Tht W«oth«r v.». WmM4» muttrn' 117th YEAR. THE PONTIAC PRESS ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, TUESDAY. JANUARY a6. 1960—28 PAGES Horn# Edition Lined Up for 'Operation' Tonsillectomy so MORE SORE THROATS — After today tonsU trouble wiU be a thing of the past for this family. Mr. and Mrs. llolUs Pennington. (rf 9225 Southeastern St.. White lAke Township, decided to have all of the troublesome tonsils at their children Removed at once. Shown here being admitted to Pontiac General Hospital rrw» pimu Monday afternoon are (from left) James, 9, Judy, 7, Dorothy, 5, Sarah, 11. Thoma.s, 15. and David, 13. With them m Mrs. iGeorge Ransford, a Gray Lady at the hospital. The six tonsillectomies are scheduled for today. Struggle Ends for Actress Find Diana Barrymore Dead in N.Y. Apartment of Heart Attack ^ fAPl-Actresa Di- But There Are Limitations life a tragic struggle to fulfill mytbicM promise of her name, A* died Monday. Her nude body was found lying face down in bed by a maid at her fashionable Elast Side apartment. Her physician said she died of a heart attack but he refused to sign a death certificate because Miss Barrymore had no history of heart trouble. Police started an investigation. Straley Has Police Reins By MAX E. SIMON Herbert W. Straley. at least ( paper, was given some of the powers a police chief yesterday. He sat in Public Safety Director Guote D. Eastman’s office Eastman toM tha department's higher ranking officers that Straley was resuming command. The meeting was short, lasting only 15 minutes. “The rhief Is rrsponsibie lor the mamucement of the department," Eastman saM later. You Know How It Is When Guests Are Due There was a qualification. however. and it was a large one. "He's responsible on the sumption that any changes wants in policks, programs and personnel will be recommended Idsma." ■ St gM Stralsy’i mendAtions would then vWtdd ifid the depift- ment’s top officers. It was the first time since Nov 12, 1958 that Straley had ‘any authority at aii. date Straley was stripped of command. I Hts badge, gun aiMf rank wee.* : all that remained. And last April be Inst those too, when be was fired by the Pontlar CtvH Service Commission. Ike Throttles , Talk of Action Against Castro Says Anti-Americanism Concerning, Perplexing to This Country WASHINGTON (AP) — President Eisenhower to-dAy ruled out iany United States reprisals at this time against Cuba’s Fidel Caatro regime. The President told k news conference the Castro government’s a n t i-Amei;^can campaign causes concern and perplexes this couhtry. But, he added, the American people still have great affection for the Cubans. The United Staten, he went on. Is not going to be n party to any reprisals against Castro at this moment, and is certainly not going to intervene in Cuba's internal affairs. ^ ★ ♦ ♦ Immediately after the news conference. Eisenhower issued a statement saying, among other things, that: The United States govenmieal views with Increasing Mmcem the tendency of spokesmen of the Cuban govemment, bKhiding Prime Minister Castro, to create the Ulusion of ngxreoolve acts, and ronspImtorUI a e 11 v 111 e o aimed at the Caban Government and nttribnied to United States officials or ogencies.” Jlisenhower called such .accusations “unfounded illusions," and said promotion of them can hardly contribute to good relations between the UniUld AMoa VMlCiite, * * ♦ ‘Wa bfliiovf ihaia in htf tota^ W said. _______ ......... no When the house lights dimmed this afternoon in j His .successful fight for rein- indication of suicide. Miss Barry- I the auditorium of Pontiac Central High . School, the l?tatemcnt in oircuit court meant more, who wos trying to make a | activity .On the brightly lighted stage was only a"climax!“’r, theatrical comeback after a IHe L_ ___ ] He a.sMKTOr his badge and .. ot alcoboUsm, degradation and hOUrS Of preparation. ,vhcn hAwtlicnsd-to^utiTJan. 14 broken marriages, made a suicide altempt. She told her story in the bestselling autobio^rafihy, ‘Too Much. Too Soon." She wakxtlw daughter of the late John BarrymOT^ whose swAshbuckling off stage matched anything he did on stage, and the late Blanche Oelrichs. who wrote plays and poems under the name Michael Strange. ♦ ♦ A Her aunt was Ethel Barrymore, and her uncle was Lionel Barrymore. Her thea^al ancestry went back four gewations in this country and England. Diana Barrymore's name opened for her every door in show business, when she made headlines, it was .seldom in the critics’ columns. In her bonk, she wrate: ‘The fact that I came from a long line of Barrynwres Isn’t going to make me feel lhal I mnsl always keep striving to live up to their • Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) What the public saw as The Pontiac Press Cook ing School was just part*--------------^— of the show. mmten was still chocking her lists. Both girls were trying All day Monday workman had been moving >in and connecting flovts and refrigerators. Lights and curtains had to be adjusted. In the middle of the afterngon some of the bigger prizes w#'re delivered and placed on stage. ’Three targe tranks had been Magnolia ]/ililis From Favor in the Southland WASHINGTON (UPlt - The old magnolia blossom' has lost its bloom. The magnolia, long a symbol of southern tradition and plantation days, has lost its favor with Southern flower fanciers. It Scarlett O’Hara and Rhett Batler were walking haad-la-hand anywhere In the Sooth they would do so amidst banks of This sad fact was brought to light yesterday when a poll to de-' termine the people’s choice for the national flower of the United States was released. ♦ The rose was so far ahead of any flower In the poll conducted by the FTorists Telegraph Delivery As.sn. it wasn’t even close. The magnolia finished a ,wilted l2tb, some 35C.6oo buds behind the rose. Sad to relate not one southern eat some breakfast At the front of the stage prize bags of groceries were being packed. Two Ponti^ Central custodians came iiy49 shorten one set of stage curtifins. And the dishwashing was still in progre,ss None of this was seen by the 900 women who jammed the ditorium this afternoon for the first of four sessions on food and l^.me how to keep a family well fed. and he got them. until yesterday. Straiey was a chief in name only. ANYTHING CHANGED* Jtraley isn’t sure that anything has chaniced. "I’m supposni to actually be the chief." he said, 'but that remains to be seen." Straley said Hie change in h>s status was "verbal’’ on East-man's part. "He emphasisMl that 1 waj sHII under his direction and coa^M," the chief said. "I received no recommendations 'Continued on Page 2, C3ol. «) In a Castro aeeased the UA. embassy of working with oppoarats at Us govemmesit. He also denoaneed Vice President Kichard M. Nixon. After this Castro broadcast, the United States called U.S. Ambassador Philip BOnsal home for consultations. Elsenhower dealt with these other topics in his news conference: Spare — The United Slates, be there will be remarks by senior clam presidents Richard Brawn of Oniral and Ed Santala of r its bead in shame In any comparison of American and Soviet ac-l■onlpllshmeals In spare exploration. Defense — The United States has developed better intelligence methods for evaluating the military strength of the Soviet Union. Named U. of M. Dean ANN ARBOR (UPI) - James C. Mouzon, electrical engineering professor, has been named an associate dean of the college of engineering at the University ot Michigan. MLss Hammerslen, who is substituting for Conslnnee WeLser, i.s a resident of St. Paul, Minn, After graduating from Stout Stale Colin ^ Wisconsin, she* taught in Rau Claire, Wis. and in Colorado Springs. She is enthusiastic about her present job and the opportunities it gives her to travel and people. HHiHLY UNimUAI, Mrs, Delore St. Dennis and Mnt. David St. Dennis, both of Pontinr, are backstage asaistants. On Monday they were busy washing all the ' dishes and cooking utensils to be used. The stage at Pontiac Central has seen some unusual performances, but they seldom have included such domestic ones. In addition to the usual light cables we worked our way around wash luba, large garbage cans and pails of water. Demomttrating a dish ta a large aadience of eager women it different from preparing M at home. on a tray. Ingredients are measured out Into snnall. containers. Even the garnish for the finished dish it prepared and ready to be added at the last minute. With only a limited amount of time to J^sent some dozen recipes, there aitm be no slip-up, no hesitation. This morning there The classes will be presented by Francis W. Staley, Central’s principal, and Philip Wargelin, Northern’s principal Diplomas will be awarded by Dr. Dana P. Whitmer, superintendent of schools. * w ♦ Musk* for the ceremonies will be provided by the Central High School Band under the direction of Dale C. Harris. Central High honor otadents In-elnde Ann Bainett, Joy Bnrteo, Mnry Conmd, Lowannn MeLenn, Sara Pnlllt and Marilyn Vernon. Northern High honor studenU are Joanne DembinMd. Carolyn McBurney and tundra Tinson. William Hayward is recipient of the Hi-Y Scholarship and Karen Oxley is winner of the Y-Teen Scholarship. Both are Central graduates. Seniors at both schools hene forth will graduate only at tl (ContimiefI on Page 2, Col. 8) TAKING A PEEK - Mrs. Fred Lovse of Peniiacola avenue (left) 'and Mrs. Edward Chasteen of Pingree avenue (right) have to be ^ ^ busy at their custodial Jobif at Pontiac Central 'state selerted 'uic m'a^lia as itsitivity. Miss ’ ueite" wm working High during The Press Cooking .School so they first choice. , low a pineapple torte. .Miss Ham- took a, peek this morning backstage. Carolann fmUae ftnt PfevU iiammersten (second from leftl shoWs theirt the standing rib roast of brof 4o be us^ in to-1 day's session. June Uebele, her assistant, holds it on a tray. Both women are on the staff of the National Live Stock and Meat Board in Chicago. 'Punk' Blames 'an Urge' for Friday's Killing White Jacket Helps Police Crack Series of Conflicting Stories DETROIT (UPI)—-AM-year-old parolee, described by police as a “young punk,’’ today faced first-degree murder charges because of his own conflicting statements and a white jacket he was too eager to wash )^ter the slaying of Mrs. Elizabeth Moughler. George Darryl Flatter, 20, told jx)llce he “just had , an'urge and grabbed’’ Mrs. Moughler, 46-year-old mother of three, as she returned from a neighborhood movie last Friday night. "She put up quite a struggle so 1 strai^led her." police quoted Flatter as saying. Two teams of DotroH Je-tectlvM pteeed the sjory together from teaglod statements given by Flatter during more than 91 hours el queollonlng. But it was a white jacket—de-' scribed by witnesses and unidentified police informants—that first tripped the young suspect. V « 41 A policeman who arrived at the scene of the murder only minutes after, it occurred laid he saw a "man in while'’ fleeing the spot where Mrs. MOughler’s body was found. Her clothing was ripped and disarranged. It wu five -ioOrs fium her wmr. Police picked up the ex-convict, bo served 18 months fesr auto theft, after employes of the Cinderella Theater and other informants said he was at the movie the same night Mrs. Moughler was killed. St ★ ★ Flatter at first denied being at the theater, and said he did not own a white jacket. ANNOYED WOMEN But Ihi-ee young women picked him out of a lineup as the man who had been annoying them at the movie, and police found a -^^oncejifhite" Jackrt that had been newly waSjedhPI'lattei''* ~roont;— An aunt and unde with whom (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Requests Vitale VenueRuling Little Warmer, County Prosecutor Has Snow or Rain Asked Atty. Gen. Adams 6ue Wednesday decision Occasional snow flurries will dot { Wayne County authorities the air tonight and Wednesday in | claiming they have no jurisdiction, the Pontiac area, the weathermanj Oakland County Prosecutor George Ar wir*na«t* TEIJ.A GF HTRANGUNG -• George Darryl Flatter, 20, is shown at Detroit police headquarters Monday after he reportedly signed' a confession of the strangle-slaying of Mrs. Elizabeth Moughler. The 46-year-old mother of three was found dead Friday. Hatter faces a first-degree murder charge. Graduation Thursday for Two High Schools Commencement exercises for the last January graduating classes of Pontiac Northern and Central High schools^iU be held jointly 8 p.m. Thursday in Central’s auditorium. Finishing their careers in the city’s school system will be 117 Central seniors and 47 from Northern. ’The main addratt will be given by Roy J. Alexan-H^te UnlveiUty Oakland. KB TBlk Is en-tMM “CourtfB<^and ooib-viction for Twnorrow.” Gletm Griffin, president of the Pontiac Board of Education, will preside over the program! The tavM*allon wUI be Jeliv-ered by Karen Oxley. Uratral's says. Little change in temperature is expected tonight. The low will again be 18-20. Raps Concentration on 1 Space Project WASHINGTON (AP» — The nation's man-in-space program is legging and may be in trouble because or c-oncentration on a single approach: Project Mercury, House committee says. ★ ♦ ♦ These conclusions are in a stafl report of the House Committee on Science and Astronautics The report, first of a series planned on the Mercury a.stronaut program, was released today. The report said that “there has already been some program slippage (rom the origiiud plan, and the most optimistic sdi^ule for the attainment of orbital flight is likely to show a slippage of nuuiy more months." Westerly winds at seven mites I an hour at 10:15 a.m. will become! easterly at 10-12 miles Wednesday. Twenty was the lowest recording in downtown Pontiac preceding. 8 a m; At 2 p.m. the reading was 26. Wonts Great Salt Lake os National Park Area WASHINGTON (fl - A national pafk in Utah’s Great .Salt Lake area is envisioned by Sen. Frank E. Moss (D-Utah). He introduced a bill Mith said employe’s duties and i^asks." It further stated that “all department heads are directed to review aay requests by township persoMsel lor the making of any statement ns onntemplated to tn-nwe that sadi sUtement will not eanse aay ^barrassment nr snbjert the township to any lla-Mllty." "Failure on the part of any township mnploye or official to comply with the memorandum shall constitute immediate grounds for dismissal," the memorandum concluded. ★ ft ft The reason for presenting the memo stemmed from a recent Incident in which township employes, without consulting their superiors, ,allegedly made certain unauthorized statements which nay result in court action against the township, according to Mapdel. TowrnUp oflleialB denied any enforce n. “gag" rule Donald E. Barber, White Lake Twp., After Lodge Post Pitching his hat into the ring for Oakland County's seat in the State Senate is Donald E. Barber, 27, of m HigMand RxL, While Uk* Towntfilp. a Barber, a graduate Michigan State University and now eraidoyud by General Motors Truck * Coach Division in Pontiac announced he wouhi seek the Republican nomination in the Aug. 2 primary. ★ A Hw 12th District seat is now held by GOP Sen. L. Harvey Lodge, He has not made his intentkms known yet. Barber has been active in file Young Republicans both in coUef^ and now in the county, and last year worked with Paul D. Bagwell in his bid (or governor. Parolee Confesses Detroit Strangling (Conttnued From Page One) Flatter lived said he came home about 11 p.m. the night of the murder and started washing the jadcet and a pair of trousers mud-staiiied. No action was taken as to the distribution of the memorandums until the board considers the rewording to clarify the meaning. Admit Shoplifting in Birmingham A mother and daughter, nabbed as shoplifters by a Birmingham police detective posing as a buyer at a ladies shop, yesterday pleaded guilty to larceny chargtM when amignM before Circuit Judge H. R^l Holland. Mm. Mary Aan ColeiMB, M, and her danghter, Patrlda Ann Brcsen. «, bath of «S E. IS Itflie Bd„ Royal Oak, wtl| be naateaced by Jadge Holland Feb. >. They are charged with larceny of" a skirt and sweater from the Kay Baum Shop. 1G6 W. Maple RQ., Jan. 15. ♦ ★ ★ Detective Richard Chambers said as he was posing as a buyer he noticed the women place the merchandise under their coats while standing at a counter. He arrested them outside the store as they placed the stolen articles in shopping bags. MidweshGoidef, but Southland Begins to Thaw Laws imperiled Sl»el Pact Providas That in Affected States Duet' Must Be Paid The and said the flaished the work at bis lob as a window-washer at midnight. Police said the jacket was found to have stains that were blood on it when it was taken to the police crime lab. Flatter tdd several stories about the bk)od. First he said he had been in a street fight. Then he said a friend had been in a fight and the blood was the friend’s. * ★ w “The story came out in bits and pieces, ” said Det. Lt. Thomas Co-chill. “He’d tell one story, we’d check it and show him he was lying, and he’d tell another story. Cochill said Flatter continued to deny the slaying even after admitting he was in the theater when the three girls identified him. GeneraPs Aide Recalls Close Tritgedy Nearly Shot MacArthur!* Cochin said they JnstUled hold lag tho youth. Flatter admitted the crime shortly before noon yesterday, police tid. He then was taken to the scene of the crime and led police over the route followed on the night of the killing. SHOWED EXTRA THINGS "He even showed us a few things e didn't know about,” Cochill said. Cochin sold Flatter, a husky youngster with long, reddish, wavy hair, maintained his com- Gen. Douglas MacArthur is 80 years old today. Except for a split-second, wholly unmilitary intervention one dark night In the Philippines, he almost certainly would have died shortly after his 62nd birthday. And I, aide to his Air Force chief, would have been his unwitting executioner. Very few American.s, and we devoutly hoped, no Japanese, knew the general and his party were on the southernmoat island of Mind-that night. csldent Rooscvcills radio order that reached him In the rock heart «f Corrogldor’s Ma-Uala tunnel was most secret. It directed him to take key staff officers and break out of Bn- A first-degree murder warrant was expected to be sought by Wayne County Prosecutor Samuel Olsen within the next fw days, police said. By The Asooclated PreM -Wintry weather, with cold and snow, spread across the north central region today but a warming trend developed in wide areas from the southern plains into New Orleans. it It -k Florida, after a nearly a week of chilly weather which caused crop losses estimated in the millions of dollars, also was warmer. However, it was near freezing again this morning in some north-era areas. Temperatures ranged from the lower 30s to the SOs. Clear weather prevailed in most of the Southeast. The Weather ran v.s. WMta VK'INITV—rissST aaS -------llarriM Mst. IT. >l(k US*T tf- ;k WeSstrfa- “ t Umpersturt prtosdlRt I Sun rteM WodnoMIST ■ Mood mU TuTidsy -* Asks Venue Ruling in Vitale Slaying _JOantlmied From pW»,;Opc> said this would place juriitMctlon in Maccunb County. GRAVE IN OAKLAND Vitale’s partially decomposed body was found Jan. 19 In a shallow grave in the Proild Lake Recreation Area in Commerce Township. McKay has insisted that Vitale, wanted since the $S.M0 holdnp Nov. 20 ot a Detroit credit union, was shot aooldenUlly while on n way to a hideout In Utica. Police, however, believe he was slain berause he was to handle." Taylor said jurisdiction of the case becomes more complicated because it is believed that after the first shot, successive shots were fired into Vitale’s body as the car was moving close to the Oakland County border. "This seemingly puts it in our lap," he said. McKay and Shirk, being held by Detroit police, have bwn unable to pinpoint the shooting any closer, Taylor said. Hill Elected Prexy of Detroit Boy Scouts DETROIT Uh-Merrltt D. Hill Bloomfield Township, vice president and general manager of the Ford Motor Co. Tractor and Implement Division, was elected president of the Detroit Area Council of the Boy Scouts of America today. Hill succeeds W. Calvin Patterson, a vice president of the Michigan Bell Telephqne Co. ' KITCHY-KOO — Evangelist Billy Graham tries unsuccessfully to attract the attention of a native child in his mother’s anns on his recent visit to Liberia. In Ghana, Graham was coolly received after his first day of preaching because he- would not comment on French attmic bomb tests in the Sidtan, which the Ghanians fear. He will be In Kumasi, Ghana, today. Liberian vice president William R. Tolbert is at right in tWa picture. The !^y in Birmingham May Permit Oil Fiim^ to Erect Outlawed Sign WASHINGTON (AP) - A prO; vision which may get around the right-to-worfc laws now in effect in 19 states has been written into the new steel industry laibw contracts. But U may be litigated iq> to Jhe U4t. Supreme Oouit. Right-to-work laws prohibit any requirement In union oontracti that a worker iryust belong to tbor union to g^ w hold a job. The steel contracts require workers outside the rlght-to-work a to maintain union member-ihlp and pay dues as a condition of their employmmt. This is the union shop arrangement that hai been in steri contracts for some BIRMINGHAM - A propqsed amendment to an ordinanoe ,ao that the Qtrtn Oil Co. may erect a sigii twice the size now permit ted in the btty wlU be studied by dty eommiailoners. it * * The decision was made last night when Martin E. Citrin, owner of the firm which distributes Standard ps, tidd file Commlsalon the huge sign is ui "integral paif’ of the service station now being Hunter boulevard ^snd Chestnut street. The permit to oonstniet the sign was denied erigInaUy when H wu tooikl that It mens- The new provtskm says that in the right-to-wk states employes will be required to pay regularly each month “a aeivice charge as a contribution toward the administration of this agreement and the repreaentatkm of such employes." The service charge ia So be equal to the regular dues payment. CALLED AGENCY SHOP Thla latter -arrangement, known as the "agency ahop," allows the worker to fl'eJ J? It ) HInmt a n It It U MUvsukrc tt 1| U to innnnpelU n 41 11 It Ntw Orlrtnt M It 4* M Mrw Vork 41 M n n oisshn - - « n It -tl ntuburi II 4# ft Uu! w M a rrsoi________ - 2 ^ § g Pope Takes Firm Stand Against Married Priests VATICAN CITY (UPI) - Pope John XXIII took a strong stand today -against any proposal that Roman Catholic priests should be allowed to marry. * ♦ * In a speech to (he Roman Synod, the pontiff said he Is gfiev^ by the idea that the church should, for any reason 'of temporary expediency, abandon "one of the noblest and purest glories ot prioit-hood" -s celibacy. Implacable ring drew hopelessly fight. How he W8.S going to negotiate the endless hostile miles from the Philippines lo . Down-Under Australia with rag-iag ends ot battle-shot equipment wa-s his problem. He was to reorganize in Australia and when America and her allies could spare the men. ships, planes and guns , to dq it with, he would fight his way back. MORALE A FACTOR Aside from the military need to keep the encircling enemy in ignorance, there was the morale of those who would htve to s^ay behind. They formed the only barrier to the Japanese roll - up of Southeast Asiannd muc PacilirrihrTigfiCbittcr resistance from the foxholes leeched into the flank of the rugged peninsula and the bellowing guns on the rock at the entrance to Manila Bay had already upset Tokyo's whole operations timetable. But by Man'h IMt everyone knew what he wouldn’t say and tried not to think about: Time waa-fMlM^rbUrior Bataan and Corregidor. ' That’s why orders naihing me one of five to try to fly south to Mindanao the night of March 10-11 came like a last hour re-rieve from the governor. Somehow we made it and on the 12th were searching for Gen. Sharp's underground headquarters. We wouldn’t have found it without help—a beautiful blend the pineapple plantation, the orderly rows uninterrupted over the buried nerve center of American resistance in the south. 'There we learned Gen. MacArthur and party had already left Corregidor in FT" boats. k it k Compared with what we had been experiencing, Mindanao was a lush wonderland. The Japanese? Yes, they were In Mindanao. But mostly they were sonu* miles to the southeast—not like the snipers Batabn, looking down your throat from treetop concealments. The Del Monte plantation compound quietly got rendy to receive nnd hide the MacArthur party until the Flying Fortresses from Australia could run through 1.M0 miles of hostile air and pick them up. That Right I felt I had to get away from everyone; here a man could be by himself, couldn’t he? But the night sentr^ ring around Del Monte was now doubled against Infiltration. 1 put it on the line with the lanky Texan armed Springfield. He let me on the promise I would not go far nor sUo^ long. UNDER COVER The next day the PTs ichme. But at the compound not a sign betrayed the presence of fiie newcomers; the Japanese would havv ripped the whole Island had ttiey been given the slighlest upect. To the restless MacArthur, restriction of any kind was tolerable. But compromise of his party’s ^ety was unthinkable. All that day he rem.nined severely under cover. But night brought wide coven-darkness. In another part of the oom-p4mnd 1 prepared to repent my nocturnal exrurslen Into nolltnde. I checked the cylinder 4>f the hand gun In my holster. It was a toug-barrel revolver that had been Ideal for sniping on Batman, a deadly accurate wf-apon. The rich Cagayan country was a vast shadow under the fline. of clean stars. There was no moon but the night had a suffuse-J luminosity. Peace. Peace. Then I heard aomething. ★ ♦ k The habits of war we ment, the animal reactions instantaneous. Already I was in the ditch beside the road, gun out. TENSE MOMENTS The sound could have come from the crunch of a boot on the Romney Denies He's Candidate Claims All His Efforts Devoted to Citizens for Michigan, AMC DETTROrr lAV—"I am not a cai didatc for any political office, George Romney, Aiiieiicau Corp. president, repeated last night. k k k > ■ devoting and intend to devote my public effort wholeheartedly to the success of Citizens for Michigan and its objectives.’’ Romney said. "I am devoting and intend to devote my business effort wholeheartedly to the continued success of AMC.” Romney told an organisational meeting ot Oitlsens for Michigan he Is "profoundly ctmeerned that publicity about the question of my iwssible availability as a senatorial candidate may Impair the elfectlveneos of the program of CIttsens lor MloUgan.” The AMC president and founder of the nonpsMsan group said the moat basic objactive of the organization is to stimulate activity of citizens and qualify a sufficient number for participation in pditi-cal parties of their choice. My dedication to this purpose takes priority over availability as a candidate for any political office,’ he added. ★ ★ ★ Membership in the organization is open to everyone. Contributions are limited to not more than |100 nor less than $1. "Thefe are only 2,000 paid memberships," Romney said, "and tijls makes finances t^h." gravel road. I dropped over until my cheek was against the g"uund. It was warm and dry. In that position man-size obje^ wouM appear in relief against the night sky. Japanese troops on Bataan wore battle dress with greiin, mst-covered helmets. But in rear areas they often substituted a soft field cap raised along midseam. What I promptly saw against the stars was a shape that could have been a man wearing a cap that could have been raised olonq fie midseam. A Filipino wwild have a straw hat, or none at all. And po American was supposed to be abroad outside the sentry ring. A Japanese, then. Inc he* at a time I got the goa In position under my left armpit to cock it wltboot making a noise. I was betting against the shape’s decision to move beforo I ewdd croak my left arm tor a rest and take kira under aim. He was stock still. That meant he had heard me the same moment I had heard him. Slowly the .sights came into position. The crown of that headgear was like a bull’s-eye exactly topping the the front sight. In turn, the front sight exactly bisected the V of Dm* rear sight. (nluld not miss. I began the trigger squeeze. A SECOND FIGURE I think I sensed rather than saw the second figure, and I refocused my eyes. This one was considerably shorter and the head was in-Of course v they would in pairs! There might be othen! hail of sentry bullets too. Maybe should try to take them pri.s-oners? but requires him to pay the equivalent of regular dugs- If he doesn’ he is to be fired-The Steelworkers Union figures that anyone required to pa equivalent dues as a acrvlc charge most likely will become • full union member ailyway. ★ ★ k- The 19 statea havii« light-to-orfc sUtutes or constitutional amendments are Alabama, Arl-Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Iwa, Kansas, Misaisalp-pi, Nevada, Nebraska, North Carolina, South Carolina, North Da-koU, South Dakota, Tennessee. Texas. Utah and Virginia. Prohibited Iritt turns tnm westbound Uixxfin avenue onto U.S. 10 were Uf^ by tfie Coipm»»lon OB the rec^mandafion of Police ChM Ralph W. Moxley. Tha restrtotton al toft-haad ■qaara toet, and Is mere thaa M feet high ever the reef ef the boUdlng. The 1966 sign ordinance does not permit signs to have a sin^ i more than 100 square feet. It also requires that the sign not exceed 15 leet above the roof. The recommended amendment as made by Citrin’s attorney Lawrence Pizer, who suggested to the Commtsskm they allow the erection of signs ,to persons “suf-' fering hardships” and where adjacent property owners would not be affecUM^^ a sign in any such "We have a situation now that we can’t crtrect," Citrin told the mission. “Now we would like your consideration of the prob- "Unless we honestly believed that all the necessary perinits could be obtained, we would never have consummated the deal to construct the station," Pizer said. He said that the cost of the site alone was $68,000. this tolerseptloB wad Straley Is Boss Again . . With Qualifications at that distaaiM to the qatot night came a womaa’s voice. "I don’t hear it now." I recognized Mrs. MacArthur! [ used to chat with her on th< way to church occaskmally li Manila before the war and had ith her briefly on Cor-regifior a month before. The strength drained out of me. I was afraid sheer reaction would cause to fire that gun. It’s Ind, general," I managed to sqy. k k k His voice was firm and crisp I usual; "Where are you, Ind?' “In the plantation, sir. I mis-to(A you for a Japanese infiltration party and I almost shot your ears off.” Mrs. MacArthur gasped, chuckled. "Well, you better get up here and we’ll decide wh^ going to escort whom back to the com- tma at tl ampted by October 1968. Moxley pointed out that mer-chaato on South Woodward avenue objected to thia action then explaining customers living east of Woodward found it "extremely difficult to reach their places of busi- ♦ _______ .. major englntwring changes in the area, Moxley gald he felt that the turn could be p-rmitted and “should not cause any major conflict In traffic move-nent." No aetton was tekea by the OomrohMkm to adopting a ress-luQon asking asabtaaoe tram the State Departmeat ot Health and Attorney General’s office In speeding ap the Twelve Town* Drainage Board's legal problem wttb the city of Mzdtoon Heights. The action would have been similar to that taken by other communities in the area: A petition to pave file streets in the vicinity of Holy Name Catholic Church was referred to the city -manager for study. R. E. Uwlor A Requiem Mass for R. E. Law-, lor, M. irf 3797 Lakecrest. will be Thursday at 11 a.m. at St. Hugo of the Hills Church, Bloomfield Hills. A Rosary wiU be recited Wednesday at 8:30 p.m. at the Bell Chapel ot the William R. Hamilton Funeral Home. Burial will be in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. , Mr. Lawlor died Sunday after a brief illness in Boca Raton, Fla. He was vice president and geij-eral manager of the Pilgrim Drawn 'Steel Division of Automotive Mq--iterials Corp. ; He was past president of the Reoess Gub^nd a member of thh Bloomtield Hills Country Club. Bloomfield Open Hunt Club, the Detroit Athletic Gub and the Steel (Continued From Page One) firom the chief today," Said Eastman as he left work.' I’m reviewing all the changes that have taken place absence,” Straley said. "The cim-cept of police administration here is now different from the one I’yi been accustomed to. “I’ll oeriataly have some ree-ommeMattons but what they’ll be remains to be seen.” Meanwhile, even as Straley returned to command, his attornev, □arenee L. Smith, charged that a new attempt is being made to fire le chief. At a hearing before Circuit Judge H. Russei Holland, Smitn sa^d that a suit started by the Pontiac Police Officers Assn. (PPOA) to challenge the legality the Police Trial Board was actually a move to pave the way for Stndey’s ouster by the city. Throagb Its PPOA dtofied which auks for legality, is aimed at any officer. Smith has asked that Straley e allowed to intervene case as a defendant. Paul I. Meredith, counsel for the police organization, said bad no objection to Straley’s invention in the 'But not on the grounds that the suit is aimed at him," Meredith declared. "As a member of the police department he has nc more and no leu interest in this case than any other -officer.’ Meredith said if Straley were Mlowed to enter the case rounds his job wu at stake ‘|tiie ■ue would become confused." If the trial board were declared MHsdstent, Willman could arbitrarily fire straley—if be wanted to. Right now, Straley is protected by the guarantee of a trial board An early ruling hu been re-questad so that the city—if it wants to—can uk for reconstitution of the trial board in April’s election—if no board now Surviving are his wife, Kathleen, three daughters. Mrs. Richard Lynch of Washington, D.C., Mr&. Ann White of’ Birmingham, an(| Sally, at home, a brother, Law»-rence, of Youngstown, Ohio, and five grandchildren. Graduation Thursday lor 2 High Schools (Cbntinued From Page One)** DIANA BARRYMORE Death Ends Struggle of Diana Barrymore (Continued From Page One) would rule Wednesday Straley’s taterveattoa. “The inue over the chief’s intervention is clear,” Judge Holland I am not sure what I uid because I wu too preoccupied with the recollection of the time I had spent filing the trigger of that gun down to a hair release. (0*trrisSt »«> 'Will his intervention shadow the question of the trial board’s legality, complicate the case, and cause undue delay*^ ' A quick decision is in the public interast, he told the attorneys. keep striving. In 1938-39, she was New York’s 'Personality Debutante.” Her imiling, young face wu photographed in all the fa night spots with cafe society es-eprts. Encouraged by her father, she launched a theatrical career ler stock and quickly moved on to Hollywood. Miss Barrymore’s movfe failures led her to excessive drinking. As a young woman, she moved swiftly through two unsuccessful marriages, first to Bram-well Fletcher, an actor, and then to John Howard, a professional tennis player. By IMT, her reputation for drinking and belllgcretice had ctooed all doors ber name had Robert Flnlor Ollbcrt OarcM Juaolt* OarclE Bhrllt Glider Michael Godwin Patricia Grace Dannir Grahaoi ''■.rlyle Hammond .. llliam Hayward Jamei Heard Arlinc Herahoylta tilery Reu Charlei Hobtood .loanne HolUna nia Irwlo Johnole Jeftereon JudI Johnion Idward Keohn- Takes Lid Off 1988 Letters Super Memory Jars Library NEW YORK (AP)-The remarkable memory of Peter Kavanagh had the New York Public Ubrary in a frenzy. k k k When the Ubrary accepted the unpublished letters of John Quinn, an attorney who died in 19M, it agreed they would not be published until 1988. The letters include correspondence with American writers. ' ' ★ ★ w But Kavanagh, <3, a lawyer described by friends u a men of robust convictions, felt the papers deserved wider circulation, spent weeks in the library painstakingly memorizing them. ‘Then, he wrote it aU down outside the Ubrary. On a homemade preu in his Side tenement room, Kava-na^ printed 129 copies. He sent one copy to the British Museum in London, gave nine copies to a man named Patrick FarreU, and planned to sell the others at $35 each. When the library heard how busy Kavanagh was, it sued to stop him. I Jn State Supreme Giurt Monday. the beret-clad Kavanagh told Justice Aairon Steuer: "I wish to enter a plea of nolo contendere (no contest) if you have no o|5-jection,'yw lordship.’ "I’m not your lordship,” replied Justice Stetwr. Kgvansgh lifted a bulging brief-sse and dumped out 119 half-copies of the Quinn papers. He said he would keep the other halves to assure that they were not published. Justice Steuer ruled the Ubrary whuld have to get back the remaining 10 copies the best wgy it could. k k k In accepting the ruling, the library’s attorney. Frederick Sheffield. unwittingly paid Kavanagh a compUment. He said the printed fragments were "almosi the original papers. riage to Robert Wilcox, she and stiwllng food from ket. One day, MIm Barryigpre swallowed 27 slwptag pills with wMsky as a chaser. She was toand la time to be saved. After the death ot WUcox in 1956, Miss Barrymm began the uphiU struggle lor a come^ ba<^ She wrote her book, eluding the sordid details of ber dia^patian. She licked her drinking iiroblem. Recently she completed a successful 10-week Giicago appearance in "Garden DiWrlcf’ by her close personal friend, Tennessee Williams. At the time of her death, she reportedly was negotiating to sUr. in London in "Sweet Bird of Youth," another WiUiams play. She totd friends recently, have begun to find toy way.” Goroth» Mnwa HeWn Mrfrt Mlrha*l O BrIfii ' Norman O NHl Harm OxIfy K»nn*'.h PatUrion' JowdO Payn» Carol Paaritna Cral* PrnrilrloA ' Laonard Prell aara Pullli Jrrrcll Raid Jerry Raynoldi wmia Roblnaoa Ihrlta Rubio Larry Banlek ' Kenneth Smith Naal Smith Staran Spratt Beytrly Bunley Ruby Btaphani Floyd Staohlaon Halan atrons Oarald SuDernault-Michael Thomai • Jaeuueltna Klmerdana Thoroa Marilyn VerooD Thomai Vora Jerry Curiae Joanna Damblni Jamei Darapiey Joanetla Ward Gladyi Waihintton Beyarly WatU Fred Welihaar Jim Whitlow lliomai Williams Juanita Wlllla Jamei Wrlcht * * ★ NORTBIRN d Walter Johnioa aln Jerry Kandt ^ Sharo^Ka^ar Richard Lana Charlai Lee Uw Ronald Martin ‘ J Fred Mayari Carolyn McRiirney Carolyn MeMaeler Sharron Monroe Bharon Nelaon - eiHawklni Heiherlniton Ronald Hoyt FaulJohnton Gerald Pt.ata Ronald Rose FrliclIIa Rueaell tdward Bantala Ron Simmons Norma Scditch Sandra TTnaon Oeor»e Toth Dorothy Townat Glenda Wanner Janlea Winter* SeeksM 10,000 ' to Soothe Loss of Jinty by HR DETROIT (AP) — Judy Ferren, 17, seeks $110,000 damages from the New York Ontral RaUroad for loss of her dog. ; ★ A The English girl hasn’t seen the dog, an Alsatian Shepherd, sinefe ' it disappeared from a baggage car here Dec. 23. She made several trips from St. 'Thomas, Ont„ her new home, in a vain searcji for the pet|^ * ★ * I- Her suit in Orcuit Court here asks $10,000 for loss of the^ dog and her suffering, plus $100,000 in punitive (‘ I ■ - ^ ^ ■': J-.'' ;THE PONTIAC PRE3S. TUEs6aY; J^ANUARY 26, l»6d /,, . I5R5U \ of the United State* tuwekkkel edna liBce 1166 idten diey i|were authorised. out more dian 4.S miUionU br. Stanley W. Block Optomeuist > 3511 IliniMrii Ulw M. Comer of Com LoIm M. Evfrungs Appointment niont FE 2-23«2 CIomg FATE OF JOHN THE BAPTIST—No. 9 RETREAT AND DCCISION—No. 10 TRIUMPH AND DEFEAT—No. 11 Christ's triumphal entry in Jerusalem, the Last Supper and the Trial. CRUCIFIXION AND RESURRECTION—No. 12 The Cross of Calvary and the Tomb. The magnificence of the Resurrection and Christ's reappearance to His Disciples. BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH Dr. Joseph I. Chapman, Pastor West Huron St. ot Mork 8:00 P. M. Sundoys—Jon. 17 through April 3 EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH Dr. Tom Malone, Pastor '' 645 South Tolegroph Rd. 7:30 P. M. Wednesdays—Jon. 20 through April 6 % GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH PaUor Richard C. Stuckmeyer 114 South Genesee Ave. 7:00 P. M. Wediqesdoys—Jon. 27 through April 13 The above listm churches invite you to tively on the days and dates shown. Presentotion of the 'Life .of Christ Series" 39 doklonci Avenue CENTRAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH Rev. Gerald W. Gibson, Pastor 347 North Sogrnow St. 6:30 P M. Sundays—Feb. 7 through April 24 FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Dr. William H. Marbach, Pastor West Huron St, ot Wayne 6:30 P. M. Sundays—Feb. 14 through May ! CENTRAL METHODIST CHURCH- Dr. Milton H. Bank, Pastor East Huron St. ot Perry 5:30 P. M. Sundoyfr^—Feb. 21 through May 8 view these twelvq^ color films to be shown consecu- of Films Arranged through Christion Literoture Soles ..^ X FE 4-9591 ... ------------------------------------------ DdvifI Picked Up With Hiree Others, Charged With Petty Larceity NEW YORK (AP) - Former Dodger cafeher Roy Campanella’s 16-year-old stepson David was arrested Monday midnight on charges of petty larcoiy and vlo-latkm M parole. It was the third time the Negro boy was arrested in less than a year. ♦ e ★ David was seized by police with three other Negro boys on a street comer. The four were looking over tne contents of a large cardboard box—a fresh lobster, cans of sardines, cans of soup, toothpaste, electric light bulbs and cartons of cigarettes. ♦ w ★ One of David’s companions has been working as a cleik in a grocery store. The owner told ,police the articles were stolen from the store. David denied any part in a theft and the other boys absolved him. police said. David said he met the other boys just before the policemen arrived. ♦ ♦ * David's pr^ious arrests were for breaking into a drugstore and for being in a street fight. He was under 16 then, so the charges were oidy tavenile delinquency. He was placed On probation. Recently he has made two rock 1’ ndl song rectmdings. For TOMORROW-9 a.m. fo 6 psiii. It's cold outside—but lesv* it to Simms to warm you up with R8D HOT SAVINCJS — Hurry, plenty of some, few of otfMirs. Rights raservid !•' limit quantities. BARGAIN BASEMENT 12 Red Officials Due Friday to Visit U.S. NEW YORK (AP)-A group of 12 top Soviet government officials is due here Friday for the start of a 24-day U.S. tour repaying the visit made to Moscow last summer by nine American governors. D. S. Polyansky, a member oi the Supreme Soviet Presidium, will bead the group. , The itinerary, announced Monday, includes New York aty; Trenton and Princeton, N.J.: Philadelphia, Charleston, W. 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MaHrsis Cams 88* ir elMtie ir Id In twin complete i Soft PERMA-FOAM Filled Bed PiUows 33.95, 049 " Value ^ 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS Genuine OXEDAR 99 Twin 3.95 SPONGE MOPS 5-YIAR 6UARANTEI The sponge mop with finger-tip squeezer and double cleaning action’spOnge head. Asshot^. 1 88 Pad aid Dover Saf KOBDITE Win CMttr Plastic ciothaslili 50 I fom THE PONTIAC PBES8- TUESDAY. JANI?AltY ge, im t WorloNr'i fall Fatal ^ tS. ol GwdM CMy, MI to hki dMth —•—-*-*!* iMirldng Mm • • anr port ^FiwBaaktoArihiWt UilRhMmHni T AM amatlBi book mttUMi *'*Arthrltio oiul RhwimaUaii" irlQ / ! bo aeiU troo to onirom who will A Wilto lor It. k It rtveob why drugs sad modi-* einos give only tootoorwy relief ' sad fall to rsinoTO the causes of ' Don*tui%ical treatment srhlcb has * tiroven suoeeesful slnoo 1119. ( Tou tocor po obltgatloo In send-. ing for this InstrucUre book. It ' may be^the means of taring you * years of untold misery. Wlrte today to The BaU Clinic. X>ept. 339. Bxcelslor Springs, Mlstourl. OmfoKants Claim: You Can Have FUN (Ha) Paying Taxes! J.S. Steel |!epo^ '59EemilqsMiy By BAL BOVUB NEW W»K (AP) - ‘'Paying taeomt taxes doem’t have to be a palnM ordeal." said Richard Bloch. "It oan be enjoyable — ■ fun — if you know how .to make Their fee depends m.the corn-plexlty of the return. The highest This year Bloch, J33, and his older «^gm)//brother, Henry, , wiU help some 200.000 Americana pay their annual tribute to Uncle Sam as pah as possible'. They are pioneers In a muA-rooming new field—the field of tax consultation to the masses. they bare evar chargd ia |S00. But the lee for a SSOO.OpOo-year ateel executive .was 02.51), half of the feet are I7.S0 or lest, end the iverage ia less than tlO. Most of the broOiers’ emidoyes through ; training course after being hired. Weekly bulletins alert them to new tax changes. MAKE HEADS TURN Whan yaw ara waaring pratty Kindy gloftasi "Taxes today are as ^)eci|plized as internal medicine or surgeiy," said Dick. ‘ ’ Shortly alter World War II the two brothers 1 launched an accounting firm in Kansas Qty, Mo. It proaperA. One of the services the |>air leered their clients was assistance in filling out their income taxes. This began to take more and more of their time. BOYIJB The company guarantees the accuracy of its returns, agrees to pay any penalty or Interest charg* SEE MASS MARKET “One night we got to wondering who helped ordinary Americans fill out their income tax returns and whether there might not be maas market there," said Dick. The brothers chedced and found perhaps some 300,000 tax consultants Mped part of the 60-miIlion-plua U. S. taxpayers prepare their returns. But they ranged from high-priced lawyers to neighborhood druggists and barbers who charged 12 fees. I yetaBn," Mid Dick Blodi. ea resulting from its own errors, it the government audits any re-tuhis. Its proufM boast is that of its returra has aver wound up in a tax Court. The two brotben ape at adept at‘psychology at they are on the U.S.'income tax structure. Every office it wired with, soothing music, and eadi client ia aerved with can get the needed figurci from Urn to belt the time.” The hrothere reject any cHeot who wants to falsify a return. They aay only about,to every 200 jcUents triee to dwat Ifae gov-[TOwnt ddiberately. One client they regretfully had to turn away was m cUetly lady who atubbondy insisted on wing Penelope as a dependent. It turned out Penelope was her cat USVALLT ON OMiB nerves are < usually edge," explained Dick. "He’s tense. Paying taxes ix not a pleasant thing to him, unless you can make it pleasant. "But if you can ndax him, you on how it did finaodaliy^ to strike- J 'I’ve been listing Penelope as a dependent for years, and I'm going to go right on doiiM It," the BiJd, as she left. "What ditference does it make to the govemmenb if she’s a cat? ^'s stUl my d^ MEW tORk (AP)-The natkm’t • ■t. US, Steel Ont. .untags report available afiar tot New York Stock Exit cloaea. Dividend payments to stockholders alto will be an- taaaapaaaaaaaai A Farmer-Snover j FUNEI^LHOME : 160 W. Huron St; FE2-»t7| -{ PARKING ON PREMISES | In the first six months of I960 U S. Steel earned |2S4.9«.49r SiSO a share. In the thinl quarter it lost 131,135.139. This left eam- ) or 93.80 a share. The record year for U.S. Steel cante in 1967. It enjoyed net in-GODM of 9419.906,966 or 97.33 a WODRIED OVER DEBTS? SsraSSta' W *a NO SKURITY OR INPORSOtS MQUIREl ON------------------------ ONI I^CI TO RAY £snisinssts" "Ut .4 r*tn ti C„4U Ixp,rfro» /^ 7«- Hoarst DaUr 9 to 5. Wod. tad lot. 9 to 12 MICHIGAN CRIDIT COUNSELLORS IS VMrtiM Btoi* aMS BMs. ,2* 9‘*as 'We decided the great middle class—people making from 94.000 to 915,000 a year-often really had no one responsible they could go to and get reliable help for altoiall fee," said Dick. t In 1955 they launched what Is now tod country’s largest chain-store-type of Income tax consultation. Tbday they have 1,000 on-pk^ who man 106 offices in 46 and gross fivo million dollars annualb'. Their goal is 1, Their clients include house-toes, retired doctors, airitome id-lots, small-businessmen, and "a tremendous number of Internal Revenue Service workers. ’One government tax man told us he gave out information himself all day long but that he didn’t feel he kiW enough to fill out his Owl Fowled Up— That Was Vienna at Electrocution Today, it cesfi THIS MUCH VIENNA (UPn — Everything stopped when the great owl died. The huge creature spent his last night roaming throutdi V^nna. Then as dawn came Sunday he settled down ^ sleep on the best perch available — the insulator for a power line pole of the city'* south railroad station. You would pay almost ttrie* wudl today to buy or build your honw as you paid 12 ytars ago. Tb put it another way, you ran build only half d koum in 1967 with the money it took for a whole houM in IMS. How about your Are insur-aact? Have you pnough today -on house and contents-to meet say loss? He was electrocuted. The crack Balkan Express suddenly Jolted to |a stop as it left the station. Other And th^ stayed ao for two ours, until engineers searching Ifor the trouble louod the body of the enoiTnoua owl. H. R. NICHOLIE ABENGY 49 Mr. CItmtns FE 3-7858 Eaton, Anterican Metals Talking Over Merger (MT*rttsem«at) NIW,------------- niW OMtat wbMalnt. couflilM ud dlftlcult krwtaiai durtae rscnnioi Mltcks el IreBchli] AMbme end Xroaohltlt with Mnr iBSrered MKHDAOO. Quickir btipi 'ASTMU NEW YCHIK Iff — Eaton Manufacturing Od., of Gevriand, which operates plants in several Midii-gan cities, and American Metal Products Go. of Detroit ace discussing merger possibilities. I The announcement was made iterday in response to ru- mors about a possible merger of the firms, a spokesman said. Both Eaton aad American Metals make parts for the auto and aircraft industries. Eaton has plants at Detroit, Battle Geek. Saginaw, Jacksem. Kalamazoo, Coldwater, Marshall and Vassar. HEAT SURE WITH PURE Haoting Oil NERE ARE YOUR PURE OIL DISfRIBUTORS . . . WHO DELIVER CLEANING BURNING PURE HEATING OIL CK IRARKS lARL 0. RICI WILLIAM A. ROWIR Mktribwtor to (b* iMfw lUrlicr I BfMtST HOVT fwbttoe. Xmc* IUC6NI CkilN Mrtrttotw to toe H>rtor. Orabbrd tok*. »• ItnrUb rUto*. W>ur- r»r«UMtob bad »mf.rdsr... 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Should your keys ever become lost, they will be returned to Pontiac State Bank for you. o LOAN INSURANCE YOU NEED kommY TATHENTS 24 MOS. IS uos. IS MOS. 13 MOS. 500 23.00 30.00 35.00 44JOO 1.000 46.00 50.00 71.00 87SO 1J2O0 55.00 72.00 85.00 105.00 1.500 69.00 90j00 106.00 131.00 IJBOO 82.00 107.00 127.00 157.00 2.000 92.00 119.00 143.00 175.00 Pontiac State gives you life insurance protection at no extra cost. Should something happen to you, your note at Pontiac State Bank would be marked "paid In fulir WE’LL FINANCE YOUR CAR INSURANCE Oftentimes, car Insurance payments must be made in a lump sum. Ask us for rates and insurance policies available. Payments 'I egn-be lumped with your car payments making It much easier for you Uk handle car insurance within your budget. Stop In at any Pontiac SUte Bank office and ask for the Gold-Key Car Purchase Plant PONTIAC STATE BANK A CQNVINIINT ONKII ■ A . > COSTLY PHONE BiU^ — There ii no doubt t(iat Oiaries Cueveni some day will be a good executive; that Is, as toon as he can figure things out a little better. Charles already has a head start for while his mother was doing the family ironing, Charles, living in Los Angdes, was playthg with the telephone and after dialing a series of numbers he heard a voice. Shortly, Charles’ mother. Margaret Guevera, took the phone from him and discovered he had aianaged to contact a Mrs. Larty In New York Qty. Now all Mrs. .Guevera knows is that Charles’ magic dialing is going to be expensive as the two indicate in this picture. They*re Committee Majority GOP Slowed U.S. Growth Ske 1953, Dems Charge WASHINGTON (AP) - The Democratic majority on the Senate-House Economic Committee charged today that Eisenhower administration policies had stunted the nation's growth since 1953. Describing them as IruHlequate ip meet tte nation’s needs, the the President’s major requests of the session — unless the admini-stratkm made ’’major reforms in fiscal, monetary and debt management pMlcies.” ’This the mimnity report s<^bed as "nothing but political Democrats uid the policies also liad led to unnecessary unemploy- menl and price increases. Republicans on the committee fired back that the nmjoiity report was “unbalanced and evasive.’’- and "mamd by paHlsais-ship." The majority said It would not support removal of the interest ceiling on long-term bonds—one of r NO ITEM OVER c The majwity report was peppered with numerous recommendations for alternative policies to those followed by'the administration in the laM seven years. One section recommended that the knotty farm problem be met by direct subsidy payments. It said the public wfll ncf endure milch longer the present crop dther recommendations eluded a major federal aid ucathNi, help for depressed areas. 97 I'tax revisions, more liberal foreim vigorous NOTHING HIGHER VALUES TO $5 l| trade policies and more 11 antitrust law enforcement. jl The report summed up the com-j' mittee members’ views on a yeai^ I long 3^,000 study of (be prob-i I lems of inflation, unemployment i I and economic growth. ISO TESTIFY About 100 wi(nes.ses, mostly! VAMtiae'a tklm I leading economLsts. testified in the rvniMC^I alOIB | hearings, piling up 3,700 pages of, J'tesiimony. Twenty-three separalei study papers also were published. The study was first suggested by Senate Democratic Leader j Lyndon B. Johnson (D-Tex) in a speech in December 1958. It has been described in some quarters as the Democratic answer to the administration's hammering the inflation issue, but Sen. Paul H. Douglas (D-IU), the committee said he did not want EDWARD'S-------------- ELICTRIC GUITAR » AMPLIEIIR.......$99.9$ GUITARS ..........SIS.9S SNARE DRUMS.......S19:9S Lsrt# SalactiM af ivarytkint IZ kaymaoH Layaway Plan II S. Sasinaw 24 ROUl AIOURD THE CLOCK SEBVICC HEINEMAN HE/LtlNG and Plumbing EM 3-8130 ar EM 3-1300 Ahar S PM. FE 2-0066 to characterise the report in political terms. The majority and minority re-1 ports are considered certain to get much attention as representing Democratic and Republican views! on economic issues in the lV60' campaign. I'VE QUIT READING 'FOR RENT COLUMNS Stop that kouta-kuniinG and pleading wilk landlerdfy by owning your komo..f inancod wiik our modorny low-cost loan plan. HOME LOANS CURRENT RAn 4^ ON SAVINGS AmcIs Over Fifty Million Dollars Capitol Savings & Loan Assoc. Established ]fl90 7S W. Huron Pontiac FC 4-0561 CUSTOMER PARKING IN REAR OF lUILDING ' V ' . V- ‘ ‘ : i THE PONTIAC PRESS) TI^ESDAV: JAW AMY mw End-of-Montli CLEARAI¥CE WEDNESDAY ONLY! SHOP 9:30 A. M. TO 5:30 P. M. SORRY, NO MAIL OR PHONE ORDERS, NO DELIVERIES! CHARGE ALL OF YOUR PURCHASES! WOMEN'; DRESSES—Third Floor I Half Sin jRckat Orttm, wart V7.98-24.98,$12 .. .Naw 8.00 10 aUiMs' RftaniMN Draasat, wara 17.98-24.98, $12, Naw 8.00 9 Rayon OrasMi, wara 10.98, than 7.00................Naw 4.67 10 Misni' and Jrt.’ Drassfs, wara 10.98, than 7.00. Now 4.67 12 Waal, R«yan Shaatlii, wara 14.98, than 10.00 ... Now 6.67 WAITE’S guarantees every item at least 1/3 off! Each item Is reduced a minimum of E/3 from the price it was In our stock before this sale! DRIP-DRY COTTON HOUSE DRESSES Short sleeve cotton prints, zip Wara 3.98, front or shirtwaist. Misses' and half sizts. 50 only. Than 2.00 ’1.00 MISSES and HALF-SIZE, DRESSES Orion-wool jerseys, 1‘- and 2-^**^ ^ pc. flannels, rayon linen sheaths, j|„„ ^ jj . JRS.' 15% CAMEL HAIR BOY COATS junior size camel hair coats in Wart 39.98, $1^88 camel color. Sizes 7 to 15. j||y|| 24.00 MISSES' BRUSHED WOOL SLIPOVERS Fansous maka slipover’sweaters, War* 5 colors, sizes 34-40. 