The engineer decided to adopt Communist measures to hoodwink East German authorities by play* (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) doomed to faltare." "I am not proposing—nor is it either necessary or desirable— that we Join the common market. alter our concepts nl political sov-ereignty, establish a 'rich man’s’ trading community, abandon our traditional most-favored nation policy, create ah Atlantic free trade area or impair in any way The new amount allotted to the Soviet armed.forces is mote than a trillion rubles more than the total allotted on both a regular and emergency basis during 1961. Advises Notre Dame to Keep Victory, Page 22 terms the authority he will seek tram Congress to give Wm greater treedorp in bargaining for tariff' favors. That authority would reduce levies on some C.8. Imports and GENEVA in — A cure may be on the way for victims of nuclear radiation, the U.N. World Health Organization . (WHO) reported today. In the related field of science, which includes most programs of weapon development, the budget figure was set at billion rubles. Last year it was 3J billion. Set Showdown AFLrCIO leaders meet to- But, Kennedy said in. a speech prepared for the National Asincia-tiqn of Manufacturers congress of American . industry: “Economic isolation and political leadership are wholly incompatible.” He said that reciprocal cuts in tariffs on both sides of the Atlantic sickness hitherto regarded as fatal, the- WHO monthly chronicle Christmas Shoppers to Got Free Parking Plan Huge Shelter TULSA, Okta. (UPD — An 831-unit cooperative fallout shelter costing |U million may be built LttifCmwN SPEAKER — Oakland County Republican Cbn-grrssmad William 8. Broomfield, tidrd from fcffr was the r»— of. honor yesterday at a luncheon for some 40 businessmen and' civic lenders sponsored by Pontiac Prim Editor John W. Flts- The Weather PONTIAC PRESS Edition JPONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 0, 1961—52 PAGES ELBABETHVILLE, Katanga, the Congo ID—Air forces went toto action today tat toe fighting between top. United Nations and Katanga.. The United Nations announced two of its 15 jets W| destroyed a Katanga jet and three other Katanga planes fat an- aerial cannon attack on Kolwezi base. He said a Katanga Fouga Jet got off the ground but made a farced landing near Luluabourg in adjoining Kasai Province. The U.N. command, said that Oh the ground, two inflnq —ahook ttfe rc^denM arta ncer toe Kolwezi baseband left four U.N. headquarters and-an old Katanga planet in ruins, toclud- airport northwest of the dty ing a Fouga jet fighters. A fuel l'»here Katangan forces were. depot and the tower at the deployed. ' strategic' base were damaged. : * ah announcement issued" at Leo- At Leopoldville, the U,N. Com-poldville said. mand announced that its 15-Jet The U.N. spokesman said a air force had been ordered to two-engine Dormer of the Ka- 'attack other Katanga air, forces tanga air force were sighted, *t Jadotville, 65 miles north-but ducked away before the U.N. west of Elisabethvllle. ing brought on by Katanga re- (Continued on Page 2; Got. 6) 25 'CannonbaH'|Ponf/ac Sales Top Bulletin Into W. Berlin as Industry Soars AT IkMIU IN ELUfBETHVILLE — Swedish United Nations troops rest in front of an armored car at the airport in Elizabethville, Katanga, . shortly before fighting started between Katangan and U.N. forces. Military Budget 9Way Up for Reds BERLIN I UPD — A young East German train engineer “bor-a Communist . passenger train Tuesday night and turned it into a cannon ball express that sped him and 24 refugees to freedom in West Berlin. The engineer celebrated his 29th birthday today surrounded by his entire family who accompanied on the wild ride. MOSCOW — The Soviet government today announced a record-breaking 1962 budget, including a staggering bike in military spending ot almost 50 per cent over that origlnallV planned in 1961. The original 1961 figure %ae boosted tremendously lastiuly because of U.8. military measures taken to • melt the Berlin defense L crisis, Soviet Premier Khrushchev said then. The oVer-all budget for totals 81.9 Mllion rubles, Finance Minister Vasily Gaibusow teld 4he Supreme Soviet, the parliament of the Soviet Union, which began session in the Grand Kremlin Palace today. There have been no firm estimate* for the over-all UJL budget tor the next flsoal year but jt Is expected to top 999 billion. Of thlo, the defense Ml tiny* are expected to be from IN btlfioo to 981 MIMea. President Calls for Tariff Cuts -The current U.S. budget figure is 989 billion, with 946.8 billion for defense expenditures. |M BILLION TOTAL - Figured at the official rate of 91,11 for the ruble, the total Soviet budget would be 9909 billion with S14J billion for defeftae. But comparison of Soviet and American budgets is almost impossible. Many Soviet military expenses are buried in allocations ostensibly for civilian production.) Garbusov told the delegates would total 19.4 biifioa rub tea, or U.7 per cent ot Ike total, as compared with 9.9! billion ruble* originally budgeted for 1991. At the official rate of exchange, one ruble equals fl.ll. Ask Program. in Order to Frustrate Russians in. Their World Push NEW YORK (API—President Kennedy called today for a lowering of tariffs in a "new and bold’ program to frustrate Communist plans tor economic encirclement ot toe West. He urged U.S. cooperation with te European Common Market along with lower tariffs to stimulate trade among friendly nations. If the nations of the West can agree “eu a common program of action as extraordinary In' economic history a* too North Atlantic Treaty East Gormdn Engineer,! Friends Borrow Train, Pontiac Motor Division hit the top last month while for Escape to West the domestic auto industry as a whole set a sales record. Retail deliveries by Pontiac dealers reached atr all-time high for any November with the sale of 43,176 new ,car8, E. M. Estes, General Mofbrs vice president and general manager of Pon- The daring trainman, longest previous ran was estimated to be an internal East Ger-trip of some 50 miles, turned his Walter Mitty-type dreams1 of escape into reality in Berita’s nm|, sensational flight to freedom flK the Cold War. The refugees mode their tiac Motor Division said today. GMC Truck A Coach Division also had an optimistic report today. For the second consecutive month, domestic retail deliveries of GMC trucks in November topped any other corresponding month since 1955, announced Calvin J. Werner, GM vice president and general manager of the division. Domestic auto industry sales last month hit 518,438 cars, according to company estimates. The previous November record was 530,000 cars to 1965 and 1990. Of the total, General Motors accounted for 307,887 sales, 68,000 ahead of last year; Ford 166,200, 7,500; Chiystor 50,296. down Lirhy past the scheduled last stop at the JGmI German station of 339, up 85Q. Here is the story that was pieced together early this morning from the refugees. WORKED OUT PLAN The trainmen had heard that te rails which previously led from Albrechtahot into West Berlin were scheduled to -be rethoved as part of the Communists' border-scaling operations. The two dreamed of driving n train with their families mad friends through heovtly-amied police guards to the West. They began their detailed plan last week. JFK Interview Is Interesting to Khrushchev MOSCOW (UPD - Premier Khrushchev said today he found President Kennedy’s Interview with Alexei Adshubei very interesting, "hut we cannot agree with everything he said.'’ The Soviet premier, speaking at a Finnish embassy reception, Jokllagly told Western diplomats 10-day period totaled 144SL boosting Pontine well over the record high mark of 49,974 ant to November ISM. Last month’s sales represented a 74 per cent gain over November 1960. 'Tepipfht sales of 12,066 were largest for any month since its initial introduction last year. Pontiac attained another all-time division record for the first 70 days of 1962 model sales, with dealer deliveries totaling 103,338. The previous high for a similar period was 97,686 established in 1965. WASHINGTON (AP)—-The first II. S. attempt to sfnd a man into orbit was scheduled today for early January. AT Shststix TROOPS IN POSITION — Troops of Katanga Province wait I lie postponement until J with rifles and mortars ready at the capital city of Elisabethville after the Christmas holi-.l )ust before the bloody fighting erupted. One soldier (right) to days was announced hn- ^1 nice cream cone. the space agency which already has assigned astronaut John H. Glenn Jr. for the attempt to orbit a Mereary capsule. Previously the hope had been to make the manned shot this year, perhaps as early as Bee. 20. The Nntieaal\Aero-nasties and Space Administration announced that the neat Mercury orbital launch definitely will he a flighLgnUMMto tore tis U NWfl? animals. Space officifels had worked hard to try to get the orbital shot tiff during 1961 in order to achieve that goal in the same year as tin Russians. The announcement'said that, based upon all available data Including a preliminary analysis of the recent orbital flight of the chimpanzee Enos, “it ap-pears-no farther animal or immanned flights are needed before attempting the specific Mercury mission — manned ti r b 11 a 1 flight” / Dollar Gift No Problem With So Many Choices a den or family room. If the male recipient has just moved into - - - pencil is inserted in the top to be sharpened by a razor blade inside. One store is showing crystal salt and pepper shakers for a dollar. . But this is' no longer emergency financing, and it indicated the Soviet government expects world tension to stay at a high pitch during the coming year. By JANET ODELL “The p&rty^Btarts as six—bring a dollar gilt.” We all hear that command at this time of ytir. What can we gat for* dollar? We saw some handsome metal waste baskets. One with kitchen utensils pressed into the coppertone sides would be fine for the homemaker; another with “tooled” flowers m the same coppm* ' ------------— hone would be at home in ' a den for the fIrst time,>he na rg h t likie a brass perpetual cilendar or a new-style pencil sharpener for his desk. The 1961 pencil sharpener is about as large as a 50-cent piece and 1H inches tall. The Highs and Lows to Stay Near Normal Awhile Temperatures will average near or a little above the normal high of J| to 38 afid the’ normal low of 19 to 25 degrees for the next five days. Tonight's low will be 34. Thursday will be mostly cloudy with a chance of now flurries and high of 40. Saturday will warm up a Utile but temperatures will be colder again Sunday. Girls -from 6 to 80 like feminine gifts like dusting powder. The prettiest boxes we’ve seen have puffs in deep-tone colors. COOKIE CUTTERS A new homemaker will be enchanted with the gift set of stainless -steel, cookie cutter?. These are not just holiday cutiere. If the party la early, consider some pretty Christmas wrapping materials for a gift, An entire bolt of narrow red ribbon would seem like luxury. Purchase a,Christmas card register. * Another prosaic gift that pleased many is a collection of small items used often around the hoqse—thumb tacks, rubber bands, ap eT’r cUps, transparent tape, household cement—the list goes on. Wrap each thing separately for the most fun: Cure for N-Radiation May Bo in the Works Twenty-six was the lowest recording in downtown Pontiac preceding' 8 a.m. The mercury reading at 2 p.m. was 43. News Flash FT. LEWIS, Wash. (AP)—Rep. Melvin R. Laird, R-Wis., accused the Defense Department today ‘incredible mismanagement” the length of time It took te make fends available lor Balts recently called to defy. In Today's Press Considioe Went could answer surprise Soviet attack in minutes—PAGE 99. To Stay in U.N. Stevenson won't seek Senate seat-PAGE 7. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6,1M1 "Support Grows for'Two Chinas' jfifawfa's U. M Mm liter Now Fad Hay Co on Throni^i Exams Seek Added Information bri CD XJperaiions Center Talkathon, CramethonrWhich^ Michigan State University Students well Into their fifth day « a continuous telephone con-venation said today they might extend the gab feat beyond the aavtwHtoy goal originally set. UNITED NATIONS, N Y. (UPI) jHtapport developed in the Gen- • PriiamiHlj today for ths"two. Entry of Western Michigan University students into the Mrs. Arthur McNaHy A Requiem Mam for Mrs. Arthur (Mary M.) McNally, 82, of 1315 N. Woodward Ave., Bloomfield Hills, sdU be said 8 a.m. tomorrow at St- Elizabeth Chapel. Bloomfield HIDi, Burial wfll bain Holy Cross Cemeteqr, Detroit Mrs. McNally died Monday after a abort flhwm. A son, Arthur J. of Detroit survives. A Rosary will be said t p.m. today at tbo Manley Bailey Funeral Home. |» - Chrtetmae vacation. r ,BaU aaid..no .firm. decision would he made here on extending the gab sessions through finals until "verification” could be received or> the starting time of the Western Michigan cAH. MUST LEAVE DOBMS The talkathon here wiU have to end Dec- 18 because of university regulations requiring all students to be out of the dorms btt that date. Ball said-Rivalry between MSU and the University of Michigan led the 'Spartan talkers to take extra precautions laist night to keep the call going. Ball reported four University i of Michigan men were found In Butterfield Hull this week, up- . The city manager has 'recommended that the civil defense Job be a full-time, paid position, but has not ruled Out a volunteer CD chief if he was qualified. Asst. City'Manager Robert Kenning was mentioned for the Job by the commission in discussing the Appointment of the ctvil ds-fense director but no action was yule with BATHOS - Santa Claus couldn't hold back the tears as some 30 to 40 children from, St. Joseph’s School for the Blind in Jersey City, NJF., tOid him their Christmas wishes at a party. Just before Donna Cariock, 5, of Jersey City, climbed onto his knee, Santa had heard another 5-yearmtd girt ask for,!t‘‘seeing eye puppy" tor a 3-year-old friend. _ ’ W- Advertising. Signs Ordered Off Roads MSU talkathon, Tuesday night extra tape was placed on the receiver hook to prevent an accidental hang-up; a watch system was on guard at the room in Butterfield, and prahlaa of Nntl—Hst China stU«s ho salved. £* More was expected to be heard „ of the idea when the China debate continues in the Assembly this ' afternoon, with Ghana, the Ukraine, Australia, Cuba Japan listed to speak. - -The assembly’s main political l dBommlttee—which alternates mom- * ing and afternoon meetings with alts parent body as the session f speeds toward a scheduled adjourn-I ment before Christmas—returned •to Its debate on outer space this * morning. f Ailing Robert Kennedy * Cancels Appointments | WASHINGTON (AP) - Illness I forced Atty, Gen. Robert F. Ken-Z nsdy to cancel his office appoint-p ments again today. Edwin O. Guthman, depart- ltEALFADBTflT— Thetalkathon is already old hat in Kalamazoo. Here Kalamazoo College students are shown after,starting a cramathon in preparation for first semester final exams. Students at Western Michigan University, also in Kalamazoo, are said to be out in front in the current marathon talking competition. Students at KC plan to keep the campus library open lor 70 hours until exams end Saturday. Advertising signs that have been trespassing on the public right of wgy of state highways in Oakland County are coming down. State Highway Commissioner John C. Mackie has instructed his 10 district offices — including the one in Pontiac — to have removed*----- ------------------- unwanted, intruders from entering. University of Michigan student* were 20 hours behind Ball’s group ip starting the talkathon. Million for Building Much of Nation By The' Associated Press f ment information officer,’r'de-| Snow, rain and tog daricened S scribed the illness as "a huskines*.the winter sky over border states lot the voice and a chest cold,” He 0f the nation today, said the ailment, which sent Ken- Asked by College Heads nedy from the Department of Jus-. tice Tuesday, is not serious. Public Invited to Tour Ntw Waterford School1 The public has been invited, for the first time, to tour the new Waterford Kettering High School in Waterford Township, at an open house set for 7:30 p.m. tonight.. . An organizational meeting with election of officers for a new parent-teacher organization, will be Under the supervision at temporary chairman Donald Redman. « Following a short business meet flhg, Dr. Chandoa Reid, assistant to Jtbs superintendent will be guest The Weather (Paris News Office Hit • PARIS dh — An explosion which • police said was caused by a plaa-2 tic bomb damaged the offices of • the newspaper France-Solr today. I Two persons were slightly injured. Scattered snow fluiTles fell on northern New England states, leaving amounts ranging from a trace to about one quarter of an inch In northern Maine. „ * . SCATTERED SNOW Scattered snow flurries moved aver -the -Central and Northern Rqridn, and flurries changing to snow mixed with rain occurred over the Northern Plains and the Upper Mississippi Valley. Snow also was expected in the St."Lawrence Valley. * A * Patches of fog formed lit the Gulf states and along the Pacific Coast and In California’s interior valleys. AAA More than a quarter of an inch of rain was reported In the Dallas-Fort Worth area of Texas and occasional rain fell from East Texas to Georgia, moving into Northern Florida and the Caro-linas. LANSING W — Nine state college presidents urgently called on the legislature today- to launch five-year $175-milllon building program, financed by long-term bonding,. at state institutions of higher learning. They recommended creation of state ammey to handle the financing and asked the legislature to guarantee between $15 and $20 million annually to pay for it. Appearing before a Senate Interim Committee studying college building needs, Full US. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Increasing cloudiness and a little warmer today, dandy, little change in temperature with few showers or snow flurries tonight. Thursday meetly cloudy with chance of few snow flurries. High to- I day 48. Lew tonight 34. High Thursday 4«. Wind south-* westerly It 1* 20 miles becoming northerly Thursday. . . Mti Is rasMa* 1 On* V**r A|* a Fanil** t am : Wind valMttjr 1* m p.ta ajfftssnyU VjilsSCr *t Ml's.a. •Mu run* TbnndSf st 1:M mb. JMfMS MU WfdSMdl, »t «:M pm. Ratoon rim* Thnrate, »l 7:0* n.m. st Lov**t tamptrilun* U liana Uuipcratur* ji wwtiur—Light rain. drUtl* ’ XlgltMt nt Inm T*ws*ralsrw TkU Dnt* Is U V*nr* M In 1»M T In 1815 VsMdar’* TtsamlM Chart ■nte*. It it 0»i«s* H H uhbt » fi P*nrat M 11 Sl Louia 4* si Mn if 8 )! Fort Worth M *7 S. Fraaclico M 41 gWapMsT M M S. SM. Marl* M 17 Jack ton rill* to M itaiu* 40 -31 Kanaai City 63 31 Tampa « M Marquette 13 B Tra*. City 31 U l-:-la#.. p u.w,,, ...Jt ,5S: s '"f’r ■ ■ ■) stein*in Unpntm a iLwa tiapnistsrn J# rrjsxzss • V? X NATIONAL WEATI dltebht or Snow flurries arc expected-in the while tight rain it foroc«at,ior the rjft the Ohio and TeOneseee Valleys. IjOml M wiU be r weather win t .. til ill Upper Mississippi Talley and the Lfm area. V Sp \ * . all size signs that encroach this property. The ban an signs, required by state law and federal regulations, will mean the elimination of 1,500 signs In Oakland County, said Peter H. DeCamp, district maintenance engineer for the Pontiac of-ice. "It's gsttiag aa that since the rad of the war they (the signs) have saswbaBed so that they are turns out to be hit-or-miss as well pay-as-you-go, due to violent fluctuations -in -state- revenue and pressures for appropriations for, other purposes.” state colleges and i sars — soaring to about >,M9. ’The situation and the times call for a bold, imaginative, far-reaching program," said John A. Hannah, president of Michigan State University and chairman of the Michigan CbuncU.of State College Presidents. , dVfr The council, Hannah said, agreed that $175 million was the minimum required for a building program that would enable their institutions to meet the anticipated onrush of students in Die' years ahead. A A A A pay-as-you-go financing program was rejected by the college presidents in favor of long-term bonding, he said. Financing as funds are available has been used by the legislature for years, he said, "and >< Group Cites Knudsen for Principles For "upholding the principles of fair play, opportunity and understanding for every citizen regardless of race, creed or color," Semon E. (Bunky) Knudsen, former head of Pontiac Motor Division, was cited ywrterday by the Detroit Round Table of Catholics, Jews and Protestants. Thieves Empty 1Heat1 From Area Homes At least throe area lift without any source off. heat in near-freezing weather yesterday after thieves emptied fuel oil from their outside storage tanks. A 100-gallon supply of f&d oil was missing from a tank at the home of Robert L. Rumford. 3134 “7 Male St., and another 75 gallons was emptied from a tank at the Daniel Turner residence, 3148 Mandrake, according to rnfctewt County Sheriffs deputies. now general manager of the Chevrolet Motor Division »ud a General Motors vice president, was both honored guest and guest speaker «t the SSrd anniversary dinner In Detroit. The cmifirate of recognition noted, in pari, Knudsen's “outstanding leadership in promoting the cause of good will among men find women everywhere ... for leadership in communal and educational activities, for promoting economic vitality and growth potential of the State of Michigan, and for upholding principles of fair play, opportunity and understanding for every citizen regardless of race, creed or color . A A hi his address, Knudsen called oh every citizen to meet his personal responsibility in upholding the nation's moral standards. “We Inherited freedOnV," he sakl, we seem unaware that we must re-earn It every generation. To oppose communism. * _ ... rely on military might alone, we’re lost,” he said. Tnwrtdp. Mis. Turner toMItfr fleers several ether thefts el fwf Sti lted occurred. lu her ■HdMiirtiii hut they hud not A third case, which police said mid have kna’llx work el vandals, occurred yesterday 'dt- die Avon Township home of Morris Gihsqd 3274 Longview St., where Hi JAM* of oH leaked out after | pipe between his house and the ‘ mk was • broken- , 7' A. A. 7 A 1 Sheriff’s, deputies ■ warned* residents to/iock thr eaps oh outside America’s struggle with the Communist world can be won only by demonstrating superiority of its social, economic and cultural performance through a reassert ion < * lividual responsibilities. Cardinal Hits Show on Boston Gambling BOSTON (ft—Richard Cardinal Cushing says Boston was tnyad’’7fcy a note* tetev! program that showed policemen n Back Bay key shop ras raided as a I AddnACJl craird at the policemen’* ball in Boston Garden Tuesday night, the prsihte—Roman Cathode archbishop of tee Boston archdiocese A* said: "GamblfaH exists everywhere. Nobody can deny»It, and' the United State* Army would not be enough af a law enforcement agency ,to stop people from gambling.” . He told the cheering group gam-ling to itself fcpJtot a sin—only the abuse of It 7 A good percentage of the signs exist along Dixit Highway, he said. COOPERATION EXCELLENT Letters have been tent to bust- violating signs asking them to remove them within 38 days. The cooperation has been excellent, Decamp said, ‘No one has called and said down,’” he said, "The signs interrupt maintenance, our mowing and the visibility ol motorists and are a general nuisance,” he said. The statewide ban will cause the removal of between 15,000 to 20,-000 signs throughout Michigan, Mackie estimated, ’The signs are coming down at this time,’’ DeCamp said, cause we want to dean up our highways.” Those who do not comply with the ban can be prosecuted, he said. British Score U. N. for Force in Congo LONDON (AP)-The British government' declared today that UN. forces in strife-torn Katanga Province, the Congo, have no right to attempt to impose a political solution by force. .. A A Deputy Foreign Secretary Ed- ward Heath, in the House of Commons, reiterated that the British government believes the United Nations should try continually to achieve a settlement between the -central Congo government «nd President Moise Tshombe’s break-' away regime in Katanga. A A A Referring to the fighting In Elis-abethvlUe, Heath said: "U.N. forces are fully entitled to protect themselves when they are attacked, but they have hot got a permit to try to impose solution by force.’’ Dog Ordinance Up for Change Commissioner Wants Tooth Put Into Ruling on Liconsos Udylite Calls Off Plan of Motal Corp. Morgor NEW YORK IB—Without giving a reason, directors of Udylite Corp. of Detroit Tuesday called, off a proposed merger of Udylite and Metal and .Thermit Oorp. * A A A Udylite make* metal finishing equipment and materials. Metal and Thermit is a diversified company with Interests In chemicals, and the coating, (dating, welding and detlnnfng fields. 1). N. Jets Destroy Four Katanga Planes (Continued From Page 1) for Commissioner Wesley J. Wood will request some changes in Pontiac's dog ordinance at next Tuee-day's City Commission meeting. Lest night, Wood asked Asst. City Manager JRobert A. Stierer to put the dog ordinance on next week’s agenda. I should have aa some teeth la It,” The United Nations steadily reinforced tts ground troops. About. 300 Swedes arrived from Stockholm and another 350 Irish soldier* were en route from Dublin. In Paris, Katanga President Moise Tshombe said Foreign Minister Evariste Klmba had informed him U.N, troops had attacked Katangh forces in Manono, 275 miles north of Eliaa-bethvtlle, and the fighting in Katanga apparently had berime general. Tshombe said be would Turtle has been a member of the committee since its .inception seven years ago and has served on the organisation’s board of directors for several years. The appointment was announced this week following the committee's anftual meeting held in Chicago. Hie group sponsors National Farm-City Week, observed in the Ui>. and Canada in late November. Kiwanls International acts as a coordinating agency for the committee. The Junior grades ol the Detroit Country Day School will present their annual Christnias program Dec. 14 at 7:30 p.m. feature two short plays. The kindergarten, first aad second 25'Borrow' Train for Dash to West (Continued From Page 1) ing the role of an “eager beaver.” He told hie bass he would like to get additional experience by running the train on a link that switches from his normal route into Albrechtshof. FELL INTO TRAP The boss was pleased with his I subordinate’s willingness to gain additional experience and agreed to try hlm on a different nm, A A A The engineer, wasN given Tuesday night’s nm, but was Assigned the fireman who normally stoked his train on the regular run. i he had the day eft. tellteg I a friend who would pen the duty for him. The regular fireman happily agreed. The engineer’* family and friends purchased tickets and pfled aboard the train. When the well-stoked eight-car train reached Albrechtshof, it sped on through at a speed of 50 miles an hour to Spandau In the British sector. A A A The escapees said the locomotive ran out of steam as it started to cross (he bonier and they hid because they thought the Communist border gauds would shoot at them. But the guards were so surprised K. A. S. BAJA U.N. Katanga Commander U.N.May Mold Congo Session Now Council Moating Expected as U Thant Prepares Special Report UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) —A new Security Council session qn the latest Katanga crisis was forecast today as U.N. Secretary-General y Thant prepared a re* port to the 11-netfon body on the outbreak of fighting between UK. and Katangan troops in the secessionist Cbngo province. Faced with the gravest crisis since he took office a month ago, U Thant moved swiftly to place the United Nations on a virtual war footing in Katanga and hinted he might make a personal mission to the Congo. Nattaue’ top security body then Ms prsdeesssar, the late Dag Hammsrskjold...... . .. They also expressed belief that the new U.N. chief's quick dispatch of Jet planes and troop reinforcement! into Katanga showed he intends to take a tough stand and Use aH means at his disposal to quell disorder in the Congo. Detroit's Crime Rate Cut in'60 by 2.9 Pet. DETROIT (UPI) — Detroit Police Commissioner Herbert W. Hart said today that while the national crime rate increased by 4 per cent last ye^r, Detroit’s rate decreased by 2.S| 'per cent. Hart said the city led all other ■ in 1980 in crime He said Detroit’s Crime rate for the first ll months of 1961 also has shown a decrease, down 5.1 per cent from the corresponding pe* Hunting, Fishing Club EUds Olivflr President Robert B: Oliver was elected president of the Huron RfVer Hunt* ing end Fishing Club of Karmteg-ton last night at the amittAl jnoet-ing. ‘ Howard H. FHxgerald 0 was r^-elected to' the board of director*. • i ?dm THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1061 » A group of children splashing in an Inflatable playpool lit the Idea lamp for an employe In a factory fit Auburn, Wash., where Jet engine nacelles are made. Placed in the Jet's inlet, the pool protects the engine from dust and possible damage during shipment and is half the cost of die previous-type of insert Above, employes at Renton Field, Wash., examine an engine shipped to them with the playful playpool coverandevt--" dandy approve the Jdoa^ 7 Nixon Predicts Further trees Tails Phoenix Audience Our Greatest Danger Is Defeat Without War PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP)—Former YicePresktetit Richard M. Nixon aaya the free world ahauld not look tqwn any negotiated eettle-of the Berlin ertob as i breathing spell in the Odd War. Speaking at a Phoenix Executive (Sub dinner Tuesday night, Nixon mid Americans could look for a breakout of further erteea in such «bbi as Latin America, Viet Nam, "xitbeast Asia and Africa. Nlxou said America’s greatest danger is defeat without war, atber than defeat in war. • ~ A A A Although Khrushchev “huff*, putts' and bluffs," Nixon said, the Red leader does not want a hot war. He gave four reasons: FOUR REASONS -The United States is stronger militarily than* the Soviet Union. Waterford Eyes Growth Expacts 53 Per Cent Increase jn Population in Next 10 Years Although it is predicted that Oakland County will grow 33 per cent in population during the next yearn, Waterford Township expects to expand S3 per cent. This was revealed in a report last night by George Lloyd of the Detroit Edison Area Development Department at a meeting of the Greater Waterford Community Council at Pierce Junior High School. Llayd else told the group that l»>—««g should uot be a “hit aad miss” affair, aad that In eider to attract Industry, an la- 675 Summonsed CHICAGO (AP) — A company named Courtesy tea teen saved with 875 summonses for traffic violations from 1958 through I960. The firm la Courtesy Pin, Inc., a division of Courtesy Motor Sales, Inc. Police Capt. John J. Nelllgan said each offense carries a maxi-lum fine of $200 upon conviction. Jim Moran, oyner of the _ firm, said he doesn't know whether the leasing company or Its customers can be held liable for violations by drivers of rented should be established to thiags mapped euL“ The committee would first contact lacal industrial officials Aid find out what they like ,< about the community. Water and sewer would play a Mg part in wooing industry, he said. ' A- ' A -A • -;'-However, there are many smaller industrial companies who do not necessarily need these facilities immediately, he said. Lloyd listed four major factors relevant to industrial operation In the township: The market and labor potential; transportation facilities; utilities; and, above all, "a favorable government operation. A Av A Lloyd was aislstad by Kenneth Houk of the Michigan Economic Department, who preaentad a movie on what other communities are doing about increasing Indus- Rescued Freighter WaitsOftJCeweenaw If the Soviet (Man strikes first, America’s^ retaliation would bp The natives of satellite countries are' restless and might re- The Soviet Untoa'p rear wouid be left open to ROD million Chinese. nonpolitical. An amounced candidate for governor of California, Nixon said this was'his ldst speech outside his tonae Mate until after the 1962 gubernatorial election. new law in No# Jersey limits!per cent. Maximum Interest' an actual interest rates on new-carlotber Installment purchases ranges ' home-improvement loans to Tlfrom 10 to 13 per'cent. Sends Yule Greeting to Armed Services WASHINGTON CAP) -President t Kennedy seat Christmas greetings to the armed faces Tuesday saying aH the nation looks to their it, courage and determination in support of peace and free- Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara messaged the U.S. military forces around tbe world that “the strength you give America makes possible the security of our homes and lamllies and the1 perpetuation of cherished peach and freedom.’’ .. UPM 21 STYLES Now UNDER-PRICED! * GUARANTEED FIRST QUALITY Dinette Sets tofttg bring* bit*er selection at the ium low. low price*. I AU Formic* or no-aer top* . __ tubular *teel. tlnele and double I tij --“Y extra tosT. . . ALL l*t QUALITY. 1 victim, is parent ] New Control Tests Okay for Polaris CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -A Polaris missile raced several hundred miles Tuesday night In the second successful test of new thrust control system. A dr .A The Navy, anoundng the sue-ess, termed the control mechanism an “advanced device being evaluated for poasiMe use in the third generation A3 Polaris, scheduled to become operational 1961, With a range of 3, Jeff Chandler's Widow Gets $1,000 a Month ANGELES (AP) - The widow of Jeff Chandler will reive a monthly allowance $1,000 from the $400,000 estate left by the actor'when te died June 17. The allowance will go toward support of the couple’s two children. A Superior Court Judge made the award Tuesday, retroactive to the date of Chandler’s death. The actor’s will kit Ms property to the children, Jamie, 1J, and Dana, 13. TONITE and THURSDAY SUPER-SPECIALS DISCOUNTS on ELECTRICAL GIFTS 2-Quart-ELECTRIC Com Popper l&r 2*7 Value • No staking or stirring with this electric corn-popper, full 2-quart copocity, with cover. 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Keweenaw Peninsula following her rescue by the Coast Guard cutter Woodrush from heavy seas in Lake Superior. Ite Woodrush towed the 543-foot Secord Tuesday night into the shelter of Bete Grise Bay on the eastern side of the northern tip of the peninsula. The Coast Guard ordered the Woodrush to stand by until the Onnariton steamship Mohawk. Deer arrives at Grise Bay early Thursday to tow the freighter to Fort william, Ont., on the northern side of Lake Superior for repairs. The Woodrush will ascort both ships to Fort William. Canadians Try to SeH Igloos to Americans WASHINGTON (AP)— Here's s switch from the old story about Americans trying to sell refrigerators 'to the Eskimos: Canadians are trying to sell igloos to Americans for fallout shelters. They're not the old-fashioned lee and mow igloo but are of a fibrous plastic material in an igloo shape and can accommodate eight persona. Canada's civil defense organization has approved them as underground shelters. __New •. Gift Idea! 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FREE PARKWKT' in CITY LOTS I ^ WE ^CAIH RAY CHECKS FREE , les’ SUPS Ml .29 VcrftlM Simms _ 100% acetate , slip! .with shadow panels and assorted lace trirrjt. Pastels and white. Also white cotton slips with embroidered front and hem. Sizes 32 to 40. ■Mfljii Fioor^ NYLON S-t-r-e-t-c-h Ladies’ Tights $2.00 Value-Now ! Good full cut stretch tights * [ for sports and practice done-i ing. Sizes small, medium * and large in red only. 100% Washable Cotton Ladies’Dusters 59 1 to 2.89 Cardona dusters with collar, button front, short sleeves. Big assortment of prints and checks. 100%washable.' • -W ! Large and Compact Styles ’ Ladies’ Handbags WMf-] | Soft plastic simu-ieather bags with zipper 1 tops, side zippers in assorted styles. Black, ’ beige and other colors to choose from. —Main Floor Many Styles dnd Colors LhHss’ Capris 159 All Sizes 10 te 38 2 for $3.00 Flannels, cotton cords, polished cottons, colors of rod, brown, blue or grey In stripes ond checks. Pedal pushers Included in this group. Now Shades and Stripae LADIES’Size 10 to 2D Cotduroy Slacks j of This Price |99 Your Cheke at Thk Price With belts to match .end ~ side zipper. Many colors and styles to cheese from. L (Slae> 22 te ZJ$ . >2.49) GIFTS for the OUTDOOR MAN! Mat’s INSULATED U-WEAR Ml TOP a*4 DRAWER SET Sixes Small te X*Lerge the yoxfiAC rtasg, 'Wednesday, December a, mi to Battle Over House Speaker Job lUlns' office staffers assert that! the Alabaman now has "from eighty to a hundred committed votes” lor the speakership. They believe he cm gel the legislation. lOlUffO 1ST CHOICE ^ He is not the administration’s first choice lor the speakership — jpK would iiiifw 1T% IHffiafft Bolling of Kansas Ctty — hot the President dees aot want McCormack, and Rains is .the only one who has had the fortitude to chat* lenge the Boston Irishman. Roth the McCormacks and the Rains' arc childless. ye^Hffar of the Roses. Two more dlffeaant types of politicians can acaljiity be conjured. ^ leader McCormack n CathoUe aad a mem like Rayburn and Gamer, Rains is a Southerner, a Baptist’ and a lawyer. New Englander McCormack never attended college, and a controversial is- tlvr office, It might be assumed his religion „ _ ____. that the Reath would unanimous- sue because President Kennedy ly support him against the Baa. and Senate majority leader Mike ton “city sUcker.” That la a*t, Mansfield are also Catholics/ ^____.. ... . ...t —Rains Wta one of the koy ajeak- Of the 110 Southern Democratic era lor Kennedy in the South dur-votes in the House, Ralna currently ing the campaign. He has never lays risim to only 38. The reason wandered off the Democratic prats probably twofold: His votes era serve, and his voting Vecord in the to the left of most sons of Dixie, last session was solidly with the and he stayed loyal to the straight administration, whereas McCo* ' Rains is a silver-tongued orator of'the old school. After his father died he worked at a child in the cotton fields, delivering political speeches to other cotton platers. The nearest McCormack came to a farm in his boyhood was the Boston dump. A city boy born and btdfil,- hC to. an anything-hut-do-quttt speaker, but shrewd tending to-nis political knitting brought to the Democratic leadership However, MinoW Skid the FCC would make television stations live up to the promises of piddle service they made when they applied Claim Labor Dapt. Sayi Town Must Farm it Mexicans to Swim (UPI) l. c. SLATON. .HU,______________ Lemon called a meeting of ranchers today to map plans to fight a UJ. Labor Department "ultimatum” to permit Mexicans to use the municipal swimming pool. “This is out-an&out blackmail,” Jha mayor said. He said the Labor Dapferttnant threatened to cut off Mexican farm labor in the area tt the migrant workers (Braceros) art not allowed to un the pod. WASHINGTON (UPI) - Television viewers probably will get "Juit what they deserve” unless thgy organize to complain loudly ajmit poor programs, according to Federal Communications Commit-tigs Chairman Newton Mlnow. da not deliberately put on bad pejftram*, but he said broadcast- "We may eatl- a mass pUhttc meeting later,” Lamoataid. Both city officials and the Labor Department said the order Bat nothing to do with integration of Negroes into any city-owned fa- Unxn and City Cbqncflman Harry Stokes said the city would fight the order “not because of the integration angle, but because we I resent a government bureau trying to ram something down our by all means, to Osman's for SPORT COATS and SLACKS A great team! A pair or two of f unprovoked attacks against U,N. personnel who have been murdered, imprisoned, beaten and threatened by armed and often undisciplined Katangans." Rte Almanac By- United Press Istoraatioual Today Is Wednesday, Dee. 6, the. 340th day of the year with 25 to follow in 1961. The moon is approaching its new phase. The evening stars are Jupiter and Saturn. On this day in history: In 1889, the president Of the Confederacy, Jefferson Davis, died in New Orleans. In 1917, Finland declared Its Independence. from Russia._____ Is INI, President Roosevelt -test s pereosel nets to the emperor of Japes, asking him to Only Summary of Talk Revealed to Russians —After keeping close tab on such things for 35 years, Bryson Wedford of Pontiac has no record of a winter when we did not get some snow before this ANSWERED BY JFK ' It looks as If the latter question was the crucial one. It was answered by the President himself as he announced on Tuesday his satisfaction over Stevenson's mthne at the 1 No one has summed up the*Yecent Russian reports on the Kinnidy-Adzhubei interview as well as The Chicago Tribune, which says: '*levettia carried out its promise to print the Kxnnidy-Adzhubki interview in full. Unfortunately, the Russian news agency, Tass, on which all papers in Russia are dependent, sent out only a summary and it was sharply edited to conceal a number of Mr. Kinnidy’s most telling points. ★ ★ ★ A deer that went Into hiding on Nov. 15 In -the big woods near the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gita Snterman, out Baldwin Road has returned to browse In their garden—hut walks with a bad limp. Natloas aad play role la the making aad execution of oar foreign policy." There has been a lot of talk around here about the allegedly independent course that Stevenson follows as not altogether to the Hking of Secretary of State Ruak.