The Weafher Light Snow (I>lUII»^»|0 tf THE PONTIAC ome Edition PO^TlACMlcieo5^TU;ESOAY>.^^ 12. imii VOL. 121 NO. 4 ★ ★ ★ ★ Democratic Senators Strike Back at GOP Critics of Cuba Policy WASHINGTON (/P) ~ The Kennedy administration, under heavy fire from, its-political opponents, is striking b^ck at Republican critics of its Cuban policies. In the face^ a fresh assault by GOP congressional leaders on ‘'the inept conduct of our foreign affairs by the Kennedy administration,” Sens. Mike Mansfield, D-Mont., and Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Minn , have teanaed to condemn what they called partisan and irresponsible charges. Mansfield, the Democratic leader, pointed his guns at New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller and Sens. Kenneth B. Keating, R-N.Y. and Hugh Scott, R-Pa. He told ■—--------------------------^the Senate Monday that ‘ ‘irresponsiblet^-"publie—ut- terances are playing dangerously with the fires of public emotion.” Humphrey called on Republicans to make certain that “a rash of charges that cannot be iratJOTTitfittea their way into this chamber” or into the newspapers. “The people are worried, concerned and Indeed confused because of so many conflicting reports,” he said. 4fe added that Pre.sident Kennedy, t'e Defen.'-' Department and the Central Intelligence Agency “have been frank and candid” in disclosing Soviet military strength in Cuba. Mansfield said Rockefeller was JIMMY DURANTE His Ih Year Nosing Around Friends Gather for Comedian's Birthday MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)-Jimmy (the Schnozz) Durante admitted today he had a birthday— his 70th—“but I don’t want everybody to know about it.” The veteran entertainer, interviewed at a hotel where he is appearing, de.scribed his birthday> celebrated last night, this way: “Thank God I had another birthday. Da party? Sure. It was after da show an’ they asked me if I didn’t want to come in and h^ve some tea. It was a big surprise to me. We 'had a wonderful time. “Mrs, M 0 r ri 8 Lansburgh whose husband o- ns the hotel gave it. He’s In Las Vegas. A few of my friends was there— George Raft, Eleanor Holm, Rocky Marciano, Carter, Genp Bayless, Peter Lawford and a lot of others. “George Raft did a little soft shoe dance to “Sweet Georgia Brown,” ’ya know, like he did 40 years ago at the old Club Dufflht in 1924, bef(/re he wentTo’ da coast. “I wanted to go four rounds wit’ Rocky, but he wouldn't take me on. Everybody had a lot of fun.” Durante does an hour and 15-minutc show and keeps going night after night. “No other Cntertainers-^jusl us,” he said. The record says Durante was born in Brooklyn in 1893 and that he started in show business at 17, which jneans he’s starting his 54th year on the stage. "Wlio th’ hell knows? he cd ‘in my day, we didn’l have no doctors. Everybody had midwives. Maybe 1 picked da date at random. Nobody had birth certificates in them days.” 2 From County Die in Traffic Accidents Oakland Highway Toll in ’6; A Farmington Township* man and a Hazei Park woman are dead as the result of traffic accidents in south Oakland County. Mrs. Mary Thompson, 23, of 23449 Tawas St. died today in William Beaumont Hospital Royal Oak, from injuries suffered Sunday in a mis-hap in 4 Madison Heights. Thomas Moss, «6, of 29222 (leand River Ave. was killed when he walked into the path of a moving van yesterday morning 12 in front of his home, police said- WASHINGTON IIIPI) - A classified report now before the Organization of American States was said today to differ with official U. S. estimates of Cuba’s subversive activities in Latin America. From Our News Wires GENEVA - The United States resumed the 17-nation disarmament conference today with a hopeful White Hi^use plea for progress on a nuclear test-ban treaty. WILBER M. BRUCKER Will Address^ Lincoln Club But the Soviet Uniorl countered with a demand that the United States abandon its overseas nuclear bases as the price of such treaty..... Th? Soviet plan has no chance of acceptance by the Western powers. .......... Ex-Governor of State GOP Banquet Speaker Williafh e. Foster, director of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, read a per- Former Michigan Gov. Wilber M. Brucker will be the main speaker at the annual Lincoln Day banquet being sponsored in Pontiac tonight by the Lincoln Republican Club of Oakland Coun- ty-- Brucker, also a former secretary of the Army and now a Detroit attorney, will be introduced by U.S. Rep. William S. Broomfield, R-Oakland County. The dinner is. being staged at the Pontiac Elks Temple on Orchard Lake Avenue at 6:30 p.m. State Sen. Frank D. Beadle, R-St. Clair, will be toastmaster. A 15-year-old Clarkston High School sophomore, Karen Cooper of 4641 Clintbnville Road, Independence Township, will be feted well informed on Latin American affairs, but, “1 must confess that 1 looked in vain for a contribution worthy of him” in the governor’s comments on Cuba. Rockefeller has said the administration’s disclosures about Cuba left many unanswered questions. He said that while Soviet soldiers and equipment there may not pose a nfiilitary threat to the United States, they constitute a propaganda, subversive and Iwssible military threat to other hemisphere nations. In a barb patently aimed at Keating, one of the most vocal critics of ' the administration, Mansfield told his colleagues he would be the last to suggest that members of Congress know less about matters pertaining to Cuba than the President, the Secretary of State and the Secretary of Defense. “But I would suggest most respectfully,” he said, Little Jack *** •‘‘"iponsfhip course which helps rather than hurts the tion would be for these well-informed members to take their inside, unimpeachable information on Cuba to the appropriate departments at the same time that tlicy take it to the press galleries.’*' ^ as the winner of an essay contest sponsored by the club. A trophy and cash prize will be presented to her by former U.S. Congres.sman George A. Dondero. 'fopic of the essay contest was What Abraham Lincoln Means to Me Today.” Second-place Winner was Russell Kaufman of 2350 Charnwood Drive, Troy, a 17-year-old junior at Troy High School. U.S. Satellite Shot Grounded by Storms CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) -An overnight wave of thunderstorms has forced a 24-hour delay in plans to launch America’s t unusual communications satellite into orbit around Earth, The launching of the 150-satellitc, originally set for shortly after midnight tonight, was rescheduled Tor early Thursday morning. The goal of the shot will be to put Syncom into an orbit so high - 22,:i00 miles above Earth ..... that It will .seem to hang in the sky in more or less (fiVe 'spof ' Set 'Price' on Treaty Russians Jolt N-Pact Hopes sonal appeal for q test-ban agreement from President Kennedy. In it, the President said he felt the chance for agreement had improved because of the Soviet Union’s acceptance of the principle of on-site inspection. Foster added that “I believe there is some reason to hope that test ban agreemeht may be on the way.” He said he felt it was time for the Russian's to come down to “hard facts” and abandbh tbeir propaganda maneuvers. But Soviet First Deputy Foreign Minister Vassili V. Kuz- netsov asked the conference to adopf, a Moscow declaration renouncing the use oLiorelgn. soil for stationing the means of delivering nuclear weapons, including Polaris-equipped submarines. Kuznetsov’s proposal — coming after U.S. and British expressions of optimism over a nuclear test ban—caught' Western negotiators by surprise. WHAT REDS WANT The plan provides for an East-West treaty calling for a permanent'ban on “the use of foreign territories for stationing strategic means of delivery of nuclear weapons.” Kuznetsov accompanied his proposal with an attack on nations that have established Submarine and other strategic nuclear bases on foreign territories “for the purpose of dealing a nuclear blow on vital centers of other states.*’ This meant the United States. The bases, he charged, “greatly, aggravate the international situ-atiori and increase the war threat.” Kuznetsov repeated Moscow’s position offering two or throe onsite inspections a year in the Soviet Union under a test ban treaty. The U.S. position is that eight or 10 are needed. But he put most of hig emphasis on the new Soviet proposal and hjs remarks on the test ban 'treaty contained no new element giving rise to hopes for an early pact. In his message, the President called on the conference to apply new energy and a genuine willingness to negotiate in the search for a test ban treaty. He admitted there is no easy route to agreement, but noted that conditions for success are somewhat more encouraging than before.” The President asked The negotiators to “reverse the present dangerous trend of the arms race.” Flight of Capital to Europe Brought by British Mart Crisis LONDON liP) - A Labor party spokesman asserted today the breakdown of Common Market negotiations left the Conservative government in confusion, and British capital already has begun a flight to Europe. 'The House of Commons, winding up a two-day debate on the country’s economic future, was .scheduled to vote late in the day James^, Callqghan, the Labor-ite expert on economic affairs, told the House of Commons the government must gird for action and if necessary to impose exchange controls. Callaghan spoke in a debate on the failure of Britain to obtain entry into the six-nation trading bloc because of. .a French veto. “Already there are signs of me or two companies moving their capital across to Europe because of the Brussels breakdown,” Callaghan said. It would be unfortunate if the British unemployed got the feeling that capital was fleeing out of the country. MUST BE READY’ , “The chancellor of the chequer should tell companies thar in the present state of-a f- fairs if they sent their capital to Europe they would be behaving way that would make for wor.se economic difficulties. If they do not respond, the government mu.sl be ready to take further action. Exchange control might be necessary.” Callaghan a.s.serted that the Conservatives, by neglect ,of opportunity, were letting international trade rivals seize increasingly large parts of trade with the Hntisli ('ommonwealth. Trade is waiting to be t 'pfClTed up,”' h'e said. “It is be‘- ing taken by Germany, Italy, Japan — by everyone bd% Britain.” on a Labor party motion of no confidence: With the Conservatives holding a 100-vote margin over the combined Labor-Liberal opposition, there was virtually no chance that Macmillan’s government would tall on the issue. Roberts Proposing Bill lo Add 2 County Judges Farrell E. Robert,s, R-Oakland County was,to introduce a bill today that would increase the number of circuit judges from five to seven in Oakland County. The Republican party in the county favors the two ■^additional judgeships while the Democratic party has Daughter Presents Grandpa Romney With Number 6 Gov. George Romney has become a grandfather for the sixth time. Mrs. Loren G. Keenan, one of Rorfiney’s two daughters, gave birth to her .second .son yesterday at William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak. The Keenans. 2694 Brady Drive, Bloomfield 'I'ownship, also have two daughleis .Romney’s o I h e r daughter has two children. voiced its objection Chances of getting one ne judge are considered excellent by the GOP committee here. Getting approval of two is expected to be more difficult. The Democrats claim the bill is being pushed now because passage of the proposed new state constitution in April would take the power of appointments away from the governor and give it to the State Supreme Court. They expect Gov. Romney would appoint Republicans to the bench while he still has the power lo do Assassin's Brother A Booth Saved Lincoln's Son By DON OAKLEY j named Booth once saved the Newspaper Enterprise As.sociationi |jf(. of a man named Lincoln. History books record that an| 1-1,.;., instance, of course, actor named Booth shot to death' ^j. j,,,,,, yyjn^,,,. assassin- ajmaa named Lincoln................lation of President Abraham Lin- The other, which occurred | Lincoln him.self once watched him shortly before this, involved Booth’s older brother, Edwin, and Lincoln’s .son, Robert. In ,1865, Edwin Boolii at 31 was play Shy lock at Ford’s Theater, remarking that he would rather have read the play at home hut went only to .see tlie great actor. Few history'^ooks, however, coin in Ford’s Theater in Wash-ithe outstanding Shakespearean Booth, in fact, had mention the fact that an actor lington. Iperformer of his day. ^’’’e.sidentijyj^jyyp^.j American stage for decades. It began with Junius Brutus Booth, who came from England, and who had threccactor .sons: Junius Brutus Jr,, Edwin and John Wilkes. John, the youngest, was the favorite of the South, to which he was fanatienUy devoted — even more than to his dream of eclipsing his brother’s fame. In November 1864, the three brothers had appeared together for the first and only time in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar at the Winter Garden in New York.' Pre.sident of the Oakland County Bar Association, Royal Oak attorney .lames S, Thorhiirn said that while the as.sociation has tak-offieial stand on the issue, it is his opinion “and the opinion of many lawyers” that two additional circuit judges are needed. There are three reasons, he said; 1. The docket is rapidly mounting due to an increasing population. 2. Tliere is much more litigation re.sulting from trallic accidents. The new judicial system makes pretrial hearings on ' livil cases mandatory, where oft-111 these have been waived by mutual agreement in the past. Booth Grabbed the Man by His Copt Colldr and Pulled Him Back Immediately after this, Edwin Booth had opened in Hamlet, and; in March 1865 was completing a n'cord run of 100 performances. [ The City of New-York was pre-, paring to present him with a gold medal. ‘ JOSTLING CROWD It was about this time that business took Booth to Philadelphia. | At the railroad station platform , (Continued on Page 2, C<>L 4j ■ RIDIN’ HIGH — Julia Perrj, 15 months old, rides tall on the back of Dondi Forrester Smith, Old English sheepdog, at the 87th Westminister Kennel Club show in New York’s Madison Sqhare Garden yesterday. Julia’s parents are exhibiting the dog at the show. Seek to Control Trading Stamps Legislature Studying Licensing by State Clouds to Bring Snow Tonight? If Looks Thaf Way Skies will be partly overcast to* night and tomorrow with a chance of light snow or snow flurries, the weatherman Said. LANSING Proposals aimed Temperatures will be a little warmer, the low dipping to 12 tonight and, the high chmbing.4ft-» near 28 tomorrow. at stiffening stale control over the operations of trading stamp companies are in the works in both houses of the legislature. A hill that would require trading stamp firms to be licensed by the state, and to post surety bonds for the protection of consumers and retailers, was filed yesterday for introduction in the House. The bill, sponsored by Rep. Lucille McCullough, D-Dearhorn, with biparti.san support, followed llie introduction earlier of an almost identical liill in the Senate by Sen. Cliarles S. Blondy, D-betroit. This is it! This is the lime lo sell or puretmse Hint newer . boat you have dreatw'd of all winter. Our.mosI reci'iit boat for sale ad received over 8 calls and was sold to tlu' 3rd party that cidled. moral of Ihi.s story i . There an> al U-asI ' ■ pi'oplc 111 our mark( Place the ud to sell your boat today. It’s so easy'. . and the eOst is low. Dial FE 2-8181 Ank for ClasHificd, Thursday’s forecast Ts mostly •loudy and colder with snow flurries. ven was the lowest temperature in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. The recording was 24 at 2 p.m. In Today's Press Both pieces of proposed legis-ation' are bused on the findings oL Ally. Gen. Frank Kelley’s investigation of the collapse last year of the Mereharits Creen Stamp Co., of Detroit. Mrs. McCullough said the House bill is designed to provide ‘Teusonuble regulation of trading stamp companies . . . with the best interests of the consumers, retnilers and companies themselves in mind.’’ The proposed legislation would bring trading stamp firms under closer state control by empowering the Michigan corporation and •lecuritics commissioner to issue iifid revoke licen.ses annually. Plans News Conference WASHINGTON (AP)-President Kennedy plans to hold a news conference at 4 p.m. EST Tliurs-day. He met with newsmen last Thurs(Jiiy. ■ ^ Miracle Scarred by flames, newsman fights way back from hitter remorse — PAGE 3. Lincoln Party JFK to mark birthday with party keyed to civil rights - PAGE 16. Farming Waste Political Ignorance of problems drains taxpayers’ pockets — PAGE 13. Area News ............-4 ■ Astrology ...........,17 Bridge ...............17 Comics ...............17 Editorials ........... 6 Markets ............. 18 Obituaries ......>. .19 Sports ............14-15 Theaters ............. 5 TV & Radio Programs 23 Wilson, Earl .........S3 Women’s Pagies .... ;.|.U v,v/r ■ V TIIR n)NTIAC PllKSS. TUESDAY. FKHRUAItY 12. 19G.‘J ■:'7" Airport Issue on Commission .Expected to Underline Stand THq' City Commission iftay go on recoM again tonight -as - opposing any further spending of county funds for airport expansion- or development, pending a city - county agreement on airport programs. MUD SLIDE — This palatial randr home In the Los Angeles suburb of Sylmar was swamped with mud sliding ih on torrential rains during the weekend. 'Itie swimming pool was also filled, and some rooms had as much as six feet of silt in them. Damage was estimated at $250,000. Winter Acts Up Again I Top item on the agenda for the 8 p.m. meeting is a resolution from the City Airport Committee recommending such a move by the commission. The resolution would oppose developing the county's Allen Airport site “until agreement and county on airport programs including Pontiac Municipal Airport.’’ Commissioners indicated a year ago they’d like to turn the municipal facility into a city-county airport — about three weeks after the county revealed plans for a major jet airport on the Allen site in Orion Township. Snow Closes Schools From Our News Wires A fresh blast of winter weather hit the eastern half of the nation today. Subzero cold numbed some northern sections of the Midwest. Widespread areas of the South and East were blanketed with heavy snow. Snow ranging up to 6 inches closed many schools in parts of Virginia and Kentucky. A 10-inch snow closed some schools in Maryland. Light No Free Parking on Downtown Lot Pending Appeal New England and in Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia. The icy air from the northern Midwest, driven by strong northerly winds, dropped temperatures There will be no free parking on the old county courthouse site in downtown Pontiac pending an appeal to the State Supreme Court of a Circuit Court ruling that such u|e of tj^ lot wa^ illegal. Circuit Judge Stanton G. Don-dero yesterday denied a motion for a stay of proceedings pending the appeal. The appeal was filed last week by the Downtown Pontiac Business Association (DPBAI and the county......... The county ordered the lot j-........ ...^ ......o —--................ - - i . .... clo.sed last Thursday. County of- room and spilled out into the |township's consulting engineers, cahed one important condition . .. . . .1 i . ' .i._ I 1 _*i_I At tho nrAhiitiAn* <hut vaii /lifiuu snow and freezTng rain that made driving hazardous forced some schools to close in Georgia. A cold front moving down the F 10 r i d a peninsula triggered lightning and rain at Cape Canaveral that forced postponement of an attempt to launch the communications satellite Syn-com. Heavy snow warnings were issued for interior and northern sharply in the southern sections. The cold air headed into northern Florida. Readings from 15 to degrees below normal were indicated. Cold wave warnings were posted for parts of Louisiana, Tennessee,.Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas, Texas and Oklahoma. The weather bureau warned of severe thunderstorms and possible tornadoes across central Florida. Farmers in Texas’ Rio Grande Valley feared again for their crops as the weather bureau predicted a “light freeze” for the valley. Waterford to Reconsider Locations for Water Tank Last May 15 the Commission passed by a .4-3 margin, a resolution condemning the jet airport as an “unrealistic and visionary project” and ordered local supervisors to vote against it. Subsequently the Federal Aviation Agency rejected county plans for the multi-million dollar project. Now, the county Is seeking federal approval of plans to enlarge Allen Airport to handle corporate flights serving area industries. fhe commission opposed the use of county tax revenues for Allen airport expansion June 19. A week later they formally proposed expansion of Pontiac Municipal Airport into a large, metropolitan city-county air facility. In August, a preliminary draft of the city’s airport master plan was made public. It tentatively recommends a $5.25-million ex- CAMPLBJBUNE USMC RBSBRVATiON Birmingham Area News City Agrees on Action for Only I Zone Change Twisting Route for Marines Marines' Speedster Sets 50-Mile Pace pansion program for the municipal facility. A large but orderly subdivision vicinity of Walton Boulevard and Main Street. protest group last night vinced Waterford Township Board members to “take a seev ond look” at prospective water tank sites in the northeast area of the township. Nearly 100 residents from Lake Oakland Heights subdi- Slayer Free on Condition She Seek Aid The tank Is one of four in the! BOSTON (AP)—Post-debutante township's proposed integrated Suzanne Clift, 21, was relea.sed water system. I^^day in 10 years probation after The board decided to call a she was permitted to plead guilty , ito manslaughter in the death of joint meeting to further explorej^^^ ^ site possibilities. Representatives! of the Oakland County Depart-! Superior Court Judge Lewis vision jammed the meeting jmept of Public Works and thej Goldberg imposed what he ficials regained control'of the corridor and down the stair- 'will be asked to attend. pro|)erty when Judge Donderoj way In protest to last week's , objections to the tank last ruled Jan. 28 that its lease with! decision bythe board to locate | „„ expected the DPBA was illegal. thS 750,000-'gallon tank in^ the . depreciation of property as well I as an aesthetic downgrading of mmt § \ I i i f Donald Porter, 3736 Mariner The Weather " Full U,S, Weather Bureau Report ' PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Variable cloudiness and rather cold with a few periods of light snow or snow flurries today, tonight and Wednesday, high today 25, Ixiw tonight 12, High Wednesday 28, Winds variable mostly westerly 5 to 12 miles today and tonight. St., Drayton Plains,, spokesman dor the groiij), ackiwwledged that the board acted appropriately whni It decided on jhe wjijer [lanK site that would involve the| 'least construction cost. of the probation; that you (Miss Clift) voluntarily commit yourself to the Massachusetts Medical Health Center to accept such treatment and for such time as authorilies there prescribe,” Judge Goldberg said if there is any violation of the probation condition the court would be required to act accordingly. jgram. He pointed out, however, that the $30,000 to $3.‘),000 expected saving, compared to a previously ;onsidered site, amounted to less than one half of 1 per cent of jthe total $7.5 million water pro- Us. ' l^AHONAL WEATHER - It will be colder tonight in the Atlantic and Gulf Coast states, the Plains states and the Rockies while milder weather is for ecast for the Lakes area V and the West Coast states, Florida and northern California will have rain. Light sndw is expected in the central and southern Appalachians,' Michigan, northern Minnesota and the Texas Pa^andle. REPRESENT 500 VOTERS Porter told board members the subdivision association represent '{1 about 500 votes the water «lxuiuuibij^. invuivfi the “"‘By 'her'ptea; Miss Clift admlttM she shot and killed Pierp Bren-' tani, 27, born in Dresden, Germany of an Italian father aed a German mother who lived in Trieste. Both now reside in Zurich, Switzerland. Brcntani was found shot to death last Oct. 1 in the Beacon Hill apartment which Miss Clift’s attorney said Brentani shared with his client. CAMP LEJEUNE, N. C. (AP) Marines trying to prove their physical fitness with a 50-mile hike, came up with what looked like a real winner today in a fastmarching distance runner, 2nd Lt. Marty Shimek. As 34 Marines, led by Brig. Gen. R. McC. Tompkins, huffed and puffed around the damp, humid course. It took almost no time at all to discover that Shimek, of Hazen, Ark., who did his running at his state university, was the pick of the lo|. Shimek started in the sixth group, 25 minutes behind the first starters, but he was in front by the time the second check point was reached. Shimek walked and ran the first 12.1 miles in one hour and 45 minutes, a killing pace. One problem: Shimek developed a blister on his right heel, but it didn’t appear to be causing him too much trouble. Gen- Tompkins, while he wasn’t setting any course records, was walking steadily and grimly as a general should. CRAZE SPREADS 'The mushrooming" hiking craze was stirring elsewhere. Congressional secretaries Washington, claiming their legs are better than Pierre’s, stole a march on presidential press secretary Pierre Salinger with plans for an all-girl, all-day hike. A bevy of cute Capitol Hill 'Girls Friday” said they would march, along the towpath of the 1 Chesapeake & Ohio canal in bipartisan show of form beginning at 6 a.m. tomorrow. Salinger’s much - publicized trudge — to demonstrate to the world the physical fitness of the lihiitc House staff and a reluctant press corps — is set for .■Friday*——'-'-‘-"'■'•■"■I-;".-..-‘-- At Naha, Okinawa, a rnarine lance corporal claims he marched 100 miles in less than 17 hours— and did it, ironically, the day before President Kennedy turned 50-mile hikes into a national fad. A 3rd Marine Division newspaper said that Darold R. Dent, about 23, of Bur we II, Neb., tramped the 100 miles in 16 hours. 42 minutes, 48 seconds Feb. 4 in wind, rain and sleet. And in Larkspur, Calif., four high school tra^men who participated in a mails teen-age 50-mile hike over back roads have given Marines and the rest of us a mark to shoot at. The four marched off the distance in 12 hours, 8 minutes yesterday, considerably under the 20-hour presidential limit. For good measure, they sprinted the last 450 yards around the Redwood High School track. Only 200 yards were called for. Iraq Continues Commie Purge BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)-Iraq’s revolutionary regime, already shooting Iraqi Reds, had begun cracking down on Communist residents from Eastern Europe, a German traveler said today. “They are treating the Westerners excellently, but for people from the Eastern European Communist countries it js a very different thing,” said Gunter Stock-a Duesseldorf businessman who arrived from Baghdad on a Lebanese airliner. “Four more Iraqi Communists were executed this morning. I “I Was told that so far thre^ East German military advisers attached to the army under Kassem (executed Premier Abdel Karim Kassem) have been arrestqd. The East Europeans are trying to get out of the country.” Hundreds of Communist bloc technicians, businessmen and their families live in Baghdad and other parts of Iraq. Kassem spent millions of dollars on Soviet mili-.taro^pipment got advisers and technicians with The new regime was reported arming civilians to help wage all-out war against diehard Communist backers of Kassem. A traveler reaching Tehran, Iran, Monday said Iraq’s new military rulers are arming civilians in Baghdad, Basra and other key cities to fight communist agitators. BIRMINGHAM - Lengthy dis- cussion of ciiy planning principles led city commissioners to adjourn five of six scheduled public hearings pn zoning last night. Commissioners took action on .only one rezoning petition. They "agreed to change the classification of a parcel of property in the Ruffner-Woodward avenues area from R4 residential to parking. The rezoned property abuts an alley hear the southwest corner of Woodward and Ruffner aye-nues. The Birmingham Chamber of Commerce had written to thfe idppft of the rezoning request. In other action, the commission agreed to set 5 p.m. Feb. 23 as the deadline for filing nominating petitions for the April 1 election. DEBATE ON REQUEST Most of the debate last night centered around a request to rezone the northeast corner of Southfield Road and Townsend Street from its present multiple family elassification (H7j to s neighborhood business area (Bl), The petitioner is seeking to locate a doctor’s office on the site. The Oakland County Republican party’s executive committee has recommended two county officials and a Rdyal Oak attorney as candidates to succeed Probate Judge Arthur E. Moore Feb. 15. Candidates recommended to Gov. George W. Romney are Norman R. Barnard, county corporation counsel; George F. Taylor, county prosecutor; and* James S. Thorbuai,,ja’fi8MBW$ of the county bar association. ’The recommendation was forwarded to Gov. Romney last night. Commissioner Carl F. Ingraham said that “rezohing the parcel to Bl is the same as rezoning the whole area without studying if this should be done.” Commissioner William E. Roberts suggested studying the possibility of issuinji a restrictive contract under the Bl classification. He said that “people want a little variety.” He is expected to name a new probate and juvenile court judge by Feb. 15, the date Moore is moving uj^ to the county’s Circuit Court bench to replace Judge H. Russel Holland, who is retir- ing. The hearing will be continued until the questions concerning restrictive contracts are resolved and when the City Planning Board completes its study of the area. John R. Howard III Service for John R. Howard III, 54, of 720 Chesterfield St., will be 11 a.m. Thursday at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. Cremation will follow. Mr. Howard died unexpectedly of a heart attack yesterday. He was a member of the Society Review of Fees for R20 Asked Circuit Judge William f. Beer has been asked to reconsider his approval of appraisal fees for .seven properties condemned under Pontiac’s R20 urban renewal project. Judge Beer yesterday took under advisetnent a motion by the city to review his award of $11, 960 in fees. He also granted the city 30 days to file an appeal to the State Supreme Court if he denies the city’s request. Under condemnation statutes, the city is obligated to pay “reasonable expenses” and a $25-a-day attorney fee to property owners who win awards. The seven feOs range from $930 to $3,120, according to the city. Fees to appraisers for their services and court testimony usually run no higher than $100 per day. of Automotive Engineers, the Harvard Club of Michigan and the First Presbyterian Church. He was assistanji general manager of the Ethyl Corporation. Surviving are his wife Catherine A.; a daughter, Mrs, David C. Rider df Birmingham; and two sisters. GOP Names 3 Barnard, Taylor and Thor-burn were among seven attorneys interviewed by the committee last night. Others interviewed were Clarence Reid Jr., of Southfield; Maurice A. Merritt, of Birmingham: Theodore F. Hughes, of Royal Oak; and former state senator L. Harvey Lodge of Pontiac, 3 Delegates of Con-Con to Speak Locally Three constitutional convention ilegates will speak at 8 p.m. tomorrow in favor of the document they helped draft. The public meeting will be held at Pontiac Northern High School Auditorium. Henry L. Woolfendon of Bloomfield Hlll$, Vera Andrus of Port Huron and John E. McCauley of Wyandotte will give 15-minutc presentations on various sections of the proposed new state constitution. They also Will answer questions as members of a discussion panel at the meeting, spon-jsored by the Oakland County nonpartisan Committee for the New Constitution (CNC). W. Pontiac attorney James Ilowlett will be moderator. Among cosponsors of the meeting ar.c the Ppptlac of Women 'Voters, the local chapter of the American Association of University Women, the Pontiac Education Association, the United Church .Women and the Pontiac Parent-Teacher Association Council. A Booth Saved Lincoln's Son ler its 500 )C bought,” Ander.son said the site ' onimended both by the County Department of Works and .lohn.son and son, consulting engineers. A second look at the f in Lake Angelus Golfviev totes tank site was s quested. Other sil vlllc Road, on the School property a locations to the w tioned. The joint meeting to re.solve the problem wa.s set for I'eb. 27 lit the Grayson School. (Continued fTom Page One) was buying tickets from the conductor. Booth saw a ypung man. pushed by the crowd, lose his balance and slip from the platform just as the train began to move. B 0 0 t h dropped his luggage, grabbed the man by his coat collar and pulled him back from probable death- The grateful young man was Robert Todd Lincoln, the President’s eldest son. He was 22, recently graduated from Harvard and soon to take up duties as a captain ort General Grant’s staff. Next week’s bo which falls on Elect 18, wa.s^ canceled. A s|)ecial^Tie(dlng f it is warranted, ’^Township .Supervisoi son. be'called ording to tier ,)ohn- Grant, learning of the episode I later, offered to do Booth any fdvor he could. , On April 14, 1865, the fourth anniversary of the fall of Fort fiumt«“r, the nation wa.| ktunned aneW by the murder of Wio President; was a hatred of the assassin that engulfed the entire Booth family. THEATER CLOSED In Boston, the theater in which Edwin Booth was appearing was forced to close. Booth had to undergo a baggage search before he was allowed to leave the «ity. In Philadelphia, a U.S. marshal placed a sister, Asia Booth Clarke, under house arrest and her husband was Jailed. Embiflering the common grief In Cincinrfati, Junius Booth narrowly escaped from a lynch ihob, was arrested and taken to Washington where he was imprisoned for a time. In New York, the mother of the Booths prayed that her son, John Wilkes, would not live to be hanged. Lincoln's dtath brought out the be,st and worst in human nature. Stories of his funeral ran side by side with lurid, “exposes” pn the Booths. Old family scandals dug up and new ones invented. Erwin Booth swore he woulc never appear on the stage again In the following mppths, he clung to the memory of his encounter with Robert Lincoln, as one rock in a. sea of madness. BLOW TO ACTOIUS The assassination reacted against the whole acting profession, which was still considered something less than respectable. ■Preachers lamented the fact that Lincoln should meet his Maker in, of all places, a theater one of those temples of folly, lewdness and Infamy. Stagehands and members of the cast at Ford’S Theater were suspected of complicity In the crime and Were either arrested or required to rpport daily to the police. Financial need forced' EdWin Booth to forget his vow. In 1866 he returned to the stage as Hamlet in New York. On the night of the play, the (heater was jammed by would-be ticket buyers. Extra police stood by apprehensively. BIG OVATION But when the curtain rose, Booth received a standing ovation. The public trial of the Booth family'was over; the verdict was acquittal. A year later. Booth received his postponed gold medal from the city. Booth wrote to Grant, who had become secretary of mindtog him of his promise of a favor', and requesting that his mother be permitted to claim the remninb of her son. Grant did not reply. Not until 1869 was John Wilkes Booth allowed to be burled In the family plot in Haiti more; Edwin Booth died In 1893; As final, tragic coincidence, on the day of his funeral In New York, ;hree floors of the old Ford Theater in Washington, converted nto government offices, collapsed, killing 22 persons. The CNC also is planning for tomorrow a fund raisitig meeting. More than 100 business and professional people from the Pontiac, Birmingham, Ferndale and Northland areas are expected to attend. Mr.s. George Romney, wife of ic governor, and Democratic cohstUuUQnal.convention dele- . gate Frank Balcer of Detroit will, speak at the 9:30 a.m. meeting bt the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ed-witu Deer, 645 Arlington St., Birmingham. Probe Arson in School Fire A fire that cau.sed an estimated damage to building materials in the new wing of Pontiac Northern High School Is under investigation for arson. Pontiac Fire Marshal Charles Metz said today he has filed an arson complaint, with juvenile authorities. 'Teen-agers were seen near the uncompleted building Sunday evening, the night of the fire. Damage was mostly confined to aluminum window frames that were packed in cardboard cases. The frames,-approximately 100 of them, were to be Installed ' yesterday. -L THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, .1963 THREE 'Ow H'old H'U' T? WORCESTER, England (UPI) -Michael Smith, 13, who was charged an extra penny on a city bus because he was bringing a rabbit.home for supper, got. his money back from a bus inspector yesterday who said it was aii a mistake. Scarmchby "Ftemes Reason Overcomes Self-Pity “Have you got your big light on top on?” he ask^. “How’s your siren? I think you’d better roli this one.” Next: The first days—and endless nights. (Editor’s Note: the disaster which struck Paul Staples. Seattle new^apermart, on a 1>MMif ut Summer evening could happen to anyone. This is his story of his ordeal and the people and will which helped him work his way back to a useful life.) ; Sisoo-Hamilton 9||e [ iHti. Heart Box... i;!;! Sisoo-Hamilton :$ 8-01. Heart Box.. . ' I'l Sisoo-Hamilton 1 : Pound Heart Box.. Conversation i Hearts—Pound. . 29 ; Jolly Beans ; RodandWhite-Lb. 29* ^ Sugar ^ams : Red and White-Lb. .39' —S: : JuJu Red Hearts ORc : Full Pound ..... UU VALENTINE CARDS Book of 36 Jumbo Cards 98 N. Saginaw —Main Floor By PAUL STAPLES of the Seattle Times SEATTLE W — A doctor had told my wife it would be a mira-cle if I lived. Yet her voice was .ji§- dieerfut-or-idm "Wpdm ' shapeiess world of dim light that was my hospitai room. Heiio darling,” she said. “You are doing fine. I know you are.” I resented her cheerfulness. I hated the world and was filled with anger and self-pity. I lieved I had been dealt an injustice by fate. It was a mixture of emotion I soon learned I would have to suppress in the weeks ahead if I was to survive the injuries from fire that dimmed my eyes and seared my face, body, arms and legs. "‘Ddn^l try to kid me,” I saW bitterly, “I know what the situation is. I’ve heard the doctors and nurses talking. It’s all bad.” “But Paul, the doctors only know what they can do,” my wife, Aiice, pieaded. “If we try,j we can make up the difference. A lot of people want to help us.” REASON RETURNS The power to reason returned to me as she spoke. My anger subsided. I thought for a few minutes and finaiiy replied: “Yes, Aiice, I believe maybe we can make up the difference.” A balmy June evening 10 days earlier, Alice and I had returned home. A riding iawnmower was in the carport. It was bright greemind red, and a bow of ribbon and a greeting card were tied to the handlebar. The mower was Alice’s “Father’s Day” gift to me. I was filled with the exhilaration of a boy with a new bicycle several evenings later when tri^ to push myself 'frep of the mower. ’There was no escaping. The fencing^as^ver my left foot and had it h'apped against the mower’s frame. In a moment, I was envelop^ in roaring, gasoline-fed flamSs. Fortunately, the mower’s engine did not stall and the clutch did not disengage as I was dragged under the fence. I was^ left stunned and afire. The mower went on and turned over on newly plowed ground. I attempted to douse the fire ^ith ™ of the fence. I clawed at my shirt and tried to rip it off. The fire filled my hands and only burned more fiercely, The mower lay on its side a few feet away still burning and spinning one wheel in the dirt. For a moment, I‘ felt a responsibility to do something about it. Then I realised I was a human torch and slowly burning to death. Turning Jbward Lake Washing-.jn, 35 feet away, I cried for help as I be^f at the flames and staggered W the edge of the water. A spewboat passed within 75 feet of m^ but its occupants did not see me. ' I crawled over som^ logs and plunged into the lake. I splashed around and then lifted myself from the water. Fiames billowed again from; under my shirt. I dropped back into the water and waited. JEacihe.fw«t4ime^ was seriously hurt. I looked into the twilight sky. My left eye was blurred. I was cold and breathless as I climbed from the water. I strode uphill through the loose dirt; My mind was filled with fearful thoughts. I wondered if would lose consciousness and not be found for several hours. My vision was bad. I wondered if I could find my way through the gates and trees. There were voices somewhere. I kept shouting for help. My cries were unheard. My wife, Alice, was in Seattle attending a meeting so I headed next door to the home of Mrs. John N. Wilkinson. Mrs. Wilkinson and her sons, John and Robert, summoned a doctor .and ambulance. My face, arms and body were blistered and black. Mrs. Wilkinson wrapped blankets around me. The doctor arrived and gave me a shot of morphine. As the ambulance turned and weaved along the streets a few minutes later, I watched the reflection of the lights from myoOt and wondered. Would my injuries be fatal? We reached the main lyghway. The attendant who had sat silent- ly beside me this'll spoke toJ1 driver. Factory Roproiontatlvo Haro WEDNESDAY-2 to 3i30 p.m. REMINGTON ELECTRIC RAZOR SERVICE CHNIC WtdnMdoy of ovwy w»«k. /auyVLffiu pituTiirjMa DMtrie Shavers -Main Floor NrimitiMiiuinlMil SINUS CONGESTION •NiMiMilMSIniflmr TRUMAC TABLETS liriwaUy Iw iNM N dan toMMliM. HiRit Onin M tl|M thmi mvlUu N nilinlrMbrMtMn|.N ..... . Oilin.WwaiMllirli Mf fl Km ibow ceiNllflom wri htri MMl tttwr piumtlom-Tliit Omt Jda •aim irho hm Mid TnmM aad Ik- IWIC, nm|ii n» •wniimm. rolled the mower from its shed and cranked the motor. , The evening air was heavy with the sweet scent of grass and fiowers. Birds were busy in the shrub.s and trees. It was great to be alive, I thought. My mowing was nearly finished when I came to grief. The mower veered sharply and struck stump. At the first feel of resistance the governor on the motor re-.sponded with full power. Instantly, the mower became a lurching, clawing monster. I struggled to hold my seat and at the Same time cut the power and disengage the clutch. At,times I feared the enraged machine would rear over on its side and pin me underneath it. The whirring cutting knives on the mower’s reel were below me. In a surge of, fright and brute strength, I managed to wrench the mower from the stump. But the handlebar twisted on shaft. The mower leaped toward link-chain fence. I still fought for lontrol. Suddenly I was chilled filled with-horrw. There-was. Seems to be everyone's year for Cadillac. And why not? It's the most wanted Cadillac ever built. And with twelve different models, who couldn't find one to fall irr-love^ith? Your dealer may just have that one for you right now. VISIT YOUR LOCAL AUTHpRIZED JEROME MOTOR SALES CO. 276-280 S. SAGINAM' STREET • PONTIAC, MICHIGAN MASTERPIECES TO ENRICH YOUR HOME VIDEOMATIC TV 229 |50 Photo-sharp pictures always • • • ‘ automatically . - .with yideo-matic Viinihe Silver Seal Warranty gives, tuning. Ofiver jcai r o 5,, paymtnt 90 days service, full year-part^ ana ,‘«quir«d ^ tubes. Mahogany finish. V _ _ . Dark walnut, light walnut, or cherry slightly higher. 'CONTEMPORARY' STEREO COMBINATION 398“ Enioy the full, beauty and breadth of Stereo FM-AM radio ahd Stereo records ! Micromatic record player with diamond stylus guaranteed for 10 years. Cold Seal Warranty: full year service, parts, tubes. Natural or sable walnut finish. .... * D0WNT0.WN PONTIAC STORE ... 27 S. SaginavY St. . .. Phone FE 3-7168 THE MALL . . . Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake Rd., . . Phone 682-0422 Two 1,000 cycfe treble horns Two 12” bass speakers in Affff Downtown fbatisK Metaned i^f ' Shop SIMMS Tomorrow for These ONE-DAY SPECIALS 9 A M. to .6 P.M: WEDKESDAY ONLY 'Shopper Stoppers' Ladies’ First Quality SEAMLESS Hyl(ULHi»e Regular $1.00 Pair WEDNESDAY DNLY DISCDUNT /^DUNDEE’ Bath Towels Irre. ?L About 22x44 Inch sl»-thick and thirsty tovwls In bloaming white for any hothroon d«cor. — Basamant WEDNESDAY ONLY DISCOUNT STICK ADHESIVE SheK-Papcr VINYL PLASTIC COATED Many docorotlng us«s—for table tops, chairs, walls, shelves, etc. Choice of brilliant patterns, designs and colors. No limit. ■____________ -2nd Flooi^ WEDNESDAY ONLY DISCOUNT 10-Qf. Plastic Pail 39' I Regular fSc Value—Now Durable plastic pail with bale honclle. Won't crack, I chip or peel. Choice of kcolors. -2nd Flopr WEDNESDAY ONLY DISCOUNT Depandablo ‘EAGLE’ Make ' Kite Door Lock Regular $2.19 Value N Pin tumbler lock Is easy to inifall in any door. Complete with 2 keys. Limit 2 per customer. —2nd Floor WEDNESDAY ONLY DISCOUNT Electric Heat Pad With 3rSPEED SWITCH $4.93 Value 3-poslllon heat switch . . . Braille type . . . ^ removable cover. UL opproved, I year guarantee. —Main Floor Eloctiir-AUTO^^ Yaporizors Regular $3,9$ Value—Now Only 3 to 5 hour , action —automatic shutoff .. . soothes Irrl-fotlon from colds and sinus conditions. jSsiaSstt Zn r . Comhioation Water Bootle $1.98 Value - Hot water <#33 bottle and fountain syringe. M Guaranteed. M 2 STYLES OP SYRINGE $1 Faultless Wearever In rectal, ear and ulcer styles. FOUNTAIN SYRINGES $4.95 Value. For travel home use. 'Journey INFR/INEO HEAT UMP $3.95 Vplue- _ 'Fenetro^ (lAy lamp for only. G^ONaffh A Milford, white Lake Twp. Area Federal Grants OK'd Sen. Philip A. Hart yesterday by the Urban Renewal Admlnls- ^announced that federal ^ahts for planning projects totaling 121,276 have been apt^ved for Milford and White Lake Township. I * Hart said in telegrams sent to officials of both municipalities that the funds had been approved tration in Washington. The grants will finance approximately 75 per cent of a 112,928 project In White Lpke Township and an 18,318 program in Milford. White Lake Township Super- Edward Ch^yz said the grant wUl help finance the first-year costiS of a two-year “com-rtw.plan" for the township. The township has hired Parkins, Rogers & Associates Inc. to draw up the plan, Cheyz said. It will include a study of ex- i Open to Public Insurance, Dentistry, Offered in Lake Orion LAKE ORION - The recently completed Downey Professional Building, 780 S. Lapeer R^d, i: open for business. Basically colonial in design, the structure has 2,400 square feet of floor sp*C® divided into four office suites. While one of the offices is still empty, the three others are occupied by Payne Downey, insurance agent and owner of the building; Dr. B. S. Stanaback, dentist, and Philip Tschirhart, lawyer. Two more wings eventually will be added to the structure, according to Downey. The site of the one-story building was originally occupied by the farm of Downey’s great-grandfather, Payne Axford. Set Building Ceremony SOUTHFIELD - Ground-breaking ceremonies for the city’s new |2-million civic center will be 2 p.m. March 24 on a 166-acre site at jOMi and Evergreen roads. isting and future land uses, population, zoning, roads and other township facilities. The total cost of the project is expected to be about $24,000, according to the superviW. IN MILFORD 'V'illage Manager Donald G. Weidner said today that Milford’s grant will be used to pay 75 per cent of the final stage of a master plan being developed forlhe'village*by^'Viltcan^=L8lTO Associates, Inc., of Southfield. The firm of Southfield planning consultants already have completed two of the three major phases of the master plan, said Weidner. The village already has received its grant for planning costs last year. However, Weidner explained that a new application must be submitted each yeaf". Tjie grant announced yesterday will pay for planning work in 1963. ★ ★ ★ Botlr grants were applied tbr under the federal government’s 701 Planning Program, w * * Hart said yesterday the Uihan Renewal AdministraUon also has approved grants to ppy three-fourths of a $13,463 planning project in Madison Heights and $11,311 project in Berkley. EVEN QUEENS FALL-Pretty £|eni Minard, eighth grader at Avondale Junior High School, will reign over the school’s 4th annual Ice Carnival Friday. Here, the 14-year-old queen rests on the iqe after a fall. Daughter of the Fred E. Minards, 643 Jamestown Road, Pontiac Township, she was chosen for the honor by student balloting. Court Upholds Novi on Veto of Land Fill NOVI — Oakland County Circuit Judge H. Russel Holland has upheld the Novi Village Council’ denial of a license to a Dearborn firm seeking approval to operate a 90-acre land fill. Judge Holland ruled the council was “amply justified” in turning down the request of the Wayne Disposal Co. for a dumping site in 1960. The judge said the council’s decision was “not arbitrary, unreasonable, capricious or invalid” as the company had charged. ★ ★ * The council was “justified in believing such a proposed land fill” a quarter-mile feast of Novi Road and between 12-Mile Road and U.S. 16 “would cause polu-tion to the Bassett Drain and create a serious potential health hazard.” In denying the license, the council said the proposed land fill operation would “adversely af-i land fill operation,” the judge feet the entire community.” 