump!” said Crookshank and he Ranged out of the office. “I do not trust that fellow," said Santa. DREAMS OF ZOO “He is an unpleasant, one,”, agreed Mr. Shnoo; “I* shall be . glad when I have paid him off CLAWSON ‘I want payment BEFORE the Queen’s visit.’ things I shall do with it!” dreams for the zoo. , Shirtasald^ “Pedfaaps I ie 1 The average per capita coffee 1 consumption in the United States last year was 2.97. cups pet1 day, Pan-American Coffee Bureau. Coffee drinking in this country, the bureau says, has increased j according to, ah.estirnatQ.bythe annually sineft l85Q, - [■ make a quick visit back to Santa Land. After all, tomorrow is Christmas eve and.Mrd. Claus gets very upset thinking something may go wrong at the last minute. Nothing ever does but ~ had better check anyway.” ‘And 1,” said Mr., Shnoo, “will get ready for the Queen.” So they parted. Mr. Shnoo made an inspection trip of the zoo and* it seemed ter him that never had the animakr seemed so fit and happy. He told {hem of the Queen’s coming visit and begged them to bo on their best behavior. They seemed to understand. Georgie, the rhinoceros did not complain when attendants gave his hide an. extra scrubbing. The leopards were agreeable when they Wire turned out of doors so their cages could be painted. The king cobras said nothing when they were given mndinner so they would be more lively the next day. Every animal and every helper was anxious to please. Mr. Shnoo was filled with pride. He could hardly wait for the Queen to see his zoo. Little did he know what the morrow would bring! Tomorrow: The Flood. Births The following* is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Office (by name of father). - , Porleoui, UJ Bower,. Cordon P. Schepke, mbs. webllc Richard 8. Morron. 747 Dreon Theodore M. Vlgneau, 62 W. Tacoma. ‘ - - ...... Self ridge. william 0. Strong. 1244 N Charloi B. Arwlne. 711 Oc Oavld’P. Wood. 1261 Shonandoa Richard J Mitchell. 244 N. Mar ^Icvld crswidn, 230 Park Franklin D. Allan. 424 John R Ronald O. Rthelman, 232 Dreon John K. Rlobarda, 523 E. Baker Emanuel N. Chrietofla, 739 Man Roger C.' Germaine, 133 Tecum Herbert L Lewla. 31 Douglas D. Paul E. Wa—,. .. Alvin Weat. 9595 Pontiac Lake, Adan Ansurea. 3079 W. t' ~ ' Roger B. Ulrich, 2369 o 9. Paddock. * JS3h: ‘\ M Livuia Douglas I. Parka, 31 Victor P. Jewell, Joel Ramlrea, 11 Clifford P. AVott Frederick J, Di William D. Flam John C. Meade, 3130 Dixie S*!1. Bad - Torgeraon. 3761 Lika. Pi ‘ iklat. Quality Gifts for Your Selection • Boston Rockers • Open Bookcases • Kneehole Desks • Students Desks • Luxury Rockers • Pole Lamps • Hassocks on Legs • Storage Hassocks • Smoking Stands • Framed Pictures • Plate-Glass Mirrors • La-Z-Boy Rockers * • Living Room Tables • Console Tables with Matching Mirrors • Reclining Chairs • Swivel Rockers • Lounge Chairs ► Beautyrest Mattresses Convonlont 20" Round Qalhry, Trdy ★ 3-Way Lighting * • Rembrandt Lamps • Sofas — All Styles • Dinette Sets • Bedroom Suites Thori'i a world of warmth, grace and boauty in .^tHUtmlyUfwaiv0.iray.-,fiam.lajn^fi«idyAmtr-ican Styling that never fadoo in popularity. You’ll lava the mallow glow of tho rich muplo flnloh hardwoods and tho sparkling bright braoo. Quaintly dotlgnod fluted thado has white body with brown, boigo or groon niching trim. See Our Big Display of CONVENIENT TEEMS All Sale Priced! Open Evenings Until Christmas 9a 90 Days Same an Cash Ample Free. Parking < Careful Free Delivery 144 OAKLAND AVE. BEAUTIFUL DECORATIVE GIFTS . from in our.opinion the largest, nicest soloc-tion of pillows and hassocks in townl B. 24* oval Danish IiqnocIi with walnut lop, braoo plated (orrulot with floor lovoloro..............1 0.99 C. 24* round modom hassock with c unusual top troottmont and walnut la URETHANE FOAM FILLED FLOOR CUSHIONS' 3" high, 18" square floor cuohion.. 3.99 5Vk" high, 20* oquaro floor cuohion ... ... ... 5.99 $£E THE WHOLE COLORFUL COLLECTION . . . FOURTH FLOOR HOME-FASHION PILLOWS by BLOOMCRAFT 18* round silk-look Pun|ab pillow..................3.98 . 12 by 21* oblong ollMook Pun|ab pillow.............3.98 12 by 19* oblong tapestry and volvotoon pillow... 4.98 14* sq. pur* silk trlngod pillow...... 22' malm faille backrest, old# pocket*”. . Accent your homo (or onyons’t .3.98 horns you Wont to giv* o nice gift . 4,98 to) with Wolts’i beautiful, alt- llndlvs, ysf 'very- practical dsc- orator plllowsA You’ll find d wide range of atylas. o nd colors from 14.98 r -which to maks yc >ur selection, a lew o( which or* listed hero. SEE THE WHOLE COLORFUL COLLECTION . . . FOURTH FLOOR shop tux e Mir night TILL CHRISTMAS 1 m When only a VERY SPECIAL GIFT will do. iW; '■ SssmlossoifuIIy-fssHlohed, Bello-Sharmter,Stockings art tho thoughtful, tho ologsnt gift stockings. Lsgslzod for porfect fit thoy toll hor Instantly that you wanted the finest for har. Choosa from a*complete range of stylos, with or without seams. MODITE-for avirass Ms* DUCHESS—for till, full l*S0 Botiftry GtfU... Stnml Floor ^ Ah elegant new dimension .in .fashion! Fabulous. Fontana Pins by fa CORO Coro captures the graceful, fluid lines of lovely leaves i elegantly and flowers In a dramatic new wayl It's the e _ engraved look of Coro’s textured Fontana Pine. Roman gold colored. Beautifully designed. And perfect for your most important Fall fashions. See our entire col- lection at $2.00. S3 00. $4.00 each. Jewelry Gifts .. • Street Floor ____.■..,the!fo]^ldd£a!.ii:agL9nce.-~ t ^3 CA/A/OW Comorte Glflt... Strut Floor tfT';, fm m ' THE PONTIAC PRESS m. ' 48 West Huron Street Bis § r Bowam B. Fxtmimald n Pontiac, Michigan TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18,1962 HW. Rnoiuu, Praaldant and Id PRW TBMOTOp. Circulation Manner John A. Rn.gr, , Secretary and Advartufnc Dlraetor ---BAU JOgDAN, Local AiMrtmi - A Fine Example Is Set ;by William T. Gossett ‘ President Kennedy has strengthened his Trade Negotiations Department with the addition of Oakland County’s William T. Gossett. . . ★ ★ ★ Mr. Gossett is precisely the l type of man this nation needs so desperately in public office and which it finds altogether too infrequently. One Of the Nation’s topnotch legal minds, Mr. Gossett voluntarily resigned a few months ago from..his long-time post as Vic# President of Ford Motor Company and head of the big legal department. ★ ." ★.....★....... ♦ He announced that he intended to cast about and find activity in soroe sprt of public sefv-ite. Many of our capable citizens seize a similar opportunity to drift to th# side lines and become spectators* But this future didn’t appeal to ' / the energetic, assertive and able William T. Gossett. He wanted to play a part in world events and help solve'the manifold problems and perplexities that beset mankind today. He was rumored aa a possibility in the Michigan setup with George Romney, and his name had been fleetingly tied to other Washington activities. ..'.-dr. ★.....★ In England, public service of this type and character is much more common than Fit is in the United States. The pursuit of the almighty dollar still/grips,the Country. A nation’s age may tie's deciding factor. Perhaps when we have many more centtkries under our belt, our njen will dedicate themselves to the t^pe of good works which Mr. Gossett is currently accepting. We face day» Christmas. | vacation in 1958 was saddened by I594 traffic fatalities, and the one | in 1956 caused 706 highway I deaths. This still stands as a rec-I ord number of road fatalities for I; any four-day period. Br' 1 ★ ★ - I Death, with its good companions, Shrink and Speed, has been hard at work so far in 1962. Motor vehicle accident fatalities totaled 29,000 in the nrst riih'e months, up 9 per cent from |he same period last year. ,v The one-year, all-time record of ^JfcM9 highway deaths set in 1941 seeks certain to be surpassed in 1962. Jjy;' ■). ★ ■ ★ i -3j-We can’t help but-wonder why. Today’s cars are built to operate more safely under almost all conditions. The explanation must be the drivers. , Two tips that may heljiyoU; 1. See And Be Seen. Keep windows and windshield clear and clean. Turn on headlights in daylight snowstorms, fog, or whenever it will help others to MO yon.. Lower windows slightly to prevent inside glass from fogging. 2. Be SwreTRTraciloh. Bs spri that youailow«»ughdi»tanblto stop positively in seVere snow and ice conditions. Make sure ’ yiowr tires have enough tread; other-wise stopping is difficult. Voice of the People: 'Freedom and Walk Hand in Hand Communism is not pew. Strip away the trappings and you find communism is just a revival of the ancient system of political master and political slave, tricked out with technology and Moscow slogans./ ',7- '7, ^ tiyp " ! Thomas' Jeifeilea, with all his brilliance, thought it would take a thousand- years to settle die West. He underestimated what tree men cMadcOmpllsbi given the opportunity to create lor themselves with ndaikum government tattoference. • . •*> .... • dr r JL ' 7 The restrictions have multiplied in recent years. Some have had their-origin in the excesses of freewheelers who have otf occasion distorted the whole business image. And some hav6 had their origin In the zeal of certain types of politicians who assume they know what is best. •• •»//77'.': - . ■ v., ... - When people vote'down school bonds, park bonds and,other civic Improvements as they’ve been doing, it bespeaks deep concern with taxes, pork barrel spending and the public debt of . more that $300 billion. New York William A. Patterson In many a case the girl who wears kissproof lipstick isn’t. 7Tis The Season To Be JoIly! The Man About Town Honkers’ Retreat Orchard Lake Resident Sitting Duck for Geese By HOWARD HELDENBRAND Although geese are not noted for h high I.Q., Mrs. Frederick G. Weed of Orchard Lake, thinks the ones she has be* friended for 28 years would "pass any intelligence test With flying colors. # • • Each spring and fall, a migrating flock of Canada geese makes a landing on the lake. The birds remain some time—on the fall visit untfl the lake froezoa over. This year, became of the balmy weather, they were around six weeks. , Since our informant and other lake shore residents feed the visitors, the flock has yearly increased in number—nothing like honk-of-biil advertising -- with this faH’a turnout hitting a record 78. Although in the past the gourmets would venture onto the lawn for their corn, this year they were particularly tame-coming up close and eating at the feet of the one feeding them. Each spring, it seems, a pair or two breaks ranks and sets up a domestic establishment on nearby Cedar Island. Come summer, mama and papa proudly convoy their brood along the shore for public approval — the gander pompously heading the single-file pro- , cession with the goose acting as roar guard, with i wary eye for stragglers. • oo- % The wildfowl enthusiast says that If attendance at the spring and fall reunions increases much more, she’ll be able to give the government a hand With its surplus-grain storage problem. To get the most mileage out of Christmas trees says Mrs. Claude E. Hall of 630 E. Beverly, drop a handful of moth Mh into the water in which the tree David Lawrence Tells: How We Should Not Act in a Crisis ‘Unable to Firid ~ Anything on Mason* —In reply to Mary. L. Marqufo L have scanned my history and encyclopedia for George Mason and have been unable to find the name. According to n|y history, the BUI of Rights was authored by Thomas Jefferson and was almost all swiped from the, famous writings of Tom Paine/. But for the great urging from Tom Paine, the Revolution would have been lost. Washington was ready to quit. After Tom Paine published his treatise on religion, the so-called Christian of the day smeared him and persecuted Reader Commends FoStOfficeDrept. Post office employes deserve a lot of praise. I received a Christmas, card from a past pupil, Who failed M*put‘Mtchigafrtmihrs(r-~ dress. Although it feouid have been tossed in ,the wastebasket, I received it and cherish the warmth of friendship that accompanies memories in the. schoolroom. Maude Elizabeth Huff Ortonville '-4t J7 * Our thanks to the lady for the timely tip —if I had any idea It would have the same effect on me, I’d start moth balling my bath water. • . Mrs. Harold Omey of Orchard Lake reports an 8.8 ft. Icicle ... wo may bo on pretty thin ice in saying It, but seems like this Would be a Looks like a long winter ahead, so better keep extension rulers handy to measure your .own frozen curiosities. Visiting with 1 Lyle Abel of M86 Middle Belt Road, about the Pontiac Lions Club Pancake Day last week, we learn that about ISO customers were pancaked and $100 netted for the organisation’s Sight Conservation and Glasses for the Needy fund. ■ • • • Considering the event fell on the "worst day h) the history of the world," all hands were pleased with the support received. Verbal Orchids to- Mrs. Edward Gallagher of 248 S. Anderson St; 88th birthday. • Mrs. Emma Coombe of 622 E. Kennett.Road; 87th birthday. Charles MacDlartnkl of ClarkBton; 83rd birthday. | 4 of Union Lake; 80th birthday. \ WASHINGTON-President Kennedy" has unwittingly just given the American people an explanation of how an administration should not function in a crisis. He told of his experience with numerous advisers and conflicting opinions in connection with the Cuban crisis. But what hf^tid not explain Is why the govem-men t of the United States did itot take action inr Cuba when first' reports came] concerning the intervention of the Communist, LAWRENCE government in the island country. Mr. Kennedy tells of how critical those “six days” in October were when his advisers gathered around him and there was fear that a misstep might be made. But he doesn’t give any satisfactory answer to the question of why the Cuban situation was allowed to drift,as far as it did before those same six days of decision-making started. * ★ 4r The President's review of his first two years in office, as given over television and radio of the three major networks, is an example of the advantage which the President has in the getting of publicity. There was no opportunity to rebut or refute whist he said. Copies of his remarks were not made available to the press until about an hour and a half before the first broadcast. Opposition speakers who could have told the American people the weaknesses in the President's argument had no chance to examine the transcript, though actually Mr. Kennedy gave the interview 24 hours earlier, when it was taped by the networks. NOT SOLVED YET The Cuban problem has not yet been solved, and it will take intensive investigation by Congressional committees to find out why the American people were left unprotected from tite time last August when first reports came in concerning the emplacement of Soviet missiles to the taking of action late in October. The President’s analysis of the way his administration reacted to the Cuban crisis indicates that he did not actually decide to tahe action against the Soviet government until he had some photographs showing the missiles were already In place. But m a n y Americans had believed, from a reading of history, that the Monroe Doctrine was still a part of the foreign policy of the United States. They had assumed that tof promptly to prevent the establishment of any European system in this hemisphere. , ★ ★ ★ The dangers and risks in making foreign policy decisions' by the method outlined by the President in his ipterview on television will give pause to those who have hitherto believed that the government of the United States would never allow any potential enemy to get as close as the Soviets did In Cuba. Mr. Kennedy hr his Interview tells of the fears of his advisers that the situation mi^ki be^escalated.” The difficulty In that was allowed to dication of how slow the process of decisioiHnaking has become. The American people will still been based upon established prill- V* *&.**;!** XL -iwJ i. nn fctr Vvm. States did not do more about So- reach th^ brink of danger, anyway. Hitherto, American policy has Portraits By JOHN C. METCALFE £-SiSdX led«e the Communists were It is as if the United States would argue whether or not it SltlllCS should retaliate when a blow is struck against its security. Hie fact that, when such a blow was struck in Cuba, R was the subject of six days of discussion before a determination was made to take forceful action, is an in- v One of the easiest things to do Is pick oat wrong sizes in Christmas presents. ♦ ”• “jr ★ * The freezing point Is 32 and the squeezing point two In the shade. Bob Considine Says: * When you are thanking, remem- j: drove along a wooded road her Tom Paine hnd be glad that ... And as tiiejmoon was shining he was around. Go to the library bright . . . I saw a large and and get the writings of Tom lovely deer . . . Within the flow of golden light . . . And as he Eugene G. Hill stood In silence there . . . Upon 56 Clark St. the pathway of my car ... I _______. stopped and turned the. motor off ■ —-r... And snqrnbeve bis head a star ... I do not think I’ll ever Thp Almanac see... Another like this graceful II1C .AlllMtlUll deer... Or any half so beautiful ' ■ . , . Without the slightest signs By United Press International 0f fear. . t And in the moonlight’s Today is Tuesday, Dec. 18, the lambent glow ... I saw within 352nd day of 1962 with 13,to follow, each mellow eye ... Reflections The moon is in its last quarter, of the silver star ... Above him The morning stars are Venus In the peaceful sky... It may be and Mars. that this, stately , deer . . . Which The evening stars are Jupiter stood within the night so still and Saturn. * • • Had come to light the Christ- Those born on this day include 1088 time . . . And leave inside American composer and tegcher my heart good^will. j Britons Don’t Understand Trouble With Skybolt Edward MacDowell, in 1861. ★ * ★" On this day in history: In 1787, New Jersey ratified the proposed Constitution of the United States. LONDON - President Kennedy has not announced yet whether the United States will continue or abandon the plan to perfect the Skybolt, a 1,000-mile range hydrogen-tipped missile intended to be launched from heavy bombers while still well out of reach of enemy Interceptors and ground defenses. Britain has ordered 100 of them. The deci-s 1 o n probably will be contained in the communique issued at the end of the, Kennedy - M a c-millan meeting] at Nassau. But the feelingl in Britain is that CONSIDINE the Skybolt has been scrapped, victim of such assorted pressures as its prohibitive costs, the suc- United States for the pasrygar or two, observing the gestation'and tribulation of the missile. ★ ★ ♦ Its presence there almost automatically demolishes the position taken in some British circles that (Copyright 1962) THOUGHTS FOR TODAY . I opened to my Ibeloved, but my beloved had turned and gone. My soul failed me when he spoke. I sought him,- but , In 1865. slavery was abolished in the United States by adoption of the 18th Amendment. . In 1941, President Franklin Roosevelt appointed a committee , ★ w* * to Investigate the military disaster God’s way <5f answering the at Pearl Harbor. < Christian’s prayer for more pa- uibtt-i ■■■ Bv..ro In 1981, a truce was declared in tienee, experience, hope v and the^ritis^knew notolng about the Katanga and Congolese President ldve often is to put him into the Skybolt’s technical problems until Tshombe agreed to hold peace furnace of affliction.- Richard this past week. In Washihgton: talks. he gave no answer. — Song of Solomon 5:1. * Cecil. Rights Issues Before High Court By BRUCE BIOS8AT Meantime, the Negroes also were ethers in the sit-in movement, WASHINGTON (NEA)—On the being asked to go but refused, picketed the stores involved end ni^ht of May 5 I^ mvctS ™ same request was put to urged people to boycott them if nignt Ot may O, iwu, several rvUpmnn a .white Duka thev would m Next day five of them, plus of such other deterrent sys- two white students from Duke terns as Mlnuteman and Polaris, university, sat down at a previ- gro students made some plans at wank wien^ a jmne uuxe all-Negro North Carolina College student born in Vtekaburg, Miss., in Durham, and its repeated failures in tests. That the United States has now spent a half-billion dollars on Skybolt,, and is reluctant to send good money after What appears to be either bad or uncertain money, seems to hdve diode little imprint on the British public. The rabid section of British press has been more hysterically abusive toward the United States tnan at any time-since John Foster Dulles stopped the British- — French-Israeli move against Nas- two are young college students, ser six years ago. ously all-white lunch counter in downtown store and got themselves ' arrested for trespassing. All seven were convicted, and state court appeals failed. They were among 44 persons Involved in five sit-in cases and two related matters which the U. S. Supreme Court is getting ready to doelde — after having heard l6'/» hours of oral argu- but now of Pittsburgh. Police appeared and took the seven into custody for trespassing, though* it was stressed at their trial that they were welcome everywhere within the store except at the-lunch counter.' . V W , W W That first incident was just the (loginning in that particular store. Later that same day, 80 to 40 more Negroes sat in and were,, duly arrested in torn. they would not desegregate their lunch counters. ' ★ * Presently bracketed With the sit-in cases oi^the Supreme Court calendar are tup roughly parallel metiers — otto covering an attempt by five young Negroes to use the prMtie amusement park at Glen Echo, Md.^.the other involving six Negro boys playing harimtitoll in a Savannah, Ga., public pSrk set in a white neigh- igh court may Choose to Although Britain was counting on the .Skybolt as Its main deter-' j^hFweapon, To Tie cerrM by' bombers Of RAF's bomber com- ^on8. much different for the 10 Negroes' in Greenville, S. C., the 10 hi Birmingham and the three NOAH but three of the 44 are Ne- groes and one white In New Or-groes, and of the latter aU but leans, who together, are involved two are young college students. jn the other Supreme Court slt-The two excepUpns are the Revs, in cases. F. L. Shuttlesworth and Charles Usually spurred by the Con-Billups, Negro preachers convict- «resa of Racial Equality, the Na-ed in Birmingham, Ala'., of incit- 'tionai Students’ Association or the ing irtndents to sit-in demonstrab le The pattern of events was not ‘ deri wlth the Maryland andGeor- they were accustomed to fre- mand, and has re f I t t e d 'those bombers to\incorporate the Sky-, of May 6, 1960, really got under bolt, at a cost of $28 million, it way when Joan Nelson, a white has contributed nothing to the co- girl from Alexandria, Va., who lossal over-ail development costs -was then at Duke.1walked into a borne by the United States. department store, bought a hall* ______ point pen and headed for the down on the lOO missiles which hMament lmyh coi^itfr. were ordered four months ago She in Sown, ordered settle In the wake of what the British food and was served.. Soon the * lay was an encouraging progress report from Defense Secretary McNamara. Chief drain on the British de-fense budget in relation to the Skybolt, to date, haft been the coat of keeping a 300-man group in. the In the Durham case, the ivents quenting, bought some small item like a handkerchief or a Mother’s Day card, kept the receipt and Negro osImp i and took seats. Wfl on either side of her, Jopn of-taited to order food far them. The moment she passM it to them, The measures begun that day were too inhuman,he said. He Apportionment Plea Up in Air WASHINGTON flJPD - The Supreme Court went into holiday recess today Without announcing whether it will review a Michigan court decision ordering reapportionment of the State Senate. , The decision has been appealed by state senators and others, it was handed down last July 18 by the Michigan Supreme Court. Justice Potter Stewart last summer stayed the effect of the rul- ing until the federal tribunal could look at the case. The court elso has state apportionment cases docketed from Alabama, New York and Maryland. Its next decision day is Jan. 7. Gifts Are Needed for 200 Children at County Center “Yes, there is a Santa Claus, Dr. Andrew T. Yang tells some 200 underprivileged youngsters at the Oakland County Children’s Center, and they believe him. But Dr. Yang, director of the center, could use some reassurance. 4 , “For many years, this community has generously supplied those extra gifts which have mean* much to our children,” he said. “This year, however, those needed presents are not comihg into our center.’’ He hoped that his ‘(S.O.S. to Santa” would bring the public’s continued support again this year. Berrien County OKs Joining Health Unit ST. JOSEPH Wi—Berrien County supervisors voted 32-11 today in favor of joining Cass and Van Buren counties in a tricounty health department. Details of the plan remain to be settled. It would entail setting up a board to hire a qualified physician to supervise health services in the three counties. Cass and Van Buren approved the proposal earlier. Nationalist China Buys $500,000 U. N. Bond UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. m -Nationalist China bought a $500, 000 U.N. bond yesterday. A statement from its U.N. mission said the purchase, made despite China’s own pressing needs, reflects “confidence and support for the United Nations.” L<3et ,*a°l m» Pull detailsiMIgetloh - Capitol Savings & Loan Assn. Established 1890 75 W. Huron St., PontiaC FE 4-0561 CUST0MEB PAIRING IN REAR Or BUILDING E. German,Escapee Claims . Only 1 Out of specifically mentioned the order to shoot at escaping persons and the drastic clearing of the area. WASsW*^trWID~ He emphasized that economic considerations had nothing to with his escape. As major, he was relatively well paid and his wife also worked. 'I could have stayed there for-nr if it had not been for the political .aspects.” 1 h 4r ■ ★ ★ Krajewski disclosed Communist, authorities plan to stiffen border controls by making It a court martial offense for any guard in sector an escape occurs:— V ★★★★★★★★★★ 78 NORTH 'SAGINAW STREET Special for Wednesday Only!. CORNED BEEF Koihei Style uresae: DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Saginaw at Rum REPEAT OF A SELL-OUT ------- KRESOE COUPON- - - - '*•::'y 3 DAYS ONLY Sensational! Amazing! . DECEMBER 19-20-21 Wednesday 9t3Q A.M. Thursday to Friday 9P.M." RING SALE i certificate with only $1.00 plus ton end receive 3 , Silver or 1/20 I OK. Gold filled Ring with X gem mounting similar Inolieteo Viet. Kimbedy mm mm mm ‘ 3100 f forever. Direct from America s largest Ring LOVELY MATCHING WE0DINQ BAND WITH SEVEN DIAMOND REPRODUCTIONS, ALSO $1 PLUS TAX. KRESGE COUPON- Shop without cash — "CHARC6 IT" AT KRESGi'S -pay only < * Mouwi-Cottori, drip-dry broadcloth, Dacron* polyeitCr, Acrilan* acrylic. 3-6x, 7- U. ilips-pelUcoatt— nylon ahaara, cotton*; ilipa, 4-10; petti., 0-14. "Alterations on men's and boys'' clotjhing will , be finished in fime for Christmas." IN PONTIAC-200 NORTH SAGINAW ST. HN CLARKSTQN-WATE^FORD ON DIXIE HWY. -— JUST .NORTH OF WATERFORD HILL Hill VMr- THE PONTTAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1962 Mental Hospitals Now Giving Better, Faster Treatment (Editor's N6te — Just IS "wears ago, the average mental hospital was hopelessly ill equipped to treat the patients crammed within its walls. Here, in the second of Jive Special stories, is a report on the continuing struggle to rehabilitate the mentally ill.) Associated Press Science Writer NEW YORK - At age .64, ■ John C. came home after 23 desolate years in a state mental hospital. He is one of thousaiujs salvaged'from back wards of mental hospitals. Fourteen years ago. he was another 'Inmate ip a hospital with 1,860 patients, and only two doctors. To feed, clothe, house and “treat” each of them, the hospital spent fl.06 a day. In some other hospitals the expenditure was as little as 43 cents a day. • * * ' T?i^—iiu^ar6u»iSris^ , providing more psychiatrists, nurses and psychiatric aides, things to do, pew stimulation, to. win the sick back to health. With intensive treatment, John C. re-covened._________________j Today that same hospital spends about |11 dally per patient and has only half as many patients. Thailand in other of the nation’s best mental hospitals, 70 to 88 per cent of patients go home within three months to a year after admission. And this same hospital now spends only half as much, for total treatment, for every pa-“tient who recovers, due to the ..shorter stay. ...... SMALL PERCENTAGE Hie dolorous rub is that only 20 per cent of patients in all the nation’s mental hospitals get the benefits of such effective treat* • ment. >■ : This includes drugs and intensive psychotherapy, the psychiatrist’s way of listening and talking to and encouraging patients, such as John C,, “until finally a light goes on in their minds and they understand what they were doing to themselves,” as Dr. William Menninger expresses It. it ★ ★, Still today in state niental hospitals, only half of all patients are getting anything more than custodial care-bed and board. As a national average, mental hospitals spend only |8 dally per pa: tient, as against $34.90 daily in a general hospital for the person ill with a physical complaint. it it it The best hospitals have one psychiatrist for every 35 to 50 patients. The national average, how-ever, is one for each 140. As one thermometer in the new climate, there were 9,000 fewer patients in mental hospitals at the end of l96L than a year before. And there were 100,000 fewer than had been predicted in 1955 on then current national rates of new ill-and population growth, HNtOCK DOORS Another idea Is spreading -strike away the locks and bars in meiital hospitals. Wise doctors are the argument, that coop* people Up like prisoners can only make them picker and more frightened. Only a small percentage of mental patients is dangerous. Coming along rapidly is a new concept of community psychiatry,; says Philip E. Ryan, executive di-j rector of the National Association I for Mental Health. ,... . j : * # #'7 In this, the emphasis is to get the patient over the acute stage of illness by hospital treatment, then send him home to finish his recovery, much like the pattern with a heart attack or tuberculo- ----r-____________~~ , • ★ ★ * A young mother crippled by acute anxieties, for example, w&s admitted to a general hospital merely as another side person, with- no commitment papers. Many Gifts Hting Up for Patients Once ovfer the crisis, she went home, continuing reguliur visits to the hospital’s out-patient clinic. She was fortunate, too, in hairing a community service which supplied a^trained nurse ta help her at home. Only about one-fifth of the nation’s general -hospitals as yet have such psychiatric units. Last year, general hospitals-cared for about 350,000 of the emotionally ill. \ 7;i ■ .|i| OTHER HELPING HANDS There are other-helping hands. operate nearly 1,500“ psychiatric outpatient clinics, assisting half a million persons last year. Only a few hospitals have 24-hour emergency clinics. -Some Provide day care, with the patient spending his nights at home, Some provide night hospital Care for people who work by day, come in at evening for therapy and overnight" stay. '.’y ★, %. 7’.'" : y;' There also are a few halfway hopses, where discharged patients live for a time in company with other patients, gaining confidence, In Topeka, Kan,, and some-other communities, employers willingly give jobs to. people still under Clinic treatment. In many cities ^under mental health association auspices, patients have formbd ex-patient clubs to help one another in full recovery. ; 1 . : I , Formerly, about one-third of patients discharged from mental In some communities, emotionally sick children from broken homes' are finding foster homes, for affection and normal experiences while being treated at mep-tal health clinics. FRIENDS CAN HELP RepoVery from mental illness is one thing. But people can slip back if they cannot find jobs, ana m. , .. - ... , II shunned by friends, or return to hospitals relapsed and had to go Hospitals and communities nowrealizing they are not alone. bad home situations and old problems-: I New and well-established community facilities are tackling these problems. of illness could be reduced to 18 per cent or less, says the National Institute of Mental Health. A very recent concept is the public mental health center com-billing all types of services,, from treatment to job-training and bade Within a year. Pilot programs stressing total rehabilitation through multiple law now share with cities and communities the costs ofexpand-ing mental health faculties. The latest budget of the institute allocates $4^,000. for matching grants With states to plan eom- But only one-fourth of the nation’s counties have any mental health Clinics at all, and most haire long waiting lists. Most hoe-pltals are under-staffed. There are few clinics for children. . .★ . y. The battle for mental health services indicate this recurrence1 costs money. Fifteen states by Last year, federal, state lid local agencies spent #! millions for Community mental health programs. It marks a beginning toward reducing staggering costs In human suffering. NEiT: Research seeks new an-wers in mental iUnels. \ 1.000 FREE i ■ TOP VUUE stamps; ■ FREE ■ WATER. TIST ■ In your home ■ "No Obligation to -lap" 5 CITY iOFT WATER CO. g Phono 682-1851 AttheratethatChristmas gifts are being received at the Pontiac State Hospital, it is almost certain that none of the 3,043 patients will be forgotten this year. SupL Walter H. Obenauf declared that, “The media of communication, plus the dedicated efforts of our employes and volunteers, will help make this Christmas a memorable one for the patients.” All of the patients who will spend the Christmas holidays in the hospital can look forward to numerous parties, carolers,-and other activities designed’ for their pleasure. Two New Year’s Eve dances will climax the holiday season at Pontiac State Hospital, Dr. Obenauf said. The spirit of Christmas will be rhtold by Pontiac area clergymen during church services in the hospital chapel, he added. In addition to the opening of gifts on Christmas morning the patients will be served the following Christmas dinner: Roast turkey with herb dressing, giblet gravy, mashed potatoes, cauliflower, cranberry, relishes, steamed holiday pudding, cream sauce, and coffee____________ _ The following 10 counties are serviced by the Pontiac State Hospital: Oakland, Genesee, Macomb, Lapeer, St. Clair, Sanilac, Huron, Shiawassee, Livingston and Tuscola. SAVE $60 ON INSULATION Illinois Governor Sends Swainson Biggest Card LANSING (UPD-Gov. John Swainson yesterday received holiday greeting described as the largest Christmas card in the world. An illuminated Santa Claus, five feet tall, was delivered to the chief executive as the official Christmas card from Illinois Gov. Otto Kerner. IT ii ■ i si | cWSISTMa:; | ’ YOUR UyNIOR USE MARSHAL J PUTTING THE SEAL ON A SAFE AND HAPPY CHRISTMAS Oor Junior Fire Marshals will brighten their holiday cards and package* with colorful and practical decora* tfons.. * Junior File Manhal Christmas Safety Seek. Look for dhase seals on card* and package* you seoiiv*. Bach earriee an important meseage designed to Mp ' muse happy to hoopers** with The Hartford Imwsence Group in bringing the year-round Junior Fire Marshal activities to thla community. We’re sm* youH give our local Junior Fir* Marshall your full support. Merry Christmat. * STAMPS AVAILABLE IN OUR OFFICE Tlatslnr, Patterns 5 Wsrnsi Pontiac'$ Oldest Jniurance A gone y 711 Community National Bank Bldg. FI 2-9224 L. %r,-.'^ew»I.iFy, furs and other valuables with a personal theft policy, ‘ or better yet, get/one of th

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Premhrm quaHty^lways . . . popular prioeaevery where! fire- brewed AMERICA’S ONLY FIRE-BREWED BEER THE PONTIAC PRESgt lTJESDAY. DECEMBfeR lfclllMi satisfaction and popular prices in gifts Ski equipment packages with skis, boots, bindings, poles... a ament... packaged for outstanding values! Tempo ige includes red laminated wood ski nas beveled steel plastic inlaid top edgcsj douHe retease safety"cable hin^ double l»ot With speedlace inner boot; dur-ts. Mounting service! Clothing, accessory lines, too! > equipment CHILDREN'S Tempo peek' i skis. hin$l- ute for boys and nirls $ to isiqned for 11 years includes skis, oind- ADULT ‘Black Damon* package includes skis, boots, bindings, poles. Superior Includes red or blue wood skis and poles. Attached bindings adjust to snowboots or shoes. 30 and 39-inch sizes for youngsters up to 3 years old. TOW MITTS in tough cow- inute Gifts • A etries Forget a gift? Hava a last-minute addition to your list? Salve your problems with toiletries/boxed and ready for gift giving. We're showing)^ fust a sampling of our/toonderful array, all from well-known manufacturers. You pay no more at Hudson's Budget store olid you're sure of satisfaction. rap tl Toi INSURANCE -ALL FORMS - HOME OWNERS PACKAGE POLICY h SPECIALTY Phont PE 4-1968 714 COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK UML PONTIAC SPORTSMAN lotion and cologne $i* His trophy for the season T . . this hand' - some set of shaving lotion and cologne. Rectangular bottle* are decorated with masculine-bolting hunting game. 2 ounces each. FABERGE cologne-giftduette l avish her with,two fragrance.! Woodhue give her Heaven Sent EAU de PARFUM Wl 175* is warm and spicy. Tigress is dain ce in each, bottle. Alio:11 bold, i/j ounce in each Sottle. Alio: ^ood* hue/Fiambeau, Woodhue/Aphrodesia. A heavenly fragrance! Your Christmas angel will love this soft,aubtle scent by HELENA RUBIN- STEIN. How ptefty It looki in its tall, contoured bOttle! Comes wrapped In holiday paper. 2 ounces. *plut 10% Fidftnl Tux on toil Hr it. NIGHT SHOPPING Wad* Thurs., FA, Sat. (Shop Man., Dae. ,4th. 4:30 to S:0O| - I 9:00 P.M ., . Nan Export GIFT-WRAPPING .... 40* ts 1.50 . . No Phan Order*! BAKER and HANSEN Insurance Company NOSEGAY cologne and bath oil_ As fresh as a Spring bouquet, this fragrance by DOROTHY GRAY. She will love this cologne and, matching bubbling bath .oil. Each bottle contains V/2 ounces. Billy Graham Believes God Aided in Cuba WASHINGTON UFI - Evangelist / Billy Graliam said at a Pentagon Christmas service yesterday he believes the prayers of millions of persons v*round the world brought God's intervention and prevented war during, the recent Cuban crisis. ★ ★ . ★ Graham, preaching to about 1,000 military personnel and civilian workers in the Pentagon concourse, said “we have been under the Sword" of Damocles during the past year.. “That sword swayed back and forth, die thread by which it hangs getting mere frayed each day," he said in reference to the Cuban crisis of Into October. Due to the energies and skills of our diplomats there was no war, Graham said. But, he added, *“I like to think that through the prayers of millions of all races., around the world God intervened/’ Though the United States has the strongest military power in ' the world, he said, “we are lost” without God’s help. DJ Found Guilty of Taking Bribes NEW YORK m -. Rock V roll disc jockey Alan Freed yesterday pleaded guilty to accepting bribes from record companies. He was fined 1300 and given a six-month suspended jail sentence. The to-year-old Freed, now of Palm Springs, Calif., figured la a disc jockey payola Investigation of two years ago.-------- It led to criminal charges being filed against him in May I960, accusing him of accepting a total of $30,650 in bribes from seven record companies. ★ ★ ★ He pleaded guilty to two counts, involving a $2,000 bribe frbm the Cosnat Distributing Co. and one of $700 from the Superior Record Sales Co., Inc. WASHINGTON «i-A presidential advisory panel has recommended the establishment of a national academy of foreign affairs. President Kennedy promptly endorsed the idea. , ♦ Jlr ★ The panel is headed by James A. Pierkins, vice president of the , Carnegie Corp. U New* York. It said*, a new Institution should be farmed to provide -leadership for the training, education and research needs of this country’s ’ foreign opera- I tions, Kennedy said he shared the panel’s belief that training and educational programs have not kept pace with the profound changes that have taken place in. the conduct of foreign affairs. ★ it Ur Kennedy said he will recommend legislation to the next ses-skin of Congress to carry out4he recommendation for a National Acadenjy of Foreign Affairs. Kennedy asked Seerjetary of State Dean Rusk to take the lead in formulating the legislation. 'THBPQNTUC PRESS, TUESDAY* 18, 1062' -£:/... ' V ;J| AIL Dolled Up.u No Fi/sFLady^ News Gals tGet Brush-Off After Wbite House Bid RUTH By RUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON-^ decent snafu In the distaff side of the W hit House had 800 miffed pewswomen muttering into their s^p^T Dressed to -the) 'teeth ini ty-going best; and sporting] • ■ brand hew coiffures expensive t eased French- twisted a{ la Jackie, the pi newsgals arrived at the White# House as guests — they mistakcn-MONTGOMERY ly thought of first Lady Jac* i queiine^Kennedy: Clutched in their white-gloved hands were formal engraved bids which ^cordiaUy** Invited them to a reception at 12:30 p.m. Notices from the presidents of the two women’s press c 1 n b s further eincidated that the party was “from 12:30 until 2 p.m.”; ■ y S i n c e the time coincided with / the lunch-hour fpr working girls, they Isjtumed that a festive buffet table would groan, or at least beckon, with food. A receiving line formed in the diplomatic receptiop rooip,.and as -they wended their way toward the corridor leading to the main floor, s o c i a 1 secretary Letitia Baldridge and pres s secretary amela Tucnue warmly, pressed icir hands. .... i. Mr». Kennedy, they assumed, The Washington corespondents were, taken on a tour of die main floor to sed die ChrHtnhW dbcora-tipns, and the uniformed guards delivered the same lecture abdut the White House that they repeat daily for thousands of out-of-town tourists. FOR THOSE OF YOU . / It even began the same:; '‘For those of. you who are seeing the White House for the firs time liut-a newff^al:sfS|n whispered,•“DSft’f they know that we’ve been doming here regularly for 20 or 30 years?” _ The 15-minute tour ended at the dining room, but no buffet was in evidence. passed ready to leave for Palm peach the following afternoon. The g a l hastily departed for the press club to^jt themselves a lun * WHYaND how Discussing the mlx-up after-wards, Tish skid she could n d * understand why the newswbmen had thought1 they were' guests1 of the First Lady. ' ★ ★' h: • After all, she said, the stiff white invitations bearing a picture of thO White House did not have the presidential seal on them. -A1 as, reporters’ invitations to the executive mansion are so few and far between in this- adminis- their Instead, waiters glasses of wine, and i then ventured forth with a tray of dainty, bite-sized tidbits that disappeared like Mack magic, before most of the starving femmes could remove t~ gfev*. The First Lady was no Where in evidence, end an older, newsmen finally-adted Miss Baldridge why she was not there. Tish responded that Jackie was upstairf, but “terribly busy” wrapping packages and getting WiH Ex Morid Lisa WASHINGTON (ffMThe French embassy yesterday announced that Leonardo da Vind’s painting of Mona Lisa will be exhibited' for a few Weeks in the. Metro-pnlitah Museum in, Jew York City., The embassy said no specific date has been set. ' r* ★ * The painting will go on exhibition here Jan.'8 in the National Gallery of Art foi* three* weeks. • tration that they did pot know the “Mrs. Kennedy was busy wrapping presents to take to the chil-' Tunfor Village atA'p.m.,’ Tish added. "I think the girls should have understood, especially since she Was leaving die next day for Palm Beach. She simply didn't have tiipe to come downstairs,” Perhaps the newswonien h a d been spoiled by "previous fir ladies. Eleanor Roosevelt set precedent by taking them on 4 personally conducted tour of the entire White House, from"be;d-rooms~to1dtcheh, and dlso. holding weekly press conferedtes Upstairs____ ★ *" - * ' s Truman, too shy for news conferences, nevertheless tookjhe feminine scribes on a tour ofthe family quarters Which the public never sees; and Mamie Eisenhower did the same after she and Ike moved to the White House. Jackie Kennedy has steadfastly refused to follow suit. Although she has personally stirred more interest-in the. Executive Mansion than any predecessor since Dolley t, she.Tias turned down repeated requests to permit ad upstairs tour by newswomen who would like to. report the changes she has wrought.----- Perhaps, the explanation lies in the fact that Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy used to be a newspaper reporter herself. She haroniy to recall what pointed questions they can ask, ■:* Detectives in Britain Soon to Draw Overtime . LONDON (UPD - British defectives soon will earn overtime pay for working extra hours on big cases, i About' 7,000 detectives, mqrfe than 2,000 of them in London, will be affected. Present rules call fpr overtime only for work done oh days off. GEORGE'S Rambler Alone Offers You These Five Kinds of Big Room Big room for a family bf 9 (or more). Only Rambler has a wagon with tide-binged 5th door, so 3rd $eat ppisengers don’t crawl over tailgate or seat. Big room with nap:couch convenience. Instant remedy for children's travel "frets and fldgeta." Big room for six 6-footers with headroom to spare and luggage space for all. Rambler Classic 6 and Ambassador V-8 beat all "standard-size" low-priced cars—and their amaller brothers, In front headroom. Whether you’re 6' 5” or 5' 6”—if you like-plenty of room, you ought to step into a Rambler and try the tremendous stretch-out room. Tpke the driver’0 seat. These roomy Ramblers beat even Cadillac in driver legroom. Fact is, Rambler’s front-seat headroom and legroom add up to a total of 80.3 inches. That’s over 6' 8” of real comfort. And these new Ramblers have even bigger luggage space than ever before. So, don’t let anyone kid you. Yonll be surprised to find that can coating hundreds of dollars more can’t match Rambler’s room, comfort and performance. And that’s just the beginning of scores of seeajbie, feelable, driveable Rambler advantages. If you’d like lots more car for lots less money, see your Rambler dealer today—a good man to do business with for a new car or a “Select” used car. RAMBLER'63 Still the only car with the BEST OF BOTH l,.BIg Room for Six 6-Footers 2?Eaiior Parking, Famous Economy room with individually adjustable seating. Big room with astonishingly easy entrance and exit. Curved glass side window* permit door* tocurveinto roof—you step In gr*c*fully, Rambler Classic sedans from $44.91 per month to $51.33 (model shown). Mi normal crrylni chum. •« Mini Inn p«M. 0*M Ml Include optional .uulpm.nl, tr.nipoit.tlon, IMUIMM, Hit. Md local IMM. II MW 1 89' SEAMLESS €\ 1 I i H NYLON HOSE W for M Ar GET MORE STAMPS FOR FREE BIFTS ★ FREE DOWNTOWN PARKING ■ ■ ■ In Any Lot . ........ ★ FREE 2-LB. FRUIT CAKE with purchate of $50 11 r, i r 11 ★ BIG DISCOUNTS! CHARGE IT! Values to 2.99 NYLON SLIPS Its Sample 6 fo 44 HOLIDAY DRESSES L00K!$199GENUINEsjmi MINK STOLES el?J 6.09 Gift LADIES’ SWEATERS ,00 Slack• ... 2.HH $100 Oroup 0 to 02 FUR TRIM COATS BARBIE DOLL s BARBIE CLOTHES H up> —-Sweaters NYLON DRESSES 99 3 WARM GIFT *6 CANNON BLANKETS < *ft nip-iiMd«i. ii rZw BOYS’ WOOL TW&LV& THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAYt DECEMBER 18j,/l962 'Milk' Da rice to Benefit 2 Alma Mum Hollow Golf Gub trill be the scene of the annual Kingswood - Cranbrook alumni dan^e Fridayevening. Proceeds fromthb a f/a i r ' will be given to the scholar* ship fund of Kingswood and Cranbrook schools. Mu.sic will be p r o v i d e d by Bill Gail’s IKmdLrolt 1 • */ .■ Entertaining prior to the ai ( fair will be franbrpok Alumni B oar d President Sherwin, , Birnkrant and his wife. The Birqbriunts will haVe members of the board in for cocktails before the 7:^0 pin. dinner at the club. Also opening their home be* fore the dance will be Mr. and Mrs. Norman S. Khauss. They have invited 30 to their Bir- Dance chairmen are Mrs.-Paul Geiger and David Breck. They are assisted by Mrs., Robert Gilloqf. Mrs. Thomas P. Kelly, Mr& Bruce Craig, ' the Rev. John Albrecht and * Frank Rowland.- Forgetful? Person May NeedNofice Q: When a reception 10 given in honor of a particular person and engravedinvita-tiohs are being kent out, does one send an invitation to the ; guest of honor? To me it seems an utterly ft isjll JJrahbrook Play are some who> think ft is proper. I would very much appreciate your answering this question for me. A: .It would not be improper, but I agree'with you that' sending an limitation to the - . | -p guest, of honor seems quite fit1 Si ver 1 fin senseless, unless he (or she) U I U11Y Cl I CU js very yague am] mjght neej, to be reminded of the date of the dipper. The 34th annual Cranbrook School Christmas pageant, takes place tonight; It is traditionally presented the last evening preceding Christmas vacation. Students, faculty and a few Invited guests gather to the great hill (Cranbrook S c h Q o 1 dining ball) decorated with Christmas greens, and Illuminated by hundreds of / story of the With of Christ and one end of the long hall is transformed into a manger scene. The school Chaplain, Rev. Whiter Young, conducts the service as costumed shop* •» herds with -crooks and Ian* < terns kneel and worship. Wise men come bearing gifts. Reli* gious portion closes/with the singing of ancient Christmas carols: ’ - HearXhorus in Church The pageant with all Its pomp and colorful costumes dates back, to the Middle Ages — food is traditional > similar to that served In English manor halls on feudal estates at Christmas. It is twofold y religious and secular. * . ★. * The first part depicts the Q: My toteband and I have had In argument about salting food at tablp. He days Legion Group Pontiac Woman's Club hosted the PontB. O’Grady, Me- and Mrs. Stephen Milter and Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Grindley, . m directed the 31-voice chorus in a repeat performance of its Christmas cpnoert. Mrs.