Tfm W9ath%r THE PRESS ' Horn* Cditloq VOL. isio Nq, 2 ★ ★ ★ # :]N>NTIAC. HICgljGAy, FBlDAI?, FEBRUAHY 9. 1»62^ PAGES 0imiB>*R83A’^&rSSBric>ii*i. for 20 Million Asked of Congress Strike Piles Up Paris Woes PAIUtii pratMt M tbB poUM method! In ■ wild riot tai which eight pcnoM nivre kllloi and hundred! Injured, iMdled modi of Pule^lMirinMi and induitnr today. HUOfTTC JOINS Of AetN!! Bri^ Bardot, lint hubaMl, mo«e dMctcr Roger were caned out by Jured In failure to the rigbHrtng merit army. mree baara •« etnet aghSng. today! itrike wu the (Int of h movie tarhnIelaBi at a eludlo Interior MiiiMer Roger Prey chaiged that the Conununiatf provoked t dared; band! of riotera attacked the ae-by Rarely have nch well-organiaed' The NDllnter party led by former •*»- The __________ other lelt-wtiy ad with k threat to call a general - . . - - the tunaraB of‘be Injured; night'! vlctlma. S ISyaaroM yea^ who le a Mmkiby - ------- a aalverritjr pieliaipr by Eait Berlin Soviet Cammhndanl Col. Andivl V. Solovyev to enter Weft Berlin to meet with the Brit-I auamandaid,i MaJ. Gen, Sir tan Ddaoooibe. tuLvjrV atapped I » rum — Wounded man on the pavemmit In the Piaoe de la Baatiile la eemlortp* |me |Ma aBm hf waa lajmad h» the riettng. hi l^ula Thuradap ni^. Woman wharf the waa (truck by a itoaw. French police poliee wounded in Conrnnmlal-led rioting agalnat the right wing aecret army. in Lasf N-Tesis' K«nn«cly aicU Reports Rad Advance; Soy Jf K Naor Dacition The guperintendent of Pontiac State Hospital today praised a bill introdtiosd by Sen. Farrell IL iloberts, R-Pcmtiac, as giving “the^laine priority to construction of s children's uint at Pontiac as the priority given live W AS|i INOTON OPl— HO to proposed uiUU at Ypsilantl and NOTthviUe PresldeBl Kennedy’s ton hospitals.” Dr. Walter'H. Obenauf said the $1.15 million In funds proposed by Roberts wouUf^imovlde space for 80 children and ^ space in aduP^” ^ dlssnmhnent advlaar ported today that the Soviet,Union "achieve^ some substantial gains” in nucleate weapons develop* ment to Ha long aertaa of test explosions last fall. DlaarnusncDt Oirretor William C. rbsuir mid the Foater made hit datement about Soviet teat reaulta I letter to the Waahington Poat which gave further indication that the Kennedy administration I the next few weeks to order ahnospheric testing of U S. nud REDSOADrmo Foster referred to the Itantial gains’* nuute by SovM te^ i velopers. “One men audi advantage.* that la, another kmg and intenatve aeries, alter p period of no teat* ing on eltber side during which thi^ extrapolated the reaulta of seeretly unnaied tnr new te might aeMw give them a raper-fority In the anttmiaaUe or < ' tary (nterted would Snd hard not Soviet hopea tor military dom- dieate that they will pte other monriorfatm on testing during which OMy would make aecrei pfWparadons for a second ten 'a ^Omedataoph a lead in tJiv race. . (Owtlmied on Page 3, Cbl. 5) Director of Hospital Lauds Roberts' Bill wards now being used by children. mended the reatcaatioa of Parte police Chief Maurice Papon and Um diamiasal of Frey. The party ■ many of “ WMIe the mob! of leftiate surged through the streets battling police, terrorists ef the anii-De Gaulle Secret Army Organization eet off a doien or more plea tic bombs in scattered sectiona of the capital. As usual the bombers away. Russian Halted at Berlin Border Yanks Block Attwmpt by Rod Commandont to A^BBt British Ckiwf BERLIN. lUPll An American a U.i. mUtBry ptHeMnn at the Friedrlehatnime emariag paW a*ed. “Are jran OsL SatevyvT“ ’Hie Soviet oommanoant did npl the only be Oonunu-f non<|ermans-4o use. Solovyev has been refused entry to the American sector through friedrichatraue shtoe late December foUowing an inddant in which the U.8. commandant, MaJ. Gen. Albert Walaon 11. was turned back by East German police for refusing to show identifleation doeu-fbr his civilian aide. Plan Requested in Letter From Defense Chief Aimtd at Kenntdy Cool of Nation widt Sy^m; Cost $450 Million X VabHINOTON Ifi—the admlnlstratkm today aaki Congress to approve a first-year fallout shelter program for 20 million persons at g cost to the government of $450 milUon. 'The proposal was delivered in a letter from Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, as the first major step toward Prsai-Kannedy'a announced goal nationwide public shelter program for S mlUkm Americans. MASe MRASUREMENTS - Engineers began a physical aurvey of Pontiac buildings this weak to determine the beat potential locations for future oommigilty fallout nheiters. William C. Bailey reoords the data as Theodore £. Kuhn measures the thickneu of a wall at Pon-WSII mass Is a vital Hem in the survey. Both men rsprosail GlBala A RoaaetU. Inc., Archltecte-EngiiMart, ef Detroit. under federal contract to make the ahelMr rarvey to this area. Both have Department of Defame identification cards. Watching the procedure Is Donald H. Cama, aasial state governmental fadlittea. d not, however, apply to factories. te oonunefcial ottioe f In ,:his letter, AidMmnara said was anticipated that the twl. ami payment would Cuba - PAOE tS. Viet Nam Strategy U.S. plans area-hy-area mop-up of Reds, but use of U.S. troops not foreseen PAGES 1, IS. Woteh Him Brazil has a pro-Red in* the background — PAOtej Il>, Wrangling Con-con Jumps from roads to taxM - PAGB lA Be Relaxed TV * Badte PrHrania (Oonttnued on Page 3, Ool. T) ] wn “•-•Li* J “Wjnssi 1- / TWO THi; rONTljtC PRESS, FMDAY, FEBHOARY », IDM Relations With Cuba Severed by Argentina IkUENOt AOUDI. ArmUM-ur ^ Ik |mMM Mfl* bMob Uit. SmbMfBy uttkif hm The lovtmtnent levered rel*-tioM with the Cattra regime OBdcr preHUre from Argemina't geoentle and admiral!, who were infuriated l>y thli oountiya failure to vole for oatracinn of the Caitrolteg at the recent conference in J*unta del Este. Argentina wae anCot tlx na-ttone which abetalned. BUENOS AIRES tUPD - Ar-gentliia broke off diplomatic rela-tioaa with Fidel Cariro'i Cuba last night, and within hour* the suburban home of d U.S. Embauy official was fire-l^bed in apparent retaliation. F\u1her anti-American outbreaks appeared likely today, although there were no Immediate reports of violence. Foreign MWater Miguel A. d’Aflalreo Marita Morn Ila Mo passport at tha foralga iidalstry last aIgM la (ormal token of tho OK Strike Vote at Pontiac Plant SpMdup Chargt AAad« by Local 653; Potiti^n UAW for Authority United Auto Workers Local SU at Pontiac Motor Division has voted overwhelmingly to go on Mrike Tho foreign office announcod that Argentine diplomats plan fo remain in Havana for ft hours, winding up details of omhaas)i bualness. Mora was expected to remain hero for about the same length of time. Hector'Villanueva, the AigenUne charge d'affalree In Havana, was Instructed to invite Cttba'e Manuel Cardtaial Arteaga y Betancourt, a “gneat" At the embasay, to accompany him to Buenos Alne. Fsety other rofageeo In asylum In the Havana easboasy wOl peso Job elassiflcatlon isaues Isn't Cectt C. MUllInU, local pnlsdent, today said a strike vote takyo yesterday showed 3 JTS In favor of a strike and S8B aipUnst. expect the International will decide on strike action by early next fosk. If they grant our re- *»7 Arg la not yet eortahi which eonatry tUb win be. Late last night, three unidentified men In an automobile hurled four “Molotov cocktail" incendiaries at the home of UJS. Embassy 1 Henry Pepper in suburban The attack was ineffective -of the crudo gasoline-filled bombs burst on the sidewalk and two did not function — but the would-be araoniets escaped. Pepper declined comment on the attack. Hammarskjold Plane Crash Quiz Rules,Pilot Error SALISBURY. Southern Rhode-aip (AP>—A Rhodesian gov^ n»t oommiaslon ruled today that P& error caused the plane crash at Ndola in which UJt. Secrplary-It mm Sersona September.' Ibe commission's findings were published after,U had heard testimony and deliberated for nearly a month. A five-member commission designated by the United Nations General Aseembly is now engaged In an Independent lavestlgatlon of the crash, which occurred while Hammarskjold was engaged In a peacemaking mission in the Congo. The plane's pilot has been identified as Oapt. Per HfUonqulst of will bo notified t)iat they have five days to reach a settlement,” MuUl-nlx said. Should no agreement be reached in the five £^1. we would walk out." aald tha major Isaue Mae la Plant Np. I , and asaembljr In Plant Ne. I.” Another issue Is job classification. The union contends that new methods of doing old jobs should put that job In a new classification but the corporation is classifying them as they were before the new methods or machines were put In Both are strikable items under our contract. We've been negotiating on them since just after new model production began last fall,” Mullinix said. Company officials were not immediately available to make a statement. Any prolonged strike at Pontiac Motor would also force a shStdown at Fisher Body Division production since the division makes Pontiac bodies. at UndBrground Site WASHINGTON (AP) - U’.S. seientists ^ve fired another nuclear devifr underground at the Nevada tear site. / Chrytlar Stock Up $1.12 NEW YORK (It - Ctaysler's >mman stock rose |1-12 on the New York Stock Exchange Thursday in the wake of the company's pr^it report for U61. The stock dosed at SS6.87. This compared to its low point of 137.37 last year. dill The Weather Pull U.8. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Haaardona driving warn-lag—eloHdy with snow today likely accumulating 1 to S Ifiehoa befoye diminishing to flurries tonight. A little warm-#r today, high II. Not. much change In temperature tonight and Saturdapr«lMF tonight 14. high Saturday SI. Iteat to northcasUrly winda It to U miloo today boeomlng north to northwoat and diminishing tonight and Sunday. 1 In IMS * In 1171 TSsnStr'i TtwH'stsr* CktH Alp*aSt is -I XtBMf CH)r 41 -14 O. dkplSl sa 17 Lm ABHIM M (4 H it tn !i reUfton I] -If OrlMni 71 IS Ttsvrrw C. It S Nrw T0?k M U Alku«u*r«w H W Omnhs It It Atltntt St 31 PbMnU u II aiiintrck 14 t rmiburth li*To UMtoa 31 It St. Loult ^ Chiciio it N 8. Uke C. D**v«r 91 at S rnnelMO .. pctlolt ai It 88 Mtrl* It Auto Industry Cuts Production to Sales DETROIT ili- Ward’s Automo-Uve Reporis said today the nw tten’s autpnekers, facing a 1-ndL UOB i|fdt new cm- myent^ by thO eiM>o( the indmh, conf-to jeor production to aalaa. •Tbe f-.... ke Tveek of IMl.' Tntck produotion wae eatlmatad et 14,515 units this week compared td 33^ last week and H.OIS tbe comparable avoek ofllOl. 'Ward*! said the taparing off in production ganerally rtflected leg. anfthg overtime operations as auto manufacturers maintain a ckiae watch on afbekpilts being built for CANDY PROM RTHBL - Mrs. 'Ethel Kennedy, wife of U. S. Atty. Oen. Robert Kennedy, gives a loUypop to an unidentified Japanese girl during her visit to Futaba Nursery and Orphanage in Tokyo, today. Mr*; Kennedy and wives of U. 8. Embassy ofltolals, who accompanied AP PSMWbl her on the vlait, sang tjie children a song, difn presentod them with candy and toys; Mrs. Kenneth was pralsod by Mrs. Yuki Tokunaga. principal of the nuraery, for hsr attitude toward children. (See story on pago 3.) Hag Operation to Save Her Jackie Helps Greek Girl (tdUor'i Not* — John P. Ltaeacot, a v*f*ron Wash-fnpton ooiT*spontf*nt /or the Clm>$land Plain Daakr, it of Orttk ortffin and tpoaki that language fluentlg. He vieited the.litae Oroofc girt recovering from a heart operation and folned In the birthday celebration for her at Walter Heed Army Hotpi-tal.) By JOHN P. LEAGAT08 WASHINGTON (AP) - 1( was i day tha( lovely litde Oirysan-theme "Memi” Papagotaii will never forget hs long as she ' In the first place, Thursday was the Greek child's birthday— Attorney to Run for Commission H. Malcolm Kahn, Local Lawyor, Is Candidat* From District 2 A Pontiac attorney, H. Malcolm Kahn, has announced he will be a candidate for District 3 city com-In the March 5 primary Kahn, 44, of 306 Pioneer Drive, filed a nominating petition late Thuraday with Gty Clerk Olga Barkeley. This raaa tha totalAa abw eaa-didatos amr IIM for the eevea CHy Oommlmion eeute. The k Meyer PMUp B. Rowstoa. the preaeat Dlitriet I eommlmioafir- Kahn opposed Rowaton in the 1968 election *nd lost. That was his only ptevioua try at public offiot, although he has been active flor many years In the Oakland County Republican party and has served as a Pontiac precinct delegate Mv-eral timet. A native of Detroit, Kahn hu been a practicing attorney in Pontiac since 1949 and ia nirrontly chairman of the Police Trial Board. Also active la local civie aad fraternal groupo, Kaha la a pait preaideat aad viee presldeat of tbe Pootlsc Breakfaat OptimUt Club aad a member at Poaitao Elks Lodge.' . Kshn is a 1940 graduate of Way ire State University Law School. He once was a title attQ^ mt for the U.E Internal >rvlce. Kennedy, wife of tbe sent MemI a lavalls heart charm, on which ware engraved Meml’a Inltlala aad Jafr quallac’s. Mrml’s plight wt >4rs. Keimedy’s attentlm last June when she visited ureeec. Memi was doomed to die, . at not later than 19 or IS. because of a vascular Impediment. PACINO DEATH But about Thursday; It wu a great day because all the htg doo-ym of Walter Road Hoapital, to which Memi was brrtight Jan. 10, paid court to her and helped cut a blrihday rake. a * ★ She preened a bit In her slip, pink bathrobe and pink slip-pers, all glfla of Mrs. Kennedy. Spiros Papagotsls, the beaming father, explained she waa able to get put of bod even though she heart operation only a week ago. This reporter conversed in Greek with Memi and heF father. They have only a few worde of £i gliah. ilow beautiful that she doe not forget her Miapitallty,” sai- ........er, his eyes brimming with tears. # Memi had still another wonderful gift for her birthday, her fatbi er related, while the ifiri laughed softly and her oltve-Mai' brightened with (boughU tant Meaalni, tbe tiny village ia aouthweat Greece from which she had been brought—thanks to the First Li4y-NOTE FROM HOME The gift was a from ter mother. Touts, a^ tno of her three brothsre-Tbeodorakl, 15, and ConstantinD, 13. The Allies Kill Claim by Reds to 2 Air Paths to Berlin BERLIN (AP)-Tte three West-rh powers balked what they called an Illegal attempt by the Soviets to reserve temporarily two of the air corridors to Berlin tor Soviet mllltsry planes* an Allied spokesman diiclaoad today. ★ * The ipokeaman saM the Rus ans served notice that on Wednesday and Thursday mom ings they would require the cori ridora tor Russian military planes up to qorlain altitudes. But all Westam commercial planet flew 'te oorridora as usaal. The Allies Mid Soviet pisnes ould have to iMe by ' power -^s ate that "reaervlng of blocks Oft ahitude” In the corn' ridors .was Ulegsl. The Western Xher, Niko. 6. doesn’t know bow to Mrlte yet. he said abyly. Spyros PapacoUls, a rice tarm-r wttk five acraa, said; “I just cannot find the words to begin to exprese what we tsel about Uie ihlracle that Mrs. Kennedy made possible. She did not do Just a good deed. She Mvsd a life. I am at my wit'a end to know how to k's passenger csr . total an esUmalsd 131,774 ]i 13l,4IT*-pn>- Debatin(f Society Ends Tradition; to Allow Women Thufsday night to ahandoa the old tradtOon that has kept women out of It^ The pro-women faction hands down 404-133. But after the vote members of the anti-women group detnandod a poll of the full noemtera not preaant at tha tag. Tha poll BHHt be held If they tan oollact liO Rgnaturts to a petiUoB by tonliRt. n ttay ean’Mfa caJbe on ta. gtrli. 'N-Tests Helped Russia' (Continued From PageXtae) could reetare the eriglaal meigli of ear toad.” The Implication that the U.S. lead actually has been narrowed constituted an argument that at-sts of American Foster's assertion that the 03»-tant of Soviet gatae has "become clear only In the last inonth” Indicates that Ksnnsdy has under consideration in the -few Tveeks facta aigutar ta tavor •f U.8. toit explosions which were not sMUable to him late ' ' When he OrH bagea maid _ itiiw lor U.S. toots. Forter ivrots Ms lettsr because of reporia from Kennedy's news e Wsdnssday that tbe PrsHdont had imroduood a new into U.S. roqi for any future nuclear tost ban treaty. That was tte Impreeaion which tewsmen geneially got. VJ., wanun odtbr Despite /uU agreemanl on tte isle iasuee, the United Siatca end Britain appeared today to dlller ta approachM to a final da- r weapons by ths Wsat II lead to any rsal disagreement probably depends on the kind of response tte Soviet Union mskSB to tte joflit U. S.-British propossl lor an Bast-West foreign ministers meeting at Geneva next month ta oorawcUon with the opening of'an ll-netipn die-armament conference. It Is-iwpei-tte Ibat Obristmas date wM be anly ane of several In other developments the French government said today it Trill not lota ta a U.S.-Brltiib appeal to tho Soviet Union tor a foreign ministers’ meettag to bring the mideer arms race under oontrs|. fbancewaitA Btructlon of nudsor arm stoekplles the means of dsHvoring nuclear bomba to their targets. Ss ot As UaHsd la Isr Ibelr peep^ orettsas ts stage a new rente The Day in Birmingham Report $125J000 Saved With Sale of School Ronds RIRMINGHAM - A________ - more then tU8.000 ua baaa rial-ised by the Binotagham Board of Education with tte salt of Q.S In bonds for nsw school Tte eaebm «UI result over a 39-year parite, school officials said, becauae of the low tatenst/ rate jubmttted by the Harrla Triist and Savlpgs Bank ate Asaodates Of Chtoago ate DetroU ta bidding on theVirehaqp of the bonds. Tte Rarrio fiisst and Savtog* Bank waa lbs lenAsI at seven MMers so the bend Mmm). This bid compares iritb tte rate of about 3.0 per cent iriiich might reasonably have been expected, according to the Municipal Advisory Council of Michigan. .* ♦ Or Lloyd Vaa BusMric. director of taaaee lor the school disiriot, aid there were several factors rospensibla tar ths low Wd. Ho citod the foUowli« oo having probaMo taflusnee; improvement ta the bond market in gso-eral; tte cheracter pf tte Birmingham School Dlstricf. particularly its willingness to support quality Ian by Mn. DsaoM Rartiw Msl enlMad "A |tew la Bosn,* Ifrs. Robert Bratton la gutd ebalnnan ate Bfrs. Rudolph Kar-lonn Is general program ohato lan. Ticksto for the poitorm-nce can te obtained at tte door. The community Congragotlennl Church ta Lathrito VBIags will relcbralp Its 19th snnlverMry at tte R30 and 11 a.m. serriree on Feb. 18. Bev. John D. Base baa beea paster Rase Ite foonglag si the etauob In 1047 an* Bw. PMBp A special fOature of tte annlver-saiy ssrvlos Trill te tte prsssnta-of a major erork by tte Armln Tilth the Advisory Cbuneil In an-BTifcring requesttof prospective Udders for taitormation. The Music Guild of tte Lultaran Churah of tte Shsphsrd Klf« Trill Htonaor O' variety show. ' _ "attiSPpjn. tomorrow In the aodal hall. Tha church io at 8300 W. MaUa Road. togtevartoly Sqys Pupib’ Beliefs Not Ridiculed Here (Ginttauad Frdm Pago One) Either a urrltten note from tte parmt or from the mtalater to ■Hive to Ibeoe regosats. We are asl awrare isf aay toitonei af Hit-■ by a......................... ) to te ta ebarfa af memlMrs will bo reoelvoi tato tte loIloTrHilp of tte cburdi during tho program. Eamto* W. Oeeby< A Requiem Mass lor Edmond W. Corby, 44, of 19725 BucktaSbam St., wUI be said at 11 a.m. tomorrow at Our Lady Queen of MartyiTii Church. Burtol Tvfn te ta Holy SoDuldiro Csmstory, SoolbftoM. jK!<2rt5Mtod^^ ot WllUom Booumont Hoapital, Royal Oak, foUowliv a Hurt Oktosa. davBbtor. Mrs. Robert W. Hamtolt of Pontiac; two oons, Edmond W. Ji. and John, both at boiw; 'motb-Mrs. Lena Baitm at Oars; A Roaary TriO bo aajd at f pjn. today at /te WUUam Vasn Pan-oral Honto, Royal OiR. A prayer Btrvleo TriU be hold there at Uh4S •TONinoMlfATUBDAY •UMi DMCOUNTf But Soviet papers made w> mention of the U.8.-British suggestion for s three-power foreign mlnlstere’ meeting to teekeally H,monopoly capttaliam haui’t a-lchuMad (la the United fliatea) nedy amiled broadly, and abook aiaoe the Ume of Adam haada with the an •BMOMT At a ateel comgahlt he ran Into about 90 ahputing dempnatratoca ........aa he departed hln: rtnuled fo> al!" A antaU dueler of Oannwadda, ua Mid aa a anas Tvpfetrt-waving lod naga and ahoutlng'h^ttJ^-—^ ™ “(39 Hone Yankee! ” gpMlad Ken- ^ they ^ wto the attome)? genaral'a office and report the aourcee and uae of feeling for the Ji BAND, TOO haddlalril AnMcaa dlalributed hundreda of anO- .w . Kennedy'a boa through __________ the plant gate dmild the Coapam- WIVYm nWa auomd.Ai'«aaterti« large................ _jaaabenr of demonatrakn. But there waa no aiga of hoatlilty. Kannedy walked between long laxatlwi. He and hia wl...___________ got ng baiore dgam to ice akate a group of Japaaa era and watch an exhibition of a JapanM form of mU aUn to Judo. government. Hbng Kong, Kennedy vdU viait In-doneaU, Thailand, Italy. The Netherlandav^ Weot Clemiiihy and had dwwn'rranoe before returning homa.^ Kennedy rd^rred on^ in paaa-) He aaid be waa impreaeed with faig to the amall-acale Oxnmuniat, » alrong leeiiipa the Japanene|deraooatratlona agalnat have on U.S. control of Okinawa, the “go home" algna. been a "very moving experience " and my wif ■ rae people friendahlpy wrlat. Mra. Kennedy let out a iMtea <^,,were In crw 1b an- ^ and dipped halfway out of ^ !■■■■■■• uan wviv IH VBBW Jfifi jrvu ttuaiartic^: Kennedy banal, ,Mdn! the UA (Sommualat party her iMflmlf* a..^ a^__ a<_an___^ aa ____ In IP yarda of them while arnil-Ing and ahaUng ha ' Kenendy alao got together leaden of Japan’a giant 1 Sohyo Ooundl of Trade Unlona who ^ . aald they behoved that the United h Imperil and nm by their ftinda Juat aa U.8. offioee of **"*‘4nch organizatlona aa the BBC Japan'a broadcaattng corporation do. ite aport, football, to a group Japaneae kindergarten atudenta of a BChool near the American Em-y. in ahlrt of tie looaened, _______________ ball gently to the youngatera on the embaaay'a back lawn. At a newB conference later Kan- in a lively yo Secretary General Akira Iwal, Hungary and TIbatt Do you eon-aider the Soviet Union la Impert- •Batlcr' Iwal Indicated he believed (hie wan dKIerent irotn monopoly oap-Italiam. Iwal, who haa vWted the Heart Boxed i Chocolates f Fomout SiKO Homillon chocolates In Ki-f( pound box for *¥0009 Lovers'. Regulor 39c volue-sove 13c here. Vb'Pound Haort Box 1-Pound Haort Box Staco Homihee thoceloiei 44c Regulor $1.25 uolue 89* ORACH CHOCOLATES BRACH CHOCOLATES Regdor 75c tieon bo*. W-poiNid lor...:; 59‘ Regulor $l.1^heart bo*. 1 pound ter 98‘ BRACK DELUXE 1« BRACH GOLD HEART $I.R5 uelue-heao b^ed. t«H pound S2.35 vehie-lull pouMl in heort bo* ]9S BRACH GOLD HEART WHITMAN'S SAMPLER Regular $4.20 bo* of 2 pounds chocolats .... 349 tuReoundlio* of cbetototes 2aa WHITMAN S MILK WHITAAAN'S FAIRHILL full pound at lomout Mia Chpcoiolei tor -1" . Full pound of lomout foIrhiU' pHorttd Bulk VALENTINE CANDIED eaavart^n Naarts JELLY lEANt WMiWytnsi* Mr l«d and VVhitt- Me* Vo-Ki.....£9 po««d........20 einnamaa NEASn MEU0W-CSEAM8 Xi':*.....29* VALENTINE CARDS 2Se Yatontint Book 100 Cui*ovts ior............ Pack of 25 Valontinot With envelopes—Keg. 29c..... Pack of 42 Valontinot With Envelopes—Reg. 59c.....' NATIONALLY FAMOUS'COSMETICS at SIMMS FAMOUS LOCAL DISCOUNTS' ROYAL Bueeu BATH $1 Volue —16 oz. pine or oppleblossom. 39* CASHMERt BOUQUET TALC 69c Economy Size for 44* LADY ESTHER CREAM Regulor $1.49 'Four Purpose* FAMOUS con PRODUen ' $5 A & D Creom or Moisture Boloncer . 2S0 POMDS DRY SKIR CREAM Regulor $3.35 volue—Discounted to ... 1" ROYAL HARO and BODY LOTIOR Regulor $ 1.50 volue — 16 ounces 39’ CREAM DEOOORAirrS * ^ 1 yglifg fsr Volfb ........ 36’ HAIR REMOVER CREAM Reguksf $1.25 vohte-Fomous Imro ... 79’ HIRDS LOTION 54c Famous Honey & Almdnd—6 Ois... 29’ H. H. AYERS LUXURIA CREAM [| $2.50 Volue—Ciponser ond Beoutifier.. 83’ I NIVEA SKIN OIL $ 1.50 Volue --For dry skin—16 ozs 99’ DUBARRY OLEARSIkO CREAM $2.35 value for dry tbtn 1" DUBARRY SKIN FRESHRER $2 Value- Large 10 ounce size V con INSTANT CLEANSER Regulor % 1.50 Volue - Discounted ...... 75’ SHAMPOO or CREME RINSE ^ Regular $1.75 'HudniiU' — 16 on , 73’ & 98 W. Soglnow-COSMH^S-Mqjnjlo^ BIG PRICE SLASH! ellWhtM-SlYiM — eMIWwIliMaelillon Yee, ONLY $3.99 for a worm, amort-alyled wlnler gormertt. •, and wa hove over 300 of 'ami OUT THEY GO! Men’s and Young Men’s UNED WINTBl Jackets and Coats Original Price-togs Show $6.95 to $12.88 Sellers • ¥fHIU STOCKS UST • SIMMS Will Be ’tiriOP.M. I Compare SIMMS DISCOUNTS Anywhere CAMERA Dept. SPECIALS Kodaeolor Color Filnn Regular $mRoU Take full color snopshott'with eJBMC genume Xoddk Kodocolor film In 520-^120-127 rizei. Famouriliisi^^^^^^ 12,„89‘ Regular $1.69 corlon of 13 bulbt — choice of Sylvanie or General flectric in Preu 35. Preu 5, AO-I or M3 tize. Guaranteed to lloth. 199 Comera with built-in flo»h. Outfit ■ ___________ cornel complete with film, bulbi, botteriei. Toke color, block ond while or tiidet. pictures per roll. For true 3-dimeniion viewing—genwine''* Sawyer Vlewmcnter wMh a free colgr ilide. Originol $3.50 teller now el>K iieounl. ■ sawyer yiewmaster 3-D COLOR REELS Packet New thipment Includeti,Travel Kenesj^ Notionol Porkt, Children's Sloriei, Popeye, Coiper, Bombi, Lottia.''* Huckleberry Hound, etc. ______________ » SAWYER 3-D YIEWMASTER ‘ free Sawyer Slide Viewer With Purchaio of Anyono of Thoto 35mm Slide Cameras RHONDOMATIC 35mm $49.50 seller - YASHICA HASH.O-Sr 46»»' kodak electric-iyi M9.50 Autwmwtic 35mm Camwm With Ml outomotlc Gloctric-My* 12 8 tons 69" AIRES PENTA 35mm b—to ,-w. 779/ YASHICA REFLEX . $169.50 Volue - tingle ^ 13r RETINA KCr«A m S3Q9.SO Volue - retie* viewing ond re I Shuttni. jpeed to 1/500 lec. Bulh-ki meter sue holm YOUa CAMEM IH WHh CASE • BATTERY - EARPHONE B-TrMHsistor Radio 87 imported 'Aloron' Irontiiforf _ radio p^ki up oil itotioni, hot! rodio it styled broutifully. Only $1 holds ’ shown. > No Wins - 9 TRANSISTOR Transn i Roooivor Walkie-Talkie 0087 Value Handy wpikie-lalkie hos one mile range over land and up to 5 miles over water .: . receives and fronsmits seporotel'y, crystal controlled. Citizens bowL needv. no license to Operole it. I'OUK l :k THliL PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, IW2 iPontiac Area Deaths MU. aUBUBB I. INCn ' Mn. Ctarlw S. (aarli I.) Inch tr. i Mn. Inch m» a member ci Oen-^ MMhodM dwreh. • Survhrtag are a brother, WUUam piUloy ot Poitlae, three grand- urday at Sparka^Srlipn Chapel with burial la Roaelaad Park Cemeteiy. ■ABBY BVDBN Harry Ryden, 71, of ST E. Y|Mi- aa UlaeaB of aevaral He and a naoniber of Dlaablad Amoi- BHurtasAuto Hits Turning Car Mishap on Dixio Hwy, Occurs When Gas Tank Hit, Starting Fire Ihraa paraoaa wen Legion. Cook-Nainn PoM. wn be at 1:» p.m. Sat- .Mr. Ryden laavea hia wUa Wlnb tred; a daughter Mrs. Devera Law^ rence ot Union Lakai a granddaughter; two brothen, Ralph of Pontiac and Lloyd ip Minneaota; and three listers. Con-Con May Affect 4 Men Count/ Officials Urge ' Delegates to Keep Their Offices Elective : floor alacUva Oaidaiid.OaiBdy at-licials are afraid the conititutkmal tonventhm might change their fu- Oerk-Register Daniel T. Muiv i>hy Jr., Sheriff Frank r Proaecutor George F. Ihylor and Xreasurer Charles A. Sparks last night sent telegrams to each of ELBA TOWNSHIP - Service for m Brown. SO. of BISS Davlaao U be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at Muir Brathcn Funeral Home. Lapeer. Burial will be In Party Mount Park Cemetery, Pontiac. A retired tool and die Mr. Brawh died Wednesday in Bradenton, Fla., after a brief 10- Surviving are his WUa Viola; four daughters, Mrs. Mary White-man and Mra. SlybU Rlcharda, both of Lapaar, Mrs. Irene Jamae of Standish and Mrs. Edith Ourigar ot Pontiac; tbrea aona, Nolan of Wallad Lake, Ckri ot Flint end CUem of Pontlec; IS grandchildren and aeven graat-graftdchll- when a car driven by Marcia Ann Naykr, SI. et SI wm * onielHd into tha rear of slopped to make a left turn hito the BW Boy ReotouraBt Silver Lake Road. The gas of the car ahead v causing a>fire. * * Gary M. Owens. U. of 100 Okte-wsy Dr., Waterford Township, was driver of the stopped car. He and hU Qompanion, Judith Patton, If, SB Gateway Dr., Watertord Township, mana^ to aacape tha flaming auto without being burned. The Waterford Fire Department wettogtthhed the blase but the car | pby said they beoanae alsnaed that whea the ^ll■v■lllB de-s af Iseal gavera- inigM be a mava by asam gala, gates to give the leghlataia tbs » deteimtoe the type of *Wt aon’t fed that the leglsldy tore should control the type m borne rule,” Murphy mid, “We led this should be left to the people to^ deckle throi ' ' flUadve legislation." Southfield Designers Amon(^4 AAedoiists WASHINGTON IB - The Amet^ lean Institute of Architects nounoed yesterday four gold medal awards to be presentod at its natkinal convention In i Ml Arthur G. ElUott Jr., ttee on loed govam-ment, said as the committee pro-boaal stands now the podtioni . '‘froaen In." "Oit this won't prevail,’*, he pre-licted. He said a cdmmlttes minority report might stir up a debate on this one of the big issues befon the convention. Mrs. Pitteng&:, Sx’Teachei in Area, Dies at 99 ' MnJPORD — A former tsadier bi toe Horan VaBey flebod Dia-Wet and CM of the oldMt women in Oakland County died yesterday bftemoon after an illness ot 3H ^Mks. Abbie S. Plttengerr M, of t30S Buno Road h«l taught at Pm Birch School and was a life townhar af tha Milford Uteraiy Dob. Am bad livad in tba county IS years and had been active In ivMef and farm demorwtration , May 7-11. • ★ 1 The awards, given for exed-lenca in the various Adds, will go to painter Stuart Davia of New York; indnstrid destg^ieni Sund-bergjnwar, Inc., of M409 W. lOH Mae Road, Southfield, Micb-; photographer Emeat Haas of Australia and New York; and consulting Ammarai and Whitney pf New York. Sterhpig Man Killed Instantly in M2i Crash LAPEER ~ A as^yearitdd Sterling man was IdUed bwtantiy about 4 p.m. yederdav whan his. craahad bsad-on into an auto i traUar on MU about two mUas Mt of' here. Dead was Cari G. Bdeher. Treatad for onto and released from Lapssr Oounly General Hom^ was Paul M. BonecUttar, 43, of Branaon. driver of the auto transport Members of the Lapeer City Fire Department extinguished ihe resultant blase on the trailer. Lapaar County SherifTs depulias Tlwf three Inbired persons were rushed to Pontiac General Hoapl-' where Owens and Mias Patton were treated and rdeased. Miss Naylor who suffered severe scalp was admitted to tha boa-She wu re^ed bi condition this morning. 4r A * The accident occurred at 10:07 p.m. Both can were head east. Miss Naylor, who wutravel« Ing at a reported 50 miles per hour told police she didn't ssa the stopped car in front of her unti' " was too late to avoid hitting It. Broken Windows Brings Request for Police Guard gan yesterday requested police protection fer Andersons’ Insurance Agency, 1044 Joslyn, after an- te a seriat of breakaga miahiwa to the buUcttng. ★ According to police, yesterday's breakage was the fifth in tour months. Windows wen icported broken Oct. 1, 1961; Dee. 2, 1161; and two this February. In May and July of 19II, the company reported Ito neon sign was smashed. Officials Nailed, Too, With Traffic Summons. MOUNT CLEMENS IB-Autborl- trafllc vtolators who faU to | up. Warranta wfero laaued Thursday agalnat 16 dsUnquent persona—including Raymond j. Apley Jr. member of the Michigan Legislature, and Daniel Coameneo. an-alstant Macomb County proaecutor. Searchers Find More Victims of Mine Disaster SAARBRUECKEN, Germany (UPI) — Rescue wockers reported today they located additional victims of the Lulsenthsl coal mine diasster that claimed neariy 300 ly braught the death toU of Wednesdays tragedy to 390 tag It tha wont mtaa Germany in U yean. Retativea and eoworiters kept . a silent sU-night vigU outside the tnata gats of the/Ditaenthsl coal mine with the faint hope there would be a few toon survivors of BENSON'S LUMBER * BUILDING SUPPLIES PAINT and COAL 549 North Saginaw St. *S!iSii£uritoTs* FE 4-2521 4xf-W Insulattfl WALLBOARDfWhift $268 SPECIAL CASH and CARRY PRICES! RCKK LATH ^ por bundio..W AEROMATIC CEDAR CLOSET LINING 40'Bdli......$10.60BdL 25'Bdlt.....r..$ 6.52BdT. ALUMINUM SLIDING DOOR TRACKS 4ft....2JI Bft....S.BI Fsrto*Ussiss>wsod. aiasaalla, gtaw, sts. ladvdkig upper end lawsr troclb INTERIOR DOORJAMB! ............2.9! Stt BV4»............I.MSft 2’’0asliif....BVko4in.ft. 2%’’WPBaM..So.iifi.ft. H’’Baaflhoa..2Vko lin:ft. OAK FLOORING Select Rad Oak--$24 par hwn. No. 1 Rad ar Whita Oak.....$20 par hun. No. 2 Rad or WhHaOdk.......$14 par hun. Rtgular Lmgtks NOT SHORTS SHEETROCK . . . ^Vi” . . .. Aluminum ^Comb. Doors sidewalks GUZED? . I Wl CAN SOLVE THAT PROBLEM 'A' No. 2 * ROCK SALT.........$2.25 GRANULATED........$2.25 PEUETS.r.f.........$2.75 THAWING SALT......$1.75 PLYWOOD SPECIALS! 4x8-V4'' Pra-Finishod ^ Mahogany........... .$5.95 4x8-V»" Piw-Finithod Mahogany..............$4.95 4x8-V«" Un>Finiohod AAahogdny> V-Gfoovod .$4.50 4x8-14" AAahogany V-Oroovod ......... .$3.85 4xB-V4" Ivory..........$5.95 4x8-y4"Blua..... ......$4.95 4iia-1k*'BaauNful Pra-Fta BrasHwood $6.93 GAY PAINT Iraarior Latex WaN Paint 99 *31 REDWOOD PANELING Vt" PmoliNg.....$MaorliMdrod W* $i«pooBfo poofcofod Rodwood PoMoUiig....$1l|Mrli«idrod KNOTTY PINE PANELING M" pMMliof.... $1$ por iMadnd W Faaolbii.... $11 POP leadiod CHLORIDE 100 LBS...........$2.50 25 LBS............$1.25 PRE-FINISHED • SABLIW0004x8-%_ o CHERRY 4xt-% 0 RANCH PINE • WALNUT 4x84k . fervice wffl be 1:30 p.m. tomer-foar to the Rkbardaon . Bird Fii-aeral Henw. with burial in Oak Glove “ _ _j two dau^ters, Uri. Ronta Porter of Wixom and Mrs. Rusatal Bloom of Detroit; two eons. Joaepb of Milferd and Roy of Vltoida; eight grandchU-_ dren and eight great-granO«M|S" Itaen. SooB Fawor Farmers ; TOKYO fUPI) - The Japanera gavernmag reports that industriall-latian, with Ms higher wages, In a 46 pw eato ndw_____ in the number of Japanese farm trork«to to the next decade. The feault, \the government britevee. •iU be Digger farma in Japan and ACCOUNTING and Reloled Siibjocfi PBI offori Professional, Higher, and Junior Ac-oounting eoursos that in-ehido financial adminia-tration and goneral business subjects. Accounting is the second fastest growing field for men. Business auccesg goes to tboie who pre-pgjre for it Day and Evening If w. -flj —--7;: — -i . THB PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, PKBRUARY », |062 FIVE \Ra|or WiUlama (former Democratic Gov. G. Mennen WUllama) didn’t get rid of hla atock In the Mennen Go., ao why ahould Rom-' ey get rid of hk." ahe aald. "I ie no conflict of Mereat, at all." Romney'a "indualrtal executive ability" la one of the primary rea-aona tor the lady atockholdera' belief that the AMC preaMent ‘ haa good chance of becoming MlcM-gan’a next governor." Mra. H. T. gbaak. wlfo of a See... Before You Buy- -.w'&.kt’ At the POOLE HOME IMPROVEMEMT CENTER He Charge far Ptaaa, Leyont or Faarfhr Ree* geaiga lendeo. CALL FE 4-1594 FREE ESTIMATES FOR ANY TYRE REMODELINQ r%n bou|M her U id ‘Humed me ahe eaM "thafa what MMrigan aaeda la a govemer.” Hewever. The eame opinion waa expreeaed by another la^ atoekholder, A. R. Bern a prafenm- of Ebigliah Benaon, who holda 20 abarea of AMC atock, aald ahe hopee Rom-ney will aot enter Hi "becauae I'm atricUy and I'd ratlw not have euch a ras penMi la the oppahMian." w * ♦ AMCa lady atockholdera made up at leaat one'quarter of the day's meting. Almoat all ot them —from atyllah young matrong to mink clad gray-halred grand-mothera — appeared told on Romney. They applauded heartily after Romney’s coromenU and whan one of his critics had^l •ay. Judging by their reactions at Wednesday's meeting, Romney is aa Mrs. Ledlnaky described — “A ladtee' man who holds great favor among the stock-hokjera of hla company." Whether this krill hold any wekht in Rcm-nay's campaign If be chooses to seek the govpmorriiip, Mrs. Led-inahy' aaya "We'U Just have to watt, and aee.” When there is nothing left to be said, you can be sure there la who will go ahead and say it . . . Nowadays rare coins arc those that stay in your pocket Definition of a fool; The kind of man who, when ap-portunity knocks, will complaiH about the noiac. — Earl Wilson. WE WIST lOEM TV! ITS PR1V BIG MOHEV IB TRIDE BOW - LIIHTEI TIME OEI! TliE 1 SiTE m "We have a raady matket for Used TVa-*-after we’ve TeconditioBed th«m in onr inodem ”“*^**^“2C* plant. Demand b now W|Ji - *hd our atocka of naed TVs are low! So . . . we’re chopping TV prices ’way down, with your old set in trade, to make it worth your While to buy now. Hurry - while our low Sale prices laatl I m I nil iM in \m> ikhik i r; BI \H ri< 11 III n III Mill '' MM II I \i'i III I III I 'I in i« I S M |s| \( I K »N (.1 Ml \N I 1 M»' SYLVANIAp.?^23’’TV OUR LOWEST PRICE EVER FOR BIG SCREEN TV . . . A Speakers . . . Genuine Wood Cabinetry! PAY ONLY ^^10 MONTHLY OR ... 90 Hpys Same a* Caxh! FREE DELIVERV AND HOOK-UP! FREE SERVICE POLICY!' Your small screen, old style TV can help you to own and enjoy whopping 1^ rectangular 277 s4|. in. V4eWing Area ... NOW! And yon get the extra dependability and excellence for which SYLVANiA Is known, Ihop... lee... Trade... lave nioney hoW! WAIWAimr ON AIX'PARTS 54TEAR WARRANTY ON ETCHED aRCUrW, .SYI.VAMA Sl'PER-DISTANCE TUNER POWER TRANSFORMER wlih 5-YEAR WARRANTY NEW ursT-FREE 23" PICTURE TUBE (iOOD HOU^EKEEW OF PONTIAC 51 Weit Huron Street FE 4-1555 OPEN FRIDAY and MONDAY NIGHTS »TIL 9:00 P.M. INSTANT CREDIT! 90ffaj^Sam9AtCa$ht a woman more feminine, more attreetive. Valentina wrapped perfume, from 3.00 to 100. ftrlwmt Pwrisr In hasrt-thapvd gin boa, t.00| Maaturvd Mill In OakiM matnl cate, e.«| Ptrlum da Tellana, 100 and MOi Crtsmy Skin PaHvme, t.N. • AH prlcai phti tab Co$metic»... Street Floor I -nose* STOCKINGS •yAAOUUD* THEY LOOK 6000, FEEL EVEN lETTER More absorbent! More comfortable for many smart women! Supp-boae stockings with eottoa-rein/oreed eolee have all the qualities that nuika Supp-hosa so uidqua. They genUy support your legs, yet look so shsor yoo can wear them with your most fathionabla clothsa. Beautiful all-nylon (just like other sheer ■toekings) with cotton-reinforced soles for . art extra neaturs of walking plaasursl r A96 1 Tpr. Hoiiery... Street Floor Your Figure of Fashion, i. a triumph at »5.95 Molded curves of AleiKon lace shape the very beautiful—and beaulifying-bodice ot this slender slip. Feeb and fits like a fashion dream under hew, slim waisted clothes. Cbrefree nylon tricot In colors flattering ‘at cosmetics. Sires 32 to 40. ' Lovely Lingerie ... Second Floor the gift for her' Cherished for their perfection ^ of natural pearl aheen and iridescence. ' III exquisite presentation boxes. Guaranteed for permanent wear. *10 Jewelry.. . Street Floor Give her a praclicid Valentine’* gift. i. a Fashion-i*retty Handbag *3 ^ such a selection at just “ Whatever she's like, whatever her tasle, we've ju-l the lia| lo capture her heart! Choose from a huge scleclion of styles, shapes, maieriale and colors. I Handbais... Street floor __ THE PONTIAC PRESS U Wmi nmm Stmt nuDAT. namuARY ». isa ■rvus a. gjiMijiii n, .. Jon w. FnaNMU, fcMwaWjnSTKMidwt tM tm* ptmui«m m« ■ liainw HMwm ’^ftraSuSw*&Mtf«r jem A. Miu*. a. WiWuA Jonui, Many Feel Steel Strike ^ Not Materialize The word right now is that Uigre Is a 50-50 chance there won’t be a steel strike according to Secretary of Labor AiTHxnt J. Ooldbiro. Being the former council for the United Steelworkers makes Oolduro somewhat of an authority. Situations that seem to be . shaping up to give the Labor See* ' rctary this confidence indqdes a meeting by David J. McDonald of the union’s 170-man wage policy committee in Pittsburgh and a ^^pledge of cooporatlnn tnm ^ Roger M. Blough, board chairman of United States Steel. ★ ★ ★ Further optimism probably comes from ARTHin B. Homo, board chair man of Bethlehem Steel, the second largest producer. Homir hag Said that the climate is now dlftorent on both sides and he is not predicting a repetition of 1959 with the 116 day strike. ★ ★ ★ This all sounds eneenraglnf since it looks like everyone Is approaching the bargaining see* skms with a reasonable attitude. Secretary Goldberg Inalets that the Government will maintain a hands*off policy. These early statements all sound good and along with the rest of the, iration we would like to think that they are correct. However, moat business leaders privately feel that a settlement can’t be worked out without some sort a strike' of short dura- And step on the gas, Christ! Movel Don’t be so slow about movin’l The wolid Is mine from now on— And Nobody’s gonha seU ME To a king, or a general, r a millionaire. Or I ‘Goodbye Christ, Good Morning Revolution.’ ★ ★ ★ ‘This man. Hughes, wss the luncheon guest of tho President St the White House. No on# chsl-lenges the right of the Pn^ent to choose his own guests, but Hughes* presence, regardless of the occasion which prompted his being there, la a sample of indlf* * fcrence to the sensibilitlss of the American electorate. '"fhe White House entertainment of Lanostok Huoms should be an affront to every man and woman in this country, of all creeds." The Man About Town There’s a Reason Voice of the People: Asks Thkf to Use M<^ney Wisely; Return Papen Whomrer UftM my huibaairt biOfoM wWi igh SehooTs barintbsU gune, plisM at Imet I. And if you wonrs pair at OrntraT rstam tbo bOfald wttb dUidrwi, you art wekximo Ip it Uw It wiMly a lUitof **"“^*!‘** day night for cur march. TV partomat which la MVy i Motim’March la IV baebbnna of ^ TV Nadoml Fbuhdation. W« alee For Many Phony Current Reports and PP^ictions / PhUatou: Where the trath la / put iB aald atarage. / p4vid Lawrence Tells: m.-d.yl..a.da.a.ytaVI f g£;; *mt m. pfsyahto." JSv^aaSrli teZ ff h»-* * * acOvt pattai It anyoM can hdp our Itt. rely on ua. alaft, ptom contact tV lwvttot« Tad. A. riairatoa, Ptoaatoe Terfcct Picture Wflson Was Whiz on Typewriter to my The Weather Bnreau’a reporta oi^ current temperaturea are almost aa/unre-llabla fa ita predictlona. It haa reached a ataga where very few people nave any confidence in either. / Reporta to thia column from resdera living In the sreaa making uem current thermometer readings aay ;ibey vary as high aa SO degrees from the true altua* tlon. And now a reason for thia has been WASWNGTON-Thia to a story about a typewriter that has Just come to the White House for ex-bibitJon to the public. To understand Its aignilicance, one must ask many peri a by gtato Rspartosad prtar to mu awB oaky Me tea war. sons out of tion^ Michigan haa became A great year round resort state, ao tha locgl chamber of commerce mind is pron^ to make it colder In winter, as well ag In summer. Oet the point? Kennedy Criticized for Entertaining Hughes This U Natlo executive i The NaahviUe Banner declurei aU Amerfbanh were Idhtoied whhn Presr rd Jehovah and all those who profe Wirship a Supreme Beix^ifiFj ‘GOODBYE CHRIST’ ‘Listen, Christ , , You did all rlghkln youf day, I reckon— / But that day’s gone now-They ghosted you up a swell stoiy, too, Called It Bible— But it’s dead now. The popes and the preachers’ve Made so much monev from It. They’ve sold you to too many ifider tree, transplanted from e years ago, and grown In a tub B of ‘ I Mrs. Bryeon Belman rford, to In bloom for toe first time. It Is moved outdoors in toe summer. County’s outdoor writer. miUlone who uie a typewriter every day can do to over the yeare, almost never making mtotake In typing. I Yet this to tV| feat w k 1 c h president of the United States — LAWRENCE Woodrow Wilson—performed, and tV evidences olllt are to V found In tv many btoloric documents that V personally typed and which are on file In Uie Libraiy.ol Congress. PresMeat Kennedy received tv typewriter nt a IMlIe eere-meay tV other day to which V grackMialy lavlted this writer. Last autumn we bad written Kennedy suggesting that, inasmuch as V was endeavoring to place on exhibition at the White Houae memenloee of every president. tt might V desirable to get tv Witoon typewriter from tV American Red Cross. Ood to wortdng through various people an»l beBewe that Oed to — . Certainly, after V became ill in TV placing on exhibition at ^ SSS lI?®e2l?lo "wwge— 1919. hto messages to Congress WWte House of tacaiiiiUlee of We- ^ Onto to leag peopto le ^ ^ ^ were prepared by various mem- toric documento, Along with tV haine and th^ don’t employ touch* here of tv Cablnet-a pracdoe, in- typewriter on which Mr. Wilson cidentally, begun by George Wash- personally typed them, ghrM to WWi ton apfsisnt gskm thV ington and continued by many minions of alghtossis an ogpor- g^ o iiisilito mU tVIr %sg- presidenu since. tunity to sv on paper, to ita |am Meatogy hao usaV tor tV ington and coniinuw uy many muimu « HgmMKv «n uyvvi* mm im —— spJS hto^ roaaarchtaSr tv disciplined, prectoe and coura- mgy tV wsfd af M |Vt trana- WomeS ResdeTt many points tVt Vva to V cov- Sfiom. Iwma avaa can aavA na Wans In nnaauiTM nr atatcmanta on (Oapjritght, IM) dIaaMar. ^ ^ ^ *** *** montv sqo, tV idd appreetaV your oav-cruiMes to) gc ______J messages or statensenU on a great many subjects. nouoHTs ras today It, to their rnHrety, type-’ Thera enma to Mm aoma gn«-. dueeas, thaaa wV say tVt Stora Is as leanneciHim—LaV MtST. ■ant to the by Our Lord’'has written tV prom- „ *• toe of tv resurrection, not in books Richwood Rona alone, but in every leaf in spring- TWO naomna •uu, uw union and maangemant aHtlei theta- dih faranoaa and awryone want back artam tV enuadea to) Routh Anwr* to weik. TV new Pontiaoa are lea so thm aach of as intartotsd bate aeilera. and almost everyone can IntoniganUyprsy tor thia vaiy to at iMt^experiendng eoma p0ncy. Dibu w bang pnM ou and wa’va bam able to buy mow tv tlme.-Martln Lather. Dr. Harold Hyman Says: Some Attacks of Rives Resist Antihistamine Fan Pnilia Story on Artificial Rink Kearns on bto fine article —■ - — uw imn wm» ■••w. ,w muk ■«*>•' Mac’s need for an aitigcUI ice how long are we goli« to Hockey has hem on a steady be at tV mercy of a few power. I tor ten years. Hiere to tre- hungry' union ofOcials who havR; Mam Im thia VTMt mu ■ ■■-------»*---mnajl emmaiO Am Hirniw ■ulto tor tv kkb. Suddenly, some union offictols began to ^ reatlem. Now they whnt to tty another etrAm. TV thing that raally makae M gldicu-Icus to tv reason igr iV strike. My husband tdls me tt IS baoaiue ------------------ ^ nungiy unnm oiucinis havs\_ grown resttoee and want to throw \ ------- -raniidT \ A WsaVifto WIfa t attacka of hives are of htoee, yaa’d V waB I a featured hunting story In a current ttlonal magazine, that to bamd on the cal field. It to my pleasure to personally Itnow all of the characters. SURPLUS PBOPEETY Sold as '‘suA>lua property," Now comes forward that Pontiac Trail weather watcher, AV VanKoevering who asurta that In SO years the ground hog has been wrong 31 times. Peb. 2 waa the date for the ground hog's coming out party. And whether he saw It or not. Grant Mlllerton of Waterford phones that If he’s a wise woodchuck, he’s prepared to snooze an* other six weeks. typewriter had came into tV possession of tv late Admiral Cary T. Grayson, President Wilson s physician. who had loan^ it to tV Red Cross. / It was found stdred in an attic, and Gen. Gruenther, president of tv Red cross, made tV formal presentation to Brealdent Kennedy in a brief cerelnony attended also by Adm. Gra>4on’s sons. Keaaedy displayed saoM fao-similes of Prestdeat Wlboa's typing, Incliidtaig tv original of Ow meSaage to Oaagreaa an tV te- tional ertoto, a tryliig ordeal taking a food to which the per— is very sehsittve, auch as straw-Vrrias, aVUfish or poric CHmo lur len jmia. mendous intereri in this great •port V avldenead by tV turnout over the lari 20 years. Jim Berg pointad In his letter tV dugers of poW tMlhles. As Kearw potait- i ■•■ we are la tor anriher rirIV. ed out, if a youngator wanto to Hgur many hava torgetton how play hockey V to almoat forced gogg (bg union was to ghre ns a « s.-- --a.«. **- mm Rms Amm to go out of town. Dbde"Teol and — been practicing in WaBaceburg. whole lU to Uve on toe tm ~ would MV to see Widter ^her previous injection of anil- Smiles a^ta JM practicing in WaBacctoirg. feed a wife and foi ^ ^ overcrowding „„ount. I Whtve I apeak tor evaryone to Msmtoer ef Ow « Pontiac that.Va lacad on ekatoi. ------ toxin preparod from animal Ae an avid hockey fan and ^ scrum, expoauro to sunlight or ***^‘^'^ aible future referee. I thank Mr. certain drogi also could be tV Pe«ah*"- Kearns tor BDuelf ihd hundreds * * * of Uda. ■ ..STn Si,r JS3as?i Orent HAW V moot of tiNso snAlen V-taflV ef hhrae. It to reM^ 1100 Lakeview I get : s a basis far aad- Lake Orion encountered a real cold wave last Friday morning, according to Mra. Lawrence DeRycke, who states that a number of thermometers in her neighborhood registered 18 below. lag WorW War |. Wilson wrote virtually all of hto messag^ and important statements m his own "Hammond” typewntei>-a brand which hasn’t Imn ipanulaetured tor many years But every once in a while tV attack to of obacure origfai. TV eruption and maddening itch are persistent. Antihistamines and even Injections of epinephrine give less and less reVf for shorter and shorter periods. Case Records o^f a Psychologist: Newspaper Is ‘University in Print’ ‘Kings, generals, robbers and kiUers— Even to the Czar and the Cos- That Friday morning cold wave across the northern part of Oakland County also extended to Leonard, where Mrs. Clinton Barrett reports that her thermometer registered 20 Vlow zero. Even to Rockefeller’s church Even to The Saturday Evening Post. You ain’t no good no more. They’ve pas^ you TIM you’ve done wore out. Verbal Orchids to- Mnk Maggie B. Partridge of 405 West Iroquois Road; 88th birthday. It was tv preciskm of Wilson's mind which made r extraordinary the many letters and memoranda and statements which V personally typed. He knew exactly what V wanted to say and, though he typed slowly, V was accurate to tv point of perfection. TV same precision was tu t>e noted in hto speech-making. He almoat never prepared a speech in advance, and during his entire campaign of 1912 made only one prepared address, which he delivered on Labor Day and which, V said after|rards, V didn’t llV. Sooner or later, u»..w— large doses at shorter and shorter intervals yield mors dtocomtort-Ing side reactions than rdief. And tv patient seeV desperately for Vlp as hto nervous system becomes Increasingly fraye^. A numVr of sladles ef ohroalc urticaria (Itch) Vva yielded some Inlereatlng rrorito IVt may Vve Important fnettoal By DR. OEOROE W. CRANE CASE L428: Ernest MrioatenU to tv dynamic young editor of tV "TRIBUNE" at Peru, Indiana. "Dr. Gane," V began, "one of But some folks, aspocially of tV old sdiool. seem to prefer tV ad-age tVt "ignorance to bllssi’’ ge uiat "ignosance » ouw Remember, u you parents fall If western ranchers VId to thal jg prepare your children tor real- ers has obj^ed to a recent ( umn of yours. Vlt dealt with transvestism. (a and I’B wcmrlng] ten’s ctotheal 8 children ags ______________ t if * you p«yto So wa educators don’t zgres rtos to tben-wlth tVt proveitlal ’‘irilrlch’' attitude' of hiding our. beads from facts. Instead, we lubacriV to flhrtofa advice, "TV truth shall malfe you ywr chil Ity and they isdtr bw.