1 said. Judge Holland also said the case under “surrounding property would b<'j,(jvjgen,ent after hearing testi-depreciated primarily becausef<,r several days in of the proposed height of lhe|£)pce,nj^r proposed land fill.” The property “is adaptable to a useful purpose other than a Name Those Runniilg for VillageRosfs pRTONVILLE - Local funeral director Charles F. Sherman was chosefrtr“tr“Twrctis‘7^ to run for village president in the March 11 election here. He will be a candidate for the post being vacated by Raymond Barriok, who is resigning after heading the council for four years. Sherman lives at 135 South St. ind Ja pwner of the C. F. Sherman Funeral Home. All of the others nominated for council po-|(sitions were incumbents. Those running for re-election are Clerk Laverne Borst, Treasurer Mrs. Jennie Saunders, Assessor Weber Ware- and-^Trustees 1 Donald Barnes, John Teare and Robert Sutton. Clerk Borst said today that it IrW unusual for write-in candidates to appear on the March U ballot and win positions on the council. Districts Vote for Tax Hikes South Lyon's Passts^ but Oak Park's Fails A seven-mill tax propwal was passed by voters in the Lybn Township Sdiool District yesterday while a 6.5-niill request was defeated in a special Oak Park School District election. Lyon Township l^hool District voters approved the seven-mill proposition for one year by Pay Increases for Principals? Clarkston PTA to Hear Churchmen on Panel I 'rhe council had pointed out that the operation would create a mound 30 to 50 feet above ground level in some areas according to maps submitted by the Dearborn firm. A panel discussion on ' Moral and Ethical Values in the P'amiiy Apart From School and Church” will highlight Thursday’s meeting of the Clarkston Elementary School PTA. Wed in Lake Orion NO ANSWER’ Judge Holland also said the firm’s argument that it would conform to any requirements set by the council “is no answer to the fact that the village council has the right to know in advance the plans, methods and conditions The panel will be comprised of]of the operation.” !ven members of the Independ-I ★ ★ * ence Township Pastors’ Associa-J The council denied the firm a tion. Rev. Paul A. Johns, associa-!license after two previous Cir-tion president, will moderate thcicuit Oiurt rulings. One court de-30 p.m. discussion. icision overruled a rejection of a —---------- --------------- “ permission request by the Vil- llage’s board of appeals. Property owners then took the fight to court again, but ended up with a ruling thdt ordered the couneii to act upon the application as if it had been approved by the appeai board. ROCHESTER -The Rochester Citizen’s School Committee asking the board of education to “give consideration” to salary increases for district principals. The committee, deciding to be no more specific than this, said the board alone can properly determine salaries depending upon experience and responsibilities of each administrator. The recommetodatjon was based on the study group’s findings that principals in the Rochester district earn less than the majority of school heads in Oakland County. The report pointed out that pay for Rochester school principals is “in the bottom 45 per cent of similar salaries in the county.” Another fact brought to light j by the committee’s findings was' a comparison of Rochester’ superintendent’s and assistant superintendents’ earnings with that of similar administrators throughout the county: The report also suggested a higher salary scale for teachers, slightly less than that recently requested by the salary committee of the Rochester Education Association. The recommended pay schedule showed a range from $4,900 to $7,900 for teachers with a four-year degree and from $5,150 toj $8,150 for those with a master’s degree. Believe Arsonist Set Broomfield to Address Hardware Association UJS. Rep. WUliam S. Broomfield, R-Oakland County, will be guest speaker at tomorrow’s monthly meeting of the Oakland County Hardware Association. Broomfield will discuss current domestic and foreign problems at the 7:30 p.m. session to be held at Club Rochester in Rochester. a 244.vote marglh.-MI to .4lia>..^ paJcheeJWJW UTICA — The owner of a tire recappinii company here, whose building was level^ by fire Sunday, claimed yesterday that firemen were delayed because the dispatcher took time to determine whether he was a taxpayer. ' Edward B. Drew, owrier of the Drew Recapping and Tire Co. at 11229 Hall Road, maintained that when his wife called the fire department. Sunday the woman dis- The operational millage, which replaces five niills that expired in December, uias necessary to hire ne-.v teachers and to pay salary increments, according to school officials. ★ * - If _ Additional teachers are need-i because of increased enrollment in the Lyon Township district, officials said. PROGRAM CUTBACKS Meanwhile, the defeat yesterday of the Oak Park millage proposition is expected to deiay opening of that district’s new junior high school and cause oth-cutbacks in the schooi program. The 6.5-mlll operational fund request, which officials had sought to have levied for 10 years, lost by only 122 votes, 2,732 no to 2,610 yes. It was the second defeat of an operational millage proposal eight months by Oak Park School District voters.^ In June, district voters rejected a five-mill proposal by an even larger margin. ★ ★ ♦ Prior to yesterday’s election, chool administrators warned that another defeat would mean half-day sessions for junior high school students. Charges Dispatcher Defa/ed Firemen the flames under control until the fire had destroyed the plant, located in a large quonset hut near the Drews'home. ■ . ' ★ , ★. Explosion of a boiler In the plant started tke fire, Stapdler said. He agreed with Drew’4 approximate estiipate of $100,000 damages caused by the blaze. . - fore sounding the alayn while she inquired about taxes. Mrs. Drew agreed with Her husband. “The lady dispatcher —I don’t know her name -«> wanted to know if we lived in the city, which we do, and if we pay taxes,” she said. “Then she left the phone,’ Mrs. Drew continued, “and came back and saldT‘I gueas.yoii ’'ll send them out.” ★ ★ Volunteer Fire Chief Marvin Standler defended the dispatcher, Mrs. Cherry. Debroske, 52861 Brenton Drive, Shelby Township, a ★ ★ ‘She’s a very good dispatch-he said today. “She told j,” he added, “that from the time the call caiiie in it wasn’ moris than 90 seconds before she pushed the button to sound the alarm.” ★ ★ , ★ Standler, said it is standard procedure to determine which-dis-trict the fire is in so that the correct fire department can be notified. He said the tax rolls usually were not checked before sounding the alarm. Firemen were unable to bring JERILYNN SCHIFFMANN August vows are planned by Jerilynn Schiffmann and William P. Wedge, son of Mrs. Emma Wedge of Ferndale and Floyd Wedge of Detroit. The bride-elect is the daughter of Mrs. George C. Schiffmann, 7521 Honeysuckle Road, West Bloomfield Township, and the late Mr. Schiffmann. On Florida Honeymoon After the council’.s denial, the LAKE ORION Ing in Florida are newlywed Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Dean Wilson who exchanged their nuptial vows Saturday afternoon in the Lake Orion Methodist Church. Rev. Robert J. Hudgins per formed the donWenHng ceremony. I company asked the Circuit Court Honeymoon-, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth K. Dea-to amend its order to force is-bler, 79 Smith Court. Parents ofjsuance of the license. When this the bridegroom are the G. Ken-1was denied, the firm appealed to neth Wilsons, 670 Fernhurstjthe State Supreme Court, which Drive. !-sent the issue back to Circuit ★ ★ ★ jCourtf for further proceedings. A gown of hand-clii)i)ed French • » -n » Chantilly lace and organza was,. H was the desire o vdlage of-chosen fc the bride for her wed-|"‘ ‘^ «“wn ding It featured a Sabrina neck-^he matter. The bride m the former Man-ijjj^g sleeves and a full skirt lyn Jeanette Deabler, daughter cf|appjiqyp(j jace medallions j that swept into a soft chapel i train. * ...A oluster of pearl-iced flowers held her bouffant veil of pure silk illusion. She carried a cascade of white butterfly roses, pompons, and miniature carnations entwined with Ivy. , Jeanine A. Deabler of Flint was maid of honor for her sister. Bridesmaids were Mr.s. Mack Clouse of Lake Orion and Verna Jean Hayward of Almont. ROSE TOWNSHIP - Arson is' blamed for a fire that destroyed vacant, two-story house here last night. The building at‘859 Munger Road is owned by Mrs. Gertrude Hunger of Highland Township. Holly Fire Chief Maynard Lowe said he believed that the building was set on fire because fresh' footprints were found leading to from the house when his department arrived about 11:30 p.m. MRS. HERBERT D. WILSdN on Hemingway Road. Performihg the duties of best man was Tracy Sibley of Rockville, Md. Ushers were David Luebberl of Lake Orion and Dougins Deabler, brother of the bride. ' ★ ★ . ★ j Immediately following the rites,] the bridal pafty received guests i, at a r e c e p't i 0 n in the fehurch] house. The newlyweds will livej INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP TAXPAYERS NOTICE! Taxpayers of Independence Township, Friday, February 15 is the last day for payment of 1962 toxes without a 4% penalty beir|g added. ^igned Kenneth L. Johnson Indtpvndcnc* Townnhip Trcoiurtr QUESTIONS A ANSWERS about CORTINA— Ford’s newest from England, America’s best import buy! (because it isjhe one fine car of the low price, import field) How big is Cortina? It’s five pcbple big - the biggest irt the low price import held. 98 inch wheelbase, 168.3 inches overall. What kind of performance may I expect? Cortina feels and handles like a sports car. It is powered by the industry’s most modern 4-cyIindcr overhead valve, 53.5 horsepower engine, largest. * most powerful in its price range. This is the same engine, which with racing modifications, has been a consistent winner here and abroad. TrAnfeMMiPJnll lilu! nized gear box. You get it in Cortina and at no extra cost! Either stick shift or steering column mounted-your choice. Hydraulically operated clutch, toot Q. What kind of seals? A. Individual bucket type up front - wide as an air liner's and a full 53.5 inch lounge in back. All padded with deep foam rubber, of course. Q* Leg room? A. You’ll lit in a Cortina very well indeed even if you arc a six footer. 47t4 inches in front, 39.3 inches in back - more than the average of other low price impbrts. Also more hip, shoulder and knee room. 0» WeVe got kids who eat while we travel. Can the upholstery take it? ^ A* Cortina's color-keyed vinyl wipes spic and span with a tissue. And it’s used throughout toe interior, doors, seats - even the headlining! Q. Mileage? A< More than you dreamed of and on regular. Oil changes only every 6000 miles. Qt They use salt to melt ice where I live. Can Cortina take it? A. With the best of them. Bodies are scientifically rust* proofed. Exposed under body parts are zinc coated. The finish is hand-rubbed baked enamel. All this plus unit construction means Cortinas last. Q« What about noise? A« Doors, roof and body panels are "sound-conditioned” with heavy mastic material. Whisper if you like! Q* About that finish again. Is it lacquer or enamel? A* It’s a special specification enamel applied over heavy gauge body steel already treated against corrosion. It is especially resistant to flying gravel and with a mij^um of care will last years. Bright work if staimess steel and heavy chrome. The grille is die-cut from hon-tarnishing chromium plated aluminum. Q> What is Cortina's price bracket? A. In the import price range, a few dollars more than the smallest, hundreds less than others with no greater rooiti. Q* Are Cortina's difficult to aervice? A. course not. All fittings -muts and bolls - are U.S. standard size. All Cortina dealers ire supplied with normal parts replacement and render skilled service at low cost. Q* Is the trunk adequate? A. Bettet than^ZO.9 cubic feet and it’s goU.hag. wide. No other low mice import can compare. Next nearest is only 15 -i that’s 25% less! You also get a car wfde parcel tray under the padded dash — and a glove box. Q* What are the extras? *> A. Not many. A radio if you want one and « heater that's a knockout. The rest comes with the car. Examples; Two electric wipers, two padded visors, two padded arm rests, 3 ash trays, silent shut safety door locks, two mufflers, opening rear quarter windows, 12 volt battery, etc., etc., etc., and etc-I Where may I try a Cortina? At any Cortina dealer listed below. Best of ihe imports because best of all CORTINA is a PRODUCT *100 down *49 per month! LLOYD MOTORS LINCOLN • MERCURY • COMET • METEOR • ENGLISH FORD 232 SOUTH SAGINAW STREET, PONTIAC--FE 2-9131 '1 Some large stoii^s use trained dogs for patrol and security duty. Tllli: PONTIAC rm^SS. TUKSDAV, ¥K HUUAUY 12. HM.a I'iVK . After 4 Years,* Out of Tinsel Town Bouncy Van Johnsons Back •NO MAN IS AN ISLAND’ ‘TALES OF TERROR’ V WEDNESDAY KOUINNffiGifilSON BROQNEYffiNARRIS REQUIEIVI HEAVYWEIGHT TiNNESSEEWIUIAMS’ M'ti'W I® COMEDY! itoS2£lZ ftWiWUlClBF WELCOME HOME—After a four-year absence, Van Johnson is starring in a Hollywood movie, “Wives find Lovers” with Janet Leigh, pictured giving him a welcome back kiss. H^ vmrked in her first movie back in 1947. Johnson said he r^ gained his confidence by working on the London stage in “The Music Man.” For Wild Styles By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD - “Sometimes you can stay in this town ttio long. You start to lose your confidence. That’s when you’ve got to get out of Hollywood and see if you’ve still got what it takes.’' Van Johnson} I who courted June Aliy son and Esther Williams a. through many anBB®k<*" MGM movie, is THOMAS back starring in a Hollywood'film after a four-year absence, during which he restored his confidence. He is playing opposite Janet Leigh in “Wives and Lovers.” ★ -' 5^ ' ★ “Janet and I go ’way back,’ he said. “We were together in her first picture, ‘Romance of Rosy Ridge’ (1947. Van has the same infectious ^bounce from those golden MGM days. He ^mitted that he had Toa Suspend 35 Students to hit the toad to regain his enthusiasm. His feature career was ailing, arid he lacked the discipline that he had learned in his early years on Broadway. He got it back doing ‘Music Man” in London. RHIMES DELICATESSEN ATNYiDMRY SPEOIAL LUNCHEON EVERYDAY 3IS OnUnnd fi— Puifclnfl ft 5-4061 I PITTSBURGH (AP) - Thirty-five pupils at nearby North Hills High School were suspended for [one week Monday for what a I school official said were wild hair styles and tight-fitting clothes. Supervising ^JPrincipal Edward D. Kruse said the pupils violated tJproarlouSf Adult Sophisticated Comedy! ttk.e R088AN0 YVEHE dellLElilJiil:*™ Now! EAGLE THEATER the school's 1957 grooming code and “gave no heed to our warnings. “Mo.st of the boys,” Kruse said, “had full heads of hair that were almost pompadours—overly great amounts of hair, combed in styles that attract attention. “Some girls,” he said, “had types of dyed hair that looked just as if they dipped their heads into buckets of dye and didn’t care what (jolor the dye was.” GAVE UP ‘VICES’ “I thought I could just toss off, but I found out otherwise, he said; “I had to really train to keep up the pace. I gave up booze and smoking. That was two years ago, and I haven’t taken up either of them since.” Van returned here last year, played ‘Music Man” at the Co-coanut Grove, then toured in it, mining a mint in tents and outdoor theaters. A Broadway play Bids on 9 Paving Projects to Be Opened in County Construction bids on nine roadpaving projects estimated to cost a total of about $151,000 will be opened Feb. 20 at the Oakland County Road Commission office. Some nine miles of gravel road will be paved in the program. FEATURE ’ 1;20-3s20>B820-7;2fl-9i25 [f An Avalanche of Fun! WaltDisney A Picture the Entire Family Will Enjoy Picture Is Breaking All Box Office Records The county will pay almost all the costs building 22-foot wide pavement on about five miles of county primary roads, with Macomb County sharing the expense of one project. COST OF PROJECTS Some four miles of 20-foot wide pavement on local roads wilt'be financed by matching fund programs with the townships concerned. The county primary road projects and their costs are: 1) Avon Road between John R and Dequindre roads (slightly more than a mile) and .6 mile of Dequindre Road between Avon and 24 Mile-roads. Cost to county is estimated at $34,000, with Macomb County paying half of paving costs for the Dequindre Road portion. 2) Clintonvilic Road between 1) Carroll Lake Road between Commerce and Cooley Lake roads and Wise Road from Commerce Road to existing pavement in Commerce Township, about I'k miles. Estimated cost, $40,000. 2) Oxbow Lake Road between Ponchartrain Street and Elizabeth Lake Road in White Lake Township, about two - thirds mile. Estimated cost, $11,000. 3) Walnut Lake Road between Farmington «nd Orchard ■ Lake roads** in West Bloomfield Township, about a mile. Estimated cost, $13,000. Mann and Maybec roads in Independence Township, about 1.1 miles. Estimated cost, $20,000. ■3) Haggerty R(^d between 14-Mile and Maple roads, including 14-Mile Road relocation, on West Bloomfield Township - Commerc Township line, about Vk miles. Estimated cost, $25,000. 4) Hatchery Road be twee Groveland Street and Saginaw Trail in Waterford Township, about half a mile. Estimated cost, $8,000. LOCAL ROAD PROJECTS Local road projects with townships paying half the cost are: 3^ MOW SHOWINCl I Adults. Children.. ..90c ..25c I Shows at 7«00-9i3l "“sthe WjI'SOR'S mum mm with Carroll Baker, “Come On Paramount lot for the first time Strong,” sparked the interest in since he visited there in' 1940. his film career again. It only lasted fdur weeks,’ said the actor, “but Hal, Wallis was there opening night and he offered me a five-picture deal. Which goes to shoty you, always do your best, evernWhen you know thfe show isn’t the greatest.” The new film puts him on the Dems Plan Dinner to Honor Sen. Hart Michigan Democratic leaders are expected to attend a dinner honoring U. S. Sen. Philip A. HartTeb. 23 at the Community Activities Building |n Waterford Township. The 6:30 p. m. dinner is sponsored by Oakland County Democrats. Pontiac attorney George Goo-gasian^ president of the Democratic Club of Pontiac, Ts dinner chairman. . Tickets for the event are available at County Democratic Headquarters at 17 Water St. over here for lunch 'when we were making"Too Many Girls’ at RKO next door,” he recalled. He also remembered director George Abbott predicted that the star of “Too Many-Girls” would fall for Van. Instead, Rucille Ball went for another member of the cast, Desi Arnaz. Van later married Evie Wy After 17 stormy years, the union is nbw on the rocks. He displayed ils wedding band and said, Neither of-us is in a hurry to do anything. Still being married is| protection for both of us. Who; knows what will happen.” Says Rockefeller Top GOP Pick for Presidency WRONG PREDICTION “Eddie Bracken brought me Yes, our* Fuel Oil lets you lough at Winter Weather . . and Jets YOU enjoy the warm, steady, e®onbmical heat you deserve ip your home. Order yours today. H.H. SMITH «;oo(pap^K^T poftTIAC.MICH. LOS ANGELES (if) - Oregon! Gov. Mark Hatfield says Gov.j Nelson Rockefeller of New York] appears at this time to be the top] Republican prospect for the 1964' presidential election. I Hatfield, here for a series of { Lincoln’s birthday speeches, told a news conference yesterday that Rockefeller “would offer the strongest chance for Republican victory” If the primaries were held now. The Oregon Republican, who denies reports that he’s seeking said Rockefeller Is well known and popular in his state. ASSOCIATE BROKERS-Thit liv«->vir« $ta(f stands raady and willing to giv* you fast and offleiont toivic* in all mattars of real astata. The improved methods of processing applicants reduces the waiting to a minimum for FHA and VA properties which are available to civilians on land contract. The present staff momboia are, from left to right; Curtis Webb, Beatrice E. Johnson, John Muscovalloy, Charles Billings, Arthur Brown, Robert Hill amd Millard R. Charles. Other members not shown are: Victor Woods, Mottle Fortier and Leona Simmone. Mr. Lewis, recently a ppointad to his position as manager, replaces Mr. Chariot M. Tucker, Jr., who is no Idngor associated with the company. Mrs. Johnson has done an oxcollont job in running the office while Mr. Lewis hat boon owoy from hit desk due to ill health. The staff and his many friends with him a speedy recovery. Associates Brokers Investment Co. FE 8-9663 Why don’t they... “Make cars that fight rust a lot longer?” (RAMBLER DOES with exclusive up-to-the-roof Deep-Dip rustproofing. In addition, you get 7 times more rustfighting galvanized steel.) “Make brakes that won’t fail even with a broken hydraulic line?” (RAMBLER DOES with Double-Safety Brakes with tandem master cylinders, separate systems for front and rear •brakes. They stop when others can't. Self-adjusting, too.) “Make doors that close solid, straight and true?” (RAMBLER DOES with Advanced Unit Construction—the years-ahead breakthrough in car building that replaces scores of small parts with massive members formed from a single piece of steel for greater strength, new perfection in door fit, weather seal.) “Make mufflers that won’t corrode or rust out?” (RAMBLER DOES with Ceramic-Armored muffler, tailpipe »a»d-*xhaust--pipe designed to last as long as the original buyer owns the car,) “Make seats as comfortable as a reclining lounge chair?” (RAMBLER DOES with optional chair-height bucket seats that" recline, glide back and forth individually, adjust for knee height, convert to* nap couch.) giving up ecojibm^''^(RAMBLER DOES with sparkling performance from spirited Sixes and V-8s — plus the economy for which Rambler is famous.) “Make engines that won’t ‘telegraph’ vibration through the whole car?”(RAMBLER DOES with Tri-Poised Power that cushion balances thrust for a - “magic carpet” smoothness at all car speeds.) “Make it really easy to get in and out?” (RAMBLER DOES with curved glass side windows that permit the high, wide doors to curve into the roof. Getting in and out is astonishingly easy.) Why doh’t you see and drive a ’6S Rambler and see how true.all this is in the Award-Winning ‘‘Car of the Year” —the most beautiful Rambler ever built? [[I n Winner of Motor Trend IfMIVIDLOl Magazine Award: c:Iarkston Bill Sp«nc«, Inc. "CAR OF THE YEAR" PONTIAC Superior Rambler, 550 Oakland Ave. LAKE ORION Russ Johnson Motor Solos ROCHESTER I & Son UF^ION LAKE Ifwi : ' //T; 'if' THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1963 Pontiac, Michigan HAROLD A. rmoKRALD '^rtlslBK Director circulation Manager O. M«asiiAt.« JnaoAN Local Advertlatng Manager Luster of U.S. Hero Not Dimmed by Years Abhaham Lincoln was bom 15^‘ years ago and died 56 years later^S' ★ ★ ★ He'is justly revered asyOne of the Country’s grcatest/iigtires, whose mission in /^retrospect seemed fatefully designed. t _ For In assaying the man, it is in the realm of the spirit~his"noFinty 6T soul-rwhere lay his imposing stature, not in the mundane qualities and achievements that have come to symbolize mortal superiority. - ★ Lincoln’s life was one of privation, struggle and sadness—climaxed by tragedy. Since, in life, tears are so closely tied to laugh-ter> it could he wondered whether Ills bent for story telling and indulgence in wit were not a compensatory antidote for the unrelieved gravity with which he lived. , codes complexities and invita-l^ns to cheat, Internal Revenue /Commissioner Mortimer Caplin /* thinks the II. S. taxpayer behaves remarkably well by world standards. “No other eountr.v,” he has said, “can approach the percentage of citizens who pay taxes promptly, report all their income and lake only the allowable de-duct ions.” We hope that the new Congress - will" mat-eb- this -oomm«»dable.™tajc-:„... paying attitude- with a comparable tax-writing one. “The Supreme Court of South Africa rules that a man who borrows a book and doesn’t return it is a thief.” —Press report. Most of us are impelled to disagree with this ruling; it would pain us to regard some of our friends as thieves. Voice of the People: HospHttUlsation Insurance EvokesSeveml Questhns Some questions that should be asked of Blue Cross-Blue Shield: Why is a hospital insurance plan In charge of the very people who benefit from rate increases—the hospitals themselves? Why la Blue Shield dominated and controlled by the doctors? What are the administrators of Blue Cross-Blue Shield paid? Are their salaries part of the increased expenses claimed as a reason for higher costs? ★ ★ ★ Is It true the hospitab worry about keeping their beds filled and do not care about certiflcatton of patlents^tsho rpaUy do not need bospiblfzation?' Are we getting a dollar’s worth of effort and efficiency out of our Blue Cross insurance dollar? __________ George McCart 204 Linden Road ‘Credit Not Given to Deserving’ School Official Replies to Letter “’Bloomfield TOwIiisffip police*^ T am leased that Mr. have been working overtime so giv^s us credit for accompllsh-the people can walk anywhere over the past few in their homes without fear. Ponllac, Dtlroit, and atale poUca -nonUi. Ihou* we« had put in a good many hours. const®"* ^ooW^ng from members of the ASDIA. His defeats, before he rose to destiny’s heights, in private and political life outnumbered his successes; his early romantic and later- marital phases were unrewarding and frustrating; and iiis administration of the presidency and direction of the War offer Inviting field for carpers. ★ ★ ★ Hut t*’* attributes of the man — his inner force and sublimity — (ranscended the human frailties and gave him honored place in our figurative but significantly uncrowded national Hail of Fame. . A PSYCHOLOGIST says the only difference between a playboy and a bum is money. It Is also true that money is the only difference between an eccentric and a screwball. David Lawrence Says: Greatest Danger of War Is in Fear The Man About Town ‘ Month Shines February, Short on Suns While Long on ‘Stars’ We salute the memory of the Great Emancipator. By HOWARD HELDENBRAND This is the month-.of birthday anniversaries of our country’s illustrious. Today we honor that ol the gentle and towering Abraham Lincoln. Elsewhere on this page, fitting "editorial respect is paid the American hero, but some interesting historical sidelights follow from the pen of our Lake Orion authority, Wilbur J. Segcr. Record of Income Tax— a Study in Frustration Income Tax, revision of which Is Boon io be tackled by Congress, has had a long and troubled life. The path it has followed has been a thorny one, with many ups and downs. A tax on Incomes was first imposed to help finance the Civil War, but was allowed to expire in 1872— one of the rare instances of a government tax being repealed after once established. ★ ★ ★ “Most Americans,’’ says Mr. S., “arc aware that both Lincoln and Washington have February birthdays, but are unaware that our ninth president, William Henry Harrison, was also born in this month — on the 9lh. WASHINCTON - Paradoxical as it may seem, the greatest dan-1 ger of war today is the constant expression of a fear of war. The sacrifice of principle to ex-|)odient:y in the past—a readiness by one side to yield to the terror oi war—has led to miscalculation and misjudgment by the other side and has brought war just the .same. ft is tor this reason that a close analysis of what the Presi-delit of the United Slates lias been ” saying lately about world pol-| icy in terms of| the Cuban situ-l ation i.s esseiltiall to an understand- LAWRENCE ing of the dangers that lie ahead. indeed some Americans have been killed recently in South Viet Nam to check Communist infiltration of an independent country. World War II was over, wrote of the mistakes of the 1930’s: Police Chief Norman Dehnke did 20 hours a day for those two weeks. Wiy Isn’t credit put where credit Is due? Was it necessary for George Taylor to threaten the parents of the sniper as well as the boy? If it weren’t for the police he wouldn’t have known If fr was a boy. Mr. Dehnke stated if anyone knew their son might be the one to phone him and he’d talk or meet them any place. Does Mr. Taylor just sit at a desk and wait for things to happen? He should realize that there are many interested citizens in Avondale—some attended the board meeting wheFhe was^^ w^^^ fronted with one of his own statements which he made Iti ah effort to defend Mr. Watt’s application for NDEA funds. The NDEA problem is far from settled. Bpard action has called for more information regarding the strange fact that we (the school district) are Neglect of Hungary led to the assertion of Soviet arrogance in East Berlin. Now, if the United States — despite all its outward show of firmness—should really lean to a policy of peace at any price in Cuba or anywhere else, there could finally be a provocation to war. Winston Churchill, after “Still, if you will not fight for the_right when yi)U can easily win without bloodshed: if you will not fight when your victory will be sure and not too costly; you may come to the moment when you will have to fight with all the odds against you and only a precarious chance of survival. “There *may even be a worse ‘U.S. Should Stop Aidingr Poland’ time Jhan could possibly have been done with ()pe less counselor than originally planned. American travelers testify that the non-Communist people of Poland are friendly. But the Polish government, being Communist,' cannot realistically be xt i s f’wUi iiuiiiisi.. UHiiriui reitiisuuujiy^ ue r„ ,Z” v.l when there is no hope of victory, because it is better to perish than live as slaves.” ~ Bob ConsidiHe ^ays: “Not one president of the U.S. has been born in June, and not one died in May. During the years the tax was in effect, I’resident I.incoln apologized to the Nation for “inequities in the practical applications.” hut added that “if the Government should wait before collecting a tax to adjust the taxes upon ^ach man in exact proport ioH With ifevify dlher, we should never collect any tax at all.” “The individual.*! with Lincoln or directly connected with hi.s assas.sination seemed branded by tragedy, as was the theater where it occurred. “The assassin, John Wilkes' Booth, of course, was slain or committed suicide 12 days later “Mr.s. Lincoln became mentally deranged and died in 1882 "A Major Ualhbone, present at the assassination with the gil l he later married, __________________ killed her in 188:1 and spent the remainder “and ^('l "no compromise on of his life in a mental iastitution. One must start with the feeling that Mr. Kennedy is a sincere, conscientious public servant who wants to avoid a war. Hut, so were some of his predecessors who nevertheless found them-si'lves in a war because an impression appeared to prevail in this country that anything is better than war. In many countries, moreover, one even hears nowadays some prominent persons crying out, “better Red than dead.” The policy of the United States government is based at present not on a fear of war as such but a belief that war can be avoid- Russia’s Being Inspected by Incredible U.S. System principle made. President Grover Cleveland tried fb revive the tax in 1894, and a bill was passed—but the Supreme Court declared it unconstitutional by a five-to-four vote. To get around the Supreme Court, Congress In 1909 passed a joint resolution calling for a constitutional amendment authorizing an income tax. In 1913, such a tax was enacted —to remain in effect until the present. “A tragic’aspect of the murder, not revealed until after the death of the individual involved, was that Lincoln’s bodyguard, John Parker, instead of maintaining his post at the entrance to the presidential box. had left it, and was watching the performance from some distance away . . . and thus not 1ft prmective position wHe# Booth,'after entering and leaving the theater five times, finally mustered sufficient courage to approach I he I’resident and fire the fatal shot. “After Lincoln was a.s.sassinatcd, public indignation prevented owner John T, Ford from reopening the theater. Eventually sold to the government and remodeled for use by the War Department, its interior collapsed in 189.’). killing 23 and injuring 68.” With deep reverence we think of America’s sa\ior . . . and thank our correK|H)ndenl for his interesting observations. Corties LincoIn’H gkmmy obHcrvation on the income tax of bin day Jhn.s been repeated over the years by any number of economists and tax authorities. And his quote i.s as pat todsy as it was a century ago.... ★ Tfr Tfr The framework of the tax has been strained and twisted out of shape and effectiveness by the many disparities that have been ■written into it. Powerful sepients of the economy have made their influence felt both in Congress and the tax court. Special dispensation, contradictory rulings and expedience have thwarted efforts to bring order out of chaos wiljl the establishment of a non-poliiijtal and equitable tax instru-ment. Bui ironictHy, despite thfc fax s one Irom Edgar W. Hiestand “Wc hear they’ve brought out a new drink called Forcignadc. It’s refreshment that never pauses.” Ill official circles, h o w e v c r, there is a constant repetition of expressions of fear of war. This could lead to misjudgment in the camp of our adversaries, 'riie ‘other day «)n television a com-pientalor read to some, congress- Kennedy had said, and then in effect, bluntly asked them, “now, do you want War'.’” The I’residc'iit himself, of course, has not closed the door to the possibility of a major war arising out of Soviet deception and military operations in Cuba. The words of a President are read everywhere, including Moscow. Do the.se utterances mean lhal, unlc.ss this country is directly allacked. a resolute stand will not be taken by the United Stales, even if it means war? OMAHA -- The Russians put a lot of aircraft in the sky over the Chukchi Peninsula of Siberia one day last week. An American Air Force officer, watching the flights on an incredible .screen at SAC’s underiiround headquarters n e a r here, said “looks like they got tbeir monthly gas ration today.” The Siberian - based_ planes were also duly noted, and d i s -missed as unim-p 0 r t a n t, on screens at NORAD, North American Air Defense, Colorado Springs, and inj the war room of the Pentagon. CONSIDINE Russia, firm foe of most'“inspection” plans, actually is being take over) and the famous red and yellow telephones. . ' The red one’s lines reach into every SAC position around t h e world. The yellow one’s lines extend to the White House and the Joint Chiefs of Staff. “How about that black one there?” 1 asked. The man sighed, and said, send the Polish governmenb aid, and it sends aid to North Viet Nam to help shoot Americans and their allies. Poland also sends foreign aid to Castro. We have to recognize bow futile are all negotiations with Communist governments. Treaties with these governments do not bind the International Communist movement, and that is where the danger lies. World communism crosses national boundary lines as readily as a crow flies. It finds its adherents everywhere and demands a supreme dedication to worldwide conspiracy. Stop the ridiculous policy of sending soldiers to South Viet Nam to be killed by guns supplied by American taxpayers to the Communists of North Viet The NDEA charge is not the one referred to on the ballot. The ballot states “Mr. Watt knowingly attempted to submit inaccurate Information to the Oakland County Board of Education in an effort to obtain public funds to which the school district was not entitled.” This is an entirely different case. Dave Hackett Vice President Board of Education of One of the County’s Best School-Districts Avondale THOUGHTS FOR TODAY It is he who made the earth by his power, who established the world by his wisdom, and by his understanding stretched out the heavens. >- Jeremiah 10:12. “That’s the one Gen. Power uses Nam, via such Communist coun- to call his wife to say he won’t tries as Poland. be able to get home for dinner.” Paul F. Open, ye heavens, your living doors; let in The great Creator from His work return’d Magnificent, His six days’ work, a world! • — John Milton. In Washington: Must Compromise on School Aid By PETER EDSON bills. Which one do you want?” and irfereasing teachers’ salaries w/«5HiNrTriN mFAi_As thp is, under scrutiny. The modified inspected day and night by a fan- House Education and Labor Com- program gives the states tastic array of radar scanners rS carries on its' scheduled nevertheless passed final say on how and where the each the size of a football field. Llis L ""‘y 7-® t^jy?®*- . loan plan for college construction, posal may find mo Winning second place in the 196.') bird calls (about Robins, that is) is Mrs. Noel Swindler of 4:)27 Bluebird. Her entry was in a tree when seen a few A.M.s ago, vigorously shaking self «... she thinks he’d Just had his morning shower. B-r-r-r. Mrs. H. Girard of Stony Lake; phoned that at eight-thirty last Friday morning she beheld the unusual sight of a double rairvbow shining through the mist on th^soptheast side of the lake . . . wonders wliether others shared the impressive spectacle. FOOD FOR THOUGHT The' Soviet government may ponder that question, for it never .stops testing its adversaries. Mr. Kennedy stood firm last October, but questiqns have arisen now as to what will be done by the United Slates about the continued pre.sence in Cuba of 17,000 military men from the Soviet Uhion. The critics have helped by bringing this issue to a*head. . ■rhe reason, to be sure, why nothing was done in Hungary and western Europe Is that the West lost Its nerve. The Soviets knew the West wouldn’t dare to ■What they detect in the sky over the U.S.S.R, is automatical; ly transmitted to SAC, among' other commands, automatically digested and assayed by electronic computers, and the information is passed along in visual form for human consideration and judgment. Well under way toward completion at SAC headquarters is an even more astounding “machine.” This one, called either SAC Command and Control system or 465L, Is a multimillion-dollar investment in ’‘reaction time,”._____ ____ . EDSON into it, around the clock, SAC bases and missile sites everywhere will pour complete information on the readiness and position qf every bomber and ICBM. The machine will store the information and, on order, deliver it immediately to the commander in the form of 20-foot tall "slides” on the wall of the command cenr go the limit to uphold the prin-’ciples of the United Nations nedy administration’? school and college aid program, a welter of conflicting and con-t r a d 1 c t 0 r y p r 0 p 0 s als are emerging. nils mpy indi-[cate that every-ne agrees that I something will have to be done to aid education at all levels. But it is obvious that a number of compromises will have to be made or nothing will be done. And this isn’t anything that will correct Itself just by leaving it alone. Rep. Peter P’rellnghuysen, R-N.J., ranking member of the House Education committee, and some of his colleagues oppose the idea of an omnibus bill. They want it broken down into separate parts: aid for primary and seconiary schools, aid to vocational and specialized schools, revision of the present National Defense Education Act programs for aid to areas affectrl by fedeni government employment and extension of college student loans. Verbal Orchids to— Mr. and Mrs. J. Walton Davis qf 9!) Weiumah Drive; f»2nd wedding anniversary. \ Mr. tmd Mrs. Maurice E. Filz-gerald eny St,; of 10 Liberty St.; 52nd wadding anniversary. In any great war it would tell him exactly which targets had been destroyed, which needed more bombs,, and where he could get them quickly. It would also tell him the po-sitlqp of the Polaris fleet, and carriers with nuclear-wcaponed fighters. And when to hold off a missile attack on a target until planes bombing It get out of range. ■ * * * El.sewhere is SAC’s sleepless /Yet in ‘ HttO, collective action control center, which could only the House Rules Committee final-hy the U N. saved Korea and be destroyed by a direct H-bomb ly told the Department of Health, hit (at which time supplementary Education and Welfare in effect: two weeks hearings on Joan plan for college cons'tructlbh. posal may find more support this A compromise version of this, year from congressmen who fear including a scholarship program, federal control of local education, was worked out with the Senate. But this four-year, $1.5 billion But near the end of the session program stijl faces opposition be-the I’ouse sent this back tn com- cause its benefits would be con-mittee for reconsideration and fined to public schools. Parochial there it died. and most private schools would ■t, i, be excluded, except for classroom One of the quirks in the present ®9uipment loans, and they claim situation is that Sen. Barry they are just as hard up. Cioldwater has come out for a nation:.! scholar.ship program to enable more high school graduates to attend college. The administration wanted some .scholarships la4 year but Gongress balked. So the administration dropped the subject this year, -except for a research program to see if it was necessary. Two other Goldwatcr Ideas not in the administration program are tax relief for families with children in college and a tax credit for that part of state and local taxes paid to support primary and secondary education costs by the states. Best chance for passage now is given to extension of the Nationat Defense Edueation Act, due to expire June 30. ’This program is 12 years old. Under its provisions, some 60,000 Crngressmen from predominantly Catholic districts can counted on make the same fight for this thjy did last year and to try to block aid for public schools “ unless everybody gets It. Lobbies on both sides of the aid-to-cducation issue have lined up to testify for and against tlie Kennedy program. The opposition, as stated by U.S. Chamber of Commerce and like-minded organizations, is that massive federal aid Is not needed. The support, frqm National Education Assn, and othojrs, is tliat state and private resourcc.s are not adequate to take care of the seven mllli'-n college, the 05 million primary and secondary school students expected to enroll In 1970. Charter and protect the op-. pressed peoples who sought to assert their independence only Io find the Soviet armies over-wlielining th«>m by force. The catch in this idea Is that eJassrooms have been built last year a half-d zen separate 7 board aid has aid-to-cducatlon bills were before been given to educating about two Congress, the way Representative Frelinghuysen wants it now. The Senate reported out or pafi' I most of *hcse bills. But million children of federal employes and armed service personnel in affected areas. Tlie total cost has been $2.85 billion. This type of aid congressmen like. repelled aggression. Many American boys died in that cause, as General ai|d for primary and ■»- or airborne headquarters would “you can have only one of these s^uondary school construction I \ . ■I 11)* Aasoclatcrt Pniai li *1)1111)1)1 cxclutlVAljr to th* ua* for rapubll-)^Atlon of *11 local i)*w* printed In hewapaper *> well *• "iiU AP n«wa )iiapatcl)«i. The Pontiac Preea la <lcllvnred bv carrier tm SO cento- a week; where moiled In Oakland, Oeneoee, UvlhR-l aton. Macomb, Lapeer and W*eii-' tenaw Counties It Io $11.00 a year; ekHSWherb In MlchlKan and all other placei in the uAlted State* I3$.00 a “ ■■■ ------------------ “yahle ifalc! Michigan; Member of ABC. \' THE PONTIAC FRES'^, TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 12 -SEVEN. SPECIAL FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY.' Tender,, Juicy RIB L/.S. Considered Menace by Europeans STEAKS 39i CLUB STEAKS 49,1 (Editor’s note: js President d« -Gaulie-stirrirtg-up resent^ ment of U.‘ S. policies in Europe? AP correspondent William L. Ryan has some answers to that question in this, .the second of four articles on the Common Market, NATO, the ideal of . European ,unity and what they mean to Americans.) By WILLIAM L. HYAN W) Special Corespondent (LONDON — .There are vocal and inftaentiaLpeople^in Western Europe' who regard the American presence on the continent as more of a menace than a blessing. Jhe Brussels explosion at the The British gov-* crnment’s . care- RYAN ful policy, keeping its anger in check after Brussels, has kept a thumb in the European dike, holding back at least for the time being a tide of resentments. These could rip Europe asunder, sharpen conflicts and lead toward a thing called continental-ism. Tpat suggests less reliance on the United States, and a Europe for Europeans. HURRY...ONLY 3 WEEKS LEFT! INDIVIDUAL CASSEROLE FREE WITH 7-GALLON GASOLINE PURCHASE. VA QT. CASSEROLE FREE WITH OIL CHANGE AND LUBRICATION. START YOUR SET TODAY! These individual, milk-white casseroles and matching VA quart casserole . .. all in heat-resistant Fire-King ... can be ydurs FREE! They’re ideal for baking or for serving soups, salads, pot-pies, cereals, vegetables or desserts. And, the I'A quart casserole has an oven-proof glass cover that can also be used for baking or serving! This offer expires March 3, 1963, so start your Country Kitchen Casserole Set toda^l , AT ASHLAND OIL DEALERS DISPLAYING THE CASSEROLES SIGN IF YOU WANT TO SAVE 25% ON THAT ADDITION READ THIS AD... NEW BANK RATE PLAN WITH LIFE INSURANCE E PLANNINO-NO OBltOATION 739 N. PERRY—PONTIAC [alternative to eventual British I membership in an Integrated Europe as part of an Atlantic com- munity. He told me the British face a difficult, if not critical, I two or three years In which they 'will have to tighten up all along the line, reduce tariffs and put up stiffer-eoipetitioa for nu^keta. It will not be easy for The *-®etira as-tlevelop-* .. .. , . — . itu\ GiihG^srviAnt easy for Britain, smuggling with manifold problems, including an unemployment- figure which has reached 600,000. RESISTANCE IMMINENT This concept of l^ritain’s future attitude toward the Common Market will meet stiff resistance. One spokesman for the right-wing Tory group is Viscount Hinchingbrooke, the Earl of Sandwich. He led a revolt against Common Market membership with the campaign cry that it would betray ment is there, nurtured by French President de Gaulle's outspoken suspicions of a resistance to Washington. There is a curious blending of right-wing conservative views with those of the far left regarding the U.S. role in Europe. ENGLISH RELIEF articulate forces were relieved when France’s veto kept Britain out of the six-nation Common MaHtet. They saw Britain a^a disadvantage as part of an integrated Europe. They'prefer something like an enlarged EFTA (European P’ree Trade Association) without surrender of economic sovereignties. Things will be tough now for Prime Minister Harold Macmillan’s conservative supporters. There had been 15 months of nego- ,s and make Britain too subservient to the United States. This line was powerful enough to deprive the Conservatives of a once safe House of Commons seat in a special election last November. Ix)rd Hinchingbrooke, an amiable peer who does not consider hl.nself anti-American, told me he Ip inglaod Jor example, cettain finds deep unease in Brjtain about the United States. He says people should forget about the menace of Communism, “wake up and see that the United States hariione us harm, while the Russians have But. he complained, Brittain’s foreign office is tied tightly to U.S. policy. LATENT ANGER There is latent anger in Britain about this, he said. He pointed to U.S. policy during the Suez crisis 1956, U.S, recognition of the tiations, with all the agonizing un- revolutionary Yemen Government certainty, before the door was in the Middle East where British slammed. I interests are threatened, and the ★ * ★ lU.S. attitude in the Congo—where, Britain will have a general elec-!he says, Washington policy threat-tion before October 1964, and if[ens Katanga’s neighbor, British-the government is overturned, thejruled Rhodesia. j whole picture of Britain’s attitudel “The foreign office establish-j toward the Common Market can!ment is pro-American in almo.st! be changed radically. leverything, to the point of ignom- Maurice Macmillan. House ofjiny, even while the United Nations! Commons member and son of the is threatening to wreck Rhode-prime minister, says he sees nojsia," he said. He says Russia is not as menac- ing as it was 10 years ago, when British-Ameriean domination^ of Europe made sense. Fears of Russia have diminished, he insists, making the united,integrated Europe concept out of date. This is close to the view of Rrench President; Gharlep de Gaulle. Without being great admirers of de Gaulle, influential people in England, France and elsewhere say Europe should act on her own in approaching Moscow not wait for the U.S. to lead. This, they say, is not sponsorship to a third force but an attempt to be more independent. MINORITY VIEWS These still appear to be minority views. There remains a great backlog of pro-American sentiment in Europe, pronounced in West Germanvv Italy, the low countries and Britain. But impTicit in development of the independent Europe idea is the possibility that anti-Americanism will grow in England and on the Continent. In Britain, feelings frequently have been bruiged by U.S. policies such as the scrapping of the Sky-bolt missile program upon which the British relied for their own deterrent. This adds support to Mere than 2,000 new books ire published in an average year in the U. S. Mystery and detective stories still are in popular demand, publishing industry fig? ures confirm, , sentiment that Washington nr vered Britain into the Common* Market mess in the first place,, and builds up more resentment. On the Continent, some elements|jN approve de Gaull' ’s twitting ofjj the United States^ Should thej^ Common Market collap-e -fromll strains induced by the January IJj events, Europe could drift morejij and more away: from the UnitedlB States and toward de Gaulle’s *' European bloc vfew. C Nc:;t: de Gaulle’s vision of His- ■ J tory. 'Sia DOUBLE I TOP VALUE STAMPS j on oil I GASOLINE I FILL-UPS i DON'S GULF : There'll Be Less Green This St. Patrick's Day DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) - The severe winter has wiped out most of Ireland’s shamrock crop, and it’s a poor outlook for St. Patrick’s Day in America. “We fly out a ton of shamrock every year,’’ said one American! pilot. "This year our suppliers sayj we just can’t have it” ' , WITH \ HOME I.OAN from our association, you can relMOTow up lo the Original amount oj^our loan lor (uliirc repairs, remodeling, or dllier improvements-willioul refinancing! And, lliis praetieal open end clause is only one way w<- help make home finuneing more con-venienl for you. Stop in today for full details. **Co|||Fo/** I Savings i ■k ,.:&;loan.