-Walter A. Schmitz accompanied attheplano,--------——— Cekbrafion ‘Tis Season to Be Jolly Vice presidents of the club* Mrs'. Edgar H. Learned and Mrs. E. M. Malone presided at the tea table. Tea chairman ‘was Mrs. Turrta WcCulty. Mrs. Stanley Ferguson is a new member. Mrs.'Malone announced the Oakland County Federation of Women's Gub will meet Jan. The. Americah Legion Auxiliary, Chief Pontiac Post NO. 377, has extended an invitation to all members of the Legion, Junior Auxiliary ahd the Softs of toe American Legion to a Christmas party Saturday, 2 to 4 p.m„ $A the Post Home. PvntUe Pr*»* Photo / Mrs* Thames Kelly, Ledbury Drive, ' models, the gown she will wear at the annual Kingswood-Cranbrook Alumni Dance > Friday evening, for two other members of the planning committee— Mrs. Paul Geiger (center) and David Breck (right), both of Birmingham. The dance will be held at Plum Hollow Golf Club. 4 at toe Royal Oak Woman’s Club. Mrs. F. ft, Garrison will speak on “World Vistas.” Pontiac Woman’s Club will meet at the Pontiac City Library Jan 21, See Holiday Slides Waterford - Clarkston Business and Professional Worn-, en’s Club viewed slides denoting “Stories of Our Christinas Traditions’’ at their meeting. Mrs. L. V. Kline narrated the film. Guests were Mary Wartoen ahd -Mrs. Charles Murphy. Dance Club (_ef Mather Contributes Yule Gifts Guest- callers and Christmas'gifts marked the Prom-enadpr’s Square Dance Gub dance Saturday at Hawthorne School. i n Every one attending brought gifts for the Lapeer Home for Retarded Children. Charles Futrelland Mrs. Reginald Ed-wards were gufest callers. ★ ★ Guests for the evening were , the Carl DomtSes, the Ernie Zechai's, Edward Chandlers, the Charles Futrells, and Mr. and Mrs. Edwards. ■ it i Tickets are still available for toe New Years’ dance. In-formation and 11 c k e t s are available from Mrs. Robert Newill or Mrs. Chester Murphy. The level of tote dance is intermediate.. She's Having By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I have a different kind of motoer-in-law problem. She isn’t in my home five, minutes when she drags out my vacuum sweeper, mop and dust cloth......... Even when 1 explain th'at I have just given the place vltrher for dinner she comes hours early and takes over the kitchen. I have had 14 years of home-jnakingL exper- ience and feel that I do a -pretty good job. How can I let Her know I do riot need her help? MAD DEAR MAD: Your mother-in-law obviously hasn’t enough to keep her busy at home-and is merely flexing her domestic muscles at your place. Let her have a good time. ★ * ★ DEAR ABBY: Please set a couple of teen-agers straight as my advice is not wanted. They go steady and have decided to spend from $30 to $100 on each otosir for Christmas. They both work. Their wages are small and what is left weekly is $10 or less. MOM DEAR MOM: I think they are spending too much on a Q: A friend and I disagree on , the following matter and would appreciate your settling it for us. She claims that when m, woman walks through a door she is nevar expected to hold It open lor anyone following her. I disagree and think it te very bad manners not to hold the door at least until the person following can get hold of it. What do you say about '“tote? xv *-'1 A: She doesn’t stand and: hold toe door for someone at a distance, but when someone te immediately behind her,. she instinctively hokte .the door and does not let it fly back and hit the person in the face. The new Emily Post Institute booklet entitled, “Clothes of the' Bridal Party,’’ describes the clothes worn by the bride and groom as well as those worn by their wedding atteridahtsr*To obtain a copy, send 10 cents in coin and a self-addressed, stamped envelope to the Emily Post Institute, in care of The Pontiac Press. During Saturday’s meeting at toe Oakland Lake site, Junior Auxiliary Chairman Mrs. Frank Huebner announced members will meet at toe home Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Reports during toe regular business meeting were followed by a; (Christmas party., Mrs. Lyle Brown was in, charge, .With, hostesses Mrs.1 William Tunnlngley and Mrs. Ruby Wagoner. Mr. end Mrs. Harry Pryala of Bloomfield HlUs win enter* tote at a cocktail party Dec. 21 at the Bloomfield Hills Coun- 117 Sue Diehl, daughter of toe Lloyd M. Diehls Jr-of I1™)'"*: him, and Maureen Ryan, daughter of the Bloomfield Hills, #111 be hostesses to some 100 Wends at Juniors Holiday Party Tea Dance In' the Detroit Athletic Club, Dec. 22. On Dec. 23 the Edward P. Barretts are hosting an open house in their home on Pine Tree Trail. .1. r Dr. and Mrs.1®. J. Keeffe of Bloomfield Village will honor their house guests from Arizona at $ “Sip and Soup",party on toe same day. ■ . u : Mrs. Philip Hubbard, South Berkshire Road, and Mrs. Jan^ G^lffiSpea Drive, think their frfendrwho have been taxiing chtlttrea around for holiday affairs need a rest. They’re entertaining a group of these mothers at tea Dec. z«. ± *1 IT / > • The W. W. Fishers of Bloomfield Hills will entertain sonw 70 guests from the Detroit area at a cocktiil party to their home, Dec. 30. Personal Notes of Area Couple Wed in Candlelight Rite Jeanne Dora Looney exchanged nuptial vows With Russell Gary Downhour of Pleasant Ridge, Saturday evening in the Central Methodist Church. Rev. David Liscomb of the Howarth Methodist Church performed the candlelight ceremony before an altar banked with white chrysan-' themums. * MRS. RUSSELL GARY DOWNHOUR : • / ' • r... ^ Daughter of Howard M. Looney of Soqth Johnson Ave-nue and the late Mrs. Looney, the bride appeared in white "peau . satin styled with unpressed pleats and , chapel 4 train. Fabric roses, fashioned the short sleeves and accented (he shirred front skirt panel. * ★ ★ * Her veil of French illusion was fitted to a satin court cap. Gardenias and Stephan-otls comprised her bouquet. ★ * * Mrs. William Landis, her sister’s matron of honor, Charlotte Arcand and Margaret “-ftwff trf 'Ubly were royal-blue organza, and held semicascades of white carnations and vgriegated holly.1 - The bridegroom, Son of Russell E. Downhour, Mt Pleasant, arid the Into Mrs. Downpour, had Vllliam Landis for his best man. Paul Trerlce of Wayne and Charles ! Deschaine were ushers. ''4 - After toe church reception, toe newlyweds left for a trip ' to Kentucky and will live on Rosshlre Court. The bride te a graduate of Ferris Institute and her husband is majoring, In geology at Wayne State University. ’ 1"" )■ single gift, but if they have earned toe mbney, it’s their . privilege. i > DEAR ABBY: A 16-year-old neighbor girl baby sat for us last Saturday night. She asked me beforehand if her boy friend could keep her company while she sat, and 1 didn’t see any reason why he shouldn’t. When we got home (about midnight) it was n aa a a . pitch dark ln the house and LJQC. 4.A"AO ' the girl and her Visitor appeared vary rumpled. My husband slid that we should not permit tote girl to have company again while she sits for us. How can I reffise her If she asks again, without implying that I don’t trust her? THE LADY ON THE CORNER DEAR CORNER: Whether she thinks you “trust” her te not as important as making sure that nothing regrettable happens to your home'. ♦ ir/v * * ~ DEAR ABBY: I ueed to be a very heavy drinker. I had to have a shot of whisky first thing in the morning, so you know I was not exactly a “social drinker." I met a woman who said she would marry me if I quit drinking. I joined A. A, and haven't had a drop of whisky since New Year’s, 1961. Now this woman sayjB she changed her mind and doesn’t love me enough to mairry me. 1 am ready to start drinking again. Do you, think she has been fair to me, and how can I get her to keep her promise? SOBER BUT WEAKENING DEAR SOBER: Sobriety is your life-saver ami this woman provided it. You owe her a lot, so thank her and say good-bye. Perhaps tote te a test. If you stay sober through tote crisis, she might marry you after all. Will-Q-Way to Do Play Will-O-Way Apprentice Theater presents six free performances of a 'Christmas play, “The Broken Doll,” Dec. 22-23 at 1,3 and 5 p.m. each day. ★ * ★ This te toq eighth annual presentation °f the play written by will-O-Way director Celia Merrill Turner to explain to her own children why Santa Claus te short and fat in one department store and tall and thin to another, w " it- ’ it Included to {ho cast are area residents:' Candace Turner, Phil Purcell, Cal Barber , Rosalie Lake, Debbie vWalsh and Vicki and Sharon Lightstone. 'Others Include Mary Bur-reil„ Janie Linder, Shannon Watts, Sandy Brown, Connie Dee Autote, Pam Jleck and , Robin Turner. 1 r , others members of toe cast are Ann Latoza, Peggy Hunt-ley, Lynn Vender Moot, Fred Betz and Joanne Rutkowski. Reservations may be made by calling Wlll-O-Way Theater. ' Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Smith of Martell Road expect toflr daughter.Gayle to arrive home from San Francisco soon for the holidays. On Christmas Day, they will eteb have another daughter and her husband, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth O’Rourke of Saginaw, present with their three chtohpn, Karen, Lindsey and Tomimy. Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Anderson of Harlan Road will have their annual open house for friends Christmas Day. For dinner, they will be joined by their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Williams and their children, Isabelle and Edgar. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Schlrmer will also be with them. it it it Dr. Ethel Calhoun will spend Christmas with her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Whttlatch of Normal, 111., and their 4- month-old daughter Ltea.Ann, at the home of. Mrs. Whit- , ■ latch’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Uoyal CoChraft In Newark, Ohio. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Spaulding will Join her brother’s family for Christmas Day dinner, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Spaulding in, Royal Oak and their sons. Bob and Dick. Mrs. Spaulding senior, from Grosse Pointe will also be with them. ________*...... ★ ★ Irene Murphy of Bonnie Brier will have a special guest this year. Her Chinese son Vincent Lu (wife te here on the refugee act program of which Mrs. Murphy te a sponsor) is coming from New York. It U a “must” that a Chinese once a year pays his respect to his mother; and since Vlncenlfe pwn mother te behind the Bamboo curtain and he cannot she her, he will Hold Fete for Bride-Elect Carol Jean Vassallo was honored. Friday evening at a shower In the Loon Lake home of Ska. Raymond A. Dobson, mother of the brkle-elect’s fiance, Airman 2.C. Floyd James Dobson. Mrs. Luther Blickenstaff and Mrs. Terry Sherer shared hostess honors. Arriving frqm Royal Oak were the bride-elect’s mother, Mrs. Fred Vassallo, and sister Pamela. From Wyandotte were Mrs. Earl Parke, Mrs. Charles E. Parke, Mrs. Sam Sjiarpe, Mrs. Sam Scal-fani and Mrs. diaries Dtoo. * .it ________________ter A Dec. 29 wedding to St. Dennis Church, Royal Oak, 1s planned. come to Hte American mother. On this happy day, Mrs. Murphy’S daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Keyes and their daughter, Clover, will also join the festivities. it/ it . it Mr. apd Mrs. Howard G. * Willett Jr., with Sons, Howdy and Gordon of Pilgrim Road, wlQ travel to BoonviUe, Miss., to be with their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. H. A. (Rusty) Miller and their son .Eric, for Christmas. Areme Has Initiation of 3 Members Three were initiated into Areme Chapter No. . 903 at Monday’s meeting to the Roosevelt Temple. With $3 members and guests present, Worthy Matron Mrs. Harry Eaton presided while Mrs. Paul Baldwin, Mrs. Max Lee and Mrs. Fred Wilder were welcomed Into toe chapter. Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Herb Steeves from Lewiston. Refreshments were served by Mrs. Rlymohd Boatright, Mrs. Williairi Cox, Mrs. Joshua Hebenton and Mrs. Robert Schmidt. Mothers Chapter Celebrates Hbljday Chapter Nine of toe Amerp can Gold gfer Mothers held III annual Christman party Frk day evening' at Tbd’s Restau- Pontl.o Pmi Photo a personal reply,'send a self-addressed, stamped envelope to Abby, care of ThekP(ihUac Press. / For Abby's booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,” send 36 cents to Abby, care of The Pontiac'Press. * Guests were present from : Royal Oak and Livonia. Following the dinner members were guestp of Mrs. Lola Erb at her Kobe on Sher-bourne Drive. Gifts wbre exchanged a n d,\ refreshments were served. Girl sqoift Vicki Hucljnbay of Clark ' Street tries a cape oh Brownie scoitt Susan Bond of -Third, Avenue. At the . rear, Mariner icouf Sharon Stadler of ‘ Clara Street and leader Mrs. Millie Lee they have made from /< lb. ♦ 3.25- A choice selection of cl and butter bona...elegant tor gift giving. cfetk Qtnbcuaodou •The flheat miniature chocolates . ■ . with many unusual centers... a gift you II be proud to give. CLOONAN’S 72 North Saginaw DP0NTOC^ Joint Ownership Can a f By MARY FEELEY Consultant in Money Management Door Miss Feeley: I think our home should be In both our names, instead of just my husband’s. But he thinks joint owner-shtp is a bad idea; I feel, embarrassed sometimes yhen my friends- learn I don’t own any of our property; They imply mat their husbandsiwant to sharg what they have with them. How do you feel about this?. Mrs, F. F. R., Ann Arbor ' „ ★ ★ it. ' . Dear Mrs. B.: Listen toryotfr husband this' time. Joint ownership can indeed be a false friend. You may find that the same prop: erty. someday is tweed twice. - Bor Instance, Joint ownership means that everything will go to the wife, if the husband dies first — after being taxed in the husband’s estate. Then when she dies, the satne property will be subject to tax. again before it goes to her addition to the more permanent account for long-term goals, is p very satisfactory arrangement. _. 1 ■ You expect fa use the $iprt-term savings when something worthwhile comes up. That’ wharywrsavr forrirs a Way pf planning for major things you in life. There are any number of Com-plications that can arise from joint ownership. Your girl friends and their husbands are just not hep to these i facts of life. If ~ they thtnirfoinfr ownership js one more tender ex-pression of “togetherness,” they’re living in a dream world. Your husband is the one who has his wife’s best interests at heart. 1 am assuming, of course, that your husband’s will is in your fa- While you’re in this inquiring mood, I suggest you talk to yOur local bank about the various types of trust fund arrangements. A trust can eliminate unnecessary duplication of estate taxes, avoid unnecessary and expensive trips of property through the courts. The testamentary trust, for instance, is widely used. As its name implies, it is created in a will and takes effect after/ death. Properly set up, a trust can mean both economy and protection. ★ .★ ★ Dear Miss Feeley: My two teen-age sons are all stemmed about a remodeling project they’ve planned. They want to convert what was once a coal bin under the house into a study for themselves. It’s only about 7 by 12 feet, and they would do all the work themselves. They figure that $100 would cover the cost of the materials. My question is this: am I justified in taking the $100 out of my savings?. They’re very capable, energetic boys,, and' they earn their own spending money. I’m a widow, and don’t know whether It’s smart to dip into savings for somehting like this. Mrs. R.O. B., Canton, Ohio WWW Dear Mrs. B.: Sounds like a worthy project to me. The boys would gain a lot of do-it-yourself know-how, which will be like money in the bank to them some day. And a well-organized place to study is Important In their school work. You wouldn’t be so hesitant about subsidizing this project, I believe, if you kept two savings accounts Instead of just one. I know from my own personal experience, as well as from other people’s, that a savings account for snort-term goals, in SPECIAL OFFER Cultem Cold Wove Permanent A eombliullon of Sendee Regularly Priced il SIS.00 for FAMHON CUT ......4 CONDITIONING SHAMPOO 1 SUPERB 4ALON CREAM RINSE COLOR RINSE , Stylist Permanent For a limited time we offer our musingly beautiful H5I Complete Extraordinary Special Reg. 925 PERMANENT Now Only $1250 VALUABLE COUPON FREE Cbristmas Gift Worth $2.50 With Every Permanent *••! loan.................J No Appointment Needed! OPEN FRIDAY TIL 9 P.M. Beauty Salon FE 5.9257 | |i n. laglnt* St., Between Uwwn aad Your long-term account can then remain untouched, to earn a steady income.. This way you don't feel like a criminal when yoti withdraw savings for a sizeable expenditure. Why not try this plan from now write Mary Feeley in care of The Pontiac Press. She will am questions of greatest interest in her column, v- on? If you have ar'money problem, TRe South Pole receives more sunlight in midsummer than any ~ place on earth. However, knout Pole remains exceedingly icy. Special. . $6.50 * Haircut—Set Complete STEPHEN / LOUIS BEAUTY SHOP. ** s-sooo Buckner Finance Building, 10 W. Huron St. ★ Paramount Beauty School ★ wigs SjJTKS.f'SX- t2g S SX phone; —cleaned—u> ftmiwfo-FEDERAL sold—styled ll»l. SeglB.w. (e*le Theater 4-2352 Rid*., Pontiac, Michigan gracious colonialjkospitality^ is reflected in our 1 OLD SALEM SOLID CHERRY I DINING ROOM GROUP I 1 • 46" Round Extension Table • 4 Side Chairs «K e 50" Buffet with Hutch Top W only complete Warm, rich hand-rubbed solid cherry wood ... and a distinctive design from colonial times £ ... ore combined b/skilled craftsmen to bring you this lovely and. unusual dining room | group that wilt odd new beauty and charm to your homel The table extends to 40" with Its J 14" filler .leaf. And you'll love the real comfort of these graceful chalra with cattail slot*. fi Arm Chair shown—$45. p a gift for the home brings year pleasure! 84-In. EARLY AMERICAN HIGH-BACK WING SOFA Custom-quality materials and fine workmanship are distinctive features of this good-looking wing sofa. Individual pillow back, and skirted base. Shown at our Bloomfield Hills store In nylon tapestry —9335; at our Pontiac store In cinnamon tweed—9305. NOW- two fine stores to serve you I give the enduring elegance of a truly fine sofa ! Handsome Custom-Built 102-in. CURVED SOFA the ultimata In quality and craftsmanship mo COVERED IN IMPORTED BELGIAN LINEN In gold, mustard and sepia print—OR IN SLATE BLUE FRENCH TOILE. n throughout, thli Impr.ulv. lota will bo a gill th. wholo family will «n|oy for y th. mognlflc.nl design and ditaillng of th fltld Hill. sloro only. wiaa: 24 WEST HURON ST. / PONTIAC 4080 TELEGRAPH RD. j BLOOMFIELD HILLS 644-7370 Speci al • IVufmeVMapIo" BOSTON ROCKER ♦2495 Replica of the ever-. papular Boston rocker— crafted of• solid rock maple, with hand-, rubbed nutmeg , fin- BOTH STORES OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL CHRISTMAS CONVENIENT FREE FARMING THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER IS, 1902 Use Your Charge sfffr . OSMUN'S This Christmas for. . TOM DICK Harry BILL JACK ORVAL RUSS rjimnr^ WALLY GEORGE JIM JOE DON BERNIE ' LES MIKE . .CHUCK „ NORMAN * JOHN JERRY — To G ALL WEATHER-REAL LEATHER A whole season's Wear IHuSh Puppies' $8” Sint 6 to 13 A to E Duratola plgsktn repels water, mists dirt, lasts tha season. Bouncy crap* solas wear and wear. Steal shank support Light 9 ounces per shoo. Three widths in sizes from 10 to 2,2 to&-Choice of stylos. OSMUN'S TOWN and COUNTRY TEl-HURPN SHpPPING CENTER Teleoreph «V Huron . Open Every Evening 'til .9 ELM. Your Pre-Bridal Photograph Free with this .beautiful wedding album, complete with twelve 5x7 photographs of your wedding. * 40 proofs ^399 complete Careful, Exact Work EVELYN HARRIS STOMO 48 G1“WWHl Pontiac FE 4-0102 One Block West of North Perry end K-mert Give her Helena.Rubinstein’s Heaven Sent’Perfume Spray 225 metered sprays,..$2.25 plus tax Ahoovonty gift Idea.. .to trim • tree or stuff a stocking I Tha whimeicoi dsngel holds pursa tin Haavan Sant Perfume Spray. PERRY PHARL PRESCRIPTIONS?: rerfect 689 Eogt Bird. a» Parry 333-7152 1231 Baldwin it Columbia v ’ 333-7057 > Freys Wed in Evening The chancel ot -Commerce Methodist Church was hanked with pine trees, holly wreaths and white poinsettias for the Saturday ingrriage of Susan Mae Kiger to Gary John Frey. A church reception followed Way to Open Bottle the candlelight evening ceremony performed by Rev. Wilfred Porter before some 250 guests. •*” Parents of the bridal couple are Mr. and Mrs. Tom Klger of Kratage Court and the John Freys of Alsup Street. BRIDAL GOWNS Hie bridal gown of white silk tqffeta was bordered with Aleneon lace at the Sabrina neckline and redingote- effect fipom w -faper tiarr.'tdficned wifihi pearls. White orchids, Stephanotis and variegated holly comprised- the bride’s 'bouquet. MRS. GARY JOHN. FREY Past Legion Presidents Hold Christmas Party The annual Christmas party of the Past Presidents ot Cook-Nelson Unit Nb. 20, of the American Legion Auxiliary was held Monday evening at the Cook-Nelson Legion Home. Guests Included the Past Commanders of Cook-Nelson Post No. 20, Carl Shindorf, Albert Games and David War-rilow. Mrs. Carl Shindorf was the kitchen chairman. Christmas dinner was, served by Mrs. Charles Crawford, ana Mrs. Arno Hulet. President, Mrs. Leo MiM-weaser, announced ; that the next Past Presidents’ Parley meeting will be held in March. Augustana Women Plan Yule Theme Augustana Lutheran Church Women of Christ Lutheran Church will gather 8 p m. Wednesday in the parsonage on Williams Lake Road. The theme is “Learning the Meaning of Christmas.” Members will sing carols and pack gift cookies for shut-ins. Entertainment for the evening was planned by Mrs. Albert Games and Mr?, Ivan Royal. ■ • w SANDRA GAY PAUL Mr. and Mrs. Donald Paul of Argyle Avenue an-noun<:e the engagement of their daughter Sandra Gay to Charles M. Dawson Jr., son of the Charles Dawsons of Ferndale Street. 