^^ and delinquento V aexual parverta. —• *——*- are dotually aooesso- *Ooodbye, Christ Jesus Lord God Jehovah, Beat it on away from here now. Make way for a new guy with no religion at all— A real guy named Marx Omununist Lenin Peasant Stalin Woiiur ME— laaidMEI ‘Go ahead on now. You’re getting in the way of. things, Lord„ And please taike Saint J with you when you go, ——’"’^ndSafiit-RveFRnr--*- t^ Saint Gandhi And Saint Aiscss McPhsrson, And big black Saint Bbcton Of the CXRisetTated IHine. of 115 Calvert St.; 89th birthday. Mr. and Mra. Charles Topham of S4s Bast Boulevard South; 54th wedding anniversary Mra. Thamaa Taaple of 1385 Beaohland St.; 85th birthday. Mr. and Mra. T. W. Byrne of 170 South Shirley St.; 52nd wedding annlvaraary. Sir. and Mrs. J. WtMen Daria of 93 Wenonah Drive; 51at wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. William E. Chittiek of 2715 Shlmmons Road; golden wedding. Fiortfs G. Ugbtfoot of WaUed Lake; Slth birthday. Fred jitenekwlu "of MUfoTfd; 90th bphday. llie Country Parson Thus, the proVble cause to ______________ ■bout one-third tV patients 1" • mmia of our nw rUNE hlvea was drugs. And tV drug «tu4i cases from the Held of often involved wm penl- ZS m "We’d Uto to lun Vr letter and * , ^ ' also any answer you might cart Foodz, Infections and emotio^ stressea made up another third. “Then wp riialLtovite comments And. with a few excepthnaa. causes ^ readers. Don’t you think for tv remaining third were un- ^ ^gg^ |g handle such determined." ^ matters?" When tv peidclUto ctoe was guyjtT EDITOBA w’ Ves. it to always very Vlpful to fear patleato, tt was diaeaviwea ----------u_ uoviouBiy, some truths are-deemed "trank" by mid-Victorians ,in our age, Yet newspapers have done a. great service to public health by recently atresring «V soamtag V crease to.) ’ " * dally i deattoed to 4a-ag types af ssanl rite-■Mans, as wa doetora teal It to OTMri to "vaaalaato’’ fham with Your sins of omtoakgi oan ruin your ddld’s httnre lumphMM juri as readily aa a wlf- Gen. Paul D. Harkins, chief of the new UA __j. ----- Command hi South Viet Nam does not prophesy the use of U.S. combat troops Tlisre Is no change in UA polky." he fold The Associated The' raU of the UA military la South VM Nam wlU continue to be training and support of naOva (roops against the Communist Viet Cong guerrillas, he said. Harkins underscored Pentagon OtatemenU that the U.S. troops In douth Vkt Nam were "not combat."'but advisory,. The men do have orders to dMehd themselves if attack^, he said, but not to attack. ‘ -ik ourtVMPOucy Haikbii, deputy sn^iy com-^jaSdar ki the PadHc, was """—A Thursday to head the new U.S. ilary manpower in the Southeak Asian republic. He concededf how- tralidng In the United States for Harkins sidestepped all q tlons on the Internal political i atlon In the embattled repul— He called the South VIetnamaoe munisU out of their oounby. He will do hia liart, he aald. NO NOVICE HarUns, a warm-mannend and dignified strapping six-footer, is not a novice in Asian combat. He was 8th Army chief of staff in Korea, later commanding the 45th and 34th Infantry Divisions respectively. He owns the Dii-Ungulahed Service Medal, the Legion of Merit and the Bronse Star Presideiit Kemeil^s policy of expanded aid to Ngo Din Diem’s pro-Wemern goven- With the new assignment, Harfc-kiB, M, wps promoted from Qso-gen^ to foil general e of UA mll- Harfcins said he expected to gp Southeast Asia shortly to tackle . t new Job. His headquarters will be in SaMoo, the capital of South Viet Nam. He said his wife would Soft touch for the lifttest Valentine .. by QUILT^I ^29 2” 3” ONNlViKYiOONTI DOWNTOWN gnd DRAYTON EUINS \ Seamfree NYLONS Sptciol purchoM . . . 1.19 pr. if ptrftcf neodia, 15 donkr, pMn or weove nylons. In new spring diodos. 9-n. Stock up newl 1st eeekty H •d ariee^ 2sfs. II OriN IVIEY NI^T TO f AAondoy through Soturdoy Smaller than average or extra full ... the 'look' is LOVABLE 'CHARM ir OPEN IVItY NIGHT TO 9 Monday through Soturdoy ~~ u. Puli figure bru-wlde self strops oxtond f^ bond, lift frM over and under , cups for fho youthful contours you love. Elostic side gusset, fine cotton br^clolh. 34-4AC, 34-50D. 450 'CHARM ir I b. "Advanlute''-Add fullness with foam-podded «*• Mhm. ^ DOWNTOWN gnd DRAYTON PLAINS Ui EIGHT THCE PONTIA^ PRESS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY \ On Letter to Jeff Pavia, No Lem U.S. Policy: Honor Confederate Stamps ! nY‘^i>ic« WEST .WASHINGTON (l»PI) - Saw rOonfrdrrate ^rnoncy, boyi. may nof haveio wait tor the Sduth to riae again. ;indlcationi are that the Yankees now running the government atwady have yielded to the point ot recognizing CbnfeArate atampa aa proper postage tor the U.S. n^ifl. , If that la the policy. It U»only a'matter o( time until they begin accepting the currency aa well. . E^ldenre that Contederate fdampa are hark In good stand ijpg with the pool ofhee deport-itaW wno obtained thio week Rep. Jameo W. Trimble of My guess is that the RichmonjI Post OOloo has been inflltmted by lUlterate Vanbees. At any rate, !one there decorated the en-vehgie with a rubber Btamp reading “Inaufflclent addroaa. No Well, rn be John Brown! You ould think even a displaced Yankee would know who Jeff Davis was. strategy.’* It recommended b This was peculiar because IVIm-Ue doen't look a thing like Jefferson Davis. I aaaume the i|a-____ig was tlwt alnee be represented the cdngresalooal district In which it orlglnaOy DATED JUNE M., im The letter was dated Jun^ a. 1X63, and expressed the opinion a (duuge agahist Cemetery Ridge was "most deplorable viouaty was trying to Robert E. Lm'b tactica a Battle of Gettysburg. It arrived M years too U alter the ootoome of the from the fact that it srarde ered at aU. Ninety-nine years ago a lei hearing a Confederate sta wouldn't have gotten past Potomac River. the glad tidings to aa«h i TOmble received from the post-mhn, via a circuitous route, a letter dropped In the mailbox by someone In Fayetteville, Ark. FOR JEFF DAVm T>e fact that the envelope bore a replica of a tive-oent Conteder-atCstamp and was addresaed to the* honorable Jefferson Davis, In ram of the rongress of the C S.A., Ridfemond, Va„ did not stay the couriers from the'lr appointed rodhds. ★ * k The letter was duly canceled hyjhe Fayetteville Post Office and fonrarded to Richmond, where It apparently caused some confusion. dsh Reflected iiCourt Case of Mouth Minor fcLIZABETH, N.J, (AP)-A IS-y(^-okl girl has been awai ' t^SOO in damages for injuries fered. when ihe swallowed a deo- Kenilworth, i on June 6 i iwallowed the mirror June 6 while she was in the choir of Dr. H. F. MItchem Jr. also of Kenilworth. She mirror, which apparently bdeame detached from a handle, later was removed by surgery. Ijnlon County Court Judge Mil-to|i A. Feller Thursday approved the settlement for the girl plus HOOO for her father. William, tor inMIcal expensea and suit fees. ;A new nonwoven fabric for dis-pasable clothing realsta adds, alkalis. grease and fire; REPEAT BY POPULAR DEMAND! 1962 Modtl ZENITH Modal J-2705Y big screen 23-Inch deliwe lo-boy console with 20,000 volts of picture power, sunshine picture tube. Zenith torget-tuner ond handcrafted service-sdver chassis. 199“ Medel J-2705Y Come On In and See ZENITH Color TV Rodio Ditpolchtd Trucks Givs You Immodiot# TV SERVICE SWEETS RADIO and APPLIANCE 422 Wnr Huron Strort FE 4-1133 Open Mondoy ond Fridoy Nights FINANCIAL STATEMBWT of .. . GMTC EMPLOYEES FEDE^ WIT UNION >. ' Pontiac, Michigan ■ AS OF DECpiBER 31,1961 -ASSETS, _ _ |A89S,ML66 Cash ............... .......... ......... 484;6n,87 k Investments ......... ......i............... 2,091,000.00 V Fixtures and Eqaipnerit (Nst) ..... 114I68J6 Land and Buil^g (Net) ................. 131,542.95 Building (New) .................. Other Asaoy ..............‘......... 27,051^ TetafAssets .................... $8,906,086.12 LIABILITIES Shares ... ........................... .$8,078^53JJ4 Accounts PayaUe ........................... 5,^.3? Regular Reserve ......................... Reserve for Contingencies............... 155,000.00 Reserve for 4% Dividend and 10% Refund .. 361344.89 Total. Liabilities .............. $8,906,086.12 Officers and Directors Harold Hudak, Preiident; Michael Becker, Vice President; Nidk B. Skoalch, Secretary; Harry J. Woodman, Treasurer^eneral Manager; Rudolph Hartman, H. W. Reeve, A. E. Silk, WilUam J. Tobin and Donald J. Wilson. CREDIT COMMITTEE GLEN 0. TREADWAY, Chairman KATHERINE BAKER R. GUY EMERY KATHERINE D. STONE HARRY J. WOODMAN SUPERVISORY COMMITTEE ARNOLD LANDSPARGER, Chairman ARTHUR BARNETT ROBERT EDWARDS JOHN HENDRY CHARLES TALBOT mnmm/ SIMMONS QUILTED SLEEP SETS NOW PROTECTED WITH You simply can’t afford to overlook these valueto^iSfthey just don’t heppen every day! Only we and Simmons could bring you these top quality quilted mattresses and their companion boxsprings at such a tiny price. And only Simmons offers SANI-SEAL treated covers to provide you with more healthful sleep through scientific protection. Come in today, see thase outstanding bedding buys and save. CHQIQE OF EARUY AMERICAN OR MODERN VOQUB SLEEP ENSEMBLE Jurt look what you latl Wondorfully eomfbrtablt SANI-SEAL traotod md bonprir« hoadboord, stool framo end caoton. Modom I a washabla headboard. Early Amarican has mapla finish and noTHiuiltad print covar. TVrIn sixa only. $8995 H SUS SAB U CUI — 24 MOUTHS TO NT Where (hudity Furniture is Priced SLEEP SET lovaly floral pattom on Craam. Mat-trau has handlas And vpnts. Twin or full tisa Msttress-SoxspHng Sat only Good-for-your-bsek comfort in ovar 400 Inp. Msttraas has AubHLock unit, pra- ^ ^ It m>«w border. handlaa,vants. Sri cow wtth^t-SEALarattoHlgitiMttomon pal# Blua.TWin or Full riMllathaas and Boxsprlng only . . QBSUTT nnUilTtlBI—UBPETS—tmiUCES Parking for'Ctuiomen in Froni,iff Sunk ssi-iioe ' \ rmi poNTiAc^paEns, FRI0AY, FEBRUARY 9. 1962 NOfltt No Business Will Be Transaeted U Febniaiy 12th UNCOLN’S BIRTHDAY Regular Banking Hours Will Resume TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 13th PONTIAC STATE BANK COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK « and endta them |M j tealinc onijr lA7.000(h of h a each-aomewM liniDar. to the way radar f$ employed. TlM< palled earreali are dt-rerted late a patieafe body. wMk a ■nasbman adUevable peaetiatloa ol elgli^ laehe^ ' . Uaa of the technique in tr?at-in( arthritis, bone infection fol* lowing hip operaUoaa, Inllamflia-tlon of the female pdria due to moftte pictigw and in verbal reports by Dr. EaeNd M. Smith of Hot Sprli«a, Ark.; Dr. Dana Street of the UniveMty of Ar-kanaai; Dr. Bract, Oemmi -of Baylor Univefulty; Vr. Ifarriiall Lbbell 6t Haiism ‘ ” apd Dr. Solon ^1 a Xki * I Webster began writing thti Hit human heart itala onort-WovQ Ltevice Good for Arthritis WASfINQTON m - A devtcc theoretically capable of bouncing radio aignala the moon 1 yiaided highly efteotWe reoulta the treatment of etubborn oai of arthritis and oerlahi other il a group of dodon reported. A ♦ ■ ♦ The machina generates high f n Ho^tal, N.T.: If. Blacfcbert of Ther ^ hig t at a private conference Lana Turner Collapses on Set of Picture HOLLYWOOD m - Actress to which a number of congressmen and doctors from the U.S. Public Health Service were invited. Smith, in his report on arthritis, said the technique had been em- suits in M out of a series pt 100 I treated by hhn. Hnnn.TR GOOD Declaring that some of the pa- for up to 2S years prior to rccehr-tn In la qnsotloas ment” wu acMered in an in from three to six months. A ★ # LobeU sold use of the technique 49ors Lusiwes Spssial Va SOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN , Tosty Chicken, Cream Grovy, Whipped Po-totoee,^ Marzetti Cpie Slaw, Hot Roll, Butter. Op«n Mon., Thurt., Fri., Sot. 'til 9 F.M. Mon., Tuot. 'til S:30 P.M. treating pelvic inflammations had “out hoepHaliutton^tiam better iOgs hair ft Sd patlenu so A repessentative of the { the device told a reporter the___ chine hu a power supply of up to S5.000 volte-iz^ yoa med 2 IVk f m 4 v/t 6 1 tVt 7 m 4 X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X n X X X X 'X X 1 X X X X X 3 99 Stmt tfylt la brtwa. SImw C •nf D, 4Vk *a •..........S.99 SMART PENNEY PIPERS LIKE HER BIG SISTERS Pra-Khool young MIm go for tfw P4nnay Piptr—dtflghi ii» wttring thii sturdy rtd dwt with its distinctiva whitt piping. An idtal shot for yoar-mund waar bacauw it prptfcfe and strangthana your young lady's ffat. Flaxibla composition sola. Sanitiiad. Slaat C and D, SVi la B 399 RUGGED SADDLE OXFORD FOR BOYS AND GIRLS Your littla onas will leva tha big kid look of Pannay's sadettt oxford. Sturdily constfuctad to withstand tha rough waar and taar of activa youngstars. Halps ^ strangthan thair feat through the formattva years. Sanitizad to be germ free. Black/white. Siiaa C aad B, 5 ta B 0^9 USE YOUR PENNEY CHAROE CARD PENNErS-MIRACLE MILE OPEN MONDAY THRU SAtURDAY 10KW A.lf 10 9:00 P.M. TEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. FBtPAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1962 Con-Con Jumping From One Subject to Another LANSING W. ~ Mkhifui't i ■litutkiMi oolwvnlion >miped fl il wtiliM to n tr today u It wound up on toxatton propoonlt and tumH ill attnitkw fcKal gowmment The convwHon alao*‘was warned that one ol ita committee pro-1 to brine to a halt the itate'a multtminion^-lai^ highway program. In the flrat atafe of a Ihroe-atep voting proceaa. delegartea pot the flniahing louchca to a tax package that kindled three daya of aometlmea bitter wTanglltig. nog the tenUtlve- (od orwtaioM ^ gradilated oiale forward and make the Income tax quealian a matter tar the leglo- elo delete the ban waa deleated by oeparate vetea of SMS aild e&«, with about 30 Repnbilcaoa breaki^ tag ifutka and voting ttrlth the Belone the vote waa taken, Dr. Jamea K. Pollock. R-Ann Arjbor, who alao voted agidnal the ban, oald the laaue marked the Igmlng of the convention. of rcactien.'' he aaU. *er tre go Chief bone ol contention whether the five top county o/fl-eiaia muat be conatitutiooaUy dea-ignatod aa elective or wtoetber vet-era abouid have the eight to decide whether to i elective or appointive. Probably the hefteat Itoa in tUa . ickage waa the iaoue of county home ixde. The eommittee’e jority report waa atrong|y INCOME TAX • Mther we alidp down .tlie I Pusses Boot Spouse Out of Apartment 11 mcml *'■ Both groupa said they favored optional county home rule, but they differed on how much and how to go.about change. ayatm for the protection of peraenal rigbU and libertlaa . “There wUl never be a geatapo when the piriocipal law enforoa-ment o(fioera aib choeen by-the people they aerve. Thir la to Im-that we ahouW 11w majoriiy ilavored mandatory eleettoD tfi the comity plerfc. county regiater of deeda.^ couhly treaa-urer, aherlff and pifooecuting-attorney. . Since their dutiea deJerm- ined by the legislature, the majority argued. It therein > eaoary to tpvc unllbrmity of set- up through the state. They added; PART tip 8T8TEM “The elected aherlff and pknee-cuting attorney are part ol theae olftcera aa elected V. ★ '★ , The minority contended, how--ver. that the majority propoaol actually removes from the charter-making procednrea “the very heart of home rule, namely, the ol the peo|de of a wunty to" change the structure of their county government to meet t||glr ewii peculiar needs." Without the right to make such determination, the minority said, 'one may venture to predict that the people of Jfw. If any, c«^ tlca would a^pt the ardinu taok of writing a county charter.' to dilatory tactics in an effort to roceive a windfall aa • reault of tnanipulatloiw and harasoment of the highway departmem. advantapi laying tht antire eondractioR F9}> wobAi.” he aaU. taht undM and tu ti the ly da- The committee that property cannot be condemned until after losses and damages' have hern paid. It also, would require a ''necemlty” hearing be-j lore a Judge and Jury. Mackie said thal under the pi-o-| vision aome persons could resort Mackie eotlmated that qw pro-pooad revision would incraaae the pregent $40 million annual right-of-why root hy at least 10 par oont, and poosibly aa much as 100 per The rommioaioper was asked to ibmit lor further study hy the Icummittee of suggeaUDna oa «hll langudge would be acceptable to his department. UlfgiM te «*r mmt h tbs flaoM pniatoioc F«r Fast Sarvka . . ^ CALL 682-26S1 FOt YOW FUEL ^ OIL DaNp I A.kL 9 9.M. Suadsp I A.M,~NOON STOREY’S OIL SIRVICE tfOS Cats Uka M.. Keegs OnCAnO KtTTT-^ By the shore df old Chicago, By the shining blg-sea-water. Stood the wigwam of the prtn- INOW IN the princess Insisted there wem only seven cats. She said her bus- Keeper of the cats, the princess. Keeper of too many cats, ^the princess, according to her • band Quentin LaPaah. La Pash, 39, loved his wife, Rad Feather. 42, a Blackfoot Indian princess, but he couldn't stand her each of their nine. lives.'' Forty. U or seven eali Because of the eats, Ih aald, he had to sleep la a separate ' Wednesday night La Paah coidd bear no more. Sadly, he left Red Feather’s apartment and sought out patrolmen Robert Smith and Roacoe Knox. “My wile loves animals. Living with her six years has been a one-ring circus,’’ he told the police oKicert. - “I'm led up V tkewi away.*’ I-a Pash La Pash wanted to know if II was legal to keep 4p cats. Smith went to the apartment to look at the cats. He said he thought there were only 25 cats but ' were too active for an exact EYE CXTCNING IDEAS FROItWARD’S FAMILY OPTICAL CENTER! cats wwe happy at the home af Red Feather, an animal hua-haadry graduate of Purdue rah veratty. Amaa from the anti- By the shores of old Chicago, By the shining big-sea-watef, Lived the felines with the prin-ccas. Wife without a sphuse, thc prln- Plan Deluxe Mercury DETROIT I* — Ford’s Lincoln-Mercury Division is going to start making a new luxury bucket-seat version of the Mercury Monterey next month. The model will be known as thd* S 55. Mercury already has the S22 Comet and S33 Meteor, also luxury hurket-seat models. Area of the Republic of Panama la slightly less than the slate of ~ M. It is 420 miles long ; u In width from about miles to a maximum of 118 miles. r hB FOR YOU 33'/s? MORE and it doesn't cost you one cent extra 16 OUNCES AT THE SAME PRICE 1 2 OUNCE Saoon^ Mr of Blat^. Hava ona pair for daytima, an-other pair fbr .drasa, And apart "Just in cata” glassas nrs slwayt a good idaa. ■ Modern, good-looking frames. Colors and styles unlimited. With our owp expert opticians... to analyze your face, help you choose thd frames that loiok best on ypu. ■ Values you can dep^ dn. Our customers expect value in everything. . . and th^ get iti In Ward's Family Optical Center, you’ll find glasses you can afford. ■ No appointment necessary a^Plefily of frde parking ■ Open evenings ■ Just say,’’Charge HI” 'Word’s Optical fMcas. FranA adjustmonts. Brokan lansqs WARD FAMILY OPTICAL CENTER h Road at Elizabeth Lake Noail Open Every day tiU DrOO f.Rti Stop in. Look around. Get acquaiptad with our Family Optical CentiX will make oUr Center yOur' center for complete family optical service. 'i.. ■V.;, . - A vV-' ■■■•V THfi PONTIAC P^SS. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY B. ifiAB ELEVEN Friday and Saturday lAST DAYS lined droperies MORE WINDOMT BEAUTY EXTRA PROTECTION 100x84 150x84 Hprig btttdr, lost longer. See these droperies now. 48x84 brown/melon on white. So beoutiful it's hard to believe that they're ot this price! At your neorbst Ward's store. Installed in 24 hours GLASS-LINED 30-GALLON WATER HEATER 88 4CLGALLON 10 YEAR GUARANTEE 30-9olloh, 10 yaor guoront«t......................49.88 Glass-lined tank — won't rust, corrode. Fully outonfiatic Honey* well controls. Fuel^^soving fib^rglos insulotion. Supplies plenty of hot water for all your household needs. Get the hottest water* heater buy in town! Here's a heater that's designed to meet the growing needs of growing fomilies. ^ lii ^ famous fobric coats TRU-COLD '61! UPSIDE-DOWN REFRIGERATOR Z69” "Charge • odjuttoble shelves • twin porceloin crisper • shucker ice troys ^ Double dbor—refrigerotor on top—freezer on bot-tom. 13.4 cu. ft. large family size. 9.9 cu. ft. refrigerator compartment, seporotc 116*lb.^rue zero freezer. Automotic defrosting refrigeration section, moist cold food storoge. m- 100% Bon-Lon^ shirt TRIM KNITS FOR CAMPUS-BOUND YOUNG MEN RefiMer 3.99 344 • AUTOMATIC WASH V WEAR • NEVER NEEDS IRONING Amazing to find Such fine C^lden Brent quality ot this low price! ^ Extra special sole of these fobulous 100% Ban-Lort* textrolized ' luxury soft nylon. Extremely comfortable—light In weigjht. Ribbed knit bottom'oryl cuffs. OUTSTANDING FABRIp LABELS NEW AS'62 STYLINGS \ 29 90 Swing into Spring in one of our beautiful, blithe-spirited coats! Foshloned with on eye to lines that emphosize the luxurious fabrics of fomous origin ... tweeds, plaids, boucles, wofsteds. Cleverly detailed, ond lined w.lthYoyon sotin or toffeto, acetate, royon. Navy, white, blue, bone, pink . . . your favorite colors! Sizes 8-19/ some petites 6-16. coonlMay WOOL SUIT 7^ Versatile suit dresxis in 3 greet fabrics . . . out-stonding v o I u e! The dressy, little suits that belong on the fashion scene oow into Spring. In blends, wool-nylon, or rich all-wool. In blue, taupe, green. High fashion ot a Jow price. If suits are your pride and joy, then you shogid see this new collection! , NET PANELS i?9 33 ' Needs little if any ironing. Lovely fabric gives long wear while It,keeps out harsh sun roys. Dorktning Shod* 2®® Cashable, Vln)j;l cooted cotton .combrit. _ Samsonite luggage L PLANS 16“ 'iFITS RIGHT INTO YOUR TRAVEL PLANS WOMEN'S beXoty CASE ledlaa' e'eite ... It.33 26'* pullmen .. ^ .28.31 meh'Bcempanion 11.33 2-tMHar........21.33 Three fomous resources were brought together by the world's 4o«gest tnonufocturer of luggage to work out this spedol offering—and the result Is the Ughtest-weight, most duroble, longest-losting -luggage volue we've ever seen. Covered with weor-resistont vinyl thot resists scuffs ond icrotchef-^ wipes cleon with o damp cloth. one coot LAVeX Walt Point ; a; 3" No point odor! One coot, covers dries in 30 min.! Use room some day you point! SEWING MACHINE ^ Includes 16 magic 7Q95 jewel corns. ww, li - BRAKE SHOES Guoronteed 25,000 AM p,, miles. High quality. V I BOYS' DRESS SOCKS I For every occasion; A ^ OOo 1 go with every color. 0"'PO 1 POLISHER To give your floors ^^88 thot special shine! 4uAt RIVERSIDE SHOCKS 15,000-mil. guar-ON,, ontee. fratolled! v Men's WHITE SOCKS White socks witilAp^ AAr cushion foot. G TRANSISTOR RADIO Lislfn to your fov- 1^88 orite rhusic onytime. I■t PT. VAC. BOTTLE keeps liquids .hot or cold foe hours. ww PLASTIC RAINCOAT Men's raincoats — ^99 zip-front. ew : . TABLE RADIO 6-tronsistor ottroc- ^^88 tive t^le rodio. JLa , COASTER WAGON Ste^l body In 2 HAI^;DRYER New hairdos ore 1A88 easier to core for. 17 RjECORDS Stock up now with OO^ your favorite tunes. OO Folding GOLF CART Folds’up for’ eoSy storage and hon- O08 dling. ^ WOMEN'S SKIPS Corduroy skips for ^99 f fun doys ahead! ■ J STORE HOURS Monday thru Saturday 9:30 A. M. to 9:00 p. M. Phone 682-4940 509 North Telegraph ■ i TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS. FBlDAY, FEBRUARY 0, 1M2 Jnliao May Be Man to FearBrazil tit pan. NciraoM im PWalgB Hewi iJMlymt When BruflUn Ftavlgn Minister .ndsco tsn Thlsfo Dantss re-r^ssd to Joia-la the ouster of Cuba hxNii thf tatter-Amerkan vstem, he did » The northei^t is Brazil’s dust-bowl, containing a third of Brazil’s flO milUoDeplus population. : w»ry ej lag kan has not the look of a potential ithcred by drought or wasM rap by torrential rains. ‘Thep Itvs in oaoomm bambod ofr sugar canto hnu plastered with mud and Yet. if castroism U to emerge in BraMI. It might weU be led by this pale-faced little man with the rhock of wavy brown hair who has become the leader of northeastern B”f«7iri dissatisfied peasants. Ur Is a tt yrar-oM Sorisllst lawyer named Kraaclsco Jiiliae. Juliao sras a sideline observer at the American Foreign Ministers’ Conference in Punla del Este, Uruguay. He then journeyed to Havana In tone to bear Fldst Can. tro dsdam the equlvalMit of KhnishdMW*s promise to bury fhe Unitod Slates, and the Organlza-tioB at American States (OAS) aiam with It. Jidlao and his followers, counted but known to number in the hundreds of ‘ thousands, provided one important reason why Brazil first proposed an OAS policy of coexistence tWth Castro wHhln the framework of the Cold War, and finiBy refused to go along with his expulsion. ZJlL pronoM , SPEAKim -Dr. Mel Ravltz, \ Wayne State University aaaoci-'ate professor and Detroit coun-dlman, wffl speak at the annual nieeUm of tha Oaldaod Child Glance Clinics, Inc., Feb. 13 at \^the Birmingham Unitarian Church in Bloomfield r Directors will be elected. Thowing SALT CowM CrwM Rock S«h 100 Lb. Bog 50 Lb. Bog 25 Lb. Bog 1.80 1.00 . .69 Wottr-Soften«r SALT Grunuiottod Soil .... 1.80 Madiimi Fluke.......2.15 NHutt ond Nwotuts.2.15 Kktor tuck Suit.....2.15 FEEI>- for Wild Birds Our Boft Mixturt 5-lb. Bof 10.lk. 251b. ilK .59 1.10 2.50 SUNFLOWER SEED -Lb. 19e 10 Lbo. . . 1.75 VbtNwUbfinckCon fMlAe iigil site lee bMs 2i Lb. Bog . .1.35 CRACKED CORN ond WHOLE CORN ’ 5 Lbo........... .30 25 Lbow..........1.20 100 Lbo...........3.69 REGAL FEED ond lUfFLY CO. ’Their poverty makes them easy targets tor thh fet-ekMuIck, promises of commmdsm. } Juliao, an astute politician, has made their cauM his own. ★ A ★ His big opport)«ity came two years ago when he Jed a court _ Inat.a Recife dentiat who bad attempted to raise rente on Ms ngnr pftoBtstloB.'' tatloa’s expwprkiftcMil fifut tutor arta with a program cjl Irrigutieii, rural educdtkm and sanitation, nearby planUtkwa with kntvea and nuchetes, the government cproprlMed two men and sold them to t^ peyaidi on the In- Out of this earn plan to a donatodl ara not ihet, Bnudl bdkao^ tstfbRvahition. Juliao calla himself the black sheep M • weU-otf land-owning lamity.^ to dakm that be to a Conununist. Castro once denied Fur Juliao rr^.^Bi|t tor him I badto and ha bia etoemmeet Ikat' if th him it baa a if the ^ tha Mily • it, t JuUao has visited IM Chins ind waa Impreawii -to to an oi(t-‘ ' or hf CmOo an* ‘ ORCHARD e NO MONEY DOWN _ e 24 MONTHS Tp PAY • 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH FURNifURE'S SPECIAL •OPIN MONDAY and FRIDAY -ilNTIL 9 F.M. • FREE DEUVERY • FREE FARKING • From Orchard Furniture's Thrilling New Colonial Shop, Here's Early American Charm for Your Liring Room! 7-PC. COLONIAL LIVING ROOM OROUPIKG • Beoutiful wing-glyle eofo with lolid molded loom rubb cuthions, xippered coven ond orm cope upholstered i the very lotest coloniol heovy coven. SAVE $100.00 Ml 7 PiMM • Lounge choir wHh some construction • 2 Solid Mople step toble ond' OoHoo table • 2 Eorly Americon style table lomps 57Q088 Reg. $399 NO MONEY DOWN ONLY $15 per month COLONIAL DINING ROOM With heot and mor re-sistont plastic toblo top. 7-FC. MM MM 9 Al" ROUND TABLE WITH 12" LEAF 9 4 CAPTAIN'S CHAIRS 9 BUFFCT SERVER MATCHING HUTCH TOP SAVE $70 NO MONEY DOWN ONLY $13 NR MO. "228 lUf. $299 88 NYLON-FOAM 3-Pc. SectioMi with !8-Yr. Guorontao Reversible foom cushions, foam bock ond orms. Heavy nylon cover. ALL 3 PIECES ONLY 'I7P $9 Per Menffc NO MONEY DOWN dUNsRiOMIT SPEMAIS KLPc. ScrowdrHor S#. Reg. $1.79...Only 75c All Metol Hammer, Reg. $1.99 ..... 75c Rickshov Plonier, Reg. $1.99......7$c ing iotket, Reg. $1.49 . ..50c 1*Pr. Bed PiUowt, Reg. $2.99. . . . $TJ5 THE FABULOUS BERKSHIRE:.. vf\. T^E PONtlAC PRBSS, rillDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1902 THIRTEEN Yanks Too Late to Aid Victims LANDSIUHL, Gcmuy (UPD— U. 8. AraVitMki dMolbad tWr kMkig not afitet dMth In aid-IM vletbiM flC Ite 8urtenMkn ^ had pm to s«v« Km. W|Ri ym pt theft, that rii wp no matt life to ante,” Spec. 5 Mohard Yupa ot cap. 'Yaagaa la a maaiber al a Mir inaa jmaic leaai wklrh irttk a The c tolly 12 Ihjmhia Intund coal .pfeiera troM mina to a haapiUli After the 28iflaule flight fran tiwlr baaa hm to tm mine, Umy ‘laid all 12 nhwt had dtaC , ★ ★ * "Whai yoa laavt te a trip Ha ^ila. yoa ai« pctparai to aoeept the dealiia id pefhapa two or thita patlanta. W# wan ndt preparad f» the diode ire fah whan wt ........It pHeitu doad,” Yaa- pe aald. HTAVro AROITND •Thoir aaked ua to aUy for a while ia.caae aiawp alie needed airMfUiifc'' he atid. “for one hoOP pnd 15 Bilowtta wa fried email '(^mpact' Tag Put on Romney by Veep Johnson jniJMlK cm • - Vlaa Ptteideat Lyndon B. Johnaon aald Thiraday the automobile InduBtry haa pnww it can adlaat to European competition. ‘•In fact," Johnaon told the Na-(loMl Automobile Dealera Aaaoda-tlob amid laughter, “the oonpact weD thay'ra taBdnc about a oom-pa^ caadMPi te pnar* ‘ RopineT. drhe la atlll Ihe vloe preeideot to the paadWIlUr RoBuiey, tal cup. manufadurea the Rambler, wit enter Republican potltka. o( to ■ able to do our Job." "Ry lltll wa waro on anr w«y to the aHa wNh IM plHla a« blaad and m hbMb al ploaaae," tfm. 4 lUary IWekar, i ~ and the aan al lam 42 Area Men Enlist in Army January Joinirt for Thr«« Yaan, Sayi Pontiac RtcruHtr II. Sgt. Raymond R. Barrlauh, Ommander qt the Army ht| Station at SSH W. Hu iON — A wanun, bar ooal among the roiaataig, weepa Df a man at the entrance to Hied at leait 271 mlnera. It a aacond worat mining dlaaatei/ "Aa wa neared the dlaaater area wa aanr thnnp at grief-atrlchan people waiting out by the | On reaching the mine, we aome bbdiea being cinled out. Moat ol them were alreMy diad and bimed beyond recognition. * a a "We left aeveral unlta al plaama there for the pbyaidana. Then we want to Knappoehafia Itepital at OutenChled where moat at the Rudolf Barak, Stalinist, Expollod by Red Party VIENNA, Auatria (APi-RudoU Lyiin Houck Gets for Slaying Minister "Wa gave an the wbale I and the ramalader ol the plaama to the Btaff there. The doctore an-preaaed their gratitude." premier of Oommuniat vakia, haa been atrtpped of all government and party poata and expelled from the party. Prague Radio announced Thuratbiy night. * a a The broadcaat aald Barak, 54, waa chfurged by the party'a central committee with of hla government functlona and unlawful operationa with government money. JACXSON M-Lynn X. pleaded guilty to murder today in the daying at tired mlniater Rev. Roy Decker at The most natural COLOR pictures ever on RCA Victor COLOR TV TRADE-UP TO COLOR NOW iCon-Con Votes to Let Legislature ^ix Tcix Umits LANSING (UPI) -> Detagatei to the MMdgm Cwwtitbtlonal Convention today threw out the 15-mill , j llmlUtlon on proporty taxea in a H aurpriae move and agried to ’ " || the State Legialature fix limiU tax ratea. The delegatee voted 60-68 in la-or of a aubatitule propotal by the Wayne County Board of Super-viaora in the property tax ptaa. The eubatitute propoaal wap introduced by John McCauley, a Wyan- • Up to tS% BHghtar Nctort wtUi tht nnv RCA High Fidelity Color Tub# • UnturpuMod poffomMneo from many hard-to-fl with tho "Noaa Viatel' Tunor • M,NI volU (doaign averogo) of pktora powar THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN TBLEVI^N nm la aampatadi aalar TV ENJOY NEW NENLISM IN EVEIY MODEL WITH ICA'S NEW HIGH FIOEUTY T0BE1 SPACE SAVER! EANLT AMERICAN CHAIM ORACHNl BAMSN MOOERN The CHARTER Mark Safiae »«-«♦ tSariaa>12-6-M-M|^ 880 aq. In. picture K aq. In. pleura VICTOR /ktVlSdiOL MarfcS•rl«a^1^G^M| RCA VICTOR Tkorldita a High FMallly Color Tuba WKh Glar|^preof Safely Claaa a Supar^FowaiM ••New VMd* Tuner -r ’•>8paafcar Panoramie taund EAST TnMS xuuaq. In. picture COmaTV R€A VICTOR TJearJ/kta .HighFid^ty color Tuba WWi COLOR TV a Clara-Proof Safety Ctaaa Bonded On Tuba a Supar-Powaifiil ‘Ttow Vlata" EASY TERMS Tuner Btara-proof Safely Claaa a Supar-Powarfui "New Vlata” Tuner 0 {-Spaaiiar "Ooldan ThroaT lUY HUB Coma In—you Aavo to aaa tor younaMI RCA-VICTOR II COLOR TV -AND FOR COLOk TV irs NEW CENTER ELECTRONICS, INC. y Taltvision - Rodlio Sal«t aiiif SorvleA MIRACLE liAlkE SHOPPING CENTER JVULL AREA FE 8^9607 Open Dolly 10 A.M. - 9 P.M« Ufa impriaonment by Jackaon County Circuit Judge John C. Delon. The M-yoar.Md former oouvlet who Need la rural Braoklim, waa Hwrgtid wNh the alayfng of Reports Ludano Died of Poison ROME lUPiy-The Rome newa-daimed today that Lueky Luclado died from cyanida ------ '^fltead of a heart at- ^per, which alao aald i days ago that the former \ vice king was working > rBI, said In a frontpage iwlch: The actlCM compleled work on the long tax portion a< a new gtote constitution and the delegatee immediately turned their attention to the matter of local government id mtutOar./^ r- Decker, who lived with I nearby Tbcnmaeh, had gone to la abandoned fahn houae to place for aale Mgn on it. PoHce ■ ‘ ‘ tied up and left on Soar beforo fire swept the room. The blaxe waa believed cauied by t electric heeler. Authoiitiea aald How t taken to Southern Thompson, Gromyko Talking Berlin Again Fedoara who drown themadvea drink uaunliy don't have tar to na Diaoto Fum: n liriaM a**.; a luEnui, 111] Dorrii did not die 'from a heart attack. An exploratory medical examination showed In the veins of the ex-gangater traces of. . /potasthim cyanide.” MOSCOW (AP)-U& fourth meeting of 19^ with Soviet Foreign Mlniater Andrei A. Oro-> on the Ber^' The mfetlqg w^ requeated by Gromyko and laated aa hour and 45 mhMitea. The previoua three had been bald utThomp- There ' waa no comment from Thomneon when tia emerged. He was iooompnalsd by the eeoond ■ecretary, Kempton Jenkina, an embassy German apcclaUst who dao attended the prrvtooe meclr ka|k |Fhfah ate deMgned to determine 11 there la a baaia for nagoiiatkn on Berlin and Germany. Oak Park AAan Nam«d Hood of State Insurance LANSING (AP) — The Senate today confirmed the appointment oF Sberwood Ocriburn at Oak Park li« Oct. U, iwai Colburn, ttrhan ■ in d ------------- . 11 yean. , Oonmmptlon of maat In The uk Hae/a deep unde baroUna Miowa an averan adutt nuclear coun^ devioe cai conaumei 55 poumb oLllicef a tfcl ana atoaoi gnndium In a year and about 75 poup* of porklUon moleculea of water. EUhS eORE ON SAVINGS SAVINGS IN BY THE l OTH OF THE MONTH EARN FROM THE 1ST AT 0 CURRENT RATE AdvancedPapent y ^ / Shares Certificates AI Am CurrantRata "W / ^ / U IP HELD TO /MATURITY AVAIUILE IN UNITS OF $80 PER SHARE Eitablithtd in 1890-yavar miMod paying a dividond. Over 72 yean of wund managamrnt—your OMuranca of $ecuriiy. Aston now over 74 million dollars. CAPITOL SAVIEGS I LOAN ASSOQUTION 75 West Nuron FE 4-0561 Two-Car Crash Out Baldwin Injures Coiiple An elderly Pontiac couple waa injured last night in a two-car collision with a 20-yearoid Waterford Tbwnahip youth at paldwtn and km Arbor avenues. In aatlMactory cooGltlin at tiac Osteopathic Hospital ^th i and bruises today was Gary M. Beny of 2063 Judah Laka Rood. Tke eaupto, Bina and Bebaat U W. IsMtelfow Avu.. a broken elevkile while Hobeit, 14. enfleied meWple eontaatoea. Pontiac police reported Balding ■aid he was about to make a left turn while going north on Baldwin when be.wea tenick by Barry’s car. dilvliM oouth on Baldwin wh Balding’s car pulled la front of Im. Berry aald he apfdled the brakes but WM unable to stop bi time. Under the boundary wetera treaty of 1906 between the United Stetes and Canada, both coualrles have tree end equal rights of aavl-gattea of Uit waters of tha-Oreat HERE'S A VALENTfNE BONUS Get 4 pairs of stockings for the price of 3! Here’s your Berkshire Bonus! You get 1 extra pair of stockings in every bonus box of 3 pairs you buy! NOW, for a limited time only I There's an extra pair of Berkshire nylons waiting for you in every Berkshire Ifeuius box of 3 pairs you buy 1 Choose from four fashionable styles. With seams or seamless. All..with the nYLOC, Run-Barrier I from $1.06 the box. GEORGE'S DEPT. STORE it Fm Smirking FOURTEEN THE rONTIAd PRESS, JII^DAY. FEBRUARY »• IFYNW«NTTO$ilVE 25H ON TMT ADDITION READ THIS M... I PLANNINO-NO OBUOATION 92 W. HUtON-PONTIAC IN NEW HOME ^'The Leonard ThompK>n family lettled in their new Poynette, Wia., home Thompeon children are all vlctimi of a crip-Thunday after living fw 11 yean in a rented pling diieane known u Friadrelch’i ataxia. The home near Poynetto. well wlsben itarted a children are, from left. Sharon, 98; Lnarai, JS; drive 15 month* ago that brought money, ma- Rosalie, 93; Leonard Jt., .33, and Margo, 30. terial* and labor tor the new house. The five The pi^ts sit before the fireplace. Convicted of Murder in Landlady's Slaying IONIA W - James E. Harris was convicted of second-degree murder Thursday In the fatal beating of his 72-year-old landlady, Mn. Edna C. Wood ^f Belding. * * W A circuit court Jury of 10 men and two women retuined Its verdict after deliberating one hour and 30 minutes after a four-day trial. Harris, 45, odd-Jeba workar and handyman lor Mrs. Wood, said he would appeal the conviction. He was returned to Jail without bond. Measuring Fate of Long Baby in Short Bassinet CHESTER. Pa. (AP)-What do you do when you have a 23-Inch bassinet and a 24-inch baby. This was the problem facing Tbm Marano of nearby Boothwyn Retired General Dead SAN. ANTONIO. Tex. lAP) • Brig. Gen. Chauncry Lee Kenton, 72, a retired Army officer, bank presklenl and professor at West Point, died Thursday. Fenton was president of the FTrat National Bank of Highland. N.Y., for 29 years. Marano's wife, Catherine, a Pedestrian Killed by Cof 24-Inch son at Sacral Hamt Hoa- I® ,'‘’,7 , ' Wayne County General Hospital ThuredBy «i|^ pf Injuries suf-ferod" earlier when he was strode by a car while walking on a toad near hi* home. is that of Button Gwinnett, one of Georgia’s three signers of the Declaration of Independence. A deed signed by Gwinnett in 1773 sold recently for |6,000. Ex-Court Secretary Dies: DETROIT Ifi — Mamie O’Brien, retired Wayne County Juvenile court secretary, died ’Thursday at the age of 78. Miss O’Brien w Inative of Ishpemlng. The first firing of an expert- at Cape Canaveral was on Sept. 10. 1952. //9 /ndushtj iheres On/t^ One leader..... „.,//) Carpelmq. wisim? BECKWlTH-EVMfS IS ONE OF THE 6REIT CIRFET SnClELTT HOUSES IN AMERICA Msrclisiidhtng, baying, bandlint, all-'rsand knew-bsw and pays t* bay horn SackwMi-lvant fast an ramnants and slaw taNai* ... we attof carper aaiai bacaasa af ear baga valain*. Oar managaniant is affManS Ingnsss H saava fast and gasMa 'big*- A 2SP.0( sUllsd tacbniclans, amlsr^^aalaMM*, aspart ysNsHaa all ga tpaebd parebsaas af fins carpet aS distrass priMS . . . ssa maaa . and wban yea bay years fram tlia leader, yea's never regret it. HUGE IMVENTOIT k Our 250,000 K|. ft. warehouM I* chock full of carpet. In season wa have as much as three thousand rolls on hand. This helps us give you better service. From our stock for example,is this: KNITTED WOOL PILE TEXTURE A thick knitted beauty with a wool pile texture. Unusual colors. Part of an 150-roll special purchase. Now dis-.. continued. ROLL prka was 57.65. It's yours for Just BSI-CUMULOrT-CAPROLAN CwitIwMm nhNMirt NyL BMkirlUi-BnB. ItMk. tb. Ptawt THIS WBEK'* PKATUB* tihea HMv, loopwl. Cob- e*|VW tlnuoiM flUment Hr- H loo. 1J‘ width, ft., -r color.. W.O, .uorw.- ^ GIDEON WILTON Wool pile tsxtursd . — Wilton. Graceful e4$B design. A ipaclal 11 buy . . . lust for you. sa. T«. Cosh oad Carry 9x12 TWEED lUOS Heavy foam back, CAA Istax^ for a bat-tar tuft bind. You Ww must sea tWi. LUXURY WOOL PILE TWIST A l]-roll sp.ci.1 purehra In. cludo. 1 Iwlf... RoU eAOK pile. VO.'ST.S>. W. ■ 11'”' bought tt rtfht. It'. V your, for GLENDALE TEXTURED BARK A tfatek all vool pit. bark Us-turwl. A .pocisl P"- e that "So”2 .tsndordiAIt'. your. * IM I4.SS Md .old k. LUXURY WOVEN VELVET PLUSH Mod. to mU for around SU.OO. W. |S«f>bl.d on Mil.. Too »«, 11’ ond 18’ • 1 width.. ■ ■a. rt. "PRECIOUS" "PRAISE" DEVOTION LUXURY WILTON PI4IN WILTON LUXURY WjILTON U.«t Wbtu^^ lljjpfg your, for luot 1% tiovo.t pubtUhMt dwIorV east b $a.6t. It’, your, for 1|111 fiut 1* ow that. 11 aolor.. II’ tod 18’. IP 81184. It’, your. |4AB0 for lu.t 8« owr 'f''* that. 11 color.. ■v >*• “0 N. T*, •a.M. irnndir. ^ y^. Custem Drapurid lip to M-foot pistsrs priau snd pst' hnndrte* of ee. .. Uaa anS sll hsrSi If you can't come in . . . we'll coma to you with Detroit's finest Mlaction of carpet or drapery sampias. Tha/H be priced right . . . artd the installation will be guaranteed for llfaflme of your purchase. REMNANTS AT ^lUYEAWAr PRIOES! 5xAT' i IxIJ'S" 2iD Bl«g 2x11 Bgi] IxiriO" 2x13 Baeg 2xl0T' 2xD Bgl|P 2x9 Mw 2xl5'l" 2xl'7" i 5x7'4« / 2x1» 2x11 2x1 rr Wot NOW $100 $39 MmM Stride . . . $153 $ 09 ScraN ..........$132 $ 09 H Twbt ..........$29$ $174 OaifgTextgrg. . .$10$ $99 0gi|eJUkitrac» . .$109 $99 M«tfal Wlb»N. .$149 $ 79 $72 $44 Twist ...........$04 $ 41 I Twiit ..,.$200 $100 Oni. TwaeO $ 04 $ 49 hull.......$144 $ S9 Mrf........$244 $144 CpNgg ... $179 $ 19 0«M, Inb TwnO $149 $ 99 lal|8. On. TafggO $130 $ 7$ I PhMb .........$159 $ 79 M« Ahitnet......$240 $149 OhNTgxtwv.......$230 $129 ------------------- $239 $129 ^ 2x19^ 2x9 0pIi 2x1$ Oft 1x10^4" 2x14'4“ 2x12 Orgga Hsavy Lggf . .$244 $ 99 2x14'4" $«iMwgg4 Mida Uap..........$140 $ 09 2x1V4" Mie OnksTwNd $lt0 $ 44 2x10*$" IlHtk, WhHg Tw'd $ 70 $ M niB b m Pmaul Ihtag... Many. Mmy Mora la Cboosa rreas QUlDaOBOODDB nwoy OR 4-0433 (Drayton) OPEN SUNDAY 12 to 7 OfMH 'HI 9 t. M. Evory OHMir Night ixcOpf TiiMdo^ 'HI A t. M. ^^900 Dixie Highwo' SlOkfc MIRACLE MILE 5 Weekend ' LafJies’ Reversible Jersey-All Weather Coats Solid laminotod i«rMy rov«rMs to spring poplin. R«g. $19.95 $090 Ladies' Sweaters Our entire stock of classics, bulkies cardigans and pullover styles. R9g. to $14.9$ 3099 3Q99 ENTIRE STOCK Boys’ Piiterwear lta9.le$33.M !4offf Men’s SLACKS All wool worsteds and suitings Hog. to $16.95 $T90 2 Pair ‘15" Ladies' Snow Boots Stacked; wedge and flat heels. Sim 4 to 10, narrow and medium. Rog. to $12.95 $AOO Use A Lion Chars* THE P0NTt4i(!: PRESS, FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 9, 1062 FIFTEEN US’Plans Methodical Mop-Up of Viet Nam Reds MpUn, nbonwianoot pincc. tnuMiMrU tai flgbt«r-t]rpt craft (tdW$ Noi$ ~ VW« fh$ ntm>amit-tmrfaa ttrat- I ^ jiAlotoiiii lo (aft ■ *----------- V. t. M- AmtrMdk4inoim man playfnr^to ^ irotMtd ar$pt yfiitt’ ^ mttttcrf wko eoMttd atit. tiPlilot'f mittkm to « MRiprt> 0/ tk$ cv- ■jr nURD I. VOrrMAN AP MPtery Attain Write WASHUfBTON >- Hw United Stataa la pWhUj a new atrataiy In •SoolA' ^ntH Nav aimed M dearbu ^9**?*"'*** iwrrlllaa The IntentUm In to make nHoc-MO Of tneLfT^ IB tun. aald Into moot of the greatly lacreaead Utt. efiQtt to anve 8oulh VM Nam fttns oommnnlnto haa ramaloed ' e the enrfhee here, at kaat officially. •oureae. Thqr are ofthnlatk fte The Idea ngqrtedir «u ad-vanoad \ty Smatary of Debwe Robert’ g. MdlHnaia dnrluc re-cM conlentoea to Hemlnhi with UJb military leedirf and tUpilD-matle offidab hraoM to torn Soiah Viet Nam. Aooording to the laleet tofanaa- is continuing with an ■tream of guerrillaa coming from North VM Nam by way of Laos. Guerrilla itreogth haa bean ceU* mated at dose to 30,000. , _ _ ''ll My the reyahHc of VM Nam to prefect Ha peoiila and to pceaarve ita to- Mare of the kseberg ( But at the. same titoh. otttotola hafe ham rafaaed to give apedflc fon aanoonoed croatlaR of a major new UJ. military command ia-ialfon aider a fooMtar efOcialB aoM, will toiwet UJ. hdi- tkme by UJ. military men In aup-port of the South VMnameae ivy and ah- force. tyooaf mOttary aid. ftUltonartnn nfnsal to talk aboM dataUa of the atopped^y UJL ■attatiori or about efforta to brtog about ralDnna to VM Nam la jpamded to two raaaona: t Aailclean otfldala want to avoid the appearance that they are pulling the atringa. Thla la to-teudad la pert to prevent mffilng South VMnameae feeiii«s and to HOME LOAN5 Do future lump-sum payment worries when; we finance your home.; OfHct Spoct Avoiloblw in Our Buildinf I Capitol Saviip & Loan Assn. EitablUhed 1890 75 W. Huron S»., PonHoc FE 44)561 cumm Finnic niiu or luuonio fid UJ. flghtli«. men wait be needed-that the big boeat In arma, tralntog aid, transportation, and other aup- port will enable the South VMaa-rneae army to root oat late by Itarif. ■eeidng to ptoturt Saigon aa puppet of the United States. 2. It puts on the Oommnnlsti the burden of proving their chargee the United Mates la mouattoi a We military buUd-up to SoulJi VM Nam to violatloirof the 19M With American mpney, the South VMnameae army la being Increased to 300,000 men-about ~1JOO more than a year ago. If the uae of U.S. combat troops becomes Imperative to. preserve South VM Nam’s Independence, the new MUltaiy Aaalataooe Cbm-moad emdd farm a base (or di-letlng such an operation. Gen. Paul D. HarUna, named to edly carries with torn to Saigon dear Idea of what Kennedy wllh the President at Palm Beach Kaildna, ST, a native of 1 he has been aecoad to mand of Army forces In the Pacific area, le understood to be a cioae friend of Gan. llaxWeU D. Tayhir, Kennady's peraonal military advlaer. Thylor’a avtheepot study of the lowud by a Uiarp InrTeam to UJ. mlUtary and eoonomie aid. a steady Inflow of American Praaidam Ngo DInh Diem to un-ihe reforma deslmied to stoengthea his people’s wiU to i*: sM the OommunMa. The united ftates has iwn—t In its neUcy lidty about the UJ. effort In VM On occasion, the White Houoe as spotiigMed that dfert-aa r Dec. 15 whm tt made public The elght-yearoid agreement permtti only 685 foreign military advlaen in South VM Nam and bars bringing Ih any new mllitacy ear eocoept for replacements. ’Ihe United States wUl admit to only the 685 figure. But the total of American military men now In ~ I VM Nam hi bellevod to be 4.000. It la eapectad to rise as 7,000 within the aeope of the present effort. Sbme secrecy is Imposed lor Thus, few will talk—and nly guardedly — about reported antfOommadst guerrflla activity Inside North VM Nam. Such ac-thrtty is believed to bp on a a American Special raroae. e»-BTts la traiitoig native Ughtera > operate as guerrillaa, ore waking In South VM Nam. A apecial votaatsara to tfaaae tedmlgnes la known to be tonetlontog. U J offidala prefer net to talk bout reports that sdme U. Navy off « that U.1. Navy _ , _ Ow small South VMnanaeae navy to become more efficient la tater-Joddeada of by sea from the North and ouiE raiTTik •ns •( OsIrWt't •rifinal dlKOUslst* PLEASE ... NfVER UNDERESTIMATE MY DISCOUNT PRICE!! We wy fhii whh pride ond Vs noihAg more than o friendly infermol reml^er m chechy|prill||EI,i'Ou ' or. plonning to buy o opplionce, fetovision or Hl-Pi soon. So mosy folks tell os, 'I dWn t Itimk you could soil H lor that priee." Yes, mony people ore surprised and pleosed when they get Freiter's price. "’"r:'. FLOpR MODEL SALE!! SPECIAL OFFER THIS WEEK ONLY Complwt* and opprovud horn* outdoor Antonno Kit with tho puichoM of onV TV tot, oxcgpt portablot. Instbllotion optionol — $10.00 Moro# Oaniblelte, Naaio Irand ZaaMh Staraa Cemole .. laariaa ttoraa AM-FM tjrnaeail Sadia.. Ildaab NrtaMa Uew In Oretee .1 UN .liNJi .lieui II1I.N loaraaa tl-laah TV.... WaattoglMuta II-IimIi TV neoirt. .$141.11 .tatua I^aaia Staraa 1 IMS Staraa Roaord, 4 TrMk, Tapo Rteardar, AmariaaNMada.. $fM.IBy CLOSE-OUT AT BELOW COST All Transistor, AM-FM and eiook Sadies in Sleek. An Exeepfionsl Uoney-Savkig OpporhmHy! ALWAYS COME IS ASDSET FREHER’S Low, Low Pricos MS CAPANTT - BN VALUE REFRI6ERAT0R-FREEZER NEW 1962 - 2 CYCLE WASHER NO MONEY DOWN end compoftmants . . . giont full-width crisper... and mere. $23995 ONLY ,VDCirT,.Mi ■ JOO.,. I..h..,.aCl««OWT.«ia FAST74.H0M ■ NO M0«7 OOWH ■ ««.. U. TO !< I If Not f'II, S.liill.4 R iUOWANtt I OUlVIAY | ON ANF PlIACNASI P ft, 5,1, s.rrk. M.NTHS ro PAY ! ' Fl!!i^w!!ilDI»ewiilMtNwlli«»l|l)lll.r..c. - ^...HurwwW - l«nle. Oomi Flrtl NuanNm. U s FRETTER APPLIANCE MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER S. TELEGRAPH at SQUARE LAKE ROAD Open Doily 10 A.M. *til 9 P.M. - FE 3-7051 ~ Sundoy 10 A.M. ^til 7 PJA. AMUMUJIltt ■ o u i ■■■■»■■■■■ ■ ■ ■ ■ _ dbl UJ Abr Foret men 1 oaMla.l«n tho ecene to aiaablt kvo comelto ahow the VMnameae hew, to numberalget the moat out of the heU- The benhna is firU to vohane M BSCAPE BLAZE - An expectant inothec and 1® ddllren were ameug the 34 peraana left who la axpectlng n baby. Thi^ famUlaa, In- ■ Bva a^b as flames destroyed this twoetory chiding 19 children and five frame bouae near Shamokfai, Pa., Thurg^. Th# before ftames engulfed the itnidture. No one fire was dlacoverad by Mra.'Harold Arbogaat ij:i DIAMONDS n s-Mti OfM Oettr M a. It. ’M e r. ■. NOTICE TO OUR CUSTOMIRS we a seed tnm !• Awbaia Ave. le I4lt Perry Ss. junoiM TV snvici SANDERS FOR RENT TRAVIS Rardwabb New low-cost luxury ih two just-out Chevy II Nova sedans oLuxufygndlowBostligvtMiNf bun ntoff bsurtifiilly Uiiidid thM- In tboN two nownt addRiont to Un dmry n lint! UNo thoir running imtn-tho Nova 400 Sport Coopo, Convertiblt and Station Wagon-thoy havo tho uiiw futum that hgvo inadt Chevy n tho winner of Car I//h imgazino’s Enginoiring Excdlonci Award for 1962. Soft-riding now Mono-Piato ratr springs, proved in the equivaient of 2,000,000-plus test miles. Thrifty 6-cylinder Fisher roominess that fits big families and email parking placee. An easy loading vacation sized trank. A raft of new idiM designed to save on upkeep, like frontTond sactions (including fendera) that bolt on and oR for aasy replacenwnL Plus trim, tasteful styling, inside and out. Sea tho smart, sassy, saving Chevy n Novas-^and the other mnsibly sized, sensibly priced ' engine gets more “git" out (ri a getlon of regular. My by your Chevrolet dealer’s. Dim n Nan Nova 400 Sport Coup#, fmkp Novk 400 Convurtlblo, eW- /amay pleaaer sbUH IXMp. § a- UhOwk^Ckmolet eonOtrltbU you that gmt tantsg$ ofitk $mkt mrfiipptdatopovtr. Nova400t-Suat Statien Wagon hoUkafull 70J ek.fi. of cargo— and deeke it out in stylil SOO 4-Mor Sadan aorriia 9 pbotengero Os Body 5g Fiiher eomfori with room to opar^ SOO 2«Doar Sadan grew you a ebottw tjofriiif ^-ora omotk, opuaky e-oylinaer m SOO S-Saat StallVn Yfagan inofm you to compare ite low price leM any otter g-»eat wagon. Hn ■ n • .m 100 4-Door Sadan—Am’t praetiealUy lAaf’B do you proud —at a low, low price. 