WASHINGTON {API-Retired Secret Service Chief U. E. Baughmapsaid today that police state methods would be required to give fuH protection to a president whenever he goes out in an open car before a large crowd. “And, of course, you can’t would prevent a sniper attack from the rear and give partial protection from die1 sides of the car without sealing off the president from the public, Baughman said. The plastic bubble top often used on Kennedy’s “automobile would not stop .high-powered rifle bullets, he Mid, although-it might deflect them. about means of Mfeguarding the president, he suggested that there should be some reorganization of federal police agencies, such as the Secret Service, the FBI and the Narcotics Bureau. And he reported a suggestion he has made in the past do that in this country,” Baughman said in an interview, “I suppose you could put people with machine guns on all sides of the president- whenever he went out, but I' don’t favor that.'You can’t do that in this country.” After his retirement in 1961, Baughman wrote a book in which he mentioned that die ^Secret Service, which is responsible for protecting the president, had feared for many years the type of attack that took the life of President John F. Kennedy in Dallas. He suggested today that better, protection could be provided for President Johnson by constructing a curved piece of glass to fit on the rear of. the presidential convertible. A bullet-proof glass built somewhat in the shape of an Baughman, 58, spent 33 years with the Secret Service, serving as chief from Nov. 29,1948, until his retirement on Aug. 31, 1961. REORGANIZATION In talking with a .reporter (Continued on Page %, Col. 1) The Weather THE PONTIILfLmESS Horn© Edition iC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1903—72 PAGES Legislativo Session Will Be Expanded to Act on Allocations Probers Ask Subpoena OK in JFK Death WASHINGTON M — Chief Justice Earl Warren announced his commission investigating the assassination of President John F. Kennedy will ask Congress, for subpoena power to pursue itsJiigh-leverbrobe. The seven-meffibef commission named Friday by President Johnson met for*"' ; 1— ... ; more than Vh hours be-hind guarded doors to set up its machinery and procedures. At the close of the session,, newsmen were admitted and Warren spoke briefly. He Mid the commission still has no reports on findings of the FBI or any other government'agencies Investigating Kennedy’s slaying in Dallas Nov. 22., “The information We have now is little more than, what we have learned from the news media,” Warren said. The’ commission will meet again tomorrow at 3 p. m. (Pontiac time), he said, but he declined to answer reporters’ v questions in elaboration* of his brief statement. “The commjiggMJj^jyigM, | sad and .very solemn duty to V ‘ “j Perimeter Title Voted4-0 by City Planners Not iveryone seiems to think the City should name its perimeter rbad the John F. Kennedy Drive, as was proposed at Tuesday's City Commission meeting. Last night the city planning commission recommended it be named — The Perimeter ' Road. The vote was 4-0. Two meihbers of the nine-man commission, Mayor Robert A. Landry and City Commissioner Loy L. Ledford, abstained from voting. Both had indicated they’d like to see it named after, the assassinated president. Three other members were absent. The four votes didn’t constitute a quorum, but the recommendation to leave the name the same Will go to the City Commission. t in Today's I -.'Press Fond Policeman's widow may get |200,000-PAGE B-14. Mrt, Oswald Mother' doesn’t believe her son was an assassin — PAGE €-8. - Take Over New Italian premier, cabinet sworn in toddy — I PAGE 11-13. Atm News ............C-4 .........D41 Comtes ...........D-li Editorials...........A-e | Food flection D-4-D-5 Markets .......D-1'2 Obituaries .........D-18 Sports D-7-D-19 | Theaters 0-6 TV-Radld Programs D-ll I Wilson, Earl......,»-19 | Women's Pges. C-ll—C-U ! i. perform, but one that is of great importance to the country,” Warren said in preface to announcement the commission would ask for subpoena powers. With the . subpoena power, the commission will be able to summon possibly reluctant witnesses, if it. decides to broaden its inquiry beyond the evaluation of tiie exhaustive report now being compiled by the FBI and to be supplemented by findings of six other federal agencies. There was no immediate indication, however, that the commission actually planned to hold hearings. Today’s meeting was in the National Archives Building, and yas held under close security precautions., Dead Children Join Kennedy WASHINGTON BJPr'- Mrs. John F. Kennedy returnedtoa darkened hillside in Arlington National Cemetery last night to bury the bodies of her two dead children at their father’s side. In a brief and moving ceremony,. lighted by the eternal flame at the head of Kennedy’s grave, two white cas- * kets were placed beside the slain president. One contained the body of Patrick Bohvier Kennedy, who died last Aug. 9 in the second day of his life. The other contained a sister who was stillborn Aug. 23,1956. , . White House press secretary Pierre. Salingqr said Mrs. Kennedy was accompanied by Atty. Qen. Robert F. Kennedy, his