'n' Tiny, Tender or Cute 'rf Pudgy (duiards* has the shoe baby needs Secure your baby's foot future with Todlins. Quality crafted, (duiardt offers Todlins in styles, sizes and widths to suit any fledgling feet—from —fr-tU"'Efififi:...i in for expert fitting today. Where Pit dome* Firxt" BILL LEWIS' 4 JUNIOR BOOTERY 1060 W Hurqa ; (Huicn. -Canfra) Pnant 334-0725. Maid of honor, Patricia Newman, wore emerald green velveteen and carried white roses and holly. In identical dresses were bridesmaids Carolyn Tackwitz, Algonac, Kathy Freeman, Walled Lake and Polly Carlson, Highland. They held bouquets of white roses, chrysanthemums and -Wy. - • • . - ' Richard Perry stood as best man. William Kiger and Dale Frey, brothers of the bridal couple, ushered withf James Frey, Detroit and Larry *»ggr St. Clair Shores. OFF ON HONEYMOON Leaving for a .'brief honeymoon,. the bride was wearing a deep red velveteen suit. She is a graduate of Michigan State University. Mr. Frey attends Detroit Institute of Technology. They will live in Walled Lake. White rosebuds accented Mrs. Kiger’s dress of green lace and chiffon over taffeta. The bridegroom’s mother chose gold peau de sole and corsage of bronze Cymbidium orchids. Polly’s Pointers By POLLY CRAMER DEAR POLLY — I offer.a workable solution in-open-ing bottletops hardened w)Hi collected residue. Using aft I W A* m ...UL lUm aHiaIi open door as a vise to bold the bottle, twist with the other hand while effortlessly pulling the door closed, bringing with It unfailing victory. Of course, the -door used should be one of little or no visual valiie. The section between the hinges is- used so a . garage,-back door or even refrigerator door serves nicely. A comb er-tack holder while tapping with a hammer. MAHALO DEAR POLLY — Few mail boxes are large enough g to accommodate the many Christmas cards that come to g all of us through the mail? I decorate a half-bushel bas- i ket with Christmas papers and pasta a few of lasT“yeaF’s g cards around'the sides. ’ ■ ,1 "» Write in large letters, on a gard, ‘‘Mail Basket” and 1 fasten this to the handle. Place near the nuty box for the 1 convenience of your faithful mall man. MRS. B. C. DEAR POLLY—After shampooing your hair, use a cup of stele beer mixed with a little water as 0 wave-set lotion. If makes the hair have a pretty sheen and really holds the' waves. ' SUSAN DEAR POLLY—A most effective and simple way to remove asphalt and .vipyl tile blocks that need to be replaced in a floor, is to hold a steam iron about one inch above the surface of the tile for a minute or two. Place-a putty knife under the edge of the tile and work it out. ..J.M.F. Share your favorite homemaking idebs... send them to Polly in care of The Pontiac Press. Yen'll receive a bright, new silver dollar if Polly uses your Ideas in Polly V Pointers. Sees VFW Auxiliary Go Through Ritual Mrs. Fred McDaniels, fifth district president, was present for inspection of the city Of Pontiac Auxiliary to the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post J370, Friday evening in the VFW Hall. Have You Tried This? Fix Party Food Early BY JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food Editor If 600 meatballs were stacked one on top of the other, how high do you suppose the pile would be? Mrs. William McClure says she has finished making that many for open house parties during the holidays. Then she shares her recipe with us. It came, she says,- from her husband’s great uncle. Those who know Kae M> Clure know she is active in many cultural and civic affairs. UNCLE ELMER’S MEATBALLS 1 tablespoon shrimp sauce 3 tablespoons catsup 1 tablespoon mustard Salt Pepper V* teaspoon Worcestershire sauce Dash of garlic salt 2 cups ground onions Mix all ingredients'thoroughly. Form into little meatballs and brown in a hot skillet. Keep the skillet moving slowly with a sliding motion to brown the halls evenly. To serve, heat in a chafing dish, using a little of By Mri. William McClure the gauce that comes from 3 pounds ground beef cooking to keep them from 2 pounds ground pork „ drying out. 1 pound ground veal These meatballs may be % cup brown sugar nude ahead of time and 3 tablespoons barbecue frozen. Heat Just before sauce serving. Other special guests were Mrs. Angus MacLeod, district senior vice president, Margaret Rose, district color-bearer and Florence Taylor from the Roseville Auxiliary. The group will prepare a Christmas basket for a needy area family and will send a donation for cigarettes for patients in the U.S. Veterans’ Hospital, Ann Arbor. Gifts will be exchanged at the auxiliary’s Christmas party Dec. 28. ' ‘_______ Oiwmode ■ HOSIERy. The perfect Choice... SHEER, SHEER NYLONS • BOULEVARD nude heel-demi toe Miracle No-Bind Tops ! TISSUE SHEER reinforced toes end heelt. Miracle ’ No-Bind Tops. DELUXE MICRO i reinforced hruls.. and toes. Miracle - No-Binci Tops.— VANITY^ foil-fashioned white picot tops, v Beautifully Gift-Wrapped Free of Charge^ At all Nturhode Hosiery Shops | 82 N. Saginaw St. Mother and Daughter RAGLANKITS : ★ i 'r KNlfriNGBAGr ★ SEWING BASKETS The Knitting Needle in WEST HURON ST. FE B18S0 This Is the 33rd Time HIKER FOUNTAIN has had the pleasure - of extending HOLIDAY GREETINGS' to You 35 W. Huron S». Lady wishing Interesting pert full-time p I e e s e n t work in studio., Age or experience handicap. Apply: KENDALE'S •• 45 W. Huron, Pontiac HOLIDAY HAIR STYLES BUDGET PERMANENT WAVE $8.75 Includes Calling and Style Set JUNIOR MISS PERMANENT $6.00 flu Hair Styling Men’s Barber Shop Remodeled for Your Convenience. Phone appointment If yon wish! Riker Bldg, 85 Huron, FE 3-7186 ★ TONY’S ★ Why buy a dryer with only "one kind1* of drying? Get the new BOA whirlpool 2-speed dryer that gives you all ths advantages of a regular dryer, plus the extra convenience and flexibility of a super-speed dryer. Just dial normal for all your regular drying needs or super 1 speeds, plus 8 temperature selections and 6 cycle settings to offer drying flexibility for everything from regulars and delicates to wash 'a wean. Even damp dries, if you wish. Como see this new 2-speed dryer * * * of course it's an ncA whirlpool! SPECIAL v* — dAKA ilEST0™" ONLY WEEK. > IN0LUDES WIRING ON DETROIT EDISON LINES! Ona of the LARGEST SELECTIONS * OF MOPtU is oakUhb oomhty Lstl - iv iiSIS I Open Ivaninfi 'll! 8 P.M.-Except Sat. ELECTRIC . COMPANY »2SW.«wf etewr Brewer Real Estate 3 MILLER; BLOOMFIELD HIGHLANDS. Owner transferred — must be sold. Take a look and make your offer- ear this ^rttrutlve^j-mdrom ErtelP' mg, hardwood r— — I i floor*, 1_ chetY. ceramic tlleo «5&be« h loll of tree* and ahruba sonable price. Will consider hous* trailer or vacant property aa part-payment LOTUS LAKE SUB. — A real n ring et*M, a extra large rum,, belba. alum, atorma and tens, fully Insulated, clean gas I. Black top strut. A home to William Miller * Realtor FE 2-0263 670 w. Huron open > to s. GILES (408 DOWN. NORTH SIDE 5-rw r Lincoln Jr. Hlgh.^$ 1 iw go* furnace, all olty . vacxnt, giving you FOR COLORED I In living t 67.30 a mon GILES REALTY CO. - PE (-8176 221 Baldwin Ave, MULTIPLE LWTO4Q SERVICE Newly-Weds—Retirees 1800 down. Cosy and warm, good nslghborhood, 3 • bedroomv living lot 100X near Ox_____ cosy bargain I HAROLD R. PRANKS. REALTOR HSIUnlon Lake Rd. EM 3-320* HIITER 'wim^Aropiac*’. graili lar DRAYTON A EAST SIDE BRICK Longfellow School b large bedrooms, 01 glaxtsred walls, oeri Ells Lake Rd PE 4 3598 or PI 2-0179. Evs. PE 8-7839. Clarksttin Hrick Ranch click tiid •hopping confer. Own-•MforroHj—Prlco reduced. Seminole Hills Colonial *ywlth large lllvng room, neZ fireplace, full iju dlnliui rm.< naed radiation. Full baacmant. Iy painted. Bxoellent rood It Ion. Warren Slout, Realtor LlgTlNl3gl>NEEbBD. CALL TODAY ANNETT A'est Side Brick Acre—2 Homes ^ fiffillYTsfin. storms serssns and ^swnlnji. 20 ^ ft (iilly*oarptled. breakfaal rm Eaparata 2 ’• bedrm. rental rage Ige. garden area. Irut Yaiula. 6n!“tl*mr1»lo{fffcdnl Elizabeth J.^tke Front* Attraotlv* brick having M ft llvinr rm., marble FP. Ig* Thermo, window, eeparan dining rm. with Thermo, win dow, modern kit. with dlntog T... i- - |,T lfr,, 1 batir epao* and dw studio bedrm neat, 2-car ga 10 Acres—4 Bedrodms Beautifully rertored/ farm home on Baldwin Rd.. r'— modern kltehen, 3 baths, noted Ihruout, soreened p basement, oil heat./ 3 to • i*l,,r±,lMpto»rm’ WK WILL TRAGIC ANNteTT INC. Realtors at vs. MuroA »t. Open Kvenlngi And suiufey M FE 8-Q46.6 Early Amerleaa excellent slat* of ilSXn ^ sTE Rolfe H. Smith. Realtor, $44 S. Telegraph PB 8-7»4«__ MA Mill O'NEIL Trade Special Three-bedroom brlok ranch- carpeting, recreation room in basement wtth^ bath. Make your trad*, with no waiting to sell itret. Ca l PS 2-1319 and ask for Jack 263 s. Telegraph Rd. PE 8-7t63 Brick - . - 3 bedroom*, carpeted living room, dining room, full b**e- ■BE THUS PINE RRTCK HOMlI MBNTI Drayton . . • Natural fireplae* la *paoloue living room. Carpeting aal draperies Included. Yss. a dining room. On* bedroom and bath on main floor, two bad* rwwi POME88IQN. Convenient termil / Humphries . ' • FE 2-9236 uJihVi&AWiUi'' T WJBNT y-EIGHT CflL Haiicai BvIV nWMV .• 4t Salt Homes <9 Sal* Houses > CARNIVAL- "BUD" Milford J 3-Bedroom Rancher Mid span condition, brink t t«nor, full basement. (U Mot ceramle tile brth. mwSHwjjw*. «ttnw »t II *00. call now I Clarks ton Area 3-bedroom rancher with one-ac land, attached 2-car garage. fir . place lVb laths. fufi buemei rec-area. etorraa and Mreei Mood at M MO. See for youreeu today! '‘Bud” Nicholie, 'Realtor . ,0 09 Mt. Clement St. w FES-1201 • After 6 F.M., FE 2-3370 . . MlHAnpt'R.UtoXNO SERVICE IRWIN Acreage - located 5 wool auburban with 9 »» iteiiegirfa4ao-wrew-«: -twr^sHooar* ; BUY THIS For roar family Chrlatmae preeen Scar garage, lot approx. 06x200. BlOOMi from supermarket, In one i Oakland' County's beet school dl ‘■“■"■‘"in'b* made Into Income. CRAWFORD AGENCY M W. Walton — 338-2303 sis i. iBr , my 3-1143 lng.rm. Full bath. 1 bedrms. basement with oil beat. Pore! S ear garage. 17.950 — Terms. SUBURBAN RANCH BOMB -to web carpeting to 22 ft. Hvtng rm. Heatalator fireplace. Tiled Brteseway to attached rage. Over f acres ol 500 with only 11,000 dow JOHNSON BRING YOUR TRADING PROBLEMS TO OS TS&WKSiS&ZJS > schools SOOtlmir MiU prise only l5,950.*Uh MW down. , CANAL FRONTAGE' With access to Bylran and Otter Lakeo. Ntoe 4-rootn r—i '- Large room through, garage. Wl^hMmoiu* $3,500 to more tor. only $17,500 down. Call today.. iffy Money down g■’aa.ii... —y,. ARRQ ‘OZY s bedroom — buhgaloi oak fjoerri handy kitchen, gerag olooo to eehoots. only $500 down. ROOM COLONIAL - home setting on an acre of inmnd with garden ■pot and. Maple greet In good lo- iWiR—wMR tMdr.- 65 ff. Sals Household Goods living room with heateletor f room with fireplace, and 3 c garage. Clarkston Area p, 3 bedroom ranch type with I ' basement, lp baths, heated t COMMUN1 1Y NATIONAL BANK For Home Ownership Loans B'e Baay . FB SSI COLORED............ iO^SAn.inteciOwnar.taMnf to on thta moat attractive 5-bo_ room brick homo. Completely modern end clean a* r _ tooth. NOW oarpotlng. I $12,250. SLIM down. PROSPECT ST. Something a hotter Ui an eidor home. 7 decorated rooms and belt $9,750. Terms. , ■ WtZ/BWltfS liSKBT FRONT — NIOC ' deep lot wlth-modorn S rm. I- 22 ft. living rm. with stone place. Kltonon with nook. 1 2 car garage. Breakwater beech, dock. 8«o this at low tor prleo of 313,100 — Terms. Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 2200 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph FE 2-0123 — (toon Eves. ______, Free Parking HOYT FOR THAT PERSONAL INTEREST MELROSE down puts you In thls 3-bed-i home, payments less -1‘4-car garage, paved eti OR Trade EXCELLENT LOCATION NORTH SIDE — e-room throe-bedroom. f-‘l basement, ktlohonotto. recreat room Wtth bar and otOolo. Palli shelter end fruit collar. Now rage, black top drive. Monty extras. Very clean. $12,500. OENTLBMAN FARMER — Color 7-room larfe homo- epaetou* I tog room wtth flroplaos. Two s North Side Immediate poi bungalow in'* district. Utility i ragi — 55 x122' lion — monthly in rent. 5-room . northern school room, 2-ear ng°*mi88! EXCELLENT RIVEN FRONT- *30 loot on the river, 5-room, 3-bedroom. electric stove tad refrigerator. Ah exceptional P jj wtth vary aaay terms. NORTHERN HIOH - 5-room bun**- low perfect condition. --- Nice Moafion. $8,750 and COLORED - A real good,. , —— - - - . Jtol^ wlto__fullMbasemont. Largo LIST i Open rM:30. Mulflp too; L. H. BROWN, Realtor 50$ Elisabeth Lake Road Ml. FE 4-3554 or FE 8-4510 CLARK 4 ACRES. 7-ROOM MODERN HOME. North suburban, near new expressway. Haa 3 bedroom*- i» bath,, stoue fireplace. 2 ci rege. cMcken '—* * Lake Angelas , Golf View Estates, You wUl enjoy year 'round fun and relaxation at this address/of distinction and mighty fine homo. Three Jsedrooms. two full bathe, atop «aver kitchen with /built-in appliances — new or '— lake privileges. Asking Quiet possession. ■ 3-Bedroom Brick / . ed to Waterford Twp. 11 itohen and dining area. Ce-i tile bath, oarpoled living ba«*m*M, /water softener Incinerator./ Attached 2'A-with ' electrto door '-—id street, r »i.6oo ir equity . sum! i community watt down plus co«ts, to Irede. / KAMPSEN JC$*2.5o. «•- ^w„Vb5»°“ £S QuIck^oBse1 slon. price reduced CLARK REAL ESTATE . »M W, RUROk ___ FE I Evening* rago on laks aohod garagi, LAKE FRONT: On beautllul Square Lake, very •peolous flve-btdroom homo In eXooilont condition. Large living room with flroplooe. (lining L. kltohon with breakfast arse, tores bedrooms end both on 1st -floor, family room with flreptaoo, two bedrooms and bath and utility room on lake level. Two-oar altaehcd aarapo Largo kennel OTTAWA HILLS: porob, full tiled basement. FA host, 2V.-car brick garage. Suoh extras as awnings, itrtoxltr system, large attlo. fan. beautiful SSTsHoWn SY*APPOINTMENT. "WE nbe6 LISTINGS" John ,K. Irwin A Sons — Realtors 313 Wait Huron — Slnos 193$ Phone FE 5-0446 - EVE. FE 2-5593 BRICK COLONIAL HAMMOND LAKE PRIVILEGES I rooms. I bodfooms, 2V. baths. rsoroaUon room with ffroplsoo. 3-car garage, OWNER TRANSFERRED. IMMEDIATE POSSES- SUBURBANNORTH ' 4-room bunislow, 3 large bod-rooms, oj fa host, get your START HERE. Full wics .$7,450, TERMS. WILL TRADE. /Smith Wideman _ 412 WEST HURON ST. _ JPEN EYES.7FE 4-452B horns. Partitioned reoreatlon home, sew gee furnace. TRADE UP OR DOWN. In town J>r toko "front. °TOe former owners have bought** new Boau-tv-Rlte and traded to this 'comfortable 2 bedroom heavily IMUlatea. easily hoatgd lto oar garage. Full prloa 111.- RAY O'NEIL, Realtor 261 8. TELEGRAPH OFFICE OPEN tn ....‘‘•’• JTi Wanted!! the City of Pontine *-BLDG. CO. BATEMAN REALTY Ask for- ARCHIE OILES OR TOM BATEMAN . Wanted Problem Properties prise. NO. 145*. State Wide—Lake Orion QA 5-1000 BAR-HOTEL Good location on Lake Huron I Thumb area. Class B license so 8POTLITE FE 4-M-15 5 ACRES U O' .. COFFIN. MAN AND WIFE WITH GOOD HEALTH BUILDINO IS BOOMING IN ZHEROKEE HILLS SELECT YOUR SITE SOON I" Controlled to protoot belt h“"“ 15® « wooded, rolling , . ft No.xp.rl.no. «, successful, exclusive location—D r I CARL W. BIRD, Realtor Community National Bank Bldg. I 4-4211 Evas. FE HIM .CASH Lots—City of Pontiac ..mm.- $12,000 to $13,000 Opt sonal Interview will if you qualify. Total inveeunant 113,780 Includes now service vehicle, alLneoemr^equtpmen^snd tlelng. Down payment of 00,710 essential. Write letter stating background. Wo will consider a single man If ha masts our qual-IfloaHona. All repltei ore confl-dsntlal. Delamatsr Manufacturing BATEMAN OPEN Daily 5 to 7:30 New Models Your Choice of AMtfoiT MW uving tret. II1M ™" RANCHER 200 Aluminum siding. 3 bedrms.. 114 bathe, basement and bto 1-oar garage. Approx.1.100 m, ft^ living area. *12.200 ^RANCHER 600 ’ Aluminum elding. 3 bedrms.. basement and beautiful oak floors. *10,NO plus lot. „ only 10", -doom or your free and clear lot could bo down K»ent. Now 30-yr. mtgo. to Whtltlor (Opposite City Airport), loft to modoli. Watkins Hills Area of all now. homos snd pave, streets. 3-bodnn. b^ok ranoh.^SSJ HI-HILL VILLAGE (A controlled oommuntty) Large country slsod parcels. On winding pavsd roads Many on ossutlful hills. EKoollent drainage—good wells. Low as $1950 LADD’S, Inc. 3085 Lapeer Rd. (Perry M24) .. BOAT piSTRIBUTOR Sales, storage, and repairs. Ideal Urns to. gal ast up for sprint. On* of too finest In toe stats. Nat profit over M5.S00. MICHIGAN Business Sales, Inc. JOHN LANDMESAER. BROKER 117$ S. Telegraph_FE 4-l$$~ FULLY EQUIPPED RESTAURANT-IN Southern Oakland Co. on bus, highway. Seating for 1$, nowly, decorated Inside and out. Pun bries **,910 with $4.M* dn iomy to $25 to $500 on Your . SIGNATURE ■■■ Auto or Otbtr Security • FAST. CONVENIENT 24 Months to Repay Home & Auto Loan CO, LOANS $25 TO BAXTOR-ijymi 401 Pontlao Stats Bans 01 :FE 4-1538-9 iNOSTONH . TOM (BRAND naw), davenport snd ehslr, foam ettsMona. from' covers; 2 stop table*. 1 coffee table; 2 dororotor lt^Wari^hraARlSpNtg /uRNI-TURE, 42 0robardl*lio Ays. 0X12 RUGS .....' VINYL UNOLEUM ... PLASTIC WALL TILE bSottoji emitrisi ) CUBIC' FOOT 8BBLVADORE RE- jsra1......... ■ * 1, TV I, Rodlet ' only $8.93 KmW Jtoyaiir ”mw”*|».’m. l%Jy tGHNSON’S RADIO ■.... arid TV : 45 E. Wtlton near Baldwin FE 8^669 Authorised Admiral Dealer K NOW. oapy. - all slaes. i miles west of H PINE, WHOLE-_ also potted trees, A 5-1501 or MA 5-2537 PRUNED AND ft. wholenJs. On Itnortb-nf-Oxford. Sale Miscellaneous 761 147.50. 047-3521 after Signature AUTO or FURNITURE * Up to 24 months to r«pay PHOONE FS 2-9206 OAKLAND Loan Company -- 4 °ldg’ frlgerator. Polaroid l It-INCH USED TELEVISION, « inly^o modev' JOx . JOE mn, I - Silt ALL NTER PRICES AND ittog. Storm windows, istalloil or materials TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 N. MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO LOANS *2$ TO *SOO AUTOS AUTOMATIC SINGER All automatic sewing by slmi setting too dial. Desk model. Mi buttonholes, blind bom. appllq monogram, sow, on buttons, fanoy doslgas. tie. without attaolui Sold now for. 1100.08. Take . payments of 05.00 monthly ontOO.lT balance. Call FE 3-7623. Electro Hygiene Co. / BROWN SOFA. OOOD CONDCnbN. Pair of grym side chairs, M; 6-6926. : RAYETTE CHAIR DRYERS, , rod ray ftotnlsor. 667-5466._ I ATTIC TREASURE SALE: WALNUT coffee table and many othor it' FE 3-42W- - ATTItMTIVE IfONBEW/ SHAPED Christmas Trees, Bootoh. Spruce, Noywey Pina, 3 M ' — ed’ up, see alt around ^heni. I and Balsam ’ le bea^tlf * it atreift. !» 'ftdD“ at green aid, IFRKQCRAT BUCKNER FINANCE. COMPANY WHERE YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $500 omen in Pontiac — Drayton Plaint — Utica WYMAN’S BARGAIN STORE «Dum wasuer, ted refrlgerat, •PO.' liVlM rooi •po. sectional ,Jr’ g*e range . Apt- sjto range sifaie‘lME: m ..$39.95 a-1 ELECTRIC DRYER -Reeondlltoned Ironr'te Inner ■■ ivtag wringer Waeber . .. Igldalre apt. refrigerator ., - CRUMB ELECTRIC CO. 3463 Auburn Road , FE 4-3573 ACOUSTICON HEARING AID RE-. conditioned. ^Cu Ht^^moderately with l*y4j044 il«2. NEW OLASS BOAT. 2 JET ENGINE. owrT^jmymeat. i FORMICA. FLUMBINO. Olass. Hltdw.c Closed Thur* — Op, F* 0-4713. Montcalm “ Mor—— PAINT, v,a*>. a ■ , u . > > Wiring. Closed Thur* — Open Bimday. Fluorescent., 393 < CLEARANCE* BUNN , BEDS (WROUGHT IRON). cocnDlete with iDfings and mat> EDISON BABYCRIB. II D l E. LAST CALL FOR —CHRISTMAS— HOOVER (WEEPERS, all rtift t ^oRcrete floors FOR iALiT*WBDDINO RINGS. ---ilte gehf. 7~ diamond* hv -th* nd. 3 diamonds to toe engego- »nt ring. FE 3-4200._____ S INCINERATOR. OOOi OAR-g* grinder. 034.80. O. A, Thomp- n, 7& M-M, Wont: , .. rVURNACE. VBiSTUK* NEW. HI PEi-7l$i. lb USED OIL FURNACE. WILL ROLLER SKATES. MENS PROFES- _________e 0V4. 040. FB 4-340Q, ’ SNARE DRUM, COVER AND STAND AkLVE&toNE CONSOLE 21 INCH ..TV. OR 3-7264. ________________ 8IZE FOR CARI8TMA8 STOCKING, pocket or purse, male Manchester poppy, 3 month* old. Wormed. MA 8-3984._________. (W DIVING EQUIPMENT. 3 tanks, etande. ‘•regulators, i— e, large. |55. TV, ri fer combination, 90C. i marble top table., rtnackl 1 ACRES AT CORNER OF I win and Morgan Rde. Land gently rolling and partly wooded. Will divide readily Into several suburban PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE, REALTORS Member partridge A Assoc., Ino. Associate onto** thruout Mtoh. A Mortgage Problem? We make mortgage loans to meet your requirement#, any property, any amount. Prompt, dependable eorvld*. Remodeling and son strletlon loam. Cash and con tolldato debts. Cheff Mortgage and Realty Co. PE 2-iW* or 553-5700 :CASH ' Loans to $2500 Loans available to horn* purahaeoa ---*-x — equities, and fund- inR GLASS TUB ENCLOSURES, hood fane, OMNI: B grade to $10.00. O. A. Thompson. 7000 Wait._________________ HBARJNO^Ajtw^ '. LAST >r behind HOT WATER HEATER. 30 OAL-Ion gee. oonsumer *p—*H 100.08 value 039.9$ and marred. Mlohlaan Fluor Orchard l ) HEARING AIDS. ELECTRIC . *»<>« Humidifier. OR 3-371$. , WAOTBD: PAIR OP .BOY'S ROLL. tatoe, alee 3 or 314. FE $-241$. WOOLEY MOliiKEY, OR 3-321$.______ I Hand Tools-Machinery H HOI8T FOR JEEP FOR RAISING and lowering snow plow UL 2 3304. : LlARGE EQUIPMENT TRAILER. MO. Camsras - Service HOT WATER BASEBOARD, per ft.l big xavingi oa hot i neatlng auppllc*. O. A, Thorn] MOVIE ZOOM Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor Sale land Contracts Sals Farms UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE Owner Transferred 3-bodrm. On large lot, Watkins Lak* privileges eloa* by. F.A. ga* heat, ooey and oomfortable. 00.050, reasonable terms and quick t Clarkston Area Only 4 block* to new Clark* Sohqola. Like now 3-bedrm. br randher. Hi batoe.^paiwlod^tair oktra*. oven beautiful wall-to-w... oarpotlng Included. See lor your- WANTEd-1 D Small town ih^t bulldl attraottvo . living quarl nb dentlef eompotlttttrt No Mortgage Costs Sellers will pay all ml»e. oo*L tote 3-bedrm. ranoher with garage on 310-ft. deep lot. West eubur'— close to all new sohools Elizabeth Lake Are^ cede 517-843-0140. or write Ba« : Mayvtlle, Michigan. Lew Hileman—Pontiac’s TRADEX Realtor-Exchangor lot 1W. Huron— pb Tisto « IMMEDIATE SALE 01 ^ FOR YOUR : Land Contracts m us before you deal. Warm lout Realtor. 77 N. Saginaw SI ______FE 3-0161 20% DISCOUNT 9 land eontraot paying 7' per oen tercet. Purchase prole was 03. 0. Present balanee 01,412.94 --.030.30 to buy. TotaN dlecoun C. PANGUS, Realtor I ORTONVnXE - j Wantsd Contract»-Mtgs. 60-< CASH ,ur land qohtmet or equity, tgee available. Let an ei- ■ ROAD on auioe, non, «q< turn. 2441 months „ M all jour debts with only monthly payment. Family Acceptance Corp. 117 Nettop al HU “ ” ------ Tele yoftT il-Pj LEATHER jlpnent, *r ■ driven t Swaps Telephone FE 8-4023 _____6$; I COMMERCIAL LOTS In P* .... Trane equity on '82 or ‘63 oar or Income property, MY 3-1126 after 6. 1.500 EQUITY IN KNOTTY PIN ranch home, 5 weeded aeree for “Clear Trailer". Reply Is ISS 204 Highland, Michigan. LAVATORIES COMPLETE *34 50 valua $14.06, alaa. Htotub*. lele, shower *1*11*. Irregu terrific values. Michigan Flu eotil, 283 orohardi Lako. — i. I MAHOGANY .CORNER CHI .........vr ORtOIDAlRE AUTOltAjlC wash-er, 7 year* Old, l50, OB 3-0040, jRldlDXIiltll BLBCyRlc JStAho^ ; lOM-IISS FORD MR PARTS: 14) ' *70-15 tiros jib* new; Webeor — OLDS TRUCK FOR Sooltwood. reroriFe FRidiDAiM Washer, iso: bed-room set: rug; Mvlng room odd plooos, good condition, mult be eold. Mr 0-3441 tfter « p.m. "FIRST TIME IN MICHiOAN" WHOLESALE MEATS AND GROCERIES 8143 CABS-ELlk.- ACTION SELL PORTABLE HiFlpbettograpb wll 030 or. swap for si roooroer. Ml *0173 ovee, < Sals Cmhtiig CLOTHING NEW —NOT USED « TO W OFF Alice’s Wonderland 5*5 E. Maple I Blrmlnihi ige up to 40 per oent. soap, eugar. eoftee, flour, butter, cake mix, eereai, eeup, vegetable!, 'fruits, juice*. Kleenex, Pet milk. Examples: Dog food — 13 ter 8* eenlai baby toed — 14 far “ at toe$* prtoee. .047-1577, $ to 3. ten "Tfuororoont!0 393' orchard ,ake. - 35 * INDUSTRIAL ARC WeLdER. __1 amp. 8747 Lanear-'Rd,.... OFFICE DESKS $34.50: FILES *20.50: iperotanal obaire 10.00; •xoouuvas ehstrs 034.50; drafting table* 012.50; otorago cabinet* *37.50; now portable typewriter* *40.00: adding machine!, shop parts oablneta, mimeograph ma-chlnee, offset pres*, coat raoki. forbes, 41* Frank St., Birmingham, MI 7-14*4 or 4500 Dixie Hwy.. Drayton Plains, OR 3-07*7. Wo also buy. ORNAMENTAL' IRON PORCH AND J ACCORDION AND CASK, ilont condition. iaerUlo*. BEAUTIFUL LESTER SPINET, , CORNET^AND CAS^EXCELLENl' condition 000. FE -i-7409 ' LEW Betterlys I TIANQ SALE and JanaeSn Pianos, reduoed as muoh a* to per oent for spealal Chrlatmae eeutog. All stylee and finishes available. Prices Include , matching bsnob, delivery and tun* Special Chrletmae budget terms. No mmo^down and no payments ‘til You’ll bo Bettor at Bettorly’s Lew, Betterly Music Co. ltvoopdfto fVWWWtWa ■AVIS CAI rm 4-43*8. IAS RANOE. GOOD C .fAVE.. r ■■ Baglnaw RlaAtio tilIT plenty on this one. MORRIS MUSIC • 34 a. Telegraph Rd. FB 1-0B07 _ ■Aeroee from Tel-Huron 1 ACCORDIONS LOW PRICES, LOAN-OnEinB lD“ tment. f t Holly J monthly payment*. Auk About ,Our/ Trade-lit Plan/ Lifetime, Security Dletributorihtp* now avelleble Pontlao and eurroundtog area*. II-work wl started. I IM MEDIATE ActiON i(ti*r_Aek^ J&N 852-0900, 2330 Orohard Lake F--J n An IMMEDIATE SALE • POR YOUR ~ Land Contracts b*4or* you deal. Warren ealtor. 77 N. laglnar Rubber Rm* ............Oo Foot ‘ 1 {meld XiTo ,, .. . $0 pooh , The wear Shop EHI5 Bileabato Lake ] 4 after 0 H SQUIRREL product TV to w being advertised 01 RED WOOL COAT WITH collar, elxo Id. W8 0-7W. . .___ - * — —----- * IL DRESSES. SUITS, EM 3-4364. and etude,11 ..ll.saKL....... ...... Sols Hoatsliald Goods GAB RANGE ... bUTTON ELECTI ________jew, pi 44m. H^IME FURNI8H1NOS AND CLOTH- jiSme toTbe' rthire. M s Ewigm. Bate finish Main, Prlflnlthed Mahoi Preftoiehed Baho DRAYTpN 8511 Dixie Hwy.__ SIMMONS STUDIO BEE luTuonSo^jr™' eonabloUL 1.3045 ). good t :> Item*, ) totorvtewj. to . your city wrlto Do-mostlo Engineering, 11701 W. 10 MU* Rd„ Oak park, Mioh. Men on your lend oo»triT- _________ buyor* welttof. Can Realtor Par-trldgo. FE 4-!mi~ 1050 W, Huron. LAND CONTRACT BROKBA, EARL ' '"111; EM 3-4000. 0X11 RUQS. FOAM BACXj 114.05. Twoodt “*■.«, GroljiraMed. m.n - AxmluStoro, 140.05. mu nylon, rug pads. Hf ON’S FURNIYURE oha^l Lake A "tope, to* 0 toot, blao U wlilt revarberatlon,. ihe - guitar And., many other ream For only 5595. Up to 13.3*5. Yo Won’t believe It? Come In and *e tor yourself. Open every n|g>U tl ; PWGAyiaAGHER’S BEAyjlj'Uti UPRIOHT PIANO. CUt .. . down to medium alio. New Ivorlee. Covered with leather and mirror J®. : i£LL'i1 ACCoRbioi^' YTHBP0&TI-AC PRESS, TIJE$Dky> BECgMBEB 1»,J962 BALDWIN AZROTONIC SPINET PIANO, taw. Bench and cartage Included. ' MORRIS MUSIC 34 a. Telegraph Rd. PI 3-0587 •dWNMwTO “' -T- ' 8CHUMAN SPINET PIANO In rim mahogany, and like new ■ MOditim. MOVEp AND TUNED Sale Prloe ...........•>.***» ' Piano organ to tor * TOteaf . $199.95 —FLOOR MODELS - THOMAS MINUET ORGAN with Leelle. walnut flnleh 5-YEAR WARRANTY / f#75...... ....NOW/I* WA*t» SERENADE With le .8 ORGAN CONCERT it ftnlih, 24 ptodfyltoard. eue- ilned percueal S tmT......... 1 eee the "GOLD-taturlng the oare-md sell-contained OPEN ‘TIL 9 P.M. EVERY NIGHT WIEGAND MUSIC tea Elizabeth Lake Road , /■ FE 2-4924 ... HAMMOND SPINET ORGAN WITH percussion', like new Baldwin spinet- organ with parous- PIANO. $350, 2 VIOLINS. 