100 2«Daor Sadan—fAw dapper oedan ie the ttriftieet of aU the ttriflyfJkwpJImodele. Mweef priced Cheerolet wagon. Witt maUwinyliitUerior to boot! ■ See the new Chevy II at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer^e ■ 'f'" 631 OAKLAND AVENUE lUTTHEWS-HARGREAVES, INC. Now Chivy U Nova 2* and 4>Doors-plus a wonderful choice of other Chevy U modele POHTIAC^ICHIGAN FI 5^161 :'V SlitTKEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAV. FEBRUARY tt, 1962 Music Festival Set at PCHGym TV eighth annua 1' Junior High School Muilc reatlval , win pay tribute to our lonign neighbor! throughotit the world . with a aongfeat beginning 7:30 ' Wedneaday evening ‘in Pontiac Oantral High ScNboTa gym- Featured on the program, Metro (/nits to Hold Joint Inistallation The Ladiea Auxiliary of the Metropolitan Qub will conduct a Joint inatallation o( offi-eera with the Men’a dub following 7 o'clock dinner Saturday in the Hotel Waldron. Mra. Harold Wright, preai-dent, announced her committee! lor the year Tueaday evening in the club room* on Yale Street. Mra. Omer Wlnton and Mra. Dora Tompklna are in charge of nomination and election; Mra, John Wilaon, welfare and benefit aalea; Mra. Reuben El-liaon, hlatorlan and publiei^ Mra. Hvl Allen, flowera and aick calla;. Mra. Ray Wilaon. chairman. Mra. Glac^ Baker and Mm. Wright, member-ahip; Mm. Walton Jonea and Mm. Lee Nye, telephone and aponaored by the muaic department of Pontiac Public School a, will be pn eighth grade hofwm choir. Thia aalect chonia 700 voloee wtU flrat greet the audience with *'Hello, HeSo Everybody" to the tune of the Alabamg Jubilee. The Ocarina, written by Irving B e r 11 n and arrang^ by Haary Slmeone along irith a Dutch dance, two Hungarian folk numbem and the Flortan § Song from Franok will be per-, formed in accordance with the featlval’a international theme'. oluaiNAL ijmnidAqe / Choir membera will aing the Brahma Lullaby, a'G e r m a n Art Song and Gaudamua Igi-ture ualng their original foreign language. The Peanut Vendor will alao feature ac- Hoateaaea for the evening were Mm. Wright and Mm. Hazel Kelley. •The Three Beam." "Michael Row Your Boat Aahore" and "Americp the Beautiful'' have bem aelected to provide a meaningful climax, with the Pledge to the Flag and God ' Bleaa Afnerica aa opening and cieaing numbem. Each junior high Kbooi will be rejeeaewtad by a apeclal ' IdM club, but the Junior High School Orcheatra will be city-wide with 70 playem combining their talenta in a aolo number. The inatrumentaliaU will alao aerve to accompany aev-eral of the Maaaed Choriia vocal aelectiona. Adult ticket! are 50 centa . and may be purchaaed at the door. dining at it’s very best — elegant yet casual! Dalicious foods, our palote-plfasing cuitino is skill- -fully prepared and perfectly served to bring you the utmost in dining pleasure. When you think of dining, think of us. 10 A.M. ta 2 A.AA. Everyday incl. SUNDAYS FEATURING: e Plaoiont Dining - Business men's luncheon e Bonquet facilities e Fireside Cocktail Lounge overlooking the ski lodge Alpine Inn RESTAURANT and COCKTAIL LOUNGE 6707 HIGHLAND RD., WHITE LAKE TWP. ADJACENT ALPINE VALLEY SKI LODGE ^ OFP ON THESB 4 FAMOUS ’imlr STKRLINa PATTBRNS LIMITED TIME OFFER FEBRUARY 4 thru 24 SMSFtrk 7.71 SO S4I 5 craMSMw in SJS 1.17/ MLSprtiWr SJO SJS TOWSaMa U.7S tas SM US « U ae. asnrtsa Iw 4 naaMitlMidsirtiaSalfas a ssjse isje tt^ u» S.7I ua 7.7S SO SJi 7 JO 4ja .S.W An international theme will prevail when the music department of Pontiac Public Schools presents ihe eighth annual Junior High School Music Festival if 7:30 p. 771. Wednesday in Pontiac Central High School^ Among the hundreds of students p&rticipathg will be (from left) Tom Webb, 'Jefferson Junior High; Tommy Caldwell and Judy Fulcher, Lincoln; Ross Coppersmith and Dennis O'Neill, both of Washington. They are rehearsing a lively rendition of “The Peanut Vendor.’’ 1C TOeiasaa ISJS SO 4.11 NOTE: Thaee 4 paManie awert «e legulv pilNe allw Nh M. Ci-UB PLAN IP DMIRBD Ride the Bus W DOWNTOWN Proudly displaying their junior high school banners are five students who upll participaJpe in Wedne^y’s annual Junior High School Music Festival. From left, Janice Benson and Sharon Weber, Eastern Junior High; Marilyn Boersma, Madison; Frances Washington, Jefferson; and Judy Crickon, Madison. An eighth grade honors choir of seven hundred voices will be featured on the program. Invite Optimists to Fete Oakland Oounty Boat Qub nual cooperative dinner on Feb. 24 when Pontiac Optimist Qub members wilt be guests ot the Optl-Mm. dub. Mm. Robert Thft is dbmer riiairmkn, with Mrs. Tom Thum and Mm. Russell Woodbury assiating. Mm. Robert Bradley is planning (he en^r-tainment. Membem brought while goods tor the American Cancer Sodaty to Tttaaday'a matting in the home of Mm. G. W. Stark on East Iroquois Road. Mrs. Roy C. Lewis and Mm. .Taft were coboateasea. Dreasltvs will be comideted at the March 6 meeting with Mm. Ralph Merfcovitz of Pine Manor hoatesa. Mm. Lorenz L. Vasbinder was welcomed at a new member. Miss Kent to Marry Mr. and Mm. Ralph Kent of West Rotgera Avenue awAincc the engagement of their daughter Ruth Esther to Pvt. Marvin P. Weyer, son of the Stanford Weyem of West Fairntount Avenue. * w ★ A late March wedding ia planned. LP RECORD Great Sovings on These T^ Recordings! COMPARE OUR PRICES! Lhri It Up. Johnny Mathis.... 2.77 3.77 MiM Rivor md El CM...........2.77 3.77 Harmonicats. Motion picture themes. Bretliet* Four Song Book ... .2.77 3.77 2.77 3.77 'Mitch Miiior ond the Gang. Bif’ Bod John; Jimmy Doan... 2.77 3.77 Morio; Roger Williams.......2.77 3.77 TonigM; Ferronto 0 Teicher. .2.77 3.77 VoimHIo Bori Ivee ....... -2.77 3.77 Feoturing "A Little Bitty Tear. Bourhon SHoef.......... -2.77 "3.77 Pete Fountain ond Al Hirt. 3.77 The Store Where Quality^ Counts F. N. PAULI CO. Poiaiae*s Oldeu Jeweky, Stitre jSaWeBt^uroii Street_. FE 2-7257 With 0 Sound in My Hoqit. . .2.77 Bert Kaempfert. Decca rocordirig. Whot'd I Shy ...................2.77 Ray Charles. LingBr Awhile........... . . . . .2.77 3.7t vie Oomone. Capitol recording. West Side Story.................2.77 3.77 Electrifying jazz arrangement. Stan Kenton Instont Party ..................2.77 3.77 Everly Bros.; Warner Bros, recording. Jomes Darren .................. .2.77 Sings for all sizes. Up fhe Logy Mvor.............. .2.77 3.77 ^Ti™W.lk..M7 Liberty ^cording, 2.77 3.77 *-****^." . . . . ..2.77 3.77 Including "When I Foil in Love." West SMe Story ........... .3.77 4.77 Original movie sound .trock. Columbia. Never On Sundoy .............3.77 3.77 Ramsey Lewis. Argo recording. AmecheTrid L^for^^^ Flower Drum Song .. .........3.77 4.77 Time Further Out............2f.77 3.77 Orig. movie sound track. Decco recording. Dove Brubeck. Columbia recording. MMnight Spociol .. .4. i, . .. .3.77 4.77 Ehh TMe; Earl Grout......... 2.77 3.77 Jimmy Smith. Blue Note recording. GONVENIII^TLY LOCATED in our "WALK-IN" Rooord Dopertmont 27^ Sogiuaw SttoN-^FE 3-7168/ _____Up Kingston Trio. Copitol. Huwuli; Elvis Presley---2.77 3.77 BiMkfost ot Tiffany'* .... • .2.77 3.77 Motion picture sound trock. RCA. The Bkhorion’t........ 277 3.77 rer PontlaeOakland Town Hall inembam will haar intemaUon-aUy famous forrlgn cormpood-ent and author WlUlam L. Shlr-er on "Praapeets tor Permanent Paaoe" at Wadneadaye 10:51 a.m. matting In Huron Recipient of the french Legion of Honor, radto's highest honor The Georgt Foeter Pfu-body Award and Ihe Wendell Willkie One World Award lor outstanding achievemeats in joumaliam. Mr. Shirer has been called a "genius of journalism." one who can impart to hit audlencet ihe feeling that they loo am partidpanis in current events. O 0 ★ At Wednesday's lecture the journalist will comment on problems now before Ihe American people from both a national and intomatlonat outlook. Read and heard worldwide during hit preos and radio coverage of the Hitler era, Mr. ..fhinr'i "Berttn DUury,” written from hia observations of the tumult in Germany, was an immediate best seller. SPENT MK YEABS Another success. Bhirer's "The Rise and Fall ot the Third Reich," was published In 1960 after the author spent . nearly six years examining secret German documents captured iy the Allies. Significantly, Shirer's first "professional disappointment" waa his failure to make the high school paper in Cedar Rapids. Iowa. A 1925 Goe College graduate, his first trip to Europe was made on a cattle-boat with 9200 In borrowed money. WWW As a Chicago 'Tribune reporter Ms coverage of Lindbergh's landing In 1927 earned him. recognition. After reporting on the 1928 winter Olympics, he,, waa assigned to the League of Nations with assignments following in Paris, . London. Vienna and two yean in India observing the rise and fall of Mahatma Gandhi. Ih 1933 he w*s In Berlin again for coverage of Hitler's rise to power and the beginning Of the A celebrity luncheon with Mfomnal question and answer period at Devon Gables will follow the lecture. Reservations can be made through Mn. D. B. Eames, Cherokee Road. Group Plans Card Party on March 6 Gold Star Mothers, Chapter 34, have reserved the First Federal Savings and Loan As-aocintioft of Oakland club rooms for an evening card party on March 6. WWW Committees were appointed by Mrs. Edward McDonald, president, at the Wedneaday evening meeting in the Bemis-Oioen Amveta Hall. Mrs. CecU Briggs and Mrs. Eva Welch are ticket chairmen. Mrs. Clarenoe Sutton. Mn. ' Leona Hagberg aiM Mn. Cart Rutherford compiw the re- Table and door prises will be handled by Mn. Louise Mayofte and Mn. dive Bur- The group honored the birthday of Mn. Welch, at a dinner TueaAy Iq Ted’s Restaurant. Mn. McDonald, Mn, Briggs and Mn. Burgess will attend the state board meeting Monday in Lansing. Society Pfons Card Party . Our Lady of the Lakes. Ro-"sary Altar Society will sponsor the amuar pre-Lenten card party at 8 p.m. Thursday in the high ' school gymnasium, There will be refreshments, .also table and door prizes, w w. w Codudrmen gre Mn. Harry Fahmer 'of Ro*ary Guild and Mn. Leonard Methner of St, Elizabeth GuUd. WWW proceeds wiH help complete the new Idtchen in the high /schoed. The public ip invite^. W -W W Richard Schmidt ! showed slides of bis European tour fkd-lowlng WMnnday's meeting of the Rosary Albur Society in the high school iriusic room. St ~ — wjluam l shjreh' ' Personal News Dr. and Mrs. John 8. Pridmore (Hah Applewhite) ot Tilmore Drive announce the birth ot a daughter, Elisabeth Joan, Jan. N, in Pontiac General HoepttaL Orandparenta at "Libby" are the J.Ji. Applewhllee of VoorhelB Rood and the Ooorge Prtdmorbs of Pemdale. A A ★ The William Deavers were hoeta at a family dinner ^Sunday In the home of hpr parento, thE-Oeoege Van Kurena of Waterford. The birthday of Mr. Deaver’s brother Robert. Who left Tuesday for the V. 8. Marine base at Ban Dtefo, Calif., waa eelebrated. ★ ★ ★ Former Pontiac realdenta, the Garry A. Nalaona of Seal Beach, CalU., announce the birth of a atm, Randy Gene, op Jan. n. Grandparents of the baby are the Prank V. CUnea ef Gale Road, Waterford, and the Arnold P. Neleona of Olark-■ton. The announcement came four days after-the.Clines returned from a alx-week vacation during whldh they vlalted relaUvea In San Pranclaco, Sacramento end San Diego, Calif., and Tucaon, Arts. They alao epeni some time with the Garry Nelaons at Seal Beach. ★ ★ A Dr. and Mra. John T. Kennedy Jr. (Bue Shanka) of Ann Arbor are parento of a daughter, Wendy Sue, bom Feb. 8. The baby’s grandparento are Mr. and Mrs. Leslie T. Shanks, Ferndalc, formerly of Pontiac, and the senior Ken-nedys of Wauwatosa, WU. Great-grandparents are the WUUam A. Wlndlates of Union Lake. AAA Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Sheets of Lanman Drive, Drayton Plalios, have ai their guest this week Mr. Sbeeto’ sister, Mrs. J(Am Lunberg of Manstlque. hearing TESTS /'* Ask your neighbor why-n’t PONTIAO OPTIOAL OEITER FOR- EYE EXAMINATIONS . El^ GLASSES FOR ^ ^ AduUs Teenagen ChOdren CONTACT LENSES SAFETY GLASSES SUNGLASSES ADJUSTMENTS AND REPAIRS when yeu find out why^ you*ll want to tell your neighbor tool Pontiac Ofitical Center 103 N. SAGINAW St. Kinsley Inn SUNDAY BUFFET BRUNCH: from U A.M-2 P.M. I2.N per pgfio»r4L$B for duldrmi mim 10 SUNDAY DINNERS mfi frsm Nom to U PJL . ' A Want to learn to do the TWIST? ' Saturday MAGEE and HUTCHISON will show yop^ow ami invite yOu7:^artlcipate ITS FUN! 7 CiM for reBervattons early j J04.S916 THM PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9. 1962 SEVENTEEN Ftnsat Qwdity Carpdi MdJEOD CARPETS Wax Your Brass (NBA) -i- Tb iravmt bnu from teniUifaic aatr tt hi been poikhM. |ivc It' a c StppTursing Lips Habits Can Form Lines Put them to work In lound ucnrHiee I k • good pUoi to fiMt Hving. Troubk k, t can't grow )hara. Skahk hmdi should go odtoro NE^imklNGSBURY CO, FE 2,9117 ALL ORDBB8 BXBCITIBD AT BIOULAB COMMISSION BATIS OldBU Investment Firm** SIS OOMMlTNlTr NATIONAL BANK HLINi. Sr JosEnoNB lowman Q. ‘Tam la my hrte fotHcfl I I am beginning to get thoae little llnm around my mouth, not at the oomen hot at the upper Up, What can I do to eUmlnata theae and I to he UNO el a la tatty dapaatta haMaSt Mb aUa. the toatara at the akto. the toapa of the nMalh aad Sm Mlaaaa ar tMaaaai at the Spa, can play a big part In the fonna-tiOD of theae lines. If you have the habit of purting your lips, atop it! Then be faithful In lubri-ca^ your Upa aad the surrounding akto. Sometimes this area la For your Valentine! Valaatina'i Day h Wadaaiday. Fab. 14 MafiMivra 'Saratoga' STEREO PHONO Magnificent KMind! Dual Mpphire stylus. Detach-abla second speaker, automatic record changer! 7990 8-Transistor Radio Plays Everywhere Big sound from the pocket-si z e "Companion" b y Magnavox! Built-in antenna. Battery, earphone, leather carrying case included. 29^^ GRINNELL^S, 27 South Soginow Street FE 3-7168 FEBRUARY SALE Imprassive Dinette Groups . of Color and DurabiKty Seven piecei wHh on every doy "party" look, large Toblee extend to 36x60 inchsi. The conlbinatiori of metol, piottic ond wood groin nr pjjttefned top* ore compiimented by the idecorotor cover* ol the deeply upholstered choir*. ^68°® 7-pieee Deluxe Set W Table extend* to 36 x 60 with tlx "extra eemfortoble" chair*. 6-KaesMOakSel '124* limed finish--plaiHe' top. Toble 36x48 ax-‘ lend* to 60" with one . leaf. '4 foam podded *eol'chiilir(. I 20% Off on All Pictures ml Lamps HeneeHy Our Locotipn and Lower Overhead SAVES YOU MONEY SVxeff Mandard brand* of Good FurnUurn 6-pieee Dinttft *48* EXTENSION TABLE Atlroctke-^p fwlt^'. ) choir*; 7-PIECE COLONIAL inpMel nhk FURNITURE 144 OAKLAND AVI. Open Mondoy and Friday EveninBa CAREFUL FREE PELIVEttY-^ONVENIENT TERMS___ Q. "You aomedmaa mantlaa| A. Yas. Ihata aie gaai «»-produda eThMi eeiy eavar up biam>| taepeaal aoaa, khes and dtankeatta d the dda. Q. "What to a good loot eme Are my M fliaaa watoxpwwIT’* WCTU Holds • Fomily Dinner duriattom Tanvaraoee Uatoa gathered Ikeaday at Tlrat Methadtot Church tort rumlly r told me get aema toam you." nm la • gead 'dm. I Q. "Do you think that a glri 14 yean old to too young to use Up-atlckr A. 1 thtok II leak vary graweap. V aN el year Meoia aaa Jlpallek aiM yse leak aUer Ohhi year i«a. I IMak yaa ■kMl!l amlay Btoag It Q. "I am 15 years oM and getting after me for yeato, but I did not begin to bp Inlerestad in improving until recently when I themuclvai gracefully and straight. Can I correct thk or am I too old? " A. Stoee yon tndy ore Mer- it la aad that more girls your age don't realtoe what a great effect poeture has on their I because posture defects can be 1st Philothea Class Holds Co-op Dinner First Phiiathea Claai of First BapUat Church gathered (or a cooperative dinner at the church Bring m. Ai~SS% OH SAVE *2” S ON MONDAY, TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY 910 Permaneiitg $ 7.50 $15 Pemumentg $12.00 $20 Pcmianentg $15.00 Participating in the program were Mie. I. C Prevatta who gave davottona, the Rav. Robert Ion, who gave a message on awto to Viet Nam^ and Me. WUUama, who aang a vocal selection in Welsh. . e * * In charge of the affair wera Mn. . H. Bryan and her aartstanli. Mn. Job Howell and Mn. George OOok. TONY^ SHOP PE S-7186 Main Floor of Riker Bldf. S6 W. Hn VIAI ATO YIAL iM>am DokA h wMer. ftw leeioa (or Mo trood to (evod k *e Daolih 0■ ■■■^-■•7- Srlooska loto to. tol».D«»l»to,tttodM,e( nod Doiibli SlolNliss SImL The CASTLE GIFT. SHOP 270 S. Talogroph Id. — FE 4-1850 Hourit ft30 o.m- to 6 am. Mon, Tue», Wed, Thur*, Sot-FrI. 9i30 o.m. to 9 p.m. *««»«> OBI of a good book by us- ^ have my axerckee to oonect ing it for a foot exercise, round iboulders, send a stamped, Curl your toes around the mHoAlreaart CTvdya wlMi your bookHHi kMwhihrOU count to eight sloudy. Pontiac Praaa. At Oakland Hills Luncheon Spring Outfits Bloom By Mim SAUNDIRg The J. Rodney Weeks are mo- taring In Florida for the next few BIRMINGHAM - Smart new ^ ™ wr uw now ,ew spring enaambles made their debut week. Luaefaeon at Oakland HUb Country dub wHh apaaker Law- A modem internal gas combustion engine bmna about U pomds of air to avety pound ei fuel con* ly totrigtong aa be was recently appototod by Mn. John F. Ken-‘ * to aarve on a committee to select Aoglcan paintings for the LAincheon taoateases included Mn. eiae P. Judd. Mn. NeU K. Barbour, Mn. duirks shain and ~' Paul E. McDonald. Mn. Lawrence Hehsch and David Williams were the junior quets w by Mn. J. D. Mn. Harry J. Calvert. Mra. Horace Brettelle was la Mr. aad Mn. Daniel Dreyer have announced the engagement of their daughter D«t>tby Jean to Brace £. McDonald ot Bit- FREE MikB-UF ' Call or Come In mfRLt noRmpn Michigan University and will both be graduated in June from Mkhl-;gan State Utilvenify. It It * Mr. and Mn. Ralph Dawson announce the birth of a aon, Robert, Jan. 16. ★ * 6 Mn. John .W. Gillette left Wednesday to accompany ffie Rev. and Mn. Henry Lewis of Ann Aim on a six-warit trip through Mexico. tsn OrdMd Uha RA, Syfvaa Lake. MkUyan namiE al hw NrUmi V« KNOW WoM nottiMns« nns *i CRAIG’S GIFTS Februaiy Sale! Our Entire Stock of TOPCOATS Including KUPPENHEIMER “ %1ZS »54 '63 »79 '88 Regular to $13S \ Now ^ Reduced To. ... ond HURON at TELEGRAPH Men.,TlHifs.,FH. 10to9 - W,Wed.,Serf. 10ts6 ^ OptD Tonight Until 9 Pji. m ms February Salel Casual and Dressy Dresses Regular to as ’/.off Imported Knit Suits & Dresses-Designer Dresses ReguktetoiHO 40 x 75% off Fur Trim Coats Regular to $190 '59 X '109 ■ Untrimmed Coats Reguku- to $110 '29 * '59 SPECIAL CLEARANCE Famous Brand Sportswear COATS *18“ JACKETS Reg. $29.95 $1190 and $35.00 t l JACKETS ^ Keg-flf-tS *7“ SKIRTS *5“ SWEATERS '*5*® SWEATERS Rv-tUSS *4“ ' Fridw and S^rdw OnM A very special group of our regular stock SHOES Values J to m.9s High and Mid Heels ALL SALES FINAL 6 47 HURON at TELEGRAPH ., Thurs., Frf. 7010 9-Tuae., Wad., Sot. 70 to 6 Kil.llTEKN THE PONTIAC PRE^S, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1902 SHE’LL LOVE Church Unit to Stage Activity It’s Such a Cheery Surprise! B«outy, fragronc® ond ci lovely, Ceromic Figurine are cotflbined by Peorce Arliitry to give fhi* Voler^lirre Gilt special ottroctiveness. A Red Heart blends with assorted, pink and red miniature rases, heather, and grejjns to make this one pf the most expressive of Valentines you could possible send. Figurines are in delicate pastel shades. . Regular $5.00 $400 delivered your Fa/«nlin«*s Day will 6« much happirr baeaui* you remembered someone. PEARCE Floral Company 599 Orchard Lake Avenue Open Doily 8 a m. to 9 p.m. Clotod Sundays FE 2^0127 - tr Ontnl MetbodM Cburch’t Woin-ea’i jlotcety et Oiriatten Si wlU eUge e nnorgeibord fri to 7 p.m, lliundey in Kliet Fed* end Saving! end Loon Anode-tion ot Oeidend buUdinc-Mn. dame »m amt Mis. I eld Perrttt dr. Sff eoehelrMM, aoMei kjr Mri. Fiei IMe. tMketej Mrs. Thonea PwiM, Others beading committees are Mn. Homer Sisney, meat chair-amn; Mn. Fred Mueller, hot dieh* ee; Mn. Robert Wiadom, ealads; Mn. VerneU Kaul. clean up; and Mn. Robert E. Field, publicity. Reaervationd for the public affair may be made by calling the Preparing decorations of ^‘hearts, and flowers** for the smorgasbord at first Federal Savings & Loan Association of Oakland building are left^ Mrs. Thomas Porritt, East Walton Boule-yVard, Mrs. Robert E. Field, South Avery Street, Mrs. Donald Porriu Jr, Wa^ington Street and MrSi WilUam Bullock, Virgie Lane, Orchard Lake. The annual affair sponsored by the Women’s Society of Christian Service of Central Methodist Church is scheduled Thursday evening. He lsn*t Dead, Abby Says Stir Hubby s Interest By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I recently married a 43-year-oId man who acts lUce he’e 90. Before we were' married, aU he did waa brag about |W h a t terrific iconditlon he as in. Now his ex-uae is that he [led such an ac-Itive life when |he was single, must have slowed him down. I am 33 and far from ready to sit and knit while he reads. His doctor says he's fit as a fiddle. I am seriously consider-Ing getting myseif a boy friend. NOT KIDDING DEAR NOT: If your husband is “fit as s fiddle,” you dgn’t need a new beau. What you need is a little Imaglna-lion. Take the lead and stir up DEAR ABBY: I am a 15- EXTRAORDINARY BUY in FABULOUS dyed to match SKIRTS and SWEATERS $788 ^ 'W' Hun each Hundred* to chooaefrom, Pasfelsi High ShadesI PinksL Bluest LiiacI MintI RedI Violeff Fur BlendsI Clas$lcsl NoveltiesI Slim SkirtsI Pleated SkirtsI Blald SkIrtsI TAKE YOUR PICK 75 N. Saginaw StVfef SMART lAOIEVfPPAREL year-old girl. My boy friend is the same age. His birthday is coming up soon and I want to give him a present. I don’t get a regular allowance. 1 did earn a little money babysitting, but that all went for cosmetics and things like that. I asked my Dad if he would give m& about $20 eo I could buy my boy friend a sweater and all I got was a big lecture about how the kids o( today don’t know the value of a dollar ... all that Jasz. You’d think I had asked him for a million dollars. Can you put something in your column to let my father know that times have changed and that |20 is no big deal any more? BUGGED DEAR BUGGED: If $20 is “no big deal any more,” why didn’t you save >fl? At the present babysitting rates, it shouldn’t have taken you long — if you had really wanted to. Your father is right. * ★ * DEAR ABBY: Ross and I went together for two years. He is 29 and I am 24. I knew all along I wasn’t in love with him, but 1 didn’t want, to nurt his feelings because he was so completely in love with me. Finally, I couldn’t put off his proposals any longer. I told him I thought of him only as a “friend” and I didn’t think I should see him any more. He cried like a baby, so I agreed to date him if we could be Just “friends.” He'begs me to Ides him end I feel so sorry for him I give in, but I don’t feel Now he’s talking marriage again. How can I untangle myself from him? He says rather then break up with me, I should continue to date him and we will be “Just friends." Please help me! SOFT-HEARTED ■w * ★ DEAR S0FT-H|:ARTED: Don’t kid yountelf. He might be a "friend” to you, but you are more than a “friend” to him. He hopes to wear you down and you to marry him after all. (This baa been known to happen.) Break—and bleak clean. He’ll live. ★ * * How is the world treating you? Unload your problems on Abby, care of The Pontiac For Abby^ booUet, ‘'How to Have a Lovely Wedding.” send 50 cenU to Abby. The PonUac Press. Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas. Virgin Islands, ia dominated by tte hilltop Danish consulate, once tne private home of a Danish gov- Pick Committees oi Study Club hr Coming Term Committees who will serve Parliamentary Study Qub for the fiscal year 19824Q were elected Wednesday afternoon at the Masonic Temple. Mrs. E. M. Malone is chairman of the program conunlttee, assisted by Mrs. Lewis Swartz and Mrs. iErvta Christie. Serving on the luncheon committee will bt Mn. Russell French, Mn. Robert Mac-Laren and Mn, Paul Gorman. Memben of the nominating oom-mlttee an Mn. John McNeeley, Mn. George Watten and Mre. Theron Taylor. Mrs. Homer Fenely sponsored the demonstntkm of an annual meeting. Assisting wen Mn. William C. Pfahlert. Mn. Malone, Mn. Melvin Norberg, Mn. McNeeley, Mn. WUliam J. Schmoek and Mn. Lee Hm. The meeting dosed with a question box conducted by Mn. Joseph Psnter, parlismentarian. Leal Ernes Unit Plans for March Memben of the Leal Ernes Group of the First Presbyterian Church met at the South Josephine Avenue home ot Mrp. Edward T. Markham for their regular ses- Markham as oohosteas was Elea-m J. KeUogg. Plans wen made for the group birthday dinner pet for March 7 at the Hotel Waldron. Martha Leach gave a taM ca- t atady waa let *y 'i Florence Schleeeer, chairman, announced new chairmen for the tr as foUows: Mn. finance; Mn. Law- Voorhees, social education and ae-Ikm; and Mn. Paul N. Salter. whether your skin is normal, dry or oily niSSY OFFERS A SPECIAL-2-STEP ' - BEAUTY TREATMENT FOR YOUR SKIN TYPE BUY THE CLEANSING CREAM AT THE REGULAR PRICE 0F»2JS?«, GET THE STIMULATING LOTION FREE FOR DRY SKIN : FOR PMALsr OILY SKIN Tuasy Dry Skin Cleanser 6 o>. *2**. , * Tuny Fink Cleansinf Cream 6 <». Tuaay Dry Skin Freshener 4 01./REE ^ Tuny Skin Lotion ^ 01. FREE 3' GREAT STORES TO SERVE YOU • 148 S. Sogfimii' • S. TelegropK Read in Downtown Pontiac at Weal Harea St. • 4895 Dixia Highway, Droytoa Plains S.D.D. Uqoor Store Niblick/Members Confer Honors ______ upon Mn Artiiur Barnes at the NMck dubs February lunehem and busi-neae meeting in Elke Temple. Mn. Kay AUan was wel- comed to the dub by the 30 ^ Several tnUae of bridge played after the dayfe bust- dated Fab. U in the Elks Tern-pie hi memben of the muick Only one of ovek 800 Open Stock Diimerware Pattenu offering top aelectiona and priced to give top value. ROSENTHAL Fine Chini at its *‘Besf* COLONIAL ROSE 5 Pc. Place Setting.. .1850 Open Stock Available Over 18 Rosenthal Patterns to choose from Michigan’e Largnt Dinnenrara Specialty Store NORTH END OP MIRACLB MILE SHOPPING CBNTEB ON TELEGRAPH ROAD Telephone FE 2-8<42 ALL HOUSEHOLD ITEMS T • Draperies • Blankets • Slipcovers # Bedspreeds ICO/ ^CC rox dit ciiwwn 1^70 Urr 719 West Huron Street LOOK! WHAT! SQUARE YARD in . CARPETING WILL BUY! ALL WOOL TEXTURE Reg, $9.95_ COMMERCIAL CARPET BEIGE — BROWN ond WHITE ______Reg. $9,95__ BIGELOWS ^501' NYLON COBBLESTONE PATTERN Reg, $8.95 ^ I OIUeATION CEORGE TUSON "IP YOU DONT KNOW CARPETING KNOW YOUR CARPET DEALER" Open Mtonday and Friday *tiV9 P.M. 5390-5400 Dixie Highway OK 3-1^25 J»0N1’IAC PRESS. FRIDAY, FEBkUAHY 9.1962 I C NINKTKKN Teen-Ager Isn't Angry at You, but Time r MM. mubmx LAlVnilOB Dwr I Should cMMnn bi ullowH o tort without (or Mpp«. to nudio Mudwleitoi r MMMoBdi Au bitoitfiriMnM 8ho doM tbia an tho tbM.' t«an aovar count on fruit, nflk or ovon of ■ - - Bhon wlMl I try to tcU her my food buds>t can’t atand it, ahe iota angry and aaya aha can’t watt to have a home of bar own. She la IS yaara oU. beam af toe ewaf DM you i "You’n havt one before . know It, darilng. But In the mean-ttme you’rt living to tbla ana. And even Daddy who emmf our tood baa to tali ma wbea to’a ' M paonU to eat to Dolores Marie to Howard A, Kellogg, ton of ^ LeRoy F. Kelloggs of Dover Road. She Is kn \ alumna of Michigan State University where her fiance was previously (enrolled. DOLORES MARIE NEAR Giving Man Solitude Can Save. Marriage Unit to Harold Vcdantine's Day With a Dance Pontiac Chapter 310, Women or the Mooae. will aponsor'a pre-ValentIne'a Day dance Saturday evening in Mooae Hall, and a. “penny aupper” beginning S p.m. on Tuaaday. * * # Mra. Walter Guthrie explained the dutiea of Gray Ladiei before aome 71 mem-bera at Monday’a meeting in-Mooae Hall. W ★ A, Senior Richard Rohrer held enraUment to honor of Mra. Jack Upton. New ' ' Mrs. Harold SeU- ural Impatienoe tor the day when I ■he'll be runnlna her own. It had I nothing to do with you at all but I with forces of gi'owth in your I daughter for which you are no | more reaponaibto than you arc tor I by Mrs. Louis Mrs. Harold Him and Mrs aifford Lynch Installed Mrs. George Harshbaigtor as lukte for the renatotog year. Helping with the evening’s antortatomanl ton* Mra. Upton, Mra. Walter UiiDerMler, Mrs. John Mann, Mrs. Jack Beach, Mrs. Richard Dawson, Mrs. Mervel Mtoiiick, Mrs. Lynch and Mrs. Haxaitoarger. oaiMr. to be auce 1 I toad to give them. “When you Hve to a famOy, they I bavo to help you pton. So taatead I at you but at Tteie-nt the year* I that tnuat be lived through betare I filter can reallae her I drism of todepandenc* and the I of her own reMr I ' 'So' sM tiH My ts Nopaii' to' dm kind of adileaeent eittk* Nearly always the teeiM^er’s I criticisni of the way we do things I expreaaea his hope of doing them I differently. It’s his way of de- I daring his intention of leaving us. f Instead of saying. “Of c« you'll do things to your own way I to your own home,” we nMi to I ' ly the way w* budget tood, I By mirni MnuDvr In England a judge ruled that a divorced wife had no legal grounda for trying to evict her ex-husband from the garden shed to back of their houto to which he had boon living tor llv* yoara. Maybe It the. toUe to the case had eocouratod her husband to fig up the garden died ai ' ‘ private “study’’ before ti . _ divorce the divorce wouldn’t have MoM wives feel that it a man is I home be ought to ba amat the ""Umt* of life anH that if be does try to road or study or urnlc quietly on same project he ahouidn’t be short with his wife why they balU wiihahspi la boeemaato aad garagea. Mke a up ftahtag trips to get auray by Some wives, of course, respect a. man's need tSr solltudo by leav-iiig him alone whan ba la obviously In ao mood far conversation. Ekit such women are pretty rare. Post Noble Grands Nome '62 Officers Officers lor the-Ppst Noble Grands Chib of Wetoome Rebekah Lodge No. 246 Were elected Tuesday foUowtag oooporative dtanar ia the homt of Mrs. rannan Hua- Servii« with Mrs. Tad Sutton, incoming peeatdnt, wOl be Mrs. Richard Rohrer, vlco prasldant, and Mra. Orion J. Hettingor, a tdry-treoaurer. Mrs. Irving 0. Quackenbush was initiated as a new member and names of aecrat pals for the year were drawn. Hostess for the March 0 maet-ihg will be Mra. Ralph Burr of Kaat Beverly Avenue. Mothers Unit Meets at Local Boys' Club The Motbera Club of tha Pontiac Roys aub pthaied Tueaday eve-nii« in the itoya aub rotons. Ovssy vLanon, director of the dub, gave a brief talk on the progress of the club building slnch toe. fire, after which ni'^HJ.beni laade a tour to view the new improvements. The group made a dbnaiion tor the cauae. Hostesses for tha evening were Mrs. Delbert Hammett, Mrs. James Fink, Mrs. Basil Butler and Mrs. Carl Peteraon. 8a a Mile phui# to eal Ma ewe — a awall stMfy, a weth-6hep, a pbatogiapMe dartarMSi, ar uvea a desk to a eevnar when But. at course, treat to ghto him what he i wife, ooa who w he kBs bemi to his worfcahop tor reading to taD him little bits of gpnip every time l)e settles down for a little peace and quiet. Ruth MU-lett's booklet on “How to Have a Happy Huaband.” Send 29 cents to Ruth Millett Reader Service, care of The ^ntlae Preaa, P. 0. Box 4M, Dept. A. Radio Ctty SU-tlon. New Yeah N. Y. It’s Tim to Start Plaaaiig to iiild for 19S2 WE BUILD IN EVERY PRICE RANGE . HVE AIIANM m fMANOIM onMUT.Biiiini.iiti Wl TAKI TIAM-INS "AMERICAN DREAM” by Frencki Bros. SIMMONS MATTRESS SETS--SALE PRICED Enroll NOW! INSURE YOUR FUTUBE Prupord yonnolf ft « curuur In - — Miss Wilson ClMBd WoditsdiT P^MTIAC BoAfllf CoUtfO l6Vk UST I EbibII To4ay , PktiB n i-iisi fobiad Irespe'a • • • SIMMONS COMPORT - QUILT MATTRISI omi $>7095 BOX SPRING # Our lowest price ever for quilted luxury. Over 300 springs for restful, heoltAful sleep. Scroll quilted mattress cover with cord handles. Both the motttess and box spring In Sanl-Seal covers. Twin or full size set at $79.95. POSTURI MODIL WITH 400 SPRINGS SPiCIALLY PRICID—$99.95 PIR SIT IMTERlOk DECORAma SERVICE AVAILABLE Luxury Satin URAPERY Material Antique 50” Wide Satin 20 Colors YARD ATTENTION NEW HOHE BUILDERS and BUYERS A Smtfil Deposit Will Hold — Bring Your Sizes for Best^stimates and Selections! 501 NYLON CONTINUOUS [FILAMENT 95 SQUARE YARD bto” undarataadtog of our proto | t ODOO the adotoaoeut la rt- I aatured thaft we ara all for that | dUfereatlioiBo of Mo own, he ftoda I It eaaier to pot up with the ra- I otrlctkaw of the one he’a Uvtog to. I ACRILAN* CARPETING 12* and 15* WIDTHS •AottU* llbw by CkMMtnad 95 sq. yd. Full Rolls $10.50 Value Continuoiis Filament 501 Nylon Texture 12* Widtlie-4 Colors Cut From Full Rolls REG. •9.95 SALE SQUARE YARD CUSTOM VINYL FLOORS Tessara—Piituresq and Palatial Corlon iwl'Hitiil’tfil ;J511 Elizabeth Lake Road FE 4-777^1 Open.Friday, Saturday and MonSa/Nights Sofas bythe seat! •set 3 for •159^ test 4 for •179^ seat 5 for •199®® NIYLON COYfatS-FOAM CIISHIONTS As Utile at 1Q% delivers your sofa Very special sovings in our 38th Winter Sale. Beautifully scaled contemporary in your choice of soil resistant Nylon. Choose just the right size to fit your room — 72", 82" 96" or 108". In stock for immediate delivery or order your own selection. Open Friday Evenings! Park Behind Store! y 1/ 1/ DESIGNED INTERIORS FOR ROME OR OFTKM SOUTH SAGINAW ST. at ORCHARD LAK| AVE. . ^ t TWI^.NTY THE PONtlAC,P>iESS, FRIpAY, FEBRCARY 0, im •Mi WcfMt INSURANCE Cold A^ves Door In LANSING (II - llM COM tton dcputment rvpotti that dttr> ii« the flve^y period jMtwem Jan. 30 and Feb. 5 deer wen be^ inK yarded in all but the extreme I of the Upper Pen- inraia. The department laid the ThuTinond Insistent Desplte JFK’s Orders dtata'i reoait cold wave wu t*“--------------------------*----------------------- ' "* ' * ■ The tint brtdte aenas the Mia-conatructed at Davenport, la., In 1 CAR KEYS $2,00 Serta-Posture MattrOss «QQ7S each only V V K«rt» OcM#U«td I ... Mid IM'II cut your kOy atMoluioly freel To got veur kfV •hnaly com* to and otk tor tt ... no Ourchato It Serta • Authentic posture features! Extra leveHsing layer keeps spina in lin* • Heavy duty covering . . . smooth, tuftieas top. 4S SOUTH SHGinOUl Division o/ Thomay /ewslry Company, Inc OFEH MONDAY-THURSDAY-FRIDAY EVENINGS TIL 9 P. M. 'Pentagon Censorship Inquiries Must Resume Soon 'i 4 WASHINGTON — Sen. Strom Tfaunnond. 0^ C, demanded tp-day that the Senate Investigation of Pentagon censoring of anti-Communist speeches resume at the earliest possible tim« dnplte orders from President Kennedy silencing eoroe key witnesses. the censoring'of mfiitary men’s speeches against communism had forced the investigation hy a r|al subcommittee, said in ai terview he saw no danger that the spreading rows surrounding the inqui^ might torpedo it. 'to Be Changed' GOP Storting to Okay $300-Million Proposal if Altered Critics included two ex-Maclnes, m. Mike Mansfield. Democratic floor leader and former Army private, and Sen. ^ul H. Douglas, D-IU., a twice wounded Vrorid War II veteran'Who Joined this poi as a private and rose to major. WASHINGTON (UPI) - Repub-cans plan to demand major changes in an administration-backed J300-mUlion manpower retraining proposal when It comes for House ' action later this month. The Wll, cleared Thursday by | the HouM Rules Committee, would set up A new four-year govem-men^backed program to retrain jiew skills workers who have lost their jobs permanently because of automation or other economic factors. The senate last year appravnd a MSS^mllUoa program doser In Oiairman John Stennls, D-B recessed the hearings Thunday defined and comprehensive hi I mat at tiniH K Aas made the executive the dominant power In its retatloin wim Odo|^.' I la an tatorvlew an 1 In anothar davelopment a con-greaaional critic of aacsaey in government today said the doctrine of executive privilege President Kennedy claimed in his atniggle vith Senate investigators wai ‘fraught with danger.” But the critic, Owlraian John E. Moss of the House Infemui-tion sobcommlttcc, said he did vlolalcd Us campaign promises by InvnUng It. srtmration of powers between the executive and legislative branches was hard to daUne and had never been adequately explored by the third branch of government — the Judiciary. PBIV1USGE 'ILL-DEmED' ”Tbe s(M;alled claim of executive privilege,'’ he said, ”is so ill- 1N7 Invwdigalloa a( thn ftata. fsl’s OHIaa s( Baonrity Bav|ew wbsre, Pelsnss AeernUry CharlA K. Wllssa nhnwd la namen n(. con-., Ha said he dU not Ubo m Uv« privilege In any guisn added that Kennedy’s nan ol the MONTGOMERY-WARD HAS BROKEN THE SOUND BARRIER WITH A COMPLETE LINE OF HEARING AIDS— EYEGLASS MODELS, BEHIND THE EAR, CONVENTIONAL BODY TYPE.. FEATURING: "THUMBEUINA" THE SMALLEST HEARING AID IN THE WORLD. NO CORDS—NO TUBES. COMPLETE LINE OF BATTERIES AND ACCESSORIES, REPAIRS ON ALL AIDS. TAKE 24 MONTHS TO PAY! Montsomery Want HEARING AID DEPT- PLEASE SEND ME FREE INFORMATION ON YOUR HEARING AIDS. Pontioc Moll PonHoc, Michifon Phono 682-4940 Ext. 233 NAME- ADDRESS-GITY---- -STATE- Mia TODIT-MO OBUMTION The retraining proposal will be ie of the first items for consideration when the House retu from its Informal LincoIntDay cess Feb. 19. It is near the top of the White House priority list, and appears to be collecting some significant Republican support. MUST CHANGE BILL However, many ReiHiWicans may condition their backing oil ack^ion of substantial changes In the bill approved last fell by the House Education and Ubor Committee. ’The measure would provide federal payments for as long as one year for workers who have lost their Jobs to machines. The new skills could be acquired In on-the-Jdb trainlm;, or in vocatkxial schools. Payments would e(|ual the average unemployment cDmpenaa-tion benefit in the worker’s Itate. 108 NORTH SAGINAW TONIGHT and TOMORROW ONLY APPLIANCE FLOOR SAMPLE SALE! Display piscBs; discoirtiniitd, RectNiditioiMd modBls onhIimI Down for A Big 2-day Saviogs Etroiit... FRiDAY aod SATURDAY Natismlly Advsrtitsd Rsfrigsratsri B4 horw whoB thw doors opon for thooo floor aomploo at Big, Important Sovlngo. tomo itoms oro ono-of-o-klnd, oo hurry. NO MONEY D0WN-T|1KI OF TO 2 YIAM TO FAY WASHERS AND DRYERS snnitlsad'-sprayed-sSeess sleened-replaced warn parts many farnaas brands ta chaasa fram. lofy Spindrior WdHioro,.. two tub woohor cuts woohdaqr In holf: Com-plotoly rocondltlonod modol. Ouorontood. 3 only Now Fhllco wringor woohor with wringor. Mg copo-guorontoo. city tub. Fu With trodo. REFRIGERATORS-FREEZERS Spood Quoon automatic woohor with sodimont oioctor, ovorflow rlnoor tonglo-proof ogl- Now fomlly olxo Loonord Ro« frlgorotor. Full virldth frooior holds 39-lb. froson foods, with trodo... . Frigidoiro outomcrtlc^ woohor with outomatk soak cyclo. 3-ring pump ogitator. '•! modol. With trodo.............................. Maytag automatic Holo-of-Hoot lloctric Dryor. 1961 frigidoiro Poluxo 11 cu. ft. Kofrigorotor. Mont 61 lb. froosor choot. fvyoor guorom- too. With trodo........ 1961 Frigidairo 3-Door Aotonwtlc Dofroot Rofrlg-•rotor-frooior. Olont13 cu. ft. oopority Truo Eoro-dogroo froooor choot. With 1961 modol. $128 GAS and ELECTRIC RANGES •248 1961 Frigidoiro 11 cu. ft. Upright Frooior.JtoM# $178 3tg.poundo of froson foods, ftroom- Hoovor—GE—Westinghouso VACUUM ciiymts, i Madcli. Odhf lassddUaaad. New parls, hag ats. *9 l99 Fomouo Spoco-fovor gba rongo. Automotfc.top burnoro. lorgo, fully Yoor choko 30” or 36” Cohim-burgoo remgoo with outomcdlc top ournoro. runy maw- q lotodovon. Floor oomplos *900 1961 Frigldolf^ 30” oloctric rongo with oupor-olso' .• $128 cd cMor with chremo trim. Doluxo modol, wm If juSt in time for VALENTINE’S DAY 50 FC. STAINLESS TAILBWARE Ml far $095 NO HONEY DOWN-UP TO 3 FULL YEARS TO PAY! FREE PARKING! BAon't or lady's DIAMOND ONYX ‘ ^ -V WALL CLOCK RINGS Year CMS $QQ50 WrWMlily GENERAL ELECTRIC WALL CLOCKS 50c. $395 KEYSTONE HOME AAOVIE OUTFIT 88PW ^ $0095 $i..50n«di)v DORMEYER F>ORTABLE MIXER OR UNIVERSAL STEAM IRON Jggg FOCKST sm TRANSISTOR RADIO *17«« OPEN FH., SAT., MON. NIGHTS UNTIL 9 P.M. 108 NORTH SAGINAW NO MONEY DOWN . . . 50' WEEKLYI n=f An Your Sihoots 'AdivHios Now Appoaring In tho' Prou? THE PONTIAC PRESS Turn to This Pago Frkhyt hr Sonior High Sehoot Nows FRIDAY. FEBRUARY fl, im PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. TWENTYONE PCff, PNH Tuning Up Instruments for Festival Ot WAOB WlUUMm IiwtnimPreparing poaters for ’’Cupid's Capers," the annual Student Council dance which has captured the spotlight at S|. Frederick’s High School this week are (from left to right) Fred Landry, Janis Quartet, Tim Dalton, and Mike Brady. TMt evening’s entertainment will be high- Student Council.' lighted by the crowning of the Valentine King and Queen. The «i—will be held from 1:30 to U:30 In the pariah hUl. with admltslon at 90 oenU. Proceeds from this aodal will go to the newly-cstailishe^ airborne television fund originated by the Cupid Capers' Dance Plan Captures St. Fred Hiiarts W. Bloomfield Pupils Heat Atomic lecture By BOKNIE DISTEL On Wednesday the United States Atomic Energy Comroiasioii, ^ CbuncU daitce has cap-1 Student Council treasurer, Tina Studiea. jKwented to tha atod^**"^ apolllghi at St. Fred- LaLonde. is general chairman. | and (acuHb of' West Bfoomfleld ertcirtr Hlgdi Schoc High School an asacmbly progisas eeSUafe 1. i. u ^ UgMghted by fbe erswa-hw af Ska VatototM Ktog aai Qaean. Back daaa oanstoafed a By SUXANNK POLMEAB sophomores; Janis Quarles and ‘‘CupM’s Capers." the aimual Mike Dean, freshmen. cntltlod **17111 Atomic World.** wrHhfha Bste principles of atam- Major 'topic areas covered lo Nominees .. —and Jim •! the program were atomic struc-reaetora, fladon, fuston, ticle acceleratan topea and their appUcathnis. and Jim Clarke and Chartey Qeaai, Juniors; Carol Cboley ............. ~ “ Good Literature in View Midiaeliles Focus on ^ooks By 8HABON BODDEN the dogan: '’Roots of Freedom: FbMi and Knowledge*’ ia being given careful conceptratian at St. Mtohad’a High SdKwI. a welcomed opportunity to enter a naw phase of life, whether It be entertainment or serious study. Week, stoee Ms UmepfloB Increasing knowledge and faitii thgpugh tbe medium of worthwhile liteqature is Its primary purpoae. Becauye there is so much. In day ahd age, that we don’t have to experience a good BSofc ia Francis Bacon, an early English essayist, once udd that "Readii^ mal^h tbe whole man." On Tues-i day a jiumber of aeniora will aetj out to discuss the topic ftirtber when they present a program to the ftudent body. Partklpaltog la the pragram will be BW VeltJaB, as ekair- Clsrkston High Slates League Choir Program Parmte of Cldrkstan High sto- The Engineering Society of De-rolt will hold Its sixth anuual National Science Youth Day in De-trdt Thursday. By JANET TDCH *The newly ehoaen 1982 AH-League Choir wiU preaent Its first ptogram of the aeaaon Wednesday in the Clatfcston High Sdwol "Uttle TTieater". The AU-League Choir U composed of 12 members from each of various Wayna-Oak-. land League schools, and fliey g!vt four concerts and assemblies at each annually. Of the large munber et elu-deme that tried fut far choir plaoea, the ll eheseu trona MDtau Friek, gaudy Padger, Caret WaNer, Oarel Otaader, Ltodu < The perfannance will' begin at S'p.m. and indnde a qsedalty net from cbotston. The act will be done by IS JaMon and aehlqra. OPEN TO PUBUO Admiaafon for the evening be 29 cento lor studems, and 90 .ZBnto lor adults. Iba pubUe la ootdlaHy invlttd to hear and see fail tors have been taritod by the Ube Ortou Sebeel ayitem to attend College Right, Peb. M. Beginning at 7:30 p.m. with rep- dustrial estal reaentatlves from varioua coUeget, the program win offer parents and prospective college students the opportunity to discuss diflerent eid-1^ programs expensta and other questions that arise when a student plan on college. . * * * TV representatives will be the following coUeges and univer-sttios: umveraity of Michigan. Michigan State Ubivaratty Oakland, Eastern Middgan Univenity, Lawreaoe Institute of Technology, Highland Park Junior CoUege, and the Ebntiac BuabwM' AikLe«te Band aeiaon. Demiia IMck, Fred Uaaner, Bob Sawyer, Pam Lovejoy. Gaiy^ IMaer aad JohnKnooc rep-an from fl» traodwtod, braaa, fnd fwB, Kip Fraser, ■elly, Jehu Scbl Maranriquet aad Ikemas Chen- In commemoratioo «f tbe l sd^diat, Thomas Edison’s U5th birthday anniversary, 16 vartona organizations such as the Chrysler Cnp., General Motors Corp., General Electric Oorp. and othm have Joined togeOier to host high acbool soptomores and Juniora on an all- day excursion m to th^ 4 ibMahmtats. dUterentin- Ibree Junior, Dick Gbaaten, Max Hurst and Danny Shadrick. were dween to rapresant St. ' *B because, they have dnnan-strated interen tai tbe sdencei and have been enroOed in bden- t a -free day —but not the valuation of the seniors in referring to lart Tuesday. The contolito nts to be honorary acholars at WKHS last week.^ ■A* smOLARs Reelvtn'g all "A'a” In Freshman clsto were Date Manning, Cynthia Newman, and Pal Nutter. Connie Grtesbaeh, Judy Hoffman, and Steven Me Callum were the three to earn straight ’A" report cards from the Sopho-moK class. ' . The A aad B hsMr reS eoa-slals of m studeats; » frssh- Ibfkiy the fourth edHlon of the school paper. The Journalism depertment, now under the new supervision oI Durward Chaffse, has been rb-organiaed with aome classes being The staffs of both the "Navl-yeerbook "Klt- ____hour.. Most of the staff work- Int on the newspaper now attends a new class first hour while tiw yearbook staff still attends dasf ly JMr. Chaffee aad Ms two Joaraallsm claseee pUa By PAM MORRIS llw DMrtet Solo imd Enaeiablo Festival attracto Silrty-lly« tal-entod muatotons ftnm Pontjac Northem Mgb SchooL , \ Tbo Douglas Ingamells, a PNH aopho-more, will perform Atkkntic Zepb-a difficult trombone solo by Gardle Simona. Doug will be ao-companled by John Pacene, also of the band. W ♦ A Ronald Courae, another sopho- TtH-N TO CLASSIC Senior Pam Morris will turn to the claaalcal period of muaic, playing the Altei^ Movement of Mozart’s “poncerto in G Major.*’ Pam will be accompanied by Shar-el laenhart of Avondale. The geariettoaes and the Dry- The Junior glrta ensemble, the Scarirttones, will sing "Homliig’* by Del-Rleggo. and "Soft Is the Ni^t" by Emig. The group tai-rludes Barbara Batchelor, Dondjiy Boyd, Georgina Breadon, Cynthia ^rtis, Carla DooUn, Pam Jonea and Judy Longeed. Ahers an Cheryl Montgomery, Jackie Morrli, JoAlycc Peterson. Penny Pritchtrd. Sue Spaiks, Gat TArmarah. Mary Willard and Sandy Trtetich, accompanM, * A * The CrystalaliM to Nerthen'a mlTSseli!*' byOwMS- ■eeu. SM ”«ve Nana** by Re- My. The group conalsts of Lymw An-daraon, Linda Colemaa, Oatolyn CudnoMkky, Diana HalMs. Mary Lou Hlghbauil), duutotto Jdhnaaa, Marb’Ann.Kloka, pat Lazgenl and an sitekle. Jackie VaNat, Pat Trampled aad DUaaa CUS. ae^ Sololato for the vocal department are Edna Hammond who will sing Rosy Buah," a folk tong, and Cheryl Montgomery, peitorm-lat ' Blaair ie «w Color VT My > True Love’a Hair." Both girls will harmentoe a duel entitled i "Let My Seng FUl Your Heart.’* A A A Tbe Pontiac Northeni PTSA la tpdnaoring a cUcken dinner to be given Feb. 17’at 5 o’clock. Ute diiuier wUi bt bold tal tbo school cafeteria under the direetkn of Mn. Alice Houto. FOR KINGS AND QUEENS Compare at $259.95 4«Pioce Suit# • Walntil and Racan Weeds • King Sist 62* Inch Triple Dramr • Carved Webiet Framed Mirror • Reguier Fail SIsa Bad with Dacarator Cut-Out Haodbeord • Matching 2-Drawar Commada Nita Stand • King Siia B2«liich Tripla DraMtr • Carved Walnut Framed Mirror • King Sisa d-Faat 6-tach Extra Wide Bad with Dacarator Cut-Out Haodboord and Two Swing-Out - Steal Fromaa spaciollY canalructad far two Twin-Siaa Mattmuas or ana axtro-wida Kiag Sisa Mottram li-Fiaea Suita, $177; or Salact tha Draiaar, M i r r a r aad two Twia-Sisa Bade 4-Fiaca Suha, $m. AddMoaal^pan Stach Fiaeot All Are Sale Frkad. HaSiRgB- BLOOMFIELD HILLS—2600 WOODWARD I J|Mr B(|«sr* Uk« Rssd ^ , 0pm 10 A. M.-9 P. )A W«tf„ TIiMri., FrI., Sot. SC 'tfl J Taimp to Suit You LI 8-2200—FE 3-7933 _L_ THE PONTIAC Pl^ESS. FRIDAY, FEBRUARt 9. 1088 White Lake Twp. Preens \ for a Glowing Futaro k. •' BIRO’S EYE VIEW - Looking eaat^lnm atop of one of White Lake Township’s highest points viewers can almost see all pf the 36 square miles that comprise the township. This photo, taken from ato|f the ski Kill at Alpine Valley, looks mark, ’has moved ateadlly alMd •In the post year, preparing for this .development. TO BE DtrLUERCE ExpiKNbd V be tHh, Doentlal farce In thdae future years la the recently ’organized nirie-member Township Plamig OommiaslQn, established by voters to undertake the fob of pnqMgbtf a mastw plan. . ite aecompSali 6Ma R wfP esd White L^'s operating budget la I toward Cedar Ldand Lake, one of 27 lakaa In the taWnshIp. There also are two large state recreation areas located in the township, Pontiac Lake and Highland. per eent of the towashlp^a pe^■ Backstopping this commission, which will soon replace the Township Zoning Board that has laid muoh of the groundwork for jdl Phofos anth Story by Jim Long future development, are several boards — electrical, heatlQg and plumUng — created to protect tite standarda of new conatmctlon. * ★. * All propoaed developments also are investigated by the township’s consulting engineers to guarantee that plans meet the rigid cqntmls so them will be no costly rs-novatkms at a later date, Reereatten plays a farge role In the develoiment aad eoonoiny of the township. Two of the largeot state recreation areas. la the township, la addlOon to tt named lakes, the Mggesl of which are White Lake and Pontiac Lake. The Pontiac Lake Recreation ^\rea is situated in the northeast section of the township and Highland RacnHtlon Is in the southwest portion. Both offer winter and ner acUvUies. White Lake Township, one of the few mnaining Oakland County townships without a village or a dty located within its boundaries, is being repdted to make it one M»th **** *“ ">«t«>P0Utan Antlolpanng a populatHB) growth aiwt— VaDw. in the 3Mquare-mUe area of about new residents by WTO, the One of the Uggete prtfects un- bo^ bdgfai op^ dertaken yeariy by the tawMMp ^ ^ is the paving of prhnhry roads ^ with matching fundf from die ceim- thinn on an even ty. This road progran>| repeneeats an outlay of 10 per cent of the at AiU cube die re. no reaaoa why we ahi of (be best planned county,” the We'fe at a sfee adiere we i Labe to the hsavtoat papalated. The other two, Idfsa and Bpriag-- - l^kw While Oeys adtailtt to several n minor problema In the towiudtip, « he aald that everything la operat. grow into a wa^ Im emaothly and will get better rttty without the i when the planning commlsBlon and a towiwhlp board to expertanoed in workbv with a........... ALLOWANCE Thd towMiilp haa a U«an police department end only one member, CSitef Andrew Plano, recetvos a salaiy. The ofBeers do, however, receive an allowance for equip- *1110 fire departiqent, which has 21 volanteerf, to loCptad in the ^ TowinJdp Han at 7825 Highland ; Road. ’The building waa erected In IMS and addition to planned for raw later this year. The most leeant aidUtoa to the fire IX OOUJOTOBS -aid VoorhefiVandr 6^uly the tax rolls used to compile county and school tax beliR; Snt out by the township. The township has no s tax hut derives most of Ms revenue from etate setos t township has about 8.800 parcels of taxable property. 