\ ★ •k ASSOCIATIOM * 75 West Huron Established 1890 FE 4-0561 CUSTOMER PARKINQ IN REAR OF BUILDWQ Member Federal Home Loan Bonk System PENNEY’S AUWAYS FIRBT QUAL.ITY V I X ■'V ' ;V d // : . ■/ EIGHT TIIK PONTIAC PUHSS, 1TIESUAV. IKimUAliV 12. 1003 Automobile makers predict there will be sl^ least 85 million motor vehicles on United States highways by 1975. GM Displaying Its Part in US. National Defense bmoui DeWm't l^ilts with (lici'r potiitve «n«lge«ic »ciion fot ftst relief of sympiomaiic pains in hack, joints and‘ffluscles. Mildly dm-, ic Dc"'------------------- -■ letic Dc Win's Pills also help flush oi defense r<{gearch laborat^ies are rmaiions. Thousands depend DcWill'i Pills for more restful nighis and active lives with freedom from pain. DeWitt's Pills. '^DELICIOUS FOOD- ^ In Dniightful Surroundiiiga 7^ General Motors yesterday|Mimlteman intercontinental bal-opened an exhibit of.its contribu-iUstic missile container. (ion to the nation’s defense effort. I items in the exhibit are „ , , j two army vehicles — a recon- ProducU of its 13 divisions vehicle and a self-pro- 4 N. Saginaw FE 5-5591 6:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. Daily \ t:nrry-Out .S»>ri'ire noV on display at the General Motors Building in Detroit. Last year the firm’s defense work was valued at $481 million. GMC Truck and Coach Di-' vision’s contribution to the cx;-* hibit is a missile transporter and erector produced for the Air Force. i This unit consists of a truck-j tractor and its undercarriage 'which, when in use, supports pelled-howitEer. HEtPWftNTED for the new YANKEE STORE pt MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER CASHIERS • STOCK MEN ^AKPtRSONS for the following departments WOMEN’S WEAR GIRLS’ AND INFANTS’ WEAR MEN’S AND DOTS’ WEAR HARDWARE AUTOMOTIVE SPORTING GOODS HOUSEWARES HEALTH AND DEAUTY Both vehicles, produced by the Cadillac Motor Division, are tracked, 'amphibious; air-dropa-ble and have aluminum armor to protect them from small-arms fire. One of the smallest items is M pocket-sized computer made by Delco Radio Division, rts small size permits its use in guidance and cohtrol systems of space rockets. GM Defense Research Laboratories are displaying • a hyper- riunior Editors Quiz on- simulate small projectiles, such as micrometeorites, warheads or spacecraft traveling through space at tremendous speeds. The exhibit, will run through Feb. 18 and is open to the public. Interprets Taxes on ANSWER; Mariner II, the first intruraent-carrying probe capable of sending back information on a neighboring planet, was launched Aug. 27,1962, We feel a great sense of pride in our scientists wbo made possible the historic flight of Mariner II. James E. Webb, administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, has termed Mariner’s flight: “the most scientific efforts to date.’’ District Director of Internal Revenue R. 1. Nixon today issued an interpretation on sections of the recently imposed restrictions on^raver^nd entertainment deductions. APPLY MICHIGAN EMPLOYMENT SECURITY COMMISSION 242 OAKLAND PONTIAC 8:30 A M. to 4:30 P.M. m PHONE CALLS lie announced that employes need not obtain receipts for lodging while traveling on company business if reimbursement by their employer is less than $25 a day. However, Nixon noted that to obtain a deduction on travel expenses, it is still • necessary to establish the time, place and business purpose of the travel. In many cases, he continued, lodging receipt will be the most convenient method of establishing these requirements. Nixon explained, however, that these changes do not pertain to employes who are members of the same family as their employer, or who own more than 10 per cent of the company's stock. Regarding travel deductions on mileage, where reimbursement is less than 15 cents per mile, the new changes do apply, Nixon said, regardless of the relation-Iship between employer and em-iployc. Senator Robert Kerr, chairman of the Senate Space Committee has said: “I am convinced the nation which leads in exploring and using space for peaceful purposes can best build, improve and inherit the earth.’’ Senator Kerr no doubt had in mind the enormous increase in knowledge about our universe which siicH Tligins can give us, knowledge which will help us work toward making this a happier world. FOR YOU TO DO: We suggest you keep a space scrap book using newspaper and magazines which tell about thrilling new space flights. You can begin by pasting in our picture giving dates and facts about Mariner IPs famous trip. RbmneyOffer Turned Down Detroit GOP Leader Declines State Post 23 County Motorists Lose Driving Rights- Drivers’ licenses of 23 Oakland County motoFlUta, were recently LANSING (UPI) -. Norman 0. Stoekmeyer, Detroit leader of Re^ publican party circles, has turned down OoVi, Qeprge Romney’s offer of a post on the State Liquor CoQtrol Commission.. Romney gave newsmen one-word ansWer when he said yesterday he offered the commission post to Stockmeyer last week. A single '‘No’’, was his answer when asked if Stockmeyer accepted the offer. Stockmeyer Was the GOP candidate }for secretary of state in last Novembgr’a electiom.^.^” T”^eat previously held by Kenneth J. Daniels, Jackson Republican, has been Vacant since Daniels’ term expired last June. Another seat held by Louis G. Jarboe, Rogers Cityjl^publican, also became vacant last June. Jarboe has indicated he wants to continue on the commission. Romney will have a^ third s&t on the 5-meniiber commission to fill this June when the term of Roseville Democrat Orville R. De Claire expires. suspended or.srevoked by the Michigan Department of State. to show financial responsibility for conviction of drunken drivlpg were: ' William A. Bhown, 70 N. Mer-rimpe St.; Robert L. Bostick, 18 Hudson St,4 Oxford; Kenneth Bowermani 435 W. Clarkston Road, Lake Orion; William H. Feagpn, 4001 Park Drive, Or-chafd^ake; Ellsworth Hall, 21319 Belmanville St., Ferndale; and Cecil Hendricks, 750 Preadinorg Rqpd, L-ake *On6h? Unsatisfiactory driving records caused the followit^ to lose their ttCiSriSgs:'' Rodney V. Green, 4020 Ar-cardia Court; William M. Henderson, 590 Upland St.; Gerald M. RoCrink, 2468 SnellbrOck Road; Herbert R. Stickland, ,182 Perkins St.? and Hiomas A. Ballard,'3180 Kenmore St., Herkley. Others were David C. Beare, 2523 Avonhurst fit., Birmingham; Billji J. Craddock, 2285 Gardner Road,"Oxford: Johnny L. Kitts, 1836 E. Granet, Hazel Park; Daniel L. Schutte, 407 LaPlaza Court, Royal Oakj Robert G. Smith, 1473 Oakshade St., Walled Lake; and Harold W. Snider, 202» Woodward Heights, Ferndale. Ordered to show financial responsibility due to unsatisfied financial judgement against them were: Walter H. Rowston, 31 Clark St.; James- F. Vanderpool and John M. Vahderpdbl, both of 1683 Collier Road; Dennis R. DeMptt, 169 St. John ^t., JHighland Township; and. Nash Jr., 23720 Melville St., Hai2el Park. Eugene V. Fafessler, 22900 Thorneliffe St., Southfield, was ordered to show financial responsibility after conviction of negligent homicide. White nylon is derived from black coal, air and water. Ike Reveals He Ignored Golf Critics NOTICE TO CITY OF PONTIAC DOG OWNERS 1963 Dog Licenses ore now due and poyoble at the City Clerk's office, First Floor, City Hall, 35 S. Parke Street, Pontiac, Michigan. FEE: Up to and including Morch 1st . .$2.00 After March 1st............................$3.00 It IS necessary that oil dog owners in the CjW of ' ..'."’s Dee. Pontiac productracentffCOTeTfTaT^heir'dog vaccinated against rabies, in Order to secure a 1963 dog license. If such owners do not possess such a certificote, one may be obtained from their local veterinarion or of the County operated clinic Olga Barkcley, .......................... Car License Tab Sales Running Below 1962 NEW YORK (AP) - Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower says he paid “not the slightest attention’’ to criticism of the time he spent “playing golf or going h 1 n g or daubing with my paints.” Advanced Polaris Sees 2nd Success CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. UPh-The advanced Polaris A3 missile ■egistered its second straight successful test flight yesterday on an ,800-mile strike down the Atlantic range. The A3 scored its first success last Thursday after six straight failures. The Navy announced results of yesterday’s test and a spokesman said the program ap-Appearing last night with hi.s- pgars to have licked its early torian Bruce Cation in an NBC problems. television program, recorded at Eisenhower’s Gettysburg, home on the subject of President Lincoln, Eisenhower said “I think the worst possible president would be one who always just stayed at his desk.” Catton remarked that during the Civil War Lincoln was criticized for. allegedly spending too much time telling funny stories and going to-the theater. The missile was fired from a land launching pad. Submarine firings are scheduled late this Romney Critic Out to 'Run' Against Him LANSING (AP) - Gov. George Romney was accused yesterday of using hit - and - run tactics in! his support of the proposed new constitution and again w a challenged to debate the issues. The challenge came from Melvin Nord, a Detroit attorney and former Democratic delegate to the constitutional convention. Nord said that |f the governor again refuses to debate him ‘‘I challenge you on the ground where you can surely expect to win — I challenge you to a race through the snow.” In a letter to the governor, Russian Work Back in Favor MOSCOW (AP)-Dmitri Shostakovich’s 13th Symphony is back favor since his librettist amended a line to which officials objected. The symphony includes choral Eisenhower, agreeing with Cat-ton that Lincoln needed relaxation of some sort, commented: “The first thing that any man learns when he has to carry r o. . . r.' I heavy responsibilities a long time, P<;1 i^nnnt kIiows *^117^1I settings of several poems by anti-cst count shows 878,l.)o tar l*-ithat type of decision that demand ■■ ■ -- -. . . cen.se tabs for 1963 have beenLjj, attention and some- .sold to date, well below the L-| times preparation. 165,754 license plates sold at tliis ^ ★ And the others he has to learn io avyii.He is no,.,£xecjlLve.Mtil during" World War II. he can delegate those to people ■ and stand behind them.” Nord wrote: “You are being challenged noti becau.se you are the leader of| your party, but because you hayel undertaken deliberately.-and re-i peatedly to raise grave public issues and disparage the integrity, of those who differ with you . . . from the eminience of high public office.” time la.st year. A number of motorisls*^ still are showing up without their car titles and have to be turncHi away, the office reported. ,600 May Leave Cuba HAVANA (AP)-About 600 Cubans are expected to get permission to leave the country aboard tlie American freighter Santo Ccr-ro, which is unloading medical supplies here, diplomatic sources wild today. Saginaw OKs Air Service SAGINAW i/PI — The Saginaw City-Council has approved the Tri-City Commi.ssion’s resolution which 0 p p 0 s c s su.s|)ension of United Airlines service at lYl-Clty Airport. The resolution approves exten-of service to include a Chi-iigo tri city route and favors cx-^ ^ pansion of tlic facility as a'rc- Valley area. Stalinist poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko. One of them asks why no monument has been erected to (lie thousands of Jews massacred by tile Germans near Kiev Officials considered that to ply that anti-Semitism still exists in the Soviet Union. -. Yevlushenko amended the objectionable line to say that Rus-siah.s and Ukrainians also died in the Kiev massacre. You Can Send Wires to Romney, Legislature Pontiac area residents can now make their views known by telegraph to Governor George Romney, Lt. Gov. T. John Lesinski or any one of Michigan’s 132 state legislators, Donald C. Gceck, manager of the Pontiac Western Union-office-atmouneed..- • ' ■ ; In rejecting the original debate challenge, Romney said he wast ‘not going to provide a platform for anyone who wants to debate the consititution.” I Nord and a group of attorneys! published a full - page advertisement in a Detroit newspaper recently. Romney said (he ad wqs full of “half - truths and dis-;.tor lions.” Replace Those Old Windows With New “Free Action," Custom Made, Douhle Hung mm We Can Do ItTNow! All work is done inside, no need to remove storms. Be rid of thos’e- rattling, jamming windows, brokensosh cords, pesky point locks. Hove new, modern custom mode, double hung, wooden sosh vyindows with one-piece, draft, free, aluminum weather stripping, track and built-in spring action. Installed New The installed price for average size window is See iMs revolutionary itew window Injtolled of our store. Arrange to have a r^tpresenl-olive stop at our home to submit estimates tor new windows sosh. FE 5-2102 After 6 Call OR 3-6079 NEW ROYAL .. SIGNET Full-size keyboard .fugged, all-metal body Deluxe carrying case 2 color ribbon Stencil cutter Choice of 3 two-tone color combinations LIBERAL TRADE-IN ON YOUR OLD TYPEWRITER With Regular or Script Typo 123 North Soginiw SI FEMBI Look at the new Valiant HRSr before you buy any car. 1962 CLOSE-OUT SALE 13.6 CD. FT. REFRIGERATOR Geheral Electric No Dc^rbsHng • Roll Out Freezer • 3 Swing Out Shelves • Freeze-in. Store Ice Server OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF 1962 TVs and APPLIANCES ALL AT A SUDDEN DRAMATIC SACRIFICE SALE! • Plus Mony Ol'hcr Qualify Features! FREE DELIVERY—FREE INSTALLATION FREE WARRANTY—FREE SERVICE ELECTRIC COMPANY, 825 WEST HURON STREET Opfen 8 o. m.’Io 9 p. m. Excepf Safuri^6y FE 4-2525 The new service, a personal | opinion mes.sage, offers a fast eonvenienl and economical way for eitiaens to express their views, lie said. Workers Tea-ed pff i HUDDKRSI'TELI), England rlll’I.) - More than 1,700 employes staged a 45-minute strike afr the David Brown Industries Ud. factory ye.sterday because they were orderfed to take their tea from vending machines instead of using their own pots and cups. HOW TO FIGHT ASTHMA You can select from a wide GHOICf of models and colors now. Why shop around? Here Is a real choice! Station wagons, hardtops, 2- and 4-door sedans-'and two sleek new convertibles! Nine models to choose frofn...l2 solid colon. & BRONCHITIS ATTACKS Al Ullf Ill«(, suil.ol Wll<-0C,lllll, Bhopt DjOiiirtlcii iounalii Bleep, aet MKNDACO $0e and drive a VALIANT today at: R&R MOTORS, Inc. 7^4 Oakfanll ^Ave., Pontiac, Michigan t rate AC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY NINf? No Flin Like Snow Fiin Repeat Nuptial Vows in Presbyterian Church . Glenn A. Sanford of s register at Otsego Sfd Club for a fun-packed ski-week with a, host of Pontiac area friends. Getting ready for ski class on the picturesque hills of Otsego Ski Club, William B. Hargreaves of Bloomfield Hills, waits while Mrs, Hargreaves laces her boots. Annual Hospital Awards Made Mrs. IJonal Hayes rewards enthusiastic skier, Howard H. Fitzgerald II, Bedford Road, with her sunny smile after his day's workout in her instructor-husband's top ski class. By SIGNE KARLSTROM Annual awards were made yesterday at a meeting of the Women’s Service Committee of William Beaumont Hospital, with Mrs. Rutledge B. Tompkins presiding. Recognition was paid to those who had reached the various bend marks of hospital volunteer service between May and December 1962. Sixteen gold pins were awai'ded to those who had served 1,000 hours; 23 silver pins to those who ^ad served 500 hours; and service stripes to those with 100 hours. ★ ★ * Among those from this area were Mesdames Donald Hes-er; Harold Geggie; S. A. . Milne; Charles Mintling; Bradley Stephenson and Ernest Widlung. Others were Mrs. Forrest Hubert; Mrs. Robert A. Maxwell; Mrs. S. J. Rozema; Mrs. Glenn Roby; Mrs. George Maxted; Mrs. Thomas H. Clark; Mrs. Paul E. Chen-n a u It and Mrs. C.~D e a n Brown. ★ ★ ★ ■ After a week at Miami Beach and a few days visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Glen Brozo at Pompano Beach, Mr. and ”rs. Paul M. McKenney have returned to their Dunston Road home. ★ • - ★ ■ ★-- On February 19, Mrs. Wil-1 i a m B. Bachman Jr. of Bloomfield Hills will have 9 meeting of the newly formed Birmingham Chapter of t h e Connecticut College Alumnae, of which she is president. Rachele Lyn Farsetti of Rose City and Charies ^Raymond Lee Hopkins repeated marriage Vows before Rev, Galen E. Hershey and some 300 guests Saturday evening in the First Presbyterian Church. , A reception in the Livingstone Avenue home of Mr. and Mrs. Raym6nd Hopkins followed their son’s wedding. The bride is the daughter of Mrs; ©tis Carte," Rose City and Peter F^arsetti of Detroit. Medallions of sequined white Ralidn lace, touched with seed pearls, accented the bouffant bridal gown of white silk organza fashioned with long-sleeved, fitted bodice of lace. Silk illusion veiling fell from a layered pearl tiara. A purple orchid centejed the bride’s bouquet-of-whiteearnations. ★ * ★ Mrs. Herman Hay of Milford .jtended her niece as honor matron. Rocl^’”^apret5h Ifitr'Sharfltr Geasler were brideshfiaids. They wore yellow taffeta dresses and carried matching carnations. Garry Looney assisted the bridegroom as best man with Herman Hay ahd Earl Neeb ushering. The newlyweds will live in Pontiac. Golden Agers Plan Dinner 'The Golden Age Club will hold a cooperative dinner 6:30 p.m. Thursday, at the Waterford Community Center on Williams Lake Road. Feb. 25 is the date set for the annual card party. There will be table and door prizes and refreshments. The public is invited. MRS. C. R. L HOPKINS Women Annual Hold Party The Birmingham Junior Woman’s Club annual “couples” party was held Saturday at Hawaiian Gardens Restaurant in Holly. Social chairman for the event was Mrs. Donald Hite with Mrs. John Bell as co-chairman. .Assisting them were Mrs. Jack White, Mrs. Carlton Stewart, Mrs. Bradley Brown, Mrs. John Sweger, Mrs. Charles Pipbr and Mrs. Harry Fall. Flowers ... The Symbol of Love and Beauty ... of thoughtfulness and appreciation. What better Valentine can there be . . . than FLOWERS BY JACOBSEN'S. a V EARLY AMERICAN VALENTINE While ceramic Pitcher and* Bowl, attrac-fively arranged with carnations, while pom-poms, red hearts and heather. $4 95 CUPID VALENTINE This original vJhite ceramic vase with dainty cupid attached, filled with, .choice - an ex'pressionof Love and Thoughful- A fast ride to the top by rope tow is obviously being enjoyed* by Mrs. Frederick J. Poole and Mrs. Noyce W. Strait Jr. At the top they will join their skh school classmates and instructor. Fred J. Poole, Heitch Street and Noyce W. Strait Jr. of We.\l Iroquois, pause on the slopes before theii ' descent down one of the ski trails. X)ES Utlil ProspeSve^/l dnc^6bafr^ _ . f r Gathers in ZZJsSixt^n Pounas or SfriKes Temple By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBYj I am 20 and , have been engaged to a boy my age for the past year. He plays in four bowling leagues and besides that he bowls jackpots after league twice a Veek. He never thkes me anywhere except —To^the bowling a 1 lejT and sometimes I have sat through twenty games a night. I We set, quc ABBY wedding date for Aprii, but— the more I think of it the more I think he should settle dbwn befpre we gel man’ied. All he wants to talk about is jbowling. 1 wonder if you^ think he would be a good guy to marry? SICK OF BOWLING DEAR SICK: Marriage has enough problems without adding a 16-pound botvling ball to it. Your young man is much too bowling - happy for marriage at the moment. Marry him only if you plan to start out with plenty of strikes against you. DEAR ABBY: Suddenly one of my closest girl friends started acting veiry cool agd distant to me. Twice 1 asked her what the trouble was. After two frigid “nothings” I realised it was me she was mad at. > Her co(»lness continued so 1 finally apologized for anything 1 might have done wrong. I honestly haven’t the ' faintest idea how I offended her. She continues to treat me like a stranger and I can’t understand it as she has always been a yery^^^thoughtful and understanding p e r s 0 n. What cah I do to patch things MISERABLE DEAR MISERABLE: ■‘Nothing! You have overestimated the girl. No truly ‘Thoughtful and understanding” person would suddenly give a friend, thtf cold shoulder without telling her why and giving' her a chance to defend herself. ★ * ★ C 0 N F 1 D E N T I A L TO “THINK YOU’RE A PHO-hiY”: Sorry, but everyone who lias ever written to me * and enclosed a .self-addrossed, stamped envelope for my personal reply has reci^ived one. \ Pontiac Chapter No. 228 of the Order of the Eastern Star held its business meeting Monday evening at the Masonic .Temple on East Lawrence Street. ★ ★ ★ Worthy Matron . Mrs. Charles Moore announced Friendship night will be Feb. 25 at the Roosevelt Temple when the past matrons and past patrons of Pontiac Chapter No. 228 OES Will exemplify the work of 1867. ★ ★ A Refreshments were served by Mrs. Duane Boughton and Mrs. Stuart Choate. Keep House Safe for Small Kids Screw a blown fuse into each unused electric socket and save a curious child from harm. Brighten Your Home With FLOWERING PLANTS AZALEAS 'CYCLAMEN • MUM PLANTS ... JACOBSEIN’S FLOWERS 101 N. SAGINAW ST., PONTIAC 545 S. BROADWAY, LAKE ORION P<iwntown Po^jtiac FE3I-7165 MY 2-2681 Member of -.A Allied Florists ' ■ I!. ... -THE EONTIAC : , TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1 ,/K^umode Count Calories ;\ Slim That Waist, By JOSEPHINE lOWMAN For a few days I lim writing to the men “who read WJiy Grow I Old? Yesterday, we decided (or I decided for you) that loss of excess weight is the nuniber one step to take in order to increase are reading this of a few simple teurs. The little lady has been at It (or a leag time while most have 4wld to the O -withmeet, the rkh lalpd dreun that if it tastes (pM)d it is good for theiik let me rendmi and butter you eat wifh soup, the rolls and butter yon eat ing you pile on your sahul, the ice^sreum YOU put on pie-these all add cakwles. your energy and efficiency, to improve your.Jiealth and to insure your chances of a iong life. When it comes to calorie . counting, most women are ex- [you soon will, perts and most men are ama- ; For instance, the crackers facts. The extras count up big! They seem harmless but they will land right pn your baywindow if you have one, and if you don't, Wl»%Cs wrapped free] NEW SPRAY MIST Always at her fingertips ... a gentle, exciting mist of this most beloved French Toilet Water. An exceedingly subtle, so fShisticoTed scent. PLUS A purse size flacon of this exquisite French Perfume ' at no extra charge. Alvin's will give you this Antilope perfume with the purchase of the Spray Mist. NTRODUCING You should not have pie anyway when loklng weight, or hop* ing to do so. Forget desserts for the time being and stick to fi^esh fruit with* a couple of crackers and a little cheese at the end of a meal. | USE SUBSTITUTES You Can substitute skim milk or butter milk and use one of the artificial sweeteners in your coffee or tea. As general rules, follow these simple suggestions, and adopt the habit of taking smaller helpings than you are acdustomea to. , Many men want to know If they should cut their calorie in* both want to reduce. The answer is no. Because of a man’s greater s t a t u r e he requires more food even when reducing. These new sin^ulated pearls have a soft, creamy lustre... cuxL™Jb.eauiiMly„.a/'qdua^ exquisitely clasped ... in a quality you will treasure. One-strand ...........5.00 Two-strand...........7.50 Three-strand..........10.00 Earrings to match......3.00 My Tubby Hubby Diet averages about 1600 calories a day. For a quick loss, this is about right for the average man. PTAs in Action SPontiac PTA groups will be raeoHng this week. - A Valentine party will highlight the meeting from 7 to . #.j^-m.,Thur^diay.. ......... Robert Spence, athletic dl-t rqctbi* at Webster has planned a program including a square dance demonstra- Baby-sittlng service will be available. PAMELA J. WOOSTER The Glenn L. Woosters of Sylvan Lake announce thp engagement of their daughter Pamela Jeanne to David Lynn Allen, son of the James AUens of East Colgate Avenue, An August wedding is planned. Keep Yeast Hot to Moke Bread Before making bread or rolls, rinse the bowl in hot water and dry before mixing the dough. This keeps the yeast ft^m cooling. LeBARON Featured speaker Thursday will be Eart JCoonce of the Oakland County Juvenile Department. Mr. Koonce will speak on “Guiding Youth to Prevent Crime.” BAILEY “Family Night” will highlight the Thursday meeting. Filins on Greece will be shown and narrated by Thomas Verges. WBLUS p. m. Thursday. Mrs. Erma Johnson will speak on the arithmetic program in the elementary grades and will give a demonstration requiring audience participation. Past presidents of the Willis PTA who will he honored It's QUALITY not Quantity That Counts We Have 'em with Satin 'n Lace We Have 'em Plain . . . and Filled with CROCKER^S QUALITY CANDIES Where else can you buy such beautiful heart shaped boxes, but at Crocker'sl Valentina noveltiot to the tots and teens from 10.c up! • 2 STORES FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE ■ PONTIAC MALL - Open Doily 'Til 9 2440 Woodward at Square Lake Rd. - Open Doily 'Til 9 - SUNDAY 12 to 6 February Special! ^ s CUSTOM-TAILORED COTTONS Every Cotton Print or Solid in Our Stock .. .Over 4,000 Yards WHISPER-SOFT uwD-wovEiinniPS They're your shoes . . . for your kind of clothesi Young . . . with a hint of sophistication in beige woven wit|t honey brown calf or biqck patent woven with black kid! Mid heels, naturally! HURON at TELEGRAPH Mon., Thor., FrI. 10 to 9 — Tues., Wed., Sat. 10 to 6 LABOR REDUCED 10% to 40% . . Price Reduced Molls hove been making the best of slipcovers for more than 20 years, to odd years of service to your furniture, and to give it the upholstered look. Ilnie You Seen Our Workmanship? We Carry Only Quality Fabrics CHAIR SOFA COMP.LETE COMPLETE as •‘12 low os os **52 low os (Includes fabric, zippers, welting, labor) Experienced Decorators to Advise You on Slipcovers,^Draperies, Bedspreads, Gorpets - Open Fridoy and Monday Nights 1666-S. TELEGRAPH just South of Orchard Lake ROad - FE 4-0516 Will include Mrs. Ariel Ervin, Mrs. Harrpl Beebe and^Mrs. - . Thomas Hbnson. LONGFELLOW “From the Pages of Books” wUl be the program .School librarian Mrs. Peter luring and teachers ‘ Mrs. Winfi^ Almas, Mrs. Esther Roth and Mrs. Melvin Small along with fifth grade diik dren - will demonstrate library work's place fn the curriculum. WHITTIER ’ The PTA Will meet Wednesday at 2:30 p. m. > A play, “Brotherhood and Negro History,” will be offered by the dramatics club. The board meeting will be held at 1:30 p. m. in the principal's office. (-WILSON * Founders Day will be observed at V:30 p. m. Thursday. tary of the Urban League will be special guest of honor for the evening. Past presidents will be honored. Brotherhood Week will be observed. McCARROLL “Dad’s Night" will be featured at the. 7:30 p. m. Wednesday meeting. Guest speaker will be Wesley Johnson, director of the Oakland County Youth Home. He will present a film entitled “Functions and Activities of the Youth^Iome,” HERRINGTON HILLS “Facts and Future of Physical Education” will be the program Wednesday at 7:3ft p. m! Dr. Lee Haslinger, Pontiac director of physical education and Dr. William Donnelly, a pediatrician with a background in physical education will be the guests. WHITFIELD Lyle Llpp, Pontiac district road engineer for Michigan will be the speaker Wednesday. Mr. Llpp will speak on plan.s for the . new Orchard Lake highway in front of the school. BAGLEY Founders Day will be observed Thursday at 7:30 p.m. A short skit, “United for Children and Youth,” will be presented. Past presidents of the PTA will be honored. Sweethearts' Boll Set byQontf nentdte Continental Dance Club will hold its “Sweethearts' Ball” Saturday at the Hickory Grove School on Lahser Road, Bloomfield Township. The guest night affair will continue from 9:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. Chairmen are Mr. and Mrs. Mitch Mitchell. CINDA SUE NUREK The Walter J. Nureks of Michigan Avenue announce the engagement of their daughter Cinda Sue to Lawrence William Lyons, son of the George T. Me-Kinneys of Lake Orton. League Execs Hold Meeting ^ in Local Home The executive board of the New aUzens’ League otYorh tlac met Saturday evening at the home of Mrs. Herbert Langtohoh NordrEastEoide* vard; Plans were completed for the 25th anniversary program aiM parti^ set for Feb, 22 In Pontiac Central High School. Following the meeting, refreshments were served by the hostess. and Bill Lewis mtans Perfect Fit Edwards Thoes are made on special lasts for better fit. We are specialists with years of experience* in fitting shoes for all typer of feet. For Convonionc*' Shop for Shoot “Whoro Fit Comes First" BliiXewis' Junior Boofery 1060 W. Huron St. at Tha Huron Cantor... Juit Two Blodis Watt of Tali^raph Plenty of FREE PARKINQ! The But Stops Right in Front “Regatia Yams” The Knitting JSeedle m W. Huron FK S lftSO SAVINGS ON WLEANSERS SAVE $1.50 ON BIANT 12-OZ. SIZE SAVE 75< ON UR6E 6-OZi SIZE Pink Cleanting Cream. Gently cleans and refreshes normal or oily skin and leaves it radiant. Emulsified Cleansing Cream. Extra-rich to Timooth and soften dry skin while it cleans away makeuo and grime. ^SS£ Dry Skin Cleanser. Deeply cleans sensitive complexions while it soothes and smooths. 12-OZ. SIZE REG. $3.50- SALE PRICE $2.00 plus tax 6-OZ. SIZE REG. $2.00 SALtFRICE ^1.25 nius tax PERRY PHARMACY PRESCRIPTIONS 689 Eaat Blvd. at Parry 333-7152 I 333-7057 1251 Baldwin REUPHOLSTER NOW SPRING PRICES EASY TERMS . AVAfUBLI ..... furniture llna furnltur* and aaalHjr earpaUng alnaa ISS4” 5390-5400 Dixit Highway OR 3-1225 Birmfnffhom Cuatomeri Coll 334-0961—Po Toll Chorge ■‘I /;V THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY;, FEBRUARY 12. 1903 ELEVEN Subways transport senatorslfice buildings to the Senate tind and congressmen irpm their of-1 House of Representatives. _Make Her Happier With Flowers •r Ruby alass brandy snifter with a doeen red andlwbiu Cantations.Red ebenille hearts. seoo Reg. $6.00 Value Send Flowers Anywhere 559 ORCHARD LAKE FE 2 0127 TWO DAILY DBXIVERIES TO DETROIT AND INTERMEDIATE POINTS BEAUTY SHOP BUDGET DEPARTMENT! Permanent Includes Cut and Set $500 $700 Budget Special Shampoo and Set $200 35 West Huron February Styling Department SPECIAL PERMANENTS Reg. $20 ^16^° Reg. $17.50 *15"“ — FE 3-7186 Free ParkinR; on Huron, on Old Courthou.sc Site REDUCE EAT and LOSE UP TO 6 LBS. A WEEK CAPSULESl Easier fo falte and mora affactiva than tha powdered and liouid includin' food supplement, and costs less inc Capsules suited to you INDIVIDUALLY by Lie. Physician, M.D. No Gastritis or , jrrA9MkrjtiL...wtth„v.Madic-Way. . DOf^T dTET-~JUST EAli- As thou-sands have done, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 lbs. and KEEP IT OFFI MEDIC-WAY. MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 Waffs-Gommer Rites Held at St. Ben^ict's ★ Paramount Beauty School ★ EnrotinienU' AvaUable _______________rnoNE __ Person for Free Pamphhet, FEDERAL IW4 S._ Soflinow. ^olf Theoter 4.2352. Elaine, Frances Gommer be- Robin Grusnick was flower girl, came Mrs,,Ellis Floyd Watts Sat- . ^ _ ur4ayHM0HttngTp^"BenedKip‘"”Be^ man at the ceremony per- Church. She chose a itloor-length gown of white Chantilly lace and chiffon With tiered net panel. Her veil of French illusion was held by a pearl tiara. White orchids, roses and lilies of the valley comprised her cascade bou- ^ ^ quet. formed by Rev. Richard A. Schoenherr was Mitchell Grusnick. A11 e h Watts and Daniel, Stocker ushered and Todd Jones , carried the rings; Parents of the couple, the Edward J. Gommers of Fenmore Street and Mr. and Mrs. George Reviewing details of an eight-week lecture series, “Music of the Opera,*' beginning Wednesday night at Cranbrook School of - Music, Bloomf ield Hills, are (from left) Mrs. John W. Sander § of North Woodward; Dr. Hamilton Stillwell, director of the University Center for Adult Education; and Mrs. Benjamin Brewster of Brookdale Avenue. F. Watts of EHsmere Street, greeted some 200 guests in the Community Activities Building. ; Wearing red taffeta gowns for ; their duties as bridesmaids were Mrs. Daniel Stocker and Nancy ^ Watts, the bridegroom’s sisters. F r , Diana Dailey was maid of hon- ' Gotrpte+tas Residence Tn Pdntidc At home on IState^Btreet are Mr. and Mrs. Bobljy Glenn Duna-vant who spoke marriage vows before Rev. Kenneth Haffner Saturday in the Community Bible Church, Lake Orion. The former Bonnie Lou McArthur is the daughter of the Lloyd McArthurs of Ortonville, who were hosts at a reception following the evening ceremony. Bone-white satin brocade fashioned the bride's street-length dress, styled with Wrist-point sleeves and full skirt. She wore a fingertip veil of silk illusion, held by a beaded headpiece, and carried a white orchid atop a white Bible. Their hats were of white fur r and red carnation corsages rested k, jirmeifTufmuffs."""’" • fr ^ Speak Vows in Home Here At a Sunday afternoon candlelight ceremony in her home on Palmer Street, Mrs. Ida Bryan exchanged vows with Harry Wendt, formerly of Toledo, Ohio, before Rev. Kyle Wilson. Immediately after the reception, the couple left for a six-week stay at Daytona Beach, Fla. and will live in Pontiac on their return. PERMANENT SPECIAL-^ Haircut — Set Complete STEPHEN . LOUIS BEAUTY SHOP fe s-sooo Bttcliner rinaiKW Building, 10 W. Huron St. (Adverti««men: Up HINTS COLUefeb BY MRS. DAN GERBER, MOTHER OF 8 Fuvoritof with the crib and bib set: Gerber Chicken Noodle Dinner; Macaroni, Tomato, Beef and Bacon; Vegetables with Turkey. Baby-care styles, like, most every* thing else, change. In grandmother's’ 4 rules put above reasonableness. Then came the, self-demand style of letting baby set his own feeding and sleeping patterns. Today there seems to be a trend toward more fixed schedules. Certainly children do thrive on some kind of routing .-but thr-iimiSBrir‘Tsr^^ flexibility... that no schedule is more important than baby’s comfort and happiness. Progreu report. Once your little •one is wcU'established-fluatniight fruits, meats and vegetables, it’s a good idea to introduce some of the wonderful CO m b i n foods, Gerber Strained Dinners, for example, are famous for pleasing little palates. These goodtasting "mixed" dishes combine vegetables, cereal and meat for bright, delightful flavor interest. And, like all Gerber Baby Foods, the Dinners are specially processed for utmost protection of food values. Memo (or a mothor from another. "To keep baby’s wrapper from getting soaked during sleep, I put it on backwards and triai>gle-fold bottom Inward away from baby’s buttocks. Really works!" baby’s diapers with the point up, baby is less apt to get pricked if the |piajap,cns.,.. Troosuro trovo of pleasure...and good nutrition. Gerber Strained Egg Yolks have a delicate fresh eggflavor andcreamy, custard-like texture that team up for, a scrump-tious taste surprise. For your baby’s nutritional well-being, Gerber Egg Yolks I are good sources ^ of iron, vitamin A, ^ vitamin B-12 and protein. Another delicious egg product: Gerber Egg Yolks and Ham. Gerber Baby Foods, Fremont, Michigan. Attending their sister were Pauline McArthur of Flint, maid of honor, and Ann and Carol B. G. DUNAVANT McArthur of Ortonville, who^ served as bridesmaids. Harold Dunavant stood as best man for his brother. They are the sons of the Rev. and Mrs. Edward Dunavant of Lewis Street. Melvin McArthur of Ortonville ushered with William Harmon. Amvet Group Gets Together Mr. and Mrs. Carl Criss-man opened their Clifford Avenue home Sunday for a meeting of the Wright - Fournier Amvet Auxiliary Post No. 161. A donation to the Friends of Child Guidance Clinic was approved. The auxiliary is also donating money for new equipment for the Lapeer Home for Retarded Children. Tenativc plans for a golf league were discussed with Mrs. Edwin Good. Class Gives Surprise Fete Highlight of the Saturday evening meeting of the Fel-(fla'Ss -6f the RaiaWlA" Evangelical United Brethren Church was a surprise 25th wedding anniversary celebration for Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert Hiscock. A fish dinner will be held Friday evening in the church basement. Extra Special! For a limited time we offer our amnzinglV beautiful Stylist Permanent at the Exciting Low Price oj' SPECIAL OFFER A Combination of Serrice Regulaly Prirod at $ IS.00 for FASHION (AIT CONDITIONING SHAMPOO SUPERB SALON CREAM RINSE COLOR RINSE COMPLETE Extraordinary Special Reg. $25 PermanentB Now Only *12*" NO APPOINTMENT NEEDEDI OPEN FRIDAY TIL 9 P.M. Beauty Salon jfe 5.9257 11 N. S«itln«w S(., Il«iw«teii L«wrenoe ami I’lka Sli. Aoroit From Blraml Theater t Father-Son Dinner Planned by Church Midine Gift Ideas Berean P'ellowship Bible Class of Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church will hold its annual father and son banquet March 15 in the church parlors. David Shelly will show color films entitled “Four Seasons in Michigan’’ during the program. Floyd Levely will be toastmaster and William Coffing, program chairman. IwR STORE MIRACLE MILE IlSQUE... (30ES WESTERN! Soft; soft casuals with that .easy-going feeling that is unmistakably Risque. “His ’nHer" go-together Sport Shirts TopclIicrniTSH for you and her. Our shirt*malcs accent authcnlic university styling with flared button-down collar with back collar button of 100% Sanforized cotton. Prints and plaids'in wonderful colors make a thoughtful gift. $1Q99 Arpege - My Sin BY LANVIN —Canvln^^reaf perfume classic appears now, with superb gift-timing. Its much admired allure may be had in sizes from EAU DE LANVIN 300 000 PERFUME 000 25"" BATH POWDER 000 ‘Sizeji4’/f! to 10 Widths AA, A, B\ Use A Lion Charge Han With Option Terms ; .v ,' - ■ ;4'i L TWET.VE THE 1\0N'I’I AC Vn KSS. TF ESPAV. EEinUTARV 12. lt)03 And This, Too, Shall Pass Away' By RUTH MONTGOMERY {.marble facade of our national ------------- “ ■ "-3. museum„is_lhe since M. E. Daniels DisHct Manager 563 W. Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan Sales Leader One Modem Woodmen's top-ranking agents, District Manager M. E. Daniels, Pontiac, has qualified for this organization's Century Club for 1962; We congrotylote him for this achievement, and recommend him as a capable representative of a leading life insurance organization. Modern Woodmen Of AMIKICA • HOMf OFFICl • MOCK ISLAND, ILLINOIS What is past isj prologue.” The reminder] has a r a t h e n chilling effect on : a new'S correspondent w h 0, after spending several weeks' poking among the ruins of ancient civilizations i n the Middle East,MONTGOMERY returns to today’s political problems. Visiting such excavations - as Jericho or Byblos, one sees like stack^ pancakes the Stone, Iron and. Bronze Age, Phoenecian, Greek, Roman and Byzantine cultures which vanished one by one, as each built in layers atop the destruction of another. later, the Senate was just concluding its filibuster, and the Communist orbifl^ delightedly enjoying the split between de Gaul-list France and much of the free world. RUTH Almost everything, in fact, seemed topsy-turvy. Our good neighbor Canada was in the throes of an anti-U.S. election campaign, brought on by a critical blast from our State Department which toppled the Conservative government. France, rescued in two world wars by Britain and America, had vetoed British admission to the Common Market, while insinuating that the real reason was to prevent U.S. influence on the European continent, to which we have contributed $50 billion. The first glimpse of the Capitol {dome and columned White House is always reassuring to . a home-comer, but I shivered,to recall Abraham Lincoln’s quotation to H. L. Pierce more thama hundred years ago: “And this, too, shall pass away.” The winds of change are Indeed bloufing, ■ as President Kennedy has $0 aptly remarked. To feel the full impact, it is necessary to get away from the headlines for awhile, and then to meet them again head- British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, snubbed by long-time ally, France, flew to Rome to strengthen ties with his country’s one-time ehemyrJtaly. Spain Generalissimo Franco, who gaye >pid and comfort to the Axis jpowws during the war, Begatt an astonlsHing political flirtation with French President Charles de Gaulle, who seemed to like it. G^ermany“ifnd'‘France; -hielor4e|j memies since time immemorial, signed such a lovey-dovey treaty of cooperation Riat some feared it may split the Western camp and alienate Germany from her staunch supporter- and former enemy, the United States. "fhat is the way It looks from here. Canada is mad at us, we’re mad at de Gaulle, and he’s mad at Great Britain. Macmillan likes Italy, de Gaulle likes Germany, and Franco likes France. Nobody particularly likes us these days, after two decades of playing international l^anta Claus. It’s an eerie feeling to recall those ancient civilizations piled one upon another, and to remember' the oft-quoted maxium that this, too, will pass away. lYOTICE TO DOG OWNIKS CITY OF PONTIAC irTs"TYdce^'ary'thm‘d1t dbS”awiwr1n”me‘CiTyl)rF^nT^^ a cer- tificate that their dog has been vaccinated against rabies in order to secure 0 .1963 dog license. If such owners do not possess such o certificote, one may be obtained from their local veterinarian, or at the County operated "xtinic;-' A SPECIU CUNIC FOB VACCmBTIOMS Will BE SET OP FOB CITY OF POHTIBC D0.G OWOEBS SATURDAY, Februory .16, 196J-.-1:00 «o-4:OO R M.-at the OAKUND COUNTY ANIMAL SHELTER ' UOO N. Telegroph Road Fee for voccinotion $2.00 animal SHELTER For the convenience of onyon^ desirous . of purchasing a license at thq time the dog is vaccinated, City of P0ntiac dog licenses WilT be on sole at/the Clinic -this Saturday, February 16, 1963, Olga Borkelay City Dated February 7th, 1963 PEOTECT yOUl CAE FROM RUST DAIAGE! , When I departed Washington, the Senate was sonorously filibustering against a rule change, and the free world was delightedly en-I joying the schism between Soviet Russia and Red China. ADD YEARS OF LIFE TO YOUR NEW OR PRESENT CAR! Th(> following IS a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Office iOiy name of father): Exclusive new Ziebart Process and Compound developed after eight yeors of extensive research. Enables us to give a three-year, money-back guarantee on ALL new cars and extend the life of your present automobile. The Ziebart Compound remains pliable at 40“ below zero and .will withstand temperatures up to 275“ F. Has deep penetration abilities. This compound will not create a sticky mess on your automobile. Sprayed under high pressure, this compound reaches into every crevice and corner of your cor— inside panels, dog legs, fender wells, light wells, quarter panels, door interior, posts, chrome mouldings ond complete underside. It is for superior to any type of automobile undercooting used today. Phone 651-0943 AUTO BODY RUSTPROOFING 109 SECOND AVENUE ROCHESTER AND ON RETURN-When I returned three weeks Alcjnnrtro M TALK ABOUT Llil a illTOMATlIf V AllTOMATH’ WASHERS Hasically you choose : washer to give you : (]LEAN WASH and lo give €OOD SERVICE and sPTvice is no belter than the \ dealer who performs it ) lICA WillllLPOOE and The (iood llouNekcepinjF Shop (,IVE YOU BOTH 2 SPEED - :) M (k‘L j)ro|)(‘r water l(‘iiij)s wIkhi you loiicli a hiilloii. Save water—use only ^liats needed lor eaeli.load Gentle aetion jiampers sheers and liandmades Normal aelion “.^(Tiihs'’ repilar fahries elcan, wash ’ll wear dot's miracle faliries wrinkle free, lliorongh rinsing fluslies away soil- removes lint-hlends hi dt'K'rgenl aiitomatieally-waslies ] 11). of deJieates or 12 Ihs. of regulars And Look Al Our SPteCIAL PKICING NO MONEY DOWN-INSrALLEl) FREE-DELIVERED FREE 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH 22990 With Trml« GOOD HODSEKEEPIN ofFONJTAC 51 W. Huron-FE 4-1555 Open Moii. and Fri. ’til 9 P.M. 1" VC (J '>1 Mtk tiw «wik» thttt’i b»f»Jdr you rOrttl«^ gouk AUI^ monthly liutollmonfs fittod to your budget^ w|tb to 3d 1 to poy., Ufa insoroneo protoction ot no oxtf^ ehdrgol Prol |1r'| y .pttonfllpi^ and option givon oil loon appltc^bnfl ’ ' 'L pontlan Stdt# Bonk%'kotol^A^ \ IF YOU BORROW 36 MONTHS YOU PAY MONTHLY 24 MONTHS YOU PAY MONTHLY 12 MONTHS YOU PAY MONTHLY $1000.00 $32.00 $46.00 $ 87.50 $1500.00 $48.00 $69.00 $131.00 $2000.00 $64.00 $92.00 $175.00 V. ■\v: ( .1 'T,7: . THE PONTIAC PRESS ME COLORS TIJKSDAY, FEmiUAHY 12, 19(W PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. THIHTEKN Misguided Farm 'Help' Costing U. S. Billions . (Editor’s Note: This is the secojia of three xirUoles- in which a newsman and farm expert discuss the world’s food dilemma-suggests some solution^/ By JOHN STROHM Icily folks and progressive farm-i Drai WAiSHlNGTON <NEA) — If ig-]ers again in 1963 - and other taxes, norance paid profit^ pfoliticiartsl^^-billion tax bite. | Amassed a 97.5-billion hoard of could get rich from what they! Misguided attempts to “help”|food and fiber which has the don’t know about the farm prob-the farmer during the last 30 fantastic rent bill of more than lem. That-spells bad news for [years have; |$1 million a day. Drained away $48.6 billion io Tended to blunt the farmer’s h’ard-e^ned elficieney. AMERICA’S BOUNTY - Tlie United Slates wallows in food surplus and spends $4 billion a year to keep farmers from growing too much, while most nations try desperately to cope with food shortages. Storage costs alone of the nation’s surplus runs upward of $1 million yearly. Yet, with this record output and oversupply, the average commercial farmer may net only about $7,700 each year. Making the World Safe for Piano Tuners By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (IIPI) - The casualty rate among piano tuners is not as high as it is in some other p r ofossions, like maybe scuba diving. wing-walking. Nevertheless, piano t u n ers do have their 0 c c u pational hazards. There ^ is always a chance that a string will snap and flagellate them In E-flat, or that the lid of a baby grand will drop on their heads. The perils of piano-tuning recently were cited by members of the I’ic^no 'I’echnicians (hiHd as-oneaeakoft forrpassing a resolution urging that' the standard for tuning “A” above “middle C” be kept 440 vibrations a second. Guild members noted with alarm that some symphony orchestras were tuning on an “A” with 442 vibrations. They deplored the trend to a higher pitch, asserting that it could make their work more dangerous. Extra tension on the strings might cause a vintage piano, whose structure had been weakened by years of absorbinj; sour notes, to fly apart, they pointed out. “YouW taking ybw^ your hands when you raise the pitch on , some of those old al-llgatdrs,” one tuner was quoted as complaining. OOVERNMiiNT intervention? ' The guild indicated it would carry its case to the National Bureau of Standards, and it was the prospect of goverhmen- tal intervention that aroused my interest in the controversy. I called the bureau to see if the tuners had contacted it. The man said they had not. fye'Spaeeship for Long Trips Gemini, Apollo Studied for 12-Month Missions WASHINGTON i/Pl - The space agency said yesterday it is studying the possibility of modifying a Gemini or Apollo space craft for manned orbital mission.s of longer than three months."’“ The purpose would be to determine the tolerance of human beings to weightlessness for long periods. If men can tolerate weiglUless-ness for three months, spokes-said they probably could withstand problems of a 12-month planetary trip. Representatives of 3,000 builders of space craft and space cruft parts, were told of the proposals at a plans conference of the National Aeronautics and Space Adnfinistration (NASA). Dr. Joseph F. Shea, deputy director of NASA’s manned space flight systems, said a major uncertainly is whether either the two-map Gemini or the three-Apollo space craft is large enough, # ★ ★ He said the experiment would require about 3,000 cubic feet of space for monitoring equipment “roughly eight times larger than the Apollo command mod ulq.’’ . ’ Furthermore, he indicated there was nothing the bureau could do to succor and comfort them, or relieve their anxieties. Although the bureau presently recognizes the “A” above “middle C’’ favored by the tuners, this is^ not- done ;for either aesthetic or humane reasons. ■k * -k It is merely abiding by an international agreement fixing 440 vibrations as the standard pitch. “If an orchestra or anyone else wants to tune at a higher pitch, that is an artistic matter over which we have no control,’’ the spokesman said, I then called the National Symphony Orchestra to ascertain its feelings on the issue. A spokesman there told me thid, the piano tuners actually were Johnny-come-lately p a r t i c i-pants in the vibration battle. ★ ★ * It seems that the basic strug-gters''‘hl«b has been raging fort years, is between stringed instrument players, who want to tune at 442 vibrations for greater brilliance of tone, and the woodwinds, who find it easier to play at a lower pitch. Dr. Howard Mitchell, the conductor, said he regards the 440 “A’’ as a satisfactory com* promise and will retain that pitch. ik ★ ★ I trust this will help make the world safe for piano tuners. T&eateneff^^" T6"sap our food-producing strength in the cold war. > ■k -k ■ -k ^ Intentions of government planners — Democratic and Republican aiike — are admirable, but a mile off base. They try to legislate farm income for three reasons: 1. Safety ?n Numbers. Politicians mistakenly believe a declining number of farms means farmers need handouts to assure you food in the future. Since 1925 the number of farms has dropped 42 per cent; each year more than 100,000 farms “disappear.’’ Only 8 per cent of the population is now on the farm. But in a short 20 years the farmer has (rijlpH o£tjut_per_ man^ hour -the^most fantastm’ incre!?^ in productivity for any industry for any period. * , ★ Today, 39 per cent of the country’s 3.7 million “farmers” produce 87 per cent of the total output and could easily produce the remaining 13 percent. Over 97 per cent of these operations are family farms, run with family labor and family money. * -k * “The fact that the number of farmers is deefe'asing is a sign of progress and economic growth —not stagnation and decline,” says Arthur Mauch, Michigan State University economist. 