- Nearc "Thus, the President was not r suburban Lake (Mon lives Wilbur James Seger, historian and genealogist, who has s keen faculty for digging vp hitherto unpublished connecting matters in past events. IJe’i now working out an interesting one fori this column. Watch for it. Ftom sources dose to the U.S. mission to the United Nations, it is learned that Stevensdhat first clearly favored the admission of Red China to the United Nations, and that as late as March of.this year he gave his own staff the impression that he wanted a change in America's policy._* A great deal , of publicity recent-Ty was given a difference of opinion concerning the merits of the doctor’s house call. Most of the debate that came to my attention centered on tha economic aspects of the problem. Opponents of the house call primarily argued that the home visit was wasteful for the patient in that,, most often, it had to be supplemented with the office visit that should have been mads in the first place. From the standpoint of the doctor, the practice was wasteful since it consumed more time than was required to see perhaps a half dozen patients in the office. These who still favored the home visit argued Us esefulaeos in helping the young doctor to establish himself In the neighborhood of Mo office. ah alcoholic In the household, or that of a “mental patient.” -* * * And, even if they did tell their story, it couldn’t possibly have the value of what is seen and heard by an Intelligent and kindly ob-server who takes the trouble to look and listen In the natural habi- thfa* of ways to e For there to no troth In their mouth; their haart to destruction, their throat to an open sepulchre, they (tatter wtth their tat A wound from a tongue to worse than a wound from the swprd; -the latter affects only the body—the former, the spirit, the soul—Pythagoras. Heritor the nest day. In 1943, President Roosevelt informed Russian Premier Stattn that Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower was selected as commander-in-chief of the forthcoming invasion of Europe. A thought for the day: Robert Louis Stevenson said: ’’Books are good enough in their own way, but they are a mighty bloodless substitute, for life." Case Records of a Psychologist: Majority Vote Is Not Always Right allowed to explain to the pest l " ^ -----------------»ple r ' mass of the Russian people that their government had failed to carry out its pledges at Yalta and Potsdam to permit the countries of eastern and central Europe to decide their own fate through referendum votes. His statement that Rosstat broke the moratorium on_ nuclear tests whQe pretending to negotiate a treaty extending the moratorium was also deleted. And as too, was his statement that Russia, though bound by treaty to accept the reunification of Germany, has refused to do so,’ with the result that the world la eon* fronted by a Russian-made Berlin ,1 never see the picture of Congressman William S. Broomfield without wondering If hto photogenic qual-i tie's tie not a material part of hto success. HeTn-cgBtted-fo^have felt that admission of Red China to the United Nations was inevitable and that the United States should find a graceful way to-bring this about. In my minority and, I presume, outdated opinion, I think my colleagues on both sides of the fence failed to give consideration to the most.useful feature of the bouse call. And that, quite simply, to to get a firsthand view of the patient's surroundings and back-grwind, By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CAM K-48B: Tom J„ and-39, to the father of Janet. Dr. Crane,” he protested at a PTA meeting I Verbal Orchids to- .★ ★ ★ *7? . “This la angther evidence that the ffthfdwf government haa no faith in Ita own cause and themtore will not allow the Ruaeian people to hear the other aide. The Russian government can suppreaaincoavenieni truths be* cause ft controls every legal avenue of communication, it jams the radio whn foreign broadcasts wlU p r o v e Met to a ft and it is dangerous for the | ‘ mind even to speak his L Newspapermen in a free OPUiftrj jliity the'plight of their op- , ..| yfrlfrig posits numbers ★ ★ ★ if* “Our nadirs are nerved by Mrs. Isadora Lanpher of 693 East Pike St.; 95th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford- McCormick of 16 Clayburn 8t.; 52nd wedding anniversary________* - Mrs. Rcbdcc* Harrington “—; of Birmingham; 83rd birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Fallower of Drayton Plains; 52nd wedding anniversary. Mrs. Freda Olmaby of Waterford; 82nd birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Eber Northampshire of Rochester; 52nd wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrt. Bdward Retchardt of Walled Lake; 56th wedding anniversary. .... ’i‘: ■ ■; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Leopard of Groveland Township; 61st wedding an-■nlversary. ___» Mr. -and Mrs. Pda) Farley -of Wlxom; golden wedding. IDEA BACKFIRES But the idea backfired in Congress, as Democrats and Republicans Joined In passing a resolution reaffirming opposition to the admission of Red China to the United Nations. After this. Stevenson to reported to have become more reluctant to discuss these matters with hto COULD AID GREATLY Now It’s true that a visit to the patient in -hto natural habitat has not the status of an X-ray test or a blood chemistry. But then the visiting physician Just might discover that tha woman who complained of fatigue wasn’t a hypochondriac or a neurasthenic but Just the victim of housekeeper-ltto. had “don’t you think you make too much fuss about good grammar? "Why, I looked in Janet’s dictionary and it to there. Thai the hypertensive wage earner wasn’t suffering so much from hardening at the arteries m, fm __ n ■» I ruin IIIB UHn-iimiing e The Country Parson to make both ends meet r of Ifetamors; Bird birthday. Thare la safer snareassn roar That the female with hyperacidity was reacting to an intolerable position brought about by an alcoholic husband’s efforts to escape hto home obligations. That thq an Ulcer was titerafiy “eating himself up” because of the failure ~6f hto children to arize on HmT opportunities with which, he’d presented them. “It a majority | of people use ‘ain’t* then I say wo should stick wtth the majority. They know what I mean when I say ’ain’t’.’’ PILATE’S MAJORITY Beware lest you think * -majority vote proves what to right! Tor R was g, 166 per cent majority to Pontius Pilate's court-room that said Jesus was guilty and sent him to a cross. Yet that 100 per cent .was entirely wrong! Tom has a point when he says people understand what you'mean when you use “ain’t’’ But language, like mechanics, to, supposed to follow approved rules. An auto mechanic knows that a scoket wrewoh or monkey wrench to the proper tori'to employ In So the chisel or screwdriver . to NOT the proper tori to me, though it does get results. And so it to wtth language. “Ain’t” may put your idea across, but not in the approved manner. SLANG PSYCHOLOGY We urge parenta-to imitate Con-radi’s experiment where he stim-ulated English sparrows to sing like canaries, Just by surrounding the young sparrows with canary music.. And we hope you parents will also place reasonably good English on thoir eardrums while they are W home. ........ '' —*y~'i comrades as * more exact index true self, than mat new • hairdo. by all means send for the booklet on "How to Tutor Your Child (or Yourself) st Home,” of your t “Darn It” explosive children tot eft —But beware) «n thon^of-vulgar or coarse expletives. And that Is doubly dangerous enclosing a stamped, return envelope, plus 20 cent. College professors are moaning because of the incorrect grammar ' vnrah^erliif fog freshmen, which to why they flunk so many In the first term. You parents can prevent that Perhapa these who discount the value of the house call may come oat la the history. Maybe, yea. But again, maybe no. ■ In a hurry, however, moot of > you folks may have taken a cold -chisel .or even a screwdriver, plus a hammer, and then driven thq nit loose. a female to adopt male clothing, male habits aad even male language. Remember, girls, yon are constantly bufiding up an impression on thaw around you. Make It attractive! And feminine! That's mbjLjNL JHfeoutae the beauty parlors and usd a toothbrush regularly aid try to dress to the latest style. Meanwhile, don’t target the vital reel that your words aw the mtrrel af your uttoi. ■Never parade them before the public ifo Improper, vulgar or ■raw 355. a SUL (Copyright, INI) Tor they hre Used by your, IM Pnas is ratltled i th* sss f«r rssusto H___________llnrert by or N mil i w**»: store t Oaklsni. Oto ii 11, Ltyins- earrtir tor U NMtoiHlIMlVta, un» . _____ _ sod Waih- Uoaw CoidUm It i« lll.M a Mart •iMwtors la MM the rt- and categorical denials. Since Moscow exploded its se-ries of nuclear testa, including an enormous blast with the force of m| 50 million tom ol ing complaints about the.'neutrals1 have been heard in the United States. IGNORE CONFERENCE The jtiuwiaiw, after preparing seeretly whOe test ban talkawere in progress, resumed their shots Aug. 31, apparently disregarding a conference, then convening Jn Yugoslavia, of 25 nonaligned na- Some Americans expected tremendous outcry. But the conference brought only a resolution appealing equally to Moscow..aod In mid-November, Asian-Alid-an-ueutrab joined thf Biadtw in pushing through two UN. proposals. One reeohition sought to expire* poreibfltttre of an inter-national conference outlawing deer weapons, ignoring U.S. demands for inspection and control safeguards. The other called for Quajbpm-Sackqy,/ Ghana’s penaa-W*, f%t did atneg regret at the Soviet testa. Presldsnt Kwame Nknunah said he was chocked. But H is not batons of hehds of stats to kma. I| to to by to f ~ of Insuring , pence. The appeal from Belgrade to tbs United 8»t«a and the Soviet Union -did gjm at cohdenudng either hut at reeking solutions.” "It Is net true that in xsdemn Soviet nudeai We did. But we atfll op* tests by die United States. Two wrongs do not mete a right. "There are enough bomb _ robably, in existence now to destroy the world throe or thw—aver ft1'fr beyond m Neutrals, he indicated, expect more of. the United States. He said the United States “does not seem to realize its great power, in Africa and | It* *nnrmnu« * ’ ~ * banning storage or transpoit >lng moral force in the. world." ofDUdear weapons on; African ACTIONS Territory. ^ f7- V. A A A neutral spokesman who de- Neutralist spokesmen point out ic*^**d to. be identified by name that in the United Nations they pushed aside both Soviet and IfjT objections in approving a call tor a voluntary halt by both sides to nuclear testing. They ignored Soviet bloc objections and approved a U.S.-British call for-renewed negotiations toward banning of tests. EXPECT MORE OF U.S. said Aiexl or nation, responded this way: A A A "What are Americana afraid off They have enormous power, enormous wealth, huge poaatbiU-tisp for Perhaps we seem to apeak more In retort to Americans becauae there ia so much more to retort to—oo many statements by pot; itidans, congressmen, newspa- Iron Workers Strike, Closing 10 Foundries members of two United Auto Workers Uhtohlocalaha* shut down 10 foundries in the Detroit area. Locals 835 and 174 have been bargaining with the Gray Iron Founders Association contract. Eugene Martin, president of Load 835, said the strike started Monday after negotiations on wages and benefits became deadlocked. The foundries i fay their association in bargaining with the two locals. They supply Gray Iron castings to automotive , exploded 1 IB tut grou voted lor the appeal be-all tests in any, £Wk, ’ with the United States If it Is rigid, with Russia if aha la right We vote against either if think they are wrong. ♦ * * "The Soviet proposal for cum* piete disarmament got our support, but not without qamprtben-‘ controls. We (Afctuuto) States in file past openly tried to shape and control.ths policies of other countries, but that there now seemed , to be -a tendency away from auefe eflqgte. . ii|§ WY'it ^ WeU-informsd Americans optimism Shout the future. As they see R, the United States gradually ia tnskfag progress/in Africans among the neutralists, —all deny there is a neutral bloc ■Min general violently oppose nuclear testing in the Sahara fay France. DISILLUSIONED WITH U.8. Some Africans profess to feel disillusion with the United States. put it, “It is the disillusionment with a friend from horn one expected mo Some think they see changes developing in UA policy for the better. Ore Aston said the UititoB They say it probably will take some years, but that eventually there-to-hspe of cmvtoctog new nations that the United States stands for freedom of choice te a woitM aoetoty of. frite states. Invites -Thief ID Return and Pick Up Rett of loot MENOMINEE (UPI) — Bill Van Domelen, owner of an appliance store here, hasn't any use lor a card table becauae someone stole the fourmateMng chairs from the store loading dock. So he’s leaving the table on the loading dock with an invitation for the thief to pick it up. But - Von Domelen didn't whether jpfattce wfli be keeping a watchful eye on the hiadtag dock. lice Continue fo Attack Newsmen NEW YOfUClB-The Inter Amer-i, lean' Prom Areoctetim says puttee attacks re newspapermen are 'cob-i.- rtwitng in the Dominican Republic ' despite President Joaquin Ba-bguar’s . promises of unrestricted tosedom of toe press.-it it it Andrew FteiskeH, chairman of the board et directors of Time, tnc.^ and president of tad ritaoctrttony urged in a message to Balaguer* Tuesday that "Dominican author!- -ties take immediate steps to pre£ vent such incidents," * '■Tfc. . A Heiskell said he based his eoiu-~ is' tost several lor-; |eign newsmen had been deialhOdZ temporarily and that oilier* had** been fired upon by police. Another* was said to haye been dubbed by-a mob while police stood by. “ Executive Succumbs PALM SPRINGS, Calif. ibPb-Zg Ira M, Fink, 62, Chicago, presto dent of the Englander Mattress Qj., died Of a heart .attack-at-— Desert Hospital. He had been vacationing in Palm Springs for about a month. Pink waa a native Chicagoan. js£=—_ iUdgicof* Christinas SWEATER SALE! Rtgulof r2.99 Orion* acrylic girls' sweaters J33 XHARGI IT' - ..Ivory girl dranrm the'll find ono 'nooth the tree! Dreamy, eaty-care Orion* -acrylic in bulky or Rot knits—crew and turtle necks; classic collared styles. Solid colors, jacquard patterns. Tots' 4 to 6x> girls' 7*14. Shop Ftdoral's for best buysl *Rtf. T.M. DuPont •Corp. - r 1 ■ilk a'Xm,./ - *- U ly/i\ & :;4r4 rl Frilly lingerie far your budding 'femme fatale' A bit of grown-up fashion for a girl's most festive party! *99 m.C99 YOUR CHOICI 3-6x 7-14 CHARGE ir Girls' holiday robes in beautiful floral patterns *99 j/mI 'CHARGE IT it's frilly. It's fomthlno—warm and practical, tool Quilted acetate tricot in boau-tiful floral patterns, frosted with lace as an added touch of luxury. Soled one for your Christmas angel at Federal's. f Sizes 4 to IA Oay for the holidays. xharoi rr Draamy dresses for that holiday party she's going tat Totsi full, sweeping cottons, frosted with loco at collar, bodice, sleeve; deep, deep hems. Sixes 3-dx. Girin bouffant Dacron* polyester aver, rustling nylon petticoat, daintily tucked and bowed at midriff. Luscious holiday pastels. Sixes 7 to IA In time for holiday festivities. •Rig. TM. DuPont Corp. |H| Gotten folks, petbhed jDOlton ponA/ knit shirt*, 2 and S.ptoco. In color*. In *izo* 2 thru 4. 'CHARGE jrr IM PONTIAC PRESS, TOBDWESDAY, DECEMBER A 1X1 mm 7.49 GERIATRIC w.jje 2.19 B-COMPLEX m i«r» J.19 3.29TRIVISOL Hm* jteRAf 2.98 DAILY iMM,«bwMu FIRST LADIES DINE—Lillian Gish (left) and Helen Hayes look over a program during the annual dinner dance ot the American Academy of Dramatic Arts la New York’s Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. The -two first ladles of the American theater attended the bilpBf ftr- the academy's scholarship fund. RE... CHICK THE FEATURES AND SAVINGS ON RCA WHIRLPOOL APPLIANCES BE-BEFORE YOU DECIDE ON ANY HOME APPLIANCI! jkjvr o«?\r "iuf Single control... 4 settings Normal, Short, Raady-Rinaa*. Plato Wanner... all cycles are aaatrillad by mm aa»y to-uao dial that can atop dishwasher or ropaatany part of cycle. FAMILY HELPERS OF HOME APPLIANCES i overhead view mows how in the wall at peim's Hein- Official Winter to Come Dec. 21...to Our Regret Winter will not be welcomed by most Pontiac area residents when It makes its, official debut Dec. • H. .':— The snowy season will replace one of the moat pleasant autumns in recent memory. MSUO Offers Ad Seminar Clast to Meet Mondays 7t30-9:30RM. to Study Sales and Media Michigan State University Oak-, land's division of continuing education will oiler a 10-week advertising seminar beginning Jan. 15. AAA The seminar will meet Mondays from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. to examine , the uses of research, art, copy and media selection and their practical application to sales and distribu-' tin. - —r.— Topics and faculty for the sessions are: Research, Dr: David - F. Miller, director of marketing research, J. Walter Thom Co., Detroit; creative, Robert 8. Marker, vice president and dlrec- — ter- ef twtMrr sendee, Mae* Manns John A Adams, Inc, Bloomfield Hlllr, television and radio, Louis T. Hogopton, ne-count supervisor, N. W. Ayer A ■nd magazines, Junes P. Dicker-son. national advertising and promotion manager, The Pontiac Press. * ' Cpst of the seminar is $35. Reservations may be made by contacting MSUO. Novemb^ was no exception. Homeowners spent more Time washing their cars than they did putting up storm windows last month. All but one weekend in November were unseasonably pleasant. The temperature on the first Sunday of the month hit 67 degrees. The coldest Sunday was Nov. 19 when the high was flfily 36. But .it reached the mid-fifties on the other two Sundays. IS DEGREE READING The high temperature in Novem-. her was a 70-degree reading n», corded Nov. 2. It started getting colder toward the end month and the low reading of 20 degrees sent the mercury dropping on Nov. 28. However, the U.B. Weather Bureau at Detroit Metropolitan Airport reported that temperatures for the month averaged 1.9 degrees above normal for a November In Southern Michigan. r « The average high temperature In the Pontiac area was 4TI while the average low waa 34.1. Ami there-was^no snow— shovel. Although snow flurries were reported on Nov. 17, not enough hit the ground to be measured. Only 1.35 inches of rainfall was recorded in Npvember, making the drlelt month of the year. The. fait season, which began Sept. 22, has seen a steadily decreasing amount of rainfall after an unusually wet summer. October, previously the driest month of the year, recorded| only 1.36 inches of rain. It was sunny nr mostly Sunny > 18 of November's 30 days and on Nov. 15 rain fell at night after the sun shone all day. I Five days were cloudy or mostly [cloudy. Rain fell on seven days. •GOING TO BE MURDER* With top federation leaders widely split on the various disputes settlement plans, one of the key figures in the Controversy ■aid, "It's going to be murder. Everybody’s red hot ovep this.” ♦ ■ * A Rival building trades and industrial unions have come up with separate plans. At Hayes, Machinists Union president and the chairman of a special committee chained with framing a disputes t |ornH]]ai had still another proposal. Gettga Meany, AFL-Cio president, seemed to fourth.-CALL MEETINGS Hayes called a special meeting of his five-man group tp try to come up with a single proposal, Meany arranged an afternoon session of the 29-man AFL-CIO executive Council for a further airiftg of differences. * ♦ ♦ ■ Meany and Walter Reuther, the head of the Auto Workers Union and chief sbokesmain for the industrial unions, were .the major rivals "in the political maneuvering. ■ Reuther has insisted on all fed-oration unions being compelled to accept arbitration of all job rightg disputes among unions, with deci-subject to court enforcement. ANOTHER PROPOSAL Building trades unions have ommended trying to settle disputes without arbitration. In an advance convention report the AFL-CIO Executive Council that labor unions will urge Congress to cut the 49-hour work week if high levels of unemployment persist. , .A A A______________ The repent also called for newed efforts to shprten work hours by labor contract agreements but acknowledged that little headway had been made in bargaining shorter work time'in the |ast two years. Reverse Move to Tone Down Yule in School HAMDEN, Conn. (AP)—A decision to tone down the religious aspect of Christmas celebrations in the public schools has been reversed by the board of education after vigorous protests. "Five hundred persons attended the noisy meeting Tuesday night at which the board announced had rescinded the directive, ot the superintendent ot schools. w w 'Christmas will be observed in the schools as it always has been," Bingham J. Humphrey, the board chairman, told the cheering crowd. No one spoke in favor the original directive that was issued to principals by Superintendent of Schools David VVyUte* at the request of the New Haven Jewish Community Council. AS A Rule... Most People Know . . . It's RCA WHIRLPOOL! Open___ Every Evening 'til 9 PM. A* A fcuU. r. *?le* TUt ampktCt ELECTRIC COMPANY 825 Weet Huron Street FE 4-2525 You Can 6lvt All The Gifts v You'd Like To Gltre With a CHRISTMAS CLUB Here’s how to make nett Christmas tht grossest and grandest ever . , . Have the CASH for all the gifts you’d like to give with no drahi on your regular savings . , . Choose the tluh that fits your -needs and do it NOW/ There's o Chib for Everyone DIPOSIT next NOVIMIIR RECIIVI $ 1.00 Ev«ry Two Weeks ...$ 25.00 _ _ nemaijnHir) «■ ■ 2.00 Every Two Weeks. ... 50.00 OEM _-JB.G------"-El I B mm M I—- 4.00 Every Two Weeks ...... 100.00 MRflVIOIIBI. I DBllK ------:--W flS U»en, Two Wehlt. " .. ' ■ \V,' ; ^ ■- ^ | 20.00 Every Tab Weeks ...500.0KE . JC6EGO HARBOR, g BLOOMFIELD HILLS . /. COUNTY CENTER -4^-4-ala*_____'■.-4-^-^yr - xifaein^rtoeiiAiesserariwunswraaanermaTiow .. THE PONTIAC PRESS/ WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, S ELEVEN Church Council • International Meeting Closes With' a Prayer, Promise and Record NEW DELHI, India (APMTItt international get-together of Christian* was over today with a prayer, a promise, and * record. The record ol.tfae l&-day general assembly of the World Council of Churches took up S% tma of-paper. , ^ H5 CLEAN HR — With an auto- In closing devotion*. Tuesday night, matic dllrilwMher ^ bychurchmen of nearir every na- ^re,, w?n Mom can join the Ask Dorajnjcaifi to Stage March Opposition Leaflets Promote Demonstration NEW DEun (upd - p*«* Against Balaguer Minister Jawaharlal Nehru today warned again that India would go SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (AP) — Opposition leaflets urged citizens to make A silent, mass march on the National Palace today to demand the resignation of President Joaquin Balaguer. tkm. Planned for use in home gregations, especially in interdenominational services, the text included this petition and pledge to Christ: "Together, we commit ourselves anew to bear witness to Him among men. We offer ourselves to serve all men in love, that love which He alone imparts., "We accept afresh our calling to make visible our unity In Him. We pray for the gift of the Holy Spirit for our task. ‘ In its final business session, the assembly adopted a message to the farflung congregations of its 196 member denominations. ★ . ★ ★ It said that amid sweeping technological, political and social revolutions in modem life, there are both new possibilities for good and threats of destruction. "God to at work in opening poa-sibilities for mankind in ouy .day. Ha is at work even when the powers of evil rebel against Him and mil down His judgment," the mes-aage said.—---------;— Cuba to Confiscate Refugees' Property KEY-WEST. Fla. (AP) — The Cuban government will confiscate all property from persons leaving the island who do not return within an authorized time limit, Havana radio reported today. Hoiia Announces Plan to Organize ******* Lake Dock Crews MIAMI BEACH, Fla. w-Team-:er President James. R. Hofla today revealed plans of the Teamsters and two other unions to organize dock and maritime workers in all Great Lake* ports. Hoffa said the Teamsters, the United Mine Weito* (UMW) aad the International Longshore-men’s Association (ILA) would begin tail-scale efforts next month to organise foe dock workers. ■ . . "Thje“ Teamsters already have the waterfront workers in Detroit, the UMW is in charge in Toledo, Ohio and the ILA in Chicago," he Hofla also vowed that be would bring himself end hit expelled union back into the AFL-CIO ‘‘by the end of 1962." Jl/gy i Stdtfi Wage Tax Ponf/'oc Arso Deaths by Nehru Again meantime, he added, India Is tadlOng treede eed alsstrips in The leaflets were circulated through the city as opposition and famUy’ fc^"***^ fre e£4*overnment 1^m '*80tlaled tor hours Tuesday night trying to settle the grave political crisis that has brought a general strike and continual disorder to the island with Communist China if all other means Communist aggression against India's northern frontier. Nehru, who said Tuesday: do not rhle out wssX his 'warning to parliament In debate on the Communist bor- j der incursions In' the Ladakh area. He said fndia woutd go all -out to avert war. "But if it has to be report* of a Portuguese military build-up reached New Delhi. One report said there were 12, 000 troops stationed within the tiny enclave, which lies on the-210 miles south of Bombay. Said Inevitable Financial Adviser to Detroit's Mayor-Elect Calls Levy Equitable elect Jerome P. Csvansgh’s fiscal advisor Tuesday sqid an income tax is inevitable in Michigan. Alfred Pelham, who also Although the talks recessed with- He warped that an Indian-Chinese war could not be confined to those two countries but would "be a major War, engulfing the whole world," replacing- Balaguer’» j The last government proposal called for a Junta of five or seven men, all from the opposition except Balaguer who would remain as chief executive. Nehru spoke after an Indian spokesman announced a new tension along another bor-der area. He said Portuguese troops from the Portuguese Fighter Plane Hies High, level and Fast WASHINGTON » — The Navy claimed a World record today for its F4H Phantam H fighter-horizontal flight at a sustained altitudeOf 66,443.8 feet. It said the flaw, piloted by Cmdr. George W. Kill* of Pfney convention committee on local gov-[eminent that a state income tax jis "the most logical, most productive and most equitable" way to ..provide needed revenue tor state and • local governments., Cevanagh, who takes office Jan. *, haa indicated that Ms administration will Had new sources of revenue, possibly a tax which would be levied against but Vile in toe suburbs. He blue haa Mated at a city Income fox. .Pelham said, “The (income) tax Tuesday over the California desert at a speed of more than 1,400 miles an hour. GERMAN BELL •Service for German Brit 63, of 16 Maple St. will be held at 2 pjn. Friday at the William F. Davis Funeral Home. Btirial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery. He 'was a retired employe of Baldwin Rubber Corp. and a member of Jehovah's Witnesses. • Surviving are Ms wife, Emma; son, Jock of Detroit; two daughters, Mrs. Ruby White end Cynthia Bell, both of Detroit; two brothers; and three sisters. Mr. Bell (Bed yesterday at Pontiac General Hospital after a long illness. ALBERT B. BLACKFORD Service tor Albert B. Blackford, 76. Of & Eddy Court will be held 1;3Q p.m. Thursday at the H untoon Funeral Home 1 with burial following in Perry Mount Park Cemetery Mr. Blackford died of a stroke at. Pontiac General Hospital yesterday morning. He had been ill bout * year. LYLE E. DURAN Funeral arrangements are pending at Donelson - Johns Funeral Home for Lyle E. Duzan, 33, of 156 W. Chicago Are. Surviving are Me wife, Caroline; LEON W. flOHULH W. Schultz, 86, of MS Boston Ave. died yesterday of a cerebral hemorrhage at Pontiac General Hospital. He had been HI just a few hours. He was an employe -of General Motors Truck A Coach Division. Surviving are Me wife Thet; three daughters, Mrs. Carl Hauae-of isMhq, lira. Curtis Don of Detroit and . Mrs. Lee Aramadi of Inglewood, Calif.; ID grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren. Service Will be held at IT a.m.' Thursday at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Amish Must Use Lights LANCASTER, Pa. (AP) - For the first time ever, the Amish ( are having to put electric lights on their old-fashioned buggies. A new state law reqnbes it Most of die Amish hfcretofore have relied on red g|us reflect- Rebels Ambush Train SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) —Communist Viet Cong rebels derailed and ambushed e passenger train In mountains between Saigon and Nha Trang Tuesday. The government reported two senders and a soldier guard were injured end seven other soldiers -The opposition has been adamant that he and all other holdovers from the era of dictator Rafael Trujillo must get out of the government —------ NOT TAKING PART ' was learned privately that Balaguer wu rot participating p0we|| Won't Name directly kMhe talks due to a coin tinuing illness which government spokeimieh lBve described as slight. It was reported that Balaguer had returned to a hospital for another checkup' but a squad of armed troops at the. hospital [denied he was there. levels. It is the most logical way for cities to- derive revenue from nonresidents who use services pro- ________________________H, The previous record bf 55,300.95 vided by the central city;" dare~ of Goa crossed the border teas claimed last Nov. 12 by! On other matters. Pelham urged j his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Merrill and fired Into Indian territory Aviatrix Jacqueline Cochran. j the committee to revise the present |R. Duzan; and a toother, Lowell earlier this week. 7 ! . The Phantom II, built by Me-115-mill property tax limitation in R. of Pontiac. \ .. . .. . Donnell Aircraft Corp., St. Louis, the constitution and said he would|. Mr. Duzen, an automobile repair , ,ov<>rn?lr. -is the Nttay’s newest and fastest oppose earmarking of tax reveniih' man, died unexpectedly of a heart wwuo use every poeeune |ho- fighter based on car- if Michigan were starting new as ailment Monday at 1556 Baldwin’ matic and peaceful means’ to , ct.t. i *«. (k. ---- 4a aMLku, Chiggers will attach to a person and stay there for three or four days. Children's Shop troops from the Indian territory they have occupied. But In the Self to Bridges Seat CONCORD, N.H (It—Gov Wee-ley Powell said today that he would not name himself to succeed the late Sen. Styles Bridges, R-N.H. The nine-day-old general strike, called by the National Civic Union tq back its demands that Balaguer step down, eased somewhat Tuesday as crowds of government employes returned to their jobs. They had been warned by Balaguer they would be fired unless they abandoned the strike. Powell declined to say whom he Would name to fill the late senator’s seat on an Interim basis until the 1962 elections. ■ * ;* * The governor also told a news conference that he would not run for the Republican nomination for senator In the September primaries. a law1 which provides for confiscation of all property including houses, household goods, automobiles, stocks and bonds. ♦ ‘ ★ * The time limit was not announced. However, in a recent speech Prime Minister Fidel Castro mentioned a one-month leave tar the United States, two months for Latin America and three months for. Rttope. , * jh *"• — The hew law requires all citizens and residents leaving Cuba to apply for departure and reentry £ Penneys President Plans Visit to Mexico; January Likely NEW YORK (D-President Kennedy has in mind a trip to Mexico. , R was learned today he is likriy 1 to visit there in late January. I have yet mate- ¥. The best guess is that, unless ! unexpected developments interfere, - Kennedy will fly to Mexico City - * or some other point in Mexico * toward the end of January. *. This would, time Kennedy's visit I after • the meeting of Western a Hemisphere foreign ministers * scheduled for Jen. 10 to explore . measures aimed at the Communist * threat of Fidel Castro’# regime * in Cuba to other Latin American * lands. - • Earl Attlee Reported I'Very Seriously III' • LONDON (AP)—&rl Attlee. 78. "the fohner British prime minis-. ter. was reported "very seriously ■ ID" today in Amersham Hospital. • The eider statesman of the La- • bor party was admitted Tuesday • to the hospital near his home • north of London with what hi* » daughter described as a stomach * Doctors said he wu "not tod . well" this morning hut declined * to disclose the exact nature of the | Sen. Neuberger Horn* • PORTLAND. Ore. lifi-Sen. Mau- • fine B. Neuberger, D-Ore., who • underwent an operation for an in-\ testlnel turner Nov. 16, went home | from the hospital Friday, Atten- • dints aid Mrs. Neuberger wu ' | recovering satisfactorily. Flee In Hitler's Gift Car ;; LISBON, Portugal IB — Nine po-l llfical prisoners, uslpg an armored £car Hitler gave Premier Antonio -;$alaiar for Chrisfinae in 1938, es-- tuOaped from naefau fnrtrea -‘ Friday and are still at large. ; fism m Pt m-. -a-— ( A / / SILK SHANTUNG SHEATHS The new subtle ease of1 -line is fashion all the wayl jSmartL /in-the-know gals love its figure flattery, the way It dramatizes yoti with color.. the way it takes accessorizing .. the way Penney’* priegf it within easy Teach for you! wmmsm Casual clothes take on new colors for the holidays... bright Buttercup, cool Aquamarine, and soft Melon ... smart looking for the festive season'ahead and for spring. So many ensembles you can put together yourself... fur blend chanel sweater with hip stitched wool skirt, or novelty fur blend sweater with pattern skirt in worsted wool, or Orion acrylic sweater with checked yowl collar and fnlly lined wool slacks, or wool bulky knit sweater and wool straight skirt, or any of the many other ways you may choose. Visit Penney’s and select your outfit today. 17« Sweater Sizes 34 to 40 -Slacks and Skirts Sixes 10 to 16 795iol095 Pimirs Miracle mile OPEN EVERY WEEKDAY MONDAY thru SATURDAY 10:00 A.M. to 9:00 P-M- PM USE PENNEY'S CHARGE CARD PENNEY'S —MIRACLE MILEJ OPEN EVERY WEEKDAY MONDAY Thru SATURDAY, 10:00 AA/L to 9:00 R.M. THE PONTIAC PttE&S. WEDNESDAY,■ DECEMBER to, 1961 Ted Kennedy Denies He Said He'll Run be will be a candidate lor the nomination next year, when he mi asked about the Pittsfield report at another gpeechmakingdate in Uxbridge. BOSTON (AP) - Edward M. Kennedy, younger brother oi President Kennedy, says it just “in not true” that he toM a group in Pittsfield he will ran for the UJ. Senate neat once held by his Kennedy wouldn't say whether Non-Communi$t Oath Required of Tenants The Pittsfield group, at a closed teefing, Wasof potential delegates to the 1962 Democratic state convention. One of them, -declining the use of his name, told the Pittsfield Berkshire'Eagle Kennedy had said he planned to run tor the Senate nod year. TAMPA* Fla. (AP) - The Tampa- housing authority has tied the can to. tenants who refuse to noA-CoAttuuuwi oitp. Sudden N-Attacks Would Signal Soviet Strike in Authority director Thomas Dyer said Ms agency is requiring heads of families'to sign an oath that they are not members of the Communist party. If they don't, said Dyer, out they go. Or if they are applicants for future housing, they don’t get in. TJ.S. Intelligence Experts Ponder Possible Rmsim Strategy WASHINGTON (APV - American intelligence experts believe that if the Soviet Union-were strike in Europe the Soviets would laupch sudden, ■ Simultaneous nuclear attacks on all of the continent’s Western defense*. The intelligence men expect rapid, deep armored Soviet thrasts - would come next ** ' Once the ground attack “was in motion, the Soviets would send in units ln waves ln an effort to keep their advance moving day night moves the United States might make in the event of a Soviet attack on the European allies.. He said Soviet tactical doctrine has been modified to” incorporate nuclear weapons delivered fiy aircraft or missiles, but conventional artillery retains a prominent rale. The emphasis in Soviet tactical planning is oh the nt »wnorI dispersion of .forces and mo&QIfy, ' I » -»*+*#*' i " ed to try to maintain constant contact with Allied forces so Western commanders would have' to hold their own atomic fire or risk the destruction-of theirlorward troops.. ■ ★ Maj. Gen. A. R. Fitch, the Army’s-assistant chief-el staff for intelligence, sketched current. Soviet—taetfasal -doctrine earlier thlf week at a meeting of chriBan aides to Secretary of the Army Elvis, J, Stahr Jr. at Ft. Monroe, .Va. CONFINES TilIH Fitch’s talk was conflhed to an evaluation of Soviet, military concepts. He did not comment on \kl flAsmnnu Dnnrfr '62 Defense Budget to ocploit Russian nuclear firepower and to minimise casualties from -opposing atomic wea- The army t Each Soviet tank division has more than 300 tanks and the rifle divisions muster more than DO tanks each. The Russians have nuclear said the number of Soriet line divisions is expected to remain at around i50. in addition to airborne _ mobilized rifle divisions. called excellent bridging equip-., ment, a light amphibious tank and amphibious armored vehicles to carry men and supplies. units, Fitch said. To be able to cross rapidly the maqy rivers in Europe, the So-vtets have developed what Fitch viets stress dispersion in depth, with the men depfiqud in such a way that not- tnore than one battalion would be destroyed ..by a BONN, Germany ah—The Defense Ministry has drawn up a ‘ 1962 budget amounting to 15.5 bil-. lion marks ($3,875 billion), fella-ble Defense Department sources said Tuesday. This would be more than $1 billion higher than the current budget. Informants said the ministry felt the increase is necessary in order to meet NATO obliga- Smooth. Rare. And worth looking for. The straight whisky in Sir John is aged 10 Sir John has been bottled in the magnificent yean and skillfully blended with the choic- cut crystal Regal Decanter. It is available in a est grain neutral spirits. This patiently aged beautiful gift-wrap at no extra cost. Not many whisky is not only incredibly smooth and are around. When you find Sir John, count light butextremely rare. For the Holidays, yourself lucky. This means, officials said. Westi - Germany probably "Will' Furnish the 12 army divisions required by NATO next year. The army now has nine active divisions. $4«5 $306 ruth rtni Schenley Distillers Co., N.Y.C - Blended Whisky • 80 Proof • 60% Grain Neutral Spirit* Opposes Intervention MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay. (AP) -The- government reiterated its opposition Tuesday to any inter-1 vention in Cuba despite Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro's recent public embra cement of Marxism-Leninism. "We Serve The Suburbs” W ith permission of C R. Ely & Son*, Jnc., - the TotretUi OU Company is pleased to publish the following letter as an announcement of expansion of Torrence service in the suburbs. Door Customer: For the pasf docade, C. R. Ely & Sons, Inc, hos sorved fual oil customers In Wallod Lake and environs. We have had most pleasant business relations with you during that period. This letter is to announce that we have now sold our Walled “Lake, plant, at 1121 Decker Road, to the Torrence Oil Company of Birmingham, who will maintain and improve it, and will continue the high type of fuel oil seivice to which you have been accustomed. We are proud that the Torrence Oil Company becomes our successor in this area, just as we are proud of our own long record of service. We believe that the sale of our Walled Lake plant and equipment to this well known company assures continuation of fast and efficient fuel Oil delivery, and emergency and other service for which the Torrence Oil Company is noted. It will mean continuation of the distributing center in Wallfd Lake and retention of valued employees, Mr. Alfred C. Porritt, Jr., and Mr. William E. Bailey, ‘who, as of December 1, 1961, become members of the Torrence organization. Very truly yours, C R. Ely & Sons, Inc C R. Ely, President I e Now, three plant* to serve you. e Automatic fuel oil delivery. V Fast emergency sorties. e Heating Division for warranted maintenance. e Jet-Hest, Jet-Cool Equipment, for easy replacement or for nets construction. TIRKM OIL COHPilV BPS mmJ: 2205 Holland, Birmingham, Ml 4-9000 1121 Decker Road 62255 Van Dyke Wadad Lake 624-1595 Utica 731-6110 E m TEL HURON SHOPPING CENTER OPEN EVERY NIGHT ’TIL 9 IF YOU CAN'T COME IN, ORDER BY MAIL or PHONE FE 4-3557 i/4 CARAT SOLITAIRE m GRADUATED CULTURED PEARLS 14K Gold Clasp $095 Rich and lustrous -oyster -grown cultured pearls in a graduated size -necklace, Joined with a rich 14 carat gold filigree clasp. Specially priced at Jayson's for. Christmas. Mil JAYSON’S Jewelry and Gifts TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER FE 4-2557 Just Say"Charge. It." ,\ ffe'U Be Glad to Open Your Account For You THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6.1961 thietEek JFK Soys Show 'Best Side'to Foreign Students WAWWOTOW (UR).— Pm* traffic VotuiM Drops in State'sNorth Country Atethodists Target Shooters Have an Off Day PHOENIX, Arlz. W—William J. Ryan, 20, of Phoenix, and two huddle* went to ft* desert to do ft little tercet shooting. Rj»tt slipped on a rock HI* THE CONVENIENT CENTER Your Clothes "Cleaned Only" cu.MlX.10Lk*-$l75 WITH THE PERSONAL TOUCH OPEN EVERY PRODUCT OF LONGINUS-WmTtAUl* Ltadtr in quality wtttbtt A fornhhpsf 100 ytan 9 Genuine Cinderella dresses up fortho Yes! We Have Velveteen ! Twllt Bock. Red, White, **fcag wj Black, Royot, Green ^ Ton and black, in infants', youths' and boys' sizes. t $A99U' holidays! WONDERFUL ARRAY OF HOLIDAY FABRICS TO SEW! ★ Brocades, Jacquords, from. , $1.98 yd. ★ Lome . .. U r r....... $1.08 yd, if Metallic in gold; white, silver, white—dobbies, florals. Many others. IMS NSW YOKIWMS Psrtieel Parties! A firl feels pert of the festivity with lace on her eoller, a flower at her waist 1 100% Inks nylon-which means easy care . aiid lasting beauty. is Wittnaucr’l greatest watch valuo-a watch of truly fine quality at only $29.99. . Just s few dollars more than cheap watches of letter quality and reputation. The heautiful designs and the fine quality of these Wittnauer watches speak for themselves. You will have an accurate, dependable, long, lasting watch (hat is at tha same time « ’ . piece of beautiful jewelry. It will be'a proud possession for many yean. See these end other fine Wittnauer watches in our store. DRESS FORMS Adjustable. Sizes Junior, A, B and C. »14*» for Boys and Girls Authentic Cowboy and Indian Spite JaysonJewelers Tol-Huron Shopping Center TeLHuron Shopping Center PI 4-0259 BANQUET FROZEN 11 OZ. TURKEY, CHICKEN OR BEEtW thursday, friday, Saturday! holiday marvels! ‘our wool double knits Lay-Away Your Christmas Gift Now .. Great way to greet the holidays wearing one of our stunningly simple wool double knits. From a collection, exceptional ot only $15-90,/oil are fully cut with taped seams, boost truly superior workmanship. Take your pick >ef fashion colors — Black, navy, blue, bone. Misses 'n junior sizes. Choice Open every night from The Stores That Never Compromise On Quality. till Christmas \ FABRIC SHOP Ph. FE 5-4457 Wrigley ' WRIGLEYS FRESH CENTER CUT RIB GROUND BEEF POUR CHOPS 2^89e G9‘a VELVEETA 2 lbs. Cheese Loaf 7QC Main or Fimtnto 1 W ALL SWEET 4 LBS. Margarine99c MEL-O-CRUST ENRICHED HU T5 PLAIN'OR SUGARED com THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1061 roOTTKEK ProposetoRebulId Low, Low PricM on Costom Draperies Tht yardstick MIRACLE MILE FAIRLANIX WIs. UA—Leaders in Oil little Northeastern Wisconsin Wonderful Christmas Gifts From Your^ FaYorihf^orel Ladies* QUILT-A-CLOUD ' Use a. Convenient Nylon tricot, -Nylon lined. Detach* able Nylon satin rose. .Romance Blue, Mist Green, Champagne > Beige, Tango Peach, Raspberry , SLIPPERS by Honey Bug 1. ELEGANTE—in Cold, Turnout sad pink leather, alio black velvet. Siaea 4-10. Marrow and Medium. 