1 provide the county , and school districts with shout S to • per eaal tor each ltdOli. NEW UOPPINO AREA Constructed In the last year, these three storee along with another row of stores west qf them, make up the largest bualneiB district In White Lake ’Town- ship. ’The shopping area to In the White Lake Township portion of Union Lake, where three other townships converge. Most of the industry in the township lies along Highland Road. Speaker Gives^* Personality Talk School Psychologist in Clorlcston Starts Sorios on Relationships CLARKSTON - John Jadwln, mental hygienist and psyctodogi-cal consultant for the aarkston public schools, conducted the first of a series of ' “ - Dates for the beginning of the first YMCA programs In the Tray and Walled Lake areu thto month on the ' Development Heelthy Perwmaltttes and Satto-fylng Relationships” at the Firid Methodist Church. AAA The series of lectures aad discussion period to being ^onsored by the Christian Social Oonceraa Committee of the church. * The series of meetings will continue each Thursday evening through March 29. ’The topic for next week’s meeting will be How Personality Develops.” Set Dates for Walled Lake, Troy —0 ’w-Nir Programs to Start The extension boards of newly organized Troy and West Oakland branches of the Detroit Metropolitan YMCA have scheduled adult gym nights and basket-baU leagues la both communities. ta adtfMoa, Setarday tan elnb by the Weat Oakland breach, wMch serves the Walled Lake echool district. Information about programs In both communities can be obtained by'teleidioning William H. Beck, mlngham YMCA. A i Mail Inquiries can be sent to the Troy Extension Board through I. Box 2. Troy, and to the West Oakland Branch at P. 0. Box 248, WaUed Lake. (tents of the area . A 'ro&ec hour will be held during each discuiulon pfriod. I^gister to Vote on Liquor Sale, Claikston Told CLaAkSTON - Monday to the registration deadline for voters who, wish to ^participate In the March 12 election concerning the tale of liquor by the glass in the village. AAA U the proposal Is approved at the poUs, then is e goM pss-toMHty that a fk will Jbe If It weren’t for Lady,” Mrs. Bobek said, "we wouldn’t be here to talk about It.” AAA ”H was just lucky,” she said. the gehutor otgasdsatlM Is pla» r Eetly An^^tiefoi type batMtag an Mata Mreet aeita of the town peiktag Keith Hallman, president of the Clarkston Busineasmen’s Assoda-tkm, said a Schuler’s restaurant hi Oaricston would mean empisyment for from one- tu twoJiundred local p^e and upwards of 6000,000 year in additional business for the 'V?- law allowa only one estah- te the population of the / to only 791. A Ucenae to issued for every 1,500 in population. Dog Credited With Saving Lives ot Family in Blaze AVON ’TOWNSHIP-Lady Rim-1’Ordinarily we keep her locked out on the back porch at itlghL She broke 'through the window and tore upstairs to wake us ifo.” te'credited with saving the lives of a sleeping family of six early this morning as fire roared through their two-story frame house here. . Mr. and Mrs. Henry X. Bobek •I 16N Storth Blvd., aad their escaped over a BUSAN MARIE WETWaUT ■ , Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Weltachat. The embtem of the Unkod State/ S. Broadwi^ ^ lavy submarine aervicc to a sub- announce the engagement Marine flanked by two dolphl|ik Oolphins are the traditional ot-Myldaato to Poaeldon, the Greek gf^ cf the sea and patnn of sail- of their daughter Susan Marie to William Ooddihgton, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Coddington of Berkley. No date has been set i9F..Ae. FATHER ROUSED CHILDREN My husband ran Into fhe cHll-m'a rooms and roused them,” she added. Firemen from i the Brooklapda and Avondale departments rived ahortly after 3 a.m. and battled the blaze untU about 7:30. The fire apparently begqn In a laundry room near a gas hot water heater, they said. "After we get oat we realised Lady was misotag aad ooe of the flremep wrat bock ta-> Ho found ber wHh her nose .onder the sheets In my son’s bed,” Mrs. Bobek sold. FlrenMal estimated damage to the building at over 61,000. Bobek and hl^ wife, who are zone directors for the U.S. Air Force affiliate radio systenu, lost about 65,000 worth of radio and teletype equipment in a special room on the first floor, they said. Some of the equipment was owned by the Air Force. Bobek paid the-house and contonto were at least partially Insured. Pontl of 5 EduOafort tp-AIr Drop-Out Pfoblom UNION LAKE — School drop-(Wta wUl be discussed by a five-member panel at the 8 P-in- >*«► ^ meeting of the Union Lake Etemcntary School ParwihTeadief Asaociatlon. - / AAA Panelists are Robert Godscy, principal of the Union Lake School; E. V. Ayres, principal of the WaUed Lke High School; Murray Adanto, principal of the Cllffoid Smart Junior High School; Mrs. XDuiBte, teaclMr at thb Smart [; and OBTOr Rose, aartstaM Uoiis for oettvUfeo. As communlly interest indkatet he derire for grams wUI be developed for laml-lies, youths and adulU, Beck said. Bo^ Larson, assistant superintendent, df Troy schools, to chait^ man of the Troy Extension Boahl. The West Oakland board is headed by Richard Stehliskey. of 1910 Dawn Ridge. W’alled Lake. PUBUC SCHOOL SITES AU^activltiei scheduled to this month will be held in diooto. In the Walled Lake area, weekly junior high ochoot boys’ ' baU leagues and ‘ both aifford H. Smart and WUlcd Lake Junior Hlifi s(dwMs. at the Blr- ttaual actlvlttes of both hronches from Btnnii«lwm YMCA headquarters, said the IS-member oxtensliM boords ta both com- from 7:SS to • pju. Tuesday at CUfford E. Smart In Troy, an adult gym night Ul be open to men an^ over 18. To be held Thursday from 7:30 to 9 p.m., it, begins next Thursday at Baker Junior High School. A A A A weeldy fun dub for fotffth through sixth grade youngitan begini Feb. 24. Its supervised games, movies and gym acthitleB wUl be bald from 9:90 to 11 o.m. weeldy at Jobnaon-NUea, Leonard and Morse elementary acdiooto. Fifth grade TTOy boys’ baaket-baU leagues wOl begln Feh. 34. Registratioiw tor both hraaches’ y pariidpafing In ham YMCA rabnbarriiip drtva. Fundi raised fai cMMiunldea served :V the two axtonatan branches will pe allorated toward eirentual establishment YMCA programs tfiere. Three-year goals set by each boaid include 1,300 membera, a foU-tiitte prafeaetanai YMCA secretary and •’ bBttHng for ictivl- Jaycee Women Busy on Project Loko Orion Unit to Viiit State Hospital Potionts Sunday Aftomoon LAKE ORKW - Members of the Orion Area Jador Chamber of Oommeroa AuMliaiy will vtoit CHUar AND CHIEF - White Lake Township Supervisor Edward Cheyz dtocuasea the day’s events vrith Police Chief Andrew Plano, who heads an 11-man departmentA'The township also has a 28-membcr volunteer fire department Members of Uie pcdlce. and fire departmenta receive no aalariM, only allowances for maintenance of equipment. Royal Oak Twp. Still Restless^ Board.Member Calls Acting to Ouster New Police Force Captain *’ Boy Scout Exposition Set for Clihtondale emoon lor m Valentine party with so hoanttal oattenta. Tkeputonta wUl bt the redpi-ento of a ping-pang tabla, ncta, paddlqR ate. to be iMcd In tbdr recrealkai holL Garnet and rs-frsdunanta wUl also be features of the party. In addition members of the A>u-tory wfll take buttona, thread, magazines and other small Items lor the patients’ use. ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP spbrtt of unrest still prevails in this fownihlp. Board member Einest Wilson called a aiMsi medtag of the board for ohortly before noon today for tho purpooe of ouottag newly appotatod Otat Edwarr L. Watklqo from tho poltee force. Witoon (daims that Watkins 1s insubordinate. According to one township trustee WlUon was opposed to Watkins’ aiqtintment in the first place. Oakland County Sheriff Frank W. Irons was called In several days ago to take over control of, the township police force during Job dispute. He also was :d to investigate Wilson’s oiy dering sf Sgt. Anniah Ruffl to reidace Watkina as chiet lACKS AUTHOBITY’ ' Watkins claims a single trustee does not have the autbortty to Over IS.OOO persons are expected to review the sixth annual Macomb District Scout Exposition to be held year at the CUntondale High id near Mount Clemens fran 2 to 9 p.m. Feb. 17 and 18. A 1A A More than 50 cub, boy scout and explorer units, numbing some 3,000 boys, plus some 1,200 to 1,300 adult scouten, will be participAlng in this year’s show. dOeetar Jaasea F. Estes si He has been working, wlthodt a contract, hayrever, beqauw his sal-aIy^has been under contention. Now it to settled by a 4-2 vote Ot the board at 610,500. Estei’ job primarilj' will be to oversee the re-building of the W. Eight Mite ebrm Plahning^Dinner ORION TOWNSHIP -of the Carpenter l^od 1 Teacher Association wUl si a 7 p. m. dinner followed ipecial Founders Day Monday at the, school. Mrs. Vcm KIrkpatiteh, win he presmtod PTA workers and___,-----.. and ballet eidiibltkm will be staged by U children from the school. AAA. The dancers will be under the dlRCtion of Mrs. James Fyte of 310 Walden Road. Piano ados will be offorad by Linda Rdd, a gmdor at the Udh achod, ahd by Mrs. Don Baldwin oT«n Flbib aintendale High Schod gymnasium and cafeteria will be filled with some 50 booths displaying coiwtless projects from handicraft to camperaft. A A A Each unit fo the Mtpxnnb District d the Clintoa VoUey Coilncil of the Boy Scouts of America will be represented In some way. Each booths to judged by council offidab from outside the Macomb District. AAA addition to the^ Macomb County scouts two Canadian units will add international flavor to tha exposition. AAA Tickets tor the expodtion are cut, 30,000 of,them, and they can be purchased from any aoout’ or scouter in the district. Olntondale High Sehod to at U- Stiiof PTA Sots Dane# AVON ■TOWNSHIP - Hembi of the Stiles Elenrontiry Schod Parent-Teacher Asaociatlon wfl^ pireaent a ’’CupU Square. Dance’ from 8-to 11:30 p. m. tomomn ta the achod’s muttlpurnosa room TIekets Jor the dim may be dLatfimJIdac------------— are as M-patteat ward "adapted” by the JayoM AaxBtaiy last At <3irtotmas«time the oaxlUary gave this ward a record player^ and ether emaU glfta In addition to a party for the pattoots. Mrs. James Cathcart at Baldwin Rood to chairman at the hospital reject. ^ther community service p scnitinizing look taiy education of childKh to la at tia tfigto of clnitdas behind the Iron Cuiihln. ‘ * dr The oomaotta nrlU be tiaatod t sonathlm oirir,' a "jan eonho" attract more "young people to fla ' * * I said it is idsap to be«4ired adl be 4 ________Aas ol atodm Utergigre ^ . nnaie. A parOodariy to rriailMi toipoopto. the I IN OUR TRADE-IN DEPT. Real Values Ufiif ] 6di dii lltctoic Idifti Wiiktn ^ IiMitn IdiifMdtMi OccaiiMdl Chain kti M-r Oftit lUm TUtOg PHOTO — The and Space Administration released/this photograph Thursday and said it was rcJ&t from the Tiros IV weather satellite launohdd from Cape Canaveral. NASA described this as one ol the first photos taken by the satellite and uaid ,Lake Michigan, partially ice |ree. Is visible at lower left comer. ^ FURNITURE SALES 1 Nile lest si Aabam tteiphls 114$ Auhini M. (M.59) **rea JUweys lay let lass at 1 end t“ S-S MON. ttfs Ssf.-PBL W S-fl S-SSSI UL 2.1100 JhiMitilV IS HERE ♦ 15S OAKUND AVE. FE 2-3781 a FE 4-1515 fpntiac'd Only 'AuHiorizod Muntz Solos and Sorvict C&V ELECTRO MART Op«n 'HI 9 Friday ond Monday Tuesday Voting Stirs Up Detroit DETROIT (41 — A special election to fill a Michigan aeat In Con-greas is kicking up interest. Voters of Michigan’s 14th Congressional District are to cbooae next Tuesday between Democrat Harold M. Ryan and Republican Robert E. Waldron. What aUrted out as Just another election has led to headUne. WaUruB has asked—and been rejeeted — that Ma dMriet OOP ar rawMsi lAUMODNO-Wlth the TIroo IV nctoarological satrillte riding to the noae cone, a three-stags ThorDelta rocket fires away sucoeasfully from the launch pad at Capo Canaveral Waldron Want* Durpnt to Resign Because of Birch Connection resign beeaaae he said Durant In the John Birch Society. Durant, an investment selor, refused point Wank Thursday. With newsman, be refused to discuss the society, dedsring It “not germane" to the cam- Earlier Durant had declared he waa a aodety member. Waldron said Durant had failed to toll party colleagues this when be was made district vice chairman. *901 Waldron laid he wouldn' repudiate Durant's help in th campaign. And Durhilt Mid he is going to go on with his help. Both the Republican and Democratic parties in Michigan have repudiated the society, an ultra $4 Poem AAoda History BOSTON (UPD — When Julia Ward Howe, a century ago, sub-«U.«. H-u «. her "Battle Hymn of the Wedneaday. The Tiros IV is de- R<'|iuW*c” signed to send picture, of ----- temations. e^orts and^ht ppem—for $4. Up to 1934 one-thlnt qt -all patients with lobar pneumonia died. New dn«s have cut the toO sharply. One-fourth of all the persons accidentally killed are listed as farmers. Thsrs't only ... Oer IT DON! NOWl •mI way to get K dons it to TAKE. IT TO BIOCKI Wall ghrs you fori, deev- at a cori w low r$ feoibh to paw op. Sss w todoyl BaVAIANTIIa NriMS*. UffHt tm Uni*t 82 WEST HURON ST. —PONTIAC WssitosyS! ♦ sjn. !• * pm. Sal. and San. f-5 Htsna El 4-*2Z5 mammm no APEotNTMSNT mscosaky ■■■■■■ "'We Keep Ronnie’s Room 12 Degrees Warmer Than "With electric heat, we don't have to worry about keeping Ronnie covered at night,” says Mrs. Raglin. “All we have to do is turn up the thermostat in his room. When weliuilt our home three years ago, we put in all the latest ideas and features to make sure it would stay modem. At that time, electric heat was the most modern way to teat—and^ as far as I’m concerned, it still is and will be for a long time. Flameless electric hrat gives us clean, quiet, even . heat without odors or costly upkeep.” Meet the Arnold iF* Raglin family of White Lake, Michigan. What about your home? Do you have a hard-to-heat room? Are you adding on a rocmi? Are you buying a new home? Is the heating system in your present home more trouble than it’s worth? One of the types of electric heating units shown below may be the answer ' to your heating problems. One easy way to find out is to ask your electrical contractor. Another is to call your Edison office. We’ll be glad to send you a copy of our free booklet “Electric Home Heating” and will answer any questions you may have about the modem, worry-free way to heat your home—electrically. Radiant pansIt or forcsd igoirr^w ■■ Elsctric hasting units con (Sting units bsMboard Electric fumacat host $y forekd air or hot water (Hydronict). FLAMELIU ELEOTlie HEAT • DETROIT EDISON X 'm \ THE PONTIAC PRE$S. FRIDAV. FgBRUijlY 9. TWEXTY-FIV^ -...hawk THWAKTKD - i^fDn Bniin goulif Bnice Gamble (1) kiclu'tFiie 'pi^ iway^ l lave off the-alick o( CWci«o’« Bill Hay (U) And the Suburban Catholic League atanda a good chance o( havl^ three coKdiampa. at Boaton. Alao Involved in the play are Ted GRen IWt Brulh* and Bobby iHull (7) ot the Black Hawka. The Black Hawha whipped In the firat period of laat night'a NHL guoM BoKton, 6-2. lor their tth atralght victory. t PRESS BOX Lanny Van Eman, the Univeralty of WlcWta'a _ _ ‘ ball guard bom McKaeaport, Pa. a in-po«Ni. ai*j-lnrh atvgeon In MalM Lake. * * * Jerry Grona at Bay City, Unl-veraity of Detrolt'i diminutive quarterback,, will be honored tonight at Meadowbrook Country Oub aa Michlgan'a “amateur athlete ot the year,” _ eaperted to enter, * A * Michigan State'a awlmmlng team will aUempI to rebound from an upaet Iona to Minneaota laat week when the Spartana mee Ohio State Saturday at Eaat Lan-aing. MSU’a wreatling aquad alao plays hoot to the Buckeyea. / * A A ______. __; imu, ___ Mleh^an and the U. el M. AAA Early Wynn, 42, aigned his Sth Chicago White Sox contract Thura-day for an estimated 135.000. Wynn is eight wins short of the magic 300 Mark. Only Qne Breab Par in Dixie Amat»ur Play MIAMI, na. (AP)-Pbu1 Des. Jardins, hfiami golfer, was the only Dixie Amateur contender to break p«r Thursday and his JO earned him the lead strokes tor 54 of the tourneys scheduled 72 holes. DesJardins was one stroke under the Palnwtto Country dubs regulation figures. His third round gave him a two-stroke bulge over Dale Morey, Morganton, N.C, who shot a 71. Bid for Second Place Streaking Hawks Win By The Aaaadateg Praaa Streaking Chicago, trying lake « race qt. it for a« place in the National Hoc Leqgue, now has won six Mraigfat in its bid tor the more advantago-ons playoff spot. AAA Tm Black Hawks, defending Stanley Cup champions, chalked 6 2 verdict over Boston ly night and pulled to Up a t iWsda] Ramsey Ready to Join Buddy Contract OvBr Salary at Buffalo Is R«ason for Delay seven poinU of second place Toronto, which was Idle-PBBMimE BOLL tm The pressure is stiH Player-manager Paul Emerson, B® York aiid Don Johnston each View Bemeta dad Vaha Lake ecorsd 10 potots for Tripp. Buss' OpUafoto clash far the elty'B Na- Rm* led Nid^ wtth 21. - - - ‘ ----- Pepf-Oola. the only team to beat e’rtaek on Nerthrtde Park toe. The BaMera are rtMat- lag far Owlr lid atralght title. Thern he tiytag to make IMI and Larry Ottey Cavell of Fapai took scoring honors with 25. Michael, apeef wlaaer ev«r BO ‘ try to ahatter the Rita plays at St. James fai the other loop game. St. Frederick travels to Brother Rice. A lie for the championship probably, would mean a playoff to determine which team vrouid represent the SCL in the Catholic Lbagtae playoffs. AAA* Front running Fitzgerald ia expected to |et past Madim without too much difficulty and Troy should handle Oak Park In Oakland A encounters. The favorites haven home court advantage. Lake Orion will be looking for its Lapwr could be walking into trouble at Kettering. The Captolns came cloae to toppling the Panthers at Lapeer the last time the wms met. Romeo entertains RoaevUle in a N ’niB BOAD Imlay City will be seeking to get back on the winning road at Millington, and at the lame time, adding to Its South Central lead. Oxford can help the Spartans by winning at North BraMh. Three el the lour home P 0 h 11 a c Emmanuel Ouiatian hits the road for Lanalng and a game against Boys’ Vocational. In Tri-River play, Birmingham Groves is st Dearborn Hasten snd North Farmington entertains Southgate Davison. W ar raoMoi BKBAK8 XEOOBO — Giant Wilt Chamberlain, the Philadelphia Warriors' 7-foot-l scoring dunks his 3,000th point on the way to breakiiig his old NBA record of 3,033 established lost season. Oiainbetlaln sebnd 59 points last night at Syracuse to hike his season total to a new record high of 3,092 u the War-, riors whipped New York Knicks, 136-130. Wllf Hits 23-for-27 in 59-Poinf Game 93KeglersVie in Meet Finals AAarch of Dimes Play Will Close Sunday at Lakewood A total of 93 men and women bowlers will square off Sunday at Lakewood Lanes in the championship round of the March of Dlmei By The Asaeefotad Pram WDt Chamberlain, freA oft atm nother record performance, ikoa his one-man scoring show to Boston tonight tor a dash with dearest enemies. Bill Russell and ^the Boston Celtics. Chamberlain, giant Philadel-la’s center who is scoring at a phenomenal rate, put or tacular show at Syracuae Thursday night In leading the Warrion to a 136-120 victory over New York in the first half ot a National Baokptball Association dou- PHOENIX, Aril. (AP) - Arnold Palmer, his game oitce again aharp, is off to a torrid start In the 135,000.Phoenix Open with a 3-stroke lead going into today’s second round. While first-day leaders often fade, Palmer usually gets> better with each 18 and Is especially not-ed for great final rounds. (AAA __ began defense of his Phoenix championship Thursday by shooting six birdies on the first ■even holes and ended with a seven-under-par 64. Lean Art Wall Jr. presented the _Mst immediate tl^at to the Minmi, Fla., muscleman with a Jack Nicklaus. new to the pro entourage altar winniag the U.8. Amateur and Nadonal CoOegiato titles last year, was grouped with five others at two-undeMiar 69. U.S Open Champ GOne LitUef ’ as among 10 qt 70. Palmer’s opening round was only a stroke over the tournament rocord for the 6,765-yard Phoenix Owntry Qub course. It supported earlier evWeiice that he has re-gained the touch that earned golfs largest bankroll In 1960 and ■econd largest last year. He was under par la each of the live rounds of last week’s Palm _,._gs tourney, where be grabbed his first victory since the Brttirii Open in July. Adc^ 'niursday’s performance. Palmer has knocked 24 strokes oft par in his last six competitive rounds. biiVlies. He almost sank a long putt for an eagle on. No. 1 and missed a 4-footer for a bird on the. 18tb- “It could have been a heck of a round,” palmer said. ”I putted very well, but should have rnade some I missed.” Wall, who said be “got aU pos-aible* out of some pretty wild shots,” had a round of birdies and 14 pars. Xtood as it was. Pain «•'§ c TOP FORM - , , ■ ^ Ar rs»ur»« _ . Defending champion Arnold Palmer wrinkles His chip missed by five ind^ on watching the baU after an Iron shot in Thursday’s ?*»JiJ^wS*Vh2SL*wJ5d V* tournament. Palirier Big No. 13 hit 23 of 27 shots from the field and finished with; S9-points—(he 40(h time this season he has gone over 50 poinik The spree allowed him to better (wn season scoring record established last seqson. OOVLB HIT 4,m Should he continue at or near IS present remarkable pace—an average of 49.8 points a game— he could break' the old mark by nearly 1,000 points. And a kUgbt increase could make him the first man in NBA history to pcore 4,000 in a season. He faces one of his major tests tpnight .against Boston's Russell, ocknowied^ as the outstanding defensive player in the game. But even with Chamberlain’s scoring heroics, the Warriors had/been le td be champton Celtics until a weekend set two Russell, sidelined wit . did not play, in the seBn, but WUl be back ti^ght. CELT1C8 BOW The Celtics suffered one of thdr rare defeats in the feature of tl* Syracuse twin-billThursday night, falling to the Nats 122-110. Syracuse, winnlg only its second agairwt Boston this season, broke it open in the third quar ter, outscodng the Celtics 36-14 and taking a 10980 lead. Lee Shaffer scored 16 of his 28 ..Dints in the burst.,Sam Jones led the losers with 26. In the only other game, Oscar Robertson scored 38 polnu ’ leading CliKinnati to a 113-109 triumph over Western leader Los Angeles that broke a six game Royal losing string. Los Angeles was without the services of Elgin \Baylor and Jerry West. Baylor is on duty with the Army and West was out with the flu. win at Clawson, but the win be definite underdogs. Is not scheduled. step sbead at Lapasr In foe Irt-CkMinty rsee si last place L’AnSe Ciaoss. The FatosM are l-L Lead, 2nd in Valley Loop Up for Grabs Northorn vt. Skippore, PCH at BC ContraI; Seaholm Away By iWUCK ABAW First place win ba the Ug torgal date, 2nd on another and e on a 3(^ os the big area echool baaketbafi fuU acbedulea to> Tarmlngtoti and Barkley, coleaders in the Inter-Lakes, will ba battling Southfield and Walled; Lake, rsaptetively Pontiac Caf tral BhoHld regain the nmneruF slot in the Saginaw Valley with an easy victory at Bay CUy Central. Front-nmner Bail Detroit will likely keep roUlng along hi the Eastern Pontiac Northern upaet Farm-w ington to throw the I-L Into a tight struggle Just when the Falcona hxiked like they were going all the ray. The improving Huakiea visit Waterford tonight In whnl may be one of the top games on another big Friday schedule. The Skippers have dropped two straight after being title contenders and will have to get rolling again or finiah in the 2nd division. Bay travffo to Memphte aad Al-mamt b at «rawn aty. Wtelaaa Dryien bate nfeke their recorda 6-1 but Fkrm-ington fnoes the problem of being away from bonw again. Main thing worrying Berkley ta the fact that Waited Uke Is so far overdue aiter many dote hwaea. SHOULD BB EASY PCH ehould be able to name its own eoore at Bay Qty even with Awarda and a duuice to oempote fai the state finals Feb. 34 will go to the three highest men and three ramen ecofera. The two mpkim will be awardfd upportable televteion sets, the run-nereup portable record players and the 3rd place finlahers tranaistor 'adioa. Tim msB ami woman MIoM-gan’s champ will earti get a seven-day Ires vaeptteo for fo« to Naoaaa. ^ Thirteen keg cstaMiihments In northern Oakland County took port In the eliminations. Contestants led league ecoreO for the tourney. Each "house” wm allowed rep-reientatlves on a baste one for each five alleys. Bowllog will be at 10 a.m. and 13:30 p.m. Mrr Palstn, Harold Idoni. Bob Loron*. ntt* Smart and Olaima Lnwb. Mapla III - rranclt Hill. Art yw. Otorio ~lauaon and Dorotbr WbMa. Airway 121 - Erwin Bamda^. Kvnm IWI — Oar Banaon, VI Holaa. Tlralnla Bronaheau. aiorla Bonnallo, arts'i.5r8s»*a®.SK' Bsuss “iSiaaiVi? inUer, Lola Sbialda. Uadonna Ortaaai Mary ic|^ar, Jaan Wlibw. Bart Browm Fatrlela atnai Waat «da JJ - Bob Mchordt. Jaak Oambara. » Uwiao, L«i Fannall w^Mary C^ate Montaalm lit) -"^toay Mur A r&rMh.'srZ’iri;' si *a3*-Ho?^ Lmcc. BIU OoVOn Rod mvBABAiw W 1i‘agS: r^’Va'bS' !Si.-“2n.T‘A5;y.’TkSr snoinrr ociow i»r — The Wolfpack should stick to toot- •Diey *«» •" • ‘yPteol BOC season with an 11-pobit defeat the cteoest BUI lUlenbruch’s quintet has come to victory. Arthur HUI moved into a tie with foe Chiefs for 2nd TUetetey but must face city rival and slate power Saginaw. The I^mberjacka may be the test roadwock to a perfect recoid for BUS. An upeet would give Pontiac a ellm chance again tor at least a share of the crown but local coach Art Van Ryzin isn’t counting on it. *‘I think they’ll win the rest of thehr gamee.” he M The Presa. Flint also should have a IteBdy cHy feud With Central host to Boufowestern. Bay dty Handy East Detroit had aome trouble with Birmingham Seahofan early er to the champkmehlp. The Shamrocks are 89 In the loop. The No. 2 team in tha race wUl be Seahohn’s next toe. The Maplea of Lou Parry mav catch host Port Huron at the right time. The Big Reds were a surprisingly easy vlc-. ... of Ferndale Tuesday and have dropped thyee of their last four after ji big stert. Royal Oak Kimball aeeks to better |ta '3ti phtce rating at home against weak Hazel Parit. _______ ArBa Ski Conditions GRAMPIAN MT. - Two Inches fresh powder, all slopes and facilities open. Very good skiing until 11:00 tonight. ALPINE VALLEY - New powder added, all tows, slopes and facilities in operation. Very good skiing until 11;00 p.m. tonight. MT. CHRISTIE - swing good to very good, fresh powder added to all areas. Open tonight. Annual ski carnival Saturday and Sunday. MT. HOLLY - Skiing very gbod today and tonight. Six slopes open. • ■ gh school meet Saturday DRYDEN SKI AREA - SWlng good to very good, Tresh powder added to all ata^e. Skiing good to vary | ______' hell — Open Saturday andTsunday. Freah snowfall should toake il^ good. MT. SUMMIT -r Skiing good to Skiing tonight. Scott Faces No. 1 Teni/is Player New Challenger for Reed NEW YORK (AP) - Whitney Reed, trying to “Justify” his potl, tk» as the topMUking Amf ' player, faces another to his throne In the quarter-1 toni^ of the U.S. Indoor “ Reed, foe U.S. Davis from Alameda, Calif., plays Scott, foe No. 37 ranked/ U.S. player. 'Scott’s underrated; really tough.” said Reed, they’re all tough no« I’m ranked number one /I’m trying to Justify it but m tough. Everybody else has mthing lose. I've got everything to lose.' Scott, the University of Virginia law-Bchoot student /from St; James, N.Y., defaalW two top Americans—Davis Ciflpper Chuck McKinley and veteran Vic Selxas -to win the Buffalo invitation In-doa- tournament last weekend. In Thursday night’s second round here, Scott, battled part Pvt. Bob Bowdltch. Ft. Eustls. Va., 49, 6-4, 7-5 and Heed fought Off Henry, AfMnta, 6-4, 109. Four ©then. Americans—McKinley. Donald DeU, Frank Ftt^i^ into the round of eight «Mng with foreign stars Rod Laver, the^ Wimbledon champ from, Australia, and Spain’s Manuel Santana.. Laver'ripped Bill Scartett, Verona. N.J.. 93. 6-4. and now |lays Froehling. Santana, the Ffoncfa champioB. ousted Bailey Brown, Bronxville. N.Y.. 64. M to earn a match with DpU. TWEKTY-SIX / fk I. ■ . ■ . • J ' , ! . ■ THE PONTIAC press. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 1»68 NAIA Scoring Expert McCULLOCH ONE/42 MORE PROFESSIONAL FEATURES THAN ANY OTHER ECONOMY-PRICED SAWII A tott cutting. Hght weight direct drive with feeturee yoo‘d only expect ' • ALL roemoN cumno • wtATMte-moono wnitiom . rtNuirrin eonmoLi • taxm mccullocwo vimmi --------m . coMPLin witm le* iar ano rAir CUTHNO eUKR riNTAILe CHAIN. K $149.95 Easy KING BROS. Pontioc Hood ot Opdyke FE 4-1112 FE 4-0734 ★ ★ ★ lio^te Gut to Tie^Old M)rd ■ A " ★ ★ ★ ’ ★ A ★ ★ City Elks Invade State Keg Tourney Saturday Win OverGo|)hers Would Be 23rd Local women took the Michigan State E3ka Ladiee Bowling ^tourney by etorm last weekend ao the men ol Lodge 810 wtH try to do the same Saturday and Sunday bn teumey. Hie regular Michigan I will ) on the home front, the ton from a W In 1 la Be axeepttsa wMh M teama. IM dedblee pairt and SM hi ■iBglea. A tew teak paH earlier la the |ie.oei eveirt. bat the majority will ba maklag'tbo trip ta Lanriag tamorrew. Farm- 64 LANES TO SERVE YOU HURON BOWL AIRWRT LANES 2S25 Wsabofb Uka Rd. PI 5-2525 OPEN BOWLING DAILY-9 A.M. to 6 P.M. SAT., SUN.-9 A.M. to 1 P.M. FREE PROFESSIONAL INSTRUCTION Coll Now About Your Bonquet Rtsarvotioni AND BE SURE lAZEllE AGENCY he. All Forms of L nsurance SM PmUu suit Buk BtUdlni SE 64172 alia ba lapreaentad. At the women's Elks State, a Pontiac team holds the lead In doublet total and high actual leamS. l,2t------- -- 6U in tingles, \S74 and 1.IM Id teams In ths state all events. A Pom^ taam la Wt seriee, a dty woman la 1st |p singles and another In Hoover Leads Pro Keg Meet BALTmORi: (AP) — Dick Hoover of St. Louis overtook Don Carter and rolled Into the halfway Itad In tha aOgame qualify-ing round qf the Chesapeake Bay Opim Bowling Tournament Thuni-'day night. Hoover, bowling sets of 1145 and 1066 for QU. held a 54-pln lead over Vince Lued of Mortle-viile, Pa. Carter wu another 14 pins off the pace at the end of the flret tan games. Lued had and Carter The field of 144 profeaelonaU roll 10 more gamee Friday to complete the qualifying tournament. The field then will be cut to 32 for the final day of competition Saturday. Cuttr and Hoover both had 1145 pint at the completion of the first five-game Mock. Other leaders at the midway point were Ray Bluth, St. Louis, 12141; Jim Santore, Paterson. N.J., 2104 and Marv Lowry, Birmingham, Ala., 2103. Battle of Unbeatens I Becomes 26-2 Rout You can depend on us . . . FRANCIS COAL aid Dll The Eagles at Airway Lanes andl^snd a dty woman la 4th* hi m ............................i^ fiae. Iren« West of PoMlae Uj Elks Invitationsl at Loidga 810 be beginning the 2nd half of play with outsiden dominating the action thus fhr. ■AMn. PARK TOPS Hasel Paric keglen have been from Oakland County with team, 4th In aingliet. 3rd \9Ui place ranklnfa In all . -.its\ Early leaden A1 Strand and ElW Holeman of Waterford are now »h In doublet. \ w ★ High aooi^ at tha Elks an 2,989 lor teams. 1,267 for doubles, bent) West of Ponllae 245 lor 2nd high game of the tourney. Sally Hettmaa al SmOma, whs ha tha sahr teeassr alwap la asUm tUe weahiad. Sevaral alhsea.have taUei te tefsat al- Bgr Tha AeaedaU kte Slaia can match Iht Big Tm'a all4imt baRnlhall whmh« atnak temerrow trigM by dafaat-Mlnnaaota In a hi Tba aotkn wUI ba limited to edy singles and douUaa for JPon-tiae women Sunday afternoon this Budnyaa would bo tboir 28rS competition at Fblr-grounds In Mttlord will ba fai Hs 3rd weekend. Randy West Hair Stylist of Pontiac now ranka 3rd among tha note (4-f) at ACH sued - Procew server Don Baldwin handa Red Auerbach a tummona notifying the conch of the ^ton Celttce that he la being named one of nine defendants ifa 8750,000 suit brought by three Syracuse men. The ploinUfto are aeeking damages allegedly stemming from a fight during a basketball game last March 25 at Syracuse. Viking Matmen Triumph Flu-Ridden Chiefs Lose CALL 682-3600 Cooley Blue Devils No. 0ns 'trounced Lutes Rams No. One. 26-2, in the battle ot the remaining unbeaten teams In the 5th-6th grade boys' basketball league con- STbS >uni lead midw., In Ibe dn.teh TWn Brom kqd M. ttrltS ,»■. .0 poinn, p«>d d« 0.*.., i«k.d depd, u, and Gilea Lagace also woo falls y* vlclory over Miimeaota'e Flu-ridden Pontiac Central had a triumph blasting Northville, *32-11. Loop Mark Hos Sleo Dave Downey with 21.T and BUI Saudi 20J ^ to com Iowa's Don Nalaon. NUaoo it tl In tha race with a 28.3 nark. ’M' Swimmers Defeat Goi;)her8 in Big 10 Dual WNtmAPOUa « - Detending' Front RyDONtOaSb Hie ORklKnd County gooHng rich proveg thKt there stlU Is K pUce for the “little maja" on the beeketbaii Hght of the top nine ecoren fell to cletr the six-foot mark. And the one that topi this mark Is e-8 Hank Akin of Troy. The top four range from 6-7 to 6-10. Tim Ifulcaster, 6-8 senior. Is miking a ahamH|ss of ths Suburban Catholic^ ^ League and Is leading the county. The St. James stalwart Is blistering the n^ at a 96.7 pace for IS gam^. derclaasman) stood S4 arid'Upped the scales at a robust 324 pounds. John stands M and weii^ 182 t Ha. 7 Big Umt college bariietball ta difficult for the player under elx feet beenuae many of Iho taller payers are capable enough to be need at guard. There afe excep-tiona, of oourae, but Uwy art few. On Uw imall eollaga acene, adnois take a doaa look at aU There Is plenty of room left for the “lltUe man" In tha round ‘ " BROWN PVTTINO Chariit Brown, former Pontiac COntral football and track star, la putting the riiot for the Michigan State varsity this winter on the kiorctrcult AHhengh Owy isn't expeet any WaUace. Hw Adrian Oollaga alum-Mta: tha BpISwIn-WaBaee VIvtata wraadtaR ta tan hanvywiMht Si-vtetaa. task pngl In I be termei tae moat tepriSad matoh af the year. ‘Jolai'e . . . opponent, (en un- "The match lasted two min- Wreatllng Is a teg RWt down mean In the pro ranka. A lacete match batween Oktahenia and Oklahoma St. drew • mllout crowd of 7,500. Thta goes to show that paople In Uw "dean" aUta, tee. a eaaahaa teak far Mm ta ten am la anaM d. County athletm on the MSU track The othera an Pde vaulter BiU loom, Bfarmingjiam; distance runner Ron Berby, MUfOril; dtetance performer Robert Fulcher. Haul Park; Bill Gnen. liiUahi, 440880; Dick C^. 1 Paih, distance events; hurdler, Tom Pediham, Farming-ton; and/ team captain Gerald Young, Berkley, one of the top distance runnera in Uw midweft. Mller Don Castle d Utica also Is on the team. . | KeHy-SprinffieM Tibe-Typt Tin W »10” CUABANTBBO lONDID Broktt Ralinod $975 fwe-caw. Wi—Eia ■MaTittai'i'v** FRBI INITAUATION MUFFLERS •4 Ttmr u»r C4R' prep ranks hoptag to hK the mat college, had better adect i $150 KUHN StrvicR 14* W. Nana PI 2-1215 3722 Oreherd Lake Rd. Orchard Lake (58). Joel Smith wnt the game into the extra session and then won the contest In overtime as Schodcraft Blackhawks edged Waterford VU-lage WUdeato, 12-10, Pontiac Lake-Houghton Odts upped their mark to 4-1 with a 278 drubbing of Donelaon Gophers. BUI Penoa and Rick Ko-gelman each scored 10 points. ing and bowed 34-11 at Bay City Central last night, Wayne Lee and Mike Gaydoe .. heavytvelght Tom _____________Dave Orser on Uw tick Urt witk over one-third of the squad aUing. KESSLER SHOOTS FOR SMOOTHER TASTE draw. They them went ahead II |0 on Pete BeeVeia’ 14th Victory In IS starts but went score-Ims hi the last six boatd. The two Big Tan poweis andi WM lira tvmte and tted for flrrt ta Osrjr Ostss (Hi dsftsCS 7-tf. HlSTVVtishl ——' Id Dtek fclebsrdt. iWKtta te now g-2 agatart Big Tan In the feature rsM, Mlmwsota'i Steve Jackman, oobolder of the ______ American record in the 50-yard _ 1 freestyle, was upset by Michigan's ■ Jim Ksrr, who won in 21.9-----' “ “300”, BOWL 'FISH FRY Every Friday 5 f .M. to 10 P.M. *I•^PER PLATE “ENJOY FINE FOOD" 100 S. CASS LAKE ROAD ~ Phohe SS8-713S One of the three PCH victors was g^y^ ArmorV Art Fowlkes, now 9-1. ' Walled Lake chalked up another n luaii '**'*■* 'i^**^* *ninu n new. timn sun iuiiai vi^ DON'T ACCiPT ANY DIAL UNTILED CHICK OUR R & R %TOR$) CbiTsIsr—PI Four nws _ the card at Prattae Annoiy tonight, headttned by Larry Ghana Wlifiing Skaters Listed Thew were'Ahe winning akatera 5 I the Rolladium fourth eUn ' th» racea. Hw 5th race wU phlsto. The Other bento taeteSe Clam A-Giria: Sheilah Moody; Boys r- Roben ManafMd. Claas B—Gtrla: Debra Brown; Boya — Kit Catcher. Clau C-Gtriai Amber LaUmer; Boys — Ridtard West. BUILDING SUPPLIES KNOTTY RINE : PANELING in>4,W.6 PATTERNS Reg. fljSO'.OO per Thoneead NOW *99®® s ACOUSTICAL CEILING TILE 12“*i2“*W’-WHITE . NOW 10« EACH STWPPiNd; NOW DICKIE Lumber go., 2494 Oedtard LMm R«nd, Keef» Hnrhmr-682-1600 SUPER DISCOUNT PRICES! brake I Front End Alignment SPECIAL lEE332ia jS 77 WEST HURON $T. ■ Wl HONOR AU MAJOR CRIDIT CARMI THE I*QNTiAC PRRSS. FRIDAY, KEBRUAKY 9.; 1062 TWENTYSEVEX By Tke AmmUIN Ptm Bradley renwira the paoe-Mtter in the tight Mlnourt Valley bi ketbah ccnierance raw after romp; Oncinnatl atill la right behind after a egueaker, and Provl-deooe, St. John's and fftw Yerfc University are a notch higher in M atrunir lor Eudetn cy. \ Bradley kept its slender hold on the MVC lead Thursday nb^t Iqr W North Texas «l-6l whUe POU> MBVIVAL - Ben Levinson (ba^ Polo aub at the Kletner Riding Academy ih ground) and son, Franklin, swinging mallei\ Commerce Township. Training of young riders are among the polo enthuaiasti pushing for bm undertaken at the Bloomfield end revival of the sport in the Detroit area. A ^roeae Pokite Hunt Ciuba. polo club has been organised at the Klentner Equegtrians Turn to Mallet Sport \ Polo Malces Move for Reviyal In key Eastern games, Provi-Miee maintained its momentum by edgiiy Boston Collage TM8 and New York teams went 2-lor3 _ wt Philadelphia, rivals Madison Square Garden ~ •s 7»68 o By BBVNO L. KKABMI Polo, oonsidered oita of the dp ing sports of the Detroit area, is nukliig a strong rally for revival, and it appears that it might make it to the stature it had In the W>y M'a- When John Ivory deeet. _ ^ center on Mile rood in Detroit five ysars. ago, it was the last hig strai«hold and tatsreet droppod 1o a low ebb. A M ndner pale MMkMiae were heM at Ivery's fam ki IMoa Uke, wMek has been Lorn devoted to pleaMdag fsr Their hrieat has hewn te i tlw sport. Names Uke Ben Levinson, Wen-deU smith. Rich Gibson, Jack Ivory, Jr., Orodon Miller, Tom Young, George Beniamin, G w e Brown, Bud Marks and the Wil- Prep Cage Standings ikims brothers, Dave and Larry, ark spurring the revival. \ * * dr Oentm such as the Bloomfield Hunt ^ub, Klentner Riding Academ)\^ Groese Poiide Hunt Qub ha^t t Pointo ¥ !St stemn from young^ equestrians and children ci th^. veteran poloists. M FraakHa, add Chari iHck of the KMtper I ®'sr" I »\ n fi' 1 * ! !' "i&Wnsn Rjffisr no Elaihc" rnadato Bradley Takes Romp, Cmcinrtair Squeaker NYU 7»-73 against Temple in time in nine conference starts Led by sophomore Joe Strawder Braves seroed in with points-midway In the first half oonfOrenoe gamea — io BrstfOey and WkhiU'sWheatahocfcers, who are 6-3. Cincinnati has rematches at home with the other two tenders later this month. Providence played another cliff-hanger and pulled out its ninth victory in a row since ' ' high in the game points and Walker added 21. A ★ A Cincionati's third-ranked Bea^ cats had a scare on the Blllikens' floor, diasipating 13 points of a 15-point second half lead before two foul shots by George Wilson and Tom Sizer’s layup put " way. Ihe Bearcats, winners of f straight Missouri Valley titles and last season's national champions, have dropped two of their nine over the WildcaU. White acoount-M tor nlpe pplnts u Villanova Jumped into a quldc ltd lead, but the Rednten put Hail on him at that stage and Hubie managed only 10 more the rest of the way.' The Wlldcau were fresh from over another of ttte Eastm powers, sbith-ranked five starters all the way*. Friars saw Boston College rally nts when Gerry Ward connected with six to go. The Eagles had one last chanoe to draw even, but Dave Reynolds' 10-footer at the two-second mark bounced off the lim. Jlnt, HadnOt Bd Providence with 3ft points. Thirty-two points and 30 rebounds by 6-10 Leroy ElUs and Willie HaU's tight guarding Job on Villanova star Hubie White keyed 9. John’s fo iu victory 0p«i 12 MfiM cocitah louiti OpanxBowliiig Alfotnoea ieepnes favtta^ Mnl Twr^ B—tws Lmsm wowwan^ £irt Sr iSmiw ptt^ifTiti EMpir* S.71S1 the other Garden game, Mark Reiner put on a sciniUlating diapli^ of long-range Jump shooting that sparked NYU over Temple. The blond six-footer hit 12 of NYU's fiiud 14 poinU bi regulation time, pumped bi eight of the Vioirts' 11 in overtime, and finished with 35. : Other scores — Wyoming 93. Denver ft, overtime;‘Gonzaga 74, Washtaigtan state 61; The Citadel H, East Trimessfe 67; Delaware 7i Albright 66. WRESTLING rwsay, Via, a siss r. ii. astsm* TMwta otwr* Ofea m n. ly 49 and tralalag ef\] Gibson, a five goal player^from Birmlnglum, helps with instZ^ tion of interested polo players ft Bloomfield Hunt Qub. \ Levinson, Detroit businessman, who has been a polo enthusiast and player for the pqst 10 years is taking an active part in the revival'of polo. His son, Frankltai, who five years ago was one of the youngest polo players in the country playing with the Idp names is now the youngest pro in this section of the country. w ★ * Members of this polo revival _poup are hoping to bring the qioit back to the area on a petitive basis. Last fall bi a tty polo game, a sum of M.MO was raised for hospitalized vet-ms. 'We can make Detroit the polo center of the Midwest," said Levln-, "and we hope tt bring polo back to its successful era of a decade ago." Central Slams Eastern MOUNT PLEASANT (I) - Central Michigan beat Eastern Michigan 72-54 bi a game . ..$2879 I Convartioin...... f sport j-OoorSvdefv..........$3369 4-Door Hordiop . - • • ' 13293 2-Ooor Sport Coop • • ' 3322/ ‘ . .................... ,m36 l-SaalEtrtrtoV^*®*?" ; ; 33667 A.Dpor Hordtop • • • • •' <3917 3.Saa» CrtoiP ] ] $3733 , 2.DOOT Colton Spt. P* 33^,7 ................... I 4-Oopr rtordtop • • • • $4062 , 2-Door Sport Soup • • • 3^34$ 1 Convortlblk. ■ •' ''' * " * ~S1894)0_ $86.0$^ $42.50^ umnit|gatn attending, headed by Preat-maMing of leaden of the AAU^ Lou‘« J- pi High AAU and NCAA Powers to Meet^^ and NCAA will be held in Chicago Sunday and Monday .will •winging of an olive branch Own a gavel The aenion, viewed by aome aa "laat chance" parley to bring peace in the battle for amateur athletic power, has been called by K. L. (TUg) Wilaon, preaident of the U.S, Olympic Conunittee. Wil-jHjbllc announcement on the conciliation meeting will be made until Monday noon. EIOHT AAU OKLROAT1C8 There will be eight AAU dele- 18 EARLY TOO LATEf — Eariy Wynn, who at 42 ia embarking on his 21at season in the major ieagues, holds up an 8-ball which he hopes won't symboltze any continuation of Irou- ar ntttuw bles which benched him after July 22 last season. Wynn yesterday signed a contract for his 5th season with the White Sox. Wynn needs eight more victories to reach the 300 mark.. Titans Fighting MSlt, *M* for Talent New U-D Grid Coach in Recruiting War Cutters Remain at Top of Heap The unbeaten Wallace Cutters Mayad at the top of the heap to he City Basketball League's National division with a 52-46 victory over Reeves Standard. Bud Hayward netted 17 points to ead the Cutters to their 6th win. John Fowler tallied 16 for Reeves. DETROIT IP - John Idiik, the University of Detroit's new foot-baD coach, feels he is in a hot recruiting war with Michigan and Michigan State for good players. "Michigan and Michigan State hate to see somebody else rise, Idiik said yesterday. "T^'re,go-tog to knock your block off, or try to. Idzik replaced Jim Miller, who TKE DISCOUNTS war anr a ascart " NiW SNOW TMES 6.70*15 tW SM5| 7.50*14 $8.95 I NEW IE6ULAR TKES 6.70*15 $4.88 I 7.50*14 ^ $9.88 I Ss»rt. Uis*'t CMiSui N*« TIrM at Bl| DtoMaala PlB* Tai—Sirhaas* ••a a»MSS*M* Culai NO MONET DOWN UNITIO TIRE SERVICE Op*a Mm.. Than., m. 'Ul • _ IMT NhMNla an. m S-S4IT I took the head job at Boston College two weeks ago. In the past Detroit, a Jesuit Institution, mostly attracted paro-school players, leaving a large public school area to Michigan and Michigan State. The Titans, of course, have had many public school products on their teams. They’re current top player, quarteirback Jerry Gross, is a graduate of Bay Qty Central. Recurring talk that Detroit is planning to drop football and a late start caused by Miller’s long indecision about whether ^ leave have handicapped Titan recruiting this year, Idiik said. Basketball Scores MtryUntf SUM SS, OalhWhr* SUU M MMwnt nnetniwu H. St. l«ate M WootUr U. mtrrbhln II *M>m II. I BrMlUr SI. North Toxht tl I Hour ton so. Mlhml^mt « IMnvtr IS, WiomiDi IT (orertlintr Ooiush it. «Hhlii(tM SUU II SohUl* Tl. MooUBh Stit* Tl ’The talk has been nuwtly in > East,’’ Idzik said. "Maybe Miller started giving this as i reason for leaving. “it hurts reerultlng. We’re net [otog to drop football.” Idzik said he wants to recruit only 25 boys a year. “Michigan and Michigan State are recruiting in great numbers. My comment to a boy is: ‘Do you int to sit on the bench or play?’ "If I recruit 25 a year and hit on 10 and mlsa on 15, I’ll have 40 good bnes in four years.' Idzik said Detroit’s recruiting this year has been, at a standstill. "Last year at this time," he said, "we’d had 100 boys visit the school. We’re way tehind this year. We know who the boys are, their grades and how to reach But we’ve had very little personal contact." Idslk died the example of GroM, who nearly went to ^a before settling on Detroit. "He would haW started out os a third or fourth-string quarterback at Iowa." Idzik said. | "Here at Detroit be got a chance right in his sophopiorc season. This is my selling point.” Sad plaeo with a 6-1 rMotd hy wtdpptag Felice Market, 16-40. Mel Ryaa paoed tk with U points while BUI to Ueh oeored U la defeat. Balanced scoring enabled Jowl to dump Smith Fuel, 49-42. Bob HocUng’s 11 polnta were topa hr 300 Bowl and Smith’s Phil ..andry took game honors with 18. Winless First Church of the Nas-arene went down to Us 8th loss, a 45 - 35 aetback at the hands of Michigan Bell. Nazarene’s Howard Rose tallied 17 points and Dava Brlgp was high fOr Bell It. iSMBTSiSS. Trf-:: I ZS 31 .40 M irh II ST MS IS • Anttl«> 0 it irinmil S3 it LouU 31 S IrMo 13 0 Til illAllibl* Ul. Ntw Turk Ut rMUM 133. BoU« lit lelimall 113. Lot AnMiu 10 TODATl -OCIeDVLE PhllAfUlplilA M Botton SyrAcuw ■! Ntw York SATVBDAT-S SCBBOCLB Chlewo tl Ntw York at Plillad Potion 0 nilltSelpliln it. Loula tl CIncinnaU. aflemoon T SUNDAY’S SCBKDVLB nilaSatpHIa al Ntw York Chleaiio at Boaton, antmoon DotroR al SyracuM. anomoon TODAY'S WHRDI'Ut San FranrUco *1 CSIrato "***“ SAl^BOAV’j*SCB*Dl)lE Jljin PramUra Naw^Tork ir N.C., and eight from the NQAA, led by President Henry B. Hardt of Texas Ouisilan; Also on hand will be a UJ5. Olympic committee which, in addition WOmmi. includes IRoe Preskleiit Doug Roby, TYeasurcr Max Ritter an4 Aaehrtant Executive Director Art Lenz. ♦ ★ ; Crux of the dispute, which Wilson believes wUl undermine the U.S. Olympic and Pan-. teams unless agreeably aettlMl, demanda I9 Uie NCAA for greatsr control of amateur' gjlhletics, sto peclally pertaining to IntematkiiD al comp^tion. The AAU is the certuying authority InternatlODal-ly. The NCAA, at World Ski Council May Revise Ruling CHAMONDC. France (AP)-The xecutive council of the Work Federation (FIS) wlll^eet to con-aider a pair of lait-dltch retolu-tions today that would restore the World Ski Games, scheduled to begin Saturday, to world pkmahip status. Stanley Mullin of Loa Angeles, the meeting at which tSweden’i Bjorn KJellstrom madq a proposal to cancel the witbdrav'al of the world' championship tag because of thcL Inability of the Bast Gen-alders to obtain Allied travel permlta IntO'France. Mullin said the late of the East Germaifs was not the fault ot the organizing committee and should not be held responsible. The Interoatiooal Ski Federa-is not above world govern- ..............The federation o sports and stay This also was the final day of preparatkMM by. the men’s slalom contestants. Qualification heats begin Saturday and 67 alders from 27 nations have been named start. The entries include fsur Amer team—Buddy Werner, Steamboat Q>k>., Chuck Fsrriea, _ I. Mich., BHIjk Kidd. Stowe, Vt., and Jim Huega. Tahoe City, Calif. Two qualification heals wlU be run with the first 15 in each advancing to the final. Harvard Blasts West Colleges Over Recruiting CAMBRIDGE, ................ at Ga- nadian recruiting and cialtom” ^among Western colleges notifying NCAA hockey tournament selection committee it does not wish to be considered for th«^ 1962 tournament. rmatlon of national federatkaw basketball, track and gym- HOPES FOR HARMONY In Fort Worth, Hardt said he beUevea a framework of harmony can be reached at the meetings. Is no questlM about iiust get togeOter," he said. It's a pretty aerious scrap the way things stand now. surely tope we can get this tli _ worked out and I believe there is a lair chance we will do ao. How-' ever, nobody knows what c the meeting will take. "Should .the talks settle nothing, w4 Would be In terrible " to continued. I do not iqf the solution would then be. We believe our group hai been treated fairly. But 1 believe j we can make the starting steps! toward harmony at this meeting.' Hayes Jones After 24 Straigtit Indoor Wins PHn-ADE2.PHlA. Pa. - Pon-| tiac’i Hayes Jones, winner of 23 straight Indoor victories, will be out to preserve his hvo year streak in the w yard hurdles of the Philadelphia Inquirer games this His biggest challenger wQ) be l«tys, Ws^Gbrojife'teain-y^artied o -‘ * - - mate, along with BiU Johnson ot Maryland and Ruas Rogers Maoiand State. * w w In the Olympic games Lee Calhoun, Mays and Jones finished in that order. However, indoors, Jones has a b^g edge on the coun- However, the Crimson hockey try’s hurdlers, team will take part In the EasN In the meet also Is 100 yard cm Intercollegiate (ECAO post-dash world record holder Frank season Mrent, if Invited. With a 18-4 record. Harvard is ranked among the^J^t’a best. The 10-maa /acuity commlllee on athletic sports Indicated opposition to the NCAA tournament The length of the season and the nature of the post-season event. Budd, but missing will vaulter John Uelses who is under QUantico Marine Base for bronchitis and influ- Wlth the world record holder jSkleUned, the pole vaul lup as a wide open battl jHcmy Wadsworth 0? the UJ. Army; Orlando Criiz of VlUanova; Mel Schwartz, of the U.S. Marinas; and John Belltza. of Maryland. Meanwhile, the track men krill get their chance to regain the spot- I. cf Ionova, irto holds tto arorld record tor the 100-yard ' ' '1 a time of :09.2. artU be carrying a tsto-year indoor unbeaten streak Into tonight’s competition. Delayny, former Villanova star, will be returning as anchorman on Ireland’s touring taro-mile relay team. , Sandor Tharos. the Hungarian sub 4-mbiute miter arto made his U.S. debut last areekend to a pair M losing two-mlle efforts, krill try for this first American victory to the Inquirer mile. Jack Yerman, Olympian quarter-mller, is favored to the 60O-yard event. Yerman krill face rtlff competition from VUlanoiva freshman star Don Webster and Colorado, grad Bill Toomey. about your car? Get%» right muffler for your make and model ot car inaUlled by an eipRrt in juat 15 mlnutas at your Midas mufflers are GUARANTEED for ai long aa ^ own your car. ALl MAIOR CaiOIT CARDS NONORIO MONDAY THRU fRIDAY ItSO A.M. to 5si0 R.M. UTURDAYS TIL 5 PJA. 435 S. SAGINAW 2-1010 PRE-SPRING SALE REFRESHMENTS SERVED STRT10M9IW0* $995 Come In and Register for MAGIC MILE CONTEST. WIN A NEW FAIRLANE, ^ COLOR 51” TV, TRANSISTOR RADIO y *Listen to WPON doily from 10 A.M. until 6 W our new ond-used cor specials. JOHN McAUUFFE FORD/Inc. 630 Oakland FEM101 A New Feature by the world-famous SYDNEY OMARR../ known as the astrologers’ astrologer •• / A SYDNEY OMARR is ’’tha astrelogars' astrologer.” No othar astrologer since the late Evongeline Adams has attracted such world-wide attention and respect as Sydney Qmarr. A great professional writer with a highly skilled news background, Sydney Omorr is considered"the most knowledgeable astrologer . of our time." Read his column each and every day ... . # Storting February 12th The Pontiac Press V-- tHE Poyiuc PkKSti, >K1DAY, FKUKUi^Y 9, 11W2 MARKETS tString of Advances Endi Tba following;, wt ton grlecn covering aloo U loenliy grown prodnoo bg growen and Mid bg them in wbotaHk package lota. Quptotloaa art funilabed by the Buroan of MariKti. m of .Iny thle altorooon aa H ’nundty- oat a airing of Market Declines on Slow Day NEW YORK (API-Tlw stock n\arkaf declined In slow trading Ddtroit Produc* dally advanoea. ' froeOans to about a ____g tag stocks oat num- ,j£1ibrod gatoers lv a wide margin. Sr , W ★ Hie fact that the rally had laat-jl ed so long was generally ascribed to a 'revival of buying by Instlto* tlonol Investors. The docUae was andclpatod bnrni day to day on Brokers iMtod, however, that pre-weekend caution was heightened by Monday’s Lincoln’s Birth- day/ observance which will be a holiday for many In the financial community although the stock exchanges will remain open. The news bacKgrottid Included U.S. Bonds Get Best Start «Rarr.:;:. . Tump*. MpeMi k«........ Poultry ond Sg^t ___ earaoiT iwtrojr DonimT. r*e. t lAPr-eriMi mm B*r poSt* ** ‘WtrWt In Mo. I «MUIr Imm t;T>o»»p Inw roi NEW YORK (It - U.S. _ ment bonds opened trading today with their best start of the week. They have been moving upward since early last week. •»p ippo Imm •OTP Ipjw raotUn 44 ISo. tf4f; e'illL *** *^*** / Over the counter dealers traasury soairities qdoM long Issues up 4/3B to t/St or e^ to " best dally gain of the s ' ____ DBTBOIT sons rn-a: lorot oMeiai *4-17; •■on W. frowoo-Orod* A Urot H4P; ---- MtoK; OroM a thocb *P4P. B tl4 most active section and s bit l^gher and rails mbced. / Boston g Maine Railroad 4Hs lost 1 at 17 at one time. Brunswick convertible 4lks at US at one time. Among corporates IndustrlaU iS S!w ' c...mrint''iSissLrB^ M«t r-- ~ ... a but In gasoline prices, a decline In scheduled auto production and a drop in department stare sa to a tour-month low—all of dampening ta sentiment. Rag car-loadings were higher. Steels, motors, chemicals, electrical e^pments, oils and tobac- Jhraey stan4anl,.>Texaoo.xRoyal Dutch and Standard Oil of Indiana aU took fractional loaaes but the were on pliuined takeover, by Tnuco has TKL OU, made it popular, added another fraction. Amerada, rumorrd to be a possibility for a similar deal, added about 3 points. General American Oil, alas In the rumor American Stock Exch. Fourth Quarter Saves Chrysler Final Three Months Brings farnings to $11.1 Million in 1961 NEW YORK* ll»^A big fourth-quarter profit, baaed as much on economies as on Increased sales, brought the Chrysler Oorp. earnings of Sll.^mlUlon last year. The figure was dlacloaed at a director’s meeting here Thursday. NKW TOM. FtS.'S (ATI-AMPrKM locki: kl a JBw .. n.S J«ho . IM ok« 0M U.l WWMWk Alrl I on( AT a Mb S ilwk M RIaS It. .rrW* P«t .. «l.l MJ £Um .... 14; SI ,s • r ffls /. «• ' R was the second best fourth quarter in the company’s history, topped only by 1949 fourth quarter earnings of 13.97 a share. Nevertheless, the ye^tr’a'l pMd to S1.34 a share, failed to latcb IM'a Income of |33.^inil-Ni, cf 3.S1 a share. 9S.M7.MgJN In II# to 11.117.- luHrp: !•• f»«4lpt4 W ri Livostock The New York Stock Exchange NSW TOMS (Ato-MWIwMs DM SSfiMSkUe iMKhty to amm from The year-end Improvement en-dburaged George H. Love, chairman, and Ignn A. Tbwnaend, pres-^ ident, to say In a Joint statement Imm Isa •tiMt M. _ iMtf srjA# W hi? i\ 'sat! S£Ure-8*.s-M; isTis: *5?**4 itoMsrd Mtora UM sa..,."KWS |«» oAoIct bTlftn mf lAIS-M SS. 2 fST Or"Ito *4 IW 7 7 . £?y^3-«Ss IstI The final quarter of 1961 warthe ftrst complete one for Love and ^ TWnsend is top corporate offl- • cers7 They took over after the * resignatton of L. L. (Tex) Colbert chairman and president last Nuly 27., _____ic ce Ik n H a aS‘®£s IS Sw “ Champion Founder Dies at 75 in Toledo IS90ITW: CIUI «• ekWAa^lAUlhtTr .-------------i VOk m. Est;.4* ti -5i- vs. ? s* r r==*6^i? 1 a* ?» w awtmp s« I.SI TOLEDO, Ohio (f) - Robert A. ' .Stranahan, founder and board chairman of the CTiampion Spark Pill*; Co., died today at his h The 7^year-oId Stranahan had *x;en 111 ip- aomeUme. Wenty^ine* ' 0 SPOB7TY CAB An early apring starter in automobile offerlngi Is the S5& which will be Introduced by Mercury next month. The will be an addition to the Monterey line aa a bucket seat! and diatlncUvo be available in mld-and twodoor hardtop feriordrlm. Tly urlU be available in mld-iareh In both conihrijUlM and S55 Entry in ^Bucket Briga^ie* Mercury Reveals Luxury Car A new and luxurioua blg^car en-y in the auto Industry’s "bucket itgade,'*, called the Mercury Monterey SSS, was announced today by Unqoln-Mercury DIvlalon. The HI TriU bo toeorporotod to the MoMeroy aeriea and wlU be available aext immlb la two body slyleoi-a esa ' tr hardtop. too two liew Monterey 855 linodria and the optionally equipped Comet Villager station wagon. ’W» have found a high acceptance from the car-buying public tor the aeatlng comfort and sporty appearance of the passenger oom-pariment in theae models,’’ said Ben. Dr MOla, Ford Motor Co. {vice pnaident and general man- The SS5 Is the third midmodel-year Mercury entry. For Its range of three sixes of cars. Mercury now has five sporty bucket seat models—the Comet S22. Meteor hger of the division. Business Notes A Pontiac man, Philip N. Mar-entay, haa been named'manager of the legal depirtmrnt of Detroit Automobile Inter-Insurance Exchange at Automobile Club of Michigan. Marentay, 62,1 ith hit wife. Florence, makesj home at 1050^ Lake Angelus' Front soata In the SSS can be Individually adjusted fore and aft Grain Futures Mart Still Moving Lower rL. !«i Stranahan wap a native of Buf-k falo. N.Y.. but a resident of Toledo 4 since lUO, whan he moved the vk Champion company here. CBICAOO UVMTOCa IS! «a Air« ass ^¥5 -^*. .. . . ^ .to ‘2 si'*' ' k aW4l 141 41 41^ < ^?Ss.ia 'iss»atS'g"^c.rs sSr SSrisBi 3 H? as |=-»r. «S»I i»i -e .....IS-,V1« -‘Pgsjj Survivors include sons Robert A. I Stranahan Jr., Champion preai-* dent, and Frank, a pratssrional A gradaato af Harvard 1 Sfodks Local IntTWst nniM •atr smimi pwnia uw aitoto KSe Vss U SvakSM PL MS 1 EtsTr 3 • party, was a SSrd I m mek tJS 47 SSrS? s Allied mpnMrkfti Atrogulp Corp- . aaMwto-l/^roit Ok UBVIOHOO ixrww. • • . ,ri FTdtrBl klorul-BoTW BMrtnii JJ.4 H«rvtr Aluminum !» • HOOTW a»n A B«»rln| JJ LTontrd R«nnln« .........ITS SUndArd i] ..TK iiK piid ^ndSr UokU* Boiiff ......U S EssiS^!itioi;i S:I tolto Oo. ...............n j 8 * HiSisliJlTS S5+' 2S^! M IS Mk MM ^... _______ Xopprn 1 1 41^ 41«i 4l(k . KarrrtU IS 4SH MH 41 - Esj-taf ii,- .*4§::s;iS5- H ii^tr I.IS M MAi im ISH. ESirp.Ws-:::::::,;; TruudODt*-- " 'n7 4W 1 S ___SMai ** M Ji cfTTo r» 1 >lfc 4 W' SISB?.£f' 5S riMsrx-ji oatM ara X4I a n< nwk-n>ik I.4S n w ,. coi« Pkiin i ito M ir Cotnl Cr4d I W rnmw Wd^lb 11 4JH ' s s 1 OB»--n Pw l.N • 74V. 7»v« 1 Treasury Position WAflaDfOTON (AP)—TIW OAih Uon of tb* Trnomin' •■■pkrkd vrth eorraipondlat daU k B.IAM. ............S MSS.V^41 . s...ii,«.,< ■•wol fiMAl yttr «.JS*.tlH ToUl dlkt ............lta,ig.W Gold Aouto .......... 17.4M.il •tkeludi* S4».fw.in.U 4MM a News Manager at Bell Made Information Officer DETTlOrr » - Don GilUurd, 32. news mana^r of Michigan Bril Telephone CO;, was promoted today to the poit of general lip formation officer of the c«n-pajiy. He succeeds Saihuel MCGool. who died Jan. 29. S v!g Sa^ u u>r ouui : 14 11^. tt a - H 4 a^ HV« ai4- K Slis^^iJTiJf^-m JiJJiJ “ px-i|ii nmtaT ^ ^ >S Tk^rU -i of this rekulta fngn needs toliowing expressway constructiom the company said. Slxty-aeveO mliea of new gaa maiiis wrill bo built. la the Aaa Aihor Otatriet Om, eompaagr wrig speNl glJNJ# la patthN l» 91 miles of new gas 17 mllM of malaa are to ho-hnOI at a oori ef 9M6,0N. The northern distri^s, including Mount Pleasant, GreenvUle-Beld' ing. I.udlngt< n. Big Rapida Cadi^ liic, Tiwveriie Ciety, Manistee and SnuU Ste. Marie, will recelvR He will work out of the BIooni-|im« uv' mJ 'tSl mi «ti$l,lft,5no in new coiiatruction livh '•*= fif ... ml ZVUi a;s*'riuding field Hills offices of the agency. '{5 J I 31 miles of mains. No. 1 for Steel Contract Job Security New Worry BerJ’s Barber ghop^ New loea-i tion, 417 E. Pike fJtw Feb. 14th. t 1^17% 17% ir%f M 5«iU7Si.a”j 14% igj }4^%JJ i.a ! 44% «% «' •' - 88 te Parke-Davis Suffers >26.7 Dip in Earnings ! !St » R!TC'~“ « s iar.*S!%. jSsS, Air t 5 tJH IT n KXW w OirMHiS. I i NwW AMSI .a 4 aonruT Ph to -B r% 1 Kvartoarp l.a l^H% 1 17115 S% I II5S5! t:i5l sSSi jS|! is5 4 Iff..a ^. 8- 1 S5 25 i ISdy^ciL a^ 25 25 I DEmiOIT W - Parke. Davis k Co. Thursday reported lp61 '^tifits of $22,326,327, equal to $1.50 ■hare. The pharmaceutical firm said this represented a 26.7 per cent drop from 1960 eaniinga of $30i-470,464, or $2.05 a ahan. But this year labor more and •more is putting at the top of its demands the security of tlto Job itself. ^ ■alea of $U4J94J« « s7Jp la^tokik stJart dn It Ovldwi ; t1(bu. :.S5 25i5JW*c „ jaftbMSiL^^^i^wter _____ %ayr Mitirx. Harry J. Loyne, president of Parke-Davis, ■ftrlbuted the reduced sales and protits to , a d-cline in chloron^rcetln sails volume in the domestic market and price reductipna by chlonunphenl-col producers abroad; productibn problems In , vlnu vaccine nianu-toobtiiog; cundney devaluatkm in | Brasil and Canada, dnd increasing costa of production and maiheting. It’s fine to get a higher hourly wage scale. But workers this year are asking! What good Is a high ' uly wage scale, if I am goliig b« laid otf-becauae of recessions, of automation, of mergers —or if the company is goiiig to cut down the number of hours 1 can Tvork and draw that higher pay? 8KCTRE JOB8 make theiriany price increase. Labor*! con-Mention is that mechanization had k already raised the output per B SAM DAWSON ‘ AP Busiaeas Newt Analyst N E.W YORK- Sava that Job! - _ 1962 if • the key rieel contract talks starting next week set the pattern as expectsd. In most of the postwar ysars the piimaiy stren has been on how much one should ba paid an hour tor work. In recant years there has been added a growing emphasis on all the fringe benefits — pensioiis, medical care, vacations—all translatable into dollars and cents both by man- recognized by the steel cont-panies. The debates during the contract talks won’t-be over the dealrability of this goal but over means of securing Jobs. Management’s stand is many of the union’s Trill raise operational costs ■ursly as would wage scale increases. Ttds could, they argue, more than eat up anything saved by mechanization. The r e ■ u 1 would be pressure for hlipier steel prices. And that is aomethlng whicti the' Kennedy hdmliiistratlon la using all ita infhioice te head off, if ponlble: $1.16 TO 6946 Management holds that the nioo’a emphaale on pay iBcreaae ■iiioa Worid War n hu raised Like the steel negotiations of the past — there have been six strikes since the wrar, rangtog from eight houn to 116 »day»— the one cqieniMg on VaSentlne Day la likely to be hoOy Thn companjes put today’s average* at $3.26 an hour. Som of the pay increases wiere tied in with the risihg cost living index. to take care proposals. of their securityi chances tor agreement seem better this year, however, st bo# sides stress there's a bettr atmo* sphere this time. <4 All labor, and all managementi> ill be watching. The steel negOiC tiatlons often net a pattern fop Other industries. ‘ And what they - can ivorfc ou|, I the way of securing Jobs i» a age when mechanical ad-: inoes increasingly let madiiiMa. 1 man’s wrork will bt of prim* Interest to all labor. Job security is a prohleid > means confined to the ste^ ills. It is an issue in more an«: more factoriea. It h becoming bi$ the steel union denies that its issue in some offtces as machine* do more >»ba. And even ih reta# •stores, the/ggrtQving 'emphasis (a£ tills Day. And the steel worketa curity and for more oonqidiaBap aiy set to ask aa this year’s thn If Aid off wrill htl(s the n' —----------------------------------.-1.^---..-------enough to ^ self-service or^on automated aerv. ice ia promlaing the iaaue uyi]^ service iBdiMllea thaw- / / . .*1. THIRTY THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 0. 1962 Jmt Be Relaxed Trying'TOO Hard Can idause Mistakes By S. KMMN. EDA ir«IE*M»ttoii. rMlMn CiUfc SometiRMf M doMn't pay to tiy TOO hud! Too much pancentratton. at at too Uttki. can' retuit hi cai^aatil errora. When ^our mindt are re> laxed and being toed completely, few carelM rort appear. ThK it true whether we are doing arithmetic or' writing a theme. DR. 7. a. a 1 7. for Medicare Secretary in Detroit on Political Trip, Predicts Social Security Tie-Up DETROIT m - Abraham RiU-cott aayt he it lure that Congreu will paia the propoaal to hitch medical care for the aged into Social Security. "IV Republicans are becoming faint-hearted — tome will vote tor It,” Ribicoff, aecretary of health, education and welfare, laid in a ■peech Thuraday. RiSksff laid that, if the King-Anderton bill geta through the Houae Way* and Meana Oommlt-, tee, "we’ll win." Democrat Harold M. Ryan in the l«th Congreadoaal DIatitct rampalKa, aought to dtapooo of oomplalntt that the aid to too . aged bin would extend to too lew people. Ribicoff laid that of 17 million peraona over 65 in the nation. Social Security covera ll million. . He aaid another 2 million are en- I titled to veterana beneflte. He aaid a "aubotantlal minority" .of phyalciana aupport the t ipite the oppoaitioa to the « _ure from the American Medical ’ 'Aaaodatlon. "I’m glad to ace doctori coming ° into the 20th century, or, rati ' into the ’60a,” Ribicoff aaid. Measles Cases Mushroom in City, County New caaea of meadea contiii to aproot laat month in the county and Pontiac ag the d roomed into < In Pontiac, 287 new caaea were reported in January aa compared to SO caaea in December 1961, and 20 caaea in January 1961. la Oakland Oonnty (ontalde of i) 477 caaea were repa ' nth. M7 la the uoath llie total! are containeddn the monthly communicable dfaeaae »> port laaued by the Oakland Goonty Health Department. Chicken pox and mumpaMwo oBier diaeaaea uaually atfeetiag children-ahowed the next htgbeat Incidence. Chicken pox in the county doubled Decemberli total of 121, with 294 new caaea reported lait month. There were 185 caaea in January 1961. In addition, the Pontiac count wai 81 O, 36. Incidence of munfjfiPwas iteady in the county laat month: 19to«aaei as compared with 209 caaea in December. There were 145 caaea reported in January 1961. The corresponding Pontiac count ia I complete and not Included county figure!, waa 3, 3, 133. * Infectioua hepatitis stood in the county at 96 oaaea last month, and , 35 the month before, as compared with 28 in January 1961. In Pontiac the correaponding figures are 6, 9, and 3. Scarlet lever cases were nbxt Ugheaf M the list. There were 14 - eases hi the eouaty In Jana It la December, 6 la Jaai n other communicable re: Impetigo (akin disease) 29; whooptog cough 16; pneumonia (all forma) 5) menln-gitia 3, mononucleosis 5; rheomatio tover S. Teachers' ^larie$ Average $5,898 LANSING (I) - An ahalyais of speodinf for pvUic . achoola in = durfiH the past fiscal year shows the average teacher’s aalaty waa $5JI8, the Stote Department of Public Instruction reported ‘nwraday. Miffcifn ranked fifth in the nation in average teacher pay. Total operational coats for achoola daring the year waa more the ymg was tMAM, t THE PONTIAC PBESS^ FRIPAY. t^BBUARY 9. m2 THIRTY ONE Sh# Not PoUy AAobri LEBANON, Oto » - W yMur^ Aiiiy bokedbyaiiol too ilowljr. Am tufiMd to her mother, Mrs. Dm CNngntefa ol umby ChHWe, to explain: '‘I’m Ml « Am eater, Moi^, i Jim aA Am leNk.” ■in Home at Laming Airport Tax Rdiet Bill dn Trouble Toxot Ropublicon Hlti JFK, Alb Tough lino ot Stoto GOP Dinnor KALAMAZOO w . Ne«1y LOBt (MMli ’OonMieM hOMtl tia. Mm Thmr, Brit el thOr paitjr LANSING ith-A bUl to grant Ux relief to private airport own-stlU aalUM In the Houw trattoo and can far a tougher Unt * * * The ooeastan was the ITIh annual Lincoln Day dinner of the Kalamaaoo Cbuily OOP organ- on gaooUne sold at private airports, provided their facilities were open to the ptfallr, frae of charge, far landing, taxiing and takh«off. SQUARE DAMIM SATURDAY NIRNT - - V ■ OXBOW UKE PAVILION MSI BHANIII Ult n. AT WMN un n. DANCI HALL OfIN TO ALL AGfS~l2 TO 70 Coll EM 3-9124 to . the *, Tower said: "We don’t need the love of others, but we do need "JOvuehchev lan’t worried about -At others tMnk of htan,” Tower added. "Let’a get tough —-whW he rattles the saber, rattle It xm hffh at him." a * should rooo0iiae a Chbrnl ■ moot In exUe and/than through that m taiy and tsehah ndel Castro. ^ downlan of "Gayott Spot on 0roadwa/* DATING RIDAY • SATURDAY NIGHTS g VERWOOD BAR 54 S. iroodwoy, Loko Orion A move to ground the mea irsday. would return the three- nm H,BOO to tLOli far a sli«le eraon. The ceUlig far a couple ould stay at »,90IL It would raise ceUlngs' on liquid aaaets from IL900 to $2^)0 far a single vmip» ond from S2.00Q to U300 a married qgu^, onnnuA % eorreet oohm of the, laeqtotlee. taeed by private awawre In thrir If private alritoris disappear, ^ovamments would have to replaoe tbom with public, tax-buUt fadtt-00. Gillie said. Rep. tenured G. BaaseU, R- 0^ In ^ I -Oeato a ion on roetoopoHtan areas. Tw oommiaaton, operating on a tS.-000 apprspriatfaii ita first y«er. that pbuld grant the refund on gaai^ sold at and used "w four miles of the airport." He tical amendment to an Impractical He opposed the measure, i Ing it would open doors to too ‘er tax conoesatons. The bUl received a measure of support from JanAs M. Ramsey, state aeronautics director, as the only workaMe oolutlan to date.Tt.wouM Ixint S30.000 a year, Rafn- W * ♦ Three Democrats fUed a bi Implement port of Gov. fiwalnaon's program far the aged. GOIis, Ed-waid H. leffries of DetroH and Taper B. Townsend of flint pro- ■ The RITZ KID: Featuring Bill Wiggins ■ Nnur PInyinf uf tfan J ■ RUz Cafe S ■ PriT, mi Spt. Ni|Mt S ■ 9 N. Snplnnw It. J&nnnMBi Atom Comes ‘ of Age--Helps Booze, Nags ^ Shrimp • Fr^ lAfs I' ■ FRANKfXmT, Ky. (01*1) -Atomic energy, according to Ms chief UA. guardian. Is woriilng to make this world a better pUoe for tanciera of fast horses and old whisky. Atomic Energy Commleaion Chairman Gleim T. Seaboeg told In a couple of areas "doee to Also. "The Internal Revenue technkpies to detect false age claims on Imported whhddes and ...................... is not a to oeunty haapMafa prior to 0 —Allow appointment of probation officers to' Jusdoee A the peace in townships and ettiea. (Whlnery.) grs under 14 from tks), apd minors from 14 to 17 wrtttan parental consent. (Rock- ~i-> (_______________^ . ^ Evtnii^ Dinners Steab • PicM SEA FOOD PLATE Food At Hi belt! Pumoau for Our Fish Dinners Frifhiy 5 to 10 pjo. ^%$|00 Can lat -R- Ctny Out Servicfr-C^n 682-3620 NOW - 3 BIG NIGHTS! OR 44022 e BhyfhsB lag an DrsM H.» CLUB TAHOE 4769 D.xic Hwv Drayton Plains COCKTAILS, BEER AND WINE ^ ^ CLOVER LEAF llVjV $ ..-ion Oa«'Lake Rm(LKmm Barber . .. % fi of Bormuda'i Income HAMILTON, Bermuda (DPI) -Tourism Is Barmuds’s most poriant Industry. R suppUes aiboui 70 per cent of the island's income. * * * There are no heavy industrial estabUehmenls here, only a few email boat building yarda. a perfume tactoiy and a rapidly devel- The government now Is c zinc Ugfat toduetiy on 0 end of the cofany. Now at Draytoa laa FLOYD RANA and his new group foamring lILL MURRAY on Fiono ond Orgon Visit the Drayton Tnh for Our Special Luncheon Plates an4 Evening Dinners I COCKTAN. IaR and | PtWtWO ROOM I NEW DRAYTON INN Dell’s Inn Vs 4xB AD Hr Hywand Sonded...............$2-76 %4xl AD Hr Plywood Sanded................:**2 %4xBAOFbPlywoodSonded.................... 4.B9 %4r8 AD Fir Plywood Sanded..^............ 5.65 ^ 4>i8 AD Fb Plywood Sonded.............. 6.63 % 4x8 BirebPlywood... ....--•••• 1 < ’5 Vr 4x8 Mohopony V Groove ................ 4.29 4x8 Prefiniehod MoheponyTlrtt OualHy... 5.95 OVER 20 PATTIRNS OF OICORATIVE PLYWOODS 4x8 % CD Plyicoro 9Vi.................... F0LBM8 ■M'^l U:)\ CLOSrDOOHSETS OpefibifR le'4i“ wlde-Prie# i«-clvdft 4 flvih deer* 1%** and tfock end oecatMiy herdwar*. Oponingt te4i".. $19.95 Opoflingi to 60".. $21.95 .. Opoflinge fo 72",. $23.95 - ieioM-..$26.95 to96‘'..$29.8S OpMljpgs OpMino* LOUVRI DOORS ALSOAVAHABLf SLIOHTLYgfOHER Adiuitablo Ba^omont JACK POSTS R.. ><2r5 $595 CLEM WHITE HlB MOLOINGS ....................^ 11/t«s3to Steel.... toxmT4>.Step....B. toxl%T.O.Slap. toxtoCewMeld 11/16x1% Cove Mold Un-H. Lie. H. 3c IbkH-lOe ................ lbi.Ft. 9e ...................Un.Ft. 3He Lin. Ft. 3%e . .........................lIii.Ft. 7e ewmorMOMtrfciAi NEW StORE HOURS Soturda/e-B A.M. to 8 P-M. SUNDAY«-10 A.M. »o 2 P-AA-. AAondoy'e-8 duM. to 8 P.M. Tuos., Wod., Thure^Tri. 8 A.M. 10 6 P.M. WE DEOV^I-TEMiS Gradg A Mahogany Doon INTERIOR MNmS REG. 2«ts6'8’'-l ..................59’5 2'2"x6 8"-t1H........................57.45 2'4’’x6'e'-l 57.55 2'6"x6'8’’-l%.................... 57,75 2'8"x6'8"-lH....................... 57.95 2'2-x6'8"-l%........................ 57.95 ........................... . $7.95 SPECIAL $545 S5.75 S5-95 S6.25 $6.45 $6.95 $7.25. PLASTER BOARD ■v NATIONAL OrKUM CO. (10 PIECES er MORI) 4xO-y4PERSHtr......... ..... 4xflrW PER sheet . .........S .45 4«e-iyPERSHEET........ $145 16x40 ROCK LATH ............ 90j 25-lb. JOINT CEMENT.........52.45 Our Row Coilng Tile Center A New 10x12 CEILiNG ?10“ AAabYour Selocfion Now I Sbert Rtodi Weot ■! %^l WWa ^ aa wm 1^ ■MMfwMUm il IwlBII ^ ■( ■ 4i4i9htR NOW APPEARING ‘‘The CUTAWAYS” , FEATUNINO ERNIE CRAIG Rtfcki* Doo^lei—Roy Scolf— • family dinners SPECIAL SPAONITTI. AU YOU CAN lAT...............$1 riSM *N' CHIPS. AU YOU CAN lAT fie 21 SHRIMP IH A 8ASKIT................$1-25 PIRCH OINNIR ONtV.^................... fOe TRY Our MicidiM f IZZA Takt-OetServica ea AR Biaoero ead leedwtebeo Boor and Wine to Toko Out! FORTINO-BliicMAR BAR • restaurant «4-«l W. HxrM n }-944< FI 2422* PASaVALE’S Reotauranl and Bar LAKE ORION, MICH. NOW SERVING Fineft llquorR, B—rt, WhwR Lunckoong Irom 11 A.M. KMcheaC|aoe4 Doily 1.30 A M. Sprrialhiitf hi Spafhrlli. Hear Lively-Peppy COUNTRY HOE-DOWN MODERR WESTERI end HILLBILLY MUSIC WENDELL SMITH aM Hit Baai FridaySalurday 9 2 AM, . "DO-SE-DO" Spadafore Bar 8 N. Coee (Ceraor of Huroa) ^TSsTlapeer Road J MY 3-1421 "^mS^ AIRWAY LOUNGE ☆ Entertainment Monday Thn Satniday ☆ 4825 mghland Road (M-59) 674-0426 Soaday Spfieial ^ Iu-I4im« h SPARE- 8 Tine Appetizing Food “VILLA INN” 1 MW SmNi Gf Idw Oriaa an M-M ■» CtarliriM Id. BUSINESS MAN’S LUNCH Supper Chb DINING In the Evening Ckef *'JUUUS'* Serves the Finest tlpln 11:80 to 2:80 AJi^—Cloged Mogday ' PIiom: MY. l-eifS _____/ f AM. le 2 Abl Saa4er 2 P4$. H I AM U Ptoary af Free Paridag fuse n. Perry M Paatioc Rd. \ FE 3-9732 •I Fi 5-9941 I ; njiK'rv-Two /IHB PONTIAC PRESS, FRtjDAY. FEBRUARY 0, 1962 Sheriff's Depf. Promote 5, dds fo Uniform Division Sherllf FralRk W. Irons today announced the promotion of five officers and an increase in the ranks oftlM unlfo^ division within the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department. The staff increase, Irons «aid, givee the uniform division a total of 69 men an{I'*‘ allows the addition of an extra team of detectives. * e * Promoted. to detective wer« Fred Piender, 31, formerly ■ Mr-RMoUin the uniform diviiion, and Raymond Bills; 3S, a former dep- ar piMtw«i APre» RiSSCirK - Aclress Ja>ne Mansfield U helped to the dock Thuraday at Nassau, Bahamas, by her husband Mickey JHarfttay after their rescue from Rose Island. The couple spent Wednea^ night, along with publicist Jack Orury, on a tiny coral rock aioll afte;r their sp^hoat overtumetT The three then swam a short distance Thursday monting t^ a hepch on hoae Island where they were spotted by a Coast Guard plane.' Miu Mansfield was hospitalized for treatment for shock and exposure. Middle Position Proves Fatal One hr Brown Horse INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP) — Velmer Hend|^ 47. FVdaomvlUe. saw two white horses galloping down a highway~near here early Thursday and decided his truck could pass between them. ♦ » A ' Tbo late he saw the white horses weren't alone—his truck hit and kiUed a brown horse In the middle. Hendrix, unhurt, reported about $1,000 damage to his truck. Hospital Releases SirCedric.toRest HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Sir Cedric Hardwicke has been released (com Cedars of Lebanon Hospital after five days of treatment for a respiratory ailment. ★ ★ a A spokesman said the British-born actor was much improved, buttwould rest at home for a lew days. a a a Cedric, 08, was taken to the hospital in an ambulance last Saturday night. He t Thursday night/ TRECO GULBRANSEN ORGANS To HbocI Housing Body DETTROrf un-James H. Queilo, general manager of radio station WJR, was elected president of the Detroit Housing Commission Thurs- Dite os Cor Hits Tree GARDEN OTY UR - Roger 0. Kellogg, 25, of Garden City, killed Thursday when'hls car skidded off a Nankin Township road and hit a tree. Hoyt, 22, 275 HUl St., MUlord; Edward W. nihart, 22,„1121 Hadley Road, Brandon Township; Robert L. Ferree, 26, 43C Fowler St., Waterford Township; and James ' Pratt, 26, SIS Romeo Rochester. PRNDRR Blue Pender, 2720 Oorlad Roi^, Orion Township, joined the detriment in 1854 and Bills, 1581 Oxford Road, Berkley, became a deputy the following year. Their promotloas new the department four S-maa ti pf deteettvep far erimtaa) i ttgatton work, saU lieas. The position vacated by Pender allowed Irons to promote James Stltes, 37, 1484 Ora Ro(^ Oxford Township, from relief sergeant to uniform sergeant,. w ♦ ★ Named as a new relief ser-mnt was former deputy Med-ward Tessler, 29, 1520 Beverly Blvd., Walled Lake. EVANS The new hirings also allowed the sheriff to promote former deputy Laonard Evans, 43. 1114 Lyons Road, Royal Oak, to the i position ot court service officer In the civil diylskm. New depotlps are Robert L. Withdraws Local Plans ioP College Hie Pontiac Board of Education last night withdrew its plans (or a locally built and financed com-l|munity coHege in favor of the Oakland County Board of Education plan — at least until June. At that time, said Dr. Dana P. Whitmer, If legislation tor a coun-E-baied system (alls to 'Crashed Lett at Gate With Car Trouble NEW YORK (AP) - Stan Ber-kan, the Brooklyn cabbie who labels ,hlmself thf world’s greatest gate crasher, says trouble with his car caused him to call off his trip to Washington .to a world movie premiere. A f W Earlicr^is lyeek, perman said he would gpr to see the first show-ingi fven 'though attefidance was by invitation only. Thunday night Berman said he id “trouble with the car” day and found it was too late to take a' plane. He said he was told the party after the show would only be tywide-tax-pass the Michigan Legislature, the Pontiap SchoM District will take another look at alternate ways of establishing a eommunity college in the immediata area., As expeeted, the PanHae board ’^la Its statement .of peHey leat dm bat B of the Plnnar or TV Snack*! Aho *arvsd in our Cofteo Shop dr Curb Sarvlea! OpAii Daily 8 A. M. to 1 A. Mr FROSTOr DRIVE-IN n*4«i 3111 W. HMfoii Hoot ElixoboHi Uka M. ■‘III. 'in. '/// •//// I'll 'III. '//-V ■I'll. -.nil. il/l Wofxlword Just* NerHi of 14 Milo ; MRMINGHAM Ml 4-272/ AnnivarMriaa—rlirriiOoyt (oil ofoo) 1961, he concluded. Stoto's Minorols Up LANSING «R — Michigan's mineral production jumped to a record $435 million last year, according to a preliminary estimate of federal and state agencia. Iron ore was ranked first among the minerals despite a $12 million drop in shipmenU. Cement, petroleum, and sand and gravel follows. /ZZ3KEEGO tKIRK OOUOUIS^ WITHOilT PITY Formor Exocutive Dios INDIANAPOLIS. Ind. (AP) -Alfred L. Hammell, T2, retired presid^hb- and chairman of The board ot rthe ‘Railway Eiqiress Agency, diod Thursday. NOW! SATURDAY--6VVL SHOWSTARTS10 P.M, I. STARTS*-. TO-MIGHT 'EXCLUSIVE FIRST SHOWIHfi I OPEN 6:30 P.M. SHOW STARTS 7 P.M. PROGRAM INFORMATION FE 2-1000 S. Toiooiapk at SqtMsra Loka Rood ta-iWi For Your Comfort ELECTRIC IN-CAR HEATERS FREE! irSANEW LEASE ON LAUGHTER WITH THE MERRIEST MIXINGS SINCE GIRLS DISCOVERED BOYS!!! —-Ntrn:— This is tho piettiro wo provitwtd on New Years Eye and it was proclaimed WELL TO WALL WOW! many luscious babes is a bachebr entitl^ accumulate^ mm RICHARD .... ... m-ilEyiRTIIOHSMi •ALSO. NASA, Army, AF 'Why Nof Go to Moon Together?' THK^PONTIAC PRKSS, li^RIDAY. F^BRUARV tt, 1Q62 THIRTY THREt; IXM ANGXLE8 Atr Foret bmbN. operaUnc htrt at tht re-marlnblt Aatnapaot fl|yitefn« Di-vlalon, widi It v«ry plain that ttwy ara act really oppoaed agag In gpaoa. Thor Umply teal that at laaat ' " e( the many aboHld ba.itvea to the taafes aa Hit aaoB tirigM ba a 7M* aplt la lavaa altta Na- eaaaa at paMag AmariealH ThefO. "In alx or eight yean NASA'i going to aand an astronaut to the moon a^ bring him-apace engineer aald to . poaelble that he will be able to report that the moon la wortbleaa except aa an ornament In ~ The Air Force haa nothing jalpst the Saturn, the lAatory KO-ntilUon (plua) booater that will be ttaed in piellininaiy moon probea, nor ia it openly oppoaad to the development of the Nova, ^^>ich will aland two-thirda aa tall It thlnka M would be Utfiidtely cheaper and wieer for the ao-caOed "peace" apace angineen to work with the "wgr” labeled feenf and produce a amaller, cheaper there Is an enoinnous military advantage to be gained by establishing a base there before the Russians do. preferably one with "turn around’ Dischinger, Nelson Challenge Hoosier CHICAGO If) - With the acorli« pace at Indlaaa’a Jimmy Rayl slipping, Purdue’s Terry Diachln-ger and lowa’e Don Nelaon have moved up to make a three-way battle tor the Big Ten basketball Rayl, after hittlq__________________ record^of » points agalMi Minne-sota, dropped to H against Northwestern and then to It last weak against niiiiols. His average, according to Big Ten autisdes today, haa skidded to tl.t. WWW Less than SH points now separate the three leaulers. Diachin-ger, striving for his third straight to 29.0 and Nelaon boosted his to 28.2. Jerry/ Lucas of Ohio State jumped from fifth to fourth place with 234 ahead of Minneaot Eric Magdanx, who dropped 22.0. Only other 20-polnters are Dave Downey of Illinois with 21.7 i teammate BHl Small wlth^30.3. "In that case, there wot^ be a Mg costly crash program to get the military there with the moat-aat. The military program would have to start from scratch, and It would take years to nuke It a good oporatioo. 'Why goat we ga la the togciherr What's Wiaem hsvliw a mniaiy maa or a vay-agarfam- -- - la apace were Red air brae pllatsi*’ Work oOnllnues hero on Dyno-joar, the manned, nuneuyerable, stubby-winged spacecraft which one day will be Mt in orMt carrying The Bomb. It will stay thera on patrol, able to go to any target on earth at 17,900 m.p.h. W W A MfRIehardM I, bat no aae ah-e blo apeabR^ jp Antale- “How l9ng do you think a commercial airline company would last if ht the end of every flight from Loa Angeles to New York it threw the Boeing 707 Into the "LeCa pool ear tUakt^ Ton can be psatty eartaln the |tas- CensusolSkiers to Be Made Sunday COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. » —An attempt will be nuule Sunday to take a census of sU^ the National 8U Assodatioo INSA) said today. Chriton Leonard, NSA execu-ve director, eaid it is estimated there are three to four million persons wl.o own their own equipment and ski from four to six times a year. However, no accurate count is available. I United States will make a of lift ticket buyers, the number of Mfrtickel buying sMcrs as weU aa a total esBmate of the number flung at a proper angle, an like a conventhnial aircraft. Theoretically, at least, such a space craft would be ready to be shot back into orMt within a mr‘ uer of hours. Fire Destroys Grain Elevator 3-Alarm Blaze Cpyts State Firm Estimated $250,000 in Damage SAGINAW » — A threealarm fire destrqpad an rievator building of the Fiutchey Bean Oo. eaUmated at 9290,000. Nearly 100 ftownen battled the .lass for two hours before bringing it under control shortly after 11 p.ra. TVrd firemen suffered minor injuries, but did not require ___________ _____ thi^tened for a time. But the fire was confined to the block-long Frutchey build-iig;, a sheet metal stnicture. * ♦ * Approximately 20.000 bushels of alfalfa and clover seed in six sUos attached to ruined. The company’s brick office building only 30 feet from the elevator buUdiiv was not damaged. A Frutchey spokesman said the ruinsd elevator was a secondary plant used to handle overflow from the company’s main elector. ’The firm has approximately a score of etovators throughout the Saginaw Valley and the Tliumb area. company’s sixtl Pittsburgh 5 ^ck in First R«ns Post 129-113 Win Ovwr Nfw York In ABU Saints Toppltd ■y The Aseedated Prase The Pittsburgh Hens have been boundng in and out of first place all seaaon in the Eastern DIvislan of the American Basketball League. At the moment they are in again. W ★ * They regained the top Tlwreday night with a ISO-IU victory over tha New Yoik ’Tspen after Sainta 129-119, Tha games were played aa a douUe-beader betoiu 2,917 at Pittsburgh’s avle Arena. They were the only CUB SDpUr AST - Everything from a mechanical man mlule 'from tin cans ti sword, shield and armor oonstructad of cardboard ie visible in the window of this vacant stoiR at 95 N. Sagliiaw St- Tlw display, 'calling attention to the current obaervance of Boy Scout Week, lepresqpts pnjecta uhdertaken during the past year by Cub Scout Pack 25, sponsored by the Longfellow School Parenl-Teacheni Association. The window diqday was put up by Mr. and Mrs. William Moody, 42 Ni Marshall St*, and Harold McCrae, 841 E. Pike St., bdult leadera ofPadi25. Ordinary Flu in January Some *B* Virus in State 'Mtrhipn today was listed among 'ight states which for ' Ime this wsric reported of "Type B" Influensa. Howeevr, so far flu casos In Oakland County-whlch totaled a reported 26 in January—have not been identified aa “’Type B.” This particular vlnis haa been expects rcadi a peak incldhnea season aa it reaches a high in its lour to alxycar cycle. AV EFIDEMIO ’The U.S. PuNlc Health Servlbe today termed the Type B flu outbreak an epidemic and said it "conthittea a progressiva spread through the north and ndrihsast sections of the country." * A A Hie eight states UsUng Type B ils week were Michigan, Idaho, liisimippl. Connecticut, Maine, Rhode Mand, l^iginia and Weat In Boyne' City, t diools were cloeed i to avert a poaaible flu epidemic. .ROSS HUi[ER~>.._.XSEm FIOS'^ R0DGERS«,HAMMERSrEIN9* FL()io/e^ DKUM SONG STARTS TODAYI JAMESSHI6ETA MnilMEKI A SUCCESS ON BROAOWAY-A SENSATION ON TIIe SCREEN! BMIlftltM In the state, outbreaks havt been reported this week in Muskegon and Boyne City. C of flu abo were notM at Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., and Burks Falls, Ont. DaUand Cmmitfa M < from Oxford Township, < Nqvl, ona from tode; the department ia keaplag both eyas open to dotoct early any avldence of the Type B Wednesday . The total public school enroUment is 1,216. An epidemic of flu ^ struck more than 290 pupils in Burks Fslts, Ont., this wedL The outbreak closed schools and torced a ban on all public meeting In the 900-popiilatlon community. In Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.. an towMMps also wera Xtruck. uf OAHLAND oouimr In Oakland Cbunty, 16 of January’s reported qases came from Oak Park publiO achoolt, seven Cbnnie Hawklne flipped in 17 fieid goals and I of 11 free throwe for 43 poinu td^ apark the Rene to dwir aas> Tapers. The l nmnermp Chicago by .474 to .412, wan ahead hy 34 points at one time in the tfairil quarter. Led hy Dick Banwtt. who scored 43 polnta. Cleveland came from behind a 9M halMiiia daf-idt to whip tha Sainta. The defeat cut San Frandaoo’a lead In tha Western DIvtaioo to H game over Kamaa City. Jim Franda waa high lor tha Saints with 24 points. tlflsd in outbreaks in Oregon, Chlo-rndo. CaUfornia. Arisons, Misaonri and Florida, a In moat U.S. cases school chil-_ren were repogted the major victims. TiWTi^B virus. like other viruses, occurs in cydies. Psst experiencs has taught doc-ton thas "B" atrikea hard every ■) led the nation’s thonnghbrsd trainers in 1961. He had 170 win-the firot 11 AUDREY HEPBURN as HOLLYGOLIGHTLY...the most hilarious heroine who ever rumpled the pages of a )jest seller...is serving wild oats and wonderful fun in TONITE SAT. and SUN. 1:00 3 07 5 14 at 7:20 and 9:20 Fellow bowlers challei«ed Mm Wednesday to bowl 90 gamaa In 13 hours and keep an average are of 180. Seven hours and ,90 mbmtea Iter — 12:39 e.m. iC8T) today —Brothers knocked down Ms ie.853rd, pin. He had bowtad 80 games with an average score of .. 167. ' Brothers, 21, is manager of a local bowling center. • t Danish Boxer Awarded Title While 'Out' Kegler Rolls hr 187 Ay;ergge in 90 Games PELL ClW. Ala. (AP) - Paul Brothers is a pooped bowlar hut he's not one to let a challengs go . ISB^ DminarK — OwiNU4n IR. (BiccormaeK dlMniAilfVM BnglMhd OwM Aldi "llSv^^Sblhww Ji«wi. '(•1 jubiD. puianiiii«i. (. 'ImSiTOK. (MU, - J*M Lute awnl- ir sri/iiy.r Appointsd as Counoel WASHINGTCW « - Sen. Pat McNamara, D-Mich., announced ’Tfauridey tlie appolntroent of Jack Moakowltz, H e Hasel Perk, Mich, lawyer, aa counael to the Senate spe^ committee on a|Mg. Death Notices wTia Or. lUMm »wk Atetotte tag tltla while unconacioua end out of the ring, woke up with the chnmpionaMp and very likely a awarded the title ’Thuradajrnight defending c^pkm John McOorinack of Soodand wea dta-quallflad in the fourth round for htttim Christenaen wrhen be was German referee Rudolf Drust aald he dtaquallfied the 37-yusr old Scot because he rushed to the attack while Christensen’s gloves still touching the floor hic said he would not file A The return match will dec! the thing,’’ he eaid. Ferree Takes Lead in Panama Tourney PANAMA (AP) bn Ferree, a Mta of Gary Player .jneriean pro golf dreu to be determined to copy the little South African’s winning hsMta. A A * Fence, ngiatering from CkyeMl Rlvsr, Fla., twned a blaxfaig putter Into the first round lead In tha 110,000 Panama Open Hiuraday. Ibur Mrdlee on tha leoond nine gave the North Otrolinlan a 5un-darpar 67 and a twRvstroke lead. AAA Right Itahind Ferree, heading into today’s second round of the 73-holo tournament that opens the flvc<-stop Caribbean tour, were (toorge Knudson of Canada and Americans At Olberger, Don Whitt, Jacky Cuplt and Oorge Lewis, all at 69. Tournar tovorita Doug Sanders was other stroke back at TO in the brocket with Billy Maxwell of Dallas, who won the banns |R for the best overall per-inoe on the Caribbean tour last year. lakeland Players to Stage 'Crucible' Lakeland Players will present its second production of the 1961-62 1 ^b. 23 and 24 in the Oont- tord Totroshlp- crlth tha ataging "The Criic^" by Arthur "The CrociMe’’ ia a drama of the Salem witch purge of 1692. staging will be utilized along with unusual lighting and propA. (Xuv* iln time will be 9 pjn. , The play, is being directed by ^Mrs. Robert Rickard aiM pr ducad by Mrs. Harry Crigger. Bills Sign 2 Playen, ban l4|gue signed defensive sA^ Jimi^Webstei^ and 360-poUhd de-tonslve tackle Roger Kromm- yoa-terday. Both played with Grand Rapids in the United Football League last season. * A. Webster played college ball at Marquette and Kramer at 1^- ___lore a**, nsteoie " Jr. bffMUae. talwMit ta * t . saiu-v---------- w Lovnra loiAMi arnwo-Mr* Nbteoe vbo pMMd emr Yo^s^b*^ terfoUM. Mtacr. Aauauwcamii^_____I ''are debts WORRYING YOU? (MMiBtSsMwsptaam -W iliafw tor tadsn saahrUs. . COUNCEI.LORS niSfjgaw AVAIL-- „teiiwr ro »«isr ARE YbU WORRIED OVER DEBTS? xwsoudat; aUl AND un tn qiVBYQU BljD*G§f*SERVIC£ I w. ironoN.. n a-shi PAY OFF YQUR BILLS WmtOUT A LOAUt . ---- D. E. Pursley Grady Wallace holds tht South ChroUna one^iame scoring record -S4 potafa agalnat Ctoorgla in' Donelson-Johns ruNsaAL wWta , _ ■ "Dtliiite lor r»>i«r»te"_ HUNTOON roNxaAL A ■ -I THIRTYFOUn iuE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, FEBRUABY^Q, 1902 Voorhees-Siple 4Mp«l [■ tram nAari^iMtami 1 mmooy dslvxi CiMiliry UH ■ •AVTIPOL lot. psrrt timmt pArtt OSM*!?. CM- «v» >» M-------- Child Welfare Worker Mri*M«d lo *ool>l wo^ SaUrr ‘fl.tw . M.M0 d*p«nai» apoa SrrwixJaiSf J5SCS3 wtui i««l»l ■Murtty. A rHaait of qaalineatUiM aM npartaitoa ihpi^ ka Mat la PoaUaa Ptaaa, KacHBaETI----------— WliSfo_____________ BvlMlv0 Itoblai klAla y ALL Wm.'eleeo BOX BXrUBS M M AJik Tp^ m wm rapUea at n» Pn ’ CXPERnCNCBD. ^ ■jaM lor^M^ IS XL MAEU OP FOCNTAtt PSltA rapalrad by laatory tnj^ ■an at oar onioa. Oaaaral Pr1iraa( A tutcnuc MOTOB. «P>% ~~~ iar»5f: ^aW iMUwtpIl I Tmw , aaad. MI l-IWI. lost—LAonr tam wallpt oi 'So. ContalBi ID c*— ■—•«• oil i-iin ■ : i MALC OeAOLE arhIU and Un. ra----- n and ABbam. ^ a-litl. Plaaaa foWra to TWCA ' 1 LOST ORATHirAL FILINO CAB-inrt. porMbla conUIntof W DfU and parwnal paper., VlcUittT Dine anr Wallon area. Plaaaa ratum. pe^uaat^a aakM^ M* 'i LADIM. JS OR OV*R. IIAR1b13C ' potntmanU by talapbona. «M "** mUaioB. I a m. lo • p.m.. fii'iiTOS k;; a »1 ba< kl Tofaater ACCOOKTAWTS-AT ohc* who r,ij*^Sr/s ssr‘3i.5Jf‘Hrh Block Oo.. “ “ ------ tSL’ay.’ adueatloB. 1 yaart aarltabboart ■ aiparleanaa amh a mlnlmam m . ;n.V*3rt,*‘AnSra-a*aS'**S: bait Haroa. XSTATB two refill aldar tralnlnt rl|M woman. Old R<^^W>. FB PAIlb. Atk far Mr. BOOKIXBPINO. ALL TAXI* BM HtU _______««3-l«M ^iwwIJhI * TBHwtof 17 DRBBSMAXINO. TAIM)1WII0 A1^ j taraUona, Mra, BodaU. PB 4-WM. ^ BBMMINO and ALflaii raaaonabla, PB mit. IKMM Tax SarviM 'rooms ard bath, PR^Ata rooms. coMpurrsLy pVIl .f^Ml^ - traahly daaar^ -^Saat lanflaliad -aaparatad badrooma — lasadry (aalUtlaa - ablldran dralaoma — aobool.Baar. '* SLATER'S I PB*4."lM*WUlhta*"pB 4A1I7 I A-ROOM TBRRACB. FpLL BASB-maat. Mt par month. Baiaman Raalty. Aak for Tom lauaian. PON-TB. CIRTRl. AIR-CORDI. • ■ aalt. IIU mo RoUa iMt IwIhsm Pwf trly 47-A a ROOMS. NBWLT dbc-nawfy Rimlahed. Under r man^amant. Apply Apt. T, $60 A MONTH laHHIrRriiia Thaaa Bomaa Are por RENT >d County branch will tr&. »lTa r ^•-r immaSIala'’ jKS iir^’iirS REGISTERED CHIEF MEDICAL RECORD LIBRARIAN Immadlala oponinp. Ml bad. IJUy approaad tanaral aolantary baa-pKal. Hall*ataffad Dep t wife can. fral dictatint aqalpaiaBt. Kfo«;i; «s.'"t5r«a*i. O- lant frtafa banatlU...Balari, opan. ^IK'/raTSS. SSf&.a'^w': Huron.__________________ SAITRBSS POR BVBRIRO work, fan tlma. sm Dlila I^y.. Drayton Plalna. Apply OTMiinta. LONO PORM TTPBO IH T 6 V It homo, M. PB AOIM. , ' rSXBS DOMETT BSTABUSHift . loaal acaonntaaU. RaaaoMbla paalrriirv."' Wm. MM W. Parry. CwwIwcsilt-MHriliif >1 i “AS SSm^ASoalR^’Sai; i Bhopplni' Canter. Heat and all utllltla. TumUhed. MS. Call WaM X. Partrldaa, lOM W. Baron. PB "L.."5f^“a38: A-1 MOTINO SBRyiCB. RBASOH- i able rataa. PB.HtM, PB SMSS. a aatraneai, taraia. tf Shari- ‘ COLORBD-I ROOMS _________PB AStsa_________ LABBraORB APARTMENTS I rooi^ and bath pear Pontiac. '■ - m.. tit weak. BM I-tlM. mt aotuiei. all utlllUaa. $11 wk. -up. Tru-Ruatlc Cablna. 4M S. Broadway. Lk. Orion. MT 1-**M pla. over M lor SsSLaV'M b."cRuETT - "THB -TR1;C0PNTT DRIVERS. lioyiNo txpwltoia nrceaaary. Muat ha abla to ba bonded. Apply between 1 and I P. M. at lllV^. Taleiraph. DIRECT SALESMAN fraaiar man prafarrad. < Cfara naadad at once. lOMAN____ ______.-,uMwJ. iSoo”i*MMJ WOMAN WITH TOOitO OSCB for UIM «M»aawwk Cara «• 1 child. Uaa In. Xn-OttS. iOMAN POR ORNBRAL OI. work. Muat Ilka deUllad clerical work. T^ln« required. WrlU Pontiac Pre.a. Boa ISl. Mallllcd a«a, education, — A P P > y amf family aUtua. '«&aw':s Rad SUmpa alyan on aU local moaing. Double atempa on Wad. Ry.°n°d“‘?to?S:°ig'‘r!Si‘M“"' yiihH|B| > PBCBwtlag IS AAA PAiirmia and oi^ra'd Ini M yaara aip. ftaa aA i tlmaui Phone PL HIM. liiT CLASS PAINTINO AND Pi^ , ja^ banging. Thomi----- *• ■ ORIPPI^ArOTHBRS. iHTKiuoti TooZ ?a°b?n«PB"A»r."' Rii?ATir“-------------- APARTMENTS — ONE BAST one waat aMa, ~ AW34 3 Bedrooms Carpeted Living Room and Hall La^ Walk'in aoseti Formica Cabinets Family-Siied Kitchen ALSO Full Basement Models Oak Floors Vanity in Bath 3 Bedrooms 965 Carlisle Wa hnaa aim *'-"- yarloua parta ' 6pEN daily 11 to 8 ■pon^^ CdLdREO-SOOTk boplbtaro !LS’j“«arisK Arallabla ioon, B. B. S Bulldara ^ \SAIZ DRIVER ROPTB BALBSMBN. AN . Oooda. Routao now ayallabto m . the PonUao aren. Opportunity t~ ' earn oyar SMS por work. In eoa ----—. w.—aatlo^agd^l iffdrtVoWUT-".' OOMMBRCI^BANK TBLLBM: COLORED Prtv. ntoik Inyarncaa. PB AS7t». V_/V^J_I V_/i II 11 ✓ ROOMS AND BATH. REPRIQ-arator and atoaa fum. FB SD644. ROOMA AND BATH. I lumlahad. PB' MISS. 4 HOOMB, BATH UPPER. BTOVB and refrIg. Oaraga. PB ASS03. . “ 4.ROOM UPPER /LAT. BBBPON- ‘ -"■la party. SSS month. Bbara nf“- Itb hatha, kitehon wHh ImllWn oaan and ranga. fnU wall langm glaaa doora taadlng to patio, fill batamant. gaa beat. (RylU^ tiWuir"**- *“ MACHINE OR TOOL DESIGNERS Blood Donors Needed FE 4-9947 S am to S p.m. Tnoi., aaao., i Thura Detroit Blood Baryteo. I* , B. Caaa. ________________ (AH OR WOMAN WITH CAR full or PART TIMB --------- elSa ri»n to aoU lighted 1 dtoan-ilonal^raUgloaa plcturaa. PubUo aoccptai;ca proran by manufoc-Uiiwr. Wrlta to Box M. Pontlae Praaa. ____________a dlmaoatonal rallgtoua picturn. Publle aeoopUnoo proran by mnnufactufor. Wrlto to Box II. Pontiac Praia. ■iilsyHWBt Afliid EVELYN EDWARDS couN'^i»S“mcB" •u HnawB SuiM Phone FE 4-0584 4 BNOINE AIRLINER. NON-STOP tRANSPORTATION T O HBAntt). OR S-UtS I UPPER. PKIVATf ihf-I, 3 blocka from downtown, •firf hn> araur fum. Rofar-Rolfa H. eaWD CARS W HOUB BT DAT Huron St. rtl S-04S4. DAY CARB FOR SUALL C*EED in Bcanaad bOma. BM »■»»-,,-DAT CARS. UCBNiBD BOMt. fi S.*S*aSnbla M illZAfiltH LABk. s BEblilSSS; : aun porch. laraxo. OA AM4T. BXBCUTIVB TTPB BBICK ML-room laktfnnt tarraea. RafriS. and atora. oall Dotrott UN 3SSU. FOR COLORED Brand Ntw tnneb bnma. 1 bad-rooma. full baaomont. _ _ 131 WILLARD________PB »-MSt JOANOAY - ««L-gaa boat, carport, $W. Ab-R« OA L131S.__________________ JEPPERBON TiUrRACB “ L~Kii“Jaft.?a:srs!: SECRETARY 1 CALL «LL» ALL. MOM CAAH ES&.9 KC”U .... Huron, PB 4S3S4 or PB 3^4M after I p.m. -------AMAbu n rboina and bath in wall heated building, wttbln walking dlatonet of dcwntdwn and all bua eon-neetlona. Alao cToaa lo aeboola dr.r^tSd^''*(U“n5i;5s.s“ fS!i“ dron pormlUod. Fine laundry fa-clllUaa. S4S per month. K. O. -----.... R.»itor, 103 - -- a Townahip to laryteo era. age 34-41, ckr naeaaabi,. Need $120-$150 Weekly If worklnf lOOftUOIIa 1 W —-- -----------n|Uym^ iBStrwctlsBS $ch—b ^ «c?S. i.5“ft'SL“?4i _Z!si two opni routes tni _____ A^mbittoui. dtpendeble __ . high laaal. Mpit ba marrli to 41. and baaa a dt^t to ... -cuatomara faithfully. High aebool adueaUon and car required. 