2. Save the Soil. Conservation has been another goal of farm programs for the last 20 years. We need conservation to insure “abundance for our children as well, as ourselves,” Secretary of Agriculture Orville Freeman told the House Committee on Agriculture just a year ago. But soil scientists say using the land does not weaken it. G. W. llcdlund, head of the department of agricultural economics at Cor-ncli University, explains it this way; “If soil is properly handled it can become even more produc live with time, so that there i: no ca.se for periodic resting. Although .some will not agree, most of our government payments programs were designed for some-Ihing other than ' soil improve ment.” 3. Preserve the virtues of self-reliance. A lofty aim — but do we really preserve self-reliance when we hand government payments to farmers for not planting their land . . . not harvesting their grain . . . not using their initiative to produce food as efficiently as they know how? Not according to 9 out of every to farmers 1 interviewed around the country! Tliey accepted government payments last year, and will do .so again in I9(>3. “But what can I do?” an Iowa corn grower asked me. “If I don't sign up for Freeman’s program I have to sell on a*rigged market.” Legislative errors bogged in murky logic will continue to cost us heavily until voters — city FOUR CLASSES OF U.S. FARMERS TOP COMMERCIAL FARMERS farm probleir Udalt Likes His Work More Than Senator Post WASHINGTON (J’l - Secretary of the Interior Stewart L. Udall said yesterday he regards his present job as more interesting than would be the post of U.S, senator from Arizona. But Udall also said he would not shirk his responsibilities when asked for comment on a report published in California that he will resigh in late summer to run for the Senate next year against Sen. Barry Gold-water, I^-Ariz. The report was written by editor Herbert G. Klein of the San Diego Union. Klein was campaign manager for former vice president Richard M. Nixon in his cajmpaign for governor of Califdriila last year. ' . -k -k it Udall said on a television sl)ow l(NBC-Today) tl)at he feels it is more interesting to be a member of the Kennedy Cabinet that U would be to be the freshman sen alor f^om his home state. He was a member of the House from Arizona when he. was appointed to the Cabinet. He added that he and Gold-water had had their conflicts within the state in the past and he would not shirk hiS responsibilities but preferred to stay in ihe cabinet. k ■ k if Udall also said it .seems that Goldwater has some other ambitions which apparently might keep him from being a senatorial candidate. « qoldwater is one of those figuring in speculation on the possible Republican presidential nominee. He has said he intends to run again for the Senate. irom farming among all 3,700,-farmers any they get less than a fair return for investment, labor and management. De^rfeent of Agriculture figures show “average’.’ per capita personal income of the farm population from all sources is about $1,400 a year compared with a national average of about $2,300. Legislators mistakenly think this means all agriculture is “sick.” They i&isregard the fact that the top 1.5 million commercial farmers, who produce 87 per cent of our food . and fiber, net about $7,700 per farm. The “problem” is with the more than 2.2 million others, who produce the remaining 13 per cent and gross only $3,800 per farm (only $500 from sales of farm products). ^-Many of Jhftstiarmecsj some kind of help badly. They were left in the dust of techni-logical revolution that brought more changes to the farm in the last 40 years than in the previous 400. This is a social problem—not a farm problem, the hard and unhappy fact is too many farmers. not too many bushels Of corn. k k k Politicians’ ideas about today’s farmers are off by a costly country mile. Here’s the true picture' of who’s producing your food and farming. “Doesn’t make much differ- | were a bountiful bpon to. some ence to me one way or the i farmers, but a curse to others. , other,” he shrugs. But he helps A 55-year-dId load the statistics. i 1 hasn’t earned ^ , , / , I enough ‘.from his 180 acres to Other part-time farmers used, ^ income tax In six of to farm full time, until low in- 4,,^ ^^s. comes forced them to hunt jobs] town. Part-time farmers spend more time working pway from their farms, or get more income from nonfarm jobs^ than from farming. Net farm income for all 3,700,-000 farmers was about $3,400 in 1961. When you add non-farm income, income from all farmers was over $5,000 net. I*'ARMER.S OVER 65 Thebe are 404,000' farmer.s—11 ;er cent of the total in the census —who are over 65. On the average, they sell less than $1,000 worth of farm produce a year. ! , Too old to hunt a job in towm he’ll try to produce enoughs, to eke out a living. Brutal fact is that the country no longer nCeds*. this farmer — and at least 1 million farmers like him, says the Committee for Economic Development. Progress is passing him by, as it did the harness maker and buggy wliip manufacturer. ★ ★ ★ World War II prodded farmers to gear up to produce enough to fill the bellies of the world’s hungry. When the war ended, the floods of higher yields and Few famfers over 65 T'UfikeJ ‘ faster "gains cofttfmicd. with farm full time any more, and thatV the way they want It.' UNDEREMPLOYED FARMER.S Here’s the real farm problem. A million farmers sell less than $5,000 worth oPfarni products a year. They have no off-farm jobs, and can’t make a decent living from the land. They arc greatly underemployed, lacking volume, capital, and in many cases, the knowhow to profit from today’s Their lack of income is the Ronald Erickson, who farms 400 acres near Woodland, Mich., is one of the million and a half farmer.s who compriseonly 39 per cent of the total, but grow 87 per cent of our farm products. Erickson’s net income is close to the $7,700 average of this group. Not a very high return, considering he has $100,000 invested and often works a 60-hour week. Et^ickson’s confidence in what’s ahead for his family farm is starkly simple: “People have to eat. There’ll always be a future in agriculture.” Erickson is one of the farmers you must depend on in the years alicad. His biggest worry: “Government controls—and the surpluses they’ve caused.” PART-TIME FARMERS A factory worker in Denver is one of 885,000 part-timers or 24 per cent of what the census calls ‘farmers.” Two years ago he bought a home and 10 acres outside the city. “I love animals,” this city worker told me, “so I bought five Angus steers—for fun, and to earn a little side cash.” New machines, feeds and seeds every citizen.) Government planners tried to legislate inflexible land and machinery resources hack to peacetime demand, but they had a bear by the tail. k k k Farm specialists are a mile apart on the function of farm legislation today. 1 recently surveyed leading economists in 30 states — men with no political axe to grind — asking: “Can legislation solve the farm problem?” ‘ (Next: How they answered. The findings are important to He wasn’t aware that the government calls him a “farmer’ COMMERCIAL FARMERS — They comprise 39 per cent of the farm census, but grow 87 per cent of the total output, because he sells more than $50 of producing plentiful food and fiber with modern machines and farm” produce a year. methods, but netting only about $7,700 a year. Was Pro-Nasser and country alike — understand the mixed-up mess enough to prod government planners. Ilerrel Dcgraff, former food economist at Cornell University, warns grimly: “If we don’t quit shrugging off the farm problem, we’ll wake up with higher food prices . . . highr er taxes . . . and controlled ag-ricdltuTe headed into the mediocrity of socialism.” WHAT IS THE PROBLEM? The farm problem is not surpluses, or government payments, the Billie Sol Estes scandal. These arC| re.sults, not causes.? The problem boils down to low f.'irm iffiome—for some farmers. Divide $13 billion net income Old Pal Got Kassem By PHH. NEW.SOM UPl Foreign News Analyst In Baghdad, in early JVlarch 1959, sand hung in layers in the air. The U.S. Embassy was under virtual state of siege by members of the Iraqi army encampment upon its lawn. In (lie .streets, loudspeakers blared the |)rais-es of Premier Abdel Karim Kassem, and itiolis carried out tlie “will ot tlie [leople" against hapless victims wild met deatli, at tlie end of rope atlaclied tol ■ e n 1 n g| truck or automobile. At night, in tlie Hotel Khyam, 'ws correspondents banned from tlie streets by a curfew, closed their windows against the street sounds and the howls of roaming dog, packs, and watched television. Star of the show always was (!ol. Fadil el Mahdawy, a cousin of Kassem and head of the Baghdad People's Court. , Mal»Hfiwy, a grim, heavy-.set man, ruled over a court with a unique sense of justice. ' "■ ii( it Guilt was assumed, evidence usually by hearsay and its presentation frequently interrupted for long diatribes by Mahdawy against imperialism (the United States) and the United Arab Republic (President Nasser). In many hours of watching, this correspondent never saw an acquittal. In jail, awaiting execution of the death sentence, was Kas-'s one-time partner in revolution, Brig. Abdul Salam Moliam-med Aref. Aref had advocated close ties with Na.sser. BLOOD BATH Tliese.’i were the days immediately following the abortive Mosul revolt in tlie north of Irac] and tliere Kas.sem's Communist supporters were continuing their blood bath Vgainst reported or sMspected Nasser sympatliizers. In Baghdad, the mobs were thirsty, too. UPl correspondent Zaki Salamn, a towering Egyptian, was there then, and he risked death from Jhe mobs every time he ventured to the cable office* to file a dispatch. Over this, sublimely aloof, ruled Kassem, Once each day he rode in his station wagon tlirough crowded Rashid Street and then the mobs would ease tlieir blood-letting to clap and cheer. It didn’t stay that way, for Kassem even then was walking a tightrope. In October of 1959, machine-gunners almost got him on onq' of those daily drives and from then on his number was up. ON AND OFF Kassem alternately had wooed the Communists, suppressed them, wooed them again. He had promised much, delivered little. If there was a central factor in his rule, it was his hatred for Nasser. In any event, at the end, he had lost affection from all sides. Particularly opposing liim was the Baath parly wliich originally was part of his strength but which had strong tics with .Syria and Egypt. Iraq, potentially one of the" ' richest countries in the Middle East, was in the midst of an economic crisis. Everywhere chaos reigned either on or just beneath the surface. W4ien, in- 1964, Syria broke from the U.A.R. ahd it seemed the threat from Nasser had lessened, Kassem released Aref from jail and reinstated him in the army. He earlier had reduced Aref’s death .sentence to a prison term. AW,' 1 Blit, for Kassem, it was a fatal mistake. For today Aref is in the'driver’s $|at and K|asseb reportedly ;ls dead. So is Mahdawy, lelevisioii s(ar, spokesman for Commimism and Kassem’s cous-hi,' \ . * . 1Y)IJUTEKN -r*----- f' i:. 1.\ j ./ , THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, FEBRlIAliY 12, 1963 Tonight's PCH-PNH Clash May Be Best Yet When Northern's basketbe)|^ team invades the (^ntral gym tonight, the best game of the city series may take place. Pontii^c Central Certainly, the contest will have to go some to surpass the thrill-a-mlnute spectacle the two put on shortly after Christmas that ended in a 62-59 victory for Northern,'its first win in the nine-game series'. rtctf^rave since Tinned their talents, and many observers feel PCH has made the bigger improvement. “We've come a long way since the first game (against North-erhl,” the Chiefs’ coach Art Van-Ryzin said yesterday. Statistics bear out his contention. PCH has won six straight contests since losing to the Huskies. ' ADDED PUNCH Its defense has improved and the addition of 6-4 lister Hardi-man has helped Central’s rebounding and offensive punch. “They are a' good shooting ball club, we think a lot o| this Northern team,’’ Van Ryzin further commented. „ __ Statistics bear this out. PNH is averaging better than 72 points a game in building a sparkling 9.2 log. It hit more than 40 per cent of its field goal attempts in losing, 66-65, at Farmington Friday night. It was the Huskies’ first defeat in ten Starts. ’Their 65 points was the team’s lowest offensive total n six games. The Chiefs, meanwhile, were hitting their highest offensive output (72) in pinning a 17-point setback on winless Bay City Central Friday. Neither Van Ryzin nor PNH head mentor Dick Hall plan any announced changes in the offensive or defen^ tacUcs employed by the two teams’. T^c coache? have six players apiece to juggle into their starting lineups. Hall indicated Monday there would be no changes from last Friday despite the loss; although Wayne Daniels, at center, is hampered by an ankle injury. PARADOX Hall has Garry ayrtd Roger Hayward to use at forward, Daniels at center, and Jerry Reese and Mike Burklow in the backcourt. Dean Souden will likely see action. COACH VanRYZlN Even Win Streak Can't Help PCH Pontiac Central has won six straight games — its last by 1-7 points—but this couldn’t keep the Chiefs in the top 10 of this week’s Class A basketball ratings by the Associated Press. ; The Chiefs were dropped from ninth to 11th as the “experts” needed room for Detroit Northwestern. Pontiac Northern dropped down as expected, from 11th to ---------------——^14th. Van Ryzin, paradoxically, has no injuries to worry him* but he may go with his third lineup change in three games. The rapid development of Hardiman intp a regular has given the Chiefs’ mentor great flexibility. ' ’Tgam captain Ray Sain and center McKinley Jones seem sure starters with Hardiman, Mel De-Walt, Jesse Hodge and Gefald Henry filling in the other three berths at the outset. Hall and his PCH counterpart, also, ar« benefltting from increased bench strength as such reserve performers as Dave Bihl at PNH and Al Galbraith of Central have shown marked Improvement In recent ga*»es- The varsity contest, which will follow a 6:30 p.m. junior varsity match, coijld put a real test on the Huskies’ running offense. They have relinquished an average of ^8 points a game on defense but their fast break attack has more, than compensated for this shortcoming. “It is the team, that plays the best defense that wins ball games,” Van Ryzltr“ijelteves; “We’ve had good success stopping teams that like to run.’’ Central, white averaging slifditly better than 87 points, has stopped Its opponente with a 51 tempo. The Chiefs have another plus fabtor going for them in miir home court. PNH took the first game on Its own floor but must now overcome the less spacious oonfines of the arenjfi. SIDE BATTLES There will be several side battles to tonight’s cla"sh. H e n r stopixri Gary Hayward without a ftelir goal In the first game but may have h)s hands full trying lo repeat the performance. TBriqsw uncMleese combined for ?2 points in the first victory and the job of corraling this pair something very few rivals have managed td do completely — will most likely belong to DeWait «m1 Hodge. Jones, 6-3, and Hardiman, M, have the siae and spring to own the backboards but the two Haywards, 6-2Mi, were gallant at this phase of the game the first time. play; he became eligible for varsity competition only within the^ past two weeks of play. ^ Pontiac Northern Illinois Handed First Big GERALD HENRY McKINLEY JONES Gordie Howe Back On Top Battles Boston Ace for Point Lead CtASn A _____ _____d 1. Betuon Harbor M3-0) . Taam. Reoord Harbor _____ Arthur Hill t r«x BoJih < >st Lantine ill ,7. runt c«ntr»i H-; Detroit Noithwenl - Detroit Southwem LESTER HARDIMAN MONTREAL (AP) - Veteran Gordie Howe of the Detroit Red Wings has zoomed to the top of the scoring race in the National Hockey League. Howe, playing his 17th NHL season, scored five points last week on two goals and three assists and jumped from fifth to first. I^eague statistics released today show Howe and Boston’s Johnny Bucyk, the previous week’s leader, each have 56 points. Officially, however, Howe Is ranked first because he has scored 27 goals to 22 for Bucyk. MOST GOALS Jean Beliveau of Montreal is I third with 55 points while Frank iMahovlich of Toronto, Stan Miki-| ta of Chicago and Murray Oliver | ». ci.w«on^(io-* iof Boston are tied for fourth at <>«»»•<= ' iS4. ! Tf»m. I Howe and Mahovlich are tiedj i, for the most goals, 27; Beliveau; j deads in a.ssists, 42; and Glenn; s luall of Chicago retained his lead' 7 K«Um*»*7*o c* I among goalies with a 2.27 goals-' § oro,«« PoinS ,again.st average. ;io. Richund nij_ I Howie Young of Detroit contin-i iUed to lead in penalty minutes.' To2hm{’'“‘i9-oV IHe has a total of 177. j 3. MONTIIKAL ADD NIII, Hl«» (PDfO j * K"nIi»ton''(lJ- ] ^So tonight’s clash be-I tween Central and Northern will pot be between two [teams in the top 10 as was .indicated a week ago. I The Chiefs are llth and NCrth-I ern I2th in the United Press poll. West Bloomfield, a Friday loser along with PNH, dipped ; to a tie for seventh in Class B | in the AP ratings. Clawson, llth a week ago, is now ninth. | Capac remains second in the AP Class C ratings, but is first in the UPI list. Following are the AP ratings; Northern. ‘ Mu,k,|on. Dotrou ^ Porthlnu. onvlil* 1) FIRST TEST — “There’s no pain in it,’’ (middle)'. Detroit Tiger manager Bob wScheffing said Frank Lary yesterday after testing his (left) is “lioping” his former ace righthander last .season. "It was his normal delivery,’’ time yesterday during the Tigers’early camp commented pitching coach Tom Ferrick in Lakeland, Fla. C/arkston Ploys W. Bloomfield Four-Ieani Race Possible in W-6 I Trinity Baptist ' I Eyes 10th Win 1 'I’en clays ago it looked like the Wavnc - Oakland Conference bas-^kltbi^liracc, la battle between Bloomfield Hills and West Bloomfield, Trinity Baptist, winner by a whopping 102-27 margin last week, will be favored to make it 10 straight in the YMCA-Church League’s Senior Division this Fri-'day against First Baptist’s quln-it, Macedonia will cla.sh with First 'congregational at 6 p.m. in Fri-I day’s feature game. The Con- I Tim Wood of Bloomfield llillsigrogationallsts strengthened their took (bird place in the junior'hold on fourth place with a 56-imen's division of the U.S. Nation-47 triumph over St. Paul Meth-iai ’ Kigiirc .Skating Champion-jOdi.st. ships at l^)ng Beach yesterday,; * * * I Tommy Litz of Hershey, Pa, -Third place All Saints Ejfdsc^v Iwas the men’s champion. pal has a 7:15 p.m. date with St. Paul this week after defeating Central Methodist, 70-43, Friday. The winners .had a' two-pronged attack featuring Jim McCurdy and Nell Roberts with 19 tallies JESSE HODGE George Allen, member of the Chicago Bears’ football staff was named defensive coach by , head coach George Hallas, s*>e-cceding Clark Shaughnessy who eacli. resigned In December. He is n | Rounding out this Friday’ I native of Detroit. card are the 8:.30 p.m. contest I ★ ★ ★ between Trinity and First Baptist John Lance,, head basketball and a, battle between Oakland coach of Pittsburgh State Teach: Park and Centrhl at 9:45 p;m. ers College of Kansas, became tt-^ANDiNOfl West Bloomfield's loss last Fri-day changed everything, j The Lakers are tied with Hills I for first and Holly has re-entered the title pictuure, trailing the leaders by one game. Clarkston, counted out of contention once this season, can get back in the running by winning at West Bloomfield tonight. Brighton goes to Holly In the only other league game. The Oakland A leadersliip is up for g r a b s tonight at Oak Park. ItHc Redskins wdl entertain Clawson. Fitzgerald, Oak Park - and “lawHon are tied for first. Lake Orion is home for Fitzgerald and Madison goes to Avondale for oilier loop games. TOP SCORER GONE Waterford, minus high scoring Bob Readier, travels to Roches- est team in the area, but the Skippers could ill-afford the loss oLReadjer*. The big c,enter Jnr Jiircd his wrist (n a losing cause against Berkley Friday. There is a big game north of Pontiac. imlay City goes to Capac hoping to snap the Chieftains long winning streak and gain revenge for an earlier season setback. Capac will be heavily favored to win its 46th straight regular season game. if -k it Dryden lias the task of trying to stop, Goodrich’s rangy quintet at home. Clarkstdh 16sf to Wes^ Blbomh field 50-48 in an earlier meeting. Although they will have the home court advantage this time, the Lakers will have to show improvement over recent games. Holly has a score to settle with Brighton. The bulldogs are the .reason the Broncos trail the leaders, having posted an upset at Brighton. ___ Bloomfield Hills is idle tonight. A Clarkston victory would leave the Barons alone In first place. ter. l»'crfon* "fIap I II git. XplKCO ' AL GALBRAITH IS, s, the third coach in the nation to ever win 600 games 'at one college. His learn won last night 63-53 Over Northwest Missouri. Other coaches in the coveted circle are Ed Diddle of Western Kentucky and Adolph Hupp of Kentucky. Luke George of Indiana kicked....... the longest Big Ten field goal last paw. look tlt^ lead lixlay ii) tlie aeawn. It went 43 yards against |400,000 Petersen Upwling Classif-Iowa. Iwith an eight-game total of 1,647. Leads Bowling'Cllassic CHICAGO (APl-Marty Schrai, 48-ycar-old Itooria, III,, south- The Falcons aren’t the tough- NBA Standings HAMTKRN DIVISION I Won I.OII Prl Bohli K,. ll -7 clnclnm.ll /, .12 28 Ml W/, New Yoi'k / II! I.l .271 2ll wi:s|rnBN mviHioi^/ I,111*'"' ' 28 28 'm II MONDAV'M IUCSIII.TS ' TODAV'H GAMICS New Class 6 Cage Leaders in City, Waterford Play McDonald’s Drive-In moved )nt^ the lead of the Class B city cage race la’st night with a 53-45 victory over Colonial Lumber. The Bachelor’s Club edged its Class A opponent,.......Westslde Lanes, 49-48; and Columbia Avenue Baptist defeated the Pontiac Police As.sociati(m, 01-33: - •* * , ★ Town & Country outclassed Michigan Bell 51-34 In the. only other game scheduled. Bill Sekulich and Gene Luppins paced McDonald’s with 13 and 1!| points while Bill Dunstan of Colonial Lumber garnered 17. Roy Couser, and Larnell Dr; ;er hit 12 and ll for the Barhclors and Mike Williams was high I for Westslde Lanes with " [Emmett of the Pontiac ivas high jii vlthiS. / Hi|bbard|E Police scored 11 while Jim Wheat-ley of the Baptists had 13. Earl Mudge led Town ,& Country with 17 and teammates Bruce Reynolds and Ray Burrows had 16 and to, respectively. Bud Hay-ward’of Michigan Bell accounted for 12 In losing cause. FIRST PLACE Reeves Service took a half game lead in Waterford Class B by whipping A & W 89-67. Bill white scored 22 for the winners who jumped to a 21-3 lead. Tom Cordingly hit 23 for A&W. Stu Thorell netted 24 points and Tom Nickman ,23 as Ijakeland Pharmacy routed Don Nicholie Insurance, 105-46. Ron Hether-ington scored 20 for Nicholie which yielded over 100 points for the second straight game. Badgers Upset lllini, 84-77 to Open Race U. of D. 5 Defeats Iona in Free Throw Marred Game, 61-58 By The Associated Press Before the start of the college basketball season. Coach Harry Combes of Illinois optimistically declared, “We’re shooting for the Big Ten title, and nothing less than a 14-0 mark will please me.’’ After Monday night, Combes is destined to spend the next five weeks displeased, even if the mini, fourth-ranked nationally, manage to wrap up the school’s first conference title in 11 years. Wisconsin’s underrated Badgers saw to that by handing the Ilini their first league defeat—84-77 at Madison, Wls. The upset left Illinois with a 14-3 record over-all, 6-1 within the Big Ten, but still ____ position for the championship although foiiTof its next five games are on the road. THREE LOSSES The rest of the teams in the league, with the exception of Ohio State, have lost at least three games. The Buckeyes, runner-up ato64;"8tHFare In but they don’t play the Illini any| more this season. In their lone meeting, at Champaign,^ Illinois won 90-78. University of Detroit relied on free throws to down Iona of New York, ei-M, last night at U-D. ’ Only two other members of the top ten were in action Monday night. Mississippi State’s Maroons, No. 6, turned back Kentucky 58-52 their home floor and took a commanding edge in the Southeastern Conference race. Seventh-ranked Colorado bolstered its Big Eight lead with a 71-60 victory over Oklahoma aLBoulder. Wisconsin, now 3-4 in the Big Ten, utilized a zone defense in the first half and a stall in the second half to thwart Illinois. The Badgers, dominating the backboards, led at halftime 44.32 but the Illini allied after the intermission and cut the deficit to 76-73 with four minutes to play. Junior Dick Dzik’s foul shooting accur(icy sparked Detroit. Both teams shot poorly from the field, Detroit hitting 32 per cent and Iona 30. With 13 40 remaining, the Gales, paced by sophomore Warren Isaacs, pulled ahead of the Titans for the first time 42-41 but Dzik hit a se^^ shot to give Detroit a lead it never relinquished. Dzik’s nine straight foul shots In the next 12 minutes gave Detroit a. nine-point lead at one stretch. Dlzik led Detroit scoring with 19 points. He and Isaacs shared rebounding honors with 18 apiece. TliA top ten. with flmt place VPl parentheeee and iMinte on a I0-9-8 wUli poll baned on Kitnica tli tirriuv. Peb, 8. bill woii-loel reooi den Knipea of Monday, Feb. II. GARY HAYWARD ROGER HAYWARD WAYNF^ DANIELS MIKE BURKLOW DEAN SOUDEN J. Illliioln ............ 1). Arleona State .. 6. MlMlaalPPl Stale . Coloradn ..............'. DAVE BIHL J the PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FlrfmUARY 12, A-':': FIFTEEN NHL Standings ^ATIONAL LEAOUK! WLTPli.QFOA wVlCdgO ......... 2tt 14 Afl IKK 19ft Montreil .........» M 18 M 168 m roronlo ........ 25 19 9 59 168 142 Detroit 22 18 13 m im im M*S York ....... 15 27JO 40 Ul'm 80**on ..... . ..10 2914 34 150 222 - - ■ MftNU-AY’8' REBULTUr”"^ ........TODAY’S OAME Now York at Boiiton WEDNESDAY’S OAMl Datrolt at Toronto (Advortlaamcnt) KING EDWARD” Amerl(f»’s Largest Selling Cigar BAKER and HANSEN Insurance Company INSURANCE -ALL FORMS- HOME OWNERS RACKAOrPOUCY A SPECIALTY Phone FE 4-1568 714C0MMUNin NATIONAL BANK BLDO. PONTIAC 2 Conadianlndiaris Olympic Ski Hopefuls OTTAWA, Canadq (AP)-Only a papoose sitter and 200 bucks stand between two Indians from Old Crow and a chance to make the Canadian Olympic skiing team. ★ ★ ★ Reports from the far north woods say the pair, one a 23-year-old mother of five little Indians, may be the fastest things on two skiis in all Canada. If they can make their way to Ottawa from Big Crow, an Arctic Circle hamlet on the Porcupine river in the Yukon, by Thursday, they will get a chance to make the Olympic teamt T’tn not going to pooh pooh anything,” said Frank Cooke, the selector of the cross-country Olympic team for the Canadian Amateur Ski Association. $100 NEEDED Cooke said he had advised the coach of the two Indians, Ben Charlie and Martha Benjamin, that the pialr will n^ a passage to Ottawa and $100 apiece. He will says their cross-country times are as good as any recorded in Canada. Cooke said he has seen pictures of the Locheux tribe on skiis. and they seem to have modern equipment. Training reportedly consists of a m of three Or four miles before bireSkfast, with 10 to 15 miles before lunch. Even without training, the Locheux Indians are pretty special. Two years ago, a Norwegian research team yisited Old Cros.qnd reported the average inhabitant was the equal in stamina to a top trained athlete. Credit was given to a simple diet and an outdoor life. RIGHT BEHIND ‘Reports down from Whitehorse say Ben Charlie is as good if not better than the top racers on our national team.” Cooke said. “And Martha is right behind him. One report has Ben doinj said. Martha is expected to leave the children at home. Ben and Martha are from the Locheux tribe of the Vantakutchin (People of the Lakes) Indians, who take to skiing as soon as they leave the teepee: An Oblate missionary known as Father Mouchet, a former Swiss Army ski instructor, has been coaching them fot three yeafs. He minutes, compared with the best time of 65.04 minutes for Canadian ace Antero Rauhanen over th? same distance. SAVE $60 ON INSULATION Ambassador Insulation Co. 2110 Dixl* Highway Ft 5-8405 SIno 1947 UNITED TIRE SERVICE UNITED TIRE SERVICE tool Baldwin Ave. 3 Min. From Downtown Pontiac Thiot^Jbfrj, Patterson and Wemet INSURANCE Pontiac 'V' Tankers Lose Three Meets Flint YMCA swimmers handed Pontiac YMCA tankers a .triple defeat Saturday by winning the midget class, 62-48; the prep class 58-40 and the junior events, 47-38. ■A ■A A ' In the freestyle relay event the midget team of Rick Jenkins, Tom Clayson, Dave Hardenberg and Jordie Rosenthal won for Pontiac in a good time of 54.9 while Jeff Klann suffered his first yard backstroke loss of the season as he and Frank Peterson of Flint were timed at 14.5 and the decision was awarded to Peter.son. In the prep events, Steve Yqd-lin and Jolin Mason were double winners again while Carl Hiller took the diving event. MIDGET DIVISION 80 y»r6 medley relay—rilnt 'A.' Pon, .lac ‘a,' rant 'B'j 80 In. medloy-Mo-Arthur (P) Klann (P) Bykowekl (PI. Time; 1:10: diving—Whlren (Pi Potter (PI Roncntlial (P). Points; 62.4: 20 lerfly—Cooper (F) Moyer (P) Eller Time; 12.1: 40 freestyle—Cooper Stevens (P) Black (Ply Time: 24.5; 20 backstroke—Peterson (P) Klann (P‘ *' -....- -r TtmfnTO'TOTiToiiBti Wyrlwleyi (PI Behler 80 free ' 54.0'. ' y' ' PREP'DIVISION l;4*7!* 2o’7rcestyfe-8tori le*'(Pt 'c (PI Cravens /P» Time: 10.8; medio,Yodll^^l Pl^^ W^tlokl^^^(_n Amour (PI wavison (I^l. Point* 40 butterfly/ Mason (Pi V, Petei»v... Rhodes (P/. Time; 23.2; 40 freesty '’■dlln (PI Culver (PI 8. Clark .... " ■ 40 backstroke—Bower (PI Dean (PI. Time; 27.0: 100 (son (PI Culver (P) Clark i;00; 40 breastetroke—Bot-Hlller (PI Davidson (PI. Time: relay-Pllnt A' 1;39.6. ar (PI Odell (Pi Mor-22.0; 6(1 Ind. medley— . -r«lth! -Keaet 40 butterfly—Ncithercut (PI (PI Egan (Pi. Time: 24,3; I) freestyle* Hayerlanri (P I. Time: 2:10; 40 breaststi I McClellan (Pi Plrle (Pi. 0 free relay—Pllnb—Tlme: Safety Service Specialists FRONT END ALIGNMENT FRONT WHEELS BALANCED I Reg. $12.9.^ Value $095 MOST CARS OUR EXPERTS DO ALL THIS • correct colter • correct comber • correct tee-ln • odfust fteering • full safety check ED WILLIAMS Wiieel Balancing. Brakes. Mnlilers 45l S. SAGINAW 0t RAEBURN, Ponl;ioc NEW YOR K(AP)-Jack Molinas, a tail, handsbme ex-basketball star who onee reportedly boasted he’d never be implicated, faces' a jail term of 10 to 15 years today fof masterminding a $70,000 fix of college basketball games. .A' ^ ^ A...■....‘ In my opinion, you are a completely immoral person. You are the prime mover of the conspiracy and you were the person most responsible. You callously used your prestige as a former basketball star to corrupt college basketball players and to defraud the public,” Judge Joseph A. iSarafite of State Supreme Court told the 30-year-old Molinas in passing sentence Monday. The sentencing of the '6-foot-6 former Columbia University star and Fort Wayne professional play- er, along^^jvith,Jtwo confessed y^j^^auseJie-apenfrfS months Are Getting Longer Molinas Gets 10 to IS Years Cage fixer Is Sentenced Instigating Rematch for Detroiter, Mina OAKLAND, CAlif. (AP) - Promoter Art Benjamih wants to rematch tienry Hank with Pehi’s Mauro Mina hfere March 4. Beujarmn made the announcement after Hank hammered out a split-decision Monday night over Sixto Rodrigue?, of l^n Ahselmo. The hard-punching Detroit light-heavyweight, ranked eighth , by Ring Migjazine and ninth by the World Boxing Association, floored l^riguez for a mandatory eight and actual five count $0 seconds before the 10-round bout ended. South Carolina has adopted a bribery law and bills have been introduced in eight other states, Byers said. LIEUTENNyiNT Sentenced with Molinas, who was convicted Jan. 8 on five coOnts of bribery, were Joseph Hacken, 42, of New York, and Philip LaCort, 39, of Boston. Hacken, described as Molinas’ chief lieutenaht in the plot to fix 43 games between 1957 and 1961, was sentenced to 7% to eight years. LaCort, who pleaded guilty to fronting for a Boston gambling group,' received 2% to five years. Aaron Wagman, 29, of New York, who had pleaded guilty to bribing nine players and making 37 bribe payoffs, received a suspended sentence of three to five testifying against Molinas, and also faces a five-to-10 year term on a Florida conviction foir football fixing. bribers, was hailed bx„WaltoF^ By* 'director of the National Collegiate Athletic Association, who said: ATTITUDE LAUDED We are indebted to . the energies and efficiency of the law enforcement agencies of New York and appreciate of the attitude the court itself.'" Byers said the combination of the stiff sentences, the introduction of federal legislation that would make interstate bribery schemes illegal, and action in en-, acting bribery laws on a state | level “makes us optimistic that we are getting to the core of the problem.” AAA Sen. Kenneth Keating, R-NY, introduced a bill last week aimed at preventing gamblers from using interstate facilities, such as the telephone and the mails, in an attempt to try to affect the outcome of a sports contest. The bill, which passed the .Senate but died M the House last ylaf, has the backing of Attorney General Robert Kennedy, and is expected to pass during the current Congressional session. For the past year, the NCAA has been leading a campaign for bribery laws in states in which survey disclosed there was no Top, Bottom to Meet , in Youth Hoop Loop.. The Celtics and Bombers, first and last in the Boys Club Senior House basketball league, will play Thursday night this week after surprising performances last week. The league-leading Celtics were upset, 43-41, by the River Rats although Jim Bland scored 18 points for the losers. The Bombers won their second straight after six losses as Frank Kettonen pumped in 35 points for decisiem over the Gam- in” jail as a material witness inmlers. ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ FAULTY TRANSMISSIONS REPMHED 1956-59 HYDRA- MATIC PHOENIX, Ariz. (UPI) - Golf, which used to be a four-days-a-week business, suddenly has bloomed into seven*days-a*week— and then everybody runs to catch the next plane. The windup of the $35,(KH) Phoenix Open tournament is slated for today — if the weatherman cooperates. If everything goes well, things here will be all cleaned up and the same show in a new locale-in this case Tucson, Ariz. — will open bright and early tomorrow morning with a pro-amateur contest. The finaly 18 holes of the Phoenix event are slated for today on the water - logged Arizona Country Club course. Arndld Palmer has been the third - round leader since Satur-such legislation. There were 16 day: 'such states a year ago. Since then, • Scientifically measured and correct coster and camber • Correct toe-in and toe-out (the chief cause of tire wear) BRAKE LIIVINGS Bait grade, high qual-ily lining. 1,000 mill adjutlmenr fraa. Af low ai $1.25 a weak. I year—20,000-mile guaranfaa. Free Installation WRITTEN LIFETIME GUARANTEE $8T5 MONROE-MATIC " SHOCKS 75,000 Milo Guaranloe Complotoly Inilalled For Uie SMOOTHEST RIDE You’ve Ever Hod. LET US TRUE balance and TRACTIONIZE YOUR TIRES W(TH OUR KEMSWAY ■—TIRE CONDITIONER vHHHHHlI 12 MONTH W TERMS 1 1 WE HONOR AU APPROVED MAJOR CREDIT, CARDS | MOTOR MART 123 _ SAFETY CENTER FE 3-7^ jr Credll T*rm«—l-D RELIABLE Transmission 41 Nr Porke FE 4.0701 MUFFLERS COSF LESS BECAUSE THE INSfAlLATION IS FREE AND THE MUFFLER ISGUARANTEED'FORASLDNG AS YOU OWN THE CAR ON WHICH IT IS INSTALLED rC'|)lac(;mont .service rliarL'o.) MIDAS BUDGET PLAN OPEN DAILY 8:30 A. M. 435 Sonth Saginaw FE 2-1010 SCHOOLED 6M DEALER SERVICEMEN AND GM DEALER SERVICE ... TAKE ’IHE GUESSWORK OUT OF CAR CARE Here's a man whose right hand knows what his left hand is doing. He’s an instructor at one of the 30 General Motors Training Centers. He’s explaining an oil flow diagram for an automatic transmission. He knows every service job inside and out, and more importantly, how to impart his knowledge. His audience is Guardian Maintenance servicemen-skilled experts who learn about the latest GM engineering advances, new tools, new skills, new techniques! These trained men staff GM dealerships- assure GM owners the best possible maintenance and repair. For service that will save you money in the long run, visit your GM Dealer for Guardian Maintenance! see YOUR gM QUALITY OEALBR POR THE BEST KIND OP SERVICE Guardian Maintenance CHEVROLET • PONTIAC • OLDSMOBILE • BUICK • CADII.LAC • OMC TRU9k 1:' THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAlr. FEBRUARY 12, 1063 the most Jet service to MIAMI FROM DETROIT Jets at 8:15 am, 1:40 pm, 11:00 pm, 11:35 pm. Night Jetourist fare $57.90. Add tax, now only 6%. Jet service to Cincinnati and Tampa, leaving 7:30 am and 11:35 pm. Ml MU It WO 5-3000 or IH your Trav»l Ag«nt the air line with the BIG JETS 'Ghina Weak Without Russ' *5cfpwfrr Chl»f Fighting Requires Aid TOKYO (UPI) - Prime Minister Hayat9 Ikeda said yesterday Communist China is incapable of developing nuclear weapons or even waging a conventional war without help from Soviet Russia, ★ ★ w In an exclusive Interview with Mims Thomason, president of United Press International, Ikeda said the Red Chinese cannot make “one fighter plane” without Russian aid. He said the lack of oil on the mainland of China was a serious handicap and wouid force the Chinese Communist government to rely on the Soviet Union for assistance in any major military conflict. “The Communist Chinese may explode a nuclear device,” Ikeda EXPERT INST4UATION . . . makes the difference in efficient home saidr^'We-don^t^kflo«Mvhem But low^ even if they do, it will take at least 10 years before they can develop nuclear weapons.” Call a Specialist Today... Heights Supply 2685 LiiiH.fr ll<l. Psnilar I L LS451 Wolverine Heating Co. I234llal<l>.in A.r. n:2.2m Bryan F. French 351 N. PaiMni k.Si. I’unliia FE 5-6973 Zilka Heating 4361 Mill Wall OAKLAND INDOOR COMFORT BUREAU air-conditioning engineers psychological.” ★ The Japanese leader said that if an Internatiqnal disarmament agreement is signed between the United States and Russia, Red China would not agree to any of the treaty terms because it is not a member of the United Nations. ★ * w But he said this would not be too important for world peace because the Communist Chinese have no Independent military force “other than the human wave, the pouring in of manpower.” Consider Plan to Send Welfare Adults to School DETROIT (fl — Detroit is con-jidering a plan to send adults on welfare back to school to learn or freshen up on the three Rs. The City Council yesterday asked School Supt. Samuel'M. Brownell and Welfare Department Supt. Daniel J. Ryan to work out a tentative budget for the program, “A sampling shows that one-third of all persons on relief may be functionally illiterate,” Ryan reported. “They may be able to write and sign their names, but don’t have the capacity to read and comprehend a job application, nor to fill one out." Lincoln Birthday Celebration Keyed to Civil Rights by JFK WASHINGTON (AP) - Abraham Lincoln, the first Republican president in the White House, will >e honored today by the present Democratic occupants with a birthday party keyed to civil rights, * w ★ In advance of the party, President Kennedy will receive a special 250-page historians’ report on the progress made in civil rights in the 100 years since Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation. PRESS BANNED The President and his wife invited some 800 top officials and civil rights leaders from across the country to a buffet reception at the White House tonight, but banned presa_ cover age of the event. This is the first such major social event at the White House during the Kennedy administration where no reporters have been al- Asked why there was a press ban, except for a brief picture- ------ ..—r— taking session, presidential press sato the-efffict C3hliut’ftseet«tai^--PI«*e^^^Sid^ Vlrst actual nuclear test “wiU be ... ....----------- .* au has been a Republican day of celebration with , dinner* and speeches sponsored by the GOP. There were'some grumblings in such events. however, that a number leaders of the desegregai had been Invited, along with state officials and civil rights leaders from across the country. Reporters were invited, how- Solon Eyes Exentption for College Bill Players WASHIN-GTON (UPD-Sen. Thomas J. Dodd, DConn., yesterday proposed a 11,200-Income tax exemption for persons paying college bills. it -k Dodds said in a statement that the mounting costs of some events at the White Houseimaklng it increasingly difficult were open to coverage and others for persons of moderate means were not. I to afford college for their chil- Llncoln’s birthday traditionallyIdren. ever, to attend a 5 p.m. White House ceremony at which Kennedy will receive the progress report 'from his Commission on Civil Rights. W with GIDLEY electric shop Sat Heating 673-1423 5199 DIXIE HWY. WATERFORD BbuiAiii Distributing System Gives You WALL-TO-WALL COMFORT! ■■■■■■I Call Ua Today! jTXZXZXXSro 9onOA.TRZOSCO. S 1JANITROL 1 A HEATING ami COOLING » 2 6824100 « 1IT81 OriHar JTiRi Rd. [ M Ksego Harbor } You Will Not Bo Without Hoat Ovomight! GOODWILL AUTOMATIC HEATING 00. ’ “phone fI8:0484"' 3401 W. Huron Juit W*(t of till. Lk. Rd. Winter Again Unloads Both Barrels at Italy ROME (AP)—Italy reeled today under a fresh onslaught of wind, rain, snow and deadly landslides. The new outburst in the century’s worst winter caused at least four new deaths, raising the season’s toll to 154. Yon Can Help K^p Commnnism OSS Balance . . . Yes, you! Get into the hglit as thousands of American citizens already have. Where? At Communism’s weak 8fK)t—Eastern Europe. That’s where the push is. That’s where 80,000,000 people still resist Red domination. And that’s where many Russian divisions are tied down. A Major Weapon You ran help keep that pressure on; by suirporting ode of our major weapons in the cold war... Radio Free EurorKs. In daily news and commentary broadcasts to captive peoples, Radio Free Europe’s 28 powerful transmitters send words of truth ... words that smash Red lies. How You Can Help Radio Free Euroi^e is supported by private contributions. It is pushing hard, keeping Communism off balance. It needs your help to push harder still, Give now—whatever you can. Send your contributions to . . . Radio A«e Europe Fkind Aitmkm C»v0tt-Vcln hi Cmmnnlmt P. O. Bpx 1963, Mount Vornon, N. Y. PiMuhtd m a pitliHf. itm in roopmHonmilk Tin Ailvrrtuing (loudcit and NnvtpttptnAdmrlMm^, jiiith I'ht "Vi THI PONTIAC TRESS WHEN YOU HEAT WITH NATURAL GAS IT'S HARD TO BELIEVE THAT January^thk mqnyjms Throughout most of the month gas appliances worked harder than usual. Your gas furnace worked overtime — maintaining the steady, even, comfortable temperatures that you and your family have come to demand and enjoy. The gas water heater was busier too, because the water coming into the home was colder than normal. More hot meals and beverages were prepared for cold weather menus. This helps explain why your gas bill for January was higher than usual. It really is easy to forget how cold it has been when you let automatic gas heat take over your heating worries. /A\ COMPARED VYITH OTHER LIVING COSTS, fpW.?ISX)NE W OF THE BIGGEST BARGAINS IN THE FAMILY BUDGET CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY / THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUl^gDAY, FEBRUARY 12. inon SEVENTEEN. Says Tonsillectomy Is Dangerous t6 Life BEN CA^EY By Neal Adams By DR. william BRADY Newspapers reported tte distli of a young woman who had been in coma 7% years. Her heart had stopped in the^course of a ton- probably the "brain condition'*’ tion of tonsil-this was standard'the major operation is unneces-dment-when-medicine was a (*sary» in: bbth-jof. these-cases.— sillectomy; The physician had massaged it^back into action. A girl, aged 14, was in coma nearly eight years after tonsillectomy. Her heart had stopped when she was on the operating table, and the doctors got it started again after four minutes. But the child never regained consciousness. The newspaper report of this case said “a physician attributed death to a brain condL tion.” Some vital brain cells die if the circulation, the constant supply of oxygen, is cut off for as long as half a minute. This was These, are only two cases of fatal tonsillectomy. In my tonsillectomy file are scores of oth-young children, athletes, beauty quaen, high school graduate, popular patrolman, police inspector, men\J)er of college swim squad. The wonder is that do many persons survive tonsillectomy. This, however, hardly justifies the operation, in my opinion. I can’t conceive a circumstance in which I’d sanction or approve perpetration of this atrocity on a patient.' It is my conviction, acquired by experience,, that the best treatment for ehiarged tonsils is tonsillotomy, the instantaneous removal of the obstructing por- For infected tonsils, the method of choice is diathermy, electrocoagulation, electro - dessicatlon, ■ believe. At least it is the treatment I’d want if I had Infected tonsils. signed letters,, not more than bn ..age or loq words long pertaining t personal health and hygiene, not dh --------- ..I.irentmenl, 'r‘" diagnosis, ______ted state pe^ i Tonsillectomy is a major operation involving all the hazards of any majW operation. Tonsillotomy is a minor operation, subjecting the patient to no greater risks than does extraction of a tooth. The latter-day operatbrs may tell you I’m bucolic and far behind the times. But I challenge them to give one good reason Why an operator should even attempt to “get every bit of tonsil.’’ Man Entrancing, Plan Enhancing, Till Judge Steps In MIAMI; Fla. (AP)—A judge has granted an annulment to a woman who said a night club entertainer forced her into marriage through hypnosis and then took $19,342 of her money. AW, dony be mad, dear,, I WAS ONLV TEASING./ PTT------- # - JACOBY ON BRIDGE In granting the annCiImcnt Monday, Circuit Judge Ralph 0. Cullen said Claire Rosamond Golden Isiel Peller, 34, was “under hypnotic influence to such an extent that she could not fully comprehend the nature and significance Blind dissection of the throat in the unwarranted attempt to „ “get every bit of tonsil” is what t] makes tonsillectomy dangerous h to life. That tonsil" tissue itself of her actions.” is not inimical to health seems evident in the fact that people , The judge ordered Ronald Pel- y IF I HAD IT TO DO ALL OVER AGAIN, I WOULD MARRY -n YOU IN AN INSTANT./j— THINGS MIGHT BE mM DIFFERENT tHEN^^j I DONYKNOWWHYI . MARRIED YOU, EXCEPT I THAT YOU WERE TRYING I SO HARD TO GET AWAY./ i DRIFT MARLO By Dr. I. M, Levitt, Tom Cobke and Phil Evans By OSWALD JACOBY Take a look at the • North and South hands only. How would you plan to make a fouf-spade con-' tract? Nine tricks are a cinch, with five trumps, three diamonds, and the ace of clubs. How about the tenth trick? If you can trump I the third heart in JACOBY dummy you will have it. West has been unkind enough to lead a trump. If you win and return a heart the chances are that your opponents will lead a second trump and if you lead a second heart they will simply lead a third trump at you, whereupon you won’t be able to xuff. that last heart. If they are going to adopt this decidedly unfriendly defense, you must find an alternate line of play. The tenth trick is not in diamonds. You hold the ace, king and queen while dummy holds only three little ones. There is a chance in dummy’s clubs and yotr filiftl see what can be done. Therefore, after you win the first trump you should play the ace and another club. Now if your opponents lead trumps you win the second trump in dummy, lead a club and ruff it. Both opponents will have to follow to that third club whereupon you will draw the remaining trump, winning in dummy and discard two of your hearts on the last two clubs and wind up making 11 tricks instead of only 10. ““Who Iceejr 4iheiMonsi|jJ«1tw»'^*lly fcr, • -who -“nsps”Yhe • wtagtr TKime enjoy good health. I am horrified by these fatal tonsillectomies, because I believe Dante, to repay the amount Mrs. Peller claimed, plus interest from May 25^ 1962. OUR ANCESTORS By Quincy Q_The bidding ha* been: Weal North East South 1A Double Pass 2 W 2 4 4W 4 4 Pas.s Pas» Double Pass V ■ You,- South, hold; 48 6 4 V1086 5 44 3 2 |>814 'What do you do? A—Pas*. Your partner thinks he can beat four spades. Maybe he can, , but you know that you can’t make five hearts. NORTH 4KQ10 12 V75 4842 4JS653 EAST A 4.3 4 7 6 2 WAQ108 VK964 4J7 5 ♦ 10 9 6 3 i4Q109 *K74 SOUTH tD) 4AJ985 W J32 4 AKQ 4A2 Both vulnerable Sontb West North East 14 Pass 2 4 Pass -44- Openlng lead— TODAY’S QUESTION West redoubles four spado*. North and East pass. Now what do you do? Answer Tomorrow IIOARIMNO HOUSE Astrological j r SVDNEV OiUAIIIt ARIES iMsr. brood ovor p»«t. OEMINI (M»v 21 to ,1uni< 21). mendous, OPPORTUNITY d«v < doors open. Mske sppoInlmentR. people Express Independence, orl ily, Tonluhl lino tor belli* with ‘"’cancer (June 22 to July 21): I connection ^wltli_ s spotll*hted. thlnkln*. M I.EO iJiilv OUT OUR WAY turn. Dav for PreocoupRUon ^ ^ j what 18. i^Rl with ii r fildf.' hoa/1 with confl<l« CAPRICORN n ...........,.,p. 23 to JRD, 2( ....1 ACltlBVKMENT Is Isey. capabilities. Recent^ mi pi ISe^ ?r*on **18’'hot. *Take advantage . vantages, Accept added TesponslbUlty. Tau?us*1iook i.nd"‘think” AHEAD, )s paved with opportunity. Un tc to perceive; utllLe I Intuitive ; ‘“piBoS (Feb. 2(1 to Mar. |s WEDNEBDAY IS YOUK HIRTUDAY (CdprnVhi IIKW) By V. T. Hamlin CAPTAIN EASY By Leslie Turner ‘Sure, it’s expensive, but your sweetheart will be disappointed if you don’t remembiir her!” ,7^ra THANK YOU TO 5PBAK OF H6R WITH ' MOW RtVSRBNCBiiJOByj VALERIE I about PERFECT I SHE MAKES nriJniER IN SCHOOL LOOK PLUMB HOMELY'. JUST TIT, ......... SAMBil/ ANP MEET TIT NEVER V ENTERfAgOt . THOUaHT VJHSIPB YOU-.SORTOF VOirP BET YOU CAN'T PI5C MUSHY m 'IRL! MORTY MEEKLE P0^BBJ&J6 IN MH?AO^, ( WINIXROP? By Dfck Cavalli By“Eiimfe' Biish m flier ' -Y LET ME TAKE YOUR PICTURE V*I'VE (yOT COLOR FILM iM-4 HEY---VYHAT GOES ON ? YOU SAID COLOR FILM I'M KIND OF ) . PALE TODAY— S BUT THIS WAY—' V REl ---I'LL HAVE RED CHEEKS By Charle.s Kuhn THE OLD DOC HAS ORDERED' ME NOT TO GO..OUTDOORS AND THROW SNOWBALLS.' j c? Al DONALD DUCK By Walt Disney IS yoUR HELIGOPTE^ ' HIGHWAY. F?ATROL, N WORKC^ > POUK6... <v C HE'S SAFELVJ ^ ."'V ^ EIGHTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. TOESPAY, FEBRUARY 12. 