5.98 ^3.88 HK)% WOOL PUID and SOLID SKIRTS Many famotn brand skirts in Wart 8.98 C M M sfzes 10 to 20. Some colors ta 12.98, , Tkaii 7 J9 FASHION ACCESSORIES—Sir««f Floor WOMENS GLOVES and MITTENS Famous Hansen Orion aivf cloudspun gloves arsd mittens. Sizes S, M, L. 60 pr. only. Wara n.oo NOVELTY ond TAILORED JEWELRY Earrings, necklaces, bracelets, pins. Wara Beads, pearls, tailored; 1.00 Wailt't . . . Sircel Floor 50' ' COSMETICS—Sireei Floor 200 Ralls Oahay Tailat Tissua, were 22c .....Naw 10c 3 Vibrotar Ralaxart, were 49.95 ......... Naw 32.40 15 Ckildraii't Navahy Saag, were 1.00.......Naw 44c SO Ehiia Craami and Latiam, were 1.00 Naw 44c VIBRATING MASSAGE PILLOWS ‘2.67 Elactrie pillows, UL approved, Wara washable corduroy cover. Eases tension, muKles Walto'g Coimotjci . . . Sirtel Floor NOTIONS VALUES—SfrMt Floor 7 Rof Shaiogaam w/Shamgoa, ware 4.95 Naw 1.11 4 9-Ft. Plottk Rog Raooart, were 2.98, 1.88 .Naw U2 9 StsMkn Non Otffm, Ur$ 1.50, then 99c.Naw 66c 8 Upbahtary ShwagaiiirL wara 1.98, then 99c .Naw 66c WOMEN'S COTTON ond RAYON BRIEFS Cotton and rayon jsanties and briefs. Ware Sfc, ^ ^ ^ Several colors, sizes 5 to 8. ' 'nieil 33c r Waiio'g Molloni . . . Sirael Floor 22' CHILDREN'S VALUES—Second Floor COATS, SPORTSWEAR—Third Floor 10 Milhm Uuad Raimaatt, were 24.98 8. 29.98 . .Haw 14.81 4 Waal Suita, 10-16, were 49.98, 59,98, than $34 . Naw 22.00 1 Shagmaar Fax Trim Caert, tilt 10, was 169.98.. Naw 88.00 60 PCN$ and PNH$ Swaot Shirta, were 3.98, then 2.88. Naw $1 20 Cattaa Blaotat, 32-38, were 3.98....... Naw 1.88 30 La*g Slaava Blaasat, 32-38, ware 5.98.....Naw 2.44 20 T-Tagi and Shirts. S/M, L. were 2.98, 4.98.Naw 1.88 10 Sagorota Tags, were 10.98, then 3.88... Naw 2.44 NECKWEAR VALUES—Street Floor 10 Nylen ileutat, 32 6 38, were 2.98 & 3.96 Naw 1.88 6 Baxad Flawar and Scarf Sata, were 2.00......Naw 88c ’ 2 Raccaan CaHort, were 10.98 .................Naw 5.88 10 Rain Halt with Flawar Trim, were 1.00.......Naw 44c 3 PigiM CaUart, were 2.00 . !..................Naw 88c 10 Laca ar Nylaa Callart, were 2.98 ...........Naw 1.88 72 Glavai ar Scarvei, were 3.00 ....................Naw 2.00 60 Laathar Palm Driving Glavai, were 1.39...........Naw 88c 36 Pcs. Cattvma Jtwalry, were 2.00 & 3.00, then 50c New 22c 33 Nacklocet and Earrings, were 3.00 . * Naw 1.33 24 Faskian lalts, were 1.00 to 3.00 ...............Naw 44c 11 Handbaft, were 2.98, then 1.88 ................Naw 1.00 8 Handbags, were 7.98, then 4.88 ................Naw 2.88 6 Handbags, were 4.98, then 2.88 ............... Naw 1.44 19 Umbrtllas, were 3.98 Naw 2.66 26 Pr. Rad Knaa-Ni Sacks, were 89c Naw S4c 60 Pr. Saif Sanm Whita Hast, were 99c ..............Naw 66c 40 Pr. Wanwn't Baats, were 4.99 to 7.99.............Naw 2.22 Boys' ond Girls' FLANNEL LINED BLUE JEANS W,r« 2.98, thtn 1.49 ‘1.00 Boys' and girls' sizes 2 to 7 novy jeons with worm red flonnel linings. Stock up now! Boys' and Girls' Sizes 2, 3, 4 HOODED 1-PIECE SNOW SUITS Ware 5.98, than 2.88 '1.88 Snug, washable 1-piece snow suits in red br blue. Sizes 2, 3 and 4. Save nowl FAMOUS BRAND WARM SLEEPERS 2-pc. gripper style knit sleep- W$n ers with non-skid feet. Sizes 6 mos. to 3 vrs. ’1.44 BOYS' 6-16 WARM JACKETS Warm washable jackets with detachable hoods Some orlon Were 14.98, dbntesta Iha OHeo and Dipartmsat af PaUto gaiety; (t) estabUali Plra and PaUaa MriUsea at the ptea- the CMel at I r to the CMy ; (S) a “Rememl^r, I’m the One Who Rules on Fouls” David Lawrence Says: Let’s Stop Sniping at Our Defense ★ ★ ★ Uto immediate need is for the CHy Oommiaakm to antboitw a vole on these proposals. This mmt be done SO days balm the Maelien April JS. Good dtlzvna will let their City ODimnisalonen know how they feel ateut it W.P.MaiwHi lUOaceoU 'OuF Weather Is Full of Extremes* *Can These Views Be Reconciledr The Man About Town Stay Home Happy And Reflect on What Our Friends Now Are Enduring Woitlan: What it takes to make Ik it. LAWRENCE Is Your Family Pooch in the Top Ten Ratings? If you’re wondering how your dog rates In popularity, the figures have just been released for 1959 by the American Kennel Club. Should the family pup be a beagle, take a bow: that’s America’s No. 1 breed. ★ ★ ★ The tabulation for the first ten is as follows: "beagles, poodles, chihuahuas, dachshunds, German shepherds, cockers, boxers, Pekingese, collies and Boston terriers. The beagle registrations dropped slightly from 1958, while poodles gained, which is an indication that the little French favorite is making a strong play for top spot. ★ ★ ★ The high esteem of beagles is due largely to the fact they are the country’s most numerous field trial dogs and the A.K.C. registers all of them. Some of the other sporting breeds have registration organizations. The A.K.C. figures usually are accepted as accurate Indications on how the various breeds stand In public favor. However, if you want to know which breed is really best, just ask any dog owner. You’ll soon find out that the family pooch has no peers. Word coming from southern climes makes us feel fortunate tha( we cannot afford to leave home, but can stay in Michigan where we're prepared for a lovely winter, and can enloy every minute of It. An air mall letter drifts In from' George Kneeshaw, who went to Florida to escape the winter. It was written In Miami Beach and says; •The mercury has been flirting with the freezing point here, and the beach sitters are wearing electric blankeU.” Caught In a heavy snow storm at the Grand Canyon In Arizona, Mr. and Mrs. Ormond Fessley send a card saying it was worse than anything they saw In Michigan before they left on Jan. 15. Prom Los Angeles comes a letter from Gerald FUntwood which says the weather is so cold that the smog seems trivial. The arch rivalry between San Francisco and Los Angeles finds expression in a card from Mr. and Mrs. Berkley Vaughan, formerly of Pontiac, who now live in Frisco, which says; "Our weather often Is warmer In winter than in that other burg of smog and atars, which gets Its growth by taking in most of Southern California, and never as hot as Its gets there in summer." Prom Florida cornea news from former Pontiac mailman. Sandy Bastings, to the effect that the Miami Michigan Club, realizing the flnencial muddle in which their home state government finds Itself, has voted a donation of two dollars to the Michigan state treasury. Several amaryUis plants in the various departments at The Pontiac Press are doing the stunts common to that-most unpredictable of flowers. Testimonial to Leman A. Cambrey whose funeral was held In Flint today: Pontiac people will remember him as our first commission mayor, and a man who considered hJs civic duty to be uppermost In his obligations. Sortie of our lakes still are considered unsafe around the middle of their surface. According to Mrs. Frederick L. Cork, who lives near it, such is the case with Hammond Like. R’AMilNGTON-What is back of all the fuss and controversy about AmeAca's defrose luogram, and what (d the outcry that "the Soviets are ahead of us”? Hints have been coming out lately that not all the preaeure for more spending on defense is emanating from objective sources but from some with a definite mercenary interest In contracts (n- from members of the armed forces who naturally want to see more money spent on their own services. Who feeds out or leaks to the press technical information and appraiaals to give fiw impression that America is falling down on the defense job? Sr ★ * Gen. Nathan E. Twining, chairman ol the Joint Qilela, oil SUft, made a significant observation the other day while testifying before the House subcommittee on defense appropriations. He said: “The only way we ran deal wUh this feitow (the 8«retol) to not to tell him how deflelent we are toda;n ve prone to do this at times, because It gets as more ntooey. It to the democratic systm and I am not boeking it. but i think It la very dangeroos." In the same hearings. Rep. Jamie L. Whitten (D-Missi, addressing Secretary of Defense Thomas S. Gates, said: ♦ "So many vested interests get involved in this situation that it is mighty hard to make militaty decisions completely objectively. 1 am surd I. do not as a member of this eomimittee get one one-hundredth or (me one-thousandth of the pressure you do, but with military spending in every state and in nearly every district, with the immolate economy of that area wrapped around it, a great problem is presented. dr ♦ W "I do not iMve any military installations in my district, so I do not have the problem, but if I did have, and if you aet out to close such an establishment, I am sure I, too, would have mahy of the people there wanting to continue it. “Atoee over half the national budget to Involved and since tbe Defenso ■ Depnrtment makes a Whitten aaked that the list; be printed in the record together with the report, which said in part: “Tho eommittee. to serioooly concerned over problems wWh nrtoo as n resnlt of the sccept-nneo by retired senior ofUeros of cm^oymrot la responsible meats '.they furniab Hie pfero Information designed to help their companies get more contriRts? These are questions related to the whole prol^m studied by the investigating conunlttee. U to cartons, bat tho state-by onr highest Even If we have cold weather A recait AP rrieeae end a Voice from now on this winter hae been qj people letter cn brother- ccuJeTul^ »e rtS. l« i-owciwt m. mtalWj of living in^Michigan. eontnrtors." Now, it is natural for companies engaged In defense work to seek the knowledge and experience in technical matterii possesse<|l by retired military men. ♦ ♦ ♦ But do these men confine them-selvet always to such duties, or do sniped at la tbe press and by Uk< politicians, and Hm> Impresstoa to given that thrse same offtclato would weaken America'e de- , Statements, moreover, by our authorized spedtesmen do not get ‘Problem of Dogs Caused by Owners* the Gakland Ceonty dog "pop-julatlon cxpkwian" is getUng out of hand and we need new laws. Dogs prominent Protestant chuixdi voted to make religion an Issue tai potWcs, provided the candidate is a Roman Catholic, til a poll 94 per cent voted not to vote for a Catholle candidate under any circunutamtoi. This Is matUng less thaa pure. Dr. William Brady Says: children, to the starving dog himself and. to people kind enough to egre fbr an abandoned dog. I know four cases of female d^ being taken in and cared fbr. with no response to ads put In the paper for the owners. - Where 1 luHnerty lived ym ir see a deg loaee. It's picked Cafe ‘Society* Drinks .. . but Do You Have To? ties are going to be closed and whiek major companies are going to get coatracto. It becometf highly Imperative, if 1 gm right about tbe hiflatlanary results of defense spending —and pnrtleu-larly that expenditure for which we get no real defense — that these things be looked at completely objectively.” Whitten then referred to the investigation last year, conducted by a House committee under the leadership of Rep. F. Edward Hebert (D-La), whiqh called on the Defense Department to furntsh f list of retired officers of high rank vi-ho were working for military contractors. The Country Parson Let Sports Proniotors Provide Own Guards As taxpayers, we expect the police department. to preserve t^er and protect citizens and their businesses. This is part of the services we purchase with our tax dollars. ^ ★ ★ ★ ■ ^ But what about sports prouibt- Verbal Orchids to- Mre. Eda 2oIman of 37 Stout St.; S4th birthday. Or. Lewis Cnrtla or Rochester; Blst birthday. w. 6. Wright Drayton Plains; 80th birthday Mre. Augustine Browne of Waterford; 81st birthday. V Grant Fessenden of Metamora; 81st birthday. "Wishy-washy Americans with irritable, sensitive, "strained" nerves commonly thipk they get "relaxation” and a “lift” from cocktail or high- I . ball. ' ------- Well. Isn't that the way cafe and Washington sode-' “ty and the smart set ill the movies do? Aw, Ma, ill the girls wear ’em! The effect of I cocktail or high- j _______________ ball that these po- Dg_ paanv tential addle;ts mistake for relaxation or a lift is of course the nan»tic effect of alcohol. which in any quantity, dulls perception and makes the individual less aware or less conscious of his deficiency, weakne^. fatigue. guilt, inferiority or unfftnCss for half an hour. ♦ * ♦ . . ' Alcohol addicts, moderate drinkers and those who habitually take a cou|de of highballs before dinner—to get thehi In a -mellow mood, as they say—will consider me a rabid teetotaler (whieh is true) because J insist that alcohol is a narcotic. , r But try to find a physician or a physioiogist who will challenge this statement. Don't you Kometimes uonder why American "ueives" are so irritable. sensitive or "strained”? Do y(»n tmaglne Hfe to leu (implicated and hence ensier on the nerves ig Europe than It to la America? Do you believe the politicians In Wa^-Ington could stand the constant fear of exposnre withont regular doses of thetr favorite brand? If you^are alreacly embarked on an alcoholic career you will probably reject this as a nutty notion, but I believe malnutrition, the earlier stage (rf which we characterize as nutritional deficiency, is the common cause of irritable, sensitive, "strained” nerves which accounts for widespread indiilgence in liquor in America, The deficiency is parti(!ularly calcium and vitamin D deficiency. Before you reject this notion please consider for a.moment the physiological functions of calcium, one of which is'Regulatkm of Nerve Fibers and Nerve Centers. In other Wordirrto Uto heaHhy specifically, an adequate daily ration of cgMo"* and vitamin D to supplement Aheir naraby • pamby, ultra-refined, augar-pap diet. Remember, most Americans get from their regular diet less than half as much cAldum as nutrition authorities consider necessary to iQaintain good nutrition and good health. Remember also, that milk, skim niilk, buttermilk and cheese land any and every kind you like) is the best food source of calcium— IVi (tots (three ^sses) of milk being the minimum, daily retjuire-ment for every growing child or adult. Mtwo Irttoto. no( mett tiisn om pue or IM word* loot perUlnInt to porioMl toraltti oaS bjetoM not dtp-etie, dlafootl*. or trosiment,' vUl bo ■Biworod br Dr. WtUtom Brady, U ■ •Umpod. iolf-oddrostod roTelO|>e ta sont to Tbt PootiM Pro**. PmUm, Mteblfu. (Copyright IMO) the Asf, hn pnyn five Mlars. the next fime i M Ml. Every (tog iwM coUgr' WMl tag. ' *■ t o It’s wicked tor people to allow their dogs to have 15 or 20 pupptos a ye«-, moatly females, then advertise "free puppies to good home." No wonder we can't control the dog menace. Don’t blame tbe do|. It all goes back to the Public Is Thanked for Its Kindness However, In all ttocertty, I (luestion their <»Uective views with respect to reautts shown by the p(dl referred to above. THetr an-swre, or failure to reply, would indicate the depth of their feeling of broOierttood toward all minority groups. « MUUant CntheMe Says Writer Has Short Memory Mr. Mascih may hive watched presidentB ainor 1182. but his memory must be vague. Sasen-hower wasn't inaugurated until 19S:i so high taxes from 1947 could hardly apply to Bee. As for pron>-iies Ike made, he said he'd do all in his power. He did. It was a good Jito. New just a short « ink everyone—those we know and those we’ll never meet— for all the cards, gifts and, most important of all, the prayers that were said for our daughter. These all made her last few days the' happiest she'd ever known. ------ Mr. and Mrs. Earl Osrr go on the road. 54 N. Jessie -*»■ p ago ■ MB would fight on forrign shores while he was Fresident. He also said he’d pot everysae to work. Six yean alter Ids laaagnratioB nearly le million were nnem- He also gave people heck their booze and for this reason we put our lives and limbs in hands of Case Records of a Psychologist: Muscles, Suntan Don’t Mean Health •Tbe strongest force favoring moral decay of our nation to ov nervi**. Because of tl of cafehmi I call It natore’a own traminUlaer, and natnre’a own nnnlgeate. Analgesic meant not senidtire to paib or rf-Heving pain. Best Instanre of the anal-geslo power of rslelnm to per^ baps the pnmipt relief of severe Coltc by Intravsneons Injeeltoa of ralcinm. And so I confeitd that what the ninnyhammers who resort to the most available narcotic, alcohol, for relaxation or a lilt really need Is treatment of th^ir. malnutrition, Just like Helen, millions of Americans think an athletic body plus a good tan, stand for rugged, hgalth. But .football stars are bitten by mosquitoes just as readily as scrawny folks, and germs are simply internal "bugs”. Your mu^les don’t ddve you immunity to either outer or inner "bugs” so scrapbook this case. And the untanned skin f* healthier than the fanned one. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CA.SE D - 462: Hcfen B.. aged 27, is a vivacious wife of a school principal. w ★ ★ I noticed that Her face was roughened by many small pitl(;d scars (If small-, pox. "Dr. Crane," she answered myj unvoiced question, | "when I was a high scb(^ giri, I I was a health faddist I faithfully followed the] advice of the late Bemarr. McFad-j den in his mag- j azines. CRANE "He maintained that proper diet and regular exercise would build up. resistance to all diseases. ★ W ♦ "So I ate raw vegetables by the bushel and was quite athletic. But just 3 months after my wedding, 1. accidentally met a person who had smallpox. . "1, didn’t worry, bewever, al-though I had never been vne-einated, for I was paidtive my raw vegetable mean and athletic activities would make me Immune. "But I got stnklifkix and it was such a Mv«re case, the doctor even despaired of my life. However. I finally recovered, but my complexion was ruined. - “So I wrote an indignant lelter to the publisher, hut he replied that if I hadn't had fear in my heart, I would not have eaught smallpox. Is that true. Dr. Crane?" CHEMICAL IMMI NITV To make the distinction very clear between rugged mus(sles vs. cbemical immunity, ask yourself if a husky football star is immune to mosquitoes or wood ticks or bedbugs? Even though you athletic'fulkii who eat raw vegetaMre and fruits may have no fear of inserts, does that lack of fear That means you don’t get enough to strike you down with the disease but you do absorb enough to serve as an internal vaccination. F.D. ROOREVELT ■ When Franklin D. Roosevelt was stricken with polio, he was a rugged physical specimen, but his bloM chemistry did not contain the antidote for polio virus. So PLEASE vacebute your oail- You kngw v^ry well it doesn’t. Then why do you think you will also be immune to tiny, micro-$(;opic ’.’bugs” like smallpox virus or the tuberculosis germ? ★ *. a Immunity to disease is based on ’ your blood chemistry, not the sue of yinir muscles or your vegrtable menu. Wc medics used to find that the big, nthlettc miw were very likely to die of paenmonln in a few'days, whereas the scrawny, sickly folks who always had been alfing, would onlllve paeumanto. TB and dosens of other ailments. Why? Because the sickly pe(mle had to such inner "hugs.” ■k It It That’s one reason to explain why city people are healthier than farm fedks. wider variety of germs and this very fart lets your body build up rhemical Immunity to them. You Inhale wbat we raji snb-mlnimal doses of germg. ' • -T dren against diphtberi^ smallp tetanus and poUo. Raw vegetables and athleUcs t desirable, but they don’t ward outside “bugs” like mosquitoes i inner “bugs" like smaUpox * polio! *!*•»• Wrtw to Dr. Osertrw. Cr Ml^dmied oovoTsim^ Ha to m (CopjrrfgM 19«) Tho AiaoolstM Prws la ral (X(Uualraljr to tlw lu* for r*t CStlOD »• •" ---------------------■-•J :.CTSf(i.‘ carrlrr Mnrtco Is sot aratlsl msll lo Oakland. OroMi^. Mm. M*romh. Laprer and (?auotlr« It I* imw I toi at)« • at Pa ' i ^ ' . ■ ■V7‘^ TOg p6ntuc febss, Tuesday, janupaky 26. loeo sgvgy- He Etwiiii Noncommittal > Ghaaians Cool to Graham Ov^ French Atomic Test ACdtA^ Oima (AP)-4Svm(»-Ibt Baiy dsOy bdon dawn. Later arrivals bid for ptooes held ly Oto early birds. Prices start at 50 cent! and go 19. The attoMtton: the trial of Dr. R. Bernard finch and his red-haired miatoeta, Carole TKgoft. chaigsd with murdolng toe doctor's wife. Mrs, Frank Sidliano Jr. Is a Ut starry-eyed aa she reads a 13-year-oid’love letter. Reading it with her is her hutoand, who wrote the lettar 12 years ago and mailed it in Lea Angetoa SepL 5,1M7. That was two years before they were married. It finally arrived last week at the home at Mrs. SidUano’s molber, to which it was (Kiginally dispatched. Early Bird G^ta Bargaining Powtion — Finch Trial Seats Sell for $10 Sanitary Moaiuro * ★ What iHlngs toe people? "I find it's bite reading a book,' “You I you get to the The door opened. The stampede was on into the courtroom, A Idg * ★ Three persons were in line when Timet reporter Jerry Hulse joined them al 6 a.m. outside the new county courthouse. "Hope I make some more money today,” said one little old lady. “Sold my place in line the other day." Another said, "The man next to me Friday paid $10 for his Policeman Is First, Without Any Pull At 7 a.m., when the courthouse doors open, there’s a rarii ftr toe etevators to the aeoond floor. A new line forms outside tbS court- CHICAGO (AP)-Hugh O'Con-BT, 25. son of Chicago’s police commissioner. wa.s the la.st pdicc recruit on the list but now he'; first. ★ * But political pull played no part in the switch. When his lather asked the civil arvlee commission lor 200 replsce-tento, Hi«h wss No. 20L ★ ★ Now Hugh will have to wait un 1 the next time around. Then be'l be first in line for Murc. An elderly women 'snapped: 'Some pedjjde get away with LONDON -t- Wine t in aouto Europa, bssr In nofOwm Europe, and tea In Jspen and China became oommon among res* idents because of a goMral lack - of pure water aupply. Magnificent - taste makes it America's favorite LIGHT • MILD • 86 PROOF THE OU) CROW DtSmiERY CO.. FRANKFORT, KY., DtSTRtBUTED BY NATIONAL OISTILLERS FROPUCTS CO.. KENTUCKY STRAICHT BOURBON WHISKEY. 86 PBpOF FEEL THE POWER OF WIDE-TRACK j V*' ' 'Vv Greater handling precision heightens your driving pleasure. You feel this immediately when you drive a Wid^-Track Pontiac. The positive contrnl. The true balance. The solid stability. The quick obedience. Narrow-track cars can’t compare. ^^6fc-rewnsc-i wias-uscs Wida-Track widarft the stance, not the cor. With the widest track of any car, Pontiac gives you better stability, lest leon and sway, accurate control. / . Pontiac—Ike only car with Wide-Track Wheeh! SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED PONTIAC DEALER IN METROPOLITAN PONTlAC ... WHO ALSO SELLS GOODWILL USED CARS WITH MORE BARGAIN MIUS PER DOLLAR PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION RETAIL STORE Oeeerel Meters Cerp. bS ML dcewat^ Peatiec, Mich. JACK W. HAUPT PONTIAC SALE^ A SERVICE KEEGO SALES A SERVICE INC. RUSS JOHNSON MOTOi SALES SI N. ■readwey Lake Orien, Mich. HOMER NIGHT MOTORS INC. 160 S. WashiNftea SHELTON PONTIAC-RUKK me m Mela Itreef RIGHT THE ifiONTtAC PRESS. TUESDAY. JANUARY 26. 1060 X Famed Surgeon :DrJhorekDiesal79 •In had aerved m profenw^of (^ntcal mirgery mt'Lo)«U Univo«' CHICAGO (AP)-^. Max Tbo-rek. W. Internationally known «ir-gaan and (oundo- of the International Gslleca ot, Sutseona. died Monday night-of a heart attack. For mmy yeara he per* manent aecretary-general of the lotemational OoUege of Surteona and alio was editor of the organ-iiation’i medical Jqymal. Dr. Thorek, who had not been in'^ health, surfered die attache , in hla home (m North Lake Shore IWw. I Dr. lliorek, bom in Hungary, > cane to the United Statea in 1900. I He had practiced medicine in Oii-I cago since his graduation from ■ Rush Medical College in 1904. He had been chief surgeon at American Hospital for many years and Survivdrs incltide his widm Fannie, and a abn. Dr. Philip, Chicago surgeon. Nowadays prosperity means be-j|ng able to break even at the end of the month . . . Safety slogan, via A. H. Sweiman; "A reckleks driver won't stay wreckleas hM«” . . . Taffy Tuttle flkys her missm in life is to help people less fortunate than herself. “But so far 1 haven't found any." — Earl MM. PINDUCT OmmUER Mrs. Findley (Olive I.) DetweUer. 28028 Alycekay Dr.. Fann-a former Ponti#c i yesterday at her home after illness (tf several weeks. j She was a mc'mber of the First United Missionary Church of Pontiac. Gik or. D.W, ^ J»km Deals in Pontiac and Neaniy Areas LUce. Burial wtU be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Troy. Mr. Hall died unexpectedly yesterday at St. Joseph’s Mercy Hos-(dfal. Pontisc. He wss e foreman tor Cadillac Motor Division. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Lester Van Matter of Orchard Lake; two grandchildren and two great-grand^ldrdn. daughters, Mrs. Floyd Jones of Pontiac, Mrs. Charles Murphy of Farmington, Mrs. James Wood of Yale and Betty Detweiler of Berkley; two sons, John of Berkley and Donald Femdale; 14 gran^il-t-grandchikiKn; a Mercy Ho^tal altar n 154ny f Surviving are bis wife,. Jemis; ton, Morgan t. of Southfield; and two grtadcUMten. A i^al also survives. How Do You Judge... ester; and thre sMm. Service will be held at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at (he First United Missionary Church with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mrs. Detweikr's body is at the Sparks-Griffia Funeral Home. E|RL T. 8HUMWAY COMMERCE TOWNSHn»-Serv-ice for Earl T. Shiimway, 74, of 8304 Arlis St.. wiU. be held at 3 p.m. Thursday at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will be in White Chap^ Meihorial Cemetery. Troy. i Mr. Shpmway, a retired ordnance department worker at Generhl Motors 'Truck and Coach Division, died early today in St. Joseph’s . . . the merits of a Funeral Director? Or do you really know the things to check? Here is a list that may help you in your selection. s Does he have a modem Funeral Home? ' • Does he hidve the comi^ete Ki? prices plainly marked? » How is his Reputation? Character? Service? » His Responsibility and Attitude? (PlwHC federal ^aJdnq On Our *JPrtmiMi^ BRUCE B. GIBSON Bruce B. Gibson. 78, of 168 Baldwin Ave., who Suffered a heart attock idwrtly after midnight, was dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital. A member of the Presbyterian Church in Pennsylvania, he had been an employe of General Motor truck ft Coach and Pontiac Motor divisions toe 'tl years before retiring. Mr. Gibson leaves his wife. Ida; /ton Geoiige of Pontiac; four grandchildren, and three brothena Service will be held at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the Huntoon Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. French Premier Sounds Warning 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC . $ COST Price isn't on item to some— but for many it is! Nowhere will you find charges more reosonoble than ours. We have Q wide range of funeral costs —^from State Assistance Services to the finest. Extended Payments If Necessary StmksQjtlihy B||QQQQQQ||||[[2||QQ| CHARLES E. LEWIS Charles E. Lewis, 12-(|ay-old son of Mr. and MTs. Curtia Lewis of 332 Branch St., died yesterday at Pontiac General Hoapital. He had been ill since birth. Surviving blesides his parents are sistert and brothers, Curtis Jr. Elisabeth Willie. Carolom. Deborah. Gregory. Dlanell and Dannett. all at home. Prayers will be offered at 8 p.m. today kt the Frank Cairuthers Funool Home. Burial will Le iir Oak HU) Cemetery. MRS. J. WILUAM WALTER Mrs. J. WiUlam (Ms M.) Walter of U70 Bangor Rd.. Wa|erford Township, died yesterday afternoon at Pontiac General Hospital alter a brief Ulness. She was 57. A member of Trinity Methodist Oiur<^ of Keego Harbor, she was a life member of Pythian Sisters, Fannie E. Tompkins Temple 41; the Cass Lake Women's Club and Business ft Professional Women’i aub of Waterford Township. MBS. GEOROE.B. SPEAR WALLED LAKE - Servic* tor Mrs. George R. (Iva D.) Spw,' 67. of 203 Charlotte St.. wiB he held at 3:30 p.m. Thursday at Richardion-BIrd Fimefsa Home, pu^ will be in Oakland MosKir-al Cemetery. Mrs. Spear, a aocial woticer. died yesterday at Conununity General Hoq^tal, NorthviUe, after a brief Ulness. Surviving besides her husband are a son. WUllem F., of Wayne: and five grandchildren. Roturns From Algitrs; Says All Will Be Lost if Control Not Kept PARIS (AP) — Premier Michel Debre warned Frenchmen today that “all can be loaf’ if order not established and maintained in Algeria. Debre imed the wamuR in an official-statement after his return from a‘ mkhUeof-the-night visit to Algiers, where French insurgents stlU occupy the heart pf the cHy- It was a clear warning Frenchmen that right-wing tremists are threatening the fu-ture of Prance itself unices they abandon their stubborn uprisiiig. The insurgent die • hards were reported to have been promi^ the French army wUl not shoot them out of their barricades. But Debre loonununky of Westport fthont 80 r" miles southwaat of here. Geriopogps GolonlstB to Sot SoH Again , ^« The ootonlata. Inducing IS men, TeNRApiMr/three wtenm «nd Bve 4toydreii.i r |0|My;At^ to oateUteh a ootony In tbej SEATTLE (Uni Dntury to tte latmds lag delayed in Grays Hathor tor oontiiiiw the voyage la their 180- AlofC from tte Qreys Rariwr SO ITEM OVER O^of the mato rooms In BOs- j Mi^twrrttyt ocufty dub hasjj 97' a giant. oid4aibioned Mack atave I The U. 8.' Ooart Guard Dm dominating the aoene. The room N0THIH6 HICHIR VALUIS TO $5 was the kitchen \rttm the club { opened In 1982. The stove remained ! k^teiil otflaaaat * Maia^it fcltrt4h»g> wasii rMiiu'i (Tc n*N Ur»' day at Richardson-Bird Funeral Hofne. Cremation wUl be at White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Troy, Mr. Warner died early today at hia home alter a long lUneH. He leaves his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Stewart G. Warner of Walled Re'mstdtement Bid Under Way Attorney for Ex-City Deputy Treasurer Gullet Files for Appeal ’Dw first step toward an appeal to the State Supreme Court was| taken yesterday by the attorney I lor LaRue E. GuUett, who was’ turned down by Circuit Judge WU-liam J. Beer in his bid for reinstatement as deputy Pontiac city treasurer. Howard I. Bond lUed an appiica- de^ the poUcy of lri^te^ ^ for leave to appeal Judge! mlnation (or Algerians stands. Nothing has happened that will dieter pursuit of the aim ot President Charles 'de Gaulle’s administration to let Algeria's nine lion North AtOem decide their ‘There is no other issue in the crisis which is splitting Algeria,’'’ Debre declared after a noon meet- 1^ with D^GauUe at the presi- dential palat 'The French Press Agency said De Gaulle's military commander and dvil representative in Algeria had promised the army wUl not (ire on the insurgents. Beer’s Dec. 8 ruling the city erred in not granting GuLj lett a hearing under the Veteran’s! Preference Act, and that Judge Beer erred in permitting certain evidence during the trial. Gullett was ousted from hlsi treasurer’s iob in August of 1958, Lhen he and his wife, |dus three! others, were anVsted and chargkd; with operating a horse bet ring. All w(|re exonerated later. the Veterans’ of Fonign Wars AuxlUacy No. 2706. Surviving are her htnEhand; two sons, Robert E and George both of Waterford Township; two daughters, Mrs. Leonard (Detores) >Day of Lapeer and Mrs. Charles (Elizabeth) Bays of Orchard Lake: 18 grandchildren; seven brotberk and three sisters. Service will be held at 11 o.m. Friday at the trinity Methodist Church in Keego Harbor. Her body is at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home. Price of Potatoes Higher Than 1959 46 WILLIAMS STREET DIAL FE 2-5841 24 HOUR AMBULANCE SERVICE " '‘Thoughtful Service" WASHINGTON W)-The Agriculture Department predicted today that prices of potatoes during the remainder of the winter will be -substantially higher than a year EDGAR HALL WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service (or Edgar Hall. 82, of 6938 Colony Dr..,wll) be held at 10:30 a.m. Thursday at Rlcbard-aon-Blrd Funeral Home, Walled ago. This increase would be reflected at both the grower and ;Con-, sumer market levels. Supplies of 19S8-fall crop potatoes are smaller than a year earlier and the production of winter potatoes is down aim. The department reported aim that prices of apples and pears are running above a year earlier, reflecting smaller supplies. Bond said he expected the Supreme Court to bear the case poa-sibly during its April term. ServicR Tomorrow for Loader, Publisher BARAGA (UPI) - Service wiU be held tomorrow tor Peter M. Getzen Sr., long-time Upper Peninsula publisher and dvlc leader. Getzen died in Detroit Saturday after a brief fllitess. He was 93 I old. He published the Baraga Journal for 16 yean and aim Served on the Village Cbuncil and as village derk. He was tiorn in Michigan's Copper Country in 1866 and was a resident of Baraga for 50 yean. Getzen moved to Detroit in 1941 and took an executive positfon with the Ford Motor Co. He was aim a real estate broker In the Detroit area. OMV AT KMCB DOUBLE TOP VALUi STAMPS WEDNESDAY PLUS 56 VARIETIES VALUABLE COUPON LIBBY'S STRAINED WITH THIS COUPON ONLY Reg. Pkgi. -FAB 49* PRICE WITHOUT COUPON 2 PK6S. 60c Coupon Valid ai Krogar in Detroit Detroit end Eestern Michigan tixu Set., Jen. 30, I960. Limit One Coupon. Krocjer BEitEW POR LESS VTu rttene tb» right to limit qujmtitiei. Prices nnd items eifeetive thru Suttsrdey, Jemurty JO, I960 st tsU Kroger stt^s m Detroit smd Eosterst Miebig^m. :i , Magic Chef GAS RANGE Buy Now at GREATLY REDUCED PRICES! GET A BIG, 36-INCH AUTOMATIC GAS RANGE THAT'S PACKED WITH FINE FEATURES ... PRICED FOR VALUE This modern budget-priced Magic ChBf Gds Range features automotic lighting, outomotic top burner, clock and timer, appliance outlet, swing-out broiler, lift-out oven bottom ond many other features. See it soon while the speciol reduced price is still In effect. Act Now... Special Limited-Time Offer Includes FREE INSTALLATION CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY /; Your Aching Back Isn't! P8|UJg BATTELLE NEW YOlRK ~ r then is one thing I am tired Ol, it*a being told I’m not tired. •’It’s all in your mind,” ev^-body aaya. ‘‘Wewineaa is k m^al ate.” This is the modem my of looking at one’s aching bg^ la this 'blame the brain” era. Evetytiiiag is mental. Van get ad aioer. It’s traatra- ap WlrtsSaU WHERE TWO BOYS DROWNED — Rescue workers and the b^’ dog are shown searching for the bodies of Charles Kennis, 10, and his brother John, 8; who drowned in the Raccoon River, Des Moines, Iowa, Sunday. John MI M while play^ on the ice too cloae to the stream, and Charles went to the lescue. U.S. Will Launch a Winking Moon hr Easy Tracing^ NEW YORK (AP)-Coming up: a winking saMlite. It will flash a light on and ofl as it sweepa acroaa the s|Rr in a polar orbit. WWW More easily visible and tracked. It will help scientists measure the shape at the earth and distances on earth, and periiapa aid ships and planes in ge^tigg accurate navigational fixes. It is one of a cloud of ^w ad-enllfic satellites planned in the -jtow ynrs by tbe' United SUtfSi Jdm r. auk of the National Space and Aeronautic Ad-mhiistratlon reported today. major American target space is to learn more about die curious and profound effects of the sun bn the earth Hs people. Clark told the Institute of Aero- Ariaona dakns 86 per cent of its days are sunny. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. JANrARY 26, 1900 ^ peslto sex, tt i \ ■ ■I' New Cult Says ‘If s AM in Your Mind’ nervous exhaustlmL A mental block attest houass, lanbably. I have nothing against trMsure.. These Uieories, that everytidng is in your niind. from tiredness to to a hsast., yoa’ve got a block sgatabt eUMrea. A ronsniM coU lu s symptom at asssl masochism: pimples come from aoroe-thiag yon thdugiit latlead of snmiacn acne, n quite suuanie ana satiafactory tor peoide whose minds _« atheis aC as Wha wwtlnwwHttim’iw prtaetptos, to have their mtods For the sake of the^ simide fUk. with die indolent ids, here are some rules ol behavior aimed at keeping people trom saying to you, ”lt’s all mental.” 1 — Never show signs faintness, nausea or boredom in the praaence of persons other than fuUyaocredited doctors. '-Never sneeze, sniffle or blow, these are symptoms of allergies to the ”it’s all mental” pe<^ — and an allergy is aa good gossip as a neurosis. 4 — Smile often ^ never cuas anything of importance. 6 — Never mention that you go to sleep. It hints you're either sissy or sexy,, ami both characteristics ce suspect. 6 — Above sU never give the imprestion, dmugh manner, speech or innuendo, that you have done any serious diinking lately Thinking is a "compensation” lor any number of more normal activities. Girl Drowns in School DETROIT » — Joyce Pierce, I, an eightiHtrade pupil at Tappan Junior High School, drowned Monday in the school's pool. She had been attending a swimming ch Your'Best FHend! Almost Everyone Needs Jjicdtility Insurance! • A guest U^ured In your home could sue! If someone falls on your Icy sidewalk and sues, could you afford to pay $50,000? If not, you’d better see us today. Wall arrange a pn^am of adequate liability protection for you that will cogt only a few dollars a year. H. W. Huttenlecher Agency S06-3M Itiker Bldg. FE 4-lSSl r ■According to a fairly recent book 'How Never to Get Ttred”) there is no such thing, as the state ol being bushed. It you feel tired no matter what you’ve been doing — 1ft a rign you are net doing "the thing ■you really came into this wortd to do.” Obviously, I haven’t an idea^ the worid what I’m here for, because this kind of^attitude makes me tired. I would like semedsy to meet somebody who is Uko me: Who does U mlmites of mishupo and then falls over, nUher thsn rising fit sad vigorous sad ready for new challenges. I would like t6 know amneone who would hear me say, I could sleep for > weidc!” and be sympathetic instead of suspi-doua. But this is not to be, apparently. According to the book, even mental and emotional exhaustion (I always rather enjoyed feeling men-tislly exhauatod) are passe. GO TO THE STORE •How can one be mentally ex-hauatod, it aays. when one can ‘open and draw on a teeming jeasura. house of stored-up energies . quickly, easily — now!" Just thinking about this inner Wednesday BONUS SPECIALS STORES CASH SAVINGS ok Hm BEST SAVINGS ONE lAMlT SIZE CAN or ANN PAGE BEANS In TMiNrto SoBCB with Pork /^/r// Tm coupon! SI OZ. CAN ASP Moitoy-Soving COUPON wWi this Cowpoii Owe Psmilly Sina C«m *f Aim Page BEANS IN TOMATO SAUCE WITH POEK We^Msdoy, Jongaiy 27th Only ALL GOOD BRAND~A&rs FINE QUALITY SLICED BACON . . WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27»li ONLY e e • • • SAVEon TOWEL TEAMS . You’d look far to match this good thirsty weight at these prices! All first quality! Complete color-range in each size! Yellow, brown, pink, rose, white, turquoise, grayj » HAND SIZE..... ........3 for $1 WASH CLOTHS ...........6 for $1 2 for *1 BATH SIZE 3IL. -100 PKGS. I WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27rii ONLY WESTERN GROWN—TOPS REMOVED ^ ^ ^ CARROTS ... ...2-12* HURRY! HURRY! HURRY! LAST 4 DAYS OF WHITE GOODS! ■■'if' NUTLEY BRAND—IN QTRS. MARGARINE . . Priaaa Iffuctlv In AR Enatam Mlahlgnn ARP Stovna Only eeeeeeee WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27Hi ONLY 3 ai^40* , THE GREAT ATUNTIC A PACIFIC TEA COMPANY, NC. 5uper )i{arkets AMERICA'S DIPINDAEIE FOOD MIRCHANt SINd IBS? , ''A ' 1 f I • ■ T ■ BASEMENT Now, let's see ... there's that lamp we bought at Niagara Falls in 1936, and that mandolin I used to play. For Heaven's sake, there's my old stamp collection and my old rowing machine. Say... I bet somebody might just be looking for these. I'll do it! I'll sell them, that's what. I'll take a Want Ad and...Oh, Boy! Money... Money... Money... Money! Pontiac Press Want Ads FE 2-8181 —. _ ■! '-'i- ■ ■ V’ ■' ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUtSDAY, JANUARY 26, I960 I KtEVK Area Girls Announce Wedding Plans BONHA «.,MOOD¥ Amwanoemnit ti trade ni the eiiiaiemeiit of BoaiU Join Moody and Donald Vincent Green, aon of Mr. and Mra. Donald Green of Balboa place. The bride-el^ la the daughter of Mra. Winiam James Moody of Detroit, and the late Mr. Moody. She is a graduate of Nazareth College Divisioo of Nursing. • GABUENE A. nnULBB Announcement is made of the engagement of Cailene Ann Fuller and Joaeph Rkhard Young, aon of the Joseph Elton Youngs of New Meadow, Idaho. The bride-eiect is the daughter of Mrs: Uoyd Farley of Pickering street and Raymond Fuller^ Holly. Her fiance attended Lawraice Institute M Technology and Detroit OoUege of Applied Sdences. The Earl Blodgetts of Weld-man announce the engagement of their daughter Carol Ann to W. Benn Johnson, aon of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Adelbert Johnson of Robinwood avenue. Her fiance is attending Michigan State University. April 22 nuptials are planned. Thr— Pdg§s Today in Wanton's Soffion V. KAYE ADLER ' Mr. and Mrs. Aastln A. Adler of Ernest coij^, announce the engagement oi their daughter Vemonsa Kaye to Marine Pfc. Robert D. Holmqulst, aon of Mrs. Eari Saiibom of Orchard Lake apd Gerald Holm-quist of WalM Lake. Her fiance is enrolled , in Teletype achool at the Marine Corps base in San Diego, CaliL Women's Section Square Set Dance Club Planning Ball Music Tonight ^ Associate Director Cdia Merrill Turner will conduct tonight's performance of the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra at Pontiae Northern High School. Major work in the third concert of the season will be the Saint Saens “Concerto for Trumpet, Piano and Strings, Opus 65.” Soloists will be Jerry Libby, pianist, and Francesco DiBlasi on the trumpet. The Square Set Dance Qub met Saturday evening at Herrington Hills School for their regular dance. Master of Ceremonies Russell Williams was assirted by callers Arthur Yarger, Frank Strubler, Jack Ralph, Ralph Price and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Spencer. Sidney Olson conducted the workshop. Soroptimists Celebrate The Soroptimist Club of Pontiac celebrated the 13th anniversary of its charter with a dinner meeting at the Elizabeth Lake home of Taimee Surola Monday evening. KAREN M. BARUNG Marguerite Parrish showed Fiancee Is Feted Bride-elect Wynette Elwell of Berwick boulevard was hon- ' ored Monday evening at a bridal shower at the Oriole road home of Mrs. Jack See-bald and her daughter Betsy. Birmingham Players Ready Musical Revue Guests were Mrs. Forest EJ-wfell, Mrs. Wilbur Crump, Mrs. Evert Agellnk, Mra. Elwood ElweU, Mrs. Delwood Collier, Mrs. Frank Howell. Mrs. Raymond Spencer,’ Mra. Lariy Gee, Mrs. Kirby Hutchinson, Mrs. Edward Hanes and Prudy Hutchins. Birmingham Village Players will present a musical revue Friday, Saturday and Sunday at their playhow on Chestnut street. The show is arranged and directed by William E. Kegel and Ward C. Tollzien, who have been arranging the players' musicals tor the past eight years. ★ A This year's revue will be a full lei^ show, offering fa- Others were Joan Pnitow, 'Sandra Wray, Linda Dorris, Judy Moon and Carol Cotter- Mrs. Agelink will attend her sister as matron of honor. Named bridesmaids were Mrs. Elwell and Kathy Seebald. , Miss Elwell will marry Lawrence Moore of Oxford on March 12 at the Grace Lutheran Church. 17 Tables Play Duplicate Bridge The Pontiac Duplicate Bridge Qub met Monday evening for its monthly master-point game with 17 tables in play. Winners were Edwin V. Clarke and Randall Kohler, Frank Ferryman and Dick Yeager, Mrs. Perry Brunk and Ernest Guy, Dr. and Mrs. W. H. Barron, David E. Utley and Henry Georgia. Mrs. Mar-^ garet Pitkin and Steve Lear-month, Joseph Nouse and AI Wallace and Donald Bowen and Ronald Fiscus. 'Box Supper' Before Dance A "box supper” preceded the Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital Guild square dance Saturday at the Waterford Township Recreation Center. Warrpn Allen called the dances: Weight Problem? Don^ Mix Colors realist rrttt rktit Cbchalrmen tor the evening were Mrs. Alfred Hamilton ' and Mrs. Jerry Margolis. Serving on the committee were Mrs. David Jennings and Mrs. WilUam Crommett. A musical revue will be presented by the Birmingham Village Players Friday, Saturday and Sunday at their playhouse. A band, vocal selections, comedy acts, satires and dancing will be proffered. Mrs. Norman James, left, and Mrs. Gene Green will portray parade girls in the show. (NEA) — Teen-agers who are plumper llvan they'd like to be can minimize the appearance of their weight by selecting their sweaters and skirts in the same shade. Idatching separates won't cut, them in two, emphasizing ihelr weight problem. Returning ,, Gift Not Unfriendly ■y EMILY POST Dear Mrs. Post: Recently. I eras maid of honor at my sister's wedding, hly sister^ in-la.yr who is an excellent seamstrm, not only offered to let me borrow her drdss, but ' also ctmqiletely remade It tor me. As we have not been overly friendly in the past fiiis ac-tioQ both surprised and pleased me and I felt a gift was in order for her kindness. Ap-paretitly not, becmise this morning I received a telephone call saying that she did*not, think It proper or necessary to give a gift to a member of one's'family for a farm* and refused to accept It. Am I wrong in feeling that this was a gross’ discourtesy on her part? Don't you agree that a gift given in good faith should not be sent back unopened? Answer; Sending back your gift was ce^ainly tadl^, but I am sure she meant no courtesy and only wished ro show you that she expect^ no return toe her favor. r ‘ viMa Dear Mrs. Post: Often when I answer the tdephone the person on the other end will say, “Hello, who is tWs?" It infuriates me and furthermore, I do not like giving my name until /I have some idea who is at the other end. Please, Mrs. Post, won't you instruct. people on the"coiTect way to answef the telephone? ★ > A , Answer; I agree that one who is not sure (d your vtdee should ask. “Is that you, Mrs. Smith?” or “Is that you, Mary?" Someone calling another member of the family should say, “This is Betty Green, may I talk to Sara?” On business matters the person calling should explain, “Miss Jones of Fine Arts would like to speak to Mrs. Guests present were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Schneider and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hawkins. New members welcomed were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gangler and Mr. and Mrs. Donald Harris. , Picture yourself in festive silk, brightening the winter scene. This Mam'selle design is warp printed in blended dones of green. The coat has bell sleeves and a full back sweeping from a deep yoke. The dress is sleeveless and its fitted waist is caught with a fringed sash in front. Available locally. You Can Do Nothing About It, Says Abby Serving refreshments were Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Wellmans and Mr. and Mrs. Volney Shafer. Name Sonny Worse Than Billy By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY; I am a 59-yearold man and I am beginning to wonder if some men will ever gre slides of her recent trip to the Virgin Islands, Haiti, Jamaica and Cuba. Guests were Mrs. Oifford Todd, Helen S|Jark, Dr. Cap'l Kulsavage, Arnold Hillerman, Harold James and Ray Swack-hamcr. keeps my husband home nights. So what if be does drool when he looks at some doll spraying her hair? He can’t get to her. Also, when my husband and I don't have too much to sdy to each other, we can both sit there and pass the time away. FOR TV low and like him very much, but the minute he tells roe he likes (or loves) me I don't care for him any more. This happens to evety boy I go with. I am getting worried about my attitude. Please give me some advice. AGAINST LOVE you'll overcome It. Don't fret about it. vorite selections from previous musicals. Players gre invited to bring guests for the show which will feature entertainment on the stage, a runway and before the proscenium. Acts will include a men's sextet, women's ^ar-tet, eoloa, duets, dancing numbers, mambo arrangements, parade girls, a Shakespearean satire, beatnik dance and a Band members include Mr. Tollzien, assisted by Mrs. John H. Schmidt, Gordon F. Jeynes, Siffrein M. Vass and Thomas C. Watts Jr. Cast members are Mrs. John A. Mitchell, Mrs. Dorothy Gardner, Mrs. Vass, Mrs. George R Ryder, Mrs. William J. Torrence, Mrs. William R. &ndler, Judith Evans and Elizabeth Boyne. They don’t like to be called BOB, BILL or JIM. One man down the street has eight children and they still call him JOHNNY. 1 can understand why a man wouldn't care to use the formal ROBERT, WILLIAM or JAMES, but why must they go back to their baby days with BOBBY, BILLY and JIMMY? I got this off my chest, but not off my mind. raykIond DEAR RAYMOND: How do your know that men who are addressed as BOBBY, BILLY and JIMMY prefer these names to ROB, BILL and' JIM? Most people.are helpless in such matters. Acquaintances simply hang these names on. them and they are stuck with them. Save your sympathy for those poor .souls who are still called. “SONNY,” “BUDDY” and “JUNIOR” DEAR ABBY: Is it normal lor a 17-year-old girl to like a fellow very much until she finds out he likes 'her, too? That's always been my problem. I can go out with a fel- DEAR AGAINST: Your attitude is a symptom of adolescence. Xou like to play for fun. but when it looks as though you are going to play tor keeps, you become frightened. With time and experience DEAR ABBY: We have a little problem in our family and need some advice. My nephew (my brother's son) is going to marry a girl whose home town is in another city. They are planning a spring wedding. My brother Insikta that the girl should come to the boy’s home town to get married. I think I read somewhere that the boy should go to the girl's home town tor the DEAR ABBY: Why doe.s everybody “ knock television? As far a.s I am concerned. I think television has probably saved more marriages t);an anyone will ever know. In my own case, television July nuptials are planited by Carol Flanders, daughter of the Theodore R. Flanders of James K boulevard, and Bernard J. Atkinson, son of the Mark Atkinsons of Syracuse, N. Y. She tvas graduated from Mt. Carmel Mercy Hospital Nurses* School. Which is proper? ' WATTING TO HEAR DEAR WAITING: The boy should go to the girl's home town to be manied. Allemanders Square Off at Pierce School Qub met Saturday evening at Pierce Junior Hi|^ SditoL CkDer Sam Joan presented a program of hash, singing calls and novelty round dances. Guests were Mr. and Mrs. John Oakley, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Whitmore, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Marti n, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mathcny, Mr. and Mrs. Warren Hughes. Mr. and Mrs. Dean Olds and Mr. and Mrs. Bert Owns. In charge of refredunents were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ball. CAROL FLANDERS The next dance wm te Feb. 13. Others are Mrs. John K. Kleene, Mrs. Gordon L. Walker, Lance C. Minor Jr., Mrs. Laurence M. Ball, George H. Fox, Mrs. Norman K. Porter, Mrs. Norman M. James Jr., Mrs. Richard R. Nette, Leroy Braisted, Dr. Edwin W. Deer, Mrs. Jean Greene, and Mrs. Ralph M. Fox. The list concludes with Donald R. Morris, John H. Schmidt, Donald J. Morgan, Thorndyke Dwelley; William J. Torrence and Lawton C, Tabor. Parade Originals to Best Advantage Paris Designers Prefer American Models Mrs. Eliot W. Higgins is assistant director. Others helping with the revue are George F. Green, set design; Richard W. Brown, lighting cues; Mrs. Michael Remondino, costumes; Mrs. Nelson Kimball, scenic: Hugh Stevenson, stage; and Mrs. Horton S. Allen, make-up. By PAT HERMAN PARIS (UPI) — The highest-priced dressmakers In the world admitted that long-legged American models are among the best at parading their up-to-$l,000 originals. Dressmaker Lucy Manguln opened the week-long Paris spring and summer showing by announcing that her star attraction was a Minnesota-born part-time model, part-time ballerina: : Kersten Conrad. Among tbe Hressmakers showing^ today — Jacques jBrlffe, -^ Jean Patou, Ores and Pierre $ Cardin — there is a healthy ad-; miration for tbe American figure in selling the fancy originals. 1 Cardin considers red-haired. New I York-born Diana Hglbrook one of his 'I valuable pri^rtles. Patou was the The house of Nina Rlcca has announced that Its American “discovery,” elfin Audrey Sedor, of New York City, saw the Inspiration of the collection It will present tomorrow. So far the only line that has been seen and the only one that has been discussed is the easy-fitting, naturallooking princess silhouette. It Is ideally suited for the long-legged American figure that, blew It, usually is endowed with an agreeable portion of bust and Her skirt length was sensible, like last season’s, Just at the top of the calf. Orif/e said that he would leave this skirt length unchanged and that he would show longer Jacketed suits and softly fitted princess-Une dresses. The Honw of Patou favored slightly shorter skirts, In seme cases longer salt Jackets, and dresses with elongated terse lines. to France. / Manguln's clothes were comfortable looking and easy to move In. Her mannequins did not mince down the runways because they did not have to. The American model even was encouraged to smile, something usually taboo in dress presentations here. Hie . smile looked as natural as the silhouette. « Ores was about to unveil her first collection of suits, ffiie said they would be "tulip” shaped with rounded shoulders, slim torso and hips. it it it, Fabrics were ligldtweight, almost airy in appearance. In addition to the usual range of spring pastels, there was every shade of blue and brown and bright splashes of aqua, orange anH apricot in the color department. ' \ : Twelve THE POyTlAC l^RESS. TUESDAY, JANUAKY gC, 1060 lit I Pregnancy 6afer, Easier Without It ayffUK, txduunged vowk with Ronald L. Goodrich, son of Ml. and Mrs. Truman Goodrich of Flint, Saturday in First Free . Methodist Church. Select PTA ■\T T-< r ■ xl Nominating Unit No JliXCiise tor the r at: I 9j MSIVUNE LOWMAN Time is no leMon for a wn /become fat durta* pregnancy or because she has had a baby. F know those are erds” but they ate true. Naturally a woman will gain eight du^ those magic nine months because of the baby and hs nest, but this does not mean that she herself should acquire fatly deposits. * Meat phjrsidaM watch the carehilly. Pregnancy places m I not ts add the burden of overweight at MRS. RONALD L. GOODRICH Goodrich-Stevens Vows ' Told Before Rev. Smith Pregnancy is safer, delivery easier. and you will look prettier after yoia bat^ arrives, if you (yourself) 'm not gain those extra pounds! Chapel vases of white gladioli, pompons and carnations backed with palms bardeed ttie of First Free Methodist ChWh for Saturday mptials of 'Grace Margaret Stevens and Ronald L. Goodrtdi. The Rev. Lyal H. Smith, as-slated by the Rev. R J. Beuth-. in of Westwood Heights Free Methodist Church, Flint, read the candlelight service in the presence of 400. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Margaret Stevens of Paikdale avenue. Her floor-length gown of bouquet taffeu' featured a chapel train of Chantilly lace which fell from a taffeta bustle bow. Hie lace was repeated in the empire lyxlice styled with Sabrina necMine and long sleeves. Sequins and pearls formed the sheU whl% secured the fingertip vefl. White knotted streamers fell from the off-set cascade bouquet of white roses and ivy. Mrs. Robert Ecker of Flint was honor matron. Ruth and Margaret Goodrich, sisters of the bridegroom, and the bride's sister, Beverly, were brides- Their ballerina dresses of light blue organu over taffeta featured sashes and Jackets of Royal blue velvet. Pink rosebuds topped their white fur muffs. Their headpieces were n^on chiffon over taffeta with veils. The bridegroom's sister Elizabeth, as flower gui, wore floor-length white nylon chiffon over pale blue t^eta and white velveteen Jacket. Richard D. Goodrich of Flint was best man for his twin brother Ronald. They are the sons of Mr. and Mrs. Truman Goodrich of West Reid road, Flint. Seating the guests was another brother Bruce; Marvin Stevens, brother of the bride, of Junction Qty, Kan., Roger Pratt of Drayton Plains, Charles IMwkins and Robert Sturgis of Pontiac. At the reception in Roosevelt Temple, Mrs. Stevens appeared in Royid blue with black accessories. Mrs. Goodrich dioee light blue with black accessories. Both wore fdnk roses and carnatkma. For traveling on a Canadian honeymocHi, the new Mrs. Goodrich changed to a Roynl blue wod dress trimmed in black suede. The couple attended Spring Arbor Junior College where the bridegroom received his degree last June. He plans to continue education in the field of mathematics in September. They will reside on Thorpe time indulging thepfiselves in tidi foods and eating anything they felt like eating—because ' they were ’eating .for two." SenCtliiiea they ate as tlm«li they were eatiag for four! Anyway, the hoary of pampertag ^e pregnant wonuui, of course, ne^ noore food 4han she ordinarily does. She cannot diet as that term is understood. Stuidents Graduate At Eastern Michigan University commencement exercises held Sunday in Pease Auditorium in YpsUanti, the td-lowing area students received degrees and state provisional certificates; From Pontiac are Martha Jane Austin, state limited certificate; Marvin J. Boyle, bachelor of science, business administration; William H. Graham, master of arts, education; Jean Ann Malone, and James Wes-1^ Stephens, bachelor of science and elementary provisional certificate; Freddie J. Wilson, bachelor of science degree and secondary provisional certificate. NOT WORTH rr worth the hasard Involved during pregaancy or the way yoo will look aftorwarda. Claik. Mfu. Middtadatl and Wilma Pyle have been named to the Mark Twain PTA nominating com- Ifrs. James Wade, who |te-sided at Thursdua PTA meet-ing, announced that tene^va-tioos should be made immediately for the Foundan Day |TA OouncU banquet Feb. 2 t Pontiac Mrs. Leo Prendergaat, Urs. Jack Broww arid Mrs. Donald ,Garros are cochairmen for the Hiring fair. Plans fof A hun dinner slated for Fdb. 13 from 5 to • p.m. dere announced by Reita Smith, fifth grade teacher. Proceeds will be used for the fifth grade camp program. A jilay,-"Scattered Showers'," was presented by Mrs. Albert Raynor, Mrs. Richard Beamer, and Mrs. Ernest Miller, PTA mothers. Mrs. Ray Hoffman has called a meeting of all homeroom representatives at T:30 p.m. Tuesday when details for the hum (hnner and fair will be outlined. Big CollOrs Flatter (NEAM>«ersised caN «*• J hvs hie seen on reaort wsar. j Many are nsnd sdth s hnu, open V neckllna and are Oat-Ip nearly all Ogure Tear Biids WU DoMlWMi Oar Sesdii TASK1»*S 63 Hurtm FE S»626i gPBCIAL $1^0 SHAMPOO * SIT AwW MON, TOTS. A Wm LA CHIC beauty sauon in Mean Street FI 4-lM* Mohair Yam SWEATER KITS The Knitting Needle 452 W. Huron FE 5-1330 Home-Garden Club Meets She should take great care to eat a well-balanced diet which is rich in proteins, calcium and vitamins and she needs more calories. whole grain eereals, citrus fruit Juice, eggs, meat, fish and fowl, wllh lots of fresh vegetobles and trulls and a quart ot milk a day. She can and should eliminate rich desserts, fried foods, cream sauces and such if her weight is zooming. FOLLOW DOCTOR'S ADVICE The very best advice I can give you is to see your doctor often and follow his advice and take him seriously when he says that you are gaining too much weight. There are many things to remember to do—anJl not to do—while you are pregnant. Follow the advice your doctor gives you carefully. Thirty three members of'the ■ Better Home and Garden Club met Thursday afternoon at the Adah Shelly Library (or a cooperative luncheon. * V* List Practical Nurses Who Are Graduating The following Pontiac Practical nurses who were graduated Thuraday from the Ann Arbor Practical Nurse Education Center, bad their clinical affiliation at Ponfiac General Hospital; Mrs. Mary Baal, Mrs. Max-cine Bowie, Mrs. Julia Fletcher, Mrs. Bonnie Glasgow, Mrs. Florence Ingram, Mrs. Rose Kelvit, Mrs. Beatrice Marshall, Mrs. Mary Paige, Mrs. Jac- queline Patteraon and Mrs. Thelma Reid. Graduation exercises were held in tiie auditorium of Ann Arbor High School. Shirtwaist Is Still Strang (NEA)-The shirtwaist dress is strong as ever for resort wear. Women who love it will find it in many fabrics ranging from linen to silk. itie wise will buy a coufde and put them away fm- summer even if they're not going cruis- Guests present were from the Holiday Farm Garden Oub. Chairman for the day was Mrs. Charies Lloyd, assisted by Mrs. W. H. PoweU, Mrs. George Alexander, Mrs. Walter Seaks and Mn. Maude Place. Mrs. Eieanore McCurry, director of occupational therapy at Pontiac State Hospital spoke on "Flower Therapy.'' A hobby display by membera and guests conclude the pro- Easy-aew Wonder Pattern! Whip up this gay, princess outfit in a Jiffy. Iron it in a jiffy, too—no fuss or ^Is. Choose bright cotton. Printed Pattern 4520; Chlldren’i Sizes 2. 4. 6, 8.10. Size 6 sundrns takes 1% yards 35-inch fabric; lero % yard. Printed directions on each pattern part. Easier, accurate. I Send 50 cents in coins for this pattern—aiM 10 cents for each pattern tor Ist-class mailing. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept, 243 West ITth St.. New York. 11. N.Y. Print plainly Name, Address wlthj Zone, Size and Style Number. PIANO-ORGAN ACCORDION Classical oad Popular **lMni ta Ptey PaH« Mnk M Year Haw Chart OrfaM" Dorothy Dingiiiian Stawart Muaic Studio OR S-na4-tSS4 surerT Attain Poise & Grace • Ballet • Tap • Too 0 Ballroom Caiolyn'i School of Dance m PnaUla BItS. R Serve a fat pitcher of heavy cream flavored with a pinch of nutmeg to pour over fruit cob-Um and shortcakes. Ntw . . . Winttr Hoir Styling ond Bosic Permontnts THELMA CIOW, Owaor BANDAU'S HARPER METHOD SHOPPE n Worn# St FE 2 -1424 Others are; Joseph James Ferguson of Birmingham, bachelor of arts degree and Geraldine Schroff Joaitas, elementary provisional certificate; Drayton Plains, Mary Lynne Bower, master of arts in education and elementary provisional certificate. Crystal spring... by David Crystal Delightfully casual traveller is DAVID CRYSTAL'S 100% pure "Ros ComoiiV' Irish linen sheoth occomponied by its smartly motching orlon sweater. locAaoMr, Miebifoa Store-wide savings are yours during WIQQS FEBRUARY SALE Sove on olmost everything in the store, including oil furniture, lompt, clocks, pictures, ond wall decor ... plug speciol tovings on mony pottems of fine chino ond crystol, houlewores of oil kinds, and hundreds of gift itemsY February Sale Feature! Sal id Rack Maple BOSTON ROCKER Regularly $29.95 $20 Authentic replica of the ever-popular Boston Rocker, custom - crafted in antique finish solid rock maple. And an extra-special buy during our February Sale! Our Special LOVE SEAT BY SHAW Custom-Covered in Your choice of Many Fine Fabrics! *159 • Revenibie, foam rubber cushieiw with sippered covers I • Lined skirt end undercevered outside arms and beck! ' • Stool roinforcod fully wobbod bottom and bond-tiod springs! * • Solid mopio framo with fruitwood finishod kgs! Select your choice of cover from our fine group of handsome fabrics in floral designs, scenic prints, provincial prints, and Solid colors. a Rachar in CkiM's Siiaa. . Save on this COLONY HOUSE SOLID CHERRY DINING GROUP Dinina extends to 58" with loof . Coptoin's Choir . $8000 »31» ■V " fe- ■ V' These fine Early American replicas ore heirloom-crafted of solid cherry and hor^-rubbed to o condleglow lustre! And they're yourS at speciolj^vings during our February Sole! See our complete collection of Colony House Cherry. ’ KOKURA'S NEW MONTCLAIR PATTERN Decorative SOFA PILLOWS Newest Decorator Shapes and Colors! Attroctive pillows for living room, bedrewm, family room, or den! Zip-off,covers in sotin, shantung, corduroy, velvet, ond novelty fobrics. WIQO!_ i4 WEST HURON STREET Fine White Ironstone Dinnerware by Noritake OVEN, DETERGENT and CRAZE PROOF! Oven-cook a meal right in the aervlng dishes you'll u|a on " ............ ..............................leal. The the table! And Kokura Ware is as pretty at It it practical Montclair pattern is a graceful spray In soft tones of gold, beige arfd pink on a pure white bxkground. Open Monday qnd Friday Until 9 P. M. 16*Pioct Sfoitor Sof...... .......$ 8.9^ 53-Pioco Sofvico for 8 $35.S(r < .t ■n - r ^THE PoVtIAC press, TUESDaV, JANUAHY 26. 19|(io T THIRTEE2J ^ ITSaLAItBS big, was without a single .wrinkle Not that she looked like Sn dd lady then or ever, so far as I Know. ^ For alter her Biwadway days her life trying to hold onto youth. Her hair, which shuld have been Pre-Inventory CLEMANCE Odds 'n Ends Untrimmed Coats ‘38 SAVE 40% to 50% M8 Fur Trimmed Coats Reg. to $245 *69 *99 SAVE 40% to 50% ‘129 Dresses Reg. to $29.95 ?9 *11 *15 Reg. to $55 *18 to *25 SAVE 50% to 65% Ski rts Reg. to $17.95 ‘5” and $790 SAVE 50% to 70% Bulky Knit Sweaters Reg. to $16.95 ■S’” SAVE to 70% Reg. to $7.95 Blouses 2 ‘5 SAVE 55% to 70% Reg. to $49.95 Car Coats *14 *18 SAVE OVER 50% *24 All Weather Coats Reg. $19.95 to $49.95 *15 *25 SAVE OVER ONE-HALF Entire Stock WINTER SLACKS and SKI WEAR 50% OFF PENDLETON Jackets - Sweaters - Skirts 50% OFF and more! SALE ENI>S.{^TURDAY HURON at TELEGRAPH ^ Wed., Sat. 10 to Mon., Thurs., Fri, 10 to 9 but the skin wag stretched so tightly over the bonu that it wu com-pletely without expression — like the lace (A a doll. Site wu prouder of her figure tlum most women her age are ol their grandchildrm, and indeed it was a dainty little figure. But instead of covering it with clothes suitable lor a woman her age, the day I visited with her, she was wearing a bright r^ velvet party dress with a Peter Pan collar, exactly the kind ol dress that would have been i^tpropriate lor a young giri’s birUi^ party. For the eysa that looked out of the unltned lace were laded, old eyes. The skin that had no wrinkles still looked old. 71^ young girl's clothes looked so Incongruous that it seemed u though an old'KI^ were playing dreea-up in her granddaughter’s clotbM. And she had nothing to talk about except her battle against growing old. All of those years ol living and nothing to talk about! Seelag Mias Hopper (who wu probably then in her seveatlea) acroM a hotel M>by.. yon might havo tbonght yon w^ro looking at a petite aohoolglri. But, talking to her faee to-faoe, you know yon were talking to on old lady who had succeeded la convincing heraeU that no one ever hu to grow old. I always think ol Edna Wallace Hopper when 1 aeo a woman pa-thtically trying to deny her age. For even if you spend your llli trying to hold onto youth It can* be done. Check on Climate for Dress Tips (NEA) — If you are flying to a climate you’ve never visited before, check with your airline or travel agent to find what type of clothes you should take. Nothing spoils the pleasure of a trip u much u finding you’ve nothing but lightweight clothes when the evenings are cold. Meet You Friendi for Ceffee Honeymoon in Indiana for Collins Newlyweds Honeymooning In Indiana ere Mr. and Mrs. AllI^ Bruce (Mins (nee Joaa^ E. lM>at> w h o ex-jad vows and rings b^ore die Rev. J. Douglu Pirker, Saturday in St. Paul Methodist Cinirch, Rochester. Chapel vasu ol pink carnations were placed on the altar. MARY T. McNamara Set Fall Wedding An eariy fall wedding is planned by Mary Theresa McNamara and Lloyd iSlyron, aon of Mr. and Mrs. Frank <3. Syron of Elinbeth Lake road. The bride-elect, daughter ol Mr. and Mra. John I. McNamara of Whiting, Ind., is a graduate of the Qillege ol St. Francis in Jdiet, HI. Her fiance, a 1958 alumnus pf University ol Notre Dame, is general manager ol the Pontiac Country (3ub. Mauve Powder Best in Fifties (NEA)—If you are in your fifties, give a thought to mauve lace powder. For evening, it will ^ve your lace Just the needed color. Flull it on with a swuMdown puff and be sure that your rouge and lipstick are rosy. You can use mauve or mauve-blue eye shadow and amethyst mascara all to good eflect. It's coloring that does things lor the mature skin-tone. And It dhet something else: makes you feel both wicked and pretty. This is importaml 8 Tables in Play The Pontlsc Bonneville Duplicate Bridge Club met Saturday evening at the Hotel Waldron with eight taUes in play. Winners were Henry Ge^a and Edwin V. Clarke, Mrs. Eleanor Haack and Mrs. Tom Hdlis, Dr. and Mrs. W. H. Barron, Fred Sparks and Edward Sealander, Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Warren end Mr. and Mrs. Lionel Thompson. The bride Is the daaghter e( Mr. and Mrs. Oari WilUam Dobat ef Datum road. Rpohceter. Par-eats of the brMegroeai are fir. and Mrs. Alfred Logan OoIHbs of Wdifootreet. . With her ballerina-length dress ol white chiffon over satin, the bride wore a shoulder-length veil attached to a crown of pearls and sequins. Her nosegay ol white roses was centered with a corsage of pink carnations. Mrs. David DeShetler ol Pontiac, sister ol the bridegroom, was her only attendant. A corsage ol yellow roeee complemented her dress ol white lace over blue taffeta. Ralph Dobat, brother of the bride, stood •• beet man for the bridegroom. w ♦ ★ A Royal blue print with black accents was Mrs. Dobat's ariaotlon for the reception in Frlendahlp HaU ol the church. Mrs. Collins wore Copenhagen blue wool with white accesaories. Each wore a corsage of red roses. MM. ALFRED B. CXILUNi Have You Tried This? Egg White Cookies Light and Airy as Snow By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Home Editor Snow outside in the form of lasy flakes drifting throuidt the air. Keep the tame feeling of lightness and airiness with a batch of Egg White CMklfs. They’re perfect lor snack time or to serve as dessert. Mrs. Francis E. Hunt is today’s cook. She belongs to the Fashion - Your - Figure Qub. China painting and sewing are her hobbies. EGO WHITE COOKIES By Mrs. Fnuwls E. Hunt l?u5' is Add sugar, nuts and dates to egg whites. Drop by teaspoonfuls on a grtaaad cookie ■beet. Bake 10 to 12 minutee in 350-degree oven. Let cool completely before removing from pan. Dr. Ross Cox Talks at PTA Dr. Roas Cox spoke on the question "What Are Social Studies?’’ at the January meeting ot Webster PTA. He defined eocial stddleB as the study of man and hit relationship to man and his en\dronment. At the January board meeting, Elwood Bigler was appointed chairman of the nominating committee. Other committee members are Dr. Edith Roach Snyd«r, Mildred Hobbs, Mra. KenneUi Nagly and Mrs. Paul Gododiian. Mra. George Watters, president, announced that Mrs. Rus-aril CXirtlt Is the new cochairman of the library committee. If Smart, Knit Coat (UPD—If you’re ambitious, keep in wtep with Paris styles by knitting a full-length coat^ with a glut collar. Mohair is the favorite yarn. The classic look is a safe yet stylish one for relaxing during a ski weekend. Consider a Made turtle neck sweater and slightly full white skirt pr a bright plaid skirt with a blouae and lacey-knit bulky . cardigan. RIKER FOUNTAIN Those Resentment Feelings Aren't 'Hate By MVBIEL LAWRENCE On Friday afternoon, Kit was in her bedrwm reading cornice i ‘ she got a telephone call. Hgr Mg MOLLS' JANUARY SALE OF FINE FABRICS ■laler, who was expecting a eall from a boy friend, answered it. And because she wanted to keep the line open for him laid shortly; •’Kit brn’t in, Chrlaty. Goodby.” On gatnrday, Kit discovered that this misinfonnatlon had lost her an invitation to dine with Chris and her parents at a local restanrant that spectalltes in pecan pie and to attend n new movie, starring n teen-ager, at a downtown theatre. YOU WIN we had not pUnned on s sale . to tho many requests, we will heve one I BUT FOR FIVE DAYS ONLY! (Sole EnONTrAC. MICHUiAX FIFTK To Finance Sewage Program Romeo Gouhcil Backs Rate Hike By LEE WINBORN ROMEO — The Romeo Village Council last night went record as favoring a hike in sewer rates to niatch individual water rates as the means of financing itk up* > coming sewage treatment plant im-provemcM and enlargement program. Tn other words, If the $300,000 bond issue is approved Feb. 15, a resident will pay the same anHMUt he is now charged quarterly for water?to help the village pay off its bonded indebtedness for the sewage plant project. . The qaarterly sewer charge now la ft. iMInimom water bUh are |S per quarter. So it the resident pays SB lor water now, ho will pay SB quarterly for ti^ww* age disposal program If the vote The financing announcement climaxed the Council's special public hearing on its sewage plant project and forthcoming bond issue.' so ATTEND HE8RION Some 80 persons attended the session to hear Village President Joseph C RymiU explain the background leading up to the Council decifiion to renovate and add to the predint sewage plant a Other speakers were Maurice 8. Richmond of the Mtehl-gsa Department of Hoatth. John r. Monger of MeMahon Engl, 'neering Co., vIBi die village needs for a M-year pertod baaed on a predictod pop-nlalioa of 7,BBS It will treat 700,000 gallons of iqaki« day. Munger toM about the design for foe facllUy which would provide 90 to 95 per qent treatment using the existing plant built in 1924-96. thereby saving the village $70,000 V not starting from scratchi As part of the whole program, foe sjtafo requires thqt remaining storm sewers tied in to sanitary sewers must he separated. |he village Department-of Pub-lie Worka has been wwking on this separation program for several years and only a little inteip[)in-gling remains at the east end of towh, according to DPW Superintendent Kenneth EliBWorth. The tax-paytng etectorate is asked Feb. IS to authoriie the village to borrow I3M.0M and issue general obligation bonds 3mey with the DrtroU law Miller, Caul|BM, Paddock and Richmond reaffirmed lage's nee^ for improved and enlarged sewage treatment facilities based on a survey of the present plant last April. It was found then that average removal was 29 per cent—that effluent being discharged into the Clinton River constituted "gross pollution," The stale bealtti offteial added that the present disposal System was basically desigiied abont SB years ago to serve a population of S.BIB. . Romeo's population now is 3,480 plus out-of-town school children attending the new high school and new elementary school This adds about l,20q to that figure five days rO.MMENl^ iPAgt ACTION The state official commended the Village Ouncil for acting promptly to meet the state-set timetable for action on sewage plant corestnic- .May 1 is the deadline for completion of plans, contracts must be let by July 1 and the facility mu.st be in operation by June 1961, Accordtag to IB-slate stand- to Romeo’s sewage treatment The method of financing proposed last night wtll not appear on the ballot. addition ^to sewpr rate Increases, the village hi endeavoring to qualify tor federal aid to help pay for the program. FOfNT BASIS The need for federal aid is de-Tmined on g point basis by the village’s desire and ability to meet its time schedules for construction, proved boqded indebtedness and other factora that make it quali-flable under State Water Commission requirements. Richmond emphasized that if the Innd issue should be defeated, the Health Department would take the matter to court to force the village to proceed with plant prevent further pollution. Ihe method af paymesd, first anaaaaccd last night, Is baaed on nsage rather than on a property tax levy, according to Village Attorney J. OeiAM McLean. The village can expect to pay an inteteat rate of about 4H per cent or $18,414 a year on debt service plus the salary of a fulltime engineer and blowers at the plant to co^t $13.0«). or $31,000 annually over a 30-year period. This amount will be paid for oompletely cSit of sewer re\enue as proposed by the Council plus Ihe money realized from sewer tapiiis outside the village which will be hiked from 160 to 200 per cent of the in-town rates, MeLean I said. Gunmen Rob Stores in Southfield, Troy day are looking Ibr gUhBten(1iito switched to a car driven by an-staged two bold robhBhes tn tteloth^ n^an, behevfd to have ttoW cities yesterday. ‘ ,• jwVMag for him. Th^ convertible The proprietor of Don's .'Tfewnl^terft>»«>d been stolen and Country St(^ at 16215 W. 12-Mile Rd., Southfield, told police DERBY WINNERS - These five boys were winners in the Plnewood Derby—miniature auto races held on a 3-car track — at a meeting of Cub Scout Pack 181, Clarkston. Parents of the cub scouts work, with the boys in perfecting the power models. From left the boys are Den 1 winner. Walter GaUegly; Den 2 winner, Klly ABin: Den 5 and pack winner, John McGregor; William Gustafson, Den 4-winner, and Larry Ball, Den 3 winner. Milford Rezoning Opens Way for Future Shopping Center By JIM LONG MILFORD-The Village Council opened the way for the construction of a new shopping center here with the reaoning last night of 12 acres of land. However, in returning 4he tend west of the Robbins plastic manufacturing plant, from heavy commercial to commercial business the Council placed resfric-tk>n.s on the propei^ in order to protect’the village. la restricting the proposed btiHdeni, the Cmmcil stoted that only to per cent of Um It acres eaa be ased for the construction •t bnildtogs. This does not in-ctode pnrktaig facilities, the The contractors must provide off^streeCparking stalls for every 200 squdro feet of floor space and the earth moving contract must be concluded one year from the start of the project, the Council said. JACQUELYN ANN SIBLEY ■ A May 7 wedding is planned by Jacquelyn Ann Sibley and Arien Hartle, The bride-elect is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William H. .Sibley of 980 Indian-wood Rd., Orion Town.ship Her fiance is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Menzer of 176 S. Andrews Rd.. Orion Township. The Iknd must not be used to build an automobile servicing garage or for a drive-in restaurant, the Council added. No protests were made to the retonIng of the property, according to Village Manager Oliver Taylor. The decision was a result of two weeks study for a proposal by Johnson, Peterson and Associates to build "a first class shopping center on the site." GIVE BOUNDARIES Johnson and Peterson were Hie receivers of the property owi?ed until recently by the Erin Metals j The Cpuncil has been working with the qew owners of the property jn private sessions in order to come up with an agreement that would be suitable to both parties. Taylor said it whs not an unusual procedure for a municipality to rezone property spccificly for Use as a Chopping center. The Council also proved the purchase of a police car for $2,150. In recent years the village has bcfii leasing its police cars on one year terms. , “In the long run we found that by d^rchasing a new cih’ every two years we would save money." Taylor said. He said the decision was mode by the Coundl only after bids to police car were $150 month. This is $25 more than the village has paid in the past, he said. Troy Changes Ballot Wording Police fo Troy«nd .SouthfM to»|Bteeet for Three blocks. There he When Catherine Gould, 22. of ............................................... 4760 Rochester Rd„ went to wait that a "jittery" man armed wifo double-barrel shotgun forced him to hand over $110 ^m the till at 3:30 p.m. while the store wag empty of customers. Don Frocassl. SB,- of 30Slt Lahuer Rd., described Ms asMiil-mat fw a “toll, Mond man, about S3 years of age, workfaig with an accomplice who waited outside.** The storeownri: said the bandit first entered the store, saying he wanted to buy something but had forgotten his money in the car. He went out and returned seconds later carrying the shotgun. He ordered Fracassi to empty the contents of his cash register into paper bag then lie flat on the floor. ' As (he gunman turned to leave a customer, Wilbnr ijuikowsky of 3M83 Fairfax Rd. entered the store. He was ordered to stand in the center aisle and not move. The bandit then backed Out the in Detroit ti* same dsy- A young mna, deocribedona being In his Mrty toa, robbed an emptoye of the Dairytond MUk De^, at 31S2 Rocbcaler Rdf, at gnn point tost night and fled with nbont BBO in cosh In a amoB («• per bag. The suspect entered the depot at abqpt 6:30 p.nv„ stood around, until all the customers had left, then picked up a pint of ice cretiq and bag of potato chips, laying counter. on him, the man pulled a small nickel-plated pistol, she told police, and demanded that she "hand it Farmington Twp. Home Destroyed Laskbwsky saw him throw the in onto the backseat of a 1998 convertible and drive down the Bloodmobile to Visit Commerce Friday After havii^ her put the bUll and loose change from the cash ngtoler to the small bag, be fled arotmd the comer of the bitiMtr'g on foot, the youiq; woman said. “IToV 'lvIioe arc inclined to be-heve the tol^ is the shme man thht has be«h holding up numbers of hhsiness places , to South Oak-hMid CoiattyJb recent weeks. They are checking the possibility that yesterday’s two holdups were staged by the same men. Family of 4 Burned Out COMMERCE TQWNSHIP Red Cross bloodmobile will be set up Friday from 2 to 8 p.m. Walled Lake Methodist Church to replenish the township's blood bank supply. j Commerce Township established a blood bank in July 1958, and has cfdlected 116 pints to date. FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP - A family of four was left homeless early this morning when a fire destroyed a two-story frame house at 22790 Colgate Rd. Fire Chief Ray Geary blamed n exploding oil stove for the fire I the home of Mr.,, and Mrs. James Hoskipe and their two children. The loss was estimated by Geary at $6,000. Flames were raging out of control In the kltchra, bedroom and uMli^ room when the tire department arrived, Geary «||d-The lire was reported by Mrs. Hoskine who ran a mile and a baU to the station as there was no. telephone at her home. Her husband, r-ho had been ailing, Fried to put out the Maze but v/as turned back by the flames. He led the ooeple’s two young ehildrcn to safety bet was enable to ^vage any of the tom-Uy’o personal belongings. Additional fire equipment was called in from the City of Farmington and another township sta- The family is living temporarily with Horitme’s brother, who also resides In the township. Twenty-seven pints have been released for the needs of township residents. It is hoped that 115 pints of blood will be donated, said Mrs. Agatha Loveless, chairman of the campaign Donors must be between the ages of 18 and 59, weigh at least 110 pounds, end must not have donated blood for at least eight weeks. Fifteen Men Nominated in Orion laYcees Set Oxford Twp., lake Orion Gas Vote Voters in both Oxford Towtiihfp and Lake Orion are reminded to cast their ballots tomorrow ^ renewal of the Consumers P0)lretf Co.’s 30-year franchise in Mh places. % Co. The land rezoned is generally bounded by Highland street on the west. Summit road jfn the north. No New Forms or Regulations This Year Tips on Taxes to Area Farmers - * * To Study Ports Commission Acts on . ■*. Proposal to Borrow for '^^ Detroit JOf ^ ^ ^ ^ Public Works Building Grain ShippinQ Towmiiip Hali on west Buidiek ~~ ^ street. Precinct IT is in the junior ____^ , DETROIT (UPI) - The Etetroit high school. Si'j Commis-sion. expecting a Voters In Lake Orion will riwt to the shipping qfijhoir ballots in the Village Hall. Michigan farm products through the St. Lawrehce Seaway, has asked (he State Agriculture Department for farm data to aid in its study of additional port facilities to handle the increase. Andrew W. Fleming, admin- posal to appear on the ballot April 4 asking that it be given authority to borrow $125,000 and issue general obligation bonds to cover cost of constructing and equipping s Department of Public Works , building, and pay for Ihe site al-l EAST LANSING (UPIi-A hit of good news has come along with the tax deadlines which are bearing down on Michigan farmers. .^There have been no major clMnges in tax laws, forms relations affecting farmers. mate, he must have his final Everett Elwood, extension spe-rtoUst In agricultural economirn at Michigan State Universily, aaM the new tax form, railed I040B', which has been piihllriu>d ^ to not appItealJe to farmers. Part of the^ualification for using i the form, Elwtxxl. is that a' person have no other income other than salary and wages reported. return filed by Feb. 15. Elwood listed several Items tor farmers, worrying about their tax returns, to keep in mind. If using the cash method of reporting. cost of livestock purchased which was lost, stolen or died during the year should be listed. However, total real estate taxes and building insurance cannot be llslixl becaune sonic of thesi* ex-|ienM>s apply to Ihe farm dwelling which eoini-s under personal exiM'nnes. Take all depm'iation allowable zincs, organization memberships, bank service fees, overnight business trips and cash to board hired workers are often overlooked. Also records should be kept, medical and hospital bills, Affth" dates and cost of all items sold. "Records cannot be too good, Elwood said. Paid bills, invoices, canceled checks and similar items should he kept and- it's » good idea pay bills by check whenever possible. A few noles to help Ihe farmer approximate his ineoine aren't This excludes farmers from using|on depteciable improvements, ma- ....................................... the form. jehinery,' equipmeni and pun based I bil'^systematle tialing to If a farmer filed .an income es-|‘toafl. breeding and dairy live- the true irnxMne, dediirllona and timate hy Jan. .15, the deadline!stock," he said. | credito. for his final return isn’t until April* Records are imiKirtant. Records! E. B. Hill, profe.s.sor in agricul-15 but if he didn't file that esti-!on such things as farm maga-i tural economics at MSI', said some farmers might consider incorporating because there are advantages to the right farm but there are also disadvantages. "Usually there is no need to hurry the decision (on incorporating),” he said. "It is a relatively easy and quick procens to incorporate. It may or may not be n easy and quick to unincorporate.’ ADVANTAGF» Sometimes .state inherilnm fodiTal estate taxes are low an irn'orporatt-d farm. It m a good way to keep a large farm In the family through transfer or be a better way of handling the ready acquired. The amount of Ihe bond issue is le same as the figure in the isle defeated last April, 1.390 to 1,286. Commtostoner I»uis Yanirh has stoted tiitt all state and county Items on the baliol at that time “confused" the voters. He added he thinks this year it will go throngh. In 1958, Troy purchased a 28.5-acre site on l^hester road, just south of 18-Mile road lor the DPW building. rily Manager David D. llasse said he expects the debt on the $4.').0n0 purchase prii-e to N* paid off by .Si’plember. EXTENDS TAX DATE In other aet^jon last night, in ad- istratlve a.ssistnnt of the commis-fiton, said during the weekend that shipping grain Via the Seaway is cheaper than rail shipment by as much as 20 cents a bushel. He said the lower shipping costs were expected to lead to an increase to farm shipping through the Seaway. The commission, he said, has undertaken a study to learn what type of expanded facilities will be needed to handle larger farm exports. All polling places are open 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. The power company is seeking renewal -of its franchise to lay, maintain and operate ga.s mains, pipes and service and to do local gas business to both Lake Orion and Oxford Towt^ip for fowther 30 years. Fun Night Coming CLIFFORD — The Altar Society of St. Patrick's Catholic Church here will sponsor a “Fun for AH' social evening at 8 Friday in thd church basement. Games will be played and refreshments served. Hie public is invited. LAKE ORION - Fifteen men have been nominated to run fcH' office in the new Orion Area Jun-icH- Chamber) of Commerce in dec-tiong to be held Feb. 4 in the Village HaU here. ... extenial vtoe preskteut. Thonuui Carter, Reginald 8hep-herA Keith Stegwert and Lyle TwoAlso will be elected to serve on the Board of Directors. Competing for the positions are William Green, J(^ Rulers, John Walter. Roger S. Tyrrell and C. A. Dudley. The temporary directors said other members stjU may be nominated for office before the election.' In other action at their organizational meeting, members oi the new Jaiycee unit passed their constitution and by-laws. Principal to Addrou Thomas PTA in Oxford OXFORD TOWNSHIP - Roy B. Qoud, Oxford Junior High SdtQoi principal, will be guest speaker at llwrsday evening’s PTA meettof in the Thomu School. Cloud, who was an exchange teacher In England last year, will rlbe his experiences and show pictures he took while abroad. The meeting win start at 8 p m.; business when two or more i>oople!dilimi to re-wording the April 4 pro-operate a large farm. for ilarlty’s sake, the Com- „ „ .. . 'mission extended Ihe due date for On tl^ other side. Hill e.u- \ i taxes 10 tloned there were many prob- jg lemH In HettInK up the eor(»ora-lion and tnueh book work. A|»p«lnlmenl of Kenneth I-ln . j eoln to Ihe Bonrd of K<-i'lew nml There also are eorporalion prof I ,^.,„Hdnlmento of Gernl.l 8«». Its taxes and costs of franchise I Kandale to HfKl filins fet's. the federal stamp Klertlon CVrnimiMldn were fftX on iMuancp of and otheri appro%,*d. stork ft’es. ' If you are frying to answer this question, ", he said, "be take enough time to study the proper pitKedures of im-orpora-tlon." Tints and Tones to Hear Lecture by Art Evangelist The Tints and Tones Art Oub, composed of members frotn, Birmingham, Royal Oak, Mtldison Heights, Tfoy and Oawson, will sponsor a lecture by Michael Oiurch, the "Billy Graham of the Art World,” tomorrow evening at Sam's Department Store in Qaw-son's new shopping center. The matlrr of issuance of .SDD licens<>s in Troy again was left. hanging in Ihif air with no ccvn-l missipner apparently wanting commit himself on what action to take, voted to place the request for consideration of the SDD licenses on file; also that no transmittal 0$ recommendations be sent to the State Liquor Commission and that no action be taken. ^ | On the subject ol county drain tsessments, it was moved that the I discusslofi be tabled pending a! meeting of the village manager | and Commissioner Gifford Suter-meister with the County Drain | Commission. rillZEWiNNER — This castle-like * entrant to Ihe Phi Delta I'hi fraternity house at Ferris / Institute in Big Rapids took second plAce honoiw / Ar Wlr»»k>U in snow Kiilj^turing during the institute’s Winter Carnival. Students used only snow Bnd ice in the construction. Church is a member of the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts and l/*tters and was awarded the gold medal for encourage-Ing and stimttinting more loral art groups than any other person in Michigan. The lecture will start at 7, and all persons interested are, invited to attend. * Clawson's shopping renter is to-icated on, 14-Mile/and .Crooks road. Set Nomination Group | for Pontiac Twp. Dems j PONTlAC TOWNSHIP - A 3- lan nominating committee has been chosen by Herman Douglas, president of the Pontiac Township Democratic Club, tt» pick candi-for club offices in the Feb. 29 elections. Committee members arc William van der Jtee, chairman; Steven Douglas and Ray Russell. Rqy Wahl has been reinstated vice chairman * of the club until the election of new officers. 1st SPECIAL SALE 1960 UP TO 50% OFF ON SPECIAL ITEMS REDUCED PRICES ON ALL ITEMS ALUMINUM STORM DOOR full 1 bek Buck ComplMt Hardwort $*^*995 ‘22’ with Piono Hinft TRIPLE ACTION ALUMINUM STORM WINDOWS «• low OB $1195 Cnstom Bnllt AWNINGS I—CHECK THESE FEATVRES- ‘ir fiM EitirotM NO OBLIGATIONS NO MONEY DOWN Up to 5 Yaars to Pay • Awnings for Porches—Potk>8— Windows ond Doors • Lifotimo Aluminum or Fiborglot • 8 Stylos, 200 Color Combinations • A Stylo and Color to Match Any Homo • Enclosuros for Porchot and Potios, GIosb and Scraan • Commarciol Awnings Also • Aluminum Columns ond Railing • Also Cdmgloto Una of Floxibla Awnings UiSlaSIIuJ} • All Work Guorontood ALL AMMC & STOIS NIMKIII SAIB 2 LOCATIONS 3415 iW. Hiibr rc 3-7S05 • FC 3^7106 233 S. Ttltftapli M. Opoa TUI 9 PM. Tuoo. • Wod. - FildaT “COMPLITI GLASS AND SCRilN RIPAIRS" .// -A:* Nixon's Name Now in Illinois Hop« for BirOQPVofo April 12; Rockofollor, l^onpody Also Filo SPRINGFlIxb. ni. (AP) BMken of Vice Pmident Rleh. ard M. Mixon hav« entcrad hia nama in the UUnoia prefan prtmaiy in an dBort to attract a larte Repoblican turnout April 12, raa Nlxon’a aeopnd en^ pHmaiy oompetltian. Hia waa in New Hampahire. The namea of I^ublican Gov Nelaon A. Rockefeller of ' York and Sen. J(din F. Kemady ID-Maaa) alao aren filed Monday. In WaaMngton, Nlxcn’a ,________ accretary, Herbert G. Klbin, aaid the petltlona were filed with the vice preaident'a knowledge and bonaent. Klein aaid Nixon plana to aeefc delegatea in Oregot and Ohio primariea. READY FOB AROUMBNT-Menlbers the Gool^ and Leggett school alxth-grade debate teams shake hands for competition. They are (clockwise, from left) Jeffrey Fisher, Carolyn Gustafson, Patricia Tackaberry, Tom Jenks and Susan Teepte, representing Cooley School; and Sue Brandon, Kathleen Hendri, Sandy Watner, Sally Chapman and Sandra Elliott, of Leggett School. Stemfi From Protest of Snowball Ban Sixth-Graders Learn to Debate The Illinois primary is not binding on convention delegates. The names (tf Rockefeller and Kennedy were filed by Lar Daiy of Chicago, himself a perennial candidate for various offices. Daly apparently acted without consent of either. A Rockefeller spokesman in Albany. N.Y.. hinted strongly the , governor would request his rame be withdrawn. He has until Jan. 30 to do so. Keimedy's status waa uncertain. Daly last week entered Gen. Douglas MacArthur in the primary but MacArthur’s name was withdrawn Monday at his request. By REBA HEINTZELMAN Sixth-grade pupils in Wateiiprd Township schools are learning the art of debate. And it all started with ball fight. When the first heavy snow fell children at the Codey and Havtiand achools followed their natural instincts and started pitching snowballs at each other. An age-old rale prohibiting this type of play on school property waa eaforoed, and as a resnit the usual lend howl of protest arose troor the ohUdrra. H>e sul^ was first brought up in the rtxth grade Cooley School language class when pupils demanded to know the reasons for the “no snowball throwing" rule. Rather than attempt to give the reasons to the class, teacher John’ McLeod simply said, "Why not? There is a reason for eoeiy rule, so let’s see why it is not a good idea to throw snowballs.’* There was dead silence la the room as the children begaa to of serlons, coa-stmcUve debating. Each pupil, sltlected a topic of his choice and presented it in front of the class. The rest of the daas were given judging sheets for recording points on the talks. In that way the, first'five-member debate team was formed, and the same procedure has been continued since that time. “This system gives everyone an even chance to tw on the team, and every team is composed of different peo-|rie for each debate,” McLeod said. The idea ha.mmittees from various schools now meet and select the topic to be argued, and the intelligence expounded on intricate subjects has surprised the teachers. Subject of a debate between the Cooley and Leggett schools was: "Should We Spend Mwe Time and Money on Our National Space Program." Alter much research, formation was brought in by all of the sixth-graders hoping to help their team win points. Motor vehicles generate 92 per cent of the United States horse power. Some of the advantages of the early debate training, one of the first programs of its t)qte in Michigan, is to {HToduce initiative, poise and confidence in a pupil, McLeod 'But most of all it puts class competition on a cultural level and tends to promote a murti better Check Five Basic Winter Needs ‘Ask lot Tent free Wlmdojt Scraper Take Care of Your Carf Pontiac Motor Division service specialists remind motorists (hat a follow-through program of winter maintenaiice can extend car life by months and even years. "Too many car owners overlook the obvious cold weather pitfalls, expecting their, annual late fall winterizing job to carry them through the entire winter period without additional maintenance attention,” the service men point out. “Periodic care and Inspection now ipay eliminate serious car and component dUfleultles later.” Pontiac lists live basic maintenance procedures for the winter motorist: 1. BATTERY SERVICE: Since the battery carries a lieavier load in the winter it requires more frequent checks. At least once a month in bad weather ask a dealer or service station to test the charge and add watekjf necessary. I. COOLING SYSTEM: Visit the dealer or service station lor a monthly check of anti - freeze strength. Maintain coolant at the proper level to insure good circulation and eliminate loss through overflow. S. PERIODIC WASHINGS: Rust and corrosion are greatly accelerated by winter road ice removing salts and other chemicals. After each snowfall when the roads are clear submit the car to a thorough cleansing. Whpn possible spray the und^rbody, muffler and tailpipe. 4. W I N D SHIELD WASHERS: When refilling the washer bottle remember to specify a non-freezing fluid manufactured' especially for winter time use. OWOSSO m — Donald Odtf, 24, of Rural Owosso, was killed last ' ' in a head-on car-trudt collision on M21 near here. •idy tiriM elm •« SEE - TRY THEM TODAY Alte.-.IlecMc Subtracters wid Electric Credit Salence Riedels KMfey er full Keybeaids l2}NitlhSsjiniwSl I. G A S T A N K: The who maintains a full gas tank in cold weather will eliminate troublesome condensation frmn form ing on the inner tank wall. Killed in Head-On Crash “We could not live without Radio Free Europe!" A quote in a letter received from Poland! The best possible proof that RADIO FREE EUROPE is doing its job... telling the truth to combat Cibmmunist lies! The truth hurts the Reds. If loosens their hold on the oppressed countries of East Europe. Exposes their lies. Keeps them worried. Melps the Free World. But RFE is a private organization, and your doUars are needed. Tiiey pay for transmitter equipment, supplies, announcers. Your dollars help build a first line of defense for freedom—behind the Iron Curtain itself! So send your dollars todayl Give the truth to 76 million people behind the Iron Curtain. Send your Truth Dolian for RADIO FREE EUROPE to: , CRUSADE FOR FREEDOM e/e UcRl Pustmosler rubtiihMt at a public tarvlea In cMparation with Tba Advartiting Council and tha Nawtpapar Advartiting Exacutlva* Attocittion. THE PONTIAC PRESS WHY HANG Clothes? Automatic c A S D R Y E R 129 NO MONET DOWN NO PAYMENTS YIL MARCH LiniFS FURNITURE & APPUANCE 5217 DIXIE HWY. iwst ta Ouip FUral Open Doily 10-9 Sundays 12-5 OR 3-6555 NEW WORLDS UNFOLD... A new home! .. . their first os man and wife . . a whole new world that holds a never ending source of fun and accomplishment, security and sharing. There ore so many things they wont for this most special home, so many plans for it, all tied up with their own plans for 0 future together. And when, os often happens, there isn't enough money in their newly-married budget to go out and buy everything to make this home liveable and attractive, they turn to the Want Ads. This is where they find so many, many household items, all at prices that stretch their funds farther. If your home is brand new, or one you've enjoyed for years, there are treats in store for it and you in today's Want Ads. CALL FE 2-8181 PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS X J,. TITR PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JANUARY 26. 1900 Com* TtNnbling DowO CHICAGO - Ktnt sky»cnptr of ■ted ecantiuetion to the United State* ww; ^ JacOBAa Buttling in Chicaso. It was tom (town in 1929 to make way tor «an even tottier, moR modern structure. PRESOMPTIQNS P MRSSIDIIAUY fRFKT koraiLY ncn PERRY DRUGS Mf E. BM. 1211 k 24311 Bggy at Home; No Picket Linea Film Writers Strike but Keep On Writing • By BOB THOMAS AT Mevle TV- Writer HOCIyWOOD (AP) - Imagine a strike in which: Some of the strikers earn $100, The strikers perfc^ an indis-pensible function in the industry, yet production has not been interrupted Though on strike, the workers miQf still toil at their craft and in the long run earn as much as they might while employed. But theieT are no tweed coats ,and pipes out m a picket line. Filming still goes on. ■ hot hitting the bricks like the steel workers," sa ip. “We deal in « and ideas. And we think we' just as effective in cutting studios off from our work as the gteel workm were in their strik Is the strike hurting the studios? They claim not. Projects continue to be announced, with word that some (dd ones an being pulled off the shelf. But a writers' spokesman ac^; "The reason scripto are on' the shelf is they need more writing." THOMAS Theae are some of Uie factors that make the writers’ strike against the movie and TV studios a unkiue one in American labor The Writers Guild of America Svent on strike lO days ago. The major issue is a share of the profits from post-1948 films sold to TV; the studios have so far refused to tive it. The writers also struck the major "TV film producers over more money from reruns and other matters. DR. HENRY A. MILLER Optometri$t Phone FE 4-6842 7 North Soginow Street "Better Things in Sight" Contact Lenses Open Fri, Evemngs^^losed Wed. Afternoons Remember...Wednesday is DOUBLE STAMP DAY Urug Stores For Hoiden Red Stamps 714 Community Nat’l Bank Building Phone FE 4-1568-9 BAX£J( & HANSEN Richard H. DeWiU Bea n s-nss Donald E. Hansen Km. FE t-HlS Homeowners’ Policies Accident Insurance Fire Insurance Automobile Insurance Life Iitturanre Liability Insurance Plate Glass Insurance Burglary Insurance Bonds—All Types Tenant’s Policies TV producers indicate they have stockpiled enouglrsci scripts to finish this season. But if the strike continues, they may be hurt in preparing new series for the 196061 season. The public may be subjected to a greater number of re- .SKVEWTaMt El^ion Funds Bill ill Trouble Many of the strikers are Academy Award and even Politzer Prize winners and some can earn as much as $5,000 a week. But the guild claims the average yearly earning is $9,000. The basic minimum 1(mp tow-budget films is around $325 a week; TV writers get from $850 to* $1,100 for half-hour scripts, $1,610 to $2,000 for hour shows. But many writers have lean periods between sales, of course.. What are the writers doing during the strike? Why, they're home writing, naturally. It may all be well - disguised blessing for Hollywood, which could see an outpouring of creaUvity when the settled. India Fetes 10 Free Years Teen Wife Sent to Jail by Judge for Bad Checks Ninety days in jail and three years on probation were ordered yesterday for Mrs. Nancy Carol Harper, former 17-year-old Auburn Heights housewife who pleaded guilty to passing a worthl^ $485; check. j SAYS QUIP WAS NO SUP — Actress Eva Marie Saint, one of the screen's favorite nice girls, poses with a Yale University student a few minutes before shocking a fancy movie industry banquet Sunday night by using a four-letter word. The student was receiving an award ar wiKthau for producing a university film. Jack Beniv introduced Miss Saint during the program with flowery remarks. She ackhowledged it with the four-letter word, describing it, later, as "the spark of the evening.!* She denied it was a slip. House Members, Who Will Be Running Again, May Weil Doom It WASHINCTON (AP)-A bUl to control election expenditures, which the S^te devoted nearly,! two weeks, appeared likely today to die a (juiet death in a House committee pigeonhtde. Despite Soiate passage Monday by a 59-22 vote, the pc^tical' facts of life were all against the meas- liOehigan Democratic Sens. Patrick V. McNamani and PhUp A. Hart voted wtth tthe majority Every member of the House, except those voluntarily retiring or seeking other office, is a candidate for re-elentkm this year. Though the bill wouldn't bectmie operative until next year, it would affect House members who must face another campaign in 1962. The bill is the first major congressional effort in 35 years to revise substantially the Corrupt Practices Act controlling the conduct of campaigns for federal office. It goes to the House Administration Committee headed by Rep. Onuir Burleson (D-Tex). Problems, Troubles Lurk NEW DELHIr India (AP)-lndia celebrated its 10 years of inde-pc»idence today with pomp but with problems looming at home and troubles hirkii^ over' the Himalayas. It was exactly 30 years ago that Jawaharlal Nehru, then a 40-year-old insurgent, moved the resolution in the Cbngress party's annual convention declaring India’s goal complete freedom from Brit- It was Nehru, on the same date 21 years later, who inaugurated a republican constituticm. The British had left 31 months earlier, on Atig. 15, 1947. Today President Rajendra Prasad takes the salute at a three- ain. at the red sandstone fort which housed Mogul imperial headquarters in India 300 years ago. the seven-mile route while jet aircraft swoosh above. Two thousand schoolboys and giris will march, sing and dance in pageants. Folk dancers, ranging from headhunters of the Northeast Frontier Agency, which Red China claims, to polished classical dancers, will perform. Carts drawn by camels, bullocks and elephants will jog along No man is lit to command (mother that cannot command himself, -miltarn Penn, 1669 Why More Training? The Job Guide, published by the U.S. Dept, of .Labor, gives this answer: "You should woigb carotolly tho loag-rna advaalagos eliorod by |obs you oro considoring against immodiato gains. “You should bo awaro of tho groat impeitonco oi odu(»tioa as a gonorol and spodiic lob assoL Tochnical or proios-sional training rocoivod oftor looving high school will givo you doiinito advontagos in sooking and finding a Job. Whon advancomont opportunilios occur, proforonco is gon- FREE PLACEMENT SERVICE The Business Institute 7 W. Lawrence of Pontiac A FAMILY AUTOMOBILE POLICY ^ao 000 KILLID SOOsOOO INJURED in traffic accldanta within one yeor/ Protect yourself, your family, your pstsen-gers. yOur csr irom the hezerds of the highway with a family automobile policy Kenneth G. HEMPSTEAD Circuit Judge H. Russel Holland also imposed $2-per-nMmth court costs on Mrs. Harper, who ha.s been living with her parents at 824 Oakley Park Rd., West Bloomfield Township, since her arrest Dec. 30. She was arrested by Ptmtiac poHce while attempting te pom the Bogus check at the Perry street branch el the Cpmniuntty Nattonal Bank. Detecttves said she admitted passing six other checks totaling more than 92.MS. Mrs. Harper, whose husband David, 20, was sentenced to Jack-son Prison for violating his probation for a like (dfense, pleaded guilty Jan. 11 to uttering and publishing. Harper was arrested a block away from the bank where his wife was arrested. Long, Long Rood FAIRBANKS - The Alaska highway stretches out southward of this Alaska city through the Yukon Territory and Canada, 1,523 miles to Dawson Creek, B.C. When a normal adult is quiet and .resting his heart coptnuHs at rate of about 70 times a minute. Bigger Men Behind Them? Two Extremists Spark French Revolt in Algeria Astrologer Tells King; Stay Home on Feb. 26 By MERRIMAN SMITH IIPI White Houm Reporter WASHINGTON - Backstairs at the White House; There's a fascinating story kicking around (he State Department where the officials quite naturally don't want to^scuss the situation It seems, however, that President Eisenhower invited the king of Nepal to visit the United States on Feb. 26. As delicately as possible, the word was passed back from Nepal to the State Department that the king couldn't make it on that date. taken a qnick lorit at the calendar and decided that Feb. n was destined to be one of the Ung’s poorer days. So, according to new plans, the king of Nepal will visit the United States in late April, during a period which his astrologer regards with favor. In these days of budget-prun- PARIS (R — The insurgent French groups that provoked the bloody fighting in Algiers are commanded by two avowed extremists ready to fight to the end to keep Algeria French. They are fiery Ptorre Lagail-larde, 28, a lawyer and a deputy in the French National Assembly who commands rightist student groups, and Joseph Ortiz, 47, a cafe owner who has organized the powerful semimilitary French National Front. There are suspicions that bigger men are behind them. But these two took to the barricades' and could face a death penalty if the military command in Algeria wishes to invoke its lull •Iqgal powers. ROSE IN 1958 LagaiUarde rose to prominence as an extremist leader on May 13,1958, when his students played a major role in the Algiers uprisings that toppled the weak Fourth Republic. Eleeted lator In the Nafional Assembly, be has flitted back and forth to Algeria. He makM Uttlo secret of bis contempt Better Quality MEN’S A WOMEN’S ICE SKATES. Sitot 5-12 HOCKEY A FIGURE s $7.50 surat iMCAiN omn wuT or TSuonAm PIERRE LAOAILLARDE ing. Congress probably would never appropriato funds for Eisenhower to have an astrologer if the President so desired. In fact, Congress doesn't even have an astrologer to call its own. During the ten years of republican rule, the whole country, from the Himalayas to the Indian Ocean, has come under one flag with the pensioning of 600 princelings., India has become one of the most staMe nations in Asia. It has conducted two free national elections. A second five-year plan is nearing completion and fai 15 months a third five-year plan is to start. Bincaase of this tight-ftoted policy, the Presideat might like But India still has 'a long way to go to achieve economic and social freedoms. Effective brakes have yet to be appUed to reduce her populattan growth of about five million annually. She still has a chronic:.food deficiency. up for him. according to “19(0 Zodiac” published by Zodiac International of New York. Eisenhower was bom under the sign of Libra and he may m well know now that his overall forecast f(»- 1960 says this; ".Business affairs will contain some opposition which may create problems and make your efforts seem futile and disappointing." Feb. 26, according to the Zodiac, would have been a fine day from the Eisenhower viewpoint and the Nepalese astrologer might study our side of tlie picture. The Preskj^nt's forecast for that day: "This day contains opportunity through travel and agreement;. make all the contacts you can. Some chance for a g(X>d investment; be enterprising.'