brother, Sen. Edward Kennedy, DMass., and the former first lady’s sister, Princess Lee Rad-ilwIU. Mrs, Kennedy knelt in prayer at the graveside ceremony con* ducted by the Most Rev, Philip Hannan, auxiliary 'bishop of Washington. She remained composed throughout the reinterment. A Little Snow Forecast Pontiac Area There’s a chance of Pontiac arOa residents finding a little snow on the ground in the morning. The weatherman forecasts some light snow tonight and early tomorrow. temperatures will be somewhat warmer, the low near 28 tonight and tomorrow’s high about 49. The outlook for Saturday Is partly cloudy and turning colder. Morning south to southwest winds gt 5 miles per hour will become west to north west, at 10. to 18 m.p.hi tonight and Friday. Nineteen was . the lowest temperature In downtown Pontile preceding 8 a.m. By 2 p.m. the mercury had climbed to 36. Hearings Set ontigiitsBill by Committee Seen as Major Break in Deadlock; Could Stall Dem Drive WASHINGTON l£) —Rep. Howard W. Smith, D-Va., chairman of the House Rules Committee, today said he will hold hearings on the civil rights bill “reasonably soon in January.” The announcement was a major break in the deadlock over the legislation and could stall a drive by the Democratic leadership to take the‘ bill away from the rules cotmlKtee by a discharge petitton.;?* Rep. Emanuety Geller,, D. N.Y., chairman of the Judiciary committee, which pro^ duced the bill, Mid if Smith would announce that the hearings would not last longer than two weeks, the discharge petition would not be filed. At present, however, Celler added, he intends to go. through with his plan to file the petition Monday. If 218 members sign it the rules committee would lose Control of the bill and it-could be scheduled for floor action. a w, i w ...... Smith’s announcement, released ' by his office, noted that the judiciary commltte took six months to write the bill after President John F. Kennedy requested it fast June and that i final report by committee (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) RJMMHlr ■*- President Johnson received the applause of labor leaders yesterday after a White House conference at which he asked support on tax’*' aha ' civil rights legislation. At right is David McDonald, head of the Steel Workers Union. Johnson A of Labor, WASHINGTON (/B—President Johnson has asked labor and industry to back Ws drive for enactment of legislation proposed by President John F. Kennedy and now stalled in Congress, ■ “l am the President, but I can do nothing without the people",”1!Johnson 'Ibid thfe AFL-CIO Executive Committee yesterday. “You represent the people. I need you and I want you1 by my side.” Less than an hour later he, went before the business Advisory Council with this pledge: Released U.S. Colonel Says 'Glad to Be Alive , CARACAS, Venezuela UP)—Tired but otherwise in' good shape, Col. James K. Chenault of Sherman, Tex., was freed today by pro-Communist terrorists who kidnaped him last Wednesday. , The deputy chief of the U. Sj. military mission in Venezuela told a jammed news conference his kidnapers tried to indoctrinate him in communism, “but I told them some facts*------—— about life in the U n i t e d States.” Four youths abducted thg 47-year-old officer aa a propaganda I move in the terrorist drive to President Romulo Betancourt and to sabotage the general election last Sunday, a drive that fizzled, Chenault sat with his wife Ruth at the news conference. “It’e a great feeling to be free agalq,” he said In a state- See* Story, Page B-72 ment read'to .Venezuelan, U.S., British and French newsmen. “iwag released unharmed at dawn jtoday after eight days of captivity. “I was held in some section of Caracas I cannot identify, but It seemed to be well popu-latod. I was guarded constantly, but received reasonably good treatment, considering the circumstances.” j ‘This administration wants to help you. We are not pro-labor, or pro-business Or pro-any: special sector. We are pro what Is best for America, ' f‘I am the only President you have,” Johnson told the 60 business leaders, Cabinet members and economic advisers. “If you would have me fall, then you fall, for the country falls.” , * * Johnson underscored his concern on the Civil rights issue by scheduling a conference today with Negro leader A. Philip Randolph, president of the AFL-CIO Brotherhood of' Sleeping Car Porters. Johnson also was to meet' for the first time as President with the National {Security Council, Johnson’s speeches to union and Industry leaders climaxed a busy.day during which he also • Ordered tariff boosts of $23.9 million a year on five commodities in retaliation for increased Import levies on U.S. poultry shipped to member nations of the European Economic Community. • Announced he will confer Jan. 22 with Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson of Canada. Powerful Dem Is Dead in NY NEW YGRK M—HerberHH. Lehman, 85, four times governor of New York and also a former, senator* died today. Lehman, a leader in his later years in a reform movement against the Democratic organization in New York, suffered a heart attack in his home at 820 Park Ave. He was regarded as the elder statesman of the Democratic