10<^3 GOP Power Struggle MESC Job MARKETS The following are top prices covering sales, of locally grown produce by glowers and sold by them In wholesale package lots. Quotalidns are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Monday Produce reviT Apple*. Dellctou*. bu........ Apple*. Jonathan, bu......... Applti. Mclnloah. bu^ Applet, Northern Spy ... Applet, BeeU. topped Cabbaie. curly, bu........... Cabbage, red. bu. Cabbage, t^dard Carrol*, lopped, bu. ........ Celery, roolj . ......... HortendUb.' pk. I.ee|ii. d«. bcha .. ..... . Onlont, dry. SO-lb. hag Most Key Losses Slight Stocks Lower in Holiday Trade day's decline. Semiholiday con-[lower trend-.jChemi^,. .steels, NEW YORK (AP) - Stocks moved moderately lower early this afternoon in slow Lincoln’s Birthday trading. Scattered issues sljowed resistance to further decline and fractional'Aains- Losses of most key stocks were slight. ★ ★ * ★ W ★ I Motors, electrical equipments, The market was down from the rails, drugs, electronics, and aero: start in a resumption of yester-lspace issues showed a slightly ditions prevailed in Wall Street, New York banks were closed in observance of Lincoln’s Brithday. Little was changed in the news background and trading was most', ly in the hands'of professionals. NY Publishers See Long Fight 'Normal Methods May Not Yield Settlement' NEW YORK (AP)-Publishers ’Analysts saw the market, as of New York’s nine closed news-^ng through a period of spot-lpapers say a contract settlement tiness typical of February and al-!wtth 3,000 striking printers “wiU so as consolidaUng gains made in be extremely difficult if not im- tobaccos, ar\d oils were mixed. In many instances, early losses of key stocks were cut, and in some cases erased entirely in favor of small gains. Potaloba. 2&-lb. bag ....... Radlahea. blahk AadUbea. botnoun . Rhubarb, hothoiitr; box Rhubarb, huthoiitr, bcb. bath, b uat'h, I Poultry and Eggs DETROIT, r pound ai a poultryi Detroit lor No. t.qualli: S, hoary type roaateri brollera ana fryert 3-Barrad Rock 30-31. ______-t Detroit by ?l o'lrera (Including U. S.); White* grade A Jumbo 44-46: ---------- ' :gr 3»-43.' large 36-42: medium 36ti-, brown*. Ik/^e^ 38-38'/2: medium 36- CHICAOO HOTTER AND BOOB CHICAGO. Peb. 13 (APi-Chlcggo Mercantile Exchange-Butler steady; wliole-satc bUTlng ytrlce* unchanged; 63 *core ....... — - ’Tii, 60 B 46‘,»; 66 C ....___________ ,1 . ^ Egg* steady; wh uuclianget^^^ pe.r^ Handard* 36;’dlrtle» 31:'check* 33. CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO. Pen. 13 lAPl—Live poultry: Whole»ale buying prices_ unchanged •- NEW YORK i3 - Corporate bond prices were mixed at the opening of trading on the New corporate trading with a number of -is.sues adding to gains of recent weeks. Ttlniiry dealers in U. S. government securities were closed for the holiday. Rails were fairly active in the the prolonged upswing since Oc- All Big Three motors look fractional losses. Steels turned narrowly mixed, resisting further decline. Steel output last week was the largest since last April. Prices on the American Stock Exchange were mostly lower in '---imoderate^ 1 nar d t ffg. -FractionaT possible” to achieve through nwr-mal collective'bargaining, and “a long test of economic strength appears Inevitable,” The Publishers Association of New^ork City issued the statement Monday night after the col-of talks between publishers printers............ The statement also said: T^ift^pubfehers s^ may be found to explore with of- , LANSING lUPI) - The fight over making George N. Bashara Jr. a member of the Michigan Employment Security Commiajion Appeal Board locked today on a power struggle in the 14th Congressional District Republican Committee. A host of union leaders --wanting to criticize Bashara’s nomination because of an ai-leged antilabor bias — waited in line for tVt hours today wiille charges and countercharges were exchanged between Ba-sliara and Richard • Durant, chairman of the 14th District GOP Committee. The Senate Business Committee, still not having heard a single union witness, finally called a lunch recess after it became stuck on the question of shara’s admitting as evidence a newsletter distributed to a church By BEN PHLEGAR AP Automotive Writer DETROIT — . the. automobile industry ; win build the_gBe mil- group by Mrs._DorqthjL-.F4^r, Mi, Tc,* Srof'TiS'repr.se„Ung were up at 37. I.ackawanna:nical Materiel, Mead Johnson ^on- siasF eur eotfmtoA problem, “We al have a deep interest in finding a procedure which will permit resumption of publication of our newspapers and a return to work by all our employes.” ineomes of 93 gained 3 at 22 and'(Hannlnl -Gontrolsr Vktoroen In-New York, Lackawanna and strument. Reinsurance invesi-Western 4s were up Di at 51. Iment, and Cinerama. The New York Stock Exchange Livestock Mayor Robert F. Wagner the more than two-week mediation effort to get the nine major L**t rhi‘ dailies back on the streets. They 3,'/. '« disappeared 67 days ago. He announced Monday, after an 18-hour negotiating session that he was recessing the talks indefinitely pending reports from both sides. In Cleveland, Ohio, negotiations continued in an effort to end the blackout of that city’s two newspapers, in its 75th day. RIFT REPORTED P. Inters union officials in New York charged there were “differences of opinion” among publishers, preventing a settlement here. The publishers denied this. The New York Post reportedly would like to settle, said Bertram A Powers, president of the printers’, union local and its chief negotiator. But, he said, the Post “was I fearful that if it did, it would suf-, fer retribution from advertisers I’I who would align themselves with ;"'the publishers association.” Speculation Boosts Old Crop Soybeans r^TSaranfT®l6haht. ★ * ★ Bashara claimed the letter to the members of the “Society of Fishermen, Inc.,” would "impeach Mrs. Faber’s credibility.” Committee chairman John W. Fitzgerald, R-Grand Ledge, opposed introduction of the document because he. felt it was not pertinent to the charges Durant raised about a possible discrepancy in a 1960 GOP fund-raising drive Bashara particTpated in in the 14th District. - Bashara claimed Durant’s ef- thls wed(, staying about 7 per cent ahead 6f its 1962 pace. Through last Saturday the Business Noles D. Ward has been Appointed manager Of Montgomery Ward’s Detroit metropolitan district, it was announced today, The district isl composed of nine Ward’s s t o res, including one in ^ Pontiac. t Ward, who has been with the company 22 years, was formerly genera)! manage of the WARD company’s north-central region. William D. Thomas Jr., president of the Thomas Economy Furniture Co., 361 S. Saginaw St., has been elected to the board of directors of the Michigan Retailers Association. 'Thomas, a former director of the association, and a past president of the Michigan Buyers Association, lives at 450 Shore-view Drive, Waterford Township. He has been in the furniture business since 1946. Earl Fortin of 3771 Embarca-dero St., Waterford Township, has been named manager of the new Lake Orion branch office of: First Federal Savings of Oakland, "it was Announced today. Fortin, a graduate .from St. .loseiih's* College K e n s clear, Ind., was previously FORTIN forts to keep Wkn off the appeal board constituted a new attempt by the conservative. Republican leader to embarrass Gov. George Romney. it it * Bashara, first witness at a special Senate business committee hearing called to reconsider his nomination, said, “Mr. Durant has seized upon an issue which is no issue at all.” The 28*yearrold Grosse Pointe Farms attorney said the real cause of Durant’s opposition was that he, Bashara, had been “active jfi:^his crusade” to oust ,, Durant as leader of the 14th Congressional District Republican Committee. Expect Millionth Auto ol Year Out This Weejr i InvStind '* liiiSiiiiiiii By ROGER E. SPEAR (Q) “My wife teaches school and I’ve a good job with an oil company. We’re both in good health and I know we are real lucky people. I have 300 shares of Texaco stock and $7,000 In the bank. We owe $6,000 on our house. WAuld you sell enough Texaco to pay off the house and what would you do with the $7,000 in the bank?” J. D. (A) You certainly are lufky people and very obviously happy, as well. I hope you Will always continue to be so. Much as I like Texaco, you have too much in this situation and I would diversify by selling 200 shares and Investing in equal amounts of American Telephone and Texas Utilities. I would leave my bank balance as it is, for cash reserve, and I see no need for you to retire your loan. With monetary inflation again threat, a moderate loan — to be paid off later with possibly cheaper dollars — is not a bad thing to have. (Q) “We are a young couple with three children. We arc living on a small income but are able to save a modest amount each month. We would” estate busin^w) in Bay City. like very much to invest $25 to $30 a month in stocks but would need to dispose of them in a year or two for a down payment on a house. Have you any suggestions?” M. D. * (A) You seem like an extremely nice couple and I have just one suggestion for you. Never buy shares of any sort knowing that they must be sold within a definite time limit. If the market should happen to be down at the time you need funds, you might suffer a - serious^^^ to^^ of principal or you might have to defer buying your 4ioiise. strongly belic've that your money belongs in a .savings account until you need it. When that time realicoiues you will be able to with- draw it in full and with accrued The new branch office is sched-uled to open March 1. (Copyright 1963) Comedian Leads Caravan Food Arrives for Negroes CLARKSDALFi, Miss. (lll’D-Ne-gro comedian Dick Gregory today begin distributing around 14,000 tops of donated food to destitute jiNe’feroes. He claims the Negroes were dropped from federal surplus food rolls because of voter registration activities. ^ I The flour and canned goods indj Kail* vui..st«ek*' arrived late yesterday from Chicago in a caravan of trucks led by Gregory, ffi^fegoi^ said ne helped collect St^te Treasury Totals j LANSING (iTl-State Treasury income during the past week was 16.6 million and outgo 'was $2X3 , jlfnillion. The Treasury balance'Negroes were pusliing „ ........... .aul*''.^arr*S4in<tor the cnd of thc week was $84.21registration drive here,’’ Gregory *.»un.rd by ,a.:h I ’ ' 'sald. ‘l /■ ......:• . ' ' . ■ ' ^ the food in Chicago “when I heard about Negro baljlos in Mississippi going without milk and bread." CLAIMS PLOT “They cut off thd federal surplus food to Negroes in Clarks-'dale and Griienwood because the voter Federal, state and county officials denied the accusation. Attorney Aubrey Bell; representing the Leflore County Board of Supervisors, said the program was “cut off. purely for a financial reason and no other.” He said both races were affected by the move, not just Ne^ Officials In neighboring Sunflower County said the surplus program still was in effect. The Mississippi Advisory Com-, inittee4o4he-U,Sr^ommission^ Civil Rights last week backed up county officials, saying it could find no civil rights violations. Lodge Calendar Anliual Meeting Quadrant Lo\^ l2 Club, Wednesday, Feb. 13 al Roosevelt Lodge Temple, 22 State St. Election of officers and other iniportant business. official total stood at /75,612, cars compared with $12,968 in the similar period a yjakr ago. ’The standmd Cl^otetr^-Eord-- Galaxie and Randier have held to their 1-2-3 order in the production standings. But there has been considerable juggling in the lesser positions. Foi,e.xaroplCi the standard Pontiac has moved up from seventh to fourth while the Ford Fairlane has slipped from fourth to seventh. UPS AND DOWNS The Chevy II is running fifth this year, up from ninth, while the Falcon has slipped from fifth to eighth. The standard Oldsmo-bile continues in sixth place. Corvair moved down from eighth to ninth while the standard Buick held 10th both years. Three Chrysler products — Plymouth, Dodge and Valiant - hold the nth through 13th spots this year whereas none of them was in the top 15 a year ago. Truck output also continues to outpace last year with all but Dodge among the volume producers showing greater volume. Dodge is just a few units behind the year-ago pace. Economists often give more weight to truck production than to car production since they feel greater capital outlays are involved. Strong truck sal^s indicate, in their opinion, confidence in the general economy. Want Witness in State 'Chats' LANSING (UPI) — p-our Democratic state officials announced last night all their, future private business with Gov. George Romney would have to be conducted before a witness. Secretary of State James M. Hare, Treasurer Sanford Brown, Auditor General Billie S. Farnum and Superintendent of Public Instruction Lynn M. Bartlett announced the decision at a meeting of party leaders. The tour agreed that “hereafter when they have private audiences with Romney they will do so only with a witness present because the governor apparently cannot be retied upon to give a complete account of what transpires at such meetings,” said a spokes-lan for the officials. The decision was an outgrowth of a fight last week between Bartlett and Romney over a meeting they had in the governor's office. The governor accused Bai tlett of issuing him an ultimatum while the superintendent insisted he had only withdrawn a previously extended invitation. The quarrel concerned Romney’s scheduled appearance at an education conference in Mardi. News in Brief Howard V. Hcldenbrand, The Pontiac Press’ Man About Town columnist, will speak at the meeting pf the Oakland Chapter of the Michigan Society of Professional Engineers, 7 p.m. Thursday at the Rotunda Inn on Pine Lake Road. Fire believed started by hot ashes from a heating stove caused an estimated $2,200 damage last night to the home of Hazel Stafford, 3190 Wan^en Waterford-TownshipL Damage to contents has not been determined. Highway Cost Index Up LANSING (/Pt~Michigan’s highway construction cost index rose (wd-tehths of a point last year to 169, reports the State Highway Department. Tlio index, figured on a ba.se of 100 points in 1940, wa.s 1(18.8 at the end of IMl. TH]g rONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. FEBRUAHy 12. 1003 -h NINETEF.X Deaths ih Pontiac, Neighboring Areas Australiali ^ aborigines keep with their A chilly night is a ‘‘three-dojt night" while a real cold one Is a "iiva-dog night. mVIl^ALLUMS Service fo^Davld Allums, 38, of 270 Ostpian St. will be 8:15 p.m. Thursday in Friendship Baptist Church. His body will be taken to 9^Inden, La., for burial by the " • " CHARLES M. ARNHART jtpry No. 2» WicWta,_Kan. lElks Lodge No. liet oFl^ning^ Service for Charles M. Arn-***”’*^^”' hart, 60, of 7444 S. Shiker St., Waterford Township, will be 2 ■an. Mr. Arnhart died early yesterday morning following a three-year illness. Surviving besides his wife Grace, are two daughters, Mrs. ________A'"*'** WE WISH TO, EXri|EtB8S OUR thaiiku t» Uis^wwny vfrt«nd> and n«lghbor>. to Rev. Leland Lloyd •lid Vo----------- -..i—. ..— 6 Help Wanted, Female 7. Work Wanted Male n V. Loland • Fu&rat : <lnd^ts il If yAu'll and wan....... LEGAL NOTICE Open ooinmtltlVe examlnatli.. ... , .-■ulta for Fire and Police Departtnents, , Waterford" Townahlp. Oakland county, Michigan. ' Quallflcatlona tor Fire D Mr. Allums died Saturday after ph illness of three months. He /was.an employe of Pontiac Motor Division and a member of St. James Missionary Baptist Church. ^rvlvlni beside^ his wife, Godfrey of Waterford phine, are eight children, Calvin, John, David Jr., Levone, Alice, Ablelain, Ward and Todd, all at home. EUGENE BRANDO Service for Eugene Brando, 52, of ^ E. Princeton Ave. will be at 1:30 p.m. Thursday in the Huntoon Funeral Home with burial in White Chapel Memorial . Mr. Brando died of a heart ailment Sunday after a brief illness. Township And Edna Arnhart: of Pontiac; four grandchildren; two sisters, Mfs. Earl Strawn of Pontiac and Mrs. Charley Be-Loney of Long View, Tex.; and two brothers, Lester of Pofttlac and James F. Hooker of Carter-ville, 111. MRS. JOHN P. HAYES Service for. Mrs. John ^Lo«ise-B.) Hayes, 86f of 4204 DEAF MAN PERFECTS TINY HEARING AID! flurkably tiny hcgrlng aid has Been perfected by a man who has been hard of hearing for nearly 10 years. This small device hae no dangling cords or separate units and represents a new and unusual de. sign Idea In a product to restore natural hearing. It wae developed ' eepeclelty for t underetand. This new liear-Instrument provldee ‘'carhearing with the wearer picking up speech Bounds, television and radio At his ear. Due to the use of transistors, (he user cost is extremely low. The Instrument weighs only V« oz. It le about the size of a sewing thimble — hardly noticeable yet powerful; Send your name and address. You will be sent full. Information without any obligation whatever. FE 5-7569 AUDIOTONE of Pontiac n with Ponllao Optical Cenler N. Saginaw—Across from Simms UE8DAY . . . 84—MONTEITH S. Shore Drive, Watkins Lake, Waterford Township, will be 3 p.m. tomorrow in the Rinear Fu-jneral -Home, Cleveland,,_^Ohio, I with burial there in the Lakeview Cemetery. I Mrs. Hayes’ body was lilien I Cleveland today by the Done!-son- Johns Funeral Home. Mrs. Hayes died yesterday after an illness of two weeks. She charter member of the Windemere Methodist Church of East Cleveland. Surviving are tWo daughters, Mrs. Chariest M. Campbell, with whom she made her home, and Mrs. Dorothy Price of Indianapolis, Ind.; two sons, Preston P. of McHenry, 111., and Thomas P. Van Sciever of Dearborn; six grandchildren; and five greatgrandchildren. JAMES H. SMITHSON Service for James H. Smithson, 86, of 454 Auburn Ave. will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Voor-Ihees-Siple Chapel. Cremation will be at White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Mr. Smithson died yesterday after a long illness. A retired [caretaker of the Palm-Villa Apartments, he attended First Church of Christ, Scientist. He was a member of Crescent [Lodge No. 133 F&AM of Arkansas City, Kan., and Wichita Consis-' SERVIJNi^ PONTIAC SINCE 1927 Established In 1927 and now Pontiac's largest in volume and physical facilities. Our standard service includes many of the features found only at Sparks - Griffin. Color pictures of each floral arrangement is one such item. It costs no more, and often less, to have the finest! OutBianding in Ponfioc lor Sutvk* and Facllllint 46 Williams Street FE 2-5841 DAVID E. BRANN ROYAL OAK—Service for former Oakland County Deputy Sheriff David E. Brann, 69, of Thursday at William Sullivah & SoPs Funeral Home. Requiem Mass will follow at 9 at St. Mary’s Catholic Church. Burial will be in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Southfield. Mr. Brann died of a heart attack yesterday. He was a constable in Royal Oak before becoming a deputy sheriff. He later served as an investigator. Sole survivor is his wife Jessie. ADOLPH H. GERDES ROCHESTER — Service for Adolph H. Gerdes„55, of 1327 N. Oak St. will be 3 p.m. Thursday at Sti-JohnA-Lutheran GhurchT Burial will be in Mount Avon Cemetei^. Mr. Gerdes died yesterday after -ft- six-week- illness.- tils body is at the Pixley Funeral ern Stantfard Time, Thureday, February 21, ms. fanrt win be publicly opened and It at 10:00 o'doek. A.M., ol the same for furniKhIng the following: ( months requirement of "14)0 level” r better auto and truck tires and ..ibes of the following brands; Flre-—'tr.^rllnTalr ThJOdrea'rr -flenera I end B. F. Goodrich. Information, bidding blanks and specifications may he obtained upon request. Bids must be made upon Oakland County Road Commission bidding forms. • AM proposals must bs plainly marked iljlit ta rileft ‘ or all pro^sals^or to^wajVe Surviving besides his,wild Florence are a son Darrell, at home; three sisters and six brothers. Ex-Executive Succumbs at76 C. L. LaMonte Dies After Long Illness Charles L. LaMonte, one of the former owners and operators of LaMonte Bros., Inc., died yesterday after a long illness. He was 76. Service will be at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in Acacia Park Cemetery, Birmingham. The Masonic Lodge will conduct a service at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the funeral home. Mr. LaMonte of 489 W. Iroquois Road joined the Pontiac Die, Tool & Machine Co. in the 1920s as sales manager, secretary and treasurer. In 1951, with his brothers Everette W. and Edwin E., Charles purchased the machine company and the name was changed to LaMonte Bros., Inc. The machine shop located at 316 Irwin St. closed in 1957 when the brothers retired. Mr. LaMonte was a member of Central Methodist Church, Beta Theta Pi at Wesleyan University, Pbntiac Lodge No. 21 F&AM, and Pontiac Hi Twelve. He was a 32nd degree Mason and a member of Scottish Hite in Detroit. •fid reBldenli or Waterford Township for * yekl' prior' to: date of •'ppllcatlon. QualUloatlons tor Police Department: ..ge Sl-2t Incl. Citizen of U.S. and resident of Waterford Township for 1 :— prior to date of application. '“lloaftU^ may ^ap^ly^^for either further information as to requlre-eontadt Chief of Department MfCIlIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS lO'I Pontiac State Bank BIc FB IbMM ontlac’s oldest and largest budget assistance company. ACCOUNTANTS. PARTTIltiE, AT onotr. who are thoroughly qualified ito prepare Form lOM. Must be experienced In all phases ef Individual income tax rettfrns. Mbn receive salary and - rfc In our office in _______ _ .__,in.-Hijb-R Bleel, . Co., 7:ia W. Huron, ;i:M.»225. COMPANION TO ELDERLY LaBy, modern home, mor- IV>r hnm« than wages. 852-S282. COUNTER ('.IRLS FULL TIME ' Voorhefs Cleaners, 4160 W. Walton, Drayton Plaln.s. No phone calls. IT’S .SO 1‘:asv to I’lacc a ' I’ONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFII-JL AD I Just Dial EE "2-8181 M CARiPkNTER, large OR ACCOUNTANT Assume, full responsibility eslabltshed accounting practice. Send resume to Pontiac Press pt l” ir" reoeWln^^applloatlons will IN DER I’ Arrange to pey all y o u with one imall w— ...blllty win be held March S, , t Maple Hill Education Develop- ' ■ "‘.or. 287 Oakland. Birmingham, ' WDOET^ SERVICE” AUTO MECHANIC, CHEVROLET - EXPERIENCE. GOOD PAY AND working CONDITIONS, VAN CAMP CHEVROLET, MILFORD Frequent Sundays Off AND GOOD WAGES fascinating and rewnrdiiig job. have. an opening for a neat pearihg , woman, who likes ohlldren aiifi Is able to drive - — *~ •*'' ■al housekeeping perlenced. MA S-DgO. . EXPiSiiNCErt ependon ______ Preas. I, ^__________ TuRNTtURE RBPAlRE"b ANDTReV cabinets, kitchens end ......—ns. FE a-1918. man' "iTbEDS work. EXiPER'- NOW!____ - • .____^ ' 0 u R N B Y MAN ELECTRICIAN iy'Sr^r of Waterford Township Civil vTce'Coihmlstlon. . IS. 16. 18. II. 20, 21, 2: and 2: 1963 PUBLIC SALE ....... _.jh, on February 13, 1963, 1960 Chevrolet 2 Dr., Serial 1 . 0I8IIF1S4707. Will be sold at public sale at 1970 E. Nine Mile Rd„ Perndalo, Michigan, .that address being where the .................. ............“fir * %y Off YOur Bills —without a loan — Payments low as $10 wk. Protect your lob a»d Cretllt Homo or Office Appointments City Adjustment Service 714 W, Huron - 4^------PE^ 6-91161- WiroHT ba^fIly and Are You Managf'inent Material? S OPTICAL DISPENSER, SHOP BX-;go'.id"salaiT7 Reply P*''‘ ELEVATOR OPEKA’rOR. IS • years old. Exiierlence not nei .“It.Ap.PiT _____ !9 Work Wanted Female < 12 -- 2 WOMEN WANT WALL WASHINa T wllllngnese to learu a , off poiitlao Lake, _ SalfPs Bar. 464 N. I vehicle Is‘stotCd and may b NOTICE TO__________ Sealed proposals will be received by* re Board of County Road Commission' . MORE MONEY than yo ow earning. 2. PLEASANT dignified work, -. Association with sound, DOMESTIC WORK. EVERY OTHER " Wednesday and every Friday. FE a-3264. ___ ‘________/ / iXpiRlBNCEb ¥hTte woman .. ...... County of Oakland„at ’iheTi offices, 2420 Pontiac Michigan. " " " COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS OR 3 7757 t In the and to accept the proposals ----- ... ---------* .A#;.8ear4,.~la4n. tba ' th* advantage . of the Board of County Road Commissioners ■ ‘le. County of Oakland. Michigan, if the County of Oakland. Michigan, rd of Countv Road Commlseloners e county of^Oakland^Mlch^am ROBERT O. PELT FRAZER W 8TAMAN D. E. Pursley 8. SECURITY regardless of general business conditions. ' 6. PERMANENT and Independi ■ INCENTIVE byiius EXPERIENCED COUNTER AND grill, over 28. apply In person. 332 S. Telegraph on 703 Pontiac Trail. L Walled Lake. EXPERIENCED SILK AND bRAPES finishers..^ Steady Pontiac Press,. I I EXPERIENCED C A S H I B R FOR LADY TO CARE FOR INVALID OR super market.. Apply In person, be^, neer ‘Tel-Huron. FE 0-0443. ............ ............. . ’'MS ,y.'>i<>!L.Lake Hd;__________1 MibbLEAGib LADY" D ESI r'E S 8. GROUP Insurance, etc. lEXPERIENCEn. REI.IABLE WHITE: babysitting #Tenlngs. FE 4.3040, THIS OPPORTUNITY Is dedicated] WOMAN FOR BABY SITTING OFFICE WORK, ALL kINDS OF ‘- peoplB_ who. wish to.^arn..bettejr| AND LIGHT HOimEWC^^ htSS typing. In my home. FE 8-W8. Donelson-Johns funeral HOME , ''Designed for Funerals"_ -HUNldON-- :io Wish to earn better AND 1 ..._n average living. YOU DO NO ORION COI.LECTIIW.^ make no puniose, makl panv Is open to reliable pei isslsisnt or receptionist Just -one eX^KIENCE D WAITRES-S,, MUffT be 21. Phone Ml 4-90»().________ age, experienced typist LAUNDRY ulsh references. Writ FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontiac for 30 Vc»r« ^Wand Ava,_______FE S>.ARK.S-GKIi'T-TX PUIIERAL.HOMB I iloiRLTs Foif WORk ... ________ Pill carTerl department. Full and parttlii II which they may be prosperous, and t»J.lL.^.J'‘M£Sli‘.-____________ Isrt immediately. Call FE 8-04381 HOUSEKEEPER WHITE. TO for appointment. i wllli liivalid and ‘ ™ I .......b V(Ib) 'j Building Strvice-rSuppliei 13 DR I FOOD COMPANY_____ | ®over 2?'*Comnz*^^eaM^sIlllB0SiKEEPER“wAH WIHTE Woodward, Rochester, OLj 38 to 45, live In. MY 2-3I62 _ l. d"u;i:;is * MASON AND CARPENTRY fork. Keith Sle^gwarl. FE 8.0762. ALCOA-KAISER-REYNOLDS I..—.- .. ...._ Qminy ztorm Voorhees-Siple .iburn. Pontiac, Mlchloan, a ------ olet. Serial No. 21lllF30364g. will ..Id at Public Auction Tor cash to highest bidder. Car may be Inspected ibove address. Personals PUBLIC 8A^ . Pontiac. Michigan, i GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING frlemjly adviser, phone FE „„„r* oall”FE Conlldeiitfil. DAWfY MAID SUPPLIES. 739 Menominee. FE 8-7608.__________________ lost and Found lold at Public Auction for cesn lu ilghest bidder. Car may be inspected February 12 and 13, 1963 .dnooln II.'Answers lo name of Buster. ».3313. after 5.________________ LOST FEMALE WAYjffii PDntlac, serial No. •63P38i highest bidder. Car may be Inspected above address. , . February 12 and 13, 1963 LOST; BROWN 'TOY POODLE IN area in Aquarlpa in Walton. Re- ward. OR 3-0103 . _______ MALE MIXED ,BR®ED February 12 and 13, 1963 Death Notices ALLUMS, FEBRUARY 9. 1963, hrb«.^.“'"'o‘r dV^ “JiV. lums; dear father nl Calvlu. John. David Jr., Levone. Alice, Ablelain, Ward and Todd Allums. .01. nl the Friendship Baptist Imrch with Rev L. V. Lewis fflclatlng. Following service Mr. at the Prank Carr Februjyy_ lay. February I (le In state thers Funeral . Wednesday, ce Arnhart; dear Donald iRubyi Ina Arnhart; dear Surviving are his-wife, Mildred; a son John S. of Pontiac; a daughter, Mrs. Wiliam J. Tate of Web-.ster Groves, Mo.; five grandchildren: a sisterj. Mrs. Maynard j Prown of Schoolcraft: and broth-1 Everette W. of Pontiac and; Edwin B. of Grosse Poinlo Park. .......r W held Tlmraday, Per- riiary 14, at 2 p.m. at the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home with Rev. Tom Malone officiating. Interment In White Chapel Cemetery. Mr. Arnhart will lie In state at the D. E. Pursley Funeral Rome. n o O T H, FKBRUAriy 10. ll)63. Rftlfth R., no 8. Wafthlnicton. Ox-lord; age 66: beloved husband of Madge M. Booth; dear father of Mrs. Lila M. Mclver; dear brother of Mrs. Mary L. MoMorran; also survived by three grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wedneeday, February 13, at I p.m. at the Bossardet Funeral Home. Oxford, with Rev. Norman Sanders officiating. Interment In Oakvlew Cemetery, Royal Oak. e Bossardet Funeral Home, Ox- supervision preferred . .. The supervision of investments calls for trained minds. That's why so many investors turn to Mutual Funds — the supervisors of these funds ore professionals whose life work is the study of values. And did you know that many Mutual Funds hove plans to aid you to invest os little of os much os you wish of income - on o systematic basis? Why not phone or write us today for full details? INVESTMENT BROKERS AND COUNSELORS " FE 2-9117 81 8 COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK BLDG. immediate aUOTATIdIt SESyiCE Our Facllilirs KxWiid l'rum f to Coast Free on Bond win" be*'held”f hurala'y.* Pel 14, et 1:39 pm. at the Hu Funeral Home with Hev. DRYWALL HANGER WANTED, — pendable. for Flint work.. NAtIdhal ?-371ih EXPERIENCED I over 18 yearz ol Father and Son t ENJOY making (rlende and want to --- .—contact your Avon Write P.O. Box 91. Dray- ___________________ phone FE 4-4806, |PLA8TE_RINa,_NEW_AND REPAIR. LADY. WHITE. Engineering. ClarkxU EXPERiENCED”NEW' maneger for dual _____FE 2.9716. _______ MANAGERS, DEMONSTRATORS. '■ ---- 'ilgh earning! n head, chest and (i part Bassett, block markings on head, el Eight mos, old. Fai..... - swers to "Cleo" VIchilly Oxbow Lake Phone EM 3-4952. /_______________ OSTinCARaE' BLACK POINTER nrOO whO« VtClhlty Cf 14 MA 6-8864. WBI hiirea dog; white wim large black spots, answers to TlPP>«', vicinity of W. I.ong Lake Rd, Reward. MI 4-9617. AMBITIOUS MARRIl':i) MAN for route salfs. 23*45. Ht(th n grad, neat appeartinoe, 1112 an prnBf# guaranteed during tri^...., weelc. oir^ ??*■.: Hran in Road Death cTTa S B, PFJmuABY 19, 1998, James H. Oakland Unlysrsltyj age 16: beloved son of Mr. and hfrs, John Chase. James has been taken to the Bampson Funeral Home, Brockton, Mass., for service and burial Friday.'FebrJi-Arrangemenls wert —■ A Pontiac teen-ager cliarged with manslaughter in a traffic death has been released from jail after meeting the $3,000 bond set at his arraignment yesterday. Dcnhls M. Kachinskf, 18, of 156 Chippewa Rd. is aeeiiscd in the death of Michael S, Collins, ZO, of 5Z5 Rowland Road, Leonard. / Collins burned to death early Sunday morping when his car was hit In the rear by a car driven by Kachin.skl. Sheriff’s deputies said Collins’ car burst info flames after the impact ruptured the gasoline tank. Tile crash occurred on Adams Road at Stoney Creek Road in Oakland Township. Orion Township Justice of the Peace Helmar Stanaback set a ihcaring for March 26 at 1:30 p.m.' (after Kachinski demanded an ex-jamination. iisrsl Homs. _ _ _ LsMO^N'IET FEBBlfAHV 11. Charles ' ........ '“ ... ..... W. Iroquois Road; 76: beloved husband of Mll-oreo B. LaMonte: dear father of John B. LaMonte and Mrs. William J. Tate: dear brother of Everette W, and Hdwin B. LaMonte and Mrs. Maynard Brown; - |..m. ... ...s grandchil- dren, A Masonic service will be Wednesday. February. 13, at 6 p.m. It the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Pimoral servir.c will be, held Thursday, February 14, Johns Funeral Home. Intermen In Acacia Park Cemetery. Mr LaMonte Will II et. Petersburg. Florida, formerly of Pontiac: age 81; beloved husband of Barah Boot; dear father of Mrs. Arthur Zuohlko and Eldred Root; olso survived by three grandchildren, five great-erandchlldren gnd one great->'*at-grandchlld: Fijlteral^ service ... ...... ne7/u"*rebr n. at 1:39 p.m. at the Span Gilfftn Funeral Hbrne. Interim Stunabaclj said the delay in| I holding the hearing was neces-isary because Kachinski’s attor-jnoy is unable |o aptiear earlier because of ‘ a ctaiflict in court 'dales. lie In staje>t the Bparks- iSonT ■ FfMO ARY ■ li] 1093, lOB H. 434 4u'”*rn Avenue; 69; dear uncle of Mrs. Bar* a Whitehead, Funeral service be held Wcdnegflay, Febrii- Voorhees-SIple Chapel with Reid-el' Alfred' B. Edson offlolatlng. creinalloii In White Chanel Ceme- FOR FAST ACTION ]’<'nti.ac I’lcss V\’.Tiit Ads Dial Fl.b 2 8181 s no responslbll-1 other ^than^to s “first Insertion has through the error. The deadline for canc lion of transient Want Ac 9 am. the day ol publloi after the Or ‘ ---- When be e NUMBER," Will b VOirr*"KI*LL adjustments U?gef CASH WANT AD RATES (when cash accompanies order) Lines 1-Dsy 3Days 6-Days All additional charge of cents will be made for use of Pontiac Press Box numbers. The Pontiac Press •re not experienced send i plete resume plus your ,1 and plans r- *— — - NURBINO AIDES. LIVE IN PRE-, ....... ■ ■ -......... Ro^ester. doors......................... PART TIME 01BL FOR OfFiCE other Itome^ too numerous lo work In Rochester. Prefer reel- non. D'Hondt Wrecking. 29 Ai dent of Roche,ster area. Ploaso Phone 335-9332,_______________ ■ irt resume and phone Reply to Pontlao Press ,..... cohvlndo me do the Job. The mai remuneration's will i salary, commission. vacation, Ishod an " All replh Blood Donors URGENTLY NEEDED SALESLA&Y; AOE 25 TO 45, JEW-ilry <iXp«r!flnce, »pply *— •*— ...... DETAILERS Agnew Macliine Co: Milford. Michigan ('.rill Men Apply Big Buy Dixie Highway. Mh:,\ WANTI.I) NOW 5 clean cut man wanted Immediately (or growing branch cMlIce. If you have ambition this Is (or you. No experience neoessiiry. We will train you For Interview call OB opportunity? Immedli A compleK ...1. Your demo ■ exceptional Borsl. Llncoln-Mercury, Inc.. Blr- niingliain.____________________ PEBMANEN¥[Pb5iTioir”WE HAVE an opening in partment (or ---- between neat aggressive Kages of 3.3 and tUon offers vacation, I and security and irage earnings. If yc“ ‘- t c....................... Ing to work—apply In person Room 494, 28 W. 2,awrenoe_Slri PART ■ TIME ' EXPERIENCED / nH_m.u|. 3 REAf; 1 ; Hur IF YOU LIKE PEOPLE „... wlmlm... ____ ... 'fllf-season" prices. Stiperlor^^ Sl(lln6 <i RooUnjf^ Supply Eu IL b IN d modeSnIzatTon. Home Improvement loans et tow bank rates and conveiilenf t*e~* Ponllao State Bank. FE 4-3891. 1 remodeling. John w. M2:9m_ ---- _ U I L b I N O MATERIALS. funvassma or ex-i 2a*xl9-foot car neoejsary, Call mn.a‘oVran^’bSlle?5!’‘to“ae't8‘"?ub". and lavatories, apartment size refrigerators and ranges. Interior number, i enced in medtoal terminology and Insurance forms preferred, slate references, experiences, and salary oxpeoted. enclose recent photo ..... Businatf Ssrvict 15 ALL MAKES OF FOUNTAIN PENS ----Ired by laclorv ---- )ral Fringing 6i < 17 W, Lawrence Si elry Dept. Spartan Dept. Store 211 Dixie Pontiac. In person a FUNRACE8 CLEANED AND RIE-palred. Humidifiers Installed. Sheet metal work. 24 hour service. Li a-91.38.______________________ FREE ESTIMATES ON ALL WfR- TUPPERWARE Applications are now being oepted for part-time and full demonstrators. Have fun. it--------- money, make new friends. Call 882-4300 for an Interview. WAITRESS. NldHTS. APPLY IN person after 6. Dell's Inn. 3461 Ellz^eth Lake Keego Harbor. 662-9687. B 5-8431. BLBCTRiC MOTOR SERVICE HE-*'“*“*nR and rewlndlnx. Phone FE 4*5981. OranmaUng & Tailoring 17 DRESSMAKING. ALTERATIONS, f’E**! I’gyV"’"**’'*' "*''*** ®***''' DRBSSHAKtNO AND ALTERA* TRY Hons. FE B-3732. WHIf Rochester. UL womTn'FOR.'TirirvBTrrr^^ Incoma Tax Sarvlca 19 $5, NONE HIGHER. LONG FORMS WORKINO MOTHER WISHES TO crnlty 0 Elizabeth l.ak' WANTED; OFFICE OIHL AND oasliler part lime basis. Typing e«-seutlal. Apply In person, Barnetts Clothes Shop. 159 N. Saginaw si. HOME OR OFFICE UNTIL 10 P.M. Friendly—Dependable—Experlenotd KEYES de NACKERMAN 2621 N. Perry PE 2-8171. FE i-2297 WANTED REPAIR LADY, MAIN Elizabeth Lake Road. -Saturday- and Sunday off. SRI. O Ml 4-6716 between 7 and 8 jp.m. Jali Dixie Hwy., Clarkston. Hdp Wanti^ ESTABLISHED WATK Real E.state Manager SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT ^ I Salat Help, Male-Nmole 8-A . _ \T'n':.\'i'i().\ '(>ra *«*ll"e" Isl'llsKrllullee ACCURATE ico NFIDENTI \L HOI,IN TAX SERVICK We specialize In personal Income ^nSiCOMB TAX 63 lip H. Si R. Block Co w A N T INCOME TAX, BOOKKEEPING NOTARY WITH SEAL, KEN HETCHLER $3-69 AVG. 591 SECOND FE 5-3876 Moving and Tracking ■A MOVING SERVICE. REASDN-able rates. FE 5-3468. FE 2-2909.' 1ST cABcFnir~iipvrNu, L"oTir rates. UL 1-3999, «I6'3I>I6. Painting & Decorating 23 YOU Ate Just One of Our 185,(XX) Readers . . 'I'o Reach the (JMlier 184,99<9 Call TOOL-’aRD die MAKER. JOUR neyman, small work, steady employment. Syncro Corporation, 605 S. Lapeer Rd., Oxford. Michigan. 1-L Today I At 10 n.m. Tmlny tlioro were re|)lles al Tlie I’ress offlee In tlie fiilloWliiK boxini! 2; 4, 7, 8,10,11,20, 21, 22, 23, 30, 57, 64, 66, 68, 76, 77. 8AI.E.S TRAINING POSITION WITllj I Pimtlac"' I ............, ...irnmilv (oi ilth one of the world's liirgeat her companies. Plume FE 3-Mr, Gee, for Interview. SALESMEN WANlTED. 6 MEN THAT will work. Guaranteed s-... •• Newberi alRiirT Call collect Mr. I iimphre ■7932. CRSON E ;■ will ira .. 1 DECORA’nNG — PAINITNO -plastering — papering. Free Est dtaeounts for cr-" A LA6y INTERIOR DECORATOR. Paperlns. FE 64)343. ___ AAA ' PAINfiNO, IN'ffilioR AND A D S e estimates. LI 8-8138, dealers oar ■ Rawlolgh's . PAINTING. PAPERING, RBMOV-" al. washing. 673-2672. C..White.' "paper hanging a BPiciALTY _ Painting, Thompson. FE 4-6364 P PAIN'nNO. WALL WAShlNCL RATE PAlNIINa AND DECDHAliSo if; Romo Improvement loans at lo I. 2)-l743. !t2iir"t WANTED: HEaT ESTATE SALES-man, wonderful" oppoiTuhlly for Re*al*'Estii{o!°225rN. ol'dyke ^d.I Ff_2J)136,_^__________ ■raftjMER^b'R YOUNG MAN FOB 1 npholsterlii have some experience. FE 4-0356. $115 W eekly (iiiarantee Help Wanted Famalv I,coking fur a Better Jwl)!' iLo.st' Money \'ahial)lc I’aiH'r,'-' or a I’et ? ; 'rhe.ii Dial j-'E 2-8181 foi* Courteous, Informed and Erijcmlly Service S willing lutiin |jri uiiy 5Vg 111. cNUbliftIuul route. Mun lUftHsiuV train. Mklwcst I''.niproyraoMt i 40''PoiitlaC|Sj,a[r^Bank Building ' rv i'.TTv \~ 1-: I )Tva R ds' "VOCATIONAL COUNSEUNO SERVICE " e Bank, FE 4-3591.' Preston Walker Smith EXECUTIVE PER80NNEI, COUN8EI.1NO SERVICE Bloomfield Office Center —Office ■iNG AND DECO- TeiavisToiTRadirs^ 24 FE 2 NEED TV OR RADIO TUBES? Save up to 30 per cent at Wards i'RI':E TUBE TESTING 1-Year warranty oi VMT'/":rYM 1,'D initructioni-Schoolt Trnniportntion « LKARN HEAVY EQUIPMENT, re” lid“,”Dct”'ilt 21 1-7323 AMBITTOUS CULTURED WOMAN for exc. earning opportunity Poiu tlac area. Permanent flexible hours. Car helpful. LI 4-207^ LEARN ■ SUcCeSSfUl 'SELUNO. New, method: Pontlao Press Box 34. RAMIO ACCORtffON STUbiO. PBI-vate lessons, for mformatron call 673-6120 after 6 p.m. ______ BABYSITTINfi] I.IVE IN. BABYBITTEB. WHITE. 3 CHH, '........- transportation. FI iL'.i.Jt"' 6-39'f9 EAufY“bPERATOR. NEAT. .. telllgent, iimbUlous. At^ least 5 surary.”’''Sl e Pontiac Press, Bux iicoME A LuziBR coJnsultant and add to IhcF.famlly Income only a few hours dally. Start yi own busmess now. We train )t For inici'vlew appointment, 4-3703. ! NEED RIDE TO WHITEUAKE Twp. on M89 from Pontiac at .) p.m. Call after 9. EM :i-23g.3 WANTED- DaE"?' RIDERS LEAV WANT HELP? , ANDJ r into D making _ .ArnfiO DESIGN ENOIN EBBING AIR CONDITIONINO REFRIGERATION AUTO MECHANICS call earn while you learn. For Cali Allied Institute. Phone PE 17 or Write Pontiac Preaz Box 'v \ BOY WILL BE 18 ON I would like work t........ lion. UL 2'9Sfl$. .4- - (through Ponttac at 6 a.m.i to In downtown Detroit arouud 8 a returning from Detroit at 3:48 p. Wiintad HauMhold Goods 29 auction. OA 6-2681. pllMCM^l^lMS or houeeful, Pear- 8 1 8 1 TO'’RXTV THE PONTIAC PRESS^ TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 12, 1963 Wmittd to Rant 4T',S SO KASY io J’lace }k I’OKTIAC PRESS Ci^SSIFIED AD I Just Dial FE 2-8181 REUABLiC FAMILY NKiD8~ ______________.11 RekUyf FE re»p®n®1uFTa m Ily of 1 w»nt« to ront homo noor Uko ond cKT," yoor 'round. Movo m by April l^or^oonor. Reply Ponltoc VNFtm'NWkED' ilA:"*: ' LNFURmSHED ROOM WITH BATH or ncceoKlble both or gentlemon will khorc March L Mi. Straight. na.Olllli daj'B .......T33 J HOOMi, AL80,1 ROOM CotlAgo. FE ,04»». J ROOMa, RMlIBCORATkD. NEi® Tel'Huron. P r 1 v »t e entrance. and parltnt- Apply 806 gt A|MrtoMiito--Untoriiiihail 38 ry ink _i. ____ ____ ____________ AL Kampeeip- recreation room, nice neigh- $110 per month, Call f* ICKTtAjfciLTD room's, kitchenette, 1 heat liim Share Living Quarters RKFINB'.I) LADY^^TO SHARK ^EX-It"' ROOMS, BA'fit Wanted Real Estate 3h ' ROOM AND BATH, Stove, -refrtgeretnr ar tin Untai_8l._682-10«.____________ ' ROOMS AND' bath, OFFER, heat lurj^ adiiltt. FE irfiLlTIES, 73t t room's first floor close ARCADIA II month.' Annett Inc. Realtor ( nsloiiKTs w.'iitiiip ' ..... HOMES WANTED ON LAND , , IM^'IATB BROKEIW distance n7”downU>wirand anciis well ..... aeraage,..hlA..obUjM>' Call and tell ua what you havo . . . H, c Newlngham, Realtor. UL a-3310. LL 2-5.178.______________ HAVE BUYER: DESIRES 3 BED- PRiVAI^BUTiEir’WA'NfS~3 6 iarge bedroom house, good t ditlon In Drayton . Water: are^ to ^shopping. Up Hempstead. Realtor. 102 E. Huron PE t-82(M, after S p m FE 2.7439. cSLORED “ OR WHITE 150 ' OR-chard Lake Ave. 3 rooms and bath, redecorated. $40 per month. Do You Want It royar'U''n'ergrborT 2. VV-wllii It permitted. Pine launda SOLD..:........................................ Or Just Listed? Property listed with. u> will -----i-ecelve-tmniedtaie allenlloni We yoVr' p'ropertv * to*"YOUH" best advantage. For quick action call or see us! Warren .Stout, j'teallor N_ haglna*. ~FE $^$i. Pontiac. Michigan Rant Ho«M«r Vpikntfilwl *6 BEDROOM BRICK I ton area. Gas heal. . .. _Adatne Realty FE $-4005, 4 BEDROOM HOUSE OlFOAKLAliD, $ao nio. Engulre 79» Corwjn Cl,_ S'^SbOM HOUSE. '2-CAR' OARAOE. near Clarkcton. OR il751.__, SatOOM TERRACE. OAS HEAT, ref.. $50. 1M N. Paddock, gas heat, large dining area, no paper work, pc .cretJ" 82109578. REAL VALUE. 2319 HARTFORD; WILLIAMS LARE,, OROUND FLOOR U1CATION WITI . ....--..--- ... a... , -an. required. MArk' 4-2S76. BOULEVARD HEIGHT! — 2 Bedroom Unit — $7$ Per Month Contact Resident Manager 544 East Blvd.. at Valencia FE 4-7833 CLARKSTOli ....... . BEDROOMS. carpeting and drapes, utll-im and carport. Darge lot no. with mrtlon to buy. Kampsen. FE COLORiD. O-RioOM. Kate Osann lELY *y***°|gS. air CONDITTONEO MODERN OF-flees. West Huron 8t. FE 2-0219. FE 2-2119. LARGE GROUND FLOOR, EAST Pike and Jessie St. Oaa _4;^11.____________________ OFFICE SPACE, - SUITABLE #OR COLORED . ----------- gas heat. $88. FE S-S1I83. MODERN. S'roVE AND REFRIOEH- -------a. privileges. I or 2 nne. 5584 Savoy. RENT or SELL . Johnson n _Call A1 Kampsen, PE 4-0921 ' MODERN rpiVE-ROOM " APART-mem. Upper,- West ^sld^^ nesr ho»- -Cige fHrtllsW-^ No" sfifail Chlldrelv. Phone FE 2-B3M and aller_6 _p.in. call FE 4-1181. _ MODERN 5-H'60m" APARTMENT, stove and refrigerator '■—‘ HAVE CASH BUYERS, ted homes. Call us. I Jones, Realty._____Zj!J Apartments—Fvrnifhad 37 1 OR 2 ADULTS. 890 ROBINWOOO. l-'BEDROOM EFFICIENCY APART- ---- Fully lumlshed. Parking. ........ -‘■‘1. FE 5-1B61 or Jfieid Terrace. Phone FE_ S-MIl*" ORCHARD rOl'M^AR'lMENis; MODERN IN EV^Y fiETAH/ Idiiua Only _____^FE 8-8918 tOCHEBTER. WEST FOURTH ST. upper, gas heat, ref. OL 0-0881. RELIABLE COLORED FAMILY TO rent 3-bedroom turn apt r caretakers responsibility 673-37! WEST R^t Houms, Furnithad 39 2-BEDROOM. COMPLETELY FURN. buy. 233 N. Cass Lake Rd.. or call 6328509. Now Under Construction. ' READY SOON 89.5 Kln^ ---------- ' ' blocks e ...... of Blaine. 2 „st ol Oakland. 2 blocka Montcalm. 1:30 to wlsfOWN'REAL'iT >wn on sales moVea you _____FE 8-2782 . __ ROOM LAKE FRONT ON large lot, completely lurnished. vacant, FE_88'I02.__________ ROOMS IN WA'TESFbRb TO'WN-sblp, 6738392. ____________ Rant Haases, Uaturnished 40 BEDROOM. GAS HEAT. I couple. 2886 Williams near Pontiac DrlveJp. 147, OR 3-4773. BEDROOM. RAMONA TERRACE: Refrigerator and stove, $88 mo. OR 3-9749 alter 4 p.m____________ BEDROOM. CHIl.DREN WEL-Some free rent for cleaning. Option to buy. Adams Utilities turn.. $15 -! JNION LAKE, 2-BEDROOM Duplex, basemenl. heat furnished, large rooms. EM 382M.__^_________ VEST SIDE LOCATION, lO-ROOM IKWSr: -itwder* pHHtlaa, im a. r -For Inlormatlon call FE 2-3448. ..... _.th opllon . W. W. Ross, Inc. I' K 4-05'U_____ R\-Xf SEI.I. OPTIO.V 3-bedroom single home featuring OAS HEAT ■WALL TO WALLXARPETINO CHOICE LOCATIONS (In north part of Pontiac) NEAR PONTIAC MOTOR and NORTHERN BlOH LARGE ROO.M. PRIVATE 1 IICE WARM ROOM F man. right downtown FE 2-8820. ____ _______ RANCH, - . —enclosed porch, carport and l»!i-car garage. $13,900. $82-0379,_ ^BEDROOM home: 4 YEARS OU3. 3 blacks from .grade school. A real bargain at V.m. $280 down. $60 mohth. Call FE 2-9122. DcLorah Building. NEW S BEDROOM. LOW DOWN. $1 «^bS!room‘. S hatha. . BwieinMi Larga kltohan and dlnini $rei Lake prlvllagaa, WBLEOW BLDO Cio. . OR Mil O'NHL- SPECIAL GI nothing down LAIpE FRONT — Six room Ipotl «m 2 large bedroomi. 17xU twi living room. Oarage. If you hav a Job — Good credit and a — Ice diaoharga, call o jucfudek*taui ina No Down Payment deal 11 Ask to “You don’t like the 150,000 miles on the speedometer? I’ll give you a new speedometer! ’’ -BEDROOM BRICK RANCH. BA8E- Sals Houses - room. _______ _____SIDE NEAR schools and shopping. FE 2-8818. rage. Pvt, beach prlvller" ------- school aud shobpihg. Li ____I'Spt^allJlng In Trji^s’'___ "HAVE' A modern 4-BEbROOM west Side home In .Fonllac._ 0<^ 30 mlnutea drive from M VOORHEI8 < Nice house for t_________,_____ living room with fireplace, heal, basement. 38.800,'terms. 8. Warwick. ^-2820 or 682-1714. ROCHESTER—NEAR MSUO OM executive ci ‘ ----- ' ‘ 3-bedroom brick living room. 2 firepla___...______ lius. Family room. Choice big wooded lot with concrete circle drive. New carpeting and drapes. Full basement. Has all the charm and comfor'a to make your family hap- ’’kRANK SHEPARD. REALTOR 1015 N. Main Rochester Buy at mortgage appraisal ~ this 3-bedroom, large living room, dining. kitehen, glassed-in porch, full basement. Itk Mlhs, gai beat. Also jrivate basement apartment. I’hle - -I line home, well looated he-»~wtinams-and .Fr4uakUa.Blvd. ___price only $11,300. FRA terms. Approximately $700 to handle. J.ACK LOVELAND ■ OWNER IN HURON GARDENS. TRADE- New 3-bedrm. ranch, alum. _ . Ing. 2-car attached garage, full basement, Ihermo windows,' marble range, $15.9M Including lo pSivate entrance, lady ( man FE 5-8863 . 36 W. Teuiiyso: ROOM AVAILABLE FOR CHR k llun- girl. 847 W. Huron. Gas ,3-Redrooin Randi of $'I0 a .................. -rerything. MODEL OPEN DAILY 12 to 8. 628-1865 J^AKLIBLE^UILDING CO. ATI RACTIVE TWO ' BEDROOM to Anchor Boy. <!ake St.’ Clair.' l.arge lot 65x200, gas, attached garage. a^umlniim^sIdlng.^.JM, $50d AUBURN HEIolil'ii^AREA Archftoctural Drawing NEW HOUSE . AND REMODELING plans drawn, 818. 363-6808. Fencing I PONTIAC EENCI’: 5932 Dixie Hwy. OH 3-6595 Alaminvm Siding ALCOA. KAISER SIDING .STORM WINDOWS. DOORS. REMODELING and ADOmONS Kraft Siding & Roofing FREE ESTIMATES FE 4-24M Floor Sanding CARL L. BILLS SR.. FLOOR Sanding. FE 2-8789.. 852-5085. JOHN TAYLOR. FLOOR LAYING expOiTanoo. ^— * R. O. SNYDER, FLOOR LAYING, jand^^^^and flnlshln$. Phone Basamgnt Water FrgaflRa RELIABLC Work guaranteed FE 4'6777 Batteries KAR-LIFE BATTERY CO, STARTERS AND REOULATORS REGULATORS, $3.95 302 Auburn FE 8-1914 Flooring EXPERT FLOOR AND WALL Covering. tiled, cerpet, linoleum. OR 3-3691 Furniture Refinithing PIANOS. TABLES. WROUGHT IRON fumttur^ expertly matched t<r any > decore, R. J. Young Co. EM 3-2029. Boatf-Accessories ONLY 3 MONTHS UN'TIL SPRINO "Buy Now for Summer Fun" LAY-AWAY or BANK TERMS 1963 BosU and Motors Brunswick Boat*—BVInriide Motors Grumman and Old Town Canoea Bvivaii Pontooh Floats Tee Nee Trailers All Marine Accessories . J lairington ,P»oii,l \\'orks ' '"Your Evfnrude Desler" i 1899 S. 'rclegraph Rd, FE 2-8033 | Building Materials Heating Service ALL FURNACES CLEANED AND Serviced. C. L, Nelson. FE 5-1788. Income Tax Service ALL WORKING PEOPLE'S AND business taxes prepared, *3 and up. J SCIUMKE. OR 3-2943. 5601 Highland Rd. (M89). C'HRIBTIAN RECLAIMED BRICK *30 a thousand; Pontiac area. Cull Detroit evenings alter 7 -633-8548 or 0f|l-1089. RALPH E. WHITE NOrARV PUBLIC 303 E Pike FE 5-7893 FE 8-0922 ^ ' Ydtm'HOME OR MINE ^ Building Modernization A-l ADDITIONS 2-Car Oarage Special *869 PAUL GRAVES CONTRACTING Free Estimates OR 4-1511 W. PINE STTOIM SASH * 3 95 Combination storm doors . .*13.60 BLAYLOCK SUPPLY FE 3-7101 wT.\'iT';k si’i'icl.M-S Licensed BuTtflers NEIDRICK BUILDING SERVICE ~ Home. Oarage. Cablneta. Addltlonii PHA TERMS FE 4-6909 Lumber TALBOTT LUMBER <low(i. Complete biiUdlng Carpeting SCHWEirZER CAItPET SERVICE, cleaning, repairing, laying, free esUmales, FE 5-6633 or FE 2-7863. Musical Instructions PRIVATE LEBSONS ON CORNET, trumpet, french horn and bab«. $2.50. Gallagher Music ( o. 18 E. Huron 8t. P'E 4-0566 Coal OLGA POCAHONTAS STOKER Kentucky Tump* Egg and Stoker ’ Pocahontas Briquette BLAYLOCK COAL CO. FE 3-7101 Piano Tuning AAA PIANO TUNING WIEGAND'8 FE ^4924 Doll Hospital REASONABLE REPAIRS ON MOD-ern and antique dolls. Clothes ,»tc‘*"juJ?e ‘Ann's 00*11’ H^ospitah 4760 mwnilll Lake Rd., Ortonvlllc, NA 7-9096. A1 TUNING AND REPAIRING Oerar Schmidt FE 3-6217 Plastering Service A-l PLASTERING AND REPAIRS. Reasonable. Pat Lee, FE 2-792'i. Dreismoking, loiloring alterations all types, knit dresses, lOBthef (‘Sate OH 3-7193. PLASTERING FREE ESTIMATES D. Meyers EM 3-0163 PLASTERING AND REPAIR. ALL work Insured and guaranteed. Call , Hie. FE 2-4090. , Dry wall ’ DRYWALL Applied, taped and flntibed. 652-3661 Plumbing Supplies . ^ COMPLETE LINE OF FIXTURES, fittings, pipe, new and used. SAVE PLUMBING CO. 172 S. Saginaw FE 5-2100 ^ 'la N DRY WALL AND, REMODELING. Fast fexpor. service. MY 3-5162. REBUILT AND OUARAN'TEED TVS tltJS up. Obel TV ----- 3480 Elisabeth Lake General Maintenance /ij-..... YORK ST. 2 bedroom, carpeted, alum, tiding and awnings, $500 down'. Pwul Jones, Realty______FE 6-8550 FLORES AND MARTIN RADIO AND TV SERVICE , REBUILT TVS FOR SALE Ve repair sewing machines a Tra« Trimming Servica Geiient! Trqo .Service F*i' 2-M4g J"|. NEW HOMES RAN'CH WITH ATTACHED GARAGE EULL BASEMENT $0 • Down : $69 e Model Dally 12 U LORRAINE COURT J.V YOl'R l.OT Rus.sell Yoviiifj; REALLY MEANS BETTER BUILT HIITER UNION LAKR 9 Toomu ftiul b furniture, ftrepliire, li »«d*ln nun porch. 