* The President will be enterprising and traveling, all right. He’ll be in South America traveling like ail get-out. New Trustee of University a Good Scout RAYBURN LASHES A fellow Texan, Speaker Sam Rayburn, already has lashed out at one of the measure’s principal provisiona, to extend federal regu-' primaries as well as general elections. Rayburn says control, of primaries is a matter for the states. The current outlook for the bill is that it may be given some hearings by tile House committee and then be dropped, or be toned down and allowed to expire in a Senate-House conference committee. The bill would tighten coitrals| on financing elections of f^eral officials, principally members of Congress. The Senate voted to extend it also to candidates for president and vk« president. It would require more detailed disclosure of sources of campaign financing and how the mcmey is spent. The Senate defeated proposals to require primary elections for nominatton of congresskxial can-(jidates and to invalidate primary nomination if a court found that qualified voters had been denied Ister and vote. Referring to Red China as "one of our neighbors,” President Prasad in a broadcast Monday night reiterated his government’s determination to have tha' border problem with Red China settled hrough negotiations, despite ‘provocations (from across the border) and rising popular resentment (within India).” Official sources said one of the listeners to Prasad’s broadcast was Soviet President Klementi Voroshilov, here on an official visit. Another Battle for Kennedy, Humphrey Eyed Just Small Potatoes OTTAWA — The Canadian waters of the Great Lakes, Superior, Erie, Huron and Ontario, comprise only about one-fifth of the total fresh water lakes area lying within the Dominion. Warm Springs foundation, anti-paralysis institute founded President F. D. Roosevelt, normal accomm(xiations for about 150 patients. NOW! HURON BLOOMFIELD. N.J. (AP) Newest member of the Cornell j University board of trustees is an 11-yearold cub soout and Little League baseball player. Ezra Cornell, a tousle-haired j .sixth 'grader at Brookdale School, ’will have to wait ten years before he can take his seat On the 49-1 member board. He succeeds bis late father -as I the oldest lineal descendant of the school's founder, Ezra Cornell. But | New York law forbids i from serving as a trustee, so thel university will hold his place Thurs. era's the kind of ightly shocking fun, elightfully daring tn-rtoinment that comes I only once in a e moon! Ortiz is a dark-haired, deepeyed rightist of loBg conviction. He speaks in bitter phrases, I' thin lips twisting into a sneer when mentioning Us enemies. He was imprisoned in 195T o the order of the then delegate general in Algeria, Robert La-coste, himself a hero of the right-wing French settlers. Ortiz was suspected of participating in what is known as the “bazooka plot" that cost the life of an aide of Gen. Raoul Salan, then French commander in Algeria and supposed target of the UST TIMES TOnn 'TIGEIID «r TOM lIOOLEr locmwiumm** I EAGLE STASn WED. it’s th9 . . V '"‘1 CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) -en. Hubert H. Hbmphrey (D-Minn) and Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass) are ready to enter West Virginia’s May 10 primary — provided the other one does to Both candidates for the Democratic presktontial nomin____________ have said they will run here if is opposittoo. The fillip MALSEV WDNNR CNARLEB UME*WILLCOX PONTIAC HttM# Tottigbt OPEN FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY HiXD mv\ 4k'vrKt'Hn B' EXCLUSIVE OVER! IK suNi Egan-M(£uire-Dh^Kennedy-D()nahue N EXYIA: R0UB4KAYIN6 SPOIT REU • CARTOON r BICHTBEN THfe PONTIAC PkESS. TUESDAY. JANUARY 26, im. “T^ Frdni the Press Box mtWKOSOL.tMkMim DEAR SIR: Now the Lions' situatUm comes out in the open. A few we^ ago everyone was denying there was any friction In the organisation. Now they’re trying to ei^aln their differences. Seems to me there are too many chiefs and not enough Indians in the Lions organization. Thejr sure made fools of themselves down at the pro meetings. Jack Cohn Dear Jack: What fools these mortals be, and what mortals those Lions arc. ★ ★ ★ Dear Sir: You ran a letter from a shut-in who asked why someone didn’t televise a game from U. of Detroit so that he could see thosd two 9oph(»nores DeBusschere and North. You were right when you said there was a bunch trash coming out of De^it TV stations which could ba eliminated to allow televising a game or two. I was one of the unfortimate ones who didn’t get in to see the Notre Dame game. Why couldn’t they have televised that game? Snneone like the shut-in man would have enjoyed It. Of course so would I after coming back home. Frank Kaminsky Dear Frank: If the seats and tickets were available, there would have been. 18,000 at that U. of D.-Notre Dame game, I was told. It was sold but long in advance. There ara many problems which arise in setting up quick telecasting arrangements,;bnt as We said before those problems could be worked out by the station if they were on the baU. WWW Dear Sir: There’s a little community up here in the northern part of Oakland County which currently has a basketball team we are mighty proud of. If you could tear yourself away from Pontiac Central for a quick minute or so you might get to learn to spell it and then give it some attention. Right now its one of the top Class C teams in the state. Guess who? Harold Dear Harold: Do you spell it 0« T^N.V.I.L-L.E? Is the nick-name "Blackhawks?” And is it ranked 8th in the AP ratings? Pretty good guessing, huh? And you really can't be serious in saying we don’t give the school any attention? ..WWW ; T^r Sirs: ^ van you tell melwhat’s keeping Pontiac Centnd fron ^tting voted the number one team in the state? I see where you guys are on some kind of state panel. Don’t you have enough Influence to swing it? Thomas B, Dear Tom: Apparently there are some who are not convinced PCH warrants the top spot. Now that Hamtramck and Highland Park, favorites cV the Detroit polling members, have fallen, there might be a chance. NEW YORK Wl-The DetroH Pistons thought they’d found the missing clue on how to neutrWize .amazing Wilt Chamberlfdn. Halas Could Have Last Word on NFL Leader" Wilt Scores 58 . Against Pistons Gum 9)ue with 34 potoU, soored in double figures. But there was ho combating Chamberiain. But counteracting Chamberlain by having seven players scar double figures turned out to .be just a lucky guest. The gang attack worked, once! Bat the towering rookie ol the Philadelphia Warriors saw that It didn’t work again last night. Be Jn«t was belter than ever, Qiamjierlain had the greatest game of his short National Basket* ball Assn, career last night, scoring 58 points. His barrage was only reason the Warriors, stung by Detroit Saturday, tumbled the Pistons 127-117 at Bethlehem, Pa. Detroit's tactics weren't changed from their 130-110 victory Saturday. Again seven Pistons, led by The Stilt's 58-point output was only six shy of the NBA record of 64 set earlier this season by Minne-apoiis' Elgin Baylor. Chuck NoUe ^trailed Siue for detroB scoring honors with points. Ed ConUn had 17, Shellie McMillon 16. BaUey Howell 13, Earl Uoyd 11 and Archie Dees 10. The defeat snapped a four- hr. Pistons. They meet Syraenoe here at Madiabn Square Garden tonight. Then they return home Wednesday against the Nationals again In nn NBA tloublebeader. Clnrinnsti and Minneapolis play the Brat game. Chamberlain stuffed 23 points of his massive total into the final period in last night's lone NBA encounter. Detroit had a chance until Chamberlain's last wild s^irt. The 7-footer hauled in 42 rebounds just to show he wasn't spendii^ all his time seming. Anderson-Fiie Showdown Won't Come Off Today DETROIT W—T h e promised showdown lor control of the Detroit Uons won’t ^ome off today SIG.NS FOB 19M — Harvey Haddix, who pitched a perfect game for 12 innings against Milwaukee last season, then lost, 1-0, in the 13th, signs his 1960 contract with the Pittsburgh Pirates. Haddix is joined by his wife, Marcia, and daughter, Teri, 2, as he puts the pen to the pact Pirate general manager Joe L. Brown witnesses the signing. Aging Williams Inks 2l8t Boston Contract What Is Ted's Role in '60? BOSTON im-wui the 1960 diap-ter of the TM WilUams story be entitled pInchhttterT Spot plajwr? Regular? * * W Williams and spring training will provide the answers. If the 41-year^ slugger b nueOy a piachhltter la the year ahead hr’U he the highetl paid Ml record la that category after Bigmng a cootrset yesterday at amounted to 100,000 but it never was clarified whether that figure meant gross or net income. A painful neck aflment was the main reason waiiams’ slways-lofty batting average fell down from .328 to .254 last aeaaai. After a brief, secret early morning session with general manager Bucky Harris, the colorful WilUams had agreed to his 21st Red Sox Ted recently testified under oath that his 1959 baseball earnings “WUlisms Is «1 and you can't ten about oM bull players,” man-ager Billy Jurgfo said isler. “How much you play at that. ge Is up to the Indlvldnal. I do know wo can expect to get a Iql ol use out of him SB a pinchhittrr. I'll have to oee bow ho does In spring “Ted isn't going to play 154 baU games, let's be realistic," Jurges continued. “We can't say whether he’ll play 100 or 75. I'll be happy if he plays 60. I'm leaving it up to All-Star Pin Points OrF-BALANCe I By HARRY SMITH Many teU me I’m lucky to get a strike at aU when I finish at the foul line with an off-balance hop, the habit that was so noticeable on television when I won the All-Stai: Championship. I no simple solution to the 3ff-balance problem. CoKwdinating the pushaway with thfc .first step is one of the key actions in a smooth-delivery and I get strikes because I’ve learned to adapt and compensate for my bad delivery. Many novices ought to sympathize wUh me because a h^ing motion at the foul line is fairly common, although it’s bad. I developed my delivery when at t1 years of age and ■ whop-plag lit pouads I fsod myself uaaw a( my light weight 1 tead-ai to lam to the iool Uae to et My abUtty to hit the pocket oonatstently with a good strike hall daaptto a poor finish makes me an exception. I certainly don't recommend that other bowlers do Hm act of releasing the ball la tilt Culmlnattoe of all the n mmtt that load HP Jo It, Hiera is a proper follow through. A hopping ntotion during the release makes a foUow through difficult, and it it'this act which keeps a bowler from dumping the baU on the aDey. Slowing one's steps during the approach and making certain that the left knee is bent suffldently wUl also aid smoothness. him to say when and how much he’ll play.” Said Harris of his meeting with Williams; “Ted told me *I don't know whether I can do It or not but If you want me to give it a whirl I will.' "I replied ‘the Red Sox definitely want you and at the same figure as last year.' ” World champion I-os Angcleit DodgtTs signed veteran outfielder Duke Snider to a 137,000 tract, a reported |S,000 cut from faMt year. His ION batting average was .308 oompnred to J13 • 1 M Rodsars 4 1 * ............. S I 14 S ( M HsIMo * 1 1 Kuklkk iitnn B»rui “ « « SO-ljg : » n M ss-u Leaders of the two rival factions — president-general manager Edwin J. Anderson and Vice president D. Lyle Fife - stUl are at Bflami Beach attending the National.Football League meetings. The Board of directors was to have met today and a pitched battle was expected. Anderson and Fife brought their dispute into the open at the meeting where NFL owners are bogged down in the aelection of a commissioner. 'The meeting will be held at some later date,” said Anderson. Sometime before' .the Feb. 26 stockholders’ meeting." Leaders Toppled in Class A Loop Royals Sudden Death Victors Over Newman, Shaw's Beats K.C. The leaders took beatings last night in Clau A City League basketball action at Pontiac Central. Two foul shots by Sam Soles in sudden-death overtime brought the Lakeside Royals a 61-59 victory over the league-leading Newman A.M.E. quintet. The score was 56-56 at the end of regulation play and 59-59 after the 1st overtime period. Soles’ two tTM tooseo gave 18 points. Bob Finley netted U tor Newman and Lakenide’s Feftx Brooks had 17, Kansas City signed outfielder Dill Tuttle and pitcher Bob Grlih. Grim had a 6-10 record for the A’s last year. Shaw’s Jewelers tied the Knights ol Columbus for 2nd place by defeating the defending city " champions, 66-56. John Keller the Knights was tops in scoring with. 17 points and Dick Ayling bagged 14 for the Jewelers. Jensen Decides to Quit Baseball for Family Life LOS ANGELES (ft-Jackie Jensen, the silent strongman who was too good to be obscured even by the tall shadow of the greaft Ted Williams, is quitting baseball. He told The Associated Press today he turned down a generous 1960 contract offered by the Boston Red Sox because: ‘‘Mostly, I wanted to spend some time with the family. And I al4 have aome business ventures that want.to stay a little closer to." The stocky, 32-yenr-old outfielder -winner of the American League's 'most valuable player" award in 1958—had been rumored near retirement for some time. But he said it was "Just the other day” that he made up his mind "after thinking about it a long time." “I .was thinking of retiring after last season. I worked at my busi-neas that way and hoped that’s how it would turn out. ■'The Red Sox sent me a very nice contract, one I had no awi>. plaints about. They’ve always been very generous to me." 5-1 Victory for Stampers Dick Gourde performed the hat trick and Bob Beyers and Jim Beijj each scored once to lead the Detroit Stamping Co. to a 5-1 victory over Vernon’s last night in a Detroit Sr. Hockey League game at the State Fairgrounds. Four goals late in the 3rd period broke a 1-1 tie and moved the Stampers into 3rd place, one game shy the lead. The Philadelphia Phils signed Ken,Walters, 26-year-old outfielder obtained in a winter trade with Detroit, hnd relief pitcher Dick Farrell. Farrell had a 1-6 record last year while Walters played at Fort Worth. The Chicago Cubs now have one player left to sign—infielder Harry Bright—after pitcher Art Ceccarelll and catcher Cal Neeman signed early today. □ass B activity at Pontiac Northern, front-running Clarkston stayed unbeaten with a 92-36 rout of winless Walled Lake as Dick Lippert notched 23 poihts. Chet Woodmore's 17 points paced Grilf Grill to a 70-6.') upset win over the Avondale Morchjnts. Jerry Hill netted 2^ in defeat. After nine failures, the Aces won their 1st game of the season in the,Class D circuit with a 34-30 conquest of Eastside Shopping. The Jefferson Jets defeated the Black Hawks, 43-39, in the other "D" game. Poppa' Bear May Untangle HopelesM^ Mr Wlrashato PRO OF YEAR — Heavyweight boxing champion Ingemar Johansson (left) receives the multi-jeweled Hickok from Rqy Hickok after being named Professional Athlete of 1969. Presentation was made at annual charity dinner at Rodiester Press-Radio Club. Ingo is 10th winner of the belt. MIAMI BI^CHierFU. (AP) -The quiet man at the stormy National Football LOague meeting may yet have the last wwd. HopOtessIy snarled in an effort to elect a successor to the late Bert Bell as oommlisioner, the owners turned - to the man who probably knows more about ]iro-fessional football than any one alive. They decided to try to taka the handcuffs off George HaUs, owner of the Chicago Bears and a pioneer of the game. Halas has been unaMe to apeak his mind on the conimissioner for fear heHl tail support on expansion if he taUp Recdrd Field Tees Off Today in PGA Seniors DUNEDIN, Fla. (AP)-Wlth A purse of 81.500 and a trip to England awaiting the winner, a record field of more than 300 golfers starts teeing off today in the annual PGA National Seniors Tournament. national affair, with the winner meeting the British champim in 36-hole match for tiie Teacher International Troirfiy. The event will run through next Sunday, with 40 players cutting in on the 815,000 prize money. Today’s field was confined to players 55 years of age or older, with the 50-54 bracket due to start play in the 724iole event tomor- Northern Tankers Post 5th Victory In as much as all but two of the living former champions are in the 56 and over class, today’s play should see some excellent scoring. Pontiac Northern won its swim meet of the season and 4th in the North Suburban League-by whipping Madison Heights, 70-22, it the PNH pool yesterday afternoon. The meet was originally scheduled for Madison’s pool but it has not been completed as yet, therefore the meet was transferred Willie (hoggin is the defending champion, as well as the world champion. He defeated Arthuf Lees, British senior titleholder, in England last year. The American champion annually makes an expense paid trip overseas to play the British titlist. Although any senior, regardless of age. Is elis^Ie for the over-all championship if he completes 72 holes, there are cash prizes in the various age brackets. There are seven of these positons, each comprising a five-year span, except for the seventh, which takes in entrants from 80 yean of age upward. Chuck Gress was a double winner for PNH by taking the 100 yard backstroke in 1:21.6 and 200 yard Individual medley in 3:06.6. Lone first lor Madison came as result of PNH disqualification in medley relay event. PNH-MADISON SDHIIAaTt ■^loS jr»rd’*iri»it»to-aui SatHlf (PKHt, PhU (VtUf (PNH), Tq(U Plemtos (Ml Time 1:S3.I. SM yard frMttjrl*—Rick Stewart (PNH), RM 0»«M (PNH), RaraU Pos Ml -rimt: S:».l. IM paid ba^luMka^b«^_ Every year sees a group of newcomers to the ranks. Last year the “rookies” included such able performers os Paul Runyan, Dkk Metz and Duke Gibson. This year Oiuck Cbngden of Tacoma, Wash.. Dick Selim of Oklahoma City; Herman Barron, long a tournament pro, and Horton Smith, make their debuts. Gene Sarazen hasn’t missed tournament since he became eligible and the (act that this famed performer has been able to win only twHce In six years gives an idea of the class of the competi- The seniors tournament dates back to 1937. It wasn’t .until 1954, however, that it became ah liitor DESTlNA-nON . . . OLYMPICS! - Irish runner Ron Delaney is shown in his new office overlooking Kearney and Market, one of San Francisco’s j)usiest intersections, as he begins ,his activities as a sales representative for Irish SP WtrcfhaU Air Lines after transfer from New York. Delaney plans an immediate start on training for the Rome Olympics, with (^iden Gate Park in mind as his main r|nning locale. .... . _____ ^cMbcrt (PNH), Mt KlcsUns (Ml. Ttmi. CSl.S. IM T*rd breutroke—WdUf Johntoa (PNH). Tom Howko (PNH), Utk* ------- • M). Time: 1:311. Jrantylo—Prod Korn Bbrrio (PNH), Tom PMaUqi DlT(a|—1«« Nolbtri (PNH), lucd (M) Ron Lud* (PRH). 300 Ind. Mtdl.-PbU Or*u. (M). imr. OIpBO ___ _____ _____ ____________ (PNH) P)iU W«)U (PNH). Mt KMlng Tlmo; 3:06.0. — mcd. rol.—(M) Charllo MoDtoa*, Oewey BtiMi-. BtU RoDihaw. Time: 4:30.0. "f. ‘ Sylvan Skates to 7-3 Victory Over Hardware fobtbpll Pioneer Wo» Keeping Quiet Fearing Expansion HirDH^ 33 rounds of baHotiog since the voting stained last Wednesday, Halas abstained 3L times. The one time he voted wii for Paul Schiasler, special events director of the Loa AiikelM Tiroeiji Yesterday, with the vote stalemated at seven for Marshall Leahy of San Francisco and lour for acting commissioner Austin H. Gunael, Leahy’s supporters asked Halas to attend theh: caucus and explain his position. Ai^)arentiy, Los Angeles. Oeve-land, San Francisco, Detroit Green Bay, New Y«k and the Chkego Cardinals wereift awara "Poppa" Bear was ooDoemed they wouldn’t live up to their promise Philadelphia last October to Dallas to the league this year. Hw "solid seven" u the Leahy _poup has become known deny a report they asked Halts join their group and to try and coax two of the opposition to swing to their camp. Th^ deny'also that in return they inxmised a solid Uock for ‘ expansion, including Walter Werffner. an avo«ed opponent ol lulinittlng^ pew meaibera in 1960. i|alas , alro . says such things wereh*t aMgHM. However, Geqltk l^en shall, excitable owner of the Washington Redskiiw. obiftiutly lieved that is exactly what happened. He ripped Into iNolfne# and Mrs. Wolfner, owner of thft Cards, asking them if they had changed their minds on expansion since coming to Miami Beach, Mrs. Wolfner, the power behind the Cards, -retorted, "Well reserve decision on that until sifter e elect a commiaaioner." Perhaps the solid seven is telling the truth; there was no suggested deal. But it seemed strange they spent 3^ hours behind closed doors just to pass the time of day. It also seemed strange that Hallas then talked with the (our clubs opposing Leahy,' Washington, Phil-Qeveland and Pitts- bui^h. Three of the minority tour at, ret confirmed they believed Halas had been offered a deal. Later they backed off, apparently feeling such comments were creating aome bitterness in the sifo-ation. All of it didn’t amount to much anyway since the lour anti; Lcahy voters refused to budge. Halas says he told the solid seven that he wasn't as concerned Three goals by Bill Mondor and; about a-commission as he was two by Boh Alton led the Sylvan about ettpansion. Fliers to a 7-3 triumph over J it M Hordwarr yesterday in a City Junior Hockey League game Northside Paric for boys 13 to 15 years of age. Bob Schaffer tallied twice for the losers. In the 16-to-18 double • elfnrina-tion tournament, Spencer Floor mMts Northern No. 1 today at 6 p.m. wjth the winner facing the Village Snack Shop Thursday at the same hour. Thursday’s winner plays unbeaten Standard Forge lor the city title. The Mt View Rangers play the Pontiac Rangers Wednesday at 6 o’clock in a 13-15 contest. "Expansion Is mol's important the league than a commission-who might serve ong, two or live years.” Halas says he told the Leahy people. Aboye all," said the (Chicago owner, "we must have unity at all cost.^ Halas said he asked both sides to reevaluate their positions. It would seem at this point that there was little unity. little chance of agreement on a commissioner. Indications are the possibility pi adjournment without electing a commissioner is still strong. Gophers Hot, Burn Iowa By The Associated Priws Minnesota became the first Big Ten team to win two conference games away from home this season when the Goitre shocked Iowa 87-72 last Right. Hitting Ml a record-breaklag 7t per cent oT their shets, the GopiMrn toned tiro game Into a rant after taktag a 4S-S3 halt- lowa dropped to sixth with a 4-3 mark and now also trails Ohio State (4-9) and Illinois, MicMgan State and Northwestern, who are tied for third with 3-J records. Minnesota attemptied only 47|oo(mters. shots front the field but hit on 34 to establish a Big Ten record. The previous mark of 63 per cent was set by Indiana against Ohio State Feb. 2. 1969. Ron Johnaon, Minnesota’s leading point-maker, was held scoreless In the first half, but finishra with 13 points. Ray Cronk. sophomore, topped the Gophers ) with 21. I (jonferrtice activity picks up Saturday with three games scheduled. Michigan SUte, the defending Champion, gafs to Columbus to meet first idace Ohio stata in regionally televised matinee. Michigan is at PurdUe and Wiimbn-sin at Minnesota in. evening en- BIO TEN aASaRTaSL.1. 8TANDINOS Ohio flUU ' GONrERENCB w L rCT. jrTs or 6 f l.iM 336 l«I W J MlontBota PlC^OAli STATE iTaiihwKUra . . .6 3 .NT 461 413 : ! ! .S? S 8T \i t IDIIUIM !::!i 1 S Me 'iS •jy tlTK rONTIAC PllESS. TUfeSbAY. .TAXUilRY 2B. 1000 yiXKTKK?r AP Prep Cage Baitings Bjr The AaMieieted Frtm ^The competition lor tarn ■pom in The AsKdated Pren rttiitfe ia getting a lot tougher. ! lea<^ 1 The leadsTs remain unchanged lor the Kcond itralght week, but the fegnt-ninnera in each daaa-Muake^in Hdghu, Ludlngton. Bangor and .Maple Oty qien Lake -are being hard-pretaed to retain the No. 1 ranking. * Here’* the way The Aaaociated Prew panel of 30 sports writers and broadcasters rates the teams this week (10 point! lor lirst, for iwcond, etc.): Junior Wings Hike Lead DETOOIT tUPI)l-The Detndt Junior Red Wings registered their sixth straight vicU»-y last ni|^t with a M win over the Riversi*, Ont., Regents in a Border Cities Hockey League game. # * A Detroit goalie Jim Clement, 18, a University ot Detroit freshman, posted his second shutout of the season as the Wings increased their lend to f^ points over second-place Chafham. ; « ..... ................ !-* 4. Rudrard ............,1)-S t. Csnen^................S-! It. owiBB ..............ii-i r It Kslamaiw ChrlMlan.....T-3 Otben, IB order: Addlaon. Cb<4tars*» ^Bthollr tvort. Chorlorolx. OQtoaason. Crystal Mta. FUnt St John. Ow^ St. Paul, SherldaB. Hou«hteB Labe, linrtoy-SUnvood. Oseoda. Satina* St. Mry. ContrsrlUa. Soysvlllt. Corunos. TI|roo Oaks. Lake Sner'. Rn'ithtMl. ^ CLAM O RaUat. toaai VALUES BRAKE and FRONT END SPECIAL! 1. Adjust Brakes 2. Add Broke Fluid 3. ’ Pack Wheel Bearings 4. Align Front End 5. Balonce Both Front Wheels i95 Ti t‘««fone MUFFLERS Wide Selection Of Sizes and Types Fmm ^95 UP Too much tKsd left to re-esp... plenty of mileage left in them. ...lA-t IM ., t-t ‘ t\ II? ....' s to! MVraiittU pirrif'!!.'!!!!' 11-t M Othara. la ord»r: R«ass, Trout Creek. Powers, Flint Hoarrr. Mlo. Au Ores. Corert. SrlttOB-MaeoB. Vi' Lothrep. AtlaBU, DeWttt Sports Calendar TVKBDAT B. St. Frederick atOL St Mai St. Rita at St. Beaedlet St. aement at 81. James Oxford at Orion Helhr at PUot HolT R^emi Clavsoo at Werren Uneoln Laoeer at Flint ManderUla lailaaw A s| B .1 Hs«ei Park rt.kSS «(h Seh< e Ce-'-sl .. ...... car Raskelhall At Uaeala Jaalaf eieb |> — Ler> Sales A Aenrlee s Fledees f o.m,; Blks Ho. TM - -■•a q m. WsUHard lUskesai At Crerr Jaalar III ASS B - Felice F«i- RneB.itrr'HI-Y 1 HI-Y »«. PonlUc ‘••*1 Firion.. 7:J# o m : Flr»t Chrl«-Oi^h v«. Pootloc Cxntrol Qlodlo- Idie Eagles T Champs ! The Pontiac YMCA Intramural basketball League concluded Its opening round of play last night with the idle Eagles finishing on top at 6-0. Engineering tripped GM Tech 41-25, the Lancers edged the Falcons 54-51 and Trudks downed the Crazy Eights. 42-19 completing the slate. Second round play starts Feb. 1. .Sonny Green of Emmanuel I ford’a Dmig Stott with H.S to ^ bowed out of high .school basket- share Uh with Earl Richardson management of any cliaflenf.erihall with another good showing of Orton\ille. Hlott was eounty (in ease he should succeed in :><■ Friday to continue his reign werj ninacmp a year ago. Out of the the eounty individual scoVing racej top M this week is Merx- tiullup with a 23.4 average. ; of Birmtagham, who tinisbed ia The mid-year gradual piled upj the grsup last ummmi. m poinis in five ^mes^ Johnj Rig Don Appleton of Brighton Meadows of Royal Oak Dondero ^t only keeps rolling along atop' ranks No 2 at 23 per game. Bud ,he area list but now heads both Acton of Troy leads in total points divisions with a 24.4 average with 247 and has the 3rd best Armada star Terry Wills is second average of 225. Ron Morlan of • ■ Holly follows at 21.7. . A sew entry this week Is Ox- coming champion and additionally over the promotion of heuv.\-weight championship (contests both with respect to the ‘live gate’ and the much more lucrative ancillary tmovie-radio-l'Vi rights” The papers said D'Amato was to use ••subservient promoters and managers foisted by him challengers desiring to- contend for the title.” Then, the papers continued, the anejilary rights were, taken out of normal promotion and competive channels and "manipulated solely for the mutual benefit D'Amato-Patterson and Kahn-TelcPrompTer interests." ohnnj OUo. ____ HIOHLAND EARS. _________ IM, WcatricM. R.J.. Ilopiitd MUtoo Eppt. ILANO tURK. OUo Smith. —, ..Mtflold. H.J ---- --------- 1C. EmI. Oranxr. —fORK-8i Two More Players Sign With Tigers in the area at 21. OAKLAND COCNTV SCOIING Allx. W. I Sf"'“‘'**'j>RoVE^LlED Powered SNOW Remover^ , O00S the Wtfk ef W Mm with Sheeels—oauly and siptpJy —you jutt gukh H with iHth etf^l Enginesred to meet svary snow removal condition—handles crusted, packed, wet or flaky snow easily. High speed powerful blower throws the snow high and far to the side of walks or drive Adjustable height for gravel paths, dirt paths, ate. Powerful BRIOOS A STRAHON En-fine with Carbureter Heater Unit. All winterized—ready to use, anytimol J & R AUTO STORES />,»fewertul, slow-moving feeder blades break-up pocked, crusted or wet snow whkti is then fed by power evger into high speed discharge chute. 1—Snow con be directed to the left, right, front or resn with the fully odjusteble disdimge chute, 115 NORTH SAGINAW ST. DETROIT (F—Two more players are under contract with the Detroit Tigers today. Utility infielder Casey Wise and pitcher Jerry Davies signed 1980 contracts yesterday. So far six Appi,ton Bri«hton players are under contrad for IheiJilx ...........t uJ season. jssch.hb.rt. Almont t 137 Center fielder AI Kaline STLbb"™!.? enV'''* ' talked contract with Tiger general s«h»utai, h. na.ta . but didn't sign. Wise was acquired by the Tigers from the I^ilwaukee chain. Davie split last season with the Tigers and their Charleston farm. •fhe St. Michael Shamrocks, currently sharing second .with OLSM, should rack up their 7th triumph in eight tries at Royal Oak ‘ Mary. New leader St. Benedict will be entertaining the same St. Rita quintet which upset Orchafd Lake and St. James plays Qement. Oxford will provide the opposition at Lake Orion in a battle of old rivals which both schools always look forward to. The Wildcats are ready for all comers now with Dong hlott buck going great guas along with Jeir Brady. They ahonld be “up" for the orraslon .following an Impressive overtime triumph over Imiuy Of)'. Coach Hal Carlin's LO Dargons have become an unpredictalHe group, whipping strong Troy one week and theh bowing to weak : Oak Park the next. They YMy he ready to rebound, altl^gh vet starter Dean Callison is still out with mumps. The Valley game will have Flint Central at Saginaw in a makeup ofca provioOsly postponed contest. Arthur Hill is at home against Midland and Bay,City,£entral vs. city .. i 114 M4. foe Handy in WRrmups. Unbeaten ::"ii 347 22 5 Pontiac Central will visit Arthur 135- / 3 54 iijj Holly will attem|)t to find its I j?® victory style agaiit at Flint Holy' ;*'■ 7 r» }L( Redeemer, Lapeef will be in the 7 122 17 4 same city to duel Mandeville, ”’i* 1*7 jir Clawson is gt Warren Lincoln, ■ -• in iM North Branch vs. Yale. MUIlngton I’.'i* 141 1*. 11 travels to Vassar, Port Huron goes " n i” 15 ir® Crosse Pointe. Lamphere visits ■. 7 1*7 15 31 Huron. Brown City meeU Ooswell- am ELUOT NOW SERVING YOU AT Homer Right Motors BUSINESS PHONE OB t-2521 HOME PHOHE PE S-3662 Rich»t<<')on, OrtonriU. Stott. Oxford ... ..... Hurntr. PCH .......... Lake OrloQ' . BloomMeld ... Ortenrltlc • .... DaBbt. St Michael .... Bradj. Oxford Maron. BloomtlaM HJIU Ortckl. RO Shrine ____ Hate. OL St. Marj Behuett. Milford ..... Thorpe. Arnodale ..... Chaplhan. FSrmlnxton Hutchlnxe. OrtonetHt-e, Allen. Walled Lake COUNTY ABBA Scot INO ,_ « TP A VO. I five IS host to St Theresa and ••*1 Farmington ,OLS seekt;, a second }• » straight triumph over Benedictine. 124 i>> Full schedules on all league l‘ i fronts will resume Friday with the . Zink?. MminxtM i ‘1? RIbner. North bn ' * - - i 'iV.to the road. TOUR SUBURBAN CHEVROLET e PONTIAC • DEALER Oxford, Michigan • On M-24 BUICK Leorn to Skate Bloomfield Hills Skating Studio Rink QvoilobI- (or private porfic Ml 6-0406 805 W. Long lake Rd., Bloomfield Hills Paneling & Plywood Clear Redwood Paneling . . ,',$185 perM Incense Cedar Paneling..$185 per M Pine Paneling....$165 to $220 per M Pre-Finished Plywood Paneling 20c per ft, DONALDSON LUMBEfe 27 Orchard Lake Av6. FE 2-8381 • free Cuflomer Parkiag Maniar-I Callrac Beekelkall SOl'TH Oeorfla Tech 43. Kentucky 44 Vlrttnla Tech W7 Furman 77 Uyola. New Orleani 43 HouiUin (I . MIDWEST MtnnraoU »7. Iowa n Crntrnary 4ti Oklahoma City SI' Adamt. Colo. St. 70. Weat New Max U Colorado SUto Col. n Colo. MUiet 44 HAYING TRANSMISSION TROUBLE? FREE ESTIMATE NO OBLIGATION TRANSMISSION REPAIR ON EASY TERMS Rriax yonr tranamUeloa Iroabtee lo Jim foi adrk. deneadabla' eorrtoa. Yoa art ■■yr •• oMIcatlM diataoia year eaoe and gtro a frat aeUmala. Jini’s Tiansnisslon 4f N. Park# PE S4fl7 WHY SO HOT? new low prices and you'll see why fast. For example, this Monterey 4-door Sedan is only *2730*. Where else can you get^much car for the money? Whwe else <»n you get a car so beautifully clean and trim? And where else can you get one so superbly built— where every single car is road-tested before it is shipped, not just spot checked. Check Mercury’s FOR ONLY *36 MORE THAN TOP LOW-PRICE NAME CARS—This price difference over the low- price car iRiys Mercury’s more beautiful styling. It buys a quieter ride (23% more insulstioa), greeter stability (7* longer wheelbase), and extra quality. See and try 24 more advanta^-at your Mercury dealer's showroom. eOfMERCURY tlNCOUI-msCURY DIVISION ' Russ Dawson Motor Co., 232 & Saginaw St., Pontiac, Mieh. •rwKyTY THlE PONTIAC press: TUESDA Hale and Hearty... but Kept His Word MacArthur, 80, Did Vade Away* C NEW YORK-oDoug^lfoe-, Aithur, 80 today, b a man o( hb word. He ftays hale uid hearty but hu laded a^. thua luUUi ends ot the raamorabla tUtonent he made to the Concreaa in A|vU U51. A few very doac old frbada tea him aodally. But hii puWk life, hb pidtlk; atatemente, have ended. A rapartor who eaUa the Wal* deri lor aa tartarrtetr b toM to eaH the ottee at W Charch 8t ' wMoh the DepaiteMt o( Defeaae matataiaa ler him. He has aot • heea there for yean. A aerce^ oc^piea the room and handlea the ever^mlnbhing volume of mail: Rcqueats for autographed picture*, iwx^ectiona erf ■oidien who aertred under him tbromh the years, appeals for political or financial aid, and a sprinkling (rfantl-Democratic Party Inoadsides which the writers feel he would like to scan. WATCHES TKUEVBaON He watches Mevbkm a great deal each* evening and maintains an especially keen interest in i^arts program* — even tebvtaed wrestllqi m^ches. Hb^ companion throuidi a talkevening b generally bb attractive and vivacious wile, Jean; hb handsome. music-minded son, Arthur, or hb. veteran business associate ipid military buddy, lilaj. Gen. Oourtney Whitney. Oea. Whltaey, who b aaaed- MaeArfiiur's last great outside tteraat b the affairs of West | Point. He has known more about the arsomri of the Army football team^wer the past «0 years than any dther individual. He wu dhoe ib manager, ahd respoiidbb for makfag up tts schedule. Ha Jlkce to recall that he ever- rbiBg coaU, includhig the price of butter. the gaii^ had had;m tattmate knoeto!^ of the price'of b«ter since enterii« West Point in 1898. He was bopebasiy mbcast that harrowing al^t and was further plagued by hOarsenen., The stcamroOer tactics ti Ton Da way aad tha mea arawad always ha at oddO with H.S.T., Gep. Omar Bradley and others who directed tha tCoccpn War. MacArthur b abaolulaly sure he could have won ttet war ded iy, if ptemittad to fight it as he Had fought the odien tat which be Sperry Read Carp., has dedicated hb reeeat IHerto sef^bg aa Mae-Arthur's '‘bbekbg back." Even very old asaoebtes (rf MacArthur must first see Gen. Whitney before there b ^ opportunity —however slim—of aeeing MacArthur. “dear It with Courtney” b the password around the superb, oriental decor apartment in the Waldorf Tower*. ■omethlac af a elead-a ■ (hat he waa, b trath, a prslBasIsaal the Jdayer was Chrbty Mathewaea, who was ta aaether There was bitterness in MacArthur after -President Trumta took him off hb cherished but wracking poat as supreme commander of U.N. forces in Korea. The general returned home to the most tumultuous public demonstration in the nation’s history, but soon found himself—victim of bad advice—stumping die lai^, making Increasing quavering speeches abojut the dire catastrophes which would befall if the Republican Party were not returned to power, d ♦ it' MacArthur felt that Bob Taft waa the only man who coUW reverse the trend be plainly feared, and he backed Taft in a way he considered proper. There were no pro-Taft speeches from an open window on the 37th floor of the Waldorf suite, but at) who called on him knew where hb loyalty lay. By thus keepiag It i ha was abb to saaiid partial keymrfa speech at the OOP eonventbn at Chbago ta IMS. It offered him a plstform almost u noble aa the dab from which he addressed the Congress the year before. But hb speechwriters pro-vided him with a hopeless turkey, a windy wandering complsint about opetay ta pafitba aga|a. The encroaching years have rought. mellowness. MacArthur was quoM recently as saying. In effect, that Trunum displayed a lot of courage when he fired But on one point, MacArthur will THE GIRLS Then he srauld have puHed hade across the Yalu and apr^ a radio-active cobak“bdt" across Korea, over which, he tslt, no Invader could thereafter safely march. But thb and ofiier remark-abb plans were not to be, and a flow^ing - and confident Goliath grows ta Qw Far East, . BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES By EdgBr.MartiB Publisher Gives for News Study ^ I. NewhousB Fund R«l«ases''$2 Million to Start Center, Teoch SYRACUSE, N.Y. lAPl-^htab-^danent df the Newtiouae Cdfti-munications Center for education and research in mass comiauntoa-tkxis has been aniiaunced by Syra- Dr. WiUtam P. ToUey, (^lancel-lor of the university, said Monday the center will be made possible by a aeries of gifts from the New-house Foundation, estabibhed in 1935 by Mr. and Mrs. Samdel I. Newhouse. The Newhouses have mnde an initial gift - TUKSDAY. JANUARY 20. 1900 8i Finance Buyers Jump In to Ease Slump NEW YORK (f) - A vigONWi buying wavt rrued a itock ma^ ket akunp and kft prices mixed eariy this aftemopn. Ov«edl trad> Ing was fairty active. Gains and losses ol fractions to about a point peppered the list of key stocks. Or * * In the wake ol yesterday's sharp decline the market was steadier at the start, with prices uneven. Then the market sagged quietly to some fairly steep losses. Chemicals were shaken down pretty badly. Steels and motors declined. The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce brought to the Firmer's Market by growers and sold then) in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Marfcem. as ol Thursday. *■ nadied la fast eiioagh to put the . ticker tape behind traasactlous ter a spell of It mlmrtes. As Steeb and electronics were higher. Motors, chemicals, oils, tobaccos and drugs were irregular. Rails continued lower on bal- N«w York Stocks (UU Mamlng nsum kfutr dMimu Air Redao . .. 7S • Allied Cb .. M Allied Sira , M. AIIU chsi ... ]| AJem Ud . .13. Aieos ...... M. AmMrUa .... 3I Am ; it Am MiHora ... 11. Am N Ou . .. M AmamtH .... Vl. Am TM a Tel . II. MARKETS IGrain Futures Limited Again Detroit Produce Attorney Tries to Help Carole Would Prove She Woi Never Told Her Righti, Talked Out of Turn I •LOS ANGELES tAP) - Was Carole Tregolf a witness against herself the day she was charged with raurderf Her defense attorneys are trying to prove It—in hopes the Fifth Amendment may help them win her freedom. AppiM. NoftlMra Spy. bu....'.'.’ dBOBiAai.as ...• Cabbki*. Curly, bu. ..c . Cubbuf*. R*d. bu.......... dorMrudtab ok........'.... dflu beh*. . .. Onlobi. dry is-lb. bus... RSi5;.*Slw-Rs% »«.• 5: b.k ■ Rudlahw. aiMk. H bu...... Rudirhf* botheuM dnu bob*. RuUbittA bo. ............. '>Mry CMbMa d«u Livestock Ana^db . ^ AnftC WM Arme« Ml ’Uy .;. ij Brth BUol ... H Boelni Air . so Bohn AlMD .. « 5orS*W»im ■ ■ 44 ? Brlet ily Si1 Motorolft . 1M< BrwiSik.::: 3.i “"•‘jf'*•; Budd Co ... 14.4 £“ti * • ■ J; Burreuiht .... 114 D«*ry • ♦{•I Cal rack .... II1 Nat Oypa « i Campb Boua .. 84 Nat Land .. . N.l CaplUI Alrl .. n 3 NT Cantral' .. M.l Caa*. JI .... 11.1 Nerf a Wrat ..Ml Cbu * Ob ... n.3 No An At . 3S.l Chrrilar ----S3 Nor Pae ..... 44.1 Cltlat BT4 . .. 441 Ohio Oil .. 31! coon CoU .1114 oponi^l M 2 * Oumna Ul A . .301 Colum OM ... ft A n i9 Cont w . 4t 1 ifi' Jl.t cont Con a a . 14 nr .. >4 Cont Mot.... 14.7 kpj^ Cola 34.3 Cont Oil . . IS Rwr 34.1 Coppcr_M| 11.7 ^lD4 D M.|| Phlt' SI (Afl _______ --------------JMS. Butt ooTly________ atausbtar tloora and haltan; Umiud •bovtot at oholc* ttaara and half ora: rariT aupplr: atandard and aood gradri pradomlnatins: incraaaad thoarlni of lood sradt bollart: Mwt compriM around 3S por cont of run; food and ...... (taora and halftra modaratalT "aS! !st s-bT. ‘2 tnt TalATel MSSUi **_!i* itaert 14 04- JMins Men IT .30.TI, fQMt food oDd choice heifpri Jotm it L . . tood choice heifers M.M. Kannacott . . 43 Klmb Clk 44 cuttora 11.44-t4.44. Krwr 1.444 Butchor. openint Uar 2 ‘iJjLt iii"' ■ Lor Olaaa . 47Ji"l'2J U Bi Ub McNBL . 14 4 uStb ».r« .. » , ^ mlaod trtdtt 144-144 Iba. -lUod irad«4 M4-444 Ibt. “ and I 444-404 lb. aova Vaakra - aalabk 111. _ _______ lolot and prlma vaakra 34-41: atandard Bd (ood 3t-S4; cull and utility 14-14 Bhaap aalabk 1.444. Blaukbkr Iambi forced I'Uc nlshtr: lowa ataady t • ••' '. 1 and 3 141-310 in. outc ----------- mliad No. 1 and 1 lM-131 wctfhta 13 74-14 44: amatl lot No. 1 Lcmt B Coin ! M l CHICAGO » - The grain futures market was limited again today to its. recent narrow trading range. Rfost prices were within mlnimunr fractions of pre^ous Miss TTegoff-at first reception-^thou^ rye developed list to a wealthy physician and «nnness in spdl^ ^is mtetress-wM arrested '^,,.,,^1, . 'July 28 after she told a prelimin- aiiirkiiu ^Li '****lary hearing her story on the night ifd doctor's wife was killed. .said there were no overnight de-I 74 a Sr'rnuSl Driref^il 23. and Dr. R. Bemiril quence to ^ prices either way..Fj,K-h. 42. are on trial on charges _ * i * lof murder and conspiracy for the government reported the | July 18 death of Barbara Jean l^^ber soybeap crush of 33,-1 Finch. 36. mm l^els was down about 2| The prosecutor who is seeking _ Iron from November but that | to prove her guilty took the stand 1 “ j ' soybean oil at 1 for the state Alonday to tell about nJi mil-1 Miss Tregoff's arrest, if s‘°ck.s, Under searching croas examina- 12.000 tion. Deputy Dtet Atty. Fred N. Whichello admiUed that time at the fMfeliminary hearing had Miss TregofI been informed of her constitutional rights. Whichello said he didn’t consid-’ Miss Tregoff a suspect when the preliminary hearing commence. ♦ a a Whichello said he decided charge Miss Tregoff during a cess. She was arrested when 1 finished testifying. Defense attorneys have battled bitterly against every attempt to introduce Mi.ss Tregoff's earlier testimony info evidence. They claim the portion of the Fifth Amendment which bars a person from being a witness against self was violated. tons, though, reflecting a stronger demand tor that commodity. ^ Groin Prices CHICAGO OEAIN ir* !•>'• 114% Rya 1.17% Mar 1.34% 1.14% 111% Bomb Hoaxes Delay 700 on Planes, Ship aborn laaabi Na. t and 1 palU U.00-11.44 Poultry and Eggs Detroit to eata lots, ladaral iMta iradad: 1 POrt. Fadaral atata and eommarctally eom- NEwf YORK fUPl) _ Bomb;- " , hoaxes held up more than 350 air-lC-.,- n;|l ine passengers yesterday and K|| Kr0||t ■'forced a luxury cruise liner 8811- '^''* I*' * * I VIII ing with 350 passengers t^ _ -'“: Tr'""“ Cent a Tablet Three of the anonymous threats I were aimed at big Boeing 707 jets Tronouilizer ProduCOT *"'i Seas No Reason to Cut eommarctally e "wiiitaa—sradt A lumbo M-M; ryira larst SS-IS; tern lS-11: medium M-M: trade B tern n-M. Browna—trade A extra terra jf; larta lS-31: madlum M-ll: trad# B tern 11-11: eba«ki 17-M. —mt; Market itaady Overall trade ; nut anreialTe. Supplies eouUonc —ta tuny ample on tern, extra lam and Jumboa althouth lurpTnt otfer-iBti of tern baint diverted to other market areae out ot etatc. Madluma * Pnee of Miltown Other telephoned threats dls-1 nipted flights at Fargo. • N.D • Milwaukee. Wis.; anj Lansiiro WASHINGTON (AP)-The mak-’ ers of Miltown tranquilizer said 4 1, I today their profit is a little more Airlines make a pracUce of con-1‘*'5" * f - ducting thorough searches in re-1 P"*****"* Cai^ jQ:jl DBTEMT rori.TmT M.( orraorr. jan ss lAPi-prio 13 pound r.O.B. Detroit tor No. 1 1 34.i;Uve poultry: 41.1, Hoary type hens 33-24: lltlu lype.bana. 41 .1; heavytvpe roaaters over 4 Iba. — “ 44.4| heavy type brollert and fryari ' «?♦ ohlUa 11-M sponse to bomb threats. Oen MtlU Oan Metora o Tti a in Oen Tima Grace ‘3 J*i” /s Laid to Rest-Bids S^lf Goodby NEW BEDFORD. Mas.s. W I Charles Manuel (Sweet Daddy) [Grace, 78-year-oid bishop of the jHoiise of Prayer*for All People, MFvim OTV nipn Ab«.,»r“* ■ 120.000. with assembly of automobiles herer * « * Hi'are in danger of "dIsappenring" >__ 1 j R as a result of (he govimmenCs T f?lrecent announcement Ta 40 porlj^'y ii i Timk a laar S ™U>ack in car Import quotas, S3.1 $3K!iS25 Hl'*cveral leading automobile Indus- ■I a On caiSSa : iJi* try spokesmen indicated today. recording he Auto Import Cut Bad (or Mexico aimw ... IM • ot Na Ry ... II *-Orcvbound .. SS.S Quit on .... n Rammtr Pap SSI Kooktr Cb Inp Rand Inkrlak Ir Int Bua M< Int Harv Int Nlrk The govei^ent has announced is considering a further 20 per cent reduction for the near future of the reihalning import quota. Industry spokesmen interviewed by the morning newspaper “El I-- ‘ te .. iWbimaMdAM made ahortly before his death two weeks ago in Los Angeles. No one but Sweet Daddy Grace apeak at his fuaeral, leaders of the Negro colt said. wide-eyed ter Products, Inc., said in testimony for the Senate antimonopoly subcommittee that no redu^a would be warranted In the present price of 10 cents a tablet. ★ ♦ * The subcommittee ts investigating prices charged for various drugs. It contends some of the wonder drugs are priced so they cannot be bought by persons who need them. Current hearings are devot^ to tranquilizer Miltown is a trade name for meprobamate, a drug for the relief of tension and anxiety. Hoyt said its discoveiy had helped lift (barter's tales from aa annual level of about $550,000 in 1930 when he became president to 48 million dollars in the last fiscal year. * ♦ * "Substantial profits made in the four years since the indroduction of meprobamate have to be considered in relation to the 13 preceding years in tvtaich Carter struggled prqfitlessly to enter the prescription drug field,’’ he said. “It is scarcely reasonable to criticize four years' profits resulting from 17 years' effort." j«i U»»*versal” at the close of **** “''nin men T«id ieh ifi * 5“*!“ *1.®* U international auto show hereP^*!*®®* ^ l««der who was 441 YwiMrShaT iSItoday Indicated the cutback wouldi**''®^ •" * blue uniform with I44i^s,„ufi RM 143 3 also,bring considerable unemploy-lKoW P«P'nK iTOca AVKR40ES mcnt to the industry in Mexico. 1 * ♦ * ta?ad »4-'Coinnnrd by ■* * * The body was placed in a public brought more th.nn 1,000 responses'was planning to kill Mexico proiluces no automobiles'ault until church lenders decide to an appeal made through newv' ------------ HO{4E Ownership in the u.s1 - ! ' Th0 M6rtgag9 Pkhtn: , , f'p||oJio.o(»( ' lo-.|dford Post is dt Seven Mile road and Grand River) to^ take him to Pontiac. " Whaley said. That was the “only reason," he added. lA^arning of Whslry's order. Taylor said. “Sure It clears me. It shows I have no coinpllelly in this thing. " .Seiler refused to comment on the study. He said this would be up to Childs to do sometime today when the completed report submitted. Vinson was arrested in a Mount Cletnena hospital while donating blood by Detectives George CraR and Wayne Buddemeier on warrant charging two counts of felonious as.sault In the beating of two nonstrikers in the long, bitter Kohler strike in Sheboygan Falls, WIs. in 1954. Vinson M now awaiting examination on a fugitive warrant in Macomb County, where he was taken after Rotbe protested his Oakland arraigmnent. Gunaca is in prison. Taylor said yesterday' Rothe's "ridiculous" charges were “merely vindictiveness on his not being able to push us around out here.” Benny Phone Operator | Will Lose Her Boil LOS ANGELES (UPIt-Actressj Sara Berner's $525 bail was or-' dered forfeited yesterday when! she failed to appear for trial on charge of endangering the life of her 7-year-old daughter. News in Brief Electrical eqaipment valued at $406 and a violin valued at $100 were stolen yesterday from the car of Cecil Rich,- 2165 Pontiac Pontiac Township, while it was parked behind his home, according to iheriff’i deputies. Feur Corner Lunch, comer Wal-in and Perry, now open 7 sjn. to 13 :M pjn. Closed Wednesdays. Hagyard Is Partner in khultz Firm Glenn Hagyard has been named a partner ln“ Schuitz Electr^ Service. 1545 N. Opdyke Rd. A 1953 graduate of General Motors Tech. Hagyard served two years in the armed servicea before joining the company. w * * Recently the company was named as one of the few electrical firms in Pontiac to do electrical wiring for modernization and remodeling jobs that are FHA financed. Its work has been mainly with commercial and industrial jobs and custom-built hemea ♦ ♦ 4 Karl Schultz founded Schultz Electrical Service in 1943. Prior to that time he was an electrical foreman at GMTC. His wife. Ruby, is a partner in the firm also. NEW STATION FOR LEASE MOm OIL COMPAIIT PE 5-94M I^iiquui|8t4^k* 0,4 trucks but assembles them whet Her to construct a mauaoleum: papers by Dr. Waller N. Mack, a a., , |- ■“ > .r> »«‘rts manufactured in the or ^ave jrorial m the family plot j Michigan .Stale University ftlXOR S EX’MdlldQBr DONALD A. WILSON Employes Union Elects President Donald J. Wilson Soys Assets Hove Increased 22 Per Cent Donald J. Wlteon, 75 Preston St., mas Eve after calling police and *'•* elected president of the romplaining her fo mer husband i General Motors Truck and Coach jDivis’on Employes Federal Credit Union. The 47-year-old actress, best known for her role as the telephone operator on comedian Jack Benny's show, has been committed to a hospital, her attorney disclosed. She was arrested Christ- 331.4 in 313.4 114.1 ia.4 114 4 .117.1 131.4 .134.7 lU.t 434 111 *74.4 44.7 114. 14.1 711 DOW-JONBS I r.M. AVERAOES 31 Inda 431.74 oft 1.11 M Ralla lU 71 off t.M 11 mill Mil up 4.11 IS itoclM HI M off 1.11 Voluma to 1 p.m. 1.4M.4SS. OmtOIT STOCRS tc i Naphter Co.) npum altar daelmol pol^l^ Allan Bloc, a Equip. Co. . olilitha Rlqlt Low Noon ‘ 3.1 34 Rowall Etac. Mtr. Co.* I^nlnaulor M. Trod. Co.* Tha Prnnh • “ * Rudy r' roj>h#t^( Boy, 5, Dies; Autopsy May Find Cause Oakland County sheriff's detectives are today investigating the death of a five-year-old Independence Township bo8r early this morning. 4 4 4 Deputies said Michael J. well, son Of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stillwell, of 4675 Independence Dr., was dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital. The boy's parrats toM deputies that Miebael,liad suffered a bead tiijury whea be fell while playing Sunday. Deputies were called to the home >vhcn the boy suddenly fainted this mnming. An autopsy ta scheduled later l(xiay lo determine the exact cwise ol death. The boy’s father is stationed at the Nike Base in Auburn Heighu. United States and Europe. in Pine Grove Cemetery. H’’ rmiounced that total assets at the end of the year were $7.-27.5,00b. compared with $6,000,000 the previous year, the figure represents an increase of 22 per cent. WUnon nald alae that a four Aims at Congress BEVERLY HILLS, Catif. fAPt-Murray kf. Chotiner. onetime campaign manager of Vice President Richard M. Nixon, will seek nomination for a aeat in* Congress Abb Chotiner, an attorney, announced Monday he will be a candidate for|„^^ ^ ^ cte nominati^ in theL,^„,. ^ick B. Skosich. aecretary; K X, ^ T Hairy J.'Woodman, treasurer; Mi- CHted by Republican Donald Jack-1,r Becker. Rudolph Hart-* man. H. W. Reeve. William J.! , L ..’Tobin and John Walton. In additio^o his work m ^aif| chairman of the credit com-ot Nixon Chotiner managed lhei^n,pg ^ q Treadway. Com-sucpsful rempaigns are Katherine Baker. William F. Knowland in 1946 and Kathryn Stone. R. Guy Emery per Higher Butter Grading Standord$ Start April 1 WASHINGTON (UPl) — Re-vised standards for grades of butter will become effective April 1, euperseding standards that have been in effect since April 1954, the Agriculture Department announced tqday. The new standards tighten the] allowable workmanship defects | (body, tolor a[nd salt) and include' more detailed descriptions of! jquality characteristics. ! The new stnndards) also tighten j the qualitv requirements for the U S. Grade C. or U.S. 89 score.! by eliminating some of the flavor j dkects previously allowed. | GAS HEAT PERMITS AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE INSTALLATION IN PONTIAC AREA IF YOU WANT QUALITY IN A FURNACE AND DUCT WORK CALL FOR A FREE HEATING SURVEY AFCO ARMSTRONG lANITROL LINNOX MUILLIR WISTINGHOUSf CHRYSLiR AIRTIMP WaUAMSON '595 00 INSTALIIO. 100.000-125,000 BTU FORCID AIR 25 YIAR CUARANTII Any ef these feraeces hastalled leg. 2 keseieeiit beef registem, aetemetic hemidlNer. aU fleer caW sir ratenis rat lato base-beards St tMs prise. BUY THE BEST IT COSTS LESS IN THE LONG RUN ONE OF MICHIGANS LARGEST DISPLAY OF QUALITY FURNACES 5983 Grond Rivtr R-J HEATING , GR 4-4554-:R«vp,gp Chortflg ■ J-.