party In New York and one of the party’s most powerful figures ih the state. ★ ★ ★ Lehman suffered a broken hip' in February while vacationing at Palm Springs, Calif., but had continued an active interest in politics. , ( He, with the late Mrs. Franklin I). Roosevelt, had led the party's refprm faction In Its successful effort in 1961 to oust Carmine G. De Saplo as leader of Tammany Hall, the powerful Manhattan Democratic organization . r Automobile sales are continuing "at i pace that is already being cited as the industry’s second best year in history. Ward’s Automotive Reports, while not giving an exact figure, says 1963 sales have already exceeded the 6,752,000-unlt total for all of last yedr, and are nearing the 7,408,000 record of 1955. Pontiac Motor. Division reports November sales stood at 61,516,. an all-time record for the month, and the eighth month this year for a new record. , Tempest sales last I month were 18,410, highest for any month. Total Pontiac retail sales during the finaMO days of November were highest for any similar period, 19,436. GMC RECORD GMC Truck & Coach Division has announced the best Mies mark for any November since 1955. Some 8,171 trucks and buses were delivered last month, compared to 7,889 a year ago, and the best since November >1955, when 8,820 were sold. Chevrolet Division says its November sales hit 191,541 cars, besting the previous high of 189,933 last year. - Truck sales totaled 37,972 units, compared with 32,738 the same month last year. Oldsmobile reports the best November in eight years with, 47,691 vehicles sold. OTHER FIRMS Chrysler-PJymouth Division of Chrysler Corp. reported 48,860 deliveries last month. Dodge Division sold 34,606, an increase over 29,290 from a year ago. Ford Division sales dropped slightly to 180,129 for the month from 180,831. Lincoln-Mercury sold 10,863, compared with 17,-410 for the like 1062 period. E. German Tons Flee KRONACH, Germany brand new plastic coin case that holdis 80 precious coins. One store features at least 12 different "Mr. Executive" gjfts, mrnwmm 0. such HI which caller. e little horn that honks, is called a secretary 3S m peci shopping Pays TO CHRISTMAS SHOP FOK GIFTS l&OUB AD PAGES Punch the panic button mounted on another gadget and tran-qullizer pills pop out. Road race tracks are again one of the hottest items in tht toy department. Last your, almost every store ran out of road racers before Christmas Eve. However, there is a» ample supply of every variety' this year, ’ * Talking dolls are coming in family unite this year, “Tiny Chatty” dolls now have baby sisters and they’re just as adorable as their big sisters, only more cud^. jp w A- 2 ‘ P'1'1 '! Sill SI THE PONTIAC PftESSl fr&UBSDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1^8 IB 3W)e of Christmas ("The Gifts of Christmas,” is an interpretation of 12 classic and eternal gifts of biblical history. Written by a lay Author* and university professor, the stories are non-denominational and have been approved by clergy of ali faiths.) Fourth of • Series The Gift of John the Baptist J ..~:r v-/— ..,...........v ''" : : By JOHN L. STEWART v —Six- nwnths~befSre~the birth of Jesus, Mary’s aged cousin Elizabeth had given birth to a son,/whom the Angel Gabriel said should be a fore-runner to the Messiah, “to make ready a people prepared for the Lord.” Bom of elderly parents, John was orphaned-at a tender age. In his loneliness he often, reflected' upon what his m father, Zacharias, had1 told him, that he should “go before the face of the Lord to prepare the way” And so John in his youth forsook the pleasures of the world and fled into the wilderness. Here in the solitude of the mountains and the windswept desert, under the blazing sun andbeneath the starryheavens, he communed with the spirit of God. When about 30 years old, John began preaching throughout the Jordan Valley, urging the people to repent, **for the kingdom of heaven is-at hand.” FLOCKED TO HIM ' So great a prophet was John, so powerful his exhortations, so bold his denunciation^] evil, that people ( of all classes flocked to him, confessing their sins and seeking bapiism. Many thought that he was the Christ, the long awaited. Messiah. But to all such queries John humbly replied, “I indeed baptize you with water, but one mightier than 1 cometh, whose shoes l am not worthy to unloose.” \ One day as he was baptizing, John looked up and saw Jesus standing' at the water’s edge, prompted by the Holy Spirit,' John suddenly cried out, “I have need tp.be baptized of Thee, and contest Thou to me?” But Jesus insisted that John baptize Him, ’to fulfill all righteousness.’ HEAVENS OPENED 7 _ , And Jesus came up out of the water, the heavens were , opened and the spirit of God descended upon Him like a dove, and a voice from heaven said, “This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.” John the Baptist’s mission was now fulfilled. Soon, in Herod’s prison, he would give his life, beheaded at the request of an adulteress. Faithfully, fearlessly, John had done all that God had commanded him. His too Was a great gift of Christmas, j^behad^preparedthe ^way for the Savior of the world. VISITORS UNWELCOME - A mother Caracal cat guards her twin youngsters, believed to be the first of the rare species ever born in captivity, in the Cincinnati Zoo. The animal is a native of South Africa and has long ears that act as radar. Full Guard Called Impossible in U. S. (Continued From Page One) —provide a new residence in Washington for the chief executive and an ocean front summer White House in the south. The Washington house and grounds should include facilities for officials of the executive branch who work closely with the president,' living quarters and recreational faeilitiesj sueh as a lake for fishing and boating, and a nine-hole golf course. ,,..yiaSr /A, -.-.it.-;......... The summer residence would be similarly equipped. STRONG FENCE Baughman said this wouldTe-' duce the number of trips a president makes in seeking recreation. He recommended construction of a strong, high fence around these residences to ensure privacy I and protection. The White House then could : be turned into a museum, he Business Pr df Colleges LANSING (AP)—Auditor General Billie Faraum says an audit of seven state universities and colleges reveals a need for stronger’internal controls on how they spend money —and for stricter adherence state laws and regulations. ■ dr W W Famum’s bulky report, submitted to the Legislature as the special session opened, contained a list of funds shortages and bne case of misused funds, revealed by the audit., It also carried a series of reo onunendations-by-JlarnfiBL^ improving what he called“buir practices” at t&x-supported institutions. WOULD RRACTICE ‘‘I wish these schools would practice the business principles that they teach,”" said the audi-tor general. - ;—— The annual audit dealt with fl- The Weather Full UJS. Weather Bureau Report PONTfAC AND VICINITY - Partly sunny and a little wanner today, high 25. Mostly cloudy, slightly warmer tonight and Friday. Chance of some light snow late tonight and early Friday, low 28, high Friday 40. Winds south ’o southwest 8 to 15 miles per hour this afternoon becoming west to northwest 10 to 18 miles late tonight and Friday. Uowttt »*mp.r»tur« preceding t e. At I e.rn.t Wins velocity J m.p Direction: tooth • Sun eeti Thursday at 5:01 p.rtl. Moon rieet Thursday *<10:13 p.m, day In irdtd di Weather: Mostly Cloudy Hlutwst ^and^ Lowest^ Tamparaturei One Year Am In eentlac tan temperature . ........ ...... weather: Cloudy, day; wet enow, Wednesday's Temperature Chet pane 31 4 Duluth icenebe 33 ]/ Port Worth Rapids if to Jacksonville tuohton 33 33 Kansas City. 11 i\ Mjj1 12 £ O Mat. 1 Salt Luko C. 26 24 i * s. frtncloco 46 41 $. $ Mar It .11 17 i Stnfflt 46 4) nancial affairs at all state institutions ef higher learning except the three .largest, University of Michigan, Michigan State University and Wayne State University. * * * ■ In his report, Farnuch cited a “definite lack of uniformity” in accounting procedures and financial reports. He made these additional recommendations: —That each school appoint an internal auditor responsible to the board of control. —Set up adequate controls on inventories of maintenance supplies.— —Establish a, centralized nash-ier’s tiffice to receive all money. —Conduct a survey to establish proper amounts to be paid by self-liquidating projects for utility services. CITED NEED Farnum also -cited a need for changing or improving proce-dures for opening mail, handling cash and keeping payroll records. Procedure manuals also could lead to more efficiency, he said, Included in the audit were Central Michigan, Western Michigan, Eastern Michigan and Northern Michigan Universities, Ferris State College and Michigan Tech at Houghton and Sault Ste. Marie. ★ n w Uncovered in the audit were shortages of $8,(40 from vending machine revenues at Ferris, $2,-990 in library fines at Central, and $725 from the payroll office at Western. " All invojlved embezzlement and are being dealt with by law enforcement officials, Farnum said. OVERSPENT FUNDS Northern Michigan University was cited In Farnum’s report for having overspent Its 1982-63 legislative appropriation by $3,781. The most spectacular disclosure was the alleged misuse of some $29,000 in operating and maintenance funds by Michigan Tech to renovate a new home for Its president at Houghton. NATIONAL WEATHER - Snow flurries, are forecast for > the Lakes region tonight while snow is predicted for the. northern Appalachians and the northern Rockies. The north Pacific Coast will have rain. It yvlll be warmer in the central Mlss^pippl and Tenr^see valleys. . % Accused Soviet Spy. Aiks Court for Bail NEWARK, attor- ney for a Russian accused of spying has filed1 notice he will ask the U.S. Supreme Court to grant bail. U.S. Atty. David M. Sate Jr. said yesterday that Samuel A. \nrner, counsel for Igor A. Ivanov, chauffeur for the Soviet Trading Agency Amtoi*g,, filed notice of appeal with supreme coprt Justice 'William A, Brennan or. Redovering From Wound Connally Leaves Hospital DALLAS (UP!) - Texas Gov. John B. Connally checked out of Parkland Memorial Hospital today and prepared to fly home . „ . . . . . to Austin, his bullet-shattered bufletwounds, ^bullethad wrist jn a cast; but ’well on the way to recovery from the sniper shot that tilt him as he ,rode with President Kennedy. Connally