2. SOIREE—Lord? jeweled red velvet, Siaea M, widths N and M. The Luxury Look of ALLIGATOR CALF American Girl the fabric, fashion and flair of T ^flips' PUMPS FOREST TONES ”, by Van Heusen r SHETLAND WEAVE Cardigan Sweaters Styled with timeless vimpliritv. High or mid-lugh llfotime heel*. Siaea S to 10, widtha AA to B. Wonderful silk-like texture and sheen of cotton and Cupioni. Smart new Zig-zag pattern. Flange pocket treatment on both sides. All combined to make a shirt of The sweater sensation of. the year. Soft, comfort-able and so .good, looking. She’ll love the new shades of, blue, brown, black, red, pittk, yelltiw and white. ■ * Matching Purse unmistakable elegance. Long Sleeve Pullover to Match $5.98 Boys’ SPORT GOATS OUypr Shirts $3.95 to $5.00 A-fine selection of sport coats. Each is finely tailored in beautiful patterns and colors. The Wonderful Swirl You Live In SWIRL 8 to 12 Juniors’ Men’s Wash and Wear WRAP V TIE Pick, this new Swirl for dramatic effect. Graceful tree embroidery this 100% combed ^cotton. Crease controlled, minimum cate. The fabulous casual shirt of Ban-Lon that looks like a million. Will not shrink, Sag or fuss, and washes without blocking. "FINGER PAINTER" :Z WONDERALLS^ Uprightly new Bared "Finger Painter” smock and pedal pushers in easy* to- _ Christmas Gifts BOXER FREE Plenty of Colon to Choose From, care-for, fun-for-play corduroy. Slees 3-6x ^ a , STORE MIRACLE MILE THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, )981 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, ||0^SShHB appi Plans were formulated lor the annual scholarship tea to be held Dec. 14 at the Frank* Un boulevard home of Mrs. CoUU A. Scott. Mrs. F. D. Larkin and Doris Haynes are in charge of arrangements. Green Lake Women ^lote Yule Party — Members of Green Lake Women!s Club have set their Christmas party for Monday with a holiday buffet luncheon for the group and guests at noon. Hie executive board and officers will serve as hostess* es of the affair. 4945 DIXIE HIGHWAY DRAYTON PLAINS 'Christmas ornaments, aprons and a tea comer unit ffg among features at Crofoot School Parent-Teacher Association's holiday bazaar from 4 to 8 p.m. Friday in the multipurpose room. Arranging tip attractive display are (from left) Mrs. James CoUretas* Maty bay Avenue; firs. Francis Tieman, Stout Street; arid Mrs. Harry Jones, Cochrane Place. Candy, pop com, baked goods, cartoons, a grab bpg and toy shop also ■ arCpldsmed. Phone OR 4*0321 Three student instrumental concerts sire an the^cemsmtnityU Christmas music calendar. The Central Area Band Concert, with groups from Eastern, Jefferson and Washington junior high schools and Pontiac Cenfral High, will be at 8 p.m. Thursday m*Centrats gymnasium. Among teen-agers who wiltappeur are (from left) Judy Wit- ~ Hams, Norton Avenue;. Larry-Reyn-nrlh. North—Johnson Atirnim; Mike Mellen. South Shirley Avenue; and Paul Aldo, Voorheis Road. Yule Events Piling Up ot Forest Lake Club Plan Dinned At 7:30 this evening the Northern Area instrumental group, cQmprised of, musicians Jrom Lincoln, Madison Junior High and Pontiac Northern High ‘schools, will, perform in 'Northern's auditorium. Arnong mdmts phtyiagimll be ffrpm left) Dolores Duality, Valencia Drive; Janice Buchre, Glenwood Street; and Doug fngamells, West Princeton Avenue. Ronald Couirse, Opdyke Road, will be at the drums. The Citywide Advanced Youth Or- Jo Lynn Yansen, Chippewa Road; Terry chestra will offer holiday selections at Wall, East Beverly Avenue; and Char- 8 p.m. DecTT3 Sr Washington Junior^ lotte Allshouse, Blaine Street. The AU High SchooTs gymnasium. IRehearsing_ Citf-Juuior .High^Orchestra also will intently for the program are (from left) play that night. * • Brian Rosenthal, West Iroquois Road; w Legion Auxiliary Meets Forest Lake Country Club in Bloomfield Hills will be the scene of Christmas festivities for the entire family throughout this month. Hie women of the country dub will play Santa Claus when they attend their Christ- nounced the Holly Hop is set for Dec. 28 at Forest lake. Entertainment for the 9 to 12 midnight event will be provided by the Denby Five orchestra. Oakland County Chapter of Sioia Heights College Alumnae Association has scheduled 'a— Christmas cooperative dinner for 9:30 pan. Friday at the’ Royal Oak home of Mrs. Patrick O'Connor. Guest speaker Elvira Clare has chosen "Hie Secret of Mary” as her discussion topic. Alumnae of U.of M. Slate Tea Second on the holiday menu to the annual Christmas dinner dance at 6:30/p.m. Dec. 16. According to the management, reservations already indicate a record attendance. Hosts for cocktails preceding the dance are the Robert Walls of Hupp Cross Road, Birmingham, and the Hairy Bleekers of Bingham Lane, Bingham Farms. ’ • ’ —- Mr. and Mrs. John Bennett Ot Southfield will serve as chairmen bf the event with the J. M. Gillespies, the Henry Sokol s and the N.-Donald— Ringsreds assisting. Santa Claus will greet the children Dec. IT on Kiddies Day at the country dub to distribute toys and filled stockings. Others entertaining guests will include B’Wana Don and his pet chimpanzee Bongo Bailey, a magician, a ventriloquist and a clown..... Mrs. Henry Sokol, head of teen-age activities for Birmingham, Oakland Hills, Pine Lake, Orchard Lake, Red Run and Forest Lake country dubs, an- Filled Sweet Dough Gets Orange Juice Glaze The University ot Michigan alumnae of Pontiac met Monday at the Illinois Avenue home of Mrs. Vernon Abbott for a Christmas program. Joan Grabak provided organ music during the refreshments and later accompanied card singing, led by Mrs. T. E. Wiersema. By JANET ODELL If yoq want to please the family, have a batch of hot sweet rolls just out ot the oven when they troop in at the end of a ban) day. If you can salvage any of them, these Ring-A-Ungs freeze nicely. They’ll grace your Swday morning breakfast table, too. Mrs. Martin Wrobel, today's cook loves baking and makes lots of Christmas goodies. The mother of three eons, die is a baseball fan. Politics has a , fascination lor her also. eggs and yeast. Beat well, stir la (tear to make a ■ dough. Mix |h Cover aad let stand 39 min- — Rv 2 packages yeast 14 cup warm water cup butter or margarine % cup milk scalded % cup sugar 2 teaspoons salt 2 teaspoons grated orange Rdl out to 22 by 12-inch rectangle on floured board. Put filling on half the dough.gmL J fold-ever the long way to cover filling. Cut into 1-inch strips. Twist 4 or 5 times, hold 'one end down and fornj into a circle. Tuck under the and. Let rings rise 45 to 60 min* utee or until double. Bate 15 minutes at 373 degrees or u golden brown. » < with S Two Members to Entertain The 18th district of The American Legion Auxiliary * gathered Friday at the American Legion Halt_ Berkley, with Mrs. Hugh McHugh of Birmingham presiding. that schools of instruction on various programs of the American Legion Auxiliary would be held throughout the District. National Body Elects Woman Sue Devktona, Barbara Me-Clure and Victor Tboma* of Pontiac Central High School presented a skit, "How Mrs. Santa Claus Saved Christ-mas.” 'bnfiVji ' Two alumnae of 'Alpha Omega Alpha Chapter, Alpha ■ Chi Omega Sorority; will present a musical program when members meet at t p.m. Tuesday in the Birmingham home Of Mrs. E. T. Burroughs. Mrs. Edwin W. Tower, daughter of the hostess, will play a group of Debuasy's works. She to music coordinator tor the Mount Clemens schools. Selections of vocsl soloist Mrs. John L. Nielsen wU include “O Holy Night” and "What Child Is This?” Mrs. Harry Sisson of Claw-' son. rehabilitation chairman announced the gift shop at the V.A Hospital Dearborn will be open through Friday. Items for the gift shop are donated %by unit auxiliaries to enable hospitalized veterans to select ’ Christinas gifts for thsir 4am*. Veterans make their own aetoettone from the shop after which legion auxiliary members gift wrap and ready The Pontiac area school tft/_ be held at, American Legion Cook-Nelson Hall on Auburn Avenue at 8 p.m. Thursday,' will include instruction on, Americanism, child welfare,' civil defense, gW’s state, membership, past presidents’ parley, arid public relations. Mrs.WtHtam Morrison of - Pe— trait, wile of the national vice commander of the American Legion, was a guest of the group. Mrs., Clarke F. Andreae of Birmingham was elected to the National Association for Men- , tal Health’s board of directors at the group’s recent annual meeting in! Miami, Fla. A University of Michigan graduate and mother of four, Mrs. Andreae has been since 1966 an annual meeting delegate for NAMH, citizen action group dedicated to obtaining effective treatment for mentally ill children and .Ju)ultz.__, She has been a member of the board of the Michigan Society for Mental Health since 1954. Mrs. Robert E. Dawson, committee chairman for December's meeting, will be assisted by Mrs. Florence Millar, Royal Oak; Mi*. Mh Bourn-‘ • Bolder. «a Mrs. Janet Heilsch. Mrs. William Gordon, Mr*. Maxwell Shad-ley and Mrs. John Windiate. gartaer, Berkley, and Mr JCtoiFenKtz, Birmingham The Berkley unit displayed some 90 pairs of homemade slippers to be. presented to the American Legion's Chttdren’a Home at Ottar Lake. ** Announcement was made The meeting doted with group ringing, of Christmas carols, tod by Mrs. Theodore' Welch of Berkley, district music chairman. Tito next district meeting u dated for M9 p.m. m t at the Royal Oak 'AnieriCdn‘Legion HUD. As an NAMH director, Mrs. Andreae will be a key person hi carrying out recommends^ tions contained in "Action lor Mental Health,” the final report of m six-year study by the Congressional • supported Illness and Health. FRENCH PROVINCIAL TABLES WITH GENUINE LEATHER OR CHERRY WOOD TOPS specially priced Wonderful Christmas gifts for the home! each ----Authentically styled and quality constructed of select hardwoods . . . hand-rubbed to a rich, glowing French fruitwood finish. Choose these distinctive tables with either genuine gold-tooled leather tops or with cherry wood top# And such wonderful values at their very low price ot only $39.50 each. OPEN MONDAY,- , THURSDAY, FRIDAY ond -SATURDAY 'TIL 9 --• - ..- CONVENIENT • FREE PARKING BUDGET TERMS THOMAS Musical Chapter {Holds Meeting The Senior League of the Tuesday Musicals met Sunday after-j noon in the Clarkston home of' Carol Walter. A program was preaented by Larry Reynnells, Bill Juigenson, Sharel Isanhart, Pamela Morris, Mary Hinkley, Joan Grahek and Pamela Griffin. Hand-Cut CRYSTAL $2*0b,15^ singing of Christmas carols and Hsavy lead crystal, beautifully hand-cut to bririg out all the diamond-Ilk# brilliance of the design 1 See our wide selection of cut crystal decanters, candy NEW LOCATION tool Handy, sip-pleasure bag in simulated leather or gay fabrics. Chqrming 11111« voses with haavy boll bast. Crystal clear tap With choice of green, blue, amber or while bate. PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER «, 1M1 The 'Waterworks' fora ttfatima of proud possession OMEGA Q Anow Shirts 0Bmu Brammell Ties Q Norris Casual DIXIE POTTERY Sport Shirts □ Jantzen Sweaters □ Puritan Sweater! □ Rabor Robes 0 Weldon Pajamas 0 Stetson kats Admiring gifts to be presented to Pontiac State Hospital patients are Mrs* James Tenney (at left) of Franklin, Mrs. Frederic. Zeigen of Detroit and Mrs. Earle S. MacPherson who opened* her Bloomfield Hills home Monday to Cranbrook Branch, Woman's National Farm and Garden Association for the third annual Christmas luncheon. Cranbrook Garden Unit Plans Gifts Sorority Alumnae to Meet Tuesday December meeting of Kappa Delta alumnae, South Oakland County, will be held Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the home of Mrs. John M. Clark, Henrietta St., Birmingham. Thirty-five members of Own-brook Branch, Woman's National Farm and Garden Association, bought gifts hirPoaUac State Hospital patients to the third annual luncheon Monday in the Bloomfield Hills home of Mrs. Earle S. MacPherson. Assisting the hostess were Mrs. Percy ft Hamly, Mrs- Laurence Herman, Mrs. Robert Holbrook and Mrs. Eugene K. Kelly. I Pretty as they are practical, these handy little accatsoriet make delightful Christmas gifts for many a gal on your. Christmas lift! BOUDOIR SLIPPERS Here ore fust a lew items from our attractive Celebrity collection! -□Slack* 0 Swank Jewelry 0 Burton Wallet* 0Hickok Belts 0Ban-Lon Shirts 0 Anow Handkerchiefs □ Gift Certificates 0 Raincoats 0 Sport Coati FREE GIFT BOXES REDMOND'S Jewelers — Optometrist* 91 N. Saginaw St. FE 2-3612 AWkorMOmna Asmf...QtkUWmA«t*iOlrmsltOamu,Sma lut* a fabulous collection of little gifts that are big on elegance ...but tiny in price! GAY LITTLE GIFTS for Her Personal Use by Celebrity golden gift of unusual beauty dk and charm! m Blue or pink gingham trimmed with ric-rac ... foam cushion aola. Complete with clear plastic gift box. SET of 4 GOLD LUSTER DEMI-TASSE CUPS In o GOLDEN GIFT BOX •nty VTW complete Holds cosmetics, change, and cigarettes. Gift boxed. See our ether cosmetic and change punas, by Celebrity This Is gold that glitters . four lovely, demi-tasse cups and saucers of imported china completely covered on the outside with gleaming gold lustre finish! Perfect for efter dinner coffee . ; ,“or to display as a collector's item. In a gold gift box! everyone loves $8.95 Fitted TRAVEL KITS $2 »• 45 With assortment of handy plastic containers. Wonderful gift for “the gal on the go”! TOTE BAG to carry that extra pair of shoes Imported Crystal BUDVASES Conveniently holds hair rotters, roller pine and audit Vary elegant in aheer nylon and laca with plastic lining, drawstring top. Flowered - DESKPEN'SiT *2 Open Every Night 9til Christmas! 24 WEST HURON ST. PARK FREE on Our Own Lot Behind Store The program will bo a seasonal one conducted by Inga Pauli. Oohotteaaes for the ag>'. fair .are Mrs. Emanuel Chria* tensen, .Mr*. James Kilgore; and Mrs. Stuart M. Totty. Decorative Holiday - SWEATERS 10.95 to 17.95 Pastel bulkies with embroidery applique . . . gold ~tt1tgrerar*7. t metelHctWf- fon over or Ion . ., sophisticated black with jewels and sequins. Concealed in the tree are 10 ten-dollar bills for a full scholarship sponsored by the branch for. a Michigan State University student. -. Mrs. Frederic Zeigen of Detroit, first honorary member, was the guest of her daughter, Mr*. Harold I. Tanner, branch president-Members exchanged gifts made, deed, sewn or grown by them-selves. ■Gw SHOP 26 West Huron New, exclusive! An S-ltem fashion wardrobe a real teen-ager would envy — designed just for daughter’s new teen-age fashion model doll. See the bubble-skirt gown, Empire -coat — sew them rtf----- Printed Pattern 4592: For 11H-Inch teen-age fashion model doll. Tfc thrifty—uie scraps. Send 35 cents in coins for this pattern—add 10 cents for each pattern lor lst-claaa mailing. Send to Anne Adams, can of The Pontiac Proas, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th 8L, New York U, N.Y. Print plainly name, address with : size and style number. Slate Yule Party The Christinas party lor Sa-Shay Quadrille Dance Club member* will be Dec. 15 at the Elks Temple. Twenty-five couples Were present at the group’s Friday nieettng In Elks Temple. COLOR TELEVISION HEADQUARTERS 5-Tobe Radios *11** STEFANSKI Television end Radio Sales and Service 1157 W. Huron St. FE 2-6967 Netmnjj Kismet Brown and do tee mean "fort thrills” I Thaw walking shoe classics have tin fashion, fit and quality that make Clinics the overwhelming choice of “young worn-en in white.” Glove lettiMr Foothrflls, light-weight Cush-N-Crepe Solis, 9.95. Glovelk FoothriDs, Cush-N-Crepe Soles, 10JO. Sixes 4-11, AAAA-C. ' Open Friday Evening PAULI’S sl Shoe Store ^ ■-'it SEVENTEEN FOR CHRISTMAS Whatever gift you may give be sure to include a box of candy from Crockets 2440 WOODWARD ATE. Open DaUylO AJL to t PJL Indorables Overblouse Slacks Gay print oven silkana in gold and Quartet of Callers at Square Dance Social Cover-Up Del icate charitilly-pattemed lace covered sweater * with face framing hood. So Ipvely in orlon-aCrylic. Soft white or black; Sizes 34 to 40. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1061 With College Fund Unit the 1961-62 fund campaign for more than $80,000. Alumni last year contributed $65,000 which ■ was 30 per cent of Antioch'* gifts for unrestricted use, it * it Rod Serling, writer and producer of television’s “Twilight Zone,” is also among those serving on the alumni fund committee. . Early Week Special! BUDGET WAVE..r-... ... CAOJE’S BEAUTY SHOP 116 North Perry FE 2*6361 (rtf £to>Uk\NVtJil A jumbo pahem of 12 potholders, 2 mitts. A variety to suit every taste! ’ Use scraps for potholders or buy % yard of fabric — makes. 2 potholders. Pattern TB4: transfer 10 holders, 2 mitts; directions, charts, 2 crocheted holders. Send 35 cent* (coins) tor this pattern — add 10 cents for each pat-tern tor lst-class mailing. Said to Laura Wheeler , care of The Pontiac Press, 124 NeetDecraft Dept, P.O, Box 161, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly pattern number, name, address and zone, . For the first timet Over aop de-signs in our ae*,.1962 needlecraft catalog — biggest ever! Pages, pages, pages of fashions, home accessories to knit, crochet, sew, weave, embroider, quilt. See jum-. bo-knit hits, cloths, spreads, toys, linens, afghans, plus free patterns. Send 25 cents. Pontiac Bridge Club Holds Weekly Play ’ Eight tables played at Pontiac Duplicate Bridge Club's Monday meeting in Elks Temple. ' * h * - Among winners were Mr. and j Mrs. Arnold Richards, Donald * Bowen end Ronald Flscus, Fred Kempe and Dr. Maurice Willis. ★ ♦ *★ Others were Ira Benjamin and Ernest Guy, Mrs. James McGuire and Mrs. Ernest Guy, Mrs. Earl Waterman and Mrs. Harrison Specht. SPECIALLY tegular to 10.98 PRICED ...4.90 Just arrived, an extensive collection of specially .priced holiday hats In dll Of the exciting fashion shapes , . . pillboxes, turbans, pixies, toques and whimsies. In wonderful new' brocades, satins, metal lies and saquins. Millinery Salon — Second floor HOLIDAY UNDER COVER STORY In pal# Minna, blua, spark, Mack, white. “Echo Toms" fashion colors flatter . m •vary skin-tone ... matched bras and L— - girdles fq coordlfoti with ywr—w-4 —i- outerweor color schomosl g - Echo Toms loco Whirlpool* bra has I famous uplift and rouridness. Low-cut - a neckline,- $3.95. v Matching colore and- decorotive detail in o fhto gouge powomet girdle —8------ with underlay powernet back panel. ' * S-M-L, im rr The svelte velveteen slacks come in red, block or blue. Sifts TO to 16. Spoils Shop — Main floor echo tones Colors to flatter every skin-tone iuioolyiMwittu Her Secret* loco Whirlpool* bra Is fully padded with ultro-iight synthetic foam to achieve natural, rounded profile. A, B 32-36; $5.00. light powomet paatie girdle , with decorative front ponel; underlay , of powomet firms and flattens derriere. S-M-l, $7.95. Long-leg pqntie girdle stylo, S-M-U $8.95. - Our graduate corsatiaroNwill assist you for. a proper 1 Once Upon a Christmas Morning • • . ELEGANT PEIGNOIR Set... $26 Gift favorite ... nylon tissue tricot waltz-length peignoir floats over lace bodice gown. White and pastels. Devine Dream Sequence Twin layered sheer nylon Baby Doll pajamas, loco outhned deep V yoke. Matching jacket drifts over all. White and pastels. 5.98 Merry Wrapping ■IV ....14.98 Pamper her witba cozy quilted robe that weighs just a few ounces and is toasty warm. Portrait collar, deep pockets, back pleats and huge rose for remembrance at the neck. Sizes VO to 18. lingerie and Kobe* — Meiu fleet Atty S«yn Swimaitog QK Church Group $ings Carols TW Wayside Gleaner* of First Baptist Church met at the church Friday with Helen H. Barnett serving as hostess and Mrs. Kenneth Shrine as chairman of the refreshment committee. . Leading the group in Christmas carolg liras Mrs. William Carls, after which the honor chair from Baldwin School sang three holiday The GIFT that only YOU can giveI PORTRAITS ■H A gift that wflljheewe Let Priest Be Human now open MILLIE’S Beauty Salon Corner of Pike and S. Sanford Open Tue*. thru Fri. 9 to S Snt. 9 to 1 FJtc ;_ Thurwdny br Appointment FACIALS—MANICURES-RINSE and DYES HAIRCUTTING Robert' Gavette, Christian education director at Marimont Baptist Church, spoke about the. Mil significance of Christmas following Mrs. T. N. Siosson's two vocal s? lections. Mrs. Isaac Prevette dosed the meeting with prayer. £ IL HASKILL STUDIO No Appointment Nocessory EDITH 8TENBON, Owner Fine Colonial Furniture rLEimr or nun ruuxo GENTRY’S Colonial House 5 8. Main MA 5-2362 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 6, mi picnics. When ther Roman Cathp-olic, Episco-i palian or any taith, are they permitted to do such things? Please comment, Abby. And perttaps the clergy would like -to explain themselves. — — —------MRS. SHOCKED DEAR MRS. SHOCKED; You have a "short” in your thinking. I don't know of any > Demi teens Club Planning Dance Demiteens Club members are completing arrangements for Saturday dance, "Mood Indigo" at Roosevalt Masonic Temple. Giy, Linda French, Valerie Fox, Shannon Pnekett, Kay Mudaan and Mary Bath Belanger, dec- Marsha Olds and Suds Bunt-singer will plan rafreahroenti. Others helping art Miaa Fox and Judy Notanchuck, tickets; Sue Madaen, Kay Madsen, Jill Graham, Linda Morse and Sally Stark, post dance; Nancy Burgdorf, Debbie Gordon, Linda Porritt and Nancy Hefner, record*. Shannon Puckett will provide the record player. Jeanette Cockle has arranged for the affair’s chaperons. , ir that requires prints to. wear clerical dothei at all glace*, under all dreumstaacea. Such decisions are left to the discretion of the prieeC I have never heard of any objections to a priest wearing a sport shirt while on a picnic, an outing or fishing. And you certainly can't expect him to go for a swim In his collar! DEAR ABBY: My husband died in midsummer. Would it ybe in poor taste to send Christmas cards or send gifts this year? WIDOW DEAR WIDOW: Certainly not. Those in mourning should not withhold their good wishes to others. ' i~ . * v--,*.... DEAR ABBY: Am I wrong to tell my 14-year-old freshman daughter that she does not have to accept a date egfth the first boy who asks her? She insists that if she refuses the first boy, she cannot accept a date for that night at all! On several occasions she has accepted a date with the first boy who asked her, and has bem sorry because an. hour later a boy ahe wanted to go with asked her. ■ There were times when she turned dopn a date because she had already refused the first one. Please straighten this out. She won’t listen to toe. MRS. B. DEAR MRS. B.: A girt need not atay home if *ahe rejects the first boy who asks her out. Boys choose the dates they want, and girls have the privilege of accepting or declining. However, if a girl accepts a date with a boy (s' drip, or a dream) she must , either go with him or stay home....... ★ ★. ........... - CONFIDENTIAL I'd WORRIED SICK: PLEASE, PLEASE tell your parents. ' PEO Unit Makes Christmas Plans Mre, Everett Peterson entertained membttejM Chapter AW-PEO at her home' Monday evening during which time Christmas plans were discussed. A .„. ik .dr . Speaker for the evening was the! Rev. Walter Teeuwissen of Drayton Plains United Presbyterian Church. A social hour foil The group wiL1 gather again Dec. 18 when hosteto duties for the. affair will be shared by Mn. Charles Coppersmith ae* Mrs. Hirry Pearce. Professional PERMANENTS Styled as YOU Like It! IMPERIAL BfAUTY SALON 219 Auburn Ave. FE 4-2878 STAPP'S • • . Christmas slippers are . i With o Bedroom Group Styled in SOLID NORTHERN MAPLE! Select Open Stock Pieces from *79.95 Surprise a member of the farnHy-wittr this handsome Sterling House-------- Maple Collection—for the Merriest Christmas ever! Classic beauty and styling with craftsmanship that assures years of enduring pleasure ... yet so moderately priced! JUVENILE BOOTERIE 28 €. Lawrence * St., ‘ Downtown STAPP'S ' FAMILY SHOE STORE 928 W. Huron at TeJograph OPEN EVERY EVENING TQ CHRISTMAS—STARTING TOMORROW byhANTA himself FELT COWBOY 'N' GUN $3.49 "TFi’v# rnariy #f**f ttflw fe clociTiroa, l#o( Dresser ...$7995 Mirror .... $24« Chest $79»5 Pair Twin Beds. .*7995 Full-Size Bed and Nightstand..$79*5 Night^tand. .*4995 Bed..*49« Chest..*99« Double Dresser. .*1 l-9«----Mtriw See Our Wondrous Gift Selection of Lanipt and Accessories . . . / Starting Thursday Open Dptfy 'HI Christmas 9 A. M. to 9 P. M. Classed Sunday Interior. Decorating Counsel ot No Extra <^ost' Just South of-Orchard Lake Road-^-Free Parking m NINETEEN on Technicality Red China Seems Destined far Another U.N. Snub Wayne Leaders Address Comity Meeting quiring only a majority vote, or Try to'Sell' School Federation in Oakland tot night entered Oakland Cbunty territory with their plan to federate Oakland, Macomb and Wayne countie* to raiae new achool taxes. admimlon of Outer Mongolia to membership In exchange tor Soviet agreement to the admission of Mauritania, a former By winning' membership for Mauritania, the United States hoped to gain support or at least abatention >£rom the 12-member bloc of former French African colonies on the Red China question. If the United States loses this 1 vote by simple majority, then the 1 admission of Red China into the i United Nations this year on a second vote is assured. WOUU> BE BLOCKED However, if the UJt. members; vote that the question is "impor- ' taut," then Red China member-! ship is Mocked for this year at Under the federation plan, the districts involved would be given power by the state "to levy taxes in the area of the federation other than real and personal property taxes.” nrwmw wani -rixiwem _ . Bail Wilson said last night that Shain repJied that "tt was the con-eon hid been'faced with rim MKjdatiOns hope that con-con major problems: reapportionment ywM ««ne * report in of voting districts and reallocation th*ir con8*derat»ns. of tends. PREDICT DEFICIT * * * Figures compiled in the report “Welmow that revenues are predict a 196,919,000 deficit in Oakleaving the three-county, area of land County schools' operating ex-Oakland, Macomb and Wayne in penaee for 1970-71 under the pres-greater amounts than are coming'ent tax structure, in Rom the state," he said. I ^ ___Nationalist China reluctantly fell into line, finally convinced that only in this way could it retain its present U.N. seat. As of today, the prognosticators are saying the U.8. has lined up 56 votes, a victory margin of three. Also recommended is granting of -authority by the legislature or in the new constitution enabling school districts to federate in one or more counties on a vote by a majority of the voters in the area. FOR CHRISTMAS ENTERTAINING IMPORTED CHINA AT SPECIAL PRICES 98 Pc. SERVICES OF TWELVE NATALIE She WH Urn To fat Lardy • 12 dinner plates' ' • 12 cups and saucers • 12 fruit dishes *12 salad plates • 12 sonp bowls • 12 bread and butters PLUS , PLUS , PLVS 6 EXTRA 2 platters Lgravyboat CUPS for 2 vegetable I creamer breakage bowls for 1 covered insurance serving sugar-bowl MAKE YOUR SELECTION EARLY TO ASSURE HOLIDAY DELIVERY ON THE PATTERN OF YOUR CHOICE Standard Shape, Pink $ AQ95 town stems. Platinum edge UNTIL CHRISTMAS THEN OPEN/A CHARGE AND PAY ONLY 10% EACH MONTH ON THE BALANCE _______________________£ • 16 W. Huron Ftra-029* MIRACLE MILE 2203 S. Telegraph PE 2-8391 Open Every Pfight'Til Christman SUPS by C/ 10.95 GEORGE'S 74 N, SAfMHAW IT. WlnTBooilM' Uneasy Bladder Umriss eating or drinking may to s aouros of mild, but unio^ tdwMer » or muicuiv kim mnu over-exertion, •train or ftaSiSi.'gs Ider irrustloos. 2 — A JaM pata* ■ action on nMtfg backache, he*, amcalsr scms and pains, wonderfully mfld diuretic action e kidney*, MMta| to increDe put of the lJaJM* of kidney So. sit tb* tame happy relief TluVa enjoyed for over 60 . Large, >my SiSS money. aaa's Fan MtaUe workers oa the MM million Mciunir man-Into-apnee program abengf have bwtalled the rocket AMaa No. 1MD, on the pod. Detailed check-oats have ahawa no trouble* la the haaaiar.—.—,---------1— ----- However, source* said it would be "at least a few more days — possibly next week," before the capsule would be mated to the huge rocket for the flight that will carry Marine LL Col. John H. Glenn into space as America’s first orbiting atronaut. * P * After the physical oormecOon of the capsule and the rocket, aefen-tists will have at least II days qf check-outs ahead of them before they can give Glenn the “go-ahead”-for his planned three-orbit! trip around the globe. ASTREA... Coupe Shape, pink flower* $ 5TQ95 with dark green leaves. Platinum edge tr y CHADSWORTH . . flower* and trimmi , ^IY LOVE... Coupe Shape, pink flowers ICQ95 ' with gray leaves. Platinum edge. vy Every set is a complete 98*piece service for 12 and includes: THB PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 6, 1961 Members from various Oakland County boards appeared impressed by the Wayne County Association's report that other, taxe* in addition to present property taxes would be needed to meet predicted future deficits in aclwol. budgets. NO STAND TAKEN However, the Oakland board members took no action expressing their stand and referred the proposal to the association's legislative committee. it P P , One association member called the federation plan "ill-timed" in Capsule, Atlas 'Marriage' Set 'Wadding' Is Next Step in Gotting Astronaut Into Orbit CAPE CANAVERAL (UPl) ~ Scientists plan to "marry” a apace capsule and a converted war rockri within a few daya in the next key step toward putting a U.S. astronaut iiito orbit. The bell-shaped Mercury capsule, free of troubles that cropped up edriler this week, remained inside s hangar on the cape, tiffing for the truck ride that would take it to launching pad No. 14. (George s OPEN EVERY NIGHT ’til 9 FREE DOWNTOWN PARKING A Repeat of Our Thanksgiving Offer That Was So Outstanding. Every Pattern la Beautiful — Any Shape — They’re All Here, Baroque, Rim and Coupe Every Piece la Genuine Vitreous — Chip Resistant China of True Translucent Beauty — Patterns Shown Are Just A Few of The Twenty Odd Offered. Supply Is Limited, Don’t Wait if Yon Want Holiday Delivery. CONCORD .. bln* and brown leaves with brwwu stems ‘ flowers set in brown leave*. Platinum trim $4995 Layaway Or Budget Charge 1.50 4.95 faaatiM Gift Lanas mwswsmmM — the footmn as; ^ DECEMBER 6, 1061 IS>U Reserves mid Go Home1 it Hot Needed WASHINGTON OJPI) pBep. BA Wilson, RrCsllf., said Tuesday that U miUtwy reservists called up la the Bolin situation are not needed, “the Amp should admit Mr nfistake" and release them. ,» Wilson, a member of the House Irani Autobahn With No Hitch U. $. Unit Quite fortin oi 1,500-Man Force Replace*! st Group, he waa gire aeeh men would serve without complaint if then is-a Wilson rejected a statement by Amy Secretary Elvis J. Stahr that morale of moat of the re-serrists i* Wfb He said State's statement that the Amy has received only 1,000 complaints is explained by the fact that the reservists are writing Congress, not . the Pentagon. BERLIN (API—The' UJ. Army sported that, at) Infantry company left Berlin today over the 110-mile autobahn connecting West West Germany cleared Soviet controls without * hitch. It was another la a aeries of almost daily U.S. troop ments—despite "Soviet complaints —over the superhighway through Communist East Germany. . 0 ♦ * The move through East Germany to the West German " Boys haye more colds than gtfWT at, Helmstedt Wat but women have more then men. One who recovers from a cold may expect to be immune about seven : weeks. incident. Army ctflctahi re-ported. Travelers reported that an unusually high number of East German police and 8evtot soldi lined up along the’ autobahn. IS THERE A PARTICULAR PAUL ON YOUR LIST? Uftnusby-CMMOIAN CLUB It’s hard choosing a gift for a Particular PauL And who doesn’t know one? Give the on# on your list the ooe gift that% sure to brighten his holiday* Canadian Club-the world’s most wanted gift whisky. Better go over your holiday Hat ' from A to Zrand give your favorite folk theirfavorito whisky —Canadian Club, festively gift-wrapped at no extra cost-* ’The Bast In The House” in 87 lands. CMMDIM CIO* It < tmt Ott. M 8 PKOOf, IMPOIKt II MTTII non CSNSDA If sms sunt ispstmt tie. imoiT. oicsiiM. mini empire mitt The unit which traveled the autobahn today had gT __ Honed in Berlin temporarily, replacing a company of the legutar garrison which had gone to Weet Germany for fieST training. Forward units of the 1st Battle Grotg>, 19th Infantry. are to make the eastward trip from the Helmstedt border checkpoint to West Berlin Thursday. The 1 .MO-man three wg replace tie grotto which was rushad eriln after East Germany started building Its wall dividing the dty last August. * • * h Speaking la the West 'German Parliament at Bonn, West Berlin Mayor Willy Brandt warned that the existence of the Red wall can lead to serious demonstrations by the West Berliners. * ♦ A Citing a recent demonstration by 50,000 youths in hit dty, Brandt said, “W0 an a patient people. me should not overtax our patience and wonder when have reached the limits of our self-respect.” * * * “The wall must go,” Brandt Idod. “It remains a constant provocatUxr and we cannot have any false conceptions about a status gm>,” Alway an Emcrioncy, of Courge Private Use of Office Phone AnotherFringe Benefit By HAL BOVUS NEW YORK --Naw and lien a memo such, as this la dr-._|_____ BMBMI ; gdato£tn evm^o«k» foAmert- Hlgh &shion Hortenae-fhe. for?" F* every U tickets he sella, gb gets a * “These phones are strictly for he conduct of company business, upon which “ livelihood of the Employes fog to mnko emergency private calls during working hours will plei pay telephones in the - corridor.” Management al- __________way sTaianihea these memos' with high hopes, bid they would be just as effective if they .ware | floated out battle. * 'A .....* • For a day or two the hands dutifully drop their .coins to the pay phone, then they go back one by one, to slipping Jheir private calls through the office aHSe two wedts everything is back normal, which means—the switchboard Is so swamped with i free one himself. ratary does her shopping by phone whenever the boas Is in conference. “What have you got new in cocktail dresses at about 139.15?” she asks her favorite department store saleslady. And that ties up that phone line' for 45 minutes. Odds-On Otlle—The office gam-bier usually placet four calls with Ms bookis . in the morning, and three in the afternoon. The bookie 'Usually calls him back three times In foe morning lnd four times in the afternoon. Net rdndt at dosing time: QUto has lost two bucks. LISTEN; BABY Casanova Charlie—He picks up Ms desk phone and croons to Nd-printed'i*TsE3T3l8&* *»*&1“f" swUcU**Pdt?p’ t to sea in a scaled 5™tor- 1™ t0 had a lonesome Hfe.”WhUe he and Nellie pitch vocal woo, the switchboard is tied hp completely. She can't be bothered putting through any other calls. Homebody Hubert1—Every half hour be phones home to see if his shirts got back from the laundry, ITtte baby has broken out with the measlw or a new tooth, if his wife wants to go to a movie that night, U to, which movie, to ask what’U they have for dinner, personal calls that anyone having should he stop to pick up any- to make a call on company ness has to go out and use the pay phoneto foe-corridor^ who makes all these private calls, and what Is the desperate nature of their emergencies? Wen, here are-a few typical characters p^, Kven to eight executive you have probably overheard In buddies in other firms trying to thing, and whether anything new has happened since he called half an hour before. Old Bubblehead Himself—The boss only makes two kinds of personal calls. In the morning he your own office; HUNGRY HARRY Hungry Harry—Life is'just one long coffee break to him. Three times a day he phones the drugstore lunch counter for java, sandwiches, doughnuts, pie, and cheesecake. At 6:15 he makes his final call: “Rush up some sodium bicarb, Joe, my stomach feels kinds tense." j trying t set up a golf- foursome. In foe afternoon—IT* ho isn’t playing golf— he phones his broker six times to say, “Remember now, If Amalgamated Twiddlywinks goes up to 87, sell fevery share Tve got and put it all in International Wldgits, that is, if International Wldgits is holding steady.” Star Makes Impression Helpful Herbert—In foe sweet* HOLLYWOOD (AP) — As a name of charity he calls a do/en group of film notables and civic acquaintances a day to sell tickoa'officials watched, Natali#' Wood, for his lodge’s latest raffle: “For]23, Tuesday became the 138th film only four-bits you get a chance to star in 34 years ts have her foot-win a $4,800 convertible and a free prints enshrined in concrete in trip to Puerto Rico,” he says, front of Grauman's Chinese the-'How many shall I put you down later. ■’ APPLIANCE BUYERS! 0LLIE FRETTER SAYS I OU.II FIUTTKR On# of Detroit's Original Discounters WHAT ARE YOU DOING TONIGHT? » ■ If you are planning to go out and shop for a now Stereo-TV—or Appliance, after reading „■ your paper tonite I sure wish you would drive out to our Miracle Mile Store and make a j down to earth personal sheppar comparison. Your eyes will brighten when you sae the ■ 100's of sparkling new 1962 appliances all tagged with our best carload prices. Most * P*°pl* tell me that eur pricas are awfully difficult to boat. Why not stop in tonitol ■ The great mystery of Amarican|ing up office switchboards, howl the answer is simple. No busi-1 during those foies hour hatches Industry is fob: With all these does any business firm ever pitn-lneas Is transacted In offices any- The office phones ere now merely enagyrocy ptrsonaJ mostsges tr-lpfete-gei aay^buslnros dcee?- [more. lfs «B dnnttn nstsiirsolsttonriiit eaaBtovg_fttogsJhsniflt- * Wednesday, Dec. 6th Is Color TV Nite Fretterfi Invittt You To Comalri And See Your Favorifg Programs. FREE COFFEE and DONUTS Served Wed., Dec. 6,1961 from 6 to 9 P.M. No Obligation Of Any Kind EVERY DAY YOU'RE MISSING MORE and MORE IF YOU DON'T BUY RCA VICTOR/ COLOR TV Huy Nou> And Be Ready Fur All The Big Shorn Coming This Season! SEE WALT DISNEY'S In your own home en The Perfect Gift TRANSISTOR RADIOS We Cany A Complete line of Transistor Radios — AM, FM and Clock Radios rca Victor COLOR, fist FRETTERS LOW - LOW PRICE!! Th. DELEGATE SPORTABOUT TUurWl* TV Sorias 172-A-04-M IT tub# (overall diag.), 156 sq. In. picture LOWEST PRICED RCA VICTOR SPORTABOUT TV e Super-Powerful "New Vista" Tuner e 18,000 volt chaisli (design average) e "Golden Throat" sound o Decorator colors, compact design $|499S BUOCtT TERMS ■ 30 Doys Exchange H GENEROUS TRADE ■ FAST 24-N0UR ■ NO MONEY DOWN ■ Coortesos, After Ur TO II ■ If Not Fullv Satisfied I ALLOWANCE R DELIVERY | ON ANY PURCHASE ■ Sol# Smite MONTHS TO PAY ------- " "jRSSrtxHood Mutant Mobs tbs Kg Difference — FreVe It to Yoerwlf - Service Corns* First Rsgerdltn of Price ■ FRETTER APPLIANCE MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER S. TELEGRAPH at SQUARE LAKE ROAD Open Daily 10 A.M. 'til 9 P.M. - FE 3-7051 - Sunday 10 A.M. 'til 7 P.M. IliSfSlMTE X BELIEVABLE I ' THE GREAT VALUES IN RICHMAN GIFTS Gift shopping goes faster... Gift money goes farther, when you shop for men where men shop for them selves—of Richmond! 1 PUT YOUR BEST SUIT FORWARD FOR H0UDAY PARTIES! RICHMAN’S BLUE WOOL WORSTEDS y - Check List of GIFTimST IDEAS; under 5®® „ Unde WUI-ptt-boxs4 sport shirt with 3.95 I foht of nyas (9090. . ftr acetate (lOtf). 4.59 - Coosln Bob—Scardijin f sadfor button up ts » 00 took tike i vat. O.JO m Johnny’s Teacher—wool I sad nyton pm with _ Q0 leather palm lor driving. C.JO fMailman-*rtady-tied or tte-your-OM ties—silk. 1.50 I befts—luxury leathers in black or brown. >0 Supersmooth! WOOL & ZEFRAN SPORT COAT a95 TOP-PLIGHT TOPCOATS 33.95 Name your fabrics—tweedi, coverts, uxoniea, ■ worsteds. Ypu’ll like the stylre—rtglan, or natural shoulder models. Believable value from Rickman's. All Charted Dp? 11 Yon can take up to six months X \ to pay for the Rlchman Charge j ■ Account Purchases yon aake X : ... f • Jt irons in the wash l BELFAST WASH-WEAR WHITE SHIRTS ZSi I3 for 1150 Tried and true! Comas out of th# wash ready to wear! Broadcloth/spraad collar, convartlbla cuff. Oxford button-down, barrel cuff. Hand out a compliment! rmm FUNNEL SLACKS 12.15 Theft fine-tailored alecks go with everything he owhs, practically—ihtrti.iport coats, sweaters. Dark tones. ★ ★ Mandarin '■ PAJAMAS 3.95/3 for 11.50 Fine black cotton with sashed pullovar top! embroidered motif in con* trasting colors. Corduroy LOUNGER Lined plaid corduroy coat for his at-home comfort, Satin sash, shawl collar. 14.95, > For a wonderful buy - Rich m a n’s *0». Ch—kU’t MryW “ fSiililSl THEi PQNTlAC t*RESS, WKlJNftSDAV, DECEMBER 6, 1961 y TWKyTy-oyE Discount Priced Gifts, Decorations, Cards! Vint*" >%»•••« i i CHRISTMAS' >|OHTS Extm ' Value On all sefs—if ana light goat out, others continue. ASSOCTKO V: • One Design Traditional Cards s~;”r*. 