1 CLARI-net.22$. FE 3-091$, STEINWAY GRAND PIANO, A , beautltul Instrument., must sell due to relocation, $1,795. 334-2902. WURtifUBR sWNBT OROAN. -----1 24794. 72 Inc machines and typewriters. VALLEY BUSINESS MACHINES . — ^TOuron rati Storo SOUTR 74 OUNS. ALSO USED guns. Bulaias Hardware. FE 5-4771. Open 0 to 0 dally. CHRISTMAS SPECIAL Scuba outfit. U.8. divers equip-tank, regulator, and wat t. OL 1-1452. ----------JIT, t75. FE $-3677 alter 5. HAND OUN8. SHOTGUNS. RIFLES. Bur, mu, trade. Burr-Shell, 275 S. Telegraph - X 2-470$. b &b7uctk>n iAkOET tY FRIDAY 7:30 P.M. -JT SATURDAY 7:20 P.M. [VEIW#UN5H----------2400 P.M. ? Sporting Goode — A” ‘C— DoorPriae. Every , We bay-sell-trade, rat Consignments wet... Dixie Hwy. OR 3-R717 JOHN. SUW Craft nwi eon urw awnri — Everything tor, the boat. OWW'BVARlNE 8UPRLIE8 . J4 OrohArd Laka Ava, PE 2-8020 MARINS INSURANdk, HANSEN Ntw awUlwiJmb - W|—MARMAJ7UKK By ABagfgpf & girting r mat high grade uaea ear. acc . UeforiVu sell. H. J. Van elt, 4640 Dixie Highway. Phone ft $»M66. , _____^ OUT-STATE MARKETS Extra Top Dollar FOR LATE MODELS M&M MOTOR SALES, Gale McAnnally JUST N. OP PONTIAC DRIVE-IN ---—2WT~DIXIE HWY:-- AUTO 4571 nisla Hwy. FERGUSON TRACTOR OAkDEN TRACTOR WITH ENOW blades' mower *ttftchment» 6126. OE6»i(jOO. ~ * HOLIDAY ORBETINOS: OUR SIN-oers wish Is that you have a vary, Merry Christmas and that tha New Year will bring you fbll measure gad o.perlty. Har* Hartlaild. X .McCulloch CHAINSAWS PRICED AS LOW AS $149.95 CREDIT TERMS — WE TAKE TRADES. USED CHAIN SAWS PRICED AT 275. KING BROS. FE 4 0734 FE 4-1112 ~-----------QPOYKB PONTIAC R Buy—Sell—Trade Skis • Tobogga— -is A Hargravas R sacrifice (or I 2-3572. GRUAM I Howard, EM >4)621. _ OOOD DRIVEWAY GRAVEL. 5 yards tor 13. dsllvsrsd. Also 111) sand* FE 4-0588. , Wood-Coal-Coke-Fuel 77 ing FE 4-4223 or OR 34H45-___________ Holiday special, fireplace wood, round and split logs, 514.51. Hoavy slab wood. 510 dsllvered. MA 4-2503.______________________________ TO OOOD 10 OALUJN COMPLETE AGUAJU-517.25. Ipcludaa 2 fra# trnploal iflsh. AKC bACHSHUND PUPS. SI# down, Stud doga^E 3-2538. AKC DACHSHUND PUPPIES, JUST ____J attar 4 p.m. AKC KtODLEB — ALL COLORR Christmas — Clippings, $3. FE B-3311 or FE 4*0403.________ BEAUTIFUL AKC PUPPIES. FE- male, FE 4-091B,_________ BLACKPOODLE PUPPIES. HOUSE-broken. OR 3-9333. BORDER COLL’* LATE MODEL FARMALL CUBS WITH SNOW BLADES KING BROS. FE 4-0734 PE 4- PONTIAC RD. AT OPDYKE Travel Trailers H A1R8TREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1932. Guaranteed for See them and get a WBik OtB red' Dachehund puppies. M24H17. CHlUstMAS SPECIAL OITtoODLE clipping slid bsth, 17. Studs, also piipp.7 ul a-iin. Dachshund male f.u bfy. i .. westo oid. >38. OR 3-OOM. — DACHodUND PUPPiEB. ARC REO-istcrad, OL 1-Q533. ___ TO*^*U85*r________________ Phil'"UrrTBNS. some l o n o riwBfilxW1'nMHPXhD PtilPPlES. a<6 Rsa. 345.00; MA 4-31104 keeshCnd. akC. 4 Months FE-male. All shol*. LI 7-9200. . POODLE STYlSicrsViVANniiL. sfetiok' ^ of Shuar* Lk. and Woodward. FE 2-8400 erenlnga., _ PURE WHITE MALE POODLE. poobiff'puppncs. akc, brov - aprtoot. «41Tlilr«, ,- POODLES-TOY" parakeets OUARANTEEBi to WUl lEId ^rtttmaCi : , :: _ • POODLES h# Hunt's Pet Shop/. FE »-3i_l? PURk iRED BOSTON BULL- PUP-Pies, deposit WMj hold, FE 2-40J2. SiAfflHB “klffiNSrli* 2-3495 att»r SB.m. _____ . . _ EXPERT MOBILE HOME REPAIR serviee, tree eetlmatte. Alio parts aod accessories. Bob Hutchinson Mobile Home Seles. Inc., 4201 Dime Hwy., Drayton flams, FALL SALE • up to 5400 off list pries _ Trotwood. Oarway, Laviron. F Wa-Wa . and Holly. Also many trailers to enooss from. JACOBSON TRAILER SALE >50 williams Laka hd. OR 1 Bob HylebinsiMri sales. 4301 tUxls Hwy,. Drayton Pa'rkhm st Trailer Sales -FINEST IN MOBILE LIYINO-Featurlng New Mnon—Owoeio— venture — Buddy Quality Mobile Homes, . ^, Located hall way betweei. Oriox and Oxiord kb M34 My 3-4411. “shORTS MOBILE HOMES Oocd_ used home type trailer*. 10 PER cent DOWN. 0»re wired and hltehee Installed. Complete r.----> ptrd ehd bottl^gaa Hwy., Drayton 1 ..vr - AND Mi T-h^m-New’' 1963 FANS, FRANKUNS, (TREES. —1$ to |8' on dleplay— real GOOD buys on ALL Ujl —Open 1 day* a week—. _ Holly Travel Coach, InC. 16210 Holly Rd,. Holly HI Tire*-Autotruck 8 Tlwwjy. .Vigr" Meter Iceeter*^ NIFTY, THRIFTY, HONDA 5# 315 ml, per gal,. 48 mph pas slectrlo starter. $10 down. Anderson Sales, PE 3-»?9», BEATTIE ___ ____ WATERFORD AT THE STOPLIOHT OR 3-1291 BEATTIE AUTO INSURANCE FOF ANYONE NICHOLIE Sc HAROER .0 CANCELED? REFUSED? , YOUNG DRIVER Over 10 yrs. experience Insuring ■ Canceled and Refused Auto Local Serviee — Terms FOR INFORMATION CALL ■ FE 4-3535 FRANK A. ANDERSON, AGENCY .044 Joslyn _FE 4*8538 NQ .RATJP INCREASE No M«»mbwrfthip Fees— d II r QUARTERLY , . $25,000 liability. $1,280 medical, $20.-0WV uninsttred' motorist coverage. ^ 2 CARS $16^ roftd i6rv^ inoludlng FREE’ map and ~ !mett agency S5~S.'Twfs>ranb FK lerelgw Cut, IPS 1989 HILLMAN MINX 4' • POOR. 4* speed transmission, leather trim. Om> $495 Easy term*. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1008 8. WOODWARD AVE . BIRMINGHAM finsh extra clean. Only 11545. Easy tsrms PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1808 S WOODWARD AVE.. ----inch........ —* Volvo Dealer Pontiac Sports Car, Inc. 467 /Auburn FE 5-1511 1958 VVV Radio, heater, let blaek nnian, one owner oar, ESTATE 8TORAOB AUTHORIZED LIQUIDATION SALE PRICE $797 Who’s helping who! 106 Naw and Uud Can jAC, excellent con- 1193 Coshocton. / OLET BEL A« 4 DOdR cylinder, standard shift, wo. Easy1 * terms. PATERSON CHEVROLET CO 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. MI ' 4-3735.______: „( ■______ lMO'cHEVROLET IMPALA 2-DOOR HardtolT 6-oyllnder, sisnaard shift, radio, heater. whUewalla, Lurquols and whtt. WOODWARD AVE. B1R-MINOHAM. MI 4*2738. 1985 CHEVY, 2Hi TON 2 SPEED. > E. Walton. 1 block off « CHEVROLET STATION WAOON, clean, full prio* $197. Assume payments ol 52.70 per week with no money down. Call credit man- Naw and Uud Cars 106 1940 CHEVROLET ’ 0-PASSENGER station wagon; with radio, heater, automatic transmission. 1175 down, 155.15 per month I One year war- LLOYD'S. Llncoln—Mercnry—Comet Met-or- English Ford --- 232 8. Saginaw FE 2-9131 Naw and Uud Cars excellent eondl...... ... down. Full price 5157. Assume payments of $2 2i per week. Csll credit manager Mr. hlle at KINO AUTO SALES. US I. Saginaw, FE S4M02, »7 FORb CONVERTIBLE. RADIp. HEATER. AUTO. TRANSMISSION. aBsolumly no Moray down- Assume payments of 15.52 per Wf*k - Call Credit Mgr . Mr. ptrto, at Ml 4*7500, Harold Turner. Ford. 1957 foRD T-BIRD CONVERTIBLE rp brown with a price 11.795. On* LLOYD'S lilneobi—Meroury—Comet- .. \. Meteor—Eb(ll»bF«rd 232 S. Saginaw FE 2-9131 - 1959 FORD GALAXIE 2-DOOR WITH radio, heater, automatlo transmission. white with a rad.. Interior, $1195. T JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 0>6 OAKLAND AVE. -E Mir t FORD CUSTOM "300" 2-DOOR JOHN McAULOnM FORD 430 OAKLAND, AVE, ~E 5-4101 M0 FALCON 3-DOOR 8EDAN. 6 cylinder, stick shift, radio, heater, deluxe Interior, - radio, beater, whitewall tires. Extra nice. Only 21,090. Eaays terms, JEROME-FERGUSON. Rochester Ford Deal- Birmingham* Rambler 1956 CHEVROLET . station wagon, VS auto,, radio, boater, exc/ running oondltlon, Full price only SM3. SURPLUS MOTORS 171 g. Saginaw . FE 44034 2-door VI tnglnt. automatlo trana-mtsslon. radio, heater, whitewall tiros, solid white paint, red and white .leather interior, real sharp. - $1195 ; JEROME "BRIGHT SHOT" Orchard Lake at Cass FE 8-0488 WILLYS JEEP ST A 1941 CORVAIR MONZA 4-DOOR twaNaMISSION ..... omtoL standard0* tra^T ShiAW^MwWe: omloal standard trans- Ly NO money DOWN. Assume payments/ol-SMiiajermo^Call Credit Mgr.. - Mr. Parks, st MI 4-7800, Harold Turner, Fora. 959 FORD 9-PASSENOER STATION wagon, with radio, heater, standard ACTION SALE 1957 DeSoto A shimmering 2 tone green jewel with radio and heater, auto, tram mission, power steering an paha*UiKll*vea0bla*lolwnpriee 359! R & R Motors OLDEST CHRYSLER DEALER IN THE AREA 724 OAKLAND AVE. ”” “M 1(0* weekly payments 18 40 Estate Stonijij'e Co7 109 8. East Boulevard at Aubu:.. FE 3-7141________ FE 3-7142 signals, Oakland County Sportscar Center A Choice of 25 Used Imports Authorized dealer for TRIUMPH. SUNBEAM, HILLMAN. FIAT. MOROAN. MO AUSTIN HBALY * Expert Service SUPER1Q# HAULER 1963 FIAT, 40 MPG 3110J 1998 Maoo, 40 MPO % l»j 1457 Volkswagen. .... . 4 591 ECONOMY MOTOR DISCOUNT flnl.h. ESTATE STORAOE AUTHORIZED SALE PRICE. ’ LIQUIDATION $397 Estate Storaue Co. 194 4. Bast Boulevard at Auburn . 3,ffoi —• • 2 VOLKSWAGENS! 1442 Volkswigen Convertible . 1341 Volktwaitn Sunroof ... 1944 Volkswagen Sedan .— 1345 Volkswagen Sedan ..... 1935 Volkswagen Sedan ..... PRICED TO SELL WARD-McELROY, Inc. Ntw 4434 W. Huron TRUCKS OR 4-0444 FE 3-0114 OR 3-3433 Ntw aitd Uisd Car* 106 1533 BUICK SUPER 3 DOOR. OOOD tiros. 45.000 ml. >390. OL 0-0204 1955 BUtCK LeBABRE. OOOD CON- tpr'p j-Ui-u OLIVER BUICK and J|£EP 310 Orchard Laka FE 2-510) 1959 WILLYS JEEP Awheel drive, equipped with ipud and snow tires. 6-cylinder engine, heater. This is just what you need -for this kind rof weather. ONLY $995 EASY TERMS JEROM E-FERGUSON RoolMster Ford Dealer IS Main St. OL 1-5711 l TRUCK SPECIALS i?n2^000* mllea ii TON PANEL. 1MI CHEVROLET Corvtn, eha ' 51,453 1358 chevrolIt 2 ten. M ft. i 1240 CHEVROLET Ol it FORD one let CrideamatloVtrai 1540 FORD T-400 lump, reconditioned houtl 48.500. WE TRADE-— . ■: V. EASY TERMS V John McAuliff^ Ford\ I960 BUICK L«8ABRK 4-DOOR 8 LLOYD'S Lincoln—Mercury—Comet Meteor—Bngllah Ford 332 S. Saginaw FE 2-9131 1557 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR STATION S..leWn^uuX'MM‘1,airOOR, powergllde, power steering. : Our Christmas To you Aek for ‘‘St. Nick MI 4-4468, Bird 1962 CORVAIR 8P Y DER TURBO LLOYD'S ACTION SALE ^ Suburban^ Old. ^ 1960 Valiant ard shift, radio, heater, whitewall lng trim. This osr has had very good car* and u is the perfeet JEROME "BRIGHT SPOT" Orchard Lake at Cass EE &048B LLOYD'S Lincoln—Mereury—comet Meteor—English Ford 222 8 Saginaw FE 2-9131 1959 FORD RANCH WAGON. RA-dlo. Mate- and automatlo Irani-mission, all blue with no ruat, no oaah naadadl Assume payment, of 97 par week. Universal Auto. Ex-Chany*. ISO S. Sagalnaw St. FE 1960 FORD 2-DQPR WITH RADJO, heater, and llto new whitewalls, Sava lota on thl* honey I 11245 JOHN MeAULIPra FORD 430 Oakland Ave. _____________FE 8-4101 1981 FORD 4-DOOR SEDAN. 4-CYL- aaj, automatic, power radio, heater, whltewalle. Light blue flnleh. Only HA FATTER-SON CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 3. WOODWARD AVI.. BIRMINGHAM whitewalls, real n JOHN McADLIFPE FORD 830 OAKLAND AVE. FE 8-4181 1960 FORD Galaxie Red Finish. Bsautlful matchlni Trim, Fully equipped I 544.59 pei month, 315$ Down, or eld 0«r! Spartan Dodge ••The House eervle* Is buttdlni”. Ill S, Ssxlnaw FE 9-454 1959 FORD "THUNDERBIRD' hardtop. ‘ ACRQ88 FROM MIRACLE MILE* 1955 Chevy V6 engine, automatlo tranemleilon. K8TATEWafoRAoi&aAUTHORIZB^ LIQUIDATION 8 A LB PRICE. $97 Low weeklyj>aymentn of $1.10 Estate Storage CoT' seTtLe "estate. ' loSomlss?1 FEbb5r-i 1PE DsVILLB. ISM CADILLAC CjOl L?fcKV nAUTO>,1*lAtllts!n ,bPon- tlac's Discount Lot,'' 193 S. Sagl-naw, FE 4»>314. 1964 CADILLAC COUPE DeVILLE W,«$IfVriS.Tp^ct Marvel Motors *51 .Oakland Av* P> 3-4079 1961 Cadillac Coupe DaVIII*. power brakes, pow- ses‘sf*hy<^'smidlortrsnsmlssloii, radio, haalsr, whitewall Ursa, E-Z eyeglass, rsal aharp. reduced from ’ 10 $3695 JEROME "BRIGHT Orchard Lake nt Cats FE 8-0488 1943 CHEVROLET IMPALA HAftfi-(op, V9 engine, powgrgllde, power &*8jlJ^M^termi. VaweS-vJoodward AVBT, Birmingham m I'hbv lb 4-doqr V# bW ,’Kra“i«S.,T.S MINOHAM MI 4-2733. 1061 CHEVROLET IMPALA CON-vertibie. V8 engine. powerKltde, \ radio, heater, whitewall* Royal 193* 'em* |lterm«' ^V’lr&'Lolii CHEVROLET . CO. 1900__S,. Wffi 1989 BUICK LeSABRE 3-1 hardtop. Radio, haalor, all tor._ power aleerln*. aharp white and la a ona-ownar. 1175 down and 948.18 per month. On* year warranty I LLOYD'S Ltnooln—Meroury—Comet Meteor—English Ford 333 8. Saginaw FE 2-9131_____ 1981 ^CHEVY ^EXCELLENT TRANS-M832#sr'sag!nawlMr . lens 5o!xj i"v$8TA NbARlTTrXnS • i^_2-9i3i _ : AViJsS Dr.SE»Tn. ca°untvoerK: , Marvel Motors 57 FORD. 3-DOOR. RADIO AND heater, 4, .tick, $379. ZL 4-4137. fe87 FORD 4 -DOOR1' STATION wtgon, VI engine, automatic tranemltalon. and I. real aharp. With only $8 down and $39.43 Marvel Motors 231 Oakland Av*. ________ FE 1-4073 SPECIAL l$M FORD, 3-DOOR, ONE Birmingham Rambler M4 8 Woodward h COUNTRY M SQUIRE WAOON^ »t Ml 4-78$$. Harold T >338 Dixie or 23 Auburn DON'T BUY ANY NEW OR OsSd CAR until.you yet our dealt Com- 110MEH MIGHT MOTORS, INC Chevrolet—Ponllac—Bulck OXFORD OA 3-23 1953 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR is chbvyTiadio AND'HlXTir excellent condition, full jjrljje 397 we'eknwlttlUno><'iiion*y down! dall 1V37 CHEVY 8, 2-llOOR H, Rlgglnt. Dealer ,, ........ 1934 CHEVROLET 2 hOOft SEDAN. With 1 V9 engine, automatic trant- '•fg: Sales,. 139 S. Baglua; •ton. M43 full price With no *y down. LUOKY AUTO BA “Pontlae'i Discount Let." 1 PATTkdtu’in Ctftcvttol.rr 1009 6, WOODWARD AVE,. MINOHAM Ml 43775. ' 1940 tfftWftMiliT 9-PAUENOBR elation wagon. VI angina. Power-glide, power steering and brakes. aiSaE tires, A-t Ihaps, best effar. 453- dooR wagon. 1962 DODGE leer 4-door, auto., radio, ohai 11348. Van Camp Chevrolet, In Mlllord_______________MU 4-1(1 "DeiOTO. RADlp AND HE ATE full power, excellent conditio full price on llilx brown ai Whit* bounty Is 3197 with W4« KlNt^AUTO SALES loTa Idsel ''Td6or“h ardtop. beautiful light brown with matoh-lug Interior. Full price 1497. Pay-ments of 14.49 per week I No money down! UNIVERSAL AUTO BALES. 139 8. Saglnew St. FE 4-4071. 1$M FORb 2 • t>OOR. RADIO'AND r___ 4l^*°Aslum _____ 83.33 p^ijw.akdjWlthi no^mmay White el KINO AUTO BALES, 1959 FORD/52-DOOR, V8 ENOINE with automatlo transni-JhuviJgnJUa »m!CLUU^-AUTOi_. SALES. "Pontiac'* Dlocouul Lor IMS T-BIRD, 1 OWNER-AND (town V, drfifi ltW*wiy. L^Cl AUTO SALES. "Ponllao'e I count Let," 191 S. Saginaw, ism'foRd" country ‘sedan, kA-bio, HEATER, AUTO. TRANS-MtiSIOW" WHITEWAIL '«R«t ~ ABSOLUTBLY NO MONEY DOWN Aeauatt paymenle ot 9*9.7$ per mo WMCWf “ FORD LQW.COS7 BANK LOAN e Bank- FE 4 1961 FORD -WAGON a ntti. work, hut a go_ "piciTOf. •tie. spotlit* 4*0116. W roRD carpeting. Equipped with automat- arllnroudr*V'*f.lBW^OUowner? Die* check on this one-ewner honey *t our .low prloe of only $1,716 Including our written lull year guarantee. Eaay term* , to fit your budg- CHRYSLER PIOfMOUTH, 913 8. WOODWARD. Ml 7-3314. 1939 PONTIAC WaOON. POWER steering. Power bra' transmission. Clean. ACTION SALE AT Suburban Oldt Regardless of coat! Our Chrlstmaa present MarHn- ___Ml 4-4483, Btrminiham I CADILLAC, 1958, SHARP W power ateertns and brakea, i tires and exhauat. EM 3-48)3. 1995-54-57 BUICKS iw m 1197. No Money Do' and only 91144 per month credit no Problem I Universal Auto I ales 1957 Buick 2-door hardtop, Automatlo transmission, power steering, power brakes, radio, boater, rani sharp and axtra clean, apaclally priced at $495 , JEROME "BRIGHT SPOT" Orchard Lake at Cass FE 8-0468 new Prim mileage, new ear trade, reduced ■from 12191 to * $1995. ’ JEROME "BRIGHT SPOT" Orchard Lake at Cass FE 8-0488 WAGONS 1957— 1959— 1961’» 9 to CHOOSE FROM! TAKE YOUR PICK! FROM $595 UP Jerome- Ferguson Rochester Ford Dealer 215 Main St. OL 1-9711 RAMBLER ean 2-door, 91,791 dj... 5SE RAMBLER PER MARKET FAIRLANE HARDTOP8 No Caeh Needed! UNIVERSAL AUTO. EXCHANGE 941 FORD 2-DOOR FAIRLANE. cylinder, eluomallo IransmUstoi tra sharp. Only 41.525. Easyjsirn JEROME • FERGUSON. Roehsi ler Ford Dealer. QL 1-97)1. ^ A-l ’ ’ Your c r. Call - j Unitor 8-6010 STARK HICKEY, FORD Clawson on 14 Mile Roed eaet of Crooke LLOYD'S reurXn'Comet —~, igllsti Ford ___ Saginaw FE 2-9131 t$40 MERCURY T-DpO^apANTt iglne. atlel hltawall IU— ■_ Rochester Ford Dealer. OL 1-4711 ■ ' ST MERCURY 4-POOR.^RAlHO *ume paymente of 93.98 per weel with no mohty town, e*u eredl manager Mr. Cook at: __ -K4NG-AUT& SALES 189 MERCURY MONTEREY door aadan. with radio, baste maro-0-mauo transmission, powi Hearing and brak«a, 9110 do* assume payment, of $91.39. LLOYD'S- Haegtsrtst , rawtr ■ $2195/ JEROME "BRIGHT SPOT" Orchard Lake at Cass FE 8-0488 1958 Buick mieeion. wnitewun i $795 John McAuliffe, Ford 09 Oakland Ava. l'E 5-4101 HASKINS Winter * Tranportation 1993 CHEVROLET IMPALA Converll- TWMTOlM and llsad Cars * 1* KESSLEH' * DODGE ogr/h^d: himiSi rt’lSTpeV weeT-iith -7 money down. Call credit map-(er at WHO AUTO SALES. Ill -------- ~T B^M. ' Exeallant i ae oown and M per flnanea! Universal Auto _ •*" - — FE Min. FORD. STATION WAOON, (JNH ner ear, automatte transtmegfep. g__toatarT^iir^town $4 99 per wk. NO PAYMENTS TILL FEBRUARY. Birmingham:; Rambler ■ nt call or CaltFE 4 MUNITY COMMUNITY'NATIONAI^SaNK Chevy ettek t. 2-door, radio, heater, whitewall*. On*' ♦( -■-----1.- Priced rtght. HEE AT >FLIB AUTO OAgj^ 3r WHITEWALL TIUIB, POWER 8TEERINO. ABSOLUTELY NO SnmfflHvf — m—la portatton. dill afier u, FE 1961 Pontiac Catalina, 4-door hardtop, automatlo tran.mlislon, power ateerlng, power brake., radio, ' heater, iraltewaU tire., Crui-O-Matto. and many other extra*, sparkling maroon flnleh with matching Interior, ono-pwner and real eharp, reduced from MISS to $1995 JEROME "BRK®L/i SPOT" Orchard Lake at Casa FE 8-0488 ----W ntitr iWr.. CHRISTMAS QIFT ■ beautiful, metallle red Fon-Catallna 1 le fully equipped 1 $ power brakea and altering - —— —tutted glad * tires and delivery. Call apicer, r a 3-1111. ext. >3. . 959 FORD GALAXIE 4-DOOR, tdf-or steering condition. “ Rochester Rd Near Lakeyu MM..........._jsm 8 Pontlaoe — '38 and *44 ECONOMY MOTOR^EhTCOuBt “11 Dixie Hwy t$4 a. woodwan 1940 PQNTIAC CATALlMA 4-bo6R rlth hydramatlo transmission, rail*. heater, power eteering and irakea. whitewalls. 9193 down. , llaupt Pontiac f Open Monday. Tuesday and On*. Mtl#NorIhUof US 2 CHEVY II 4 door with powei leering, brtkee/ and POwarylJde inultlon. W> d t e, showroom .............7 a id and whit* «n HASKINS Chevrolet-Olds I960 COMET - ' Straight stick t-door. Ntw rubber. $1095 SEE THE "DEPlftlDARLBS" KESSLER'S DODGE 1 N. Lapeer Rd. Oxford ■•it to world's largest gravel pit A 5-1400 or OA 1-1441 1541 AMBASSADOR. WAOON. Ptlt-L ---- -----‘■‘toning, Florida oar, at 4144 down *nd NO FAYMENTB , FEBRUARY. Birmingham ■ Rambler PI8CHBR BUICK Marvel Motors - 661 Oaklend Ave. _____PK $-4079 ___ Your Choice of I bsautlful 1142 Tempest con-' vertibie.. One rid wttl HSNSfefL™. metio tr»n»miMion. | •t#«rlng Priced Ai $2,006. PO^TIAC-CADILLAC 1 1350 N. Woodward Birmingham MI 4-lS^W) ■pr M,. YfflRTY THE PONTIAC PRESS. fasfcrtMEr. DBCKMBRlt is. nun ' m mi ^f/AXimr It? Birmingham “Rambler -kraST* * Is Ilk* newt 9266 down, and asson payments ofr$70i62 per month I O year warranty! LLOYDS Lincoln—Mercury—Comet Meteor—English Ford 1951 PONTIAC. __________ __________ ~hle(. hardtop. clean. Original Own- heater. Jiydramatlc. pow« i and Ui*d Cars 101 . ECONOMY SPECIAL, 961 HMjfMfcByj;■ jLwfwawaraww ■■ 45 MPO. m down «nd only fft.W Uf fAY“*NIS ** Birmingham Rambler Ofamittfe . •«i«,TkoHBT WITH ■ a Pontiac ““im . buying a OTWMWSfctAWTQ 312 W. Montcalm 1 (It block ¥. of Oakland) PE 1958 PONTIAC •Utr Chief, Moor. Power steering, power brake*. Real ate* car, SEE THE “DEPENDABI.ES ' KESSLER'S DODGE 10 JC Lapeer Rd. ’ Oxford ** OAW«”l«OQ* or^A* «-g16»ae. P « 157 MERCURY8, r front. 2-doors — 2-t 4-doors - and hMI 1 ranging In price from 6967 UNIVERSAL A *sp. D MON- I payment* of 994 per LLOYD'S . ..2 8. Saginaw FE 2-9131 1M1 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE C vertlble. 4 on IT 1 'HE powered. FB (-2237 • FORD. CONVERTIBLE, FLOR-lda bound, runs like a dream. $49 down' and only *9.9», per wk. NO PAYMENTS TILL FEBRUARY. , BimlftShani Rambler . Woodwan II 8-3900 1959 PONTIAC BO&NEVILLE CON-vertibie, radio, banter, post-steering and brakes, big engli 91,595 lull pries. . LLOYD'S .*■» Special - . _ 1959 PONTIAC 19M RAMBLER 4-DOOR. BIRMINO- Is really nine. $1695 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clemens $4. FE 47954* , il .red ig lmerioi II price only 6367. | menti of 62.73 per wee UNIVERSAL A rf Oakland) FE 5-9231 RUSS JOHNSON’S USED CAR,SPECIALS! Fresh Stock of Sharp Cars IMS BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE Power steering, power brakee This Is a demonstrator and has I new car warranty. - LESS THAN FACTORY INVOICE 1962 RAMBLER CLASSIC WAGON Brand uawt Last one left and raat deal for you. —__— DISCOUNT 9(00,.... 1992 RAMBLER CONVERTIBLE Another brand new car and A doued up and ready to go. DISCOUNT IBM. ISS2 TEMPEST CONVERTIBLE DISCOUNT ISOS. M CHEVY CONVERTIBLE INI CHEVY IMP ALA , oor hardtop with power steei . power brake). This la a on. 19S2 PONTIAC QRAND PI Turauols flnlih with wh BOB BQRgT on tlfli \MI 6-45! BIRMINGHAM 1961 AMERICAN. STATION WAGON, rATION WAO islon. radio, b er. beautum our at 9129 _dos and *8.69 per wk. NO PAYMQNI TILL FEBRUARY. Birmingham' Rambler 956 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 3-door hardtop, sharp tu-tone green flnlsh. Full price 91.299. One year LLOYD'S- Lincoln—Mercury-Comet Mew EndUsed Cw» 106 I966-PONTIAC 4 DOOR WAGON. RAiqiljy L. Suy^TWITH "fWl. Ji WARRANTY at vour new ear Heal- T! mouth. was. ■; • ECONOMY MOTOR DISCOUNT ' MS BUY YOUR NEW RAMBLER HOUGHTEN & SON SM. W. M AlP 41 Rochester OL 1-9761 166r Vd&Eyg^lk, LOW TBuE- 1957-. Plymouth . radio, heater1!* To run ae'good^an look as good as u doM.lt/eurel: mU8th£ftV4te*SLw«e**3" wtittv guarantee. Priced for quick sal. R & Motors OLDE8T CHRYSLER DEALER IN THE_AR*» OAKLAND AVI. 1966 RENAULT, NO, RUST. REAL dean, full prior 9397. assume weekly payments of 94.65, call credit manager Mr. Cook at: KING AUTO SALES' CLEARANCE MUST SELL 56 CARS CMEAPIES ;** chevy, v*j ottos ^. .’■»-?.* 84 Auitln,, 65 Pontiac. ’91 Lloyd, i ’56 Chavy v - ... ’66 Dodge Club Coupe -- MUST SELL CLEAN UP 3NEY DOWN NECBSt Superior Rambler ftp the Hme 4'x7’x3/a6M V grooved prime r coat mahogany paneling PONTIAC PLYWOOD CO. 1488 Baldwin Ave.____________FE_ PICK TV PrESfiNT .....GHRISTMAS -4-— U FEBRUARY. Birmingham Rambler WE’VFi GOT A LOT OF CARS! BUY'NOW and SAVE! Bonneville hardtop.. 9269! 962 Pontiac hi_„„. .......... Bonneville hardtop ...... Bonneville hardtop ....... ___Bonneville convertible . 662 Pontiac hardtop ....... — ipest 4-donr sedan . _____jS convertible ......... 962 Paloon Future ......... 962 Bonneville convertible . 961 Star (Shirt hardtop ..... *“ "96” hardtop ....... iouth 9-nass. wagon bier deluxe wagon . 8S . m . 61095 . 61465 anfan SHELTON Pontiac-BuicJc ROCHESTER OL 1-8133 Open Mon,. Tues.. Thurs. 6:36 to f Used? Yes Abused?. No 1661 Ford Falcon 2-door sedan with radio, heater, and automatic trahsmlBston. A real sharp blue beauty with^a matching interior WILSON pontiac-cXdillac 1350 N. Woodward Biripingham MI 4-1930 Pre-Christmas Savings on all 1962 Models Buy a Car That Is Loaded With Extras— for the Price of a Standard Model! * ’62 BUICK Invlcta Convertible 12698 ’92 BUICK Lelabra Moor . 926 ’62 BUICK Skylark Hardtop .. 624 ’62 BUICK Speolal V6 4-door .. 621 ’62 BUICK Special 2-door V6 621 ’62 BUICK Special Deluxe ... 122 Spttcials Above- for This Week Only OLIVER BUIQK ■emir r braXes. Thl. U i, all white ftiitah, ■ oSi.tto* 1966 RAMBLER 4-DOOR SEDAN 6 cylinder engine, stick shill. A on. owner ear and In extrn sharp to ftnlib. You’ll love Itl *1.019 1*66 PONTIAC 4-DOOR SEDAN Power aiaertng, power brake), au-tomatlo transmission, whitewall SELECT USED CARS MM RamMer wagon .M05 ■HSiB* m inisim' T95BCHEVROLETS We have | to ebooeo from: On* ■ V* engine and powerglldt. o--door with Vg engine and p glide. ■’ 24-Hour Specials NO PAYMENTS UNTIL 1963 ’62 RAMBLER ‘‘400’’ Ambassador $2188 ’62 CHEVROLET Spbrt Coupe V-t engine, automatic transmission. radio, boator and real $2095 .■’OrSQRft———- Galaxie “5QP** Sedan UtluiuaUr sharp autumn gold 2-Door with V*6 engine. Ford-O-Matlo transmission, radio and *60 RAMBLER 4-Door Sedan $888 ’61 CORVAIR "700” 4-Door Sedan $1288 -^4-XHEVROLO'--------- Bel Air, Sedan $148: Matthews-Hargreaves 2 .Russ Johnson ■ i; PopHRCeRRmblfcr —5-416L • Make- Orion s *} MY 3X266’! r„ 631.. Oakland at Cast .FE 4-4547- y Christmas items for tliat extra TV or recitation room Your choice of beautiful new pull-Tup—chairs — 2—for 6283ML A~ good value' at any price. Extra •pedal at this 2 and for 1 price! . 9x12 IlnMeum. perfect for mat extra rood) - only 26.95. fa Jalfulii GULBRANSEN TRANSISTOR organs Starting at $995 THOMAS, ORGANS. with fnmoui 5-year warranty Starting dt $499:95-- Starting at $995 WIEGAND MUSIC 469 BUxaheth Lake Road- FE 2-4924 - Open until 9 p.m. every night Christmas Shoppers Vlelt the — "SHOPPE OP ANTIQUITY" 7766 Highland Rd. (M-59) Open 16 A.M. to I P.M. 5156 Andersonvllle Rd., Waterford LIGHT FIXTURES FOR ALL rooms, medicine cabinets, b"‘” ranges, hoods, refrigerators, tubs, toilets, pumpa, kitchen i IgVShl -d m e buy. se{t or trade. Come ,c id look around. 