said goodby to 280 doctors,’ nurses end technicians in the cafeteria of the hospital, where Kennedy died Nov. 22. “I'm ready to go,” Connally, 46, said. “I owe my life to you at Parkland Hospital. I’m to have met yen under these circumstances.” , > Or ★ * He said he was looking fol*-ward to returning and renewing his ’ friendship with / them happier times: EMERGENCY ROpMS The dying Kennedy and gravely wounded governor were wheeled into emergency rooms False Arrest Nets $7,000 for 2 Women Two Pontiac, women won Circuit Court jury awards of $3,-500 each yesterday in false arrest suits against a discount store in Southfield. Mrs, Gloria D. Luclen, 27, of 192 W. Wilson and Mrs. Augustine Wright, 27, of 409 Branch were granted the damage judgments against Arlan's Department Store at 24000 W. Eight Mile. ' Both women were arrested Aug. 30, 4960 and accused of shoplifting three waitress uniforms, but were acquitted by an Oakland County Circuit Court Jury In January, 1981. w ★ Each sued for $50,000 In her case. They were heard before Circuit Court Judge Arthur E. Moore In a 3 Vi-day trial. Jurors deliberated half a day before returning the verdicts. Mrs. Lucien’s a n d Mrs. Wright’s attorney, John R. Jone of Detroit, sa|d the judgments were among ,the highest over granted for false arrest in the Detroit area. Hope May Cancel Tour; Eye Ailing HOLLYWOOD UP)-*Comedian Bob Hope says results of treatment for a recurrent eye ailment will determine whether or not he’ll make his annual Christmas tour of, overseas military bases. He is scheduled to go to San Francisco today for a treatment known as photo-coagulation — focusing of a powerful light beam on the eye to burn blood vessels In order to repair a tear In the retina. Hope said the ailment is not •painful but causes fuzziness of vision, and that doctors In the past have advised him to slow nil busy pace. The latest selge came on him about four: weeks jtgo, he said. at Parkland shortly before 2 p. m., EST, Nov. 22. The President died of two p a s s e d completely through Connally, shattered ribs, cat a long, broke bis right wrist aad lodged in his right thigh. Surgeons saved him in a (Hr hour operation. Connally was wheeled out of the hospital, the cast on his right wrist resting on a pillow and a black sling around his neck. He got out of the chair on his own power and into an automobile that took him to the airport. * ★ ★ / * ' Connally was wearing a gray suit. He and Mrs. Connally sat in the back seat of the automO- Birmingham Area News More Teachers Mak in City BIRMINGHAM—The number of Birmingham teachers making their homes within the district is now just barely over the tjuajority mark. In his annual statistical report on the .district’s professional staff, personnel df rector—Kenneth F. Nagley noted that 349, or H57T~per cent, .of the staff members are now living within the community. Nagley said the board of education prefers teachers to ijvje in the Birmingham area and participate in community activities. But, he added, this is i difficult from a financial viewpoint. It However, the small increase is encouraging, Nagley^safd. OTHER CHANGES Like the residence figures, others have changed only slightly in the three years the sur-> vey has been conducted. The statistics are divided into two categories. Those professional staff members, including' administrators, who live in the Birmingham district, have , an average of 10.34 Hearings on Rights Bill (Continued From Page One) members was filed only this •week. : ' “The civil rights bill is the most controversial' and emotion-al MU that Congress has hacT to deal with in my recollection,” Smith said. “It is one that requires sober reflection and careful consideration in a calmer at- j mosphere than exists at present. “However, I realize the great national interest that has been aroused on both sides of this controversy and it is my purpose and intent, with the approval of the majority of the rules committee, to hold hear- years teaching experience, with 5.8 of them in Birmingham. iheir average age is 37.8, and their average saury $7,562. Of the 349 living here, 231 are married. OUTSIDE DISTRICT The figures for those living outside the district are some* what lower. Numbering 847, ffieybaye an average of 8.15 years experience, 2.1 years in Birmingham. They are younger, averaging $4.1 years. More-247—are married. Their average- base pay is $7,192. Marilyn Mason, professor of music at the University of Michigan, will speak at the 0:45 p.m. dinner Monday * in Beautiful Saviour Church, North Adams, Bloomfield Township. “Types of Music for Church Use”'will be her subject. Sponsoring the program is the Michigan Council of American Lutheran* Churches. Reservations can be made with Rev. Robert Sheets at Sylvan Lake Lutheran Church. DEAD AT 27 - Army Capt. Michael D. Groves, Birmingham officer who commanded the honor guard during President Kennedy’s funeral died of a heart attack Tuesday night, an. autopsy yesterday revealed, Groves was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Groves of 501 S. Bates, Birmingham. bile. Connally’s brother, Mer- jings on this bUI reasonably soon rUl, and his wife sat in the in January after the Congress front seat with the driver. J reconvenes.” 