41U J.’STiSi ftSfAi>XR bi aooabit ntaa. 1 parlay. BM 3-OT. ALTERATION LADY Bloomfield Fashion Shop rnttatmemm .M, Afcdom> i»4ir rMSgwMt wi*. Ufu _____________ _______ S-33S3 uRor I ALL eXSH COST UTrLB APABT-mant, 3 rooms, centrally located. AU radacorated »nd with axtraa. CaU Mi S-St bftar 3 p.m. COLORED ' Modem 5 Room apartm: •TOVE AND BBI ------- ABPH-^^HbSPlTAL. NBWLT DBCORATBD 3 WSd* New 3-badroom. MS «-- Bulldara. 13 to t. 3-M33._________. THESE ROMES ARB FOR RENT $55 MO. If you arc Jc :Xto^ 'ilamt BUILDER' CASH 48 HOURS ^■g^w.«k.lS.ppt..mi Orchard Court Apartments 1 and 3 badrooma Air eondltloned _ MODBRH in evert DBTj 873 Kettering PB S-3STS < m m m »"tUJBRB Pancad beach. C\SH ___ _rr. with eato toi . . y oyer FOB DORRIS P YOU ARB CONSiDB^O SBLUNO OR TRADINO, id Iw DORRUnW BOR. porch. IcncM back yy.’rtajw, Mr^erator, waUr aottancr, tj)L. r ilrBaT BLooM^nsiib'— RBb i'li- Sdt IlMIfN' IT OPTNER. MUST SBLL^ 3-1^ rooii brick, eaip^. n«Plb«S and ^r garAgo. Mytonltf. OaU •ps..-* "su"4» as >. n sm si._____ » DRATTON PL^S on Prombea near Witlbn. PSI is:t^r.sra*<^^d:ii &£dw Hum*a^'tnmSmM."'* PACE J’M^StoJiUb OOgMPgqy gtJSSLViltf® O^rmiSS^^ NO MONEY DOWN amumM Waterford Township*'^ WR BAVB SBVBRAL HBARLT ?25 dS!i*'aS\ ukrtSim boSI «%ralkliM Lie. ^SNsfYo wn. OR 3.T4U ByeroR M|IS Near MSUO A Real Bargain Lovely 3-bediuum br« ruurt Ij SSft iRS**£jaMp prteu only ilASSS. Buoy J. A. TAYLOR. Be»Itor "*^Wm*ssAftS‘’Rr.'5T4r DAILY Al BUN. 14 ' ““ MsIImim Econ-O-Tri 3-Bedroom TH-Level Wc/t Suburban Acreage csi w’rstmA bffl'v&.“IVx.5Sf«ir.c: prlcud It S14.MSI CARL W. BtRD, Realtor [orthern High Area KTSBi INSURANCE DENIED? PINAHOIAL RBBPONHBIUTVt TOO TOONO OR TOO OLD! CulUaloa — ComprahtnaUa Low Kates — LZ Terms Guss Insurance Asren^ W W. Buma_______ro H3I1 REBUILT MOTORS BOney down—S4 aoe. t Moy Buchang. m BOAT - TRUCB - AUTOMOBILE 5*-r.55^:^TO_ Auburn Aya. PR S-IS14 I—»ty Shaps IP TOO inkiAMD THB mr Wa eaa du rautwmi BVINRimB MOTORS BRUNStnCK BOATB orumman a olotown canoes V Tour Brinrudn OuNor Harrington Boat Works — a. Tel-------- — . LA MODBRNIZATWH. SIODIO, atora wlndowa. doraort, aboU ' BOO, bsaamantenad atUoa. Oot Wd first. raA tarai. OB Urs. Bousa RaUIng. Oaragaa. Oou crate Work. Notbhg Dowa PAUL ORA VBA CONTRACnNO Free BaUmstoa ALQM»UM STEP AND BBTBM-UON LADDERS, WMcyt aad RataUI AVIS OABlNlT SHOP, CbRPBNTBR WORK OP ANT NkiM. P» S44M aflc- * NTBR WORB-PAIN laU Job Inturad. OB Cwyst OsBiisrs PITZPATRICB Cm! SANITARIUM roodward PB 4-HM I ACRES NUR8IHO HOMB ______TTAL PLAHniS ^ CwStSBI iwwIh •ABIU'S lanyit m»' " FI Mb bftssiBddBt, ALTBBATIOHS. ilX OARMBNX IM.. Balt Diatatt OR 3.1U3. Dry W«H $^MAN*^ sras FaBULON - WATBBLOX - WAX FLOOR BSNDINO AND VllhliU- !sir.2..i"rB"tS!ar ‘ " M____*-----M--- • ___________________ EARL COOPER FLOOR BAHOINO, finish., sunr. Praa oot. OA S-3SH. Puemsgg”**gaM, ^ IMMXDUTX BIRVICX Wiegand Muaic Center Phono PBdOIAl S4SM TDhlHO~Aib RBfAlRIIIO. U---------ia. aU work guanmeid r-U8*v iVB TOUR PARTY AT WAL1 ViSi > U • 14 ATBUOB PBB - DUNN'S ReobtoopCiA Tai Borylca. 0* 34SM. Wafl loahabAW A Wattmi. Benjamin R. Backus NOTAB/Vffll5' ***mI b. 1 PB Lists_______________PB A "-jTjJf-Rebuilt Pumps Jet — Piston — Sump Rebuilt Motors and Pump Parts AU lypat ol Plumblag. Borvlao m BROWNtas HABDWARB WallpRpier Steamer Ploar tsadora. ponabara. bbud ' abndott, furoAca vaouna olous; ora. OublAM Pwol A Paint. Ill ..gy^ >T». n» Complota Ho. Auryloa ( I ■ U Utbe'ilA n. ^ plywood. All Mmo «A UAlu.^ AIRPORT LUMBER tfll HIgblAAd R4. OM 4-lSSI Waterford LuAiber ROOFS: NEW. REPAIR XATXyTRODOHlNO PX 44444 • m---m--•_■ 1-- TROT IBCRBTARUL SBRVICB yy lor CoDsetors ^ n NICARAUOA LW Sqairral SUmp Shop ISAIrwo-rtlMr *“%«|.7WS COMPLETE STOCK Building Materials -PRICED RIQBT- SURPLUS LUMBER AND MATBRML SALES CO. 040 Highland Rd (Mlt>OR L74W TALBOTT LUMBER PLYWOOD' t)ISTRIBUTOR Johnson’s Radio & TV Good gatd TV's. Buy-SoDTVadm I E. Walton PB 44M> Lleanaad Mlahtgan TBSA MICKEY STRAKA IT SERmCE , DAT OR BVRB, PI MMS irs# TrlnHRiBg Ssiwics ACE TRBB SHRVICB •TUMP RBMOVAL^ Trot removal, ulmmlqx. Oot onr bid. ISLMIO or FB LsWt. JXPERT tree SBRVICI. IhlBB aaUmaioa PB M4S3 or OR mis. General Tree Service " TiMckhii ’ BAULnia AMD RUBBin RAMB POPDLAB OROAinaT How bnttiaB rteintloai — Sgggr*l^iy^g^ma bCOORDlOW OROAlf, F 1 * R U, PIANO ntSTRUenON AND THB- bay. ^ aim NSW md Used TV OW/Hsrthit I A-l PAPERRANOINO iwiaritoaj-Tmeks to Rent Omup'rrtSSSiSSrnam Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. PB 442*' ^141, "" n DaUy Inelndtoi Sr- lllbRlllMlM JM OFFICIAL HOOVER SBRTIClh Parts - forrtea: mi makos ... ■*»»»* * hIroratb________ BLOOMPIBLD WALL 35% Off. WsddlBga, bsnqneta, a nlyarwrias. Evdyn Harris SI dip. PB S4343 or PB 441W. CLBAMBRS. ■AaeaMMRk OuAltty Pslata IM. mri ■HAVE EQUIPMENT TO THAW ' I out Doion wator Unot. PB 44031. mr, "-3 •...' »C ♦ '"i I'-' V 7 ■ • * THE PONTIAC PRESS. FKiOAY, FfeBRUARY>9. 10«2 ■ I THIRTY-FIVE UknmtM 40 ACRES~« nt'cd » l*ri»r horn* Ctarr •ru. M.TM Ttrmt. If inttrcMM la vjcaat **«••* or taaU tami cbacK Mtr )lif tac*. UNDcmrooD mai, ■■t*™ rm a-HM IF**. MA HTI O'NOL MULTIPUB USTUld gtHJKB lor*lT laiidMa^’iS^W tl.lN dowD plu tloMaC •SJSi’ffi ■*« •TiS "’"G.I.'s , No Money Down u AOW. 1-bMrooM kOB- Sfr.SES?{sa Sm taMitno*. RAY O’NEIL. Realtor HIITER ^r|^*yi*ia> 2n» ■*tt,^s!& TMonpa »r t tiiriiMA mkm |M 1mm. I *M IMM*. _ ------... J**d* I- ■ ■iSt __________5~W“®I MCLL OR TRADR *9 H*r* It nnpiM*. wm L , nasertJ" - S5S. ft’ i‘rii;«'Sa DORRIS U 7MT Mmm* to trad* to r«M •aiUlM bMi7 *M (tod M to drMaMNTakJli* SWVSpSfSjSS fSi!f w *rt &r*. I >*^‘ impftcM aad a ^ mM Mi *yyra^ M H ACRRr VWi Ihl* attraeOT* > SSS51 ei.=a2” •an ftotn. atormi mM aad A kMMltfunir* toi IM. « 1 Ui. W.IM. tRAMI: Tkl* «**JMI.MII djl^ kaMatov *a PiaMai'* Mam rsssm PORRIR aL^£] VaU^Way W* Trad* OB Aar >*■*• INCOME — DUPLEX WtM to towM • !2J2» mSJUmS NORTH SIDE _ ^ am d*wB •*»*• f*a toto Mto COLORED AM la MM VUI to*** r*a <■ *a* *f *anuM koRct. a^ *• Itrf* M 1 room* wito km and K. T. (Dick) VaLUET Rekitor FE 4-3531 lU oaklamd avr. All Thumbs ? $850 Down SSSrrSS.Yr;«WV.‘S: Watorford. Ctou to **m3* Md tbar*M«. FRA R. H. Smith, Realtor HOYT “inSS^SS kitiHW^to^ rv.!ir« MDL-ffpue LIBTIRO BTOYIcf^ JOHNSON M TBAHa OP SBRVICS ES SSt.'T"t«"'5inJ!! Bun mor* t*atar*i too Bt)Bwr*ui a&'iff'.srjtfi’'’"’- JOHNSON & SONS lEALTQRS FE 4-2533 liiiNeMet - tor, aS BTtotd M lOHNK. IRWIN LARGE MMILY 4 BEDROOMS Fat! CRAWFORD AGENCY g»?S NICHOLIE ^‘SS’m.. Uto ‘if—- jewei^. TkJB' a»*ri^'wr.r‘k5 aratodTlhlk aatoaalto k*M. nM BMaroa r -------- Mtoa M bum Suallfr^& lStSMir*‘aiS«Ma% k*al. Pared ilraato. Akoal MM eUAUPIXD BUTER. Bf*a. caU Mr. CaatoU RICMOLIR.RAROI W. H»r*a m. "BUD" Charm Galore js! cr%.^S£sa ausr'^.''ius s&rs*B«r;st (*U MdarV Are You A Big Family? Wm$ Mtr WlB«*r •«« lo MU. •mr*U dlBlBf B*r r*« to tan^ Bovi "Bud" Nicholie, Realtor « MLCtoan* at FE 5-1201 After 6 p.m. FE 2-3370 STOUTS Best Buys Texiay SfSwiaTrrffWi to vhito *10011*001. itdtoa. IMf Hot Btvir dtoaratoi ibrooBbaut llxM lino* roam with c«r* ->•• tofi. full .)■• dlnlni rooai. < aoBc. UtoMo. BiMtor kto lIVtolt v*}k-la «lo**M. drr ettr TSuM^oSir feTKf^l ' }Ilm*e«,’*D*w »Mr i»r«i*. 1 prto*d M IU.MP wMbtorM*. hoB*. PdaU with fuU kaMoiaat pa. b*at aluaitoaoi rtorm* and axr.w&w."" Warren Stout, i^ealtoi Tf R. Bailnaw it PR HIM ANNOTx Near Lincoln Junior Oemplet^ rtmodalad ao., . rMecoraM t-bedrooM boa- RrSria!S.w g.^:.ff.Tsarv’^ 2-FamiIy, $1,000 Down Haar Mbooli and _ Uo*. 1st floor hal^S larpa rooms and Mth, ftod noor I rooms sod bsih! Pun bass-j>. msM ft (US fumsoss. It Elizabeth Lake Estates J5“!’ •S.US-W.., osrVtlV flr«plM« Uvteff room, iear ott’d i Small Farm, Close In isrv^ijr’&h’WM * JSf"VTSi5’h2?.»*il.rB^ri « FE 8-0466 SCHRAM West Side 5JKSW2 cr ^s*d M'iitNi tap b* arraaiad. Money While You Sleep (Mtoi'^tantMt. j IsaatodB ajR-a IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR FE 5-9471 ■ ‘ joeLTw - MOLTipui uarwo ■ Tri-I.evel L.’SSRiSSS^ki Moard spas* ..dm. aad lb*------ earp*tod. PuU prto* ftl Northern High Area PassmaM aM.. JSE b*. esrpstod lirtof msUc bsaf. Ml* Im aod ft^aar larMs. W torma West Suburban ^•■^toir*jsa."ss AK eombtoa^ ftlM^pU^rsd wylto^ ?!!Sr'Sr«sr-5«.' L^. «l.ftN dow*. Wast of PODIISC, total hem< SS-R. .unreom. Mar (arapi itoek pots*..loa. |M tooat_, Ro dowB parmsot to Of buptr. C. SCHUETT CLARK MIALL PARM. I AmRB. ft toll. Modtm I Mroom bam*, to batomsnt. ofi MM MB*, (rosaboois. arsMrd, Ifl.- SSI CIM* to PMitaa*. 01 — ROTRIRO, OOWR OR E.! Mu'.MnMr SmM. ' SB. 111 W. Rorta Opsn B to MILLER fiL"J‘il^a.S»MW.S plastorsd wtUs. carpstod Ilru - om. drapes loeludsd. A ■•—■ teheo with buUt-ln rsm »sh«r. drpsr. trsssM. i pr. Priced «t Ml.lM pies.sot surprtu. tospro propsitr. sa.'Sft.irtllB'Sffi.l pjir.asr-ifie’iKB: William Mi'Ier Realtor FE 2-0263 dW w. Ruraa_Ob*b ft to r -OPEN SAT.. SUN. 12-6 P.M. Beautiful "Fox Bay" “22s'^'if»a^iiirto**iim! &>KmSrto’^jei.s5sr- ARRO “We Trade—We Build" ■«. OT-.ftSHisra Oolir Mft.MO. 'S£*SoJS.'%S*-iSSy3 fj?d‘i& (MdaBSTiiiKf^ Kgsi. Ofiift $U,IM. torau. fair bssdmaat, ra*. iwam. •.p'assssrv- letter ess toll bssutlful irounC bsseb. WRBT OP PORTUC — Orsr <• Eiii with spa^wsll V bedroom rsoch, Tlrsptoei. _ baUii. fuU bss^msot, wstor sMtoo. er. line A|ra(s. Ktima bp *!• KetR tHRiny^ GILES ffiLTSCr. GILES REALTY CO. ----- -----‘rta ito* "Hoine of Your Choice" TRROOOR TRM Home Bank Exchange Ana No Realtor EHscounts . Bass & Whitcomb RfflLTORS* ”fE KENT Sr-*K3!i5Wt!* Tatot prtoo. S2TWSJ!fJ.3!W Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor GAYLORD •t. Mlctasii'. . Oburch s Woc| flTSToom spaitmsaU. Iiwems wiu BimOALOW TTPR bmao wttta ao «itr* lari*^ — Tkrt* badraoBs. Oa-nXMl. Ota baat. CaD Lawrence W. Gaylord yj5irffato”^M. g_tai ,lake front James k blvd. opeN Sat. arid Sun. 1 to 5 WILL TRADE PRATURIRO 1 badroems. 1 t NO MONEY DOWN s«ri«s‘-“si“isa “Young-Bilt Homes” ^uiJoi-- mJ’sTiw , bSlmJf“b!Xmm!r' eU Owner morlni from Michlfsn. Offers a Ten attraetlTc modem bunialow tncfodlat; furniture aad aleotnrnHure In an extra l-rom Hs Brewer Real Estate lisrsa/-•““kr'A!*%)JS5i 'baJbulMnlf’dlebWaSto;. ___a and beodTiaraeaad mUo sessr® WAITI Sylvan Villaoe 'e.'HX: riqhtiUall por Bhowinoi LIST WITH Humphries iPR OPT 2-9236 SI iwbubt .lar-Bi ______ our eoloolal ranch hpmae. iarpe farm kitchen with hiwMae* tod built-in burbccucs. ft badro^. ft bathe and loU of Call A. L Dbsn(*i Co . MI t-idMI, WEBSTER iSS " ^A. 1 0* Msa >“tig*aft,i ZSm. OR ft-iiM.______________________ RICE ft-BRDROOM RANCH HOI» wRhMeomto^arsa W. Modp ** *H*>!*HOLMfa. IRC PR S-ftMft —" ■" « aobbi. plowiro wrlu ajr.nreJg'&iLiir- BUILDING LOT MM«r. Rail Walton Bl^. PSTsd "f6ntiac“realty WC S-MTS •bUTllWtBfeibRNRR OP DrAr- HI-HILL VILLAGE ....... ■ - ‘ntto pou^r ______ -Itk®-'"* C. PAblGUS. Realtor ORTONVILLR dftft Min Btraet- NA T-ftftll HIGHLAND AREA aarM^Ttl, Tasant, r«*d from- -ft^S**rwnia«. kUtokloB frmitot*. ■ •* hoLly Area :n.*o-**asin:? at. a*n an or oart. HOWELL AREA M l aer*s, % all* off MM. Tteeni M**Mr*»,**Tswf.' tcllTe area, ’’bulldtok*: Kaektop *roo!l. ^ ‘Q"Si*^*n‘"Jib.r ,‘±!!*a£RribuUdln...« aarW drained muck, orcMrd^ L. ri. Crandall, Realty Stie UrtiMWfwyerty sf MONTCALM BUU.DIHO AND iHS'-n- UMPtJo'^a’ iO* on MontcAlm. Ydctl for « doetor er bifbor sliep or buu* «ua?%sfL*6i^‘fir X M. s etorr nad full basement. M esr parUnt lot. anchor fenced and blaek lopped. Only 3 block. SOa liwipMa Prefirty 17 -J I ft» c_ “^NEWfNCHAM IStasassiaS^* rWf 116,000 NET CLASS "C" I fr*M hr iatoi Mx tor 'dl. TlJKS’x" ' Over (IM.IM traa tot ’PI Bm-to| baelneM mea'e lunch. Ri- *nSNAL*BOBtltRBB BROR1 B.7 _ iWi“Tc. querttr. Ideal tor aMcrip pi* Smell inTestmeal . L*w Cell OR ft-llM. BA^ nirt Clem O r- MP.IM *r III - t?p4r’3oi*j;'a2r*c~.t.m teUlV tactudS. pAut town**' feiardofr” - Peterson Real Estate MY 3-1681 uoneur enowD menuiea.sxvr w Upwsrd e^n* door, sod stoetrls operetor.. Reply Peniloe Press toe city of Pllnl, Mleb.. neer to* vlUsit of CUo. Mich. Pbop CM-slot e( II Bseblnec. Inepeetton reuxSed to end epprOx. Its oere due to s datoto UtejpMli... I’OR SALE Julie’s Grill & Pizzeria Established Business 930 MT. CLEMENS - • .i“i sa;„“iLr ‘MICHIGAN BUSINESS SALES CORPORATION ^me\, PACRAOR LmUOB -- A td^e arwjJ>*fa£«" B,7»!S“SS2’dJ,-a,’Sffl Uric ft-bedrooP^ .i"?* PARTRIDGE A ABBOCIATW. RRALTORB BUston.e. tomeul MlebliM IIM W Huron - n 4-IHl 6*6ck*f wifH IrU aTO wine Uke cut. I room *P». toj >[ F®**' fiXf GOOD POTENTIAL. PlOta • loafta. m. —• ----- r.saia*.XAu'£5rffj^ Home Improvement Business ‘tradr (» s—‘ $Rld iBIld Ctirt^ ^ an IMMROIATR bale POR TOON Land Conlracts ^ou^desl. Werrm ARBOLUTRLT TWR PABTRBT AC- iMf WSi:JtY> 'rr‘££\? MlalUt In toll end firu m. pour coMruet. kurtrt #eitta Tour eenireet iMC relue .. real titoM i the feet, ab u. before reu dealt Wi FOR TOUR Brewer Real Estate HAVE BUTRRB PpR CONTR^ ABILITY ARRO REALTY IMMEDIATE ACTlO>^ (ftft-fW. iftftp Orobard lF Rd. M^y t«L«M IT __iLlecated Mobfl. LeMer.i_ WHEN YOU NEED $25 TO. $500 ST^e“fWa?1^ ®. NtoMy ft Im* 41 (MyrnM Many totowi) - $25 to $500 on Your SIGNATURE 3 tem nmm wm&nom^^. Hpme Sc Auto Loan Co. VLUmJk_____OLSJW BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY mtmt YOU OAR BORROW UP TO $500 taB’uS!K’A;.'aa Signature •'pRotiETfel® OAKLAND Need $2^ to $366> See Seaboard Phone FE 3-7617 LOANS •%18.isTTfa.-jr J!3uE*m’ANcf? 202 S. MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO Ml Paniia* BUto Mak^'Sdlad FE 4-1538-9 OOI^NITT NATIONAL BMIC to MMUwlldito th ftoar bin* *nd ptp off p**r land taatraat aad biortott*. prsvtdlaf r*u nt do CASH LOANS aa auto* bam* eaulUoa Mwm ^UblBf* and tquipmeDi. M to d*lbSTSJS17‘:i»wlilSS *0* plat* to MP. Family Acceptance Corp. lUFpTL..... . IS i.’WsrffwrB!; fi-y^ss $ala Clallitiig MM MUSKRAT COAT. 11-14. AL-ma.l new Idt. Ladle. dr*i.e. M70 «®®®>* iALLiRiNii TlRdWTWlbBWS dr.M. dee 11. H Unito *1**®*;. Chentlllp 1*0* o»*r 1*11*;^- ftlO. ^fcir I BAROaiM OROUPl ODD BROB. dres.ere, ebeile, iprUfte. mirrore. rsdloe, dinettes nad sewtap mn-shines, cbeap. H elean. (usrei.. teed tlovfa end refrlgirMora. AU ala*.. ftlMlr Mefttor wask-«!• ............................. b«.‘ Rverytoln* la UMd ' berpatn prteei. AI^ NEW Ilvins rooB...-- Mnettes. ru(a and autti---- Ttetorr aseondi. .*kaM to B'l®*. BOT^Ct-TRADR Monday aad I Pridap. kEJRCTt, ■SBdtT 1 pUe* bad-bmTi. «MeU. BUY — Sr£l — TRADR PEARSONl FURNITURE ........- *— PR 4-ftMI PIECE LIVING RO^ iUITR. pood eondlHon. M». n 4MM. .. PIECE BEDROOM aUtn tflTH n*w .Sealy bM sprtop tad mtl-ir*u. I cedar < eltoet. waln^M MftM *r*MI ilduSi'Sr#. c a-_ KAREN SvRPET I kdTT BEMI-AUTOMATIC SSrlV’”'-'-* preen darenport. rwumsbl* -^n|da( to Early Amertetu. MA ACCEh fXflAiiYs by to PER month *a nutonttue dial elp-, JL^rd.-e!;».WiM: Funj.,jMUi»”1U.\Mto. ’ FOUND AT L a S SaCm. —t totiiiaia*. eatt a* Wad*. Cam* wit usa.*"’" i^^?bVA7* gto*"urto»ja!«‘’’ ^ HX THR mNIf____ . Berry GarRge Door F»ctorv Seconda ATtUaM* al Ikwabu dla*«aM iisr “’■Ti’a.ft. RTSfl_____ OWiTl^lURj[-^^^^ ftlN- sp*iW. Mstor IMM* Vato* lamp, burlap shade Amker ma- w *x*'ub‘r.‘“TwM';i! ........ ' LIQUIDATIbfG ntTIRR STOOE and rwirX.^ iJf.‘-«r‘'is}: {It. Frlpldalr* electric ran** with ft orena. Mcellaal eondlUw, MiiO. MI 4-pnl; ea Lator Rd. near flW^lBWrilbr (»■ 81CB _____ bar* baen ebeeked by at. fac^twy braneb tad base a new mtbhto* pnaranto*. Rleettoluu Corp. can *1 tfttr RUtabetb LUc Rd or phone FE **114. ffoVEi 6iTall k rA, Ump*. bedroom **4. dub, Uk* alftr and Mb* R away. SOI utBallo, PETitoi.____ etWfSa uPAcHiNkB. Wrols- Ml* to aU. New, aaad and r«-poeeeesad. 0**r n models to ehe*M fiwm. Prtoo* il*H llamr portoMn, IIP.M. Up tap «<%. mem. Curt’s AponsM**, INI Hstcherr Rd. ON 4-1101. a" LIA^ BAROAINR Wuhys-I^srg^lpsray* OtJoD^EBt'VoiVIC^ csbinetr Jtoc. sondlttoa. BpIaM* , THIRTY-SIX THE PONTIC FRESg, , FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 0. 1062 •BfftlOMUTm, IM. AB I__ TluidE 6m ranob roR elbc- «n* BlMlrte Crump Electric, Inc. 3«M AMRuni Rd. ___ Wt t-WW ” t. FB VtED VpISCB «l5CT10kAL_~ •OPA ••• DiH I plM* UiH (hromt * i.r-*; ____________— . MllnAW VACUtn^ CtCANER - A BRAKO 'Z— ...k I^p, with tO Al- if)i» tswitor. Call rx UOtt rORMICA TABLE AND PAODKD rbaln. drwMr, thicktn kroadtr —XMlPWAnt' MA 4-llW. — WINTER DAZE! VAilwr-drrAr. conbo. P*b( C-. -----r*b«m tuaruiutd AaIobaUc «■ WAibtr-drr*r. R(Irt(«rator«. HOT WATBR NBATBR. M OAL8. «WM raliM M»»» AT- — “ mArrtil. Alae akrlrlc, toUM _fAi JwAMr GOOD BOUBBREEPINO ^^P U WM H«roA^_ WYMAN'S u“S iitrcuTftNd machine a h B blanlu. r«A»oiiAMf. PE M4M. LAVATORIES COMPLETE. IMA* USED TRADE-IN DEPT. J-burner Ap» t|( »«>»♦ * OuAr°*El«/RAlrti OuAi^WrtAiAr WAditr • M Eltetric rAD(t -... » w Ifto. ihow«r alAlIt IrrMUh imiric VAluM MIchliAD Pfuor e«ni. m OrfhArd Ukf -L UNDB'ifY WATER SOPTENl fully AUlABAtls, llbenlAA U IH yra oM OR Jhfn ONE OliEO llRMlf BTil fli*RiNT. Prom btebl enorat-lo| by J. PriU, pleluro to Roaa Bonhuar -- Eblkl- dolla MM. anllquo '—‘ * WYMAN'S FEBRUARY BALE OAYB Evory Hair la our atoroa drua-tlcAUf rodSDod! Baytata «B M M ^ and M par eoni now poaalbla oa ^ oar antlra iloak of oarpaUto. af pIlAMiaa, llyluf room and bad-room Jui n E, *r mirror MO Call MMBM. ROMEx wnFii ground wire. MTs lor no R. eoll No. S aarr-ka aniranet cabla. Mo. G. A. Thotnjraoo. TOM MM Wait. iuMP pum^f^ld-repairId Cona'a Raatal. PE 0-«0«l RXinLebb BTEEL double bine IM.N. Tallala, IIT M. Pan boodi. O. A. ^immpsaB. TON MM Gurta^, OM.'OO ralw OM.IO. Laratorlat. oompiau IteMfan littoniiaant, Mi apopa PE mn. iLOND RCA 10 Ph. ra 0-4M0. crrdll mananr. CaMtol Baaint Cantar. PE f-MOT____________ TWO-LAMP. «-P60T PLUOREB- BTEREO AM PE 0-40M TEOA ff IIBO OEALAND "SERVICE CHECEED-OM.N and up '0OODYEA& SERVICE StORB M B Com ___________PE O-OUI S«b MUicBilaRaBM «7 THE BALVATIOBARMr nf’EAinr uwl^^ larylblns to moot pour aaoda, ..otblni. Purnliura. AppIlADeoa. UWDERWOO^TYPiyBITER. OM USED oi^picE DEBks. dkkikw. 1 POT DUOTIIERM OIL BURNER. ♦M PE a «a3t____________ i PAIRBANES MORSE WATER : fc fo'r'o'&.^yL’o-ISt.*^ bVuel Noat ^ *4 Hour Pfaonk Sarvica Dally o machine ATTENTION: BEWINO I 0I0.M up. Don-l ALL IMt MODELS, TAVPAlTbAi and alartrlc, built-in orana raacaa. OlM and up. Btreral ebon cablnat dlaplaya at cloao_ pticaa. Royal Oak Eltohana. 4U0 _u—........................ haatar. HardNard. alaot. auppitaa. and Mpa and flUiati. Lorra BtoUiara P^t. Supar Eamtona and Ruatolaum. iBM, 0 MASONITE ________ IDLE CEDAR CLOSET .... 03.M PONTIAC PLYWOOD 00 1400 BaldviD A»a PE 3-M43 BABE OUJTi kfSSSn bJirTd.................. odd led of atorma and acraana. Craftmaa 10" tUtl^ arbor power ikMai.^Orld aitentloo.'*pj*'t>tT3* ITAR AND AMPLIFIER. ------ aryar. paper d atralght adoa. CIRCLE FLUORESCENT LIGHTS, nawaat liabta lor kllahrni. 013 OS . rralua OO.^ factory ma Mkblsao Piuoreaeant. J03 XLEARTOME REARING AID Rofnlar OMO. Cloaljis out 01 ■111*17% READ! M p Co.. SO W. WaRoo. P DRUM LAin •Ibsa Ut Tom Armi Oiwwltr aod Gtori ma6e. loor atm, . Pro-OMl PEl-MW. • {K£m“?.rssi.ja'. r.?: t -Lalto — 10. JPREE STANSIBO TOOJRR OU M S^aa^alMMnk* ........ loL OtX> THERM PVRRACE - BLOW- ;io.-nT-ie!&.%T.;Y air coodiuonlni nnlt. MI 4-S33T. vi¥f; FIX UP lO V," plaatarboard st-Ksr lO k" nr pir—■ __- Pt. apoolal . Looaa Rock Wool, baf . 0 .. OSO V.O. mofotaay Hyvood M l Burmeistef LUMBER COMPANY MO Oaolay Lbka Rd. Eli 3-41T1 Opan 0 n.m. to 0 p.m. Dally rl“'olfKtl r Mkhloa I Orchard Lake iohn’s Party Store • BALDWIN AVENUE OMO. aacrifica OIN. One nan TO.OOO BTU laa countar-flow furnace OlH. floor modal. Aca Baatlno and Coollas Co OR the daalin. Zip Eao wood oonaok. oooa b Mwa on buttona. deal almount of OTl.MPor i lllhla. Ideal for n laa. ahopa, ilO.tl aal. I. marrad Call factory abb: Mlchloan Plnoroacant, 3 TALBOTT LUMBER Paint, bardwaro. plumMno, alactrlca) pu|^||^i. Oomplato iLANDA^. Se^ typawritera. addlM SMALL METAL LATHE. 01 MON-taray. PE 3-1404. ‘ANOEti TRAILER. VACUUb brakaa, 04N. OOH Commorco Rd. 71 UO BABB. PULL EEYBOARD AG oordlon with awltobaa. OlOO.JW Blnth St.. RochaaUr. OL MOH. ALL MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS BUY NOW - AND RAVE - ■ ‘nrw.- Laroc Trade Student ran Wa atock Parta--- EDWARDS_________ 10---------- ACCORDION SALE. ALL SIZE& I plan . d Buppllaa 10 B. Stolnan nnlah. Floor diaplay mod-Larta dtioounl. BmaU down manl. Balance M nonltia. Cnl-Mualc Co. 110 B. Baslnaw. ____________________ BALDWIN ACROMNIC SPINET. _ gaplnaw. FE 0-0333. chickerIno grand p i a Vi Pood foiidltlon. ME 4-4M1 Holly. LECTHIC ohita'r^'with am- plillrr and caar A-I COM. 0160 _ _____ PTE 6-4411 ___^___________ 'f«WMA«l|jCTRIcirDITAR. DOUbOc '®*^*TT*MDlck-up. Thre#-w»T »»Uch. 175. with ampliriar Oloi. Mto ba ,aaan batwaan U and 0 430 Enaraoo. LOWREY LARGE STOCE of reconditioned TV tata. I30M to ITO.M. Prleoa In-elu<}e tuarontao and dallTtry. r.RIN’.VEI.L'S 3T 0 BAOINAW PE 3-71M (iRIXNKLL Mahojrany Console Uaad In oood condition n MORRIS MUSIC 34 ~M. Talaornph Rd. ----1 from Tal-Hurgp) ORGAN SALE Two atudk uaad Coon aplnat or-Oana. laaa than M daya old. Sara 0160 on Uiaae oicellcnt yaluaa. Raw luarantaa glean. LEW BETTERLY MUBIC CO. Ml 0-0003 DAILY 0 Piano Sale Prtcaa UMluda icb aod dalleary. I tboia olcapUannl • •• r Inat, ... "down payma'nl rabolrad, Mu* Gallaghers MICRIOANg LOWREY 1 LOWREY DEALER Everythinp Must Go! lawjLewray Sploat nronna Uaad Hammoodt from f...... I VaM Eater chapel urCAB . . . I \ 'GOING OUT FOR BUSINESS SALE 71 PRACTICE ORGAN " lasaan wttb Ampunar OH MORRIS MUSIC d^Rioinr in omd coik- dHloo. 030. on Etobekw, Laka ' Wanted Guitar Students Music Center 9:00 - 9:00 Every Day 268 N, SAGIN'^AW FE 4-4700 wn ADDING MACHINES 1 s. Battnnw NSW NA1TONAL CASH JUMU tara from 0100 up. New HnUma nddlno mncblnat from OOO im. Th. only faeton autboriaod branc oftkaa In Gnkland and MnoomI or locury rtouin roan raauH'ra. 31s OratlM. Ml. namona. HOw-' ... 3-4333 SAVE MONEY ON USED TYPB- — - Al*?. U—.——- — rtpAl” of all offire maohlnoa oiford OfUca Supply. M S Waahinitorr. OA P300b. USED AODINO MACHINES. 03S M v'iPlley BUSINI 4M W. Huron PE 0-3I07 74 KELLY HAR^WARF New and Used Guns Cnmnlota lino of huntln* ooulpmont. Mjrara Pnrnna 30M Auburn at Adama UL 3-344S Opan Dally Till 0 p.m.-Bui A-AiA BLAB WOOD DsLndbiB Sull'^k'a'RoaS: Wal^L^-Sni! Albarta i-umbor Mlll« Aic” WOODri^HACI. P1R* —- alnb wood. Low prlco. niH. jCnTL.. OTI-OITO ----------- XLL iiNDS OP WOOD AND dllni FE 4-4330. OR 3-0100 T» Beott Lake Rbad.__________ k« Alnt Anniab a«»» I ^•ce futl. fSinac*.. SHOftlT a - ^ Pit 7f 1 POX TERRIER. WmEHAIR. jkOj^GramplOB ____ .-./MI°M4Tit. •dIAOLB PUPS. AKC. t13d003 ________ BOXER PUPPIES. 10 MOPTHB JO 0 waoki Champion oirod. AEC roi. 001-4130 m2L*CTontirOk l*l3». AEC pfitolUtS, 3 MALBB. WWtB ■^&nr: SBB~SS€EaS~____ iK“.tsMaa pgraa;' *5U“SISS!r°r.'’IK •' RROTAnV AEC FEUaLE. raaaortobla. PE A44M. iihuahua puppies^ iicNARY B TAILWAOOER 6 k ^ nala bonrdinf. ttnlnln*. trln^ mint OL l-OOM. _____________ POMERANIAN PUPPIM. LITTLE MmmiaOimm mvk/i InW TMlOdiA VUDDI^t, VBMV.ivAiwiniv rurrsKM brautlaa nnd toy popdl blork Coll FE 10061_____________ FOOTLES QUALITY SILVER AEC. auction with a zino selling •,7 "™."*prSit“"i'io vs atiV h 75!!ii.r’Lk.>^. ouctlonoari Proa door_ “ "* B&B bookcoaa hondbonrd B»lT •JKl"So:S{J t'{?a *5hlk “nite wlHi kidney bench Bxe. t-anall <^t alia SKSt lil Full lAAOth mlr^. aood Spin Dry waatwr, rolrtt-and tnitsc. Noooo okctrle ronaUr, of d!&oa. utanalb nnd amnll u-uUI Banr hnnttFt outfit with bn^ clotfia. ttc. ' Naw doU « amnll lot of now Ory lootU. ^ nlua boneb tHndor Proiilx, ■—-------------- north of OxB^. M anka mnnSdorT OA 0-31 1. » BALES or NICE GREEN HAT IOC bMo. 300 logbom bona Me 35Zro~mroTrr CARNIVAL "He keeps adding to it — r my sales b rabbits AND cages FOR BALM.* Doe. bucki^luain and nuooUa. Nnw PjTMfcicoi e’M'i. POULTRY, EOOB. APPLES. V*0-etnblea. flowera and pUnta, booty, bakad aooda. OARLAHD dOUMlT MARKET. 3300 PoMUe lAkn Rd. Ogu^^liM ..m.kl:0. I HORSEPOWER OARDBN TRAC-tor wUb plow, now pkw. tpUa 1100. 0B3ATH. cblnary Co., OrtaoiUk. 1-3001. Alao Homolita cbAh. McCULLOCH CHAIH SAWS NEW AND USED USED CHAIN BAWI LOW AB KING ] 4-OT34 PH 4-1 ■ONTTAC ROAD AT OPDYK] Fhthi E^pMBIlt 17 _____________________ an parta now for your plow. phUBlor, htrrewd? Bt la thajM ot |o tbit tprlBf. Wa aoU John Daora nod Pnpto HnrtUnd Aran 1010 BAPEWAY-O-E AlUr 3:30 P.m. 19& C ^ lyw CREF-S "ARE NOW ON DUPLAY" Truck Campers and Travel Coaches! OUT TODAY >11y........... 10310 HOLLY RD. HolltTNIarine Coach 'ILLY RD. BANK RATES OPENBUNPAYO ills. MkU OIUMPION. . ------- oT“b;i."S}‘.r“IS?“A.«»%5S?* Aaaamt balano# far «l bmoHii at OH.00. MY 3-I4M. 1 I k B T k B A M ii6H¥VllAh loin one of WaUe Bynm't omiUiif tarekt. f r a a atUmataa. Alao, park and a.;ettaprltg. Bob Hntcb-luon UobUa %ma Balaa Ibc. Wl^DWa Hwy.. Drayton Plaint. ;SiVarin‘arAM'%M‘*- 's asiroVir'sni^iTSsii.S u aotoal Imm. Alao. many aaoM-.knl naad mobllo boa as. Bob Hutchirtson Mobile Home Sales, Inc. Oxford Trailer Sales and Court .. • and Btowart W%or pbm. II prwoa, mir aaiUi rataa Wa tea no olkOleka. but wa do tea tm latiilkd enalomara and I ytaro of- good hnaat toallnsa. >a uaad aold oo rantai plaai. Par A RtaUy Oood Buy B*o Ut TMayl OiMri Tranar Balta nio AM Laka Orion n M-34 TeIotoNE my .BOWl I MM MY 34111. Repbssessed Ob' X IP INI 1 kodrm. with mpaado. Heat. iTxbk. ttt. and rolar all on. Complata wjth larta EBHAPT GRIROIHO IN THW -----H ----AN MO^ Uxtomt, laj^Soo'jjr^artLrYt TORS, Uaeoln - Maroury • -^Htiour. ta B. Baslnaw. R^ATB - MOToSi*^------- . cruibe-6ut boa ___ and bkoklDi Pontiac m.ii*jf? Oxford Trailer Sales SHORTS k|OIIILE h6m1^^ Vl”&R cIn/dOwS'^^ - ” XtailM^ Complete Una ot P and bottled ana PE 4-010 TRAVEL TRAILERS — Winter Rates — F. E.' Howland, Rentals a« Dlilt Hlottwny OR 3-1400 JACOBSON trailer IALBS buea on dltiity i a aod Mrk. Wlokr 1 nark, winkr prieaa _ _________ im Wllllomi Laka. Drayton Plaint. OR 3-6001 »>.f beameiT fiiSNT klicnan. aide dloattc " -- In raor. Ball oontr'^ 1-3666, Ortonellia. ---------Jim itkinad. NAit ITt f^: PRIVATE PAhW •50 AND 'll PT»0 VO MOTORS Tlm-AHl»-TrHck~ _______ . lUCE DPI------ Uaad Track Tire Banalaa •iS»-iv*. ED WILLIAMS 4M B. Bkdlaaw at Raabura WE ARE CONTINUING OUR BUTZ SALE FREE WITH EACH NEW CAR OIL CHANGES FOR ONE YEAR FACTORY SPECinCATION — PLUS — 1.000 MILES OF GAS , AND LUBRICATION FREE WITH EACH USED CAR A NEW BATTERY AND FREE OIL CHANGE AND LUBRICATION FOR ONE YEAR - A NEW CAR - Including License, Title, Sales Tax, Radio and Heater, Whitewalls and Factory Equipment PRICES $1489.20 STARTING AT ’59 Rambler American $745 ’59 Rainbler American S-Daar Waica witb radio, bait- $895 ’59 Rambler Super 4-Door with radio, banter and whltewalla. Indtvldttal front $995 *56 Pontiac Wagon l-Dow with radio, haatar, whtta $495 ’60 Rambler 4-Door One of our beautiful oaa-«wnart and ready to so anywhere I $995 ’58 Chevrolet ;Wagon with O-cyUnder anska. ataadord whltawnlM. SHARP aa a TACKI $995 ’59 Chevrolet Bel Air l-Doer with radio, haatar, auto- $1295 ’59 Chevrolet Wagon $1395 ’59 Chevrolet Bel Air 4-Ooor. wtih V-0 anfint, anta-malla Tranamlar*— $1345 ’60 Rambler 4-Door Eation waoon with .B^ »*• ■^’R.ri»Lc2i“ M(SM Motor Sales gtatT WE NEED 100 CARS “TOP DOLLAR" Suburhan-Olds Used Cars MA a. WOODWABD VBAlf. ***•^4-4485 Nmv Ml «Md TnKfa in •“JgffZaSTirSSS: CHKTROLBt WBBCIC^ wnTSA®-.^ _______ an Today FE 4-3536 m iawIpCM ■s "ga^: c is^:_ ITioESAii. 4 66dfc. ao aW?: Oa HIM AiWr ^ ITnvSwT^ Ava.. auMt^MAiTl^A^iiis. ' 'n aDlOA HAaOTOP ^ ass MaIrVf. M«*r «aa4 lAAo unj ns a-o»>- ____-, -3- '*dw«" «fc~- bfooAe, ,- IMA REHAOT^ iMk Mt or-VotitawAodf w owi* ooafis- i‘—I^InVDs’eD CAR5>^ f' Automobile Import ftll M AAOniAW FB / VolkSWagensi WARD-McELROY, INC NMSMdUMdCirt 19^1 buiCk ^ FISdHER . ^ mck 4&22 MOM oaKEimgiO't ^c«^«u ^ VT*Lim||‘ i|i New «i Vaad tm IMlNiw Mi Iteai Can '~U& BIRMINGHAM Chrysler - Plymouth S. WoAS««iri isi M 1957 BUICK iLjSL'ei'aa sy* I® FISCHER Suburban-Olds USED cars 555 S. Woodward MI 4-4485___B’ham 2g' I960 BUICK ian«.‘en;*ss»-'st Urtor. aAdto. haator. dntallra, $2095 FISCHER BUICK M a. vooDWAim 1 MI 4.^ ^^ta»« buMa and aal. SMSS. 1957 CADILLAC $1595 Suburban-Olds USED CARS 555 S. Woodward MI 4-4485 B’ham 'u7 110 Cn«.»i. asoy.iltos. radMi AMar. alat *SU^l^i^OTORS ss5i:-frn.Ki?-.!t-TSi.ias5 - can Ml H17« alUr S M pm. >s cpyv BiacATKa yi. s-doob _________S?OT! OLDSMOBILE HOUGHTEN & SON a, lla)B. aaaaaMai OL >-SI>i 1959 FORD yuraa.ttSr'st..'*- SCHUCK FORD Special This Week '58 PLYMOUTH E's?:-rH«!rS K/KJ Sff'5i.*U.-WS! $949.95 ’.58 MERCURY Moatclalr, S-deor haidtop. airta-BBll*. bMOUtal rtd a^whlu IbWi. TbU U a WaaVlritBia ---------• DriTt awar lor .83 X. PUBLIC NOTICE lOMDT DOWa, Aaaa $99.00 DOWN Or Your Old ar Wm Buy a New . 1962 Pontiac Tempest Acaor «aa haaSar aM vaAaii or a 1962 Rambler American Moar wm htater aM aaMan Wagon Sale 1959 RAMBLER "•“no^^s 1959 LARK ' ” NOW $895, 1958 CHEVROLET 1M*r anttaa. ilaaaaid p»».. How $1095 1957 FORD 1957 CHEVROLET WaeM wm aalaauiU IfM NOW $895 •^"""^W1S95 Used Car Bargains- 1961 Thunderbird ..$3195 1961 Pontiac .$2195 vtaSE 1959 PontUc eSaSu"**** ,.$^1095 1957 Plymouth ....$495 Adoor lacatt. VI anfina and auta- 1956 adillac .$1295 ■ardtoa «ttk MB pewar. Oaaa. Your Choice $145 imi*^5Sw SRrSop UM**CHKTOOUE?^n>AII RUSS JOHNSON 1959 CHEVROLET ----WACOM. Broakarood « — - ---Bllaata. S MSI OORTA» MONtA SPOaT taapi 4-apaad traiumlHla%_ ra dla, ^tar. f^Uwall ttraa. Whlb ^Uh with rad trtm^Onl^_Mlj(l alffil baaUr, wl_. lua nnian Bur tarma. PATTElOoft CUBP- CLEAN MwMwilNi^ in ’59 CADILLAC COUPE One Year Guarantee I JEROME "Bright SjMt" Orafeard Lakt at Ohaa FE 8-0488 , gaaa8r.ir.jg"' ' ’61 Chevrolet Menu One Year Guarantee I JEROME "Bright Spot" Orahard Laha at Cau FE 8-0488 M oHByr BBt Am. V4. ancK s-aina: *58 Chevrolet 4-Door n. Am «IM radlat haalar aa •^“•$15“ John McAuliffe. Ford m OAKLAND AVB. FE 5-4101 ..-cHWRCTriiaBrs! ooura. vs MwartlMt I ----Mator and a tsr riac. radio. baaUr, _________ Tarma. PATraiiatlV PUBLIC NOTICE M ehmalk daar JUaaaF^ nitM will HNomaUc tiraaa-Bluloi. Jaat Uka saw, |.awnar. .^RMADUKK By Andwm.^ a ImmImi Nmr Mi «Mi Cm 1M 3-MII. C. Ma»BM» NS OHBVMOLIT 4-DOOII SIDAM. VI OMIM vMA PmifUdA ra-dla and baaur. abm itaM ll»-iab PuU prlaa IIJNS. LLOTD SlOTOaa. UDOola - Martury-■ ‘ Pard. »1 M O a ■ V T a°8L." wAHtwall Hrw. Immaawlau IMa. rmr. Spollaaa palM aM ahioMa, BIRHUNGHAM Chrysler - Plymouth B. WaotnM Mt T4I1I •M DODOB D. pawar alaailiiB. aaennaa. ummg Uto army. Pi 4Ald4. ■14 ' OODCm. BADIO. BkATti. V4. 4 door, ataadard traaamla. ata. OM aad Motor. SMS. ■irii&hb mw Mi Umi Cm 1M “8?UlWVnR2E $1095 BOB BORST Oaa.li?k’'Wtf^8S^UB.W BuunNaHAte ui oasis RiwMi llHUM in IbwMi jMCm NOTICE ’60 FORD WAGON ^%ransswa “ $1295 John McAuliffe. Ford SW MKLAND AVB. FE 5-4101 Mercury 4-1 $095 BOB BORST ’58 FORD WAGON $995 John McAuIiffeLFord LOOK I BUY! SAVE! INS Bolak 44oor hordlop .... SUM UM PoatiM eoeaarUbto^. IIIM IMS Panttoo CaUttaa . ilMI 116 PoMaa Vdaor hardtop .. |IMI IMS C^y Impala hardtop .. iim gfey^’TS^tdr. ... !ia IMS PmiUm 44aar hardtop .. ilNf INT ^rrolat Sdaor .... I IN UM ialek CaoTartlhT ^— iiw PontlM lAoor a< la; ‘ 1M4 PonUaa ladao UM Botak Adaor k 10 taUM 44oor It Chary BalAIr Imrdtap .. r Mrdtap .. Ml Telkawosaa S4r. atdoo ilNS Ml Chary Bol Air 44oor .. |IW M Balah Ipooiol hordtoo — Hi Betok *dew herSei SHELTON Pontiac • Buick Rochester OL 1-8133 ajnrjrRi!rLr>nr,.m. ,.3^abs.^--- ^uffUSnSf Ssi^^ ■aXoSp**' SSIJS MO. HASKINS Siiaip Cars INt OMt Dyoomla IS BoUdoy iao.‘^^S«^,x tttal iraoB tiA «4lto BiJm. INO Charrolal ^ Bofoto . Bdoor hordlop. V4 ao^TVoior Moor, toj^powar brokaa, radio, mow- MiaMca: HASKINS Chevrolet-Olds US-M M B r Croaaroodi t HMMilniCm •M ptmooTB AOMto nnmh ..hpo rmm talk BooMr. opwor flirI Wi IrtlB. .I i.i IIII . SPEdAL cl^BLER Hir”4r~ FISCHER BUICK TM a WOODWABD M MI 4-6222 3^1 WopHT SSm&vm FISCHER BUICK •"•"W‘«222 GLENN'S SHARP CARS ■IPPOMI BDoar AMO. VS SIlSS vs CBBVT BUmt S CyL .IIM VIPOimAO BafStoB PMTor SUM VS aonrr wofMi. s POM. .. sum ■M PtNIUO BOmo hardtop . S IN GLENN'S Motor Sales HONESTLY WHEN YOU SEE THE AUTOMOBILES THAT WE HAVE ON DISPLAY, YOU WILL HAVE TO AGREE THAT THEY ARE CLEAN. WE WANT YOU TO GET A GOOD BUY, AND TAKE IT FROM US... THESE CARS ARE THE BEST WE HAVE SEEN IN A LONG, LONG TIME...STOP AND SEE FOR YOURSELF!1 Our Stock Is Large and We're Ready to Deal... Stop and Shop On Our Friendly Lot '59 (RAMBLER , ppvor hrakaa. 1961 CHEVROLET $1595 $1795 I960 PONTIAC BOHNByiLLB Sport Coupa I radio, hootor. HydramaUo tra ,958 PLYMOUTH BTATlOlf WAOON. Bara b a (ood ear tor a lorta tamUy. It BOMNBVnXB V^iTA. ‘HUa $2295 r lor yea to $1295 I960 PONTIAC PONTIAC TMO irrwM uo. .^1. CATAUMA OOWVBB'nBLB hoa oUatuih powor hrakaa. powar W 'irt!!mr“i •taartaf and whItowaB Uraa. whltawau $2295 1961 PONTIAC $2195 1961 PONTIAC CATAUMA 4-DOOB SBDAM. $2795 I960 PONTIAC ra to A fOM with 0 radio 1 baotar aa hulda oaeat-laa. IBara ara pawar hrakaa 1 powar atoar^ aad ttia MMw body to flMialod doM $2195 ;$2695 ln>. Dan't mlae tbto heoey < $2595 OUR WIDE SELECTION WILL GIVE YOU ALMOST CCMPLETE FREEDOM IN MAKING YOUR CHOICE 1957 BUICK I9W PONTIAC tnOAL ADOOB Baa oMo. S4M0SI Ikal Baa 0 tbrutr totok amtto toaoamlMliw radl» Boot. IwoitollMlto rodHt Bootor OBd . TBooo wbHomoB Bm, VBto to la tow todpod 00 by too watM Body I oar. aMdWOB vBMB to portBOL $795 I960 PONTIAC 1960 PONTIAC BONNBVnLB bpobt oodpb BOMHBVILLB OONVBRTIBLB liaartot. $1895 I960 PONTIAC I to ooMpPOd wMB powv ikaa aad otoMtoi. $2295 1959 PbNTfAC B apraUloo wBM htao toto^. $2695 1959 PONTIAC $2695 I960 PONTIAC I. VBo aolar to a ilaaM- dromaUo toWtoortmtoa. poo wm ooppar. ma la root hroBM aad pawar aloottoi. T aad roaoaoBlp prtoad. mtoB l^dBO dt too i $1795 $1695 a I960 PONTIAC $2195 1959 PONTIAC FACTORY BRANCH RETAIL STORE Shop on OUR BIG LOT Where There's Parking Space Galore PONTIAC "Goodwill Used Cars"..' 65 MT. CLEMENS ST. $2695 $1895 FACTORY BRANCH RETAIL STORE FE 3-7954 FE 3-7954 - SAVINGS - DEPENDABIiny -- VARIETY - SATISFACTION - SAVINGS - •< ) THIRTY-EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. FBpAUABY 0, 1962 Nnr MtfIMOn A BEAUTY II 1961 PONTIAC $»)5 WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward Nwr «■< twl WflWfrflwdCm 1959 VOLKSWAGEN" $1295 1958 BUICK IpMtel «-Mor, pgnMflnrk r^. kMtar. whitmll Una. 0«ir JEROME-FERGUSON FACTORY OFHCIAL'S CARS Suburban-Olds USED CARS 555 S. Woodward MI 4-4485 B’ham •« roNTtAC «. arncK ainn, aon* iMrriet. Ml. ^ I•4i44. i» i*6wTUc aot^ktmu. 1961 THUNDERBIRD ............... $3195 sir.i5!ur»c«.r^ss^ ».• 1961 FORD .......................$1895 rwilMM MMar with ■utomau* truumlulaa. radio. hoaUr, pewor Moartaa Mti pawor krako*. Lav mlltaao aad aatra ibarp. 1961 MERCURY .................. $1995 SilSTo^J?*!llr“* ”** *“** 1961 FORD^^v.*,.. •...............^95 Suburban-Olds USED CARS 555 S. Woodward MI 4-4485 B’ham bum iB66ir~iibAk. Watta with V4 aadot. autoaiaUa trinimt ir atotilnf aad powtr krako*. Lev mlloai*. 1961 TEMPEST ......................... $1795 ^OMTjtodi^^vItt^jrU^r aacki* aad lUck ibUI. 4,Mk allta. 1961 COMET .............................$1795 MMar aadaa vNk otralflil aUek. radio aad haalor. AU flayl to- lo^. Uka aav. I960 RENAULT ............................$795 1959 CHEVROLET OiPALAa, »^.,.«,.daew. 1958 RAMBLER .......*............. ....$595 1958 FORD ....*.........................$1195 SB'^rnjr 1961 ECON-O-LINE .............'.........$1795 jhja. aalij^vhMa^ljBM aad«aalr »••• aataal aiUaa. retd Ho»ar 1961 CHEVROLET .......................$1595 nok«» vtik aojliador aattaa. radio aad b^r. 1|.N0 *Un. lEROME- FERGUSON ROCHESTER FORD DEALER FOR MORE THAN 35 YEARS A GOOD PLACE TO. BUY 1 Ma >ONTiAc rraa o s‘ fiKCKra t it DOWN - Etoe Aote I M7I W. Haroa. WT *-*ar- 1958 OLDS ■oraa fDOOK tl, aaloaaatl*. r^ 'r.'^lr.^arfi’.'tSir $1195 Eddie Nicholas Motors >r* arraBi**%aaiK!laK tt PownI $1495 Suburban-Olds USED CARS 555 S. Woodward MI 4-4485 B’hatn iW »0trftA<^ HAIBW: 6K1 ovaar OR Mm. C. Haanlag. 1961 PONTIAC $1795 Suburban-Olds USED CARS 555 S. Woodward MI 4-4485 B’ham #6Wdr saVr U6H*t a tooUae Slau Baak Im ■ loookl Buy! Save I imAc dokftftMbiii. 4.1 mis: n 1-1SU. 1961 OLDS 4-DOOR HAROTOr. tWlT •d. OM (aalorr ofnelal** $2795 Suburban-Olds USED CARS 555 S. Wo^ward MI 4-4485 B’ham ^1 OLDS CUTLASS Year Guarantee 1 JEROME "Bright Spot" Orahaid Lak* FE 8-Owk T.,.'®rIff*^.'ST-.SS28 ibWnitliigW'cAli ^ MW- II.III. da MSM. “WOW” '57 Ford'9-Passenger BTAnoR WAOOM. With Stadia, Siator. Ai&»tatl* TraaeatliSoa. Fowar Stoarlat aad iraaal aid BOB BORST —HAkI_____>n M 1959 OLDS **{irSk**, ^dl^baalar.*_ koMoBi. la laaanaaa ooadRMa. $1695 Suburban-Olds USED CARS 555 S. Woodward MI 4-4485 B’ham InUrtor. lU^. $2195 FISCHER ‘l^aaJ.!^! BUICK TM a. WOODWARD MI 4-6222 llawi iM Cm 1961 PONTIC . $2595 Suburban-Olds USED CARS 555 S. Woodward . MI 4-4485 B’ham krabo*. |l.m. rB ’M rOMTUC BTAR CaURF BIRMINGHAM Chrysler - Plymouth . —. in Mwi m CASH NECESSARY ^jBMtgo’atasa.L in ii.ii Ho. n‘1" Ford mauoa n mFWd.»do*r«.J^^ •I Ford aURwi WMOR^ m Ma. ’*'m.M Ma. Maar Mora to Cbaoaa Froai LIQUIDATION LOT. W a. aacloav FB S4H WIN • ONE OF 10 RAMBLERS-aASSIC, STATION WAGON, SEDAN PLUS ALL EXPENSE—7-DAY VACATION FOR TWO IN IRELAND JUST COME IN AND REGISTER NEW 1962 RAMBLER HEATER. RADIO, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSlilN; WHITEWALLS AND WINDSHIELD WASHERS $47 Down and $52.08 Per Month I960 chevrolW jorooir ‘tST' RDoar Sadaa 1959 FORD iom -m’ tDoor •Mji^'5* Sr* ficSitr* wmL***Sh«wi31 1961 FORDx^ la »dir jnyto4H».t-i •S I960 RAMBLER fUSSl, 1957 CHEVROLET yl959 RAMBLER bifmngham rambler 666 S. Woodvvatd, Birmingham MI 6-3900 OL 1-9711 BEATTIE Any Way You Figure It...You Get A ‘BONANZA of SAVING ^ • AT ■■ MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES "Chevy-Land" HAS THE ONE FOR YOU 1 A BEAUTIFUL TU-TONE 1959 FORD FAIR-LANE SEDAN with V8 engine, automatic transmission, factory-installed fresh air heater and push-Imtton radio. And to complete this exceptionally clean car we installed a new set of whitewalls. Mere words can never completely describe this one. Yon must stop in and see it t ATTENTION COMPACT CAR BUYERS '60 RENAULT DAUPHINE m Mdlculoaa Low File* e< Oaljr— 1^5 '58 Ford Fairlone "500" Mr «Mb TMWm Fatal. Td Baflaa. Adteaiatt* Traa*ail**li WaMors aad WhttowaUol '57 Ford Fairlone 4 Door TDM vtth Uadi*. Bootor, Woditrt oad WhIUvsl '60 Falcon 4 Door ibator, Wtahor* aad tara alcuaU. aoUd U(bt kla* flalabi '60 Falcon 2 Door-Clean! WNk Baaior amt Waabar*. Bitra Cloaa Hiroa(boutl '58 Ford 2 Dcior Sedan DEMO aEARANCE ■ - NOW GOING ON -7 TO SELECT FROM n FORD GALAXIES FORD FALCONS FORD WAGONS BEATTIE “Your FORD DEALER Since 1930” ON DI3CIE IN WATERFORD AT THE STOPLIGHT OB 3-1291 THESE CARS ARE TITLED IN ^ GENERAL X MOTORS NAME '61 CHEVY Impala 2-Door ■adoa vtth OVBRDRIVB, Vr!^SlcSS!s;‘ Kisr M ““* * $1995 '61 CHEVY Brookwood Wagon $2145 '61 CHEVY Parkwood Wagon tnnanto^. poVM atoarlai. povar btokaa, baator aad a boat $2095 '61 CHEVY Biscayne 2-Door Sts, $2045 '61 TEMPEST 4-Door Sedan abarp daluas toUrtor oetti Toa'U vaat $1795 '61 MONZA 4-Door Sedan TbI* ItttI* lam aqulpped i radio. I, ESI (loai. Sharp |*t blook flalab $2095 '61 CADILLAC “62” 4-Door Sedan Fpvar atoarlai aad brake*. vhItevaU Ur**, Hydromsttc fe’-'dia.-nto.*M4’>^^^ vtto Biotchlnf cuitom latartor. Tlllad la Oaaaral Hetor* aom*. ^3895 '61 COR.VAIR 4-Door Sedan S^adard frlMiatMloe, CSC iroup, foldliii aaal. BZI |Uaa aad AIR.‘'OOKDITIOMl|IO- $1785 '61 Vouxhall Victor 4-Door Sedan $1195 '61 CADILLAC 4-Door Hardtop BBDaA DeVn.Li; vtth Hydra, aiatle trantmlaaloo, lull povar . . . 4-vty: Nev apar*. rqdle, -haater. Tvo to chooa* from . . on* a abarp aoiarald iraaa; tha $4295 '61 CHEVY Bel Air 4-Door n* prlaaf Only . $1995 '61 CHEVY Impala 4-Door Sadaa vtth AIB OONDmON- Si..-^o?fV.rw,"^Sl $2395 OUR GUARANTEED WARRANTY ' AND LARGE SELECTION OF A-TTRACTIVE AND RECONDITIONED USED CARS ASSURES YOU OF COMPLETE SATISFACTION YOU'LL BE AMAZED AT THE MANY VALUES YOU WILL FIND ON OUR SPAaOUS LOT. MOST HAVE BEEN METICULOUSLY SELECTED BY OUR USED CAR MANAGER WITH CUSTOMER SAVINGS THE PRIME OBJECTIVE Your Choice of Financing and Big Trade Allowances TYPICAL "Chevy-Land" USED CAR VALUES ’60 VOLKSWAGEN Sun Roof 2-Door $1395 ’60 MONZA Sport Coupe fovanlld* tranaailaaioa. ndto. bmtor aM vbMavsU tiro* M $1695 ’59 FORD Galaxie Convertible $1395 '59 BUICK ^ LeSabre 2-Door * ’60 CORVAIR 2-Door, "70(7’ Seriea ’61 MONZA 2-Door Oub Coupe Fovanlld* trtaaalatloa, radio,* hooter. vtaltovWl tiro*. SoUd tJHar oatraa. A abarp aodaa vllb aatoaiatlo traqaalMlon. radio, baator aad toUd |*M flalM. A dallfM to , •etaony empM. Alto rtditk Bttvllful Rmimi rtd f*n*t*» $1295 $1495 $1995 '59 PONTIAC Sta^chief Sedan A kdoot with r-t Mfta*. aata. •61 CHEVROLET Biscayne 2-Door Baaaoaaieal d-*ylladar ooftaM ’61 CHEVROLET Impala Sport Coupe ■la*, radio, baator and oobd haaur. Baal abarp baifi kod aatumn loM flalab. $1495 abarp Ivlllgbl bin* flalah. $1795 polo vWto vllb rod tntortor. So* thU on* lodayl $2145 ’61 CHEVROLET Biscayne Sedan A Adoor «tlb radlih baator. ’59 RAMBLER American 2-Door nu on* alae ha* ataadard '60 CHEVROLET Biscayne 2-Door oodan vllb ataadard traaa. rtdlt^ fitittr mmI mIM aemloal AoyUndor taila*. aad mdby athar flat mItm. FlaaalBc aaamlal iraaa flalM. graaa flatih. Orao* yonr ditoo-way vtth lUa aM lodayl FltMlBf toWB Met lltirtti $1695 $695 $1580 ’58 CHEVROLET Bel Air Coupe A Fdoor daUtbt vltb V4 an- “ $1045 ’59 RAMBLER Super 4-Door Sedan vtth heotor. ataadard tranamtaaloo. l-ayUnd» anilB* that aaaara* met ex^ oUa-air and baautUnI taiparlal |r*y flniah. $995 '60 CHEVROLET Brookwood Wagon A ADoor Waiaa vtth aa ooa-aomleal S-eybador taitai* aad and boater. SoUd bln* flalab. •$1495 •57 PONTIAC Starchief Hardtop ’ei^CORVAIR 4-Door, “500” Series a^ppod* toV MXaiiiSe^an!? i^aaloo aad ival abarp harbor bln* flniah. Folrly prtoad *t. * $1545 ’61 CHEVROLET Greenbriar &ai*r?*%yl!»!^e*jEr^^ s^.*^’Ma^aiy's?‘t55s; ““ $995 radla, baator. ataadard' traaa-alaalon aad abarp iTorr aad tod flalab. A aMaty-MytoJ $1795 ?61 CHEVROLET Bel Air Sedan ’56 CHEVROLET Bel Air Sedan ’61 CHEVROLET Parkwood Wagon $1995 A ADoor Vtth V-d onitao. oalt^ atoUe traaamlaalaa. vbltavaU Ural aad abarp tu-loM Wat fla-lab. Jaal Uk* aav. $695 Apattaniar wMi. radio, boater. T-S aoita*. aatamaMa traaaail*-tha. Bool abarp NHd Maataa “I2295 Matthews=Har Oakland County's Largest Volume Qievrolet D^ler 631 Oakland at Cass FE 4-4547 :'V THE jPOXTUC PRESS. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY >> 1902 THIRTY-NiyE (M Dr.F •tM (4)WMtlwr (T) lUhaWi •iM 0)Nt«f (i) (7) Ntws (t) T>«bo«t Anrit CWlteTip* 9tm (S)lvito • (4)lpQtt» •t« (2)N«M (4)Nmi (T) 7>I9 (2) (4)Rlpoar4 • (7) One Stop Bcynrf (9) WhlplMh (M) ftoiy et Monty 7im (3) RawMdt (ooBt) (4) laMinatkaal (7) Soupjr 8«l« (f) Movit. “BUy Ite KM.* (IMl) H» taiiMd yomm out. law is hind as a “panuad-ar” fay tha eau> of tbs ooub-tiyaUe. Robart Taylor, Brian (4) (Cpiar) auri Lswis (7) ftaim M nut Ui« (3) Marty Waa 44) (Ootor) lOnf Laonardo UiM (3) Aliakaim (4) f>ny (7) Orcui Boy UilP (3) Roy Rayari (4) Maha Room for Daddy (7) CMaen Soidlar UiH (I) Billboaid ■ATUMAT AimVOOIt UtW (3) tty K1|« (96) CoUaga News Confer- (4) Sbowtfana (east) (7) Hafbawayi (») Movie (oont.) (96] “ 6:» a) • (4) a> (!) Movie (oont) (96) For Dodara Only •<66 (2) Roirta 61 (oont) (4) Dataedvaa (coot.) (7) 77 Snnaet Mp (•) Tommy Ambnaa (96) llir Doetora and You 6l and a The remainiag Magnus Pederson, of St. Petars-- w Stabnsr of Milford. Skip Boston of Mount .... ^ ----------------------- Froth tiia tkna a ooupla of MU-3rd area womsn mat tbrss years go, they've bad two tbfngs In omimn. That's fixing food and ukii« frianda. and thrtr npoM-lon os "thp friaafty oooha" ban preod. When Mm. Robert. Miller of Driftwood Drive kuggeels to her neighbor that the two make a few tennalom to make tiny colorful bolls tor oppoUaen or doaerts. Nothiiw was wasted. They took • ^ 9 and made - a ran and Evu atnoe early last tew baby Umu of ap tha'food la oantaliy ipaakiBg al pWdia. the twa frtonds pot ap aad ftvMsd rtx large oeeeke ef Ratter dOe and 19 qnarto af owert gheekhw, phH maey Jan-af sweataam hat a couple «f nee left over _______ is oerefuUy placed ta dw TV platae, than covered with aluminum foflandftw- Atlor several web tarty Wt4it^r MSB dinners have aceu ths two Mends Iwve ■ " guostTwhott tusetaus Mg d In their i of cocn. one bushel each of bsnno. asparagus, beoti, squash and9l4 quarts of tasty chill sauce. Last weak a big pot et aamebraten is their own yeraitsi of a TV dinner. They save and ool-lact all the old clean abimlnum two gala have gotten together they can. Than as small to concoct practleal and unusual portions of food art loft over ihun dinners, they ai« put into the hree eompkiUpants of the plates." a ftsy have ons swta rtssk. a Haro's the way it woika. About mldauminer Kay leksa soys. "Let's get a crate of strawbeitim crate of raspbahlea apd have hmei WPUr LOOT After the fresh berries ark frosted with sugar and put into plaatlc bags, the women *'spUt tbe loot." (cost indudad), and the dinner sised packagee are placed in ench a ‘a. One day ta early fall tba cultaary jE3SL.V tlx honeydew meloHf and two ww skMiilfaUr val lrt the that took ab-memyy at M victory over 'Itayaguei nurs^ ni^ in the bterAnap- iTleeSi in a 94) mark. OarOett is UrgM Early Spraying of Foit-Gr^ng Aphids PAUL, IfiaB. (UPI) -Sprayh* for aphids, or plairt Uoe, should bt done when tbe li first appear on plants, says Lofgron, Unlvenity of Mlnasactt Aphids build up to dsstnietive nunbars to a anpriatagly short tfana. A Amato a^ may produce up to 40 young with 16 gen-erntODns between Mqrch and Oc- 5& r E IT r w w IT W IT ■ r B w 4S ESts^SOO « kSlw citr I Did Johansson Borrow Secret From Moore? GOTEBDRG. Sweden (AP)-igeroar Jobenmon, form heavyweight boring champion, begin* his comeback against Jamaican Joe BygraveS tonight. Jo-haiwmn is a 4-1 Avortte for tha bout, scheduled to start at J:30 p.m. ESr. Hr A a Ingo shot up to about pou^ in his. long Iayoff> after bis knockout lorn to Floyd Pntteraon irt Manta. Many aaid he would never get --Today's Raciio Programs-- wxtx (iste) woan ti “H!®sr ".W, lopvoos tiBs-wm Jtun CXLW Saovtos . ■SteyKJfJTUr* -SiSS-WWi, DmMiMr ftsa-wJk tbbwm ar s wvtt HtvtirofMM teCLW. Kao^M wwj. B. aiUMa isteygwj, '■'I'* aae-wm, asriMHast WWJ. rom wxvk. rrMi won WWJ. Wows, nokort* ik'tar'iM. wPoft trMittov liis-wwj. a*«i, nokort* Wfiarksr* otJETm* WCAE, Ntvi. Ooktod wroM, m*(. lovu sbov CXLW. Morsoa, Bsrtd MrSS-wm Sort rtsw' WXTX, WiBtor, Mon wroM, MOV*. Jtmr oi*n MsSS-WWJ, Mon. Monitor CXI.W. Morssi, VM^ WCAX, MtOiTOMirn UiSS-^WJn, Mon. Donlol WXT8. Mow*, WtnW HBHLw wSb."! OXLW. M ■ATDBDST ArrSBNOOM U:te-WJB. Mow*, ronn WWJ, M*w*. MoinU wars H«M**l«gr, M*w* OKLW. New*. Jo* Vos WJBX, Now*. MO WOAR, N*n. Vlllk* • ' WrON. Mew*. Otoni SIMW tsiss-wja Tura (or.Mea WW|. M*wt. MASwrtI CD,#, M«W(, Jo* Vs# 1 Vni.W. MOWS. .TOO TMI WPON, Mow*, Ota*a abow liSS-WrOM, M* WXTX, WlnUr, WWJ, N*n, M siss-wwj, it*wi. rtsxnn WJM. IM inlatt V*. Boftn »i*t:yCArt M.n^M , **n WWJ. Monitor S(M-^WWJ. MOW*. Mom «t*S-WWJ. MooNor wi^ ^wS^SfUtH WJBK. Mu*l* Site-WJR. Mon, WW* Menller jK^HAood Aww Bsw-wjR, mmio non WW4.M*w*. Monitor Toots Makes Evening Expensive for Sinatra By RAIL WILSON NBW YORK — Frank Sinatra and Richard Nlxqn —- a couple of opposites if you can Imagine a couple of opposltaa— were on opposite sldea of Toota Bbor's celebrity oomar the other night MUe Romanoff, dining with Sinatra, strolled over to Mixon and said a few Ro* Maybe I’ve not taken off weight as sensationally as AreWe Moore,” said JohanMOiy "But I’ve taken it off. And Tve# it ofl by n combination of hard training and scientific eating.’' A -dr # # Moore’s weight rsddcing in the li|^ beavywright dass is almost legendary. Johansson’s weight reducing, at Ipart among Swedlrii who know him well, is some-that proves that the home grown Gotttorg boy ie eerioue in his bid to try to 1^ bade to the top. He now we^ about Nixon came over and offered hld'hand to stra. - ^ , Whareopoa aliarfly cried, "Amboy, Fr^k for making him come over to yokl’’ ‘ * It was an expensive even^pg lor Slnatrsr-probably xQst him abotlt |1J)00 In Bhor’a. For Toots reached Into Slnatra’e pocket, extracted rolls of bills, passed out about $500 to inters, caiHalns, bus boys, and bartenders. Ttidn, dar lighted at how easily he could do It, he followed frank to his taxi, snatching out more I... for everybody bu4 his customers. Blnatra enjoyed it, evidently. Immensely. Frank left because he had a 7 am. call for his ideture, "lianehurian Candidate," i Madison Bq. Garden. “I've often gone to bed at o’clock in Ntv York but this la the first time IVe ever had to get up at 7 o’clock In Now Yevk,” he explain^. Bantamweight Fight AortM Postponed by Injury f when Jofre injured Us right wrist during training.' ^ y Aristides Jofre said Paulo. Brazil, Thursday that his son suffered the injury there hlle training on a heavy bag. Lou Thomas, spokesman tor the National Borii«43ub said March 30 was the tentative nevf date for tbe bout between Jqitc and his Mexican opponent, who Is ijsaln-lag ta the San IVaBciaoo — JHE MIDNIGHT EARL Janet Leigh,did a barefootjcorps twist at ths little Club with bou Billy Reed . . . Martha lUye and Ntok Cendes OK’d daughter Meledye, 17. Joining her uncle Steve Condee* act In Las Vegas next month . . JANBIL 3oan Crawford attended "A Family Affair"; her nece, Lowe, has a role . . . Reeallnd BusseU, who portrays a Je^ bouaewlfe In "A Majority of One," got an Invitation from Gurion to vlalt Israel One resourceful cafe owner came up with a new reason for bad business: "People read the world was coming to an end, so they spent all their money; It didn’t end, so now they’re broke." Comics Joke about toumlng night clubs Into garages; Jhe plush new Copa In Atlanta pulled a switch—It before It became a cafe ... - •A Ar ★ RABL’S FBARUi pigw In an optician’s window: *lf you SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The .arid bantamweight - championship fight schcdidad hart Feb. 36 between champion Edee Jbfre and ___________________________ __ Hannan Marquez was poatpoped ygQ want—then you’re in the right place." _w_ r_._ u._ -i-u, j^D^ys BEST LAUGH: A local fellow eomplalned about hlrtien-peeked home life; "TIm last big deela^ I made was whether to wash or dry. WISH I’D SAID 1HAY: T^ coet of puetage Is going up again. TThs will give some peopfe another excuse ?br r not writing New YOTk’s new traffic Commlsriopar Barnes says he’s der tfrmlned that "a pedestrian shouldn’t have the right of way 01^ utaen tu’p riding In an ambulance." . . . IhaYs earl, brother. (Cqpyright, 19tt) Mt: Pularid, Sprktoftold and Gritt burg. We Usteiwd ea he a 1 qa my 'nr art, 1 a.clvfim. The t ■ bii( this 19 the tort one lor mo. ' No tears now. 1 want to rnneas* ber you the way you were. Strikebreaking Bill Hits Snag -- Affl^ndnwnt Holds Op; Fropoiol In SM; Go dp Floor in WMk Homo Run Wins Gam# last at New President From U. of M. Dr. Jamot H. Zumborge ^Will Hood CoilogB ot Grand Rapids A UnTveraity of Michigan geology professor, Dr. James H. Zum- LANSlNa « --A bUl to prohibit amployinant ef protoealcnal rtrlkw "The legal, but we want to gut the mah-ter thrashed out." said Greens, "the US. Supreme Court hai heM ' that anyone may Join a picket line. "The Taft-Hartley Law already provides a court remedy for any violence ta picket lines." • nw MU. prsasitei eMsfiy by fta MIeHgaa Fedroollon M lypo- It also would prohibit any birtaR ot a protesaional stiikebresKfer. de-'flned as "any pwson wheturtom-arily airisrapoatedly offers himaeif tor employment ta the place ef rtnpkjyee taveived to a labor dto-ute.” "We’re mainly concerned wUh' ro or three groupo of atrOnfaNato ns who work full time traveling 3 one newspapsr to another to at Jobs during labor di» jtos,’’ rtUd Jamos A. McNiab. • prari^ of tba State Typogntphl-eal Feodrotton. Tha aama moasun cloared ths' inato tost year but died In the „ Michigan's new ported institution of higher learning, Grand Valley State (Toitege. ef tbe aew by QVSe bsMd ef eoniroi after aa tavee-UgaUsn sf ttc asattN tote (be • RENTAL • SOFT WATER Uetonifed Qusntitios -•7 ^3 LIND|iAY SOFT WATER CO. 91 Newberty St. PI 9-6621 2kunberge is a graduate of the University of Minnesota, where he received his AB degree in 1946 and Mi PhD in 1960. after service with the United States Marine daring W^ War II. JOINED FACULTY , * He Joined the facnlb' of the University of Mktaigan’s coUege of literature, sciehoe and the arte in MMto n full professor 10 years later. aear the site of Ow origtoal LM- Grand Valtoy State CoUege was organised aa an iadependient col-togs wlfii its own governing board and autfaorixed by an act of the state legislature In Ite I960 aas-aion. Its campus la located on MSO and Wart Grand Rlvgr, seven miles from Grand Hfrids. Tbs first biil}dh«i wtO be rthdar construction In tba annuner of 1962, and.ite first daoa will be admitted Enabling legistotiafi lor apbod wan laM to UdO. contin. grtit vg«r taaekers who were required to obtain 91 milUon in private fundi and a site to start ap- been met. • SPECUL PRICE With Thil Ad on FURNACE CLEANING $J50 MICHIGAN HEATING CO. •8 Newberry Sf. FW6211 \U^l s*-RADIO I Service Salit and^Sarvicfl ImM. II ft 779 Oittaid Inks W Mi«kVMi7Bjinf^ FORTY TH» PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 0. 