2 acres of fr irking. Phone FE 5-9241 LIQUIDATING ENURE STOCK EVERYTHING MUST GO fir 9ap BAKERY TREATS FOR Deliciously ^differ* TED'S ------llGifts Qf Fun” F6r Everyone Olft Certificates For' Bowling ballt, bags, shoes HURON BOWL 2829 Illeabsth Lake Rd. FB 5-2525 1962 PONTIAC lonnevllle Vista, radio and L^-. ir, Hydramatlc transmission. This s real nice and only *2,898. ^PONTUC RETAIL STORE WILKINS BAR AND RESTAURANT Dinner out tor the whole family. , 4106 ORCHARD LAKB AVE- Christmas Special!. KAREN CARPKT 4526 Dixie Hwv. , Dray OR 3-2100 or OR 3-3311 Monday and Friday '(il 6 Weekday* til 6 EXAMPLE: 1862 45x10' all new eom- furniehedi $2,485. EXAMPLE: 1958 Cuitom-buttt Mir- Joe or' Lou."paRKHUR8T TRAILER SALES. 1540 Lapeer Rd., Lake tng. hunting goode, marine aocee-eorles and novelties. BOATS—MOTORS—TRAILERS CRU1BB-OUT BOAT SALES 13 B. Waiton , . PE 9-4403 Dally 0 to 0 Sundoy 12 to o * Christmas Special 1 DuPont ’501’ Nylon Rug 4690 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Monday and Friday ’til 0 Weekdays ‘ ’til I DECORATE YOUR TREE , HOME Of“VoUR OWN HAGSTROM REAL ESTATE 49(H) W. Ilin on OR i.ima REBUILT AND GUARANTEED TV’S *,OA* up. Obel TV anlradlo. DON’T KNOW WHAT TO GIVE? Not aure of lice? Solve your gift problems easily with' Montgomery Ward gift certificate*. Available in nuiatlona of $5 to $50 — oan e added U lodatloff 1. Pontiac Mall. /w Oamilif Christmas Gift From Lloyd’s All ear, qarry a ...- Year Warranty, with no payment* till elan. 1863 "TloydISotorF' Llncoln-Mercury -Comet English Ford-Meteor HOLIDAY SPECIAL Bo In for Christmas, lovely : Call Waterford Realty, garage, large tot. will itug with opliim to buy b low down payment, ird Realty, OR 3-4525. WHY PIOHT^THE^BAD ^WEATHER have fine, aalecton h,^So AUTO SALE! lift S. Sagnaw Bt. THE PERFECT OIFT FOR THE "PONTIAC'S DISCOUNT L< NAABi IT A Family Gift This Chlrstmas! FOR A "HOME OF YOUR O CONSULT — Dorothy Snyder Lavender 7001 Highland Rd. (M59> Phone EM 3-3303 WALT MAZUREK’S LAKE & SEA ____South Blvd, at Saginaw_ Devoru Gables The Unusual in Gifts From baby to grandmother will be thrilled with your unique gilt center. __________ thing blithe way of dollght- dlnary Imports for ‘ deltg rem«_. Always open on Sundays. Bloomfield Hills _____MI 4.-680Q.. ... Santa’s Special I960 OLDSMOB1LE tires, B-Z eye glass, 'full power, only 6380 down. JEROME 'BRIGHT SPOT" Orchard Lake at Cass FE 8-0488 od Quality Wood Ukulelle ..16.5 od Quality Mahogany ..17.8 "/(lL BAND and ORCHESTRA * MCrnkj S <,M°US f C * 34 0. Telegraph ____FB 2-C h Tel-Huron) OLD PLANTATION 11 Make your reservations Open Christmas Eve and MA 8-6611 Makes, Model*, on Display PERFECT GIFT - $80 UD. ' d McnIriti AN A-l UBED CAR FROM John McAuliffe, Ford 630 Oakland Avo.___FE 1-116 FOR THE ’’OOLPER’’ Balls? Golf bags? Club.? Any golf aooauorltaf Starter lets, 129.66. Why aettl# for lesa when you bargain ’ prices at ’ P O N TI AC COUNRTY CLUB, 4238 BUaabath Lake Rd., FB 6-9030._ bfwwrit iteBTwnsirBgx tlu^rascent!*' J^hajras STEREO-HI-FI WITH AM-FM 8TER-radlo. 6 speaker!. Solid wood (net. ■ 'TOiTy^ApbTfaiw^'""'* .... Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plalne Open ’til 9 p.m. * 072-6565 SCHWINN BIKES AND SIMPLEX MOTOR BIKES—Scott, Bundy. SUM Neptune Outboard motor., til up, Bottfnalum. and fibarglaa. Boat Mm Stwna Chrl.tmas Special, boat, motar, trauar. combination*. WARDEN CYCLE SALES 4758 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1466 OpOB * -* BMU| j STEREOS — TV’S — RAI»M Johnson Radio & T\ II E. Walton FB A Gift Certificate . for: PIANOS ORGANS GALLAGHER’S II E. Huron l ’ FE 4-0566 Open dverv night ’til Chrl.tme. PONTIAC RETAIL gTORE 65 Mt, Clemen.______FE, 3-1 HOLIDAY SPECIAL Fresh filtered eider 7fte gal. Applet-Macintosh, Jonathan, Red Delicious, apy. Wlnsaap. Diehl* Orchard and Cider Mill. 147ft Ranfth Rd. Rose Center halfway bet. Holly and Highland. MBlrose “Christmas Gift” A New or Used, — Car fronr' BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER SINCE 1630’ IN DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD AT Hub 8TOPHOHT WHEN THE WEATHER SAYS SNOW And the car won’t GO. See us for the car that You 3375 W. Huron St. , jer M - Marvel Motors 3ftl Oakland Ave._6-4078 631 Mt. Clemens from 698 to $497 "PONTIAC7# DISCOUNT LOT" LUCKY AUTO BALES >3 1 Baglnaw ’______FB 4-33 LAMPi FOR THtt Car urtesy ................. $ l cl up ................. $11 _.jve Box ............... $ I Ash Tray .$.... ..........64 Luggage and Utility $( Park and Brake .......... $ 4 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE is Mt. Clemons_______ FE 3-7 F. E. Howland Trailers GIVE DAD - fP0R CHRISTMAS C Rental, for Winter Vecetlone 3345 Dixie Highway OR 3-1416 AN IDEAL "Christmas Gift” A New or Used Car from BEATTIE ‘YOUr FORD DEALER Since 1636" IN DIXIE HWY. IN WATERFORD AT THE BTOPLlaHT R F1X1NO HIS CAR (Cadlum Dieted) PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 66 Mt. ciemena *" Any Kind ol Aooeaeory for Dad’a BUICK Stop and Shop at OLIVER BUICK....... 126 Oaldand Ate. “ 'li DOOR EDGE GUARDS . — " H Flwl tontiac'retail store * 15 llT, cVemeni FB 3-7t» A Sure Strike! Bowling baui, bag., anoti 3525 BllxitSfcWakeBSd!I' Fr5-15ai ' frf M er, Hydramatie tranemteelon. I nice. Full pr‘— “i” *' “* PONTIAC fa iXm "KLEENEX” DISPENSER OLIVER BUICK lie Orchard take FB 3-9131 * CHRISTMAS SPECIALS Electric Car Clook ...... II7.S0 Templet Car Clqol) ...... f“ " Car Compau (for da.h) ... I PONTIAC RETAU, STORE 66 Mt. Ciemena_____i, FE 1 . __________________8. Auto- mane Zlg-Zaa In beautiful wood eoneole, only 686.56. NO MONEY DOWN. Paymenti a. low iu " “ month, Waite’s Dipt. Store other flowering MOST ANY CAR -"Ror Mother to di Marvel Motors SINOER STYLE-O-MATIC. '-■■non hole., doe- —‘ ItH ettacbmenU BINDER SEW* * Downtow______ I. Saginaw 3 Open Evenlngi ’ttll 6 TREAT MOM TO OUR deltctouny different ALL YOU DESIRE Served from gleaming ally TED'S at Square Lk. FE 4 KEEP YOUR CAR N PONTIAC ■RETAIL STORE 65 Mt Clemen. /for DOES YOUR SON NEED A CAR? All Make*. Model., on Display from 6*9 to *497 Universal Auto. Exchange iN-» Saginaw PB 9-4Q7I AN A-l USED CAR . FOR YOUR SON * PROM John McAuliffe Ford 636 Oakland Ave.___FR 6-4H .BUY YOUR SON A PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS, ----J1, from *46.65. Onto* MaMi. Dopt. — Printing and Office St Oeneral 17 W. L iMweenbent. ■ Marvel Motors mt. 393 Orchard Lake Art mt. 393 orchard Lake. 1962 VW WITH BUN ROOF. RADIO, heater, whitewall*, light blue finish. extra clean. Only (1461. Easy terms. PATTBRSON CHEVROLET CO., 1066 B. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4 3738. ftp daughter 151 HILLMAN MINX 4-DOOR SE-dan.. 4 speed transmission, leather i ftp fipotkep GIVE SPECIAL CHRISTMAS OIFTS “■ ‘ild* Mirror ........ W-jJ w Vault- Mfr-g —tit—t. PONTIAC RETAIL STORE_____ 68 Mt ’Clemana FE 2-7*64 TRANSISTOR RADIOS, WIDE SB- ftp Sltfe* DS^aWffiF* * Mi^Sxr'Rn< ftp CkiUten SAVE ON TOYS — (JAMES AT Full Line At -Bargain Price. DAVIS MACHINERY CO. Your John Deere, New Idea, and ■ Homellte Dealer. . _ Ortonvllle ,_______ na 7-3292 EXTRA HOLIDAY FUN Ir favorite restauri TED'S Bloomftold Hllla EDUCATIONAL TOYS — DOLLS -• Goodyear fttvlee Store FI 1-6122 Make their with come true ' ' “A puppy for Christmae” pf Him 1963 RENAULT $1495 Delivered OLIVER RENAULT BLACK 6 DECKER U-16D V„” utility drill. R*g. 615.96. ^latmaa 8pe-olal 6t.il. HUDSON'S Hardware. V ELECTRIC DRILL 68.86 Kmart — Olenwood Plsxa Open Pally 10 to l». 1~~ ** “ JOHNSON MOTORS, BOAT ACCE8- In buttonholer. Reg. (146. now only 1169. No money down — No payment. untv February. Fret — battery operated miniature sewing machine tor the little lesmatress. MONTGOMERY WARD. Pontlec Mel) Permanent* ... VIVIAN WOODWARD .WHY NOT BUY A "WIFESAVER” AT WILSON PONTIAC-CAD1LLAC 1350 N. , Woodward'1 Birirlfngham MI 4-J930 , See our. used car ad. In (h. «Classified *d section values. (147.56. Michltah oont, 363 Orohard L»ke_ .....NirL&ki 2 ROSS’ FINE CANDIES WHO SAVi btoMWAafllNO 16 FUN? Ward's does (well almost anyway). Olv* her a t-cyole automatic dishwasher now only 9146.96. No money ftp a Jpien4 CROCKER'S CANDIES warning hotter for it mlnuto’’ gift. namb pla#eb, wEk, oloW in , thl dan. Attaches to post lap-tern*. Each name made up Individually. *9 95. Michigan Fluo-meant, 3*3 Orohard Lak* Ave. L BIBLE IS THE IDEAL 6lFT. , Christian Lltaratura Sales pt Stiuknti VHAT WOULD BE MORE APPRB-dated than a ward') Heritage Danuta portable typewriter? n. baa many lline-savlng feature* arid Is priced at only I105.U, No money down on credit at Montgomery Wan), Pontiac Mall. THIRTY-OK& George C. Scott Vetoes Newspaperman's rodeo riders, cowboys, public and private investigators ami others _ who become “actively involved,” ’ the list- of glamorous occupations ■ for characters who really do ' things Is pretty well exhausted.. i Dann, admitting sadly thf famine of fresh and novel “doers” . for television purposes, suggests ithat the problem must be resolved ' ultimately the way it has been in ethersbow*a^^ , “It will just boil down to the ' quality of the writing and the’act-i ing,” . predicted Dann. “Then the device and the gimmick will not " be so important, it will be a mat* 1 far of who telle, a story best.” : By CYNTHIA JbOWRY ' AP Television-Radio \Vrlter N E W -Y O R'K - The Columbia Broadcasting System, for nearly a year, has been working on a l96344 television series to star actor George CL Scott as a newspaperman. But qow Scott — considered by many to be one of the ’ most exciting dramatic actors in today’s Huge Teething Ring Robbing Dental Labs? —Today's Television Programs- Frognun> furnished by stations listed In this column are subject to change without notice THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECJKMJbER 18,1962 8:09 (2) News (4) M, Squad (7) Movie (Conti) (9) Popeye (font.) (56) American Economy 6:20 (2) Editorial, Sports 6:25 (2)-Weather —-(4) Weather * fcSO ai HighwayJatrfll_____.. (7) flews (9) Quick Draw McGraw (56) French Through Television 6:40 (4) Sports 6:45 (4) News (7) News, Weather, Sports 7:00 (2) Fair Exchange t(4) (Color) Weekend (7) Mike Hammer (9)'Whiplash (56) House We Live In 7:30 (2) Exchange (Cont.) ------f4H Cok>r)--Mrr Magoo*s~~ Christmas Carol (9) Movie: “Love Laughs at Andy Hardy” (1946) Andy plunges headlong into dangerous battlefield of rp* — mance, Lewis Stone, Sara Haden. (56) Turn of the Century 6:00 (2) Lloyd Bridges (4) Carol (Cont.) (7) Combat (Cont.) (9) Movie (Cont.) . (56) Age of King? 6:33 (2) Red Skelton (4) (Color) Empire (7) Hawaiian Eye '(9) Movie (Cont.) 9:M (2) Skelton (Cont.) (4) Empire (Cont.) (7) Hawaiian Eye (Cont.) (9) Movie (Cont.) 9:25 (9) Playback 9:30 (2) Jack Benny (4) Dick Powell ' i (7) Untouchables (9) Front Page Challenge 10:00 (2) Garry Moore (4) Powell (Cont.) (7) Untouchables (Cont.) (9) Inquiry 10:30 (2) Moore (Cont) (4) Chet Huntleyjfteporting (7) Close-Up . (9) Mary Morgan 11:00 (2) News (7) News (6) News llil) (7) News, Sports-----— 11:15 (2) Editorial, Sports (9) Weather 11:20 (2) Weather (4) Sports (7) Weather-.- - - -i: (9) Telescope UAW 11:25 (2); Movie: “They Won’t Believe Me.” (1947) Man plans to kill his wife, but finds she has already committed suicide. Robert Young, Susan Hayward, Jane Greer. (7) Movie: “Emergency Wadding.” (1950) Playboy marries beautiful young doctor, Larry parks, Barbara "Male, Willard TParltbr. 11:30 (4) (Color) Tonight (9) Movie: “Of Hump Hearts.” (1938) Mother sac-rifices herself for career of ungrateful. spn. Walter Huston, Barnes Stewart, Charles Coburn, Ann guth-erford. WEDNESDAY MORNING 6:Oo (4) Continental Classroom: Atomic Age Physics 6:15 (2) Meditations 6:20 (2) On the Farm Front 0:25 (2) News 6:30 (2) College of the Air (4) (Color) Continental Classroom: American Government (7) Funews 7:00 (2) B’wana Don (4) Today (7) Sagebrush Shorty 7:30 (7) Johnny Ginger ‘ 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (56) German for Teachers 8:30 (7) Jack LaLanne (56) Industry on Parade 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 it 15 14 15 16 17 18 19 ' 20 [21 22 2^ 24 2b pF 27 2tt 291 30 31 32 33 n 35 36 39] - 4^ 41 42 44 45 46 Jr 46 49 &6 51 BT 53' 54 17 41 War god of Omci 43 Fml.ihood 43 Ploblan 44 txtlnct bird 44 PortUloatlon 48 Collection ol •tying* 44 Hope* kiln 40 Betel palm 32 Bonssters . 1 Competent 2 Requires S4 C!« rlnbB»n, for sSSL- S'Ser-nyinph"— 4 Dry. as wine 6 genii* of R« 8 Mariner's** * 30 Mixiun of 9 Demigod 31 Iibin chiricttr 31 Pirlod lOOenus of tresses 8:45 (56) Spanish Lesson 6)55 (9) Warm-Up 9:00 (2) December Bride (4) Living (7) Movie: *»R Happened One Night." Part 1. (9) Chez Helene (56) Let’B Read 9:15 (9) Nursery School Time 9:30 (2)Millionaire (56) English V 9:55 (2) TV Editorial 10:00 42). Connie Page TThW^HIion'M'' i'mi; (9) Romper Room (56) Our Scientific WoHd 10:15 (7) News 10:25 (4) News « 10:30 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color) Play Your Hunch (7) Girl Talk (56) French Lesson 10:50 (56) German Lesson 11:00 (2) McCoys 44H£ok>r.) -Pricels-JUght--(7) Jane Wyman (9) Adventure Time 11:05 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:30 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) Concentration'______ (7) Yours for a Song (56) Food for Life WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) First Impression (7) Ernie Ford (56) History 12:25 (2) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Truth or Consequences (7) Father Knows Best 12:40 (9) Morgan’s M e r r y-Go-Round (56) Spanish Lessons 12:45 (2) Guiding Light (9) News 12:55 (4) News (9) Playback 1:00 (2) Star Performance (4) Best of Groucho (7) Gale Storm (9) Movie: “The Unfinished Dance." 1:10 (56) French Lesson 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) People Are Funny (7) One Step Beyond (56) World History 1:55 (4) Faye Elizabeth 2:00 (2) Password (4) (Color) Merv Griffin (7) Day in Court (56) Adventures in Science 2:25 (7) News 2:30 (2) Divorce Court (7) Seven Keys (56) Young Artists at Work 2:55 (4) News 3:00 (4) Loretta Young (7) Queen for a Day (56) Discovery 3:30 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Who Do You Trust? -----(9) Scarlet Hill (56) Memo to Teachers 3:55 (2) News 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) American Bandstand (9) Razzle Dazzle (56) Memo to Teachers 4:30 (21 Edge of Night (4) Here’s Hollywood (7) Discovery ’62 (9) Popeye and Pals 4:45 (56) French Lesson 4:55 (4) News (7) American Newsstand 5:00 (2) Movie: "Next Time I Marry.” (4) (Color) George Pierrot (7) Movie: “The Mob." (56) What’s New? 5:30 (56) Industry on Parade 5:45 (56) News Magazine ,5:55 (4) Carol Duvall Scott felt that, the newspaper approach did not afford him much d r a m a tic rarige,” explained Michael Dann, the CBS programing vice president who has been developing the project. r “He felt that essentially, a writer is a passive, character whose most important work is done alone, at a typewriter.” So now, CBS expects Scott will play the lead in another series also planned for next year, “East Side, West Side,” in which the hero is a social worker. THINK BIG—Books enlarged by the Oakland County Board of Education enable vision-handicapped children like 7-year-old Denise Thompson to get exactly the same'books their Used- by School Children classfnates are reading. Giving Denise special attention is Mrs. Evelyn Gottschalk,. a teacher-counselor. Oyersized Texts Save Sight STUTTGART, Ark. (AP) — Joe Karkur reported the theft of 1,000 teeth from his dental laboratory in Stuttgart. „ .u, . 1U , . Noting a similar burglary of ^‘sjartj the leading char- 4m at Augusta, fia., re-Karkur said' “I think it’s a teething ring.” . — acter can* get actively involved, and he can cope with everything from murder and narcotics addiction to marital problems,” explained Djnn. SUBJECT EXHAUSTED Actor Scott has put his fingfer i a troublesome television situation. wyjj_ the networks awash with doctors, nurses, lawyers, SftNOTONE House of Hearing 29 E. CORNELL By RALPH P. HUMMEL The little girl with the big books is one of 109 children in Oakland County’s sight-saving program. TV Features By United Press International “MR. MAGOO’S CHRISTMAS CAROL,” 7:30 p.m. (4) One-hour cartoon version of Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol," starring Mr. Magoo as Scrooge. Ma-goo’s voice, as usual belongs to Jim Backus. (Color). DICK POWELL SHOW, 9:30 p.m. (4)—Updated F. Scott Fitzgerald story about love affair between young Hollywood writer and boss’ wife. Dana Andrews, Barry Sullivan, Rip Torn and Vera Miles star. JACK BENNY, 9:30 p.m. (2)-Louis Nye plays cabdriver. GARRY MOORE, 10 p.m. (2)-Carol Channing guests. CLOSE-UP, 10:30 p.m. (7) - Light-hearted holiday look at _ r_____ what it’s like to be 7 years old. | locally. -Today's Radio Programs- WCAR. Art Coop« r WJBK. Robt. E. LOO WXYZ. pool WPON. Now!, Sportl WHFI, NOVO wpon! Novo. Cnrtitr WHFI. BuflnoM Novo 1,00-WJR. Ouoil Rouio WW* Pbono-Optown -••••-WXVB, >: chlw r.jfcovio WJBK, J. Billboy ----- Iks Arehor —i, Chrliljr o tor Modii WHFI. f CKLW, B. Stolon 1,00—WJR, Evening Conaort &A Oomm. WHFi!°N!w"mu!Io (or Mod, oras. 8:30—WWJ, Foyo Ellnbith WLSTttV'tod 1 8:30—wJR. Army of Btori - lOtOO-wJR. RiauMl TWXVZ. AM# SShr . 1 from im*r~ fi, Chrutv ■.Millie for WSUNSRIIAV MORNING WWJ, NoVI. Hohirip WXYZ. Wolf. N«"0 ORLWr-8NM«,.-A!IW ■<»«»•» WJBK, Nowi, More Aviry WCAR, Novi. snoridM WPON, Novi, Art*. Woltoi WHFI, Rom. Muslo OilO— WJil, Muslo Hill WWJ, Novi. Robert! wars. Wolf. Niwi CKLW, lyo Oponer WJBK, Nowi. A«iry> IlM-WJR. Niwi, Mtillo H»l pX.Voli R0,wrU WJBK, Niwi, Miro Aviry CKLW, Mini, *■““* WPON, Niwi, WHFIr NOWIr liM-WJR. M-Jltl Holt ware, now*, won ' CKLW, Niwi, Divld WJBK,,Jtuwi. Aviry WCAR, Binnaon ■ '.,1(1—WJR. News, OUMt WWJ. NOW!. Robirtl wart w«i *- Cklw, Niwi, BsvM WJBK. Nowi. Awr____' WCAR. Nowi, Aiioridin, , WPON. Niwi. Oum WHFI, Hovii Sportl,. StM—WJR. Muilo H»U ItOO—WJR. Kort Hoot WJBK. Novi, Roid WPON, Novi, Dili Tlno wiifi, Nowi, Muslo l:M—ORLWl Myrtle Lobbltt WJBK, Novi, Bold , itM—WJR, Novi. Hoottb, WWJ^ Nowi, Lynkor / wfntir WJBK, NOWI, Mild , WCAR, NIWi, 1, Mirtyn WPON, Niwi, Onto Tlno WHFI, Nowi, Muilo WFDNKHOAV AFTERNOON IIHMl WJK, Niwi, Firm WWJ. NlWfi BmphMli OKI.W Jn« Von WXVZ, Wlntor. Novo W'.'AH, Nowi, Punl WJBK, Niwi,, Bold lino—WJR. Tint! for Muilo WWJ. NsiMatoMMI WXYZ, V WWJ. Niwi, Hullpnsu wm/flrt^pn CKLW. Joi von WJBK, Niwo, Ml WPON, Niwi, MoL*u|hlln WIIFI, NIWI, Muilo liM—CKLW. Nowi, Bhllt'bi 1:00-WJR. N WWJ, Niwi, Hultmota, WJBK, Niwi, Loo WCAR, NoWl, Bhirldlp WPON, Nowo, McLiughll „ _____ Bumper Club WkVB, Nowo, Bobutlon CKLW. Nowi, Dovim WJBK, NOVA LOO WPON. NOVI, MoLoughlln WHFI, Niwi, Mui)o 1:80—WJR. Muilo Noll , CKLW, Joo Von Her books are big because she has to have large type to read about Dick and Jane or Columbus or fractions. As with the rest of the children In the program, her vision is less than 20-70 even with glasses. But 7-year-old Denise Thompson can look forward to a whole school career with textbooks she can read. Now a second grader at Poa^ tiac’s Wilson Elementary Schpol, she will get books her size aji the way through high school. ★ ★ ★ / The sight-saving books are from one of the country’s largest col lections of its kind, the Oakland County Board of Education library for the visually handicapped. There are now more than 1,-270 volumes on the shelves or in the hands of children with poor vision. The books are supplied free by the county board to school districts throughout the county. One-third of the books are sight-saving editions of standard texts published by the American Printing House for the Blind through an arrangement with the copyright owner. The other books are the result of a photo-enlarging process devised Sinatra Gaining on Jolson for Show Biz Hall of Fame By EARL WILSON NEW YORK - We’ve finally been consulting the experts in oUF effort to pick the Hall of Fame of Show Business—and notice that Frank Sinhtra’s now getting almost as many votes as A1 Jolson. It’s a difficult job. We wanted to choose five: so already we’ve got 10. In approximately this order: lr-Jolson 6—Frank Sinatra 2_Bob Hope 7—Sammy Davis Jr. 3— Red Skelton ■ 8-Milton Berle 4— Bing Crosby 9-v-Jack Benny 5— Danny Kaye 10—Eddie Cantor That was the vote turned In by hundreds of readers. But discussing it on a panel with George Jessel, Horace McMahon, Toots Shor and Comedian Joey Forman — all really experts on the matter - I found they each felt that Sinatra Is “the greatest commercial entertainer today.” Jessel mentioned that Sinatra can sing, act, make you laugh, make you cry, and also pull the people Into the theater . . . “aqd he also knows some girls.” Sinatra surely moves up into the first five. It was Joey Forman-now at the Latin Quarter-who said, “Hey, all you panelists! You forgot somebody! What about Troy Donahue?” ★ ★ ★ Jackie Kennedy’s affection for Italian bcfach resorts has boomed WILSON mmw WHFI- NlVl, Muilo usr&i real estate prices there sensationally . ./. Understand some rival resorts are saying, “Jackie, please copie and stay with us-FOR FREE.”rT'rY(5bflg“inigBr‘Neirsedtiic*iiaibeentaggecttor'ii White House party appearance ... Buddy Hackett went down to the Carolines again. Isn't he on that rtee diet once more? ... In England they greatly respect Ethel Merman’s voice (described by Mil-ton Berle>a6 “the shout heard apbund the wdrld”) and are trying to find young singers who can copy It. W/-' ★ w EARL'S PEARLS: ”A (Chicago bakery reports an exciting new product—unsllced bread 7 ’ V TODAY’S BEST LAUGHt “Arrogant? Of course we are all arrogant, and getting mpre' sol Who would want lo stay meek and inherit the earth, Sie/way It Is now?” ’ WISH; I’D SAID/THAT: “The speed bf light never ebases to amaze me,” says ex-schoolteacher Cannonball Adderley, “and it’r always a little ahead of time . 4, Especially early in the morning.’ A certain Texan, is nearsighted but drives without glasses He merely Kas^all his ’windshields ground to his prescription . . Hiatts earl, brother. (Copyright, 1962) 11 Dr. Paul F. Thams, director of special education for Oakland County, calls them the answer to problem irritating teachers of the partly-sighted for years. ‘Too few text books are printed in sight-saving editions to provide complete supply of texts for children from the first grade through penior high schools," explains Thams. One costly solution, he adds, was transcribing the books page by page by means of a large-type typewriter. Another method wps the use of a magnifying lens—a procedure which was Impractical in the classroom. Then, four years ago, Thams and Fred L. Nowland, coordinator of the county physically handicapped program, hit upon a photographic process that is believed, to be most satisfactory answer to providing large-type books which are no longer printed, ww* Regular - size versions of the books are first microfilmed and then enlarged by an electrostatic printing process. Each page is placed In a machine similar to office copying machines, but much larger. The pnitts then are bound, and1 the student can be given ai larged reproduction of the actual; book being used by his classmates. IDEA SPREADS Since the county board came ilpj with the idea and put it into use In 1958, says Nbwland, other counttop in Michigan and areas all over the United States have adopt-1 ed the process. “We still use books published by the American Printing House | for the Blind whenever they arc ; available,” says Nowland. “The j average cost for these books is $12.