4- '^Reasons Why YOU Should Buy\ Your Transistor Radio At Simms 2. —;— BuMtrtWImmHul------ 4 Biggest Selections ■ At Lowest Prices Sale! SIMMS TRANSISTOR RADIOS ‘TMK’ 8-Transistor Radios 1 Exclusive l-Menth a Guarantee on Radios Radios Am Tested Gy Simms and Makers I Powerful 8-transistor radio, _ I complete and ready to use. Perfect ft I your own uie and for gift giving. e••e e e e e eeeeeeeeeeeeek REALT0NE ‘Lancer’ 8 TRANSISTOR m Pocket Radio Compart to $24.95 Deluxe 8-transislor with t thermistor and I diode. With 'caie, battery, earphone. $.1 holds, fWeeii " FM-AM TRANSISTOR RADIOS ‘VESPER’ 9-TR. FM-AM IBM J2V.W value - HI power 9 dedicated to helping othere to . , regain vision. ★ ' ★ ★ Ten years ago, Esterina began to lose her sight and gradually to withdraw Jrom the everyday world. Two years ago she went : bUnd. 1 ~ Now she has 20-20 vision, thanks to the Delaware Valley Eye Bank, which collects human'eyes after donors die-aod-distributes them to hospitals fo? operations. ' •' • EYE DONORS l ' Miss Lione’s new eyes came ^ from two donors. The comely “ nurse is the first to admit she once Was a hermit. “As a teenager I hardly ever went out, or in my later years." (, V .. That’s ell changed now, she -says. "I’ve got two boy friends npw and Ilxn going to have some fun out -of life ” . !#jf “ 7 ' * ' ★ * The firsts,time she was able ' to enjoy her regained sight, Miss Lione says, was last spring —about a year after the second of two successful operations. • ■ “I took the roundabout, way to work,” she explained. "I looked lit all the flowers, and I even, saw the veins, on leaves. Imagine that?” DIFFUSED PICTURE V” She hid a malady opthamolo-gists called a kerataconus. It cafises the corneas, or windows of the eye, to come to a point, diffusing the picture the eyes , Deceive. For Esterina, it was , like looking through a Crumpled wax ball. The world began to grow dark for Miss Lione about 10 years ago after she’left. Newark; N.J. and came to Hahnemann Hospi-1 tal here as a surgical nurse. She didn’t realize she was going , blind, however, until five years * liter. ★ ★ . * , “Everything was dull and getting duller week by week,” she recalls. “I couldn’t figure out why. Finally, she went to an eye “My mother was dead, and -my father was sick,” she recalled. “The Wentzels took me in and cared for me as if I were their own child.” /"• h -k ★ The first of her two operations REGAINS SIGHT—Esterina Lione, who went blind two years ago and regained her sight through two successful cornea transplants, is. now working, toward certification as a surgical eye nurse at Wills Eye. 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WEAR REVERSIBLE PARKA SKI PANTS $20 Turtle Neck Cotton T SHIRT J $3°° h EAR UPS $1.00 MITTENS $ 4.00 Nylon Cjuitted reversible parka, tailored to perfection. Stretch Pants are 53%, nylon, 47% wool Proportioned size*. I11 -7 " 1 . ' " Tv A ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER S, 1968 HOLIDAY DRESSES a. Our little Jewel of o > Holiday Dress . . ' "PUFF KNIT" SHEATH Unmistakably Christmas . . this fashion-right sheath in acetate rayon bubble knit. Sashed of the waistline with fringe accent. Comet in Navy, Utoc or Powder Sizes 12 to 20 and 14V* to 2416. classic... end famous everywhere. life Stride mold* the classic open with^ sfmpllcity end lines dm Inside* with “knit-fit" to Insure comfort and fit Be sdte to chedc oar dm dmt We cm fit yon. b. The Perfect Cocktail Suit fashioned in three ports BROCADE ELEGANCE $17" Enter the holiday season in luxurious brocade ... this women's half size cocktail suit has a sleevelets shell blouse accented with self bows and a glitter fewel pin. In black or candle Ugly Sizes 12V* to 22V*. Available on High or M Bo* Choice of Black Calf Suede, Peau de Sole and patent, red or navy calf. 10& . . . Third Fleer walu t Ski Shop.,. Third Fleer Sheet.. .Street Floor COME ALONG TO A NEW WINDOW WONDERLAND OF SPARKLING IDEAS AND GLITTERING GIFTS Misses PAJAMAS by Schrank A chic way to look at home .V . night or day WINDOW SHOPPING FLEECE DUSTER NYLON TRICOT DUSTER WITH max Factor Give the warmth of brushed fleece Arnel® triacetate and nylon, touched acetate satin at The perfection of of Artemis — tailoring you love to give. Opaque nylon EM goldend-whlte , the Hypnotique Boutique... in collar and cuffs. Sweetened Blen trey. $9.00 with appliques collar and tailored cuff. Slash pockets. Reversible belt lo wear all 'round, front only or not , ot'alll Aurora / pink, debutante at collar to as she looks. Aurora pink, debutante red, royal k Sties S-M-L Sine 12 to 18 Man „ - tailored po-|amas In wash 'n wear fabric that requires little ll ,otjy Ironing. Solid colors and novd" ty prints. In pink, blue or main. Slice 32 lo Matching Pajamas MOO Csnulla .. i Street Floor THE PONTIAC PRESS Pontiac, Michigan 48 West Huron Street THURSDAY* DECEMBER 5, 1963 HAROLD A. FITZGERALD U. S. Political Scene Takes on ‘New Look’ Reverberations of the shots that felled President John F. Kennedy come from many directions. Loudest and with most immediacy are-conclusions of-am— alysts on effect of the tragedy on the nationwide political out-“look.