21 cards, 59 Individual Cards, Including Religious. .2/5*-S*“I0' Relative Christinas Cards..... . .....5**10 “Moise Tshorn be and Katanga Province are strongly anti-communist," Thurmond aaid. "Tshombe la about the only leader in the Congo that I know we can See-Thru SINGLE DESIGN •SwnmtrSiU 30-lite Set Replaceable Petal-Glo Miniature Lite* Kennedy's Dog Wearing No. 1 y Pollyannm 12.50 Value!NEW SINGLE DESIGN SUMS "eNovviv Cards you’ll be proud to send! An imaginative, sparkling holiday array ... in slim and conventional designs. Choose several boxes at our money-saving discount prices. WASHINGTON (UPI)-CharUe, President Kennedy's Welsh terrier, la wearing Washington dog tag No. 1, outranking his Russian triend Pushinka by far. 16-Inch Diameter Detroiter Appears Set lit Seaway Corp. Post WASHINGTON (J» — The recess eppotnUnentetJaaeph H. McCann of Detroit as administrator of the St. Lawrence Seaway Development Corp. is imminent, the White House advised Sens. Patrick McNamara freeform boma UoH-glo thodesJ 13-way lighting.! NOVELTY CANDLES Santas, angels, lamps, V snowmen, choirboys, II others—2Vi"to7Vi" IV A A Novel boudoir shades Tueedsy. McCann Is now deputy administrator of the corporation. Hewoald succeed Martin W. Oettershagen of or Window Decoration DECORATIONS DECORATIVE A 99 GIFT LAMPS'! Colorful Santa or Nativiry motifs on washable plastic. Universal $14.95 ELECTRIC 4>ARKER JOTTER /wiA uk Al /lOinrflMt BAIL POINT. PIN Gift’ Colors A gift to be enjoyed the year ’round! Instantly! Makes such good coffee ... mild, medium, or strong as you gclecti 8 cup. §Hi Universal Universal CRAYOLAS if Fine vellum paper... with matching envelopes.. ,*in. white or novel’'colors. Shorthand in weeks with Whirl design i "v Jpfc fij' hood; whisper-quiet git-flow motor. 64 brilliant colors I Boxes for teens... bases ■moh. Hi- I for adults... in impressive mm m I leatherette-like boxes. * I J DRAYTON 1 I PLAINS OPEN EVERY IVINING *TIL 9 P.M. TIL CHRISTMAS dry ironing. Widefabricdial. Other Sites at Discount Prices (Day and Evening Classes) PONTIAC BUSINESS INSTITUTE Miudl Mill SHOWING C1NTIR DISCOUNT PRICED DISCOUNT PRICED DISCOUN [priced Speedwritinj CHARM tv AT KR£SG£’S-pay only o, !l | fl its* IRE On all sola-- 1 N ana light ■ ITS goat out, ethers continue. | THfl PONTIAC P&B88, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6,1901 tinning JFK Tells Notre Dame He Referring to a clyae victory o< hit own to 1960, he said he had "IV Abort, w£at we Dust do k literally change the phyiical habit* of millions of Amafcaao—and that i* far toon Jpihunr than changing (their tastes, (Mr fashions or even their poBtics.” NEW NO, i SPORT [Referring to the baaeball-foot-. ball eMtfvenfy, ha said: , I . “The sad fact is that it looks .more and more as If our gnat I national sport .is not playing at ■ all-hut watching. We have be-ixome move and more not a na-s tion of athletes, but a nation of i spectators, the result o< this shift from participation to—if I may coin a word—spectation Is all too i visible hi the physical condition f of our population.'’ - Kennedy called the American nation,’’ he said. “We look instead of play, ride instead of walk. Our push-button existence deprives vs of the minimum of physical activity essential for healthy ltv- Surrounded by m shy * sports greats, the President celled politics an “astonishing profession,” noting that he had risen from the obecurtty of the junior varsity at NEW CENTER ELECTRONICS It. Governor Blasts Lawmakers Who Don't Back Own Measures He shared the head table with eight former players and* one of two former coaches who were in- LANS1NG (UPl) - Lt. Gov; T. John Lesinskl bluntly charged Tuesday that some legislators introduced "bills for local consumption which they hope sincerely will never see the light of day,” HEADQUARTERS for Lesinskl, speaking before a constitutional committee subcommittee, added that the bills had every rightOo he heard on behalf of these people who proposed them "even if they are not in the best Judgment VARIETY STORES of the legislator.” Wet he rapped legislators who New Commander at Naval Reserve Training Center The interim commander of the Pontiac Naval Reserve Training Cento’. Cmdr. W. 0. McDowell, is a veteran combat pilot of World War II and the Korean conflict. Cmdr. McDowell, who started his Navy career la 1M1 shortly after the Japanese attack aa Pearl Harbor, will have charge the bad apportionment presently in effect, in his opinion, the entire population was not represented in the legislature. “Progress has been frustrated by this improper apportionment,’’ the lieutenant governor said. "In fact so much legislation dies in the Senate because of this the Senate has become' known as the gas chamber.” Lesinskl, who serves as presiding officer, of the Senate, said that his relationship with the Senate has been gooff in his year in office. He served as a torpedo pilot in the Pacific area during World War II and was an attack pilot on the USS Princeton in Korea. His corpbat awards include the Navy Cross which he won for sinking a Japanese Cruiser in World War n. Cmdr. McDowell sill serve here Swainson Says 'People' Are Best! MARK Series 212-G-R7-M \j J60 square-inch picture GLARE-PROOF PICTURE TUBE COLOR TV CONSOLE • Glare-Proof Picture Tubt e High Fidelity Color Tuba • Color-Quick Tuning • Powerful "New Vista" Tuner YOUR CHOICE • Four out-standing stylos, comp lata with cloth on parchmont shades. ALL with 3-Way Lighting State 'Salesmen while retaining his post as head EAST LANSING II* — “People are our greatest asset in promoting Michigan,” says Gov. Swain-son. “Michigan week is a time when all our people combine to sell our state,” Swainson told a Michigan Wfittk committee meeting Tuesday. ■ The third graders who portlet-pated through the schools In the Training Center. EASY TERMS Wire Residence to Guard < a Couple of Top Dogs , WASHINGTON (UWV - Th« .White House has something new! added to its super-security pro-1 Heaton: chicken wire. Coromistono in two ’smart dot Ians. Ivory or white with cecoa, persimmon or tie-quoit* trim. C and D: Lovely, traditional opal plots . with til Icoto floral decorations. Handsome hrods bases. Hara’s a real gift item you wlIT ho proud to ilw, and why not buy o. pair for yourself? The wire is being strung along ago bow are college freshmen, the bottom of the spiked iron fence Swainson said. suHO^ing the i^ ig^ to «Many of them aro away fron krop the Kennedy fomfly’s dogs1 other stateg, and the *.***!_ - taB“e’ aro in a position to talk up Mich and stray dogs outside.___________ because they have taken ai Precision Watch Repair r State departments are' doing a good job in selling Michigan, the governor said. CENTERPIECES TheSCARBOROUGH MARK SERIIS 212-G-90-M 2M square-inch picture COLOR TV HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER Better-than-ever Color TV a High Fidelity Color Tub# A Small Deposit Will Held NEISNER S Watch lapair 41 N. Saginaw PI I-I59S ca Mann, M.n.ier Terry Named Aide to Auditor General Artistic, realistic floral ctntorpiac*.- Dtclgndd by an outatanding Herd artist. Beautiful cereals vo.ee filled with ever, lotting pie.tic llewere that need o Midi In water I LANSING (UPI) - Richard M. Terry, Ferndale, was named administrative assistant to file auditor general Tuesday by Auditor General Billie S. Farnum. Terry, 24, was s campaign assistant to Gov. John B. Swainson last year. He formerly t a u g h t # Glare-Proof Picture Tube Stereo AM-FM Radio Total Sound Staroo “VIctrola"* Phonograph • 6-Speaker Stereo System EASY TERMS school in Warren and’is a graduate of Western Michigan University. He was named to succeed Lendy Reave*. Flint, who joined the Staje Highway Department. ] Author Moseley Dies BOURNEMOUTH England (AP) —Sydney Alexander Moseley, 73, who wrote more than 90 books and broadcast a weekly .radio | news commentary in the Wilted States during World War n. died llTuesday in a nursing home. Genuine General Electric Radio and Clock combination. White, blue. Wonderful to have or give os • gift! RECORD CABINET GLARE-PROOF PICTURE TUBE DANISH MODERN COLOR TV a Glare-Proof Picture Tuba •High Fidelity Color Tuba Boeutifollj o 3-Speaker Panoramic Sound Color-Quick Tuning '•Powerful "New Vistaf* Tuner • One-set Fine Tuning • Super-Power Chaselt e Stay-set Volume Control EASY TERMS Limed Ode, Mahogany, Walntit. r Beautifully constructed for years of service. Sliding doors with brass lenobs. Legs have 1>rdss Ter- Loons $25 to $500 ASSOCIATES LQANCOMPANY PONTIAC: US-1? 4 St, NEW CENTER ELECTRONICS, Ini rules.1 Keeps your records noat and clqan. Pocked 42 NORTH SAGINAW STREET OPEN DAILY *9:30 to *00 IVIATJHING YOU AW 8 GU/WANTHO \ >7;\ Tj [SH OifflHA-rV f@» in j \ iMt 1R ■ n i Xmm m ISHI j IBBH i If- W it ] ni 1 if;' (1 % WINFIELD ■ ZtorlldsTV p THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1961 TWEXTY^THBIPB REMCO ELDON GOLD CUP SPECIAL STEEL STOVE-SINK REFRIGERATOR HASBRO THtNK-A-THON ELECTRONIC QUESTION and ANSWERS THINKS LIKE MAN REMCO FIGHTING LADY Bottony Operated 13.00 Volue Multiple Old Fashion KITCHEN TABLE, CHAIRS, GIANT WHEEL GAMES • OLD MAID • HOT ROD • BINGO • MISSISSIPPI • MELVIN MOON MAN • TUMBLE DRUM DICE GAME g Should Soil n jm pa POTS, PANS, STOVE, SINK, REAL WATER YOUR CHOICE-WHILE THEY LAST Pink—Turquoise—Ivory 26.00 4.00 Value Trade Fair’s Discount Price Value ATOMIC FLINTSTONE CHARACTER BATTERY OPERATED-ACTION TOYS TORBOAT—KNITTING KITTEN RALLOON BLOWING BEAR PICNIC BEAR—POLICE PATROL 5.00 $189 VALUES I PROSPECTING GOLD RUSH GAME ^er.$144 CASPER -MATTY TALKING DOLLS DOLLS FIGHTER PLANE 3.00 Value 3.00 Value NetFsaetly As Pictured BIG 7-FOOT POOL TABLE 69 COFFll MAKER Better tasting coffee, greater coffee economy — yew ttu'l bui th«t «i tny price! The Fiavo mitic jtiv^s you better coffee, thrpugh'W combination of exclusive and patented feituee* that control timing and temperature exactly, automatically. Never overheats or "burnt" coffee, never "underperks” either. The Flavo-matic method yields more full flavored cups per pound, too, • Live Action Bumper g* • Regulation Balls • 2 Cues • Folding Legs • Not Exactly as Pictured IVANS BICYCLES MADE IN MICHIGAN Boys' or Girls' 24" or 26" Lifetime Frame Guarantee... Big 36-1 n. WALKING Hot 9”. ■, Not 10”... BUT LUGE Hm CONTROL - COVER and ^ PAN Complete^ji-y-^ tl995 Value Early Shipmont • Beautifully Droitod • Assorted Color Hair Stylos Yew Always Savo At Trado Fair's LOW DISCOUNT---- PRICESI while hair dries qpickfy and thoroughly. LADY SUNBEAM HAIR DRYER NO. HD-.J—RMw* Blue, Petal Pink, Turquoise. AT NO EXTRA CHARGE WITH EACH WEBCOR STEREO-HI-FI COAAPLETE WITH REMOVABLE CONTROL It’s Aluminum KING SIZE TV TABLES THATS WHY SUNBEAM PUTS 3 REAL BLADES IN THIS GREAT NEW SKATER • TO GIVE YOU A CLDSER, FASTER, MORE COMFORTABLE SHAVE THAN ANY ELECTRIC SHAVER EVER GOULD BEFORE. ± raWBKlWlOTJIM"'.' a ServingTray Jl Brass Handus, A>o Sum _ With casters Sot of four including rack... attrac-tlvo designs ... ideal to USO ... exceptional as a gift. Buy Now for Christmas'. with brass Handles King Size KING SIZE FOLDING Serving Cart discount "PRICE Grand Opening Special rom Santa OPEN DAILY 9:30 TO 9 SUNDAY 10 A.M. TO 5 P.M. unbeam PARK FREE IN TRADE FAIR’S BIG LOT! IN FRONT OF STORE DISCOUNT CENTER DISTRIBUTORS, INC. 1108 West Huron Street 1 1 E 1 I 11 1 1 E 1 a % BIG VALUE 1 Not 6—Not 7—Not 8 |i BUT A BIS flu f 9 TRANSISTOR 9 i#j m PORTABLE f RADIO P | c7&u«i.«f77 |i • Earphone* ip ■ # 1 I o Leather 1 1 Cato ■ WEBCOR 1 fALUE DAYS S tereo-Hi Fidelity f ’ortable Players i i i $cnoo uni uc ! THE PONTIAC "PRESS, WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 6. 1061 Santa and the Flying Shoes illBi DOWNTOWN letters with his finger on the window-sUl. Suddenly Jus dropped the telescope and went spinning down the 300 steps ot the spiral stair case "Gentlemen!” he cried to his ministers. "We have been invaded by an Ipswitch! ” (Next: Trailing the Ipswitch.) I hw squabbling about what had hap- ’ pened and what was to be done about it. King Ferdinand was taking a walk. . * * *- All alone in the pohlte «P•* **> keys into three keyholes aligned *•“» In the Amerieaa area above those of the British. His jaws do fit their, hole*: theirs nnrphpnea kept tip a constant chat- Heated sheds die sire A lane tW with master control, elsewhere hang rolled hack on railroad time ^3S »vS tSrSaSS Uoned off from thta porton. GRANULATED PIONEER BEET Mussdman’s SAVE IT Apple- sauce *§JAM5I3! Green Beans Tomatoes | Wax Beans Maxwell House Hr YQUR CHOICE tPPUSAUCI SWAN LIQUID SAVE 10 Morton’s Dinners BEAN SPROUTS SAVE 12 SAVE 101 Kroger Tea Bags CtiOROX BLEACH H-ui- 41e LAUNDRY STARCH BOONE HALL-HALVES Freestone Peaches SAVE 10* LIQUID VEL NO COUPON NEEDED — BUY ALL YOU NEED! KROGER GRADE "A" MEDIUM fc: Fresh Eggs COOKIE ASSORTMENT LUX LIQUID LUX FUKES Rapslav dto hen LUX SOAP . IVt CANS SMOOTH STRRADIN6 GOLDEN Homestead Margarine . . HUM LMHTLT SALTIfc Rod Butter COUNTRY CLUB BRAND SWUTMHK OR BUTTUMILK 12 CANS *2.59-SAVE 38c I Borden's Colby Cheese SAVE 10* . ^_ SAVE St—CHOICE Of** FLAVORS .hip n Dip Bordeh's Elsie Ice Cream | ftl SAVE 11*—CHOICE Of 4 flAVORS ** ww Lady Borden's Ice Cream Glace Fruit Mix . FRESH FRANKLIN Toasted Peanuts SANITARY NAfKINS Modess Regular Coffee TASTY KROGER Pineapple< Grapefruit Juice 'U.O (J M ?! 35 III So Mt - Jar1 REFRESHING KROGER Orange SAVE 8* Juice "SB KROGER FRESH SLICED SAVE 17* T Kaism Bread 2^37 I Pure Sugar CJ LB |BAG me 1 Ac WITH mm COUPON WW ••1- ±~ £) j fi ,v I WA \\1 | r r(0i)6Z • “*55? TWKNTYdfflht ' THE PONTIAC PRESS,. WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 6. 19*1 Save how! The best Christmas gifts are FREE with fop Value Stamps! but never cuts quality! FRESH PICNIC STYLE Pork Roast ■ Pork Steaks I ARMOUR STAR BRAND Canned Picnic FRESH PORK HOCKS Chunk Bologna \)S< GOVT GRADED CHOICE Chuck Roast USDA CHOICE Choico Contor Cuts Chuck Steak TOP VALUE STAMPS WRU THU COUPON AND PURCHASE OP SKINLESS HYGI Wieners . . < .2 - S English Cut Roast Red Ripe Slicing Tomatoes 0 \ ' p • ' ' * FRESH Brussel Sprouts jjk 14-Oz. Tubes 50 Extra TOP VALUE STAMPS 10-Lb. Bag Potatoes® CnimViH at ln|M la PaaUacT Dr.yU. IWu, l*tea Lata, Ctorkitaa Snakist Oranges . iu mi money swirr hammc Florida Taagalss . Paper Shell Paeans Mixed Nnls........ Walaef leata ".ess Paean Manta .... 25 EXTRA & STAMPS 25 EXTRA stamps ANY PACKASI OP CHRISTMAS CARDS fi FORK SAUSAGE BUI-WHITE FLAKES IVORY LIQUID sinricT«79c MM MILLION mf STAMPS rSWEEPSTAKES $1.89 OXYDOL iSif&79e BLUE CHEER 250 EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS — with coupons below ^ VALUABLE COUPON VALUABLE COUPON THE TOKTIAC MUSSS. WEDNESDAY, 6ECSHBER 6, mi ; iV'T! Canned Tuna Is Pm-Sifted Flqw^Some Difficulty » A/J/f Crion/1 ' . f1 ,ANn ODELL Wc have rfiicd away from the old tried and true recipes call for. tk>n* or complainti. The; VUUK j ri IClHl rmMLrmmrnm.mt*. ^ «. do not know want mm, <*** do natwaite fc—.*”00”* . ■' ■ Tn bHI a* not In aMI flnair flat »I1 rniiiw■ Bn. It K». hn»n . _. . OMHlDait CQMtllfiy K Nuttier Winter Is in Store for U.S. your favorite hearty soup orjm; der. A tuna sandwich or salad can, make a nutritious snack. And'tor lunch or supper, try this new and easy Jwi. recipe, • ^ So he prepared by seeping Canned tuna in your cupboard at EASY COOKIES — Easy to fix cookies that are perfect treats for mid-morning coffee parties, afternoon tea tables or anytime snacks are made from' macaroon mix. The cookies In the middle Two Macaroons Pale Green Applesauce Frnm Ann Miv Dresses Up A Dessert ■ Macaroon Toffee Squares and Apricot MacaroocuLare both made from a macroon mix but each has a distinct flavor treat all of its own. For Instance,. Macaroon Toffee Squares, cut small or large, are chewy good with a rich chocolate topping aprinkted generously with chopped walnuts. The Apricot Macaroons dre rotmd, plump little cookies with bits of tangy apricot poking out from inside. „ 1. WMNrt Intentionally Be UndeneM 2. Customer’s 100% Satisfaction 3. Locally Owned and Operated WHY PAY MORE? nc. Christmas, They ’re also wonderful to eat. . ..’..IT. --- The crisp shells are s delicately chewy meringue and mads deliciously so with chopped nuts and broken, Jbuttery crackers mixed through the egg white froth. After Both would be wonderful to have In the cooky Jar for nibble hungry family and guests at holiday time . a time when quick desaerta are a blessing for busy baking Fresh Dressed Pan-Ready Tasty Lean Pork Shoulder A Wonderful Sunday Treat Boneless Rolled Rump they’re topped with big spoonfuls of green tinted, peppermint fla* ored apple sauce. And there’s your dessert . . . deliciously pretty, a Mend of chewiness and melting-ness, of crispness and creaminess, the lively tang of apples and peppermint a contrast to the Soft delight of the ice cream. With Christmas dinner In mind, you unts iMW ou Mena the day -be lore. And prepare the canned apple eases. Then at serving time FRYERS ROAST , A to A lb. average WifW ShdMk Removed, 3 egg whites % cup sugar H teaspoon vanilla extract. % teaspoon baking powder 14 aealiopad buttery salty crack-rs1 % cup chopped walnuts Cottage Style PORK CHOPS Lean and Meaty Mscarssa Toffee Square? Heat oven to 375’ (quick mod.) Bake coconut macaroon mix in paper-lined 9" square pan 15 minutes. Top with Vk cup semi-sweet chocolate pieces. Return to oven for 2 more min. Remove from ovepi and spread. Sprinkle with \k cup chopped nuts. Makes 36 squares. P S. If you’re planning a tea party, serve flavored sugars with the tek. Combine two tablespoons chapped fresh mint, or grated orange or lemon rind,, with one pound of superfine sugar in a tightly closed jar and store for a _ 2 teaspoons cornstarch 2 cups'Canned apple sauce 2-3 cm sugar 15.30 drops peppermint extract 6 drops green food coloring 1% pints vanilla ic^ bream Pineapple Juice Helps Do you have problems with the browning of your diced or sliced fresh fruits? Canned pineapple juice will come to your aid, Simply dip them into canned pineapple juloa, or syrup drained from canned pineapple, or even toss them with the pineapple Itself. You’ll find the pieces will stay bright In color. Beef, Chicken, Turkey, Muot Loot Moisten cornstarch with a little cold water; combine with apple sauce, 2-3 cup sugar, peppermint extract and green food coloring hi saucepan. Cook slowly, stirring constantly until sauce is thickened. Chill, Just before serving, place ice cream in center of meringue Grain Fed Tender Steer Beef ROUND-SIRLOIN-OUB Pontiac's Finest Lean , 4% A Ground Beef aw 99 Pap Up Cream Sauce Give zip and appeal to holiday leftovers! Add instant mincad onion and a daah of curry powder to your favorite "a la King” recipe. These tangy seasonings are ao easy to urn and make such a dif- MEATS ot Lowest Prices SHINNER’S Large Size Head LETTUCE Tender Try a Tender Hoffman’s Steak FREEZER SPECIALS Full Beef Loin Just Think 11 T-Bones, Sirloins and Porterhouse Pore--'ib Quarter Ask to See Poatiac’s Largest Meat Cooler 'ib Quarter WHOLE or HALF Medium Grade ‘A1 No. 1 HOFFMAN’S PONTIAC FREEZER FOODS, Inc DCTSII DIUKIAM nf nsvi AMD e&riMNf, ' RETAIL DIVISION of OAKLAND PACKING QUALITY MEATS AND PRODUCE AT WHOLESALE PRICES 526 N. PERRY ST. (Next to Wrigley’s) Gordons »~ 11 Fork SAUSAGE ChMeHiDgs ICMb. pail i o si SI 89 V lbs. 1 1 CITRUS SALE Pink of Marsh Seedless m GRAPEFRUIT 6 29 WO Size Florida Juke ORANGES 120 Size Sweet and Juicy TANGERINES 35V 3doz *1 J THURSDAY ONLY SUPER SPECIAL! ! SIRLOIN 59c* s nun... I T-BONE ! STEAKS... 69* jjtJRTEB-! ROUSE — 79e* CUT-UP FRYERS Sugar Cared SMOKED PICNICS . ^ Wil..n'. Slic.d CORN KING BACON BUCK HAWK BACON Peters, Grado I * SKINLESS WIENERS ILS.CHOICE—FULL CUT Campbell's Tomato Soup • Save 10c On 4 Cans! Harmony Cat Croon Boons Serve 10c Or 4 Can*! Harmony Cut Wax Boons U. S. No. I All-Purpose, Michigan Delicious Dossert! Wilson Or Foremost Serve Jest like Tes Would lee Creosif '/2-Gal. Ctns. i Sava 4fc! Swiss, American, or Pimento • \ Kraft DolaxO Choose Sikes Save 4c! Greet With Your Cheese Slices! Crocker Barrel Saltines , 7. Save 10c! Regular Or Drip Grind Hills Bros. Coffee Mixer Match! Light Brown, Derk Brown or Food Fair Mild Liquid DISH DETERGENT 2 2-Ox. Bottle Special Lebell Fluffo Shortening CHOCOLATE CHIPS WMeSetie GRANULATED SUGAR Hoovy Duty Hand Soap — Mad UVA SOAP BARS Food Fair Fata Vegetable SHORTENING . Fool Really Cleael Regular SAVE lOe — Food Fair Our Fino.t Quality ^ m ^ Salad & Cooking Oil......... 49* SAVI tie—Cut Green Speers jm '' Food Fair Asparagus . 4 89 Food Fair California Yallow CLING PEACHES oJaS, Spealel Labolt Haeia leeedry She DASH DETERGENT . CHEER DETERGENT SO DCTRASriH. STAMPS WH SI er HemftPShow S—ptGeer, Wleo. CigaraHd* end Inked Geedi Genie Facial Tissues SAYijIs'-*> Whiteiu, Sanitiioil Thrifty Way... Shop at FOOD FAIR, Your Budget's Best Friend Really Fresh -- Ground Bee* Pillsbury FLOUR 5 5k39‘ With Coupon Below Large Egg5 FOOD FAIR COUPON FOOD FAIR COUPON DIXIE HWY. In Drayton Plain CORNER WILLIAMS AND WALTON LAKE ROAC MIRACLE MILE Shopping Center irAAn [AID TELEGRAPH AT SQUARE LAKE ROAD V I Turkey, Seafood of Ground Beef Can Be Good Start for a Casserole tie to December, if you ■» aware! «*» **h of current food supplies, price seals **-trends, and oonsamen' shopping Ms Is w habits irstsid holiday time. j calk Doll IV Mattering Agent, Mrs. hams, pie Josephine Lawyer, advises that! sad park . popular moats-at holiday time in'] eats nosh chide turkey, poultry, ham and I{ you,, ft beef rib roasts. Since these cul«t|anib a fr -wre-tb# most popular, shoppers ^ ^ may find some favorite pork and b beef cuts priced lower than usual. ^ , Keep watching. Hog slaughter Is expected to these food* continue large in December and prices will drop slightly from the ru*' October-Ngvember levels. A cheek of food dom lh- Se^rerte weeks show, several pork cats ^ymn Sm Evaporated Milk PINEAPPLE JUICE IGA (Ups and Rapped APRICOTS..... IGA Rips sad Hopped PEACHES........ IGA Rod Hot CHILI BEANS... IGA FIG BARS....... FROZEN PERCH Carters DOG FOOD... Kistt VELVEETA .... If it*s a dark afternoon or ajp^^ And remember that lire is j restless evening and you re expect-L* necessarily related to flavor, ed to offer some diversion, call and a smaO orange may for the apron* and declare a c*ndyjbe u and juicy u a making session. • ■------! large one. A generalrule to follow Something wonderful happens iwbrn selecting citrus'Is: choose when you combine brown sugar, fruita h^yy i„ their site. Soar cream and Alberta and some- Banana import* are improving thine wonderful happens to a lam- retailers say prices may be a ily too, when they’re working H ut tie lower this weekend, gather, it you call making candy ^ „ - j Weather hi Florida and C*»- _ , . __. . . ; (nmia ha* *lowed development Some magic alchemy transform* it(N|nMm|| vegetable* mid Mil* this Simple JMMJM » ta turn mnuesee. price*. TM. creamy extured candy that liter- to ^ ^ r*mt. TableRite Grad# A Hygrade Uberany'stud- tawny squares __ _ ded with filberts for a real nut-flavor that keeps all hands reaching, reaching, reaching for more, Fresh aad flavorful. filbert* Retailer* report that peppers are of excellent quality and reasonable in price. Head lettuce is expected to be slightly lower in price this Did you know that tender supplies of greenhouse Bibb and leaf lettuce are being harvested in Michigan at this season? The greenhouse vegetable industry, located near Grand Rapids, wttl .supply these delicate salad greens through April. J It’s ’’nuts for baking time.” Aside from the fun and tinte in shelling .. . it trill take 2 pounds of almonds, pecans and Brazil nuts in the shell to "crack-up” and give around one pound of nut-meats. Most tree nuts are to- to 39 cent* per pound in the ahell. dally la Oregon, the large, tender filbert has the barest reaemb-laaee to the haselnut of pester-year. Creamy Filbert Penuebs 14 cup coarsely chopped Oregon filberts % cup Oregon filbert halves TfehlaRIt* ROUND STEAK.... sIrloin or t-bone GROUND BEEF........ Hygrade Center Cut Smolnd PORK CHOPS CUBED STEAK Aspic Hasn't Lost Any of its Appeal Prepare this tomato aspic the day before using, if you like; oveiv night refrigerator storage won’t hurt it. , Fruit Cocktail.. . Del Monte Slicod Poachns — Del Monte Slicod Poor*_____ Del Mont* Croam Sty io Com. Whol o Kornol Corn Cut Groon Boons Del Mont* Stowod Tomatoes Dot Mont* Swoot Paas . . Dol Monte Crushed Pineapple *« teaspoon celery sail _ , . . *» oi a *maii nay icai Remove from heat, add butter, , pnvpi01)0 unflavorrH eclat in >> I., ttnd.! TitaiwSsiS* Without stirring, until lukewarm lffl ^ Mt, onton Mt, (about 110 degrees!. Add salt,jgnj ^ jcuf m simmering: keep! vanilla and coarsely chopped ftt- ^,^ almmpr|ng for about 5 min-berta: beat until mixture will hold utc|; nmow huy, lpaf Meanwhfle its. shape and loaea its (kiss. Oft jp^nkle gelatin over remaining to-not serspe sidea of pan during mat0 Julce t0 Add hot to- beattug. mato Juice; stir until gelatin is Pov eut onto waxed paper pan. diuoIved Tun, tato four tt-cup Cool; cut tato squares; press W- cm ^ m; unmold. best half tato the top of each y.i^ 4 servings. Viatic DILL CHIPS.,, CREAM CHEESE ORANGE JUICE INSTANTCOFFEE APPLES CARROTS Florida GRAPEFRUIT or M1CB THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1961 PARK | DOWNTOWN MERCHANTS FREE PARKING ffl AU THE CITY LITIS NON UNTIL CHRISTMAS - - - Yot! Wo hare covered oil the meters in the Downtown City Parking Lots to provide you, our valued customers, with FREE PARKING. We hove asked our employees to vacate these lots too ... we set aside a special lot for thair use. This provides fust scads and scads of FREE PARKING FOR YOU, CLOSE TO THE STORES, OFFICES AND BANKS IN WHICH YOU WANT TO DO BUSINESS. . - Come Downtown to Christmas Shop. So lections are varied and plentiful! Stores are open EXTRA HOURS! In fact the whole Downtown Area is ready to help you make this a tremendous, thrilling Christmas, Shop Downtown for AIL Your Christmas Needs! DIEM'S I Pontiac', Popular Ik, Stora CONN'S CLOTHES 71 N. Soginaw St. NEISNERS 42 North Soginaw Street JOE'S ARMY NAVY SURPLUS 19 North Saginaw Street 87 North Soginaw.St. HOMADE FOOD SHOF PONTIAC STATIONERS SIMMS BROS. 98 North Saginaw Street SEARS ROEBUCK & CO. PONTIAC ENGGASS JEWELERS 25 North Saginaw Street - 144 N. Saginaw . CLOONAN'S 4 North Saginaw. Street CONSUMERS CENTER SHAW'S Michifm'i UrfNt /ovalori ~ 7 24 North Saginaw Street *72 North Saginaw ^Street CALBI MUSIC CO. —f-f— 178 North Saginaw Street WESTERN AUTO 154 North Saginaw Street ——ARTHUR'S L '—M - FEDERAL DEPARTMENT STORE North Saginaw at Warren WARD'S hone ruumwu COMPANY -48 South Saginaw Street THRIFTY DRUGS 1^8 North Saginaw Street ~ , • 119 North Saginaw Street BAZLEY MARKET 78 North Soginaw Straet STATE FINANCE CO. 508 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 'Bud' NICHOUt INSURANCE 09 Mt. Cl.m.m Straet . 162 North Saginaw Street HUB CLOTHIERS 18 North Saginaw Street OSMUN'S 51 North Saginaw Street GEORGE'S 48 North Saginaw Street WAITE'S Saginpw at Huron BURTON'S Ladies' Apparel „ 75 North Saginaw Street 74 Nortiv Saginaw Street— TODO'SSBOES JACOBSIN'S FLOWERS BARNETTS MALING SHOES 20 West Huron Street R&H SHOES 101 North Saginaw Street STAFF'S JUVENILE BOOTERIE , ? ISO N. Saginaw St. [ J.C. PENNEY COMPANY 50 North Saginaw Street OAHTOL SAVINGS 73 North Soginaw Street SINGER SEWING CENTER 28 East Lawrence Street mriri ucawi'c 17 South Soginaw Street 75 West Huron Street 102 North Saginaw Street DICKINSON $ MIN'S SHOP ■ ui if m mi" Ppinfinii fltfiVn Supply B. F. GOODRICH Sagiri&w at Lawrence w r w inv. 108 North Saginaw Street MtnBiQl rrmrmg v viiiwb wuppiy 17 West Lawrence ^Street 111 North Perry Street DONUT CENTBR LEWIS FURNITURE CO. Orwant Hearing Aid Center Mlfchtll't Typewriter & ALX... Eaiiih . V *T" Saginaw at Lawrence Street 62 $. Soginaw St. *7 11 West Lawrence Street 123 North Street SCARLETT'S BICYCLE & McCANDLESS CARPETS INC. R—,—... n li Cl S. S. KRESGE'S Downtown Powtioc-' —1 -■, ... — R, H ASKILL STUDIO 20 East Lawrence Street ii N. Ptrry .M. WAYNE GARERTS GALLAGHERS MUSIC CO. v- 4 Mt. Clemens Street - — CONNOLLY'S JEWELERS y OLIVER MOTOR SALES 121 N. Saginaw St. V 16 West Hurorv Street. 16 W. Huron St.. * A 210 Orchard Lake Ave. Wh ;S DECEMBER 6.1961 It's Quick Shoofly Pie From lemon Adds Tang to Candied Sweets Bake on km shelf of a hot (480 degrees) oven 15 minutes; reduce beat to moderate (390 degree*) and bake 30 to 35 minutes longer. (Apples may be on the cri** side.) While hot sprinkle with confectioners' sugar; serve warm. with a sugary oust, lids same Pennsylvania Dutch to- make" triangles or lingers. • Spread with filUng iiade by Wending 1 cup well drained crushed pineapple and 1 3-ounce package of cream cheese. Top with tyts of s crisp bacon. COFFEE Ground Fresn Many Times Daily No Backs Attached — 451.. Breasts «ht 40V Wings 25^ PACKAGE S Drumsticks Thighs VARIETY »»um, Hygrade UHL r "Um* "Wide or Imperial 2#^ tkas 5 liver Sausage fjl Skinless Franks iff Glendale Ring fi imported 45 S. Telegraph S Heres Om« Oeily «M 9 p.m. ’ 1495 N. Main—Rochester Opss Men., Tee*., Set. 'til 0 — Other Deys 'tH 9 ★ fUMTT 05 PRM FAMING •AV^Sm^N^oureii Mills Bra*. corns Sava 6c 2 59* a 59* Limit One For Customer ixpirbs sat* ace. a Regular or Drip , - ilna Coffee £-97*4 Food Club—With Coupon For Biscuifs, Pie Crusts Mix WRIGLEYS 50 EXTRA GOLD BELL STAMPS With Coupon and Purchase of ’5.00 OR MORE Except Beer, Wine, Tobacco Expires Saturday, Dec. 9 WRIGLEY 10$ SALE • Jiffy Coke Mixes *£&' • Jiffy Coko Frostings • Elno Rod Kidney Boons ^EtiW Spoglwttr ta2sr _• Creamettes Solodottos Beans 7c off Labe) Ivory Mild Liquid 3f 4c Special Label Dash Detergent 2j£ Mild for dishes Draft Detergent %Z Soapir tr «c special Label Ivory Mild/ Soap 4 C . 4c Special Label , . . . Ivory Large Soap , 3 Prices effective ffcre leterdey, Dec 9. We reserve the right t* limit gfeatMes. Hawaiian Punch Green Beans Mushrooms Zion Fig Bars Apple Sauce Pineapple Chunk Tuna 3 100 46-ox. Cans Red or Yellow 6 | OO Green Giant Kitchen Sliced 4 100 Cavern Gmi Pieces Cr Stems 2-lb. 3 100 35-ox Jan 4 100 No. 2 Cant 4 99 Flat Cans Musselmans Zesty Sea Island Chunks in Syrup Light Meat Tuna Tima 56' 35 '8T 79 43} A? 7c off Label Mr. Clean Cleaner World Famous Lava Hand Soap 5c off Label Criscb Shortening Mild, Gentle i ■ Ivory Flaker Red Label Salado Black Tea Nabisco % Ritz Crackers Food Oub Cut Green 28-os. /rtc Slso 0 Z Asparagus Spears _4.SP 2 -27' Dutch Girl Apple Butter j . \f , Si 84' Elm Dependable Peanut Butter ’5r 49- toon ax* . . She JO Sniffer's Homogenized Chocolate Syrup 'Sr 49“ VS-lb. Q Tc Pkp. (JO Vlasic. Whole Sweet Pickles ' Z 49s %3y Sunshine Fresh ( - Graham Crackers £39‘ BELL gift *STv\rvi■ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WaDKESPAY, DECEMBER «, 1861 Serve a Baked Omelet . With Spicy Tomato Sauce lor a Quick Meal % cup alMd Pitted rip* olive* 2 tablespoons chopped parsley 1 teaspoon salt Cut the slkes ol cheese into quarter* and arrange on the t>0t-tom at a 9-inch pie or pyrex {date that has been nibbed with butter er uaaraarina. Beat the eggs slightly and cortbine with, the remain- Lean, Tender, Specially Selected Tenderloin Bid Portion Pork Loin Roost With Plunty of Cantor Chops Full Rib Half Loin With Plenty of Cantor Chops ROASTS 7-Rib Portion Full Tenderloin Half Lojn 55 Florida Ruby Rod—80 Size Seedless Grapefruit Frozen Beef, Chicken, Turkey Banquet Dinners M Plain or Pimento Florida Oranges Kraft's Vahreeta Allsweet Margarine 4 Duet Luxury Margarine Sealtest Dip-N-Dressing Daily Maid Orange Juke Green Beans Broccoli Spears Sealtest—SAVE 20c M Salad .or Grapefruit Sections Campbell's Bnr-B-Q Beans 5 fit I* 7;. Campbell's Pork & Beans —452*1J GOLD BELL STAMPS With Coupon ond Purchat* if Any String »f CHRISTMAS UBHTS|t axeiaas iat , oic. t ■ GOLD BELL STAMPS FROZEN VALUES DAIRY SAVINGS OET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT ^TAIVIF>E; ^1 Soup ’n m hijn#lf a^ i Vegetable Beef, Mushroom, Chicken Noodle :£* ~ AIM! k Campbell Soups 6 -* 1°° % tQiKC* 5 F Good Taste Saltines !i 19* Center Cut Rib Pork Chops Boneless, Rolled end Tied U - am * Lean, Tender, Practically Boneless Lean, Mealy Pork Roasts Pork Stooks Spore Ribs Medium,’ Thick or Thin Cut ' Solid Meat ^R ^ Easy to Carve ' ll|V| /53‘. 2-3-lb. ** wt. m jWBTY.SIX TMM PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER £ 1901 Cave Man ProVes to Be a Weak Sister war production. It now win fly over factories and firms which contribute significantly in an effort to increase the sale of U. S. goods in foreign markets. the* Senate and probably will be reported on ah the next meeting, on Feb. 14, he said. Heads Automobile Club Mervyn G. DETROIT m ------------ ^ Gaskin of Grosse Pointe Shores SPECIAL cSEkehs 21 CUT-UP READY TOW OR 3 LB. PKG. FRESH GROUND BEEF GROCERY DEPT LARGE NO 2Va CAN FREESTONE PEACHES 4 CANS RIB-CUBE SIRLOIN STEAKS MARKET BOY Set: OLD SYMBOL REVIVED — President Kennedy and Secretary of Commerce Luther Hodges pose at the White House Tuesday with the World War H ‘E* flag, revived lor e new ride. The flag once flew over plants making notable records in MSU Teaching Socialism, Charges Faculty Member EAST LANSING — A Mlchi-I "It is difficult, Hannah said, "tor gan State University professor has the university to protect itself said "conservatives are, being' when people in its employ set out muzzled” and “socialism is the predominant thedty being taught” at the university. John 1L Moore, associate pro-trMor of nataral science aad aa adviser to the MSU Conservative Club, espreseed his views In letter* to members of the Michigan Farm Barrau. John A. Hannah, MSU president, ■aid He has received several totters from Farm Bureau members on .the matter and that a list of Moore's charges were printed in a Van Buren Cbunty Farm Bureau news letter. to crucify the institution. SEES BENEFIT "Thera is no question that university benefits from a c servative club and people who pause the conservative point of view," Hannah said, “tod problems' arise when then are people who think they see a Communist behind every bush.” ★ * * Hannah aald the matter waa referred to the academic aen-ate, the ottlctal (acuity organisation, because Implications In the letters are agates! the faculty aa a result of excavations teto the ancient dwelling places of Bie Neanderthals, who lived some 40,000 yean ago. It la true that the Neanderthal Man had a receding forehead and e ridge over his eyes, and .walked with an ape-like Slouch. But beneath that hairy exterior beat perhapa a bent of pure gold. Indications are that the Neanderthals took good care of their sick and aged, and poaaibly get credit for performing the tint surgical operation. At least one anthropologist, Dr. Carteton S. Coon of the University of Pennsylvania, ha* marked them down aa having a higher material cuttnfo than some in existence today, * -... Furthermore, he averred that there are persons , living now "who in one way or Mother would not be out of place Neanderthal cave.” "These are not all humble people or failures in life," Dr. Coon eaid. “The Neanderthal stamp also turns up In exclusive dubs." • You may pay interest and principal in advance at your convenience. A TRUE OPEN END MORTGAGE We are proud to offer these truly open end mortgages. This is what they provide: • You may, pay up the mortgage at any time without advance notice and without penalty. , • Your mortgage can be increased at any later date to the original amount borrowed for additional improvements or for any other satisfactory reason. " | a ■ \...... ■ m • You may pay any additional amount at any time without notica or penalty. Choose the grown4a<^fichigan» Processed-in-Michigan, sold-in-Michigan Sugar... Pioneer and Big Chief alra aa fine and white and sweat a sugar as there la la the world I 1YOOWI RIGHT TO PBM MOWS MICHIGAN MADE PUKE SUGAR p and PONTIAC CO-OP ^ TOGAtf SB IT IN A, Banner brief, WE. HATE THE MAKE VERT BEST of B r BIRDS ^ EYE STRAWBERRIES 3 FOR BIRDS EYE MEAT PIES 5 FOR Terms on our conventional open end mortgage up to 25 years. • Monthly payments includes Interest, Principal, Taxes and Insurance. We have cash available today . . . for tjiese attractive open end mortgages. Come, in and talk with one of our friendly, courteous representatives. WE SPECIALIZE IN HOME LOANS anaii WE BUY LAND CONTRASTS •miuAm EDERAL SAVINGS l 761 W. HURON—PONTIAC Downtown • Rochester • Drayton Plains Walled Lake • Milford mmmm nil With Thi. Cmm 25 EXTRA M£T STAMP M hn>w •# 14k. FI*. •* Amirlna B ITALIAN SPAGHETTI 50 EXTRA "ST STAMPS' WHh PvkImm at 1 Ito. ar Mara at MaHaaaf FRESH GROUND BEEP unl*M at Am * ORANGES 29* Oxydol . . For Washing Walls aad Woodwork 34* Spk & Span'-<~--«- . . - Washday Mlroalo 1, ——- 59* Tide Detergent. ... 3. Liquid Detergent 89* Liquid Ivory . .. 95‘ Draft * . . . . , .. . . White or Colored Bathroom Tiswe ■_ *1°° ‘Northern Tissue . .4 35* Jumbo Towels . . . U’/j-O*,' THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1961 CHUCK HOAST ttff and Trim mid thi National Valui-Woy USOA mmmm CHOICE 59* Ground Chuck Paaiy Ovea Raady f to It Lb. Sixes _ ^.. ___ Grade "A" Turkeys.. «f 39* Skinless Franks Gov't Graded U.S. "Choice" Hygrade's Tatty ' - Rib Steak . . . . > > 85* Polish Sausage Short Shank-—Sugar Cured Ami SAUCE SAVE 34c jw*!00 Smoked Piadi^ty Your Choice...One.Out of Three! Tg Twt* OF THE FOLLOWING ITEMS BELOW WITH COUPON AND *2 PURCHASE OR MORE! Baal Path RINSO BLUE SAVE «•« 44c «* Bax Natco Creamy Margarine .:.... .2^25* . Michigan Made Pioneer ^ ESP Sugar ... . . . 5 * 39 Rabin Hood# Pillsbury Flour or ■■ BP Gold Medal .5-39 pn mtz pus 39* Tap Treat ICE MILK 89* SAVE Vi-Gel. Ctns. Whitt or Colorod SAVE 16c Ralls QaJen Xak Vepta Safe! Corn, Tomatoes, Beans Orchard Brash Jolly ’TSSs- . Top Taste Cracked Wheat Bread ... 2££ SAVI 10c—Sharp Pinconning Cheese . **• 69* Mix'tm or Match'am £ ■tr 4^00 Oetdat M Whole Wax or Green DipN' Dressing . , unik-anb|>rm Chicken Chow Mein . 39* SAVI 9c—Birds lye Get or Breech Style Preeee Green Beans . . • 4 S£ 89* Mason's Root Boor 12? 89* Chocolate, Spict, Yellow or White Jiffy Cake Mixes jss& Chocolate, Whit* or Caramel Jiffy Frosting Mix . SAVE 20c—Chocolate, Vanilla or Fudge Royal Sealtest Ice Cream mu wM Wh ™ 50 EXTRA "ST SfAMFSM-With $S Farcbasa er Mere OM ImMIpb *••!. WhM m OmmIM Mmi Mil* cm" at Nattaaal M Mmh. Caapaa bphM Sat., Bat. ». IMt Baa Caapaa Par Faa ‘ ' 1_____ CtO. U.S. No. 1-All Purpose-Washed - Michigan POTATOESf2 Watkin«ten'« Flnfat Quality D'Anjou Pears 1- 49* . - S9* California, Packad Fraih Daily _ Brussel Sprouts . . . . W 39* 12-Qt. California Green Onions . . .2“ UTILITY BASKET U.S. Na. 1. IV," aad Up, MMMpaa JONATHAN tflO APPLES ^ 1 Libarty Brand—Far Finar Fruit Cakpp Meed Fruits 4t Peels Breen Peppers Personal Sica Bar Mild aad Refreshing Camay Soap . . .3 C 49* Ivory Soap Wafhdpy PotcrgDot Per Polity WashabUs Blue. Cheer . L. S79* Ivory Snow Cuts Grease Quickly Silverware In lex of Comal Cleanser ‘36 ^ 99* Premium Bar Aotomatlc Washer* * Liquid Detergent Dqsh Detergent . '{£■ *2” Liquid Joy a. ... -. & Duz jaffffY-MOHy THE PONTIAC PKESB. WBtWESDAY, DECEMBER 6.' IWI rbor Storv Tough to Write Even 20 Years Laker tutors Note: Twenty years ago Thursday the Japanese attacked Hart Harbor. Jeh* Matheson, cite editor of the SauU Ste. Marie Evening Mews, was a crewman on the battleship West Virginia, hit bp sit torpedoes and two bombs that dap. Me JOHN MATHESON Written Form AP SAULT STE. MARIE - As any young tailor of 18 - then or now -4 ms looking forward to a day of liberty in Honolulu, and tile "Liberty boat' was due alongside tag gum, closing water-tight Inert, wanning battle stations —all paid atf la the first minutes of the attack. . My station was "Sky Port," an tsttaircraft fire director on- the side of the ship where the Jap Suddenly an alarm—we thought a routine one—rang. It was a call for the ship’s fire and rescue ' party, a procedure often practiced and dedgned to Bend aid to another ship or ashore to meet an emergency. Ite scene was the battleship West Virginia; the time, 1:56 man.; tto lay, Sunday, Dec. 1, 1M1; the place, Pearl Harbor. With the alarm, the Liberty party broke up. Sailors in our division were assigned to on the part tide of the ship for this type af emergency. We were to fsil in and stand by. We starred topside for our deck adjacent to t the. watm of theiacrtwr. JAPS ATTACKING kwar betore he peaed "the la the weeds of an old cliche, it afi happened so tast. ; " 8 liembcni of the crew reacted la aeoerdnan to their training. The ling hours of monotonous One bomb passed no more than 30 feet. It neemed, from my battle station. But to, this day, I can’t remember its hitting,- although m The ship’s damage knocked out the power and our fire control director was useless. We were ordered to fhe antiaircraft gun deck, hut our four guns were out ol commission because ot damage on the port side. t. It was‘necesaary to climb ladders to reach fids station, one of the highest on the ship. Torpedoes were starting to hit about this tUHi. It is difficult to describe how a torpedo shakes a battleship when it hitm. lt knocks aperson off his feetand tews a column of oil and water up over the top of the ship, Qae hit when I reached - the dtredter, platform on the starboard side. I went skidding across deck so my pants and Ini Looking up from the deck, I saw high-level bombers overhead. They, were making their bomb runs that gawe them so many centerline hlta on the sitting ducks below. ABANDON SHIP The order to abandon ship came .Iff*** oC ms wmtAB the fftOhbSM side, which was adjacent to ‘ the battleship Tennessee. We scrambled down to the armor belt, and then into the water for the short swim to Fond i The starboard side e< the deck was a strange sight. Most ei the men bad removed their s the a neatly fined up for a considerable distance toward the bow of the Woet Virginia. Once ashore, a boatswain formed a small boat crew .to evacuate some wounded men out of our Jllhinch gun turrets. I was ordered aboard and we rounded the of the burning ship to pick up the wounded. Most' Sf lhem bed suffered flash burns from the heat| of a bomb hit on the turret They were carried out of the turret, brought to the side of the ship wfatoh had. settled-Jto; Jbe^ bottom of the harbor by now, and wo ; handed over to us. We covered them with canvas and took , them to one of the fleet landing arenas. NEVADA BEACHED About this time, the battleship Nevada waa trying to get out of foe harbor and the Japanese dive bombers had her under attack. She was beached before. she reached the harbor entrance. "After the attack, .many of us -wandered" around Ford -island, the center of the harbor. Toward evening, we wwp ordered to the Tennessee' to' reinforce her gun -'1............................. which the paint was burned off the barrel because of the number of rounds fired that morning. Pearl Harbor’was a gloomy, eerie place that night. Smoke tilled the air as ships and ell burned. Trigger-happy describes the mental attitude of that night. One et our own planes was shot down attempting a land* tag. The Wert Virginia tsrew wai widely scattered. We .were grada ally, concentrated in a shore area !Re*tollowtog-iffiiM7aDd'asalgiga ~ to undermanned ahtai aa they fame into the., harbor. One night a'call' went out for volunteers for the carrier Lexing-too. My buddy, a Kentuckian, rteppetfout, btitl pulled him back in favor of trying for a cruiser or destroyer. Wo assigned to the cruiser Mime- • BSMBtatiil 'tali In irttati ships at i r toga oil life" » no |krd Ii There still are ao of doubt.Earitar that year our own naval aviation bad staged a maneuver Mr strike against the]: ships in the harbor and. the similarities of the American drilland the Japanese attack were some- And five months later, we 1 pulling seme of our farmer West Virginia shipmates out of Coral'Sea when the “Lax" sunk to that battle. The battleships operated something of a pattern through die part of 1941 that I was there. But while the battleships were concentrated in Pearl Harbor, I can’t recall carriers or submarines being in the harbor with any regularity-or on any set pattern of operation. "Remember Peart Harbor" was a slogan for a war now 30 years old, but it doesn’t seem to lose impact tor one who was there. Twenty years later, tough story to $rlte. Everything that happened personally remains as vivid as last night’s technicolor movte;But it doesn't seem to come out'that way in blirtk and white like this. NO ANSWERS The questions persona ask you are atiU unanswered. When you're a seaman in file rear ranks, an enlistee a year out of high school, you don’t know how or why a war is started. As a participant, however, you arrive at certain copciugtgna*'-' Om to flwt the Japanese didn’t get very much of military value battleship row. Those ships Holiday Special! STORM DOORS • STORM WINDOWS —STORMS FOR-PICTURE WINDOWS STORMS FOR SLIDING DOOR WALLS IU0 PH-BUMS DOORS — 13.00 EXTRA I Fsbrvury 2, '62 COMB* DOORS $23** wltft hardware JfVNING and STORM WINDOW SALES 910 Orchard Lake Ave., 1 Block East of Telegraph Rd. (Nr. Toni's Hardware) FE 3-7800 Open Mon. thru Fri. 