- twextytXvo THE p6nTXAC FRBSS> tUESPAY. JANUARY 26. i960 Salvation Army Honors Its Dead Board Members Pleads Guilty/^ to Knife Attack on His Landlord A piMnw bi honor of aecMsed Advisory Board membeni last nicht was dedicated at the annual M-vatkm Army Board meeting In GkenfiekTs Restaurant, Birmingham. The Pontiac Citadel of the Salvation Army is celebrating its 70th year. a Especially honored taut night of the original hers. They are Mrs. Roao gtnek-well. Mm. Roy Annelt and Mrs. Emmet Page. The Advisory Board, now comprised of 18 members, was originated some 40 years ag^ with the purpose of being a liaison between the Ptmtiac Citadel of the Salvation Army and the community at large in order to perform more efficient service. Keeling said he wiU remain no the- board and do ev«ytliing he can to hdp the Saivatka Army in Us “great work.” The Salvation Army does a great work,” said Keeling, "and one thing that eqiecially appeals to me is.that if some poor soul comes along who is down and out will help give him.a meal and a bed to in before it attempts rehabilitation.” Volunteer Group Elects Director Advisory board member^ are ‘civic leaders and businessmen who represent the community and donate their services to the Salvation Army. t. William Heaver, captain of . the PoMtlae • dtaiM at tS W. Iawtnmw 8t„ saM there are ptacN on foe piaqae for snbse. qmnt board away. The large bronze memorial was dedicated by LL Col. J. Clyde Cox, divisional cammander of the Eastern Michigan Division of the Salvation Army. Singular tribute was paid last night to T^year-old Pontiac tomey Ralph T. Keeling, for 23 years chairman of the board. Keeling asked to be believed of the chairmanship but retain mem-- bership on the board. RULE CHANGED No other member has held the position as long. Last year, the ruling was changed limiting future chairmen to two thrke-year terms. Board members now also serve Keeling last nit certificate appointing him the only life membtf on the Pontiac Salvation Army Advisory Board. Said Heaver: “We aincerely appreciate the many yean of dedicated service rendered by Mr. Keriiing as i member, then as chairman, a the Advtoory Board in Pontiac. “As 'he assansM his plaoe as foe lint Pontlsc member ever to be 8*a^^ a Ufo niemhenhtp, we look forward to additional yean ol oervtee, fellowsMp and Senators Hunt Bagwell Rival ewr-tawreaslng tartemt hi foo work of foe Satvatton Army la Mtl for bloc^dng his car In a driveway where they lived, ‘yesterday pleatfod guilty to assault with intent to do great bodily harm whtn armiwwd'before Circuit Judge H. Russel Holland. Judge Holland will sentence Tom Itmasella of 54 Elizabeth St. Feb. He was returned to the county jail to await sentencing following preaentence investigation by the Probation Department. With foe judge’, questtom be-ii|g lelayed to him by CRM As- Ted Panoretos Named to Board; Mrs. Briney Soys Drivers Needed PergifiMn. M. of foo same i drem. ^ p Indfe Jaa. 11. Police said an argument started when Tomasella, who had been drinking according to Ferguson, complained that Ferguson's car was blocking his and he wanted to get out. Ferguson said they I want him to leave ‘ he had been drinking. toa commi lions director of Pontiac State Hospital, was elected to the Central Volunteer Bureau's Board of D^ rectors at the Bureau's monthly meeting in the Community Services Building. for volunteer help In foe UP of- Mr>|. Barbara Briney, 62 E. Iroquois Rd., the group's motor aid chairman, reported a shortage of volunteer drivers. A committee was appointed to handle an award tea fop Bureau Committee members are Mrs. Stanley Carter\15R5 Lone Pine Rd. Bloomfield Hlllsi Mrs. Stonley Stol-orow. 422 Shoreview Dr. and Mrs. Allen Priestly, both of Waterford Township: and Mrs. Warren Fowler, 58 Lake St. Williams and Brown Testify at Capital WASHINGTON UH — Govs. G. Mennen Williams of Michigan and Edmond G. (Pat) Brown of California Were expected today to .air their views of a natural resource The two governors are scheduled to testiffy or submit statementa at continned hearings of the Senate Interior Committee. Unhappy GOP Scions Want Someone Else for Governorship LANSING m - Mori of Mich-igan't 33 GOP riale senators were expected to attend a meeting tonight called to talk over poasible rivals to Paul D. Bagwell for the GOP governor nomination. LiyPOPULAK IN SENATE Bagwell, foe 1958 nominee, has wkli backing for a second tty for governor. However, he is unpopular with foe Senate majority. The asset that teemed Ukely The bill, designed to fully develop and conserve natural sources is being coaponsored by 30 senators. It won backing yesterday from Govs. Gaylord' A. Nelson of Wisconsin and .Stephen L. R. McNichols of Colorado as well as Sens. Gale McGee (D-Wyo) and John A. Carroll ID-Colol. The Mil would establish a Joint Senate-House committee and presidential commission to plan resource use. Part of Fisher Modernization I earing Oenatry Club waa agree-annt te get somebody into the Aag. t primary eoponslag 'the senators reportedly were far from agreement on any figure In the party who was both available and measured up to their specifications. • Sen. Perry W. Greene of Grand Rapids, who sent out invitations Hut week to foe dinner affair, said he peraanaUy was tUsiatlsfied with BagweU for what be said was too much “me-tooing" Gov. Williams. r lobbytott were plek-leg up foe check. Some senators have harbored resentment against Bagwell for bis advocacy of a personal and corporate Income tax as a cure for state revenue ills. This was early last year. And there was senatorial criticism of the way in which the Bag-well forces handled foe constitu-tkxul convention issue at Satur; day's GOP State Ontral Committee meeting. The state oommtttee, la limited-debate sesslo a. hustled through eadersemeat of a already approvej by Gov. wil-founo aad staanchly opposed by mori GOP kglsIalorB. Et? CWrk wdT SM say Car aaoept awHlar or total me dor of eny tnrular or iporte) el^rtloa or ortmerr •Iwltna reettn for i*tf*(retloa the nemr •r eneWsI voter bi Mid CUv of Poatiec not tirvsdv r*»««<»rrd «ba tiey ai>r‘-lav ovt*on*Hv tor earb rMletritton. NMioo te herabv farther tlvao U Otit be al tot ettr HMl U B ei. Inter VanMartor: atoo lur-rlvtd by t*a irandchlldrea and two sroat-trandchltdraB. Funeral nrrloe will be bald Thurtday. Jan. ». at I0:3« a m. from tba RlebardaMi-Blrd Chapel. WaUed Lake, with Rey. Carl OrapnittiM ‘fiaiT^ILS lie in Itate at tba RtobardMO-Bird Funeral Home. WaUed Lake. HORN. JAM. M. INd. MART. Melnrad. Drayton Ptolne, (ormar-ly of 11* Bafdvta: ate M: dnr mother of Keanrih Horn and Oladyii Wrliht: dear ilater of Mn. Bva Duke: alio luryleed by (our arandchlldren and Hn great-tranechlldren. Funeral • • r y I ft will be held Wedaeaday, Jan. St. at 1:N pm. from the Huntoon Faaoral Home with Hoy. WllUam Hake* einclatUit. Interment In ClarkitOD Cemetery. Mre. Horn thu Be la elate at the Hnateon Spears' wife has sait^ her husband told her bis place on the plane was taken by ait old friend, WUiiam Allen Tayha-, 60. of Tam-I. Fla. Spears was arrested for driving Taylor’s car from Tampa to Phoenix. He is being held on a charge of interstate transportation of a stolen car. Judge Confirms Morgan's Ouster Backs Up Dismissal of Royal Oak Township Civil Service Member Circuit Judge Clark J. Adams today confirmed the removal of William Morgan as a member, of the Royal Oak Township Civil Service Commission. Township Supervisor E1 w o o d Dickens sought Morgan's permanent removal in Circuit Court, claiming Morgan was “showing prejudgment and prejudice” with statements about eight township policemen and firemen fired for pocketing Goodfellow funds in December. Dtekeos e h a r ge d Mmrgaa’a statements were prejndiced te lavor ol the live iMlireinea amt three flreroea at a time when "he knew or shoold have knowa” Top Figure Is 62,529 Car and Truck Output in One Week DETROIT (*t — For the second straight week Gievrolet and Ford division set new production records last week. Chevrolet said it established a new aulo industry record by producing 62.529 cars and trucks, week earlier the General Motors Corp. division reached a similar record with a combined output of 60,856 units. Ford division test week nc-coanted tor three now pootwar dally reoarda and Jmw all-time combined ear-track prodnetion. Ford said it built 7,547 cars Jan. 19. The following day the company SACRAMENTO. Calif. (AP) - built 7,570 cars and 7.605 Jan. 22. Gerald Brown, 21, only son of Gov. The previous daily record was set and Mrs. Edmund G. Brown, isj Jan. 14 with 7,479 cars. givir\g up plans to enter the Catho-; ♦ * * lie pricsthixxt: Included in C^tevrolcl's total last Mrss Brown said Monday the youth had decided instead to attend the University of California medical school, then riudy psychiatry. OrMd has been studying 3>4 yean at the Jesuit liovitiate near Los Gatos, Calif. week were 41,644 standard automobiles, 9.250 compact Corvairs and 11,635 trucka. Prevfoua high for Corvairs was act the previoua week with 8,532 unite. Ford built 53,574 cars and trucks, topping foe 51,546 mark set the week before. come before the Civil Service II Morgan were allowed to remain as a member this would have seriously impaired the township board's righte to holding a lair and Impartial hearing.” Dickens said. Morgan’s statements constituted good cause for removal, the supervisor alleged. At a Jan. 7 meeting where the eight men and their attorneys gathered with the Civil Service Commission to review appeals. Morgan disqualified himself under pressure when township officers protested his "prejudice.” Permanent removal proceedings then followed. African, Nationalists Riot Over Macmillan's Visit BUNTYRE. Nyasaland (UPD-^ mob pf about 1.000 shrieking Africans' battled with police for to mmiitcs here todav in front of the hotel where British Prime Minister Harold Maomillan was having Ibncheon. The riots were t h e worst in Blantyre since a state of emergency was declared in Nyasaland last March following serious outbreaks of Nationalist demonstrations. Bringg Smellies to Hollywood 'Whiffy' Todd a'Showman, Too HCHXYWOOD (AP) - Michaeli A youthful Dixieland band Todd Jr„ an Ivy League version jammed in foe lobby while a scan-of his tsmous father, Monday tily clad startst aprayed perfume night introduced foe “amellies” to on each Incoming guest at foe Hollywood with traditional Todd Fox Ritz Theater. never asks foe price of anything.' After the premier, TOdd took over Frank Sennes Gro’s for a lavish party for more than 300 guests. hoopla. Young Todds “Scent of Mystery.” first movie in the SmeU-o-premicred in a fashion that would have made the! « « « late Todd Sr. proud ol his off-j Everybody was there — from spring. [Jack Oakie to Linda Christian For pure showman.ship, it was!The cost? No one knew, easily foe best premier since foe One member of foe Todd organ-elder 'Todd's “Around foe World ization exidained that Mike Jr. is in 80 Days.” I like his lather in one respect: The star • studded audience applauded the movie, starring ^ter Lorre and a brilliant British ac-Denholm Elliott. Directed by ace photographer Jack Cardiff, the movie was Cinerama with a story. Filmed entirely in Spain, it was a fun movie with a chase that was reminiscent of the early silents. The Smell-o-vision process piped directly to each seal—ga> everybody a whiff of foe'screen’s action—from freshly baked bread to garlic in a gypey camp. » lA. :Z HVOHE8. JAN. 23. IIM. JOHlt b.. 44 Prall at., an **: b»>ort band of Mlidrrd Huahea; daar father of JohB R. and Rabart T. ^ ^ - of Mn. Margarte Mf. lUei- Punrral larrlea wlU te hald WedneMlar. Jan. It. at it a n. Hwia. JAN 13, 1»W. CRAHLhS Bdward. 33| Bfaaeh St.: telona Intent M» of Curtli and CaroUna Lawii Sr : dnr broUier ol Cnrtu Jr. Xlluteth Ann. WUIlr String. Cnrotean. Deborah. Oreag^, Dl-Mo^ra and *Kbnett LawU. Fundral lervloe vflt te ' Frank C - Carruthor* Fnneral Roma with BUhop aider C. J. Jobneon offldatlng. interment la Oak HUl MM Arlie. WaUed Mke: am T4: beloved hutband ol Jennie thum-aay; dear father of Morgan S. Shumway: dear brother of Mre. Florence Coate; alio lurrlved by too grandchildren. Funeral lerr-Ice *m be held Thureday, Jan. ZS. at I p m. from Sparki-Orlina Chapel with Rer. Howard Clat-combo offlelaUag. Intermanl In White Chapel Cemetery. Mr. n>.....~. -,n u- J, Shumway will b Bparki-Orlffln I SPEAR. JAN. ri. inv. Charolett. Walled Ukc; an S>: beloved wife of Cteorn N. teear: Charolett. ' , aleo a — jn. Fuaer.. Thuredav, Jan. 3t. at 3:3* p.m. from the Rlrhardvon-Blrd Funeral Home. WaUed Lake, with Rev Carl Qrapentlnv offlriaUni. Interment In Oakland Memorial Cemetery. Mrt. Spear wlU lie In It the J?®?!'- Walled Lake._ JAN 1 1170 Bangor. Waterford Town- ----- ------- „„ Marlorla Ool- llni, Morric, Fearl. Oeorga, Halite. Vlnhl aad Wayne Watte. Fn-neral tervlee will be held Frldny. Jan. », at 11 a m. from Trinity MethOdlit Cborch. Ktego Harbor, with Rey R H Benedict offlclat-Inc Mre Walter will He In itate after I pm. Wedneeday at tho C J .riodhardt Funeral Home, Keeeo Harbor. ^ WARNIR IAN M. 1*M. MILIXIN Bovd 110 Clara, Walled Uke; aae 39- beloved eop of Stewert and Bernice Wnrfier. Funeral eervlce will be held Thuredav. Jan M. at 4 p.m. (ram itha Rlchardeon-Blrd ChaMl. JVallad Lake, with Reader Mn. Oeloree Lovejoy, C.8., officiating. Crenn-Uoa In White Chepel Cemetery. Mr. Warner wtU lie In itate at Rlchardeon-Blrd Funeral B o m a. WaUed Uke. Card of Thanks LOVING MEMORY OF OUR beloved HUibend A Fethcr. Daniel T. Murphy Sr win pauad That grief can eali Sadly mltied by h ano family. 6 ebUd of love and prayer. We sire thee to the keeping Of the tender Shepherd'! care 8*dlv mliied by Mother. Father. Brother, Bliter and Orandparenti. COATS funeral home OE I Donelson-Iohns FUNERAL HOME .mbtilanae Bervlee Fiona or Molar FE »S37« HUE RE1IIE8 At IS a.ra. Today tboraj ware rrpltoa at Ilia PraMi 1, 4, 8, I, t. 0, IS, IS, j 14, IS, 17, n, SS, .‘:7, 31, SI, M, so, SS, 7S, 77, 18, 8S, SA S4, SS, SS. SS, S4, S7. ISS, m, 117, Hsip ^ A^mbly & MC MEG. CO. JEEwSiiwiTOroniAmlS wido Bnaaea oompaay. ago It to ATTBNTlOil DMVEBai WE NEED a IlmHed number at txporlenrad’ Aateaaul away drlvart lar d-"- ^ ^rtege Cemgeny. U4M Ei- In Waterfoird area. OH 3-t)M CAB DHITBRa. 8TEADT ANO CAB DRITRIta II OE OLDER. Phone FE Xill. FHiterai DlPectors 4 Voorhees-Siple Cemetery. OL *-17*1. MOUNT^yPE. J ORAVi SITn. PiRRZ MT. PARE ckdE^RT. yeamltel^* gravo M. WIU divide. ET ....____ jiuct have templet high iphail meohanioal drawtag eouree or ogutvaleni and hayp Dopt P O. Boa 44*. kXPERIBNdK onlV, mY clean^ route man. Amy .Walk-er'e Cfcnnore. Ug ■. Btondvay, Lake Orton. BxPERiENcio DdcT nfstAlSSia and gae converelon ' burner m-itaUeri. Moil have (oole and transportation. Oood wggei ffzSen*HenLtog yaui^y C eorreipoodeneo B general office work doeiraMo ae waU a' angl-nearing. Write PonUac Prase Boa M. giving age work kM pay eiperlenco, oducaUon A family. FIBERGLASS wanted man, eiperleneed tat (Iber-glati layup te work in boat plant In Uke Orloa area. Muel be qualified. Kay Industries. Inc. »W OR3UNWOOO NO. FOREkAN WANTED FOR SMALL raanutaciuring plant In Oxford area. AntomaUa press. Bxpert-ence neeeuarv. Betume to In- ‘ rssirst 8 Saatnaw HlOri^RNlNOa MONTkiV Dlttrlbute nationally advorlieM vx-g. Bxcluelve territory opop to tuU time man wlUi amblUia h better htmeelf. Write; Auoclated OUtrlbUters 171* N. Charlee ____Saglnnw. Mlchlf— internationallV concern vlU hire 3 young men (or eootact work, Mutt bnvt ear aad be Interested In ei ^ f-to^'Mc- _______I. FonUac. PART-TIME w are (roe T-W p m., aad are appeartne and have a oar. may bo able to quaUty lor PART TIME rtrage S3 to IP an hour on local -jleb'Uhsil route. MI->~»~ * honri day: OR 3-dM*. PERMANENT SALARY will train 1 men tor work ae Insi^aniM ^y_cr^U Inveetlxatere n-n. bevy high sebooljjnree * _ FB »-*zq HEAL ESTAf________________ (er exneneneed, but wUl I 85?J*S^u#t^ VPofiSnm EBTAti SAlailkN. <5660 man. Plenty of leeda . WIU. train ambitious Miitien can FS 4-M44. Aefe Ted MsCullougb. Arm RonOy. ■---------ibeth R- A UeUnga. ttleentiea for Ted Me--.., tl43 Cnee-Ellxal local eetablUhed dealerthlpe open. No Invastmeot. To qualify: Neat married, car, deilre ' over gist month. fbuNo M» ig 6k dVtE SrfTH ear. FuD Ume work m ouutdo Help Wanted Female 7 k TWO DOCTOR OFFICE, WEST •Me Pontiac, noedv aialetaat to do lab won. bmr. BKO. and aeetet wlUi patlente tainry. Apply Pomla BABV SITTElt aPd HdbSEKEEP-er. »-J. weekdayi. Near downtown PooUa* »»»t week Cell FE 3I7W efter * p.m. or anyUme weekends. BABY81TfiirrUA«8 A tlkllL From I to 3. Ft «-t*03._ bar WAlTRtSSEa kuST BE r*R. Night work, part Ume. Apply ?effirart"Rd *****"“‘’ >*• * BABT aiTTBft' TO CARE FOR dUldran. and ll M«. «S5 ^;wSs£S‘!s'£| &b^Ri?an'?1alJrforc"e'e COMPLETE CHARGE * children general tleanlni. g.?.''"ira »■ — . Curb Waitresses (sraRSin"! JED'S DINING ROOM WAITRESSES Also Part-Time Hostesi IS:f..M*.J aj5j*y “»'>*r , TED’S WOODWARD AT SQUARE LE RI MtEAND wdoL TOIBHi vUb own tmoi.. ttondT ir« nrosnd work. iMtoo Ckontf JIM Coolty Uk> Rd, Exp. housekeepei Ona^ehrt » to M, (or conn home Frivete ouerter*. 4 (amlly. Free hotnltelliat)im m aefurlty. • hayb di er’t Ueenae and be uaed to o« Aoplv .In perenn Un Holm Q*«»and. Pohtlee. Mlrh. EU>ffilLfT.ADr~‘ixr UVE~wf r -T Wirt»< Fwiwli 7 W—trt 11 GIRLS WTD. NO feX-PERIENCE NECESSARY EOR TELEPHONE WORK. SALARY & COMMISSION. 71N. SAGINAW ST., ROOM-H. HELP US FIND THIS MOTHER It j«a te** txpMitaw la t«ai 1B«, P.T^., Koutlnt. eavrcli .. •omiDOBlty work, Mfl eaa te-vot* 3 houn d^y, b«t«Mn t:i6-3;W, yo« may qdattty tor ikb aauraal hixb-iypo ooutlw in your oommunliy. tlM.M per month, minimum eomtng oppor-tanity to oUrl. Per oppolntmont vnu; Mr. UuU J. Borlnl. Pr-Mon*l Otroetor, IMi Mleblg BulkUat. Detroit M. MlililiaB. ____ ______ oltloe. : perlooM ntooMory to ea^ «k. For oppolntmont mti. LADT FOR TELKPRONB WORK. It a. ■aplnaa, LEGAL SECRETARY Outstanding lob Opportunity le bookkeeper and ottlee “■-t be tamlllar — ookkeeplni C double entry tfal: SEould te'betvem ir~and 33 ■amine pol^lal to I3.0N per rr. All Inquirlce will be held strlet contldenee. Olee tull detalle In lone hand and eneloee a enapehot. It poeelble. All In-QUlrlee will be acknowledted. WiiU Pontiac Preae, Boa 3t. ROOF REPAIRS“ EAtnCBTROOOmitO FE t.>ttt TO " OR RBMoIibL Nili- eon Bulldlne Co. FE 4-P*lt. TREHCBWO, iXCAVATUIO FOR ■petle tanka Field tile, footinei. dltehea and boat well UL 3»3t*H. 14 Give romplete reeume. Rej^ Pon- BBCRETARY Ayaletant to Admlnlitrator'e fetary. Mutt teke jhortband •hortbai _______Jtfloe mi---- Pleaeant telephone rolee. Apply to the Admlnletratlcn OttlM. PontUc Oeteoimthic Hoepital. STENOGRAPHER tor to take Uiht dictation, pleaeant receptlonlit-type dutlee of qroettne cuatomeri and an-iwerini telephonee keep Wb Ui-tereetlne Pleasant .turroundlnts. Health, - ' ---------- PAID VACATION __ HOCBEHOLD FINANCE CORF. _3Jb_UiAOJN/" r.HAS INCREAtEO todap FE write Flalne F.O Boa II. __________ WANTED: NEAT APPEABINO. ’ personable yount Woman, preferably man'ed. lor position as Secretary. Must be eipehenced In lyplod. shorthand, and tlUnf. Send resume of educatton. etperlence. and salary requirements to F.O. Boi 4S6. FonUac. Mich. All applications stnctly confidential. WOkt A N >*>R tlFNEBAL OFFICE woik. Must like detailed clerical woik. Typlne reqeHed Pnntlac Pi ess Bo* 1C.. . . see. edueatlnn. lob esperlence fe WHITE MIDDLE- AOEO BA^ situr. Ueht housekeeping. Live la or out. Call after 1 p m. MI EMM housework, 3 In family. OR 3-lstd WAITRESS WANTED. ENC5RE. Mlracle_Mlle;_______________ WANTED BABYSITTER WHITE. Dve fat 3 days. FE E3M3 after -« P ■_______^____________ Help Wanted CODPLB. 3 ROOM ^DRNIBRED apt and utinues, ---- dutlee for —■ ■■ ties, houaekeeplne '. parkln^Jo^ and and eiKrience Apply Personnel Dept.. Womans ^plUI, 433 Bast Hancock, Detroit 1, Mlcbl- tfrABUBHiD' WA¥i&ilB~RCCTi aralUble. Pull or part lime. At-eraee »3.*C per hr. ltd N. r- MBN - WOMEN. 130 DAILY. Luminous nameplates. W Reeres Co., Attleboro, Mass, BILE FINUHER IN OXFORD WUI salesman or SAI B8 WUM- Receptionist For front deok to............... . and jrlT# dlrrctlons. Muat type and like working with people. Aged 30-3S Mldweil Employm ' 4il. ' prieoa. traa pUna and apao. ^ . 3-MJ3. ATOIfEWi—roilJff6iiB''''>t Boo reomt. Oomplato haOdins -----— S-11M. — Cali (^a''^rce^ F» 3-3300 I M B ll T 18 ODE BFBL^ALl Ploera. baaemenu. BM 3-int. OTiiNrif5SrTi5Tffii3TS5 Ursa or imaU. BpoeUl winter Prtee. M Ins. Free eetimatee. PE S-WSI. FREE ESTIMATE ON lor water beaUre, drytra. PiS 34431. R •. ~~ Electric Co. 1330 'W. Huron, ld_you a F^WAY ____________I ri 3-Y383 firletalls Para *Butidtog' 313 J^yn R. O. SNYDER PIOOR LAYlWd. sandiDS and ftaUhlnf. Fhone FE 3-B3S3. Building SuppHes MUST BE WRECEBD OR MOVED_ 3 aterr houee and eontenU. Oond condition 3334 Located et 14311 North Tologreph Rd UN 3-3031. U. Cbarlee. Mlehlgan. Alai Teeel- JSL Business Service 15 fiLECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE RE-palrlnc pad r^vlndinc. Ill I-Pike. Phopt n * tWBNTY-TUftKK THOMAS nPaOLSTERINO~ m NORTH PERRY STT FE 5-8888 Lort and Foui^ 26 bbotant spaniel. IBOTANT SPANIEL. 3 YEAH oM with orange end white ipot fjgVy* i? NiOHD; fuT” FontUe Alri .Al^^LABR Me. Chain Ur Reward LOST; LABRADOR RBTRIBTSR. le.uala Vic. Com. VU-Chaln collar. Oak. County ImMemmel VU 4_WWl ^ I. Reward. EM i-3331.' ft PenonjyB 27 t * 1JL* T ®_ pert ihndowtogT FE 34301. ANT OUIL OR WOMAN HEED- tng e friendly adelaor. Phone FE 1-3133 after 3 p.m. or If no ■ ewer. FE 3-1714. CenfldentUl AKROTREDB KNAPP SHOES Fred Herman_____OR 1-1343 Solo"' i^U44 dainty maid BUPPUBS — 133 Menominee. Mrs. Wallaoe. FE IN DEBT? IF SO LET US Give You 1 Place to Pay Ease Your Mind WE ARE NOT A LOAN COMPANY MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS RM. TI3 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDO. PE 3-0433 Mam her credit Credit LOBE WEIGHT SAFELY AND economically with newly released Oes-A-Dlet tableU. H eenU “ SIMMS. UFETIhtE CONTRACT AT BOOSE of Venue. Ml. OL 14641. NEW CLASSES IN CERAMICS • ---- ■ “ ^--- “ Inlor- __________ ON AND AFIER THIS DATE JAN-uary M. 13H. 1 wUl not be re-ipontlble tor any debU con-tracUd by any other than my-eell. Norval B. Lofle, 343 8. Caee Lake Rd., Pontiac, Michigan. WORRIED OVER DEBTS? Than eonaoltdaU all your blUa * PORNACRS CLEANED AND rvlced C L Nelson. PE 3-1133 PAY S APPLIANCE PAkTS OAKLAND AVI g waiher rapalr aarrlet. FK AIR COOLED ENOINBS REPAIRED __ 13H ONION STREET tillemaT~co8TOM leather- • 333 B, Edith at FE 3-M33 VENETIAN EUNDS MACHINE waehed. EE 1-4333 or n 3-3334. DneEsn^ DRESSMAKING. TAILORINO. AL-Uratlons Mri. Bodell. FK 4-3033 HCMMINO. LlNlliO. COFFi. EIF-P*re. and other repair. Done In my home OR 3-3371.________ InconM Tax Service 19 ALL WORKING PEOPLE’S TAX S"ERVICE. OR 3-2943. . .. 31 AVERAGE FEE FOR Individual! All business forms corslully oreparod. Dunn's Bookkeeping A Tag Service. OR ACCURATE - EXPERIENCED olfire Open BvenUss * Salurdeye Hnipc Call! by apolmmeot BOLIN TAX SERVICE a E. Flka. FE 3-Iltl or FE 34T73 *N INOOklE TAX RBTORH FR^ partd U your heme by snaltfled aeeoaoUnl with maeUr'e desree. ----Intment. FE» 3-TS33. Antolntmant. BOwhExPL BdtfeTON E. FTEVENB REGOESTS that bis lormer Income Ui cll-enu ceil W R. BGMN. FE 4-1133 or FE 4-3TI3 ‘ BUDGET SERVICE FE 3-03M. II W Huron St. Oyer Connolly'e ’— WEDDING NEEDS Dreetlng Cards—Stallone.. aOOEB. OIL FAINTS 13 East Lawrence. 'BACKSiitSTOeB' .ewrenee.______FE 3 VIVIAN WOODWARD COSMETICS. For troo pereonellud analysis ,wr Wtd. Children to Board 2» Wtd. Household Goods 29 ^snce^i FURNITURE NEEDED Enttra bomt or odd loU. Get tbs top dollar. Will buy outrli^l or teU It for you. B*B C^mi--------- Sala. Phont OK 3-3T1T. WILL LIQUIDATE YOOR koOSE-hold goods, oltbsr by prtvsU sala or pubUe ouctlon. Appraisals Ia E. Smart Salt Farm ’—— Michigan. OL 1-M31. Wtd. CeirtWbctB. Mtg*. U ABBOLOTELT THE PASTErT AC-tlon on your land contract. Cash Wanted Real Estate CASH 48 HOURS HOME —equity » WRIGHT-VALUET GI AND FHA CASH FOR YOUR HOME W TRADE WE BUILD ..TOHBIB * SON KEALTOIM 133 w. Huren — -------- lft 08 bb6# You how to oet tract. CUI for free appraisal. H. C. NEWINGHAM Coiaar Auburn and Croaki WANTED LAND CONTRACTS L Farms and Uka property.' Don loee vour home. We md lall * 3 BEORM. laeepront epu. Fertly furnlihed. OR 34103. BEDROOM BAsifiniT AFARf: ment. clean, utllftlet. gas heat, prKaU entrance and bath, child OamL - _______ ROOM AND KITCHENETTE, heal, hot and cold waUr fur-Paddock. AdulU only FE MeM. MARMADUKE By Anderaon & Leemiii^ Rent Hoases Unfum. 40 NICE FARM HOUSE AT 3373 rieeth Rd.. Milford. MU 4.II0I. NEW BRICE 3 BEOlOOil. LARGE basement Bast sloe. AvalUble February 1. FE 3-4514. Wo dM3. O* 1-1T13._______ SMALL hRkTSB, SUITS COUPLE -----'iviog room, tircplaee, gas nmcdUU oceupaoey. 331 I. SN. Can I'm 44SM. FE SMALL CLEAN BOUBIE. ELlCC-tric rangt and refrigerator. Lake privilege!. No OR 3-4331. SALLEE WOODS SUB. Model open dally at 313 W.dTtlc, corner itaoley. SpmUI priced 1 bedroom. Small down payment HEMPEI FE 3-30: ----lady U B-. . SLMANNREALTY IASI WARWICK BAB IN SYLVAN Lake, 3 bedrm. bmck. Carport, lake prtvUcgee. 3135. **— 4.5033 AOd FE ^3^08. , ‘"These’U pep hkn up! Give him one every two hours at your OWN RISK!" --------------------„,if*Sxle Hwy MA 3-1133. 3 ROOMS, STOVE * REFRIOER-ator turolshed. AduIU only. 330 N Paddock. FE 3-33M. 3 UDRIl. BRICK ‘ t heat, : hath. I 3 ROOMS BATH. UPPER. UTIL- . 313 FE 1-1430. I APARTMENTS FOR RENT, fc 1 I ROOMS A bath. 113.33 per week. E city. OR 34081. LOWER. FaREINO I ROOM APARTMENT lit 8 Johnson. 110 per week. Close to Oeneral HoeplUl. Call FE 34441. I ROOMS A BATH. CHILDREN welcome, $1] per week. Inquire 373 Baldwin Avenue, FE 3-1051. I ROOM APARTMjBNT. PRIVATE' balA, very eleanrMl Whittemore. 1 A 3 ROOM CABAIS. _______074 OnClIJlWY;______ 3 AND 3 ROOMS. PRIVATE EN-traaco and bath, lit N. Tele- 3 large' “AT^C^^yEAi UtUitlee fur- Call daytimes FE 4-8544. I p.m. Sveninge call FB 3-4M.._____ I LAROB ROOMS. UPPER. UTlL-Itles paid. FE 3-3303. LARGE ROOMS UPPS-R, UTIL- _bat|; 33 Auburn 3 ROOMS AND BATH. ADULTS' utlimes FE 3-5303.________ j' RM. 1ST. FLOOR, 1 CHILD" Wtd. Miscellaneous 30 HAVE YOU A TYFEWRltER, adding maeliliM or piece of office furniture or equipment not Id uaet We will buy thaee Itemi. OR 3-OtST. up Dee of charge. Eli WANTED SMAtx CEMENT MIXER OLD SICH.Y COUPLE WOULD ■ 3 --- < 3 ROOM APARTMENTS PRI- 3 LAROB ROOMS, GROUND hurat St. FE 35303. 3 A 4 ROOIU ____EM 3-3474 ROOkiS WITH PRIVATE BATH and entrance, 310 per week. Child welcome. FE 3-1031. Inquire at 4 rooms AND BATH AND OA rage. 1 block from town. 31 __Hartuni Court. _______ 4 POOME AND BATtt. PRIVATE entranew, no childreo. FE 3-0413 _Mo. FB 3-3331. WC»M| AND BATM. PRIVATE 2-4013 1063 Premont,___________ 3 ROOMS AND BATH NEAR AU-burn and Perry. 353. PE 1--------- . ROOMS AND BATH pStST floor, oowly decorated. Clot# to dbwntown 137 Sanderson 3 RMS. MODERN, BAtl^. ( w. side, heat hot wate mo. Quiet coupler No chi peU. PE 3-3343. LARGE ROOMS AND BATH. Heel furnished. OR 3-1373. I ROOMS. LARGE. CLEaIT MOD- RM8 A BATH, 3 BDR348 GAS heat, util, turn 304 WhHtemore, ■ ROOMsT r BKliROOM. MAIN noor. Ntar Oweral BotplUl. Call attar 1, FK S-1033 4 ROOMS AND BATH. COMMERCE Village. Kitchen fumlehed, auto-—... ... ^ matic oil _ EM 3-4377 alter 4 p.m.. 4 RIU. k BATH. MODERN. CLOSE to W. Huron. i bodrm. Stove, refrin., k sarate, 37 Mark St. FE^iiii i p" Tine Keego. 363. FE 3-3 hlO. 3 ROOMS. BATH AND SUN PORCH n Scott I 1 ROOMS b bath FULL BAS& ment. Telephone. FE 3 3143._ 3 flOOMS AND bath. BRICE. ROOMS Weet side AND bath, lower. AdulU FE 3 6534 5 RMS A BATH DOWN. 4 RMS b.^^u^.^B,«h n^wly--------- 3 RMS k I. 3 AND 4 ROOM nUhad. Near Bt. Benedict i Donelaon School! Clove to ah ^og and buf eervlee. CaU 3-3303 or FE 4-4333 WEST SIDE 3 rma. and bath Sod floor All uttlitlee furnUhed plus, stove, refrigerator and apartment elM washer OR 3-7133.______________ WEST BLOOMFIELD TWF,, AT Orchard Lake and Mlddlebalt Rd . 4 bedrm. ranch, itb garage, l>s bath, klfO. RalerencM. Leaee, Im-medlate occupancy UN 3-4335. WANTED: COUPLI TO RENT A^fo to provide board for owner. No children $30 per mo. 74 Tregent. Fcr Rent Rooms 42 Rent HousesTumished 39 1 BEDRM.. FURNUHED WITH heater End fuel oil tank. 3 blocke V from school. 3 ml. from Fisher Body k PonUac Mclore. FE S-4104. 3 BEDRM. YIUR AROUND ROME. Oil heat. Ik, prlv. MY 3-3333. 3 ROOM HOUSE. WELL FUR-nUh^„AU modern. After 4 phone FE 3-734i.____________ 3 BEORdoM' fiOlfk ON LAKE near Milford. OR 4-0341.____ 4 ROOMS. r^NACt HKAT. SHOW-__er. 470S Highland Rd. iM-St) 3 ROOMS. SOI LAKEVIBW CEDAR 1 Lake. FE 1-133S em. 100 Hel'shU Rd. MY* 3-1284 MODERN 3 BEDROOM PARTLY lumlei.ed MAple 3^003.___ SMALL HOI4B. 1 B1Dr66m. fenced groundt, bus line. All utU. sunned. Cute, clean, warm. FI ------lioUSB iUBO LABOI home trailer. Modern. Bachelori only. FB 3-TSM Rent Houses Unfurn. 40 Kitchen. 181. OR 3-3771. ; lb LIVINO RM. BEDROOM FLAT, RANOE AN] BATH NEWLY DECO ■ •vr,. ^ carpeted. Nesr OenersI Hosplta Lincoln 1-5331 _ M OAKLAND Cleon ‘ 1-A-l RENTALS 2-BEDKOOM DUPLEX Automatic Heat - Full Basement WILL DECORATE $75 I’KK MONTH ri: 4-78.^3 544 EAST BLVD N AT VALENCIA 4 Ml. I E SHAPE. FE 54431. AT BOS STOP. SLEEPINO ROOM, BUSINESS PEOPLE. PVT ENT. ehower. Oookins. Bait IroquoU. meat everything furnished. OWer DOWNSTAIRS SLEEPINO, ROOMS (or elderly women, end cooking ,pHvl|g|eg. Huron iHrdgne. PE OIRLS NICE HOME oif TOUR 0 ratg, 547 W. Huron K7TCHENETTE RM. FOR 1 OEN- Rm. In quiet home of _______ 4 blocke from downtown. Wrtto _ Fontlac preee Boa tt. ROOM WITH FRIVniOT* RI-• " lady. C4M« after 3. — 5-4413. ________________ LADY. KITCilEN PRIVILEOES. garage, 133 Lincoln. FE 3-T733 Rooms with Board 43 Convalescent Homes 44 _________________ 5-837L_________ VACANCY FOR MAN OR WOMA5 bed or ambulatory, -------■■ Rent^torM :w STORES, ' FE 3-3144 ^ent Office Space_____^ 3ND FLOOB, 3 ROOMS OF OT-flco apaeo all or port. In baart of downtown atea. Comer loca- PdnllalfTom^unR fcanc?*(!Mt pany. Call John Lee. ~ For Sala Houses hekt^irater a^twr,'wve0.____________ COLORED - 4 ROOMS AND BATH frlge'rstor furnished Roy Annett. Ine.. Realtors. 34 E Huron St. FE t-0404. 4 ROOMS, OOWNTOIVN. FONTIAC PRIVATE BATH, P R I VATE ENTRANCE, HEAT AND WATER PUR-NISHKO. FK.A-3IMJL i-BEDROOM TILE BATH, REDBC-orated. oil lurnsce, near PonUac Tisll. 475 Adulu. EM 3-3371._ 1 BEDROO'M MOSeRN HOME, J75 month. FE 4-1077 or FE 0-0010. I BEDRM. FRAME~nS. PON. Mir Tiled' bath li shower -luUv Incul. - stme. k terns. -— Landscaped 44043 345, V I. fe BEDROOM HOUSE. NlfcAT AND clean, lake prlvllegec, $06 mooUi Call after I, MA 541TT. ____ I BEDRTOM BRICK ON JUDAH Lake, hot water heat, 430 month. _Im mediate possesslqm-pE_3-4D3. I nEDROOM' BRICK. OAS HEAT, Inquire C5 B Blvd. N. after I •P ni _A1| day.4unday I BEDROOM,'" AUTOMATIC OIL Near Will Rogers School. 475 n PK 3-0073. 3 BEDRM., BRAND NEW. LO'TUS Jk»ii I. OB 3 Heat Furnished! BEDRM. 33 8 JB881B. |73 MO.. Ill wk. PE 3-3113.___________ BEOROOll HOME WEST OF Pontiac. 333 a monUl. FE 5-3746. BEDROOMS. OIL HEAT. CLOSE ID. 375. me. 144 E. Howard. FE 3-47M ROOM HOUSE, 145. MO. IN-qulrr. 1033 Btanfey RMS Ain BATH. UTILnT RM COMPLBTB PAMn.T Laundry. 140 S. ^Moyjng ft TriKk|nt^22 1-A Reduced Rates Loenl or long dlslsna> maviiiw. ________fifeplacet FE 0-13 CARPENTRY. ALL BINDS. ___________FE 1-3333 CAkFENViR WORE. nICW AND romodellng. FE 3-3333. CABINET MAICBR AND' 6flRl%k- ter. Kltobon 4-3030. CARPENTER WORE OF ANY TRUCKK TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT tk-Ton Pickups. IH-Ton Stakes Dump Trucks Samt-TraBors Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 131 B. WOODWARD RAULINO RELIABLE MAN, DIYERSIFIEO eiperleoet In meoUot lha public doslres any kind of port time work. CnU FE 44333. UNWANTED ARfiCt.E8 PICKBD aiNOINO OROUP LOOKING FOR CDfsinments. Mime of troop Is #ANTED: JANITOR WORfc t)F any kind. EiperienCpd. FE ***** Work Wanted Female 12 3. WOklEN WANT WALL W Ing k honOt cleaning FE 3 BABY BITTINO AFTER 8(!«dOL DEPENDABLE GIRL DEBIRBS wort or hi------*” * RONlNds.l’ JIvered FI Trucks tp Rent ______ _ ______jH; NAliit your price. Any time. FE S-3335. O’DELL cartage up free of charge. FE 3-4d33. A-l PA1NT1NO. INTKHIOR. IX-terlor 11 per cent dice for etth Ouaraoloed. Pros ec4. FE ' - AAA PAINTING k DECORATING 31 veers esuerlence. Ressonsbic. Prey estlmatei. Phone UL 3-1733 CUSTOM PAINTING AND PAPER-haoglng. U.ilon Insured, OR 34344. ----------Pr-------------- vered 4-3743. \ „ PAINTING INT 7m Klrt PAPIW iNINOS^^I^^ Uf| AND DE-I »*“*" Thompioii. PI 4°M3^*al . On West aide. PI ^Rire L jyh^^ ^ 3 TEACmERS WANT Y O U N O woman to share laketront home tor duration of year. Call,. OR (BASEMENT APT. CHEAP. 1 OR t gentlemen nreierred. close to bus. FE 4-4131________________ BACHELOR AFt. 3 ROOMS k bath Heat turn. Union Like EM 3-4333 Ferry Mon. to I 3-1113 Wtd. ContractB, Mtg». 35 -A-A-A- SERVICE FOR YOU . TOP DOLLAR FOR THE SALE YOUR LAND COMTIUCT Wm. A. Kennedy, Realtor ra 4-3I6S FB 5-5144 FK 3-7733 33SI W Htmow BT set Dotelble dieoounr' Ted McCullough has given for yoori. Also cash for yonr equity. Cash buytri waiting No obllga-™ ****** w CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS. ' H. J. Van ^olt. M DUla Hwy. Immediate acti6i4 On any so«d land eonlracta, Now or toMOMd. Tew oaah upon oat-lafaotory Inapteilon of property ^ UUc^. Aek for Eon Ttmploton. K. L. Templeton, Realtor 3338 Ovehard LUo Rd. --- ahlldren accepted. 134 i Inquire at 164 Chandler. ___ ROOM. 3 . BiIdROOM. LIV Ing XDom dining room, knotty Bine kitchen, sleeping porch', bath tllltlei furnished Good location Prefer adults Ideal for 3 men ALWAYS WARM! New garage adth this miylem, al-tractlve 3 room k bath n>l Com-pletelv fum. Washer. Playground Near Elisabetb Lake. 333 weekly FE 4-5203. ATTRACtiVS ^rtly nr ' more Ilkt_______ working couple. FE i-1 BATH. I., or uoram., pvt. eat, jinnia^ Lone JfSjd. ipt. Pr •3177 I CLEAN 3 ROOM APARTMENT IN Christian home. FE 4-3J43 _ _ clean J ROOM APAR-f-MENf Tg Hovey between Cottage and Oi- eSUPCi PRIVATE BATH AND entrs' c«, FE 4-3347. bbWNTpWN AFT SOFfOE MA-nor ApU. Apply Pipers Novelty Store. 33 Auburn Ave. ____ OARAOB APT. PARTLY FURN: Near Plsher Body. 1 child welcome 310 mo. FE 4-303__________ 0~XBOW LK. 1 BI OR 66 if. Schneider. MA 4-1383.___ SMALL bkoUNO FLOOR aH". Near town, i Rent Apts. Unfurnished 38 1 k 3 BEDRM PARTLY FUR-nlshed. Lakefront epts OR_3-3I06 3 BEDRM, HOUSE. NEAR CAM Lake, 3Sl pe^ mo. FE 44333 3 bedroom tbrracI; - WIsaar school area. II ring room, dining room, kltobon. full daylight basement. Me of Moeote and storage space. Win decorate lor responcible ^e^U Paul A. Earn. FB IRII, CLEAN. PVT. ENT, td floor near Blue Sky TbS' 333 a mo FE 44333_____ BEDROOM DIIFLEE - Bnrk vl hot water and laundry farm-ties In building furnished DOWNTOWN One bloek B of Michigan Bell. Children welcome. Also 33 Apt building lor aduke only. Over 103 dltlerent unitsJa serve you Alto comm'l andf Indusl. SLATER APTS. N^ PARKE ST. •> . Fe 4-3343 ARer 3 and Suixlays, LOWER APARTMENT, i ROOMB and bath, private entrance and garage. OR 1-4331. MUST RENT: 341 A MO 4 LARGE room.s. nice location. Keego: also 4-rm. duplei on Walton for 43l a mo. Stove and refrigerator MODERN 4 FAMILY 3 ROOMS and bath 1*1 floor. HOC per mo. AU Util, plus wssher A dryer. No children or pet.y FK 3-7434 refrtg furnlehed. NEW MODERN I ROOlt APART-ment. private laundry, oil furnace. garage Nicely located. FE UNFURNltob f AND 3 ROOMS, utilities furnished. Hollywood Apartments. 114 E. Howard Btreot. U N F U RPNISHBO APARTMENT, gas beat and lights furnlehed. PE 4-3433. 33 Wllllauis. ______ UNION COURT APft Are you looking lor oTean, attractive apis., where the people are quiet, vet frleodlyl Warm to wln- 1. Adults UPPER 4 ROOMS B BATH. IN Pontlso, private ontrance, imat, lights, refrigsrator de stove fur- llU^. "eh*-- to etoiW." Adults only, ---------- 3-313 Upper Flat—Heated 3004 AUiURN AVE. AUBURN HT Mvsi3« raws. WQiwm, kttcbmttft ftotf ftaiti rroni M “w prlvatf entrancet. Oaraac-inraravt ^ lour-tomily buiMtof. THE Ab'i.SWEK TO YOU R PROBLEM: Want Ads! To sell, rent, hire, it's FE 2-8181. qulred PE V UPSTAIRS APT TO RENT. PART, ly VuroUhed. «• drfnktrs. dSrulRNISHED APARTM ENT for rent, cheap. 334. 11 W WiL son. PE 3-1133 .______^ WEST SIDE iTpiU^APARTMENT. 3 rme.. 3 Ibcdrms.. after 3 p.m. ROOM AND BATH CALL OL 1-OIU alter 5 _ _________ ROtrtis" AND bath NEAR For Rent Miscellaneous 48 POR RENT OR LEASE 30 For Sale Houses 49 % ACRE MODERN 3 BEDRM. ivlmt rm with ow. Floor-to-eellli ___________ pamuot”lK?.*: Ceramic tl'le bath. llV paved drive, Uke pries. 310,108.----- Owner. MA 4-3061 3 BEDROOM. 1 FLOOR. 3 CAR gtrage, 30.100. 3750 down. 370 a moDU. Pontiac UL 3-3711. Own- wlth natural fireplace. _____ light kitchen, wardrobe elae ets. Self stortog storms ono screens, oversUed attached garage Large fenced yard with Stlo. Convenient to shopping Cen-' ana scboela. Low Uxet. 313.-I. Caab to new mortgage. PE BORM. RANCH. OARAOB, OAS heat, fenced, storms. $3,233, 3300 down 1X3 8tlrllng,>E 3-33M____ 2 BSfORobM. l^RUB UYINO room. oU heat. Nlce4 landscaped. Storms k sciecns. West suhurbsn. I full basement a 3~ROOU BlVlCK TERRACE. 3 BED- I Apply 31 N. Mtr- i'rMS k BASEMENT. AUTO. heat. In PeoUac, UL 3-14ST. ROOMS, Ni^Y DECOMTID, .'------ — k garage. In '** —Inquire Dibytbn Vla.ns, •i„v at 3130 Dixie Hwy. < 3-3157 after 4_____ ROOMS "and bath. Oil 5 ROOMS AND BATH OIL h^t 334 Tennyson. FE 4-3333. 445 MONtH' ' 3 BEDROOM BUNOA-low, lull basement, wooded lot, lake privileges. North Suburban. Immediate possession. Bmlth- _____1 Realty FE _ ____ N, "SAOiNAW 7 ROOMS, 3 lalhs. sas heal Can be used es family. $75 month TOwnsend Oas 1005 DURRANT Oakland. 3 rooms l heal. 3M month. Ft 4 “ Cl EAH 4 ROOM a'nd BATH OA-rage White 344 Orchard Lakt. Oj^4-3«M____________________ comiib'rci twp BMAix'libusk. 813 week Schneider, MA 4-1333. for RSiNT-SMALL LAKEFRONT home with altacbed garage. OR HOUSES UNFURN, INQUIRB AT 3481 Dodd Ct. off Taylor Rd, 3 room apartment, tile baths eok floors, gae heat Phone FK 4-W5. HOUSE FOR RENT AUBURN Heights. 3 rooms with basement, finished recreation room, oil heat, excellent neighborhood. Freter child. Fhone FE 3-3833. LOTUS LAKE WATERFORD. 3 bedroome, children wclcomt. Baf- erenco. OR 3-3833._______' LINCOLN REtOHn. I BEDRM. Modem "• - - - OK 3-3733 LAHQE. ALL MODERN COURTfRY ..........— FE MIW. MODERN COUNTRY BOIIE IN Ortonvllle area. I rms. and bath, newly decorated, all burning hot water beat attaehad double ~ rage OA 1-3341 MOflERN 3 Biffl privileges Itt per month C. I’ANGUS. ri*:ai.tor . 1183 Mil Ortonvllle NA 7-1318 I MODERITIioMI POHnffiDlf.’“33ift ! Drayton Road. Clarketon Owner IS3 N Astor, Pogtiac. 853 nuinth. ! 111 FRIAR 3 BEDRii. I brick 1 year old. lull baeement, I mraw. all eiWoa. 133 mooUi -Rent or qpUoh to buy. Charles I Biuoe. rt 4-1330. 1 BEDROOM HOME L A R O E kitchen, living room and tull bate-mem Oac heat. 1753 dn. 13 E Beverly. _______ 3'BEDROOM BKICR In Pontiac — West side. Teke advaotaga of lew mttrett rou of only iVt per cent. This home la . CarpoM floors 1 ______dinette and baUways. Aluminum storms k doors. Nicely Innd-'acapad lot. Favad atroet k drieo. 3 car brick garage. Only I17A33 bedrSom home with_______ rage and 4 lets. Located 135 Mcaellqn^ Lake Orton. 35.103 terms Mt V4504. - - 1 BEDROOM. 33.333 DOWN. 314 mnnlh. 317 W. Loagfallow , FE _ 3-3453 _________, PEKSUN^LIAED HOMES __________FB 3-^__________ RENT OR^LBAU WITH OPTtra buy. 3 bedroom modem, west irbon. nearly new. OB 4-0383 suburban, nearly ni TAYLOR REALTOR ROCHESTER k1« O L L 8, BRICK years old, carpet thronst lomatlc gaa bast, H u. • ' apad, 131 inssbit l ch, 3 RocbeaUr.’OL l-133d. WASHUiOTON |>AiK! VBR Y clean 3 rm. aid bath 1 bedrmi.. Ige. llv. rm. wall to wall carpeting, Ige. kttehen. Full bemt. Recreation rm. Stool and wash sin la ' sin la bemt. IVli ear garage^ Oil heat, fenced back yard 113.300. 10 per cent dn. Contact owner. FE 4-3013 oriox. 4 years ow. Basemeni, at-taehod garage. Terms. FE 4d637. 3 BEDROOMS Washer, dryer and alectrlc range Included In price. Paymente ap-proxlmatoly $83 laelodlng taxes and Insumooe. RUSSELL YOUNG r BKDRObM. OPEN FIRCPLaCB. outeldt barbeeut, e 1 o a a d in porch. Lot '80- S 180, etorogo parage. Prloed for quick tale. Land contract available. OR 1-3131. 1U5 Athene._ 4, ROOMS AND BATH 74 Orandvlew I Riis k BATH, lio- l6t with trutt troee. near school. FE 3-4303. 375 DOWN. PARTLY nNIBHED 1 hdrm.. neae Bdgawood OM Course. Will help finance flRIab of tWa borne. UT 3-3731. modcj^ 3^% * Harger H06bB POR BALK NR. NORTH- V rwn nis. nvm: By owner. 078 Sterling. HOUSES POR SALE BY OWNER and builder Jamoe Dod' ~ Dwight StraoL FB 4A4M. bedroom brick bomao. Oi Conklin Road. Lokt Ortom Ono 3-bodroom at lail WnUrtae Lake Read. Shown by app^moi' — 4-8431, large' home. For ORION lEDRM,' WB4t 'SIDB inf Jfhll FE 4-1313. bath, basemint. Large wt, lake privileges. Roues nesdt some repairt, but priced at only 33,830. Very easy H. P.' HOLMES. INC. 3331 S, Upeor Rd. FE 3-334 BROWN COLORSX^ - OI Nothing down. Lovelv / bedroom modera In very pood condition Oil AC turn. Full basement. Paved 81. Nice front porch All you need Is your closing costs. PSjU price only "Here It a tsoaslloil' 41.303 DOWN - Charming 3 room I bodreiomt. Large' Sg i NO MONEY DOWN “^QB 3-^bl ” $9,500 Phone OL l4334. i SALLEE WOODS -SUB. " lol oopt dally at 3S3 W. Yale, wr Stanley. SpMlal priced 3 BEJ NeaV Airport Edtmiu i WE TRADE BKAUnrUL 1 bedroom. Car-..R k living room, baeemeat. Aluminum acreenx. Largo ' Nleoly laadaeapod. Only 33.00 down and aaeumo PBA. 313.300 NEAR WILLIAMS LAKE Cute 4 rooms k bath. Baacment Large lot. 33333 with 33M dowa EUZABETB LAKFRONT income - Beautiful 3-unit. 1 1. of perfect beach. A steal CASS LAKEFRONT INCOME 3 three-bedroom homes. Both very oUractIve Good beach. mOOO. • an'hode-loter 8 dream Delightfully modem wltb a perfect background for your preelms antiques. Ranch style, breeaeway. jfioVSiMr. •oV.vioiSii EUeSOeth rmfewTirWalm BSI —ar golf couraa on Ellaabain, Lake rMd - this attraeUve If room homo boa outstanding interior decora^. Carpeted. Full basement.. Oarage. 3 liau. Only ***'*°®elwood realty ---------- 7 W. STRATHMORE WEBSTER OXFORD-LAKE ORION M&siwir"' $190 DOWN CIVILIANS NO OTHER COST 1 bedroom roach, full baaomeot, ^or!’ ftm^. *Perit4*c^Wm.** VACANT-IMMBOIATB Pols. ChM. Walk la and look at tt I It lotcrestod call ewaar. MAT VARAOEMBI Days. WO 34! Evoe. Sat. B Bun, Y HAYDEN * oU tumace, Nice kitchen 13^1 tnred for slseirtc etove, nit Bau. ^ Dawn plus F.B Al htortTan Cost. PONUAC WATKINS BETATBS floors. New wall to wall c. in the L.B. Plreplaot. Tlla B Large Dining Room Thermal windowf. Extra Inxulatton. _________ gal eeptlc. Recreation room. Gil furnace, til,Tit. 1>»«s - NORTH OP WALTON. Oft Baldwin. APPROX, t ACRBS. John R. Rd. WE BUILD ill Baeement, Brick Proat 3U.SIS J. c. HAYDEN, Realtor^ ■4 K. WALTON FH 34H4I Open Eves.—Sun. I to 3 pjn. SYLVANLAKE eteaa fireplace, cerai p( ilnla. hi nillj entpel raM tUa bi XBOCk I Wad floog. gae !«-r'95’sre furnace, atte 17 It. pkvet. __________ 313.501 call PE 1-33U. SEE THE "VIKINO’ AT JUDAH Lake Estates. PE 3-Sia_____________ Holbtnt down K^tgi.ri'si:*-John I. Vermett SMITH Wideman. aUNTOON LAKE SUBDIVISION Custom built ranch bom* 3 bedrooms, ceramic I 311 503 COLONIAL - Located I ttoo room. 4 bedrooms. Aero d land, m-car laraae. One of the older homr' * '■* — —‘ ----- offer living offered here. 1ST WITH US - For fact k efficient service. WE BUY. sfi-L A trade 3# vri serving Pontiac Si Tlclalty. OMa 3-3. L. H. BROWN. Realtor 3407 Elliabotb L'aka Rood FE or FBS^ll e Listing Benrleo CLARK LAKEFRONT. 41.003 DOWN. Va- NOTHINO DOWN, 3 bedrooka brick ranch Tiled bath, oil heaL larga lot. West Suburban nttkhboihood, Newly decorate lislso 3M4 DOWN 3S.MS. Modam I roon bunsalow. Omn front por^ ful "-------1, g]i Itb-car gi • • Only W.M3. rase. Paved I1.13S DOWN. INDIAN VILLAOE. Modern 3 room ---------- ‘ 0.3 room buntalww flreplaco. dtung. n uMviuent. Oas hot water m Oarate. 313.130. full price. LSJT wr™ 08^ ......... STATE iRK REAU ES' bath, carpetad living room. 3 ledgerock flraplacea, rtc-reallon room IVk car garage. beautiful landtea^ lot, IMMXDUTB POesU- 103-FT LAKE PROHTAOE Beautiful Long Lake home, featuring 1 rooms, 4 bod-roo.-ue. Capo DM deala-i. ■---------Ivlng room and dln- tog**roo_ __________________ Brick flroplaof, birth rabl- -___________J italnlats I sink in kllehen. Fan--- i 33-ft. porehL |v. hos water best.' Lot heaulttully landeeaped' with house — far 90o qttth a green thumb. BeautL'ul —wdy boaob. lOBAI, HOME ' YEAR - HOUND UT* iS!o.^ Fatto.' -I wtW h 4U W. HURON FE 44526 ____,, 'SSf ,'Tr JSSSti jeamgo. ftaqwrai 31,418 dowiT f!c. Wood Co. r>:F“£“jr A r- T\\^NTV.1^UR "V'"- ' . ' . r- ■; ' ■ ■' i HR PONTIAC PKKSS. TUEHUAY. JANUARY 19o6 ■A ■ For'^alt HomM 49 WILL TRADE \ BEDROOM BUNOAI m^oE jMnrlltt* >At>QW ROOM run. LAROE AMD KITCI--- ---- - BABEMENt^ QASJtBAT - OPT JOBLTII-nUCED TO SBU, FAST JIM WRIGHT, Realtor _________JTE i-03«l WBBT'iiSB'BitiCK ■ Brtck } bMraont, cArpetad nOArt, m bathi. 3 car Mn(» I block --1 of OeBcnl HoapiUl. Only * b«4room>. IS •tor;, t b< •nd both on tat floor, corofc. olumoluin a' — For SbIb Howet , # LAEKTROMT B 1.AEB ‘ A oadd boaao. Id RlUi (oraia. obom Ifwia. 8TBBUC BBALTT. IM R. MIL- V ** “ "brTcI"’' rULL rRICB $7,500 bor. I11.3M Ciwh to morMtr ' Paul Si ■ I ones. Real Est. All W Huron Ft 4*1! Fu' Sale HooatB 49 WEST SUBURBAN 0. OnlT w.a» ont DO load 001 Val-U-Way HOYT DRAYTON PUINS : LAKEFRONT ' $950 DOWN jsg*v«5rt.'S{.!ir'S» }rr;5.'K-.’TJ£5t.''t^5i“b'Un bMUtItiU tembed front yard wttb a aand baacb. S-«ar llf.N0. Mako an o«or tiini# d^n payment. GPIT THE KIDS OUT OF YOUR HAIR Id tbia } bedroom «ftb full baa«-mc»t Haa U a » ft tllfd rocroa-tton apaet naatarad valla, oak floora. 13-tt llvlnc room Tiled bath with tub * abover Handy kltoheo vUh loadt of eablneu k anaick fvMr JuA imaalne a 3 ItmllV duplex for 111.MO. Has ortvata drives, situated on large lot and nicely landscaped One 4 room apart-mant sod a 3 room. Both furnished and have nice batha. Over tt.OlO a year income Presently rented. MuA have appolnlment to HOME IN THE SPRINOf Then check Into one at out tom "Moorebllt" homes, on lot. Haa full basement, aelec. — floora. plastered walla, fully In--n w,eh cablneU -----Priced from t—— I Cal) us lor full detolla It lovely bomes. PE i-im HAYDEN I BR Home NEAR M8.U.0 KENT Eatobllahed In III* 3 BEDRM RANCH - Located fr cltv of PonUac. Ooed site bed •I.OM. Terma WATERFORD AREA - Altrac. ttva I room and bath with double lot and lako privileges. Tiled bath All In good condition and will sell at low prict ol M.MO. Terms plenty of al Total price living 1 act. Oil lISM down - Nearly room and tiled bath In m Carpetod llv pHci‘“i‘Ko.*?“' Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor ^ telegraph . J 3-S133 — AMPLE CPI MULTIPLE LUnTMO SERVICE O'NHL CRIBCINT LAKE PRIVIIBOIB “ - y 3 bed- Only s B. Psneed wl?h^llbb caab deal located Ml Ola-Bt with Paved garage. S/UIJ SI,MW OOWU piu, COatB. GILES REALTY CO. PE i-ens 331 BALDWIN AVI OPEN , I a m - I P M. MULTIPLE LISTTNO SERVICE WHITE BROS. DIXIE HWY. m ft. commercial frontage 4001 Jl ^dtep, with frontage on Loon Lake II rooms. 3Mi ceramic I WHITE BROS.. OR 3-13t& Eves 'til •: Sunday 10 MULTIPLE LISTTNO SERVICE PAMPER YOUR PURSE "No Punches Pulled" needs quick cash and . ilce hla equity lor approxi Jy tl.aoo tor this cute ami / Road. $M monthly taxer and Insurance I 7fb-*£jPl5r”le7lra’;f/''"‘’ -■ SPACE'AN’D CO'mEORT Bedrooms plus/den Pull dln- ------* m iBstha makes ---- famliy home In ly keiB West side natoh-Spotwasly clean ana a irea> le ahow/ May you be flratl Priced tor quick sale. tl4,1M .\ DREAM COMES TRUE... when you Inspect tbIa 3 year old brick ranch overlooking lake and only 10 mlnutet from downtown. 4 bedrooms, ftroplaca, m batha. Carpeted throurtout and ------ dltloning unit. 'a ^1......... beautifully ki borhood r~ It ACRES 8ASMABAW ROAD, room home. 4 badrooma. klteli remodalad. houaa Msament. eual lut ear garata. Evarylhlni eondtUoa. «lt,ttt. Oood n 4-3MS. I 71 ACRES ON COMMERCE ROAD ~ I of ymage two par aert. ilder .diving 'By thp way, Murliln, haw I ever told you how (nuch adi(ilre a man who turns out the amount of work you do and still Stay on the payroll!" ^ For Sale Hombcs 49 TRI-LEVBL J________________ -Will dupUeato. Sat wodaL i«ss Olanvoed. Sylvan A M. Catoll. Central Price reduced 13.000 only IM.MO arlth euoellnt torms BARGAIN ll.\I WRKillT. Rfiilt.ir 340 Oakland^ve________PE 4-0441 le'vlth glaaaed-ln porch a car garage A buy al to.l 1 tl.MO down. ;FE 4-0528 ! — REALTORS — 377 S TELEORAPH. OPEN EVES A N N E T T n home. 3 lota Oarage. down Will I brick home 30.0x43.0. Oak . ?um“ln ™V‘“a ’’o?«Va*r?ei*«>.‘T »»»• lot. lU.ttt ■Terma. J.C. H,\YDE.\. Realtor M E Walton. PE 0-0441. Open Eve! located I The 33 I GI's Nothing Down NEW LUTTNO. Urge 4 rpom home Just oft Soahabaw. nestled on a 100 x 363 foot lot Pull price only 17.400. with monthly payments of 047 tncludlnt taxea and Insurance. NESTLED ON A 130 rr wooded lot with lake privileges on Casa and Bltia-beth Uke. This charming 3 bedroom bungalov vlO make some OI a very comfortable home. M.J46 with monthly paymenU of 003.10 log burning fireplace. All the cupboard apace you've always wanted In yeur kitchen. Tiled bath Attached garage. Perhaps beat of all la the spot A beau-. tiful shaded canal front with excellent b a few feet CURK8TON - 3 bedroom brick with full basement, add nice aloed lot This home can be purchaaed for 0400 down IT you have good cradit. bon't drlayl’ I aee this ^ one today House DOWN - Very neat Templeton 5 .\cres , K. 1.. i enipirtoii. Realtor 3330 Orchard U. Rd PE 4-4441 ________After 0, PE 3 0403_____ section Call NEAR NORTHBRR BIOH — A RAY O'NEIL, Realtor STOUT'S Best Buys Today .- LUXURIOUS LOO than Iha regular . _________ home The grounds are Undaeapod. the bomt provides the best to Uving Cotv fireplace. colorful kitchen, with lota of light Pull basement with room to entertain and priced al only gr.iSt with terma. Sure Um yard la fenced. LITTLE FARM Located list Weal ol Meta-mora. and Includes a mod- with basement A steel barn with alaiirlilona. corn bWIMMINO AND BOATING Are only purl of the plus features Included m this. Soper value Located on a comer lot on a quiet aide OUeV and'*%y?ran'*Yak«' Tbe home la a 3 bedroom with attached -bretteway and 3tk-car garage. Land- ----•— •- “tt of UiU world. to mortgage. Warren Stout. Realtor T7 N Saginaw St PE S-lll * Opm ‘TU 0 P M. $500 DOWN Bs Lake are'a, J btdroom nt. gaa ' Us tokea WILLIAMS IJkKE lake. 3 badrooma. family rqom. 1 aar attachad garave, yard aom-Pietoly fyncad. Sharp bofa*- j to oven and 1 Eac'rTi .. ' for an appointment. [ 3 PAMILV-NORTOK ST I This l> an rxcellrnt Invratnvent n excellent condition Pull baee- eliAbeth I TATTt^ II™’ kitchen Pull, painted b NORTHERN HlOH AREA-New 3 bedroom ranch Ala-co alum aiding, plaatored walla, hardwood floors. 33 It living room with cove ceilings A fireplace. Modern klUhen with dishwasher fir'll place Completely .loaulaled. alum i^atorma A at teen a thruout Not a project home built with owDcr'a aupcrvl- NICHOLIE & HARGER CO, .haaement, Imrdwood floors, til* bath, oil beat Just dw-oratOd About |33g down — Vacant. CLARKBTnN AREA 3 btdroom ranch homes with I ba Ih Just decorated and In fine condUlon No down payment — about 03M cloatog eoita—Vacant. NEAR walled ItoKE 3 bedroom rdheh. Just decorated. Master Mrm has private bath and stall shower. Carport. Paved slreet. Oolv ItlStt with ASM dowa on PH A terms on balance — It's vacant. TUESOAV EVENI&O CALL: Don Bryaon — OR 3-4434 Don NloIwUt — PE 44044 53y, WEST HURON ___________PE 4-0103_________ For Sale Houses 49 GAYLORD es,' FOB PREStlOE ... ----- Cloae to I plant. Terms — OO^IOIM down. PE SMALL FARM CLOSE IN This farm haa two hon with a product including Ford H ton pickup, ncc aaiy to operate this tr farm la tocluded to the pn ol 010.400. Let ua toll all I posalbtliuea It has to off Will take a Irarfe. PS |-M LAWRENCE W GAYLORD COLORED 4 large BEDROOMS - llli batha. Spacious living and dining rooms, kitchen Pu l baaemrnt with auto oil heat. Large land- " f?n%'fi..’'%^toe'"?r1‘vr ^O^f; Income Property I FURNISHED UNIT, GOOD RENT. al. tlMt down. PI t-lgtO. NORTH PERRY BTRBBT I family brisk, carh unit h_ rms. and bath. Separate basements. new gaa furnace and autr water heaters. Btoble tenants, ei cellcttt eondUlon. High net toeom Splendid value at Ma.eOO; tormi Rolfc H. Smith, Realtor 144 e. Telegraph_____FE. 3-7040 For 38 ACRES An tdaal plaet to auppleniaat rr own facd. This won't tost tho rtduaad price of fll.HO. 4 ACRES Cloae to achooli and atorca, baau-tiful rolling acanic buHdias apM. tt.0M fun prhsa. . 8 ACRES ■rl'i CRAVVFORD AGENCY at W. Walton Pf t-IMO MO E PUnt_______MT E-IIOS For Sale Farms S6 PwliiaM $9 sO stato a dbinty raqiitremrau. Now fuH. I lavo). wall locatod. finest of oShiP Plooty of room tor txpanalan, 0111.000 cash. Ma brvkera. Pull name, addreaa A ^ont nq. Reply Boa It. Pontiac STp VELT'f AND MAOAkiNE X a?‘ N()1^1IERN U.P. BAR EXCELLENT LOCATTON-ta l&od alee city IntersMtton of 3 main hlfhwayi. 100 tt. frontage lor easy parking 40x130' masonry hulld-iBg. beautifully paneled to charry. Pnea Includes nuatoaaa, real oo-toto and 7 room home. Owner re-Urtot and prmid Ip afltr thla Ug |ma buatocaa. Only OU.tOO - ’ STATEWIDE to good i *•»» ■ Wm. A. Kennedy UALTOR 3101 or Huron St._____ b to ACKB farms with AIlt3 Ithout buHdlnga. Oreterd loo. iMiauTT. 1340 IS. aaat,-d* brtween Mlahlaad and . Highland. Mlj^lgaa. HO CtWN'rFY tSTA'IE 71-acre Dairy Farm Haa 4 bod-roems. modem country homo with 3 large baVni. Located 4 miles north of Oxford Phone OA 0-3144 Prank Bbepord. Realtor____ Small Farm 1 right for saddio horaes. m farm home with oak floo w-.w w—■. ..J •■•rnace. •• 1. Vartety I. Oood I high at Vticant MaAcrea on blacktop road noHI of Pontiac Lovely building sR and Dear flahlna and swim mini to Ortonville o or llt.OOO wlU I'lfjyd Kent Inc.. Realtor 3300 Dixie H>v. tt Telegraph PE 3-023 - open Eves AMPLE CUSTOMER PARKING Rent Farm Property 56A l^le BusineES Pro Huron. I Lake Rd. ------- ------- purchas* Write Pontiac Preat Boi COMMERCE CORNER 3 .storv building with office downstairs etui apartmedt up Located al 400 Elisabeth Lake RomT Priced right. Call PE 4-1107. modern office - 2 HOUSES. H' frootage Parkmg lot. room lor expansion, near'bank A Tel-Huron Center Ideal for many types of business or branch, con-si,ler long lease. Realtor Hllto. PC 5-S181. VERT DESIRABLE PARCEL AP- Su^r Market Owner's other Interests prompts a tale of this marvatoua bnateeas. Includes 8.D.M., oxeeltoot large bulldtog, loto..ot parking iitoee. grMttcail^ all ai^^pment. from Pontiac in a very buty area. WILLIS M. BREWER JOBBPH P. R8DIE. BALBR MOR. SHELL OIL CO. Has tor leaaa. modem 3 bay service etottoo to Panltoe area. Exeallent buxlnaae oonortunitv. Call PE 0 Oin After I eaU TO M003._____________ SERVICE STATTOHS 3^ 'LI'ABE. good' potential Pliiasa eall between 0 and I PE 34101 AP 0 p m.. PE AI440. Pure Oil < QAN kUSlNBBS GUIDE." COMPLETE LIST OP ALL KINDS OP BUSINESS OPPORTUNITTU. PARTRIDGE AND ASSOCIATES. 1060 W. HURON. PONTIAC. PE For Sate Ctotlili^,^.64 MT MnoHAN- _________ WNK CAPE - WtHTikcB livino room suite . Brand new daveaport and cbali 30 PER CENT DISCOUNT BAL-1 •‘•P anr.e 00.100 payable al 010 mo., ___J InWrest. Tout t.-- Sacurad by. 3 bedroom . CHATTEL MORTOAOE ON BAR, sold lor 032.000 present balance tIOIIS pavt om month at 0 per cent Interest WUl sell lor 014.340 . Call PE 4-II47. _________ , SaVB”8EVERAL'CONTRACTS -new A old Bchneldtr MA 4-J»3 LAirt) COI?rRACTB TO BUY OR to sell. Earl OarrtU. EM 3-3411 V only 03 weekly I 300 FT LAKE Rent. I.’se Bus. Prop. 57A Money to Loan ^ 61 Borrow with Confidence $25 to $500 Household Finance CnrporalloB ol Pohllao 3»b S. gsginaw St_eE_i »1» BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WBBRB YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $500 OFFICES m PoAlac - Drayton Plalna — Utica Wallad Lk.. Birmingham, Plymoulh GET $25 TO $500 ON TOUR Signature Up to M HooUis to Rtpay PH. FE 2-920C OAKLAND T,oan Company 303 Pontiac State Bank'Bldg LOANS. 1040 SliMLER OIL SPACE HEAT crs. At- pr«-seasan spoelal pnc a 0. A. Tbompaco- 1000 MtO. West 1959 CLOSEOUTS sseivvvrea, vjueroown . a SPEED Ql)EEN OA8 DRVERS New. InsUllad. Ouarantoed 4 RCA W'POOL Automatic Wai 10 lbs. New. Installed . 0i«e The OOOD HOUBEKBEPINO WOP 01 WEST HURON________rE_Ai>*I A UVINO ROOM SUITE. COF iu on *i nVi?*** APARTMENT SIEB REPRICI _jood condition. cheap^PE 44432 ABOUT ANVTHINO TOU' W A N I FOR THE HOME CAN' b -----------atitVT ■ ' ---------kinds. HKW A Visit our trada dept, lor t bargalna. 34 HONTB8 TO PAT Wt buy. tail or trade. Coma and look around_3 acres of f parking. Phone n M14I. O^ MON . BAT. I TO 0 4 mlloa E E. of Aub. Rd . M40 AUTOMATIC washer. _nsw_PE 4-4470 Auburn Holsbts SSSSi rE 4 3-JOa PRCNTAOE C Cold Phoae OR 2-0?l> AS.SOC lATI'- BKOKl'iKS! Inv, Co Inc 443 ORCHARD LAKE PE 04003 . After 4. PE 0-1000 ' W. Huron .'btreet ' Very fine brick double. 0 besutl- oak floors, big basement, gas beat, garage. 14.000 down. Mary Day Avenue Large I room m'ode'rn home tsste-fully decorated 4 arge bedrooms s k-.i,- -----... g,r,g. N LOTUS I ipci _________________________ todrewm | bUiTdINO 30 x 30 PdflT A 1 stall garage Inquire at 313'Bald--------- ------------------ win, PE 4-1061.__________■ GENH\.\ LAKE used car lot wrhi oppice. room home. 334 Lansing Street ' •*. *1®1***f e" Baldwin Aye, n 40x300 foot waterfront lot. | "J ull basement, new .oil furnace 1 Baldwin, PE 4-1061. _____ - . A PM RADIO |3« ClockJi^lO^ 4-»'i40. ATTENiioN SPEVIAL THIS WEEK 31'’ Motorolw sot 04 New set guaranteed In writina 30 other sets to choose frun. All scu prieed over IM guai aotoed H days paru and labo: Prom 17" to rr'^ htond and ma RAY O NEIL, Realtor 303 8. TatoBrapb Open o-O PB 1-7103_____________OR 3-3030 own by appmnli Close-In 1 IRWIN Dlitrtei. Community « Alt cUy ----------------- Lovefy * ----- I'k-car garage farge loi nicely landscaped Immediate ; possession 831.400. Shown by car garage. Base-ray I eat. Im mediate _po*session. 13.000 dn Sell or TVadc John K. I^^viIl & Sons Realtors JI3 West Huron Street ■Ipce 1134 0400 down Hers Is your chance to move on a small farm at a rcoaonable price 3 bedroom homi with full basement. Only 07.400 full price. WILLIAMS REAL ESTATE A INSURANCE — “\LDW1N_PE nPLE LI8TINO BBR\ ARRO iE OUR LADY OP THE LAKES - Just a I mlnuto walk to this wtU plaanad imbltoi brick ranch fearing 3 bedrooms, batd- II1COII1P ---- —. down 3 family, private entrance and bath. Auto-maUc heat, 3 car garage WILLIS M. BREWER JOM™ P REISZ. sales MOR 04-06 E Huron St. PE 4-4111 Eves. PE 44004 or PE 14033 RUSTIC LO(;\.. You people who are Iqoking for a rrs> Dice year around log laketroot home, wuh place, situated on a beautt-fully wooded It will want to Inspect this home. Bting sold furnished with many extras for 117.400 — Terms CaU J A TAYLOR, Realtor O* 04306 I I STOP LAUNDRY A DRY CLEAN service. cMn mrated. new equipment, drop-off Dundry service and .’ask A carrv dry clean serv-W 04.000 will handle. White t ake Automatic Laundry. 3030 Duck Lake Rd Rt 1. Hlghland^MIch I C6MPlEIE"PAR-rt STORK BP8T offer over 03,000 Peb I. 1000. 0 30 to 130. <34 ^Mwlm______ N38 LEASE: PRIVATE' OWNED Mobil Servire Station Stork and toulp^nt available. MA 4-0331 or 40 TO 0400 - 134 TO 4400 COMMUNITY LOAN CO DeJeto I 30 ®- LAWRENCE PE 0-0431 4-73M ! PRIENDLY SERVICE LO-ANS $25 TO $500 On your signature or other secu' rlty. 14 months to repay. Out i service Is fait, friendly and help-1 ful. VJstt our olllea or pbona PE TY^. W* EfHaabeth U .... . .. 541)1 I MMI Open I am to t p.^. HOME & AUTO i______________________________________ M A U IVJ BEDS 111. BIRVICEABl.f LOAN CO. i Kenmore automatic washar 02.' Comer E Pike j Y-gSyih . WHIPPLE LAKE Lake F’rivilepcs icr Kirden spot with raipbei rawberrit* ancT grap^x. \\>bt Siilnirhan t bedroom ranch 1 Ing. wail ri • Prncft IiT . $7“.250 3 bedroom' home located on lot > 00 X 130'. Storms and screens. \ basement. Only 114 blocks to I school. 