---- With post time, for Presidential hopefuls whoface their first te^ts in party nominating conventions less than nine months off, shifts have occurred in what was once considered pretty milch a cut-and-dried Republican field- ★ ★ ★ It is thought that the accession of Lyndon B. Johnson td the Presidency has dimmed BahrY Gold-water’s chances of winding up in the winner’s nominating circle. Goldwater’s backers have believed that, copld have Hefeatori, Ken~ nedy by carrying the conservative South, the Midwest and the Far West. Now, however* that Johnson has become the first Southern-born President since Woodrow Wilson, he has an opportunity to woo some discontented Dixie Democrats back into the party fold. The new President will naturally exert the vast power of his office to clinch the 1964 junjiination and little Opposition la foreseen at the Democratic convention at Atlantic _Cityjiext August. 1 ■ ______^ »..★ ★ ★ ; But ffie selection/of the Number Two man oA the ticket could cause an intra-party hassle. The Ameri-’ carls for. Democratic Action and other minority blocs that rebelled against the 1960 selection *01 Johnson as presidential running mate and on .whom KENNEDY was credited with having about a 90 per cent grip, Ion’t take a conservative ticket itl^out a fight. ( Thus, with the threat of con* __servative-liberal —cleavage—in— their opponent’s front, the Republicans who have thus far i seen a nominating race with . ' but three entries may find themselves with some added , starters and a dark horse or two. Besides those heretofore conceded the Inside track —■ Nelson Rockefeller , Goldwater, and Rich-' ard M. Nixon — Governors George W. Romney, William Scranton and James Rhodes of Michigan, Pennsylvania and Ohio respectively and Sen. Thruston Morton of Kentucky are names that uiay appear on the program as the GOP nominating sweepstakes is run off in Skn Francisco next July. • It could be quite a hoss race. ilies owning one car today plan td enter the two-car class in the -. next 24 months, a new analysis by University of Michigan Sur-/- vey Research Center indicates. If the sevenfold increase in multiple-car ownership since 1949 is duplicated in the next 11 years, this will put an average two cars in every family garage by 1980. THfeTaportance of the acceleiat-jng shift to multiple oMmership is* immense, for the development will help make 1964 a seven-million-plus car year for the third in a row. This - In turn will be a vital factor in prop- -'ping our entire economy. The auto industry provides, directly or indirectly, one-seventh of the jobs in the • United States. Multiple-Car Families Adding to Auto Boom Sometimes the words of men live to haunt them. On the contrary, men have lived to flaunt THEM. This could be said about the Ill-fated pre-depression utterance of then President Hoover as he fore--saw "two cars in every garage.” Though it haw taken some .10 years to vindicate his optimism,, the trend now toward two-car fumtiles is snowballing and has made substantial contribution to the current auto boom. Since 1949, the number of families owning more than one car has jumped from 1.6 million to 12 mil-llon-*~meanlng that one of every five families Is a multiple-car owner. ★ ★ ★ While our. personal Incomes have risen 1.6 times In this period and suburban population has about doubled, the rise In multiple-car ownership has been sevenfold. Moreover, 12 per cent of fam*- •: ♦ ; i.* HjFw Verbal Orchids to - Mi*, and Mr*. Harry M. Pryale of Bloomfield Hills; 51st wedding * fcanptveroary. Who Commands ifLeadersKiUed? By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst . WASHINGTON — The assassination of President John F. Kennedy raises some grisly questions which were not a problem when John Wilkes Booth' planned, to kill President Abraham Lincoln and some of toe highest officials around There were no intercon- |T tinental ballistic missiles in Lincoln’s 'day. At that lime, the nation could not * be in immediate danger if someone were not found within a matter of min-utes to become president and commander-in-chief. Now a few moments MARLOW , —the time between the-start of an enemy nuclear attack and the order to make a nuclear counterattack—could mean the difference between annihilation and some survival if not victory... Officialsjiave said American nuclear mis-jsilea_are so weq scattered and protected and could reply so fast that an enemy beginning an attack would be equally devastated.~------^— ___________________ . . AUTHORITY NEEDED , i Such statements, a discouragement to , an enemy, are based on the assumption that at the moment of attack there would *be someone in supreme'authority to order, and very quickly, a. counter bloWT“'~— But suppose an enemy decided, before beginning an attack, it would be shrewder first to create siich a confusion and chaos in America that a counter- | . attack might be* fatally delayed after , the barrage on this country began. Stfch a fde might think in terms of assassination, not of the president alone but those in the immediate line of succession: ' the vice president and toe two congressional leaders. -..* ....★ * It Isn’t hard to imagine the dismay and confusion after four such assassinations if they occurred within, a few minutes. 