'til 8 p.m. FE 3-7809 I whs shout to dart out onto the open deck when the boht-swain’s mate tamed around. That wild look in his eyes told me this State Motorists 'Speed It Up Drivers' Average Up 3 M.P.H. Over 1960, Says Highway Dept. LANSING Hi — Michigan motor-j tats are driving 3 miles an hour] farter this year than they were-j at this time last year, the State! Highway Department reported Tuesday, Average speed of passenger cars, - en rtata-Mghways is 58 miles an hour during the day and better than 56 miles an hour at night,1 the department said In a report to, the State Safety Commission. .Commercial vehicles are traveling an average 48 miles an how daring the day and nearly M mllea an hour at night, an Increase of 8 miles an hour ever Inst year. State Highway Commissioner John C. Mackie said the increase may be attributed in part to recent Smile-an-hour boost Ter speed limits on Michigan’s freeway network. Top limits now are 70 miles in the day and 60 at night. —Traffic volume increased tenths of 1 per cent in the first 10 months of the year, compared with a 3.8a per cent increase during a similar period last year. Mackie said traffic volumes in the Upper Peninsula and the Detroit and Kalamazoo areas are. continuing to decline. Mortar Shod Wrecks Mission House in Congo ELISABETUVILLE, Katanga («l —A mortar shell blew out the side of a house occupied by the American Seventh Day Adventist Mission during the fighting in Elisabeth-ville Tuesday. U.S. Consul Lewis Hoffacker said none of the mission workers was -hurt. All. 90 Americans in town Notice of Tan* City of PooUac The 1961 Ctiaty tax-•s ifi the City o! Pontiac will he dfie and payable at (he Office af the Pon-tiac City Treasurer De-cember 11.1961 through Jaiiary 22. 1962. with-ait fata. Oi lax wry 23. 1962. a collection iaa af 47# will ha added tt all Canty lists paid fhraayh February 21. 1961 0a March 1. 1962 all upaid Canty and 1961 City aid School taxes wiD la rotTHad to the Oahlaad Canty Troanur-ar'i office aid nut ha paid Una with additiai-atjwi. . Fiypnte Hade If ■all mA hi paatauik-id net later thu Jai-wry 22, 1962 la avoid MUTER A. GDDIKU. City Tiaaxarar 35 S. Parka Stroat wm 6MN6 OUT OF BUSINESS »«50%*90% on all remaining Summer items The entire never laved Hurry-—it'i summer inventory is on the block! Nothing Spared. . . . NOTHING CAN REMAIN! You'll SAVE at you've before on first quality, nationally famous brands. Cams next summer, you'll bo glad you acted now. But first coma first saved!! SUITS $18°° Reg. 132.75 to 545.00 Wash 'n* 'Wear, Dacron and Cotton, Cords ' and Poplins. JACKETS ' *3* flag. SI0.95 to $11.95 Windbraakors, poplins, famous brands. ' CLAM DIGGERS *2* lif . StJS to PM White, solids, cottons. SUITS $29 Reg. to S65.00 Dacron and Wool, Mat-tinelli. Den Richards. Many with extra pants available. SHORT sum SMUT SHIRTS Knits, boat necks, all wool gauchos, plaids, stripes, solids. SLEEVELESS SWEATERS *3*0 AH - wool, wool - blends, many colors , to choose LEISURE COATS **90 SWIM SUITS 90>b »i» Beg. 53.95 to $6.95 MacGregor, C a t a I i m boxers, briefs. MADRAS SF0RT COATS *18°° Dacron and Cotton wash 'n' wear, plaids/ checks, stripes, linen weaves. BERMUDAS $J90 and up Values 85.00 to SJ0M Plaids, solids, madras. STRAW HATS tnd CAPS 9Q^t, *2*0 Alt the latest Myles and iota colors. Famous brands’. McGREGOR and CATALINA SWIM SETS aod REACH JACKETS SLACKS $2*o flag. 84M and 85.18 Polished eo'tton, by Dickey, cords, linens. ROBES $490 Reg. 810J5 to 810.95 Washable cottons, terry cloth. VESTS $2» Reg. 84.95 to PM Plaids, corduroy, fancies. Beg. SI0.95 to J14J5 Wash 'n' Wtar, Dacron blond, Dacron and Wool, tropicals._________■ , ' PAJAMAS $]90 u Reg. 83.95 to 85.95 Shorties, wash Shop Haw for Ohritluat SAVE’ ALL SALES FINAL • ALTERATIONS AT COST • CITY PERMIT NO. 2620 H OPEN EVERY NIGHT 'til 9 P,M. tq. CHRISTMAS it Mtn unuw st. Next to »ho Strand Theater mmM H ■dm tSiS rag PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1961 SUPER-RIGHT" SKINLESS, 10 TO 12 POUND, SEMI-BONEUSS (YOut guarantee [OF QUALITY* OUR FINEST QUALITY Value-Priced Now at A&P! "Super-Right" Quality CENTER CUT Pork Chops Om Nn as MwrtM loin End Portion SSHPZ? Full 7-Rib Portion LB. ASP BRAND-OUR FINEST QUALITY ASP BRAND—OUR FINEST QUALITY Yellow Cling Peaches 4^99* Grapefruit Juice 4^99 CONTADINA 10c OFF UBIl Pizza Mix Potatoes SHOESTI Apple Sauce h Apple Butter JANE PARKER SPECIAL APPLE ME 89 1B-OZ PROS. 29 B-OZ. CAN 1-00 35-OZ. 49 2B-OZ. EVERYMEAL BRAND Apple Juice Blueberries 46-OZ. CANS N*. 300 | CANS 99c 99c Tuna Fish 4 sss 99c A*P Tomato Juice 4 CANS 89c Crocked Whoot Breed mmmmm loaf 17c Crescent Pound Cakes fiam^nnSuSli as 33c Daoisk Pastry Ring Cake Mixes White, Yellow, Devil's Food or Honey Spice i sa RQt________ Angel Food Mix ’Sf 39c "SUPER-RIGHT' MATURE BEEF Standing Rib Roast 4th G5th Ribs First 3 Ribs , First 5 Ribs u 65« >75, “ fe9c SPECIAL WEEK END SALE FLORIDA ZIPPER SKIN—176 SIZE Tangerines HOT HOUSE TOMATOES Apples an delicious 4 & 49c Cucumbers . . . . 3 F0* 29c Brussek Sprouts . . 11 29c Cranberries ocean spray la 25c AMERICAN OR PIMENTO—PROCESS CHEESE SPREAD Ched-O-BH H 2 * 69< BORDEN'S Cream Cheese... % 29* CHEERIO CHOCOLATE-COVERED Ice Cream Bars ™« 29* AB prfcue In thin ad uffucftvu thru Saturday, Dee. Mr , in all Barium Michigan AAf Super Markat* THC CHAT ATIANTIC L FACWC TfA COMPANY, MC ^ Super J^arkets AU. ASP SUPER MARKETS Ofb* THURSDAY AND FRIDAY * AM. TO 9 PJN. Cnsco Shortening uST can 82c Comet Chooser . r> 2 31c Cheer «" 1.32 ... . «»7k Cernoy Seep . ..vvtSS 31c Spk and Span HI 29c Tide «*• 1.32 —»7ie THT "1;*',-1,1?.' "J" - 1;, . • ' Bash »■ •* 69c Joy Liquid . . .. . ’Lt.1 63c m | • HO STAMPS! | NO GIMMICKS! j I BUT FLINTY OB . | I LOW Ohioan! Price* I ... baMs of f«ii " DISCOUNT PRICES! N0RTHW00D MARKETS ALWAYS THE BEST FOR LESS CARNATION OR Conned HAMS TM DtllCIOUS HAVMS Canned HAMS l«f.4 for 41c Discoait Priced! mu-. THE PONTIAC PKBSg. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1901 FLAVOR* 1ST CHOCOLATE Ptessnuiil Cookies Xsceuwt it! lig, 14-OZ. 2cuc33cOaaMlOkaator %3* 1#| |M I4J. MCC. SUMWIKl 3»c Nlii Gnekors Muml Pried 35* | 99c QUdCTOOTItl Mr. Clean Dlacannt Priced ' 93* ' •„ |; Wft' BUG. NABISCO. ”r - Dlaa—1 37* • . lit. . SOS CANS - Dimunt I Priud sic Saffinos f - : i icaii iic Ama Tomatoes GIANT SIZE lie Breeze Discount 7? li|, ' SOI CAN AULDPS CUT 2 cabs 27c Groan Beans Diuuunt Priced 19* giant size * Rinso Bill DiKMNt Brkid 75* Big. 29c . 2 ft CAN ROSI CROIX MICH. Freastoaa Peaches Diuuunt Prictd 25* • SOI |AR DOLLY MADISON iu Apple Rials Discount Brkod 29* 2-LB. BAG WHITE or YELLOW Beaaie 1m Pep Cent Diuuunt Priud 29* BORDEN'S or SEALTIST ^ _ Creamed Oellaca Ohewa 14k CM. 23* : l& KINO SIZE Tide Diicuuit Priced 1“ DiMMRt 59* XU3 KING SIZI 555% Ik Wisk Liqiid Pricod Ohoer Diuuunt Priud $129 RIG. SIZE 3 in 34c Lix Toilet Soap Discount Mead 19* vu JUMBO SIZI Dash Diuuunt Priud 9411 ■a- BATH SIZE 3 for 47c Lix Toilet Soap Discount Pricod 15* l«g. 39c 21-OZ. Dash Discount Priud 37* Ik. UC. MI ohum 3 km 3k Lifebaoy 3 mm 31* 8*9. 79c GIANT Dash Discount Priud 73* ■— bath an . 3km 3s< LHabuoy Mm 3 “> 3T KING SIZI Rinso, 2Be iff lahol Discount Priced 99* ||| REC. SIZE Discount 13* Bog. GIANT SIZI Bnon fflmiut W i5« r raise tic Priud log. £**iu 1^., 2 b*rs 43c PrSISO Prieud 2 bars 39* Bog. 33c URGE SIZE Du Discount Priud 32* |M 5%-OZ. BOTTLE sfc Airwick Discount Pricod 49* log. 79c GIANT SIZE Dn Discount Priud 7? log. birsonai SIZE 4 kon 29c Ivory Soap wm* Imd 25* log. URGE SIZE IHirsunt Oft ■f 33c Fab Priud ilT |» MEDIUM SIZI 3 km 33c hriry Soap Diuount Pricod 19* log. 79c GIANT, SIZE * Fah Diuuunt Priud 75* |H LARGI SIZI 2 km 3Sc Ivory Soap Discount Priud 15* log. SU3 KING SIZE Fah Disuuut Priud 3^29 log. MC-SIZI Discount 10* 1 A Dn CIVI ''' 3 bus 34c Camay Soap Priced ■ 2 for 67c FelS Disuuut Priud 31* ||| BATH SIZI 3km«c Oaauy Soap Discount . Pricod 15* B«g. 23c Whiz Hand Glsaaer Disuuut 1 Priud 1? |m REC. SIZI ik Zest Soap Dkcount Pricod 13 8 B«g. 45c Murphy ON Soap Diuuunt P**Hd 37* Beg. *,ZI Ditcot.nl 1 2™ ; OQ< 1 log. l-QZ. 21* 2bors43c ZOft Soap Priced 49 25c Boraxo Piacunt Priud Big. **** Discount 2 i»n 27c Lava Soap Mm 2 BAM 25 8 lH . . 1ft 1-LB. Spie A Spaa Disuuut Priced 29* 2km25c Castile Soap Mm t 23 8 i*g. 31c 1-LB. Soilax Discount Priud 2V III LARCE BKO. 2 tor 09c Ivory Flakos Discount Pricod 32 8 B«g. 35c 12-OZ. Drue Discount Priud 31* III. LARGE BRG. 2 for 69c Ivory Slow Diuount Pricod i 32 pr— 8 l«f. 27c BINT SIZI Saa Bol Dlsunnt Priud 23* |||, LARGE BUG. 2 for 69c Draft Discount Pricod 32 8 itg. 29c Sail Flash Dlsunnt Priud 25* |M 22-OZ. eS Ivory Liquid Diuount Pricod 58 9 Bog. 79c GIANT SIZI Ad Discount Priud 75* 1m 22-OZ. 62c Joy Liquid Diuount Pric*d 58 B Bog. 35c Phnite Discount Priud 31* |||( LARGE BKC. 2 for 69c Diz SOOp Diuount Pricod 32 f Bog. 33c 20-0Z. Vaaish Diuount Priud 27* lm URGE BKC. ci . 2 fu 65C Tide. 3c OH Libel KST 28 B log. lawhsize —« Um co. Snvf Diuuunt 51« m in *•* uni u rnceo |||, URGE BKC. 2 for 67c CliOOr Diuount Pricod 31 9 log. 91c 8-OZ. Woolile Diuuunt Priud 79* ||| WITH DINNIRWARE 62c Preuiiuiu Duz Diuouut Pricod 57 t Bog. 11.49 . 1-LB. Wootito Discunnt Priud T* ||| GIANT BKC. 7k Dash Diuount Pricod 73 B Bog. 91c s-oz. Wool-O-Lene Diuuunt Priud 79* <7c Cascade Detergent Mm 45 B Beg. 29c 1S-OZ. Solveatol Diuount Priud 29* |||. 1-LB. BKC. Diuount 29 b itg. Brillo Ship Pad* Diuufnt IS* sic Spk t Spaa Pricod 43c Priud ^ liNL'5:;riiAiEYGitf' - • • 29c GM * a nS—“ Dhuunt $070 Priced G ■u LABOR SIZI t b> Sk Vsl - Diluent vie -^Priud #f log. giant site 7k V*| if lot. 25-OZ. IX Vanish Diuuunt mCl Priced 09 M. £*• Jk Burn Diuuunt OEC Priced tk Buna Diuuunt JOfi Priud ify »•».. Stf*- Diuuunt 07^ Priud Of Jk AD lug, 49-OZ. 7k AR "JSm 75* lag. 9 LI. IS OZ. (Us Al Diuuunt $919 Priced L M »“• 14.59 Al Diuuunt $13$ lug. GIANT SIZI 7k Liquid All Diuuunt Priced 09 Itg, KING SIZI Ztai7c Maot Whils Diuuunt OOC Priced VO Ifu, URGE SIZI .. x to 67c Rinso Bias Discuunt Gil Mud 01 lug, GIANT SIZI 79c Hue H>0 Diuount lug. LARGI SIZI 2 m 6k Silver Dusl 32* leg. cant si< Silver Dast Dlsunnt jfTfl 1 Priud If u.s. hie. i Michigan Pataloos 10-29*1 TEXAS RUBY RID „ Sasdrn Grapefruit «» 4*-25*1 FAIRLANI FROZEN 75S1* VEGETABLES TABU TESTED FROZEN Crioklo Cut Froaeh Fries s w SWISS MISS FROZEN • Apple CmdlDU G Pencil OQC Ea. nmi riu u Cherry &V KRAFTS FHILADILBHIA Cream Ohaasu % 29* KRAFT DILUXI 1mh*Scmm |b|b|h Cheese Slices » n, Ainwrican nnp and Pimuntu ££f HYCRADE'S HICKORY SMOKID SLICED BARON 59** SWIFT'S PREMIUM SUGAR CURIO SLICED BAGON 59#lfc PETER'S HICKORY HOUSE SLICED BACON 49#Uk RATH BLACKHAWK THIN OR THICK SUOED BACON ....... 59*^. LEAN—MEATY LOIN END PORK ROAST ... 39#u- WHOLE OR FULL RW HALF ip. PORK LOINS i£. 45 WITH TENDERLOIN FUU LOIN HALF ...... TENDER ANO |UICT - PORK CHOPS a 35** LEAN AND MEATY PORK CHOPS is 45*u STRICTLY FRESH. LEAN AND MEATY SPARERIBS 39*^ CENTER CUTS A Al 1 l PORK CHOPS iru THRIFTY RIB END CUTS PORK LOIN ROAST . .. ... 29*14 Pricet on Perishable Items Effective Until Sat., Dec. 9 COUNTRY QUEEN FRESH GRADE (AA> LARGE EGGS MM YELLOW QUARTERS" KINGNUT MARGARINE 14k On. BURR CANE—REC. 55c DOMINO SUGAR £ 49* ■ wwi » »»« msceanv 1 MIRACLE WHIP Stt 4 9* Gold Medal ar PUkkmy FLOUR ....... h,,“ n 4 9* HEINZ or CAMPBELL'S MEATSOUPS.. ^ H 1 6* n«in* or MMPIKLLV-REG. I/4Ic VEGETABLE "»•*««" f 3* DEL MONn leg. DittoBnr PEACHES I Ih|1 27 NORTHERN TISSUE. I*|. 4 for 37c Priudi #c Roll ROMAN GLEAH8ER lOf. 59C Bricodl CLOROX BLEACH n WIIOfMNI Iff. lie PHesd! Dole or Del Monte Sliced PINEAPPLE B .. uncount 1*9. 45C Bricodl 2Vi Cm Hill’s Fair PEACHES in. 3 lei 95c All Fluor* forty-one1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 0. 1981 Wilson Expacts Top 3 Picks to B* Excellent Pro Prospects ir Ul^O L. KEARNS Sport* Editor, Psntlao Preaa Coach Gedrge Wilson cl the Detroit Lion* fo a worried man in one respect But in another regard be is quite pleased Wilson temporarily forget about the Minnesota Vikings who wilkbe at Tiger Stadium Sunday to talk. Class C Backfield Explosive of Bath and Tom Isanhart of Dewitt at the ends; Andy Domson of Michigan Lutheran Seminary and Jim Longwell of Saranac at the tackle*; Bob White of Portland and Laity Gerow of Beaverton at the «nrds; and Pete Hager of Dearborn Divine Child at center. This production-minded All-State team wqp picked by a statewide vote of more titan 400 conches and Allen's total yardage was 1,481 yards and be scored 107 points. The interior linemen — Domson, Ltngwel), White end Gerow — were described aS excellent block-ero by their eoacbes. - The Class C first team is made 19 entirely of seniors. honors as the expert; picker tills year. He receives a check for f 100, which goes to the winner each year, from Rkdiard M. Fitzgerald, treasurer of The Press. In five years, each member of the sports department has won at least once. . SWAMI PRESIDENT — The Swami Association, which features the members of The Press sports department in the football guessing contest called “The Grapevine’’ each season, had a new winner tide year.- Swami Don Vogel took the Each of these modem day four horsemen gained approximately a mile apiece this season. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 1M1 CLASS C ALL-STATE HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL SQUAD Position, Name School * Hgt. Wgt. Class E—Tom isanhart T—Andy Domson T—Jim Longwell G—Bob White O—Larry Gerow C—Pete Hager QB—Ted Perry B—Larry Allen B—Allan Stump B—Don Japinga DOWltt' 6*3 Mich. Lutfc. Sem. >6 . Saranac A Portland 6-10 Beavertptj 6-1 Dhorn Divine Child 6-3 B. Crk. St. Philip 5-10 Kala. St. Augustine 6-2 St. Ignace 5-11 Way land . 5-9 McGonigaij Stump, St. Ignace’s 170-pound 8. The completion of the entry list 1 keg houses throughout the county g for the 5th annual Pontiac Press and also at The Press Sports Be-Bowierama will be made tonight partment. Those post-marked to-®j\at midnight. day .and received at The Press Si Men throughout Oakland County|eariy Thursday will be accepted. 8* have until that.time to turn their S. entry into a county keg establish- ment or get it In the mail to The ,-JL The Interstate Conference is expected to make Eastern Michigan's withdraws] official Thursday when the league opens * two-day meeting at Chicago. 1 . The top three names, John HadI of Kansas, quarterback Ed Wilson of Arizona and halfback Bobby Thompson of Arizona were considered the top plums by Wilsop. Hadl, who ployed quarterback and halfback at Kansas, immediately asked Wilson where the Lions would play him. “I told him and I honestly feel he is the closest thing to Paul Horaung and wo would definitely use him ns a KANSAS cmr (AP)-The Don Carters capped a tremendous ■urge by whipping Stroh’s of Detroit in both games to capture the Bowling Proprietors Association of America national match game championships Tuesday night. Hie St. Louis club finished with 8007 points Stroh’s with 79-48. SECOND TEAM ENDS—Chuck Washington, Csntrevllle; Don Melvin, Saginaw St. ~ •=» TACKLES—Dick Dickinson, Mancelona; Jerry Karner, Es-sexville St. John. GUARDS—Bob Stark, Whlteford; Craig WUtstire, Evart. CENTER—Stan Slefker, Shepherd. QUARTERBACK—Tom Kozicki, Clare. BACKS — Vince DiMagglo, Benton Harbor 8t. John; Jim Perrine, Clare; Doug Ornbbe, Boyne City. That deadline includes all- men who toiled to make the Dec. 17 championship round last -veek and want to re-enter for a 2nd attempt. The qualifying come* to a tiie young Detroit ciew, the only route to the title and 82,000 first priae, Dan Carter and Co., zeroed tat. for 1,098 In the lint game to‘done the gap to 73 pins. Thfy then pot the loqk on with a 1,042 to 1,010 decision to . again win the crown they had held four times aider m beer sponsorship. Stroh s hit 998 in the opener. * * ★ The Don Carters, which began Tuesday’s shooting in fifth place, rolled at a LIU average through the first tlx games, lending to the position round against Stroh’s. which proved the surprise of the tournament. name of Wilson la the best passer in the country. “He didn’t .get nil the publicity that some of the quarterbacks like Rdf Miller, ! highlight. Another group planning to make a bid to overtake that big 3069 of Lakewood Lanes is a team repre- £“* seating Westside Recreation. Mak-ing up the unit will be Jack Chambers, Bob Richards, Gene Shell, Jerry Perns and Jerry Har- • rmin# m* nw M^ir 8 TIMES — George Kazarian Men ranging In averages from nay not have qualified last 123 to over 200 made the final* weekend for the Bowierama but last weekend indicating that the he’s happy anyway. He bowled The AFL’t Buffalo Bills hive signed Florida halfback Bill White, their seventh draft choice. White was-the No. 6 selection of the NFL’s Minnesota Vikings. „ !„ vi_ ;_„ mingnam muner ui jumping a 14*, ******?*•* q*f1Uylng horses, will speak and &ow films round at Wonderland. He may at ^ Mth annuaJ DUde saddle try to make the finals again, club Christmas potluck dinner Sat-Tonight midnight is the last urday at 7:30 p.m. in the darkston deadline for all entries. Icommunity building. Chicago Snaps Losing Streak at Milwaukee St. Louis Victimized by Former Teammate the 20 players tnrhidtng South- field’s Todd Grant from U. of M. drafted tjr Detroit. There is a chance that center Bob Scholx will have a two-year military stay facing him. By The Assorted Press And now their old buddies are turning on them. The St Louis Hawks, five-time Western Division champions of the National Basketball Association, have had troubles from all sorts of angles this season, and now Tiff in fourth place In the five-team division. They got troubles from a new source Tuesday night. Sihugo Green, a former Hawk now playing for the new Chicago Packers, hit a tie-breaking basket with four seconds left that brought the Pack- ers n 101-99 verdict over St. L5uis in the first game of a Madison Square Garden doubleheader. Folley KOs Cooper, Seeks Liston Next BU8Y, BUSY, BUSY — Referee Sid Borgia la a busy little man among the pro basketball giants as he tries tb break, up some fisticuffs with Phil Jordan (6) of the New York Knidjs, Wilt Cham- for n layup and tied it 9999 with 11 seconds left. Green hit- his winner but Pettit had time to get off one more, missing a Jumper .with n second left. Pettit finished with 32 points while Horace Walker had 26 for Chicago. Liston, No. 1 heavy contender from Philadelphia, knocked out Folley In three rounds in their only-meeting on July 16. 1960. Folley drawled his challenge Boxing Promoter ' Suspended After Canceling Fight MONTREAL (AP)-Eddle Quinn has been slapped with an tm definite suspension as n boxing promoter after calling off at virtually the last minute Tuesday night’s scheduled bout betweoi Archie Moore' and Canadian heavyweight champion Bob 06* roux. Tuning Up for Dud With Wake Forest Turning back to nearest problem facing him, the Vtktngi, Wilson ’That Dutchman (Norm Van Brocklin, Minnesota coach) realty is doing a great Job with that team. Remember they had a 144) lead on us up there and they gave Lot Angeles a sound beating last week. 42-21” There are 4.000 reserved seats plus bleacher seats still available for the game Sunday and they will be put on sale at 11:00 am. before game time at 1:30 P*b>* over prone and heeding figure of British champion Henry Cooper, previously considered Patterson’s next ring rival, if the champion didn’t fight Lis^m. Philadelphia bAoke a 52-52 half-time deadlock with a 42-point bunt in the third quarter that put it out of reach. The viotoiy moved the Wanton to within 4th games of Eastern leader Boston, idle Tuesday night. Wilt Chamberlain had 39 points and 22 rebounds lor the winners. WKBe Naulls led New York with I III HUM I ' Cockney Cooper, Britain's only ■ WW ■ wffn ■ ■ wj ■ ■ • hope for world boxing glory, was knocked out almost contemptu-the Duquesne - Carnegie match, ously by Folley at 1:08 of the sec-Penn-Michigan features n Phila- ond round in a scheduled 10-round delphla twin-bill. Other important bout at Wembley Indoor Stadium matches include George Washing- Tuesday night. Folley weighed 194, ton at St. John’* of New York, Cooper 189. Providence at Boston College and * - 4t * William A Mary at Georgia Tech. The result boosted Folley’s pros-DUKE ROLLS prats far n shot st the champion- m «•«?*«* fsjt Ex-Braves Owner Dead BOSTON Iff) — Judge Emil E. Fuchs, 83, of Brookline, former owner of the Boston Braves National League baseball team, died Tuesday at Massachusetts Memorial Hospital after a long illness. open a tight game early in the socond half and raced out in front, leading at times by 16 points. Lynn Chappell tossed in 28 points. Cincinnati, displaylg midseason form and using substitutes much of the way, humbled Miami of Ohio 63*30. The Bearcats, who todude the overtimn upset of Ohio State in last year’s NCAA championship finals in their 24 straight victories, put the accent on defense in the slow-moving game. There were indications Montreal Athletic Commi which took the action aon On Little AH Dafsndtr' Dtad - BUENA VISTA; Va., m — Judge Robert C. Smith, 35, famed for his “12th man tackle” during n 1990 college football game died yesterday after a long illness. ’ Smith, Judge of municipal court here for ’the last six years, became so excited during a gridiron contest at the t University of Vkp* I West Virginia overcame first half lethargy to forging Its victory over VML Tbs Mountaineers hit tor 54 points In the Inst half. ' ■ \ In other major games, Loyola of Chicago breeaed past South Dakota 104*63, The Citadel beat William A Mary 83-79, Butler swamped New Mexico Stale 77-56, Colgate outlasted Columbia 75-73, Oklahoma State won its second wrestling bora for 22 yean., In some of the other top games, Oeventh-ranked Duke se( a school booring record in a 117-72 conquest of Davidson, West Virginia raced past Virginia Military 90-56, South-iem Methodist disappointed hopeful Oklahoma 61-52, and Nffth Pamitna edged demean 54-52. Sharing the spotlight with the PittQhfe State same, bi the doubleheader at Pittsburgh tonltfit is > SMiiiiifis® 03226750 ^jP&TY-TWO THE J’OWTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1961 IS THERE A JUDICIOUS JACK ON YOUR UST? ,50-35 BASKETBALL mSCOKES gmwMriy-CANADIAH CLUB Then’s bound to be a Judi-cioua Jeck on your list.. requires a thoughtful gift. Make eart hs jeta Cenndisw Club-the world’s most wanted gift whisky.Botier go ov*r your holiday Bet ftomrA to Z, and give your -favorite folk flair favorite whisky—Canadian Club, festively gift-wrapped at no extra cost.. ."The Best In The House" la 87lands. cmmmi cun is«ruts no. mi mgr. intern* » Mutt fiim emit iv ante enttt mrornts. me., mthoit. MICIIttN. IUNDED C1UIIU WHISKY. REBUILT MOTORS Wonderland Lanes on Richardson Road in Commerce Tnnmahip haa its anrf successive big weekend coming up. Manager Paul Morie and his staff were hosts to part of the opening round of the Press Bowtertuna last Sunday. This week he will have a pair of top keg stars appearing there to compete and give instructions. Marge Merffck, fresh* from upsetting Marlon Ladewig at the World Invitational, and. Bob Korn will be the guest artists. They will give instructions Set-! unlay from 1 to 4 P-m. end will 1 compete with the top two average men end women in house leagues I at the establishment that night and ]Sunday night. Wayne-Toah will team with Mer-rick against Korn and Alice Mc-. Carty Saturday atarting at 8 p.ro. Sunday at. 7 p.m., .the lady guest land Bob Thornton will face Millie jReynolda and Korn. I Don Weaeott railed a big 73# paring KranCftee to • MSI total la the Woadariaad Senior House loop Monday right. He had games of to-WHM. Dong boxen >]Captains Beat Oxford’ Maoies memo an Eina school eesulys as|{Bpgy 1 Wfllwl My 1 IVipiVj [Edge Dondero Loyola, Ek. 93, daUfoMU^Davfai 01 wsaw v, mw~s8*X£m. n ■ rHjJreHaii 1 j Holly, Cranbrook Join I ' Losers for 2nd Tima [ thlsSoason" Artaooa ft, Ariana aL dan, m t«m ASM M, mama 4» rAB WEST Waifcta|toa n, -MMilaM ST and Lai Howe SOT. Thar* were 200a. . '"'it ft \+ -Dick Preston, who rocked Detroit recently with an 802, turned in a OSS at the Farmington Claaatc hut wag only 4th bast at Nar-Weat. Maurie Quinlan postal 245-689, Pate VairieBogart 24A671, and Chuck Bligh 247-660. Preston had 257, Hagerty Lumber took the team lead with 1136J178. Major Gauge ft Tool acored, 1090-3192, Clearwater Pools 1131-3143, Huron Bowl team did wafl In national setlea at Kansas CHjr against the best In the natioa. 1%ay wtt go attar Bowterama honor* Sunday. Several other good scores to from house leagues. Pat Treacy fired IM, featuring a 248, and Mo :Meere 01 in the Senior Man’s at 300, The Moorsa stayed hi 1st with Archie hitting 628. Mika Gadoahian had 356406, Chioo Chlcovaky 608, L. Luenberger 607 and JOe Puertas R. Toby* picked up a 7-10 split. * * * Sounds like those 300 alleys will be well warmed up for Bowiarama finals and actual Invitational Dec. IT.' HUSKIE ‘FLYER — Co-captain Bill Mathlsen of Pontiac Northern warms up for the butterfly event far tonight’s swim battle against Pontiac Central In the PNH pool. The Huskies wifibe seeking their first swim win over the Chiefs Ip three years. : Waterford Kettering got started out right in h|aketball by winning Ita lri varsity game before .a large . home crowd last night. the Captains, led by Dick Ship-man’s 13 points and floor play, easily whipped Oxford 50-35. win ita Id-lifter aa the Kagles ■ a Berkley aki Lapeer bowed fat P .1st outings despite good showings. With Season BareiyOver 12 Grid Coaches,Ousted More woes coming -up for area keg proprietors. Great Lake Bowling Corporation is moving in. Progress la moving along rapidly on the new Strikes and Spares on Maple Road juit off Telegraph. Another to be called Old Mill Bowling Lanes is to be built on-Dixie Highway fat Waterford. PCH inQpener Tonight Birmingham Seahohn bounced .back from a surprising defeat nip Royal Oak Dondero, 58-56. Holly, which may be headed for Jean season attar _ “ power, and Emmanuel Christian lost their 2nd straight. The scores have been getting closer each year, but Pontiac Northern has yet to defeat Pontiac Central in swimming in six trie*. Tonight the Huskies feel will be their night whan the two swim 'teams meet In the PNH pool, The Chiefs opened the season last Friday night by losing 73-31 at Flint Northern, This la the opener for the Huskies. ft The Chiefs are minus their two great Alt - State and all-America swimmers Bruce Norvell and Ben Donaldson who ~&re now at Ohio State. Bob Lorens In the 100- and 200- start ed the i HERE TP THEBE Rebuilt Westside Recreation and new Cooley Lanes will open Minnie Myers rolled her yard free style la the 2nd all-spare game In a month at ** T’rw “W*1 1 Maple Lanes. She bad 78 one time and 179 the next ... Dr. Miller’s lead Elks Ladies. ETU team hit 785-2220 . , , Thompson's Products hit 1052 actual in GMTC Engineering competition at Lakewood. F. Bill scored 244 and H. And reason 224 among four at 200 or more.. . Vi Card had 136-SIT there in Women's Oakland County Employees play. Fireballs are 1st. Earl Atwood, a 160-average man, fired 286 at Collier’s . . . Hazel Clark’s 502 high aeries of year In West Side Ladles Classic. She and Mlllier Andersen had 235a .. . Ron Russell hit 222, Marilyn Servos beys with 644. B4 Gibbs tori 08. Mok Shore IBS and Pat Ttaeea 818. Para 848 to* 18 80 games Bud Peel converted a 7-8-18 spilt. Bob ft Larry’s Her roiled new team highs e< lMt-904. At Howa’s Lanas, Streh’s and Cb-lonlal continue to battle in the Sen-lorCMaric. Stiver Lake Golf bet ter high aeries again with 2010 and had new top game with 1090. Hank Ferguson hit 615, Norm Jennings I Servos 176-454 and Tony McCardy 613, including a 238, Bud Jania 6081455 in Kettering High loop at 300. turnee for PCH with Bruce Dawson in the diving event. Lorens won both free style events against Flint Northern, taking the lto to M.S and the M# to 8:0.6. Two other returning lettermen for the Chiefs are Leon Melkm and Phil Cnshln. This Is the first head coaching season for Doug Treats who was assistant under Gene Norris. PNH has 12 lettermen back headed by cocaptains Bill Mathe-aon and Fred Kern. Matheson will compete in the individual medley along with Chuck Grew. Kern, who in the 90 free style against 100*b«ckitrok«—Jim Haff.rty n Plains, found good quail hunting in Southern Illinois. He hunted 1th Ha Gates, 85 W. Rundel St., Pontiac, near Galatia. Forced to Hunt in Wisconsin 'Deer King’ Scores Again LANSING n holds its regular He also was denied the right bunt in Michigan to three years, | ctowervati* Depmtment Dougan claimed he was "framed”, fi?1* "* ITcomro*Bdlnf -------. — (Pm „ UK j and said "the Conservation De- bond State Conservation Commission by! partment was odt to get me” be- at j,-. J- Hofmiaster state Gov. Swainson Tuesday. cause he had criticized their deer parttM ™ % Muskegon Lowe, 40, succeeds Joseph p. management program. en? ot Michigan* new- Rahilly of Newberry, who retired i Earlier, he paid a $10 fine for Ate recommended under the to? -B?0,?h after 27 I**1* m the tfiegal peseesrton.of atear car- permit-bonding program is the V--' : -■'■" 1 purchase of two lots to complete m * rn i’i ! state ownership in HarrisviUe Solunar Tables rtate ***•Mcon* Caunty- A major lands exchange is pro- ___am. r. tm. posed between the state and the “"co Mn •»: Kimberly Clark Company erf Wls-l •:» laao consin to promote better timber siss s- wjand game management on a num- commission. Tte appointment, requiring Senate' confirmation, is for a term expiring April 1, 1963. Under law, Swainson was' re-1 quired to fill Rahilly’s vacancy|.. .... with an Upper Peninsula resident. .... I** giving the area two representatives| Momnjr '*.... «:« $:M on the commission.--------- Always a wdl-chosen gift And one of the great whiskies for holiday entertaining. VhUkey by Hiram Walker No extra charge for gift wrap •UN0CD WHtSKfY • 84 WOOF • 30% STRAIGHT WHISKEYS * >0% GRAIN NEUTRAl SPIRITS • HIRAM WAUCER & SONS INC. PEORIA, HL $380 $240 The Sign of Dependable WINTER CAR SERVICE > GARTER yire$tone BRAKE AND FRONT END SERVICE Balance Front Wheels I Any American made oar fimtont NEW TREADS imn on sooni the soon 00 ON VMM HR TONS Complete Set ot Tubeless Whitewalls ANY SIZE CARTER TIRE COMPANY 370.S4utH Saginaw St. 7r FE 541$6 .IffBTY-FOUR THE 1QNTIAC JPftEgSa WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1961 Tariff Battle Impending Industry Sends More Cacital Abraad ttt following are to etwrim tales of locally grown "produce by growers and acid by them in wholesale package lots. Quotation! ate furnished Iqr At Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Tiuglny . ~D®troitfroducH Aircraft-Missiles Firm on Mart RWerSales Read) Record NEW YORK (API—A recovery hy the savings-and-loan shares and a firm tone among aircraft* missiles highlighted a mixed stock market early this afternoon. Mott, key stocks showed gains or losses of fractions to about a point. The badUy-battered raying*-MS and-ioans rebounded from frac-iSjtions to about 4 points as traders M| picked them up at aepressed rSiPrices.*# next fiscal year compared with an estimated $47 billion hi defense spending in the current fiscal year. The fighting to Katanga underlined the importance of il The aircraft-missiles were boh itered by a nears report that toe Pentagon is understood to want $51 billion in appropriations for MODERATE RECOVERY A moderate recover by.,—. electrical' equipment stocks and an advance by Big Three jostotf as roporta came of higher auto sales wen other features. Steels, tobaccos, drugs and chemicals were mostly lower. Bonds Go Lo wer Again r NEW YORK tH-Bond prices ) moved lower again af the start of ; trading today. They have been tcation centered on hill selling. Among corporates traded on toe New' Pork- Stock Evhange rails i weak since Monday. | Over the counter dealers In U.B. ! government securities quoted ( long bondo off t/83 to 1/83 and intermediates lower by t/H to | 4/3t Activity was described is ! moderate with much of the at- and bfitities led toe way downward. Industrials were' fairly active and a shade better in price. A tow of the rails lost as much as a point. They were Northern Pacific 3s .off 1 at 56' and Lehigh Valley 4s aeries A off 1 at 43. more than 4 points while San Diego Imperial, toe most active loser of toe past two days, came bade fractionally. Recoveries exceeding 3 points were made by United Fi-nencial^endjimt Quarter. ■ JEhm^ del. Great Western Financial recouped more then a poh Douglas Aircraft, up more than a point, showed the beet response to tbs Pentagon news. Minor plus signs Were posted for Boeing, General Dynamics and United Aircraft. J Prices worked irregularly higher on the American Stock Exchange in heavy trading. Lamaon it Sessions am} Anken Chemical roee more Aon 2 apiece. Mead Johnson fell more than 4. Gatos 36,726 AiWTim* High for Novtmber; Falcon to Top Million Mark DETROIT W — American Motors’ November retail sales of Xr 728 Ramblers BnmmPlWWWP pany record tor the month, AMC reported Tuesday. Cadillac, Chevrolet and Ford previously announced November sales monte. Klein Department Stores, Loral Electronics, Syntex and Micro-wave Associates. American Stock Exph. Ftfurei Uttr decimal point! art eighth Cal ttjfw ... IT.* tea' X Am ..111.' Cobs Baa M Kelaar Indue l.i Oipl a»_m Mh-to' M*»CJs1n 111 Craala fat .. 31.8 Mohawk Air! 5.' Drnam Am ... 12.2 NJ Zinc .IV My Tiger .... ti.s Novo Indue .. A Oen Deeel ... ll.T Pacific Pet Ltd 12 “ 1 Bherw Wm ..III In other'sales announcements, Dodge said It! dealers sold 20,266 can to November compared with 25,051 to the same moeto a year ago and about the same as to November 1959. . Ford Division of Ford Motor-Go. said sales of its compact Falcon will top the one million mark sometime today. “ “ ' <& * * The division said the car sold at the, rate of l per minute for each selling day since it introduced Oct. 8, I960. . 18.4 Sonotone . Poultry and Eggs ■ormorr rotixir ; : DsrrnoTtr d**. ■ (APi-oms* |u pound as Outran for Ha. T am HtMrSx hen! ll-ll: U(ht type < bene Id: Mn type ronataca sear a KuT31-23: brollera and fryer! M Ibe. fcsvjr type reneteri 1-1 lbe- lf-ISi white! |f>U;. Berrid ltt 11-11) duck-Un(i si; (eeee Si: tarkaya: tor-dbtboit sons * asi^!%3rz: , - ,_»bo 3I%-41; extra < larie 14%-M; medium j A Jumbo jm-. extra ____I_______ M-M: medium *• J Oruda 1 ebacki 23-34% CHICAGO POULTir CHICAOO. Dec. I (API—Ure poultry: Wheieenla buylnt nrleaa 1 lower to-% , higher; rone ten SlVb-tl: epeclal ted Witla noek fryers It: Plymouth Roeb fryara 11-UVb, mostly 14-16%; duakllnie chicaoo mnrtn * boos fwggm^ Dgi. S (AP) — CblaUfU The New York Stock Exchange nw YORK (APV—PoUowtaf jug, «%-4 Browne—O rede tors* 3S-M; larse i > High Lew Last Che. 1 34% 34% 34%— % f82~ini 81%+% 21 M 23% 25%-% 2 117% )j7% 117%+ % 34 39% 39% 59%+ M .n >63 SI (3 IJOb U (4 43% 62%- 17 13% 12% 12%... 9 224% 222 223 + . - 1.40 3 94% 94% 94%— nan 2.20 10 «% *2% «%... Pure Oil 1.30 ' 19 14 33% 34 wheieenla bujrlt % blxher: 93 • B M| too I -------J C 57%;-------------------■ C 34%. iteedy to firm: WholeMl* buy- • Ins prlnat uaabnnpad to 1 higher; 79 par aaat or batter grade A whites 32%; * Baited 32; medium! We; itundarde 30] livestock e supply |wutl MASS CUvICB SMVll R » V M b i , steady; lewar grid** abaady In etrong.1. ' cow! aetlTi, fully iteady, few loads >, average to high choice slaughter-steers 30.50-21: ass Meting good grade steere 33 30-23.M; itimdnrd «ta*ri 3>23J0: i •tllity rteert 88-33; f*W iM baiferi 23-34: atandard balfatu 21.60-23; ' Safeway St ISO 4 02% 02% 63V«-“ *" 1 1 10 34% 24% 24%+ 3 10% BE ____' Babcock* W Num- BaldLlma « ___ _ butchers 17.10 Number 3 BnBhqfa «*P id 3 100-340 lb. 10-10.13; loud Number * and I 341 lb. 14.50. Number t and 3 • 13 30-11; boari g _________________ __MH r M""r rjtaoSwM 8 and J 4I-------------... — - Vsaisn 100. PUlly Wendy; prlma 3«- |eSlBeel 240 40; SOM oad choice 20-30; itandard euRWU. ■”« 21-20; cull ond utility 11-11. _ . , Sheep 400. Slaughter elnitta iteady; worn u choice and prime, wooled daughter WJSS* au lambs 11.30-10.30; food and choice i5 50-'»r>W.l*?L *n. oM; tap*11 430 Ibe. UJO-lIJ*. tritely Lieivog mw T 1 > lt0-26g Ibfi. Iw md txllMNi— - Cattle 14.0M. oalret- 10«. for b Wedneeday market th a three month!; eholeo and prime i flow. Wink to mostly SI fewwr; ___ I grading good and know fairly active. Camb N Steady to M lower; halferi moderately Campb 1 - active, steady at Tuesday's ndwaoce; can toy lows alow, few early idles •* ^ =r- fully 33 lower; bulls active, 0 S3 higher; vealen iteady; few Roto fiaiSi mo-i Hoo dtondurd 1000 lb. Holitelns 23JO: load-, lota eMae and mixed choice and prlmo hatfora 23.00-24.00. most choice b*U«r* 34J0-23.S0. Treasury Position WASHINGTON Cfi-The cash position of Ih* Treasury compared with corresponding date a year 47 33% 32% 32% + % II 20% 20% M%— % 30 33% 37% 3I%+1% i ia% ic% — 33 30% 40% is n% ny« ..... I 10 67% 67% 37%— o 30 32% 63% 33%-% 32 32% 39% M%+ % 19 *4% 04 04 ... S' 12% 13% 1S%-43% 43%+ 1 lit ■ 04%+t 7438% 139% 13B%-1% 13 30 29%^ 29% — 29 83% 93% MV a U% 13% 12 43 Vs 42% 1 U% 14% ■ , 13 26% 26% 26%— I 96 37% 37% 37%—\ 3 123% 123% 123%—1 6 27% 27% 37%+ \ 6 31% 31% 31%+ ■ M 49% 49% 49%+ 1 sag By JESSE HOGUE — UPt Ftoanshl Eitow NEW YORK - Washington dispatches tell oi a taylff battle impending to the next congressional session, and figures show an in- creasing tendency of American industry to make investment for plants and tostaltofions abroad. In other words, they seek to tap rick or high potential foreign markets hy being “to'‘ at rtion point, or near ft.'They thus avoid some of the machinery of import^iqxxrt trade. toendtog of foreign branches and ■Skelilarin of American industry Rave gone up “comddermbly faster” than tow of Amestie Basing its summary on data ttoPto toe. Department of Commerce, tola organization mid expansion of prbduetkst facilities of direct investment wterpriaes abroad wfll cost an estimated $i| Utoon this ygay. This figure was exceeded in 19W, but if realized, as aeema likely, ft wiD be one-fifth larger than last year’s figure. DYER RALF IN EUROPE... -;. Of tills figure, manutacturing industries account for $LI>btilton; petroleum Industry, $IJ billion; tntohw {too ntillion and other industries the remainder. Owr half of the new capital spending ir to Eunve. seturing outlays Author Tells NAM Men Prussian Ideas Threaten NEW YORK (UPI) — Author tl.,eatencd ~to dominate American Itx Morfey ^»ld a meeting pf the thinking. National Association of {danuiac-turers (NAM) today that a Prussian philosophy Of government Michigan Man Among 12 Cited for Achievement NEW YORK i* — Henry E Morse, ,45, of Holland, was among 17 men cited Tuesday by the FVee Enterprise Awards Association for achievements symbolizing "T h e success possible under our free enterprise democracy." The 1961 “success story” awards were presented by the association’s awards chaiman, Talbot T. Speer of Baltimore. Morse was cited as "a' self-educated farm boy who started a company in his home basement and developed and patented a number of products such as the Hemco (H. IS. Morse Go.7 dhrome gauge for measuring dose tolerances. Wheat, Beans Show Firmer Trend Early CHICAGO IT—Wheat and sop bean futures indicated a firmer trend during early transactions on the board of trade today, but other grains were draggy and steady to easier. Hedge selling and circulation of offers to deliver corn on December contracts exerted a bearish tinge to that grata. The Commodity Credit Corporation to understood to be selling corn rather freely again, Grain Prices Moriey was one of several speakers at sessions of the 66th annual congress,of American industry be* fore and aftee the lunch at which Proetdetit Kennedy addressed the group. Moriey assailed what he said was a growing trait to govero- Ikere are many who certainly seem to think that dbeethre action from the eeater Is desirable of, by and for Itself.’ He said there 4ras an "all too toko up U per sent of the total ~ U per cent to HR the bureau Production ol the UK. manufacturing concerns abroad has grown jan exports ol manufactures. "v .