«The cost of photographic re- j production Is about $25, and: most children need at least five books in a school year.” The cost per child is decreased, he pointed out, by the use of the central library. The same book WI used by several children during; the period of textbook adoption, j ,* * * Last year, 73 children With scf; vere visual problems, were able to attend regular classes through' the use of sight - saving books. To each of these children, the ( county board assigns a teacher- | counselor to help minimize the j handicaps through the use of special equipment and classroom techniques. “The sight-saving program provides the child opportunities to read beyond his textbooks,” Now-! Jimci-addBy-^ALsehooirheauto magnifying eqqlpment for library work. Fpr home use, he is given, the loan of supplementary readers] and texts for extra reading,” Three school districts In the] county—Farmington, Pontiac and Ferr\dalp —'have special sight * saving classrooms equipped with large- scale maps and othersight saving materials. Thirty - six children were in these roonjs last year, Nowland reportSj , Utah has the nation's lowest rate of illiteracy. Only 3.3 per cant of the population is unable to1 read or write. LIMITED TIME ONLY! Famous Brand AUTOMATIC HUMIDIFIER FOR TOUR PRESENT FURNACE! Outstanding $14,88 Buy at Only l"X • S gloat flbar evaporator plat** • Fatter water pick-up . . more evaporation • More effloiency, simplicity and economy • Protects your home and family MICHIGAN HEATING, INC. 88 Newberry FE 2-2254 Pgntlao FE 8-8881 Tonight: NBC-TV...9:30 P.M. Dana Andrews, Borry Sullivan, Rip Torn and Vera Mile* in "CRAZY SUNDAY" Television's ewerd-winning dramatic anthology presents another compelling story,, probing the innermost amotions of paopla Involved In a moment of ■■ crisis/ Starring Dick Powell as host, H|| presented by CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY I ^HB-TONTIAC pREgs, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1962^ Is It Only a Tiding W>c? - Common Market Boosts (Editor’s Not* — The. W-lowing dispatch, tho first of three, discusses progressOf, the European Common Market,up to now and the issues which will determine whether this bold attempt to xe*~ shape' the map of Europe is to be miracle br mirage.) ■ By PHILNEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst ® prosperous, Busy Brussels, Christmas lights glow through the chill mists of early evening. In the_streets,j French *HudRe German Volkswagens in holiday traffic] that scarcely moves. InBrussels’j largest department store,] Yvette V and en-l borre, “a~ pretty NFWSOM Belgian housewife, and her little daughter. Karin./move slowly down the alsles/fo admire Dutch furniture, German toys and stuffed poodle made in Italy. .Brussek/ is the headquarters city of/the six-nation common Its prosperity is aa ac-s reflection of an explosive nomenon which has boosted to precedented*' heights the eco-7 nobles of Belgium, France, West' Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Luxembourg. ; But beneath the smooth surface other currents are moving which will determine whether the European Community ever is to be anything but a trading bloc and whether the dream of natty is to prove a mirage which disappears before the harsh realities of nationalism, Common* Mlrket, found these elements at wprk. CONCLUSIONS —the Bfltish government- of Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, yrhictt has .staked its future M BHti^ ifey into the Common Market, hastbeen negotiating with the six for more than js. year Without success. Meanwhile, British policyqnaking, bdth foreign and ilumcsBc, renmS»es;f#,a^8le <■ of paralysis President Charles de Gaulle of France^Jaiming at European lfeadership^’fis indifferent if.not actively hofljtile to British mem-ihip.- De:v Gaulle, instead, has jwseg that France and West Germany srfbuld step up immedi-ately their Organic cooperation," without waiting for European, political unity as a whole and without waiting Jor Britain. % * * —The small nations, notably Belgium a# " toe Netherfands; suspect de Gaulle’s motives, and are especially fearful of a ‘Paris-Bonn gxisfoyhich Would reduce them to th^rank of second-class sns-in- uniform throughout the six. rodudng high and uneconomic German farm prices to a level still not determined but probably somewhere around the present .French level. ; • ■ For Britain it would raise consumer prices an estimated 12 per cent. Britain has agreed to meet the 1970 deadline but has asked for certainInterim concessions to help ease the economic blow. *. * , Jit"'.....] also has anight some delay in the levy - of duties-on grainB and Othef ftgpPlcultural products from Commonwealth nations which now enter Britain duty- free, and for firm assurances that Commonwealth exports will not be priced out of the Common Market by excessively High duties. Oe-feoth requests she has met adamant refusal. -Britain’s position is that she is fighting not only her own battle hut for the United States and other grain-producing nations as well. In this she has been joined by United States Secretary of Agri-ire QrviltoL. Freeman who has described Common Market agriculture policies as “unreasonable and arbitrary” and has warned Community officials that trade must Be a two-way street. ..' * n It was a thinly veiled reference to a suspecion that the Common Market will hecotoe an inward-looking commercial club designed to exclude others rather than an outward-looking group trying to expand world trade. JUNK CARS | WANTED USED AUTO PUTS I FOB SALE FE 2-0200 ■ ■ ■ ■ PI■ ■ ■ I PONTIAC SCitAV UBS■■■■ ■■ ■■■ tions of individual men. This correspondent, on the third trip to Europe this year to assess ind report on progress of the WILL AMERICA WAKE IIP IN TIME ? We are tho world’s leader in, many areas .'.. in science and invention, in trade and living standards, and as a force for peaee. But we must not be asleep to the pressing needs of leadership. Higher education is having tough going, and colleges are in a squeeze, dome have shortages, while in less than 10 years they will face the incredible prospect of an applicant list twice the sizel To hold our lead among nations, we must see that our higher institutions have modern laboratories, enough classrooms and, above all, competent teachers. HELP THE COLLEGE OF YOUR CHOICE NOWI To find out how fh« college crisis offsets you, writs to HIGHER EDUCATION, Sox 34, Tims* Square Station, Nsw York 34, N. Y. Fublishf.ii as s publie ssrvias In cooptratum with Ths Advtr Using Council amt tha Nswspapsr Aa-vertising fxssativil Assaaiatiat^ THK PONTIAC PRESS feel that British membership is essential, ifbnly as a modifying factor. * —A feeling among top Common Market leadership, although not shared byhlL that Britain herself is negotiating from an unrealistic position and that, despite the consequences, British entry may be delayed Tor,As long as five years or more. A Beyond the polite, words at the negotiating table, the British'are grimly determined to “negotiate and negotiate and negotiate,” indefinitely. But in private they frankly share the small nations’ distrust of de Gaulle’s projected Paris-Bonn axis and his good faith when it comes to permitting British en-, \ * BRITISHER JITTER Bitterly remarked one member of the ^British delegation: “I think that if we offered today to come in qn\their terms, they would think west of all. UNIFORMJTf PLANNED By 1970, prices are scheduled to Sleek-lined Lowboy Styled TV Consoles- Our Lowest Priced Big ' Screen Consolette TV Silvertone TV Consoles On Handy Swivel Base Sharp, clear pictures from its bonded picture tubf. Mahogany veneer cabinet. 23-inch overall diagonal screen, 282 - square inch viewing area. Save! PARK FREE DOWNTOWN In All City Metered Lots Reg. S229.9S NO MONEY DOWN i 8«an Krnr Payment Pten Regularly at $179.99! 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Reg. 813.99 . ’’Satisfaction guarairifepd or your money hack” SEARS 154 N. Saginaw fit. Pli. FE 5-4171 •f ), Project Plan 6 Lanes, 4 Bridges Prom Telegraph Road to 1*75 Freeway The Michigan State Highway Department today announced it will n'e a t ly double its original plan for * improving Square Lake Road south of Pontiac. A just-completed engineering study has resulted in plans for an estimated $2.5 million project calling for construction of a ''six-lime divided highway and , four bridges from Telegraph ' Bond to 1-75. Department officials estimate half the cost will be financed by federal funds and half by the state. No leical funds wilj be required siqpe the project lies outside the Pontiac pity Limits. The project is tentatively slated te go under contract late„in 1964, according to the depart-. meat’s current construction Orlghtahy, the proposed project called for modernization of Square Lake Road from Woodward Avenue to 1-75 at roughly half the cost. The engineering study revealed that traffic on the thoroughfare warranted extending modernization westward ot Telegraph, according to Highway Commissioner JohnC.Mackie. “The entire route is now taxed to capacity," Mackie noted. “Traffic studies predict a traffic flow qf more than 1,700 vehicles per hour When the new highway is built to jprovide a cross-connection be-tWeonU.S. 24, U.S. 10 and 1-75. LAND PURCHASE The study recommends building median ^barriers on Square Lake Road aM the purctyutt of access rights mom Telegraph to Woodward and on the north side from west Lasher to east of Opdyke Road. Existing subdivision raids will remaia open, with the exception of Devon Road and Marlborough Drive. Two bridges will be built over Opdyke. 0me new bridge will carry west bound traffic over the Grand Trunk Western Railroad main line and the existing bridge there will be modernized. Nets Flashes LANSING (JR — Gov. * Elect George Romney said today he will name Robert J. Danhof, the unsuccessful Republican candidate for attorney general, as his legislative aide after he takes office Jan. WASHINGTON (API - Secretary of Commerce Luther H. Hodges said today the nation’s production Is now at a record pace, but a prompt tax cut is needed to increase it still further. Mac Greets Kennedy in Nassau THOMAS MITCHELL Actor's Actor Mitchell Dies Cdncer Claims Second Great Star in 2 Dqys HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Thomas Mitchell, an actor’s actor, honored by his colleagues with the highest awards of stage, screen and television, Is dead of cancer at 70. He succumbed yesterday, the deadly disease’s second victim In tiro days among the famous names of Hollywood. The otter was Charles Laughton, who died Saturday. They appeared once together in a movie—“The Hunchback of No (rd Dame” in 1939. , ★ w 1 The bushy-browed Mitchell, who had the face of an Irish leprechaun and' the soul devilish poet, was most famous for his role of Scarlett O'Hara’s father in “Gone With The Wind.’’ That same year Mitchell also played tlie boozy frontier doctor in “Stagecoach," a picture many critics believe the finest western made. WON OSCAR In the Academy Awards that year—1939—Mitchell was mainly in competition with himself. His performance in “Stagecoach" won him the Oscar for best supporting actor*. In 1952 at won television's Eihmy for best dramatic performance and In 1953 he got the legitimate theater’s Tony for his role in the Broadway musical “Hazel Flagg.’’ The public mostly knew Mitchell as an actor during his 50-year Caredr in show business. ■ * Or * He also was known as a quiet genius of theater in his early career. As a playwright life had several hit plays on Broadway and much in demand as a play doctor. Congress Plans Probe Into 'Skybolt WASHINGTON (API—The fight|British Prime Minister Harold over the Skybolt missile appeared | Macmillan at their talks in Nas-to be broadening today with a con-,sau gressional investigation in the off- ing. . it A fo' Sen. Richard 6. Russell, chair; man of the Senate Armed Service Committee, said the whole matter of dropping or continuing the proposed missile will be investigated. There were these other developments: President Kennedy indicated] he will back Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara’s reported recommendation that Skybolt be dropped. An informant said the four military chiefs of staff have voted in favor of continuing Skybolt. -A Pentagon spokesman said the controversial misfcfle is at least two years-,behind schedule, a * * President Kennedy indicated he favors dropping Skybolt when, in his radio-television appearance Monday night, he said: 9359-MILLION OUTLAY We put in $350 millipn into Skybolt. No other country has put anything into the actual manufacture of Skybolt. If we complete it, the British would have bought a An informant - said the Joint Chiefs of Staff—Air Force Gen. Curtis E. LeMay; Adm. George W. Anderson, chief of naval operations; Army Gen. Earle G. Wheeler and Marine Gen, David M. Shoup—had unanimously approved going ahead with Skybolt and believe it can be made operational by its late 1964 target date. McNamara reportedly is recommending the missile be di’opepd because of serious technical and money problems. FAVOR DEVELOPMENT weapons and would require the Soviet Union to spend up to $40 billion to-develop an air defense system against the bombers which would carry the Skybolt. But a Pentagon spokesman said Monday that Skybolt has fun into such snags that it probably won" be operational until after 1964 He amended this to say after 1966 by a considerable margin. The missile is supposed to be fitted to U.S. B52s and British Vulcan bombers in late 1064, Some Pentagon officials believe that by 1966 or later the United States will have an overwhelming nuclear punch from land- and sea-based weapons systems. Also, The Joint Chiefs were pictured Ithey feel that by then the Soviet as favoring continued development | air defenses would handle any because it would give the United (B52s before they could launch Sky-1 States a wider choice of nuclear bolts. Automobile Executives; Pleased at 1963 Outlook Skybolt, China, Russia High on Discussion List Brilliant Sky Setting! Stage for Pair to Talk of World Problem! , Plan Jan. 13 foi Dedication May Rain Thursday of YM Wma What a wonderful weatherman & we have. He brings us mild temperatures and sunny skies when we j Dedication of new wing at the need it the most. Pontiac YMCA will be held Jan. * * * n^Thi^ Christmas shoppers he t U r 1 take advantage of a predicted i high of 40 tomorrow. There’s a chance of rain Thursday. Tonight’3 low ij,qxpected to be DETROIT In glowing year-end statements, two! hundred missiles, we would havejaut0 industry executives expressed optimism yesterday bought a thoujwad. itwould have Um; Tgjgg Promising ToT auto makers anej other “ “TT business activities as well/ ! Britain ha, been depending on Lynn Townsend, president of Chrysler Corp., said it Skybolt for its main nuclear de-]was harc| to find anything but optimistfi among automo-terrent, and the matter is expect bil m and attributed this feeling to the high levels ed to come before Kennedy end ... ,o( employment and income, the atmosphere of strong Warm Tomorrow’ consumer confidence and ' the availability of credit at reasonable rates. Frederic Donner, chairman of General Motors Corp., predicted auto sales for the new year should approximated 1962 totals of about seven million cars and one million trucks if continued high levels of economic activity and consumer confidence prevail. Donner noted that “a fresh spirit of optimism concerning the general economic outlook has been apparent during the past two fhonth8,” and added “the most recent measures of economic activity provide sound reasons for this growing confidence. HYPNOTIZED — All the dreams and hopes of Christmas are expressed ill the face of Sandra Dee Eggert, 2. of 1286 Bramble Drive, as she admires the mechanical Santa Claus to a First Federal Savings & Loan Association of Oakland building. v day. Circuit Court Judge H. Russel Holland will be the guest speaker at the 3 p. m. ceremony. An open house will follow the* dedication. The two-story addition lo the recreation facility at 131 Mount Clemens St.,i along with renovations to the old building, cost approximately $675,666. It is expected that the building 25. Morning westerly winds at 1 mile per hour will become light and variable late today and tonight. He pointed to continued record * * * 11 e v e 1 s in Industrial ■ produc- Thirty-three was the lowest rd- tiob, employment and personal in-uuuuuik cording in downtown Pontiac pre-|comes and said, “Retent surveys will be open to members beforejeeding 8 a.m. The thermometer j°f business capital investment the first of the year. Ireading at 1 p,m. was 44. \ (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3' Concrete Collapses, Four Feared Dead TULLAHOMA, Tenn. (AP) -Rescue ^workers dug through a mn«« of concrete and steel at the bottom of a 250-foot deep rocket cel] today, searching for four » believed killed in the col-lapse of a 304-ton pie-shaped wedge of ebnerete. - The freshly poured concrete, which set off a chain-reaction collapse Monday, was the first of six segments designed to cap the $16-milllon test cell. It crashed through floors placed about 50 feet apart in the huge hole, carry-, tog additional tons of Concrete and tael to the bottom. L\ ,} Jr ,v# \ ★ , The 150-foot diameter hole was lasted through Tennessee lime-tone for a facility to simulate Jw. atinoapheric conditions at lOjOOO.feet for a rocket booster en-wlth a. half-million-pound . NASSAU, Bahamas Iffl— President Kennedy flew td this resort island today for summit talks jvith British Prime Minister .Macmillan. ■ They will discuss strains in the Western alliance and divisions in the Communist bloc. The American-British furor over the Skybolt missile program, the ideological break between Moscow and Peking, and prospects, if any, of improving relations between the Soviet Union and the West were expected to rank high on the list of subjects. Kennedy's jet plane landed under a brilliant sun after a two-hour flight from Andrews Air Force Base, Md., near Washington. Macmillan headed the official welcoming party. The temperature was in the low 70S. Breezes fluttered the Union Jack and the Stars and Stripes on poles beside tl)#. landing strip. Flags of the Obmthonwetmh nations , decorated the airport lev-Imtnal building. White-helmeted Bahamian police formed an Imntir [guard. WORLD PROBLEMS .Kennedy touched on world problems in a filmed radio-television interview broadcast in the United States only last night. The President said it will be some time before the United States can “come to any real ' ... ' „ understanding” with Soviet Pre- MIAMI (UPD—New York attorney James B. Donovan mier Khrushchev, and a negotiating group left for Havana aboard a Hc ga|d tha( whlle (he Cuban special plane today apparently to arrange the ransom showdown taught Khrushchev of 1,113 Cuban invaders before Christmas. 1 something about U. S. deter- Donovan and three members of the Cuban Families ^Z Committee departed at 9 a.m. EST aboard a Pan Acneri- down itg guard. can World Airways plane, which had been standing by, ..(jne mistake can make tjhia awaiting approval of their whole thing blow up," he said, flight plans by P r e m i e r Without minimizing the danger ® 1 . . of Russia’s goal of world rnnt- fastro s government. /r„nlinii„/An L", m Donovan were Alvaro Snn-president of the families) Icommittee; Mrs. Berta Barn Cuban go-between in Ihe negotiations, who came to the United] Youth Convicted for states about three weeks ago; , jand Virginia Betancourt - , Ri/SSlO The three Cuban members of : the delegation all have relatives ■Honvicted slayer of Oak- eafTd land County's First Assistant during the ll-faodBay of I igs -Corporation Counsel. Charles A. lnvnBl',n ,n Al,ril l,,BI | WASHINGTON W-~ President Davis, was sentenced yesterday The group had waited ail night j Kennedy believes the Cuban crisis to spend the rest of his life in for Cuban government approval taught Soviet Premier Khrushchev Jackson Prison. of their trip, and the departurei"how dangerous a world we live Seventeen-year-old Sheldry |‘h>8 mornin« indic“te‘l1 il, wasjin" but that it will be some time W. Topp was given the man- forthcoming only shortly before^forc the. United States will Group Flies to Cuba to Ransom Invaders flight plai Sentence Toppgs to Lite Term Youth Convicted County Lawyer's Death | ted I 'Friendship Far Off...' dotory life sentence for first-degree murder by Circuit Court Judge Clark .1. Adams. they look off, Before they left. Here reported under ^^^^^^^^supplies in Ihe Mil Topp will not be eligible for ransom „f the pri parole under the “natural life’’ christmi sentence. The only way he can ever be released from prison during his lifetime' would be by a commutation of his senlence or a par ,.., -... don from the governor. * presumably)part of Ihe multimit * * * lion-dollar ransom Topp was found guilty Dec. 4 Yprk to an airfield ,’ome to any real understanding” intSjwith him. 1,,ss 11 the Communists would devote f°r their energies to demonstrating TONS OF’ MEDICI NF) A spokesman for Trans World 1 Airlines suid il has been uskdd to! I fly 150 tons of medical supplies Nike Zeus Project Must Wait, Pago 78 "ITS THE SEASON — Peering out from Pfm nM* behind a stack of Christmas parcel? at the flee expects t'mK ta chan8e the balance of The freighter African Pilot, un-.P^er “we could have a long pe-der charter to the American Red r'od ol P®ece> Kennedy said. Cross, left Baltimore yesterday But it is, he said, the Red on the way to Miami with orders Chinese and Soviet determina-anticipation of an tlon to make a Communist Shopping Dayt /Till Christmas world In a nudehr age that “makes the sixties so danger However/ in a chatty interview that set a television “first'’ Monday night, the President said, “We ought to be rather pleased with thwarting the threat of Commu-inisi domination. The President made no effort, to ,' (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) , 7ft# W#afher THE PONTIAC PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1962—32 PAGES il* IIIV III - * -.«r -//)- ' NEW YORK (AP) - British-born actor Peter Lawford admits "being related to the President of the United States is a very • great honor. But it la not, and never will be a career." . Candidly and often humorously, Lawford tells in the current issue of McCall’s-magazine how it feeli to be a man with a reasonably well-known name who iS suddenly known as "the brother-in-law — ” * * * Lawford recalls a politician's 1960 prediction that "When Jack gets to the White House, he’ll make Bobby the attorney general, Teddy will run for Congress in Massachusetts, and Sarge Shriver will probably become governor of Illinois. The big question is, whai are they going to do with Peter Lawford?” i As an actor who is pretty much a California-casual-style fellow, Lawford refers to himself as "the bit player in the background," and answers the question: “They re'ftiU Wondering what to do with me.” "My career has been satisfying and very rewarding," said Lawford, and "I have perhaps the world’s most interesting in-laws.’’ PLAYS NEW ROLE Lawford said, "That one of them, my brother-in-law Jack, is President of the United States of America I still find rather overwhelming. It is,.a fact to be handled with' awe and respect. I have learned to plgy my role as the off-beat brother-in-law.", Lawford’s relationship to the Kennedys subjects him to considerable “needling," the actor admits. In fact, he adds, needling ’ him is,one of the President’s favorite activities. He says Jacqueline enjoys it, too. ★ ★ ★ Lawford fondly recalls his first meeting, with the Kennedy family at Christmas in Palm Beach-Fla. it h h He recalled that Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Kennedy could not have been more gracious, trying to put a slightly stage-frightened suitor of Pat’s at ease. The evening stands out so clear- ly, said Lawford, "I know exactly what I wore—loafers, white trousers, a blue Mazer, and, so help m, bright-red socks." “Mr. Kennedy couldn't seem to t take his eyes from„ the aocks/! ... said Lawford, WAS ACCEPTED The following April 23 Lawford was married to Pat. "JFK — a^-•. senator at the time—Bobby, and Ted were my ushers, and they , ribbed me in the traditional manner. They also made me feel accepted," the actor said. Lawford tells bow he found the "rough and tumble of a large....... gregarious family" . foreign to him. “And thus," he said, “I became by marriage — an outsider in an almost overwhelming situa- Describiog his-childhood. Law-ford said: "I grew up as an only, taught child with all the traditional British reserve.” He said he considered the Kennedys handling of the .situation wise, in his case. "They never forced thtir political and religious concepts ort me. ; I wasn’t even pushed into their touch-football games," ho said. "Actually,” the actor Asserted, "It took two years of exposure to the Kennedy family esprit before I begarMo get the message that the secret was participation. . . “It was Pat’s father who really did the trick. He was an old movie hand himself. Back in 1127, he was an executive with P^tfce |hd RKC pictures, and show bueinfes wasn’t way out to him. Since he had always been the center of family activities, encouraging his children to join in the ton and competition, he didn’t find it difficult to ease me in. I '-it: A' /W . "And finally it dawned on me,” said Lawford, "that aU my life I had been missing much ta fnmily fusion on the grand scale." ^ Lawford says "when the Kennedys take you to heart* you become one of them. My four children will never be loners, for they, too, are full-fledged members of the tribe." _ , The actor reveals an intimate .letter to his youngest daughter, Robin, from the President. DEAR ROBIN “Dear Robin: “Welcome to the youngest member. of Utopian. Your entrance is -timely as. we need a new left end on the team. "Here’s hoping that you do not acquire the political assets of your parents, the prolific qualities of .your godfather, or toe problems of your uncle. With my warmest regards. “Uncle Jade". Robin’s godfather is Bobby; toe team, of course, is the touch-football squad, and the clap is the Kennedy family. Commission Meets Tonight Advisory Unit May The Pontiac City Commission is expected to act tonight on a resolution to establiab a new Civic Improvement Advisory Committee. The old 71-member committee has "teen inactive since last April's municipal election. Each commissioner will appoint lO members from his district. Formation of a qpw committee has been under study for several Also slated for action tonight i agreement with the Michigan State Highway Department for purchase of property on the north side of East Huron Street at Parke Street, owned by the Kobacker Furniture Co. Part of the parcel is needed for Perimeter Road right-of-way. Under toe agreement, toe state would buy the whole parcel U.S.