150’ lot. 5 ACRES, nc* home roughed In. NEAR DRAYTON. : r FE 4-39IKJ. Sale Hausei 49 Moving^ Picture. \VINDOWS" The constant changing seawna| this I ; home will I 3 bedrooms, I'.s baths -2 fireplaces panelled den Red Roman Brick screened porch Thormopane Windows Saturday and Sunday, owner. Associate NO MONEY DOWN Mixed Neighborhoods Land Contract, VA, FHA down, land contraci! LARGE LOT — 2 bedrooms, $6,100. Move RigJit In option, call at once lor particulars. n and dining space, baseipent. 24x31 ft. A u t o. .. furnace and hot water heater $9- prlce If cash to ihortgage. K. O. Hempstead Realtor 102 E. Huron. ANCHOR BAY. NEAR LAKE ST. Clair, New lovely 2-bedroum '- large living room, tiled bath aluminum sidini Lot 65x200. 81 189 SEWARD STREET 1-bedroom home with living room and large kitchen all on one " — I air fiiniace. ,,K., ,0, . ____________ ________ —■ iK Ti Huron F MONTROS.S TREE SERVICE s . rem..v.l-.lHmmU.v ■ 3.15-7650 . A lead' /leajl HAULING AND RUBBISH. NAME ir price. Any time. FE 8-0095. LIGirr AND HEAVY ''rRUCKiNO. •Ill dirt, grading and gra- Trvek Rgntal Trucks to Rent IVa-l Dump TruokK—Seml'l------- Pontiac Farm and Industrial 'I ractor Co. "2 S- WOODWARD (l’E%«(IML ■■ OpeiTTlatly It Jatly Including 6 Upholstering THOMAS UPHOLSTERING 4499 W. WAL'I'ON BLVD. EE 5-8888 BLOOMFIELD WALL C VVantodllautehaid Goods BARGAIN HOUSE PAYS CASH FOI l_fjirnllure. FE 2-6642. WoterTI^ Service Wajto-Coke-Coal-Fuel CANNEL COAI.T-THE IDEAL PIBE- *2(1.590 OL 1 0447. RADEdNS.' ''3-BEbRboM~'RANtTl, clly conveniences, .48(1 and u ments. Open 12-7 p in. Mi a Building Co. FE_M039;_____________ 3 bedroom ranch, WA'rEBFORD ■■ "erlng High area. Newly decoi I. Large lot. Priced to sell wit down payment. Easy term today WA'IERFORI) HBAI ORJ-625;____________________________ 27x18 fir .... ----- ....— Located close schools and shopping^, small daw payment. Call OR 3-6059 for a -BEDROOM HOME. (ached garage, 3 BATHS, rge utility ! offer. Diamond 1-3618 $9,500 NO'CREDIT CHECK.S No mortgage approvals needed. Just assume payments. Must sell. OPEN 12 TO 8 DAILY 8POTLITE BUILDING CO. FE 4-W5_^ ______ BY ^ OWNER, NORTH BIDE, condition, tla baths, gas heal, at-lachert garage, large lul. A real bargain at $11,950 with 51,,'lflO down. ilract. Mniilhly pay-1. Ly^all W1':.ST liURON Near Palmer, 2 flat, new gaa furnace, largo lot, aoned special service, large double garage, bargain VoNTIAC‘realty 737 Baldwin______FE 5-8275 First Time Offered Rochester area - 3 bedroom brick. Living roons. Dining el. carpeting and drapes, kitchen with eating mrace, I'/s -baths, 2 car garage. Finished basement, storms and screens. Priced to sell. Quick occupancy. Owner. OL 1-0355 after ' WEST SIDE bedroom frame, garage, en-sed front porch shaded by tow-— IreM. OU heat. Sacrifice at 16,990. Ol's "O" down, ns can buy on easy terms inly 31VI1H ITAGSTROM ' , REAL ESTATE 4900 WHuron OR 4-0358 Evenings call 682-043^or OR, 3-6229 We.st .Side—2-l'':unily New conditions himdy to Oeneml Ho«i)Uh1, ft rooms and 2 baths ' Z" READY FOR SI’RING A hundred beautiful building privileged. One o^ Oakland Countys most pleasant locations. Fulfill .your desire for suburban living. Open Sunday 12-8 p.m, I'-ROM $3,9(X) SILVl'R LAKE (ONST. ( (). 673-9831__________Eves. FE SELL OR TRADE — LOVELY TWO bedroom ‘hungatoW with gaa b'~‘ Aluminum storms. Completely sulated. Plastic tU« bath. Wall c— structed. Near Lake. Only 4Ji miles from city. Price low at only $8,500. Will trade for larger home. RliAL VALUE — Just Imagine t 3 • oom bungelow only 7 yeare old 18.500. OU AC furnace. Aluminum storms, Interior newly decorated Large 90x128 ft. lot. Near Williams Lake. 10 per cent down and otUy $58.01 mo. "Sure Is a steal," GOOD BUY — 40 Ft. rancher with part basement. Ceramic tiled bath. Nice family rm.. patio, outdoor grill. Wall to waU oarptlng “ • AC furnace. Here’s a spotless, with fenced yard, lake prlvl— and Is a very good value. Price $10,250. Terms can be arranged. NORTH END -w Excellent location. Clean as a Hound's Tooth. 3 rin. modem bungalow with lull base- FOR COLORED 8 rooma with njwl^^djdWted. W.000, wm IShSam Off Joslyn a badrc""- ' living I kitchen EasemenC'''covered . and rear. $9x22' garage X1J9’ lot with concrete d r I - .. ^ tide for Only $1L800 wi^ 81.^ Sylvan Village 2-bedroom bylck. eenarate dining rpom. modernleSd It Ho b e n, full KMiiAtMAnl with 4Hia lUr~n(fRt< enclosed pore gt.sl^^owp.blus cloFng coste. IVAN W. SCHRA’M REALTOR FE 5-9471 942 JOSLYN COB. v. IPBN EVENINGS AND SUNOAYS MULTIPLE LISTINO SERVICE bungalow LAKE FRONT — Hore Is on Priced at only $11.0* give you terms. Compact .j with oodles of closet ... Brick fireplace. Completely ftinished. Nice screened iMirch. Just the ticket for retired or newlywed iOlipre. LIST WITH US -- We Buy. Sell snd Trade. 24 years experience. Open 9:30 a.m. lo 9 p.pi. Multiple Listing Service. I,. H. BROWN. Realtor 309 Elisabeth Lake Road Ph. FE 4-3504 or FE 2-4810 ARRO iNE OF THE FEW HOMitS — for salo In Lincoln Heights. 5 brick with full basement, gas *—* 2 car garage, largo lot. Only B-, heat, storms and screens, hlcoly landscaped, ,900, Terms. NEED SPACE — for a garden and the klddles'l You will have It with this neat 2 bedroom home. Cgrpel-Ing, full basement, storms and screens, $9,990. Terms. ’lED'^cCULI^aH, REALTOR' OPEN 9-9 SUNDAY 10-' 8143 CASS-EI,IZABETH ROAD PHONE. (182-2211 GAYLORD .ROOM HOUSE.’ Has 3 alrtments paying excellent Income. WUl con-Blrter trade. 9.oiu- garage,, gas heat. wr. fumlshod. , Investment worth chocking on. Call now. MY 2-2821 or FE 8-9693. . etorms — 16.200, 4 BEDROOM FARM HOME - clean GILES FF OAKLAND 4 bedroom hot with full basemenl. N< grade s Paved 800 down, $55 I appointment now. WILL TRADE 9 room 3 bedroom full basement, 2 large porches, IV4 car garage, ip street. Older home —" OWEN SCHOOL DISTRICT 6 bungalow, hardwood floors, bath, basement. This It a (ilEE.S RI'-AETY CO. E 5-6175 221 Baldwin Ave. Open 9 a m. to 9 p.m. MVLTIPLE LISTINO SERVICE NICHOLIE WATERFORD AREA Three bedroom bungslnw. l.lvlng and dining area. Kitchen and utli- $250 moves you In. NORTH EAST BIDE Three bedroom bungalow. Living anu dining apace. Kitchen. Iiard-wood floors. Full basement., Oil CLARK8TON AREA Three bedroom brick bungalow. Living and dining area. Kitchen. NEAR fisher body Two bedroom bungalow. Living and dining area. Kitchen, lull basement. oil HA heat. Vacant, newly decorated About 9.100 moves you In. ve. Call FE 4-82.16 or FE 2-7273 NICHOLIE HAROER CO. 83‘/» W. Huron St._______FE 8-8183 riS:‘W^ lar J DOWN PAYMENT-GI Gi 1 ltd., (Mm OR i-om KIDDIES Will love convenience of Va bath near rear door and large 7f lot. for play area. Oil neat. . „ utility. Ye«, S bedrooms recently decorated. $11,600, $67.71 mo., plus tax and inn. hAosTROM REAL ESTATE. 4000 W. Huron, OR 4-0358, evoR. call 682-0435 or OR WES r SIDE LOCATION Z-bwIroiMj buni^ nn*"’ REAGAN Privileges sre included with 4 bedroom home in Elisabeth Lake Ktlatet. A good solid home large pleasant lot. At real to earlli price M.-'dlo on easy Tt” wWdF.N, Realty 1^34 W. Huron _______ houTmv Tiili.s Ranch. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, family ruoiii. OK kitclli'ii. iiimiy rnum. 2'Vcar garage, large lot. landscaped. I Bv«d, clnso to sehouls. clnirclics, slnres, elc. Vacant. Price 821.990, $1,809 down. Open RORABAUGH ■E 2-8051 Raaltnr 0 LAKE—BY ■’owner e lot. $700 for my equity. 'BUD” JiLst-Right for a (.'ouple Nice, neat, nifty 2-bedroom home, urban netghborho^. Wllh oarpet-,exl living room, birch kUOhen-fiMn- C'iarkston Area 3-bedroom ■ ■ ** • • - ((^jj*^***’ and greens, ircair’'’"”" “BucT” Nicliolie, Realtor 49 Mt. Clemens St. J' E 5-1201 After 6 P.M,, l-’E 2-3370 I. attached 2-ck 'ai Ifi'-Hli" STOUTS Best Buys Today BEDIIOOM DUTCH COLONIAL l^arge (amliy^ Baacmonl. oil firci acre parcel included at only 114.95 L I T T I, F, EDEN OVERI.OOKINd TRADEX KENT FEATURING —A nice large country ' I kitchen (his north side 3-bed-1 home must be seen to appre-I. Ceramic tiled bath. Full bMe- 8UBURBAN RANCH HOME — ill carpeting In 22-ft. living HentalBlor Ilieplace. Tiled Bsmt. with, oil heat. Breese-0 attached 2-car garaee. Over tractive brick living riHim, brick fireplace. *Fuii basement with ri-c, room and e-'— fireplace. Enclosed porch. Gar Double lot. *16.900, Terms. BRICK SUBURBAN RANCH —I. having 4 bedrooms, 1 rage 180x200 lot (or Tired* TRYING *"*"" to "rRADEX". family home ‘■“th price. iBt*$a?50 PS or TRADE TRADE? Turn LEW HILEMAN, .S.E.C. Realtor-Excliangor 1011 W. HURON ST, FE 4-1570 JUDSON STREET. FHA: Lovely big family home 9 large rooms 2 baths full basement gas steam heat plastered wall down and 74.00 per tr, NORTH BIDE; Lovely biingalor —- and ready to -------- .. room, dining room, kitchen, rooms, tiled bath with nt lures and Shower utility Basement, oil ‘ ‘—‘— In. Living hen, 2-bed- .HUMMIT STREET: Brick bungalow In ve ditimi. Large living peled family style kl bedroomr and bath, : heat lenced back ......... *995("'"fHA WSO dowif.' ffiwn b"v appointment. John K. Irwin water softener, garage. 60x100 ft. lot. Excellent location. Total price $10,500. with good terms. Call MY 2-2821 or FE 8-9093. WANT TO Build. Ask about bur quality building and financing. Will build oil your lot. Call FE 8-9693 or MY 2-2821. ’ho® HAVE GOOD JOB. WRIGHT S.S Ave. F» »«044l DORRIS 190> COMMERCIAL ON OPPYKEt i room 2 story horn* oompl^ly ,T.‘ge^te *n..‘?M.tS5; Emd coiitraot with $2,700 down. ™Bt»! T Mrgey than avoruo rooms for family comfort. iT'a baths, natural , flroplaoa In par- 4 BEDROOM OFF WEST HURON: Oil PontiBCs popular west side, V/a baths, separate dlnliyi room, large screened in iwrch, base-. ment and garage, $10,980. DOLL HOtJSE: Boaoh Just 4 bloeki away from this excellent starter home for young couple, *p> »' down, combleteiy* aluminum aided, Georgia marble, fireplace, sparkling kitchen, attached ga- .... . 1 garage! base- ment. and price IncTudea washer, dryer and eleolrlo ranye. 810.980. SPACIOUS CODNTBY HOME .M LAKEVILLE 1 4 bedrooma In this quite oommiuiUy outside of Oxford. over Vs acre lot with amall stream on rear of property: 99,-950 on land contract. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Broadway and^ tiled b . i^lth I In Watkins style kllchei: space. Gas i $15,900. FHA Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 0 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph • FE 2-0123—Open Eves. Free Parking Frushour IMMED1;ATB possession - This 3-bedroom brick rancher Is located ■ ■ "le Mall, lovely big Encm. Ing. full basement if m DOWN win move ^year-old ranch t^pe prjvUegos. $55 per mo, to wall carhet-wUh reoreilUon .. $15,200, Make No walUng to lell Jack Frushour Realty FE 9-4025 __________FE 2-1,52 CLARK KE FRONT. 9600 DOWN. Needs Interior finishing. On Round Lake In Independence Township. I.arge lot. attached garage, enclosed front porcli, screened rear porcli, fheplace. 87..500. TR^E FREE AND CLEAR ROME lilac liomLwUh 2 lots on Sub-,an home or small tnrin wllh ) 10 acres. Priced at $9,500. CLARK REAL ESTATE ANNETT Newly Decorated One-floor home, large living I’oom. 2 bedroomn. bath bWlon^kltohen and dl i. Your. clUl-xtra teaiurf I.AKE — Hard It led garage, workshop, beautiful re corner parcel with fruit end ■les. lake privileges. Only *18,900 1^^ reasonable Icrms. See it and PIONEER HIGHLANDS-Establlshed lielchborhond, aUrae.llve g-liedrooni while frame home with plastered AUBURN MANOR- Area of dlstlnc live homes. Lovely 3-bedroom brick 25x41 overall, Features 20 ft. living room with ledgerock fireplace, custom kitchen, oil fired not wster heat, BIO 20x24 garage, 20x20 patio, king also 120x131 lot with fruit trees. Priced right at $19,800 teirms. Available. | Warren Stout, Realtiir ’ N, Saginaw^ 81. FE 8-8I65 FOR A QUICk‘"sa"lB. MLJ, IfSI SinUIR'BAX^ BGNtiALOW Larife wiling, ftaraxe. *3 tile alum, awning. Oaraxe. ., ...... kll fenced. l,$ke privileges, 000 do#n, 960 per month. . i HAROLD n PRANKS, HEALroR 2583 Uploh Lake Rd. EM >3-32115 :h 2nd lloor. Full basemenl. Custuiii Built Ranch fenced ” ‘landscaped acre lot. mirt.li and west of city; Slate, floored" entry, U7l"lj rootn, Windows Thermopane, wall-lu-wull eai'iietlng throughout, custom drams, kitchen "Frig-Idaire" bunt-ins. dishwasher, large dining area, 3 apaclou* bedi'timns. den nr library. I'/u tile baths. Utility, laundry room, soreened rear porch, overslse 2-car altaohed ga- *31^9()0. I'erma. Shown by ap-lioliitment only. Auburn Road Corner Just east of Adams, commercial brick and block building, full basement, gas heal, 2 lavatories, tot 90x140. Res-tatiranl equipment hiohided— (possession at once. $38,000. 8-1 Acre.s/-Vacant Appi/xlrnutfly Va mllif f^nf-Hgp Jbn 8, BJvd. clo«« to Pon-ttuc/ Ulonl for (mbdlvlMion l>rmx N)r will «Hcriftco for (iHfdl. WIC WILI. TRADE K'caKorC 28 R. Huron St Open ipvettings snd Sunday 1-4 FE 8-0466 lings on Multi iHlgle 1 FE >r FE a sling Service 1 7888 MILLER NORTH SIDE INCOME * »P8ft- terms?'call for completa datalla. HOME and acreage Indlanwood Rd. 6 rooms and bath, sbigle story. Needs a bandy man soma , work to be done, decorating, etc. Basement. $ aeres of land, live stream. $8500 — terms. LAKEPRONT near Waterford. 3 lots, access to 5 lakes Includbig Macs-day and Lotus. 6 rooms and hath. Ne«iis,.80nie work, but basically sound. Aluffi. Siding, part William Miller TRADE “'foday’s Top Trades” Family Room Is hicluded In this nice 2-bed-room brick rancher. Carpeted 18’ living room, 10x11 dining room, fabulous bath room with 11’ vanity, stream-lined kitchen, full baKcincnt. Attached 2-car plastered garage. IOO'x22S' lot — of-fereed at $17,050. $1,800 down plus costs — or trade. Near Baldwin Ave. An exceptionally attractlvo 2-bedroom home. Carpeted living room and hall. Large combination kitchen and dining area. Rec. room In basement with natural fireplace. Fenced yard. Only $10,-800 -*1,080 down plua costa — Thi.s k wh 50. < the city - Ternui or Trade. ” Near Williams I.ake A Rl-lcvcl, 3 bedroom, It', bath home. 23’ living room with nat-iiinl fireplace, 12x14 screened porch. l‘A oar garage. 88x160 lot —only $1,300 downp his costs. KAMPSEN 1071 W. Huron SI, FE 4-0921 2-Bedroom Lakefront cated on Pontiac Lake with brick fireplace, slate floors in living room, attached garage. Posslbli-ty of additional bedroom. You can move Into this home for only *2.000 down and have all IH’ALTOR PARTRIDGE JOHNSON nd HcreouH. flagntoi n yard, carport and llii'ougliniil and can be pin loi only $i6.!iri0. A .savin,,k of over *5,000, Lake prlvll block fiom your door. Hoi neighborhood valued from CITY Here la sn linmaciili bedroom home wllli I This home has man :.:"'rii''r;a!r'^j contract on balance. Af’er 6 call Sonce Johnson, OR 3-8405. A. JOIIN.SON & .SONS 1794 M TELEGRAPH ________ns 4-2S33 VaPU-Way $59 PER MONTH Pays all after a *478 down payment. A redecorated 2 bedroom home In Ferry Park. I.argo corner IIH on^ pa^ved Needs sirfall $225 DOWN No other costs, 3 bedroom ranch home located 3 miles north of city. Large titlllly room, altaohed garage. oil furnace. 83-ft. lot. *79 per munlh Includes taxes and Insur- RJ, (Dick) \ ALUET REAi;rOK * I’E 4-3531 OAKLANP AVE, OPEN »-7 O'NEIL SPECIALS We’re constantly besieged by nice families calling for four-bedroom single floor homes In prime neighborhoods. Now we do have one In beautiful Drayton Woods, 2_ blocks from Cooley and the Our Lady of Lakes bus near the door step. The ' ’ row- y‘oiifei>K‘'’o T'* M r** Daddy waiTt lo talk * or watch TV. There Is a natural fireplace - a garage to hear, the price flalooo* 3-302a!"'^ PAY ()’\’i:]I;, Realtor 202 8. Telegraph _FE 3-710,1 COLORED BHICK RANCHETTE nnw condition Uu'ouKhout. 3 bedrooms, high dry basement, gas heat. Beauti-IVl sa^^**^* flowera. $12,350 — liberal terms. REAL BUY FOR O.T. Home and *K .. payment; 'ortable 4-bei uoii?iir' Ranclr I’iome RANCH HOME ATTRAC’..... ...... h adjoining overslxed '■ living Carpeted 30 I and dining roc..,, bath and 3 good slaed bedrooms. Plastersd walls, oak floors. Yes, a full basement With oil heat, water softener BEAUTIFUL BIO LOT DaJidy "7. "Ubnrban. You II like the price — *18,260. cash lo mortgage. Bluebird . ymrrTot**llni*N%rge’'V‘bSdro bungalow - 'l6x2o‘'nvLg* room" natural fireplace, Panelled fam-lly room. Recreation room with bAr In basement, attached ga-............. ' veiy I “ West Side . Humphries 1 .-83 N. 11-no ar I'E 2-M2.ki U(.^i:nsl*e‘r*‘‘cTrr""2‘‘.'l!o22 «eikb6r Multlpls Llslln(| Strvic* THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, 1 EBR,UAliY 12, lOQ.i ' TWE^T Y»QHE . ' Templeton ---^SYEV^^rrSKEX^ Mltdroom buMftjow, Urg* living hMW’vgr^nle* Ibt on bfiiok-tapped otriot. Only iU,IM)0' vlth 10 p«r oont down piui mortgnga ooiU. K. L. Templeton, Realtor 8330 OfOhMd Ldk* ko*a OBg-OIWO NEED 4 BEDROOMS? jmrreHTK0TISf?R wo have luat ,the nouoo for yot Carpoted living room and dinin room, full baaomtnti. gao boa.. 8-ear jarago. Pontiac irorthorn Araa. POIX PRICE 13,800, WORK AT PONTIAC GENERAL? Wa hava a aharp 3-badroom homo, largo oarpatad living room, Youngatown kitenan, ]■/ oar garaga. PRICED RIOHT. Smith Wideman O'NOL OPEN DAILY TWO TO SIX IN PLEaIm^ ^KE^OODS NOT OWI.T li TH« Salt Homm ^Uti^AcriBjf ylarkston area SarA.I» Largo It., .. 31'.,500, Tarma. BLOOMFIELD HIGHLANDS a® Rolfe II, Smith, Realtor 3M a, Talagraph wwnpwwnp Sia?-- you can hava for your vary own, Baaoty-Rtta Horn a t ara daalgnad and built by a maatar In tha art of home oonitruotton, Pormloa mack bar which actually aaats a family of ilx< comfortably I contact t......... n thia Btudio calling ----1 which faaturaa ,,0 wall as ; Window Kuaata : . family Including lot at 333,400 or WE’LL dupllcata for 330,800. Lai's trade. Mrs. Bette will ‘ be your hostess, OR 3-8028. TRADING IB TERRIFIC INCREASED THE SIZE OF YOUR family* Then why not trade that smaller home on this substantial west side home. Six roomy rooms with three large bedrooms, oak floors, full basement, cas heat, 3-car garage. All this for only 813.000. CRESCENT LAKE ESTATE. fammM withl1ttle“ohlfdron' It’s a 3-bedroom ranch with a full basement at 08,SOO!M Plastered, painted walls, nice kitchen, blech cabinets, tile bath. 3000 down plus costs. Yoii’11 be glad .you looked. T1»E QOOtr LOOK OF HURON WOODS, half acre sites, tall trees, wonderful beaches. All these are yours with ownership In this exclusive eeotlon. Your family will certainly spend much of their time, as the present owners do. In the large paneled family room with its natural log-burning fireplace. A second fireplace features a rollsserle and Is conveniently located In the dining room. You’ll have 2 full I... ......... under the stars summertime nights Is so much fun. Full price 321,000 and less thsn 33.000 will get a miallfled man In. Bv appointment G.l No Money Down Lme In'^Jxceflent condition and located In very desirable location. Nice big DO YOU NEED FOUR-BEDROOMS? Well thlB east ilde dandy has them, plus n— MUI.TIPLE L18TINO BERVICE BATEMAN Open 5 lo 7:30 RANCH or 'J'Kl-LliVl’:i, NEW MODELS FEATURING: 3 bedrooms, l‘/» baths, family room, rangs and oven, brick and aluminum. $10,600 to $11,975 [.ess lot Mie TO Whittier ioppobitb CITY AIRPORT) LEFT TO MODBLa Suburban Roauty Inside and out. Large, beautifully landecaped lot with wonderful lake privileges on Upper Long Lake only ’I blocks. 3 bedrooms, 3''s baths. 27 ft living room with fireplace, beautifully carpeted and West Side Brick [| bullt-ln air condl- being transferred i sell fast at iin.BOi down plus yoits. WE LOOK? The Deal “Vlth “kUO ................J located,, e vvenlent to everything, 'Thle about the sharpeet, most w kept property we lit*al'r"ahower,,''Blum,* storms 1 , screens and' I'k ear gavi 'w"ll''VeM'’for oillck sale at 38 ~ 3fl30 down and »83 per mo with no Mortgage, costs. }/ FAe'r. , . Ask .'Mioiit Our Trade-In I’Ian ► t, i nHOO ■ ^ »„„ll,if FE 8-’ MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE IRWIN North Suburban' 2 acres with lovely 3-badroom bum galow, oak floors, ptaetared walli full basamant and 3-car garagi School hue at door to Pontia. Nonhern^and Madison Junior High. West Side Duplex «ent brick construction an a line. Bach aide hai 3 .... rgohii, hardwood floors, plastered wans, carpeted living room, dining room and hall, aeparala utllltlei,, Saa furnaoet, 3 garagoa and paved rive. Call for appointment. Colored GI ^bed^om^bun^alo' I"? OEOROE R. IRWIN, REALTOR 2»g W. Walton FB 3-7883 ..........A»MittN------------ EXECU-nVES OR DOCTORS A wonderful combination for hc.... and offloea — lovely old colonial. 5 bedroom. 2'bathe. 8 large llvlir rooms. Fireplace, Lar— room. Family kitchen. Water heat. 380 ft. I........ tractlvaly. Terms, Dorothy Snyder Lavender 7001 Highland Road (M88) 10 Ml. West of Tslagraph-r EM 3-8303 ________Eves. -. . . COMMUNllfY NATION At ISAllk For Homo Ownership I— Baty ■ BY OWNER ■ ; HAYDEN 3- BEDROOM tri-level $999S-$1000 DOWN- .3’ Lot Family Room l'/4-car Oarage oas H--‘ 4- UEDROOM BI-LEVLL 10,995-1095 DOWN l>'a baths Itk-car garage 12’ Living room 03' Lot l; C. HAYDEN, Realtor l0701 Highland Rd. (M-BO) EM 3-6804 7-famlly dwelling Complex conitet Ing of 3 buildings which have i total Income Of 8388 per month un less owner occupies 1 apt. This Is i real liwestment possibility a 317,000 dash to mortgage. Ideal loi a man iwha can do own repalrini and mflntenance. K. O. Hemp stead RgaHor 103' E. Huron FI Loks Pioperty 51 MOBILE SITES. DON’T RENT, BUY 'uwn, 020 a ----- Brian Cnyo. UNION LAkl’FRONT Bemiltlul 2-level I-herircinm hmis with exposed basement leading to i pcrfeci siimly beach. Inchide.s lire pliice. giiragc and scOpIc landscnp Ills. (lOU. Cull tiu uppolmnieiii. U. I’.'XNGLJ.S, Realtor ORTON VII.LE WEBSTER liAKEi ORION-OXFORD L 8»25l& MY 2-2291 TRA 11e WATI’:R]’R0nt Beautiful 8 room rancher—led( rock fireplace—large fiinilly moi altachod garage.^ 322.500. terms. (.'larencc C. Ridgeway 'E .8-7081 2!|8 V Northern Proptrty 51-A ACRE WOODED CAMP SITE. Mancolmni nrea $10 down. $10 mo. Only 0405 full price. Next to thou-„an,i. „( Bcres of slate owned hunt-Adams Realty, EE 8-4008. k^rtJPtopei^ LAKE UVINO Um -iJi'lviUo >■ down. $10 - a month. AWin ooHt Dftlo B Don, FF 4-4M19- OR 3- J2 ‘«5 Lets—Acreage _____________ EStATI 180 paved atraat In ara homes. aaorifioa price, 3 tsiUf; 18 ACRES NEAR DAVISBURO real buy — oomplata farm ‘ Inga -- price reduced tc 3 0 ACRES — 4-badroom farm home — new fjirnaoa — good barn — workshop — 383,800 — lubitaptlal UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE _,J8 Dixie Hwy. Clarkston 825-2615___________MA 8-1241 Busineii Opj»BrtMi|fjtlet ^9 AUTO DEALERSHIP garage and showroom. Same owner oyer 40 years. Illness oomnels sale. Cal' for appointment today. SPORTSMEN’S HEADQUARTERS HSporttng fooda, hardware, boats, motora. bait. 3 buildings. All lake-front. Illneaa also compela sale. Call now! CRAWFORD AGENCY '«« W. Walton 38J-2300 I. Flint MY 3-1143 MMMytplMH 41 . -,. *¥?”**$ J*^**'- ' Signature AUTO or FURNITURE Up M 84 montba.to repay .'^-FHOKB FE-348IM.. - - OAKLAND lydan Company L«JteayiWfc_ TEAGUE FINAfe CO. 202 N. MAIN 214 E. ST.‘ CLAIR ROCHESTER- - ROMEO LOANS ^3^TO $800 LIVESTOCK. HOUSEHOLD OOODS OL 1-0711 OL 1-0701 "FRIENDLY SERVICE" $25 jit) $5d6ron Your SIGNATURE Auto or Other Security FAST, CONVENIENT BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WHERE YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $500 Pontlao — Drayton Plains ~ Utica Walled Lake - Birmingham Mortgage Loam ^ 62 Cctsh Loans $600 to $2500 Bif Rick Turner “It’s got a 27-inch screen, a hl-fl and speed changer, tape recorder, stereophonic sound, and a small coiPpartment in the side for aspirin!’’ an. ft. Would do for wholfsaler. distributor, oommarolat or light infg. Concrete floors, high celling. BEST HARDWARE IN THIS SUB-urban Oakland Co. araa. Exoal-lent rant on modern bldg, Ovr 3100.000 gross. Part Inventor J»a or wift'BMtaidar tr--"* dowa lADE 1-. - with V equipment — low r COMPLETE PIZZA pTE EQUIP-mant. Reasonable. 526-0423.__ BlU’R and WlNli Party store. Has gross over 0128.-000^ Needa^^^a^resslve ^^opera^tor. Widow must sell. Reduced to $7,-000 with terms. State Wide—Lake Orion 1175 N MJ4_________ OA H800 FOR SALE; OARBAOE DISPOSAL Including 1081 2-to“ . —i^gbage^ brand new motor^^.OOO. I bue|neee, ^1 DpiVEHN Excellent highway location. New equipment. Unlimited parking. Owner retiring and will accept part trade. MICHIGAN Business Sales, Inc. .lOHN LANDME89ER. BROKER 1573 8. Telegraph_FE 4^1582 LOCAL DEALERSHIP ^yXlLABLE manufac-Honeywell, Ujs potetuial icAL DEALERSHIP Ay/ !or unique residential f prowler alarm eyslem i lured by Minneapolis IT capital Invesim 7-4802 Holl Small Lumber ( ompany ■> Iiiilldhigs -11.400 sq. ft. ol '1. office space. )0k. 44,700 eq. ft. Abuiilf 3 al Bargain r — OR 3- ’arty 3-4673. bath.^pluB hefung mX* all utUltlea paid by the tennants. full baaemenf. With a paved narking lot, all In good oohditlon. priced to sell at 320,80. Terms can be arranged. IVAN SCHRAM Realtor FE 5-9471 motor carte. Establlahed 1040, Dle-play and parking area. Low Inventory. exo. opportunity. Contect owner bv Feb 23 at 0408 Dixie Hwy., ACRES AT COBNEH win iniT Morgan Rds, I rolling and partly wood .’o'btation, corner wai, 1 inn and Perry, Pumping gooc •' nAl.Ii.l _voJmne FF,JB;316A_____ '«1 ......... ................ dSalc Land Controcli l.eslie K. 'I' W, Huron 61 l-FOOT CANAL LOT, IlESTUICT-ed Cass Lake Zox Subdivision, 31,000, 3200 down FE 81170 after flE¥1f'6R~YOUR8E'LF (;iii’:R()Ki’:i’: hh.ls! inunlty of better homes and eecluded^ ke Ell .. ____ Lake Rd. - 3 blocks to Laoota. ARL W. IUrI), Realtor „J3 Coininunlly National Bank Bldi FE 4-4211 ______ l umi.i, VILI ./M il’ '™'8.y.'8? Land Contracts Wanted Controcts-Mtgs. 60-A Ibt REALTY, PE Puved « 110 X * L0^*^A $$ AN IMMEDtATB flALE FOR YOUR Land Contracts moul!'*neartor.' 77"n. Saglnaw'^'m" EE ,1-81(11_________ a¥soi,utely the easi'est ac-on your Und cr... AS $1,080 EE 8-021)1 or OR 3-1231 after 7,30 LADD’S, INC. ___3805 La|)e_eT_Rd,JP:errj M2D_ YOU A.SkI'.D I'OR- IT j$ nice 3-bedroom home on 10 rod- C. PAN(iUS, Realtor ortonville »2 Mill 81 _________NA 7-2018 Wanted!! WOODED — Parcel with frontage. Located in Orton-ecreatlon nrea. adlecont to sh Lake Stale Park. Boat-■ fishing and other sporte e. Terrific value at O'l.WO per cent down. ACRIM WITH • viXTiood efrared bulhllng sttf- acres \ vlire"*! JnR tna m ti*“'oV ECONOMY LOTS - fiir ifooi ■ 7:\ im-ii 'Stout, Keallor BaglUBW^ SI,^^^ EE 8-8188 ; A «J|U1CK»8A1,K. CALI, UHI CASH mortgaaos available. Call 1 Cullough Sr„ 802-1820. ARRO REALTY l-ELIZABEli R cXsir^OB LAND CONTRAl I H. J. Van Welt, 4540 Dixie Hwy OR 3-1388. NffWAITlNG ! Hate eale for good seasoA »„u oontrnots, Eor a quick deal call 133 7187 WARDEN REALTY, pAN^Tolf?fiTc"t’s WAN’itED. Earl oai iels. EM 3-281U EM 3-4000. Money to Loan 61 (Licensed WHEN YOU NEED $25 to $.500 S'l'AT |t' ’’I'fATN^T^t'O. iAXTBh'^ I’nntinc State Bank Biilldlnt I' E 4-1558-9 “LOANS $.10 ’TO $300 ~ $23 - 3100 COMMUNITY LOAN CO SO E. LAWRENCE FE 0i Buckner Saio HouiohoM Goodi 65 A Mortgage Problem? We make mortgage loana to meet your requtraments. Any property, any amount. Prompt, dependabia service. Remodeling and o o n • etruotlon loans. Cash and aolldate dehts.- . Cheff Mortgi^^a^d Realty CASH Loan^ to $2500 Loans available to home purchases on autos, home equities, and furnl-tuce. 24-46 months to repay. Group all your debts with only one small monthly payment. Family Acceptance Corp. 317 National Bldg. 10 W. Huron Telephone FB 0-4023 Mok-reAM dk C»N»' Adfii W. with 180-foot frontage. No appraisal fee. B. D. Charles, Equitable Farm Loan Bervlca, 1717 8. Teiegtaph.FE, 410031. AVAlLABLli koW TO pay oft all your bllla, Ian oontract or mortgage, providin you get a home unprovement o your house. Must nave 80 pe cent equity or more. Big Bea Conetruetion Co FE 3-7033. Swaps 1958 20-FOOT TRAVEL TRAILER for late model Jeep with oab and blade. FE 2-2918. KENMORE AUTOMATIC DELUXE Ironer for camera or_? FE 4-T'~~ LOT FOR ’fRADE ON 3 BEDROOM would conilder Sal*~Cl^ng^ BEAUTIFUL FL gown. Silk faced chapel train, pi WHITE ALLBORO COAT, NEVER worn, else 10, 328 . 2268 Maddy ----- Keego Harbor. After 0 - ~ PRICE-REJECTS Beautiful living room and b^room Hoirse. ?03 N, '(>ss*yE' g-OM?* '* SETTEES, 1 BLONDE AND 1 dark red. 380 each. Doctors office, 1918 Pontlao State Bank Bldg.. EE 4-r- 1-3-PIECE SECTIONAL. 319. APART-mehl siae Alaiarlc and -gaa ranges, low as 318.00. clean, guarandeed refrigerators. stoves and washers, all •lees. 310 to 0120. 9-pleoe living room suite. 110. 3-plece bedroom. $40. Big picture TVs, 022, up. Norge and Frigidaire automatic wathere, $40. Dinette, $7, up. Electric heater. $4. Oil heater. $26. Youth bed. •ai* : Odd“be^. springe,, dreeeerx. chests, tables, rugs and lamps. Ev-‘■rythlnit In used turnl'uro ui f ar-irlces, ALSO NEW LIVING - -----BEDROOMS Sofa ru^s. bnnk^ beds. seonmis About’'g pNre, EZ terms. lOY SET.L THADIS inrgain House. 103 N. Cass at Lafayette FB 2-(>842. Opni till 9 Monday and Friday. ________ _____ PIECE BEDROOM iBHAND new), double dresser, large mlrroi, book bed and chest. 2 vanity lamna, warehouse priced. $80. II 20 weekly. PEABBON's FURNITURE, 42 Orchard Lake Ave.____________ PIECE LIVfNO ROOM (BRAND new), davenport and ohalr, foam cushions, frelr.e ooverei 2 step tables. 1 ooffee table; 2 decorator lamps, warehouse priced, Ol*},;*-81 28 weekly, PEARSON’S FURNI- ’HIRE, 42 (frehard Lake Ave^____ XI2 R0O8, FOAM BACK. 314 88, Tweeds, $22 88. Oval braided. 328 88 ■ Asmlnlsters. 1411 85. ^12x18 nylon. PEARStlN’S S'URNITu'rE IL ' Uake *"- A|i|)liaiu RCA Whirlpool lECE Sl^TIONAL, E Midltlon, FB 8-7840. 2i-iMC!ii uBib TiLii/iBfdk. $4b. Walton TV F| M3B7 Open 0-0 E. IValtbn. corner of Joilyn II-INCH PHILCO OONBOLB only 045. FI 2-3010, ... _ 10 inch! ELECTRIC BAMOK. 5 piece Duncan Phyte mahogany dl- >r 078. 333-0307. i ANTKJUE CHERRY DROP-leaf table, gateleg. Also a coupl^e 5f other good antiques.. Also Speed-queen wringer-washer, like new sondlllon, 380. (Jater^ anlmj^l 330-0095 after’ 3:30 ly and SUnda" *" ABOUT ANYTHING YOU W FOR THE HOME CAN BE F( at L It S BALES. A little out of the ttay but s to pay. F :cs of all ED. Vl$n 0 USED. "Vliii’ our trad* dept, for real bargains. We buy, sell or trade. Come out and look.around. 2 acyei of f parking. Phone FE 3-0241. , FRI, 0 TO 0 OPEN MON.-8AT. 0 TO 0 24 MONTHS TO PAY 1 mtlee E. of Pontiac or I t E of AubUrn Heights on Aubi M.19. UL 2-3300. 8 AND MATTREBB. $30; CLOSING OUT all floor samples . 9 '111 0:30 Mon. 'HI chests, dressers, bods, bunk beds. EVERYTHING MUST 001 BEDROOM*OU'/Fn*TINO CO. —n stove, $26. Washer -2700, V. Harris.__________ 'CLeaKaScI'i HK BED8 (WROUGHT IRON) miplete with springs and mat-esses, 130.98. Also maple or blond undle and triple bunk bads. Peai -in’s Furniture, 42 Orchard Lake COMPLETE DININO ROOM B E T antique walnut single bed, pokei table, and mile, househould Hems, wa-iiBT,__________________ DE1p“FREEZE, 18 FOOT CHES7 type Ben Hur. Warranty and food plan Included. 0250. 334-8026. dImTsinger beautiful dial Singer automatic s? paymenu full price. imbrolderi . ____chin# for rv, appliques, lies, etc. New ’ SiK’cials GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP WYMAN’S BARGAIN SrOlH’ Rebuilt Wisher, gunranleed $5Il95 bfted refrlgenilors. timranleod MJ.M 3-po. living room suh .IVH a-po. •ection»l lult . * !?? !!!! uW.^k.nrSTr-mr’FEj.VtS5 APABTbIENT ELECfuiC RANSeJ Apartment gas range OB refrigerator F veaer on lop *»5noh'^*lei^rtc 'range CRUMP ELECTRIC CO. 3465 Auburn Road____FE 4-3573 490 yd. 9x12 RUOS VINYL LINOLEUM PLASTIC WALL 'ni.e; ic ca. B8»0 TILE OUTLET^ 1078_W^ Huron 4 roUMIc' FOOT CHiST TYPE /reeziT, Oooil concIltUm. $80 MA it >2058. ________________ M A Moiffif BUl/s :i rooms of PC. living room eulte.wlth 2 step tables. I cocktail tafilo. and 2 table lamps, desk and chair, pc. bedroolju set with hinersprln'g meltress ami box eprlng -to match Used Trade-Ins 8 TVs, Table models slid consoles From |31 2 OE Refrigerators From 300 Demo's Slightly Used .Ml l.iW New Some Witli New Wan-aiity , liCDGI’IT Tl’IR.MS ,\vailal)le . r.du as $1.25 per W k, III $5.(X) per Mmitli Gdollyear Service Store Sail Houuhald Goodi 65 HARTLAND LOOM. COMPLETE With spindles, bench, etc. Also misc. antique furniture and diahea. 8988 Anderaonville Rd.. Waterford. OR 4-1710 or OR 3-0O35. HOT W^’ricR HibAtiR, 30 GALLON Michigan Fliioreecent, KIRBY SWEEPER AND ACCB8-sorles Including buffer, power polisher. butler, etc. Lata model In A-1 condition. 10 year guarantee. “• Fay Off' giM-.iF ai groo 'Wflsmmf: call FE 3-7623,________________________ LO'VELY BINOBR SEWINO chine with Zlg Zag for blind hi walnut cabinet. f account In 8 months i LaI^E crib AND MAT’ffifii (brand new) $15.99 up. Pearson’s Furniture, 42 Orchard Lake Ave. ioViNST— mUScellaneoCs liv- ing room, bedroom, kitchen furniture. Double over Frigidaire range. Phone, MY 3-3400 after ODDS AND ENDfl 350.08 lamp. 00.98. 060.05 lamp, $12.08. 850.08 corner table, 09.95. 358.98 silver fox corner table. $12.98. 339.98 blonde cocktail , table. * I BBDl------ 4703 Dixie ............. __________ OR 3-6734 ONE BO’l’Tl,iED“ OAS 8TOV up; atudent’i deik. $8.90; Voest-Inghouee portable sewing machine. Olfoo; TVe, 110 up: dresser. 30.08; Ihunge chairs. $3 up: odd beds, springs, etc. BUY, SEI.L AND TRADE. Pearson’s Fmnlturc. 42 Orchard Lake Ave,, PLASTIC TfLi: . REBUILT -.U8-ED SWEEPERS, guaranteed 38 up. Barnes k Har-groves Hdwe. 742 W. Huron. RCA 'victor RECORD 'bFeSeO and monorul, new and old releases Including collector Items. Way below coil. 830-4181. RECIINDltlONEb TV siTS FROM Slefenskl’s 11.17 W. Huron condition, FE 4-(l607 CHAIR EXCEL!,ENT SBwikO MACkikBB AND VACUUM ..................... .OS," Over 78 mod- oleaners, wholesale i trolifx*viw SPECIAL THIS WEEK AUBURN 5 k HI Aunt Lydia’s Rug Yarn 4 Skeins for ^)9c Bring thill lul ftnd gH tin additional 8c per skein off 0 AUBURN AVE. ira?''o7,, Jn'iiSd c( inder, Roehegter. latio . 3’J ■iyinruL 'Mlclilgan Fiunresi 13 Orchard Lake - 4.1 Salt MiicaliaNaoui OAS INCINERATOR, OOOl OAR-bage^gider;^ thomp- ORNliMeKl'iAL IRON P<)h(iil AND 8tfp Ratling oornere, and pr-“ room dividera. AVI8 CABINE Star* Equi|NiMMf^ The Floor Shop 2#88 Elisabeth Lake PLUMBINO BAROAINS: FREE staniilng toilet, , ijO.OS: ;olTet, 010.91 ..........J.98; 3-ploee ... $89 95, Plberglal laundry tra $19 90! 32-ln shower stall. t1‘> 05: O howl slnki 92.90. PLUMBINO po^ BLBOTitic SEWER W 1 hours, s.ump 1 repalreil. IS Rental, FE 8-0842. 4'k8’ F I’xO-H STOP AND LOOK Grooved Mahogany .. 3 2.90 .refinlihed Birch ...3 8.05 •14 Birch ............313.85 Masonite .........3 1.78 POkTlAC PLYWOOD CO. ... Baldwin Ave FE 2-2943 STABlL'EijS S’TBBL sinks WITH rim, 339,991 Delta single .ever fen-cell, 319.8“ With spray. O. A. Thompson. 7005 M59, W«st._____ 'I'ALBOTT LUMBER Glass Installed In doors and wln- ffil^SALVlfiON ARNIy RED shield store US WEST LAWRENCE ■yerything_io meet your nt-.. ciomtng. Furiiimre, Appiianoei. ewing ir^hlng etg ,oaggei;^ for prbIE PUPPIES AND FRlfflHT- sor’s. Yell ^ ■■ ■ ■ ............................................ Barnet ti Har graves Hdwe. 742 W. Huron. used" an5 new OFFKJB FURNI-lure, business maoblnei and drafting tables. Sale new Royal portable typewriters, $49.08. Portable typewriters, cleantd, oiled and adjusted. 312.90 up. FORBES, 4800 Drx|a Hwy. (Next to Pontlao State Bank.) OR 3-9767. also in Birmingham, al Camerai • Servic* 3 0ULBRAN80N ORIJANB (USED) MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 2-0.107 Acroie from Tel-Huron MaSoUs' (fHORD . 1.80 baianoo. 1’erma. . ^Ilmtcea. 6401 Hatchery (JOMPLiTE SET OF’ BUNOEHtAND i‘d“ % CA^ CONSOLE PIANO. FRUIT- lUDSON SPINET, FRUITWOOD, Lew Betterly Music Co. A Savings at Wiegand’! - ORGAN BARAOIN8 — CONN Caprice in Welnut ^ Like ........... I7I 50G0 Top Value stamps will be give with .....- .....^ ” WIKGAND MUSIC 408 Elleabelh Lake Road FT. 2-4924 OPEN 'TIL 0 P.M. EVERY NIOHT Real Bargains in Pianos and Organs UMd^^aldwIn SplnU piano, Uke new, Mahogany Lester console piano. 3968 . now 3089, 10 year guarantee. Used mahogany spinet piano . 1480 guarantee. Ueed organ ....... ....... 1380 Gallagher Music Co. Antiques r ANTIQ^yES- OPKN_ ) APPLIANCE USED TV'S $18 SWEETS RADIO Al 422 W. HURON _________co, DRYBR,“'VE8’riNaHOUeE Metric, 330. FE 4-6001, el®ITric LidHFFlffiWk downa, ballanns, starlights, 'Irreg-lerrUlc values. Michigan ............ Orchard Lake— "FIRST TlidE IN MICHIOAN" WHOLESALE MEATS AND OROCERIE8 -FREE HOME DELIVERY-AU nationally advertised “-bramls. Savings up to 40 per cent. Soap, sugar, coffee, flour, butter, cake mix, cereal, soup, vogetablea. ---- ---- Kleenex, Pet milk. ba'iy food ............. cents^ cuj^up ■ '* C'|n's mallon slniwlng how you cun buy at these prioee. 047-lll77, 9 to 8. I.E. WASHEli. WHIRt,PO(iii IQlC- very .^***®' OENBRAL ELBC'rRiC BUILT-IN AP ullaniyes. Oveni, cook-tope, hoods. New diepity lamnlee. priced, below dealer coats. Hawthorne Elec-Irjcal (kg, Blriqlngham. MI 4-2200. Il-Fl, TV & Radlot :1 electric cord^ for dll eell complete set 3130. L 3 montlie. FE 8-2B30. B, EXCELLENT CONDI- Sal* Miicellan**u* l-A ALUMINUM 8IDINO WlfH INSULATION - INSTALL NOW AT LOW WINTER PRICES AND save on heating. Storm windows, awnings. InetaUed dr materials only. No money down — FHA. JOB VAELELY CO. OL 1-8023 FE 9-984.1 52 YlAlIoN WES’flNaHOUBE'ELFrc -$.10, 083-1420,____^___ ANCHOR FEXCHS NO MONEY DOWN 'FE 5-7471 AU'TOMAtlC WASHERS, DRYERS. .______lion Zlg Zag- B lor $3.10 per monlh-, FE 6-9407, Capllol BATHROOM FlXT0iTE8,''oiL' AND gas furnacss. Hot water and steam holler. Automatic water heater. Hardware, elect, euppltes. crook and pipe and flttlnge. Lowe Brothers Palm, Super Kemtone and BU01^U^ 8UPP1V 2098 Lapeer Rd^___________FR 4-9431 BEEF and" PORK - "A'-F ANtr quarters. Opdyke Mkt. Ti n t'a I N'lTjlOT R if O •ka'les', “/‘'"pair lad'les loe skates, -siincruft Quari.s Health lamp, iiiou-lon full leiiglh grey coat, Waite lena"’ b'' e iiyloii laoO dreee. else 10 , 339-2565;__________■ (,’^PEl I-X^^IecTric _ sfov® Formica Hcadquarter.s New Location 917 ORCHARD LAKE RD Cabinets, Tops, Sinks. Hoods Special Mica 3Bc PONTIAC KITCHEN SPECIALTIES ____ _ ^ 4-0:i29__ 1 POifMK’A.' PMJMBINO. OUlfiK. .Ii»rdw«re, Wlrlnff. Closiid _’r_hurs, - ^Opeui . Monlct 112. Montcalm Supply. I ______FLOqRS W..V ____ Hardener Simple Inexpensive Apollcaiion Bolce Builder gupply F'E O-ofOO FURNACES AND DUCT WORK Reasoneble prices. No down pay- meiit.,.FE 2-433;i._________ _ _ (fAS FURNACE, USED LIKE NEW, YORK CORNET. UK® NEW. *78. .. Tkw Betterlys The; sweetest'.'■ iotmd:; yxtu'y*- «,vei;„ heard! Oulbraneon all traii-slslur organ with bullt-ln Leslie speaker. New. from 0995. Also, the fabuloui Oulbrknson Rlverla eelf contained Theater organ. Come end hear It. IT'.S iri’.RR 'I hc New ’63 Conn -SERF.NADK Come and hear the new 1963 (!onn Serenade organ with built-in Leslie speaker. "The Organ that sounds Uke an organ." ORGAK UAI^IAINS HiTOtflond Spinet. Percussion. 0099, Estey Electronic. 2 manuale, 18 pedals. $699, You'll Do Belli at Betterly’,s | ■w Betterly Music Co, ^ MI 6-8002^ ^ rhoater "^open Friday l?venlngs 110 ASC-PiiFUL APPROVED III '-y warrxiU^ $*""" HE CAMB TRAILER*. 6 e. tssB UP. Cimi»r’| INira- BROwSlNO OUN«, ALSO USED guns. B'Ulman Hardware. FE 3-4771. open • ■ * ...... HAND OUN8. BHSTOUNS. RIFLES. Buy, sell, .irade. Burr-auell, 378 S Telegraph FB 2-4700. ____ Saiid-Grav*i“Dtrt 76 l-A BEACH SAND, LEVELED ON Ice. PlBstlo installed. Bill Male. EM 3-0173.________________________ A-1 TOP BOIL, ORUSllEO STONE, eand.^gravel^^and fill. ',yle Conk- 8AND, ORAVBL, FILL. CEMENT, trucking. Pontlao IM. Bldre. Sup-■ -088 Highland Rd. ORJ-3886. Highland__ W*^C«aRoi(*-Fu*l "T7 SLAB. ALL KINDS OF WOOD, fireplace, kindling and as --- also tree removal Al s Landscap-ln| FE 4.4220 or UR 3-0108. fTREPLACE WOObr WHOLMsaL'e to all. $7 a oord. You pick Will deliver. OR 4-1701. IT’S-SO KASY to Place a PONTIAC PRF.SS CLASSIFtKD AD I Just DiaFKE 2-8181 A few Out UIW'““ Kd?or''‘ttx,‘’ ajoTrhk(,ru'’%w. I 34x1 at only 03.908. Also many used at bargain prices. Bob Hutchinson Mobile Homes Sales. Inc. KlghWty OR 1-1201 Drayton Piain$ v Open 9 to 0 Dally -- Bundayo 12 to 5 Parkburst Trailer .Sales _ _ »ome type ------- 10 PER CENT DOWN. Cars wired and ijltches lnsjajte|L^ complete ’•*"*0?43”*'^*" 3?7il'V^uron- • IN ANb sr“ Pets-I 1 FEMALE Cheap, NA r-xear, ,i"liioiiiS“‘pboDi,EH liiitMi). ------ NA 7-8031. 79 MONKEY. : BRITTANY PUPS. REASONA- ,______ PARAXBETi GUARANTEED talk, M.66. We raise them. We er’i Bird House. 30* First I Rooheiter, OL 1-0372. POODLi PUPPfBS, TOY, AkC weeks, 6»2-O30X lyuppiEB,^ ciANARiiai. all pEt POODLE PUPPIES No Money Down 01.28 a Week All other breed of dog available. Travel Trailers AVALAIR NEW r.IOHTWBIOHT FULLY SELF-CONTAINED ......-ALBO".. FLEETVVING PIONEER TRUCK CAMPERS Ellsworth AUTO SALES 6877 Dixie Hwy .... —to7 008. OR 3-$702. BtAMiME klT’TEINBi' V/tLiNTINE’B i^mal. with pedigree, phone 0$0- wfiimftXNlR" Aifc' “iiJALi:' - --------- R*nt Trall*r ipac* MODERN _ AND^_^pmyAT|g^ I 'piirir,''220 ~e! 'Watton. A^on Sal*i tlr*i-AutO“Trvck „ . B AUCTION BALES EVERY FRIDAY 7:30 P.M. EVERY SATURDAY 7:30 P.M. EVERY SUNDAY 2:00 P.M. Biiortlng Oooda — All Types Door Prleea Every Auoilon , We buy—eell—trade, retail 7 days Consignments weloome 8039 Dixie Hwy OB 8-2717 (iOMPLETB OUiPEIUIAL BALE BAT- 4 West Hamlin R pontes and equipment, houiehoTd Roods, antiques, hay and "— etc. Mrs. Louise Harris. .......... Istratrix, terms cash, auctioneer Col. Wendell Buehrer. ncer. JACK W. HALL. All nmenls are now accept) ,LL'S AUCTION. MY 3-18 r .10141 . TRIO B M H D B N BRBllbBR geese. Arabian gelding welsh gelding both reg. cheap. NA 7-2931. CHESTNUT OELDINO. RIDES ENO-llsh and Western, drlvet. Has Jumped some, lead pony prospeot. Reas, to good home. Call OL EVEkiNO AND SUNDAY RIDING LESSONS ALL APPAL008A HORBEB Children, Adults HORBEB BOARDED GOLDEN H. CORRAL 1000 Hiller Rd., Pontiac ■ EM 3-0011 Hay-’-Grain—F**ii WILD BIRD PEED AND DOO F(X1D. many kinds, pet supplies. Straw, :edaii beding. salt, paokagt coal. Open 0 to V,'*Sunday* 10 lo 3 Birb«7‘’*-'-L4M*n Mld -pw-*ui»ply- :;T ..19 CllntonvIIIe Rd. 073-9331 8068 Highland Rd. (M99) 673 9102 Farm Produc* FOR BALl^ F] liilb ELBE SELLS YOU JUBT what .you want? 10 lb. best I: ' roast and rib steaks lor $39.90. Ih. sirloin round and riimn c 334.80 . 00 lb. T-bone, llrloln, pori... house outs for 039.80. Bide of Black Aiigiii choice or prime low as 39 cents lb. 78 lb. half hogs 022.90. so lb. side veal 024.50. 28 lb. half lamb 012.28. 28 lb. lean pork ohous nr smoked hams, center cuts In all Trv and beat that lio days will I as some ns cash. N» money dow Richmond Meat Packers, Inc,. B tail slore 4978 M-59. ’i mile ea of Pontiac Airport. Phone: 0 El^bi^h l\t r|’;nt a piano At Onllnghcr's — With option lo purchase. Your choice of .1 woods. AU money paid In will be applied on price of piano tiallaglier Music Go. I E Huron Piatio.s by Wurlitzer E»tabllshi:d in ^100.1^ 'to (U^y^Ihc organs *fo-yesr ex^uslve **wnrrttiity Including the finish. \Vi(.’.j,!;aijd Mu.sic FF". 2-4924 Ellaabelh Lake Rd. v/iN AMERICAN CORONE'l ___ _eondlllon._030. UL 2-1377. _ STERbo and MONbftAL LATES'I records 3 lor 14. Downtown Orln WANTED: small PIANO IN GOOD oondltlon, reasonable, OR 3-0780. Ofilc* Eqi^pm*nt 72 LAltOE EXECUTIV® WALNUT desk and two chairs. FE 2-3009 or FE 4-7708..... Sfora Equipment 73 II sleee. itldc •election. Factory Farm Equipment McCUlJ.OCH CHAIN -SAW.S PRICED AS I.OW AS • $149,95 CREDIT TERMS -- WE ..... TRADES. USED CHAIN SAWS PRICED AT 379. KING BKO.S, FE 4-0734 FB 4-1 PONTIAC ROAD AT OPPVKB FARMALL CUBS WITH SNOW BLADES KING RRIXS, PONTIAC RD. AT OPDYKE 8®E~*OfJR EiME of MANiyn .spreaders und Homcllte Chain saa Duvis Mach. Go., Ortonville, ■ 8 V 'i202 Your John.Deere. New Ide Och and Mayrath dealer. traveT Trailer* ( AIR8TREAM LIOHTWEfOHT TRAVEL TRAILERS HInoc 1932. Oimralileed for Ills. Bee them and act a demonstration at Warner ’frailer Bales. 3090 W. Hut’on (plan to Join one of Wally Byam’s cxelting caravans) APACHE CAMP TRAILERS A few new 1M2 mod«ls^^|t at big r'sl2p''SrKr In- Ai)Aoft« CftmDliiR ptMitcr. 1 mtltt (Miftt of LfHpetrr on M*'.U. —Oi^ 7 days a week- , Holly Travel Coach, Inc, r Rd., Holly “ ~ME 4 Campers and Trailers Bales and rentals. F E. HOWLAND !4.1 Dixie HWy._________.OR 3-14.10 XPERT MohlLB h6mE RIPaTr service, free estimates. Also 4301 Dixie Hwy„ Drayton Plaint, FORD TRAlLES..“^ .SALES . ________ Jhamplon's, illow fltona’t and oem ■. 1, and prlloed to your .... 60 Units on Display la of good ustd unIM. all aisoa. lannsr’x to 90 wida. ^ !lSJ 0 Money Down, 6 mo. to pay. Pickup Truck Tires '0-10, 6 my. Traotton tubaleti Blemlahei W.OO. axoh. RBCA:roiNa 4E DAY SERVICE on Rsquest 8W20/000-2Q/10.00-20 call PB 2-0351 ask for Dick Curran _ FI restone Store West Huron USED auto AlfD TliuCK TIRES, all elxee. Auto. Disc. FE 4-0975. Auta Service 93 SHAFT fyllhdei. ..._________—- Shop, 33 Hood, Phone FE CRANKSHAFT OBINDINO II. ---------- ■" (llhderi rebored. Zuck Me- ....... Shop, 23 Hoo ’ ----- 2-2883. Blc]^*^ ^ ____96 34 YEAR* EXPERIENCE IN BELL-Ing quality new and used bjkes. Scarlett's Bloyolo b Hobby Shop *1 E. Lawrenee 8‘ ”” Bantt«-Acceimle» ^ 97 2« FOOT CHRIS CRAFT CABIN Cruiser. Twin Motors. 9006 Dixie Hwy., Waterford. BOAT SHOW 23 boats on dlspli^ Inside Owent Cruiser 24-30 ft. Century Jet b Lapslreke Reven Chrlt-Cfraft Thompeon, 3 modele Owens FIberglas, 6 modele Skee-Craft. 3 modele I Broe, FeatIgo, 4 modele Outboard-Volvo Ouldrivei Many used rigs and motora WALT MAZUREK’S .AKK (Sc SEA MARINA Bouth Blvd. at Baginaw Ing hunting goods, i —rlex and noyoltlee. BOATB-MOTORB-’..... CRUISE-OUT BOAT S FB M402 Clotad Sunday ----- 0 ■ FOOT LAPBTHAki DUNPHY ~lg and laei, luu laartng, maBjr es ehnson elcoirfo, ra ^ete outfit. IBUDB MOfOR p'fXrglas "iiAKU lu FIND” ”^A8Y TO DttAL WITH” icb 'Lafco;..7'' ■ ' rONY’B MARINE? BV IN RUDE ■ and supplies. 27 ’ expei’lenoi. 2098 or-Rd.. Keego. JOhINSON MOTORS Blar Craft boats and Oalor trailers — Everything for the boat. OWEN'S MARINE SOPIPyBa^ Orchard Laka Avt, FB 2-0020 ....... Ray 1-0) Chris Craft 8 Skiffs; Aero Ctaft Runabouts 8 Nymph Fishing Boats Little Du and Hull-Oard Trailers. PINTERS MARINI 1370 N (ipdyke (M24) Wanted Con—Truck* 101 .$$ tOF DOLLAR $$ FOB Clean U-sed Cars JEROME "Bright Spot" BONANZA! More “nuggets’’ bv buyer western niarket. 1*111 puroli "sharp oars," any make, 1 through 02. Aek for "Bernla" i BIRMINGHAM Woodward OUT-STATE markets F'xtra Ton Dollar FOR LATE MODELS M & M MOTOR SALES' Maryin'McAimally, pwn(ir Uale MoAnnally JUBT N.^OP PONTlAi^bBlVE IN MORE For that high grade ueed ea IIS, before you sell. H. J, Welt. 4540 nixie Highway. 3.^ V TWEXTV-yWQ WwrtWl Cwt-Tnwti 101 IT’S SO KASY to Place a PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD ! Tust Dial FE 2-8181 *y—j'”***’ tftgAmr umm* vn«w Averill's , Ellsworth •'TOP D01.LAR 1 AID” FOB "CLBAN" USKD CARS Out State Market.Fof 'S9^’60-'61-’62 MODEl.S 'S Nwr cnO UM^Can ICK CENTORI vei7 clem, i l »-^7 after 6 p.i lOOfNaw and Utad Cart 106 iw^OICK CENTORT. 4-DOOR ■^^vety. Clean,, t eener. ■ pip- 1S5S BUICK HARDTOP.; SPECIAL, pd^ iteering. power brakes. A Blrmlnitham one owner. «ke nep-Pull prloe^JS doijn. 1750 to finance I3B.S0 per rno. ,on fh# balance. Yog can’t a«6rd-to%s^.^r---— Birmingham Just Ifte^nrw^ VaiTM^^^tSs^ SUBURBAN OLDS BIRMINOHAM , ___ ■ Ssglna BUIck 1%1 ” III power. FE H-4071 2-DOOR HARDTOP Pull price $1795, Bad r. whitewalls. Only $79Si Easy terms, PATTERSON CHEVROLET .................... “■ ^T**"o’., iiioo js.'woodward AVJiJ.. BIRMINGHAM, MI 4.2735. copper finish with beige top, am whlt4w-" - * *--— IsSo and 1R17 Cadillacs A-1 7 Chevy's 1954 Ui 19S1 ■M Ford wagon and delivery 100 others ... $35 up Economy Discount 23.15 Dixie Hwy. Credit no problem! Universal Auto !. Saginaw. ”” 3 CHEVROLET 3<DOpR $79 956 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR SEDAN. 6 cylinder, powergllde. blue and white finish. Sharp. $495. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. -lOOO S. WOODWARD AVE BIRMINGHAM I Iliad Tnicki 103 | Better l.’sed Trucks CMC r. WILl,MMS_MOTOH 8ALE.9 lU KDi''. MOTOR .S.M.k'.S, INC. vllnder.. slick, excellent lim. MA 9-6410. ________ 9 CORVAIR 2-ili6oR WITH TIIK nONTlAC PRESS. TUESDAY, FKBKUAIIV 12. im>.l New and Iliad Can SIARMAliURE By Anderson & Leeniingr New and Iliad Cnri 106 tsSO PLYMOUTH FURY Sport Coup# Hardtop, iiiii power, and new white rubber, special Scotch plaid upholsterti\g. Was' built originally for factory offtfctalr tnadetf with" power. -SPECIAll THIS WEEK $945 106 „„„ __________ __.4Z, MODEL 219, black, 1-owiicr, $1,675. 427-73f BUY YOUR NEW RAMBIT.R nOLGHTEN tSf SON 0 N. Male and Rochester OL 1-9761 NO MONEY DOWN SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENTS Two-Year Warranty (OW) SPARTAN DODCIi-: .he House Service Is Building' 211 S. Saginaw__________FE 0-4541 GadilldGS I thought if you baby-that wif me, I wouldn’t hav t’ go t’ bed tiio early! sold by us. Avsllable In model, all the equipment, with air conditioning. selection of fine 1950 ------- .... , . PLYMOUTH VALIANT DEALEI LLOYD'S New and Iliad Cars 106 | New and Iliad Can Factory Branch OAKLAt^D A FE 5-9485 over SJOO. EM_J__ _______ 1956 'CADILLAC' COUPE DeVlLLE I beautiful yellow and white finisli'f' • Huns -STrer looks ‘ ' tires. $1,095. PATTERSON CHEV-ROI.El CO. 1000 S, WOODWARD AVE BIRMINGHAM. MI 4-27:r 1962 ' CORVAIR MONZA. DOOR. POW 1 1959 FORD RANCH WAGON FORD-ter. whllewall I iimstic eleaii. $79.1 6.93-6137 1957 T HIRD. Slick'Fl^OR SHlW^ ,.i>f month! MARVEL MOTORS f CHEVY'"BEL AIR 8, 4-pOOR. 17 OMC PANEL 1 TON, 4 SPEED tranomisslon. runs good, $400. Call after 5. FE 5-4510. __________ 1954 FORD DELIVERY TRUCK 8E-dan $73 or trade for another car. good shape. 5948 Norlhbsy off of Foster I ., Clarkslon. F_E_ 8 -X Motors . llkO n 1957 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILI.E. all power, real beauty, low mileage. $l,«^OR 3;S284. B>56.(;ADILI.AC. Sedan Devllle, full power Sharp! WCXlbwARD AVE nmMiNOHAM h9|7^ CHKV^^ MI4T735, __ __ ___ I E«''”"’'-o wi 1961 ■ CHEVROLET BROOKWOODI !{ 24..1102, $1.37 r $695. ‘woodward AVE . BIRMINGHAM I ........ . E R I A L, WITH POWER RA-IJIO, n ». A T E R. WHITEWALL 1IUE-S ABKOurrEi.Y NO money DOWN WITH payments OF $12 16 PER MO Call Credit Met. Mr Parks at MI 4- . Harold ...JEEP. '^'Itour Authorised Dealer" OLl\ I'-R BUICK and jI''.ER 210 Orchard Lal^s . FE 2-9191_______ chevroleu^ 1962 and 1963 : Demo Turnover! SALE ' 1962 CHRYsLeR station WAaON, et^condlllon^ 3.14-5404. __ 1955 CHRYSLER. PRIVATE, $225. ........ .1,395. Easy PATTERSON CHEVROLET i 1000 S woodward AVE . I MtNOHAM. MI 4-2735. _ 960' CHEVROLET BISCAYNE door with radio, healer. Pot glWe............ finish !4 Months (OWI onm'gniefli wsmiiTy $175 d LLOYD'S 4 Month.% (OW) It h^i^x^e' Pure SUtlon. 7.56 All Priced to .Save You Money LLOYDS I rfattif Lmcoln-Mercury-Comel : ijILjri i i ii_l leleor—English Ford 232 S. Saginaw FI': 2-9131 ■—Engil-sh Ford iT*2-9i"31 PICKUPS 4 DR . I A«to, Iniurnnce AE'rXA.CASUALTV $35,000 liability. $1,250 medics $1,000 death benefit, $30,000 ui BRUMMKTT AGEN’CV 210 S. Telegraph EE 4^0589 CANCELED? REFUSED? YOUNG DRIVER Over lu yrs. ekjpcrience Insurln Canceled and Refused Aulo 1961 CHEVROLET BE sedan. V-8 engine, mowcikuuc. .»■ din heater, whitewalls. Light blue finish. $1,595. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO - 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE BIBMtNoHAM^JilI 4-2735-. , ' H E V R O i7e T. AUl o'MtlBlilE 1.0ANS for Ttew. used cars. Low ' bank rktes- Pontiac Slate Bank, t Oct Our Deal ON THE CAR OF THE YEA s\cw *6.^ Rsanihler SHELTON'S 1:M OUT! . Must predate. .See Mr.-- llAROLD lURXER,. FORD 464 8 WOODWARD AVE M blocks south of IS Mlle Rd.) ‘ ‘ , MI 4..7500 1963 Cadillacs today WILSON UT)Nd’fAe-GADIf,LAe- 1350 N. Woodward Hirininghani M14-PJ30 THREE 1957 FORDS. VO ENOItW a 6 cylinder. , . LUCKY AUTO SALES. “Pontiac's Discount Lot," __193 8. Saginaw. FE 4.3214, I doBr. HASKINS - COMPACT-■■ SALE I960 FALCON Deluxe, 2-door with automatic transmission, radio, and Is above average condition saddle 1958 FORD 4-DOOR SEDAN. V-8 engine, automatic, radio, heater." whitewalls. Only $493. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml black finish! 1962 CORVAIR 1 -'rgllde. rad throughout Dynamic 08 “ Vdoor Low mileage «2of SUBURBAN OLDS BIRMINGHAM 901 OLDS F-85 WAGON, V-8 EN-glne. automatic transmission, power steering. ..whltetvall tires Power brakes BIRMINGHAM " 1963 PLYMOUTH 4-DOOR ^$69 10 Mt^Clemer FE i-lH 24 HOUR Special New and- Died Core ^ 106 ■transportation tr Mr.. <J KlNG.AliTO SALES - . FE 8-4088 ______ 1 P O R 1 to. transmission, extra ac-good condition. Cull aitet ...Fk ..... . 1962 f6'R0”0ALAXIE top, with — tran.smlsslon, bOKutlfu Ish, $200 dr.........— per month I 1,’ paymcius ol $! 24 Months <OW) Ouaianteed Warranty LLOYD'S Llncoln—Mercory- Comet MelBor-Eiigllsh Ford 232 S. .Sagtnaw I’l'] 2-0131 1962 Chevrolet Convertible, fully equipped. Two to choose Ire *N(') moni:y’45own with Established Credit 1962 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-DOOR, steering and brakes, decor. $2,300. 1959 RAMBLER '>b00R STA'HON w^on, hester, 16k. No ). $491 fii Birmingham Rambler 666 S woodward ChevyLl 2-door sedan,, 4..cyI.|>»«>„‘PoST,AC"B^^^^^^^^ I economy booster iiu\A u umnnwAnn ave.. $1588 Alatflicvvs-l liirgrcavi 631 Oakland l■•|■ 4-4547 ........... WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINOHAM, MI_4-2735^^_______ “e 4-DOOR "BONNEVILLE, HARD-1-owner. power steering and radio, healer and seutt .... exoellenl condition. $1650. FE 5-6768. rake-I; 1959 PLYMOUTH SAVOY. .iTAND-■ transmission, 6-cyllnder, radio heater. Excellent conditlo-4-7383._________________________ .... 'PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 4-door hardtop, with full pov very low mileage I There Is —• if any kind I exterior, will Interior, you will A-1 Birmingham Rambler 1961 FORD FAIRLANE 4 DOOR .with V8 engine, automatic trana-mission, whitewalls, radio, and the tires are like new all around! $121)5. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD HASKINS, Chevrolet-Olds S CHEVROLET Radio. Heater • price $19 Pay Here KOU.IXG 1959 Bonneville Hardtop 19.18 Bonneville convenlble 1959 Ford sedan 1960 Chevy Nomad Wagon 1961 Ford Oalaxle hardtop l*a BiilcY|.Sj«'cl»l ^Wagon hone 6h2 Cutalln^-Spy . coujje 1959 Rambler Super 4-dooi FE 8-WI 1959 Pontiac 4-door 1953 iPON- i 19i/ Pontiac Hardtop allon, 756 I i960 Slarchlef Hardtop 1961 Pontiac Sedan — ■■ thief Hardtop . Superior Rambler ] ___FE 5-4101_____ ^ *1961 “faLCONT 2-DOOR. DELUXE f i nmiier.'^ 6812751 ‘ I 19,19 FORD V8 FORDAM'aTIC, $725. f weekly payments 6. '498 Cameron, ii ,S.:0 Oakland i , I 1939''PbRD'lw6RT''RADib7 I , , ..... ...... transmission, $1395 ! WHITEWALL TIRES ABSOLUTE- M-Wj LY no money down WITH $179!S I PAYMENTS ----- ------- 7 F()RD V8, SHARP, 3445. hUPE- lor Rambler. 8^ Oakland._ j()638'THRU'’lOMs $5 Per Credit No Prob Uolversal AiA Saginaw__________ V Iinpala 4-door $2195 1 _ . $1395 I $2495 I I Crea* Mgr,. Mr. FOR INFORMATION CALL l'’E 4-3.S3.S FRANK A ANDERSON .AGENCY 1044 Josly___________FE 4 353! 18 BUICK SUPER SHELTON Birmingham Rambler Kixe AU'I'O .SAI I'-.-S 327.S W. Huron .St. 1 FALCON 2-DOOR SEDAN. DK- ismisslon, low mileage. Only $1. - JEROsME FEHOUSON, Koch-ir Ford Dealer. OL 1-9711. KAci:’.s u.sj:r) c abs 2546 Dixie Hwy,, ' -booR 1960 RAMBLER CUSTOM < _ station wagon, radio, healer, a malic Iransmlsalon. whllewall tl . Fortign Can 7 MO. 4-SPEED TRANSMISSION, adlo. beater, whitewall tires, new-r overhauled engine, no rust. Has new (eDders. silver metsllto grey 9 color with green Interior. Just $845 lO MONEY DOW^ MONTHLY PAYR Year Warranty <C SPARTAN R & R Motors Just Received FORn !■ ACTORY OFI'lUl.M, CARS OLDEST CHRYSLER DEALER IN THE AREA 774 OAKLAND AVE.______FE 4-.1526 'nAsrLFciRi) Stallon wsgon, slick V8, 9-psssen- 1.19 FORD (lAl.A.XIF. • UMI' 2 1)00 haidlop, radio, healer, VII enxln aulomallc with only $17,1 down, pn: menIB of $52,39 jrer monlh! LLOYD'S Birmingham Rambler tn-lo-earth pricet months to pay. Call J Uniter g-6010 STARK HICKEY, FORD Clawson On 14.Mlle Road east of Crooks Across from the Clawson Shopphtg 985 PON'TIAC STA'TION WAGON $2195 VERY SMALL DOWN PAYMENTS SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENTS Two-Year Warranty (OW) SPARTAN DODGi: "The House Service Is B I 8. Saginaw I960 PONTIAC 2-DOQR, FULl ^r, sharp._MY 2-3182._ R.YMHIT'.R "''‘‘r()Sf; ramhuer SUPER MARKET New and U>gd Can , 106 j()58 PONT wagon, new FE_ 4-8677^ r body, I30o. nifj”’Jol'in’s Used Cars 02 Oakland Ave. ICT 8-7001 'bee the ■'DEPENDABLBS''^ KESSLER'S DODGE ”'"'NexUto“wo'rid's iYrgeal srSlf*? P«* ** OA 8-1400 Of OA a-1882 IMO'nsTMBLER. WAOON, SHSlip. $995'. Superior Rambler, 006 Oak- ■ 160 R A M B L E R. * PASBBNOER wagon, automatic tranemlaalon. power .Bteerlng, radio, heater. New grltO^rnor^olKTeSllM ■ value. $39 33 per Birmingham Rambler 608 PONTIAC: “Sa'VB" MONEY WITH ____ loan when used oar. Call , FE 4-3001. '■"■“'"py FISCHER BUICK USED CARS 515 8. Woodward Blrmlng 1082 FONTfAC CATALINA 4-DOOR, ' nower steering and brakes, easy- , eve'glass, low ntlleage. Mans- * field Auto Sales. 1076 Baldwin. iSiimPONTiAC STARCHIEF, ____..n,, nrAli ilMS tlramaUc: well equipped. $1995. Ml RAMBLER AMERICAN DE-- ■ 6-cyllnder en- ansmlsslon, ra-illeage. like new. ,"'sparkling whitewalls,' and „„,.d black finish I $" John McAULIFFE P ""9 Oakland A’" 4.2214_^ _____ LUCKY ■'Pontiac's Dls-S. Saginaw. FE IMca and heater aiid reasonable $697 ^0 money di „ Mr. While at KING auto SALES, 115 8. Saginaw, FE 8-0402. 1962 and 1963 , Demo Turnover SALE ■ Manj'^ models and ,0 choose ft All Priced to PATTERSON CHEVROLET 11106 8. WOODWARD AVE,. 1 MINOHAM Ml 4 2735 CREAM PUFF '1961 CHEVROLET 4-POOR STATION ' wagon, has radio, healer, automa(- ■ ‘----' isloii. a - real- sharpeaL own, payments of $06.46 I of sparkling wbltewii LLOYD'S Lincoln — Mercury - Comet (laikstoi >f U.S, 1 1939 PonUpc 2 dr., hydra., power rni^ARY SPKOAl.S FOlli) "FArilLANK, ‘ )Od coiUntioii^OR 3-1875^_ MElicu'RY 'J-DOOR UNIVERSAL AUTO 4 Months (OW) Birmingham DODGi: : "The Home Service 1« Building" i 211 S. Saginaw , FE 8-4.141 Many to choose from. Galaxies. 500's. FalrlancB. 2-doora and 4-All have ^ low mileage and priced | 171 8, Saginaw FE 9-40.16 1958 Cllb'.VROLl'rr 6 pass(!nger wagon In beaullful 1956 FORD VICTORIA Liquidation Price $297 ^No^^Money^Down^^^ uuaraiueca warranty LLOYD'S 1960 PONTIAC VENTURA 4-DOOR. full power: Alxo 1938 Edsel V8. 4-door.^ Both very g«M>d condition. FE Rambler 666 S. Woodward MI 6-3900 1962 CORVAIR MONZA 2-DOOR | "r**’whirewalil* biurTr"m°"'i«i(r' 1 uparkllng while finish, $1 895 PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., IIKXI K WOODWARD AVE . BIRMINGHAM ji'.RoMi: i-'i':R(irsf)\ i Rorhesler Ford Dealer • ^B^on'"n\ ',1®*" healer “ (tTl A C 1 'any'NEw'”bli"JsED ^ car imtll you get our rteall Com 1 jilelely reeondllloneil used cars al 1 Lincoln -Mercury-Comet i Mcleor -Engllsh Ford •232 a, Snghmw I' l: 2-9131 TRANSPORTATION 1 SPECIAL 19.16 Riiick 2-door hardtop. Here Is^ 1959 KARMANN OHIA CONVERT blc. one 1030 VW. $300, one I960 Vw $1130 Mr4-2735._ ; 1960 "ford orpASSENOER " COHN 1955 CHfi:VROI.I*jT .lDOOR, * HKL Air. $1.50 FE 5-(>a96 or 1261 Stanley. . $945 l■■.S()Cll':l: csi'',i) cars “LTomf.r HKiirr ■ MOTORB, INC. 1956 METRO HARDTOP GOOD roiumion. $450. OR .1-2043 after with the lixlra low weekly pay-menta onlv $1 10 See credit mnn- Pontiac Sports Car, Inc. healer. V8. - power steering am! j brakes Light blue llnlsh! $173 dn.. | 195*5 CHEVItOLFf 2-DOOR' ' ' $167 2182 s, 'i I':li:ck,\I’1i OXFORD OA 8-252B FORD, LOW ■ COST BANK LOAN I960 OLDS Dynamic 88 KL’S’G /\Tff() SALi:S iNi iNOUBH f^dI'TTo'o'd ahape. FE 2-8400. 24 Months (OW) Guaranteed Warranty 112 w sroo IlUifl IMRAI$A SPORTS “ COUPE^ 332-4623 "ACROBS FROM M1RACT,F. MILE" Piml(ac“'^8lB*e*Bank.“FB Power Steering MOM :9« TEMPEST WAOON, 4-d66B. 4- 1961 RENAULT DAUPHINE, RADIO, heater, low mileage Original throughout. $195 down. $38.50 per LLOYD'S j LlhCbln—M^rcury-^oTTifi ' excellent condition. 332-2000, lOrirCHK'VROLET. IMPALA. CON-vertlble, power ateerlng. power brakea. rgdio. heater, whitewall 1959 F'.nglisli T'onl Anglia, beautiful black flnlaJh.U0oka ~ 1957 FORD. REASONABLE. FE 2-0047 o'eTIT'no" COMPAN^ CAR. MUST $1,695 *" I year warranty call MI 4-4485 *'BmM?NaHA'iif* cylinder, automatic transmls)lon,' radio, heater. Tlharp throughout. $1,695. Easy terms. JEROME-FER-I OUBON. Rochester Ford Dealer Birmingham Rambler Meleor-EngllRh Ford 1 2.12 8 Saginaw i';i: 2-9131 f962 CHEVROLET IMPAI.A 4 D()on THORIZRI) I joUIDATlON ' RALE, irnvmetiU ^^'** ■*^ H)M CU'EVPOLEr with V8 EN Bill Spence 19,18 EDHEI, '2-1)01)11 ' HARDTOP Here Is a big ciii whh all Ihc ox 1656 OLDB 2-DOOR BEDAN. GOOD tratiajmrtatlon. OR 3-.1489. 1961 6LD'8M6BiLE''Fl5 Fbooil' SE-(Ian. aulninallc. radio, healer, while 1961 PONTIAC VENTURA 4-DOOR hlg'*and brakes. Vinyl trim, sea-' HA 1 Verson (-HEVROLEr IIWII H WOODWARD AVE. HUM ■ V lemfOotrward Ml 6-3900 lerlor' 92 295 PA'l'TERSON CHEV h r--vL -«wnlrr R:imbl<.V4(''^T; mwi'nl'' "*Bi'e *onlV 21^*‘.Se(- • Easy' larnrs. PATTERSON CHE'j-IIOI.ET CO.. 1009 8, WOODWARD MINOHAM. MI 4-8735 - -e-1961 PONTIAC AND 195!) OLDS $1498: 1957 JAGUAR ROADSTER. SOLID rmM finiwh. wlr» wHafIk Onlv $99$. ROLET.CO., 1060 8, WOODWARD AVE . BIRMINOWAM, MI 4-2735 Clarkslon ''' ““'''D'* , KiT'(r''\T’'rt)\sAr,i:.s AVE,. BIRMINGHAM. MI 4-2735, Econom.v Discount 2331 Dixie Hwy | PATTERSON CHEVROLE 1 RENAULT. 4CV, $395, I “ VOLKSWAGENS VW station V >r month. WARD-McELROY, Inc. 1963 FIAT AND 1063 RAMBLER Ic^nom;( Discount 2386 Dixie Hwy. a'"" CHOICiT’'bF~ 35 tMPOlfs Authorised Dealer For: Jaguar. Triumph". MG A Healy, sunbeam. Flat, Hill . Morgan. Complete line of part *ESpert Service on ALL Superior Rambler 1962 VOLKSWAOEN. 335-l9$3. 161 'Birmingham Rambler 066 8 Woodward ______Ml 0m N«w and UtidXan 106 195$ hwck; Ml VUM. BOilD 2-bOOR. $195 i! " A tr WAitaniy MI 4-4W bbanWd* ; BONNEVILLE CON- BLUE AND LIKK NEW CARxS. HMi2 .S-22 Mercury Comet, \m Wlllys RlftlUm w,/iKon. 4 ' IfHil F»ontlH(t Catalina 1959 Buniuwllie nedan. full pow< Keego Pontiac sSulc I' l: 2-')] 31 I960 licnault 4-Door $.S9.S Bill Spencie Ranibler-jeci) • You Money! BEATTIE ON DIXIE HWY. ...............'KHFORD AT THE STOPLIGHT OR 3-1291 1959 BAMBUER wagon y model, 6-cyI^(jn- b"!’ hlcludlng chrome luggage oh roofi Must be seen to m- ‘no Money down • $785 MONTHLY PAY5 SPARTAN SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENTS 211 S. Saginaw 1960 PONTIAC VENTURA 2-boOR 9(10 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE 2 door. 6-cyllnder. powergllde. radio, healer Solid red finish Only $1,295 Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEV ItOLET CO, 1000 S WOODWARU LLOYD'S 24 MonthH (OW) LLOYD'S • 1962 CHEVROLET IMPALA^ SPARTAN SPARTAN I" Doijt.i-: I ■ CORVAIR 'LAKFWOOD ’ PATTERHON CHEVROLf ••The ItouM 1 ^_8i^lnaw__ .58 CHEVROLE! BIRMINOHAM. J WOODWARD AVE. SIM'.CIAI. Vm I»()NTIA(‘ r*EOPLE8 AUTO SALES BILL SPENCE DOLLAR With every demonstration r i 1963 Rambiar or je«). dIPTB FOR Hi LI. .SPRXt I'l R;mil)ler—Jcc|) / S'rON _-l _____MA f58(11 LDS' "OO" CONVEfiTHiLE. brakes, shsrp t...........— , mllys on Ibis beauty I $175 > paynieiit6 of $47.15 -..... 24 MoiitBil (I ,/S LLOYD'S Llneolfi-Mercuryl- Comet Meteor—English Ford 232 8 Saginaw ■ J’jJ,-: 2-9131 ■ l'n\'i'l.\c R1'7I .sroRi: 6,i ,Ml. (■Icincns St. __I' I': 3-?>54 _ i960 COUVATiS 2-boORS $995 SPARTAN DonGi: 1 H HttKlhUW if ■ DeSd'I'b 2- ti::; KlXti AUTO SAM'-S-327.S W. Ilm oii'-.^t. LLOYD'S _____I' l: 2-9131 i?58 2-DOOB jW'TI oTil FORD CONVFRTlBll HEATER. H'l'ICE HH1F6 WAIT. TIRES. GOOD 'll LUTELY NO MONK WITH PAYMENTS OF 1 '(>1) othivr . RADIO. WHIM' P. ^MSO at MI 4.7500, Harold 1’ fliii?"' FORD 2-DOOR UNIVERSAL AU Onklai...... FE-5-41U1.,. f 9(91 "f a L C O N '"2-bGORT R ADTO. IlEA'I’ER, DELUXE TRIM WHITE- nil PAVMENH S WEEK'S SPECIAL $1395 BMALL MONIHLY PAYMENT; Two-Year Warranty (OW) SPARTAN Birmingham Rambler. SPARTAN DODGi: “Thl Home Service la B I Saginaw IP YOU ARE BANKRUPT Need a Car No Cash -Need a Car Credit Problems , i 'FcYHI) 2 DOOil .SEBAN V McAULIFFE TORD 1 9''pA'(isENOER'wAOON, leii er.^ menla**sr*'only $i.lo! He/ credit mnitager Mr Cook at; KING AUTO SAI-FiS 327.S W. Huron Si. | RUSS JOHNSON "SELECT" USED CARS 1962 1962 1962 1962 VH)2 l'i()l 1961 I'k)l 1961 ""tTO) I960 I'W 1959 19.59 1959 . 1959 1957 1957 1957 19S« 1958 1958 1958 F>56 1956 1956 19.55 195$ 1955 1954 HomicvilIc Vista ................ 'I'cmppst Convertible, (new' car) Chevy Uorvair *>00 .............. Kanihler Classic W'a^nin ........ (bevy Iinpala Sjiort Coupe .... I'(ir(l Convertible ............. JCiinbler .Station Wagon ........ Rambler American 2-I)()or .... Raml)ler Custom Sedan ... ,.... F'orcl 9-Fassenger Wagon ...... I’ontiac Starebief .............. I'ord 4-(loor Sedan ............. Raml)Ier Station Wagon .......... Cbcvrolet 2-Door Sedan .......... C'lievy (.lonvertible ...."...... Volkswagen Sedan ................ Clievrol^t 9-Passenger Wagon Pontiac 2-Door Hardtop ...... I’ontiae Hardtop -Sedan ......... Clievrolet 4-I)oor Sedan ........ I•'()rd 2-l,)oor Sedan ....... Pontiac, Starqbicf, Hardtop , e-. Ford 4-<loor .Sedan ............. Catlillac 4-door Sedan........... F'ord Ranch Wagon ............... Lincoln .Sedan ................... Olds .Sedan ..................... Pontiac 4-dopr................... Pontiae 2-door v ................ ( bevy 4door . ............... . ,$2795 . $2,595 . $1895 . .$2595 . . .$2595 . $1795 . $1295 . $1295 . $1495. . $1495 . $1695 . $1295 . $ 695 . $ 795 . $1495 . $ 995 . $ 695' . $ .550 . $,.595 . .$ 695 . $ .395 ..$ 99$ . $ 595 . $1195 . $ 495 . $ 695 . ,$ 395 . $ 295 . $ 195 . $ 145 RUSS lOHNSON PONTIAC-RAMBLER M'24 at the Stoiiliglit NEW 1963 RAMBLERS . $65 DOWN , $59.03 PER MO. Includes: '63 Uicensc, Heater, Turn Signals. Oil F'ilter, Self-Adjusting Brakes, Car Serviced and Delivered AI.SO 4 Ni:W ’62 RAMBLERS AVAILABLE SAVE $1200 ON THESE ONI.Y AT Birmingham Rambler 666 S. W()01)\\'ARD • MI 8-3906 Where Service is KING OLIVER BUICK i 1%2 Jeep UniveLsal, Canv,Ts Top ...... ...,$1695 j 1962 Bniek LeSabre—4-T)oor, Sharp .. ....$2795 1 1%2 Biiick Special—2-Door .....$2195 1 1962 Biiick Special—VVagori ...,.$2,385 B)()2 Bniek Special—Sedan .., .....$2245 1962 Bniek Skylark—1 lardtoii ...,$2595 ! 1962 Bniek Special—4-l)oor ....$2355 ! 1962 ikiick' F'lectra “225” ....$2995 1%2 Renanit .Garfline ....$1295 I%2 Buiefi LeSalire 2-l)oor Hardtop .. ....$2895 1%1 Bniek i:ieetra “225” Hardtop ....$2495 ]961 Bniek Wagon—Speeial ....$1995 1%! Bniek Fdcctrii—4-Door $2285 1961 Renault Daupbinc 4-Door . i ....$995 1961 I’ontiac Catalina Convertible .... ....$2195 I960 Ford Galaxic 2-Door ... .$W)5 B)60 Opel Station Wagon, Stick ;...$ 973 j B>60 Bniek LeSalire—4-Door ......... ....$1775 1 I960 Bniek LeSabre 4-Door Hardtop .. ....$1895 1 1959 Bniek LeSabre—4-Door j 1959 Bniek Electra'—Hardtop ....$1495 ! 1958 Bniek Cefltury 4-Door-Hardtop ... ....$ 645 1 1958 Oldsmobile 4-Door Hardto]) ....$ <W5 1 1958 Chevrolet Wagon ... 1952 Ford F-6*Dnfnp Truck . ..;$ 4>)5 1947 jeep—6-l't. Flow . ...$ 98.5' 19.56 Olds 2-I)oor Ilardtoj), Sharp ... .$ .sy; OLIVER BUICK 210 ORCH.yH) FAKE '' ; ft: 2(9101 ■ / - THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, KEBRUAHY 12. ,TWEN,l»t-Tltli^E>lJ 's Television Programs- are subject to change without notice Frograms (iirnhhed by stations listed In this Chsnnel X-WJBK-gy Chsnnet 4-WWJ-TV TONIdHT 6:00 (2) NtWI (4) M Squad (7) Movie: “Assignment Paris." (In Progress). (0) Oapt. Jolly and Popeye (68) American Economy 6:20 (2) Editorial, Sports 6:25 (2) Weather (4) Weather 6:30 (2) Highway Patrol (4) News (7) News, Weather,^ Sports. (9) (Quick Draw McGraw (58) French Through TV 6:40 (0 Sports 6:45 (4) News (7) News 7:00 (2) Hennesey ^ (4) (Color) Weekend 9 (7) Mike Hammer (9) Ski World (98) House We Live In 7:30 (2) Real McCoys (4) (Color) Laramie (7) Combat (9)M|0vle: "Rio Rita." (1942). Bud Abbott, Lou Costello. 8:00 (2) Lloyd Bridges (58) Immortal Jesters 8:39 (2) Red Skelton (4) (Color) Empire (7) Hawaiian Eye ):30 (2) Jack Benny (4) Dick Powell (7) Untouchables (0) Front Page Challenge ■ 10:00 (2) Garry Moore (9) Inquiry 10:30 (4) Chet Huntley Reporting (7) Sid Caesar Special (9) Mary Morgan 11:00 (2) News (4) News (7) News (9) News 11:1“) (7)/News, Sports 11:15 (2) Editorial, Sports (4) Weather (9) Weather 11:20 (2) Weather (4) Sports (7) Weather (9) Telescope UAW 11:25 (2) Steve Allen—Variety (7)H6vle: “Jet OvW the Atlantic." (1059). Guy Madison, George Raft, Virginia Mayo. 11:30 (4) (Color) Tonight—Carson (9) Movie: “Riffraff.” (1935). Jean Harlow, Spencer Tracy. WEDNESDAY MORNING - **®VI_E, 1L» lun. (7) “JfitjQvfiLthe^tapJfe:u«^^ Tl aBoard. plane traveling from Madrid to New f 6:00 (4) Continental Clas.sroom: Atomic Agj Physics 6:15 (2) Meditations 6:20 (2) On the Farm Front 6:25 (2) News 6:30 (2) College of the Air (4) (Color) Cont i n c n t a 1 Classroom: American Government (7) Funews 7:00 (2) News (4) Today (7) Sagebrush Shorty 7:05 (2) B’wana Don 7:30 (7) Johnny Ginger 7:45 (2) King and Odle 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (56) German for Teachers 8:30 (7) Jack La Lanne (56) Friendly Giant 8:45 (56) Spanisii Lesson 8:55 (9) Warm Up 9:00 (2) December Bride (4) Living (7) Movie: “Sing While You] Dance " (194(i). Part l.i TV Features Sid Caesar Special LLOYD BRIDGES, 8 p.m. (2) Sensational pitcher boosts sagging bush league baseball team. Clean-Up Cost Higher in Pontiac WinfeF's Been Easier This Year Last of Family Dies in Convalescent Home JACK BENNY, 9:30 p.m. (2) Rita Moreno guests and Jack plays great flamenco dancer. plenty ^svidencethat Old Man Winter has been nastier than ' usual this' year, he hasn’t been as rough on the Oakland County Coad Commission as he was a year ago. On the other hand, he’s put the Pontiac Department of Public Works to greater snow .removal expense, Acording to a battle report from Road Commission Chairman Sol D. Lomerson, his department’s CAMPAIGN struggle with the Old Man has DETROIT (® - Mrs. Nellie Cannally, last surviving member of a Great Lakes 8hlppi(^ fam«^ ily, died in a eonvalescwnf^"""’'^^^ moval crews has been the main] Last year’s moderate tempera- cost of the battle this year, Lorn- tures and weRer snows brought She was the daughter of a cap-erson says, since winter has more cries of distress, he said, j struck in the .^middle of the night! * * and oq Weekend^. Last winter was, no average 1?.,— one, a fact that tends to be for- mm Itoinr J» ai have !«»“'" ""'■•ng preaenl Inclamenl year ago. tain who owned, one of the last commercial sailing ships on the Lakes. Her four brothers were lake captains as was her husband James, who died in 1942/' Most of the road commission’s efforts have ben plowing and scraping of show, Lomerson says. I winter was the worst in many, years. COLOR TV SERVICE and SALES RCA-ZENITH CONDON'S Radio R tv now. Huron 6144786 HAMPTONS ELECTRIC COMPANY CLOSE-OUT SALE '62 TV and STEREO Open 'til 9 FI 4-2525 DICK POWELL, 9:80 p.m. (4) Rejected mistress, former German submarine commander and Spanish beggar boy find lives entangled on large passenger ship. James Stewart hosts. - , this winter. aiET HUNTLEY REPORTING, 10:30 p.m. (4) Chats with four Englishmen of satirical Broadway revue, ‘‘Beyond the Fringe.” A total of 10,864 tons of salt and 8,576 cubic yards of sand had been thrown into the fight up to Jan. 31. SID CAESAR SPECIAL, 10:30 p.m. (7) Lampoons TV vanities, such as fo>mer 9-yeat' old' child star, who faces challenge,of growing up to real age, 33; man-in-the-street reacting to seeing himself in electronic eye. This year’s cost of salt has r^'ached only $85,000, some $100,-000 les^ than lai^t year at this ‘ Hw=diffepeflee"4s York. Guy Madison, Virginia Mayo, George Raft. due to a 6 per cent drop in the cost, however. Overtime hours for snow re- Ellen Drew. (9) Chez Helene (36) Let’s Read -9:15 (9) Nursery School Time 9:30 (2) To Tell the Truth ' (9) National School' Show (56) English VI 9:55 (2) Editorial 10:00 (2) Connie Page (4) Say When (9) Romper Room (56) Our Scientific World 10:15 (7) Hollywood Report 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 (4) (Color) Price Is Right (7) Jane Wyman (9) Movie: “Love Story. • (1947). Stewart Granger 11:05 (56) Spanish Lessen 11:30 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) Concentration (7) Yours for a Song (56) r<'ood for Life WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) Love of Life (4) (Color) First impres sion (7) Ernie I'’ord (56) History 12:25 (2) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Truth or Consequences (7) Fatlier Knows Best 12:40 (9) Morgan’s Merry - Go Round (56) Spanish Lessons 12:45 (2) Guiding Light (9) News 12:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) Star Performance (4) Be.st of Groucho (7) Gale Storm , (9) Movie: “Affectionately! Yours.” (1941), ........ Hayworth. 1:10 (56) French Lesson 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) People Are Funny t7) One Step Beyond (.lO) World Hi,story 1:56 (4> Faye Elizabeth 2:00 (2) Password (4) (Color) Merv Griffin ....(7-) Oay-l«-€e«ft-•—- (56) Adventures in Science 2:25 (7) News 2:30 (2) Divorce Court . (7) Seven Keys, ' (f3) Young Artists at Work 2:55 (4) News 3:00 (4) Loretta Young (7) Queen for a Day (56) Discovery 3:30 (2) Millionaire (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Who Do You Trust? (9) Scarlet Hill (56) Superintendent Reports 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) American Bandstand (9) Itazzle Dazzle (56) Memo .to-Teachers 4:25 (4) News ■ 4:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) Discovery ‘63 (9) Mickey Mouse Club 4:45 (56) French Lesson 4:53 (7) American Newsstand 5:00 (2) Movie: “Love Letters.” Part 2. (4) (Color) George Pierrot (71 Movie: “Roxie Hart.” (1942). Ginger Rogers, Adolph Menjou. (9) Larry and Jerry (56) What’s New? 5:.30 (.56) k’ricndly Giant 5:45 (9) Rocky and His Friends (.56) Industry on Parade 5:55 (4) Carol Duvall . I don’t want NEW YORK — Don’t stop the World for me to get off... I love the cra^y place... It’s that place where Jackie Kennedy can upset Broadway for Detroit Man Held in Murder Probe HAMTRAMCK (/P)-Joseph Ma-Ritatu.szak, 43, of Detroit was held I for investigation of murder today in the fatal shooting of Harry ILewalski, 51, at the Polka Bar I Hamtramck yesterday. i,oif oci The situation is similar for ZTt, 2 ,Sl«ac ~ding .0 DPW Sap., By the same time last year, 22,121 tons of salt and 16,197 cubic yards of sand had been used. Clyde Christian. Pontiac, however, has spent nearly $25,000 more for snow removal this year compared to last year. The figure as of Feb. 1 was $66,667, compared to last winter’s $42,019. The city also has used less salt —2,782 tons this year, compared to 4,108 tons last year at this point. ChHstfaii also reports fewer complaints this year. Low temperatures mean drier snow and Better traction, he points out. Jacqueijne's CancellaHon B'Way Turmoil He ond Christian agree on the main difference between this year and last, Winter fas flung colder temperatures and more snow at us this year, more sleet and ice |as| year. Since rock salt has little-effect on heavy snow in extreme cold, less has been u.sed this year. Lomerson says improved equipment With sofne salt trucks having increased capacity has better armed the rogfl commission for the winter war, even with the addition of new freeway miles to its responsibilities. The fight is especially fierce when storms follow quickly after each other, he explained. There’s no time to catch up and get ready. Final casualties have yet to be counted. Much depends'on what winter has planned for February, the high snowfall month last year, By Earl wilson whole night by getting reservations for a show (“Beyond the Fringe”) — then deciding at 7:30 p.m. to cancel her reservations. What turmoil! What a crowd — for the Jackie that wasn’t there. Photographers waited — curious admirers of Jackie’s Jammed 45th St. in front of the Golden Theater — extra cops waited around, fretting . . . young Peter Cook, one of the stars of the show, was enormously disappointed, for Jackie’d asked him to get seats for her party . . . restaurants were thronged by midnight crowds expecting her. 'Jackie’s gone tp another show!" ran one rumor ... “Jackie’s gone to the 21 Club,” went another rumor . . . “Jackie’s gone to El Morocco to dance,” cracked a third. The true one probably was this: “Jackie’s gone to bed.” WILSON One more JFK story via Playwright Howard Tcichmann: “When anybody in the Kennedy family gets annoyed at the President, they say, ‘Jack, what’s the matter with you? Are you off your rocker?’ ” Eyes Tribimai to Overrule Highest Court WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen. Strom Thurmond, D.-8.C., plans to introduce a bill to establish a court of the union” which would have ^ower to reverse decisions of the U.S. Supreme Court. Thurmond told his constituents in a newsletter recently this was one of two constitutional amendments he will propose “in the Interest of protecting and restoring the rights and powers of the states." The second, he said, would give to two-thirds of the state legislatures which approved an identical resolution the power to propose a constitutional amendments. It then wbuld have to be ratified by three-fourths of the states. tlonal convention called by Congress. - TONIGHT AT 9:30 P.M. on NBC-TV IIIItTIIOAV rAllTY i r- r- r* r“ 8 9 i6 rr rr 13 14 IT* r 17 21 w. |'23 27 28 2d 31 32 ^3 34 H37 55“ 3^ W- 43 t 46| Constitutional amendments now The world's also a place where a comedian like Jackie Gleasonjmay be submitted for ratification (the.se Jackies stay in the news) can become an authority on extra- only by Congress'or a constitu-sensory perception — and poltergeists (ghosts that make their presence known by moving objects about and causing a great clatter). Gleason’s read dozens of books on the supernatural and isn’t willing yet to believe that mediums are really magicians. Jackie di.scusses it for hours with his aides — one of whom is “Snag” Werris, former president of the Am. Society of Magicians. THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . Princess Grace’s favorite photographer, Howell Conant, has just racked up his 11th national major magazine cover for Her Highness — her worldwide total of covers in' top magazines is around 400. Grace and Rainier have given Conant a red velvet robe with a crown on it, embroidered to read, “Phokus I, the World’s Greatest.” . . . .ludy Garland, who’s never had a vocal instructor, has engaged popular Carlo Menotti to coach her for her] TV series . . . Producer Joe Irvine’s first Broadway play, “Photo Finish,” starring Peter Ustinov opens tomorrow — and after that* Levine’Il go on a crash diet which’ll allow him to have only seven! ounces of liquor a week . . . Robert Merrill’s son, David, seven,] made his debut at the Metropolitan Opera. (As a member of the^ Children’s Choir). , | TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: “The saddest words of tongue or Police saui Matuszak, a wdderjP‘^"’^j^^^ PiJ^SAID^'thAT: “There’s nothing much you can do' ted the shooting telecast in living color. They might look bet- Matuszak told police he got - REMEMBERED QUOTES: “The Gaiety Delicatessen is .so small that tliey have to carry the liverwurst in endways.’’ | “Hospitals have the recovery room in the wrong place,” says the Atchison Globe. “Instead of adjoining surgery, it should adjoin the cashier’s office.” . . . That’s carl, brother. into an argument with, the bar owner and fired at Lcwalski, patron, whep Lcwalski came at him with a bar stool. He said he didn’t know Lcwalski, p reported. taaa WMMM IHii , police I --Today's Radio Programs- wnn, N«w», Mudic t( WKONKSDAV MOIININO ll:flO-WJR. N«wa. Anri. -WVAJ, N«w«, lt<'bms WXVZ Wolf, N»»* wiiri, Ross, Music ri$o-wXYZ. 1 CKl.W. N«Wi WJHK. rtiiHi-wjjrt. ,N WJ«K, News, Avsrr WPON, News. IFl, nurillclt, Music I WJR, News. Music WJ, News, Mfiileus WHiei, News. Music ' 0:30 CKl.W, Myrtle I.BliWH W.lBK, News, Retil 1;(»0 -WJR. News. Godfrey wjuis., etews, WPON,‘ News! Jqr*’y oi^n wun, Newit, Mtialo Gordon. Winter wi :i>m;Rn.vv™TrT|KRN<)ON WWJ, Nows, rcmphftslii CKFnV .Imp Vi«n wxYri, WPON, No 1S:30-WJR. Hud Guest Show WWJ. Nows. F.tnphtisis ' . WXYZ, Winter^ News 1:00—WJR. News. Art Llnklet- W«J, News/ Ask Neighbor WXYZ. Winter. ^ WHFI,’ News, Mu l.ao -VyJH. Gurry THE DICK POWELL THEATRE Rory Calhoun Jon Sterling Michael Davis Ludwig Donath Star in “LUXURr LINER” Presented by ' CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY TONIGHT AT 9:30 P.M. on NBC-TV I’M) WJR, News WWJ. News. U\ WXYZ. Bebo.sUi WHFI. News. Don eiHO-CKLW News 1:00 WJH. New News, Hultmun ^ i .... WWJ. New CKLW.’ Nt WPOn! Nr OiOO-WJR. New#. ^ ^Hy’z^^'nmwb. yit WPON. News. BeiiH FREE 1000 TV STAMPS with home Water Softener Demonstration Rental 75c Weekly Owning $1.17 Weekly CITY SOFT WATER CO. NO OBLIGATION 2430 IMPIRI StREET PHONE: 682-1851 awarded MONTHLY: $6SfS.OO Scholarehip In Commarclal Art Talent with promise being eought. Draw Lincoln any size except like a tracing. Use pencil. Everyone who sends a drawing gets a professional estimate of hia talent. Scholarship winner receives the complete course in advertising art, illustrating, cartooning and painting taught by experienced artists at America’s leading liome study art school. Try for this free art course! Individual Instruction given, Illustrated art textbooks furnished. Also step-by-step lesson assignments. Entries fer February 1963 scholarship due by February 28. None returned. Amateurs only. Our students not eligible. Winner notifiod. Ai/aRT INSTRUOTION iOHOOUS STUDIO AL-92 • 500 South 4th ,St., Minneapolis 15, Minn. More People Own RCA VICTOR COLOR TV than any other kind.. age; SEALED aRCWTRY The GLOUCESTER 233-C-74-M COLOR TV Charming Early American styling, authentic In every detail. Carved gallery and apron, irtioothly 1 onci spool logs. In Colonial turned corner posts c Maple veneers and selected hardwoods. PRICES START AT m ) The Most Trusted Name In Color Televielon RCA VICT(3r DIST. CORP., 7400 Intervale, Dqtrpit DON’T BE SWITCHED . . . 5ee Tow RCA VICTOR Deahr-HOWl j- NEW HOMES... It lakes only iiiiiiiiles to make all arrangcmeiils for a Home Morl^^a‘^(‘ Loan . . . En joy lower payments, lowe r inte rest, longer terms l>v elealinj: willi (lomniunily ^can Imlp yem le^elay. ^ 13 CONVENIENTILY LOCATED ' 4 OFFICES TO SERVE National iJIank OF PONTIAC Memlm’Seder(il Deposit Insurance Corporation i .\ The Weaiher > Light Snow rp XT T7^ X XXXli ONE COLON VOL. 121 NO. 4 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. TUKSUAY, I’KimrAKV 12, VMi;] —24 PAGES I Democratic Senators' I Strike Back at GOP I Critics of Cuba Policy WASHINGTON (iP) — The Kennedy administration, under heavy fire from its political opponents, is strik* ing back at Republican critics of its Cuban policies. In the face of a fresh assault by GOP congressional leaders on “the inept conduct of our foreign affairs by the Kennedy administration,” Sens. Mike Mansfield, D-Mont., and Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Minn., have teamed to condemn what they called partisan and irresponsible charges. Mayfield, the Democratic leader, pointed his guns at,New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller and Sens. Kenned B. Keating, R-N.Y. and Hugh Scott, R-Pa. He told ^the Senate Monday that “irresponsible public utterances are playing dangerously 'with the fires of public emotion.” Humj)hrey called on Republicans to make certain that “a rash of charges that cannot be substantiated by facts do not find their way into this chamber” or into the newspapers. “The people are worried, concerned and indeed confused because of so many conflicting reports,” he said. He added that President Kennedy, t’le Defen.se Department and the Central Intelligence Agency “have been frank and candid” in disclosing Soviet mili' tary strength in Cuba. JIMMY DURANTE His /0th Year Nosing Around Friends Gather for Comedian's Birthday MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AF)-Jimmy (the Schnozz) Durante admitted today he had a birthday-. his 70th—“but I don’t want everybody to know about it.” The veteran entertainer, interviewed at a hotel vvhere he is appearing, described'his birthday, celebrated last night, this way: “Thank God I had another birthday. Da party? Sure. It was after da show an’ they asked me iL I didn’t want to come in and have ^ some tea. It was a big surprise to me. We had a wonderful time. “Mrs. M 0 r ri s Lansburgh whose husband ov'us the hotel gave it. lie’s in Las Vegas. A few of my friends was there— George Raft, Eleanor Holm, Rocky Marciano, Little Jack Carter, Gene Bayless, Peter Lawford and a lot of others. “George Raft did a little soft shoe dance to “Sweet Georgia Brown,” ’ya know, like he did 40 years ago at the old Club Durant in 1924, before he went to da coast. “1 wanted to go four rounds wit’ Rocky, but he wouldn’t take me on. Everybody had a lot of fun.” Durante does an hour and 15-rninute show and keeps going night after night. “No other entertainers—just us,” he said. ^ The record says Durante was born in Brooklyn in 1893 and that he started in show business at 17, which means he’s starting his 54th year on the stage. “Who th’ hell knows? he snorted. “In my day, we didn’t have tio doctors. Everybody had midwives. Maybe I picked da date at random. Nobody had birth certificates in them days.” 2 From County Die in Traffic Accidents A Farmington Township man and a Hazel Park woman are dead as the resplt of traffic accidents in .south Oakland County. Mrs. Mary Thompson, 23, of 23449 'Tawas St. Oakland Highway Toll in ’63 died today ,William Beau-1 2 'm 0 n t Hospital, Royal joak, from injuries .suffered Sundaji in a mishap in Mi^dison Heights. ^hbm,as Mpss, 66, of 29222 Grand River Ave. was killed when he walked irlto the path of a moving |Van yesterday morning in front of his home, police said. Mansfield said Rockefeller was well informed on Latin American affairs, but, “I must confess that 1 looked in vain for a ’contribution worthy of him” in the governor’ comments on Cuba. CITES THREAT Rockefeller has said the administration’s disclosures about Cuba left many unanswered questions. He said that while Soviet soldiers and equipment there may not pose a military threat to the United States, they constitute a propaganda, subversive and possible military threat to other hemisphere nations. In a barb patently aimed at Keating, one of the most vocal critics of the administration, Mansfield told his colleagues he would be the last to suggest that members of Congress know less about matters pertaining to Cuba than the President, the Secretary of State and the Secretary of De- But 1 would suggest most respectfully,” he said, “that the responsible course which helps rather than hurts the nation would be for these well-informed members to take their inside, unimpeachable information on Cuba to the appropriate departments at the same time that they take it to the press galleries.” Sen. John Sherman Cooper, R-Ky., said he is willing to accept the administration’s judgment on Cuba becau.se of its many sources of intelligence. * WILBER M. BRUCKER Lincoln Day Fete to Hear Brucker Former Michigan Gov. Wilber [. Brucker will be the m a speaker at the annual Lincoln bay banquet being sponsored in Pontiac tonight by the Lincoln Republican Club of Oakland County. Brucker, also a former secretary of the Army and now a De-' troit attorney, will be introduced by U.S. Rep. William S. Broomfield, R-Oakland County. The dinner is being staged at the Pontiac Elks Temple on Orchard Lake Avenue at 6:30 p.m. State»Sen. Frank D. Beadle, R-St. Clair, will be toastmaster. A 15-year-old Clarkston High School sophomore, Karen Cooper of 4641 Clintonville Road, Independence Township, will be feted the winner of an essay contest sponsored by the club. A trophy and cash prize will be presented to her by former U.S. Congressman George A. Dondero. Topic of the essay contest was What Abraham Lincoln Means to Me Today.” Second-place winner was Russell Kaufman of 2350 Charnwood Drive, Troy, a 17-year-old junior at Troy High School. U.S. Sees Possibilify N-Ban Boosted Mac Assured "■ of Support for Economic Plan Parliamentary V«te Due Today on Actions Countering Mart Veto U.S. Satellite Shot Grounded by Storms CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) -An overnight wave of thunderstorms has forced a 24-hour delay in plans to launch America’s 0 s t unusual communications satellite into orbit around Earth. The launching of the 150-pound Syncom satellite, originally set for shortly after midnight tonight, was rescheduled for early Thursday morning. The goal of the shot will be to put Syncom into an orbit so high 2,.300 miles above Elarth -r that it will seem to hang in the sky in more or less one spot. LONDON (/P) — P r i m e Minister Harold Macmillan appeared certain to win parliamentary endorsement today of his program to counter the effect^ of the French veto barring Britain from the Common Mar-'ket. ' ' /■ The House of (jJommons, winding up a two-day debate on the country’s economic future, was scheduled to vote late in the day on a Labor party motion of-no confidence. With the Conservatives holding a 100-vote margin over the combined Labor-Liberal opposition, there was virtually no chance that Macmillan’s government would fall on the is.sue. ★ ★ ★ Opening the debate Monday, Macmillan roundly denounced President Charles de Gaulle’s government for its veto, then outlined a series of emergency actions he is planning to fill the void caused by the collapsed negotiations. Amonjthem: A Commonwealth trade ministers’ meeting to be held in London in April or May to stimulate business. .Britain will seek closer trading cooperation with the United States, her friends in Europe and other nations. The government intends to drive for world commodity agreements, a cutback of tariffs and freer trade generally. Macmillan warned that the policies of the De Gaulle government could threaten the Western Alliance and drive the United States into i.solation. ★ ★ ★ The speech brought the usual chorus of Conservative cheers and Laborite derision from the British press. The Labor - supporting Daily Herald chided Macmillan for advising Princess Margaret and (tontinued on Page 2, COl. 6) Clouds to Bring Snow Tonight? If Looks That Way Skies will be partly overcast tonight and tomorrow with a chance of light snow or snow flurries, the weatherman said. ^ Temperatures will be a little warmer, the low dipping to 12 tonight and the high climbing to near 28 tomorrow. . ★ -k -k Thursday’s forecast is mostly cloudy and colder with snow flurries. Seven was the lowest temperature in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. The recording was 23 at 1 p.m. ^ Seek to Control Trading Stamps Legislature Studying Licensing by State LANSING (4V-Proposals aimed at stiffening state control over the operations of trading stamp companies are in the works in both housds of the legislature. A bill that would require trading stamp firms to be licensed by the state, and to post surety bonds for the protection of consumers and retailers, was filed yesterday for Introduction in the House. The bill, sponsored by Rep. Lucille McCullough, D-Dearborn, with bipartisan support, followed the introduction earlier of an almost identical bill in the Senate RIDIN’ HIGH - Julia Perri, 15 months old, rides tall on the back of Dondl.Forrester Smith, Old. English sheepdog,. It the 87th Westminister Kennel Club show In New York’s Madttson Square Garden yesterday. Julia’s parents are exhibiting the dog at the show. Iiluai lUUiHJuai UIU ui wic ucuni-v. , , . - . . . by Sen. Charles S. Blondy, ixladditional judgesnips while Roberts' Bill to Seek More County Judges Sen. Farfell^E, Roberts, R-Oakland County was to introduce a bill today that would increase the number of circuit .judges from five to seven in Oakland County, The Republican party in the county favors the two Detroit. -At ★ ★ Both pieces of proposed legislation are based on the findings of Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley’s investigation of the coiiapse last year of the Merchants Green Stamp Co., of Detroit. Mrs. McCullough said the House bill is designed to provide “reasonable regulation of trading stamp companies ... with the best interests of the consumers, retailers and companies themselves in mind.” The proposed legislation would bring trading stamp firms under closer state control by empowering the Michigan corporation and securities commissioner to issue and revoke licenses annually. Assassin's Brother A Booth Saved Lincoln's Son By DON OAKLEY Newspaper Enterprise Association History books record that an actor named Booth shot to death a man named Lincoln. Few history books, however, mention the fact that an actor named Booth once saved the life of a man named Lincoln. The first instance, of course, vas John Wilkes Booth’s a.ssas.sin-ation of President Abraham Lincoln in Ford’s 'rheater in Washington. The other, which occurred I Lincoln him.self once watched him shortly beffife this, involved Booth’s older brother, Edwin, and Lincoln’s son, Robert. In 1865, Edwin Booth at 31 was the outstanding Shake.spearean performer of his day. President Booth Grabbed the Man by His Codt play Shylock at Ford’s Theater, remarking that he would rather have read the play at home but went only to see the great actor. 'k -k ir The name Booth, in fact, had dominated the American stage for decades. It began with Junius Brutus Booth, who came from England, and who had three actor sons: Junius Brutus Jr., Edwin and John Wilkes. John, the youngest, was the favorite of the South, to which he wa^ fanatically devoted — even more than to his dream of eclipsing his brother’s fame. In November 1864, the three brothers had appeared together for the first and only tigie in Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar at the-Winter Gaj'den in New York. ★ * ★ . Immediately after this, Edwin Booth had opened in Hamlet, andj in March 1865 was completing a record run of 1()0 performances. The City of New York was pre-j paring to present him with a gold medal. JOSTLING CROWD It was about this time that busi-ness took Booth to Philadelphia. At the railroiid station platform foliar and Pulled Him Sack . . ^(Continued on Pa^ge 2, CpI. 4) the Democratic party has voiced its objection. Chances of getting one n e judge are considered excellent by the GOP committee here. Getting approval of two is expected to be more difficult. The Democrats claim the bill is being pushed now because passage of the proposed new state constitution in April would take the power of appointments away from the governor and give it to the State Supreme Court. They expect Gov. Romney would appoint Republicans to the bench while he still has the power to do President of the Oakland County Bar Association, Royal 0 a attorney James S. Thorburn said that while the association has taken no official stand on the is.sue, it is his opinion “and the opinion of many lawyers” that two additional circuit judges are needed. There are three reasons, he said: ' 1. The docket is rapidly mounting due to an increasing population. 2. There is much more litigation resulting from traffic dents, Tlie new judicial system makes pretrial hearings civil cases mandatory, where often these have been waived by mutual agreement in the past. GOP Names 3 for Judge's Post This is it! This is (he time to sell or purchase that newer boat you have dreamed of all' winter. Our most reeemt bout for sale ud recoivt'd over 8 ('alls and was sold to the 3nl parly that called. in-f t . citbln c r u I K « r. Completely coulpped. Inside winter ttornge paid. Tel. (100-0000._______ The moral of this Story is , There are a( least 7 more people in our market area who are curreiitly in-tei('s(('d ill / purchasing a go(Kl boat. Place tlu" ad to sell your boat today. It’s so easy . . . and the cost is low. Dial FE 2-8l8t Ask for Classified The Oaklanti County Republican party’s executive committee has recommended two county officials and a Royal Oak attorney as candidates to succeed Probate Judge Arthur E. Moore Feb. 15. Candidates recommended to Gov; George W. Romney are Norman R. Barnard, county corporation counsel; George F. Taylor, county prosecutor; and James S. Thorburn, president of the county bar association. The recommendation was forwarded to Gov. Romney last night. ★ k k He is expected to- name a new probate and juvenile court judge by Feb. 15, the date Moore is moving up to the county’s Circuit Court bench to replace Judge H. Russel Holland, who is retiring. Barnard, Taylor and Thorburn were among seven attorneys interviewed by the eommittcc last night. Others interviewed were Clarence Reid Jr., of Southfield; Maurice A. Merritt, of Birmingham; Theodore F. Hughe.s, of Royal Oak; and former state senator Harvey Lodge of Pontiac. j President Adds Plea for Drive Tow/ard Pact Geneva Arms Talks Resume on Note of Encouragement From Our News Wires GENEVA - The United States told the 17-nation disarmament confer-ence today that a nuclear test-ban treaty “may be on the way.” William C. Foster, director of the U.S, arms control and disarmament agency, told the first 1963 meeting of the 11-months-old conference as it reconvened after an eight-week recess that “I believe that there is some reason to hope that a test ban agreement may be on the way.” Foster coupled bis statement with a personal appeal for progress from President Kennedy. The President called on the conference to apply new energy and a genuine willingness to negotiate in the search for a test-ban treaty. The President issued a special statement as the delegates resumed their work here, with Fost-ter replacing the resigned Arthur H. Dean as chief American representative to the talks. k k k Kennedy said agreement on a test-ban treaty “does not lie within easy reach” but declared that “, prospects seem somewhat more encouraging.” FEWER INSPECTIONS’’ Shortly before the conference opened after a long recess Britain’s chief negotiator said the Western powers may be willing to scale down still further the number of on - site inspections needed to control a nuclear test ban. But there was no indication the United States was ready for such a stand. British Minister of State Joseph Godber told a news conference that any Western concession at the 17-natlon conference would require a corresponding willingness to meet the Western demand for foolproof safeguards. He indicated this could be Soviet agreement to increase the size and number of black boxes seismic detection devices that would be placed on Russian Daughter Presents Grandpa Romney With Number 6 Gov. George Romney has become a grandfather for the sixth time. Mrs. Loren G. Keenan, om* of Romney’s two daughters, gave birth to her second son yesterday at William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak. k k k The Keenans, 2694 Brady Drive, Bloomfield 'roWnshlp, also have I two daughters. Romney's o t h c Idaughlcr has two children. Kennedy asked the negotiators to reverse the present dar^r-ous trend of the arms race.” Foster aske dthe Russians to abandon propaganda and their take it or leave it” bargaining tactics. In Today's Press j Miracle Scarred by flames, | newsman fights way back ^ from bitter remorse --PAGE 3. Lincoln Party JFK to mark birthday ' with party keyed to civil rights - PAGE 16. | Farming Waste Political Ignoi^^ance of. problems drains^ taxpayers’ pockets — PAGjE 13. Area News ............4 Astrology ...........17 1 Bridge .............. Editorials .......... 6 ; Markets ........ Obituaries ..........It Sports .......... 14-lS Theaters ............. I TV & Radio Programa IS Wilson, Earl ........|l: Women’s Paget ... m J THE roNTIAC press. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1^196.1 MUD SLIDE — This palatial ranch home !in the Los Angeles suburb of Sylmar was swamped with mud sliding in on torrential rains during the weekend. The swimming pool was also filled, and some rooms had as much Ss six feet of silt in them. Damage was esti-’ mated at $250,000. Fresh Wintry Blast Top item on the agenda for the 8 p.m. meeting is a resolution from the City Airport Committee recommending such i move by the commission. The resolution would oppose developing the county’s Allen Airport site “until agreement is reached between the city and county on airport programs including Pontiac Municipal Airport.” Commissioners indicated a year ago they’d like to turn the municipal facility into a city-county airport — about three weeks after the county revealed plans for major jet airport on the Allen site in Orion Township. Soufh Suffers Storms From Our News Wires A fresh blast of wintry weather —with snow, sleet, strong winds and freezing temperatures —hit wide areas in the South f^om Texas to northern Georgia today. Florida. Readings from 15 to 20 degrees below normal were indicated. The. icy air from the northern Midwest, driven by strong northerly winds, dropped temperatures sharply in the southerif sections. The cold air headed into northern No Free Parking on Downtown Lot Pending Appeal Cold wave warnings were posted for parts of Louisiana, Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas,- Texas and Oklahoma. The weather bureau warned of e V e r..p thunderstorms and possible tornadoes across central Florida. <f., A light earthquake rattled windows and awoke residents of Oakland, Calif., early today. Farmers in Texas’ Rio Grande alley feared again for their crops as the weather bureau prediced a "light freeze” for the There will be no free parking on the old county courthouse site In downtown Pontiac pending appeal to the State Supreme Court of a Circuit Court ruling that such use of the lot was illegal. Circuit Judge Stanton G. Don-dero yesterday denied a motion for a stay of proceedings pending the appeal. The appeal was filed last week by the Downtown Pontiac Business Association (DPBA) and the county. The county ordered the • lot closed last Thursday. County officials regained control of the property when Judge Dondero ruled Jan. 28 that its lease with the DPBA was illegal. valley. Smudge pots and wind machines got their fifth workout of the bitter winter. Two inches of snow and sleet, along with winds of 15 to 35 m.p.h. hit many areas in northeast Louisiana and central Mississippi. Up to four to five inches of snow was in prospect. Temperatures dropped to the teens iq northern Mississippi and northern Louisiana, with freezing marks expected in the Gulf Coast. Snow also fell in northern parts of Georgia and Alabama and eastern Tennessee and a narrow band of freezing rain pelted areas from Montgomery, Ala., to the Great Smokies. Waterford to Reconsider Locations for Water Tank A large but orderly subdivision! vicinity of Waiton Boulevard protest group vinced W a t last night con- and Main Street. •ford Township The tank is one of four in the „ ^ K . 1. . .1 • . . ATLANTA (DPI) - Chief Justice Board members to take a sec- townships proposed integrated water system.”-' ond look” at prospective water tank sites in the northeast area of the township. Nearly 100 residents from Lake Oakland Heights subdivision jammed the meeting room and spilled out into the corridor and down the stairway in protest to last week’s decision by the board to locate the 750,000-gallon tank in the The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Variable cloudiness and rather cold with a few periods of light snow or snow flurries today, tonight and Wednesday, high today 25. Low tonight 12. High Wednesday 28. Winds variable mostly westerly 5 to 12 miles today and tonight. 6un sets Tuesday a Moon sets Wediiesda Houghton Marquette Highest temperature Lowest temperature Mean temperature Weathor—Partly s r’C" NATIONAL WEATHER' - It will be colder tonight in the Atlantic and Gulf Coast states, the Plains statbs and the Rockies while milder weather is forecast for the Lakes area and the West Coast states. Florida and northern California will Jhave rain. Light snow is expected in the central and southern Appalachians, Michigan, northern Minnesota and the Texas Panhandle. ^ ' Airport Issue on City Agenda Commission Expected to Underline Stortd The City Commission may go on record again tonight as opposing any further spending of county funds for airport expansion or development, pending a city - county agreement on airport programs. Last May 15 the Commission passed by a 4-3 margin, a reso-iutioh condemning the jet. airport unrealistic and visionary project” and ordered local supervisors to vote against it. , Subsequently the Federal Aviation Agency rejected county plans for the multi-million dollar project. Now, the county is seeking federal approval of plans to enlarge Allen Airport to handle corporate flights serving area industries. The commission opposed the use of county tax revenues for Allen airport expansion June 19. A week later they formally proposed expansion of Pontiac Municipal Airport into a large, metropolitan city-county air facility. In August, a preliminary draft of the city’s airport master plan was made public. It tentativly recommends a $5.25-million expansion program for the municipal facility. Chief Justice Says Law Is Behind Times The board decided to call a joint meeting to further explore site possibilities. Representatives of the Oakland County Department of Public Works and the township’s consulting engineers will be asked to attend. Objections to the tank last night were based on expected depreciation of property as well as an aesthetic downgrading of the area. Donald Porter, 3736 Mariner St., Drayton Plains, spokesman for the group, acknowledged that the board acted appropriately when it decided on the water tank site that would involve the least construction cost. He pointed out, however, that the $.30,000 to $35,000 expected saving, compared to a previously considered site, amounted to less than one half of 1 per cent of the total $7.5 million water program. REPRESENT 500 VOTERS Porter told board members the subdivision association represented about 500 votes. Township Board Trustee Loren Anderson said he wasn’t impressed by this approach-”1 don't care whether its 500 or 5,000 votes; 1 can’t be bought,’ he said. Anderson said the site was recommended both by the Oakland County Department of Public Works and Johnson and Ander-lion, consulting engineers. -A second look at the parcel in Lake Angelas Golfvlqw Estates originally designated the tank site was specifically requested. Other sites on Cllnton-ville Road, on the Jayno Adams School property and unspecified locations to the west were mentioned. The ■joint m.eetlng to resolve the problem was set for Feb. 27 at the Gray.son School. Next week’s board meeting, which falls on Bllection Day, Feb. 18, was canceled. A special meeting will be called it is warranted, according to Towmship Supervisor Elmer John-| has not kept pace with science in the onrushing space age and cautioned that man can destroy himself unless the two are made partners i^or useful outlets. In a Lincoln’s birthday address in the huge coliseum at Georgia Tech, Warren did not mention the civil rights issue which has been a major topic of Supreme Court decisions since he went on the bench shortly before the 1954 school desegregation decision. The chief justice paid tribute, however, to the American Constitution which he noted was only 4,373 words—“shorter than the average magazine article of today in which our founding fathers distilled the governmental wisdom of the ages.” Warren arrived here last night in a rare trip into the South. He was taken under a light security ring to his hotel room from the airport where he was greeted by Atlanta Mayor Ivan Allen Jr. Twisting Route for Marines 50-Mile Hike Craze Continues to Spread From Our News Wires CAMP LE JEUNE, N.C. Brig. Gen. R. McC. Tompkins chlmly lit a cigarette, took a firm grip on his walking stick and determinedly led 33 other Marine officers away on a 50-mile hike today. It wasn’t exactly the day for long - distance walking, assuming there was any interest in hiking at all. It has rained most of the night, a drizzle was falling as the men shoved off, and rain was forecast during the day. Everything went off with neat military precision. Maj. George Fox, the official starter, assembled the first group two minutes early. Then as the seconds ran out, he tolled them off, “four,'three, two, one, zero! For good measure, they sprinted the last 450 yards around the Redwood High School track. Only 200 yards were called for. Blast off!” cried an irreverent voice from the rear and the general and five assorted captains and lieutenants, who made up the first group, blasted off for their hike. CRAZE SPREADS The mushrooming hiking craze was stirring elsewhere. Congressional secretaries Washington, claiming their legs better than Pierre’s stole a march on presidential press secretary Pierre Salinger with plans for an qll-girl, all-day hike. BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)-Iraq’s revolutionary regime, already shooting Iraqi Reds, had begun cracking down on Communist residents from Eastern Europe, a German traveler said today. They are treating the Westerners excellently, but for people A bevy of cute Capitol Hill Girls Friday” said they would march along the towpath of the old Che.sapeake & Ohio canal in bipartisan show of form beginning at 6 a.m. tomorrow. Salinger’s much - publicized trudge — to demonstrate to the world the physical fitness of the White House staff and a reluctant press corps —is set for Friday. At Naha, Okinawa, a marine lance corporal claims he marched 100 miles in less than 17 hours— and did it, ironically, the day before President Kennedy turned 50-mile hikes into a national fad. A 3rd Marine Division newspaper said that Darold R. Dent, about 23, of B u r w e 11, Neb., tramped the 100 miles in 16 hours, 42 minutes, 48 seconds Feb. 4 in wind, rain and sleet. And in Larkspur, Dalif., four high school trackmen who participated in a mass teen-age 50-miie hike over back roads have given Marines and the rest of us a mark to shoot at. The four marched off the distance in 12 hours, 8 minutes yesterday, considerably under the 20-hour presidential limit. Birmingham Area News City Agrees on Action for Only 1 Zone Change BIRMINGHAM - Lengthy discussion of city planning principles led city commissioners to adjourn live of six scheduled public bearings on zoning last night. Commissioners took action on only one rezoning petition. They agreed to change the classification of a parcel of property in the Ruffner-Woodward avenues area from R4 residential to parking. The rezoned property abuts an alley near the southwest corner of Woodward and Ruffner avenues. The Birmingham Chamber of Commerce had written to the commission in support of the rezoning request. In other action, the commission agreed to set 5 p.m. Feb. 23 as the deadline for filing nominating petitions for the April 1 election. DEBATE ON REQUEST Most of the debate last night centered around a request to zone the northeast corner of Southfield Road and Townsend Street from Its present multiple family classification (R7) to neighborhood business area(Bl). The petitioner is seeking to locate a doctor’s office on the site. Commissioner Carl F. Ingraham said that “rezoning the parcel to B1 is the same as rezoning the whole area without studying if this should be Iraq Continues Commie Purge from the Eastern European Communist countries it is a very different thing,” said Gunter Stock-Duesseldorf businessman who arrived from Baghdad on a Lebanese airliner. “Four more Iraqi Communists were executed this morning. I was told that so far three East German military advisers attached to the army under Kassem (executed Premier Abdel Karim Kassem) have been arrested. The East Europeans are trying to get out of the country.” Hundreds of Communist bloc technicians, businessmen and their families llYe in Baghdad and other parts of Iraq. Kassem spent millions of dollars oh Soviet military equipment for his army and got advisers and technicians with it. ARM CI’I^ILUNS The new regime was reported arming civilianj/to help wage all-out war against diehard Communist backers of Kassem. A traveler reaching Tehran, Iran, Monday said Iraq’s new military rulers are arming civilians in Baghdad, Basra and other key cities to fight communist agitators. Commissioner William E. Roberts suggested studying the possibility of issuing a restrictive contract under the B1 classification. He said that “people want a little variety.” The hearing will be continued until the questions concerning restrictive contracts are resolved and when the City Planning Board completes its study of the John R. Howard III Service for John R. Howard III, 54, of 720 Chesterfield St., will be 11 a.m. Thursday at the Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co. Cremation will fjpj.-low. / Ir. Howard died unexpectedly of a heart attack yesterday. He was a member of the Society Review of Fees for R20 Asked of Automotive Engineers, the Harvard Club of Michigan and the First Presbyterian Church. He was assistant general manager of the Ethyl Corporation. Surviving are his wife Catherine A.; a daughter, Mrs. David C. Rider of Birmingham; and two sisters. Want Witness in State 'Chats' LANSING (UPll-Four Democratic state officials announced last night all their future private business with Gov. George Romney would have to be conducted before a Witness. Secretary of State James M. Hare, Treasurer Sanford Brown, Auditor General Billie S. Farnum and Superintendent of Puhlid Instruction Lynn M. Bartlett announced the decision at a meeting of party leaders. The four agreed that “hereafter when they have private audiences with Romney they will do so only with a witness present because the governor apparently cannot be relied upon to give a complete account of what transpires at such meetings,” said a spokesman for the officials. The decision was an outgrowth of a fight last week between Bartlett and Romney over a meeting they had in the governor’s office. The governor accused Bartlett of issuing him an ultimatum while the superintendent Insisted he had only withdrawn a previously extended invitation. The quarrel concerned Romney’s scheduled appearance at an education conference In March. 3 Delegates of Con-Con to Speak Locally Three constitutional convention delegates will speak at 8 p.m. tomorrow in favor of the document they helped draft. The public meeting will be held at Pontiac High School Auditor- ium. Circuit Judge William J. Beer has been asked to reconsider his approval, of appraisal fees for seven properties condemned under Pontiac’s R20 urban renewal project. Judge Beer yesterday took under advisement a motion‘by the city to review his award of $11,-960 in fees. He also granted the city 30 days to file an appeal to the Slate Supreme Court If he denies the city’s request. Under condemnation statutes, the city is obligated to pay “rea-.sonable expenses” and a $25-a-day attorney fee to property owners who win awards. The seven fees range from $930 to $3,120, according to the city. Fees to appraisers for their services and court testimony usually run no higher than $100 per day. A Booth Saved Lincoln's Son (Continued From Page One) was buying tickets from the Co ductor. Booth saw a young man, pu.shec by the crowd, lose his balance and slip from the platform just as the train began to move. Booth dropped his luggage, grabbed the man by his coat collar and pulled him back from probable death. The grateful ’young man was Robert Todd Lincoln, the-President’s eldest son. He was 22, recently graduated from Harvard and soon to take up duties as a captain on General Grant’s staff. I Grant, learning of the episode later, offered tq **”y favor he could. On April 14, 1865, the fourth anniversary of the fall of I*' o r t Sumter, the nation was stunned anew by the murder of-the President. was a hatred of the assassin that engulfed the entire Booth family. THEATER CLOSED In Boston, the theater in which Edwin Booth was appearing was forced to close. Booth had to dergo a baggage search before he was allowed to leave the city. In Philadelphia, a U.S. marshal placed a sister, Asia Booth Clarke, under house arrejit and lier tiusband was jailed. Embittering tlje common gjfief In Cincinnati, Junius Booth narrowly escaped from a lynch mob, was arrested and taken to Washington where he was imprisoned for a time. In New York, the mother of the Booths prayed that her son, John Wilkes, would not live to be hanged. Lincoln’s death brought out the )08t and worst in human nature. Stories of his funeral rat) side ty side with lurid “exposes” on the. Booths. Old family scandals were dug up and new ones vented. Erwin Booth swore he would never appear on the stage again In the following months, he clung to the memory of his encounter with Robert Lincoln, as one rock sea of madness. BLOW TO ACTORS The assassination reacted against the whole acting profession, which was still considered something less than respectable. Preachers lamented the fact that Lincoln should meet his Maker in, of all places, a theater -one of those temples of folly, lewdness and Infamy. Stagehands and members of th^ cast at Ford’s Theater were suspected of complicity in the crime and were either arrested or required to report dally to the police. Financial need forced Edwin Booth to forget his vow. In 1868 he returned to the stage as Gamlet in New York. On the night of the play, the theater was jammed by would-be ticket buyers. Extra police stood by apprehensively. BIG OVATION But when the curtain rose, Booth received a standing ovation. The public trial of the Booth family was over; the verdict was acquittal. A year later. Booth received his postponed gold medal from the city. Booth wrote to Grant, who had become secretary of war, minding him of his promise of a favor and requesting that his mother be permitted to claim the remains of her son. Grant did not reply. Not until 1869was John Wilkes Booth allowed to be burled in the family plot in Baltimore. Edwin Booth died in 1893. As a final, tragic coincidence, on the day of his funeral In New York, three floors of the old Ford Theater in Washington, converted into governmerit offices, collapsed, killing 22 persons. Henry L. Woolfendon of Bloomfield Hills, Vera Andrus of Port Huron and John E. McCauley of Wyandotte will give 15-minute presentations on various sections of the proposed new state constitution. They also will answer questions as members of a discussion panel at the meeting, spon-fsored by the Oakland County nonpartisan Committee for the New Constitution (CNC). Pontiac attorney James W. Howlelt will be moderator. ' Among cosponsors of the meeting are the Pontiac League of Women Voters, the local chapter of the American Association of University Women, the Pontiac Education Association, the United Church Women and the Pontiac Parent-Teacher Association Council. The CNC also is planning for tomorrow a fund raising meeting. More than 100 business and professional people from the Pontiac, Birmingham, Ferndale and Northland areas are expected to attend. Mrs. George Romney, wife of the governor, and Democratic constitutional convention delegate Frank Balcer of Detroit will speak at the 9:30 a.m. meeting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Deer, 645 Arlington St., Birmingham. Moc Assured of Support (Continued From Page One) the Earl of Snowdon to call off a visit to Paris March 8-11. Macmillan said the cancellation was to avoid possible political embarrassment. The right-wing Daily Express called his idea for promotion of trade through a Commonwealth conference “a magnificent prospect.” West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer declared in an interview he feels certain Britain can gain admittance to the European trading bloc soon. In what could be interpreted as a rebuke to De Gaulle, Adenauer also eraphalically backed the Ken-nedy-Macnnlllan Nassau agreement caling for the establishment of a multinational nuclear force f(^r the North Atlantic Alliance. \ If THE PONTIAC PRESS. \TUESUiiY, FEBRUARY 12, 19C).] No Fun Like Snow Fun Repeat Nuptial Vows in Presbyterian Church Rachele Lyn Farsetti of Rose City and Charles Raymond Lee Hopkins repeated marriage vows before Rev. Galen E. Hershey and some 300 guests Saturday evening in the First Presbyterian Church. A reception in the Livingstone Avenue home of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Hopkins followed their son’s wedding. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Otis Carte, Rose City and Peter Farsetti of Detroit. Medallions of seqiiined white Ralian lace, touched with seed pearls, accented the bouffant bridal gown of white silk organza fashioned with long-sleeved, fitted lai bodice of lace. Silk illusion veiling fell from a layered pearl tiara. A purple orchid centered the bride’s bouquet of white carnations. ' Dr. and Mrs. Glmn A. Sanford of Club for a fun-packed ski-week with a Bloomfield Hills register at Otsego Ski host of Pontiac area friends. Getting ready for ski class on the picturesque hills of Otsego Ski Club, William B. Hargreaves of Bloomfield Hills, waits while Mrs. Hargreaves laces her boots. Mrs. Herman Hay of Milford attended her niece as honor matron. Rocky Stapleton and Sharon Geasler were bridesmaids. They wore yellow taffeta dresses and carried matching carnations. Garry Looney assisted the bridegroom as best man with Herman Hay and Earl Neeb ushering. The newlyweds will live in Pontiac. MRS. C. R. L HOPKINS Annual Hospital Awards Made Women Hold Annual Parfy By SIGNE KARLSTROM Annual awards were made yesterday at a meeting of the Women’s Service Committee of William Beaumont Hospital, with Mrs. Rutledge B. Tompkins presiding. Recognition was paid to those who had reached the various benchmarks of hospital volunteer service between May and December 1962. Sixteen gold pins were awarded to those who had served 1,000 hours; 23 silver pins to those who had served 500 hours; and service stripes to those with 100 hours. Hubert; Mrs. Robert A. Maxwell; Mrs. S. J. Rozema; Mrs. Glenn Roby; Mrs. George Maxted; Mrs. Thomas H. Clark; Mrs. Paul E. Chen-n a u 11 and Mrs. C. Dean Brown. Brozo at Pompano Beach, Mr. ,^and firs. Paul M. McKenney have returned to their Dunston Road home. Golden Agers Plan Dinner After a week at Miami Beach and a few days visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Glen On February 19, Mrs. Wil-1 i a m B. Bachman Jr. of Bloomfield Hills will have a meeting of the newly formed Birmingham Chapter of the Connecticut College Alumnae, of which she is president. The Golden Age Club will hold a cooperative dinner 6:30 p.m. Thursday, at the Waterford Community Center on Williams Lake Road. Feb. 25 is the date set for the annual card party. There will be table and door prizes and refreshments. The public is invited. The Birmingham Junior Woman’s Club annual “couples” party was held Saturday at Hawaiian Gardens Restaurant in Holly. Social chairman for the event was Mrs. Donald Hite with Mrs. John Bell as co-chairman. Assisting them were Mrs. Jack jyhite, Mrs. Carlton Stewart, Mrs. Bradley Brown, Mrs. John Sweger, Mrs. Charles Piper and Mrs. Harry Fall. .P/.v. Lumnl Hayes rewards enthusi- after his day's workout in her instructor- aslic skier, Howard //. Fitzgerald II, hn,sband’s top ski class. Bedford Road, with her sunny smile Among tho.se from this area were Mesdames Donald Fles-er; Harold Geggie; S. A. Milne; Charles Mintling; Bradley Stephenson and Ernest Widlung. Others were Mrs. Forrest I fast ride to the lop by rope tow is obviously enjoyed^by Mrs. Frederick J. Poole and Mrs. ” W. Strait Jr. At the top they will join their .ski-l cbmmates and instructor. , Fred J. Poole, lleilch .Street and Noyce W. Strait . of We.st Irociuois, pause on the slopes before their de.scent down one of the ski trails. Prospective 'Ball and Chain' Is Sixteen Pounds of Strikes OES Unit Gathers in Temple By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I am 20 and have been engaged to a boy my age for the past year. He plays in four bowling leagues and besides that lie bowls jackpots after league twice a week. He never lakes tne anywhere except to the bowling alley and: think he would be a good guy to marry’? SICK OF BOWLING DEAR SICK: Marriage has enough problems without adding a 16-pound bowling ball to it. Your young man is much too bowling - happy for marriage at the moment! Marry him only if you plan to start out with plenty of strikes against you. ABBY wedding date for April, but the more I* think of it the more I think he should settle down before W6 get married. All he wants to talk about 1.S bowling; I wonder if you DEAR ABBY: Suddenly one Of my closest girl friends started acting very cool and distant to me. Twic&I asked her What the troulile was. After two frigid ‘'nothings” I realized it was me she was mad at. % Her coolness continued so i finally apologized for anything 1 might have done wrong. I itonestly haven’t the faintest idea how I offended her. r She continues to treat me like a .stranger and I can’t understand it as she has always been a very thoughtful and understanding person. What can 1 do to patch things up? MISERABLE DEAR MISERABLE: Nothing! You have overestimated the girl. No truly “thoughtful and understanding” person would suddenly give,a friend the cold shoulder wijh-out telling her why and giving her a chance to defend herself.v Pontiac Chapter No. 228 of the Order of the Eastern Star held its business meeting Monday evening at the Masonic Temple on East Lawrence Street. Worthy Matron Mrs. Charles Moore announced Friendship night will be Feb. 25 at the Roosevelt Temple when the past matrons and past palrons of Pontiac Chapter Np. 228 OES will exemplify the work of 1867. Refreshments were served by Mrs. Duane Boughton and Mrs. Stuart Choate. CONFIDENTIAL XO “THINK YOU’RE A PHONY”: Sorry, but everyone who has ever written to me and enclo.sed a self-pddressed, stamped envelope for my personal, reply has received one. Keep House Safe for Small Kids S^rew a blown fuse Into each unused elfectric socket and save curfpus child from harm. '' Flowers . . The Symbol of Love and Beauty . . . of thoughtfulness and appreciation. What better Valentine can there be . . . than FLOWERS BY JACOBSEN'S. EARLY AMERICAN VALENTINE While ceramic Pitcher and* Bowl, attractively arranged with carnations, white pom-poms, red hearts and heather. CUPID VALENTINE This original white ceramic vase with dainty cupid attached, filled with choice Spring flowers, is truly an expression of Love and Thoughful- Brighten Your Home With FLOWERING PLANTS • AZALEAS •CYCLAMEN •MUM PLANTS... f«n, ^4 JACOBSEN’S FLOWERS Downtown Pontiac 101 N. SAGINAW ST., PONTIAC 545 S. BROADWAY, LAKE ORION FE 3-7165 MY 2-2681 Dalivary twica daily to Birmingham, Bloomliald and Datroit. tV THE PONTIAC PRESS. Ti/eSDAY. FEBRUARA^ 12, 1963 MARKETS The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers uid sbkl by them in wholesale package lots. (Rotations are furnished by the Detroit Byreau of Markets, as of Monday. Produce NEW YORK (f>-Motors backed away from recent gains as the slock market resumed its decline in moderate trading early today. , Losses of key stocks went from fractions to about a point. A conspicuous loser was Bath Iron Works, down mbre than 3 following a dividend cut and a report of a sharp drop in earnings for the shipbuilding company. Chrysler’s drive to new highs was stopped as it dropped point. Fractional losers included Poultry and Eggs ttRROIT POin.TBT DETROIT. Peb, 11 (AP)~Prlc«8 _______ per polini »t Detroit lor No 1 quolltj llvo ppultry: Heary type tiepe ao>23; Ufht type bant t: brollerl and tryers 1-4 Ibi. wmu a«-M. . Highway Cost Index Up LANSING U^ichigan’s highway construction cost index rose two-tenths of a point last year to 169, reports the State Highway [^Department. The index, figured on a base of 100 points in 1940, was 168.8 at the end of 1961. DETROIT. Feb. 11 (AP)—E|k. prtcei paid per doeen at Detroit by'lint ra-celrtn (Including D.8.): WUltei Qrade A jumbo 41-4S; extra large 3S-43; large 3SMi-43; medium 3T> 31; browna Orade A jumbo 43-43: extra large 33-40: large 30-3gtb: medium 30-37: cbecki 30-32. ER AND coos (AP)—Chicago Mer-itter ateady: - • ^han||e—Bi Livestock cattle 3 DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT. Feb. 11 (AP)—(USOA)- ---------- juppiy jipugl; good to low cholc. _________..______n moderate aupply: t enough aalai any cltaa to eaub-llah trade. i — Barrowa and gilts Hogs 000. Barrows and gll steady: aowa ateady: few lots 230-200 lb 14.M-10.7t: 1. 2 at a 13-13.50: 2 1 and 3 3 Stocks of Local Interest FiguroO aner decimal polnta are alghtha OVER THE COONTKR STOCKS The following quotatloni do not neces-aarlly represent actual transactlona but are intended aa a guide to the approximate trading range of the aecurluea. AMT Corp......................10.4 11.4 Aunt Jane's Food .............11 12.4 Detroiter Mobile Homes ....... 0.0 7.4 Diamond Crystal ..............10.7 Electronics Capital .........11 Electionicf mtematlonal ...... 0 Frlto-Lay, — Affiliated----- Chemical Fund Commonwealth Stock . .. Keystone Income K-1 . -. Keystone Orowtn K-2 .... Mass.,investors Growth . Mass. Investors Trust . Putnan Motors Back Away From Gains Stock Market Resumes Decline General Motors, Ford and American Motors. Studehaker eased. ★ ★ Steels firmed, showing a mixed pattern, with Jones & Laughlin and U.S. .Steel rising fractionally. Chemicals also showed some resistance to further losses as Union Carbide, Eastman Kodak and Air Reduction clung to the upside. Du Pont, however, slid more than a point. Semiholiday conditions prevailed on Wall Street due to observance of Uncolu’s birthday. New York banks were closed. Oils continued soft in reaction to news of a Russian oil deal with the British. Royal Dutch and' Jersey Standard lost fractions. IBM fell about 3 points. Merck lost more than a point. Utilities displayed a stoing of small losses. American Telephone, Consolidated Edison, and Southern California Edison lost fractions. Prices were irregularly lower on the American Stock Exchange. Losers included Paddington “A” Tri-Continental Warrants, Imperial Oil, Edo Corp. “A,” and Gul-ton Industries. Up fractionally were Occidental Petroleum, ^r-ora Plastics, Draper and Gulf American Land. American Stock Exch. FIguraa after decimal polnta are elghtha NEW YORK (AP)—American Stock Ex-Kalaer Indue . Cal”E' I 7(4 Teohnico ..... 3(4 The New York Stock Exchange NICW YORK (AP)—Following Is a list, of selected stock transactions on the New York Stock Exchange with noon Monday Fla Pw 1.04 prices; Fla PL 1.20 __A_____ ' Fd Fair .00 FMC Cp .00 tales M Ford M 1.00 i4t.)H^liUw LsslChjt.l-^ - - a 1374 13V4 13(4 — (4 2 8174 81.' 3174 -f (4j ^ 12 ml if* 5^" +H*" OamSk IJOa 5 337* M .... 38 11(4 IIV* U(4-Vs Oen CIg 1.20 X2 31(4 Alleg Lud 2 5 3474 34% 34% + % Oen EUo 2 9 5174 51% 51% - % a«n Pda 1.80 32 44% 44(4 44(4 - Vs O Mills 1.20 3 53% 53% 53% •)• 74 0«n Mot 2a 3 1874 18% 1674 1.;?® 38 22(4 22 22 —(4'OPubSV .21g 12 85(4 55% 85% - 74 OFubU 1.20b 5 117% 117(4 117% - % «'ir li20 X21 19% 18% 13% - 74 ;•* 8 15% 18% 18% - %,0*"Tlre .40 32 35% 35% 3574..... 28 47 4674 48% ..... Oetty Oil M 52% « M - H'aUlette 1.10a 18 34% 33% 34% + H 10 10% 1074 1074 - % 25 23% 22% 23 + % 39 34% 33% 34% + V* Grace .90b 444 22 21% 21% + 74 OrandU .60b I? + 54 gftss* .'4^2 da.) ngh Lmr Last Ckg. 1 42% 42% 42% ... . « 74% 74% 74(4 - % 18 25V« 25% 25V, " 31 40 39% 40 76 44% 43% 44 ■■ •“ 9% •- AIumLtd 40 7874 73V« 78% - X7 83% 8.7% 8374 3 32% 32Vs 32 V, .. 94 83% 63 63% .. 6 3774 3774 3774 - 19 5% 574 5>A .. 14 34% 3.7% 34% .. Can 2 AmFP .64 26 1874 18% 18% . 58 32 31% 32 4 41 13 12% 12’/i f 13 46 % 4574 45% - (11 34% 34V« 34V4 Am Tob l .M 62 M t XIS 1374 13% ll%-% OWFto 1.70 83 124 123% 123% - %lOreyh 1.101 so 29% 2974 29% — %!Orumn l.M 7! i!'* niMLSn i sn< 'Nominal Quotations Anacon 2.50e Ankendi .40 ArmcoSt 3 Armour 1.40 ArmCk 1.80a AshI OU 120 "n 1.40 1.20a ___ Line 4! AURef 2.40 ■ , Cp Cant > Cp M ; 13.95 16Y5 BellHow .< --------- "4 Bendix 2.4 , Jellfwnll '.I 7 Bigelow .» Boeing 2 14 4874 46 46V, 15 34% 34% 34% 3 52% 5274 M'i r 727, 72% : I 2674 26V4 S 45% «'■ 48 ■ -%;HeydenN , 7274 72% 72% ... Hoff ElecI .... .... .... Homes! 1. 26 25 % 26% 26% - % Hotel An 8 52% 5274 52% 4 % HoweSd a 53 , 52% 52% .... Hupp Cp 8 1874 15V, 1 34 24% 24 : 65 22% 21% 2 7 iV/, 17% 1774 14 3474 34% 34Va 15 44% 44% 44% 12 37 3874 3674 — % 1 38% 35% »% 2 2% 274 2% - 3 11% 11% 11% + r 5 7% 7% 7% .. PSvEO 2. publkln . Pullman : 16 138% 136V4 138% f 23 74 73% 74 4. a 73% 73% 1 6% 6% .. . —2674 i-,. 0 17 39% 39(4 3974 - ‘ —R— 129 64% 6374 64 41' 54 25% 28 25% + ' 13 28 % 27% 2774 ... 1 8% 8% 8% .... ' -"'i 1174 1. lAv 1 10 17% 1774 1774 .. I StI 2 16 36% 36(4 36% .. I 1.10b 30 45% 45 45V, + ..._,1 ,50b 7 32V, 32 S2V. + Reyn Met .90 32 24% 24% 24"4 .. - Tob 1.60 x44 41 40% 407* 4 ..... Oil 1.80 x2 43% 43% 43% .. RobFultn 1 3 25% 25% 25% - Rohr Co................... Schick SCM .42f Scott Pap I infant 4 4 V4 Interli — O. tnlRiii r 30V. 28 30%' i 21% 21V. 21(4 - Int Mick 2a I 22% 23 iS &r 8 •5 55^ ! H BuddCo 12g S2'TJ'*'S'S Bulova .60 88.1940.10 Burlllid 30g '1 Burroughs 1 20 Ralls 150.89. off 0 15 Utils. 136.63. off 0 85 Stock, 238.13. off Volume to 11 a.m. 0 Treasury Position •WABHINOTON (AP)—The cash^poi tlon of the Treasury compared with co re»ponding date a year ago: .............. I 6,152,42«.61< JOfipoaltii fiscal year _ July 1 ....... ........ 8*110,186,040.7T •Withdrawal, fiscal yd, , I 73.313.no.8S Total debt ..............•3304.817,823,73 Gold BSSOts ............. 3 Balance ........... ...... 3 4,74i:i‘l4.36l Deposits fiscal year July 1 ................ 3 53.730.330,431 Withdrawals fiscal yr. t 67,004, lS3.32j ClUetSV 2.60 Coca Col 1 Pe- Hlk. of Pay- Barbsr Oreene . Re-Elected Chairman of American Exchange NEW YORK (UPI) - Edwin Posner was re-elected chairman of the American Stock Exchange at the organization’s annual election yesterday. Posner has served as a governor of the country's secoiHl largest stock exchange for a total of 24 years. Nine candidates were also elected to the board of governors yesterday without opposi- • Liconitt Sale Still Today P*p l.( a MV/H ^ Int T&T I 'A 10 22% 22% ■-26 307* 33% M 44% 44% 44% 4 X8 87% 86",4 87% 4 %i''"7 ‘ 66 18 17% 17% - % *4 16 lo"'* I574 " ■' ?? Sin. SS ™ ± 24 53"4 52% 52% - 18 45 43V, 4474 ( a 63 82% 63 10 19% 19% 19% - 31 29V. 29 29(4 4 S Johns Man 2 30 45% 4574 45% - ' SI Jon Logan .70 4 16% 16% 16%- (flJiinasSiL 2.M 17 50% M 5074 4 ' ^jJoy Mfg 1 6 22% 22% 22% ... SouthnC 1.60 SporryR .75t X,r« 0 la and 2 StdKolls .Mt Sian War I.2( Stauf C3i t.2( Sterl Drg 1.80 Studebakrr Sunray 1.40 8 15% 15V, 15% 4 1 22% 22V. 22V. 4 9 36 35% 35% - XIO 78% 77% 77%-- 17 28’% 26% 26'74 - 7 42V, 42V, 42% .. X.76 19 18’,4 18% 4 Texosul .560 20 15 14% 15 4 Toxin, ,20g 14 64V, 63% 64V, t T,x PCO 1.20 141 55 % 84% 55 ) - - Ld 30e 17 20% 20 20% 4 Cater Trac .! S *1/ u beh V Ind J? S-v* T 4* Lehmn 1.21g „ JJS* HJv 1 (/* LOFOl, 2,60 S(j i 4 3 24% 24% 24% 4 % “**“•* ® 27 19% 18% 18(4 *8 37% 37% 37% 4 V. 110 ;iOV. 29(4 30V. - - % 4 54(4 54V. 54V. ... 3 41’/, 41% 41’/. 4 > 25 29% 29(4 29% - ' x4 23’% 23% 23’% ~ ' 19 18 1774 17% — ' 13 17% 17% 17% - ' 3 1% 174 17* 'f ' 16 28 % 25% 20% 8 5474 54 % 54V. 4 ' 10 12% 12% 12% I 10’% 10’/. . 25% 28% * LIttonIn 1.871 Thea LonsSCsm I LonglLl 1.60 Con EdI, 3 Copper R "»rnPd 1.4( „roW* c“ .8 Cm Zell I X359 88% 87% 88(4 4 1' X29 60’% 60"4 60% 4 7 6 67 68V, 66% -I 40 7 03 02% 93 4 V l)a TO 4674 46 46% I ' 21 28’% 2874 2874 4 ( M M’% 8074 50% - 7 10 2774 27% 27% - V 8 24(S 24% M% _ + 7 M 47% 45(4 4774 + 7 16 26% 28 2874 -)• 7 16 49V. 48’% 40% 4 V 14 87% 87% 87% ( 7 3 33% Lorlllrd MadPd 1.26g Dayoo Deere 2.20a Del Hud 1251 Den ROW 1 Del EdI, l.2( Del Sll .I5g Dj,ne| .40b »" M .80 DowCh 18()b press 1.20 duPont 7.Mr gJSmi'AJn’" 28 42% 16 45% «% 34 64% 63% 4 IlV. 11(4 20 55% 16 52’% 62V, I 47 47 16 I0’% 10% - —D— I 7 14% 1474 1 14 1574 16V, 1 61% 61% - • 42'% 42% .... ' 2474 24-V. — ) Mont Ward 21(4 2l’% ^(4 2 12% llvil 1 31V. 31V. 31V. I 46 48 48 40 28% 28% 18 50 58% 7 29 24’% 11 243(4 242% 5 nii .E— Eaton M 1.1 BlBond H 11 10 24'/. 23’4 24'4 95 82% 52(4 -^7. 13 113’% 113% 1|3’% 2 35’% 36’% 36% UNSING «V-Th« secretary of SlSar r lo state’s office reports all ito auto ' license sales branches vdli be ‘ ^ Open for business today, Lincoln’s Birthday. TTiose enjt^ing the holiday are urged to take theiF3?roT Loi» dianoe to pick up their 1963 li- rTmst«^1b cense tails. ' Mr* 1;?“ 4 5% 5% 8% - 28 85% 86% 65% 7 .74 63% 5374 83% - 0 10(4 1974 10% - 17 20% 20V. 20V. , 80 M 57% 57"4 t 16 44’% 4474 44*4 , 3 4374 43(4 437. - _M— '4 38"', '4 45 - . ... .4 31'%- 1 I3’% 13(4 13’% . 13 36(4 xlO 4.7 IS 31(4 I nv. 1 5674 I 6 M bo o« 2 41 40% 4074 4 85% 85% 88% 77 12'% I2V, 12V. 23 20% 29% 2074 5 35V. 35% 35% 2 10% 107* 19% 24 95 94',4 04% 18 SO 3 l^% M% - 10% 10'/4 No NOas 1.80 *• •Oao 2.20a glaPw 128 •thrp I Nwst Alrl ,80 Norwich la Ed 1.70 7 40 4474 40 21 71% 71(4 71(4 ■ 7 38% 38% 3874 10 28'% 26'% 28% - 17 17V, 17V. 17V. ■) 34 41% 41 41% 7 I 1% 1% 1% - 18 49 48’% 48’% I 17 63% 83(4 637. 4 8 49 48'% 48% ~ 43 43'% 43 43'% - 12 23% 2374 23% ' 1 4I'% 40'V, 4074 - ) 42V, 42 42 - 17 1074 10'/. I 4 18% 18% 1 1 ll’/i 11% 1 4 2m 29% a -:F— 18 64% 44% 4,„ . 22 b% 1% . 8% 4 (4 Pa RR '.I 32 21(4 am 21 ( % hep Cola 1 37% I7>% 37% - !4|l«flser .Mi x3 3174 .71% 31% Phelps D 8 38 347. 38 -I (4 Phlla El ,18 S3 :|% MV. .... Phil gdl 24 38V, 37’% , . 6 1347. 1347. 1347. - V. ' 2 25% 25% 25% 47 82’% 62V. 627. 8 31% 31% 31% NEW YORK (AP)-Publishers of New York’s nine dosed newspapers say a contract settlement with 3,000 striking printers “Will be extremely difficult if not Impossible” to achieve through normal collective bargaining, and “a long test of economic strength appears inevitable’.” •k -k -k The Publishers Association of New York City issued the statement Monday night after the collapse of talks between publishers and printers. The statement also said: “The publishers hope some way may be found to explore with officials of all unions representing ___ .. ..^loyes and others to consider our common problem. We al have a deep interest In finding a procedure which will permit resumption of publication of our newspapers and a return to work by all our eitfliloyes.” , •k k k Mayor Robert F. Wagner led the more than two-week mediation effort to get the nine major dailies back on the streets. They disappeared 67 days ago. He announced Monday, aft^r an 18-hour negotiating Session that he was recessing the talks indefinitely pending reports from both sides. In Cleveland, Ohio, negotiations continued in an effort to end the blackout of that city’s two newspapers, in its 75th day. RIFT REPORTED Printers union officials in New York charged there were “differences of opinion” among publishers, preventing a settlement here. The publishers denied this. k k k The New York Post reportedly would like to settle, said Bertram A. Powers, president of the printers’ union local and its chief negotiator. But, he said, the Post “was fearful that if it did, it would suffer retribution from advertisers who would align themselves with the publishers association." Tramllron Tarent Coni -u- I 83’% 54 I 82% 62’% Unit Cp .35* Un Fruit .00a UOai Cp 1.60 Unit MAM la 1. I m Rorx .80a 4 : U8 Frhl 1.20a 62 ; rii. -----ell .W ITB Ht«,l : .16’% 36% .18% - *4 Va Caro Ch 32% .1174 3I‘% -1'/. I 21'% 21'% 21'/, I 16 .10% 207. 30'% + 'll 27»% 27% 27% .15 3474 .14% 34% , . 22 .19 .19 30 ,,, 4 46% 467* 46% , ,, 7 42.% 42'% .42'% , ,, .2 28% 28'% 28'%- 5 27 26"4 267, - x4 00(4 o6'% 90'/. f -z— 23 58V. 55% 38 ) unofficial. forsgolng br—* — 1 I iintad, ,p( I not Includad. ...... axtran b—Armi: ilu, xiock dlvld«nd. d--D8clar«d .11 IMI pii. Mock dividmid. «—Declared or paid ,0 tdr Ibis year, f—Payable In xlook during 1901, extlmated ca,h value ex-divlifend or ex-dl,trlbutlon dale -Paid lait, year. b---Deelared or pak »r «lock dividend or ipllt up. k—Do dared or paid thU year, an accuniutatlve ' lue with dividend, in arreara. p—Paid 1, year, dividend omitted, def------■■ action taken at la,t dividend ......... -Declared or paid In 1082 plu, Mock ddend. I—Payable In atock during 106" Litvot.u „.>h ..iiie on ax-dividnid i y—Liquidating dii the Tail''quarVerTy Hon. tmlei, pthei r.; 10 34% 33(4 ; 1 23V. 33V. : 04 2874 28% I tS r i _ _________________________________________ * *7vJ 46% 4? " + % dAtrllnTtCn" xw—WUhouT 1 33% 33 33 — ww^-WUh Wftrrxntx wd>^WH«n 10 507* H% 6874 " ' • ' *- " 14 31% 3I(% 3174 25 .16% 35% 38 wi—WarnfnU* ui^uKder vj~ln baiikniptoy or recelverxiiip NYPublisliers See Long Fight 'Normal Methods May Not Yield Settlement' By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK ~ Three things busihess would like to do without as the first quarter of 1963 nears itiii half-way point: 1. Continuation ofgeneraUy nasty eather over much of the nation that has I mixed up jiroduc-tion, transporta-j Uon and retail * i. DAWSON Labor strife that has been unusual^ bitter in several Industries and that has tied up, or threatens to tie up, important segments of the economy. 3. Uncertainty in Washington, both as to possible legislation on Capitol Hill and disquieting predictions from various agencies as to what lies ahead if such and such is or isn’t done. . k k k Winter weather will pass, al- NBC's Bureau in Mosedw Is Shut by Reds MOSCOW (AP)-The Soviet government ordered the National Broadcasting Company today to close its Moscow bureau because of a program about Premier Khrushchev. The Foreign Ministry’s press de-partmnt called in NBC correspondent Russell Jones and told him to leave the country. Press director Leonid Zamyatin told Jones that an NBC program Feb. 3 titled “The Rise of Mr. Khrushchev” and another late in January were anti-Soviet. Tass, the Soviet news agency, said “This step was taken in connection with a recent series of malicious anti-Soviet broadcasts by the National Broadcasting Co. which grossly distorted Soviet re-plity and had the obvious purpose Of arousing in the U.S. population hostility toward the Soviet Union.” NBC has been represented in Moscow By Frank Bourgholtzer since June 1961. Jones has been in Moscow while Bourgholtzer has been traveling in Spain. NO COMMENT IN N.Y. In New York, William McAn-drew, executive vice president of NBC News, said the company will have no comment until it studies the Soviet charges further. Bourgholtzer will be allowed to return to Moscow to close the NBC bureau. Jones said Zamyatin made clear that the closure of the bureau was riot aimed at either himself or Bourgholtzer. Grain Prices OPENINO ORAIN lljAP) -Op#n .69% 2.00% Mar .1.02% May .1.64’% Jill . .1.00 B«p Ry: 1.15H Mar 1.1874 May 1.11 Jul , 1.15’% Rail* lad. UUIa. Fg«. l.Yd. ' M.a 100.5 59.2 85.4 KO M.8 100.5 80.2 88.5 04.0 Business Blues Three Gloomy Items f f » I # i By ROGER E. SPEAR (Q) “My wife teaches school and I’ve a good job wito an oil company. We’re both in good health and I know we are real lucky people. I have 300 shares of Texaco stock and $7,000 in the bank. We owe $6,000 on our house. Would yon sell eiiou(di Texaco to pp( off the h(Ase and what would you do with the $7,000 in the bank?” J. D. (A) You certainly are lucky people and very obviously happy, as well. I hope you will always continue to be so. Much as I like Texaco, you have too much in this situation and I would diversify by selling 200 shares and investing in equal amounts of American Telephone and Texas Utilities. I would leave my bank balance as it is, for a cash reserve, and I see no need for you to retire your loan. With monetary J( inflation again threat, a m^erate loan — to be paid off Imer with possibly cheaper dollars — is not a bad thing to have. (D) “We are a youag couple with three children. We are living on a small income but are able to save a modest amount each month. We would like very much to invest $25 to $30 a month in stocks but would need to dispose of them in a year or two for a down payment on a house. Have you any suggestions?” M. D. (A) You seam like an extremely nice couple and I have just one suggestion for you. Never buy shares of any sort knowing that they must be sold within a definite time limit. If the market should happen to be down at the time you need funds, you might suffer a serious loss of principal or you might have to defer buying your house, strongly believe that your money belongs In a savings account until you need it. When that time comes you will be able to withdraw it in full and with accrued Interest. (Copyright 1963) Official uncertainty is dramatized in the battle over tax cutting. One debate is over who should get the hipest cut, the lower-income brackets where consumer spending presumably would be spuited, dr corporations and higher-bracket individuals where presumably more investment funds would be put to work for the economy. _______ bitter is the fight over the closing of loopholes. The joy of lower tax rates can be dispelled for those who see their favorite deductions menaced or trimmed. Arguments on either side will grow louder as Congress opens hearings. A further worry for some Is that though not soon enough for many businessmen who have suffered damages either-to property or to production and sales. Labor strife seems particularly bitter this year because in an increasing number of cases it has been getting down to new fundamentals—labor’s fear of automation and management’s Jfear of rising costs that seem to defy curbing efforts. Stalemates and compromises seem to postpone rather than settle basic disputes. STRIKE SCARS Some of the strikes that have been ended leave scars. The dock strike is over but the New York piers still hold a tangle of cargo. And ships still await a chance to tax cute will only increase the immediate Treasury deficits. Administration assurances mat the cute will speed up the economy to a point whqi(;f ta,X collections will rise and erase the early deficits fall on deaf ears in many parte of the financial community, , To those critics inevitable inflation seems the more likely future result. NO REASSURANCE And the whole debate over where the economy at the moment is stalemated or growing too slowly or headed for a cyclical decline doesn’t reassure businessmen laying their plans for the future, as they must if they Intend to keep going. Nor is the debate just qcademic to labor. In the view of the man with a job the question tS: Will the economy be healthy enough to assure my keeping it? To the four million or so looking for work the question is: What will get the eixinomy going enough to make more jobs—for me and for the thousands who are reaching working age each month? Spring will settle some of today’s worries. Outdoor jobs wilf open up. Sales of many seasonal products will increase. Congress will get around to really considering some legislation proposals. Maybe some of the international uncertainties will be resolved, But in mid-February, the economic outlook often is as gloomy as the latest weather forecast. Expect Millionth Auto of Year Out This Week By BEN PHLEGAR AP Automotive Writer DETROIT — The automobile industry will build the one millionth car of the calendar year this week, staying about 7 per cent ahead of its 1962 pace. Through last Saturday the unofficial total stood at 875,612 cars compared with 812,968 in the similar period a year ago. The standard Chevrolet, Ford Galaxie and Rambler have held to their 1-2-3 order in the production standings. But there has been considerable juggling in the sser positions. For example, the standard Pontiac has moved up frpm seventh lo fourth while the Ford Fairlane has slipped from fourth to seventh. UPS AND DOWNS The Chevy II is running fifth this year, up from ninth, while the Falcon has slipped from fifth to eighth. The standard Oldsmo-bile continues in sixth place. Corvair moved down from eighth to ninth while the standard Buick held 10th both years. Three Chrysler products — Plymouth, Dodge and Valiant - hold the lUb through 13th spots this year whereas none of them was in the top 15 a year ago. Truck output also continues to State Treasury Totals LANSING (iPI-State Treasury income during the past week was 16.6 million and outgo was $27.3 million. The Treasury balance at the end of the week was $84.2 million. Camedian Leads Caravan Food Arrives for Negroes CLARKSDALE, Miss. (UPI)-Ne-gro comedian Dick Gregory today begin distributing around 14,000 tons of donated food to destitute Negroes. He claims the Negroes were dropped from federhl surplus food rolls because of voter registration activities. The flour and canned goods arrived late yesterday from Chicago In a caravan of trucks led by Gregory. Gregory said ne helped collect the food in Chicago “when I heard about Negro babies in Mississippi going without milk and bread.” CLAIMS PLOT ‘They cut off the federal sur- Slus food to Negroes in Clarks-ale and Greenwood because the oi||Negroes were pushing a voter 91 i,registration drive here,” Gregory •^fsajd. Federal, state and county officials denied the accusation. Attorney Aubrey Bell, representing the Leflore County Board of Supervisors, said the program was “cut off purrily for a financial reason and mo other.” He said both races were affected by the move, not just Negroes. Officials in neighboring Sunflower County said the surplus program still was in effect. The Mississippi Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights last week backed up county officials, saying it could find no civil ri^ts violations. Lodge Calendar Annual Meeting Quadrant Low 12 Club, Wednesday, Feb. 13 at Roosevelt Lodge Temple, 22 State St. Election of officers qnd olhor impoHanl business. outpace last year with all but Dodge among the volume producers showing greater volume. Dodge is just a few units behind the year-ago pace. Economists often give more weight to truck production than to car production since they feel greater capital outlays are involved. Strong truck sales indicate, in their opinion, confidence in the general economy. Business Holes S. D. Ward has been appointed manager of Montgomery Ward’s Detroit metropolitan district, it was announced today. The district i composed of nine! Ward’s stores,! including one in^ Pontiac. „ Ward, who has'^/^fi^lS^'^ been with the company 22 / years, was i m e r 1 y general^^B manager of the WARD company’s north-central region) William D. Thomas Jr., president of the Thomas Ecohomy Furniture Co., 361 S. Saginaw St., has been elected to the board of directors of the Michigan Retailers Association. Thomas, a former director of the association, and a past president of the Michigan Buyers Association, lives at 460 Shore-view Drive, Waterford Township. He has been in the furniture business since 1946. Earl Fortin of 3771 Embarca-dero St,, Waterford Township, has been named a manager of the I new Lake Orion I branch office of I First Federal I Savings of Oak- f land, it was an- [ nounced today. Fortin, a grad-| uate from St. I Joseph’s College ■ in Kens clear, FORTIN Ind., was previously in the real estate business in Bay City. The new branch office is scheduled to open March 1. Hews in Brief Howard V. Ileldenbrand, The Pontiac Press’ Man About Town columnist, will speak at the meeting of the Oakland Chapter of the Michigan Society of Professional Englneefs, 7 p.m. Thursday at the Rotunda Inn on Pine Lake Road. Fife believed started by hot !ihes from a heating stove caused an estimated $2,2IX) damage last night to the home 6f Hazel Stafford, 3190 Warren Drive, Waterford Township. Damage to contents has not been determined.