- * . * # III one group of major industries, foreign production grew from $11.6 " i to 1957 to $15.4 billion to _____in tbe same period, UK. ex- ports fuse from $7.2 billion to $7.5 hiiiinn And the great hulk dt this production U sold in the local market or to third countries. Why all this interest? Most toMtoeosmen agree that AmeKtisrJpdastT7 mast he to a position to fight sa the best terms ft can get for a share of world trade, j . The news magazine News fhtot, noted that tbe Western European market alone still wa* unsaturated conesrned. ROOM FOR GROWTH For example, where toe United States has more than ISO automobiles per 1.000 population, according to this magazine, there are only' 83 per 1,000 to ftp 13 West European nations. gtadlar disparities show la pea Since advertising gose hand-in-hand with production to most evident assumption" that Amerie «M»m«hing months already ton shown a grim ing number ol American agencies HEADS NAM — Donald J, Hardenbrook, incoming president (ft the National Association of Manufacturers, talks to newsmen to New York where the group is having a three-day convention. Hardenbrook of New York City, is chairman of the board of toe American Creoeot-ing Corporation. SnMiltx f: T . ..... 9*.3S6.323.*rr.l3 CsnMNr Jf% il year 46,0«5.7M33» S3 CWnwW lb ... ... 3M.M4.U9.ltOM ....?, Rm^MSil.OenEUnd I Dec. 1,1*66 |Cw»NOaiL t» .../.6 6.136.1M.137.36 gWdM»W..gS *r Idpoicu 1J0 ..... M.6M.1S3J*T.«1 Owtlae 2J* i year 40.7ta.6M.624.36 OtaUtot 46 ...... 290.466.663.796.34 not H s it it- ! tflP fH#! 2 109V« 96% 5%-l% 46 57% 16% 37%— % 1 9m H% 31 17% 17% 31 M% 33^ I? IS in — % ____21 139% u4" n*%+iH Loakb Aire LSI M 47% M S + ” Loaw'a Thaa H 36% M% M%- Lone * cam 1 9* 31 23% 22%- ,, Lone S Oai 1 16 nV« 3i% 23%—.% Law III U 1J* 4 27% 97 57 *T Lnrfllaid 1.20 If 67% W Hi,. „ Lukana tul.tle II **% ■% •%-!% ■—M- Mack MIS II 41% 47% »M7iiSa»"T " M Dayatram .27* Dacca Bee 1JI BSTI Bud 1.4* + 4%l* 1 cK *fl7|Det idii iaa Dlaoxy .4*b HhCT------ 42% «% «%-% ,1-is S3 |T ' * 29% 19% 29% + J|1 ■ U 22% 21% Charlevoix Rejects Bid ;|>y Confumari PowGr Co. 2 ' lEmerXad J7t % CHARLEVOIX <* - The City I Commission has reacted by a veto ftaw w . ' ft 4 to 2 a Consumers Poorer Cor®v*r,tt,^p 1M * bid of S756JI6I far the Cherieveix pwcan jm i municipal power plant. , * The commiaston decided to ex-ffSSiJM . ptore toe purchase of balk power * from some producer lor male to jyctaaty un I Qtuievoix customers. . ERTm"* ...W ‘f ■ v! 1 jsyufEssvpn —EI—» L JM. n 23% m, n%+-4 IIH 11 4 i SJR m fl MirtN MU lb eft _ __ ii% ti%+ 9* 38% 28% 26%. 3 58 91 S3 + ------38% ll% + u«r d i . __________________ _ Merck i aa is M m% aa%- % Miwftiii 1 u% it il —,T mom .2 a 46 MH MH W MlddlaSUt 166 21 37% 37% 37%—% MkMrACh Jtbad 7 »% 36% 34%... ipafie 3 13 136% 136% l|6%— % “try— .is fi 73% gK 7s%- % MaracA 2.46 2 47% 47% 47%-% Mabaacaa tad ,40a 21 9% *%*% .. ManianCb lb 4* B% tt% 33Vt— —— — * ^ as s%...,. Sl% 31%-% —N— I* M 22% 21% 12%. H J MH *>% *i%-t SI 19% 15% 13% ____ 1.29 11 121% 127% 137% + 1% NatDalry I 4 74 78% H%—1% NatDtatlil 120 II 27% 27% 27 %- % —IJN 2b * IIS MS SB Mtaas to m% $M SjrC ? f 1.. H Central ■ ti 11% u% ia%+ % If T* SfeSr u>» a-a? MS 3 36% M% 94%+ %! OPCAOO ORAIN POP.. .... .... ■ CHICAOO. Dae. s (API—Oprnlnf I 47% 47% 47%+ % Stain: 29 90% 90% 90%-% May Ml 49% 49% 49%+ % 1 84% 94% 54%- % 8 19% 19% 19%. . 4 86% 31% 36%- 1 3 47% 47% 47%.... .. S' 88 M%" 81%-i 1 34% M% 34%— % 18 11% 11% 11%+ % IT 87% 17% + % 13^48% 43 43 — ^ 80 84% 84% 84%... .69 m 64% 56%— .. 11 35% S% 33%+ % “ 33% 32% 11 18% U% 1«%- % I 28% 1 1 38% + 6 U% 11% U%-20 32% 31% 31% . 16 18% II 18 - 7 51% 31% 51%— .. i 32% 32% 33%— % •7 23% »% 33%+ % —u— ^ 57% 17% il 51% 36% ___ „ I 67 19% 67 +1% M 36 31% 39%—% V 37% 36% 36%+ % ’ ll 43% - 43V H • " 19 34% UK ....... IS 40 31% 3*%- % 13 23% 33% SvT. 8 30% 38% 33%+ 3 31 *1 91 ... 3 4 104% 103 188 —I 5, 2% 3% 3%... 70 86% 19% 30 + B% 47% 47%+ .. 7f 88 54% 34%- % ■ jf 36', 36% 36% . . 34 12% 61% I1H-1 4 14% 14% 14% .. 28 29% 29 29%+ ■ 99 61% 67% ‘66% +2 1^,34% 14% 34%+ | 1 32% 32% 32% + ] Davldion Broa. ......... 11.1 11. rbderal Mosul-Bower Bearings 38.6 39.. Harvey Aluminum . 37.6 27.7 Hoover Ball h Bearing “ * “ ‘ Leonard Refining .... RecCvtUCSi —w— Warn Lam 1.96a Wnhencorp 1 WnMary l.tOg > WnOnTel 146 featgEl 126 IMHCp 1.46 TweMot 8 6 88 88% 88 27 43% 42 42%+ % • 7 24% 26% 88%-% * S’* » a 67 16% 36 J0%—% 3 32% 32% 22%— % M ®5 82% 83% + % . » 86% M M%-1% I 33^34 82% 8t%—1 16 30% 34% 36%+ % 1*1(77 111% »7%+l~ ZentthRitd 90a 39 74% 74— 24%+ % Worthington t cans for their own good should be “coddled, subsidized and If necessary regimented." ■; ~ ♦ ,+W Moriey ridiculed tip concept that a man “somehow acquires a .certain expertise” by taking a position with tbe government. He said that to follow this belief waa to show'“bltad faith to a leadership often at least equally blind.’ This, he eaid, was a “complete alteration” of government as envisaged to the Coqptitutkn. Moriey recalled that the Prussian philosopher Hegel two centuries ago said “the state is the divine on earth.” "That was certainly not the opinion ift the founding fathers,” Moriey said. '“Yet, though Prussia has now been wiped from tbe map to become a Communist spearhead, it to tbe Prussian rather than the American phllnanphy nt gmmm. meat that threatens to dominate with us today.” As the meeting, which bare theme, “A Blueprint for American Strategy,” got under way, tocom- agreements with firms already in business there. * ft * These figures on overseas investment do not lessen the importance of the export trade and they may toow the concern with which some persons to tills country regard such trade prospects to the future. Stocks of Local Intorosf Plgurn after decimx] palnti ere eightiie.' 1961 model year. Allies Supermarket* . Auto Firms OK Antiair Pollution Devices tor *63s DETROIT »—The auto industry agreed today to equip all new cars and trucks with antiaif pollution devices starting with the 1963 model year. Tha action came lew thaa four months after' Abraham Rtbiroff, (hf President Donald J. Harden-secretary of heolth, education ibrook ot th« NAM said he looked and welfnre, told the Industry ltor a “modest” business improve-to come up with a voluntary jment tor 1962> with most Of the flotation la time for 18S4 mod- ““ “ I els or faee Congressional action. The board of directors of toe Automobile Manufacturers Association today recommended positive crankcase ventilation systems, often called btowby devices. Such devices hafye been Installed on all new cars offered for sale in California since the start of the » Pfd. | |j Contract Approved at C. M. Hall Lamp ' OVia” THI CCOl!NTK * STOCKS9 Th« following quotation* do not n~ eiurlly reproaent . actual traiuaetloni but ON tattodad a* a gold* to tin proximate trading rang* of tha • Michigan Seamleai Tub* On. 32 Pioneer finance ............. 27 Santa 7i Drilling ......... 37 Vernon (linger AM . Winkle man* .......... Wolverine Shoe Wyandotte Chemical a two-day strike at the C. M. Hall Lamp Co.’s plant here was ratified today by members of Local 304 of the United Auto Workers Union, a company spokesman said. Ward Schultz, Hall Lamp’s director of public relations, said the union had notified the company workers would return to their jobs today on the afternoon shift. The agreement was reached in) negotiation* Tuesday after 450 employes had been idled by the two-day striket MUTUAL rums AfflUxted Fund M tails. 730.64 ( 7.S. AVERAOIS U 3,316.000. L’SST. :CA . 27* 8 IMS 147.1 H j- .......2MJ 1244 M7J SNA noas m» .....Jtot mi e.i au Mcmlh Ago ......174.6 126.4 43.0 8444 for Ate ......: 318.6 S.1 “• !“' -8844 126 5 toHn S8 P-Pnld i960 Low .. 2*4 4 103.0 Electrical Firms ConsumHrs Power Co. , Leveii Prke-Rigging Charge at 22 Makers NEW’ YORK m - Consumers Power Co. of Jackaoa, Mtoh , has filed 10 antitrast suits charging 22 electrical manufacturers rigged prices from 1948 through 1960 and seeking triple damages. AH tart one of toe defendant* to toe bolts Bled by too public utility to federal court Tueeday were among flrmo Hated to It by 44 DuPont Prexy Set to Appear in Federal Court CHICAGO (UPI) - Du Pont President Crawford H. Greenepalt was scheduled to appear before Federal Judge Walter J, La Buy here today to explain what toe Isupreme Court order forcing Du Pont to divest itself - pf Qerieral Motors stock wo’uld mean to his DETROIT W — A settlement of I company. La Buy had a meeting with lawyers representing Du 'Pont, General Motors, the federal government and Christiana Securities, a Du P o n £ holding company, here Tuesday. Another session to the involved anti-trust ease was called for today. TWA Asks Raise in Coach Fares to Bring in Funds ’ ! 82% H% »% + 8 4% 4% 4% , 1 a? a^togo o —F-+- If 48% 44% M%—1 8* M% 9% , *W % 2 22% 22% 28%- % 3 94% 34% 94%— % If 24%. M% 16* >3% 83% 84%+8% 17 Mb IJgS (BH Ptct | Porke Da U PwtbodrCwl , jf Penoer. JC l Me h niu i.J2 St-“C«4M4 S.r. . . * 28% —P— ________ Q| JEI 2.86 6 1*6% 165 168V<4 % nx-Uietrlbiitlor. T 1,20119 29% MH 26H- % dMld. ir ta Ml 22% 22% 22%+ %, S-86%f Ip ‘ 9 33% 86% .88%+- H. cld-CelleJ taken »t laet -Ji/ideod meeting.1 -Dac aNd or paid m 1836 plna atock (Mend.; t—Payable in stock during i960. " .• Net Cbans* . .J „ 1 lYtor- Am ffl jM I WASHINGTON (UPI) — Tuns World Airlines told toe Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) that the nation's financially ailing airlines must stop the diversion of first-class passengers'to coach service TWA (Mid the C AB could supply a major solution by narrow-Ing the difference between ftrst-daao and coach fares. Specifically, ~toe airline urged: —A 5 per cent increase to all coach lares, which it said would bring toe airlines $4.5 million to additional revenues. ' >l Increase on every ticket, ra j resulting in another estimated $4.5 ........... ** miiflbn more, annually. ■ond AVXRAOqs ‘ j —A 5 par cent * increase to Cempiled by The Aeeeclaled Free* | lirot-elaso fates for tripo on pis- Ufa M. nil.. Fg». L.Y4.1 ‘"M"**"* pteBOO Of “ About $40 In cash was taken yesterday from a foroed cash box in an outside telephone at the Pontiac Mobile Home Park, 229 E. Walton Blvd., according to Pontiac police. Damage to the phone was estimated at; $75. Lodge Calendar News in Brief The new defendant is Carrier Corp. -Like the other plaintiffs, Consumers Power did not specify the amount to be asked. ★ 1r it The suits charge the defendants conspired to fix prices to sales to circuit breakers, * insulators, lightning arresters, power transformers, power switch gear assemblies, turbine generator units, The action was the latest to a chain resulting from the federal government’s antitrust prosecution of electrical equipment makers in Philadelphia lastTebruary. Business Notes Appointment of L. W. Fidler, 7268 Cottonwood Knoll, Birmingham, as assistant to the general sales manager of the Autolite Division of Ford Motor Co. was announced today by E. R. Stroh. annualoonvoiiSon, Wrt..'’D«‘''fl.ldlvj,8‘?n n?*na«er' Election pf officers. Pot luck 6:30.1 Fidler, who first Joined Ford in KH.P. Marvin Roberts. —adv. 1937 as a guide at the Rotunda, assume* his present position after •pending a year as manager of distributor sales for the Motorcraft marketing operation of Ford. John F. Foley has been appointed manager of toe research department of MacManus, John A ■Adams, Inc., according ot Robert E. Britton, senior „ i „ . i.l1t IL .^77' F«ey Joined toe agency to March, Mtlj w, 19-raue rtoau, oouumeiui Township. it was reported to Oakland County Sheriff’* deputieA I am Interested In huytag leaalag agnort gepnes Station n___ ■ private party in Oakland Ckarnty. Write id i particulars to Bontiaoj ea manager ot c partment of Mac a: | i IS j Orion. 1900, as an automotive market analyst. He will continue to make his headquarters ta the Bloomfield FOLEY Hills offices of the advertising agency. , A ir it — . Jack A. Robinson, proprietor of —•“v,1the Parry Pharmacy, has been ilc of toyo and knick* elected president of tbe Save-Mor electric Drug Stores, Inc., for 1962. liW^JL1 Owner of two drug stores, at 686 4 1U4 Sv~ *t~wh*tl RS* Ta%-*«t» M«Mi 'A** HI iMj mi mi n.*, A« increase from 40 to 60 Large selection boxed Christmas 4 i7(| i7%- % »j_ta uuMrapicr j- ri HrijdiM ir un'uS nr 1S7 Sj mj *S J Pounds in the free baggage allow-imprinted. QltiAl knacks; also 1 j stove. Fri. 10 ir - 1.M6 mile*, which TWA • raid Andrew’s church, MOl Hatchery ri^h” wooM produce another.$Z million. Road. -adv. ”• ^ ,Blvd > _and Bridwtn , » r ■ j “jAve., both to Pontiac Township. mi, .—An increase from 40 to HP} Iyg»^ssttctlMi bOxad (torirtsau RobiiMlon succeeds Jade Kutnlck -- | as psesident. Robinson i« married ."wmwmmm. «............-__ land has tfeo ehildnn, He Uvss at jj IHT-SR. ^ ^Adv.lOTJl Wildwood fit. Oak Paik. THE PQ?mAC PRESS^WiilDNKSDAY, DKCl^lfJKR 6, 1961 FORTT-FlVIfi in Hands of Fact Finders The Greeter Utica Chamber ot nender to the chamber and in ton Commerce last night appointed a to the community a picture at ell three-man fact-finding group on poaallile incorporation at Utica and or parte of Shelby and Sterling township*. Named to the committee Gdlkm Hwtakter of S3U1 I Road, Butty Tewnahlp; Richard 'e. Stavoe of 45842 Brownell, Utica; and Harold L. Dillabaugh of 44851 Morang Drive, Sterling Townehlp. . Hoatekiar le a balider, Stavoe, an attorney aad IHUabaagh Is la public relattons for aa industrial f Ann,'’ "Thaw men have been aaked to aypectek of incorporatipo of m area now encompassed fgr the Greater Utica Are* Chamber of dmtneice, namely Shelby and Sterling tdarnmpa and Utfcs. Mid President Richard . Duncan today. “The chamber decided there a need to mid» Adi impartial study of the boundary problems besetting tbs greatar Utica area," he —M "Public reception of to decision to appoint a study com* raittee, on the whole, has been gratifyingly favorable. “The reaction of toe city and township officials has been ta-dlcaflvc of the desire to eooper- Unit Dedicates New Cafetorium Addition Ups Sooting Capacity at Michigan Christian . AVON TOWNSHIP — A special ceremony at Michigan Christian Junior pollege last night marked the official opening of the college's new cafetorium. ft . ft ft The new ooe-otory addition added to the multipurpoee building will expand the seating capacity of the present cafeteria from 300 to 800 people. AecordlBg to Lariea Pahner, deaa ot the college, the eafe-torlum wil be ased lor banquets, lectures, plays and campus programs. ft special feature is tost which is equipped with two dress-ing rooms. During normaT school operation, the room will be used as a combination auditorium and Santdtm Sleigh Ride Throug/h Rochester- ROCHESTER — Nearly 30 units, including floats and bands, will parade down Main Street here Saturday heralding the pre-Christmas Vikt of Santa. The Jovial old man, last kutky II mesas not least la the pa-ide, will ride Into town ea his "A study committee in and for only cm of the political subdivisions concerned would ha expected to think and act' only in the interests of iti sponaor. The greater-Utica Chamber of Commerce ter to an. tntoUlaent conclusion.” ' * ' ft The committee is expected to report weekly to the chamber. It is to start compiling facts this week. Earlier Duncan had warned: “We are not oaytog we are going to Wo this or that Bat logical to toroa this - DEDICATION 8UNDAY — The climax ci-three years of planning will be reached in two services Sunday when the new educational wing of the Oxford Methodist Church is consecrated. Educational Unit Cost $83,000 The two-level unit contains a fellowship hall to ■eat 390,' adjoining kitchen, minister's study, classrooms and assembly room. An open bouse will follow the services. Set Consecration special ceremony .The addition was erected as project of the Aaaortatei of MCJC and was dedicated in a special 8 pjn. ceremony sponsored by the organbation. Mm. Mslvta •r may ho eamptox, atooa the twa townsMpe da snrnnad UHea and since Tan Dyke is the mala artery for al three gwenmseatal Brits.’* The three communities have been promised inclusion In the planned extension of Detroit’s water sendees outside Wayne County, whatever their political position. • Tlit_ plans to pump Detroit water outside Whyne County were approved Nov. 38 by the Detroit Common Council. ¥ ' ¥ ¥ Other' possible advantages in merger would include integration ot fire and police departments. * A ft Shelby Township now has its own police and fire departments. Sterling Township has its own fire department and depends on state police and the Macomb County Sheriff’s Department for poliee protection. Utica has its own police and fire departments. OXFORD — Consecration of the new 883,000 educational unit of the Oxford Methodist Church will be held Sunday- ft ft ft—- Bishop Marshall R. Read of Detroit and Port Huron District Superintendent Merton Stevens will conduct the service, assisted by Rev. Fred Clark, pastor, and Rev. Alfred Eddy, retired pastor of the church. followed by. an epee house. Ike formal consecration rites will be held following the regular 10:45 ajn. worship service which time Bishop Reed will tortam key from Bey Bewold ef the Rieherier tmrirerilag Him ef flank Bewsld and ton which built the elation The Associates have furnished 835,000 of the 838,050 needed to pay for the wing- Approximately 83,800 of this anmbnt was netted at the second annual Associates Fair Sept- 38. The I To Test Students for'Fitness' Avondalt Schools Plan Drlvo to Examino at All Age Levels A drive for physical fitness of children lntVXvoodale School District is being kicked off with testing of Junior and senior high through project* conducted by the members to each at tea H district chapters. There' are 1,* 4M women to the ergatoritoa. The addition was designed by Wyeth and Hannan, Architects, Port Huron, the firm which has developed the master plan for the whole college campus on tea former Lou Maxon estate. - ft ft ft The college is located at 800 W. Avon Road, Christmas Play to Be Given at Clarkston Church CLARKSTON—‘1 Amriil and the Night Visitors," the Christmas play with music by Gian Carlo Menotti, will be presented at the First Methodist Church here at 7 p m. Sunday. ft ft ★ This story Of the three wise men and the little crippled boy will be staged in costume by the music departments Of Mercy Cbllegtf Detroit. Alee on the program Is “The Childhood of Christ" It mounts the owning at the shepherds to the manger LAKE ORldN—Seven delegates to the parent-teacher association pilot committee on school prob-|s in the Lake Orion Community DUtricr have been named, along with six sherries. The PTA district representatives and alternates are: Blanche Sima Elementary School -H. G. HoUena of 1258 Bald Moun-Future plana include adding a tain Road, Orton Township; alter-stage and additional classrooms at ... “- the west end of the building and The new facility is the first in seriea of several stops to be completed in a master plan prepared by the Ann Arbor architectural firm of Kainlauri, Mac-Mullen, Millman and Associates. MOKE TO COME Elementary school pupils will be examined when the present evaluations are completed. chain—Irip ef principal ef Mean School. Schools Supt. LeRoy Watt today said the committee was named to carry out the national physical fitness plans for youth outlined by President Kennedy’s committee on the same subject. ■ft ft Along with Bland, the committee includes athletic directors in the senior 8hd Junior high schools and elementary school teachers, Watt said. ft ft ft The committee first will see our children measure qp to the President’s physical fitness program," Watt said. "Then, if necessary, it will make recommendations to the administration on improving our physical fitness pro- 1868, with * new sanctuary. This will be built on the site of the present church and church home. A connecting area will houae a choir room and churdkpariora. The new twoJevd unit contains a fellowship hall to seat *350, adjoining kitchen and the minister’s D bo bsM at fcM lake Orion PTA Units Name Study Delegate the east end. ' Planning af the I storied throe years toe riulrmanridp ef the late The final phase of the plan s be to replace the church, built study. The lower level certains four large assembly rooms that can be divided by folding partitions, a preschool classroom, office and restrooms. Richard Royer of Leonard was the general contractor for the new building. Road, Orion Township; alternate, Edward Dcweyof-2511 Judah Road, Orion Township. a Cobb ef 14M West Hirer- Lake Orion Junior High—Mrs J. T. Meyer the evening a reception was a at the Waltz Hall in Pontiac. Following their honeymoon trip through New York State the newlyweds will reside in Virginia, where the bridfikttom to stationed with Ithe U-S. Anny. ',~'T ATTENTION ! HOME SOLICITORS — Corn for Dehrito— BRESSIR'S :ross-index DIRECTORY TR 4-0570 Mrs. Joseph Hipsher ef 4000 Whipple Lake Road, Independence Township; alternate, Klaas Knibbe of 760 Joslyn Rood, Orion 1,405 Killed in Traffic t EAST lJUWiNq m - Traffic in Michigan so far this year, provisional figure* compiled by State Police showed today. The toll tor atheran^fe o Give Concert 150 Voices to Join in Annual Christmas Event at Rochaitor School ROCHESTER—Ushering in Advent eeaean, the choirs o( St. John Luflwrea Church will present their annual Christmas Candlelight concert Sunday, at 7 p.m. in the school auditorium, ft ft ft Almost 150 voices of the Senior, Junior, Treble ahiT Cherub chetosj-will Join in presenting the music ot Advent and Christmas, featuring many old favorites including the traditionally well-known "Glory to God, the Angels Sing.” Dm to the popularity ef this program, the concert will bo held I* toe ochooi auditorium for toe first lime ttto year In order to provide room for afi to see ind hear. Members of the choir have been engaged the past few weeks transforming the auditorium into a worship setting. The offering for this year’s service wifi be used to provide platform risers for future concerts. Vi team of ponies from the f ill T. Ivory Farm. TV parade will get under way from the North Hill Shopping Ptosa at 2 p.m. ft .ft. ft When it ends Santa will greet gfl his Utfie friends individually at his temporary headqusrtera, Kaveriey Mercury Motors, 420 Mahr St.— So far at least 11 floats have been entered In toe llto annual event wUek Is sponsored by the W. L. Papenberg will direct the Senior, Junior and Treble choirs. Mrs. Carroll Nelson is the Cherub choir director. , • ft ft ft Soloists of the evening will be Mrs. James Fehlberg, who will sing “Silent Night. Holy Night’ and Henry DeVries ringing "Gera according to Mr*. Betty Levtok, C. ef C. secretory. Already scheduled to move down [Main Street are those oftheDown-town Merchants, North Hill Merchants, Rochester Kiwanis, Rochester. Rotary, Rochester Eagles, Avon Players, Avon Youth Center, Michigan Christian Junior College, U.S. Army, Cases Hardware, and] Mttzelfeld’s Department Store. ] HIGH SCHOOL BANDS Marching units include the Rocb-j |ester Junk*: and Senior high school’ | bands, Avondale High School band, the Rae-vens of Pontiac, the Thfiorl Maids of Royal Oak, and area. boy| “fkSrftH riding group, toe Trallblasers, also will be on hand as well as the Lions Club clowns and toe Shrine Club. Leading the parade will be cotarl guards from the Homer Wing American Legion Post 172 and the Jack A. Mason Veterans of For-[ eign Wars Pori 3908. ' ft ‘ It ft TV parade will move down MalnH I Street to Third Street, then west tol [ American Legion hall where thel marchers will disband. Hot choc-1 |olate and doughnuts will be served* at the hall to all the parade par-|g ticlpants. ft. ft;- ★ ■ There will be no Judging of thel floats or marching units this year.l In tV past trophies had been pre-|l seated to the beat units. PONTIAC ft OPEN ft FRIDAY | SAT.-’SEN. Driver Program Cited LANSING. (UPD — Michigan’s high adxxd driven education program was given the award of ax-cellenee Tuesday lor rating high among states conducting the program. TV award was presented by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety at the Michigan Safety Commission meeting. Area PTA Unit Plans Program lor Christmas AVON TOWNSHIP — A Christ-] las program will be presented at; the Dec. 13 meeting of ths Brook-lands-A von , Parent-Teacher Association at Brooklands School, 480 E. A Von Road. Featured will be two plays, Santa's-Lost Book" and "What Could I Give Him?" directed by lira. Arthur Wtneland and Mrs. John Ireland, program cochair- mm ' ;■ ; ~ Parts to toe pUy wUl be tok-a by pupils, and Mrs. Bay Freaks, marie director, will lead a small group ef youngsters In song. Mrs. Donald Healy will play the >lano to provide the musical background for the plays which will V presented at 8 p.m. Several Christmas selections will be played by the band led by Kenneth DeVor, band director. Chorus director Alex Dubba also will lead Ms group to singing, Second grade mothers wUl serve refreshments. (AdTsrtlMamt) Doors Opoa Drily 12:45 KM. strand SEE IT NOW! it A SEARING STORY OF BORROWID LOVE! IS THERE A CMIH6US CLARENCE ON YOUR USTT TT gift whisky.CANADIAN CLUB Ofcoteroo,yoiiknowaCantk>ai Clarence Mid he’s a coal problem when it comet to a gift So play- It safe-giva him til* world's most wanted gift whia-ky—Canadian Chih, Batter go over your holiday list from A to Z, and give your tavorit* iolk their favorite whisky— Canadian Club, faativriy gift-wrapped at no extra coat... "TV Boot In TV Hoorn" in 87 lands. tritoft tut a • nm ns ms. is ro»i i» « unit nos cum it SUM MUIt IStolHIt me, DUIOIT, ■ifuttw; lutmttimu unit fWIE-ll HURRY - HURRY IT'S TERRIFIC! HF 2101 S. TELIGRAPH RD, Ft 2-1000 Opaa 6:30 — Starts 7 P.M. UlCTklC _ •h-car free! MEATERS * sltoto * —VERA MILES "Davir of 8:30 Only —STARTS SOON— I AUDREY HEPBURN Adults — 90c Children — 25c FRIDAY THE HUSTLER* A THE MILLIONAIRES" iloiuARDjounson'5 Special of the Month MENU Roast One Half Chicken Stuffed with Savory Dressing fluffy Mashed Potatoes Buttered Green Peas Cranberry Sauce In Lettuce Cup Freshly Baked Rolls and Butter — Coffee, Tea or MUk TT Biaque Tortonl Ice Cream tan ni-csnsws snciu , / sniro DKnm i nwa u u HOWARD JOHRSOFfi ] CKNTIRLINE—Van Dyke tear 10 MH* M. MT. CLIMIMS—S. CwMot aad U Mfls fid. ■< DRAYTON PLAINS—-Oo Dixie H^hway (US-10) ROYAL OAK—Woodward ooar 13 MHo Dead j HIGHLAND PARK—Woodwwd at CriHorola f SOUTMPIttD—Northwortom at 10 MHo Rood \ p6NTIAC PRES^, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBR& lack ofSchooUnferest on Old, verybody Is it to to psy 4ttCDtion to.it, and the better you like It. Inis applies to antique can, singing guitars or even algebra. You may have to try this to believe it. I Hm guilt of the king hinged upon i all st the political intrigue of die ‘ Europe of that day. Close Up Red Magazine BUENOS AIRES CH-The ytVb Castro magazine “Che”wiS closed by police under a law prohibiting Communist activities by groups. Copies of a new edition assailing President Arturo Frondizi and the United States were confiscated. When he had learned a lot about the history he became interested in it and enjoyed it more. 'This idea will work for anyone who tries1 it. The principle oehlnd it is psychologically sound. The more you know of « subject the better you will like it One-hall the fur. sold in the UA comes from wild animals via trappers. /, By Quincy OUR ANCESTORS pedestrians, more drinking than usual and the two holidays. It is hard to predict, Childs said, what figure the December and Christmas traffic death toll is likely to hit. Vhxbmah mml Childs said he planned to enlist National Guard aid tor Christmas holiday traffic patrols and to put troopers on 10-hour shifts, as iff the past. Secretary of State James M. Hare also urged newspapers and radio and television stations to promote safe driving campaigns. He listed these as including more hours of • darkness, usually bad weather and road conditions, the excitement and buttle of the holiday aeaaon, careless walking by CAPTAIN EASY “Too many girls is what's ruining burlesque! I come to see comedians, not dames!" Give Book library; Paperbacks? Yes! BOARDING HOUSE LOOKAT'IM^TMAT 816, FAT W&C*—v/ fireplace- Porpoise/in there, Y anchored AT EASE, AND his sidewalk 4 r IS THE ONLY ONE INTH' NEIGHBORHOOD "THAT NEWER HAS IttSNON AND $LOSH SHON0JSDOFF/-***»’TDID MBCWCe / WT HE DSED1&0EAN ARCTIC 0CPLORER—MOSTHRJE/ GOT HIE TRAINING MOSHlNG Atf 6UPP1NGON HlSOWN NANCT TVC glGjgTlFF/y^- l HAVE A ] PEN PAL — 4 WHY DON'T YOU GET ONE? For instance, give the gourmet or the beginning cook the following assortment of books for reading and cooking fun: --------,__(____ IT'S FUN WRITING "Creative Cooking," by Nicholas Roosevelt, “Mexican Cookbook,” by Era* Ferguson, “Old Worlds for New World Families," by Leila McGuire, “Cooking With a French Touch,” by Gerald Mau-rois, and “Salads for the Gourmet," 'by Gillian Sandlands. ★ ♦ ★ For a mystery addict a welcome Rv Dick CitvnMf MOIITY MF/EKLK Arthur Conan Doyle,’’ by John] p.'ckson Carr, plus five Sherlock Holmes .stories. I THINK HUGO HOME AN0MK MY MOTHER TD IMdSM/lBMnRSaURE. And now there are paperback, for the children, including “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer," “Hans Brinker or the Silver Skates," “Heidi," "Treasure Island” and “Blade Beauty." W ALLWOHr MR.BMOOB r OPEN ’EM ALL UPRIGHT HOW AND SATISFY VOUR ► curiosity/i wantto SEE THE LOOK OF DUMB (DISAPPOINTMENT ON / SOUR FACE WHEN YOU ) ’ PINP OUT THERE < HAH/ JltTVSCAUam I \/ AMP MV ISA- \ HAPPEN TO BE STAMPIN' \ VKTIBMCV IE } I HERE REAPIN' TH’ BAPER, \ SHOWING/ / I'M CURIOUS/ VOUMU6TA I CUTOUT > BEEN DOW SOME EAOLE- / THAT RANTING EyiN* SOURSELF; LATELY, / IN THERE BE -’CAUSE VOUP. 6UILTY J PORE I COME J S CONSCIENCE IS —IN AND DO IT I V shown** —✓ S foryou/’vI on Coast Stirs Calls in Arizona FORCE GRANDMA (WHY DIDN’T YOU GO WHEN GRANDMA OFFERED T TAIOT 1VOU T’ TH’ MOVIES? ...16 LIKE DOIN’ T’ONE O* l THOSE OL’-TIME, SILENT MOVIES / —r\ r—J GRANDMA'S SNORES] DROWN OUT ALL TH* TALKIN’ PARTS/—1 VANDENBERG AIR BASBrQdK ~ B as Arlsana. Hundreds of residents throughout California telephoned law eit-fornament agencies Toeaday to report seeing strange lights in ths ■hr. DONALD DUCK C)Hr Forwtsr Imposes Me on Self and Others LOCKPQftff. N. f. IB—None of his campnipi posters will be mmammr [HE% PApLOOME HERE/jj f LOCK! JMMfi SOBBaLED \| ALL CNEE THE WALL/C'I MOUftE A NAUGHTY BCy/J WA1TT1L DADS' SEES r* WHAT VOUDID/i—r^( r l 1#^ ii M (jp) rbj;: b HI mk v8 >4 A LI i n fmmm _ ™5sr?^— \\SAJU»JO§ IPTIRTT Tiffc/B eft 1 jflIQgTYgWTjffc , y-Yov-rAceJ+t '«theHoldu3> ^ Ole THE PONTIAC PRESS, V^KUN ESDAT;:Pi£egM^Kft fr, 4^ FOKTY-SEVEN. " "If' AP tlMMu USCBnn FRENCH HONOR—Mrs. Evangeline DumsnU of Highland Faft, received the Oroae of the Legion of Honor, from' French .Consul A. M, Haillous at the Detroit Institute of Arte Tuesday. 182 Pontiac Families in New Locations Some 182 familiee in Pontiac have been relocated this year, according to the urban renewal progress report accepted without comment last night by the City Corn- All of the families weren’t relocated because of urban renewal, however, the voluminous report paints out, About 67 found new homes because their houses were in violation of building codes. wttee's Urban Renewal Pregie— Report and Pre- In detail, it touched an jects as codes and comprehensive planning, administrative organization, neighborhood analysis, finances and dti participation. It tells what has been accomplished and what is .planned for the future in those aresi. MUST SR ACCEPTED It must be accepted fay the' Urban Renewal Administration the Housing and Home Finance Administration before federal approval is granted for Pontiac’s second urban renewal project west of Saginaw Street. Teald In nloeattaa of families, a itlodatlaa office and stall have bain set up, the report notes. Ia the nest two years about IN More Testimony g Set on Tariffs SHOES W- ¥' ‘:1- If enttlae, homo Family Acceptance Corp. ARE YOU WORRIED OVER DEBTS? olidate all your bills HD JJCr us orei YOU oneplacs to pat -EUDGEXiySRYlCR_________ is w. hurow rm ran litmus buy it or sbix it tor YOU. WKItp COMMUNITY auction. OAseset. LOSE. «BUUT SAFELY AND economically with newly retested Dex-A-Dlut teblsts. M eeau at Jig??*-. ___ ^ ■MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS 7tO Pontiac State Bank Bids. Pootlac’s oldest and largeat buds- ’ RIDES, KITCHEN A VIAL- PAY OFF YOUR BILLS ■? WrfHOOT A LOAN I Arrange to pay all your bill* past due or not with one weekly payment TOP can Alford ASXOW ASllO WEEK Avoid famishment " CO»«ndItKttl5w* AeMfo. •' ; STEADY. W0RKr Due to new contract 3 men need-m| toy full time and 1 Tor part-time wan for a company who u 4t yeari of operation haa never had • strike or layoff Steady year romt work, w pay ween tor full time men end $34 per —week fee perttlai mau. Phone Mr, Johnson, OR 3-4701. M p.n. Thlg la what you are looking fo Year around Income Secure feature Oroup Insurance program ■. No eamples o Earning* «100 plui par week >.’ IF YOU ARE SAW, 3 ROD AND SAVE A CAR CALL PB 3-4433 POE APPOINTMENT. Mrip Wnntidftmrfs WOMAN TO DO 'ALTBRAItoM aad drew maklnf. Must have transportation. CaS LI 3-13M afttr man as ttotlAR witti oar. earn 43 to S3 and up par hour. RaittMUf Sd*nito3 Watklae EVELYN EDWARDS . "VOCATIONAL ■ OOUNSEUNOSERVICE" 24* East Huron . '*£•< Phone FEderM'4-0584 SALES Man aged 3S-44. experienced S^-bSSST SUS PLOYMENT. 40IJ SALES Man aged 23-s* with college do- ^ ■ Midwest Employment, • State Ndak Bldg. PB *5227°” zu lnstructloni. Flower nraktagand floral arrangement WMte-w> Morris Nursery, 4M1 Rochester Rd; - South of LOOS Lake, Troy. ; Material eOtdT Party and shower arrangeiweats for rent. Open Mon. and Pit. from S nil 4. Thee.. Wed., and Than, from noon tlU lo p.m. Onea Boh.---- --^=- FINISH HIGH SCHOOL No. s'aeees, High School diploma awarded. Stody at home in apart time. For free booklet write to National Behoof of. Home StOdi, Dept. PP. »og 431k Detroit 14, accordion, organ. Aecred- AN IMMEDIATE 8SUI FOB TOUR Land Contract See us i before you deal. Wkfiwa1 •tout. Realtor. 71 N. Saginaw. • - wTeiib. • -__-■ 3 ROOMS 1ST FLOOR INFANT WjiMHp. m BH ±2£L 2- OR MWQpl APARTMENTS — PrlvAte hath. Adtdtc. Near Osm trsi msh winot, W: ‘tiEkim? per |erall. Caretaker, y Frail St. 3- BaipciioNr -dN nil 'lak Children welcome. OB 1-04W I ROOMS^AND BATH. UTIUTlits. Adults Dwight St Mar I, PE i^mWr'sniYdTR Bfwflg,‘jMffi ____welcome. FE 4-S44C, 3 ROOMS. CLEAN AND PRIVATE. FKMSM.I48. Shirley. 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE “ hath aad entrance. Ill S-3423. ..■" ■■ 3 ROOMS AND RATR CLEAN. 3 LARGE BOOMS. BABY '«&-coma. MIJS pot waaCpil4440. SatiH^ I .ROOMS PRIVATE BA’ SB. BATH, PB r WELCOME. I LAROE ROOMS. CHILD L. come, Rea*. 431 N. Perry. 1 3-5174. terred. Call after 4No. IS Short St. PS 4-447*. 4 NICE ROOMS, UTILITIES, LOW- Rooiks. EvraYTHnio #^ nlshed, reus. PE 3-0440 •tU 3:3». , R OO MS iJliH) R.*nl ON |TOUnd floor. Bwky welcome. PE i Rooi44 innnr dARiod. ----Lorraine Ct. See Caretaker. Plano, accordion, oi to fill cutting, i MEN NEEDED •UlC groups for meat ___processing. This trade - Royal'ook Inetttut# of wrepplng. Roys Meat Cuttlag. school. 444-3144. LESSONS ! Kitchopc a specialty. FE_____ i ELECTRICIAN. ANY SIZE JOB iMMi Ncaeowabte ralca. ol 1-0342. IfUjlsscs Ssrvkt Hot point—Whirlpool—Kenmore AUTO INSURANCE FOR ANYONE Regardlate of Frevloua Record T^C Food Co, Inc. ' Ql. OttOpping U©23161 ir^an^tSw l£\**** *» n-ZOfliflg of American * orktag man ^ 37 ^ ,t North Perry and AriHie ANT OIRL OR WOMAN NEEDINO | friendly sdetocr. phono PE >4133 After 5 owl or. U no on-•wer cell FE 2A734. Confidential. DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES. ~m Mcootnoe. FE 4-T4W.________ f WOULD LIEE TO LET ALL MY 1 selling na John McA streets at last 1 _ mission mseting. t’s City Corn- scheduled more testimony in support of freer VS. trade policies. * * * ■ Rep. Hale Boggs, D-La., subcommittee chairman, shrugged otf the attack by Rep. John 1J. Dent, D-Pa, chairman at a House Labor subcommittee studying the effect of request and forwarded N to the foreign imports on American em-' «My ptonnlag eommtosioa. A pub-ployment. Me beutag la expected to be held. Galled m Bsgga group today were Robert It is proposed thrsite be used' for a $3-million shopping center. Coouniasiowers accepted R. Bowie, director of the Harvard Ualverstty Center for Ir- dore Geiger et They teamed up on airport far the subcommittee last week in which they urged closer U.S. cooperation with the European Common Market as a bulwark against Soviet economic expansion. January meeting. Hie site is bounded by Ferry, Arlene and Madison streets. It is about a mile northeast of the Glen-wood Plan Shopping Center, wboae developer! were also represented by National Brokers.....— The newrcenter, tentatively called Perry Plaza, would be larger. It lies Just south of Madison Junior High and Pontiac North- Aim slated to" testify were S 'e™ Higjtmhoote._____________ Clark Beise. president of the Bank of America National Trust and Savings Association, and J. Frederic Dewhurst, economist of the Twentieth Century Fund. ★ * Dsnt, an advocate of protective tariffs for injured American industries, leveled his blast at the Boggs group Tuesday as his own subcommittee wound up IS hearings with "testimony from industry witnesses. Death Notices BILL. DSC. I. INI, OERMAN. 1* Maple et^ age *3; beloved bus-bend of SakaM Brown; deaf, father of Jack and Cynthia Bell Mi NM. MW White; destr half-brother of Prank. Nelson and LUlla ThMwe, Uto Holmes and 1*. Pune ______________PelAr-J ». tt 2 p.m. Iron the wu — JraMtos. Ford Hits Meany tor Airing Work of Advisory Body DETROIT (AP)-Henry Ford 0 •ays AFLrCIO President George Meany violated s confidence in discussing publicly Ford’s part in the current work of the President's Labor-Management Advisory Committee. Both Meany and Ford an members of the committee. in a st£enhmt IVssdsy, Ford Motor po. chairman said he felt It would hi- inappropriate lor hiigi to reply at this time to Mssny’a chugs that the commit-toe’s work has heap hampered by FordVlnsiateocs on new legislation to ipply antitrust laws to Meany was quoted Monday from Miami Bench as saying that Ford is advocating tight new curbs on labor unions although Ms firm is prospering under long-time union relations. Meany did not mention Ford by name but a union spokesman said ke was referring Fori. - V ;v mwMm ridgy. Dm WWhm I . _______________with Rev. IBS Strong offlctoUng. Inter- -----th Oik RUl Cemetery. Jb. Bell «p Be to etoto kt tb* WU-llem F. Dev 1s Funeral Home. BLACKFORD DSC. A 144L AUUtST ■ • 31 Eddy Court; in ft b-loved hutbsod of LuimBlAekford: deer father of Mr*. Bitty Jane Zwicker sad Meotoy O. Irish; deer brother etpewg* P. Black-ford: alio survived by several toe win be fieff'ftweday^&e?*T. - St 1:30 SJR. from toO Huntoon Funeral Home with Dr E.1T Bavtge offlototlng. Interment In Ferry Ml. Fork Cemetery., Hr. Blackford will Ho in ttoto ti tho Huntoon Funeral Home. BOMERf Dkc. 3 le*l, AIttHUR Oeorg* Jr., SIM Cttntanvtlle Rood, Ctorkaton: aft 41: botoved bus-bond of Mmmiwt ^ttoeoari: bo-ioved oon of iilenboth and Arthur O. SyeewjtoJ Rift father of DkAlel Lte ammefC_ PMernl eerv ILL'S OffkMtll at 3 p.m. from Pursley Funeral ■owe with net.' USRMl Awlrekfi offleigtlag. -Iaternwnt In Ayytls Cemetery Mr. Boeeert will Ue In ^Uto st^FxrUey Funeral ^iMie^ US dr. cEoam; ape' 33; beloved husband of CMSNM Dunn; bn-firedt topT of hots r. nod Ntonfto Dwto;^ donr ^brother of «auavcSS.s ERUOER. DEC. 4. 1ML FRED C.. 44 nnraet; aft 44; betoend husband of JlouUnd Kruxer; dear ' fitter of Mrs. wuuxm nudelme) Krwln and Mrs. Billy (Dorothy) chapman; Slip bfiiSer ed feury. ®Si» Esrvss •ad Mrs. Roe* Lockheed; slao sur-vtvod by nla* grandchildren and two greet-yrandchlldren. Funeral eoretoo win be held ot 3 p m. today from tho Huntoon Funeiol Homo with Rice. William Parent rtnetotfaa.^ InUrnmat Ttngodsy, m ' about five cut for every : ___________ Ed. Curtis Dunn end Mrs. Let A r m od I! kl(0 earvfeod by It ■robdehUdron and thfo* (root-- * irkndobiidrtn. Funenil ter fjl t White Chapel Mr, Sehulu win jjijhjSii UtoPiSbiiin Johns BOX REPLIES , At IS ASA Today there warn rasfess st Itw Pros* office Hi Uto folio*' boxes: 14, M, M. «. «. M. 85, to. 71, K, to. to. "..4 LOST: LADIES GLASSES. LOST: SMALL ! VtcIritoNniira J«d"Owm**«~* cien^ erou* reward. PS 3-3344. LOdT uvm AND WHITE ENU- HTihlTnd",Recrtotlon Rldln* Stable. Sun. Dec. 3, 1M1. plner contact owners Oeorg* or Ted Todoroif. PE 3-4333 or M3-I3M Howard. > - LOST — 5-YEAR MALE BOXER. Fswn whlto oheri. Heovy ooHor and Itoonee. FE 4-411*. FOUND BRITTANY SPANIEL -Malo brown end white vUtalty of Sothnbow Rood. BMW after WATER SOFTENER SALE8MAV4 with proven record, commission fginlohod 1TfcnliilUi^n'bi’n* w ply In perean. >14 W. Walton. 1 CURB GIRLS d££ hUV.,Bw- 0rt.w*ta- ”° OTV OP POHtUc LIBRARY AIDE. SALARY $4,190 * $5,075 At loaot S yeore Ubenl trU college. An excellent ojmorninlfy to 1 TmWorm tub niulesefenol hbimy waslgnaents n o congenial ov to Pontiac Frees Box P. EXPERIENCED SALES WOMEN, excellent conditions, fuff or port time. PE 4-0003 days. FE »-«*54. *cSuL‘ORC?S33HA1B DRE8gER HOUSEKEEPER-COOK, LIVE IN. mom Mho olihBon, bo dwindohlo. ploo rent, o™ •** ““ - *» Ref. Pood THE CORN CABIN A N 1 € S U L T S ? UN NEEDS work, PE 3-3ST* or PE 4-3434. YOUNG ifAlI RlIH FAlriLjj jg-sires work of any kind ri HIH- W«k WnEtoti Nmnh II 1 DAT WONWO. RSarERKNCSCA. < Mrs, McCowon. Wfj-1411. 2 WOMEN DESIRE WALU N a”JslJssss&Ss!'* I * m DO YOU NEED FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY WISH - Tho Insurance- Mooch 16 j W Huron , ■dr Styksti 42 W. Monte elm bWhert Tods, JACKSON ■ lontotah PEit434S BEAUTY BOX HAIRCUT-SHAMPOO ....... - Ott WAVE BTYL1NO - COMPLETE 1JS. 1— ---- "“*• ert. Oakland Puel * Point, 434 OrchordLoke Avo. PE M1M. WIDOW LADY DESIRM H work. Uve In. FE MUT. lniMtog Ssrvks—SwpyBss IS REBUILT MOTORS No money down 34 moe. ti Motor Exehxnxe Co’. 401 s. Snnttmw L5L*SL.l;LCESSSr.BOTiPg>t' BOAT - TRUCE - AUTOMOBILE \ 'res oetfmntoe. mo-2*Ti. |1|| Exchxngo. Ooorantoed 1 iAROAUT FACTORY KBCONDd., KAR-LIFE^BATTERY CO. jverheed garage door*. oU ] jgj Auburn Are. FE 4-1314 — OisU prod”"'- n* 1 -P17........ ,1 ACOUSTICAL AIDS SONOTONE ■ 1148 Oakland Avo. , PE S-1Z23 ~CLEARfONE HEARING AIDS PHONE 334-4443 ROOFS: NEW, REPAIR EAVSSTROUQH1NO PE 444*4 TODOROFF BROS. sto**, 810roe 11 Product* Co. *34-3431. gjf£AVii«m - muJmhm Pectrte Co.. IMS home, oaraoe. < tssfa temsrfci 1962 EVINRUDE MOTORS Now on Display couple. 