-Red Accord Is 'Far Off' (Continued From Page One) paint a rosy picture of U.S.- Soviet relations in the interview. The Cuban crisis, he said, has made successful negotiations with the Kremlin more difficult ‘ because the Russians — through deception — tried to change the bal- ance of power by sneaking missiles into Cuba. WAY IN FUTURE “So it is going to be sometime before it is possible for us to come to any real understanding with Mr. Khrushchev.” Kennedy has virtually written «H toe possibility of effective international Inspection of Cubs, or *f any Communist territory, ter some time to come. He took a dim view of 'prospects for an inspection agreement . U.S. demand in the Cuban dispute and a key theme in American dis- I don’t think we would have gotten the kind of inspection which really is necessary, because a totalitarian system cannot accept the kind of inspection which really is desirable,” he said. Kennedy saw no advantage in "The camera I think is actually going to be our best inspector," he said, because “a totalitarian system must exist ohly in secrecy" and “they are not going to open it." * ★ ★ The President said, in fact, that even when Soviet Premier Khrushchev offered international inspection of Cube he had no hope this would actually come about. summit meeting soon. MEETING USELESS "I don’t think there is a need for us to meet now," he said. “I think probably he (Khrushchev) feels the same way." Kennedy said, though, that the Soviet premier’s speech to the Supreme doviet (parliament) last week shows that he realizes perils of the nuclear age. Khrushchev knows he said, tat if Russia ever fires Its missiles toe United States will have enough to "tore back at him to destroy the Soviet Union.” And, Kennedy^, said, the Russians “realize that West Berlin is of a vital interest to us and that we are commltteed there and that we are going to stay there." and sell part of it back to the city. The city would pay for the land from gas and weight tax fufnds, not' tint money. The property would eventually be needed for work on the Clinton River, a ★ ★ Action is due on S resolution authorizing the city, clerk to advertise for bids for the contract covering demolition of structures marked for purchase in Pontiac’ second urban renewal project (R44). a ★ a The bids are to be opened at 2 p. m. Jan. 28. Commissioners also are expected to change the dates of the regularly scheduled Dec. 2S, Jan. 1 and 8 meetings. The first two fall en holidays and the Jan. 8 meeting would conflict with toe annual quel of the Pontiac Beard of Realtors. In a matter deferred from last Tuesday's meeting, action is to be taken on a city planning corn-commendation that an agreement for the extension of Road with First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Oakland be rescinded. HEARINGS SLATED Public hearings are slated on the following 'itims: Plans to construct a combined sewer on Baldwin Avenue, Colgate and New York ave- Plans to construct a sanitary sewer on a portion of Bloomfield Avenue. Special assessment rolls for curbs and gutters on, portions of Corwin Avenue. The chief executive covered much of the world in an hour-long question - and-answer session William H. Lawrence of ABC, George Herman of CBS and Sander Vanocur of NBC. Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICTNITY-Couiiderabte cloudiness, slightly warmer today, high 38. Partly cloudy and cool tonight, Tow 28. Wednesday partly cloudy and mild, high 48. Light and variable winds. Houghton Morquotto IS ST Los Antoloo 1 IS ■ Miami hoh. 1 43 34 Milwaukee St II Now Orleana I NATIONAL WEATHER - There will be scattered snow showers tonight in the upper Mississippi' Valley, in the Lakes area afjd on the slopes of the Rockies while rain will fall on the Pacific Coast and in western Texas. It will be warmer. from to# Mississippi Valley to the Atlantic Coast. N. Carolina Family 'Adventure' Birmingham Area News CommissionSetsHearing on 4 Rezoning Reque BIRMINGHAM—The City Com-f Castle Addition subdivision * from multiple family to non- Feb. 11 on four rezontag requests in Birmingham. Four to 13 Children Overnight CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Meyers will fill 13 stockings next week—nine more than last year—on the first Christmas of what Mrs. Meyers described as "toe greatest adventure a family can have." Early tots year Meyers read a news account of the traffic accident that claimed the lives of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Baker aear Battle Lake, Mina., Jan. 13, leaving their nine children orphans. Myers telephoned the pastor of his Roman Catholic church here and said, "I want to adopt those children.” The mass adoption was arranged by Catholic charities. Monday, the children arrived here by airline. The youngsters, ranging in age from 2 to 13, could be seen grinning and waving even before toeginUner came to a halt. . Then the Meyers, who already have two adopted chUdrea and have two of their own, Moments later, Meyers emerged from the plane with 2-ye«r-old Phillip in his arms. Karen Meyers, 11, came down the plane ramp arm-in-arm with a new sister, Pauline Ray Baker, 13. ★ ★ dr The Meyers, who decided when they were married that they wanted at least a dozen kids, have a big home that’s built tor children, with seven bedrooms and a large, shaded backyard that has a stream running through it. Father Jarzembowski Is Dead at 72 Special assessment roll covering unpaid weed-cutting bills for 1962. The weed-cutting roll will be confirmed following the hearing. it it it Three zoning ordinances concerning properties on Fisher, Palmer and East Columbia streets are slated for introduction and first reading. All three proposals were tentatively okayed last week. Auto Executives See Bright 1963 (Continued From Page One) plans indicate a continued high rate of expenditures in this vital part of the conomy.” ATTITUDE BETTER Townsend noted that certain changes seem to be taking place In public attitudes toward private enterprise and Its Importance in national and international affairs and he added that these changes could prove very important In the coming year. The Chrysler president said a -cal improvement has been evident in public understanding of the role of profits and the profit-energized free enterprize system in creating prosperity and economic growth and pointed to the increasing amount of talk about the need for tax reductions as "one of (he clearest Signs of this improvement.” Botl continued good busln He was ordained a priest on _____ Nov. 9,1912. REV. DR. B. F. JARZEMBOWSKI He then returned to hi# home Donner said General Motors anticipates a good year for itself, for the automobile industry and for the general economy in 1968. i it it Townsend said 1983 promises to bea banner yew for the auto business generally, but he made no specific predictions concerning his own company. He noted Chrysier’s car production in the fourth quarter of 1992 was second only to 1988 and its truck output 89 per cent above last year and the best sine# 1989. Rev. Dr. Bernard F. Jarzembowski, pastor of 8t. Joseph Catholic Church since 1939, died early this morning in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital just two months after celebrating his 50th anniversary as a priest of the Roman Catholic Church. He was 72. The time of service will be announced later. Father Jarzembowski was born on Jaa. 1,1119, in Detroit, the son of Pollsh-American par- bowskl. He attended toe Polish seminary while it was located in Detroit and at Orchard Lake when the seminary was transferred there. parish St. Frencis where he served os assistant pastor for five years. Later he was assistant for several months at St Josaphat Church where his brother Rev. Alexander Jarzembowski was pastor. In 1919 Father Jarzembowski became pastor of St. John the Evangelist Church in Ubiy where he cleared the pariah of debt. EGlW PARISH On Aug. 19, 1922 he was appointed to organise the St. Louis parish in Detroit. He then built a church, school building, rectory, Sister’s Convent end HAD. Because of ill health he resigned in 1932. The Peatiae paster than, went abroad spending asset of his Hie to Mail B Card Senders Christmas mail sent out right now will still get to its destination before the big holiday, said Pontiac Postmaster William H. Donaldson today. But your mall's chances diminish the closer to the end of this week you mail it. The Pontiac Pest Office — Including the main office, the federal station, Auburn Heights office and three smaller branch offices — is expected to beadle a total of 87-milllon piece* of regular mall by the ead *f this This is twice toe number handled in an average regular month — and a reason why early mailings are important for Christmas Tills will be 7 per emt more than was handled last year, when a record total of more than 91-mil-lion pieces was handled. Another six-million “oceupant”-marked envelopes will add to this year’s load. During December, said Donaldson, postal employes are expected to process mmillion pieces of "If patrons want to make sure their Christmas cards are de- “tkey should mall them and preferably with a four-cent stamp aad with return addressee shewn. "Unsealed cards with threw-cent postage, even . . addressed, can't be forwarded out of the city or returned. With, a four-cent stamp, the mail dan ha forwarded if the addressee has moved, or it can be returned to the sender if nondellverable, show- ing, that toe address is not cort bowski was decorated by Dr. roct.” Donaldson said that publicity campaigns about early Christmas mailings had shown results In past in Rome where m had a private aadienee with toe Holy Father PhH|0; At a reception in the palace of toe Polish Ambassador to Vatican City he met the Primate of Poland who know him fromhis soks. Father Jarzembowski has written some 29 religious books and ed many articles to newspapers and magazines. COMBS TO PONTIAC On July 8, 1939 His Eminence Edward Cardinal Mooney sent him to St. Joseph,Church, here. The church, then a little white ing s* he erected the present brick building. . At a banquet in his honor dur ing the anniversary festivities Mayor Robert Landry proclaimed Father Jarzembowski "The Citizen of toe Year” for the City of Pontiac. In recognition of his work in literature he was made a member of the Pontifical Academy of Tiber With degrees of doctor of science and doctor of literature. ,, )§;.m: f In March I960 Father Jarzem- us Szygowskl with Poland’s Order of Polonia Restitute with Greet Sash, Cross and Star. At, that time Dr. Szygowaki represented toe ^Polish government as minister in Washington, D.C. sion declared it will be necessary to construct an access drive on the west side of Woodward Avenue north of Smith Street. The 104-foot-long drive, to be financed by special assessment, will be located in’ front of toe Becker Orthopedic Appliance Co. at 1771 S. Woodward Are. Owners of the company asked for the drive te provide easier access ,t* the building for their customers, many sf whom are physically handicapped. The commission directed the city administration to review request to install a water main extension and two fire hydrants the Grand Trunk Western Railroad right-of-way near toe Erb-Restrick Lumber Co., 428 S. Eton Road. The February public hearing will include a request to rezone property at 797 Knox St. from perking to single-family residential and a petition a parcel at the northwest corner of Yosemite Street and Eton Road from neighborhood business to a multiple-family classification. Other items at Ae hearing will cover a proposal to rezoae two lots la the Adams Park 8abdhisloa from neighborhood business te community business and twa parrels hi the Mac and JFK Talk in Nassau (Continued From Page One) munism, the President said, "We would be far worse off — the world would be - if the Chinese dominated the Communist movement." 8KYBOLT ISSUE As for toe Skybolts, a still unproved American missile which Britain wants to arm ita bombers, the President discounted the need for such It weapon. His administration proposes to junk production plans. "When we start talking about tots $2-8 billion (program)," he said, “we do act think we are going to get $2.8 billion worth of national security.” The original plan for the conference of Macmillan and Kennedy was for a generalized survey of the world after the Cuban crisis. WWW But that crisis has since been overshadowed by the Skybolt issue, a crucial one in Britain’s budgetary planning, and divisions within the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation such as European resistance to the American idea that ground forces should be built to levels adequate for defense in conventional warfare. Mild Weather, Hanging Over Most of Nation Mayor Florence Willett opened last-night's meeting by welcoming foreign exchange students from Spain, Japan, Sweden, Holland, Turkey and the Philippines. Christmas in different countries will be the theme of a concert to be presented tomorrow ‘ and Thursday at 9:29 p.m. in Bloomfield Hills High School’s Little Theater.. Senior class president Jim Allen will describe paintings of the Madonna and Child as the school’s dural groups present a musical tour of foreign countries. Tickets are available from all high school choir students. Howard C. Baxter Service for Howard C. Baxter, 61, of 997 Ann St., will be at 10 am. tomorrow at the Huntoon Funeral Home, Pontiac. Mr. Baxter, a mechanic, died Friday following an 18-month illness. Just Arrived! DELAYED SHIPMENT Over 500 HARD-TO-GET TIMEX Watches Including Newest Models for Men and Women —Now at SIMMS— DISCOUNT PRICES 6” TIMEX Watches 6*. 7" TIMEX Watches 7“ 9" TIMEX Watchei 8“ $14“ TIMEX Sell-Wind 1?“ $19” TIMEX 17 Jewel 1800 $39"* TIMEX Electric 35” All Prlcss Effective TONITE—WBO.—THURS. • While Quantities Last • (10W Federal T*«) ■« V By The Associated Press The nation’s weather showed only minor chuigee today, with a continuation of unseasonably mild temperature? in many areas. Temperatures, after last week’s zero and freezing weather in many sections, ware far above! normal levels In most areas. How-was chilly again in New England with zero marks in parts of Maine. 1 : . , •Idy, iorro, Snow VI Famous "TIMEX” Chlldrtn's CHARACTER WATCHES All SS.SS valttta—Mlsktr, Mouas, Hopalong CM* /nr 6" gtt Welch** Are Fully Guaranlaad hr Famous Maker* MMMFJin. —_—Hyu:—*r— The ifdmber of1 Alcoholics* in Canada rose by 9,000 during the last year. TilE PONTIAC PHKSfe TTrfcSl)Av,' DE'CKMHVJL iH, lifoa MAKEOVER VI Hearing Aidsf Custom Fitted NEWJ62 '/■ MODELS Compare to $300 NOW only mr Eyeglass Models 2 LEFT! Call FE 5-756? y AUDIOTONE OF PONTIAC \i Pontiac Optical Renter i'03 N. Saginaw Across from Simm* Frederick Morrisons Honeymoon in Chicago , Rev. Richard C. Stu^k-meycr heard the vows of Barbara Jean Shaver and Frederick R. Morrison Jr. of Detroit, in a candlelight ceremony Saturday evening’ in Grace Lutheran Church. Parents of. the newlyweds' are the Robert R. Shavers of Bfandt, Detroit, and Etseling Wilcox of Deford. Their bouquets were red. and white » variegated, carnations a n d holly. Robert Rennie of Detroit gcted as best man. Neil Morrison ushered for his brother jyjthJB. C. Willis-and Roger Hawkins, both Detroiters. The bride’s nephew,' William Brian, carried the rings. After a church reception, the couple left for Chicago; They will reside In Detroit. Both attended Ferris Institute, Big Rapids. The bridegroom is a member of Sigma Alpha ‘ Delta Fraternity. MRS. F. R. MORRISON JR. Parkinson Drive and the ■ senior Morrisons of Detroit. The bridal gown of white delusterpd satin, styled with scopp neckline outlined with Alencon la6e and pearls, swept into a full chapel train. A bouffant veil held by a tiara of orange blossoms and a cascade of white carnations and red and white rosebuds, completed the bride’s ensemble. k k Wearing red velvet were Mrs. William Brian Jr., her sister’s matron of honor, who . carried white carnations and holly, and bridesmaids Nancy HOME DELIVERY! pizza,:! PIZZA.: Small Cheese 1.05 Medium .. .140 Large M.1J0 K|fh Additional IWe> kxtrA also — • Spaghetti • Raviola • Lasagna • Chicken • Shrimp • Sandwiches LOU'S CARRY-OUT and DELIVERY 2897 Orchard Lake Rd., Kaago Tuts.. Wad.. Thun., Sun. 3 p m. to 12 Friday and Saturday—3 p.m. ta 2 * PHONE ^82-4920 DEMERY’S Dotroit-Birmingham OPEN EVERY PLIGHT ’TILL 9 P.M. This year . . . Shop Early! Remember, the Gifts you buy for Others mean valuable S&H Green Stamps for you! WSCS Has Christmas Meetings Women’s Society of Christian Service of Central Methodist Church completed t h e December meeting schedule last week. The Jean Bagnall Circle viewed Mrs. Fred Mueller’s colored slides of the Holy Land in the home of M r s. John Kuhlman on H e Y b e 11 Drive. Mrs. Richard Kuhn gave devotions. Mrs. Robert Lewis of Fern-barfy Drive was hostess to the Ada Duhigg Circle. Mrs. Jack Chettleburg and Mrs. Edward Glatfelter assisted. The Ortha Lane Circle met in the North J o s 1 y n Street home of Mrs. Dale Ballard. Mrs. William J. Freyermuth told the history of Christmas carols to the Marta Simonsson Circle.1 Mrs. David Moothart of Genella Street was hostess. The Leora Shanks group met with Mrs. Paul Kantz of Mohawk Road. Mrs. Allen Palmer and Mrs. William S. Dawe assisted. Mrs. Mae White played carols and Mrs. P. G. Latimer gave seasonal meditations. * .* ★ Serving dessert luncheons were Mrs. John Miller, Washington Street, to Barbara Norris Circle; members Mrs. Earl Decker, Scott Lake Road, Etha Nagler Circle with devotions by Mrs. Howard F. Simmons; Mrs. Richard Balmer, Chadwick Drive, Sara English Circle; Mrs. Robert Byrnes, Marquette Street' t,o the Janette Geiger Hoepnes group with Mrs. William Bullock playing organ accompaniment lor carols. * * * The Martha Graf Circle met with Mrs. Gene Calhoun on Spokane Drive and the Otto Sisters Circle. had dessert luncheon with Mrs, Emerson Gordon, East Iroquois Road. Mrs. Harold Sibley gave devotions and progrom entitled "Oyr Gifts for tha Christ Child." , Mrs. Arthur K. Lake told of Collejge Students Arrive for Christmas Vacatiops KATHLEEN DENNEN The Vincent Demmis of. Navajo Drive announce the engagement oj tlieir daughter Kathleen to Fredcrirh LaUinger, son oj tin• Anthony La uingers of East Rutgers Avenue. Fall vows are planned. Rest experts say a normal per->n probably would die it he were treed to stay awake for .10 days. •* Four students at We 1 I s * College, Aurora, N Y. Will return to the area this week to spend an 18-day holiday with their families. They are* Julia C, DeVlieg, daughter of'the Charles R. De-Vliegs, and Nancy. Reynolds, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Eliot W. Reynolds, both of Bloomfield Hills; Sally L. Wilson, daughter of the Rohert E. Wilsons, Fieldbrook Road; and Elizabeth F. Wright, daughter .of the Joseph I’. Wrights; Birmingham. At- Wellesley College, Wellesley, Mass., Patricia Kelley of Birmingham has been chosen to represent her class in her dormitory on the campus where she is a jun- Majoring in German, she is the daughter of the Bethel B. Kelleys, is president of the German Club and a member of Press Board, the student organization affiliated with the school publicity office. Jane Griffith', daughter of the Thomas A. Griffiths is now librarian, or her residence hall and sings with the Wellesley College Choir this year, Martha Burke, daughter of the William- P. Burkes of Rochester, will be arriving home today from Milwaukee-Downer College in Milwaukee, Wis. for. the holidays. Berean Class Holds Party The Omoc MacNutts of Ne-' omc Drive opened their home to" the Berean Class of the Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church Saturday evening for the annual Christmas party Participating in a skit entitled “Cradle, Cross and Crown" were Mrs-. Vernon Wait, Mrs. Waiter Napersky, Mrs. Anderson Bee, Mrs. John Bee and Lexie Williams. William Coffing led a carol sing-and members exchanged gifts. Many Help Support Family Why Do Wives Work? By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN Many people have the mistaken idea that women who have a job, outside of their home do so just for some “pjn money” or in order to have a few luxuries they would not otherwise have. In the United States 4.6-ntillion working are working for some of the fundamentals of a good life. They are putting children through college, taking care of the older members of the family, helping prepare for their financial security and that of their husband. •I am about as far from being a Ifemini8t," as the term js used, women who are sole supporters of as a chicken is from being an air-their families and many others plane pilot, but I must admit that who are sole supporters of them-1 was shocked to read what great selves. There are 7.5-million work-discrimination there is in wages ing mothers whose husbands earn!paid a woman and a man doing less than $3,000 a year. ' I the same work and doing it equal-These women are not working |ly efficiently for diamonds DANCING in the beautiful. sntMtiuus MAIN DINING ROOM to IRENE BADER and. ORCHESTRA featuring favorite sonfl stylists Rudy Mansfield and ferry Nemawit* RESERVATIONS abd MMI ho PALI- TODAY! Free Favors DORMAN'S OLD MILL TAVERN OR 3-1907 Waterford, Michigan And when you realize that most of the women who work outside of their homes do so because they must, or in order to add to the comfort and opportunities of those! they love,’ this discrimination is even -worse, ft sounds like the dark ages! Actually the woman who works for pin money, and I know some do, is apt to find herself in the red- Her plan is a dream. When you count up the help you will have to have at home to take your place, transportation, clothes, income tax and all those hidden extra expenses, you can’t win unless you gross a lot of money. There are Some women w.hoj have careers just because they love what they are doing. They] have a creative urge which must be satisfied. Then there are women who are loving wives and mothers, but who are just not thej domestic type. Often these women, and their families, are happier if they have a joB and get more help at home. Whatever the decision, it must be an individual one and the mar-i riage and the family must be tak-eit into consideration. It depends a lot on how your husband feels about it. Tlu- lim-.-ir alphabet with 22 lei ;i I >l»; i rent ly was I he ronliibu-<>f Byblian Phoenicians. Pontiac’s Only ZENITH Dealer CADILLAC HEARING AID * OF PONTIAC FACTORY RECONDITIONING for Zetiith and moat other makes -. ..; - from $16.50 NEW EVER LAMS and Behind Ear Styles ■ at Big Savings far the Holidays FUEL 5-YEAR SERVICE WARRANTY ZENITH—The Name You Can Trust SEE THEM NOW AT ' 11 West Lawrence or Call FE 8*2733 Floor Sample Sale! CUSTOMtBUILT FURNITURE CHAIRS and SOFAS All One-of-o-Kind Pieces REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE1 LAMPS and TABLES INCLUDED Open Monday and Friday 5:390-5400 Dixie Highway Main women are nothing not for diamonds or •ineralds but lo assure some of the Jumjamnitals oj I good life for llteir I mm lies. The “SWEETEST GIFT” vN\ Open Every Evening—Pork Behind Our Store! ■. : j ' . • y: ;' THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1962 3he Would Love A' “^\I)iamond Dinner Ring Christmas donnell's haik stylists Nine Diamond* $275.00 Diamonds $33(|.00 . Mountings Without Center Diamond or Fdr All Of Your Diamonds $ / C Available From ..................•* Ov HOURS: ☆ WIGS * WIGS for holiday glamor Term* of Course 2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU DOWNTOWN Open Every Nile ’til Crhiilmoj 16 W. Huron f£ 20294 MIRACLE MILE 2203 Telegraph Open Every Night EE 2-8391 dOD PI611 HAIRSTYLISTS Continental Salon PONTIAC MALL -SHOPPING CENTER Phone 682-0420 JEWELEISS Ah extra hour to shop and save at Montgomery Wards All This Week OPEN 9:30 A.M. to 10:00. P.M. 'Merry Christmas to all the family" WORLD'S ONLY CORDLESS, RECHARGABLE SHAVER WITH ADJUSTABLE RQj-LER COMBS REMINGTON SELF-POWERED LEKTRONIC SHAVER e Lets you shave without a cord • Frees you from sinks, wall outlets, boihroom tie-ups e Sealed-in energy cells recharge on shover's own charging stand for shave after shave of cord-free convenience Mil POINSE Remington Roll-A-Matic Shaver The growing beauly of Poinsetlias ore always the perfect gift choice for special people. Large blooming plants with any number of blossoms. Christmas Red or White LADY * -REMINGTON TRADEMARK Sh $7.50 and JMO MONTGOMERY WARD Jacobsens FLOWERS . 1 "Flowers by Win Throughout iho World" Delivery Tvklea Daily lb Birmingham filoomfleld and t Detroit/ A Phone SI,, Downtown Pontiac and loke.Orio