1968 Religiousissue Caused Trouble for LincoInBs 1 ^ dUUoilty - “• “• ‘•KnowWoe DooWing > INI Mirra wu • rrligkMi t^mi In M rlMUQa cwnpalgn. * «oiqrtody cklmad tfie candl-At lor tte Houm o( Rrapmeit' ------ tram Springfteld, lU - ■ - wu "M ki> of religion In general or o( any pectad ol being a deiat, denomination of Chrialiau In pa^ ■ * . - . Ikular.*' 1. war a St. ad k Wives t the election. But three years earlier it had been a POPULAR PAWrUIB Much hu been written about ■uperstitioiia. In IM ha wnits to grayed if^Ul u much unieatneaa. hia birthday rods around each different story. He had tried lorye«r a pomilar pasMme In , , , . . • WhIgvparty nomination without ,„,rtera to to try to flguid out tThat I am not a member of ■uccess, and laid at lout part t)l ^hat denomlnaUon he‘belonged a(y Chrlatlan church to true.*’ re-1*» blame to religious intolerance. , ptwl Ae. honeatly, ."but I have nfver denied the truth of the h Sbriptum; and I hive never o * H * tenermeat feeUngs ol tklaidatoii M oiy Imeu in'prayer/* ha aald shortly nflar the batMe ol I GMtyfburg. ‘‘Never befbre had 1 He Mnuelf adlnitted to beli« friend. JOahua r. Spaad of LoulsvUle. Ky., “I wu ahAys supenMtioua. I believe God made me ana ol the Instniments for brtniilng your (wife^ and you together. which union I have no doubt he foseordalned.*’ But Lincoln also bad a strong reliance on prayer; went to my room and got I fait that 1 must put truat in Almighty God praiad that he would not let the and die a happiar and bettor man." rAltH IN PROVIDENCE And a profound filth In “1^ aO of thla book upon balanee on faith,” ha iRule to Speed in UH “and yon edU ’If, after endeavoring to do my brat in the light Which (God) affords me, I ftori my efforts fail," he wrote In 1882, “1 must believe that for some purpora unknown to me He wills it otherwtoe." Perhaps the most revealbig attitude was summed up hi the I my a ments of Christian doetrlne which toe their attictep of be- "When any church will li aubataace of both law and goapol ‘Thou Shalt love the Lopd thy (Sod with all thy heart and with all thy soul and with all thy mind. MINrfItAPOlllS 08 If you think acfaoal wu tough in youk day,r pity (ho poor.opholar o£ five Mrs haoce. Dr- A. Rkhird )9aldwlii, ra> uardi dhPrator. el i farm products firm, eotlmilcs accumulation of ' heart and with all my i B be the fourth time that nuui'a vohimo ol knowledge hw doubled, aayj Dr. Baldwin. Pii-vious times were between 1T50 and 1900; between 1900 and 1990; and between 1960 and 1900. REDUCED FIRST TIME Seolg breakwlhe naliencriiy adverlieed * *59” price! Tew set famous HEX GUARD uwality at *20” OFF! *'*»^"*w*4^ Never before couM you buy aD -the quality of the Bealy Flex Guard' mattreM for leae than $59.96. Now, you can enjoy ezcluaive Edge-Gard border Kjpport, button-free comfort, ' and heavy 8-oi. wovgR atripe cover— tht quality for tdueh^oiuaiuU paid $59.95--at a firat-time-ever $39-95 for thia Saaly 81st Anniversary Mattreaa. Win# you No *'®«enoa IN ^Ay )9S ^UtY, |00 OiV/j, ^«irj O/tf S-#i. Wevte Slflea Cevw. bus OuraMe with , ssha mars of wear wevsn McaBMuMulceMWno- DON’T ^ISS THESE OTHER SEALY ANNIVERSARY I samo qualify Flax Ouard fDoturae tvDfo ad* ^ vDrUsedattll.llin UPf laDue of July ft, 1H8. AlsoRdvtffieDdalllMI in LIPI JaniMry tl, HU Mid July M, nil. P-SAVERSI Infra quality, antra firmnsasi Saaly list Annivarapry quality foaturas p/us lavish floral print cover end , thick erfri layer of latei fibor tor ^ oraetar comfort and firmnns. ikr*- Bo* also 49.05. BRASS OR PIASTIC mADBOARD SET ‘Brats or wnhabla plastic ig >1 tropunto deSlon, Saaly mat- WHITE WOOD or PLASTIC HEADBOARD SET *1^] Painted white wood in (lofal Ign or tiifiod whMe plat- 6-PC CORDUROY INSIMBIE d, badaprted^vi:......— mattrtse • Matching boa MAPLE BOOKttSE , ^ HEADBOARD SET | Honey maple flnlth. Beok apece galoref Button-free OMy mattress In traditional print Matching box spring, •Isel frame. Available at BOTH STORES far Immediate Delivery ! Amida Free Parking THOMAS R| ECONOMY Budget Terms mi samraw sfRor • Mmc *®***^^H^ wi MnihMawaT • Muma Hhik '' ■T ' i: Th# Weather u s. WtllkOT parMs FwmuI THE. PONTIAt: PReSS^ P4fiB \'OL. l^u XO. 2 ★ ★ ★ ★ ♦ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, PRIDAY. FKBRUAIIV 9. 190^-^40 PAGES \ 0 Die, Hundreds Hurt in Paris Rioting Begin Fallout Shelter Survey r Russia Gained in Last N-Tests, Concedes U.S. Kennedy Almost Forced to Decide Soon bn Air Blasts for America WASHINGTON (M— President Kennedy's top disarmament adviser reported today that the Soviet Union “achieved some substantial gains” in nuclear Weapons devolp-ment in its long series of' test explosions last fall. DlMmuunFnl Oirpctor William C. Koiiter aaid the Soviet oomphahraent haa become c to U.8. offlcialt “only in the Iasi month.' Hk w«rd« Iwileatad eHher that MABS^ MEAMIREMENTN - Engineert began yB phyaical survey of Pontiac buildings this week to determine the best potential locations lor future community laUout shelters. WUIlam C. BaUey records the data as Theodore E. Kuhn measures the thickness of a wall at Pon-tiaf (ieqeral Hospttal. Wall mass is a vital r«aUs« Fr item in Ihe survey. Both men repreaent GlOels a Rosaetti, Inc., Archltecta-Engineers, of Detroit, under federal contract to make the ahelter survey in this area. Both have Department of Detenae Identification cards. Watching the procedure la Donald H. Carroa, aaalstant hospital administrator. Givet Priority to Pontiac State Unit ' Praises Bill by Roberts puasewden af n U.13 million in funds proposed by Robeils would provide space for 8D chUdren and free ^pace in adult wards now being used by The aupermtendent of Pontiac State Hospital today praised a introdneud by Sen. Farrell £. Bobertf, R-PonUac, as giving same priority to ttatroittoi otil children’s unit at Pontiac as the! The Senate Mil would author-prlorlty given five years ago to ise thr state Adminiatnitivr proposed upits at YpsiUnti aai Board te.lbrnnoe the fl.U mU- lorthvllp IMsMUlB” Dr. isUteil H. Obei Obenaol said the! sute Uoih>)MI hy Sheriff's Depf. Promofes 5, Adds fo Uniform Division Sheriff Frank W. Irwig today announced the promotion of five officers ahd an Increase in the ranks of the uniform division within the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department. The staff increase. Irons said, gives the uniform division a total of 89 men and*" allows the addition of an extra team of detectives. * * * Promotrd fo dcli-clive were Fred Pender, 31. formerly u sergeant in the uniform divt.sion. and PENDRR BHJit Pender, 2720 Gorlad Road, Orion ToWnship, Joined the department in 1954 and Bills, 1591 Oxford Road, Berkley, became a deputy the following year. Their promotions now gives the department four S man h-ains of detectives lor rriniinal Investigation work, said Irons. The position vacated by Pender allowed Irons to promote James .Stltes, 37, 1484 Ora Rpad, Oxford Township, from relief sergeant to uniform sergeant. ★ ♦ ★ Named as a new relief sergeant was former deputy Med-v^ard Tessler, 29, 1520 Beverly Blvd., WaUed Uke. Withdraws Local Plans for Collie The Pontiac Board of Education Inst night withdrew its plapf lor locally built and financed community college in favor of the Oakland County Board of Educathxi plan — at least until June. At Ihsi linic. said Dr. Dana P. Whltmer. if legislation for a coun-tywido-iax-hii^ system fails to pa.'^ the Mlch^an Legislature, the Pontiac Schdol District will take , another look at alternate ways of establishing a eummunity college In the Immediate area. As expected, the Pontiac board In Its statement of policy lent Its support to the county plan but demanded popular election of the eontrolltng board and pojiular control of the purse strings. As proposed, the County Board of Education, as pi-esently^nstl-tuted, would be the «mtrolling board of the community coll&ge system. The Pontiac resolution stresses tliat “adaptation to local needs and conditions'’ of the community college system “necessitales strong and direct communication between the controlling board and local citizens. “A board eleeted by the cili-sens and r^ponslble to them,” the resolution reads, “will, in the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) This is the same figure which has been recommended for several years following rec-ommendations of a study conunlt-tee set up about five years ago by the State Mental Health Department. Dr. Obenauf indicated today that these recommendations hifid been outdated. The priorities set by the stale commiltee about five years ago out thoae hoapitals first lit line lor chUdren's units, which had the heat developed programs at that ilme,’’ Dr. Obenauf said. “At that lime, these were the Ypsilanti and Northville State Hospitals. ' In the meantime, however. Pon-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Holiday on Monday In observance of. Uneola’a Birthday. Pontiac area banks and savings and loan InstltuHons ami county offices will be closed Monday- City otflres will reniabi open regular hours as will the STITE8 EVANS The new hirings also allowed, the ^etllf to ' promot# former) offi<'c ahd secretary' dbiHity Leonard ih'aris. 43, 1114 j stole^ ^nch ounces. Lyons Road, Royal Oak, to the . '' _ - - (Con^ued on Pagp 2. Col. ,S> 43« DUM Hlsbnajr I . from the State Employes Retire-meat Fund. Originally, only $50,000 for plah ning of such a unit had been n> quested In -Gov. laradMon'a bodget Dr. Waller a Obenauf. medt- V latelllgraee iu> sions have reeeatly been reached by the aeteatkts aaalysiag such Informatloa as they have been able to get on ttie SovlH lest Foaler made his slutement about Soviet test results in to the Washington Post which gave further Indication the Kennedy administration Is moving steadily toward a decision within the next few weeks I to order atmospheric testing 'U.8. nuclear weapons. REDS OAlNINtl -Foster referred to the “substantial gains" made by Soviet testers and weapons DETROIT (AP»— George Romney, Amerlran Motors Corp. President, fasted and prayed today as he pondered whether to seek the Republican nomination for governor of Michigan. Romney plans to announce his decision Saturday morning. ♦ * ♦ Intimale friends disclosed late Thursday that Romney had begun 24-hour fast. They said he made practice of fasting before making any important decision in personal and business altalrs. Contacted in Lansing where he aeries, after a period of no teat-on either aide during which they extrapolated the remits of tiMM teau and on that boi secretly prepared for new testi ptight actually give them a superiority in the anilmiasilr or olhe,r strategic areas which their mill-lary interest would find hard nut to exploit.” ♦ ♦ ♦ Soviet hopes for military dominance, "Foster said, seem to indicate that they will press for another moratorlqm on testing during which they wdul8 make lecvel preparations for a second test series aimed at such a lead in the nuclear arms trace. Foster said It seems logical fir jAe Soviets to Mlow surh tactics, M^ing a new moratorium *‘be- could restore the orlglMl margin If our lead.” Tke implication that the U.S. lead actually has been narrowed constituted an argument that al-moopheric tests of American weapons obviously are necessary. # ♦ ★ Foster's assertion that the ex- Reds Threaten Strikes During Victims Burial Police Cloimi^ Gongs Orgdnized to Pull Wild, Bloody Night PARIS — Communistg today threatened strUces and more demonstrations after a wild night of bloody rioting in Paris in which eight persons were killed and hundreds injured. The Reds accused Ihe police of "unbrlievable savagery" In ihive hours of fierce street fighting. The battle erupted from a WOUNDED IN PABW — Wounded inJir on (»^shc was slruck by a stone. Fi-em h police |testing the govenuneut's fafiure comforted by two girls after he was Ihjured In said thaj three persons weie klllixl and l-W J® Ihe rioting An Paria Thurwtoy night. Woman police wounded in Communist-led rioting agalnsi Army OrganlaatiM. standing behind victim rubs spot on her head Ihe right wing secret army. Inteilor Minister Roger F^rey _ ________ _____________■ _________________________________—................... .......charged that the Communists pro- \ ’ voked the bloodshed and de- I dared; '"These people wanted trouble. Rarely have such well-organized bands of rioters attacked the security forcet” The Communlsis, bucked by other left-wing parties and non-Communlsl trade unions, retaliated wlih a threat to call a general strike during the funerals of Thursday night's victims. , A M-year-aU yoath wte Is a rMisia by ■ Mlehel ~ He*s Fasting, Praying Today Is Romney Decision Day was attending (he constllutional convent ion as a delegate. Romney confirmed he was fasting. He said he would return to his Bloomfield Hills home outside Detroit later "to seek guldon«;c ^ryond that of man." Romney is president of the trolt •Stake (diocese t of the Church of Jesus Christ of-Latter Day Saints. His title Is equivalent to bishop. DECIDING TODAY Hie auto exeeuiivc said h? likely would make a definite dedtion *- seek vention seal only because* he was required lo make the choice. ' rt'IlK^ous belicls. Oakland County. Romney had:*"** 'harged by a group of aligned hlmseinwrti neither parly. ^ '"‘"‘■•‘''•s eariy this week. CHOSE OOP Convention delegates were clios-en by party and Romney chose Jo run as a Republican. He won easily In (he traditionally Republican district. On a national television interview last Sunday night Romney said he found fault with both parties. He said he ran'os a Repu^ lican for the constitutional con- Al the same tinte. Dr. Dana P. Whltmer challenged Ihe Greater Pontiac Evangelical Ministers Fellowship lo cite specific instances of ridicule by teachers of siudents who object be<‘ause of conviciton against social dancing, "profanity In English textbooks" and language in the play "Life With Father. HOMES FLOODED - Water, brought by Southern California’s heaviest storin in years, surrounds these homes and cars In a saction of the Loa Angeles section of Gardena. In some by Ihe Piintiae Btiani III Education at Us regular meeting last night. Dr. Whltmer invited iiienibers of the fellowship’s social action rimimltti-e to iiie«‘t with school adnilnlslralors lo "give us Instam-es” of Ihclr Mceusaliiais and "to dlsc'iss school policies- and prartice In general." The proposed discussion meeting between school utijninistrators Ihe ministers was hailed by boaid member Glenn H. Griffin as a "logical step." * * , * Acting Board Pi'esidenl William H. Andcison, in the absence of Pi-esideni Walter L. Godsell, said he thoughi he was expressing the feelings of other board members in saying ihul "Nol one member; of the iKiiii'd would condone such action" ns charged by Ihe minis- •We n'grcf.'^ Anderson sakl. to kidnap the yonth. Hm fatltor. a ualvorslty professor named laiareni HrbwaHs, la aa onl-spoken opponent of the secret army. The non-Communlsr Socialist •plinler party led by former Premier Pierrb Mendea-France demanded the rasignation of Paris police Chief Maurice Pppon and Ihe dltmiaaal at Frey. The party lad many of its mcmbei> among the lixjured. BOMBS HERE, THERE While the moba of lefiisis surged through the streets battling police, lerroriats of the anli-De Gaulle Secret Army Orgoniza-Ikm set off a dozen or more plastic botnbi in scattered sectlona of Ihe capital. ,Ai usual the bombers got away. Oimmunlsls parly oMcm qnd One bomb bndly damaged the Parts office of the Soviet news agency Taas In a bulldtng owned by the Soviet Kmbasoy. A « worker «t < pla<^ water was 8 feet deep. More than a dozen Los Angeles 8ch<^ were closed. Another downpour is predicled for today. Rains Flooding LA Areas products of southern California’s biggest downpour in years, threatened to linount today in the face at still more rain. As the stuborn storm lingered w a third day, the Weather Bureau forecast another 1 to 2 indies for the Los Angeles Basin which already has received nearly three inches since the rains started on ^ednsday. Some districts have ed even harder. In Canyon, rainfall from the storm had reached S.M laches by mid- Althoug^ the heavy moisture was pronounced ideal for practically all cropt, it caused numerous personM tragedies Jn urbiur ar^; TWo storm-related deaths; (aihilies lorded to evacuate their flooded homes; mud and rock slides throughout the basin. TRAVEL ROUGH ^ Slick pavements and Ihe queni landslides mkde autpmobiV? travel a nightmare. , ' . -a * * Flooding ranged from Waging depth to > torrents that washed the tojM of cars. Arteiia Boulevard in Gardena was turned into a huge, lake .at one point west of the Harbot^,, Freeway Thursday. PoUoo closed a 'S^blbek see-tion of snbarban OUver OHy due to floedlag Hincsday night. Dozens of . families left thMr homes in tbe low-lying beadi communities of the South Bay District as rising water made islands of some individual dwell- Twenty-four persons were evacuated from flooded homes at Port Hueneme in Ventura County, where rainfall passed 5 Inches. But many of the displaced families either had returned to iheir homes by early morning or were staying with friends. ^ / ^ * A Landslides were/ a constant mi|nace. Especially'hard hit wer^ stneets winding through »h# fire-denuded hills of the Bel-Air Brehtwood diatricis. . n«ilrr Mt^nilcr Bwf S», made against our iraclierN. We certainly would want proof that anything of the sort bus oc^ rurred." On the subject of social dancing, he noted that this was pursued in two w ays: in extra-curricular ■Voluntary danc'cs and In physical education classes in senior high schools where folk ^dancing la taught. excused with note The practice in these classes, be said, is that "any student is excused on the basis M conviction. Either a written note from the parent or''from the minister is honored." “Our teacher*." he added, "for a long time have been qvdte *en-slllve to these requests. We are not aware of any Instance of ridl-.Continued on Page 2, Ool. 4) News Flash ^ashin(;ton (AP)— life administration p p 0 -posed today that the Fed-erai government pay 60 per cent of the cost of butiding pubiic fattout shetlers. In Today's Press Nixon and Poor On TV show, ex-vice president hit.* JFK’s handling of Cuba - PAGE M. No U.S. Troops U.S. chief’of S. Viet Nam aid command doesn't see use of American ti-oops — PAGE :. Watch Him Wrangling Con-con jumps from roads to taxes — PAGE to. f ^ Be Relaxed High Schools ........... tl Markets ..................Si Oblluaiies 4 Sports' . S#-S8 Theaters ...............St-M TV A Radio Protranis » Wilson. Earl » |es li-li ^ - I N. Strrrt X niE PON I IAC J^RESS, FRIDAV. FEBRUARY 9, im. Relations With Cuba Severed by Argentine BUENOS AIRES (UPI> - Ar-(flnUra broke otf diplomatic rcla-tiom with Fidel Caatro'* Cuba lait n||M, and .within hours the suburban home of a U.S. Embassy, official was fire-bomM In apparent retaliation. Further anti-Amrrlran outbreaks sppearad likely today, although there were no immediate reports of violence. Fereiga Minister Miguel A. (tarraaa handed t'ubnn Charge d'Aftalres Martin Mora Zla his passport at the torrign mlnMr> last night In lonnal token of the dlplomatlr break. The foreign office announced that Argentine diplomats plan to remain' In Havana lor 4fl hours, winding up details of embassy busineas. Mora was expected to remain here lor about'the same length of time. i Hector Villanueva, the^rgenline charge d'a(falH>s in Havana, was Instructed to invite Cuba's Manuel Cardinal Arteaga y Betancourt, ' guest" at the embassy, to accompany him 16 Buenos Aires, Forty other retugeeo In nsylum In the Havana embanny will pass under the proleetlon. of the eoun-try that undertakes to aalegnard ArgeuUBe laterenls In (tuba. It la not yet certain whieh eoualry Late last night, three ........... fied men in an automobile tiurled four "Molotov cocktail' ariea at the home of U.S. Embassy official Heiury Pejrper in suburban Acassuao. The attack was lneffe<-live — two of the crude gasoline-filled bombs burst on the sidewalk and not function — but the would-be araonisls escaped. Pepper declined comment on the attack. The government severed rela-Ilona with the Castro regime uoder pressure from Argent Ina’s genemis and admirals, who were infuriated by this country's failure to vot ostracism of the Castroitos at the recent ••onference' in Punt a del Esie. Argentina was one of six na-Uona which abatalned. OK Strike Vote at Pontiac Plant Speedup Charge Made by Local 653; Petition UAW for Authority Withdraw Plans lor local College rCjontlnuod From Rage Onc» long run, be better able to Impie-meut local views and aspirations. "Control of community rolleges, to be maintained in the years ahead as colleges of the 'community.' should reside in an elected board of control whlAii' is independent of the County Board of Eduen-Uon." The statement emphasized that '"nie issties which are dinussed here are policy issues, and should not be construed to represent any rrlticlim of or lack of confidence In the County Board of Eduqatjon, its members, or the county 'offlc’c of education. " Regarding provisions made in, the legislative bill for a chai^ property tax and a 2 per cent property-transfer tax to finance .derating and construction posts, the Pontiac bourd expresied regret that "There is apparently no provision for a periodir review by citizens in which they rduid -ex-preso their views with respect to tax rates for community college purposes.’’" United Auto Workers Local 653 I Pontiac Motor Division has voted overwhelmingly to go pn strike if an agreement on speasl presleient and »'lee president of the Pontlae Breakfast Optimist Club and 'a member of Pontiac KIks I,4Nlge. . , Kahn is a 1940 graduate 61 Wayne State University Law School. He once was a title attorney and agent for the U.S. Internal Revenue Service. He is married and has two children. Kennedy, wife of the President, sent MemI a lavaliere with a hear! charm, on which uere engraved Memi’s inillals and Jacqueline's. Memi's plight was brought to Mrs, Kennedy’s attention June when she^Islted Greece. Memi was doom<^ to die, perhaps at not laleiyUjan 15 or 16, because of a/'aseulur impediment. FACI.NU/DEATH BiiJ/'^iboul Thursday: It was a grpdi day becauae all the big doe jdCB of Walter Reed Hospital, to which Memi was brought Jan. 10, paid court to h<‘r and helped cut a birthday cake She pn'cncd a bit in her pink slip, pink bathrobe and pink slippers, all gift.s of Mrs, Kennedy. Spiros Papagolsis, the beaming father, explained she was able to gel out of bed even though she had undergone the dange: heart operation only a week ago. This reporter conversed in Greek with Memi and her father. They have only a few words of English, "How lieuutiful that she doe not forget her hospitality.” said fhc, father, his eyes' brimming with tears. Memi had still another wonderful gift for her'birthday, her fatih-er relafed, while, the girl lauglied softly and her olive-black eyes brightened with thoughts of di.s-lant Messini, the liny village in southwest Greece from which she had been brought—thanks to the First Lady. ; NOTK FROM HOMK The gift was a birthday note from her mother, Toula, and two of her three brothers—Theodoraki, 15. and Constantino, 13. The third I TtmpH [) Wathlm itnston 40 27 Ar FMMfBS NATIONAL WEA'raER - Rain, possibly mixed with srfew. if expected in the mid-Atlan|ic Stales, Southern NcwvEngland and Southeast Ohio Valley, Vvith snow or flurries in the Ukes area and NMtheaat Ohio Valley.^11 of the Plains and Plateau, except southern sectors, can expect rajn and snow mixed und rain will continue in the Northwest. K win be colder in parts of the Missiasippi and Ohio Valtej^, the Osmral Lakes and parts of the Gulf coast and warmer in parts of fhK^Atlantic c-gast and Wc;:t-ern Miasissj^i Valley. ' and youngest brother, Niko, oesn'i know how to. w r 11 e y< ie said shyly. Spyros Papacotsis, a rice farmer with five acres, said: “I just annpl find the words to begin to express what we feel about the miracle jhiot Mrs. Kennedy mads ble. She did not do just a good deed. She saved a life. I am at my wit's <*»d to know how to make pur gratitude known.' Report $125,000 Saved With Sale of School Bonds BERLIN (UPl) — An American challenge today halted an attempt by East Berlin Soviet Commandant Col. Andrei V. Solovyev to eflter West Berlin to meet with the Bril-lah commandant, Maj. Gen. Sir Rohan Delacombe. Solovyev stopped his Rusolan army, ear, turned around and drove bark to East Bertln when a U.R. military poUeetnan at the Frirdrirhsirasiie rrooslng point asked, "Are yon Onl. Rolovyeq?’’ The Soviet commandant did not reply. He had been advised Thursday by the office of the British commandant to enter West Berlin thi-ough the Invalldenatrasse croaa-Ing-polnt directly into the British sector. MEETS BRITISHER A British officer went to Fried-richstraaae today and met the Russian commandant a few hundred ya«da east of the crossing point to remind him again to use the Inva-lldenatraase crosaing. Aulhoritathe sources said So- BIRMIN6HAlft'-T A savings of more than lUS.OOO has been raal-iaed by the Birmingham Board of Edueatioii with the sale of 13.5 In bonds I6r new school construction. The savings will result over a 2S-year period, school officials said, becauae of Uie low Interest rate lubmltted by the Harris Trust and Savings Bank and Associates of Chicago and Detroit In bidding Mi the purchaae of the bonds. The Harris Trust and Savlugo Friedrichstrasie la the only crossing point which the Communists allow nop-Germans to use. * 0 a Solovyev has been refused entry to the American sector through Friedrichstrasae since late Decem-incident in her following the U.S. commandant, Maj. Gen. Albert Watson II, was turned back by East German police for refusing to show- Identification documents for his civilian aide. N-Tesfs Helped Russia' (Continued From Page Opel clear only in the fast month" diCales that Kennedy has hud under consideration in the la»( few weeks facts arguing in favor of U.S. test explosions which available to him late last year when ho first began making tentative preparations lor U.S. tests. Foster wrote his letter because of reports from Kennedy's news conference Wdnesday that the President had introduced a new condition into U.S. requirements for nny fulufe nuclear test ban trea^. That ared today to differ in npproaehes to a final de-‘ cision on atmospheric testing of nuclear weapons by the West. Whether the apparent differences will lead to any real disagreement probably (iepends the kind of response the Soviet Union makes to the joint U, British proposal for an East-West foreign ministers meeting at Gen-next month in connection with tl^ opening of an 18-nation disarmament conference. expected that fliristmas Island will be only one of several plares where the United HUIes will explode miclear weapons If Kennedy decides on new sir tests. In other developments the French government said today it will not join ip a JU.S.-British appeal to the Soviet Union for a foreign Praises Bill by Roberts Says Pupils' Beliels Nol Ridiculed Here (Cqnlinuod From Page One) cute by a tea43h«-r or that any extra work has been assigned." Whitmer added another instance n which, he said, religious convictions are being respected in Pontiac public schools although not particularly cited by the ministers. This, he said, is the issue of gym class uniforms and requests for I ministers' meeting to bring the more privacy in showers. 'Some students,'' he said, "want to wear their own gjmi uniforms because of their beliefs. This is always granted. Some girls want greater privacy in showers, some instances, teachers have complied with this to the extent that they have made available their own private showers. There has been no compuls^ r ridicule from the teachers on dancing, gym uniforms or show-I.' he said. nuclear nnns race under control. FRANCE WAITS The French government added, however, that it did not oppose proposal. And was ready to join at any time in big power negotiations on "true measures of disarmament,’’ including the destruction of nuclear arm stockpiles and the means of delivering nu clear bombs to their targets. From IxNidon conoes word that the Russins have unleashed new propaganda blasts at the United Ir pn-p-t ^nd Ntales and Britain for Hi srslionN to stage a nr of nuelrar explosions In atmosphere. Bui .Soviet papers made no tion of the U.S.-Britlih luggettlon for a Ihiee-power foreign ministers’ meeting to seek u ban on nuclear testing. Meanwhile leading Japanese newspapers expressed hope” the United States would nol resume testing in the atmosphere. Scandinavian leaders of organizations opposing nuclear weapons said they hod cabisd the White House urging President Kennedy not to, order such tests. The Day in Birmingham This bid (romptUTS with the rate of about 3.42 per cent which might reaaonably have been expected, according to the. Municipal Advisory Council of Michigan. * ♦ 0 Lloyd Van Buokirk. idirertor of finance for the school district, said there were several factors responsible for the low bid. He cited the following as having probable Influence: improvement in the bond market in eral; the character of the Birmingham School Diatrlct, particularly its willingness to support quality schools; and dose cooperation with the Adviaory Council in an-STvrring request of prospective bidders for Information. The Music Guild of the Lutheran Church of the Shepherd King will . SOT a variety show, "Some &idutttered Evenlnf,’’ at T:30 p.m. tomorrow In the eociai hall. The chureh is at ,5300 W. Maple Road. The Intradeetlaa to the varletjr mime, Ie an arlglnal dtt wett-m by Mrs. DoanM Karrow aad enlHIed "A Ihew Is Bata.’* Mrs. Robert Bratton te jcuUd chairman and Mrs. Rudolph Kar-mann la general program chairman. TIcketa fOr the performance can be obtained at the door. The community Congregational Church in Lathrup Village will relebrate its Uth annlveriary at both the I; 30 and 11 a.m. tervicea on Feb. II. Rev. John D. lUtse has been tiac State Hospital has established its own children’s treatment program. he said. This program as well developed as at any other state hospital, he added. ★ ♦ * "I would agree with .Sen. Roberts," said Dr, Obenauf, need for separate children’s units in (his county and in the area served by Pontiac State Hospital is at least as great if not greater than anywhere else.’’ At pn-NesI, I'ontlac State Hos-pllal has M chlktren which have taken over some Of the adult Tvards. Moving the children into lacllltles especblly deslgn4^d for their different mn^ls. Dr. (iben, auf saM, would free aduU wards and permit admiaslon of some IM adults npw on waiting lists. Roberts’ bill for a Pontiac Hospital Children’s unit is one of several bills to improve laclli- chlldren hou^ in four state mental hospitals which have been introduced in both the ^ale Senate and the House. ★ dr ★ Roberts introejiiced the Senate measures, and Rep. Allison Green, R-Kingston, majority party leader, introduced similal* bills in the house. 'State Economic Gain to Focus in This Area' Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties, comprising the Detroit metroplolitan area will show the geeatest advance in the improved economy forecast for Michigan this year, arcording to Dr. Paul A. Herbert, chief of the research division of the Michigan Economic Development Departmenl In predleUng a marked gain In the state's ecnaomy ivr 1M2, 7rhlch will be greater daring the nrst six months. Dr. Herbert Mid the Delroll Metropolitan area will show the gieatesl Increase relatively la romparloon with othhr reglo8M ol the aUle. As only about 16 per cent of industrial employment is in the nondurable gcxxls industry. Dr. Herbert said, most pi, the improvement that* will occur is due to the upsunie this year in the fluctuating automotive industry, which has its greatest imparl in the Detroit and southern Michigan areas. However, it will not be sufficient to eliminate the unemployment problem he said, 4 * * The over-all improvrmeni In the' state should continue during the second half of the year, but with leys acceleration. Dr. Herbert con-tinued. There Is a slight possibility he said that the present national business cycle peak may be reached before the end of the if BO, it also would affect somewhat Michigan's recov- ehnrrh In IM7 and Rev. PhUlp (leirtlle Joined the alalf four yrara ago lo be la charge cf A tpecial feature of the anniversary aarvloe tvlll be the preaenta-tion of a major nrork by tlie Armln String Quartet. '' New membera will Tae reccivod (to the fellowship of the Oburch during the program. Edmoiad W. CMky A Requiem Man for Edmond W. Corby, 44, or 1ST35 Buckingham St., will be said at 11 a.m. tomorrow at Our Lady Queen of Martyrs Church. Burial will be in Holy Sepulchre Ometeiy, Southfield. Mr. Corby died Wednesday at William Beaumont Hoapital, Royal Oak. following a short Ulnen. He was employed nitb the Powers Regulator Co. in Ftmdale. Surviving are his write Agatha; a daughter, Mrs. Robert W. Hamlett ' Pontiac; twro aons, Edmond W. Jr. and John, both at home; moth-Mra, Lena Baihei Of Clare; and one grantMaughter. A Rosary will be said at 9 p.m. today at the William Vaiu Funeral Home, Royal Oak. A prayer service wUl be held there at 10:45 tomorrow. In nny case, the stale's economy will be at a higher level In li)62 than it was in either 1960 or 1961 he concluded. Report N-Test in Desert at Underground Site WA.SrtlNGTON (AP) - U. scientists have fired another nuclear device underground at Nevada test site. Got Channolt I-6-M2 Plus Regular Channals OUTDOOR TV-Antennas 19“ $29.95 Lint I alue TREE BRINGS DEATH — Mrs. Natalie Sobol Spritzler^ 41. crushed to death when this 754oot tree fell on her eal* in Angeles Thursday during the southern California area’s hfaviest rainstorm in years. The car had bc<>n moved from AF PlwMsi under ihe tree when this picture was made. Mrs. Sprttzler was the only daughter of ij^-ndicated Broadway columnist Louis Sobol. Her 15-year-oid son witnessed the accident. (See stob’ <>n page MONEY BACK GUARANTEE Raody for do-it-yourself in-stollotidn . . . completely elec; conic'oeriol, no moving [ ports, 12 position switch for, strongest signals, superior foi; both block and whits and color television sets. 1 H N. Saginaw -2nd Floor I TONin Mrf SATURDAY SUPIR DISCOUNTS HAZELWARE ‘Simplicity’ CMpVDipSst 147 Ai aklwr#d-3-pi«M tel ties tore# cMp bowl and tmoN dtp bowl on holdar. Ctoor glosi by Hoiot-Adot. For Ladius' Shoot, Cluor Plaslie Shat Box Cii4nuine 'BISSELL' Rug Shcmipoo Reg. $3.95 ys-GALLON Famous ; SEYMOUR"' _ y Adjustable All-Steel Ironing Boards $6.95 Famous MIRRO-MATIC PrasstiraCoeltart 188 S15.9S Value II 4-e«art ^80 .. . oxcluslvo prot- SI N. Saginaw-.IfIiin Floor 7' THR POKT^IAC PRESS, FRIl^AY. FEBRrARV 0. ]9(12 Yanks Too Late to Aid Victims LAND8TUHL. Genmmy (UPI)-U. S. Army medics described their losing race against death in aiding victims o( (he iiaarbruecken mine disaster. "We had gone to save I When «• fot there, there sti Was no more Ule to save." said ^pec. 5 Richard Yangas of Chi-oago. Vaagas Is a member of a operates with a beUeeptar. The crew was called Wednesday to fly 12 Injured coal miners from the mine to a hospital. Debating Society Ends Tradition; to Allow Women OXFXXU), England, Ufl ~ The > Oxford Union Society, the famed university’s debating group, voted 'nuraday night to abandon old tradition that has kept < en out of its discussions. The pro-women faction won hands dwn 4M-122. But after the vote members of the anti-women group demanded a poll of the full society membenhip Including membero not present at the meet-lag The poll must be held if they can collect ISO signatures to a petition by tonight. If they can’t—It’s come on in. girts. ter U|e HOminute flight from r ba$ I After (heir bal^ here to the mine, they found all 12 miners had -died. "When you leave on a trip like this you are *prepared to accept the deaths of perhaps two or three patients. We were nt^ prepared for the shock we feit when we found all 12 patienta dead," Yan-gas said.' 8TAYKD AROIM) "They asked us to stay for a while in case an.vone eliip m-eded airlifting," he said.“for one hour and 45 minutes we tried small talk and anything else we could think of to substitute (or not being able to do our Job/^’ “By ll:4S we were oa swr way (0 the site with tSS pints of b|kpd aad tM satis of plasma.” sM Jlpec. 4 Terry Tucker, another medle aad the soa of bandleader Tommy Tacker. "As we neared the disaster area w» saw throngs of grief-stricken people waiting out by the gate. On reaching the mine, we saw some bodies being carried out. Most of them were already dead and burned beyond recognition. "We left several units of plasma there (or the physicians. Then we went ta Knappschafts Hospital at Quierschied where most of the patients were being sent. Wc gave all the whole blood and the remainder of the plasma to the staff there. The doctors ex- rl^fKni LANSING IB -oouniy Jails will gel part-time freedom to work, leam and see a doctor If the legislature passes a bill n>adl*'inenl. (Includlisi the housewife whii f'nrohnu shows an average adult | ter i^uclear counhag cU vUc can de-eonsun\es .55 pounds of lieef ajtect one. atom of radium in a bil-year and alwut 7.» poi^nds of pork, i lion molecules of water. The wages furiied would l»e held In trust by the sheriff idr Knend of the Court in alimony eusi'st find would lie immune from giii | nishmenl. Gainfully employ.-d prisoners would be charged forj itnohi and isMird * h ' Th,. bill H|so allows for a ’re-dueilon of as much as one-lourth prisuner's senlenec for good conduct. Rep. Gross Complains Over Lincoln Day Pause House Takes Recess Despite Grumbles House ignored the gnimblesolfnexl Monday, ‘fT went along by had already Vorapicled consider-l follege - Keim.dy’s college ....... ...isL _... Mss.lik SU.. liuliiil nsh. ' iblil ifelHIk UrMk fllF AI preksedMhrir gratitude.’’ gTgT*T*TTTTTTTTTTlT»TTTTTg.T.T.T.T^^^^^^^ Rep. H R. Gross R lowa, ’Thurs- unanimous consent with Senate ^ble work and day. and agr.-ed as usual that ajP'""^ ------------------ " pause In eonsiderallon of public business Is necessary for Lincoln's' birthday. i It cleared the way for the House tp Join the Senate in what amounts to nn ^formal recess until Feb. ^ 19, ip honor of Lincoln's birthday The,most natural COLOR pictures ever on y RQA Victor COLOR TV TRADE-UP TO COLOR NOW ■•ca M ywir *M TV. toward fha naw ' plaatura •F' RCA Victor Color TV ThaBROMLEY Daittxa SoriM ^1^F-7•-M 2M sa. 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In. picture RCA VICTOR TkurViAia COLOR TV e High Fidelity Color Tube With Glare-proof Safety Glate e 3-Speaker Panoramic Sound EASY TERMS Come In—you have to sea for yourself I RCA-VICTOR IS COLOR TV . -AND FOR COLOR TV IT'S NEW CENTER ELECTRONICS, INC. Television - Rodio Soles ond Service MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER MALL AREA FE 8-9607 Opei* Doily 10 A.M.-9 P.M. jroas, a frequent critic of long p e k e n d s, asked House Dem-ratic Leader Curl Albert, Okln., if the Eiemoerats also would need a "vacation" later, and wondered when the House Intended to get dow-n to work. AUiert replied that I h e Housb ............. ,ilh the usual (■(>•' aid plun was aldelrscked lor at operation of ihr* gentleman iionij least It days when Hep. AUmtI Iowa” he figur ed It would be. able Quir, K-5llnn., hlo«'krd a unanl-to go back to work a wer*k fi'om! mou» roniM-ii| r«q” '* *" —•* “ Monday. j »• ■ H'miw Him wee romniittee. Other 'developments: I * * .Stockpiling thn. Settale Armed (trmmittee wmtldl Servlees (ommltiee unanimously , j uu .u.—. authori/ed a sutH-ommitlee headed «'harged with wo k.ngi by .Sen, .SI uail Symington to luuneh out « eompnmilse between Hoii.n* an investigation tntn Mrategie ma-'and .Si’nale versions ,of the bill, terlala atoekplllng. President Ken-1 But Qule's iullon throws the hill rredy requested the InvesHgiillon, Into the House Uulet Committee, which must have Senate approval which Is not i xirecicd to take It before Htnrifhji, ^ Mip Irefore Feb. 19. EARN MORE ON SAYINGS RAVINGS IN BY THE 10TH OF THE MONTH EARN FROM THE 1 ST AT Advanced Payment m* / Shares Certificates A lyU ( uirrutRiilr. "w ^ ifc /U IF HELD TO MATURITY AVAILABLE IN UNITS OF $B0 PER SHARE F.stubliithril in llt'KI- Verer missrd ixiyinK n r/n iilnul. (h vr 7- yvnrs oj s4niml imiitngrnu'nt—yonras^imim t' of Ivw/o ririN m rr 71 nnllino (lollars. . CAPITOL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION 75 Wait Huron Downtown Dotroll Offiao' Weihinglon Blvd. Bldg Cornor Slot* Sitool WO 2 1071 Homo Officr FE 4-0561 Southfield Office: 37215 Southfield or 11 Mile Road Kl 7-6125 Member Federal Home Le4in Bortli5yitem ; jeme. t Memaowi, iii . Aoburn M.latiU; Miche.l nn. B«.t at. Ilacl>..l.r: Oll-c;. hoilfCM. 4tM Orloa Hoed, Iff Urry D AIIm. W» Orion Roch.it.r; Wlllleni a. Burnle. iMMi ei . Rocbc.trr: Bde.i V .)r IM rherl.i Roed,------------ 42 Area Men Enlist in Army Janoqry Joiners in wm.;irth^'"worid’'i’gria't: for Three Yeors, Soyirh.S:'lM'Ji%rrM"S?f*aU7fe crasher, ai^a trouble - . - ' lai nrrh.rd L.k. K.nn«(h R hla Car coused him to coll Crasher Leit at Gate With Car Trouble NEW YORK (API - Stan Bee man, the Brooklyn cabbie who Pontioc Recruiter WaaWngton to crash iio.d“''M"f"'d"‘’j;hn"k '''“••Id movie-premiere. M. Sgf. Raymond R BarriauH,!?*""^ ♦ Ik. A—,,, I Eerller thia week. Berman said Jfru^ A. Yorx^ UI c*d.r ti. Ort^ he would get to see the first ahow^ ling, even though attendance was ci.o,.h,u m. Holly «h,idon B »>y Invitation only. . ttM M.yii.. Road, Cl.m.lon: # # Orion'^b«rt I^ArMn'ut iu Thursday night Berman said he An whe Joleed In January wUI |*.i.r ^ "Irouble with the car" all take a p . ... ...... and Paul J. Koopp jeommander of the Army Recrult-r'^th7^ai^[ Ing Station at 5S’,» W. Huron 'L’TiiiriiinfiroS' mT'^^ today announced that 42 area en-’ la. . ... IMI Weterford Townehtp; Arthur A were accepted for Army terwn choishin m. Hoiiy, ahewon duty in January. IwunSm ---- . ---- nerve for three years under one c*'LuMi-r**j7' B*'*Broa*uwa?; . of 107 spM4al enMstnient pro- Orton.. ! grams offered by the. Army, thd | ’ I recruiting otfleer snid. iStote's Mifierols Up ! Among the Pontiac rexldenls whol .... joined lust month arc: | LANSING Ift — Michigan a min- He said he was told the party after the show would nnl.v bci small and Informal, adding: "1 only go In for the big stuff so I had to cnwel out on that one. .. ... wlndtof cral production Jumped to a record *LrmlTv"'"waV|*^ million last year, according ____ k«i MdsrlTrd R. 5rn,/(5-'m1^*^u!nM*AYe i jeral and state agencies. Iron ore j uphold. ‘ A,|: “ Al.™!ll.‘?iL,:l!:^'’iForfner Executive DieL ..... _ Jlopkaii. .. . lmu P. MlDm. TM I Dtvid M. OUniDOM Jr., ipv ruatw . Otrtid L. R*sm«r, IIU W»lnut RoaS: Ohsrin C Nlltniao. »tJ Dorrli Rosd' Riclisrd O. BUthan, 771 Touni ;st ; iarl M UUnSa. IM i. Rail Bird: land wuuam B. Oaahia UU MO Chippewa I Raid In ihipments. Cement, petroleum, and sand and gravel follows, I indIANAPOLLS. Ind. -------------— ! Alfred L. Hammell, More than six million germs ran president and chairman of the be carried by the common house board of the Railway £xpress houae fly. ' iAgeney, died Thursday. , HERE'S A VALENTINE BONUS Get 4 pairs of stockings for the price of ^1 i» FTP I Here’s your Berkshire Bonus! You get 1 extra pair of stockings in every bonus box of 3 pairs yotybuy! n: T row, for a limited time only ! There’s an extra pair of t Berkshire nylons waiting for you in every Berkshire Bonus box of 3 pairs ydffbuy! Choose from four fashionable styles. With seams or seamless. AH with the NYLOC, RunrBarrier! From $4.05 the box. GEORGE'S DEPT. STORE TIIK POj^TIAC PREgS, FRIDAY. FKRRjTARY. oS9fl2 FREE PLANNING-NO OBLIGATION 92 W. HURON-PONTIAC i- 'iv, IN NKW HOMK — The Lronai-d Thompson fiimily neltled In Ihclr now PoyniHio, Wis., home thursday after jiving for 11 years in a rented home near Poynetlo. Well* wishers started a drive 15 months ago that brougiit money, materials and labor for the new house. The five Thompson children are all victims of a crippling disease known as Friedreich's ataxia. The children ate, from left, Sharon, 26; Luann, 25; Rosalie. 23; Leonard Jr., 22, and Margo. 20. the parents sit before the fireplace. Convicted of Murder Landlady's Slaying Measuring Fate |Retired General Dead .SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) -iBrig. (k;n. Chauncey Lee Fenton. 172. a retired Army officer, bank ,o/ Long Baby in IONIA ift.— James E. Harris^. ^ . •* was convicted of second-degree^^orf BaSSinet munler Thursday In the fatal Ix'at- president and professor at West (ng of his 7'2-.vf>ar-ol(l landlady.[ (TIFISTKR, Pa. lAPt—What dolpoini, died Thursday, Fenton was Mrs, h^na C. Wood of Belding. i.vou do when you have a 23-inch|president of the First National * * * iMssinet and a 24-inch baby. Bank of Highland. N.Y., for 29 A circuit court Jury of 10 men ['‘‘•'W and two women returmsi its ver- Boothwyn Marano's wife, Catherine, a slim, 4-foot. 11-inch, ll.Vpounder.l __ _ „ gave birth to'a KVpound. 9-oun( c.l joLi i 24-inch son at .Sacred Heart Hos-De»rbom Township died in diet after deliberating one hour and 20 minutes after a foiir-day trial. Harris, 4.'), odd-Johs worker and handyman for Mrs. W»xl, said he would apiM'al the convic-on. He was returned to jail ithout Iwnd. pital. Manino, a welder, anti his wife ive five other childirn. all boys. Wayne tJbunty General Hospital Thursday night of injuries suffered earlier when he was' struck by a car while walking on a road , hea^Jiis home. I I lures among autograph collectors Isyios - i jis that of Button Gwinnett, one of DETROIT i») - Mamie O'Brien. Tlte first firing of an experi Georgia's three signers of the retired Wayne County juvenile!mentally manufactured Bomarc Declaration of lndep«'ndence. A'court secretary, died Thursday at;missile from the missile test cen-deed sigm'd by Gwinnett in 1773 it he age of 76. Miss O'Brien was alter at Cape Canaveral was on Iwhs sold n'cenlly for $6,000. Inative of Ish|)emlng.' ISepl. 10. 1952. //7 /wy /ndusfri/ iheres On/t^ One leader..... CarpeHnq.^ BeOSCtWTW-eMA/S Our handling snd wjrehouio lyttem has Iracom* * model tor the induilry; manufacturer, diitributor end retsilert li;ivo eitabliikcd their warehouiei biied on our layout. h4e|i U-S- hM aome form of heart orlcludca 500,000 grade and hlgb|a > Ex-Vice President Kibitzes on Paar Show j-T ^TWEXTY-TI^l^r^: WowARDjo«njon'{ Valentine Special Nixon Smashes JFK for Cuban Invasion NEW YORK W o rbimer Vice PreeidMt Richard II. Nixon hat attacked President Kennedy'! handling of the abortive Cuban inva-Sian — especially tor not giving the failed ta teUew throi«h « 'mNtl^FriePCMiCkein Zaaty Cranberry Sauce d Posatosa Cxis^ Cole Slaw Coffee. Iba or Milk Freshly Bak^ Rolls aod Butter Choice of Famous Michigan Cherry Pie Appearing for almost an Thursday night on the natk televlaed Jack Paar Show (NBC-TV), Nixon said he had been unable to discuss the Cuban situation rely as he wanted to during the 1960 presidential campaign because he knew the United States was training rebels to mount last year's Invasion. 'Once the United States has committed its prestige to the throw of a Cbmmunist regime, and once the decision was ir ' once the troops sailed, there was no choice but to make it succeed,' Nixon said. What Is needed, he added. “Is a determination Cutro must go, and the development of a policy to see that it happens." Nixon discussed Atty. Gen. Robert r. Kennedy, the President's brother. 