3 girls 0-7. Uve to. 4>v4. room. TV. IH days. 320. Write Bdx M. Pontiac Frese nnloto Renoir! —u n v, u n--em.f.V I TOOK BVSHISU1MB U&ALER oaafppM. pe 4NW. l. a. tenog. Harrington Bo»t Works JufttURnilW AND REFAW 1*30 S- TWBMb Rd. PS I Sill Ml N Paddock ~Bt." FE t-4073 domestic' HEATIRO COMPANY 471 Orchard toko AVa. FE HTO Day or Night Scrvico Joseph Oonthbr, OB 3-4433 Service Call $4.50 I CLEANERS arvlco PE 4W High School Students ■ | to your oppoituntty to oaru ley to flnaoco your many a curricular acUvula*. Ptooa-talanhan* aatoa on an attrac-eocomlaaltui kaala trim n ntown PonUac offto*. Apply a 344, 1* West Huron St. 15 HOUSEKEEPER LIVE ». PRIVATE ROOM. No ahOdran, Good wages. Rei aranco ranufaod. FE MM ----Ladies — Part Time.... - *1.1* par hr. -W* offer yon an opportunity t supplement your husband'* to n Keller.’ UL 3-1740, Ininsss Strides ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE RE-polring tod rewinding. SIS. P 1 Kke. Phone FE 4-M8T g PUMP REPAIR SERVICE. 1 hour, oeU FE 4-3447 after a. SAWS MACHINE SHARPEN MANLEY LEACH H BAOLEY ST. liiMniplil i Texts skwINO ■senrty Sksgs Rotlora anil Isrnoooa. FE SdMS OBRIEN llKfntb a mtrvt ■ VHi Orchard Lk.Ttd. wtoHI f Wnion la£b hxatino. r' ^anoT^M M Mf l-tUf A-l ADDITIONS, - FALL-OUT SHEL-tora. Houaa Raising. Oarmgos. Con. l^j^fiScwhaSW Free Eatlmataa OR 4-llU WE'LL DO TOUR LAUNDRY FOB you. Plnlehad laundry any. But* tram s. 1400 Baldwin' PR 3-437*. UctBSod fwtUsn COMPLETE *tt 0 blRNIzAWON aarvtoe. Residential and commar-clal. All work guarenleed. PEA DEAL WITS BUILDER — OA-ragot. aiblWtoni recreaUoo ttonu. R. VanSlcklo Bldg. Co. FE MIS3 342-4741 Mother” I school cMIdran. A-l MECHANIC. MINIMUM OF > yaoto oxparloaaa. Lota of otoody work. OtMojt sarmo Mantotr •t Lloyd Motors, 333 S. Soft’ Construction Engineers TUNNEL INSPECTORS after'4, PE 4-01M. OED LAE. .. .. „ _____rlylady, Musi Hvo ■ Thursday off, 435. Call altar *• OR 3-7*14, ________ NEAT HOUSEKEEPER TO UVE In Phmliy of A. Clarktton area. C»n after S cm.. MA 5-H«7. OPPORTUNITY TO EARN MONEY op telephone tot too. Attractive commission offered. PB 4-7***. tlili. EABY8ITTER. white PE MUI. 4:3»7:3*. SHORT ORDER COOK FOR 3 P.M. M Brick Apt. Full bsmt. 3 baths per unit, bullt-lna. Perkins. — . walks, tows. *43.40* an your V A-l MOVlNO SERVICE. REASON-1 E. J. Dunlop. Builder PE All _ t ‘ ----- GhUt MsMi UL 4XN’f~ < Moviitq and Trucking m. shift. N< •iperlencad w ntiaa'Fleas 1 open tor statement on a mum-mlllloo dollor drainage _ project in Oakland County. Send complete resume to Pontine Pros* Bos to ■ Are You Ambitious ? hlVh* school MISt. Tell Everybody About it with a Pontiac Ptess Wmt M : That’s because of the greater selection of everything from automobiles to employment offered every day. a lust Dial. * FE 2-8181 STOP LOOKINO! Avon has the tarn log opportunity you wont. Sail quality cosmetics and toiletries wlth eon-Ilrtenee Money bock guarantee for eomplet* customer saltrfac-tlon Phone today. FK 4-450». nuns An rue uuMeee work, typins required. I derailed clerical wort Pontiac Press, lot 71 gl work oxportoaoo or-* r- TOP SALARY $6 THE RIGHT —part. Must Stay in 3 nlxhts a weef. Oanaral housework and child care, reference*. MI MI30. WANTED; WHITI LADlf TOR general housework, Uro In, OR >•734*. ____ WANTED: RECEPTIONIST FOR phyttotona offtca. Ovar SI psora. Eat* qualifications. Reply ”~-tlae Frets IN 1. FOB AI i‘rdX“ ALTERINO AND WOMAN, >OR UOHT HOUSE- WANTED: eE51 ___IaUT iir.*rl6avS? ELdtRLf kOMAN TO cere tor thiUreo while mother work*, mow for homo than wakgas. call 473-4411. 0m55i to uve in more for homo than wages. Mother's Jielp-or. 474-1314. WOitAW »Oh faABTjflPflNO A'Nb mother's helper Kachangt far pv-hj^Hrtm aad board. FK WOMAN COtkFANION "p6r EL- derly iAdy. Mors l ------ wage*, call before attar I. ft Mil*. : 1X4 PINK ROOF BOARDS 10 MB. ft. 1X3 FURR1NO STRIPS 3e Bn. ft 3x4 KIM Dry Plr .... So to. ft. 3x4-4 Economy Stud* . 3*c ea. I Rock Wool .......... *»c • bay 4xlxH Hardboard ........ 11 M txSxv« nr riy toad ..... SMI PONTIAC LUMBER CO. Yard Prices. Dthvtry Service Available S3! Oakland Ava. • FK 4NU 3X4 — F Do&noUV STUDS M*K 1x13 wtota pin* boards lit to. ft. 2x4 No. i ErlMS 67 Mi K ft. . .'AINTINO AND DI----- lug, Frae esUmates. 442-3417. HTSRIO R AND EXTERIOR. Pno eat., work nor. IS par cant die, for cash. **3-043*. 1 LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR. Plywood Mil on ......-fniiftns sxn,____ it our oelsaa before von bay i ant ob cab Load LYNN'S TV SERVICE. WE SERF-toe oil “ykr* *f —df—, TV, hi-fi. stereo. Pert* aad labor guaranteed House cells • specialty, kerv. available on Sun. IrtB 4470. MICKEY STRAKA [ TV SERVICE i PAT OE ITE. FK 8-IMS ACE TREE SERVICE STUMP BBIOTAI, General Tree Service 1 TRIMMING OR REMOVAL. VERY low ooet, FK S-3M4.__ OB M733 or OR 3-4*43.______ BARNES tt HARQRAVE A superior seloattoa of ton 742 W Huron. Pontloe FE M101 Consumers Discount Center ITS N. IAOD4AW ST., FONTIAO ____________SHOP r"tv*%'7JLs PAmtlNa. FAFERINO, BEMOY-1 Ol Washing. FE 2-2312. ___j PAINTINO AND PAPBR HANOINO Mark Nelson, FE HIM. 4 ENGINE AIRLINER, NON-STOP-' .............................. WANTED: A RIDE FROM UNION un to Twittae -Mator Ca dally dh day ahtft. call altar 4:31. EM WEMT -------------- ' — WanltJ ChiMran to Nari 21 HOMELITE ,L MODELS ON DISPLAY 114450 UP REE raHOifITUATIONS CMff Dreyer Gyn { & Snort Center k lull Holly Rd. ME 4-4771 PRIVATE LESSONS Riottisfr BLAYLOCK COAL A 8 SI Orchard Lake Ava ___CHRISTIAN HOME — SlV* rate rentes, PC 4-7370 Wontsd HmmIisU Goods 29 1 CALL SELLS ALL. MORE CARE far furniture and appilaneoe. Bar-gain Houaa, PB 3-4*42. casE Fob furniture aFd aF- |Hisata, houaeful. LET US BUT rr OR SELL IT FOR YOU. OXFORD COMMUNITY AUCTION. OA 4-3411 WILL "TfUf " houtafuU of fnrnltun, tool*, ate. M. R. BaDow. Auctioneer,' FE -----— MB 1-41M. $Nwf|d t> 8—* 3-BEDROOM RANCH HOME, PULL basement, out of etfy, large Id or r. ecreage. Y“** -*■'" KM M44I. CHRistiXN FAifftV 6F 4 Mim I'tSTuSTl- Sf % LINmtOS - COLORED L. R. Middlaton FE I HAUURO AND RUWnn. NAME yoor prto*. Any ttsto. PE SAMI. HAUL1NO AND RUEBISH. 42 load, anrtlxa*. FE 4-4844._ to”OR 3-M4E ~OR MJtk*1* LIOHT~ANb' HEAVT'TRVdXlifa' RubMah. fllidlrt. grading and iarww4**1* tti&d----- U-WASH-IT 0 LB. WASKERS SOFT WATER JFEN 34 HOUR8FLUFFY DRYER 3M E. Pika, at Martvo. Fwbha Taio. FOUR—MODEL B-7I7-A kabnltt 300 thread-grtndlnx dndtot, 2I7A an. W1 4-mE Ifew beE Vui tl REBUILT, USED TVs Guaranteed OBEL TV SERVICE A5f. to >:M PJf. Trucks to Rent Pontiac Farm and ' Industrial Tractor Co. ^ WOOWWAfl ^ Open Daily lnclntimt- T--- FE 2 8 iM 8 1 ipjltTY-EIGHT TgOB PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBEB 4, 1661 Sab Hemet 49 SrieMamii j • - ^ mVANIAKK ^ g» J_Hag HANOT MAJ5— . pe^y^^^^nM^to^m* et h fiK ^ttSto^fJ*prieT2!ft SSSS TVetUn^use dbuU? 1M0 pflvUiftl, PH F"9 PH# B3m. " - Lakefront $8750 ■ Suaraer beace. furnlehed, fta- .. ptoee. , mm Vd-U-Way GIs $50 ouf*BaMwm. »» m price. WEST SIDE - ButhBt. Bbarpeleu 5-room#bun- ^fciiiFta»£k~m45if iir*4177 or LI 3-7337 after 7 p m ■ - • j>MlFP»" TW«f-TT • —fiS&s- SEE NEW Econ-O-Tri 3-Bedroom Tri-Level $8995 pine let Will build on youre lot « euri. No Mortgage duet. Tenws£,m m * \ZJATD*”- "^5444, Hammond Lake Ranch. ^rg^T’SLi6*.? charming. 3 hadreom. lekefront. will provide yon and youre With the finest of living tor years to ooms. Beautifully laodecaped, sprinkled lawns. Wolkout lower. SvdwMh family — fir“’—1 S3rttih,* i 'MVioV PARTRIDGE * Assoc., Realtors 1054 W. Huron FI 4-3143 YOU CAN OWN - a new 3-bedroom, aluminum aided bma, plastered lVh bathe, full basement. 511.555 on your let Call NtUoo Building .Co. anytime. O'NEIL MULTIPLE LUTINO SERVICE RUFF BRICK BEAUTY. We( side, nil eh one floor. I nucleus bedrooms, large kitchen with nice Mg eating arts. Light and cheery living room with picture window. Cinema galore. Only I year old. duet right for retired couple or o f yaw this "ene”s."'Ths*"stu—M But wooded. On canal one block from Lakejt. OMr. 55.555 full price. CeR 555-3754. Just • f«w minutes BY OWNER: YERY'NICB 3 BID- decorated. Drayton area, ready for ^oewpsy^hw > down pay- BY OWNER—1-BEDROOM HOUSE WHOM — fBU Ick renek. fun ________ •t. carpeting, fenead And land-apedTKW 4Jkler cent wort-40. JU t-3337. DLORAH BUILDERS Orion. DFuK*prfe#r to eloee eetete. Ttkf GLEAN. 4room, both, ksse-mant, garage, large lot. 513,505. Bseeilentterm#. H. P. Holme*, too. BQJMMT PONTIAC TOWNSHIP M.B.U.O. by s8-^drft3a» j rifle# 1 bedrooes home, gae heat, as^uspMusa s*rtEL“&osr«B gjuMi hm liii1 wm mevad to yegg M. Laoatad northwest uetfan. Ranch type tts All hardw basement, eehoMert yen In. V -254^ close to city bus and ----i- ■‘—“i* will move P REALTY, ?JS±*SL T at WANT TO WjffiEjnraA. M I BUY. drder your Ad on Me . « Day, Low Coat M|an . . __ _______ home. There1! carpeted living room and din _ room, cenlalc hath an the main floor with one bedroom down and t bedrooms up. Made your appointment today. GJ.'s No Money » Down .......... PERMA STONE 3 BEDROOM mot with lake prtvfletr- — Huatoon Lake. Living ream, lag room and a full baen Hardwood floors. Forced air 1 IN which gives you a let 111 x 130. 55,355 buys It with elosIhB _____11 basement. Formica counters, frultwood finished cupboards, gee beet for economy. 555 moves you In. He other costs. UNION LAKE FRIYILlDOES. to he bed with ownership of very ne*t, story and naif 1— Kklow. fuu baaemaM, too. Extra rte living roam. Aluminum oem-blnstloos Included as well as 15 exterior aluminum awnings. If* a goad dpal at Just 51555. Approximately $375 will move a vtteran In. RAY O’NEIL, Realtor 343 t. Telegraph Open M P.m. rt 3-7103 OR 3-3111 MILLER k.pM MMPVII ____Honed Inside and apartment fUrmlshedT lower Partly furnished. I new kitchens. Priced at 55.105 — 51.455 down. ,WAncm FONTI AC—Attractive lW imft tMHh mhr galore. Large let 155 Ke W***5-- bullt to P»V it ooodlttao. A he deteJET William Miller Realtor FE ' tit W. Huron lifler - ‘ '• i Fhana Wt (-3353 «57- Attention, GIs With Good Credit We ean offer you a vary attractive deal an following heme, 3-bedroom bungalow, plastered waU*. oak 01545,. porch wttk ---------- jgrajai mala and let. 17,000. transportation. ; $29.00 YOU* CAN'T AFFORD TO RENT WH EN YOU . CAN BUY “ IN THB CITY OF FONTIAC $49.70 A MONTH Excluding Tama and Insurance 3 Large Bedrooms AU Carpeting Included MANY OTHER DILUX* FEATURES CHOICE LOCATIONS IN ALL PARTS OF NORTH PONTIAC CITY MODEL AT 108N.EatftBlvd 1 Block N of Pike on Bset Blvd. ■ Open' Daily, Son. 12 * 9 Model Phone FE 5-3676 g.B.a BuiLpnto ca HITTER TYLE FARM, 3* acres, 3 om, family mem with tee. remodeled farm baanu . r garage with black top,,drive. e have other acreage 1571 W. Huron WILL BUILD %sf*iP3egaa- Heve__3-bedroom .^1bath, tm) Don McDonald _ LICENBED^BOTLDER ohn Sunday Noon to 2 3 BEDROOMS 2 BATHS ThU custom-buUt "heme FHA approved — 51.7M Total Price: 514.500 Man Sunday mean to 3 m 94—*~J— $500 Down Full Pricerr$5^5U‘ Goad (room frame home. : rooms, living and dBUng T_- full bath, plitttmd. walls, taread air oil heat, raved etrss* tion, city sewer and wttei vacant — move right In. Drayton Plains Fenced 1 cere wooded lot. 54 grade school tad six center. 5-room ranch home ti ft. broemway. 3-ear g Priced at 51L5M. terms. I SMITH WIDEMAN 413 W. Huron Street OPEN EVES. FE 4-4526 MULTIPLB LUTINO BlkviCB SECOND STREET. . ___________, full baeement, gas bsat, fenced yard, near Narinern Him, 53,555 UNION LAKE AREA, 3 bedroom, quick poseeMloo. only 55.300 with lew down pay. Call FE 4-3555 ar FE UMI. C, Hiller, Real Estate. 35b5 EBa. Lk. Hi. Immediate Possession •mall down papaeot. Balance ••ey monthly pay manta. Weal side. Webater School district. 3 bedroom. Bheemsat. Oaa furnace. Finished glass porch. Paved h'-staaet. 55.555. PONTIAC REALTY 737 Baldwin IRWIN GAYLORD i enjoy thl« three ___________ OVER TWO ACRES Total price 55.505- TtVW acre* >-roi^.tw*ciu>r/lfiSi. w'rt brick 3-3551. -Lawrence W. Gaylord -Agar- LaRe Privileges I rooms and Mttb. enclosed patio 15x35.’.5MB ItM 13x15, attached garage end .hmgpmg. Beautiful lot. STOUTS Best Buys Today nom^womAWM - Dgw patio. 1 tots.prfrilegM in’ Sylvan Lais. Priced to cell rihdn&w tiiNiiff : gage available. room ranch home, located only imSS Warren Stout, Realtor 77 N. Saginaw St. Ph. FB 5-511 ________ hast and hot water, ittrear garage, large lot near erne lie and ■tores. Priced at only 515,755 on FHA term*. Lake Front a Oakland Lake lla P»mft4tOM pwiUrttf wall*. DORRIS IXIHIUOK HEIOHTS BRICK: A . tractive 3 bedroem home, r ' on mein fleer and a toil dormitory bedroom up. Tills e comfortable and wen pie am *me, tiled baeement, gas best, ice fenced yard, with patio ad outdoor flreplace ar-1 -Md garage. 515,555. OTTAWA DLLS HOME: 51.47k on , total prim 513.155. A large 4 roam Gadar shake I lilfim .Bifid. gm.BBIR .dPVh aid to bath up. BenaflM profess)cosily landscaped let. Aad 3 ear garage. ANDY BUNOALOirjtMI. t lr eeroee front mums Hew gee farneoe. Bast..... garage aad hreeeeway. Yaeaat WATKINS LAKE FRONT: J bedroom home with haaiiMtUWy paneled living roam cad maeaiva fireplace. UrM gleeaed *-porch, nleo inches with all toss steel sldt. 513.555. SILVER LAKE BUB. Neat end " figis arete ______ _________laid, 3 rage, 3 lot*. glUM. 4 ACRES, 5 ROOMS Stream and Trout Pond 5 acres Of excellent gaidda cell, with nearly a thousand feel „p< rotd frontage and bordering on • mBiM ttrvam. Along with a nice 3 bedroom faaah home fMtortog ea expeeed walk-out basement with largi windowj. I e large lib garage. A eeUeat eondlthm. Only 51 51.555 down. LAUD'S me. 3553 Lapeer Rd. t&Rty) B FE t-5351 or OR 3-1331 after PRICED TO SELL Attrec- , ______Hatched bcdreaml. large wall earpela. make this worth seeing- SSL555. ■ SASHABAW Very attractive I bedrooi waO-to-wsU carped la Hi custom MR kitchen, til gee beet, lm ear gal torn let. 5MM an ten \ rifle savings far cash to mortgage. FAMILY HOME _____Ji 'M5 Uvtng room, 5* activity room. Uilt dhdng m voter twa aeroe of toad wwh o $500 DOWN I bu at door. bullt-tn front porch, has epproxl-mctely lib eeree of ground. Ideal for track garden. 2 Family . . . West side - 51.050 dm! i rooms end beta each floor. Hf floor perfect, second needs some ftn-tohlug. Hew roof, gae heat, Bear garage. On blacktop street. Just off W. Huron. CALL FOR Roneh'EstateTT Beautiful 1-bedroom ranch heme, huUt to I5M — on 3% acres, irith a swimming pool. West of Foattoe. d lovely rooms, lib ceramic tile bathe. A-l construction. Anderson windows, oak floors, ptoetifid walls. A fireplace to the eptmtoae carpeted llvtng room, another stone fireplace In the recreation room. t*~-gas best, ail add to yeuFwtoL. comfort. The Md ■Wlmmlng pool •id-Mb acre site Insure sw- enjoyment I WE ARE KAOR1- SHOW YOU 1HIB FIN* HOMB Acres Cape Cod heme, MMM throng——_________________ clous rooeatl IttN living, room, -----*-•* neterel ——— *— l, 15x15 OBN^BMAN-B UST WITH- Humphries FE 2-9236 Waterford Brick Ranch ____Jrma. ...________. carpeted • living room, ell hast «atto to back yard, to beautiful g“fc-“n- i g|Md *~ Clar kston Main Street ■utely family home to excellent condition. Locate* oa Igc. water-front M, Beautifully landMaMd. - 3 large bedroom*, new carpeting. Ts*tel ally diimwtod throughout. gM^toTtorr-- •W: $500 DOWN Two acr*4. 5 room houc* l__ qar gang#, located «a blacktop road. If yon like country living hcre'e Yhe place to git started. Lorraine Investment Co. FB 54513 12-ROOM BARGAIN .DEAL FOB DOWNTOWN BOOM. ACTON AT 5MA5 wITH 5555 Sown. .. -- -y COLORED GI I FAMILY INCOME - 550 MOVW YOU W — VtaYOpOCO CONDITION — RAVE MANY OTHERS FOR COLORED TO CROOBB PROM. WRIGHT CRAWFORD AGENCY 3it/1r. walton *n mms •W E. FLINT MT 34143 Or Call FB 543M RIVER FRONTAOB-CtfTB LITTLE horn* to v*ry good condition right on Huron River mar Oxbow LA*. AMU, OR TRACK — Drayton Plato*, tune 5-rm. modern noma with NORTH SIDE: ■ Take pKi at this dell house • M ol Mam In this home - Living roem, Otog L, all earpetad. Two bednas., tile hath, 1 large room tottsjmdtn knotty pine, walk to etoeet. Basement. ree. room. . . gae "heat, gastaator. large a ear gtroge. Taved drive. Frleed at: 511.M0. family rm., rdf nkccxeent, gas iwat and large firontota tan to well ear»|tag;-*taliwl^Brouiy 511.554. will accept cheaper heme w^ljood lend contract or houac- WEST BIDE: A big family home and priced to sell. Living room, dining room, StoEam 1 bedroom# end bath ea 1st floor. Oarpotmg aad drapes. 3 kidroatog and to bath in. Basement, oil beat, water sett-oner, storms and screens, immediate peeseiilea. Frieid at: 513,155 - $1,501 daws, 575 per WER BIDE: Bcmlnolt Wblt# ftiunimin SPECIAL — New William* Lake, Large 7-rm. rancher with attached two *ar garage. Nlee famftr room, wall to vraff jarp*ttog,..gae AC furano*. tgciiunl mudlBah to and out. 5105 down phu mortgage coats. Urge ltoxlSt ft tot Ttaiy an exeeellent home. scree with i vary'atom* Arm. modem home. Mm baeement and fine family :room. An you nead riding, family.heme. Thto Ms tot al enjoyable Bring to thto home, living room with fireplace dtntnf Mem. 4 bedrooms end hath up. Basement, oil heat, 5 ear garage. HM5 WMMSdtoM Itoto tor Eto. Frleed St gtMOd, School bus st door, Saar atop- JOHN K. IRWIN to^jjob. ^good eradtTand your ranched with 1 carpeted bed-raised hearth, lto baths, ovtr rags wlto’hutltto'work hro^ and SuSSkSs . eg Income to trade. G.I. LIST WITH «| — We buy. celllend M^MuRlpI/*-LtottSTtottTtoe. Christmas Special $99 Move in Before Christmas ■ New 3 hldraaoi ranch Bsmo. weri 5f Fauna*. Built in 5V5u and rang*, formica counters. Fruit. wood flntoh trim. Attached ga- ffjgjgggjg a- aamtou. Ash 1m m* Luca*. BAY O’NEIL, Realtor U H. BROWN, Realtor MB niuiMth Uka load Ph li Tim or FB Mli COLORED HEW RANCH bdlStS Wtth 11b bathe, built to even HM rouge, j I beiireeme. Full basement, gae heat. Ot h* money dotrm FHA PwrY liblOM, >Mh dto.VMfe IfisSeS perch. Full heeemeai. Auto. Bout. 353 8. TUUgmgh Opan 54 F. M iSMiir™ / hhwSi .sanz. _ Signature Wf»E”FE2-« ©AHiAND ■ Loan Com r ally . 22 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. WHEN YOU NEED-, $25 TO $500 MimmA LOANS 30 E. LAWRENCE Need $25 to $500? v See _________ "• Seaboard ~~ ' — Phone FE 3-7617 , PLACE TO.LTV* AND WORK. 1 Moll goo station and 3 room .apartment adjoining. Situated In A*t* Stmoco'Station s 3 saru'TirvSw3’!; KN ter prise 7514 liM am. to S p.m. Monday thro Friday._ BEAUTY SHOP FOR_ RENT. equipment furnished, FE (-3520 Hagstrom Milk Pick-Up Route ]p Northern area. Includes 20 term Mope. 18*5 International tank truck. Approximately (0 mites par day. Excellent gross. ©wner Tired Excellent opportunity tor o live Wire. Wonderful hunting and tithing area. Main street location. Modern equipment. Inveill- H R HAGSTROM, REALTOR ,.J0 HIGHLAND RD. iMSI PONTIAC OR 4-031 OPEN DAILY ------ INTERESTED IN BUYINO or leasing a good service station from a private party ta Oakland County. Write full psntcuhi* to Pontiac Frees Box 1(. must tiUrnWffWtT PARTY ETOBBAND RE8TAU-rant carry-out foods. Orosalng (125,000 a year. A very profitable buaineaa. Excalteat equipment and air conditioned. 120 - foot frontage. New 3t!(0 building. Black-top parking. Will sell everything Including Inventory.. (55.001- Term* Located U> Ketfo Harbor. Private. Call MX (-331(. Aik for Mr, Nick. ; E B T A U R A NT FOR RENT, rally sa toped Pontiac Motor area. FE MOtl. 722 Olenwood Small business for sale, pa- BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY- WHERE TOO CAR BORROW UP TO $500 OFFICES IN Pontlae — Drayton Plains — Utica Lk„ Birmingham. Plymouth FOR YOUR QUICK CASH LOAN of t25 to (800. borrow the on, oenvenlest way mi yo SIGNATURE With eaay-to- OHil ■ ’ " jrrapia guaranteed Movei, iefrl(*nlen. tad washers, to. to tgfj I piece electric water ktsun. (II up; SSf dresser, odd beds, sp rora and ruga, Evei 5SSo roolBk, dtoqMfo, imHMMP frame* and keadboardi. Foolery (IMSdl. About te .price. E-E fB>BUY BELL TRADE lARdAIN HOUSE, 103 N. f inti PRBMCH PROYlNCUL LAbt‘4 secretary. PHtontoF|.liOML BMC 1 RCA UUvtMoo, (100. 1 black aSg.M BET, (35; 'irfitlNO set, (Mi MSI Move, (20; OBlf-KT2MM, (U: waahera, all umkao, (It up; davenport and ubuIf, (1»; Kenmore eteMrte dryer, (20; gal and electric (tovaa, (10 up; B year crib, (10; dressers, (note, bad*, epring*. occasional chairs, lounge ehalra. Everything tot »• •^^Y*W%Aimt PEARBONBj 42 Oygmrd Lake Ava jsbvs matching I chmlii. Ml M74i. rUDd UOO ROOM SUtTE. .^FSSffliRr^o^ Lake Ave. FE 4-hd. n'a. 42 Orchard weekly. Fears4u>u _ - time brand now MB to MB. (1^6 weekly. - Feoiyana. a Orchard Lake Avo- ( piece Fumed soud oaS dining room furniture, 3(1 B. Marshall .. ________ B&bo«^4' tons simply by Staling, or pay CMb-grtM of IkI Waltaa. FB AUTOMATIC ZIO ZAO. DIAL-A-Stltch Sewing Machine. In tovely Wood console that moaoenuus. button hole.. bHud hotel, over-toots. oE ibbgut attachment*. dial control* maw ouiton hole*, bl* monogram*, faney de»______ ... 4-Mli: Walte’- M lot* model TV* Rebuilt and guaranteed ” blood O. B..............(M.M " and M” Phllco .........ftoB.M “ Zenith, blond ......... (M M " RCA tUMB M other goto to ebeoae from. WB BUT. SELL AND TIRADE Walton TV, PEB-MI. Open M (15 B. Walton, Corner qf Joalyn. ANTIQUE BALE - ihltDAj, LOANS (» TO 1500 BAXTER -TUVUWrpNE M W. Lawrence Bt. FE 4-152* TEAGUE ^FINANCE CO. 202 S. MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO LOANS (2* TO (MB AUTOS LIVESTOCK HOUSEHOLD OOOD8 L 1-07*1 l 2-351* $750 TO $2,000 - CASH LOANS on autoe homo aquIUao. homo furnlthlngi and equipment. 24 to 2( month* torma. Group all you* debts Into out account wllh only out place (n pay. Family Acceptance Corp. Sit National Bide. 10 W. Huron. Pontiac —Icphooe toa-t023 MORTGAGE ON ONE With 150-foot frontage. graph. -Ft 4-0521. __ headboard, dreuln* table sa^wTg6^ cilrtblnT^ ilal gtttengnoi '■*" fancy dealgnt. button hotel d clothing. FB M322. 1 Walton Bird. FE 5-4175 STATIONS FOR LEASE OOOD POTENTIAL. Fiona# call between * a m. and 5 p m. BBS 3344 nr after ( p. m. ggo-ittr. pure OILCOMFAWT :--#TAt4DARiron, Brand new high volum* (tatlon for IraM, Located at the Fon- person. -‘-tot1,,,.___________ CaU -Ml (-5211 1 TAVERN. OWNER'S AFT. BAB to operate tavern with plenty parking M edge *f growing toe Just north of Toledo. RecenUy r modeled .and air conditioned > only 11.5(0 (own. PACKAGE LIQUOR - A terrlf lust $20.(0* plat about (3,(M stock do torma. PARTRIDGE nvSSnSSSjkSSon the Beonboatoa Way. JoM Dial FB )4W. I MM REVERE MOVIE CAMERA automatic turret teases. Kodak M( projector. largo glass to ' •creen, Kodak 25 mm snde p tecior. Con rovolvor. OhioUl Webster win noaedw.. Shop Smith and accessories, fart cash for equal vahio enlarger 25 mm nflgg camera. Path Finder Speed* -Graflex. FB 6-2074. 17 CHEVROLET V I STICK FOR ----------Bwi STEREO Poi TV Portable*. RCA Whirlpool ~OOOD HOUSI ANYTHING OF VALUI ON DOWN oaymenl—new 3 bedroom r — JJ, Builders, tog 5-3(76. BOAT. MOTOR. TRAILER FOR Mle -—■- - - —* — —- value. OR 3-6W0, - slaX - '.— ICE SKAT&S B>rn— k Hargrw?•»' TU W. Hum Bara— k H>nm?fi TU W. Huron CHOICE OF LATE MODEL 2* TO 4* H P outboard motors « boat* for steam cleaner at equal value. HAVB PICKUP TRUCK AND 1 place Wood, need Unite JiL —-deep frame. FB 4-4SM. AJ'i Land- i wiuT take ooodTTIBI Mobile home tor my equity In -Oxford Trail PAIR OP SORREL MULES. COM-mt 3 and 3, also, thalr mother In foal, Clifton Parr, 44M Brown City RoM.-Brown CHj. BELL OR TRADE - 4 na-ndrtrtM SWAP: VACANT LOT FOR MO- 7-lfrdRi-Bimi. WTwwifc-------- 4riLL TAKE OLD 'jBBP FOR l *(1 Ji 1 4-14M. WiQ Trade *3 Acres it * wooded. Small modern I tad-room home, fanned yard. ((.too. Terms. Or take ear, boat, house-trailer or what ton you? Down. W, H. BASS, Realtor -- -*-w TRADES . ■ KMat Uk CkthiBS BOY’S COAT AND BAT BBT. I r M Girl * sUbtebn • winter ( Lady*i Mm I winter coat. 2-0621* between 5 and 9 .p.m. FASHIONS A LOOK, ? c/ndVr^ sfep MI 7-3684' I___Article* muM 1 from premie, at til Lawton's Antiques, l ANTIQUE S E T T k I WWi chairs, marble top dreaaer walnui eane seated chairs. eOft.. table, oadar cheat, anttqne trunk. Mtec Items. BThBI After ‘ “ OR 2-U>7 after » a m. ABOUT A NT THING YOU WANT I of an kinds. NEW AND We-buy. sell or tied*. Como and look around, I acre* of fret parking. Phone FBMBtl. TIZZY Bir Kate Omm '‘But, Father, Z absolutely must have an extra two dollars! "I’m going out-Dutch tonight with a very heavy spender!” Sib HiwahaM 8—d» 68 Salt MiscsHansses FREEZERS—$148 ThompBQD. 1006 list W»»t. uvmi. **i rBHTBL» SR (^..irft tg& MOVtNO. FOR SALE HOUSEHOLD (IDOT OR*yitoL ____ MATTAO. t ROUND TUB," *1*. 1 eqnare nlumlnum Mb, Ml.**. eeuare aluminum Mb, Ml yEABWNByO Ortaard Lk. j MODERN SLOBF CBAUt, I NEW DAVKnFORT. CHAIRS, bunk beds, washer, dryer. Stove, ref rig., toeie. Belling everything, Hmpmm_.,iwnio Needle Big Zag Bowing Machine. Sff tR^arasS TO; - bolaa without using alts. Only (61.11 balance U FB (44*7. Capitol Sew nurse# — ardor y tary oad aahUght I lopTULlLJ ASPHALT. TILE, Ea. •XI RUOB.............- gt.es .BOYLO*4 TILE, 162 8. SOTINAW ranoe, :* Vearb. excelleSt AIR CONDrnbwEK. 2 foN. kx~ , 30". 61*6. MI 7-2666. REPOS8E6ED ELECTROLUX. MA-ehinta have been checked tv our factory brooch end >have a new . machine guaraatoo. Electrolux Carp. CaU at 33B7 Elisabeth Lake ---PR 64114. | _jite and nalec. tempi, dishes, rummage. Atm a few antique*. 5*56 AndertonvUle Rd., WaMnord (to Mock oft Dixie----------" 4-111*. 1EBUII ENRICO ROSELLI ACCORDION. ucts Co. *25-2431. "WO LAMP, 4>OOT FLUORES-cent lights. Ideal for work benches, shops. 111*5 value. BWwKiarreg — CaU factory — Michigan nUggoaeaul, FREE ESTIMATES FHA AND MATERIAL BA LB COMPANY (246 HteMnad Rd. (ifltl OR 2-78*2 TALBOTT LUMBER BPS point, Oold Road point. Do-Hardwan!* plumb^g, W^elec?rlcai supplies and fuU Une of lumber. Open » AKL, •tffllMrStaTlo i. 103* Oakland Avo. PE 44W Concte Rental ** THE SALVATION ARMY---- RED BHmLDJTORE lit BAST LAWRENCE Everything ta moot your needs, Nothing. Furniture, Appliances. USED FOOL TA1 WANTED: DEER SKINS. 60c TO walnut emtarr of drawers. water softener, oil burner with ~ upsimSvsft ^ i ' 14-2* f. TotogrBBb OPPOSITE B’HAM treater •ally 6:2e to 5 o.m, Friday* -till BUT NOW FOR CHRISTMAS ACCORDIONS, OUtTiM, RUMS, BONQOS, OROAltS. ___NY OTHIR INSTRUMENTS 120 BABB HORNER ACCORDION. ~ ' s new. (111. _ 'GRIlJNELL^^r 37 S. Saginaw PS 3-nti ' .CcbftDia'h BAiair-ALB BMMBB. Accord loos loaned Ron to tagla* nora with lesson*. FE (-643B, IAND INSTRUMENT REPAIR — By foetora'expert . 2 MJtL^taSETT HOUNDS.^JUCC. AKC DOBERMAN ’ PUPPIES. Jahelm’s. PE t-2(36 BABKNJI DOO, MALE FOR SALE, 8TRINO BASS. OOOD condition. |72M Phono TUdBII after 5 p m. BRtRAinr poppies, call apt- OMNNBLL UPRIGHT #I4M8. Oood CODdttloa. (Up.. OR 2tel44 EHta ~VIwf” BALbWiN AfflW- ------------------------------- MUSIC ——SLOd___________ -- Piano — Guitar Accordion Instruments Furnished Open 9 A-M. to 9 P.M. “'Music Center 268 N. Saginaw FE 4-4700 NEWBY AND , CRAif* j UPRTOlFJ PICK YOUB CHRISTMAS TRNR ON REPRtORBATOR. (36; OAS stove. (■; «** TV. Mod now*.. (40; steetric stove. $25: washer. Mg^seettenat, M*. Harris'! 8EWINO MACHINES. WHOLE ■ole to oil. Now, used and possessed. Over 75 models portables. Ill JO. sig sag eq ebooso from. Frleos (tan Bln maul Part** AauHoneoa. I Hatchery Rd. OWTlltl SUNBEAM SCRUBBER, WAXER, --------^----OA (-iter bpinbt piano. Walnut finish Mr. Mite*. FE 4-48M USED ORGANS HAMMOND..Chotd Organ -HAMMOND Organ nULBRANSKN Transistor Organ VRLITZER. 2 organs la out TROMAS Organ *460 USED PIANOS SMALL GRAND, walnut USED Upright (lta USED Upright (M *« .7. .;, USED Upright (140 LESTER Spinet, Blood. (4*5 JtND’MANY OTHERS New Kimball piano (4M - OALLAQHKR MUSIC CO. U E. HUROM BT. — EVERY 1 i Lapeer Rd. FB 44431 CIRCLE FLUORESCENT LIGHTS, iwaet Itofato for kHcheas. (ls.M large woluut aoblnm. Take over payments of (4*0 per month, or pw dTg bolonet Universal SPECIAL (x 12 RUOB. tMM. Me-* d Carpet, Woodward at Bqwire Just below Tod's. W 3-77*1. TAKE ON t Final payments Of tail monthly ter Bit Bag aq nipped Stager cabinet style •owing eaSBR Make# button halo*, designs, etc. Only (34.27 total. OaU PE t-Mfl. Capitol Sew- 4-251 hams, nrtrouto. PuU price — Walta a. • Berry Gtrage Door Factory Seconds ----la at slseabte dlseou] e street, Blrmlagbam — BIG VALUES — *24 I* US.M (MW . (13*.« of Panttae HURON * BUNK BEDS. BRAnF Sn'g* complete; Mao trundle bod* and trip™ bunk bod*. PEARSONS. 41 Orsfcard Lake Av« FK t-TMl. CHROME DINETTE SETR umblc yourself, save, fourC---_^. l(gi*dosigDt! formlea tope >Och-tgan Fluorescent. 2*2 Orchard Lake.—21. ____________ CHINA CABINET. BROWN CHER-— (MB. FE M4H, LIQUIDATING ENTIRE STOCK 'llrtii NMn^aHI rockers, lamp* and ■•Wt USED APPLIANCE BARGAINS Frlgldolr* Refrigerator .(MM OE Ante. Washer ...(M.M “ . Washers .(121*5 .. uto. Washer (MR Your choic* — *5 00 down, as law at (1J* weekly. OmaronUed. Frog dobrory ■ — GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE 3B a. Caoo rx 54123 I ASHER AND DRYER. I Ann WYMAN'S MB trade In allowance a your old Being room suite regardless of ait or condition on a now i piece living room suit# to you? choice of now decorator colon and tang wearing tehrtai. Nag. (11**5 aow only; (ltl.M tafli your trad* in. 7 .1 E. Huron FEA4N6 1* W. Pike E-Z Terms FE 2-2150 NN. Factory mar.™ an rtnoiisunt. 2B3 Or-Lake — 13. ... IN SPACE HEATER AND —----ik. MY 2-12*7 or MI 4-2(41 CXI LINO TILE .. Ite BQ. FT *--“TO ........... MJ> ^lii-A-'tiL » BQ. FT. r TILE. t(B B- BAOIHAW CASH WAY" STANLEY ALUMINUM WINDOWS m ■m us M.M • Burmeister LUMBER COMPANY BMB oaoloy Lake 3M. BM Mill - CEMENT STEPS. READY MADE. AH tegOA Splash block, door sills, chimney cape. Pontiac Pro-Cart : BMP Co . rn W. Walton, FE 3-3006. DEMINO qq-HORBB DEEP WELL Jot pump, qumptotg teftjet. 11*7 LlverooU, Tory. TR WW. ejcpandXway desk, extends 60”; 15 gallon fish tank With aland. FE 2-6616 after 5. 4 ELECTRIC STOVE. PULL SIZE AM.0 wMh dgopwetl "---- MI MM between 5 ■PPPHItffi Holly, to mile out .Of UteM iDIxlel. . Oriltd^ N^KEE, M*C9UC II PONTIAC WAGON. SMITHS Welding Outfit. Hydraulic floor Jack. I too otodu hotet, im .burning salomandors. plM tow guide, work bench. Dewatt radfal taw, Mahogamr spinet piano. Bell A Howell I atm. camera, hearing ald« OR WIM. 1MI CUSHMAN KAOLE (204 NO trver see pieces, gaua wo for Christmas dinner. Also, packaged m gut, (344 each, at Common** Omm Farm. 3BM Boeea-ter Rd. Troy. Mich MU (-22*2 W*od Cud OMnI; 77 agforfe i&r l-A POODLE CLLFPINO BATHED A POODLE CLIPPING ii sag' Christmas gift. CaU after 4, 5SS- BRItTANT aSc registered female. 4 years old. Excellent hunter. For,uto or will Uad* for late model 5-bo ns outboard motor. Erinrude or Johnson, BLACK POODLE, AKC. Mtooeobrok* citato rod FE I4W6. CHIHUAHUAB, AKC. CHRISTMAS It will hold. Columbia after 4:BR FEMALE WE1MARANER 11106. MALE, I trgto. Ouu AKC rag. (25. MA (tat kittens, rabbits, all fet Shop, 5( Williams. FE 44422. MALE COLLIB RBOUmBID. ' 5 month! old. Beautiful pot. B54. cnTmbk. MckAhf*8 iAXLWAOOiR ttX-..nolo, bqordtoji. trntoxliigi. ~tnm. mint, OL 1-05*4. PARAKEETS OUARANTEMd TO talk. Canaries, cages —- U R| TIL r wKMfr* VlOLDf OOOD CONDITION, (26 FE 54B7B ta gg? liM T V~ I Joalyn. hrr and c I L O N D. MAHOGANY UORT oak, solid uok Booki. and tom* typewriter dooka. Swivel dulrs. straight arm oholrs. end secretarial poeture chairs. 3 and 4 drawer all Steel maul file Csb-tnets. Also other general office Items. Call 542-2855._____________ CASH REGISTERS AND ADDING machine!, new and need. VALLEY BUSINESS MACHINES 7^MnM|ta — I es. conptomelers, duplies ptoddoopy machines aa Wool Lawrence I PARAKEETS OUARANTEED TO (Ul. Walker’s Bird House 1st 8t„ Rochester. OL 14272. PART COLUE-O FE 5-6202. POODLES, _________________ ■~ialj miniatures, rettetarod MU B RIDINO HORSES WITH BAD. BAT AND WNITB OELDDtO. SAD- tSmoriA. Wit Hmc; QUARTER. HAL?; ble, lot cream chain, portable typewriter, spinning wheel, imall appliances, urpgltog mil*. Friday. Dn,1 I a m. School bouse, corner of Walton 5 Adams Rood!, RacbaettT. _ ’REEZERS—UPRIGHT, FAMOUS Bam* brands, Mtatebod. Terrific values. (140.66 while they text. No phone orders please. Michigan Fluorescent. 2*2 Orchard Lake FomiicA, tahaiMO. faint. _______ t&xiShsrMrakTf. FREE KITTENS. BEAUTIFUL. 2-31M. _ rw gj" FB 2-6761. _____JUAB TOY FOX T____________ puppies uxe nctetarod. 525. Ateo stud itrie*. FK 1-1467. CHIHUAHUAS AKC CHRISTMAS puppies. Deposit will hold, i" stud ssrrlct' MA 4-1U5B. DELUXE MODEL. DtONRITE condition. Bel) b Howoft movte - ^t EW NATIONAL CASH REOI8- taluTl tan from list up. Now Natooui adding macMwas troaa (•* up. 1 only factory authorised brai gHtai bk Odtaand and Muqp County wboro you can buy a. -or notary rebuilt cash registers. The Notional Cash Register Co.. Idt-W. Huron. Pontiac. FE 2-0255. 22^8^0ratlot. Mt. Clemens. HOw- SiDOiG MAC11INES- Ntw. Bead, Rebuilt—"Terms” Quality—Price—Service "Her® today—here to dftf." Pontiac Cash Register 227 S. Saginaw | USED safe, mcx (rival CASH^REOI8TER8 FORMAL*. OROCERY STORE EoCTI________ ~ tale, 2450 Elisabeth LUko Rd. .. Lk. Orion. FE OOOD TIMOTRY HORSE BAY -“-Ittel Fetors. 55*4 Mstamora oa Mia________ AND STRAW, \ 1 WHOLESALE Bull AND OROT Baby ta(^ M ten. *?“odil3L ELECTRIC DRYER, AUTOMATIC hM 8(8.8* llm.85 *5 *5 ^rump Electric, Inc. Auhurp Rd. FE 4-3573 FRIO ID AIRE WASHER AND~DRY-ir. Ooldspot cheat froOqor, yellow WwUM8fHV5^BK^Mn(M'.|U|B ocklng horse, like now. Wooden vork bench, 662-3786. MI 4-3(45. ALWATk OOOD aiUYB IN USED 66 CH CONSOLE MODEL i^dslf fitalltaed irlpool nCJ!“ Crum; THnnc tvs. Reasonable,_____ usto •hoMtvaom - SSF* laroe ; ft SEN VIC 20 8. Case______________ STONE FE *412 ws 1 UBED^OA^FURHACE. LIKE 3-8PEED RECORD PLAYER. 52* ia pensive aaeordlonT MM. Ateo bow an( arrow taRH^OTI. toirifte ___ __crat, 3(3 Orchard_ MEDICINE CABINETS. **" mirror, sltebtty (3.M. Large selection of __ ss Fluorescent. 30 Orchard Lab* — wTHBUWjr mams < ^Ty^VUted* « Lou* Uke. ~rea^ar™eA55., M rood jrraveL 18-A over- 1 1 CRAFTSMAN POTTER SAW. . Tg 4 BJR, R HOUOH ON i iijfC T029-FT. 1961 CREBS AK 2* AND CASE. EKCEL-4 oood. Ateo 1‘tllRlipiiiijl 1 adaptor. Lta* motor. I rqB film. *2*. FB8-28T4. -CLEARANCE SALE tui pwrtw iut at aboard of low priceol EXAMPLE! HO itzlp an new completely furnbhed. In Moan, AveriU's -4g ____ HX DOLLAR, jUNK CAM Awb tract, PE HW» days, evening* EXAMPLE: MM 4IX1F completely EXAMPLE: 1550 Cuetotn-bullt, M MS; waiter and dryor. oori e« (7,000. Better than nr- "alwati butino-___ „ MJUNK CARS — mu TOWM --- HT— CALL PI Mill __ >».»■— * bon me. JUNK CAM AND TRUCKS, FREE towint, or i nn Can hr thaw, MT Mail, ae» TRAlIJCR^aALM, ^MO Lapeer BhTLate Orion. rifle. <3,100. Ph. Ut-wt. EXPERT MOBILE HOME REPAIR < •errlce. free eetlmatae. Aleo. NO DOUGH? ____ice> tot pan in a pinch'. tat Ua help rou-Tpp Dollar Paid tat clean; (69, 'Hud «1 Modeb i Glenn’s Motor Sales Ml W. Huron St. »PE «-1- -TOP BUCK—JUNK CAR. TRUCK, aPiSs* Hwr' D"f*- fe pok bale chxapv mm elcab S^tSoSnSSr I HhtL TAKE OOOD IP WWlk mobile name ter my equity In ------------1 houee. Oxford Trailer m AACOI IBSON TRAILER SALES J an dlepli. ---- id parte. Whitar prlca* . MU Wllllame Laki rayton Plains,. OBMMI. 1 OXFORD •Trailer Sales i. All h ir* wide* - JPIHL ______________ , IM steea. Price* and term* to ■A an aamare. Y jtawatoce traralere, I elees. IP* fr. Be emart . . . |0 Yellowstone. U#d Unit*. AO *l*e. V'-C-IO’ wide. M eaa be purchased on rental DEAL DURING DECE1 For A Really Good Buy • Seie* Us Today! TOP DOLLARMl Make m a Parte pe t-aroi M&M Used Auto—Track Parts 102 W**l tot* *. *58 piymoul ’U Cadillac I. MM Chary ] (lid* truirama It Che., ■ Finer Slid a. *M Eaiet Super Dyne-gn^trar-nlrilTn PI HW. C. AUTOMATIC ‘M FORD PARTS Wracked Car. MA 4-3376, New ami Used Trucks 103 MM FORD H*T0B. CLEAN", OOOD Urea. Patt*r*on, FE 6-3927. •57 FORD RANCHERO OOOD C dlUon. radio. Beater, auto, tr Call after 2:40. PE S-7SSS. MM FORD * TON PICEUP. TTanbox. MM. MT 3*1111. HP Lloyd motors, Lin- coln-Mercury-Comet-Meteor, 11} j. Baglnaw. PE -S-Mli. '69 CHEVROLET. POWEROUDE I TODAY'S -SPECIAL I MM CHEVROLET BISCATNB I-door. (-cylinder. Standard ehllt. Radio, heater, white flnleh. Only iLHK NORT H CHEVROLET CO., 1000 a. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM. MI l-ITO. 1961 -TEMPEST IMl CHEVROLET BROOKWOOD 4-door station wxgon, ( cylinder, standard *6111, radio, heater. --- I to ebaaae.trMK. now are onra clean. Only (MM-Easy terma. NORTH CHEVROLET —------B. WOODWARD AVE., me ENOLISH FORD. 2-DOOR with radio and beater, M mile* per eallon, fuU price *791. LLOYD MOTOR8. Llncoln-Mer-cury-Comet-Meteor, 232 1 Sag-lnawTPE M121, MSI FORD RETRACTIBLE CON-vertlbl*. VS engine with automat-•- “ rtMrtag JIM CHEVY I. 2-DOOR H ____beater. Beautiful e< flnleh. You’ll be prone -----gj— ----------Itbtt" your driveway w $1695 Matthews- Hargreaves f'Chevy-Land'1 I 631 Oakland at Cass tl KK 4-4547 CADILLAC ’M SEDAN DE YILLE, Tight blue, $2,200. FE S-3SM. 1P«1 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE. for a oooo clean car -properly re-eendMWM — ilR^INGHAM . RAMBLER Ml B. Woodward egg blue, l.OM mile*, air conditioning, (3,750 f price. Call between 7-3 p.m. ;Kc M&3, ‘M CADILLAC HARDTOP COUPE. Ml CADILLAC? CONVERTIBLE. Urae. Sell reasonable rt I-TMI. CHEVROLET IMP A LA 195* HARD-t'>n Radio, beater, white wall*. Rig engine. Vary clean. . Oxfofrd Trailer- Sales 1 lUle a. at Lake Orion an Ml TELEPHONE MT 1-0721 - THE TIME IS NOW ! POE ua TO PICE UP AMD SELL year trailer. Any IF to gy wt have buyers waitiho i IF CALL US TODAY I hoOLt "--**— - — ’52 CHEYY *5 TON PICKUP. 1275 SHORTS MOBILE HOME8 Goad used noma type trailer*, II PER CENT DOWS, Oem Wav-el trailer*. Wolverine truck camper*. Cart wind sad at ten#* tn-giaUed. Complete jSno ol part* ^y^gttled ga». ^ Raron OAKLAND AT CASS PK 5-14(5 mi tHEVkOLET PICKUP. motor. MT 2-MM.___________ 4-WHEEL DRIVE JEEP TRUCK BURN VIEW TRAILER PARK TTJoderHew Management Convenient to nil OM plant*— TI8UO—modern jpteaaant ^ _____non- "* *° " ' PE 4-07(6. Tips .&(H-Track 92 -1 USED TIRES, *3.50 UP. buy. aell. Abo whltewalb. State tir* sue*. Ml S. Saginaw SI. PE 4-4547 or PE 4-45*6. ibARD BRAND NEW TIRES ED WILLIAMS 111 ». Saginaw at Raeburn GUARANTEED USED TIRES. 13, 14. U Inch. Auto Dlecount-U.l. Royal tire*. Beat Bird, at Mt. LOOK I 750x14 BLACK TIRES. Au, dune brand*. Of! new eara IU.M an tax and exchange. State Tire s-7-- M3 S. r ” ‘ iJnm, OOOD USED TIRES KUHN AUTO SERVICE > W. Huron PE 2-1115 ■d tires; REOULAR-MUD- CRANKSHAPT ORINDINO IN THU ear. Cylinder* rebored. Zuck Machine Shop. SI Hood. Phono PS Mdpr Sc—*m W MM RIVERSIDE MOTOR8COOTER excellent condition. EM 3-Tin. NEW - I USED CUSHMAN AND Veapa Scooter*. B-Z term*, derson sales ft service. ” t Boats—Acctsssrlti 97 BOAT BUYERS USB OUR LAYAWAY PLAN ROW OaiRm yeur '— —--------- Outboard Skl-eraft run.... . Owpie nberebi, Evlnrude, Mart Inboard Owens Sea-eklfft. aO model*. Winter tnelde storaio free witSphMMpe1 hgoL Mazurek Marine Sates Woodward at 8. Blvd. PR Mar WfclSTMAS GIFTS baeebaJL ting goods. •=U"i m I- GMC 104 ANDERSON FOR AUTO INSURANCE $37 FOR 6 MONTHS Complete Coverage On The Average Oar lor Oood Driven Easy Payments .. ;enk A. Anderson, Agon.. 1144 Joeirn PE 4-3535 AUTO INSURANCE FOR ANYONE Eofardlets of previous record luranoe rtik* Par hard t HEATER. AUTOMATIC TRANSOM 18 8 I O N. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Ataume payment* of (21.71 per month. Call Credit Mgr.. Mr. Parka at Ml 4-7MW, Harold Turner. Ford. 95S CHEVROLET II# 1-DCX cylinder with automatic, _ price of Mtl. LLOYD MOTORS. IMl • Mercury - Meteor. Ill 8. SmS "lasMiaw! $3595 . >, JEROME "Bright Spot" 1M0 CHEVROLET BEL AlA SPORT ipe. 6 cylinder Powergl’— [To, heater, whltewalb. Sp ». Only, $1,195. Eaiy t«i NORTH CHEVROLET CO BIRMINOHAM. MI 4-2735. "SySsmaBcT" "wSitew»ffx**^radS’, heater. Sharp. (7M. EM HW. )59 CHS.VROLXT, BISCATNB 4-door sedan. V4 engine, power-glide, radio, heater, suntan dtp-fjejss ssasi bain finuh. only eUM. Ea*y terms north emmoLEr CO., IMS s. WOODWARD a vg., BIRMINGHAM. MI .Around. The balance _______ ltd* an* b — be claimed by taking c------- - ly pay menu df MJf.'JKmg Auto Bale*. U5 »■ Saginaw. PEA-0402. Mi i SPECIAL New 'll ear, with radio, heater, whltewalb, II (LtdJ(, (M.20 da. I4l.ll par month. R&C RAMBLER SUPER MARKET WJKtll (145 Commerce CHEVROLET, (Mo IMPALA 2-Door. Plenty of . “get up and go" with an B-cyllnder engine and powergUde tranambilon. Power * leering. radio, neater for your driving comiort. Ton'll b* delighted with'the gparfcllng white exterior and centra*t-lng turquoise interior. Prao-tlcally new whltawatl tiro* and lets than 1,000 mile* leave nothing to be deelrod. The' price i* right I Call Rum. FE 2-11(1. extentlon *“ 3b ■ p.m. After I e— Vagoo VI. Completely overhauled Jtlck shift with overdrive. How paint, (Mg, UL M(44. PM FORD 4-DOOIl STATION I cylinder _______T. i transmission, radio w - -*■“—u Urn, 1 ownj 1M7 LINCOLN. door, hardtop. ------ --- tlful tan ami whit* with matching interior trim. Pull pttot — *b6B BORST, INC. LINCOLN MERCURT COMET 2M HUNTER BLVD. BIRMINOHAM MI 54W > IMS MERCURT 2-DOOR, RADIO and fall nric* of ttJN, LLOYD MOTORS; Lineoln‘M*rcury-Com-et-Meteor. 232 S- Saginaw, PE at MI 4-7500, Harold 1 and paymenU of $42 _ LLOYD. MOTORS, Lie cobs - Mergury - comet -Meteor, 132 S. Saginaw, FE M MM WffWM ybWR. , die and beater, overdrive, good transportation, ZERO down and KWTwMTumyv motors. Uasam . Mwar*- —| Meteor, 211 S. Milt. 1957 MERCURY 4-DOOR. 31,00ft •57 ENOLISH FORD. BAROAIN Uooley _. — . Pettier Con- 1957 FORD PAIRLANE 500 HARD-top. ihlttlng rod aad whit* r" matching leather Interior, eolbnt condition, balance i $596, take over payment* $9.(5 - weekly. Xxag Auto Si “ —— WMMiT 11(1 MERCURY MONTEREY 4-door Hardtop, radio and heater, power brake* - steering . eeat* - -’"'low*, whitewall tire*, full (1,4(5. LLOYD MOTORS. Mercury • Coi 3275 W, FOR THE BEST IN USED CARS... See Estate Liquidators 150 6. Saginaw Street 1 till Llnco CHEVROLET. V-», STANDARD trangmbejpn. dark blue, extra Mc*Oin-tWl. g,DOQR rad HEATER AND;. WHITEWALL IMl CHEVROLET IMPALA 1-DOOR powerful!.. _____SESmt and neater, whitewall Urea. (.000 actual mlb*. Whit* tin-tsh with red trim. Only (2,1(5. Boetk aavteMOou — B WOODWARD ATI., MINOHAM MI 4-2735. K&t S. WOODWARD AVI., BIRMINO- •60 OORTAOt. NICE. ONE OWNER. IANC1AL RESPONSIBILITY. CALL FE 8-7157 ■ Don Nicholie sm W. Huron St. (Huron Building. Room No. S) allot and your old T& C RAMBLER SUPER MARKET EM 3-4155 MM Commerce Rd. How Come So Cheap? I9601 MG Roadster With 4 (pood traaamlMloa. light blue with whit* tap! ■— —|a top ooodltioa CALL OR SEE DAVE FROJ5TER Car a (IN RENAULT SHOWROOM) OLIVER BUK3C * RENAULT-DALPHINE. OOOD condition. (4M. 3147 Signet St. iJrarton Pbirie. OR 1-1(72-19(0 OPEL STATION WAOON. clean. OR 1-7(16. IMPORT-SPORT CAR SERVICE Old* Stone Front Service * ^ ^ Lk, Cor. Mapta PE MI74. ' d flnbh. 1(00 SIMCA ORAND LAROE 2-deor hardtop. - Radio,- SMEW whltewalb. Netfa Sad rw Only 9909. Saay term*. CHEVROLET CO . 1000 8. ___ WARD AVE.. BIRMINOHAM. MI 4-97M. j PONTIAC'S NEW AUTHORIZED Triumph Dejuersmt rship SERVICE i£ iph PARTS ■H Mr aft )*n**n cam £t»XiSS.]