1750 down ARRO REALTY TED MCCULLOUGH. REALTOR 5147 Cass-Elliabeth Rd I'K 5-1284 FF 4-.W4 open 0 s.ni to I 70 p m ____ SUNDAY I TO 4_ "SMITH" _________________n s;!!/ edge rock fireplace, plne-sncled family room, ultra dsesped Reduced to t37.- SPORTSMAN B PARADISE ~ Enjoy hunting. Ilshing A all other winter A summer sports on your own 00 acres Unusuallv scenic nroperty. expertiv remodeled 3 bedroom home Florida room overlooking rolling countryside. Auto oil heat Private lake over TOO ft. loof plus ons acre lake. Bara 33x44. for horset or cattle A other DORRIS $10,000 BRICE RANCH HOME A well olanned 3 bedroom home with numerous appointments you will admire. O'esmlng oak floors lovely bath, a wonderful step-saving kitchen, asphalt tiled basemeat with extra lavatorv A deep wide Warren Stout, Rraltor 77 N Baglnaw St. PE 4-0114 Open III 0 PM torlto Pontiac I —________— ------------ leaaed land for 03.000 down pint stock and least deposit. 0 day a week, operation. Invastlgate. WHEN YOU NEED $25 TO $500 We win be glad to help you SI'AI E FINANCK CO. 703 Pootlao State Bank Bld| FF 4-l.'i74 TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 2C»2 S. MAIN * 214 E. ST. a.ATR ROCHESTER ROMEO LOABS 010 TO 1000 AUTOS For Sale Lots dollar value VACANT bungalow. I 060 - Attractive tray sb gle five room bungalow w glassed-in porch, full bt toent. gts heat Small r 304 DRAPER - In betullful Plonatr Highlands where pride reflects In well kept homes and yards, Eicep-tlpnal two bedroom home. Unusually large rooms throughout Basement and iTi-lIill ViHaKu N\L 2 NOW OFE.\ I As a special Introductory otter— . The first 10 parcels of this neo I development will be sold at a 10 | Close-Out Balsams!! COUCH ............. 010 00 divan .............. 030 0b UVINO BOOM BOITB .... 034 00 EASY CHAIR ......... 0 7 DC DAVENPORT BCD ...... $40 00 ARMY COT, COMPLETE .. 017 Ou SEVEN FOOT TWIN BEDS. COMPLETE........... 003 00 TWIN PUBTER REDS. CTlOtPLETE ........ 103 00 DRESSER WITH MIRROR 013 Ol WOOD DINEri B BET t'O ni OlipiAB'ES Etc..... Olw I'lcc Df'livfiv—Tefiiis _____ 10 W PIKk ST. ICAShTTo- usel) IVo~PUrn —— , tun * M'-c^ PE 2 0107 HOUSEHOLD OOODS OL 04711 OL 1-0101 PL 3-3610 PL 1-3010 "PRIENPLT SWtVlCE" QUICK 030 TO OMO LOANS Seaboard Finance Co. 1106 N. PERRY STREET Parking - Phone PE EOOOl POTATOCHIP ROUTE your rhance to get Is Unt going business. ----- trucks, franchise and handles onai-uv ■ i and party store me^andtoe 411.- gi w - Lawrence - IANS 035 TO 0500 TKR A LIVlNOSTONE ' wrencf St PE 4-14101 FE 4-1.574 ‘..r;'n‘ Dixie Hwy. Orayti ■tu E Pri., 'Ml 0. ol A A P Maiket 1 Oet tbe details I Credit Adviiurs tlooal Income from small _ rant that Is rented by the month. Includes ill 3 bedroom aparh ments of whicb one Is rontod. Owner lives to the other. Real estate, business and equipment, IIEOOO down plus stock. M a I o highway location. Hagstrom i- CONSOLIDATE BII«-N( LOANS I ' Mortgage Loana 62 Itfftltor ‘ Rd (MM) OR 4-0358 'BUD" Tip-Top Location All on One Floor Delightful 5 room ranch-stvir bungalow with attached garage Shores Subdivision. PeiDurri carpeted living room and dining room, drapes, mirror, pleasing kitchen to delight the homemaker Ample utility room, au- This : 11 like, I 3-Bedroom Near St. Benedict'^ Conveniently located 1 buualw. close to boll and parochial schools._____ stores. Features generous Uvlmt room, with dining area. Pull bath wllh showtr Automatic gas haat and hot water Oaslna-tor. aluminum storms and sertaos Awnings. H-car garage. Paved street. Quick pas-jess^y^ Aa,ton-prto«l at 014.300. ‘Uud" Xicholie, Realtor north* o*"pon*itoc"'Vi bedrooms. 314 bath h landscaped site «r hsve evi offered tor sale An- abundant of ' unusual varieties of r Shrubs and flowers. 2.033 of blacktop road frontage. ROY ANNETT. INC ! 28 E Huron I Open Evenings: A 8 SfiFE 8-0466 045.000, Terms. By appointment i Roife H. Smith, Realtor I 344 B. Telegraph Rd_PE 3-7048 Partridge : IS THE "BIRD' TO SEE You'll Never I’.qu^l This Close to echwil and eto. North Pontiac 3 bedroot basement, garage. ' DONELSON SCHOOL AREA Attractive family and baih. a third badroom :tra epace on second floor, bors, plastared walli. Ei-basement gas beat and itcr Pine condition toside ann out. Triple garage. BETTER SEE IT TODAY! A PLACE TO LIVE! ! A PLACE TO WORK! •torms ■screVns''''sii v'lui "fv7i ' REMARKABLE INVESTMENT! KENNEDY Suburlran Living Its. I^st ’ . Your future homele thg • (CONVERTIBLE 24) W.'W, ROSS HOMES ' OK J-8021 ‘ I Neat, completely redone, 3 bed- i room frame witb new oil furnace and malure ^**^ *' '‘"‘’"'‘R'bi i vironment. Lake privileges 1,^“ at others and then buy th<* n, '6 wltn 01 400 down, s ol parking oi lot A gift shop nos be office, beauty shop. er_ youi need msv i adjoining 3 badroom h--- ly lecatei, for business, down will nandie. CALL ' LIST WITH . IS. Idofel- mikT U47 w.w*9 worn 91 *vu aoirn^> I Y T ^ Partridge |5™Phn|5 legli^.. VJ' 2-9236 multiple LISTING SERVICE LADD S INC. J 4300 Dixie Hwy . Drayton Plalnil PONTLAC NahlTN^DDWN“-LK—PRIV. ROOM FOR SAU. IN! NOTHilfO tX2WN. LK. PRIVi* (ormAttnn IIM nablAtui teert on Clear Lk Oxford. Ap- ------- prox I acre MT..3-901___"LET S TALK ONLY $600 75x2CX>—Dcaytoii P’aiiiy $600 TO $2000 on Oakland 6ottntp boaae. II •rn or nol. Voss & Buckner. Inc. i 388 Rauonal BWg PE 44736> 810 BEAR CONSOLIDATION . Call u , BUSINESS" Por dollar valu > the best buv In m ranch home 1.“*£^S«l}e'id”V: I 18 screened rir.a'S MUL'nPLE LlB'nNO SERVICE SELL BUY TRADE THRU MILLER WEBSTER SCHOOL AREA. First time offered 8 rooms A bath. 3 htdrooms pleasant braakfast nook. Pull dining room plenlv ' cloaat space. Dry baaem—* gas haat. Oaraga. Alw cloaod frant por^. ill.5 avallablt. Thli U • gen cheerful, a cot - North side 8 rooms A baUi-ODly'8 years eld with sparkUng oak floors, alum, storms A screens Pull basement, oil hoot. Only 81.880 down - IN ao. tocladtng taxes A insurancs. .4H per c«nl mtga. OOMPLETU-Y furnished north suburban I roomia l>''i baths. 3 restful bedrooms. Penmeler heating. Anrhor-lenced yard. Automatic washer A dryer, stove, rOOrlger-alor Evervihing Included for 113.-8M. Just pack your tooth brash, Willi'am Miller > , Realtor FE 2-0263 878 W. Moron Open 8 to 8 Aun. 1 to 4 LAUDS. INC. OR 3-1331 LAREWUUD VllitotiB A MtW enolee lakefroat homoaltes are sllll avallablf. LAKBSRDRE DEVELOPMINT SEE THE NEW SITES AT CHEKOKEF HII.LS before Tbu BUY! You'll Uke ihete wooded, rel IW ft sties controlled to i CAUL W. BIRD, Realtor s63 Oommanty Nhtiniial Bank Bldg. PE 4JBI1_______Esas PE 51382 .Waterford Hills Estate “ A few obolec lots loft., Averata leOxSOP. Oood dratoaga. Ideal io-eaUen Herbert C. Davos, Rltr. PE 64311 ^ For ^le Soft Ice Cream This Dearborn area soft Ice , down™oavment an3'*ll*prtce?^ «rll Capable of a good net pro- MICHIGAN BUSINESS SALES CORPORATION JOHN A. LANDME88ER. BROKER »»73 Telegraph Rd. PE 4-1463 PARK AT OUR FRONT DOOR S'vaps DEEP PRkEZE. JORDENTlTfcu-bicfgo^uprtoh.. Clean. Beet Offer DEEP FREEZE, CXC COND . 1146; wringer waahsr, $30; rtlrlg- trr;«.yTfl5*r,s;V‘vi*;K; electric dryer, fU: ------ sever used. 6M; am er, 616. PE 6-11N. ELECTRIC RAHOl” condition PE 4-4NI. Partridge Ideal for couple to operate. Only 63.0M down plus stock. ConvcD-lent neighborhood locaUon. Hardware Superb 6160 6W groas. Plenty ol paved parkiDg. Population around thla stora toe reared 6M per cant to the last 6 years. In a large, lower coatral Michigan city. Ei-cellant laaae. Pine. waU e«tob-'-“-■l bustnaas. N.6W '----- rtrldge'a n gan Busin Partridge 3 BEDRM. BRICK HOME— LARUB LOT - CARPS 1 ED — OA8 FURNACE - LOCATED OUT J08LYN -WILL TRAM POR SMALL HOME — ALSO HAVE HOUSE IN KUZABBTH LAKE EBTATia. Open ■nil 6 36 I ROOM MODERN LAKBPRONT borne. Trade equity for bouie-trallei^or ^v^nt property. Own- inft7“^E8T DEeF PREEZK 676 or 'M - 'U Chevy or Ford also '64 Ford W ton pick up, rl or a good car. CaU aftor ___pB. PE 64446._____________ 6N RBDUCTNO MACHINE NEW AND ASSOCIATES :x:-r-:, -n - --i; ] iUBINESSES THRUOUT MICH. CLO*E _TO ORTON- PE 4-3i« 1856 W. HURON - 7aR ELECT, CONTRACTOR WILL'SWiCp work lor tools. OR 3 m6____ SELL OR trade. POR OLDER M DeSotq Excellent cond. RhM. W.w tires. PE t-MlI water SOFTENERS TO RENT or tell. t3M mooto. OR 3-3366^ 1** but sell, trade tcE xketei- .Barnas Hargiava Bard- ________EM 3N13. ELECTRIC RANGE, 636~T3AS range 634. Pbllcs TV. 636 rr-frtgerator 636. breakfast set 116. ----------------- ... —... ......- ------iii. sectional bookcasa lit. lamp ta-ki.. as -- lamps 64 ea ' tk . Smith Movinx ” ■ carnar of C *''i6Vmxfe . Scott Lake Rd^_____________ ELBl.TRlC * OAS RANUE8 AT closenrut prices. MApla 6-WII Samuel's Apollances POR SALE I PIECE" CHRbidE sat, good cendltlon. PE 4-6604. PSEBZinjo - NOROE PREEZiRs New models *allghtlv''matebcd or •• --Two years to pay N days same as cash „ WATNE OABERT ^ PE 4 8IM rarOrDAfRE ELkehue RANGE M.OO. Kenmort elec, dryer, 648 O'l ThVra't-*”"- -'2.“*^.!.. .«L®0 llxlt II 87f.M*‘pB i ^.88 its /Ion .tweed me month old, before 1 p.m. pRBiKZERA gS. .P?*”"* Mfeblgan PluoraoeoDi, 361 (Hahard Uki ft.. IIH nodal. SavF ch)to40l No down pa,_.„,. „ -. Oottoyear Servlet B.»rv j« Cass Pontiac PE 64113 ' ^ GENERAL ELECTRIC WASHlcir'A drver Brand new IHO model. 6 year warranty Slightly scraliher «ian de|ivtre4. Customer Would K! -■’■.•‘Hi ®"ii fAND-WOViEN RUO." PE Utter 5_________________ ktikcTRic RTirtrE Double oven Pushbutton R um-! i! ar. Exc. cond. ifM. nnatf u. HowfthoM Ooodii W THE PONTIAC PltESS, TUESDAY. JANUARY 5 f u!Trl^ 'fS* biSk^t owtaf. I pbroiMto a M.sa p«r moDth or total ol *M.»0 — Ckpitol Appltanco. TT b-M ItAT-TAO WMBSR * Dl -------“orffir, J. Ktp0UMM4. te^eo >1 por wwb »ttata~i: MY 15711. MOVUIO CCH^UtPORART WAL- I, < obolrt. Auto- moUo waSmt, dryer, toon (umU taro. 1 ft. phUodtndron ptant, I other hoiuofiold artlolei. MA m1?TAOX #ItdiqiCR WAMCEtt. » fi^lNO. liOBt BACRiriCI \ FrlfldAlre. homo froour. Frl- ' doire rotilcerolor. Om llth o tury eoto, Itaht brown nylon i boletered. tonm rubber bnek a tuahloni. one coffee table, t>» oeeaalimal ebalri, one brown tweed lounM' chair It ottoman, llkl new, Ixtanaiao ladder. Ill e-dWl. MAaiC c • OAB RANOX, XX- OAK KITCHEN TABLE AMD . chain. Full alee bad aprtnia. Pair aetal twin bade. OB 3-»6*4. 6vER U used TT siTB FMM $U.N - --------- N up. TV antennae, It.t WALTON TV i» X. V--- ______FX »«M PRACTICALLY NKW CM) 1 ... --------- PHILCO XLXCTRIC RAMOX. APT. lUe. FE Hn«. _________ RknuorRAToki, all a i z _ . and prleee. One for erery^ need. Larieet eiock of rebuilt and lu amced rafrleeratori In OeklL. County. Sun falee MA H]41. RCA ---- SPIkClAL tXll RDOa, «I H.________ Lend Carpet, Woodward at Suuare Lk. juet below Ted'i. FE l-77«t STOVES BODOHT, BOLD. EX-chansed. Turner'e, tU Ml. Cloni- TRADX xixe. RAMdk FOR OAB ranaa. R B. Uiiaro X>**rCDLLOCH DEALER PONTIAC RD. AT OFDYEE farm MACHIMEhV - MEW AN5 Oliver Salta oi , _i“"Ljorth_«LP*I™r4:_____ chain saws .new —w'^ ^vna BALER. -54 model Oliver 77 tractor a cult'—-Oliver 3 bottom IS' plow mowlnj mac. McCormick uisc, 33 X 50 Quonip kaockfd do. 300 ribd J*K welder, m toa chwl McCormick deerinc rekp ......... * " UL 3. —Grand Plano f Uaed plSt.M I Splhet Plano. Mabopany baae, good I WATCH FOR OUR AD THURSDAY Open Dally l-g for Retail ^ h Purchaalng l B S; B AUCTION 50M DIXIE highway Acroat from DRAYTON SHOPPING CENTER jDryjon Shopping Centci GARAGE DOORS Paetarv itaonda. all atanda BERRY DOOR SALES HEAOUUARTBJIS #OR HOBBIES ‘-ralna-Teya-aabwlnn Bikea ‘ -7*Hobby Shop — ^Tt041 iR 3A03I Mloa pallet RouaelUl It PO bet Ptherilaa Med. Thiek Blenket TP |o. Ft per roll M.P7 [Himy ilenk-l 100 Bq Ft M U . A'mP Foil PM 8q. F* Blaylork Goal a Bldg. Knotty Pine Paneling FATTERHS WFP. WP4 and WC140 CHURCH’S. INC. CoVUT SntOBR ZIO tAO I Ing machine (doea not neeil *■ ---------- buttonholea. u^vaiorST^crroms Mixbfd fauceU. $34 50 value. $11 $5 - bathluba. tolleta. ahower a Factory Irrcgulara Tarrifk MIchlgah --------- ard LJte MODERN BEAUTY EQUIPMENT 3 yeara old, half piic^J^E J^PWt _____________ pn«- z* _ MOD OAS RANOE, NEW BEWINO maehine. ext ladder PE 4-0301 mteXs jxr pomps, sop ra. Ktlly'a H burn a/ Ad . PB S-APII NEW 174.000 BTU OUTPUT OAB furnace forced U praaa, P1P4 UL M7P1. A, Thompaon.__________ ... AND OAS BASEMENT Ftm^ nnee. Very cheap MA 4-6011 FAINT iPRAY^OtPtr. 4 VOLT ___ 10 In. floor tan. Bumper jack. Mice. AU cheap. PS P-3434. PROPANE 'TORCH TAMES ll.si PI 14 With trade. Mootaalm Supply, FE M7IP.______________ PLYWOOD. COT TO YOUR SIZE. Warwlek'a. am Orobard Lake 30X10 VAliifY HANl seat Iren Baal p r a d a. III b 0. A. T^pann, 7004 fflP Waa ANCHOR FENCES No money dowm FRA approved FREE EiTIMAfXB FE 4-7471 ALMOST NEW LUX AIRE Jurnere, ducla h tank. MA 4-IMl SlSlV'mSlS * BLONOk^dNSOLX NBCCHl ZIO- I!^nr'’?;'’ker.ii»a7.S!;li"ta*’ i ‘il? IT 3-3317. Nec'chl Co.__________ PATHKOOtl FUTURES OIL AND xaa fumaeea. Hot water h atyam bulera AuHihiatte Water healer Hardwere elec, lappllea, crock k Rpo and fllUnga. Lowe ~— lint Super kemtune i ‘'“hxiohts SDFFLT — pricet tnt In atoeL.________________ X'TD’a with fan Slowing on the floor. Iia.17 OA Thompaon TSOI MM WaaL___________ 1WAILERS UmiTY erm wlnde1r*e“a *5wr* "t^low^r pricea froin Superior. Eyenlnga. FE 4-3177 Consumer Powers RELEASED PERMITS FOR GAS HEAT NOW AVAILABLE IN Pontiac Area CALL Munson Heating -OL 1-03J0 LVWOOD PAXEUNG , avnAvti nvehotany l 144 >re-flnl>hod cherry ... Ill S3 vre-llnlaluf walnut 111 41 fnnmea , lie aq. t». PlNllAC FLTWfX>D CO 14M Saldwm Ave. FE MM3 HOWCA8X8 4 FT A l~FT Schneider. MA 4-13P3________ Sppcial Paneling Offer 4x1 panela. Vc" mahotany V-groove. D grade 44 10 etch il panela, ta' mehoteny V-groove. C grade 40.Jp each ^ panela, ta^ mehofany V-gTOOva. pteflnlahad I7.M each Oak Flooring MAONUS COED OROAN WITH TA- ble 1 mo. old. FE g-03M._ PIANO^TUNINO-OSCAR SCHMIDT FE P43I7_________ FRACnCX FUND .......... pM 9, returned -----conaole Limed oak Bpti from rent. Bmall Baby Ornnd piano Bptetal lale .on all aco Gallagher’s Music Store SPECIAL _____31 montha CALBI MUSIC CO. IIP H. Baglnaw ___eEJjM USXD iLECTROklC OROAN. Stetaway eonaole. bargain email medium piano Flayer piano, do it youraelf . Tarma up to 36 montha. GALLAGHERS II E. Huron St FE 4-PMP iIRS 1 REA I LIOHTWEIOHT - —-j. Since IP33. Ouar-agiieed for life. See them and get a demonatratlOD at Warner Trail-er Salea 30M W. Huron. iPlan %ii?nr Byam'- CLOBl - - .......at'^aoiSiV MARINE Oxford fra'lc' Sales NOW IMO-a GENERAL, VAGABOND, lenenAi-, WAUAHiVNI GARDNER. ZIMMER GARWOOD a HOLLY. CamtMiv and uved trfllara. Soma BAZAAR AREA. MIRACLE MILE Plano Tunluj^^ ^ Orimn Repair UFRIORT piano. PRlCED~fO I Bmlth Movtng Oo . HIghwa Sale l IBM EXECU'nVE k \ ELEC Smlth'Cerana portable with aerlpt print, eltner or both at aacrUloe. Call PE PAI7I between P h 5 Monday thru Friday a P to ' Sale Store Equipment 73 AUTOMATIC CORY COFFEE maker, HStpoInt grill. 1 Hotpotm bun warmera Call MU 4^1Mi belore 4 p.m OONS - BUY. SELL. TRADE. Manley Uarfa, 10 Begley oliNSTuSuERN AND ANTlQIlV Shall. 374 B. Telegraph. FE 3-4701 liiNNOWt. 3»c TO 1134 DOZ. Moualea, gplden g r u b a. 3 doa. lOe. com bortra 1 dot. He, Trout Creek BaH Ranch, M34 at Orean-ableld Rd. Sand, Gravel & Dirt 76 COW MANURE FE 4-3TH or FE 5-4304 CRUSHED STONE. SAND. ORAV- Wo94a, Coal & Piiel 77 Wa taka bouaeAqId BOB HUTCHINSON’S gOl Dtale Hwy. V. 8. II PraytaB Plains__Or PIXIE TRAILER SALES Rental. 1044 North Lapeer i Oalord’ OA .4-3743 WANTED: USED TRAILERS. you lor l| n-r ront on our lot. HOLLY MAklNE AND COACH BAIE8. 14310 Holly Rd.. Hollv MElroaa PARKHURST TRAILKR SALES 440 Lapeer Rd. . Lake Orlou MY 3-4011 Peatttrinx I a m o u a makea. New Moon. Ventourt. Owoaao. Elcar, Tau^A■Home Netween Lake Or- lOB and Oa.'ord. On' M34.___ dflliRrS MOBILE HOME 8AI.IX k SERVICE PeatnrlDx all new Sportaman-Beemer. Complete line oflparta k bott'e xaa Blirhea Inatallbd h ca'a wired. We'U aall your uaed trailer for you. 173 W. Huron_________FE 4-P743 rat^a fc Uke Rd'"oRytMl.*' Rent Trailer Space 90 ne*“N“*^yko FE 4-3341 OXFORD liOBILE ItANOR FOR -------- ------ vlile rua.l OA 4-3033. YOU'VE SEEN THE RES'*: NOW XaRKJUURST lake I^R Court. EY 3-«U. 'fhe bea't*w — Wonderful looaiton on T between Luke Orion auu Auto Accessories 91 IS FOOT CHRIS CRAFT INBOARD, excellent condition, boat and trailer ll.m caah. Phono PE I-4SM For Sale Tires 92 lurnare a No. 3 Oammoo ....... 4134 M No. 3 Shoru .......I N 41 BENSON LUMBER CO. PE 4-3431 SPECIAL .ss: cf.;*; Black Temp. Pegboard. 34x4$ II Oak Ploor Shorta IM it. 17 "ihogany Ply 4l4 . |4.l AUBURN LUMBER AUBURN HBIOHT8 PE 44303 dial puor’ ** __ TAtBOlT LUMBER Wart h eletlrieal tuppllet I ON wood louvtra. 41 oaeb ior quirk aulo. 1434 Oakland Avo PE 4-4444 THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE EvtryUilng to moot your nceda. ciothlnx. Furniture Appllancct. lit WEST LAWRXnC- VVe Are Overstocked! You Profit I FMX 3X4’a, ALL LENOTB8 ”— .10 Pool BASH wm 41.1^ a Op 3X4114 ...... II.M XlCb eXLOTEX SRXATHtNO IM SQ. FT.. 07 M PIRINO STRIPS. 1 "xT 34 Pt. ____FE 4-IIM FIREPLACE. FORNaFe AND klnnilnp wood O'NM price ou v cord lota 775 8c<4l Lake Rd. FE 4-4^ or OR 3-0166___________ O'OOU HARO SLa'bWUUD. 3 entda lor 010. dellvetetl. Alao Ilre- place wimd, FE 4-3047._________ BLAB WUID OR FIREPLACE woiid. t cord. 417 Del. FE MUt For Sale Pels 79 sroxis WHITE WALL TIRES. _____________ OR 3-3074 A-I USED fiRES. 43 M UF" WE .............. whltewalla. By Kata Oiann 4ot TVVKNTY-FiyE “If you really loved me, you’d let me get at the relish firsF ” Tranapertat’n Offered 100 SHARK EXP TO B.t. MO. FHl Waqt^ U^ ATTENTION!' WERE FAYINO TOP $$$ DOLLAR FOR CLEAN USED CARS AVERILL'S . —"V .. CAM AND TRUCEA WANTED. Tralton Auto Parto, FE 4A134. CLEAN AMD JUNK CAM. WANT-ed. Sun, and Eve, taU OR HSU CASH FOR YOURCAR EIAWORTR a BEATTIE AUTO 8AI.B8 4477 Dlxla Hwv Claikxton I laoo DEPENDABLE USED CARR HARDENBURQ motor BALES Cats at Pike_____PE 4-7341 - NEW DEALER - PONTIAC AUTO BROKEM Sale L)ie<’ Trucks 103 DIAMOND T TANDEM Ixt DUMP, air brakea, rubber Uke new. beavv ------IP yard ^y. Condition xooo. duta IS yard body. C 43.M0. MU 4-7PP4 P40U DUMP TRUCK. M40 _________PE 4-3143____________ ■13 DUDOE rb-TON PlcKUP ONLY —I. Price taoludw tax and INO TOM BOHR. INC. PICKUP'S '60 DODGE D-lOO Jr^-TON PICKUP - lir- WHEEL BASE -With POUowtns Xquipinem: ..aavy Duty 3 Speed Trana. — Heavy Duty Rear Sprlnga — —Directional BIfnala—W-Waaberi— —7:10x15 Ttrea Includaa Spare— — Heater h Defroctera — STOCK NO. T-13 — Torreador Rat^ $1825 See M M Motor Sales i For top dollar on later model cara ' 3537 Dialf Hwy. — ------ , JOHNJ. SMITH DODGE 12115. ‘S'nTw I" 3-2055 TOP CASH IM FOR CI.EA"-----' --------------------------- trucka - - ■ - - aubiim Sale Uaed Cars 106 1017 aUlCK SPICUL < ULCLUB. 3 OR.. -----------white, 1 owner, 0^ autoiMUc Power, SUM. BlKi5woH^-MlttLnil*^ W4 8. WOQDW^ Ml P-3P0P ’57 BUICK _ SPECIAL 3 DOOR Dynatlow, power atceiini. Pwer brakea Radio. 14.PM 4334 DOWN-tM.H PER MONTH BRAID DeSOTO-PUnfoifra^EALER "Mdrathon ProduCta" 34 TEAM PAIR DEALINO CASS AT WEST PIKE STS _________FE 3-OllP ______ 1950 B UI C K INVTCTA CONVERTIBLE. ALL WHITE, POWER. 8000 MI. WILL TRADE OR SMALL DOWN PAYMENT. FE 2-2319 AFTER 3:00 P.M. 14 BUICK HEARAK BODY Excellent condition. Mechanically 14M BUICK hard TOP, RADIO ; BEATER, AUTOMATIC TRANS-MIMION. ABSOLUTELY — MONEY DOWN Aaaume ---•- - ---- —Call < Sa"le Used Cars 4170 full priea. No eaab notdod. Fay only lip mo. Duo Mar. lal, Rita Auto. Mr. Roll. FE P4I3|J HP E. Blvd. S. at Aubum, H emW~WAO^, AUTdilATIC ahtft, radio and Mter. pISPI. EM i 0334. YES! No money down. IP4I Chevrolet. ftU price aw. Ring Mr. Bing. S^Ba^naw ■pTcittViE BEL air. V-l. RkfU 1 owner. 11.000 mitee FX P-1307. IPII CHKV. 3 DOOR Tbia ta a V-P with powarplldv R a H hwka good, runa good WInterlaed ready to go. Qlvo tbli *”*PBOptl'8 AUTO BALES 40 Oakland FE 3^341 ;P« CHEVRLE'f HARDTOP. HA-LIO h HEATER ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN Aaauma par menu ^ $14 37 per mo. ^ Credit Bpr Mr. Parka at 11 4-7500. Harold Turner Ford. 1454 CHEVY 3 DOOR. VER' clean 1 ownqt. FE 3-7442. H Rlgptpa. ” 1453 CHEVROLET 310 NO MONEY DOWN orlflnAl. I coDdlUon^ Mr. ^irka" 4-740P Harold Turner Ford.___ 1444 BUIdt, 4 DOOR,. SUPER RIvlerla. Immaculau In and ’ Florida ear. no ruat. 1 ov 4445, 444 down. 41 a day. BIRMINOHAM-RAMBlJtR 444 8 WOODWARD III 4-3S10 'ta CADILLAC. 42 COUPE. VERY clean, low mileage. — “ ----- OR 3-7711 after { i IPH CAOiElAC 42, dow hardtop White. Power ateer Ing. power brakea. t.tOO mUea Call MA 4-3471 afte^4_^_____ •Id'CADILLAC 63. 3 DOOR HARD-top Loaded 41474 full price. OR 3-3473. By owner.______________ CADILLAC. 4 DOOR 'MOTOR, tranamiaalon. etc. good. Nteda aome bqdy wort. 1140 caah. OR ’55 CADILLAC 4 Door Sedan. Pull power, I tone preen and Ivory. JEROME "Bright Spot" Orchard Lake at Cass• p-: 8-0488 Open Eves 19.59 CHEVROLET , BEL AIR 4 DR SEDAN Economical P cylinder engine ■■ etlortleaa Poweri^lde trena- mlaalon, beatar — ..._______________ act of flaahlng white walled Urea. Solid golf finlah with matching $1995 Crissman ROCHESTER OPEN EVES. TIL P OL y-tWl '47 BEL AIR HARD TOP COUPE. ----- heater, powergltde. condition 11.444 Ml P-1341 'id CHEV. BEL AIR REI’O.SSKSSION gta tall price. : Rite Auto mo. Duo Mar. ---- ------ Jr Bell. PB P-41 lta» E. Blvd. s. at Auburn, il CHEV eondlt'or ■41 CHEVROLET VERY GO i OR 3 ECONOMY CARS TOP DOLLAR lor ‘W to '50 models - low I mileage cara wanted lor out atau | Van WELT ! 540 Dixie Hwy Ph. OR 3-1344 I Eddie Steele — A-l — Used Truck CENTER JEROME '55 DODGE 1 TON STAKE Radio a Heater A i beauty, juat Uke new. . ' • $595 "Bright Spot" Orchard Lake at Cass FE 8-0488 Open Eves. TOP $$$ PAID FOR OOOD USED CARS Russ Dawson 232 S. Saginaw FE 2-9131 cara wanted PE 4-4300. STkTE TIRE 8A1XS TOP 444-USED k JUNK CARS Smith Motor Salet PE A2441 WANTEb JUNK CARS OR 3 3t« '55 G.M.C. 1 TON PANEL Radio k Heater $575 ’55 G.M.C ’57 CHEVROLET I TON PICKUP Thia one a like new! Radio k Heater. Anthony Lilt gaU. $1075 503 Saglitaw Ct. LOOK! 740x14 BLACK TIRES name brandt Off new $15 40 plua tax and excl Slate Tire Salea. 403 8. Saa I ^^R CHEAP Used Auto Parts 102' ’57 FORD ta TON PICKUP An orlxlnai 1-owner. $799 Ic TROPICAL FISH SALE BUT the ftrat at regular price, get one mi>r« tor Ic. HunU Pet Shop Miracle Mile Shopping center. In Baraar Section SS S Tele-_grap^FE_g-31U, AKC RBOISTERED COCKER 8PAN-Jela, buff and blMl^ n_4-3S47^ AKC DACHSHUND STUD 8ERV- ^ lce._FE_2-W._____________ BBAOLB PtiP. 410 SHOTOUN AND gun rack. After 4 p.m^ORJ-0341 OBiMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES, g wka. old. $35 MA 4-3471 ___ fUTT/'Y.tTTKR ALL PET SHOP. 44 wilnama PE. 44433. STANDARU BRAND NEW TlRESl Whltewalla I ED WILLIAMS I __441 S. Baglnaw at Raeburn USED 8 N O-W TIRES. is~DP i OOOD.USED fWKS KUHN AUTO service fe 4-$I44_________ Sale Used Trucks ’56 CHF\^1,ET 't TON PANEL Radm k Heater $595 103 NEW '60 Dodge Pickup tFiitg Thla price Inoludea all ataa_ Factorv equipment h federal tax' Ugtn Silax Ttx and 1!--- (Limited Ume ofler, CRANIUHAFT ORINDINO IN THE I car. Cyltndera rebored. Zuck Ma-hta^ Shop. 33 Hood. Phone FE I MALE DACHSHUND. _--------3-1441.___________________ apRiNoa. litucics. autos, re- buUt. uaed. 04 40 ub We inatall. Pontiac Spring Rcbuildcre. 3211 I PmiUac Rd., near Opdyke. PI | Due to the Tremendous SUCCESS OF OUR YEAR-END CLEARANCE SALE . 34t4 Auburn. DL WALL BXAOLbI spayed FB- TOY FOX ' 1 3-4373 errIer puppies. DoKBjTrained, Bw AND CATS BOARDED DOCS _____ ______ _________ Burr-Shell. 374 B. Telegraph. FE 3-470g___________ lfeNAH#nrAIL-WA3dKR~ KENNELS SrltUM popple^ boarding, training. trfmmliig Bnttanv k poudit •»“0 »vrvlco. CaU after 4. OL _ Hunting Dogs 81 BRfTTANY SPANIEL PUPPIES. ngt0t€nd. $3» » Ula MA m4o! Hay, Grain A Feed 82 ALL TYPES OP^ 1ST k 3ND CUT-HAY ANb sraAW PE 443M OR NEW, AND USED . CUSHMAN EAGLES Mmpitx and Track rabbit Kart 310 E. Put; Phone FX 4-434( For Sale Motorcycles 5 1100 ZUNDAPP SUPER SABRE. 3n_K, pike. PE 4-4340_______ 8IMPLETf“S(Tr6R RiKE. PROM IMP. Full line of Blmnlex Opkarta from edit 40 CTIff Dreyer'i Oun Soport Center, 14310 Holly Rd.. ■9|ly. MEir.ae 4-0771 Boats & Accessories 97 our aupply of good, e* Uke*'’&^'’maU>tali our opportunity to new truck and tak, itajge of the tefriflo aavlnga t tap *“ ------- Better atop In today and BOB BUTLER HAROLD TURNER INSURE TOUR BOAT AND Motor for only 42 40 per 4100 of value. Ranavn Ins Agency. FE ) SCOTTB ARE HERE!! CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES W E. Walton Dally lO-O FE 0-4401 BIO BAVIHds ON '59 JOHNSON MOTORS . 0#ENS MARINE SUPPLIES 300 Oreharif Lake Ave. FE 34W30 rucreft Crulaera SAiuruifi V s);np^ 83:, __ j Reoistered'holsteinTeif; • 1' ralfhood vaccinated, due now, slmPLUS LUMBER I fSKteSToiffl-yBiiTim D1«1«U. AfftaP ^li OmeeKm... FORD 0 8.. WOODWARD BIRMINOUAM Midwest 4-7500 TRUCK SPECIALS ■44 DMC $40 Dteaol •4/'^r&'a^VnV•ir.e:.• •44Wc-«^r.W'*“ 10 ft.. Steel flat..gift Chav 13 ft. van, 1 is.. " '13 Chov. 11 ft. van, 1 ipd!, '41 Inter L-IPO. ihg Tm-dem, 440. eniiaa, A-l meehanfeally ...... PI 404 •41 OMC 440 471 Diesel trap . ..fJll’A' eohOltlon .. Z1.M4 40 Ford, ton pickup. ■ta OMC, new. demo . V-i. ttrea. P'ully t Big ar------ WEJIOY - OR TRADE 3 OR 3 PASSENOXRS TO FLA. having neat, wk., FE g-3Ml. 4 ENOtfdrairliner. LOs Alf- galaa. San Francisco.' San Diego --------------,----_ te. kawU 4M.10 oxlra. Now York 3130 Dttip Hwy. PIP. Perry servlet Inc- OR >1344. OR 3-130S SCHRAM TRUCK & EQUIP. Eddie Steele — FORD — Used TRUCK Center W. HURON AT ELIZ. LAKE RD. •'i 4-3177_______FE 4-PPll CHEVY '44 ta TON -PIUE UP. long box, good tUroa, wUl ttnanee. 014 ta TON CHIVII PICK I 1 owntr, good rond. I5S4. _______^ . .. . ,j.Q„ PICK-! I oUer. km 34 DODOE. cacel. cond. L _________ 10461 Bogle LAka Road, $1295 '57 Ford 1-Ton V-O htater rBE Larry Jerome _ CHEVROLIfr HARD DIO h HEATER. >TONI LUTELT NO MONET D<______ ■ume paymenu of til 47 per Mo Call Credit Mgr. Mr Parka kt MI 4-7430 Harp'd Turner Ford. 1454 CHEVROLET CLUB CO-. RADIO h HEATER. VI CTL- EY Down. Aaaume payments ^ fJOOJ per Mo. CaU Cradlt Mgr. Mr. Parga at MI 4-7400. Harold Turner Ford r 'Elmer. FE 3-taSi! PW. Walled Lake'. MA 44411. Mew or n»ed -- We sell bota_ 1041 CHEVROT.ET vXaUTOM IF- ISohouihsion radio . menu of 430 40 pti Credit Mgr. Mr. ?arks at Ml 4-7400. Harold Tumer^rd. * DOORjSan-DIO a HEATER. ABSOLIAeLY NO MONEY DOWN. Aaauma pay-manta of tlOOl per mo. Call FLt21‘ »*> *•1400 Harold Turner Ford, •41 STA^ r*N WAOON. R h _Bnow Urea. 4474 MA 44134. i»»»„che>_;»ipala_4_6r probt Wue. W. W. RhH. P O. 14.000 Ml. tf — — Interested I'm auri - - " ' OR >1471, 1959 CHEVROLET . IMPALA SPORT COUPE Immaculate Solid Beige with eo Jlf* 5S!S*‘***'L ifadi?* h*’*’**’^*' ing In' thla beauty ONLY $2495 Crissman ROCHESTER OPEN EKES "UL 4 OL >073f llTBliVROLET, BlAU'nPOL~3 tona brown, radio and heater. txeaUent condition No money down, Aaaume payments of 44.40 Kr week. Bee credit manager, r. White at King Auto sde. Ill 8. Baglnaw. Ft 1-0402 HAUPT PONTIAC FREE I.Ns of gas each week -------‘ mUea Mr rikTcaF Drtie irydlrtett"-' 24 OALLONs forepersonigeUiuc niiw mi gsHoa In our Falrlane Text Car D—- “ --------- tag January. BEATTIE it the Stoplight ta Watorford ’56 CHEVROLET Icl Air 4 dr. HT. Copper a FhIU Auto. RhU. White w Clarkston Motor Sales OHRY8LER-PLYMOUTK DEALER Mata 8t. ClarkatoQ MA 4-4141 ’58 CHEVROLET 3 DOOR ' $1395 'Cy' Owens |i|55nr*'-- >**« I, oyw payments. _________PE >4300._______ 1044 RED ANOnwHTTE let. good condition, ori er, radio, heater, wl________ _______ DrtytiS'* **” 1137 DODGE._OOOD TRANBPfHt-TATION WttL TAKE RESPONSIBLE OFFER, CALL BETWEEN l^d^ND 4 30. PE 4-743T OR P37 DODOE. OOOD TRANBPOR-TA-nON. WILL TAKE REASONABLE OPPER. CALL BimnCBN • ^ FK 4-7037 OR ley down. Aaiumo pay- --------I.lo per week. See credit manager. Mr White. King Auto Balea, 114 B Baglnaw. pO-0403 '44 DESOTO REPOSSESSION 4334 full, price No cash need Pay enl* 413 mo. Due Mar. RIU Auto. Mr. Bell PX >41 Blvd. s. at Auburn. Pull 'price. No ca My 133 mo. Due iuio. Mr BeU Pay onl] Rita AM- _ 104 E. .Blvd ta FORD RANCHERO. PO.M. .. >»*»*«r, backup llgbU. W Walla, good condmen, P1774. FE >3714 after 4 p.m. ’55 FORD 3 DOOR $545 'Cy' Owens 147 B. BAOINAW STREET ’57 FORD 3 DOOR $995' 'Cy' Owens 147 8. SAGINAW STREET ’59 FORD 3 DOOR $1795 'Cy' Owens iKIARANTEEb USED CAWT" HARDHNBURG CORNER OAB8 k PIKE FE >7341 1454 Rul k Century 4 Dr Herdtop -----------------auertag, brakes, itadto h healer* waU tlras. >tona gray, ful famUy carl Yotti down payment. Auto Insurance 104 PL. PD h MED Pf.R MilBT CARS WOO DN I MO PAYMT8 OF g4 ta EA 1448. •ta VOLKSWAGEN CONVER'T. TOP •— volkiwag- UL staUoB wagoB. OL 1-1$ Sale Used Cars 106 14H BUICK ROADMASTER. 1 43 tal “** “ Russ Johijson Motor Sales MY 2-7871 or MY 2-2.181 1413 BUICK SWBi. '^Olb AND heater, excellent condition No money down Aaaume payments of 13.3l^r week Sec credit mana- Kt. Tir, White at Kinx Auto lea, 114 B. textaaw PI Y-0403. IPU~ BUICK CONVBNTnLE. 1.400 ita!*FK*>i4po%ftar'i ptal Say “charge it.' •41. 'll or 1 piymtnt. Many More to Cbcoae From Mil one Mile North U S 10 Open Evenings until I except Wed. MAple >4460 or MAple ‘ ■ Good Car Specials '51 Chevy p. R a R '57 Lincoln. Hardtop. Hardtop. fuU power .i. i- T- *’>'!''■• * Otaufr R * 54 Llnoota, air conditioned 44 Chrysler, chnvertlble, power. waaci, iiae new. ’ll Cadillac continental convertible. ■47 OeSoto. 4-door hardtop, the boat full power, JthH. Sportsman '40 Plymouth V-l, pnah button. '41 Ford Hardtop. Falrlane. SEE OUR SELEgnON Of fine la'c mndel used care Dn.ga Plymuutb-Cbryalar rLto A “LOST’’ AD. Call FE 2-8181 for an ad Jo recover a loss. Dial FE 2-8181 Ifor an ad writer. '.54 FORD 3 DOOR $395 HASKINS SHARP CARS. 1PI7 Chevrolet 31P 3-do«r Mdaa. y-t engine, radio, boater. BaauU-ful xatota xilver aiUl IvoaY 'IhUh Clean. dranMc. radio. hardtop V-g anflne. I radio, heater Uke new ouax pearl and Ivory finish. Bevel IP4I Chevrolet Btxcayne 4-door sedan. Oaa aaving I cylinder en-*tae and ctandard tranamiaalon cautlful silver bliw and Ivory sedan. Oaa aaving u ___________— engine and standard traasmia ■Ion Radio, heater. S-toi>e green I engine, heater, finlah. I 1944 Oldsraoblle Dynamic 1$ Holiday coupe. Hydrsmatic, powrr ataering. power brakes. Radio and heater Many other accea-aorlea. Oexldhttrator. Haskins Chev. iU Urea, rory good eon' ----- - rust. Mutt sell, loariH city FE >0331 633 Mt. Clemen 1P58 FORD, CUBTOMUHB. BBAD-tlful 0 tone green, radio and heater, excellent eohdttton. No money down. Aaeume payment* of |4.34 1— —■— — ■41 FORD 4 DOOR PORDOMAHC Oood condition, 4134. PE >1110 1P47 FORD RETRACTABLE CON ytrtlhlc hard top, solid white, black and white tatarlar. Pull power (Now ooBdUtonl. 414S4. 4141 down, up to 30 moat^ ■40 FORD WAOOli. FB 440PI. AFT- LXT US U3WKR YOUR PAY ------aita fire you Usn^—- ■•>K'crRu5r" 3310 PonttM Road at Opdyka ’55 FORD 3 DOOR SEDAN Radio a Heater. Auto, traaa. $695 'Russ' Dawson 333 S 1^;?” POM, CleaB. 1401 TuUC heater. 3-tonc. Etc. i MI >33$1 '54- TORb CRESTLINE VICTORIA Aitaurn a Crooks. 1144 FORD WAOON. RAblO h h^r, runs good, in >1107. UM FORD 4 DOOIL 0 CYUNDBR, “ER. ABSOLUTELY NO LUTELY NO -JWN. Aaauaaa pay-menta of 431.30 per mo. OaTl Credit Ugr. Mr Parka at Ut >740t Harold Turaor Ford. 044 STATidN WAOON. KX- cellem condlUon, radio and beater. Aaaume paymenta of 44.71 K’' ZSS'' atasager, r. White. BTng Auto aataa. 111 8 Baglnaw. FB >0403. ■43 FORD. . . REPOSSESSION tin No caah nofdad. Pay only 01.77 ISO. Due Mar. Ut. Rite Aut^ Mr. BeU. PB >4011. 100 ' E. Bird. B. at Anbuni. logo FORD. I CYUNDBR COUNTRY sedan. 1 owner, 4 door, wagoa. * * H. condition that 1a b ---------- „ ie boUort.' Immaculate. $000. P14I dawn, up to 34 month! to ftaanoe. birminoham-ramblsr OM a. WOODWARD Ml 4-3i00 MONEY DOWN. Aaiumo psr-•nonta of I34.M nor rna. CaU ”2. >arka at Ml ----- COUNTRY BKDAN wagoD. 21.010 mlloa. Power brakea and atcertag. RSH. daaa. MM. -- Ml >3034. OMATIC, RADIO ! ifXAraR ^TOLUtEL'Y_ NO_ E Y grp.,"srcMn?r”.2f.‘*M,?' yjfne'r'^U* ■5 FORD STATION WAOON. 4 door, country sedan. In eacap-tlonally good cond, $441. OR >3444 •113 FORD. RADIO AND HXATBR, exceUont condition No montj down. Full price Itb. Make pay-menta ll.io par wtok. Baa ttMlII manager, 36. White at King to>Jea. ns 8. Baglnaw. TaUii.^, ____________________ wtadowa, padded dsah, R. a 1 undercoattag. May be saen Fn. night, Bat or Sun. M70 Orchard SOME OP THi riNsar or Used Cara are Found •( G. G. CARPENTER SALIS a aBRY’'-* 414 commerce RD 'Cy' Owens 147 S. BAOINAW STREET NO MONEY DOWN 1443 JORD YICTORU HARD- ‘B'Sg.'“ll;:'’^?o(R”“Lu5y ”■ a.i«« lav 8. .Saglnmw. 1449 ENGLISH FORD CHEAP Far laformstton caU #hmn. BL 7-4979 after 4 p.m_^___________ 1943 FORD. BKAVtlFUL 3 TONI blue. No money down, aesi-— 43.40 per week. King 4 rt 1-ix X with us before you buy I Q----- Alta Sales, 17i S. Saginaw. "RUSS DAWSON - •56 FORD F-LANE 4 DOOR SEDAN AutomaUe transmUston, ra- dio a bdatar. Power tag. $795 'Russ' Dawson 111 iTORp 3 OR Y-0 STRAIGHT ■hlft. with ortrdrlvr, Exc Ckmd, JThrim|bout. Phonr F* >0?M. .- FORD. I CTlInDBR COUNTRY jrMn- 4 door wagon, taw mllte. Solid white Clean, automatic tranimlaalen. 1 owner. Cheek this special •1131, 1144 down, up to 10 months ui boUMOo. ' 'BIRMWOHAM RAMBLXi Ml B. WefopWARD Ml 4-3IM 104$ FbflD* FAIRLANfe _________ REFOSSEOSION til’ ’57 FORD "6’’ aaonger Country Sodu. S Cyl-ler, PontamaUe, radio, boatar, •f* ond whlta BEATTIE ;2i“I,J'!SF2JBf*dor staoo WO"' ^$06 DIXUB RWT. or 1*1111 At iht yopUght ta WtUrlort if_8to|^h g»g,wr a Sjgr»‘*M*?. Wr^"*; >»00 Harold Turner »"rd ■M Ford, Waxon. ventlonL. heat ofler. MA 4-1101. _____________FE i-n 1043 LINCOLN. B " er, exeoUcnl ____________ . _ tir. White arStat AptalBb 111 B. Saginaw. FE aodw: ’ 1M7 LINOGL I OAPm. 4 6668. hardtop. MH. sbvOr htnhota ^ Nffinaw i tisssrvm Boa credit manager, lE Whlta at-Kta^Auto^l^. llTl. aost-G ^ 1 n T\VENTY-S1X THE l>ONTIAC PRKS^, TUESDAY, JANUARY 26,^ 1960 Sal* Uw4 Cara ’57 MfiHCURY ------ $1295 'Russ' Dawson AQTOKATIC TRAimnanOH. KMin arsnuNO, radio * itBATBR ABaoLomr mo^ MORBT DOWN. AuWM pAT-■rato at Itt w Mr m». Call 9^ Mir. Mr. Yarki at Ml A-nii; BaraM Tima Rerl. t ’55 MERCURY 1 DOOR HARDTOP Radto A Baatar, Auto, trant. . * “ $745 'Russ' Dawson WILL ACCEPT OuA«. auUmarla. iMti, rrfiigtrt-tora and aapUaBcea, tl«. Ob anr MR im RamMtrt ar bb? Rood load car aa part payBcnl. BILL SPENCE . “RAMBLEIV IMI PLYMOUTH. RD> toed tlraa. MA t-MM. IM4 PLYMOUTH CLOB" ±!>**L- Harold Tiirw P< North Chev. SAYS SAVE $$$ On these t Tear Baralea WarranlT on Tbcai Mcak Tear Mata Prl< lid 1»M PoaUac HT. :.... IT IBM IIU Cher. 1-dr PO. I I— 1M2 IMI Cliaa. Mr.'Waf. .. I 7tt 1117 IMI CIMV. 4-dr. Wa|. tlMI IIU 1117 Chair. 1-dr. ttia I1MI — 1 IIM Chaa. Delray 1147 I llM .......... iniB llM Char. Pdr. .. M74T We haea a few IMI compaM a oniclalc' cart. All hire fUde and aome bare poarer aUirhit. I1M7 and up. BARB RATBB^ •■AR FOR YOf^ • COUNTY! TRADER florth Chev. LOOK, 1M4 OMamoUla M. paarer. Na money'da._ ... p,». ^ Rini Mr. Blac. PB 4-llM. Lucty Aute Baiat, '« I. r- matte. Ready for anater drirlni. $795 JEROME ‘'Bright Spot" Orchard I^ke at Cass FE 8-0488 Q|)cn Eves. PACKARD 1MI.~ CHEAP. SHl*U«MlC«ri IM asas Ala. HI ». BoBlBAar, n MIM. »M PLYMODTTH BBLVBDBRH NO MONEY DOWN . ' R A H.. autamaUc traaamtiMaa. * “SSSEn^mAM-RAioJ^ Ml » WOODWARD ^ MI l-MM*-Sn HLVMOOTH. I PABBEMOTO lk)*B • amei •“ for" __________ _____O Ante Salts, m Attfcurn. - saataatr PB l-MM OOOD. COUPE, TAYLORS CheVrf-& Olds. Waned Uke MA ..Mill 11141 ....I1M5 '.....I 741 Shep’s Motor Sales BAIT fa.YD.______PB MM7 REPOSSESSION Pontiac Catalina Conpe. Pull price UK. RIny Mr Bine. PE 4-lOM. i^ky_Auto Sale*. IM S. saiinap. iisi POnTIAC 8TARCH1EP TIBTA. ll.QN mne.. pewer eteerlnt and bratOi PB I-I17I____ IIM PONTIAC^ 4^DOOR "raifbM. -II PONTIAC CAT aura! 1 DR Mdan. _po«er equipped. t.MO mllca. PI 3-3443 after I p.m. or _all day_*wk^t__________ 1M4 PONTIAC CATALINA. 1 DR.. Good, Clean Second Cars ■H Ram2^r’M'’ W. Bharpi ^ ‘M Pord BUtloa Wga.......MM ‘H Chevy »'• ....“M ■U Pard , PONTIAC AUTO BROKERS •17 Cadillac 4 dr. DaVllle U Bulca 4 dr. Ipiec. SharpI tlTM '17 Ford Ctry, lad. Lotdcdl IIIU -17 Pord Cuetom I Auto . HIM -M PontlAC Wofon. I pan HIM M Chevy 4 dr. Bel Air Auto. IIOM U. Buick rpee. 4 dr.....I HI -M Chevy 4 dr. I RB ..... I IM 'U Pord CU7 Bed. OD ..... I HI -II BuIck super 1 dr. RT. . . I Ml M Dodie Royal 4 dr......I 141 II Chew Bel Air 4 dr . • 7U -II Pord Cuet. 4 dr. Ibarpl . • IM Jaap with plow ........... SMI M Plymouth Wison ....... I 3M '13 Ford* WasoB .i pD I 311 -M Studebaker WaiiM- .. I 111 IMO Perry at MadUon PB 4-1101 WILSON rONTIAC-CADILLAC. CLEAN Birmingham Trades 1350 N. Woodward IIRMINOHAM MI 4-113 IMS PON-HAC 4 DR. BEDAR HIM IH7 Oldt 3 dr super U tedan .............. .. SI3H IIU Mercury wuson. Mcreomatic. Radio A heater , I 711 IIU Chevrolet 1 dr. hardtop. 1 owaar. 43.M0 mllai I 7PI 1117 Buick 4 dr. ledan. Dynaflow. Radio A beater II3U 1H7 Dodie 1 dr. hardtop. Automatic traaimleilon. RAH. Wbite- IMI* Ford Yl 4 ur. ledan. Bie. condition I III IMI Pontiac J dr. hardtop. Radio A Heaur Whltewatl* | 7H HOMER .HIGKT MTRS. ^ "II Mlnutci from Pontiac" Oxford. MICb. OA MIM £Rl* UB«d C«rB 106 MODEST MAIDENS I PLTMODTM SHARP. LOW - ate. MW. or X SU2 RIU i %FfEP'S“ MOTOR SALES PATMENTB LESS TRAN -$50 Per Month -H PORD P-Lanc 1 Door .... 47M -U CHEVY 'B-AIr B-Tif . 4714 'll PON-HAC B-Chfet 4 Door . I7M -H FORD Cuatom 4 Door .... MM -M PORD Cuatm 3 0<»r aiaa 'll PONHAC 4 Door By Jay Afaui MMI.'^^OL i-S133 _or_U 1-1733. Aak for JomJTracy. IHi PONTiAC UfORELiNE tlOLD CaUllna VlaU with powtr and extraa. Excellent condition. PE JMIM after ^ p.m nil PONHAC CATALINA 4 DOOR Sedan. Pewer equipped. S2.3M. MtL4-3S31._________________ I$i4 PONTIAC. RXCldiBNT CON-dttlon. radio and heater. No money down Aaaumc paymenta of $3.71 per w^. See credit manlier. Ur. White at King Auto iaiea. ill I. aagtn». PI l-MM ''ll*PONHAC. IIM. PE miu oEufi. J PI 4-1107. -M PONHAC. OOOD COND. HY- _dja.^PE 4-IM7.___________ IMI PON-fTAC'CLfJB BtDAN. RAH ataodard tranamlialon a nalay, runi and drtvei load ruat. IMI 141 down. It a BfRMINGHAM-RAMBLER •M^B^WOOpWARD ^ 4-3MO NOTE 1l;l PONH4C 3'■star momlBi fray . Immaculate. ' I dayi only I.— 143 05. Low caih 31 payme^U ^ ‘Tm going in and make a withdrawal—the president!" Sale Used Cars 106 Sharp. The neweat uaed ci "*JOES*CAR I.OT - kill Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke _____ ______tK 3-7131 _____ WHY YOU SHOULD PHONE ,FE 8-4539 TODAY—TONIOHT-ANYTniB M PONTIAC 4 DR, ■M PONHAC 4 DR . 14 DE SOTO 4 DR. ■13 FORD T-l ... HAND PICKED A personally checked -U PORD. bl| trana A mD, tint '» CHEW Stic - ■ - ---- •M PORD. 1 di. . 'M PORD Cuatom — ----- ---- 'U FORD cty led wo|.. pa. 4IIII -47 CHEV 310 wagon. I. px. 11371 -17 PORD cty lad wagon I Il'lM -17 CHEV. B.A 4 dr. aharp tUM -17 PLYU Bel 4 dr. I auto IMI -II FORD 1 dr. cui. I. ltd. MM '» PLYM 4 dr Savoy, I atd. till ••• PORD I paai wofOB. I **" -H PONHAC a door . . . 131 Dixie Ok'dCars . Blvd. s. Al Auhuni •13 PONHAC REI’USSESSION IIM full prtca. No caah naeded. Pay onlv III mo. Due Mar. laL Rite Auto, Mr. BeU. PE I-4I3I. 101 E. Blvd. B. at Auburn. 1955 PONTIAC 4 DOOR HYDRAMATIC. RAD-' lO AND HEATER. 1 OWNER. BLACK AND YELLOW. WILL •TRADE. FE 2-2319 AFTER 300 P.M._________ SHARP -M PONTIAC. IMI. ________n i-i4«i^_____ •U PONT] AC CATALINA HARD- 11.17 STARCHIEP 4 DOOR HAR'D, top. Pull power and arceaaarlra. Low Ixcellent con^ltl^ —MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES CHEVROLET— "TIME'S A WASTIN'" T the PEOPLE OF PONTL\C J. Nw/ a a a HAVE PROVEN LEYOND A DOUBT THAT You Prefer Used Cars With... Brand New Brand New> Tires Delco Battery ."SPECIAL" IF YOU PREFER tTiE TI RES ALREADY ON THE CAR 2 BRAND NEW SNOW CAPS WILL BE INCLUDED FREE OF CHARGE WE GIVE MORE BECAUSE WE SELL MORE ’59 CHEVROLET IMPALA SPORT COUPE V-l. Pawerillde. Radio. Heater. Fewer Steierlnf and Brakee. Solid Im-l»^tal^^ Ivory with Red ......T.'*.".,.... $2395 ’59 CHEVROLET BTAHON WAOON •Parkwood 4-DOOR" — Radio ahd Heater, Auto. Trana.. Power siaerini and Power Brakea. Solid . $2295 "Croat Country" 4-Door. T-l. Auto Trana, Pow- jft Bluck with R0d In-tftrior. ^'^'ifvtomatlc *-rfana-miaaion. Ivory and Can- ’58 FORD ’.S8 PONTIAC RANCH WAOON CHIEPTAIN 3-OOOR 4-Door — 1 Cyl., Radio and Heater. O'DrWe. lyory and Adobe Beige. Hydramatie. Radio and Heater. Blue and silver $1595 ’59 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE 3-DOOR 4 Cvl. Standard Tn... million. Preih-AIr Heater. Solid Aaoln Oreen. ...............$1695 '59 CADILLAC SPORT SEDAN Pull Power, RAdIo and Heater. Whitewallx Ivo-rv and Canyon Coral. Oanaral Mot«ri Offl-clal'a Car." ............... $4395 million Preih-AIr Reat-ar. Solid Sierra Oold. .............. $1495 ’57 CHEVROLET STATION WAOON S-Door "MO-- — f Cyl. Standard Tranimlailoa. neih-AIr Heater. Solid Sierra Oold. . ................ $1295 4 Cyl.. 0-prlTt. Radio {SLt^'aDr. «one ’57 CHEVROLET BEL AIR S-DOOR V-S. Pawerillde. Radio and Heater. Belie and Sierra Oald Paint. • ................ $1495 ’55 PONTIAC SPORT COUPE Catellna l-Door Hardtop V-l. Hydramallt. *iA{/a.‘"?,r??^ and Ivory. ..$ 995 ................$895 '57 CIll-;VROLET l-DOOR "110" ► I.Cyl. Powerxlldr. 1 er Steerinx. Radio Heater. Ivory and P ■55 BUICK SPECIAL 4-DOOR Radio and Heater. Dv-naflow. Black over India . $ 695 MANY MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM MAHHEWS- HARGREAVES OAKLAND COUNTY’^ LARGEST CHEVROLET DEALER The BIG-BIG Lot ■ 631 OAKLAND AVE. FE 4-4547 IMI PONHAC 171-1 DR.. , Catalina. Hydramatie. RAH, Very little ruM OK Mechanically. - ■■■* ........... Call Holly. ME f ilSl **No ti Sale Used Chps only Juat your old ear down. RINE ilOTORS. 4411 W. Huron Next to tha Rallndlum) OR 4-0311 lUa NASH CUSTUM BTATnMAN. very elean. RAH. No money down. AMume paymeDte of lit month. Mr Whlt^Kliw Auto. Ill I. Saginaw. PC S^MM. 40 New Ramblers MUST BE SOLO IH 11 DAI We hare out-of-ilate puycri c and ftt a flaminx deal. R & C Rambler ^ales EM 3-41M EM 3-41M IMO 8TUDEBAKBR OOOD RUB-ber and good motqr tU. OR IMS STBDKBAKER VERY clean RAH No money down. Pull prira IIU Aaauma paymanta of tlOM month. Mr White. Eln|. _Auto^ll 8. Saitnaw. PE lOUli HI-OAS MILEAGE. BRAND NEW "W " LARKS Juat your old car down. Paymenta aa low aa 131 month. RINK MOTOH8. Stuoe-bBker Dealer,. 4411 ■” ”- 4-0311. Ilumi. OR IMI I ARKS. PRBX RADIO. PREE heater 11,171 plus taa and II-cenae. 114131 down; 443 U per mohth. Alao Lark convertihlea. Lark waxpi JIMI^K^XO Sales. Keego Harbor A VERY NICE BUY ON A 1M4 PE ^4** Muat aell one. IMI PONTIAC S-TARCHTeP VISTA RAH. standard ' BIRMINOHAM-RAMBLER •M 8 WOODWARD Ml I-3M0 Till'’ RAMBLER CUSTOM CROSS Country wt|on. radio, automatic tranamisslon. absolutely no ruat. clean See It MM. tU down. 46 ''bi^minoham-rambler 444 B WOODWARD MI 4-3100 ilSI AMBABiUDOR CUB-TOM. RAH, automatic transmIasloB.. power. Red and white continental tire. Hurry fill. 141 down. |1 a day. BtHMINOHAM-RAMBUtR .. ® Operation .COUNT! DOWN! 10 SECONDS •II willys jeep............ tuoi DISPATCHER Cloth top. atan-hard tranamlsalon, heater. 3 wheel drive Jeep Ideal for the wife who drives back and forth •II BtnCK..............imi RLEC-TWA 4-DOOB SEDAN Ola-cler grren, radio, heater. Dyna-flow power steering and brakes. Oreen trim, areen carpet, white tires. R dea like a dream. e finish WIDE -HIACK. ’Good dlo. tu tona red and economical Wagon come In and see tbli II CHEVROI.ET 1 _____________T 1 IW. IMPALA HARDTOP Radio. Powergllde. white top, ga " d body. 4 new white tire •17/FORD VI ...............lion PAIR1.ANE with automatic trani-misalon radio, heater white and green finish. Light green trim. A clean autumoblle. -S| BUICK 4-Dr..........|m1.II SPECIAL SEDAN Heater. aUn-dard transmisslpn black and wnlle fln-sh. White Urea. Lota of room and economical, tool •M WILLVS JEEP8TER K44 01 RADIO., heater. - stantfard ahlft. black Urea, five new Firestone whitewall tires. Red and white CONVERTIBLE A car that you can rc'elre a lot of tun and tp- OLIVER Motor Sales __11« ORCHARD LANE AUE PE MlOl OPEN ®VEB. BUItK OPEL JEEP EXECUTIVE CARS Ml. M. 4M0 mtlea. New tbrouib-out. I way seat. Save on this one at I.MTI Houghten & Son ■ $5 DOWN ANY CAR: - GENEROUS — Trade-In .Allowances —IMMEDIATE DELIVERY— “30-Day Guarantee’’ ’54 FORD 1 DOOR Po-O-Uattc. Radio A Heat- $375 ’54 Pl.YMOUTH CONVERTIBLE Radio A Heater, Beautiful red fiDleb. $349 $395 ’55 PLYMOUTH 1 DOOR Radio A Heater. W.Walli. $349 ’.54 FORD “ CONVERTIBLE Fo-O-MaUc. Radio A Heater. $385 ’S4”kERCURY 4 DOOR Radio A Healer. Mere-O-Matic. Beautiful black fin-lah. $295 ’56 PLYMOUTH •3 DOOR Stralftat stick. Radio A Heat- $399 • ’56 FORD . CUSTOM 1 DOOR Radio A Heater W.Walla. $495 ’55 CHEVROLET 1 DOOR HARDTOP V-l PowerfKde. Radio A Heater. $449 ’53 MERCURY 1 DOOR HARDTOP V-l Merc-O-Matlc. Radio A Heater. All leather Interler. $285 ’52 RAMBLER 3 door HARDTOP O'DrIve, Radio A Heater. $99 ’53 CHEVROLET BEL AlR 4 DOOR Powerglldc lUdla A Heater. V $275 ’55 BUICK 3 DOOR Dynaflow. Radio A Heater. $399 Eddie Steele FORD - W HUBON at ELIZ. LAKE RD. PE 1-3177 PB 4-Mll irr-r SCHUTZ A COT^LETE SELECTION OFOVER 75 CARS AWAIT YOUR LNSPECTION AND APPROVAL ’59 Oldsmobile ..;.... $2595 atedrins Ah4 bi-skea. radii, hiater. wBU* Urai ’56 Plymouth ................................$ 745 4-OOtm. automatk. T-l, radio, boater, jrhtto tiros.’ '54 Pontiac..........;.......................$395 3-DOOR with RydramoUe. radio a .from $2195 ’59 Plymouth Wagons....... PfjwXR atotHng and brakes, rad No Down Payment Required on Cars Priced Less Than $1000 ’56 Rambler Wagon .......................$895 AUTOMA.-nc. radlo^ heater, t eyllndtr. ’57 Plymouth 4-Door.....................$1195 B^VKDBRB. Ebony flntsh. OrlslaA] throushout. '55 Plvmouths...........................$ 495 ’57 Buick Estate Wagon ......................$1545 iSd*to5i *"**■’ kMertng and brakes. ............$1295 ’58 Plymouth Hardtop ........ YO0R cholct 01 two. '59 Chevrolet Impala................ .$2395 ^AROTOP. Looks Juat Ilka new and has power itetring and 2 Year Warranty Lets You’Buy with Confidence white tl ’51 Plymouth Wagon . ..$99 ’58 English Ford Wagon..i.$ 995 '59 Renault Daulphine...$1495 SCHUTZ MOTORS, INC. -UeSOTO , . . PLYMOUTH . . :V.\LI.\NT 912 S. WOODWARD AVE. MI 6-5302 JO 6-1546 YOU'LL DO BETTER IN ROCHESTER 1959 CHEVROLET ..........$2495 impala 4-donr hardtop. Power steering, powtr brpkea, Powrrgllde. VS rngtne. Here's one Just Ilka ntw. 1959 ENGLISH FORD . .$1395 "nd^^ik ‘’'***’- **“^**‘' vashera. |,N0 actual miles 1959 BUICK.............. $2695 Convertlbla with power ateerlng. power brakes. Dynanow. radio, beater, whitewall Urea. Red body wlUi iMte top. 1958 BUICK...............$1795 Special 3-door aedan. Oyoaflow. radio, heater. Ilke«ew' whitewall Urea. Beautiful green finish. 1958 CHEVROLET .... .$1695 , Blacayne Pdoor aedan. V-l engine. Powergllde, radio, heater, whitewalls. Lika new throughout. 1958 FORD ............ .$1795 1956 BUICK....................$1095 Super hordtop. Power ateerlng, powbr brakea. whitewall Urea, Plastic covers never been off. 1956 CHEVROLET .....$1095 4-door -aedan. 3-tone blue and Juat Ilko new. 1955 BUICK.............:....$ 895 CrriAury 4-b aw nbjert to di^ ^ CtaWMl 4-JWW4 TV Ckauml 1-WXYZ-TV ChanMl »-CKLW T TowioHrs TV noHuoim «:M rt) Mode (began at S p.ra.) (4) Jim Bowie. (T) Curtain Time. (f) Popeya. (56) Teeny>Tiiiy Lady. •:t« (2) Wedther. «:M (2) (4) News. (T) Curtain (cont.) (9) Quick Draw McGraw. (56) Newt Magazine. fcl9 (2) Newa Analyafc (7) Sportt. t:tf (2) (4) (7) Newi, Sports. (56) Industry Parade. 7:90 (2) Divorce Court. (4) Ooss Current. (7) Brave Stallion. (9) Sheriff of Cochise. (56) Big Picture. 7:N (2) Court (cont.) > (4) Laramie. (7) Bronco. (9) MUlion Dollar tfovle. Musical: Bing Croaby, “Going Hollywood.” (’33), (56) Shorthand. 1:00 (2) Dennis O’Keefe. (4) Larapale (cont.) (7) Bronco (cont.) (9) Movie (began at p.m.) . (56) Facts medy: George Raft guest stars as the boss of a crooked gambling syndicate. (4) (color) Arthur Murray Party. (7) Philip Marlowe. (9) GM Presents. 10:09 (2) Garry Moore. (4) M. Squad. (7) One Step Beyond. (9) Theater (cont.) 10:30 (2) Moore (cont.) (4) U. S. Marshal. (7) Keep Talking. (9) Harbor Command. 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports. 11:39 (9) Telescope. 11:38 (2) Nightwatch Theater. Corned: Cgry Grant, Shirley Temple. "Bachelor and the Bobby Soxer.” (’47). 11:30 (4) Jack Paar. Variety: Hugh Downs takes Jack’s U:tt WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON luwer to FnTlwM rml* Idaoe aa host.-Special guest , is Jadi HaakeU. (4) After Hours Oub. Variety: Emcee Vem Collett and regulars, George Sootti at the piano and folk calypso singer Len Chandler. Guest personalities and in- (9) Startight Theater. Biography: Don Amebhe, "Alexander Graham BeU," (’37). WEDNESDAY MORNING (4) Continental Ciaasroom. (4) (color) Continental (3as3Toom. (2) MediUtlons. (2i On the flann Front (2) TV College. (L Today. (7) Funews. (2) Felix the Cat. (7) Breakfast Time. (2) News. (2) CApt Kangaroo. (7) Johnny Ginger. ' (4) Bdd Journey. (2) For Better or Worse. (4) Life of Riley. (7) Stage 3. (2) Movie. (4) Dough Re Mi. (9) BiUboerd. (4) Play Your Hunch. (9) Ding Dong School. (7) News. (2) 1 Love Lucy. (4) (coior) Pric^ Is Rigid. (7) Lady of Charm. (9) Abbott A CosteUo. (2) Deoembei- Bride. (^ Concentratkm. (9) Six Gun Judge (7) Detroit Today. U:09 (2) Love ot Life. (4) Truth or Consequences (7> Restless Gun. (9) Art in Actiun 13:19 (2) Search for Tomorrow. (4) (ooior) It Could Be you. (7) Love That Bob. " (9> Myrt A Doris. 1^48 (2) Guiding Light 13tl9 (9) News. 1:99 (2) Olv bliss Brooks. ' (4) NBC Playhouse. (7) About Faces. (9) Movie. In the United States, the heaviest snows fall in the mountains of the Pacific Northwest and California. Relatively warm, moisture-laden air welling in from the Pacific climbs the sk^ws and cools, causing the water vapor to condense, clouds to form and snowflakes to crystallize. N.Y. Check Cashing Hits Record in 1959 NEW YORK (UPI) - The check cashing business in New York State during the past 12 months i highest in any period previously reported in the history of the check cashing industry,’’ according to the New Ycnk State Superintendent of Banks. The total number of chedcs cashed in the year ended June 30, 1959, came to 6,396,739, up about 494,000 or 8 per cent from the previous year. Dollar amount of checks cashed was $405 million, up about 9 per cent. Eye Problems Grow PHILADELPHIA - About four times as many pupils in the eighth grade have ey^ght problems as those in the first grade, according to standard vision tests. Largest incandescent light bulb (75.000 watts) is about 171,400 times brighter than Edison's first lamp in 1879. sSr«;,. Corded fabric Biblical Dame X*n7^ * R«leMi ScotUiih Turn*out«trd rmiM Lm jolnti ?ald*noU€eii Olrl's^^aame Hindu queeni Mute ol ivrtc fnJun bli vl( Ed(ci> Mlnerul uprlnc Shurn report Lend parcel Oaellc Slippery t» Mariner's direction 6( Employs DOWH r r r r r r r ii rr \i IS 14" II II IT II r u 1 21 9 9 H 11 w sr 36 37 40 41 4? 41 It li 14 U _ Jt t Indian ?«PS, I Redpo icomb. t M Offered b n 8las?e*'toi 3 Nymphs 3 Bet 4 Sketers' iroup liter" 44 Dewrled*'^^ 4< Foretan atei M Romanian (2) As ttM Worid Turns. (7) Topper. (4) Faye Elizabeth. (2) Medic. (4) Queen for a Day. (7) Day in Court (2) Houae Party. ) Gak* Storm. 9 (2) Millionaire. (4) Young Dr. Malone. (7) Beat the Clock. (9) School Time. (2) verdict Is Yours. (7} Who Do You ’Trust? (4) From These RooU. (9) Movie. (2) Brighter Day. (4) House on High Street. (7) American Bandstand. (2) Secret Sturm. 9 (4) Split Personality. (9) Robin Hood. (2) Movie. (4) (color) George Pierrot Presenta. (9) Looney Tunea. ' (7) My Friend FUcka. Show Record Is 83.4 Feet West Gets Heaviest Blanketing; Houghton Gets Its Share WASHINGTON-Snow, the farm, er’s boon, motorist’s bane, and child’s delight, co>nes in assorted amounts, forms and colors. A ranger atation in Mount Rabiler Nattoaal Park, Wash., measured 83.4 feet of snow in the winter ot 1968-88, a seasonal record. The heaviest four-day (all blanketed Tahoe, Chllf., with 199 Ineheo in Jannnry 19«. The Rocky Mountains also are great snow makers. Snow has fallen on Idaho every month of the year. The greatest 24-hour fall known in the Unitfd States dumped 76 Indies on Silver Lake, CIolo., in April 1921. In the metropolitan east, deep snow is a hazanlous nuisance; in the agricultural west, it is fondly called white gold, Tlw snow provides water for irrigation, drinking, and power. In winter, a thousand "snow surveyors" trudge through while drifts piled on high western mountains. They measure the depth and moisture eontent of the snow to estimate (he amount ot water that will flow into the valleys the following spring and ners With Ike," Republican Party fund-raising project, appeared today on the verge of rousing success. A brisk advance ticket sale reported for most of the $109<-plate dinners being staged Wednesday night in 10 Michigan cities, the largest number of any state. The capital office of Don E. Ahrens, Republican finance director, foresaw an ovcmll sale of 8,800 — possibly 7,000 tickets. This would be enough to raise one-half the i960 budget of $1,-380,000 for all purposes, including the stole party’s contribution to the OOP Nationni Committee. "The Ishpeming dinner had to be moved from the Mather Inn, where 309 persons « the overflow limit, to the gymnasium of the C. L. Phelps High School," said Joseph Hunting, an Ahrens aide. Deep snows are not confined to the west, however. Every state, including Hawaii, gets some snow. During the winter of 1951-52. snow descended on Houghton in the UP for 52 consecutive days, piling up to 118 inches. When snowstorms strike large eastern cities, the cost often is monumental. New York Qty spent $4,500,000 cleaning up after a 26-inch fall in December 1947. Though New Yorkers probably would disagree, their storm was not literally a blizzard, which is characterized by strong winds and low temperatures. A blizzard does not necessarily bring fresh can occur when high blow fine, dry snow off the ground in sufficient amounts to obscure Ihe sky. 1V7 Million Apple Trees YAKIMA — The apple orchards in Washington include about 35,000 acres of irrigated land and have approximately 1% million apple trees In. this area. Erupts and Re-Erupts YELLOWSTONE PARK - Old Faithful geysier in Yellowstone_ tional park erupts at intervals ot from 38 to 88 minutes. --Today's Radio Programs- wwi (SM) wxri (If») wosk (IIM) wroN c S:M-WJR, N««l WWJ, MtWI CKLW, N««l WPON, N»WI. Bporto :SS—WJR. DlnBir Dkto WWJ, But. Mtvt WXYZ, D«Ir 7:S»—WJR. Ount HouM WWJ. UkxvtU WXYZ, E P. MOTfU CKLW. Pulton U*U J WJBK, jMk B4llb tUto-WXTZ. Nltht Trsto WJBK. C«mp'» Cnr. WPON, Sound Btoct • ;SS-WJR, A. J. Tully IO:M-WJR. Contort WWJ. M'lodlu WPON Jerry Olton WBDNBSDAT MORNINa t:to-WJR, Move. Agrl’cl' WWJ. Newa. Roberta WXYZ, Wolf CKLW. Ilooator Club WJBK, Tom 0«on« WCAR. Moura. ShartdaLU CKLW, kyt Opener WJBK. newa. OMrit waaj, itewB, aaotoraa WXYZ, Newt, WoU OKLW, Neva. Taby OSTid WJBK. Nawa, Oeorte WPON^ Mtwa, ciiSr lt»0-wnL Mutto -----itwt. Wa WCAR. I WWJ. Newa. Roberta WXYZ. Newt, Wolf CKLW. Nawa. Onvia WJBK. Newa. Ooorsa WCAR. Neva WCOjI. Ndwa. CsMY wwe. newa. aanaie WXTZ. BreMcfnat aub CKLW, Newa, Dnvld WJBK. Nava. Reid WPON; Neva. Lark •;M-WJR. Jack Harrla S:Ob-WJR. Muatc WWJ. Neva. Mualc WXTZ. Nawa, Winter CKLW. Joe Vm WJBK, Newt. Raid WPON. Neva. Lark CKLW. Myrtla Ubb tlrtS-WJR. Choral WPOn! Chuck Lewie WRDNSS^AT APTKRNOOM lt;a»-WJR. Neva. Wellk WWJ^ewa, Haaaart WXYZ, Lou. Sherman CKLW. Joe Van WJBK, Stereo WC^. Neva, Purae. WPOR, Rawa. Lawta lf:la_w'jR. Tima fer Mualc (•J^WJR, Bhoweaae WWJ. NeWa. Story CKLW. Joe Van WJBK, Reid WPON. Bob Lark t«a-CKLW, Nawa. Shift'brk WWJ Nawa, Pnnch WXTZ. Paul Winter CKLW, Newa, Davlea' WCAR, Newa. Bennett WJBK, Mualc r WPON. Cnrrtait Trade I—WJR. Muile Rail ' WXYZ, Paul Winter » » WCAR, Tbnn. Imie Ford CKLW, Neve, darlea Trapped Miners Face'Prison' COALBROOK. South Africa (UPI) — An estimated 440 miners seated deep underground by _ rockslide will have to stay entombed lor another month—even if they are ttlll alive. Officials at. the rescue scene of the collapsed coal mine said today ^ only way the men can be saved Is fiiM to successfully drill a 13H-inch air shaft to them. Burger said aomeone would have to go down because even if the miners are alive they are probably too weak or hurt to feed or help themselves. Af WIrepbeU A MALL MELTER - Latest addition to Kalamazoo’s Burdick street mall is this infrared heater. It is being tested by the Qty Parks department, both as a means of keeping the snow melted, and also maintaining a comfortable temperature* on the mall the year ’round. State 'Dimers With Ike Oft to Rousing Suaess LANSING OJ^Michigan’s "Din- to Gov. J. Caleb Boggs of Dela- ware. A capacity crowd is: expected at Muskegon. Henry Kearns, sistant secretary of commerce in charge of international affairs, is billed there. Other dinners, all tied closed circuit telecast of President Eisenhower’s speech at a Los Angeles dinner, are being held at Battle Creek, Jackson, Flint, Lansing, Saginaw and Port Huron. The ticket sale was estimated at 650 for the Flint dinner and at Saginaw, the largest state gatherings. It now appears 400 persons may turn out (0 hear Earl Eisenhower. LaGrange. III., newspaper publisher and brother of the President, he said. Huntlnz said about 3,000 tickets wiU be sold (or the Detroit dinner at the Masonic Temple, with actual attendance expected to run 3,800 to 3,800. Oiarles Percy, Chicago businessman and (JOP national platform expert, will A sell-out is virtually assured at t. Joseph where 450 will jam the Whitcomb Hotel ballroom to listen Bank Beats Bandit to Money in Sacks ST. LOUIS ID-Carl Zimmer-fnann, a service station owner, deposited his weekend receipts at a bank and walked onto the bank parking lot. TVyews and Reyiewg Sound ot Music Makes Kate Smith' Bow Success ThoM.. Who May Be Alive in African Pits Must Wait for Shaft By FRED DANZIG NEW YORK (UPI) - Here’ quick idea of how unpretentious ^ new Kate Smith Show is: Miss Smith wore the same gown throughout her half-hour CBS-TV musical rollcall ’The accent, you see. was on music and not fashion, snappy patter or dancing; just the sound of music. through it to the qiot Rnder-ground where the miners are believed to be. F(kxI and supplies would have to be painstakingly lowered through the small air sliaft for at least a month until South Africa’s best shaft sinking team could dig a major shaft down to the sealed off spot. It will be at least five days before the first- air shaft is It was a pleasant show. Of eourae, we’ve seen enough of Miss Smith on recent TV guest uppearunces to know that voice-wise, as we say cast ol Madison uvenue, she rare can vocalwtoe but the happIcHt factor of all was In seeing that she didn’t let herseit get trapped Into a soupy, (toted array of music arrange-meats. She’s stajing young. The (Nchestra, under Neal Hefti'i Daton, knocked out some crisp swinging backgrounds for her— especially in her theme, "When the Moon Comes Over the Mountain." The Harry Simeone Chorale also contributed a bouncy reading of “The World Is Waiting for the ise." And the Barbara Ca^ roll Trio added its share of easy-to-take sounds. pleted with special drills expected be- flown here tomorrow frofn the United States to help In the TTie miners have been trapped since last Thursday. There is no way of knowing whether they are alive. 