'In looking at Robert Kennedy," Nixon said, "you have a man who, except for lack of experience which he la flow gaining, has many qualities of leadership in foreign policy." , Nixon noted publlshe Japan, first foreign stop In a around the world, said In Tokyo he had no comment. V being rooahlered for a I €00(pot Howard JoiinoM's 28 Famous^ loo Creams or Sherbets “look Iho advice of some IfltraMoa’s foreign pollcteo, Nixon said: “If all fhe United Staten doeo to what the %reak relary of stale. Robert Kennedy, currently Cbmmenting on the ultraconserv-tive John Birch Society and mlnuternSn organizations, Nixon said neither the Republicans the Democrats could afford candidates who sought the support of such groups. “We need good, strong and-fXnnnwnlsts In this country,” Nixon said, “but I realise that Ihooe who exaggerate, those who make a racket of It,, hurt the cause. When you overstate your case, .you are playing right bilo "I know from expertonce," Nixon continued, “that in fighting the Communists 'in this country, as they should be fought, one of the Ihl^s that la most essential Ja that you have every regard for the uac of American principles in fighting Hfflpi You Ovoreomt FALSE TEETH Lootouoss and Worry ssM bscsiMs of looss. wobbly tUss wstb. rASTSlml. so ImpruTwl slha-llos(Don-sctd) powdsr. sprlnXIsd uo your pisus buld* ibsm Onnsr an Utsy fssl mors oonforubis. Avoid smbsr- SERVES FEHNMRV 7 THM IS AT HOWARD JOHNSON’S 3650 DIXIE HIGHWAY Of DRAYTON PLAINS NOW at BIRMINGHAM FEDERAL You Earn More! You Are Paid Oftener! ALL SAVINGS ACCOUNTS EARN 4% CURRINT RATI COhfPOUNOlO QUARTIRLY ALL EARNINGS Oividstofs Paid . . . MARCH list PAID QUARTERLY DICIMRER list Where You Save Does Make a Difference MILUONS IN CX)UNTKRFIKT — Offlclala family house in Brooklyn Thursday night are and one prlaoner taken in a raid on a (our-shown with bales and bales of counterfeit $10 bills seized in the cellar of the houae. The biUa, If real, would be worth $2 million. Behind the desk, loaded with phony money are, left to right, Alfred E. Wh|takcr, Treasury Department special agent; Joseph Magglo, a laborer, who, with his wile and child, occu-pled an apartment in the Brooklyn building, and Aaat. Chief Inapector Raymond V. Martin the New York Police Department. ^ SAVINGS EACH aAVINUa ACCOUNT INBURSD TO 110.000 BY PEDENAI. SAVlNOa A LOAN INSURANCB CORPOUATION Ml 4-1711 LI 5-7610 Warning for Driver BUFTALO. N.Y. Wl - Sign on the rear of a floriara truck: "Drive carefully. The next k>ad may be lor you.’’ JUST WHAT YOU’U HEED FOR THOSE Hoine Repairs! Flexible OAK FLOORING TILE 9x9 MAHOGANY PANELING 4x8 theet Grade "A" Mohogony FLUSH DOORS r4"x6'8" $JI7 r0"x6'8'* . . . . . . $562 2*6" X 6'8" ECONOMY INSUUTION 100 foot rolls $295 ACOUSTICAL CEILING TILE 12x12 12' BURKE LUMBER Drayton 4495 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1211 WCLOTHESDRVER Only Norge safely drys everything waihalile—even knitted woolens, , plastics, silk stockings snd delicate cashmeres. til THf NIW CLOTHES DRYERS • 1 DIAl-A-HMT SRECnONS • suPEi-cAPACtrr omi (thnoei • AUTOMATIC DOOr'SKUT OFF " SWITCH ; us BEFORE YOU BUY Get tills Hosiery Drier [Fl^gg NO MONEY DOWN - NO PAYMENTS 'TIL APRIL KRAZY KELLY’S FURNITURE and APPLIANCES Rochester Rd. at Tienken Rd.~North Hill Plaza Center, Rochester 11 Ft. HOTPOINT Refrigerator Acroii the Top Froozor Sholvof in Door *148“ BOX SPRINGS w lUTTRESSES Smooth Top 10.year $4Q95 Guarantee foslF . Vf* carry Serto, Restokraft ond Sealy Bedding. Electric BUILT-IN With automatic double oven, removable doors for easy cleaning. Deluxe surfoce unit with burner with the brpin. BOtH *225“ lorly American WING BACK SOFA =*139 TRUNDLE BEDS HOOVER UPRIGHT VACUUM CLEANER *49** Greer Hard Rock Maple, extra heavy stock —use as twin or bunk beds. ^64' 50 HIDE-AWAY BED SERTA OR SEALY FOAM CUSHION Practical, utolul — $19009 , dual putpow. I ' i t ■ ■ THB PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. FEBRtTARY oMm pd Finance No Leadership Shown Th« iDUowtng are toi . covertm Ml« ol local^ grown produQt Ig growcro and sold by them In wboleaala package lota. /Quotatk>na an furnlahed by tha Detroit Bureau ot Market!, aa of Iburaday. P«troit Produce Key Stocks Move by Fractions^ NEW YORK (AP> - The alock market waa mixed In fairly active trading early today. ApplM, NoitlMn apjr vioeesi, ««nji via....... Ctbbaa*. r«a. M.......... Cabbag*. fUadaia Tprlbtf Cbi roU, MW p*a .......... Cbrrvto. tbppW. tm. .... Mmiiapa. . tbfbt........... Onioat. M-lb. bag f, Ptralar, rooi, Ma. baas. ........1. Paraalps, sAa pat................!.( rotaloaa. gg Ibt................ 11 aadlsbas. balltaaM ........... 1-1 Rhubarb. HoOmsc . . ...............I aousah. a«om. ba................. IJ aquuli. Ruttarnul . 1.: Poultry and Eggs iU.S. Bonds Get Best Start r up; haaa «•!»: light trpa bant ____y irpa rwstari o*ar I Iba. «-»; broilrri ang Iryars 1-4 lbs.: whlUa al-U: ducklings aa. ' . ^ -------- ig^rgM alaadr. Daaand STB oflarlag* not too plantl-UI ana soov aad caMTvsalbar Uniting .hipnenu. Pryara ample .but haary Isns lM'cana7a*raMrrsd £s winV DETROIT. Tab. g (APl-Prteas paid psr doasn' at Datrall by first rscclyars < including OJ.l. , . ,.rgS“5i*5j’Tsrga*3^?:**-:sj2‘- sus: :irSs^ra5iui.-»t‘3.r5r.2?;^ '*Co5smaBl:’ biprkat slaady. Oyarall ’nV«.\1?":*VVwrV‘«Ta*miSi‘^^ and supplies barely ample to short, vhlla soms dsaiara report trade ra^ ;-s't^*!Sgr':£f^rTa“ir:au*-.ti:. on other sisas. cHicAOO raOTVea CHICAOO. Pab. g (UP11—Produce: •Live Multry: tw law raoalpts to i "“eniur 'steady. dl aoora •••..»> »«®r» **aigisr* sU^y. whits iargs aat/as 3d: mlup largg aatras MH: mediums Mts; ^andards^: dirties M: chocks It. *’"«tll.**- dvps at. Livostock DiiTBOIT LIVBaTOCa DETIIOIT. Pab. • 'API ■ ■ ^Sa”.^ m“‘* ,lta*’ eomMrad' Iasi weak ...^...s lully steady; lower gr^ and choice haliers and down lOo I Utility eowi tUody to^ lOe lo««r. nffi ond outUr* floMly; •i-L7i»: three loads high oholoe a^m.liad^hUh (hole# Mid prims l,OlT*i.d n.tO-h.n. Umitad showing hhjh*'good and ^ **|5fer*s"**3p6*a-a?^ S&*‘mWo '*1 "bIum: etrongwelghi uUUtj up iaSiVV*oX'*2iai«. *Mlad*Iiwhnlr“^mS^^ •ltd choice voolcd Umbe mMt choice end prime ----- i—aba. n.fto.li.1®; iood^ choice le.ftO-n.M; cuU lo choit *^ciuie***^*io* elcuiMer clceiee ei<^y* 13 beod prime cround 1,000 lb yecrllni * 3r00: lew BCcUered p0.30>k.M; utility cowe 14.00*10.00. sadiiu. iVm; emmere mkI Many ieading rail atocka poated fractional galna, among them Santa Fe, Pennaylvaia Railroad and Baltimore A Ohio. Some good-aized blocka in varioua iaauea were traded at the opening. Aaide from raila. there waa little aemblance of leaderahip. The pattern waa narrowly uneven among atecia, motora, oila, chem-Icala and building mateiiula. Chryater gained a fraction following newn ol a ahnrp rtae In quarterly enrnlngii. Brunswick skidded 1% to 37H on a block of 7.100 shares and widened the loaa fractionally later dealings. NEW YORK lyt - U S. government bonds opened trading today with their beat alart of the week. They have been moving ppward since early last week. trading on the New York Stoek Exchange, were mixed. Volume was light. Over the' counter dealers ir trcMury securitlea quoted long issues up 4/33 to 6/32 or equal to the beat dally gain of the week. Some intermediates were up were the most active section and trended lower. Utilities were a bit higher and rails mixed. Boston tt Maine Railroad 4^to loti 1 at 17 at one time. Brunswick convertible 4Vii IVa at 118 at one time. Among corporates ' induatriaU Ford was off a point. United Aircraft (ex dividend) fell more than a point. Amerada continued to rite, adding more than 3. * ♦ A ’ The market was mixed at the start and continued that way. Opening blocka Included; TXL Oil, up 14 at 31H on 15,000 ahares; Standard Oil (New Jersey), off H at 54^ on 4,000 ahares; General MottXY, off H at S6I4 on 4,-Chryaler. up H at 57 on 4,-000; and Westinghouae Electric, unchanged at 3774 on 3,000. * A A Pricea were mixed on the Ame^ lean Stock Exchagne. Gainers eluded Edo Oorp. "A," Syntex and Loral Electronics. Among losers were Anken Chemical, Gulf American Land and Polarad Electronics. American Stock Exch. Fourth Quarter iaves Chrysler CvnipiM by Tb« SnMtatvS PnM k Ago Tg.T IOb.S lb AfW Tg.T ItI T .._.«*tfigb 5:? iS? m Si ligg Low Tt.t gl.« I ibS. UUto. Pgib l!W Im.* ggg m ti.i gg.i «.i “ * S4 H.S g g4.4 gg.i gr.a S4.t g3.g S:t Final Three Months Brings Earnings to $11.1 in 1961 NEW YOVtK lf)-A big fourth-quarter profit, baaed aa much on economiea as on Increaied salei, brought the Chrysler Corp. earnings of 111.1 million last year. The figure was diacleaed at a dL rector'a meeting here Thuraday. ' UbUI the fbwl three immths the BstlM’a third largeet aute mBker had labored iMler de-preaaed aales, a defMt that ranged ap to mere than |M mil- Crtol* T Pair C4I 8;| gtj? I TbCb ...^ ....... Muek F Ring DOW*JONIS NOON AVKRAOftb BOfVM SIlS^g.M The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (APy-Pollowtoit lib)u)in|b iM Cba- r Abbott L l.tbo U m n 2'^* li. k h S ESs 9 4i{ 4'i 41%.. O II tiv{ *14» TIJj ^ O AUr BtdiM t.3g AJ Xbdiul JSt Alco Prod .4 Atof CP .*to - lot Lud g log Pw l.lg • Ch l.gb Ltd 44 ____IM Atnorbdb 3 Bo«b Brk a Cm 3 itvt Ji Oi Pie Cp n Mt(, SjiT Jk OUlSJwj.W n Brk gh 2.40 *4 l»i{ 1»H limt ^ Not Miougb to Mi ap Barrow* gllti Pbc Cp U ly ou __rtto t.M Olan Aid .40 41 33H 13% 33%+ ------- ■ • II IT'% IT% 1T% + 2 51% 91% 91% + S «% S% 49%+ % Ow'd'On' 90b 9 90% 29% 2I%-% m,rw 19 S% OTJt a% + l%8ran C «1 ^ i Sli 5 h F Fv SO 13 10’^ 19^ 19^%^ Ot A A F t.SOft 37 Bft4 StH 99 ^ J i i il i ■' " » 5- 'l Tl% tfvi tivfl ^ !! H„ S'* —------------.H— ________ ____ . MtJ Navag Ind ,39g Se' i’l. S aTt aT \)ri fi TflSTrl 3 go 91 IMTb lg*k I»% J VlMoJa 3 90 M% »% AUr Inc .39 I »;• ,40 \i IT: g% fi%+ % ____Ida V90g 0 90% S S -- ji ^.TSSSr^gaV" n r ct tat.I :fSSSck®hikid I »% wS T9',b^% SlSd^' o V90 J 100 1M% iU[%+Ij! iii| A?SrciSr,«i a* »% w% I0%+ 4i Rotel Cp Am Bouaah Pin 1.30 Rout LBP 1.00 Hvwa Ind 1.121 Hopp Cp .20t IdMl -Com .00 "1 Cant 1 1 vr TT r+'% 2 4% 4% 4%+ % .... ^lisy^’l5‘e\4* maW " . qii^nSlMi •Ubcly'; aaa'lal*'iBliMVum'ber i-j >i»^ ’’^■porad waak ago Parrjwa and gUto 29 cant* Utwtr; >ow* *taady. CHICAOO LIVUTOCK CHICAOO. P*b. 9 (OPIi—Llvt.---- ”c»ltl* 1000. ealra* 29. 1 Blauthur eieert and half^ri Ktetdf ^ *■ "" »?j.:........... I la s lit 1... II 09% 90% tm .. 04 9r% 34 34 — TO 11% 10% 21 + M 19'k 15% 19% + 9 19% 19% 19%+ -14 lJ*(, 14% 14*fc+ % Boaing 1 Bordan 1.90 Borg Warn 3 Brill* Ml BrUI My .90a ; no *alc* atooktr* and klauihUr *l**r* 10.31 load* mixed good and cl tood I1.tg-ll.00: load 7>ellrr* MOO; lood 23.30 inSf Chaini Stocks of Local InfBi Mgurot alter decimal polnW arc ______oevaaltb 8tai^ ■ . ibuXrssJir"* Tclerldoo Elaetronlc* WcUlngtcn Eonlty Welllngtcn Pimd -Nominal qaoUUim*. IT.tt 10.03 .U.39 U.Tt •ItiSliS Treasury Position WA8RINOTON (API - Tba c^ » attlon c4 tha Traa»«ry compared with ---------■"— —la a yOar ago. Fob. g, 1 ......g 9,102,144.1 lOr V ..... »1.379.4l9.i---- i year 62,tt9.749Jll,49 . 9 5.M).&,M4klO 49.TI4.9M.I41.M roui dobo ...... ’'T^lSda. . iriMtoMiuiin —C— 3 I 9 9- * 1 14% 14% 14% .. n 1 1M% 109V* 100% + U 9§4* M% M% + 11 29% 29% 29%.... 11 44% 49% 44 +1, 34 99% M% 09 + % 31 4% I'* 1%... S41% 41'; 40% 40> IT 10 IT* 19 tl>« 01 It 44 43% ,, . 8 iilt U 15 A ' •log * My, 1 5 14V« 9T% M ........... 1T%- I 30''. 20*, 20;i- ' I 2S’,e 29% 25% + ^M* gPBPac Chi PimuT l.Xa CblKUPacr 100 r.*iii!i4. nj ri5 Cote Palm IJOa 31 91%....... i? si: 30 M*C it'ti 20*1+ % 0 at M*/, to + % II 93% 9SV, U%— ' M 11% 12% »% + ________ nt: gs-ssavi. SSSSir’li,*** 8 85 2?5 s IL. frVJJiti _________nx 5 i.ir%’o*^i.T^- It IT 10% IT ♦ ___________ 20 141% 130 130 - Lockb Aire 1.10 114 M% H% M + --•- —20 4T 40% 40%— 30 29% 39*4 29*k ..... MfS* % n'V+ % Not BUC 3 5 90*. Pi^ 1.1 TaUkTol 1 lono* a L loy lug a U IT% 2T% 3T%+ % 2 Om 49*k W*-% I 29% 21% 19%- t ■rssvW^' 31 99% 94% 99%+- 1 3t Tl*« T9% T JJIll SeoU Pap .90 00 41% Scab AL&R 1.00 10 10% » j flg «!;• I i^7>k rr ■ :8» J?5t5 ri5 Long 1*1 U arat?*L. —M— 1.00 34 30*k 30* %.49e 10 M4k 10' _______ 2.0TI 34 T3% Tl* Magnavox ,90 II 44 434 MarmiarF^ 14 10% W* Martin M .19* 40 M% M4 May D Sir Tit 1 94% 94t McDon Air 1 11 47 49} ”—1 1.90 9 94% Mt ^S • 12 ^ 01% 0 isli’ Mpte H Mbn I 33 33% O Ut 1.10 ____ Ward I - - . „ Molec Ind .001. I I7*+ 17*t _Jn~ NAPI Cp 29 30% 30, 30% Nat Btec 3 _ 5 to*. 09% M>* 1 05% 19% 09% 41 39 29* '. 2l* k- 10 94% 94% 94% . •5 Hrt 2 U% 1... ___________________ U 49% 49 MoriaWtit 4a Id 3 106 *— “ * A» a « n% _____ Oai 1.10 1 44 Nor Pac 31# , “ — > Cbam id# » Zi% 2i> “peny^TiM 1^2^ I LI 1.M M'* It ffv. 17% r% 19 M% .91% NorUtrap 94<% i4%- % R*xt Alrlln .B TOlt SJrr %|Norwlch Ph 1. 19% I1V.+ %| ...1i5T‘% 8SS ^,.io“ The f i n i I quarter, however, Changed the plc^, A $31.6 million profit, equal to S3Ji2 a share, wiped out the deficit of the first the eecond best quarter in the compeny’a history, topped only by 1949 fourth quarter eamlnga of SJ.97 a share. Nevertheleaa, the year’s proflU, equal to $1.34 a share, failed to match 1980's Income ot $32.3 Ikm, or 3.61 a itwre. Balea alao were dmni, fi la UN to N,m.- to mjm from LIIMU hi UN. The year-end Improvement encouraged Cieorge H. Love, chairman, and Lynn A. 'Townaend, president, to say ill a Joint atalemeni that "your management believes the company ia well establlahed on a forward couree . . The final quarter of 1961 was the first complete one for Love anti Townsend as lop corporate officers. TTiey took over after the resignation of L. L. (Tex) Colbert aa chairman and president last July 27. STOCa ATEBAOES .M%dby».^am^£M^ Pr*k. Ooy . 1TI.S 119 9 W««k Ago MS.1 1M.J ■--- Ago 9M.g 1194 -- Ago SM.I mj lS6.g___ ____ High 104 1 119 9 Ti.t Mt4 IMl-a Low 119.9 lUl ------ 1900 Hlg*> .314 9 IM.3 ••“Low .....IM.4 lM.g SSi. _ . US Bor*x , „ „ , -........ US Prelght 3 3 41''* 42% 41% . rk-STM*"* l Ti % ^5^"' Indut M Tm 11% 21% + V. a IM li% 39% Vi ilSPow 1.34 17 93% u5 I —W— ^ .. wira'a Flc 1.30 14 04% 03% M4.+ Worn Lorn l.lto 1 04% 04*. 04% + "’‘SYTjSg* s S5 s s: ite El l.JO 90 37+4 37% 37% + 9 33*i 32 31 - * IT 40% 4* 4t + % I 4 99 94V. MV,^ T II 11% I . 9^97 k*v. aoM . Title a Tow .Mr 1 29% 19% 2t%- Strii •icl :S:»:n KtcSStp^sri .139.IU.IT FTbitkoiir'JW* ^.3J4.» Pte Pw .90/ ’.g IM, l.g SM. J.f IliJ- si SI 30 Roll* 140.30 on 0.30 News in Brief Pontiae pelioe today were traoi-ing clues to a thief who vandalized Franklin Elementary Schooi Thuraday morning and stole two typewriters worth $200. The thief broke a window to gain entry and ransacked office cabinets. Theft of U oartons of oigarettes, 11 six-packs of beer, 2\k gallons of wine and 9 pounds of assorted chocolates during a break-in at Marwood Maiket, 4301 Baldwin Road in Orion Township, was being investigated today ^ the sheriff's department. Parke-Davis Suffers 26.7 Dip in Earnings DETROIT II) — Parke, Davis A Co. Thursday reported 1961 profits or $^2,326,327, equal to $1.50 share. ★ * ★ The pharmaceutical firm said this represented a 26.7 per cent drop from 1960 earnings of $30,-470,464, or $2.05 a share. The company's INI workhrtdc ■ales of I1MJM.SN Rfore 7J per cent beleov INO. Ha^ J, Loyne, president of Park^Davia, attribu^ the duced salea and proflta to ,a d-cline in chloromy^n salea volume in the domeqtic market and price reductiona by chlorampheni-. col producers ■broa4: {Modiictta) I problems in virus mhnu- ' Tacturing; currency devaluation in Brazil and Onada, and increasing costa of production and marketii^. Of the total U.$. natlonaUnoome, labor'a share rose from 59 per cent in 1929 to more than 68 per' cent in 1950, and the ratio ia rising. SPORTY CAR — An early spring starter in automobile offerings is the S35 which will be introduced by Mercury next month. The S55 will be an lulditlon to the Monterey line lu a S55 Entry in ^Bucket Brigade* sporty model with bucket seats and distinctive interior trim. The S55 will be available ia mid-Mareh In both convertible and two-door hardtop Mercury Reveals Luxury Car . A new and luxurioua big-car try in the auto Induitry's "bucket brigade." called the Mercury Monterey 855, waa announced today by LIncoln-Mercury Diviilon. The SM wOl be lacorporatod la the MoNerey Series and wlU be available next maiith la Iwe The S55 ia the third midmodel-year Mercury entry. For ita range of three sizes of cars, Mercury now has five aporty bucket seN models—the Comet 822, Meteor Business Notes A Ponllac man, Philip N. Mar-entay, has been named manager of ihe legal department ' Detroit Automobile Inter-Ii Exchange at Automobile Club of Michigan. Marentay, 62,r 1th his wife. Florence, makeal hU home at 1050^ Lake Angeluo Shores. A native Windsor. Ont.,| Marentay moved with his fqmily to| Pontiac while youth and gradu-| ated from Pontiac High School. He MARENTAY then attended the University of Michigan, and obtained his law degree at the Univeraity ol Southern California. Alter a year in private law practice, he Joined the Exchange in 1926, and became assistant manager of the legal department In 1950. Frederick C. Nordsiek has Joined the MacManua, John Adams, Inc,, advertising agency as an account ex | ecutive on t h Dow Cliemical wUh suek a sigiwd ooBMle aad new latertor trim that It ctoarty staada eat aa the glamoar eatry la the Mer-cary Hae" Mills added. Front aeiUa in the 856 can be individually adjusted fore and aft 'Compact' Tag Put on Romney j by Veep Johnson ATLANTIC CITY (J» - Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson aaid Thursday the automobile induetry has proven it can adjust to European competition. In fact." Johnson told the Ka- ma n. manager. Formerly Brooke - Smith French 4» Dor-' pence and RoMkj Roy - BSF A Detroit, Nordi graduate of NORDSIEK Indiana University and a World War II veteran. Prior to entering the advertising field, he was with the Owena-Corning Fiberglas Corp. in Toledo. He will work but of the Bloomfield Hills ofQceg of the agency. 833, the two new Momerey 855 models and the optionally equipped Comet Villager ataiion wagon. R ♦ R 'We have found a high acceptance from the car-buying public for the seating comfort and sporty appearance of the passenger oom-partment in theae iiNxIela," aaid Ben. D. Mills, Fold Motor Co. vice president and general manager of the divlaion. /'Ill addltton to the bucket type providing greater comfort for each front seat occupant. The full-width rear seat has contoured lines to match the oecor of the front bucket aeata. R R R The console storage compartment extends from the back to the front seats to the forward wall of the from compartment. The gear-abUt lever for either the four-speed standard or three-apeed automatic tranimlaaion Is mounted ■top the console. Beneath the vinyl-clad console ia a heater du(n which Iranamita air directly to the Utility Company Consolidated Gas Firm Will Spen<^ $27 Million Throughout State DETROIT If) - The Michigan Cbnsoiidated Gas Co. intends to ■pend $27,116,5(X) on new conatruo-lion and facUlttea this year. tional Automobile Defers AsK)cia-| the utIUty, announcing the plana tion amid laughter, "the compact car manufacturer! have done ao wen tixv're taUdng about a com-- Met caiKlIdate for president: Mr. i Romney, who la stlU rambUng .|irouod." The vice president was referring to the possibiMly that George Romney, whose American Motors Corp. manufactures the Rambler, will enter Republican politics. today, said the program wilt be the fifth largeal in ita history and ia $7.6 million larger than but year’a. Mleklgaa CouMlidatod'g INt Nearly $13 million will be apenl In the Detroit area with more then 45 mUes of new gas mains tp be 2 West Coast Firms Approve of Merger « ; The Grand Rapids District will NEWYORKIft-Mergerof Leai.lge, expenditure of $3,311 .(*0 Inc., SanU Monica. Calif., maker program. A half mlUlon of precision equipment inlo S!e»- y,,, results from needs ler O^. ot l/» Angeles was ap- expressway oonstruction. proved by directors ol both firmk - - today. The directors Announced stockholders win be asked this spring approve transfer with five shares of Siegler common exchanged for seven of Lear. Chrysler Stock Up $1.12 NEW YORK (f) - Chrysler’! common stock rose $1.12 on the New York Stock Exchange Thursday in the wake of the company’s profit report for 1961. The stock closed at $56.87. This compared to its low point of $37.37 last year. _________ Sixty-s( miles of new gas mains will b« built. la the Ann AHnm DiMrict the c4Nn|NiBy will spend •I.lN.Nt hi pntttog In 81 miles of new gas mains. In the Mnskegon IMstriet 17 miles of malno are to be bnlR at a coot of 8N6.N0. The northern diatrlcts, including Mount Pleasant, Greenvllle-Beld-ing, Ludington, Big Rapids, Ca^l-liic. Traverse Ciety, Manistee aad Sault Stc. Marie, will receive $1,114,500 in new construction 6i-cluding 31 miles of mains. No. 1 for Steel Contract Job Security New Worry B SAM DAWSON AP Bnsineoa News Analyst NEW YORK - Save th job! That’s the labor slogan lor 1962 if the key steel contract talks starting next week set the pattern as expected. In most of the postwar years the primary stress has been on how much one should be paid an hour for work.. In recent years there has been added a growing emphasis on all the fringe benefits — pensioiui, medical care, vacaUons^l translatable into dollars and 'cents both by management and labor. R R R But this year labor more and more is putting at the top of its demands the security of the Job ttsell. R fine to get a higher hourly wage scale. But workers this yror are asking: What good is a high hourly wage scale, if I am going to be laid off—because i3f recee-riona, of automation, of mergen. ^Hir if the company to .gojng to cut down the number of hours 1 can work and draw that higher P»y7 SECURE JOBS The basic steel labor-management negotiations open on Valentine Day. And the steel workers are Mt to ask as this year’s Valentine far-ranging aglreementai operating by management to make their Jobs more secure. R R Job security as a key issue is ecognized by the steel companies. The debates during the contract talks won’t be over the desirability of this goal but over the means ol spring Jobs. R R R Management’s stand is lhat many of the union’s will raise operational costs surely as would wage scale increases. TMs could, they argue, more than eat up anything saved by mechanization. The r e s u 1 would be pressure lor higher steel prices. And that is something whidi the Kennedy administration using all its Influence to head if possible. II.1S TO ISJ6 Management holds that the union’s emphasis on pay increase sliHto World Wv II has raised average pay then of $1.75 an hbur. The companies put today’s average at $3.26 an bourse^ of the pay increases were tied in with the rising cost living index. R R R llie steel unkxr denies that its new demands for more Job security and for more compensation if laid off will hike the mills’ -----"— costs enough to Justify any price increase. Labor’s contention is that mechanization has already raised the output per hour of man labor high enough to take care of their security Like the steel negotiations oi the past — there have been six strikes since the war, ranging from eight hours to 116 days— the one opening on Valentine Day is likely to be hotly fought. The chances for agreement seem better this year, however, as both sides stress there’s a betlr atim-apbere this time. All labor, and all management, ill be watching. The steel negb-tiatloiu often aet a pattern for other industries. And what they enn "mH* u in the way o| Becurin™ an age when mecha vances increasingly let ihachlne do man’s work will be ot prime interest to all labor. R R R Job security to a problem by > means confined to the steel mins. It to an issue in more and more factories. It is becoming an do more jobs. And even ip retail stores, the growing emphasis on self-service or on automated aerv ice is promising the issue may well spread thbre — and into aome of the eei’vlce industries themselves. ■J/ WmTY.TWO' ’ THE .... PONTIAC PRESS. FRtPAt. FEBRUARY ft. Aufbores Harper Lee 'Can't Complain' By BOB THOMA8 AP Movte-TV Writrr H 0 L L V W 0 0 D - MIm Harper Lee of Monroeville, Ala., waa iwn ihia week, acting very much‘unlike a beit-aeiling author. Miaa Lee wai Invited to Hollywood to look at preparations to film her Pulltzeri Prise novel, ‘To Kill a Mod Peck. i know that' authors are sup-| 1 to knockj Hollywood and complain about ar iwtMat AKTEB REsn^E - Actress Jayne Mansfield is helped to the dock Thursday al Nassau, Bahamas, by her husband Mickey Hargitay alter their rescue from Rose Island. The couple spent Wednesday night, along with pubiiclal Jack Drury, on a tiny coral rock atoll after their speedboat overturned. The three then swam a short distance Thurstilay morning to a beach on Rose Island where they were spotted by a Coast Gu^ plane. Miss Mansfield was hospitalised for treatment taH*"S{)Mk and exposure. Middle Position Proves Fatal One for Brown Horse INDIANAPOLIS. Ind. (AP) -Velmer Hendrix, 47, FolsomvlUe, saw two white hones gallopingl down a highway near here early Thursday and decided his truck could pau between them, a a * Too late he saw the white horses weren’t alone—his truck hit and killed a brown horse In the middle. Hendrix, unhyrt, reported about Jl.OOO damage to his truck. Hospital Releases Sif Cedric; to Rest HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Sir Ced- TRECO GULBRANSEN ORGANS WiBf AR< liisic Crattr from Cedars of Lebanon Hospital after five days of treatment a respiratory ailment. a a a A spokesman said the British-born actor was much Improved, but would rest at home for a few days. a a a Sir Oodric, M, was taken to the hospital in an ambulance lost Sat-ght. He was discharged ’nuinday night. She LikcB Hollywood Treatment has to be liked by enough people who will recotnmend it to their friends. Word-of-mouih is the best advertifing for a book.” Publicity Worth a Million Mitch Loves That Beard To Head Housing Body DEHTIOIT il»->Iaines H. Quello, general manager of radio station WJR, was elected president of the Detroit Housing Commission Thursday.. Dies os Cor Hits Tree CARDEN OTY (ft - Roger 0. KeUogg. 2S. of Garden Qty, was killed Thursday when his car skidded off a Nani ■ “ and hit a tree. are treated here." le said, "but just can't manage it. * .★ a "Everybody has been so darned nice to me and everything is being done with such care that I can't find anything to complain Dout." She likes the movie script, and the net of the Southern home she wrote about "looked ao real wanted to sit down in a rocking chair and fan myself.” OKH OimNWR BET MIsO Lee also gave her approval to the outdoor set of a small Southern town in the ‘30s. It wiss built on the UnWersol lot derelicts removed from It of Los Angeles freeways. ^Id Miss Lee; The town is so good that I'm afraid people will think It was filmed on kx»tlon.'‘ That's exactly what the studi DpM. You may have gathered thi Harper Lee Is not the usual kind r. She isn't. Homespun without being hokey, she is amazed by her success, though not overwhelmed. She is strongly built with a Kemtedy-llke brown hair and an likable face. * * a "Mockingbird" the usual novel. For 79 weeks it has perched on the best seller list. Such longevity Is amazing for first novel, or any other kind. Her exidanatlon of its staying Success hasn't spoUed Harper I the matter is that (ax laws Lee, but it has changed her Ufe. be great for sharp-minded movie She can't quite convince people stars and oil men but are hell on that the book hasn't made her an authors. Her earnings have been nt miUionalreu. The fact o(|hlghly taxable Income. By HAL BOVLK NEW YORK (AP)-Tbe most famous beard In America belongs to a man of whom fellow muoi-cians say, "He may not be the world's best oboe player —but he'i the richest.’* . Mitchell William Miller met an oboe (or the first itime when he 'was 12 and had been invited play in the 1 school band. The grabbed all the SELL FOR m He went on to become one of le nation's best-known oboists, and some of his solo rscordings now seU for $2S. But Mitch Miller hit the road to fame, fortune — and a dozen six-bit dgart a day-r-swltched from Bach and Mosart to popular music. * *' • A record firm executive, his Inventive genius helped guide to s|)cccas such singers as Rosemary Clooney, Frankie Laine, Johnny Ray. But for two years Mitch ran Into nothii« but a series of blank walls when he tried to se _______ idea-a television . gram featuring nostalgic old pop- among the 1(» current top-sellers. than (our years their recordli«a have grossed 345 mil-llon-which Miller beUeves is a record (or ao short a time. Mitch is grateful now to the executives who once turned him down. TIMING THE TRK« Maybe they did me a favor, he said. "Timing is everything in business. If you have a great idea and don't expose it at the right time. It dies a-boming. 'I went through two frustrating years, but If I had got a trial at the start, my idea might have been a colossal (lop." * * A Mitch, whose father was an immigrant iron worker and whoae mother once sewed (or the Russian czar's family, yearned as a child to sport a beard. A . A A 'Both my grandlathers had elegant beards, and I was fascinated by theta,” he said. "A* was afraid to grow one (or (ear of gibes.” 7 1940 his wKe and talked it over and decided the had come when he had achie^ enough musical stature a beard without being accused of affectation. After all, who notices what an oboe player wears? ■ A A A 'Now I wouldn't dare shave off ...j beard,” said Mitch, " I had to go Into disguise. lu estimated publicity value Is better than a million dollars. Mitvb picktxl them (or (heir voices—one used to sing In the Metropolitan Opera—not for their I _____ __ has resisted all suggestions that he fill his chorus with tall younger men with ipatlnee Idol-type faces. "A man who is talented and unbeautifliil," he observed, "suddenly becomes beautiful when people hear his talent. "But a (ace that is beautiful and only moderately talented suddenly fades right Into the scenery.” Rudolf Borok, Stalinist, Expolled by Red Party VIENNA. Austria (AP)-Rudolf Barak. old-Ume Stalinist and vice premier of Communist Czechoalo-vakla. has been stripped of all government and party posts and expelled from the party, Prague Radio announced Thursday night. The broadcast said Barak, 54. was charged by the party’s central committee with “gross mls-of his government functions and unlawful operations with government money.” Train Crash Kills 3 WARSAW (AP)—Three persons were killed and four injured when passenger train ran off the rails Id rammed through a house Thursday, the PoUsh Press Agency reported. Tve learned a lot about ik business in the past two years.” she said. I realized that no amount of advertising can a best seller. Nor do the book s help sales appreciably. (Hers was selected by four.) WORD-OF-MOirm BEST For a book to really last. It ‘WON’T WORK’ I never got a form refusal, he recalled. "I got firsthand refusals from all the top guys. They lid, 'It’U never work on TV.’” But when Mitc|t finally got his chance on a iiU-in spot, it turned out his kind of nsstolgic singing was just what the public wanted. Today his "Sing Along with Mitch" show in one of the tcq> *“ programs. Thirteen of 1 15 record albums are Mitch Is a belly-laughing, gregarious man full of enthusiasms, and fond of rich black cigars, good red wine, reading, and bowling—he has hit 240. But bristles at anyone who tries tinker with his program. For example, although eight pretty dbneers lend it glamor, his all-male chorus Is made up of 26 ranging from 29 .to 59. Some are (at, some are bald, three are grandfathers. ...STARTS'. TO-MGHT EXCLUSIVE FIRST SHOWING ‘ OPEN 6:30 P.M. SHOW STARTS 7 P.M. PROGRAM INFORMATION FE 2-1000 y—Mhiw ^i^^lTHEATER It.,... ..—— S. ToUgraph ot Squor* Laka Road ^(Brrrri For Your Comfort ELECTRIC IN-CAR HEATERS FREEI irs A NE W LEASE ON LAUGHTER WITH THE MERRIEST MIXINGSSINCEGIRLS DISCOVERED BOYSII! —MOTE-------1 This is the picture we previewed on New Years Eve and it was proclaimed WALL TO WALL WOW! hovv many luscious babes is a bachelor entitleid to accumulate irs WHERE THE GIRLS ARE! 2o at St's where aff the fun a takes pJacetm C-InemaScOPE -raiMion WHAT MYSTERY FORCE TOOK OVER THE CONTROLS? Tini fONTIAC PRKSS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 0, 1962 40 ACRESi-r.RADED MADT TO ■WDITID* ..... ......‘T, BMWtMl Morllwn Hlih. FB i-MM ■ PINE LAKE E«TATO ' WEST SUBURBAN •ssa. B:n*a,-»isr- a'J5'aj"LSWi.“i3“:i ja^iS^>^Land 1U> CAM lAt* NO MONEY UOWN rb v«U AA Umm brbto Ae» 3- twiroom rA««h ---- ._■! ujMi bath And tour aiAtlrr brdrooin^ And fAMf. run irooMi a>«“. - AWOCUTE BROKEN* ■ IM PtApkltn Bird. rV Aj SYLVAN VILLAGE • ir,:' & *fo'J‘e.d*“A“‘ hiAi. r Appl. ZONED COMMi'E^ '-^^r 1163 a nrfplftcei. rfcreaUoo in buenieni with • Oihfr biim-im »nd !f»w»r«. c»r Rtrbgf. Slop *p oii»c» tonrpl«'l^ luformbUon. WEST SIDE'- UlTV 7-room colonlbl — EicfUfnl ' f ri®"bCf'*l?Iia“dinln| VwSi. 1 luXn 'lull^ Tit*" RON .C*p1m «5‘l7 C»M lor bppoinirornl tp anow SMITH WIDEMAN nPK^lWErHn-4526 ) Trade BATEMAN \\r 1...V Off loslyii Aluminum ii fA*mlly*^ . , pin, clonn* co»l trrlng tbl». let ■ TRADE Snow Snv'v, "-r ?Suw” I7M down No mlg eooU. Trade ‘ ‘^r*».”g«. wim»'m. boilUUluT Urge wood Will trade for emalli LX . Dollar Dizz TO KETTLE ESTATE- Adinln- i;‘,?''c^o.rsitw^'^Sn{f:c‘fif r. Price reduced H TradinK l> Oyir Busiues REALTOR 8. Telegraphy *^Siul^ple*ubtino berItice* Homes-Farms I acre - curh.un ACh^^^^ menl. 7 flrfplbcei •ulbtbd. aluminum storms '.creen., hardwood . ...’ii eland compiriaon wllh »!»*•• holAP. Tor quick •" *“ SBb Nmmi_______ 4» WEINBEBOBII NOlW. ON UkKE. Bd «l'w -jTd ~ ( Rd llo^lt th ekcellent two-badroom bungalow for »"*y Beautifully land,capi Ug*'* Hl!v%%«ur'"in Ta™a"r«rult. BELL OR TRADE - Here t, p?lce“* CbSy* •" 7 *0 ♦ ?ISl""be'lSr,„r‘cVli‘n*;nd'*,"ol!J 1-to-wall carpeting I accent cheaper „ntracr. noui Ute model car. condition. Fireplace. BELL on TRADE - n Lake a d two-car garage. I BELL OR TRADE lunial Mill, 1 bedroom. , oroiuv.... attached tw^car garage Pull bakemant Two bath, .*"lullt-ln crab and range, full dining room, fireplace. If A-1 neighborhood thu at only B34.0U and i trade. LIST WITH US — a tr you Multiple LUtlpj Ser;^ fE BUY SELL AND TRADE year, eiperltnce. Open 0- . II. BROWN. Rfaltor »0t riliabeth Lake Road Ph PE 4-3BS4 or EE 1-4SI0_ DORRIS N EXECUTIVE'S NEfOHBOR-HOOD of fine preellge hoir‘ ‘■ Lake Angele, Height, Yei I, your chance to trade It Mnaller home, and ,tep toppad dr Mlllng"’ apoliiimenU. gat.SOoT attractive 3 AcRe 1 bedrbom one, ranen Iiiaiie cated We,t Suburban ThI, rcramic bath an d plait II ba,ei ^.d kitchen. I bullt-ln vanity range Oak floora itered wall, ’ throughout. ------ wllh bullt-ln ,-1,8 fee carpetfng. Inaulalad I '-,kf prtV’^---- 13.000 V U ACRE - Cuatom I INCOME - DUPLEX Wack to toveto a amall amount 0t miT-r wdA a oiea ratarn? TTica toy ttiu duplei in the clty_ 'mrl . Each unit hai 0 roocna with 3 bedroom, baMment and B»/M*, Each uan now rentiof at 670 a mooth Full pnte OlI.OOO with Beverly •*••• A«wa i'.h«L!\ORTII SIDE •d yard gg,, movet you Into thl, ** huic 0-room home It baa a beau- Mway and B*ragc comar lot^, ba»-furoaca. Only l*> nd jpollahed id floor,, pli per 1 COLORED — to 0000 will move of our fine -home*. I rraponalble partlee with di or .mall laims thrtk o'jr lul lug,- UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE O'NEIL J. (Dick) VALUKT -- Realt.ir FE 4-3531 346 OAKLAND AVE All Thumbs? Then don't buy thU oito. ha^dy MULTIPLE LISTlNfl SERVICE LOADfl OF SHADE Brick and aluminum, fully Iniulat-ed 3-bedroom ranch we,t ol y'~'5^veV*'landKaped*loli* Only 41 100 dovn plu, cloving tiac. 3-car. garage. SNowhi 3-VlM*lor further details. 3 BEDROOM BRICK ai rtth^Vei^aEr dlntiig area Dkcely landscaped lotv ilut a 3-ear garage. $2,600 G. I.'s No Money Down INC^. neat deberated screens lO mlnuti. ------ downtown Pontiac and the new Oleowood Shopping Centor. BIOS total closing RAY 0’NEIL. Realtor 3B3 8. Tylesrsph Open 0 9 p,iL FE J-7103 OL 1-0676 nere. e-teSrm'*bpntalow-----^ The best part Is tha Py™* “’J! P*-I ^l?f‘^i„faou, $850 Down k bedroom brick ranch V wjui^^/•'■“I and 3-car garage OI terpsi. West Suburban Lovely 3-bedroom ranch 1 wllh Icrge kitchen and d— .. comblnatlon.^Has^plMtomd walU^ ' ft"*'Sant*led"'lamlW room, 1’>-«»' gurage On 3 loU near HTm* lake $1,300 down OEOROE R IRWIN. RFALTOR 306 W Walton_______FE 3-70M away from HUSTLE BVVTLI RANCH ON 5 ACRES We«t of Pontiac, Ideal homa wHI 30-n. gunroom. 3-car garaga on L —--vr Maple road — SSl^ a.7 So doilfT pyment to OI btiyi C. SCHUETT Phone PE 0-0461 CLARK WEST BIDE BRICE. Webeter Rchool DIetrIcl, two lof* ly fenced In, outilde barWue, 3j emr laragi b *"*' V* STOUTS Best Buys Today -...‘“iVVl SMALL FARM 6 ACRES Trade or >ell Modern 3 bedroom home, lull baiemenl. oil heat. 3-car^ga- 6oil*'i and drapec. Bullt-ln l range, garbage dispoaki a mloa counterif $17,760 with „ tiva tarmi. Immaculate threj FAMILY COLONIAL - One 0. .. niceat we've bed. exterior flnlehl In bhlte aluminum aiding. Int rior newly decorated throughout' 13x30 living room wllh e.ii Ing,. full »lse dining roc ,pace kitchen, master I3Wxl6. Wxlk-ln closets, ment. oil heat, one-ca. - Convenient city location. Only IIO.MO toll' 1 home. Spa------------- - tored walls, carpetod living 3. drapes Included A dream ler, dryel, freexer. refrlgerj-slldlng glass doors overlook-the sparloui \ rage Pr‘—- -\ pleasant \ property. Vlizabeth lake estates l^ms and bath with all furniture iVluded Choice lake privilege, groOO I060 down, 1*6 month. Ol\ NOTHING DOWN 0 ai VATERFORD HIGH - Area, nei --- 3-bedrqom brick ran -.43 -wllh full baseme aluminum itorm, a landicaped 86x160 I home. 30x43 7 h?“g«xgrOniro'LOOo"' handle to 4t, per cent i ANNETT p»ymen PE 3 M66 JOHNSON I YEARS OF SERVICE brlcb bo: looking 1 ement,.FIi 1 firepitci landicap 'Fireplace. Large u, bullt-lna. Den. 3 water heat.' Walk-out Tnixhod recreation rm. large roqme^ 3 lote Boat dock Many mote feature, too numerou, •- mention. Call for arot. today— ............ you’ll be glad you 0 Near l.incoln Junior ’ Completely remodeled and redecorated, 3-bedroom bungalow with enclo,*d pofeh. - Fbll bcement. Alum, •torm . tog. pnly'M’.gK.’^Smau'’down .payment. 2-Family. $I.0CG Down l?n" Ut'’fl0Dr *M Tlargl Elizabeth Lake Instates landicaped lota. 3 bath,, fami: lortly fireplace I - 3-car atl'd gi -\. lOHNSON & SONS kFALtOKS FF: 4-2533 17M 8 TELEORAPH Small Farm. Close In Lovely 3-bedroom bungalow with 5 acre,. Oak paneled family room wllh flre^ice, full divided baaemeni, oil heat Large garage and utll-llv bldg. 20x60. heated 30x20 office or workshop with plumbing. Additional 6 acres WE WILL TRADE ANN FIT INC. Realtors 1 26 E Huron St Open lEycmnlH and Sunday 1 - 4 U'ed'r? ' 1.718$ Rea FE. 4-4113 ’ CLARE REAL ESTAIJI 11 W .Huron Open B Multiple Uitlnr *—“* MILLER aluminum RANCH ----- ■•llul groL--------- this attractive larkfli • l 121 600. For William Mi'ler Realtor F'p 2-0263 070 W Hqron_______Open t to OPEN S.vr.. SUN. 12-6 I'.M Beautiful "Fox Bay" DIBECTIONB: Out M6I to wmian Lake Rd. Turn left to Ellcabel I^ Turn r1|ht approx ARRO “W'e Trade—We Build’ aquare feet •i.tw, ——em to the fh-- uie. 2 fireplaces, walk-out baae- ’RICED TO BELL - gas heat^*2-ca*r**g»rage. 'bed yard with shade trees. Lake llegee. Only 111,1“ ------- "B-roOffi ranch '•■"“lesSSISi - Large 3-bedroom . i- vo-k.. eSL WEST OF PONTIAC — Ov acres with spacious well hi bedroom ranch, fireplace. baths. lull basement, water i..--- er. large garage. ShoNa by ap- TEo McCullough, realtor OPEN t - f SUNDAY U - ■ PHONE 682-2211 MULTIPLE USTINO SERVICE KAc__________ ar noma In trado. 11. R. HAtiSTROM realtor no Highland Road (MN) outlac OR 6-0J6B BBEOBIB Altor f_____ GILES IMMEDIATE PORSESBION Only B760 down on Uila bcttie luat doc-oratod on largo cornor lot. Full basemont. oil IwM, Nhlh^NAj} Itl-car ur garage s. A real WEST SUBURBAN. Ranch home In ■callant condition Juat oH Ellaa-itb Lake Oil heat, comer lot. irge rooma. all on ana floor, only 1,360 lull priot. 4-LEVEL HOME^ Ftalurlnf large 1 brick fireplace I ivlng room. 4 beOroomx 1 ramie Ule batha. hardwood f tsamont raereation room. B< ge Urge ecenle lot and mori - -- tranafarrtd giving ua ywnar tranafa paqUl price GILES REALTY CO. E 6-0176 331 **• MU*LT|"fLE LStlNO BEtviCE WE CAN Convert Your Home INTO A ‘Home of Your Choice” THROUGH THE Home Hank ExchaiiRC THERE ARE No Realtor Discounts' Bass & Whitcomb SPECIALIZINO REALTORS KENT Etlabllabed I CLARKBTON AREA- nome w.«i u.«>. fireplace. Full basement, oil hoot. Large porch. Oarage. Double *-* Kap.*d uSc p;toilogc. 'gl4.B00 veetmenl for ronUI unit, BB.400. ORTONVILLE AREA --.3-famlly Incomo. 2 bedrooma each. 2 bat - ■ .„;:,“:.arrtt r riiop^^BB# with 33. -bedroom homo. North tuburban ^ I. Tllad bath. Brick Eloyd Kent Inc., Realtor *■3300 Dixie Hwy. at Tale^ireph PE 3-0133 - Open Evas. _________Proa Parttlng_________ GAYLORD Bt. Michael i Church a block away from thla large home. 10 room, completely lurnUhed. 3 five-room apartmenli Income will moke moet of your paymenU. Ex- 10 acreage with four-bedroom home. North of Pontiac, r ' to ,ell now. Cftll FE 04003. BUNOALOW TTF* home with an rage. Only 013,600. daa heat. Ca MY 3-3M1. / Lawrence \\^ Gavdord 130 E. Pika Bt. . „ JK Broadway and FlIntJR. MY B-3BI LAKE FRONT JAMES K BLVD. OPEN Sat. and Sun. 1 to 5 WILL TRADE PEATURINO 3- bedrooms, 3 tllo baths, larga paneled lamlly rTOin 2 fireplaces, ca^rtlnr modern dealgn, Ph. IX 3-66B3 Mr, Turo. NO MONEY DOWN NO MORTOAOB COSTS - Brd Large 3-bedroem with “Voung-Bilt Homes” Really mean bettor''built tusiell Young_______ BuU< DRAYTON WOODS Now vacant, lovely S-room rant-Carpetod living room. Hardwo^ noore, cerllmtc bath, alao bath walk-out basement. large Tandacapad lot. to mortgato. Clarence C. Ridgeway •aVvery FURNISHED HOME Owner moving from MIehlgai Offeri'-a vhiy attractive model also furniture In an extra ^room Incomt apt. Separato balb aad —--------- Oaa heat. 3-ear «- Ifict price — IB.JWI Brewer Real Estajc JOSEPH y. REIBZ. -flALM ^R, PE 441B1 Evcc. PE B4B33 SELECT LOCATION b"!;W?ftk;[r.ta"i-*iii.i4 lot. citabllahc^ --- bllahad lawn .... Carpetod 16------- - I carpatM 1BI17 family tmlc bath. 1 Urgt badroi itn baa bufll-liia. dltbwat..... fan and hood, icrcaqad ratio bdr. Natural flrapItOa. ves. noorc, plaatortd walU. Oa-— iViLEOM ON C A R B L/IkE. W. Bloomfield Tbit wonderful homo bat to offer at thla price < with coovanltDl terms I WAITI Sylvan Village A LOVELY HOME WITH OVER 1,6M M FT OF LIVING AREA Romsn brick ranch home. J.lartc - , lU baths, a family carpatlDf and drapcrlss Includad Raised haarBi Rrcplaec. Flelur# ---------- -------the living £?ss.rwi&”'b"fiii.'s lor prIvacy^**Jlk....™ .... - ,-throughout PlaotorM AArt: I slorage ____ _____ , gac boat Attached double tarafo pavod drive. Lake and beach privllc|ct PRICED RIOHYI CALL FOR BHOWINOI Humphries BEDROOM RANCH HOME, ciu7‘M 2SS: coloolal yanch nomes. large larm kitchen with fireplace and bullt-ln barbecuee 3 bedrooms. 3 baths and loU of altraa. Prlvato Ukt PrivUana. 16 minutes from town, l3T,m. Call A L. Dotnget Co . Ml B-IBOO. Birmingham. U»> W QRMER' WEBSTER sii'sras, full baaamant. living room — —grioqktnf -~* rOM I Int. tB.66 RBMTt Prt|«rty nSHERMAN B PAR ADI BE Larto lake. tS mine. Pontiac No motors. Exc. fishing, swHnmIhg. Wooded lot, BBB6 BIB down. g^To month. Dole Brian Corp. PE .4-4668, OR 3-13B6________ RICE S-B^ROOM, RA3 with baskment. larga to -toPPlng^erato;^ PE 6-2B63 Utt-Acrt«|« 53 • ACRta. PJXmiMO WELL. building LOT . 80x346' Eaxt Walton Blvd. Paved SSS7’«f‘^.-to7.'l““«?'wa*£S5 Bt,. 41.600. Tarms^_ PONTIAC REALTY 737 Baldwin FE B4376 w. Farnum. Royal Oak. BOU'ITfWliTCbRRER OF DEAR-born and Terry. LoU 47._46 and 43, Lakeside Park Bub.. PonUac, OLOOO caih^ Mulberry B-4444._ TH^B lots OO'xBOOr ON *RDER-sonrlle RtT, alto au"*prlced^*fo sell**Broker La- HI-HILL VILLAGE A baauUful apet to hulM your own home, where you mny b< protected and aiaurad of fiiturs —'“t. Plenty ol room Plenty of , Choice a 1111 located on Inf paved rcitda. Excellent * d good wells. 130x166 rith 1200 down. IDDb ihc. r rJ. iPerry) M34 alnage an r B1.N6 V r OR'3-1233 alter 7:30 Sate Firm 5* 100 ACRE FARM ^ Por only 830,000 with 00.000 down. ________deled fan SStf**acto*J^'**woyad and 4k tillable. 00,000, torma. C. PAFiGUS. Realtor ORTONVILLB 433 Min Btreet 70 aa'rci. lavcl. MOO trontoge. old T0*a«ex**rou!nB"bl4tekloo Irontogt. f acres*'vacant. comer. S. of Milford. 04.300. HOLLY AREA comm^rcjjuv joned^, 0^«- HOWELL AREA a s aeree, K mile off M60. vacant, eomar. |100 nera. ajo”eicreeV lanifal farm, bUldlDks. blacktop road. 0211 land naariy all tillable, good 4B^acrei,*'ami^e *»™ buUdlngx. 30 acres drelned • muck, orchard. L. H. Crandall. Realty 333 E. Grand River, Howell, Mich. Phone HoweB 017._______________^ Sdi IniMU Pnpirty 57 MONTCALM BUILDING ■ i--------- fraoUte. 34 X 30 on loundatlmi with PA heat, air coodlttonad. 00' on Montcalm. Idaal for -doctor or barber ahop or nth 00. 3 parklngflot. anchor fenced a^ black topped. Only 2 from downtown. Ideal for — tor cUnlc, and niimeroua other ty|)ea of buslnaeaes. A-1 or DOtSia H BON, RBALTOB 3030 Dlzlo Hwy. OR 44: Jo“\ar‘u*'afl c-o Nytech Tool A Bns . Box M. CUo. Mich., or eSl after dp*-. MO B43if. Reason for sellinq b family FOR SALE Julie’s Grill & Pizzeria 1'Ntablished Busineu 9J0 MT. CLEMENS - FOR BALE RETAIL MILK ROuH, dl.trlhu.ln^.tton^lly^;«tbjJ °and^toe Itoanaef located ^ •pot lor making money Old age forcas aale. Includad art ll-room housa, 3-car garaga aiM 1-aert land ISO B. Squirrel Rd. Au-■■ -Ithti. GIFT SHOP BIrmlniham - Convert unusual tol," and time lor ••tMtcUon and prollt. Dletrasi aala - ktoke MICHIGAN BUSINESS SALES CORPORATION oi^UIT WITH BEKR AND wina taka out. 33B Ferry. PARTY STORE - ON MAIN HIOH-FAhTT niuri»_^ oooBiv _ Liquor as plus In-I.SOT Bldg come Oroto near B13B.B0 Locatod In atoble Thumb area community on main cSreet Excellant brick 3"*« ‘Vj-I large 3-bedroom owner'e apt. Jral BMJOO plua about B3.B08 atock. PARTRIDGE « ABBOCIATEB. KEALTOR8 ■•..in.ises thruoul MIcblian Huron - FE 4-Wl r wi™ SeIr ka out f room apt tor or rental Income B3.«0 ---Ftbe to FE 44137. tjrpfvmrrt »imi »€iauii FilNTTNO nraxsp STATIONS FOR LEA^E GOOD FOTENTIAL, Plaai» t»«Mi i a. m. and I P- m. M3-3I44 or afur I p. m. pOKK OIL COlfPANY llakts »ora profit Uw.—.. Mw‘lnt(f.^**n7olf MW In "J pai I to iovi anility, doilro w SSfi ♦■f«,“®’~w*l"o"rd“‘™ *.nn*tin"i.‘*.i;5!’ Home Improvement Business TRADE OR BELL, Real E,ti truck, slock, aqulpmcot and ic will Included In nrice ol W.l Bulldlnt 34x04 feet eonaleU display rooih, 3 offices, garaga aiiifstoraBa araa, gaa heat In oparaUon eavaral ytari, o^er made large net gn""* Will accept eaah. free and yley homa or equity orJ»nd codtracta M down pajvment. CtofBR*;! *•' tota, 3101 W Huron, FE 3-7IBB. ' FE 44BI3 Uk Lem! CeePtecH 40 an immediate bale FOR tour Land Contracts DC. .. betort you deal. Warren Btout Realtor. 77 N. Baglnaw 81 FE641B0 WaiitMl Cwrtr«:»«-a!|. 60-A Tour contract can be traded *t face value on the buelneas “r real estate of your aholce. the facte ab< LEW mLEkliN ™ 0-B7B3 REALTOR-BFECIALMT "immediate balb for you Asnr«7,,“Ki«W Honltor^^ M. SoflnnWg PooUn ■CTk“%"al~5S?^P® Brewer Real Estate have buyers for contr^ FE 4-61*1 „ 3-1360. ABILITY ■fo get eaxh for your Land Con-g.*n'Sr-.o«. *ho-4.“A«‘. Sf'St’n.'A 7?uSr«ft" yC.’ — Thl ACnON D your land eontracLUtrsa nkR enU Mr^HUtor,J«_4^-SBB0, _____ enU M Broker, 3*«E 44iai'_____ V^r^nrarinf'''* 4Bc**so^i‘ a A O TILE^ ^076 W. hutoo roNTEMPORARY CRERRY I.. ..WI. . .W.,-. — I ’ lamp, burlap ahadt Amber ma-I bugany comer, tohle, maicbinc I angled coSfee Ubie 'Twin Mroh bave yon. OR children « and apparel MU t-4ltt davenport and COPlhEE T*-Oood condttlao. Very ehoap 1*61 CHEVY DUMP ™UCK AND 1-4 IntomaUooal IroM cad load- yadWttxgv*gwy.ic*su!r 1*0 whB-e PINE 4 If oV tlty ol while pint bam timbers. For aala or swap tor what have EM 3-0636 JNlfERTORS AND BOlXMIl ________OR 4-1067________ CLEAN '41 MERCURY CONV^T-Ibla, Fowar .leering, brakee -Oood tiree. low mUeafe. Will take '■older car m trade. Bo^ and Into-rlor era good OR 34*74 after g. *’^r gilldSef ^ gPM* ciS'PiflEiV 3BEDROOM borne, wm trade anything tor down paftoxd •>*•> naanmt pay- ss“^«..-irs,*i.'ST Builders.________* . TRADE CAR, HOUSE TRAILER or land contract on thlc coiy. suburban lake pririlcg^ home. Hot- waur haaC flraplnea and RU*«*«K3??'b fiilirTSli: FE B.71B1 er FE 4-063B WILL TAKE LATE MODEL CAR )n trade Jor^^lty on 3-bcdroom $400 MUSKRAT COAT. 13-14. AL-most new 000. Ladles dresses r ,n .*uie?'{?r v^v^oifisi: 30T* Hickory Orovc Rd Bloom- lleld Hills. __________ BALLERINA LENO™ WEDDINO dress, slse 13. *. length sleeves. CLOTHES. SIZE re*,. %.‘VA"*‘Fi“*oliai*,''l Ottowa Drive.________' Ity, FE 64848, IIQ SIZE 13 LtOHT OREY ALL-WOOL ------- —, Excellent condl- I for more mature WANTED Early Spring clothes. Bt. . Opportunity shop, 366 W. I Birmingham. Sols HousrtoM Goods 1 BARGAIN OROUP: ODD BEDS, dressers, chests, springs, mirrors, radios, dinettes and aewlng ma-Ghlnas, obemi. M eldsn. (uarao-toed stoves wnd refrigerators. tUas. Ilt-gst. Maytat — Big . V a aai, up, a b^rooms, $36. Living__________ ,> Everything In uaad lumllura at bartain prices ■•.SONEWUvf------------------- BUY-BELL-TRADE In Houss 103 N. Cass al ...jttai’FB 3-6043. On*. ■ Monday and Friday. lb PRICE - REJECTS. BEAUTt-ful living room suites. Low ai g7*. fl.50 wttk. Ito^aln Housa, STUDIO COUCH 31*. REFRIO-erators all sliei 01* up, Eenmora electric Ironcr $3*. Oaa and alte-trte aloves 110 up. Dining Room set *34. Washers *10 up. TVbzl4 rug 014. Bottled gai siovq *30. Kaaa-hola desk Ilf 3 plec* bed------ "* bads, chests. dressers nnd springs. BBY - SELL — TRADE PEARBON'B FURNITURE 43 Orchard Laks A 3 PIECE UVINO ROOM SUmc, good condition, OOP, FE 4-00*0. J PIECE BsiDROOM SUITE WITH neF Scaly box cprtng and mat- chest « I or 307 I TBioIDAlRE. FIRST CLASS OON- ditloii. 038 073 M30.__________ F L E X A SCREEN IriHEFLACfc screen. coUmisI sola-bed. Holly- lmp» h ‘**w**S-Sm4 f^ERER' 300 POUND CAW- lAVE'TV'e, WUI Sell All slaea, I14J6 up Fcarton'e Furnltore 43 Orchard L'~ ' - oparatoe perfect, $36 EM I_____ HIDE-A4EO, EXCELLENT OON-dIUon. 3 piece eecllooal. 1-ptoew bedroom set, FE 0-0764 dJcLVINATOR. ELBCfRIC ftAMOE e7c5!KJJ*c'S31ur«'..V'J».‘‘£*,?: igait |7I. *134114. UkE NEW 7 HOLLYWOOD BED Only 040 MArket 4- LIQUH EN'HRJ IDATING ---IRE STOCK “tJe'sTiCi rockers, lamps and lablas. odd bedroom*