&uESLD Superior .Auto. Sales _______JfP ATE. • PE (-7(00 J TRIUMPH TR-J SPORTS CAR. mart aolL WUl aacrlfleo, cxcel-lent coodltlop, MY 2-Q9M VOLKSWAGENS! WARD-McELROY, INC. NEW MSI W. Nuroo UMffl aUtSI OK >2(32 K NUICK KAjDTOr i SOror gray. Power jb 8. Bogina! corvJur'ii >59 CHEVROLET B1SCAYNE 2-door cedan. V-8 angina, standard »hlft. Radio, Stater, whitewall tire*. Only (l.MS. Easy term*. NORTH CHEVROLET CO. 1000 - WOODWARD ATE.. BIR- MINGHAM, MI 4-2735. •50 CHEVIE STATION WAOON. 363. 3355. Stuart CagwaP. dottier.-- CHEVT. '5l. HARDTOk*. POWBR- treed*. j i. MI lertnc, *' 8-8359, 1961 CHEVROLET 4-Door, peon finleh, ft cylinder, ilandard *hUt. 10,000 mil**. Only (1,(00. Easy termi. • SCHUCK FORD M-24 At Buckhorn taka_ Lake Orica • - MT 3-MU 1950 cRevrolet BISCAYNE door ledaa. ( cyllader. Power, tilde, radio, beater, whltewalb, Jewel blue flnbh. Only (1,195. Kaey termi. NORTH CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 B. WOODWARD AVX., BIRMINOHAM - ““ Serb*. 6-Cyl. Standard ahlft. MM. OL 1-5643.________________ (0 CHEVY V-(. PARKWOOD with WUl* top. Xxe. coad. 4-6550 ■ ’ >54 CHEVROLET BEL AIR i , nut. 9*Sur payment* of (1.13 will Pay off the balaae* duo of WtElhg Auto Sato*. 3371 W. Huron, PE---------- - 1950 CHEVROLET IMPALA 4-DOOD eedan, hardtop, 74 engine, Paw-ergUde, ^ower ttjterlag.^ power - ly 11.415 Saay term*. NORTH CHEVROLET CO, H0» 8. WOOD; WARD AVI. EutHINaHAM. MI wagon. V-9 engine, Autooaa-n tranemleeloB, power eteirlwg, power br»kee, tinted ■tom. Mew with red trim. Only >2,495. Buy terma. NORTH CHXVROLST CO.. 10M S. WOODWARD AVE. B1R-MINOHAM. ' 1C (-2738. • SAVE . JEROME "Bright SpoP nrdftti tiir «i rm—. FE H-0488. ■ f1^' m till Buick LeSebr* eedan. lee-berg Whit* with beautiful coo-trailing interior. Radio. Heater. Dynafiow. Power (tearing, power broke* aad whitewall^Sroo. A real lovely -car 1 FuU price $1465 Remember, we encourage yourto check our cars with a mecHanic you Itnow and trust. FISCHER BUICK 784 S, Woodward, B’bam . MI 4-6222 ACRQBB FROM QREENnELD'S ____ CEEVKPIJW WAOONS Brookwood (-cylinder, (MMSH. •hlft. Only SI,Ml. Brookwood ft-cylinder, PHNllMI, Brookwood V-6 engim ”J *■ NORTH 57 FORD CONVERTIBL1 With V» Auto. Tranamtuton, __ er Steering, and Brakee! Radio, Heater, and Whltewalb! MATIC TRANSMISSION,' RADIO. TIRES ABSOLUTELY N DOWN. AaauoM p----- 46 per month, c 1940 FORD FAIRLANE 500 2-DOOR ^MWMte and hoater, aparkllng white flnleh. Pord-O-Matlc trane-mbtion, air-conditioning. (150 m^.*Bu£iD#%»Si[fe'U2U iglnaw. Llncoln-Mercury-t-Meteo- “ — Comet-Meteor. FE 2-9131. ‘00 FORD CONVERTIBLE JOHN McAUUPPE FORD (30 GARLAND, AVE. FE MW1 1959 FORD 900 2-DOOR HARDTOP. d heater, whitewall t flnbh with turquobe interior, 2-9131. .. FORD OALAXIE (-door with radio, heater, ..... ■leering and Crubomatto trane-' mlulonl Aad whltewalbl sain JOHN McAULIFFE FORD (m oaBlamd — — 1950 FORD. CUSTOM. 2 DOOR, VI, auto. tranimbiloB. radio, -heater. Full price. $375. boater. Putt price, t: BOB BORST, INC. LINCOLN MERCURY COMET 2(0 HUNTER BLVD WHAM. MI 5-4538 •(1 T-BIRD HARDTOP With radio, boater, Auto._____ ml**loo. Power steering, brake* and window a I Whltewalb IMS FORD CUSTOM 3-DOOR. 927 dowa with payment* of (7. a week. LLOYD MOTORS, LL. cota-Mercury-Comet-Meteor, 232 S. Saginaw. FE 2-9131. 195* CHRYSLER WINDSOR COMET 3-DOOR. LIOHT i flnleh, radio aad beater, 0 trim, (1M down and the •55 DeSOTO 4 DOOR WITH AUTO. Traaambeloa, tram and white. PULL PRICE (197, E8TATE,LI- srasr * s', saitnaw st. 1956 DODOE 4-DOOR ROYAL. M25 Pueh-buttoo drive, power eteer-ln*. radio and boater, whltewalb. Two-tona blue. Will need rocker panob aad muffler before long. Otborwtx* no ru*t, ogeMoat urn-nlng condition. Ph. FE 6-0755. FALL SPECIAL . radlo’and heater! whitMtdewalia 1 wear warranty. Priced to ML TOM BOHR, INC. 120 8. MAIN MU (4715 „ FALCON FORDOR. STICK, (1395 PE 6-17l( 'is porp sTWuohf'imck i dlo. heater, and let PRICE 9197. ESTA1 YOKE. iM “ 3-7131. W roroTwoR^MDib,;Heat- -—... FULL 'ATE LIQUIDA- __________WE. Aeeum* payment* of (34.79 par taa. OaSuredtt Mgr-. Mr. Parke at Ml 4-7M0, Harold Turner. Ford. •M FORD CONVERTIBLE WITH vorai mam wnw. ahus wwu i FUXaL PR1CB IUT. nTATB U> FORD lW TON VAN, (- BOOT. eet up for route v Cuetom Color. 2M i 1951 THUNDERBIRD. AUTOMATIC tranambeloB. power «'----- Bower window*, potter -Midnight blue flnlxn. Only 92.195. Exit terma. NORTH CHEVRO % CO.. 1000 8- WOODWARD AVE . BIRMINOHAM. MI 4-2735. REPOSSESSED • CARS No Caih Hooded Juat take over payment* let payment due Jan. 1(, 1103 1955 PONTIAC Puli prill 1(5_ (ll.W Mo. 1M2 CHEVROLET Pull price (loo (4-77 Mo. MM FORD Pan price lite w u Mo. ' 1954 PLYMOUTH Pull price 9125 97.34 M0. MM FORD WAOON price SMS ' 931 Mo. 1954 FORD Pull price (US (7.M Mo. LAKESIDE MOTORS il W. Montcalm 335-711 - Lincoln.... Continentals '58s, '59s and '60s 2-Doors and 4-Doors One Convertible I WITH FACTORY ERROR All Hsve Full Power I-Owner _ Birmingham Trades 36-Month B«nk*a Rites Bob Bonst* Irifc. [unter Blvd., Blum MI 6-4538 Did You Say Birds ? BOB HART MOTORS MS Orchard^LaM at Voorheb Yogi Wo hav* Thunderblrde— white top of ante t MOTORS. 4-way power. Pull price $2595 IVRtVr. IlfinJSewi, *HS| DEtlVERfeDJ1795 MAZUREK ETUDKHAKBH SALES j, Blvd. at Saginaw ------ -DR. •M MERCURY PARKLAltE. RA-"o. heater, power etoortag and rake*. White eldewall lire*, plul any outer extra*. SOM. R&C RAMBLER pij(SfiB( Jraaeml*»lon. powe brake* and power (teeirlng, price $im. Lincoln • Ml ,____ Mrtng, full ___ ____ TLOYO motors. Lincoln • Mercury - Comet -Meteor, S3S 8. Saginaw, PX or, SMS down aad payment* of (35 a month. LLOYD MOTORS! Llncoln-Mercury-Comet-Meteor, S3S S. Saginaw, PE 784 S."Woodward, B’ham MI 4-62B _ont Say Ye[ TO ANY DEAL UNTIL YOU CHECK price (2.4 Lincoln - Meteor “ 2-9131. S. Saginaw st. FE . MERCURY PARKLANE 2-door Hardtop, radio and hooter, automatic tranambalon, power brake* * IONTErJy 4- trfm! ”Thta”b T’beauty. PVB price (1.(95. BOB BORST, INC. - LINCOLN MERCURY COMET 2M HUNTER BLVD. B’HAM. Mil-4531 Transportation Specials 57 MERCURY 4-DOOR Hardtop, With Power Steering PRICED TO SELL! I BEATTIE TOUR FORD DEALER SINCE UN AT STOPLIOHT IN WATERFORD OR 3-1291 I960 MERCURY $2195 Both of these cars are in impeccable condition. FISCHER BUICK Rammbler Dallas DODOE . CHRYSLER . IMPERIAL N eiauT* ROCHESTER PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, Jl.U per weak ear. KtagAut Saginaw. FE 0- •57 PONTIAC 2-DOOR, HARDTOP. RADIO, HEATER AND AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION._____ABSO- LUTELY NO MONEY BCHPN7 **-•um* payment* ot 526.75 per i Call Credit Mgr.. Mr. Parks IB 4-7500. Haras r - - ’62 LARK 2-DOOR WILL ACCEPT SAFETY-TESTED USED CARS Suburban-Olds Ml S. WOODWARD SC 4-4419 HASKINS LATE MODEL ■ TRADES - 0 CHEVROLET WL-AIR S DOOR •to RAMBLER WAOON. With OU Saving S Cyl. Engine, and standard frbni-t—«*". and Dark Slug Ptabhl HASKINS till Spence •68 YAUXHALL. LIKE NEW. 1 UL S^ SPSeF'whiteSIu MW. VtnDlM Wwr WttlWWW re*. tl WJli MW WILLY JEEP PICKUP 4 STOP! LOOK! SAVE! ISM HutM S-dr. hardtop .......MM • 1(55 Pontiac Mr. hardtop ....(MS MSI Wull»I S-dr. hardtop (3.595 8 BonnevUl* 4-dr. R-top (2.495 msp _______________u5^'msM'" ISM Ford Oalaxi* Mr..........$1,499 MM Buick 4-dr. ladaa ......SUSS 1950 Buick Mr. oodea ......SI.MS MM CStevy Hal Air Mr.........91.795 UM Oaovy Mr. iodaa ..........Si,395 1101 Pontiac Bonneville Mr. SS.SM 1955 Pontiac Mr. H-tep .......MM MM Buick Mr. H-top ...........91.495 MM Cttevv Impala CoavT . 91,495 1(M Bmtek ConVt ..............S1JM - INI Buick Invfcta ConVt . 9S.3M SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK ROCHESTER OL 1-8133 TEMPEST. ____ght stick. 6 100 car warranty. 1959 PONTIAC STARCHIEP HARD-too. blue aad white flnlih. bal- igr •5* PONTIAC STATION WAOON, RADIO AND HEATER, AND AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. ABSOLUTELY NO MONET DOWN. Axiume payment* of (17JS per Call Credit Mgr.. Mr. Park* aroMT----------------- it MI 4-7500, Harold Turner. Ford. •53 PONT., RUNNINO CONDITION ”* Htft •55 PONTIAC. HYDRAMATIC. «- 60 PONTIAC 4-DOOR CATAUtfA TORS.' Llncoltv-Mercury-Comet-Meteor. 232 8. Baglnaw, PE Mill." ’50 MERCURY COUPE inth Standard Tranambaion, Solid — ek with No Ruiti Marvel Motors SUPER, MARKET __ 3-4155 (141 Commerce Rd. 19lt VIMhCTTRY. MON'I'ERET, ~'l (1.2(5. BOB BORST, LINCOLN MERCURY M0 HUNTER BLVD. __________Ml S4I3S •55 MERCURT CLUB COUPE. RA- , INC, r COMET B’HAM. is ninuuni ulus uuuri, rw-DIO AND HEATER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payment* of (it.OS per mo. Call Credit Mgr., Mr. Park* at 30 4-7600, Harold Turner. Ford. OLDS M 4-DOOR HARDTOP. MUMmMWItMi|M Loaded ' drive oniy reaeon for KhT KESSLER'S Inside Used Qu* Lot All Inside — All Sharp IS N., Washington QAg-1400 Wa buar MM OPEL. OOOD CONDhnON. PE WIN •66 OLDSMOBILE power (teerlng, tu-ton* black ahd white I 1416. CRAKE MOTORS h W. Huron St.____PE MB 66 OLDS FOR SALE. S-SM7, . 1960 ONLY $895 ' HmM| * “Y' VS, good eeudh —Special - I960 PONTIAC —. Power'brake* and power rtyrtaj^ Whitewall drag and .!.......... $2295 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt dement • • AND 4-,-Corner Cass and Pike Mmmh* SEDAN with Auto, trauombatan, radio, heater, glowing copper fin-bn! One-owner ear! (1,164 — HAUPT PONTIAC SALES, Clarke- (3,660. EM 3-M6I * '55 PONTIAC. 2 DOOR. HARDTOP. PUBLIC NOTICE o received 3 (two! Oakland County eara, ISM Paatlae Itetloo Wagon |345 fuU nriot and no money down. 1557 -Pontiac 2-door, itratght stick, (405 full prim; no money down. Wo olao will nay* * 1(41 Pontile*. Oakland County Shorift ear* priced Eddie Nicholas Motors 1SS OAKLAND ATE. PE MM (at Railroad Croaaingl -WE BUT CARS 'SB'S? MODELS FINE SELECTION OP CARS I Wo ArronE**Plnanctog, (5 Down! '54 FORD 3-DOOR, ( CYLINDER, Like n* •55 FORD V ■■■Mi i RENAULT nbb and out (3(6 Superior Auto. Sales 9 OAKLAND AVE. PE 4-7500 1964 PONTIAC S-DOOR HARDTOP, radio and heater, hydramotle transmission, whitewall tire*, ox-tra sharp. Pull price (695 LLOTD MOTORS. ilncoln-Mer-enry-Comet-Meteor, 222 S. Saginaw. PS 3-9131. • 1954 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF. 4- brakes. Vory (baa. PE after CSS. nylons 1(57 PONTIAC 4-DOOR HARDTOP. radio, hoater, Hydramatb. white- wswe, uowwwiie*, wu. rm a . 6 PONTIACjRADIO AND HEAT-or, (1M. FE 3-3MS. MSI Hal- 1960 Buick CONVERT LeSABRE White wtlh beaattful Rod in-or. Radio. Hoater, dynafiow, t. Pall pmo $1995 Remember, we encourage you to check our cars with a mechanic you know and trust. FISCHER BUICK Cfei k 784 S. Woodward, B’ham ■'.... MI 4-6222 ..... ACROSS PROM ORSENFIELD'8 1962 FORD TRADE-INS _A-1 ONE OWNERS '60 T-BIRD HARDTOP with radio, heater. $2595 '59 FORD OALAXIE “SOP* wtdtewalband- wtth radio, Iranomlaalaa, beautiful P $1395 '60Plymouth 4-DOOR with, radio, heater and (lowtof whltewalbl A REAL REAUTT THROUGHOUT I $1295 '59 Plymouth $1095 . '60 CORVAIR '61 FORD- 4-DR. COUNTRY SEDAN 1 $2495 '57 FORD 4-DOOR with radio, hooter aad $695 '60 Falcon $1295 '59 FORD S-DOOR wtth radio, boater. $1095 '55 FORD s-door with radio, boater aad $395 FREE PARKING on the Rear of Our Lot CLOSED WED., FpJ. AND SAT. AT 6 P.M. John McAujiffe PONTIAC’S ONLY FORD DEALER 630 Oakland Ave. FIE 54101 THE P^E&IBERXl9fll s Television Programs- -* Research T($$ But Acting is 'Untidy* in Hungarian Drama ■ . ■r By WIULIAM GLOVE* §j t—lfail Pm* Dmiw OrWe NEW YORK - The bftfldy Hungarian revolt against OomiWU-nist dictatorship in 1966 DeeMMS Widow and Cab .Driver (4) (Color) Joey Bishop wWm'' > (9) MovieMcont.) (4) (Color) Perry Como SERVICE JOSEPH GAUTHIER Both the victims had b el n An Intruder who apparently believed the elderly widow kept large aunts of money in her home was Mamed by police in the ‘alky* ing of Mrs. Fitch. Officers said weather-beaten, two-story house that had been her home tor neatly OR 3*5632 Chandler Heating Co. 'Drop-out' Tragedy Got Impressive Play Features NEW YORK (UPI)—’’Dropout," the heartbreaking "and timely alary Comedy with Curl Rainer, Sid Gould, Joey Forman and the Stttttherll&Mhers. GaeMstegw: Marilyn Maye. WAGON TRAIN, 7:30 p.m. (4). Mongrel Willod $5,000, Now Ha Can Put On Dog CHATTANOOGA, tme. (API-Sandy, aq 11-year-old dog of mined heritage, is probably the wealth-lest canine in town. fcwty —g p,HB hy the late Mtos Sophia Rahe of Chat- [ke Doesn't Bate as TV Performer, Poll Indicates WASHINGTON (UPI) - Former fcte (3) Movie: “Armored Ca Robbery” (4) (Color) Gouge Pierrot (7) Johnny Ginger (9) Jingles , (56) What's New (50 Industry on Panda toll (to Rocky and His friends A' Unique'Assignment Given Ex-Policeman B "It’ll be your own atory,” Jack Warner said. “Where’s there a better one?” Oth tentatively titled “the Streets of New York") Saridls miaaea one thing alnce he reaigned from the force. He miasee hearing the best operas ait the Kfat. 1 wore my uniform — that’s how I got In free," he says. WILSON Audrey Meadows got a Christmas gift from husband Bob Six—a new Jaguar XKK—“but I’m afraid to drift it; It goes 120 miles an hour In second gear.” She practice-drives around the Continental Airlines hangar In Denver. HMlywood Agent "Bullets" ■■■■■■■■■ Durgom, who also has this Jag, I says, “When I drive down Sim-set Strip, all the girls whistle —et the ear." THE MIDNIGHT EARL .. . Singer Oeergta Gibba’U wed an American correspondent in ■ Rome . . . Beverly Aadlandll ■ open Feb. 19 at the Living I Lessons in the Twist7 Steal Power Tubas DALLAS, Tex. (UPI) - A private detective agency installed a burglar alarm system, complete with electric eyes, to the United Waste Co. and it worked fine — until burglars stole its power tubes. Construction Projects Last Month Down From Forced-Air Gas Furnace installed the role opposite Natalie Weed to "Oypsy" 8ARIDIS Dick Clark, recently divorced, acts pretty serious about Loretta Martin, also to the Music Bis . . . Ingrid Bergman’s daughter Jennie, after her divorce, will resume acting ... The new cynicism is: “D6n*t give up the Ship ttll It” . . . Tony Perkins spent a whole day with ballerina Susan Platt, 17, before returning to Peris. Conversion Burners Today's Radio Programs plus Installation MICHIGAN HEATING COMPANY 80 Newberry St. FI 8-6621 Kim Novak’s take for “Boys’ Night Out”—*be owns a chunk —Will top $1,500,000 . . . Rudy ViUee, starting a whole new career via “Howto Succeed,” will be profiled by the Saturday Evening Post... Anita Gillette will take over to "Carnival” when Anna Maria Aiber-fhettt vacations soon... Debbie Reynolds' future plans: Two films a year, plus one TV guest shot.,. The Yul Brynnei-Tsny Curtis film, “Taras Bulba,” won’t be released tilt *8$. We Have One of H» Largest Selections of TVs and Stereos in Oakland County I*f Payment in Mprch, 1962 if drived TODAY'S BIST LAUGH: Some women start planning early for the future, for instance they start tying about tbeir age when they’re in their SOs. WISH n> SAID THAT: Ogden Naafi said It: “Marriage is an alliance between two people, one of whom never remem-Ibers birthdays, and the other never forget them. it’s strung* about television — the more unsuitable a pro-, gram Is for children, the qulater It seems to keep them. That’s to Appear on Tawvwon - Bruno Kearns,' Pontiac Press Sports Editor, will appear on the Urn’s Quarterback dub tonight at I an Owens! 2 with coach George Wilson, Van Patrick and two Lkm players. QUALITY RfM( BUY DIRECT POOLE’S Pontiac’* Only Author TV SALES ond SERVICE TH& PONTIAC FRE^kj^NgSPAY, DECEMBER 8, 1981 Medical Editor Die* CHICAGO ConfDeadline Flinch Provincial 3-piece bedroom Suite ' regularly at f219°° beautiful reduced *39 PROPOSED DEADLINE The proposed tipietable, introduced by Eugene G. Winger, R- lor ityle and drafting committee to report its Initial action on committee proposals. —Require the completion of second reading and adoption of pro*- ' aerr-TEa "6BT$pF^|i March 9.* '—Fix March 23___________ far the style and drafting commit-tae to caninUdate all approved proposal* into an entire new oonsti- Tor you who love the charm atid grace of French provincial design, the dramatir, the moat in looks. Sears proudly offers this beautiful grouping! Includes... double dresser .and mirror, matching 4-drawer chest and panel bed in Antique white with rich, soft gold, and old world bras* hardware for the final touch. Fully dustproofed, center-guided drawers. HARMONY HOUSE matching pieces in open stock $71 Cheat. ,|$9 *39 Panel Bed.. *3& Regular $129 Triple Breaker.. ...*114 *79.95 Desk .. 69.88 $24 Chair.. 21.88 Regular $91 Cheat .on Cheat, now ... *79 Rognlnr $34.95 Nile Stand . . . . *29.88 Regular 879! Teater Bed, now..... , 869 Regular $69.95 Powder Table.... $59.88 Reg. $109 Dbl. Dreaaer with Mirror... $94 Men Have Look of Their Own This Christmas Furniture Dept., Second Floor Christmas gift list. The little touches that make up a took of good (rooming, good toofa and great pleasure make FREE PARKING in all City metered lots From Now Until Christmas anchored and spotlighted with a tiny Ue-tac. These tacs range from ■mall classic gold or peart necento to. gUta of diamonds, sapphires, or other precious stones set In flawless gold settings. Small, elegant, practical, they keep a He la place and give a Give the Priceless Gift of Relaxation Harmony House King-size Recliners or Swivel Rockers Mal^-Knife and "The Threepenny Open" end Otf-Broadway’s longest stage run Dee. 17. Vie producers announced Tuesday the ‘‘absolutely positive" windup of the Kurt Weiil-Bertolt Brecht musical. The show’s tune sfceut Its fearsome hard was a long-run jukebox favorite. Motorized Grill Charge It Oven hood cuts cooking time, keeps food warm. Heavy gauge fire bowL Storage tray. Citation Portables Have the Wanted Features "Threepenny" opened in 1964 sad will have compiled 2,611 consecutive performances at the 299-SMt Theater Da Lys to Greenwich VfflkRE During' thT ran. 106 par They’re Padded Ay Over with Buoyant Serofoam1 Check Sears low price Include* aluminum caie Czech Archibishop Beran Won't Sign Red Pledge Typing Course on both chair* Big 12xI2-Inch rilSoffiEi - Hibachi Grill* g. 810.98 8” BIG RECLINER invites you to put yttor feet up and nllt 3 positions: for TV view-lag, lounging, fall reclining. Nylon' and leather-soft plastic cover in same. colors as rocker. * MODERN SWJVEL ROCKER lets ydo select, the hook angle that’s best for you. Full-circle Swivel action. Rioh nylon frleee in Spice beige. Parchment ivory, gold, grey or green. Siaiet,.. modern styling keeps it steady, holds own noise. Lightweight... made of aluminum. Has full length tabulator for easier charts and tables. Office-size 88 character keyboard. Radio and Tl'Dept., Main Floor BlSiWlllfW Satisfaction guaranteedor Jfagur-jnoogy -back- 154 North Saginaw Street Phone FE 5-4171 SEARS -75* DIAMOND JUBILEE Eras The Weather *.S. Weather karma Foreceet Chance of snow flurries ' (Details aa Fate 11 THE PONTIAC ONE COLOR ^m nil VOL. 119 NO. 259 ★ ★★★/★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN^ WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 6, KM51—52 PAGES Air Forces Join Growing Conflict in Katanga Mortar Shells, Bombs Loosed on U. N. Men Report Jets Attack Rebel Planes on Ground Near Elisabethville ★ ★ ★ Soviet Budget Smashes Record LEOPOLDVILLE,, t h e Congo (AP)—Indian U.N. jets destroyed four Ka- tanga planes today i aerial cannon attack on the Katanga air force base at Kolwezi, the U. N. announced. ELISABETHVILLE, Ka-tanga, the Congo Wi—1The air forces of both the* U.N. Command and Katanga went into action today as fighting raged for the second day in and near this secessionist capital. Mortar blasts^ shook the residential area near U.N. headquarters, and an old airport northwest of the city! where Katanga forces were! deployed. A lone aircraft, from Katanga's — small air force, a' bomber con-, verted^ from a German-made transport, raided the main Elisa-bethyiile airport held by U.N. troops, and dropped three bombs. A U.N. spokesman said there were no serious casualties or damage. Indian Brig. K. A. S. Raja, who took oved the (UK. operation in Katanga from civilians, announced (j, N. Jets strafed 'Would Doom Red Aim’ JFK Calls for Tariff Cat NEW YORK (AP >—President j plans for economic encirclement along with lower tariffs to stimu-Kennedy called today for a lower-of the West. ; late trade among friendly nations, ing of tariffs in a "new and bold” He urged U.S. cooperation with ___ a,________i-.l.s, c. r ____________ „.._i...l If the nations of the West can program to frustrate Communist |the European Common Market agree • 43,176 in November Pontiac Sales Hit the Top! i eommon program of artion as extraordinary In eeo-nomh—history as the North Ah lantie Treaty C rganizatlon was unprecedented in military history," the President said, "the long-range Communist aim of dividing and encircling us all is doomed to failure.” Pontiac Motor Division hit-the top last month. U.N. May Hold Congo Session "I am not proposing—nor is it ! either necessary dr desirable-join the common market, r concepts of political sov-;ignty, establish a ‘rich man's' cars, E. M. Estes, General Motors vice president and {trading community, abandon our 'traditional most-favored Retail deliveries by Pontiac dealers reached an all-|t^v time high for any Nbvember with the sale of 43,176 new ® general manager of Pontiac Motqf Division said to-! day. 1 I CMC Truck & Coach Division | also had an optimistic report today. ! For the second consecutive month, ! domestic retail deliveries of GMC .: — ,, .. . 'trucks in November topped any' New Louncil Meeting ,0ther.corresponding month since Expected as U Thant ^' announced Calvin J. W« | Pontiac Motor reported retail UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. tAP) sales for the_fbml to-day period -A new Security Council session. loUied 14,831, boosting Pontiac on the latest Katanga crisis was well PVer the record high mark Katanga dir force at Kolwexi, forecast today as U.N. Secretary- 0f 40,974 set in November 19M. northwest of Elisabethville. General U Thant prepared a re-1 He said Swedish iei* firhterJp°rt *° tl’e 11-na,ion twb °" the month ■ sales represented outbreak of fighting between U.N.!»J4 per cent gain over November carried out the attack, and pre- ’ * •, __ i vented an air attack on ujTN Katan*anTroops in the sece*|MW. forces at Elisabethville. One ‘ U.N. I Katanga's Jets at Kolwezi succeeded in getting off the ground but made a forced landing near Lulua-bourg in adjoining Kasai Province, 0j|sidhist Congo province. U.N. troops opened antiaircraft fire on another Katanga plane (Continued on Page 2. Col. 7) Faced with the gravest crisis since he took office a month ago,) U Thant moved swiftly to place the United Nations on a virtual! war footing in Katanga and hinted he might make a personal mission to the Congo. Kalamazoo Gazette Hikes Cost 5 Cents KALAMAZOO W — The Kalamazoo Gazette has announced that the . weekly rate of the newspaper had been increased to 50 cents. "“The five-cent increase was attributed to increased production I policy, Create an Atlantic free trade area or impair in any way Advises Notre Dame to Keep Victory, Page 22 62 Figure Sees Gigantic Boost in Arms Spending Military Expenditures Surpass Original Plant in '61 by Almost 50 Pet* i MOSCOW ifli—1The Soviet government today announced a record-breaking . 1962 budget, including a staggering hike in military spending of almost 50 peft cent over that originally! planned in-1961. . 3 The original 1961 figure was boosted tremendously last July because of U.S* military measures taken td meet the Berlin defense our- close economic ties with Canada, Japan and the rest of the. free world,” he said. GET PREVIEW Kennedy picked a conference of industrialists to preview in broad terms the authority Iwr will seek from Congress to give him greater freedom in bargaining for tariff favors. AP Photofax ENJOYING HIMSELF — President Kennedy breaks into laughter as comedian Bob Hope holds the floot at the National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame banquet in New York Tuesday night. Hie President was featured speake^ at the dinner hon--ering football's.coaches and players.; « Delegates felt that 11 Thant’s promise to give the council a full report on the latest Katanga events Indicated he will be quicker to seek guidance from the United Nations' top crisis, Soviet Premie f Khrushchev said then. I The over-aH budget for 196? totals 81.9 billion rubles, Finance Minister Vasily Garbuzov told th* . Supreme Soviet, the parliament of the Soviet Union, which began * — session in the Grand Kremlin. Palace todayr Garbuzov told the delegates ... defense expenditures In lttt* | would total 13.4 billion rubles, or j 19.7 per cent ot the total, at com- r | pared with l.tt billion rubles originally budgeted tor 1991. _ _ I. At the official rate Ot exchange, But, Kennedy said In i speech! tone ruble equals $1.11. prepared lor the National Associa-I • _ _ .. __ • .____. \ The new amount allotted to the Itten of Manufacturers dhdgT9*9pof| BERLIN (TIPI) —* A young East German train engi-lg^^ armed lapres Is more than American indurtry: "Econagric neer "borrowed" a Communist passenger train Tues-\a button rubles more than the to- ». IH! , , J night and turned it into a cannon baU expwaa thatlp **** “* period Hjghs and Lows ^ nct9aK^ cut8 Jsped him and 24 r^ugees to fr^om ln West BerUn. That authority would reduce levies on some U.S. Import* and Increase foreign competition with UA. Industry. *. M. KKTEK body than his predecessor, late Dag Hammarskjold. j initial introduction last Pontiac attained another all-time division record for the first 70 days of 1962 model sales with dealer deliveries totaling 103.338. Tib previous high for a similar was 97,686 established in 1956. “The overwhelming public ceptanre of the 1(92 Pontiac and I ir '_. in l • I _ Tempest has erected an un-NOIHlCll AwhllQ precedented market for sar new can, with unfilled orders con-'Wily | tinuing at record levels,” Estes 25 'Borrow7 Train for Run to W. Berlin t basis during 1961. \to Stay Near — -■'»-----| «fin,-! sum uiH.lt deliveries, ini , - ' . r., , ... . ,, , They also expressed belief thitjNovember tolaled 6,831 units, ^u™yg ^,1 Cloudy * new U.N. chief's quick dis-mg it the best November since IWi?h^^«of moTSSri«IlS| Temperatures will average * a little above the normal high of 34 to 38 and the normal low of 19 to 26. degrees for the next five Flashes the patch ot jet planes and troop re-1195! Inforcements into Katanga showed October deliveries also reached' he intends to take a tough stand a six-year high with 7.002 units1 and distribution costs. Single copy and use all means at his disposal delivered, price wap boosted to 10 cents daily. Ito quell disorder in the Congo. Dollar Gilt No Problem With So Many Choices jtariffs on both sides of the Atlantic 'would increase U.S. sales abroad] and thus strengthen both this country and its allies. He called for economic cooperation between the United States ] and the European Common Market, an association of atx nations which Groat Britain has ap-membership. Some 90 ...---------------- . cent of free world Industrial a high of 40. Saturday will warm) production may soon be ronren-up a little but temperatures will frafod |n these two great marts' colder again Sunday. | kets, he said. Prerlpitatlon lor the period | . j am proposing, in short, a new I will average near .4 of an Inch I American ’ trade initiative which in scattered showers or snow wij| makc it possible for the eco-j TULSA OklaV (UPIi — An 831-1 f,urri,H‘’ mos,ly Saturda-V and nomic potential ot these two great (.rnment unit cooperative fallout shelter s"n<,av* .markets to be harnessed together, costing $2.5 million may be built Twenty-six was the lowest re-|into a team capable of pulling the! here if tenanls willing to pay from I cording in* downtown pontiae pre-full weight of our common null- . , ■ - - • - -------------------1 i,.^ economic and political aspir- impose a poUtlcal solution The engineer celebrated his 29th birthday today sur-1 But this is no longer emergency ’.rounded by his entire fam-j financing, and it indicated the so- il I May at a h| [during the coming year. In the Mated Held of a on the wild ride. I The daring trainman. wJxwe[ {longest previous run was. estl-j which Includes moot programs of mated to be an internal East Ger-j.weapon development, the budget man trip of some. 50 miles, turned , ttgure v - , hies. Last year It was 3.8 billraa, L!--, Wa ter Mitty-type dreams of crossed the border fired into Indian- territory earlier Plan Huge Shelter j $2,550 to $4,500 are found before ceding 8 a ; April 15, it was annpunced .today ■mg 1 p.tr i 36, 'ations." Kennedy said! NEW DELHI (UPI) — Indl* already enmeshed in a horde flare-up with Red Oilna, said to _________________ day that Portuguese troops from escape into reality in Berlin’s most Comparison of Soviet awFAmc 'sensational flight to freedom of I lean budgets are almo^lmpossi-the Cold War. Ibie. Many Soviet military expens- , ■ , es are buried in allocations osten- The refugees made their Ky fQr cmi^,rodurtion. escapi- when engineer Harry Del-erling and fireman Hartnmt !3.9 BILLION MOKE IJchy powered the locomotive' The 1962 budget is 3.6 billion past the scheduled last stop at |rublejFoigger than last year's, but the East German station of IGgrouzov said the* government ac-Albreehtshof. jfually planned lo spend only 80.3 j billion rubles. mrplus-o( 1.6 bullion rubleslor 1961 also. 'LONDON (ft—The British gov-i-clarrd today that U.N. forces in strife-lorn Katanga have no right to attempt to By JANET ODELL "The party starts as six—bring a dollar gift.” We all] hear that command at this time of year. What can we; get for a dollar? We saw some handsome metaV waste baskets. One! with kitchen utensils pressed into the coppertone sides ! would be fine for the homemaker; another with “tooled” flowers on the same copper*------ tone WOUld be at home in One store is showing crystal salt! a den or family room. Bnd wper^hakera for a dollar. If the male recipient has jUstj (ron, g to 80 like feminine | •They Meet Their Congressman * --- " . V VtUIS IIVII1 V MS W lint ICIIIIIIIIIC moved into-a new home and has ^ |jke dusting powder. The n <4m (ap *BO F . I a den lor ‘[^prettiest boxes we’ve seen have first time, he,r puffs in deep-tone colors. .... g h t like a brass perpetual COOKIE CUTTERS calendar or a a new homemaker will be new-style pencil!chanted with the gift set of stain-sharpener lorjless steel cookie cutters. These his dbsk. lace not just holiday cutters. 1 The 1961 pencil if the party is early, consider] § ,sharpener is some pretty Christmas wrapping] j about as . large]materials lor a gilt. An entire bolt S as a 50-cent of narrow red ribbon would seem piece and m like luxury. Purchase a Christmas' nil Thu roffiilBr • ’ I JANET inches tall. The card register, pencil is inserted in the top to bel Another prosaic gift that has sharpened by a razor blade inside, pleased many is a collection of —r^ri—,(— gmail items used often around the house—thumb tacks, rubber bands, page r clips, ^transparent tape, household cement—the list goes Wrap each thing separately for the most fun. Christma$ Shoppers' . to Get Free Parking Hhoppero In downtown Pontiac will begin getting n big Christmas bonus tomorrow. Some 1,939 free off-street parking spaces will be avattable Dec. 7 through Here is the story that was pieced together early this morning, from. He ffPOrtw* ! The Supreme Soviet is certain .w WORKED OUT PLAN {approve the budget before conclu- The trainmen had heard that sion of its session, which also will the rails which previously led from discuss the nation's 1962 economic Albrechlshof into Wesi Berlin were plan and approve changes tnMhe {scheduled to be removed as part civil law code. ’ jof the Communists’ border-sealing! ......- ■■ - !operations. Ben-Gurion, U Nu Talk The two dreamed of driving i a train with their families and I RANGOON, Burma Jl —r Prune i irii-nds through heavily-armed ! Minister David Ben-Gurjon otjs-polire guards to the Weat. They jrael. here for a»six-day ttate visit | began their detail^ plan last “"deig^t “ay* ot BuddMst style I k meditation, held private talks to- day with his host and old friend, | The engineer decided to adopt j pr|me Minister U >to-Communist measures to hoodwink; East German authorities by play-! ing the role of an “eager beaver, j He told his boss he would like to get additional experience by! running the^, train on a link that switches from his normal route] into AlbrediishofT; FEU. INTO TRAP The boss was pleased with his; subordinate's willingness to gain additional experience and agreed ||| try him on a different run. The engineer was given Tues-| day night's run, but was .assigned the fireman, who normally stoked His train on the*rogular run. He told the regnlar man to take the day elf, telling him he had i friend who would pull the duty for him. The regular fireman happily agreed. > engineer's family friends purchased tickets and piled] aboard the train. When the well-stoked eight-car train reached Albrechtshof, it sped on through speed of 50 miles an hour to Spandau in the British sector. The meters In most municipal v puking lots will be hooded, a Christmas present from the city and Downtown Merchants LUNCHEON BREAKER — Oakland County Republican* Congressman William S. Broomfield, third from left, was the guest’ of honor yesterday at a luncheon for some 40 businessmen and (ffvlc leaders sponsored by Pontiac Press Editor Jphn W. Fitz- Fantixc Fran Ffcata gerald. ffore Broomfield talks with Harold Goldberg, Oakland County^ Republican State Senator Farrell Roberts, and Calvin J. Werner, General Motors vice president and general manager of Truck ft Coach tfiyistpri: , The escapees said the locomotive ran out of steam as it started to cross the border and they hid because they thought the Communist border guards would shoot at them. But the guards were so surprised they did not open fire. In Today's Press Considine West could answer surprise Soviet attack in min-utes—PAGE 29. To Stay in U.N. Stevenson won't seek Senate seat—PAGE 7. Set Showdown AFL-CIO leaders meet today on refereeing system— PAGE 19. An Old Story Many lack Interest school work—PAGE 49. Aron News . Editorials .. Markets ... Obituaries . Sports...... Theaters ........ .......* TV and Radio Programs II Wilson. Earl . .41-43 ..IMS ■18 .1, T. : # § THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1961 -Today's Television Programs- fen Uverrati (2) On the Farm Front (2) College of the Ate (4) (Color) Continental C ($) Quick Draw McGnw j (56) Notes on Music 6:43 (2) Sports (4) Sports 6:41 (2) New* s.. (4) News (7) News, Weather, Sports 7:00 (2) Highway Patrol (4) Two Faces West (7) Matty’s Funday Funnies (9) Man and the Challenge (58) Food for Life 7:30 (2) Marshal Dillon (4) (Color) Laramie ■ (7) Bugs Bunny (9) Movie. “Jackie Slade." 6:00 (S) Movie (oont.) (4) Wyatt Earp (7) Johnny Ginger (eont.) Hare, head of the safety commission, cited a 12-month study conducted by the National Safety Council involving some 61 minion male and 21 million fe- SO per cent while the male driver total has increased a little over 10 per cent. (7) Johnny Ginger (2) Captain Kangaroo (96) German for Teachers (7) Jack Ial jnne (96) Alaska: New Frontier (2) Movie: “Mississippi” (4) Ed Allen (7) Movie: “Scandal Sheet” (56) Spanish Lesson (4) Gateway to Glamour (96) Art for Everyday Use (4) Debbie Drake . (9) Billboard Say When National School Show Our Scientific World I Love Lqcy (Color) Play Your Hunch Jackie Cooper VISITORS—Michigan State Univeraity’: uate school of advertising students an Features By United Press Istnmstionsl DICK VAN DYKE SHOW, 8 p.m. (2) Comedy writer Rob Petrie (Van Dykel tries to round up 44 tickets to the TV show he helps I 1:90 p.m. (7). “The Valley of the Three Charlies.” Three bank robbers kill a man who finds theta digging up buried banknotes and hold his girl friend hostage. DICK POWELL SHOW, 9 p.m. (4). , “Three Soldiers.” • James Donald, Robert Webber and Telly Savalas star in a drama about a sergeant who tries to teach his men about life. RED SKELTON SHOW, 9 p.m. (2). Ernest Truex and Ronnie Buna are the guest stars as Clem Kadiddlehopper (Skelton) goes to college. GARRY MOORE SHOW, 10 p.m. (2). Comedian Jack Carter, dancer Gretchen Wider, guest stars. PREMIERE, 10 p.m. (7). “The Breaking Point.” An open-and-shut case against a murder case suspect suddenly takes a new turn. Starting Brian Keith, Mary Murphy. Fred Astaire, host. CLOSE-UP, 10:30 p.m. (7). A1 Bernard, IS, of Quincy, HI. dropped out of school when he was 16 even though his marks were high. Why did he quit? “Drop-Out," a report on this problem which Secretary of Labor Goldberg calls “a national disaster," sets out to learn the answers. PRESIDENT KENNEDY, 10:30 p.th. (7). President John F. Kennedy accepts Gold Medal Award for distinguilahed service to football at annual dinner of National Footbail Foundation and Hall of Fame In New York. ' JACK PAAR SHOW, 11:30 p. (4). Guests: Marguerite Piazza, Pat Harrington Jr., Wally Cox, Shelley Berman and Betty Johnson. (Color.) builds a reputation ( out the West as a RRR gunman. Mark Steveni, Dorothy Malone. (56) Ahuu^: New Frontier 3:00 (2) Sea Hunt (4) Laramie (eont.) (7) Bachelor Father • (9) Movie (eont.) (56) Student Peace Corps 8:10 (2) Dobie GUlis (4) Alfred Hitchcock (7) New Breed (9) Movie (eont.) (56) Introductory Psychology 0:00 (2) Red Skelton (4) Dick Powell (7) New Breed (eont.) (9) Men into Space' (2) Ichabod and Me (4) Dick Powell (eont.) (7) Yours for a Song (9) Front Page Challenge 10:00 (2) Garry Moore (4) Cain’s Hundred » (7) Premiere (9) Interpol Calling 19:36 (2) Garry Moore (eont.) (4) Cain’s Hundred (eont.) (7) President Kennedy (9) Dr. Hudson 11:91 (2) News (4) News (7) News (9) News 11:19 (7) News, Sports -11:16 (2) Weather (4) Weather (9) Weather U:M (2) Sports ; (4) Sports (9) Telescope UAW llill (2) Movie. "Berlin E press.” (1946) A German a peace mission is threatened by the Nazi underground. Merle Oberon, Robert Ryan. (7) Weather 111:33 (4) (Color) Jack Paar (7) Movie. 1. “Great Ex-pectations.” (1934) A boy encounters an escaped convict who orders him to bring food and clothing. Henry Hull, Phillips Holmes, Jane Wyatt. 2. "My Name Is Julia Rom.” (1945) A girl takes Job as secretary. Nina Foch, Dame May Whltty. (9) Movie. “The Harvey Girts.” (1946) Pioneer-waitresses go to work in Fred Harvey’s restaurant in the West in 1860. Judy Garland, John Hodlak. (4) I C ■ U, 13:36 (7) ] 13:33 (2) I (4) (7). (9) <____ (56) Engliu. . 10:45 (9) Nursery School Time (2) Video Village (4) (Color) Price Is Right (7) Texan (9) Romper Room (56) Spanish Lesson 11:16 (56) German Lesson 11:30 (2) December Bride (4) Concentration (7) Yours for A Song (56) Eastern Wisdom I grad- _ students and their mentor, Prof. Kenward Atkin, were guests recently of MacManus, John A Adams, Inc., Bloomfield Hills advertising agency. Featured in the daylong seminar was a dietailed presentation of the agency’s handling of the Saran Wrap Account (Dow Chemical Co.) by Account Supervisor Pat-ride D. Beece. Agency hosts John R. MacManus, senior vice president (third from left) and Milton F. Coulson Jr. vice president (left) are seen here chatting with director of Swiss National Railways, Dr. Werner Belmont, of Bern, Switzerland (at right), and Dr. Atkin. Shanty Creek Lodge New Northern Resort Rep. Hoffman Taken to Naval Hospital WEDNESDAY MORNING Confine ntal 6:01 (4) (Color) Classroom 6:33 (2) Meditations r n IT ii ii IT ii L 17/ IT ■ R t H r n F U ■ ■ IT IT KT K r IT r J sr IT H Pi r u H L rr H ■ 1 R t 52 5T 54 ■r T F r r B n nr H u 13:11 (2) Love of Life (4) Truth oHOonsequencet (7) Camouflage (9) Myrt and Doris (56) What's New 1S:M (9) News 13:M (2) Search lor Tomorrow (4) (Color) It Could Be You (7) Make A Face (9) Susie (56) Spanish Leason 13:46 (2) Guiding Light (56) German Lesson ■ oo (2) Star Performance (4) Groucho (7) Day in Court (9) Movie: “Luxury Liner” 1:19 (56) French Lesson (7) Newt 1:16 (2) As the World Turns (4) Californians (7) Lite of Riley (56) World History (4) Faye Elizabeth 9:96 (2) Amos ’n’ Andy (4) (Color) Jan Murray (7) Number Please (56) Adventures in Science 3:30 (2) House Party (4) Loretta Young (7) Seven Keys (56) French Lesson 3:00 (2) Millionaire (4) Young Dr. Malone 17) Queen for a Day (9) News (56) Ordejl by Fire 3:10 (9) Movie: "London Melody’' 3:10 (2) Verdict Is Yours (4) From These Roots (7) Who Do You Trust? (56) Memo to Teacher* SI (2r News 00 (2) Brighter Day (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) American Bandstand (56) Cod trails 16 (2) Secret Storm 4:16 (2) Edge of Night (4) Here’s Hollywood (9) Adventure Time (56) French Through Television (7) American Newsstand (4) News ' (2) Movie: “Hello, Everybody” (4) (Odor) George Pierrot (7) Johnny Ginger (9) Jingles and Pinocchio (56) What’s New 6:30 (96) Travel k4S (I) Rocky and His Friends (91) News Magazine kM' (4) Kukla and OUie Shanty Creek Lodge, a 11.5-million year-round private resort, owned ami designed by Bloomfield Hills- men, is scheduled to open July 1 in Northern Michigan. Owner Roy Deskin, 150 Marblehead Drive, said the lodge will be the largest year-round 'vacation facility in the Midwest. The resort is situated on a 1,000-acre site near Bellaire on M88, northeast of Traverse City. About 15 per cent of the three- Take Big Step for Church Unity ory, 90,000-square-foot lodge is already completed, according to Jack Begrow of Begrow ft Brown, architects, 20 E. Long Lake Road, designers of the resort. NEAR AIRPORT five-minute drive from the Antrim County Airport, the main! lodge is located at the highest point of the property, some 400 feet above Lake Bellaire, which is a half mile away. Both Torch Lake and Lake Michigan will be visible from the lodge. The buildliig will have 108 private rooms, each with Its own balcony, and n large dining room with two plate glass walls and s World Council Vows to Work for Communities, Net One Organization NEW DELHI, India (AP)-In a tnajor stride toward its goal of world-wide unity of churches, the General Assembly of the World Council of Churches Monday night pledged to work for interlocking church communities rather than single, ecclesiastical organization of all Christians. The 9,000-word document set forth conditions and relationships the council regards as the goal of church unity and emphasized that "unity does not imply simple uniformity of organization, rite or expression.” It proposed instead a system of interlocking communities on the local, national and international, level with mutual recognition of I ministries, members and joint participation in the Lord’s Sup- Eyed in State Proposal Would Allow Firms to Deduct Funds Spent on Development ANN ARBOR