1/005 Credit Unions in New York State NEW YORK (UPI) -There are now 1,(X)5 credit unions in operation in New York State with resources of more than 2220 million serving approximately 600.000 members, the New York State Bankers’ Ass’n credit union dividends run as high as 5H per cent annually. Of 152 I the association said, 81 paid dividends of 4 per cent or more annually while 18 paid between 5 and 5)4 per tent. Co-Woikeis Speculate About Desi-Lucy Split By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — "Isn’t It zad?. Lucille Ball and Desl Arnaz may have faced each other on the TV cameras for the last time,” speculated a Hollywood actor a few hours ago. While neither star will say that the famous partnership is ending, other actors say it’s embarraBSing working with the husband-and-wifo team now: ‘‘They’re so stiffly formal—eo overpolite.” Two big companies are eying the lush Desilu TV empire. One prodnoer said: "It would take cash—and I don’t have two, four or six million dollars in the bank!” ★ •dr ★ “The Bernard Brothers”—one of the world’s WILSON greatest cafe acts—are not brothers. George Bernard admitted this after we saw him and his "brother,” Bert Bernard, headline magnificently, doing their great record-mimicry. In skirts, reminiscent of the Andrews Sisters. "Are they really brothers?" asked My B.W. I said, “Why, of course!” A ipask(^. armed bandit jumpM I fr<)m behind a car and demanded' money. "Sorry, but I just deposited the, money," Zimmermann said. “CmicalB than ordinary ra(| because of dif-(wy their kidneys ferences In the function. Miss Cole is working for a doctor’s degree'in endocrinology. She transfcrrecl her project from Eng-to n|w Jersey this year §6 she could spend a term at the Biological Research Buoi Mitchell Praises One Labor Unit Secretary Claims U.N. International Group Has Worked for Peace (Tht InUrnkUonkl USor Or-mnlMUon. now on tnn ot (ho Unltod Kattoni. wm MtuoUj (o«nd-ed 4« Yoon oto undor too trMty t)»t endtd World War 1. In tht tollovlns dlapauh, US. Storotarr of Labor Jamto P. Mlteboll UlU how toe ILO hai bMB fuscMoalnf be established only If It Is bnsed And the ILO has always worked ; tirelessly to advance social jus- ! Uce, as the basic element in the larger peace. This work has taken many | forms A traditional activity cd the i ‘ International Labor Conference, ' held annually at Geneva with gov- j ernment. worker and employer > delegates from 80 member nations | attending, has been the encourage- • ment of sound labor standards. ' Since 1919, the conference has adopted 114 conventions, which ' can be described as international treaties on social and labor questions. These have ranged from a . ban on the use ot poisonous white phosphorous in the manufacture of i kitchen matches to such significant ronventioas as the one banning the , use of forced labor. The effects of these international • labor standards have often been ' dramatic. Nearly 100 of them have ; received a sufficient number of ratifications to come into force i a large part of the world. ' In developing nations where men ! are striving to create a democratic • social structure that will bear the [ weight ol rapid economic develop- -ment, the standards developed | the ILO are a commem and re- ' spected guide In drafting new la- ■ bor legislation that has an im- [ portant effect on the well being of • millions of worliprs and their ftun- ' Hies. In recent years, under the guidance of the ILO's Amertesn director • general, David A. Morse, the organlutton has been alert to the special needs of s world In which OMuiy new oow-trieo are entorglag. An ever-increasing part of the ILO’s activity is devoted to te<*-nical assistance. ILQ experts from many nations are at work in Africa, in Asia, in Latin America and the Middle and Near East teaching the occupational and soctel . skills which are the basis of a ' successful modem society. SONOTONE House of Hcoring Free Hearinq Tests CTnSNtTKlGHT THE PONTIAd PRESS. TUESDAY, JANUARY 26. I960 Owner Finds Waitreu Sight for ^e Eyes L(»4D0N (UPn-WaltnsH Mari-eila Capn, IS, waa fired laat week by the OKiwiier U the where the had just recently been hired because ahe was nearsighted" other owner. Hod DiBben, andireceirtly fired eoi|doyft-and pro-begged tor her job hack. posed. Then hie took hor out and DIbben took one kj<* at hislbought her a pair M (spectacles. Maiiella went in tears to the THEY TAIJC rr OVER — Gov. G. Mennen WUliaips, left, and Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass). talk in the senator’s Washington home recently. Wiiliams was Kennedy’s guest tor ^ % ar wir«sh*to breakfast. Both were among speakers tor Saturday Jgight's Democratic fund-raising dinner in Waidiington. Rawly Hsisrsiisd WATON-JEWELRY REPAIR DEPTS. THE LADY AND THE GIANT By Clarence Budington Kelland i 0 IPS* w ClwsKt IsdiHtM KtllMd W YW Csitb PsUitlilH Css«asr DMritoM h NEA imkt m sToav: mum rt»it ji way ku tokm Syraew* ky iti »Hk k«r ekarm. kal r—*“ nication on the letterhead of the tary, but I made no comment. anS kar atalaUr katlar Oacar, t tkMfk Orrta kat kaca ratalaaS « raercaaal kar a- - •••a.—• a lawyar. MaSaa'a _____________ .MUirftaS wHk tkal t DaaM Draw, ika (nat naaactol ' XIV My duty was clear; I sought Madam Janeway and drew her aside. "Madam Cissie.” I said, thing just happened that disturbs "So, very properly, you came to tell me about it,” she smiled. "That letter you just received." said I. "You dropped the envelope.” "How stupid of me,” she said. •’How horridly stupid.” "Mr. Dewitt.” I raid, "read the return address,’* To this she madfe no reply. "That little twerp, Jethro Willis, tried to bribe me to tell him what it was.” She touched my wrtst and smiled at me. "I knew.” she said, “thait I eouM trust you Implicitly.” “But,” I said gravely, "I fear you cannot trust your butler.” "Oscar!” she exclaimed. "Yes,” I answered. "For a MU he gave the Information to Willis.” Again she patted my arm. “Don’t worry,” she said sweetly. "I’ll attend to Oscar. Depend upon it. Or-rln. he’ll tell Mr. Willis nothing that will do him anv good.” And then. "Will you ask Banker Dewitt to step into my office? Bring him, Orrln, and remain yourself.” She smiled. "As my confidential repre- New York bank, first to Mr. De-and then, when he had read it attentively, to me. As I read it my eyes bugged; Dear Madam:” It 'said. “We have been instructed by a certain individual to transmit to you an additional $^.000 in the common stocks of the Erie, the New York Qentral, and the Western Unibn Telegraph Company. ’This completes the amount our client agreed to settle upon you. You are instructed to treat this transaction with your usual discretion. ’The letter was signed. "The Mercantile Bank of New York.” by-and the signature was an illegible scrawl—Vice President. ’You are seeking advice in the Hrcumstances, Madam?” asked Mr. Dewitt. Madam tapped the fat manila envelope with a tapering finger. "As to whether I should retain these seenritles, sir, or sell them at the market and taivest the proceeds In government bonds.” Banker Dewitt did not ask to examine the envelope's contents. Madam inspired confidence. A FLEETING THOUGHT For an instant I remembered that odd conversation between Madam and her peculiar butler in which the name of Mr. Dewitt had come up, and which seemed to that he should be convinced of something. But it was only a fleeting thought. Not even a slight suspicion. For 1. like everyone else who came in contact with her, was obsessed by Madam’s person, and her intelligence and her charm. To say nothing of her obvious wealth. I sought out Mr. Dewitt and iw-flueuted him to accompany me to Madam’s office which he dU readily. She was seated behind her desk, holding In her hands a large manllla envelope which bulged with bulky contents. ‘ Thank you. Mr. Dewitt, for humoring a whim,” she said graciously. "By reputation you Well known to me; both as a banker of ability but also aa a man of integrity.” "It’s a kind oY a bill of sale we want drawn,” Hull said. "I’m sell-in’ two thirds of the Cardiff Giant. "You are selling?" I exclaimed. 'I thought Stubby Newell ownhd it!” 'Ye don’t need to fret about that,” Hannum said. “George has got a title to it that contents me. (To Be Continued) To moot fho requiremenfs of our increased repair business, we have enlarged and equipped our shops I ell modem tooif.and machines to give customers better and faster service on watch and {eweliy repairing and remodeling. REMEMBER... for reliability, courteouR service, savings and guaranteed work ... Sears is the tops. .An agreement reached by GreecejOe new RepubUe of Cypraa would and TUikey to * Zurich oqb(w- have a Greek preeldent and a , etp la Fobroaty, USB, pravldad|Turitihh vtee-piaildeift. 20-Month Guorantoo Economy Priced for Every Car Owner • a . ALLSTATE NYLON SAFETY ClJSniONS 88 18 IJSxlS er AMxU AND YOUR OLD TIRE 3. SATWACnOM OUAS AHTKO •r y*wr mcKky hack. AS kdl, •Htnl, kaitSkiicHrrv-lprIo-'l • 14*in. Tubeless Whitewalls available. • Strong Rayon cord construction cushions impacts • Special cut-skid tread design for safer stops. FAST FREE TIRE INSTALLATION DRIVE NOW PAY LATER No Money Down When You Trade-In Yc Use Sears Convenient Credit PI ” Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back” SEARS 154 North Saginaw St. Phone FE 5-4171 "By all mcRm, Madam,'* said Dewitt, "congidering the state of the market and—er—the, shall «ay source from which they epme? ■I would recommend that they he retained. You cannot go wrong." "I’m grateful to you, Mr. Dewitt. You put ipy mind at -est." Madam Janeway rose in dismissal. gave the banker ber hand and a smile. Then she turned to me. "Orrln. my friend.” she said, ‘now you may take Loasie home.” I was sitting fai my office reading Kent’s Commentaries when the door opened without the formality of a knock and two gentlemen entered. I recognized the first as banker David Hannum. character and horse trader, and the serond as big George IJulI. from Binghamton, where he manufactured cigars. ’Momin’, Orrin.” Mr. Hannum said. "Know George Hull, don’t ye?” I stood up and offered my hand nn<| Invited them to be seated. “What service can I render you gentlemen?'* "Want some papers drawed up,” Hannum said. ‘Figgered you, bein’ jest a beginner, 'd do the job cheap” This was not exactly complimen- "You are more than kind. Madam.” be said. "Therefore I venture to ash your advice. I do not even ask you to keep the matter confidential, though 1 know you will be discreet. I have here a communication from the Mercantile Bank of New York. Who represent a—” Then came a slight hesitation, “—a valued friend of mine.” She held o» Better Quality MEN’S & WOMEN'S ICE SKATES Sitof 5-12 HOTKEY A FIGURE $7,50 SUKR BMGMN CENTBI ISSt WIST HvaoN WIST or TBLIOBArn BRACE-SMITH Funeral Home 138 W. Lawrence FE 5-0738 Eitahlinhed 1886 Funerals as low as $350.00 may be obtained from Brace-Smith Funeral Home with oil the services of a more costly service. 24-Hr. Ambulance Service MORE CONVENIENT * MORE COMPLETE 5ic MORE USEFUL This yeatf ym'll find your Yellow Pages more helpful than ever before. ICs easier to use...it covers a larger area...and it lists many more places to find products and services in your shopping area. THE NEW YELLOW PACES GIVES YOU: ^ MORE BUSINESS CLASSIFICATIONS—so that you can easily locate that sp^ial type of firm you’ve been looking for. It’s probably in your suburban Yellow Pages, among the many new kinds of buflinesses. FIND IT FAST-FASTER THAN EVER IN YOUR NEW SUBURBAN YELLOW FAOES ^ MORE PRODUCTS AND SERVICES—when you’re looking for the person in your neighborhood who services or sells a certain brand or producti ' use the Yellow Pages—you find him faster. ^ MORE BUSINESS LISTINGS—to give you a complete list of aU the firms in your area, along with many more advertisements which are there to give you special information about the stores and . shops you’re interested in. . YELLOW PAGES I- - ,«i.; ♦, i... • , J- Hie Weather, C. •. Wf^thcr r*rnut URhl MMm iMlKlil. Umtorr^M' (DetoHi rm tl THE PONTIAC imh YEAR Backstage at Cooking School Urge* Stirred Strangler Admits Murder Ike Throttles ^alkbf Action Against Castro Little Warmer, Snow or Rain Due Wednesday Orcasional snow* flurripa will dot (h»' air tonight and Wednesday in 'th<' Pontiac area, the weatherinan Says Ahti;Amlricanism!g Little change in temperature is ;expected tonight. The low will •' apin be lfi-’20. Concerning, Perplexing ' W'edhesday'x hi|;h iti expected to This Country to reach 311. SIH>« and much colder Ik the lurecaHt lor north-em HectionN of Michigan. Know , WASHINGTON (AP) ^ powtlbly mixed with rain and a ’ President Eisenhower to- •* ‘fc** prediction ^ j lor Southern Michigan. day ruled out any . United __*• Westerly winds at seven miles states reprisals at this time;a„ hour ;t“io:i5 «.m will become against Cuba’s Fidel Castro I ea.sterly at 1O-I2 mile.s Wednesday, regime. i Twentywasthelowestrecording- The President told a news conference the Castro government’s ant i-American campaign causes concern in downtown ■ Pontiac ^rec’oding R a.m. At 1 p.m. the reading wa ! Struggle Ends TAKlMi A I’EKK — Mrs Krc'd Lovse of p*Ktur'.r»>« ea«t« Pensacola avenue (left) and Mrs. Ldward liammersten (secjjnd from h'ft 1 .showS them Owsteen of Pii||^>iw avenue 1 right I have to he the standing rih roast of bc>c'f to be used in to- busy at tlleir custodial jobs at Pontiac Central day's session. June L’ebele, hc*r a'ssistant, holds High dunng The Pn>ss Cooking .School so they it on a tray. Both women are on the staff of the ^ , look a peek this morning backstage. Carolann National Uw Slock and Meal Board in Chicago. perplexes this country. But, he added, the Ameri-f A 1 Recipes Only Part of It tan people stUl have great |0r /\C|f65.^ ------------------------- affection for.the Cubans. ^ The United States, he went on, is not going to be a party to any reprisals Ky JANET OUELI. tubs, large garbage cans and pails This^orning there stdl was ac- C a S t r 0 at this '■ ^ 'it-and »s «iwmiy HW Y«(K .Afs-Anm. i» Its- i« *u_ ilfmonHtrHtiMw u ia - iammx ; P PI orli. Miss ^oin^ to intprv©n6 Barrymore. 38. who fnado hor “ Both'giru‘‘le,“^^ internal affairs. IMe a tragic struggle- to fulfill the east som^ h^akfast ^ * mythical promise of her name, nreaiciast, . ............. Monday. Her nude hexiy was luMOd lying -- . B Work Behind the Scenes" Find Diana Barrymore Dead in N.Y. Apartment of Heart Attack Detroit Police Crack Parolee's Errant Stories Eagerness to Wash Jacket After Killing Woman Molds Trap 'i Wlr«Kk*t* this afternoon in the audiloriuiif of, llemonstratlng a dUh to a large Pontiac Cmtritr High School,- the! "Udienee of eager women In dif activity on the- brightly lighK-d; preparing It at home, stage was only a rlimax to many! eet-Ipe haM lla separate hours of preparatioff. f ' utensllK and diNheK, all placed What the public saw «s The P<»n- *" " (- Press Cooking School was jusli ingredient! TEUJS oE STKANUIJNU — George Darryl Flatter, shown at Detroit police headquarters Monday after he reportedly signed a confession of the strangle-slaying of Mrs. Elizabeth Moughler. The 46-year-old mother of three was found dead Fri-da.v. I-Tatler faces a first-degree'murder charge. , DETROIT (UPI) — A 20j year-old parolee, described by police as a “you^g punk," today faced first-degree murder charges/because of his own, conflicting statements and a white jacket he was too eager to wash after the slaying oF Mrs. Elizabeth Moughler. ’ George Darryl Flatter. ^ 20, told police he /‘just had *n urge and grabbed” Mrs. Moughler. 46-year-old mother of three, as she returned from, a neighborhood movie last Friday night. "She put up quite a struggle so I strangled her," police quoted i Flatter as saying. Immeldiately after the . , ''i , T-*- t. • ' j MPF nuae pc At the front of the stage prize Li.senhower issued a state-|,g^.p sayi.|ig. among other things,,her fashionable East .Side apart- bags of groceries The I’nlled Klales govenimenl | ,V.r, or ^ All day Monday workmen had. iH-on moving in and connectingjat the^sl minSSe^^ ‘"e stoves and refrigerators. Ughts andi ,u„h ™,i eiiHiilM h«H to be adjusted In! Graduation Thursday for Two High Schools] Two teams of Detroit detectives pieced the story together from tangled statements given hy l-1ntter {taring more thnn M houm of qnestloiriing. But it was a white jacket-described by witnesses and unidentified police informants—that first tripped the young suspei-t. . I limiu-d amount of 900 women who jammed ifi'e au-; •' the rniddk-of the afternoon some of I 1afternoon for the Prime Minister Cadlro, to create Ihi- bigger prizejt were delivcred!*^'^ ”’*^*’* ^ slip-up, no hesi-lfirst of fotir w*ssions on food iind the llbi-d at the Cuban (ioxem-menl and attributed to l>nllee- tween the United Stales and Cuba.;selling autobiography. "Too Much, "VVt- believe these charges to be Too Soon." She was the daughter lolallv unfounded. " ihe President •1’*' late John Barrymore, whose .said. swashbuckling off stage malehed , anything he did on .stage, and the' In a Tl. brondeasi last week. - B|^„phe Ocln.-lu.. who wrote; (aslrit ai-i-UKed Ihe I ,S. eiiibaKsy pigyj; poems under the name of working with opponeniK of his Michael .Strange i ^ ™ I. _ government. He alKo denoum-t-d iipp aunt was l-'lhi-l Hai-i-vmoCi* He sat in. Public Safety Director George D. East- vtee PreKWem Ru-hard m. Nixon. he^ unde wns uLiBai ' after it occurred said he law i "man in white” fleets the spot I where Mrs. Moughler's body was found. Her ( lothing was ripped and dis- Miss Hanimcrstcn. who is suli- yliluting for t’on.slancc Wciscr. is .MAX E. SIMON * Herbert W. Straley, at least on paper, was given the powers of a police chief yesterday E;iu Claire, Wis , and in Colorado Springs. .Sh{- Sr'XX^ KirXThelXS^ ^ Eastman told the department s higher After this Ca.stro broadca.si, ihef>ore. Her theatrical ancestry Ities^it givc^ her to travfd and'*‘^*'*”8 Officers that, ' United States called U.S. Ambasss-"'bn' *««’k four generations in this lues II Kl'*!* nt I , lO liavil ana „ . ° ' j r, . .____ . . . '/■nnnlrv. ana ITnrrlana Hiona Do.. was resuming , „ , , ^ In Today s Press straley ’ command. IIKilll.V I Nl Si AI, Mrs. Delore St. Dt-nnis and Mrs. The meeting was short,^lasting' David St. Dennis, both of Pontmc, only 15 minutes, are backstage assistants. On Mon- ... , day they wen-busy washing all the '^M»"nKlble for dishes and cooking utensils to be *' '•’■"e-gemenl of the de|>»rt-used. The stage at Pontiac Central r-nsimnn said later, has sonii- unusual -peiform- There was a qualification, how- aiK-cs, hut th('.v s<'ldorn ha\c in- •*''cr, and it was a large one. i-luded such domestic, ones. In ad- , ♦ * # dition to the usual light cables "He's i-es|)onsihle on the as-work«l our wtn around wash sumption that any changes ('omi(-K County News ............ Editorials Ijidy and Ihe (daiit Markets fMtiluarles Sports Theaters TV A' Radio Programs wants in policies. p?x>grams -and Wilson. Earl Magnolia Wilts From Favor in the Southland will lx- r»H-omni{*ndi',l Bonxsif’s Pagi-s (k)r Philip Bonsai home for v-on-/■bwi‘ry and England. Diana Bar-sutations. rymore's name o|x-ned for her - Eisenhower dc-alt with these olh-:*’''**^ show business, but | er lopu-s in his news {-onference: made headlines, it w as^ ' , seldom in Ihi^critic-s' c-olumns. ,jp Space — The United Stales, he i said, has no reason to bow its | **'''' ••®ok, she wrote: -'The j head in shaiiie in any eompari- '*''1 fh*t I (-ame from a long line Amerii-an and Soviet ae- of, Barrymores iwi'l going lo 'jl <-om|Mishinents In spai-e rxplor- make me leel that I must always atlon. I keep slriving lo live up lo their 13 Thfec-ountiy hasar.H-«.dinthey~f“^^^^ IT ^spaoe fi.'ld of which it can lie; striving. JT prdud, the Pn-.sidi-nt add>bulanle" Her 13 iConlinued (>n Page 2. Col. J).,, iContinued on Page 2. Col. 7i Oakl^d. His talk is entitled “Courage and Con-, viction for Tomorrow.’’ Glepn Griffin, president of the Pontiac Board of Education, will preside over the program Police picked up the. cx-convirt. theft, aftef employes of the Cln derella Theater and other informants said he was at the movie tlu‘ same night Mrs. Moughler was killM. Flatter at first denied being at i i !the theater, and said he did not ua white jacket. The Inx’ocalion will be delK-ered by Karen Oxley, Central’s senior rlass vire president, and there will be remarks by senior {•lass presidents Richard Brown . ANNOYED ,^WOME^' ol Central and K4I Santnla of ' But three .voung women picked N{iriliern. him out of a lineup as the man The ( lasses will be prc.sentedi'T*’® had been annoying them at hv Francis W'. .Staley, Central's I*"** movie, aiid police found a principal, and Philip vVargelln.i"‘>"«‘*hite'! jacket that had been Northern's-principal. washed in Hatter’s room. Diplomas will be awarded by Dr.j^,^ *"‘1 whom Dana P Whilmcr superintendehl 1 *^*“**^'' hved said he came home of schools I about 11 p.m. the night of the ' \ ^ ^ ; murder and Marled washing the Mu.sic for the ceremonies willi 'Continued on-Page 2. Ooi. 2t be pnivided by the Central Highj School Band under the direction of ( Dale C. Harris. ROY J. ALEXANDER 1/astman said .Stialcy's recotiv mcndaliirns would then he yi{'wed by hini and the depai,-menl's top officers, . - -..—...a- -ru ij ** •h'* ht’st time .since .Nov. VtASHINCJON tlPIi - The odji2. ,«at that Stralev had any mamioha blossom has lost *^*;aiithoritv at all , . . ,1 'hat date .Sfralcv , The magnolur, long a symbol of,„j command, siiuihcrn tradition and plantatwn, days, has lost jts favor with .South- . hn(ige. Lined Up for 'Operation' Tonsillectom'/ ^'Senators Hunt Bagwell Rival s sti ipn ‘di <'i-n flower fam ir ’ all that remained. And last April he lost those t{»o. when he was fired hy the Pontiac Civil Service ('nqtmission. If Scarlett O'llara- and Rhetl Huller were walking hand-ln-hiiiid anywhere in Ihe South tfiey _ wonid do so amidst banks of'i Ihs siK'ecssful fight for . roses—not iihder the niagoolia , stuK'inciU in circuit (vurt m trees. -'h<’ restoration of his rank. _. ... 1. u. - asked for his badge and ,-,nn This sad fac was broiyjht ____, , , . , , ,, , .___________ „ ,„.ii he rt^urned to duty Jan. H light yesterday when a ,k)1I to dej^„^ ^ i.>t^mc thr p(H,p e s{-ho.,^ Still, tmtil vesterdav, .Str national flower of the United .Stftcs! „ ... . • ’ released. was a chief in name only. ANYTHINt; (IIANGEDT Tire rose wa^ so lar ahead of; -vtralcy i.sn't .sure that anything my flower in the poll comiuetedIhas changed. "I'm supposed toi my flower in the poll conducted inas changed. Im supposed to iiV ilhf Florists Telegraph Delivery |artnally lie the chief." Iw said, .lissn. It .wasp I cv('n dose. ' .j'Tiut that irmains to Ik- seen." The magnolia finished a wilted Ktralcy said the change in h>s t2lh, some 3.50,000 buds behind thej stains was ‘‘verbar nn East-rose. Sad tp relate not one southern! man’s part. ’’He,- emphaslrrtl' state selected the magnolia as its* that I waa still under his direc first choitHf. Wants Great Salt Lake as National Park Area ''Hon and control." Ihe chief "I received no recommethdations ifrom the chief today," said E.isj-iman as he left work. "I'm reviewing all the chan.{.*! WA.SH1NGTON (B — A national park in Latah's Great Salt Lake area is envisioned by Sen, Frank E. Moss (D-Ulahi. ■ , lie introduced a bill "MAnday that would -set asidf shorelines of! Ihe l.ikc for a park. "This (vast inland sea. ” Moss hald, "IS the only thing of its kind ih Ihe Western Hcini.sphere." that have taken place absence,” Straley said, "The t.m. cept of poljce administration hon’ is now dUferent from the one I’ve usfomed 'fo.~ ‘ n ’Til eert'ainly have soliie--rec-(Hnniendations liiil . whsi they'll be remains to be seen." Meanwhile even a.» ,Straley 1, (Continued on Page 2. Col. 61 Central High hiaior studi-nis ii elude .%nn Rarnell, Jn,v Barton. .Mary Conrad, l-owanna Mrl.ean, .Wara Pullls and Marilyn Vernon. Northern High honor students are Joanne Dettibinskl. Carolyn^ •• 1 e 1 McBurney and Sandra Tinson. Unhappy GOP SolonS W'illiarh Hayward is recepient ofj Want SomOOne ElsO the Hi-Y Scholarship and Karen; z ^ 1 . lOxley is winner of the Y-Teen tOr Uovemorship .Scholarship. Both are Central grad- 1.ANS1NG ifi - 'Most of Mich-.Senlors at both schwis hence-|j .^ 22 GOP state senators u f P/Anfiniidi/4 /vn Docrz\ 0 fit ' iContinued on Page 2, Col. 81 expected to attend a meeting tonight called to talk oVer possible rivals to Paul D. Bagwell tor the GOP governor nomination. 1’N'POPI'I.AR IN SENATE Bagwell, the 1958 nominee, has i wide backing for a second try for VVA.SHINGTON lAPi — The ha-lgovemor. However,-he is unpop-i-space program isiular with Ihe Senate majority. Raps Concentration on 1 Spa^ Project lagging and may Ix' in trouble Ix'- , ... The most that seemed Hkelv CHU.s{. of {oncimlration onasinglc, ' approach. --------- “------- These conclusions arc'in a staff ivport of the House Committee on Science and A.stronautics. The report, first of a series planned on the Mercury astronaut program, was relea.sed today*, The report said that "there has alread.V been some program slip-froni the original plan, and, l-ansing Country Club was agreement to get som Aug. i primary ronservatlve .viewpoints Ihe n senjrtors li’portedly were far from agreement on any figure in the: party who was both available and measured up to their specifications. the most optimistic schedule tor Rapids, who sent out invitations Jhe attainment of orbital flight is lijltely to show a slippage of 'many moiT mt^joths." Tab Sales Way Behind NO MORE j-vlsion which may get around the rigbt4n-wori( laws now In effect in 19 states has been written into the new steel industry labw tracts. But it may be litigated op to the U.S. Stqweme Cbuit. Right-to-work laws prohibit any requirement in ~ union contracts a worker must belong to a labor union to get or htrid a*)Job. Hie sted contracts require all workers outside the right-to-work states to maintain union member-^ip and pay dues as a condition of toelr employment. This is toe union shop arrangement that has been in gteel contracts for tome KITCHY-KOO *- Evangelist BiOy Graham tries unsuccessfully to a|tract the attention of a native child in his toother's arms on his recent visit to .Uberia>. In Ghana, Graham was codly received after his first day of preaching because be would not comment on FYenclf atomic bomb tests in the Sahara, whiSh the Ghanlans fear. He will be in Kumasi, Ghana, today. Uberian vice president Willi^ R. Tolbert is at right in this picture. Generars Aide Recalls Close Tragedy Nearly Shot MacArthurV Gen. Douglas MacArthur is 8p years old today. Except for a split-second, wholly unmilitary iiiter-vention one dark night In the Philippines. he almost certainly would have died shortly after his 62nd birthday. And 1, aide to his Air Force chief, would have been his unwitting executioner. Very few Americans, and we devoutly hoped, no Japanese, knew the general and his party the southernmost island of Mind-uwo that night. President R. R. E. Uwlor A Requiem Mass for R. £. Law-Iqr, of 3797 Lakecrest, will be said Hiuraday at 11 a.m. at St. Hugo of the Hills (Tiurch, Bloomfield HiUs. A Rosary wUl be recited Wednesday at 8:30 p.m. at the Bell Chapel of the WilUun R. Hamilton Funeral Home. Burial u411 be in Holy Sepulchre Ceme- At A quick decision is in the public interest, he told the attorneys. An early ruling has been requested so. that the city—if - It wants to—can ask for reconstitution of the trial board in April's electk>n-*-if no board now exists. Smith has asked that Straley allowed to intervene iiyihe "But not on the grounds that the suit is aimed at him,” Meredith declared. "As a member of the police department he has nc more and no less interest in this case than any other officer’ TRIAL BOARD IN PICTURE Meredith said if Straley were allowed to enter the case on the grounds his Job was at stake ‘‘the issue would become confused. If the trial board were declared non-existent, Willman could arbitrarily fire straley—if he wanted to. Right now, Straley is protected by the guarantee of a trial board hearing. Judge HoUand aaid that would rule Wednesday Straley’s Intervention. "The issue over the chief’s in-tervmitkMi is clear,” Judge Holland Death Ends Struggle oljtiana Barrymore -"Will his intervention o' shadow the question of the trial board’s legality, complicate the case, and cause undue delay?' Plan Publicity for Bill WASHINGTON (UPD-North-erp Democrats have scheduled an H-hour speechmaking session in toe House timorrow to focus public attention on their drive to force action on the OvU 'Rights bill. Takes Ud Off 1988 Utters NEW YORK (AP)-The remarkable memory,^of Peter Kavanagh had the New York Public Libraiy V frenzy. UNDER COVER The next day the PTs came. But at toe compound not a aiga betrayed the presence of the newcomers; the Japanese would kavse ripped the whole island had they been given the slightest cajae to suajicct. » To the restless MacArthur. re-ktiiction of any kind was in- Super Memory Jars Library , When toe library accepted the unpublished letters of John Quinn, an attorney who died in 1924, It agreed they would not be published UDtU 1988. The letters include correspondence with American writers. But Kavanagh, 43, a lawyer described by friends as a mun of robust convictions, felt the papers deserved wider circulation. He speht weeks in the library painstakingly memorizing them Then, he wrote it all down o library. On a homemade prew in his East Side tenement room, Kavanagh printed 129 copies. He sent one copy to the British Museum in Lon^, gave nine copies to a man named Patrick Farrell, and planned'to sell toe others at |35 When the library heard how busy Kavanagh was, it sued to stop him. In State Supreme Court Monday. the beret-clad Kavanagh told Justice Aaron Steuer: "I wis enter a plea of nolo. contendere (no contest) if you have no jection, your lordship.' ' 4- - ., I’m not your lordship,” replied thistlce Steuer. Kavanagh lifted m bulging brief-ue and dumped out 119 halfcopies of the Quinn papers. He said he would keep the other halves to assure that they werq not published. Justice Steuer ruled library would have to get back toe remaining 10 copies the best way it In accepting 'the , ruling, the library’s attorney. FiSiiderick Shef-field, qnwjtttngly paid Kavanagh a compliment, He said th« printed fragments were ‘‘almost verba-the original, papers. Mr. Lawlor died Sunday after a brief illness in Boca Raton, Fla. He waa vice president and general manager of the Pilgrim Drawn Steel Division of Automotive Materials Cbrp. He was past president of the Recess Oub and a member of the Bloomfield Hills Country CHub, Bloomfield Open Hunt Club, the Detroit Athletic Oub and the Steel lastitute. Surviving are his wife* Kathleen, three daughters, Mrs. Richard Lynch of Washington, D.C,, Mrs, Ann White of Birmingham, .and Sally, at home, a brother, Lawrence. of Youngstown, Ohio, and five grandchildren. Graduation Thursday for 2 High Schools DIANA BARRYMORE (Continued From Page One) smilfog,- young face was photographed in all t^ fashionable night spots with cafe society escorts. Encourage by her father, she launched a theatrical career summer stock and quickly 'ed on to Hollywood. Miss Barrymore’s movie failures led her to excessive drinking. As a young woman, moved swiftly through two unsuccessful marriages, first to Brarti-well Fletcher, an actor, and then to John Howard, a professional ennis player. By IM7, her reputation for ilrlnklng and belligerence liud closed all doors her name half opened- Daring her third marriage to Robert WUeox, she and her husband were arrested for stealing food from a supermarket. One day, Miss Barrymore ■wallowed 27 sleeping pills with whliiky aa a rhaaer. She waa found to time to be aaved. . After the death of Wilcox 1955, Miss Barrymore began the long, uphill struggle lor a comeback. She wrote her I eluding the sordid details of her dissipatipn. She licked her drinking problem. gyOCESS IN CHICAGO Recently she completed a successful 19-week Chicago Appear-aftce in “Garden District” by her close personal friend. Tennessee WBliams. At the tjpie of her ejeath, she reportedly was negoupting to star ii\„London In "Sweet Bird of Youth,” another Williams play. She told friends recently, have begun to find my way.” adopted by too CammtoateB la No actioa was tekea by' toe Cemmiaotaa la adoptliig a reao-Initen asUag aaalatoa>m brem the Bteto Deparimoat of Health and Attoney OeMnl’a oMIee la (Cdmirnied From Page One) forth will graduate only at the The graduates are listed below: Dorothy Arnold Oortld Baker Sandra Bakrr John Ballard Ruth Barbf Uarsarrt Catn Judith Chittlek Arthur Clifton Mary Conrad ■•on Courtnri Carol Co* Gory Co* Wilbur Crawford Guy CrlU* Ilvin Kins >6R Tom Kyir Ororaotte Lafnrar Gary LaPOotalne Rrtinald Larion Harold Lod»ln(rr Gary Lanser William Lonabrdkc Mike Lurhrnbach Claud* MrCIrllan Bdmond klcConnry Art McDonald Lowanna McLran Darld MacDonald Sylvia M*adc Dlanff M M*r*r* ______r MIteff ChatiM Mnriar Dorothy Moaei ----T Mytri Michael O'BrIra Thomaa Draa Renry DtWalt Kenneth Dextrom Jamei Oot«on Michael Drake Kenneth Patteraon Joaeph Payne Carol Prarion Crats Pendirton Wynett* Kl**ll Kenneth Innla Gary Bran* Robert Perdon ^tert^nley ^n Furman Gilbert Garcia * "a Garcia ^....- Glider Michael Godwie Patricia Orao* Danny Graham Leonard Prell SaraPullli JerreU ReM Jerry Rbynolde Willi* Roblntoo Xinta Rubio Larry Sonlek Geraldine Sheffield Ausuft Shurber Kenneth Smith Neal Smith ~ ivertt*^tan)ey iby Sten)ien« Willi lyTe Hu..— llam Hayward Heard Michael Thomaa Jaeqnelln* Thompfon BImerdena Thome Marilyn Vernon Johnnie Jefferaon Kenneth Walker Joanetu War0 Oladva WaahinitoD Oacar Johnaon Jr. Bdward Keeha Evelyn Kerr Dennla Klni -----Y WatU Pred Welahaar Jim Whitlow Thomaa William* Juanita Wlllla Jamea Wrltbt Richard Lana Charlea Lm Ronald Martin Wllilam Dupuia Geraldine Prady Rhoda Garrlaon Curtli Gavett* Lawrence Gnffar Geork* Grave* Lenny Hatman Charfaa Rawklna Connie Oi Gerald Peaaa Ronald Rose Prucllla Runaell Bdward Bahtala WL, Sandra Ttnaon Geore* Toth Dorothy Townea WwwpkAP GOP Senators Hunt Rival lor Bagwell (Continued From Ptge One) porate tricbme tax as b cure for state revenue ills. This was early last year. And there was senatorial criticism of the way In which toe Bag-well forces haiidled the constitutional convention issue at Saturday’s GOP State Central Conunit-iee meeting. The state committee. In Itanit-e4t-ilebate ■ e ■ a I o n. h n a 11 e d 'throngh enaloniement of j called " already approved I llama and staniKbly opposed by most OOP legialatdrs. ent of a *e" can-f by Odv. « Rfonr '\\ ) ' ’ (I •V" r yiTE rONTIAC TRESS. TUKSDAY, JA^U Famed Surijeon --Drlhorek Dies at 79 CIfl(?AGO (AP>-Dr. Max Tho-rek, 79, IntemathMially known aur^ geon and founck>r of the Intema* N tlonal College of Surgeons, died Monday night of a heart attack'. also had served as protaiiwr of dhticaJ surgery at I^yola Univer-sity. . , For many years he was permanent secretary-general of the International College of-Airgeons and also was editor of the organization's medical journal. Dr. Tliorek, who had not been in iU health, syffered the attack In his home on North Lake Shore Drive. Dr. Thorek, born in Hungary, came to the United States in 1900^ ^He had practiced medicine in Chicago since his graduation from Rush Medical College in 1904. He had been chief surgeon at Ameri-<>can Hospital lor many years and Sat^iv.0rs incitkie his widow. Fannie, arid a son, Dr. Philip, a Chicago surgeon. Nowadays prosperity means being able to break even at the end of the month . . . Safety slogan, via A. H. Sweiman; "A reckless driver won’t stay wreckless long" . . ,, Tally Tuttle, says her mission in life is to help people leas fortunate than herself: “But so far 1 haven't found any." — Earl Wil- MR8. FINDLEY DETWEILER Mrs. Findley (Olive 1.1 Detwei|(Pr, S. of 29028 Alycekay Dr.. Farmington. a former Pontiac resident, di^ yesteixlay at her home aQer an illness of several weeks. She was a member of the First United Missionary Church of Pon- tiac. Deals in Pontiac and Nearby Areas ' ■ ■ T CC’A'PTS t- (IIDT> 'r Surviving are her husband, four daughters. Mrs. Floyd. Jones bf Pontiac, Mrs. Charles Murphy of Farmington, Mrs. James Wood of Yale and Betty Detweiler of Berkley; two sons, John of Berkley and Donald of ferndale; 14 grandchil-two great-grandchildren; a Russell Howton of Roch- jcommunity of Westport about 80J [miles southwest of jiera. ; The colonists, inciting 16 men. SEATTLE (UJ*It — Twenty-four three women and five children. Lake., Burial wi)l be in White, Mercy Hospital, after al5-day Ul-1 colonists <9«tay ‘'Xtablish ^colony m % Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Troy i ness. ' planned^ 16 resume t^^^ . Mr. Hall died unexpectedly yes-1 Surviving arc his wife, Jennie; “ Qalapagos islands after be - -terday at .St. Joseph’s Mercy llos-la ison. Morgim E, of Southfield; One of ihA niaioi nsmis m Iti.s- pital, Ppntiac? He was a foremanjand tu» grandchildren. A '* * • "IMon I'nivcrsiiys Facull.v t lub has for Cadillac Motor Division. alsq survives. I . ■' «uint. ol(i-fushion('d black stove Surviving are a daughter. Mrs.! , , | The U.-S. Coa.sl Guard gave the donun.iilng (he .scene. The room Lester Van Marter of Orchard! MR.S. GEORGE R. SPKAR folDnists permis.sionsye.Hterd,ty to was the kit'hen when, the dub Lake; two grandchildren and two] WALLED LAKE — Service for continue the vbyage in their 10(k opi-ned in 1902. The stove remained great-grandchildren Mrs. Gegrge R. (It-a D.» Spear, jfoot former refrigerator ship, bf liind when a modern kitchcri was l67. of 203 CTiarlotte St., will be Alert, from the Grays Harbor in.stall.st EARL T. SRIMWAY [held at 2:30 p.m. Thursday ester; and thre sisters. Service will be field at 1:30 p.m. Thursdfty at the First United Missionary Church with buriaj in White Chapel IVtemorial Cemetery. Mrs. Detweiler's body is at the Spark.yl Griffin Funeral Home NO ITEM OVER 'e NOTHING HIGHER VAU7ES TO $$ Pontiac's 97c Stort COMMERCE TOWNSHIP-Serv-ice lor Earl T Shumway. 74, of X304 Arlis St., will >be held at 3 mm. Thursday at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Pontiac. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. ' Mr. Shumway, a retired ordnance department worker at General Mo-toys Truck ands Coach Division, darly today in St. Jose|>h’s . . the merits of a Funeral Director? Or do you really know the things to check? Here is a list fhat may help you in your selection. • Does he have the complete prices plauily marked? • How is his Reputation? Character? Service? • His Responsibility and Attitude? tPW federal 4-4511 BRITE B. tilBSGN Bruce B. Gibson. 78, of IG^Bald-win Ave., who suffered » heart attack shortly after midnight, was dead on arrival at Pontiac Generj^ Hospital. / A member of the/Presbytertan Church in Pennsylvania, he had been an employe^ General Motor Truck 4 Coachjmd Pontiac Mot. divisions for "a years before retiring. leaves his wife, Ida; of Ponfiac; fou gran^chhdi-p'n, and three brothers. Servi^ will be held at 1:30 p.ir ly at the Huntoon Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount P^kXfemetery. 0«Ou,‘Pm.im^ ■SB / 7 / ns 055 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC $ French Premier Sounds Warning Richaidson-Bird Funeral Home. [ Burial will be in Oakland Memor-i iai Cemetery. , ! Mrs. .Spear, a social «vortd t^ay, Saturday that prices of potatoes during i after a brief illnesis. remainder of the winter will beiypars old ^'fhou^hlful Service'.' .Servirc will be held at 11 a m, „ Friday at the Trinity Methodist!'**^*’ increase would he re- Ho publi.sheri the Baiaga Journal Church in Keego Harbor Her bodyi **' grower and con-,for l.) yeai-s and also I is at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral "^“■'kel levels. ,,h,. village Council and as village . Home. ! Supplies of 19,)9 fall crop potatoes [olerk Jle was born in Michigan': . i aie smaller than a .vear earlier and I Copper Counti-y in 1866 and was i EDiiAR ilhc -pi-oduction of winter potatoes [ resident of Baraga for years, WEST BL(X)MFIELD TOWN-1 is down also. Getzen mov ed to Detroit in 191 SHIP — Service for Edgar Hall,; The de|Kirtmcnt roixnicd alwJiand took an executive position 82. of 6938 Colony Dr., will be held (that prices of* apples and pears aie jwilh the Ford Motor Co. He was ^ j at 10:30 a.m Thursday at Richard-! running above a year earlier, rc-jalso a k..«i,«.. ' son-Bird Funeral Home, Walled I fleeting smaller supplies. Detrtsit ONLY AT KROGER DOUBLE TOP VALUE STAMPS WEDNESDAY 1 Gullett was ousted from his treasurer's ,tob in August o'f 1938- Iwhen tie and his wife, plus three "oth’ers, were arrested and charged ■ 1 with operating a horse bet ring. I All werp exonerated later. ,| JJond said he expected the Su-( premc Court to hear the case pos-, sibly during its April term. piii Service Tomorrow for Leader, Publisher BARAGA lUPI) - Service will be held tomorrow for Peter M. ON PLUS 56 VARIETIES LIBBY'S STRAINED VALU.ABLEy COUPON : WITH THIS COUPON ONLY BABY FOOD TIDE ■ FAB 2 49* PRICE WITHOUT COUPON 2 PKGS. 60c |'1 J Coupon Valid af Kroger in Detroit Detroit en'ij Eaitern Michigan thru Sat., Jan. 30, -t?60. Limit One Coupon. I:) nroaei:* WV reserre the right Jo limtl quantiltef. Prices tnd items effectite thru S*turda'\. January SIK l%V at Kroger stores in Detroit atsd Lastern Michigan. , Buy Nov) at GREATLY REDUCED PRICES! GET A BIG, 36-INCH AUTaMATIC GAS RANGE THAT'S PACKED WITH FINE FEATURES . . PRICED FDR VALUE This moeJern budget-priceid Magic Chef Gas Range feotures automatic Jighting, outomotic tap burner, clock and timer, appliance outlet, swing-out broiler, lift-out oven bottopi and many other features. See it soon while the special reduced price is still in.effect. Act Now... Special Limited-Time r Offer Includes FREE INSTALLATION CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY .38I6HTTOK TTne POVTIAC PEESS. lUESDAY, JAXUARY »6. 1W8 t- ■ From ibe Press Box Halas Could Have Last Word on NFL Leader IMIARSIR: Now the Uoiu’ eituetion come* out in the open. A few wMdn mo ewryone wm teiying there we* any fric-tton In the orgeniiatkn. Now they’re trying to explain their dlfferencee. Seem* to me there are too many chiefs and not enough Indians in the lions organizaticm. They sure made fools themselves down at the pro meetings. ^ Jack Cohn Dear Jack: What fools thee* mortsta be, and what mortals thoee lioM arc. ♦ ♦ Dear Sir: ^ t You ran a letter fr«n a shut-in who asked why iMneone didn’t televise a game from U. of Detpit so lhat he (xwld see those two sophomores DeBusschere and North. You were right when you said there was a bunch * trash out of Detroit TV stations which could i eliminated to allow tekvising a game or two. I was t of the tmfortonate ones who didn’t get in to see the iotre Dame'game. Why couldn’t they have televised hat game? Someone like the shut-in man would have h]QMd it. Of course so would I after coming back Frank Kaminsky NEW YORK un—TiM Detroit Pigtom thought they'd toisid the miaehig clue on how to aeatnltK by I dpuble figuree hned but to be just a lucky gueas.' Tlw gaag attack worked saee. Bat the towerhig rookie of the PWlodetphU Warriors saw that tt dMa't, work agahs last sight. k Dear Frank: If the seats and tickets were available, there would r have been 18,000 at that U. *f D.-Netre Dam* game, 11 WM tcM. It WM aoli ont long in advance. There t W are many preblems which uriM in setting up quick » tdccaeting emaccnients, but m wc said before thoM f preblems could be werked ont by the station if they t were en the beU. it -k it Dear Sir: There’s a little community up here in the northern of Oakland County which currently has a basket-team we are mighty proud of. If you could tear away from Pontiac Central for a quick minute so you might get to learn to spell it and then give it lome attention. Right now its cme of the top Class C ^ams in the state. Guess who? Harold : Dear Harold: Do you speB H ON-T-0»N-V I L-L-E? Is the nick-. name ''Rtackhawks?’* And is it ranked 8th in the AP ^^raiinga? Pretty good guessing, hnh?( And you renlly * can’t be aerioua In saying we den’t give the school snyettenUen? ‘ it it it ; Dear Sirs: Z Can you ten me, what’s keeping Pontiac Central from getting voted the number one team in the state? I see where you guys are on some kind of state panel, |km*t you have enough influence to swing it? w ’Thomas B. Dear Tom: ^ Apparently there are some who arc not convinced PCH warrants the top spot. Now that Hamtramck Wilf Scores Against 58 Pistons Gcm 9mw wMi M W>ti. seond in daubte figures. But there wu But counterteting C3uuaberUtai The Stilt's SHpokit output wm oidy six shy the NBA record ol 64 set esorller this season by Miiue-apoUs’ Elgin Baylor. Chamberialn had the greatest game of his short National Basketball Assn, career last night, scoring SB pednts. His barrage wm the only reason the Warriors, stung by Detroit Saturday, tumUed the Pistons 127-117 at Bethlehem, Pa. Detroit’s tactics weren’t changed front thsir 130-110 victory Saturday. Agaip seven nstohs, led by The defeat snapped a fanr- OHick Noble trailed Shue-ior Detroit aooiihc haxirs with 18 points. Ed Coj^ had 17, SheDie McMiUon 16, Bailey HoweU 13, Earl Lloyd U and Ardiie Dees 10. Pistons. They meet Syracuse here al Madtson Square Garden tonight. Then they return heme again In nn NBA donblehender. Ondnnntt and MlaaeapoUs ^ Chamberialn stuffed 23 perints of his massive total into the final period in last night’s lone NBA encounter. Detroit had a chance until Chamberlain’s last wild spurt. The 7-footer hauled in ^42 re- Anderson-Fife Showdown Won't Come Oif Today Utotidiag ril his time scoring. Poppa' Bear May Untangle Hopeless Mess MIAMI BEACH, Fta. (AP) -The quiet man at the stormy Nathmal Football League meeting may yet have the laat wofd. Hopeleaaly anarlad in an effort to elect a suoceasor to the late Bert BeU m commiasiianer, the owMie turned to fiw man who PRO OP YEAR — Heavyweight boxing champloo Ingemar DETROIT (R-T h e promlaed showdoam for contreri of the Detroit Lions won’t come off today as scheduled. Leaders of the two rival factions — president-general manager Edwin J. Anderson and vice president D. Lyle Fife — stUl are at li Beach attending the National FootbaU League meetings. The Board of directors wm to have met today and a pitched battle was expected. Anderson and Fife brought their dis|^ into the open at the meeting where NFL owners are bogged down in the selection of a commissioner. "The meeting Will be held at some later date." said Ai^rson. 'Sometime before the Feb. 26 stockholders’ meeting." Leaders Toppled in Class A Loop JobannonXft) lecdves the multHewdad Hidnk EMt from Ray Hickok qfter being named Prolessional Athlete of 1868. Presentation was made at annual diarlty dinner of Rocheatw Press-RaiHo Cub. Ingo is 10th winner of the belt. Record Field Tees Off Today in PGA Seniors DUNO)IN. na. (AP)-With purke of $1,500 and a trip to England awaiting the winner, a record field of more than 300 goUers starts teeing (rff today In the annual PGA National Seniort Tournament. national affair, with the winner meeting The British champion in a 36-hole match for the Teacher International Trophy. The event wiU run through next Sunday, with 40 players cutting in n the $15,000 prise money. Today’s field was confined to players S years of age or older, with the 50-54 bracket due to start play in tlje 72-hole event tomor- Royals Sudden Death Victors Over Newman, Shaw's Beats K.C. Ill as much as all but two of the living former champions are in the 56 and over clasa. today’s should see some exceUent .scoring. J end Hiihleirf Phfk, fevoriiM of the Detroit polling * nembers, hevo fellcR, thorc might be e chance. SIGNS FOR JIMS — tlkrvey Haddix, who pitched a perfect game for 12 innings against MUwaukee last season,„then lost, 1-0, in the 13th, siM« his 1960 contract with the Pittsburgh Pirates. Haddix, is joined by hkh-wife, Marcia, and daughter, Teri, 2, as he puts the pen to the pact. Pirate general manager‘Ooe L. Brown witnesses the signing. i^ging Williams Inks 21gt Boston Contract What Is Ted's Role in '60? i^e leaders took beatings last _ ft in Cass A Cty League basketball action at Pontiac Central. Two foul shots by Sam Soles in sudden-death overtime brought the Lakesidd Royals a 61-59 victory over the league-leading Newman k.M.E. quintet. The score was ^ 56 at the end of regulation play and 59-59 after the 1st overtime period. »* two free toooM gave sooilng hoMrs witl^IS I. Boh Ftailejr aettod Ittor FeOx • BOSTON UR-WUl the 1960 dMtp- ler of the Thd WUUum stoiy be entitkd ptaiehUltcr? Spot player? wu clarified whether that figure meant grou or net income. WiU provide the answers. If «M St-year-oU itoggse la ahaad hel be IM hUheto paM rigatog a eMiraet yaetorday at tha aaase Ogare m *m. After a brief, secret eariy nxim- Bucky Harris, the oolorfBl Williams had agreed to his 21st Red Sox Ted reoenUy teetified under oath that Ms 1166 baseball' earnings amounted to ‘$60,000 byt it-^ never if he plays 60. I'm leaving it up to him to say when and how n he’U play. ” A painful neck ailment was the lain reason WilUams’ alwayv \ lofty batting average fell down from .328 to .254 last season. Kansu City signed outfielder Dill Tuttle and pitcher Bob Grim. Grim '•Ted told me ‘I don’t know » «■“ ««««* ^ ••WUSanu IS 41 aad yw MUi’t tea abwrt oM ba pUyers,” naan-agor Billy dargdl saM lator. •ntum BMNh yon play at that sge Is ap Is dw MdWdoaL 14e knew we cen expect to get a M ef om aol ef Mm u a piackMtter. I'll have to eee how he dew hi sprlac whether I can do it or not but if you want me to give it a whirl ' wUl.' "I replied ‘the Red Sox definitely want you and at the sahie figure as lut year. year. WerM champtoii Lot Angeles Dodgers signed veteran ouUlelder e Snider to a S37,SN coo- Ted isn’t going to piny 154 hall games, let's be renli^," Jurges oontlmied. "We can't say whether heU play 100 or 75. Ill be happy All-Stai Pin Points Jensen May Call It Quits Today With Red Sox The I^iladelphia PhUs signed Ken Walters, 26-yearold outfielder obtained in a winter trade with Detroit, and relief pitcher Dick Farrell. Farrell had a 1-6 record last year while Walters played at Fort Worth. The Chicago Cubs now have one player left to sign—inllelder Harry Bright—after pitcher Art CeccarelU and catcher Cal Neeman signed early today. Orr-BALANCE no simple solution to the olf- t that WM so 'noticeable m 1 won the AU-Slar ChampioiisMp. Coordinating the pushaway with e the first step is one of the key ^ acthms in a smooth delivery and OAKLAND, Calif. (AP)-Jackie Jerisen is through with baseball and will make his formal announcement today, says sports-caister Bud Foster. I get strikM because 1’ Many novices ought to sympathize wtth .n* bacauat a hopping ■Muon at the fsul line ia faiity . although it's bad. Foster said on his KTVU television program last night the Boston IM Sox outfielder prefers announcement to be made through the club. Foster added that the former most valuable player in the American League hu decided he would rather be with hit family play baseball. Jensen will make his Oakland restaurant his full time instead of part time job, the sportscsst- The restaurant said Jensen is in Loa Angeles 5-1 Victory for Stampers af rei • the ^bl^iifSatim of all the nsove-B thbr le*d or i* it. There Is a proper follow through. A bopping on during the releaee makes a follow through difficult, and it this act which keeps a bowler from dumping the ball on the alley. Slowing one’s steps during approach and roeJcing certain that the left knee is bent suffideotiy also aid smoothness. tract, a reported t3,S00 ent from hurt year. Hie 1060 batting average was -SM compared to -311 In ISH. Mem Tankers Post 5th Victory Pontiac Northern won its 5th swim meet of the leaaon and 4th the North SulNuhan League by whMplM MatHaon HdgMs, 70-22, the PNH pool yeeterday after- The meet wm originally ached-uled lor Madison’s pool but it hM not been completed m yet, therefore the meet wm transferred Willie Goggin 1s the defending champion, as well as the world champion. He defeated Arthur Lees, British senior titleholder, England last year. The American champion annually makes an expense paid trip overseas to play the BAtish titlist. Chuck Grets wm a double winner lor PNH by taking the 100 yard backstroke in 1:21.6 ahd 200 yard individual medley In 3:06.6. Lone first lor Madison came as result of PNH disqualification in medley relay event. I 17. Shaw’s Jewelers tied the Knights of (folumbus for 2nd place by defeating the defending city champions. 66-56. John Keller of the Knights was tops in scoring with 17 potato and Dick Ayltag bagged 14 for the Jewelers. Although any senior, regardless of age, is eli^ble lor tbe over-all championship If he completes 72 holes, there are cash prizes in the various age brackets. There are seven of these positons, each comprising a five-year span, except tor the seventh, which takes in entrants from 80 years of age upward. In Class B activity at Pontiac Northern, front-running Clarkston stayed unbeaten with a 92-36 rout of winless Walled Uke as Dick Lippert notched 23 points. C3iet Woodmpre’s 17 points paced Griff’i Grill to a 70-|^ upset win over the Avondale Merchants. Jerry Hill netted 21 ta defeat. After nine failures, the Aces won their 1st game of the season in the Oass D circuit with a 3430 conquest of Eastoide Shop-pii«. The Jefferson Jets defeated the Black Hawks, 43-39, ta the other "D" game. Every year sees a group of newcomers to the ranks. Laat year the "rookies" included such aWe performers m Paul Runyan, Dick Metz and Duke Gibson. This year Chuck Oongden of Tacoma, Wash., Didc Sellers of Oklahoma City; Herman Barron, long a tournament pro, and Horton Smith, make their debuts. . A * A Gene Sarazen hasn’t missed tournament since he became eligible and the fact that this famed performer has been able to win only twice ta six years gives an idea of the-vclass of the competition. ' ' The seniors tournament dates back to 1937. It wMn’t until 1954, however, that it became an Fk>nMr Wos K««ping Quiet Fearing Expansion Lots fesskmal football than any one They decided to try to tike tiw haadculfB off George Halas. owMr o< file Chicago Bears and a pioneer of the ganM. Halas hu been ' le to apeak his rated on the coumisaiaoer for tear he'll leae auppott on et^ansion if he takes Through 2$ rounds of baUotinf. Inot the voting started last Wednesday, Halas abstained 21 times. Dm one time he voted wu for Paul Schisaler, special events director of the Los A^les Times. Yesterday, with the vote stalemated at seven for Marshall Leahy of San Francisco and four for acting commiuioner Austin H. Gunael, Leahy’s supporters asked Halas to attend their caucus and explain his position. Apparently, Lbs Angeles, Cleveland, San Franctoco, Detroit Green Bay, New York and the Oilcago Cardioalt weren’t aware ’Poppa" Bear wu concerned they Philadelptea lari admit Minncapidia^. Paid an Dallu to the league this year. The "aotid seven" u the Leahy group |iM become known deny a report they asked Halas to join their group and to try and coax two of tbe oppoaftton to swing to their camp. They deny also that in return they promised a aoUd block (or expanskm. Including Walter Wolfnar, an avowed opponent of admitting new members 1960. Halas also sayk such However, George Prestdn Marshall, excitable owner of Me Washington Redskins, cbvioUtly believed that is exactly what hap-He ripped into Woltaer and Mrs. Woltaer, owner of the Cards, asking them if they had changed their minds on expansion since coming to Miami Beach. yard trawtila-JiBi TytU#,trKH>, mj VISM Baralciu* Time: Xlmc: .....w.- *"i »»rd fi»«»tyle—RIcZ It. htcfc Omirt “ Ttme: S:S1J. I yard baekMraka—Chuck Orcu (PNHi. Chuck Lambert (PMU), Jeff Klcillni (Ml. Time: IM yard braaetrokc—Wa|)y J*i>hM (PNKi. Tom Ha«ka (PNHl.^lkt Ooui-—" Mt Time- 1;IS.S. Time; S:M«. ^ MO yard mad. rtl—(Ml ChMlIi Maruln, Bob MoMOM, - Oevey aick •tevart. Lou CaMOddua. Don Uaaln, Uu Morhere. Tima: Mrs. Wolfner. the power behind the Cards, retorted, "We’ll reserve decision on that until alter we elect a commissioner." Perhaps the solid seven is telling the truth; there wu no suggested deal, it seemed strange they spent 2*i hours behind closed doors just to pass the time of day. It also seenud strange that Hallas then talked with the four clubs opposing Leahy, Waabtagtoh, Phil- . adelphia, Geveland and Pitts- Sylvan Skates to 7-3 Victory Over Hardware ft Three goals by Bill Mo two by Bob Alton led the Sylvan Fliers to a 7-3 trium)>h over J k M Hardware yesterday ta a Gty Junior Hockey League game at Northaide Park for boys 13 to 15 years ol age. Bob Schaffer tallied twice lor the loaers. In the 16-to-18 double - elimination tournament, Spencer Floor meets Northern No. 1 today at h the winner facing the Vlllagt Snack Shop Thursdiy at the same hbur. Thursday’s winner plays unbeaten Standard Forge for the city title. The Mt View Rangers play the Pontiac Rangers Wednesday at 6 I’clock ta a 13-15 contest. Dick Plourde performed the hat trick and Bob Beyers and Jim Berg each scored once to lead the Detroit Stamping Ck>. to victory over Vemor’s lari night in • Detroit Sr. Hockey League game at the Itate Faii^unds. Four goals late in the 3rd period broke a 1-1 tie and moved the Stampers into 3rd place, one game shy of the lead. By The Asaedatod Preu MtaneaoU became the first Big Ten team to win two conference games away from home this son when the Gophers shocked lows 87-72 last night. A; DESTINATION ... OLYMPICS! — Irislv run- ap wtruetoi* nei* Ron Delaney is shown in his new office oi^- Air Lines alter transfer from NeW York, De- looktag Kearney and Market, one of San laney plans an immediate start on training for Francisco’s busiest Intersectjons, as he begins the Rome Olympics with Golden Gate Park ta his activities as a sales repipentativer lor li|sh mind as his main running locals. • Three of the minority four at first confirmed they believed Halu had been offered a deal. Later they backed off. apparently feeling such comments were ere-ae bmerness ta the situ-afion. All of it didn’t amount to much anyway since the four anti-Leahy voters refused to budge. Halas says he told the solid seven that he wasn’t m concerned about a cominission aa he was about expansion!? 'Expansion i.s more important to the^ league than a comiplssion-er who might serve one. two or five years.” Hafas says he told tbe Leahy people. "Above all,” said the Chicago wner, "we must have unity at HalM said he asked both sides to reevaluate their poaitiona. It would seem at tbii point that lere wm little unity, little chance of agreement on a oonuniaaioner. Indications are the possibility of adjournment without electing a commissioner is still strong. Gophers Hot, Bum Iowa 7t per ceM af their aketo. Me Gephers taned Me game Into a nat after toUag a 49-B half- Iowa dropped to aixth wii 4-3 mark and now also trails Ohio State (46) and Illinois, Michigan shots from the field but hit on 34 to establish a Big Ten record. The pnMous mark of 63 per cent was set by Indiana agataat Ohio State Feb. 2, 1959. Ron Johnaon, Minnesota’s leading point-maker, wh held score-lees ta the first half, but finished with 13 potato. Ray Cronk, a sophomore, topped the Gophers, with 21. (inference activity picks up Shtnrday w4M-.thr#e games sched-uled. Michigan State, tbe defending champion, ghat to Columbus to meet first place Ohio State la regionally televised matinee. Michigan la at Purdue and Wisconsin at Minnesota in evening en- S' »*s ............ .'urdiit ......... UuUkOk ........... KicinqAa ......... WlI^IlB .......... 11 li ■rA. T»K yoy riAC press. Tuesday.;jaM arv k. ^ ^riObfi sixfts In 'basketball 9 a « ■ ♦’ i ★ Tffc leaders rtwiain uichanged for the setond straight week-, but the front-runn^ in ej\ch clSj»— Mu8kegMl^.',]^ghl >gor* Art ■" Bangor'jid Siu)lr CilV (Stetj —are being hard-pressed to retain the No. 1 raphii^. HeidsSi ' the ^ nel ol KJ sports writers and broadcasters rates the teams this weck.^ >)ints Joi for )ints j^or flrft, 9 junifaf Wings "Hike kead DfitROrr (UPH-The ’Detrdif Jutpor Rtsi Whigs pegistert^ ^heir sixth straight victbry . last nifeht, with a 6-0 win over the Riverside, Ont., Regents in a Elorder Cities Hockey League game. Detroit goalie Jim Oemcnt, 18, a University ot Detipit fre.shman, posted his'second shutout of the season as the Wings increased their lead to four points over scTOnd-plaee Chatham., !wo Boxing Groups^ sGlosed Circuit, Patterson Firms iRuled Finished w. w,x:itlr . ...... ::?:t Oirbnvsan TelePrompTer President Denies Wrongdoings in Monopoly Charge 'aJ-J VALUES NEW YORK (API-The president of TelePrompTer — accused I of engag^ in ,an ‘ unholy alli-■plance’"^ to mohopolize the world »»'heavyweight championship Iw'the el! state ftlornley general—Ijdl^. de-nied any, wSongdoing. t ' '•U‘4 J* "W<. believe our contracts to be *.«h«n. c^'bwtsnl vaHd,’’ thundered Irving B. !S*ivy murn-milUon dollar ifw^ton lAk^tsfrieT-iebmpan^ have no intention - hacking out of thte position. o»k*. tiftf Bhor^.^Hwigtou. jWc Will cooperate but not be in- .Oll'. Teiiin , ■ E»c. rw.'itinudaled.” cttv oi*a UM is-o iM| * * it : /ivA /Vr^ IIJJ Attorney General Louis J. l>f- ‘ [«.i 9j|kowjtz yesterday obtained a State if.j U| Supreme Court ord^r permitting BRAKE ond FRONT END Si*ECtMj ™ him to begin action to dissolve Mjboth TeleProinpTCr and Floyd iPatterson Enterprises. Ltd., for 1. Adjust Brakes 2- Add Brake FJuid -3. Pock Wheel Bearings A. Align Front End 5. Balance Both Front'Wheels |95 All for TiF^fton^ MUFFLERS Sports Calendar SI. MUDm) *t M} R MsrT ei. Clcmrnt it 8t Janui 1 attempting to monopolize' heavyweight title lights and their ra-dio-TV-movie rights "I am shocked by the ehargCs," continued Kahn. “We received no list of the charges from.the at-tortwy general. All I know about | this thinp is what I read in the Hollv >1 rilnt H< "’if.n ■»r>ltnt Ute «t Q» Brwith I «ttioh«r» s !li-t,eii>Nrton n It Oro- ■ Pte. Midland •< B«v Ctt» c ; SMinsw Arthur Bill .-mirU kt a«y evv Htndy atih Schoul Surlmminr Thur*toi' •• IJilr* Bi(h SrhMl WrrkUlK PonUte kt H»«fi P»rk City Bu'hr'bkII CASH? Just say the word l "You’re the boss” at Beneficial t-ovef bills — clothing hilla, S When you want,cash to pay off If f t * doctors’ bills, any bills —just phone Beneficial for a Bill Clean-Up Loan. Xheh make only «»-f monthly payment instMd of several . . have more cash left-over iot youraett at U« ; end oAeach month r Phone todoi// ^oaiu $25 to S5M on Sikiiature. Furnlturo or 7 WEST LAWRENCE STREET, PONTIAC 2nd Floor, Uwronco tidg. • Phono: FEdoral 2-92W 0«N tVENINGS ST AFfOINTMENTSHONE FOS EVENING HOUIS BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. BiNEFICIIil HI INV^E ORION TONIGHT — jjxford travels to Lake Orion tonight to renew their old rivalry in one bf the feature games on the area prep schedule. Three bf the Wildcats who will likely see considerable action are, left to right, Mike Dodge, big John Kamm and Val Sausser. ci.Asa p - Lfi- -. g f a 8, papers. “We're the best qualified corporation to deliver the top dollar to the fighters for closed circuit television." Both Patterson and his mani ager, Cus p’Amato. the oriy stockholders of Floyd Patterson Enterpri.ses, went into hiding. L'fkowitz’ action was an, off-shoot of a long investigation into the. promotion of the heavyweight championship bout last June 26 in which Patterson lost the crown to Ingemar Johansson of Sweden. Ice v» I The affid«vil.s named Kahn. 5 |\^'illii,m B. Rosensohn, the official I promoter of the Patterson-Johans-^ooHffi'Son fight, and D'Amato as tlie wrrd^'rmain agents of the alleged con-) ‘“Ispiracy. Ht-rc is how the "master mo-no|x»Iy plan" worked, accortliag ito the papers: Eaglets, Orion Host Hoop Features By CHICK ARAIK |the SCL continues with a full Orchard Lake St. Mary and Lake | schedule. Orion will be the host teams atj Frederick, despite a vic- the feature games on tonighfs' tory Friday, will be a dellalte area prep basketball program. ; underdog at Orchard Ijike with The Suburban Catholic and Sagi- j The f^aglets anxious to get bark naw Valley will "have the only loop| on the winning side following games going. A big throe-team, their battle for championship honbrs in| them Emmanuel Ace to Graduate The St. Michael Shamrocks, currently sharing second w^th OLSM, should rack up their 7th triumph in eight tries at Royal Oak St. Mary. New leader St... Betwxlict will be entertaining the same St .........fc quintet which upset Orchard il^ihiM-k whirh'dro^ P>®ys St. ......... aement. Oxford will provide the opposition at Lake Orion in a battle of old rivals which both school always look forward to. ★ ★ ★ Green Still Top Scorer ...... I Sonny Green of Emmanuel! ford's Doug Sfolt with 19.S to effective control 6f thelbowed out of high school basket-i share Sth with Karl Klebardson ,i,,i managemeijt of any ehallengn’jball with another good showing | of Ortimville. *010 lm»i 9mIsucceed In 'ic'Friday to eontimie his reign over) niriberup c-oming chompion and additinna]-!ihe county individual scoring race; lop M thi iy over the promotion of he-aVy iwith a 23-4 average. The Wildcats are ,ready for all euiners now with Doug Stott back going great guns along with Jeff Brady. 'They should be "up" for the occasion following an impressive overtime triuiuph | o\er linlay CHy^ | Coach Hal Carlinjs LO-Dargons year ago. Out of the I hgvp tJfic-l^e an* unpredieUnUe W'eek is Mer\ Gallup i group, whipping strong Troy otu' who finished In |weok and then bowing to Wak CLYDE ELUOT NOW SERVING YOU AT, Homer Might Motors 15 MINUTES FROM POWN- TOWN PONTIAC BUSINESS PHONE OAR-2528 HOME PHONE FE 5-3662 YOUR SUBURBAN CHEVROLET • PONTIAC • DEALER Oxford, Michigon BincK On M-24 Wide Selection Of Sizes and Types ; UP weight championship contest si The mid-year graduate piled up| the grohp last season. Oak Park the next They may b<' Nun j-.v „ *rn. rcspcct to the liveillT points in five games. John; gig Dort Appleton of Brightonto rebound, although vetj , »». PiedsM, B 30 gate' and the much more lucra-{Meadows of Royal Oak Dondero {not only keeps rolling along atop|Dean Callison is stijl put i.,kriih.i; |<>ve. iineillary imovie-radio-TVi ranks No. 2 at 23 per game. Bhd|the area list but now heads bofh|'‘'<>> mumps. Acton of Troy leads in total points (jivisions with a 24 4 average.' Valley game will have Flint Hn'rcwarn 'i'in ^ m”" ....'-J, *............,wdh 247 and ha.s the 3rd best ’Armada star Terry Wills is serond f'^'ral at Saginaw in a makeup From 495 ' Too much tread left to re-.. plenty of mileage n them.*" cap... I left in t V'e'', fc foie- The papers jaid D'Amato was with 247 and .Aifc.ir To u.se 'Isubservient promoters and!average of 22.5. Ron Morlan of lake Orion' Hn^'Vi'^Rochr.ter Hi Y matvigers foisted by him on the{Holly follows at 21.7. .Mrfr'pi.ton:TO a new enin- this week is Ox- II. B 30 D m Then, the papers eontiniK'd, the ---- j .meillary rights were taken out of _ . . ' Idle Eagle, 'Y' Champ, K MOfC PlayefS 1 the a » at 21. OAKLAND cot N' fTrOtORt ^ The Pontiae YMCA lntramurall!«V.“‘a l!^ Gnn VA/'lfK TifiarC ba.skelball League condudr-d its Kahn-^igp VYlIn MQ6rS ..... ... TelePrompTer interests. ^ ^ 146 W. Huron FI 2-9251 MOMIAVS EIGHTS opening round of play lakt . night * with the idle ILigles finishing on! top at 6-0. 'Engineering tripped providi^"^'’*.. . G.M Tech 41-25, the Lancers edged; .JJ the F a 1 c 0 n s.,54-51 and Tnirttsi hiohla'no par*k. n’’j" downed thi* Cfazy Eights, 42-191 completihg the sl'ale. Sr'cond round! new YQRK--s»nuin < — ■ - 1134‘V New York oulpoliU RO Dondero Morikn. HoTly , Rtchardson. OrlonTillr ' Humer. PCH :. . Reed, Lake Orion Allx. W Btoomfield iMyer«. Ortonvllle lDal)bi. Bt Michael 'Brady. Oktord *■---- Bloomflel-' rlne '.Haas. OL St Mery Dl-rTROIT (.n-Two more playe ___________________ „ T31 Nutn are under contract with the Dt‘- ^““'Va'ie ! I roil Tigers today. chapman. Parmiaaion ittrsmith.i Utility infielder Casey Wise and iiton Epp» pitchry Jeny Dayid; signed 1960 coenty area i play starts, Feb. 1. J. D Em«. Brlshton ' roVelled ^reffSNOW contrarls yesterday.' So far ■jpla.vers are under contract lor ^he jsea.son. ■ ‘ , ;B.whenbcrg. Almont j Center fielder A1 Kaline also i llalked contract with Tiger general|scheuini. n Haven {manager Rick Ferrell-yesterday. Sr zlSk*'^ffn*Jton but didn't sign. Wise was jtequired by the Tigers: 'from the Milwaukee chain. D.ivie .split last st'Hson with the Tigers, and,their Ch.-irle.ston farm. n‘?a"nch prt'viously postponed contest. Arthur Hill is at home against Mid-AVG i Central vs. city, » iM S3 4! foe Handy in warmups. Unbeaten | 11 847 ’2 s F’ofitiae Central will visit Arthur | • >» ’ Hill Friday. ; 3 .58 19 3 Holly will attempt to find itsi s i4» il l victory style again at Flint Holy 7 iS 17 ^^^‘■mer. Lapeer will he in the 7 iH 17 4 same city to duel MandeviHe. in 1*7 '47 Ulawson is at Wamm Lincoln, I 1.11 16 4 North Branch vs. Yale, Millington 10 i«i IS r travels to Vas.sar, Porf Huron goes n' iM ^’'**’*^ Poinie, Lamphere visits' 7 107 1? 9 j Huron. Brown CHy meets Croswell-oRisrl'* ’** l'<’xit»Kmi. Royal Dak Shrine g' fp Aio.'five is host to St Theresa pnd 't M7’2Vi^'®'’m'nfilon OLS seeks a second' ! 137 triumph over B4‘nedH’tine. « 124 iii 5 f'ull .schedules on all league * 'U I4 8 "ill resume Friday with the 8 115 14 3 maiorify of the local teams taking ‘7 85 '?3*4«o the road. Paneling & Plywood ' Clenr Redwood Paneling . . . .$185 per M j Incense X'etUir Panelmg ... .$185\perM) Pine Paneling . . : . $165 to $220 per Jii^ Pre-Pinished Plywood Paneling 20c per ft, DONALDSON LUMBER 27 Orchard Lake Ave, Ftem Cattorn*!'Patking Remover Dees the Weric ‘ef W Mee with 5hevels—*atHy and simply —you just guido it with Utt/* nfforti Throwt tnow in 36 MORE THAN TOP LOW-PRICE NAME CARS-This ^rice difference over the low-pricacar buys Mercury's mdre beautiful st.vting. It buys a quieter ride CJ3% more insulHtion), greater stability i7' longer wheelbasei, and extra quality. See and try '34 more advantages at youf iiercury dealer's showroom. 60f ME CU iY imcoik MtUCURY DIVISION y. Russ Dawson Motor Co., 232 S. Saginaw SL, Pontiac, Mich. r. J-i A 4 ii*'" TIIK PONTIifC PRESS. fUESbAV. JAxVaHV jo/umo Slid "Finance Attorney Tries to Help Carole See No Trend on Stock Mart The toUowing are top prices covering saies pf Mcally gn>#n pradtice -brought to tbs' Farmer's Market by growers and suid by NEW YORK (g»-The stock market milled indecisively in moderate early trading today. Gains and losses of fractions about a point prevailer' iamong most pivotal issues. ^m in wholesale pitc^age lots. Quoutlor ...................... dkms are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as ol Thursday. The Ibt steadied after yesterday’s sharp ‘'Blae Munday” slump as assorted steels, motors, rails and aircrafts displayed small gains. Chemicals, ^ever, continued to sag. DuPont was off about 4 and Eastman Kodak dropped a point or so. . McDonnell Aircraft spurted 3% to 35 in a delayed opening block of e.poo shares as buyers rushed for the stock following news a proposal for a 2-for-l split and an increased dividend. Oeneral Tire advanced more than a point following a mlsNlle contract award to Its aerojet subsidiary. MARKETS Grain Prices CHICAGO GBAIN Detroit Produce Appits. Nortbsro Spy. ku.. riMlSlAni.Ki R««tl toposp. bu. ......... Csbbatc. bu .. . ...... Cabbssc. Curly, bu........ Cabbatt. Rad, bu......... Carrata. toppsd. bu . . ';tlary root. eos. 1 .... .loratradlab nk. Paraolpi, . ................... Potatora, M lb. bat ............ Ralllihca, Black, ^ bu......... Radluhra. hoihoukk dot. boba. Rutabakaa. bu................... Squash. Acorn, bu............... Sqiiaah. Hubbard, bu............ Turnips, toppad. bu............. SALAR OaSENS Livestock N.Y. Schools in Crossfire Would Prove She Was Never Told Her Rights, Talked Out of Turn LOS ANGELES (API Was ; Caiole TYegoff a witness against herself the day she was charged with murder? Hit defense attorneys arc trying to prove It—in hopes the Fifth .tmendment'may help them win her freedom. j Miss Tregoff—at firet reception-1 ist to a wealthy physician and I later his mistress—was arrested I July 2? after she told a prelimin-! I ary hearing her story on the night I the doctor's wife was killed. i > * * * _ , , ICarole, 23. and Dr. R* Bernard Rockefeller Wonts Tax:pinch, qg, are an trial on charges State in Education DKTBOrr UVISTOCE DBTEOIT. Jan. It lAPl—lUBOAi ----- - ------Bulk ------ U.S. Steel WHS firm as its report I»[ktt»bt«r on fourth quarter results was scheduled for after the market close. i New York Stocks Allied atn Allli Chkl Alum Ltd . Am Alrlin ' Am Crm . Am M ft Pdy Am Met Cl Am Molort Bof* Wi^ J Kennkcett . .. I' t Kimb Ctk . . 1;, Krofer ...... g buM :: Ub McNftL . ji] :: '8 * SVI:?’ 'ftC ... U t Lorlllkrd.. 8U .... M t Mack Trk .. r ft Co . M t Mortln Co. .. n .... »1 Moy D atr . orp 13.8 Merck....... «0 8 Merr Chftff »l « Mplk Hoii K > Mtim MftM .. •], Monnan Ch . *1 J Mohl Ward . ?! ’ Mat WhacI ----- at Bhotoa itaari and tnltm ''So *kffunf ***^*-“** *"** *'’*^5 ------- -------- thowlni - [VDv ttkda baltara: coirt cemprme iround 10 par cnit of run; good and jholea ftarra wd baltrra modarklaW aettyq, tally ateady: lovar gradaa not fully ntoMlahad; co«a modamtaly ac-tlva. about i loada high eholca 10tl-U«0 lb. itoara H.OO; moat cboica ataari se.tb-37.70; good to lew choloa itaoki MOO-30.71: moat good and chotak hrttrri. n.00-M.5t; toad eholra halferi 30.6(1 utility cowi 16.80-10.M: cannari and icultara 11.00-ll.M Hoga—Mikbla 1,000 Bulchara opening 3Sc higher: aowa ataady to 30c higher: moat,U.B.' 1. 3 and 3 100-330 lb. butrhera II 00-U.00: mlaad No. 1 and 3 100.330 lb - 13 71^18.00: gtkjll lot^ No. 1100 ALBANY, N.Y. (if-Mounting conflict over achool finances was reported today between Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller and Republican legislative leaders In the wake eg President Eisenhower’s refusal to surrender a federal tax on tele-' phones. Eisenhotyer tiHned down yester-i day a personal appeal from Rocke-iinuKd ^ national administra- ' •• tion aband($n the lH per cent tax New York school districts coukJ ver the 70 mOlion dollars if In thi» state.; b«. I4.M; NOJ I 3.00: No. 0 kao-jao nixad gradaa 100-100 130-M ll.0b.U78; 13 50-13 36: ............ Vaalart — aalable 138. choice and piima yealOri and good 00*08: cull and tiiimy i Bhaap—oklablt 0.000 Slaughter opening around 00c lower; — 10.80-11.08: No 078-10.08. About iteady: good 17.00-10 0 n.li: utility nioai good and cho... 1 and 3 polta 10 00-10 80 Poultry ond Eggs July 18 death of Barbara' Jean Finch, 3G. The prosecutor who is seeking to prove her guijty took the stand for the state Monday to tell about Miss Tregoff’s arrest. Under searching cross examination. Deputy Dist Attj^ Fred N. Whichello admitted that at no lime at the preliminary hearing had Miss Tregoff been informed of her constitutional rights, Whichello saidyhe didn’t consider Miss Tregoff a suspect i preliminary hearing menced. ,, Rockefeller announeed on Ws rrlunf from WashliiKlon he had not ghen up bo|ie of getting thw lax this year but had. no plans to urge Congress to rebuff the President and drop the levy. Rockefeller said lie would a.sk the New York Legislature to authorize local school districts to levy the telephone tax, but only on condition that the federal lax expired June 30 as now scheduled. Whichello said he decided to ■harge Miss Ti-egoff during The Mortgage Picture: HOME OWNERSHIP IN U.S. : , ^ J • 1 Owt 4 Owe ^ * kf li . , $1,000-1 S5,000-Mo Mertgoga 5,000 10,000 Ml How Ownership Has Grown: 1949 1954 1959 fiag^yardw in Schultz Film Glenn Hagyard has been namixl ja partner in Schultz Electrical-Service,- 1543 N. Opdyke Rd. ' I A 1953 graduate of Gene ft I I Mofors Tech, Hagyard served two '' .vears in the armed services before joining the company. ' Ueccnlly tlie company wimi Inanuxl as one of llW few electri(S^l firms in .Pontiac to do electrical wiring for modernization and te-' modeling jobs that are FllA ii-n;mced Its'work has been mainly with commercial and industrial jobs and c.usiom-built hemes. Karl Schultz founded Schultz I Electrical .Si-rvicr in 1943. Prior ito that time he was an electrical fore man at GMTC. His wife, Ruby, is a partner in the firm also. NATION OF HOMRS — The home-building boom that began after World War II, and which i.s still going strong, i7 reflected in the figures sliown in newsmap ajsove. Fifty^ight per cent of America's families — not living on farms — own their homes today. Alomst half of tliem have no mortgage debt outstanding. Ten years ago. only 51 pci cent of nonfar»=families were homeowners, \1ore than half (lie homes arc valued by their owners at between $5,000 and $15,000: tlie average for al) homes is $12,900. 01 those home.s with mortgages, the av(>rage debt is $6,600. Data from National Industrial conference Board. Again Extend Deadline on Krupp Sale'Demand i BONN (UPli - The deadline ifor the sale of the vast Knipp ■iron and steel properties has been |extended another year, to Jan. 3L jl961, it VI as announced today. Says Officer Sent Unionist Cleared) Taylor ) AH allied commission which already Jiad extended the deadline Ifor one year from Jan. 31. 1959. decided on the further extension-at a meeting here. • An investigation into why a UAW worker was jailed in Pontiac after being arrested in Mount Clemens The general expectation in diplomatic quarters here is that the convenient for our operations here 1 and Wayne Biiddemeier on a (the Bedford Post is at J^venlwarrant charging iwo counts of initially .advanced during Mile roail and Grand Riven to fi' .. . . - .ho -aOne u;,,..ih cess. She. was .arrested when sheL(^Q^,p,j Bedford State Police finished testifying. Defense attorneys have battled ^i'ferly aguinst every attempt to Introduce Miss Ti-cgoff’s earlier testimony into evidence. They ■laim the portion of tjie Fifth Amendment which bars a peroon from being a witness against himself was violated. Lt. Howard A. Whaley ordered the move, according 1^ Pi'oseculor George F. Taylor. lake him to Pontiac,” Whaley said. That was the "only reason. ” he added. iH : b Soup ' 54 il.AIrl, 11 3 Nal Caah R Nat Dairy Nat Uypi DETROIT. Jan. >‘lroH In eaae laU Federal alata ar 18 lAPi—Bk(a FOR. feHeral atate traded I cpnimerctally com- Eisenhower has asked Congress to-extend the tax. Asked by newsmen if he planned to bring any pressure on Congress, Rockefeller replied: "I am not going to try to undermine the federal government's position. ” Says Pill Profit Cent a Tablet The probe was oiMcred yesterday by Slate Police Commissioner Joseph A. Cliilds after a Detroit attorney said thcVe were "peculiv circumstances” surrounding the arrest Jan. 7 ofWillinm P. Vinson, 32, of Warren. The attorney tor Mnaoii, Mebo-las J. Rothe, charged the trans-fee was aimed at helping re-elect Ta.vlor, a Repulilican. Macomb ('ounly has a Ucmocratic prosecutor. felonious assault in the beating ofi'^e years just' after World Watt two nonstrikers in the long, bitterj’I- quietly dropped-in 8 Kohler strike in Sheboygan FaHs. '^'’**' Wis. in 1954. ' T lH>arniiig of Whaley’s order, Taylor said. “.Sure it elears me. It shows I have in this thing.” Seiler refused to comment on •he study. He said Ihii; would be up to Childs to do sometime today vhen the completed report i.s mbpiitted. Viason was arrested in a Mount Clemens hospital while donating blood by Detectives George Craft Vinson if awaiting examina- Shaping complicity-flioa op a fugitive warrant in | GRAND RAPIDS (iP-With filing Macomb Count.v. where he was.^pafUj^^ ^ three-way race taken after Rothe protested Jiiskas shaped yor in the Oakland aiTaigmiient. Gunaca is p^b. 15 primary elections al Grand in pri.son. ! Rapids. Candidates are incumbent Ta.vlor said .yesterday Rothes,Stanley J. Davis, second ward "ridiculous " chargc.s were ''mere- commissioner Robert H. Blandford iy vindictiveness on his not being businessman Thomas D. Staf-able to push us around out here.” fo^d. News in Brief Whites—srid« 38^-m'^ II8 Norf ft Weet : IgAv ■ Is ’ I t*i»r " ; 317 'helDe D PhllrPet F«-Cello.O Fnod Merh Ford Mot Freep Sul Frurh Trt —u”"]^ I Tel ft El 71 > reh Pklge 3 7 it AftP .. 31.1 1 He Ry ... 81 irwhound 30.8 jum Oil . .. 13 ^emmer Pep 33 1 ..jiemmer pi| Hereh Choc Hnllind r Homestk Hooker Ch . Interlkk Ir Hit But Mch 'A ... . Jdlum check) 17-30 [krket xeady. Overkll Ian ol lerie belni < It 0( II DETROIT FOUI.TEY “ *' ■•’i_p,ieei r No. 1 qukll Heavy type hem 33-34: light type hem ^ * heeyytype rdetler)--------- "■ •• -— type I—“— -31-33 Tranquilizer Producer. Taylor em|>hatically denied that! Se« No Reoson to Price of Miltown mommg by telephone with .State Police jSupt. Howaid Seiler, ordered byj WASHINGTON (APi—The mak-'|Ghilds to conduct the inve.sligation. ers of Miltown tranquilizer said;nc Seiler told him Ihali today their profit i.s a little more| wijnlqy, on duty and in charge of than a penny a tablet. Idotrclivrti when Vinson was ar- j Henry H Hoyt, president of Car-|pp||^ ordered Vinson brought to i450 000 Lost Monies *" ‘^*'♦'-1 Pontiac becau.se "we know exact- ' jmony for the Senate antimonopolyijy bow to quickly and expeditiously City Will Open pTax Note Bids to Be Set Aside for ] subcommittee that 1, .. I .»/. vvould be warranted ii Hospital Wing jq cents i-eduction the pres-y tablet. handle It here, ” Ta.vlor said. FOB CX)NVENIKN( E’ ! The new Oakland prosecutor, | who at the time pf Vinson's arrest | denied Rothe s claims that he v y«l Out rlAuto Import Cut i i Bad tor Mexico 5T MEXICO CITY (UPli - AlKiut Bids will be opened 8 p.m. today The subeommitfee is inve.stigat-al fhe Cifv CWmis.sion meetinEl'"K charged for various r,~nnnn ^idrtigs. It contonds somc of the! playing politics, claims Vinson was! on the $4.t0.000 tax anticipation j priced so high i delivered here "for the sake of ntMes mr Pontiac Gf-neral cannot be bought by persons! convenience " in that "the sister pital, the last mwies the city wilL^.j^^ Current hearings ca.se” of another unionist, John M.l sot aside for additional equipment I devoted to tranquilizer pills., Gunaca. was handled here in-1958.1 and remodeling of the hospitals' ., |,-ade' name forj Whaley confirmed that,he had| ca,sl ^ ^ nieprohamalc, .a dnig for the re-jgiven the order. "It was monij lief of tension nnd anxiety, Hoyt ‘..... Im;ludrTl on tonight s .agenda also^Tjfj j|s diswvery had helped lift hearing on a special assess- cai-iei s saU-s from an annual lev- Benny Phone Operator ... ...... ,..................Ilion, Wilt Lose Her Bail New York sllect to Cat li.slei dollars m the last fiscal Most important farm crop in the vicinity of Debortih. lowa.Jis 'corn: But. no com is sold, "^e KliH trical equipment valueil at entire crop is used to fatten hogs $406 and a violin valued at $100 for the market, were stolen yesterday from the) ear of Cecil Rich, 2165 Pontiac Rd., Pontiac Township, while it parked behind his home, according to slieriff's deputies. ur Comer Lunch, corner $VhI-lon and Perry, now open 7 a.m.j to 13:30 p.m. Closed Wednesdays. NEW STATION FOR LEASE MOBIL OIL COMPANY Ft 5'946« IIONAIJ) ,1. WII.S(>N !’ street. Jnderwona m Cerblde Init Air Lin !nlf Friui ! !s rlnei IS 8 Rub a'mioul.cTOu'nl’ol a *1 por I'’'.'".''.'!'.’''.'!'’ ".'J* 4».8 cent cutback in car import quotas, n 4 several leading aiitomohilr iml.u.s ................." A rcMilullon will be proposed to ask the ( onservalion Department for deeds (or several pleeea ol property for public purposes and adoption will be aaked for the annual appropriation erdln-nanre for 19S0. Las ANGELES lUrii-Aetress yj try spokesmen indicated today. ".Substantial profits made in tlie.Sara Berner's $.525 bail was or- four years since the itUr(idil?Ili$ifSf f>f’' f^^ forfeited .vesterriay when 313 The goremment has announeed it is considering a further 20 per 313 cent reduction for the near future 37 4; of the remaining Import quota. Industry spokesmen interviewed Iplohn Van Rkkl Wed Un Tel Weitk A Bk Wedi XI WflMm ft Co 'VoolworUi Youned 8h*T -’nllh Rkd 34 3 I ! tl _ third international auto show here II I today indicated the cutback would io3| also bring considerable unemploy-f hfent to the industry in Mexico. iprotianjate have to be ixinsid-ered In relation to the 13 preceding years in which Carter struggled profillossly to enter the prescription drug field,” hp said is scRrcely' reasonable to criticize Announcement will be made at ypaf-g- profits resulting from the meeting that registration for^^ effort.” .she failed to appear for trial a charge of endangering the life of her 7-year-old daughter. NEW YORK An offer of free removal of warts ; ! to further his studies of tumors The name of Lichfield, England .brought more than 1,000 responses Mexico firodiiees no automobiles means "The City of the Dead, " to an appeal made through nev or tiTieks. hut asaemhies them A thousand Christkms weVe .sup- (laiiers by Dr Walter N. Mack, fium parts manufactured in the isisedly mart.vr.eci there in Homan Miehigaii .‘'la United States and Europe. ‘peiseeulkms alKiiit the year '.’Hfi gist The 47-year-old actress, best known lor her role as the telephone operator on comedian Jack Benny’s show, has been commiUrt to a hospital, her attorney disclosed. She was at^rested Christmas Eve after cal|ing police and complaining her frtrmer husband was planning to kill her. Employes Union Elects President Donald J. Wilson Says Assets Have Increased 22 Per Cent m sl^^:ssslA^ or is. 1 E.xrOW, to avvikt in your personal planning, you will want to read whaf the Economies .Sl.iff of a nationally known Research Organization looks for in the year ahead, l or convenient reference, estimated 1960 earnings and dividends per share for 65 leading iQduktrial stocks, 25 Utilities and 40 Railroads are presented in tabular form. ^ This comprehensive report T also discusscK among other * r aneaa. ror your rNtt. copy, . ( just return the coupon below s today, J. Nefkirr Ce. _.™ _____ „.8 Cemmunily Net! topics, industrial production, | Feetlee, Mlehlten the cost-of-living, employ- I Fiiwt link ai Frit 1 ment and farm income. Now j 8."i."leh le.t 73 • IS8 81 . AVERAGES 0 II i e eighth); DETROIT STOCER 1C J Nephler Co > Figure! efier declmel point) ei. ____ V. High LoFttonn' Allen Elft. ft Equip Co.*^ 3.5 3 8 ruMwIn Ruhher Co* 33.4 14 Ro«) Oeer Co* .......J- 38 38 O L Oil ft Chem Co "N 13 1.5 “1 Elec. ,C®_* ! t *® *| Penln>uler M. Prod Co.* T4ie Proph Rudy Mig. Co. IS 4 .118 118 1181 1 18.3) Boy, 6, Dies; Autopsy May Find Cause Oakland County sheriff's detectives are today investigating the death of q six ydar-old Independence Township boy early this morning. Deputies said Michael J. Stillwell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert SliUwell, of 4675 Independence Dr., was dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital. The boy’s parenla told dt-potles that Michael had Buffered a head injury when Ins fell while play Ing with frienda 9«Mlay. Deputies were called to the home when the boy suddenly (aiiMed this morning. An autopsy iq scheduled later today -to determine the exact; (•iiiwr of death. The boy's father is stationed Uie Nike Base in Auburn Heights. I Nixon's Ex-Manager ^ Aims at Congress ■ Donald J. Wilson, 75 Preston St., has been elected president of the General Motoj-s Truck and Coach Division Employes Federal Credit Union. He announced that total a.s.sets al the end of the year were $7.-'.'75.000. Compared with 56.(VX),000 the previous year, the figure rep-l■('seMls an inere.ase of 22 |a-i cent I 13th consecutive year, { this penetrating Forecast has I been designed to help you [ Addrne__ C. J. NEPHLER CO. 818 Community Notional Bonk Bldg. FE 2-9117 Wilson said also that a, fniir per cent dividend rale has l»een ni:VF:RLY hills, Calif (APi-i deelared on shdr.|, depoolt* and Murray M- Chotinei-, onetime ranvi that a' pEfranage refund of in paign manager of Vipe President' — Rirbard M. Nixon, wilLseek ination for a seat in Congres.s per rent will be returned on all interest paid on loans by members during 1959. Other officers and directors named were A. E, Silk, vice president; Nick B. Skosich, secretary;^ Harry J. Woodman, treasurer; Michael R. Bwker, Rudolph Hartman. H. W. Reeve, William J. . u a < 1(1'^°*’*" Walton. In addition to his work in behalf chairman of the credit com- o( Nixon, Chotiner managed thein^i,,^^ ^len 0. Treadway. Cora-successful campaigns of rx-Sen i Katherine Baker, William F. Knowland in 1946 and Stone. R. Guy Emery i J. ■ land,liarry J. Woodman. Chotiner, an attorney, announced Monday he will be a candidate for s the Republican nomination in the I Dist. The seat is being cated by Republican Donald Jaf-k-j LAZELLi: AGENCY. Inc. All Forms of Insurance j S04 Pontiac Sbte Bank Bldg. • FE 5-8172 AKonzo IL Bell Jr., chairman of: I the Los Angeles Coiinly Repuhli-i rim Central Committee, also is .seeking the 16'Ji DifsI. nomination. jHigher Butter Grading 'Standards Start April 1 RED OIL UFEUNE — In another move to strengthen economic ties with its European satellites, the Soylel Union has embarked on a huge oil pipeline project. The plan, to be completed within four .years, calls foi^ pipeiim’s to originate in the,Soviet Oil Center of Kuibyshev in Uie-'Urals anid run across Russia to eastern Europe, where refineries will be built (see news-map above). In addition, two Baltic Sea oilies are to he developed as oil ports. Aim of the .Soviet Unkm is to doiiltle oil projliiction by 19('5. to an oulpiil of 240 million tups, him] have an ex-portqblo surjilus of betweefi '25 and 30 million WASHINCTON (UPl) — Re-i vised standards for grades of .butter will become effective April I. superseding standards that have jbeen in effect since April 1954, the • Agriculture Dettartment an-jnounc^ today. The, new standards tighten the I allowable workmanship defects (body, color and salt) and include more detailed .descriptions of 1 quality characteristics. ' Tlie new standards also lighten the qiialfiy reqiiiremeAl^ for tlie 1U.S. Grade C, or U.S. 83 kfire. I by eliminating some of the flavor Idelccts previously allowed. GAS HEAT PEBMITS AVAILABLE FOB IMMEDIATE INSTALLATION IN PONTIAC ABEA IF vdu WANT QUALITY IN A FURNACE AND DUCT WORK CALL FOR A FREE HEATING SURVEY AFCO ARMSTRONG JANITROL LENNOX MUELLER WESTINGHOUSE CHRYSLER AIRTEMP WILLIAMSON BARD $ 595 M INSTALLED. 100.000-12S.OOO BTU FORCED AIR 25 YEAR GUARANTEE Any of tkaie furnacDS installDd with new custom ducts, ell new centroli end fumete wiring. 2 besement beet regiitors, eutometic humidifier, ell floor cold eir roturet cut into beso-boerdt at tbit price. BUY THE BEST IT COSTS LESS IN THE LONG RUN ONE OF MICHIGANS LARGEST DISPLAY OF QUALITY FURNACES 5983 Grand River R-J heating / GR 4-4554—kpverfe ChorgM TWKNT h mumsimt THE PONTIAC PRESS, tUg^mY. JANUARY 26, 196Q Rapa! Johnson -Might Backfire Unfit Brand by ADA Pleases Supporters of '^xas Senator WASHINGTON (AP) — A fresh "attadt by Americans for Democratic Action appeared today to have strengthened the position of Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson (D-Tex) as a middle of the road presidential hopeful. The ADA.'s action Monday .■-uigling out Johnson as "a symtwi of compromise and politick op-ivutunism” and therefore, it said, unfit for his party's presidential nomination, secretly delighted friends of the Senate Democratic leader. Tl»y reasoned that, by implication at least, the ADA had said , all others of those prominently mentioned to head the ticket could be grouped as liberals. This would tend to se|iarate Johnson from J[he general flock of nwjor candidates, including Sens. John F. Kennedy -ffe-Mass). Hubert HumjArey tD-Mtnn) and Stuart Symington (I?- Legal Rigrbt Admitted ■JL Ready or'f/ot, GamJWe, Father's Coming Thursday NEW YORK tAP) helms Gamble Benedict, 19, wiU maet Tburuday with her peychia-triat father, Dr. James Dirksen Wants to Curb Probers GOES INTO WISCONSIN - His wife. Jackie, sits beside him Thursday as Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass) announces his intention to run against Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D-f4nn) in Wisconsin's presidential preference primary ar Wlreshete April 5. Hit decision sets up the first test of strength between two major candiclates for the Democratic nomination. The announcement was made In Milwaukee, Wis. Mo). Johnson's supportei-s think his three colleagues are likty to force each other into taking some ex-trentely liberal positions on national - iasues before the nominating convention meets in Los Angeles next July. They count on middle of the road Democrats fiom the North and the West to react and to supplement the Southern strength Johnson will carry into the convention. Feb. 4 Discussion for . Parents, High School Students at MSUO Volunteer Group Elects Director Ted Panaretos Named to Board; Mrs. Briney Says Drivers Needed Ted Panaretos, community relations director of Pontiac State Hospital, was elected to the Central Volunteer Bureau's Board of Directors at the Bureau's monthly meeting in the Community Services Building. The Bureau, a member agency •f the Paotlac Area Lulled Fuad, A panel df four educators will discuss them at an 8 p. m. meeting Feb. 4 at Michigan State University O^land. Sponsored- - by the Oakland County Home Economics Extension Council. Michigan State University Extension Service, the program will be moderated by Herbert M. Stoutenberg, mSuO director of admissions: for votaflteer help in the UP ot- Mrs. Barbara Briney, 62 E. Iroquois Hd., the group's motor aid chairman, reported a shortage of vedunteo* drivers. A committee was appointed to handle an award tea for Bureau Cnnmlttee members are Mrs. Stanley Carter. 1585 Lone Pine Rd.. Bloomfield Hills; Mrs. Stanley Stol-orow, 422 Shoreview Dr., and Mrs. Allen Priestly, both of Waterford township: and Mrs. Warren Fowler, 59 Uke St. Cuban Official Threatens li.S. Promises 'Millions of Cadavers' if Marines Land on Island HAVANA (AP) — Cuba's minister of Justice said today "there will be millions of cadavers" if UR. Marines land in this country. The televised remarks of the minister, Alfredo Yabur, appa^ ehtly were in reference to an earlier report by a local radio commentator That 10,000 Marines had landed at the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo in eastern Cuba. Normally a few hundred Marines are stationed there. The radio commentators statement could not be confihned from any source here. At Norfolk, Va., an Atlantic fleet spokesman denied the report. He said the United Stat^ does not have 10.000 Marines in the Caribbean area. He said, however, there had been no change in plans-for beginning today at Vieques Island, Puerto Rico, about 1,000 miles east of Guantanamo. Turns to MdUce Believe to Garner Attention NEW lUVEN. Conn. iB-Herc's Panel to Treat Scholarships High school students- apd their parents will soon have the opportunity to learn about cedJege scholarships. Mr*. Virginia Dryer, direetor. of sehflIarsMps and loans for Wa.vne Slate Lalveroity, and her assistant, WIIMam Van Dusen, will diseuss the National Defense Education Act. Hie role of a school counselor will be explained by Terry Thorn-counselor at Garkston High School. whUe Mrs. William J. Mc-C!hrthy, cochairman of the Family Life Committee of the Michigan Home Economics Extension Council, will describe the many sources of scholarships. Stoutenberg will explain the general problems involved in seeking them and explain requirements for most scholarships. A question and answer period will follow the panel discussion. Seeks $110,000 to Soothe Loss of Jinty by RR DETROIT (APt — Judy Ferren, 17, seeks $110,000 damages from the New York (Central Railroad lor loss of her dog. The English girl hasn’t seen'the dog, an Alratian Shepherd, since it disappeared from a baggage car here Dec. 23. She made several trips from St. Thomas. Ont., her new home, irt^a vain search for the pet. Her suit in Circuit Court here asks $10,000 lor loss of the dbg and her suffering, plus $100,000 in punitive damages. Sfern Lawmen Win in Chicago Missile Helps 'Find' Bermuda Jupiter With Flares Shows Off Versatility on Short Test Flight CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. (AP) — A Jupiter missile, carrying flares to help mapmakers locate the exact position of Bermuda, has registered a successful short-range test flight. WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen. Everett M. Dirksen (R-llI) moved today to curb wid^ranging investigations by the Senate Antimonopoly subcommittee headed by Sm. Este^ Kefauver (D-Tenn). Dirksen, the Senate R^bUean leader, said he will ask the Senate to require approval by a majority of the parent Judiciary Committee before the subcommittee can start any new investigations. He . proposed the UmiUtlon as an amendment to a measure to ghrel the subcommittee another $425,000 for its work. Two 'Tough Cops' Get Helm of Scandal-Hit Police Department CHICAGO )ih- A new team of top police officials with a reputation of discipline took charge of the scandal-ridden police department today wh|le a grand jury tried to> obtain s^et files of a previous departtnent investigation. Acting Police Commissioner Ky-ran Phelan, known as a trouble shooter, demoted two top aides yesterday and replaced them with veteran officers known as "tough cops." Stepping up an chief of detectives was Lt. James .McMahon, 61. and a policeman for M yoars. Taking over as chief of the uniformed force was Capt. James P. Harkelt, 50, known as "Jnn-gle Jim" among poUoemen for his Inspection forays Into any part of the city at any hour. He also has been on the force SO years. The Army Ballistic Agency announced that the missile pertormed perfectly Monday night. In a test of the Jupiter's versatility, it was programmed for less than half Us normal range of 1,700 miles. The series of flares began flashing soon after the end of An outline of information con-j Po*'*r*d flight and were photo-taining the point.s emphasized in.Kraphed simultaneously by thive the discussion will be distributed, kanieras located several hundred Illustrative material on specific'apart scholarships and books listing Dismissed were Lt. John B. As-cher, chief of detectives, and Capt. Thomas V. Lyons, chief of the unl-Missilc formed force. Their reassignments marked the third major change in police upper echelons since Richard Morrison, a 23-year-old admitted burglar, accused eight policeJ^ men of aiding in his burglaries and five others of extracting bribes from him. scholarships will be available for reference at the meeting. Pleads Guilty to Knife Attack on His Landlord The pictures will be studied, and jPubiisijerS T01171 by determining where the flares m, , _ Themselves Tops A 64-year-old Lake Orion man, who police said stabbed his landlord for blocking his car in a driveway where they lived, yesterday pleaded guilty to assault with intent to do great bodily harm when arraigned before Greuit Judge H. Russel Holland. Judge Holland will sentence Tom Tomasella of 54 Elizabeth St. Feb. 8. He was returned to the county jail to await sentencing following a presentencp investigation b^ the Probation Department. Phelan took over when Commissioner Timothy O'Connor resigned Saturday, pleading ill health. Sharperwhetber she wants to or Says Work Too Costly; Would Have Top Group Decide What and When The Benedict family attorney, Robert Hoffman, aald Monday Dr. Sharpe hai a legal right to see Mb daughter. Turned away twice at the Benedict mansion Sunday, Dr. Sharpe was told that Miss Benedict did not wtnt to tee him. Tdias Benedict's brother Doug-ss said: "He does not deserve that privilege." However, Dr. Sharpe consulted his lawyer, David Du VIvier, who arranged the meeting with Hoff- Dr. Sharpe gave «utody of,Mi8s Benedict and her brother to their Imothar, Remington typewriter heireaa Katherine Cedes Benedict, aftor the luiclde death of their mother, Josephine Benedict Sharpe, in 1948. 17m children’s names were changed to Benedict. The psydiiatrist has rince remarried and lives in Brattlehoro, Vt. He showed up at Idlewild Airport Saturday night when Hoffman and young Benedict usheted the weeping debutante from a plane, They had flown, her from Paria after getting a court order from authorities there. The practice of having a subcommittee chairman de^e by himself what invesiigaBons-«re (p be undertaken and then hpmng him order the staff to go ahead ought to be stopped," Dirksen Miss Benedict ran away to Europe last month with a married, Romanian-born chauReur, Andre Ponimbeau, 35. He remains In Paris. In the case of the Antimonopdy group, Dirksen said he thinks there has been "considerable waste” of taxpayers funds by inquiries he said have produced little benefit for the country. Kefauver disputed Dirksen' contention, saying Diricsen's move is obviously aimed at hamstringing the subcommittee.” Dirksen said the inquiries had imposed heavy financial burdens on companies which were forced to bring their records to Washington and to have their officers testify. Divers to Probe for Lost Plane "The General Motors people for instance, t(rfd me it cost them k half million dollars to prepare and present their case." he said. Dirksen said that while he believes a Current investigation of drug prices by the subcommittee is unnecessary, he isn't going to try to stop it. It is being financed out of current funds covering the year ending Feb. 1. Chevrolet, Ford Break Rkords Top Figure 1$ 62,529 Car and Truck Output in One Week Ignited in relation t(>' nearby stars, the U.S. Coast and Geodet-Survey will be able to establish Bermuda’s precise position. The results will check the findings of a similar test on a Juno II satellite rocket last August. That experiment prompted map-makers to "move'’ Bermuda to posjjion 400 feet «from jwhere was believed to be. WASHINGTON (AP) - The aerospace industry claims that it is the nation's largest book publisher and itk stack of technical manuals exceeds the combined output of all the comnercial book publishing houses in the nation. The exact mapping of remote islands is difficult because of their great distance from other masses. With the jud, lag relayed to him by Chief As-•istant Prosecutor Robert D. Long because Tomasella said he had trouble hearing, Tomasella admitted stabbing Kenneth M. Ferguson, SO, of the same ad-with a knife Jan. 17. Police said an argument started (Vhen Tomasella. who had been drinking according to Ferguson, complained that Ferguson’s car was blocking his and he wanted to- get out. Ferguson said they didn't want hint' to leave because he had been drinking. CHICAGO (AP) - Dr. Titus .M. Johnson of Swedish Covenant Hospital went out of his way—several thousand miles, in fact—to help a young physician. Ferguson was taken to the hOs- a novel way to win your husband'sIP’*^ wounds in the back sympathy: “^ Police said a local woman, that in mind, tied and gagged herself and lay on the floor of her home When discovered, she suid a man posing as a roach exterminator lied her up and robbed her. There was even a lethal-looking while powder on the floor. Police said it was baking powder. Kitty's Pitchers Mighty Plentiful Way Out of His Way to Assist a Doctor Planes, the official' publication of the Aerospace Industries Assn., sa^s that though these manuals will never reach the "best seller” list, the cost to produce them is astronomical—the Air Force alone .spending some 250 million dbllars year for technical manuals. Thf puUication adds that the industry i.s attempting to cut the mounting cost through a program of manual standaixliza-lion. A plan to accomplish this act has been submitted W the Defense Department. ‘ Dr, Johnson has returned from Karawa in the Belgian Congo where he spent a month as a replacement for a young medical mis.sionary. Dr. ^elen Bernqulst, who is serving three years in the Congo. Dr. Johnson’s temporary duty gave Dr. Bernquist a leave of absence for rest and language study. Jimmy Doolittle Gives 80 Trophies to Air Academy RBntBTRATION MOTICE roa ciTT nuMAity tutenov Mttcb 1 1»M To th* Q«Al any day aieapt Sunda$- or Icaal liollriar. the day of anv loawlar or aonrial rirrilon or primary •IroKna ncalTt for.todatrailoh the namr it any Ittal rotar (n aald City of PonUai •ot airrady n>a(itrn-d arho may apply ti m partonally for'aurh rr«tatratlon. TIotidt la bara^ fnrthar |1a»n that ; «m ba at Uw Olty Hall J5 B. Ptrki t on Monda* Pebruart I. IMt ' - HARDWICK. Vt (API - Kitty Stewart thinks there is nothing as pretty as a pitcher. That's why she has more than 200 of them. Mrs. Stewart has made a life-long hobby of collecting pitchers from all over the world. AIR FORCE ACADEMY. Cblo. (AP)—Eighty silver cups have been presented to the Air F(>rce Academy by Jimmy Doolittle, who led one of the boldest raids of World War II to bomb Tokyo from the Aircraft Carrier Hornet on April 18. 1942. u aanMaaiion Palad JaaM One of her >itthers, of w h i t. English pottery, was among the first articles with which she set up hourekeeping after her marriage pybruart s. IMS fromjlo i^e late Jo’ji R. Stewart in 1(1 I o'elM-k pm. tbrilliB. * fwi-vlyt tncll , rvitsiranoiu by pi^Bonfti| NoM' h. VirttI and Wajiie Watti. Pu-rral ^errlce will )» held Prldav, n Trinity lor Un: WtlUr ....... after 3 p m. Wedneeday * .Oodhardt Piaatral Keejo t WARNBR. •3 Bovd. lit Clara'. Wallad Ukr:' ate 33: balovtd eon el Btawart ler. PUntral jucnardetn-BIrd Chapal, Walla4 Uke with Roadtr lln. Dtlom Urejpy. CM., offleUtlni. Croma- —, .—_:lni. Croma-^ White Chapal Comtary. Mr Wamar_wlll lie In eUU at Rlchardion-BIrd Puneral Roma, Card of Thankt 1 Wl WISH TO BXPRoa otm r"kSd‘*tS";?:;i3?‘l5T.;U£! Hit mamory we ahall tlwayi keeo Badly milted by wift Helen and children. Pan, Dawn a Lorraine. • teld law, January If. ibiT. The ftea I tort la Hit loylif yotea la The hand that oft' elaap la mint. Llti now la doatha «old chill. I often tU and think Of him. Whan I am aU alone. WbfT U the only thins, That grief can caU it. January Sf, lt*7. O lilctccd little tunoeam. p child of lore and prayer, ”•"* "— *0 the k—--- M the tender Bbepherd't earc. Badly mltaed by Mother. Pother, Brother, Blatar and Ortndparentt. Fttnerai Directors 4 COATS PJTNBRAL BOMB OB >riM Donelson-Iohns Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME BwyleaJPtona or f-'-— Cwtieteryf Lets ^ CHOtCC LOTS IN WHITB CHAPEL Cemetery. OL a-lTH.____________ moumt^hopb. I ORZVB~al¥iBi. fMRlTr SaHe' tkukrlfSV PE mSo* *"** ^ BOX RJUlin At It R.IB. Taday (hare were npAM b4 Ihe Praaa 1, 4, 8. 8. 8. 9. 19, U, 14. 14. 17. U, $8. n, n. 67. 68. It, «. 7t, n. 71, It. II, M. M, to. n. tl, 17, m. 11*. 117. I tfel^lWBrtied Mele t Assembly & Chest APJoem wanted por natMhi hOT TO RON D Wa hi ^antfed'arbTbR rajs. CAB onnmi. 555X5*635 gm Mma.jysf.oldar, Apply dll rj Uka ■ — Iran data _______________ auptrylaw. atsat hayt eomplated hl(h aehoal maahanleal ^rawtag , - agulyaSt ahd ban SSSLSr--------------- 67!..r - - ----- Topt f ^**L]WAon of rouU PART TIME Ayaw $3 to M aa hour aa local aatablbiMd route. Mlnlmuat 4 houn day. OB 3-d4SS. PERMANENT SALARY wm trahi I awa for work at iBiurtM di crodU InyetUsatort 33-SS, hayc hltb eehool degne B be able to type. Car nee^ Paid yacatlM * other beaeftte. OaU n S-I34E BiAL ESTAWhALlwdAN. htE-fer eiuerltnecd. but wUl train BEAL ESTATE SALSMEN GOOD Icilow-dp man Plenty of Icedi * lUttaya. WUl train amMUouc lalacmea Call PE MM4. Aik for Tod MoCUUoustt, Arro Boatty, ed. Draw ouaraat—d PB 3-tMt. WELL EN^N COMPANY HAS S leeal teUbUthod doalerihlpi opea. No tayottmoat. TP qualify: Neu a«itr. dtp».^ A TWO DOCTOR OPPICE. WEST cldc PonUae. neod< a doetor't aatltol to do lab work. BMR. EKO. and atilit with paUoati. New air eondltloaod offlee, good lalary. Apply PooUao Preie.Boa if afTTER A too I Om an aru houbeseep er. El. weekdayi. Near downtowi PoMae $3v-tL. week. Call PI 3-63to after I p.m or anyilmi weekendt. BABlirnth'idaTb a Wlufai _from I to 3. Pi g-4303 mint wore, part timt. Apply ^dnra.-St?*S5..!S; — tranapoitaUoa. dalt Mt S4t4t Curb Waitresses firswiBfrffuS II. Apgfy ta .portaa anly. TED'S Woodward at ao. U. Rd. DINING ROOM - WAITRESSES. Also Part-Time Hostess •P«tng1r*lof SSiiS?' wo^waSJ TED’S WOODWARD at BQDARE LE. RD. Ixp. houseke: paatiaehrt. 31 to la tor booio Myate ouartori family. Proa boaplUlliatlon, leal aipantaa. toola) SecuAi TMk ...M nojt haye •ox oaimatoo. so.... o.,...,.. •,.»Mk to atort. Muit haye ar't lldtnat and" be --- ' Apply In peraU . “ " I. Twit idtRaf »