1 DEAD? ALIVE? The telephone lines would, be a mess. How could anyone be sure who was dead and who was alive? ' , In short, then, who would be sure tor some time that he was the next In line to take the oath of president and become commander-in-chief? And suppose right then the enemy began the attack. . . . Who could order the retaliatory nuclear blow if there were no president? it ' 'it' + ■ ‘ » The writer asked the question around Washington and was told, although not officially, that undoubtedly the secretary of defense would take it on himself to Issue the counterattack order, since every second counted. LIKELY EVENT Any secretary of defense in such a dtua-toln would probably do that, even though he.was exceeding his prescribed authority. If anyone was left to dig himself out of the American ruins, he wouldn’t >e thinking about fine and unprecedented constitutional questions. But suppose in toe general assassination plot, toe secretary of defense was also killed. Wliiat then? * * * This can be said on excellent authority: there is a secret procedure in the government for action In case of an emergency. Maybe it answers the questions raised here,, but it Isn’t likely to be made public. ‘Let’s Hold Our Fire, Suti, Maybe It’s One Of Ours!’ David Lawrence Says: Voice of the People: Says Accused Ass Given Unjust Treatment It was a crftneUie way Lee H. Oswald was. laid to rest. We are not to judge others. That is up to God,, We will all be judged when our (lay comes. ■ - / , Lee H. Oswald had no chance to tell his story.. Our President was a good mankind he wilTbe missed by all. . A RojWWson Wants Explanation on Garbage Pickup Whathas happened to the garbage c SEEMS CERTAIN One thing seems certain. At the polls in 1964, the opposition sentiment of many citliens will be recorded on several policies identified wito the incumbent administration in toe last % months. The new President will have to champion or oppose these policies in detail in the inter- val between now Snd the November 1964 election. It all boils down to one point — issues are more important than personalities. * "■ (Copyright, INI. I Bob Gonsidine Says: Smiles This is the season when somat thing else beside taxes is being raised onthe country land. ★ ★ ★ Um ‘ An Ohio farmer was slang twenty times when eiw of his hives tipped over. Risky bees- It was a vacation to a beach that tripped a couple up and made them fall in love. . w m When a teen-ager gets old * enough to drive the only fimt-■ ty car it puts Dad back on his feet. -v * w ; Some songs are a lot more popular than the folks who think they can sing them.__________. Death Takes Old , hut Memories Linger On The Better Half NEW YORK—It has been like a meteor shower, these recent deaths of friends. .Each death crushed - high liopes or great promise. ■The President was killed while engaged in two missions close .to his heart: toe dedication-of certain space projects and the old • fashioned but never for him—search for. votes.—_____consIDINB His friend -Grant. Stockdale plunged to his death frdiin a Miami office building. The former U.S. ambassador to Ireland was reported as being stffl heavily despondent over the assassinatHm. The news of his death summoned memories of a wonderful and happy dinner my wife, daughter and I had with this good-natured man at toe embassy residence In a Dublin park a couple of years ago "... and of his dear children romping through the place. ★ ★ w t We knew Kqryn Kupcinet from the time she was a very small girl, pride and Joy of Kup and his wife Essie. I’ve known Kup since our happy-go-lucky sports writing days. SO PROUD * The Kups were so phnid of their little girl, so happy with ; her steady progress In Holly-_ wood, f :f We rented a house one summer In'Rye from Phil Baker, who died the other day In shot Lingle is here; tonight If you are, stand up.” * * -*:■'* / Syd would stand up in his box and say, “I did it, -Fbll would Toai^“Seizethmrtitni: He killed Lingle!” But Syd had the last line. It went: “Hey, just a minute. I thought you said Lincoln.” Hard to believe that human spirit will be able to mend itself completely enough to joke, one day in the distant future, about toe shocking events of Black Friday, Nov; 22. (Distributed by King FMlurts synuic«l») In Washington: “Just lay it away for me — PJD be back for it after the gay, joyous, carefree holiday season.” Consumers on Spending Spree He was the best landlord we ever had. He was one of th^ real showmen of our time, blessed with superb timing. He and his old partner Syd Silvers had one,exchange that would be macaore today, but tpede a lot of people lough through toe 1980’s. Particularly ‘in Chicago'. SLAIN REPORTER Chicago Tribune^ reporter Jake Lingle had been slain, and the police had not been able (nor have they since) to run down the gunmen or gunmen-Incredibly, It became a Joke: “Who killed Jake Lingle?” Anyway, When playing Chicago, Phil would step down to the footlights and say, “This is an appeal of conscience, which sometimes works better than t)ie best detective dan. There’s a chance that' tin man who j By PETER EDSON WASHINGTON - Increased consumer expenditures for 1963, continuing well into 1984, are predicted by toe latest reports from tJ. S. Departments of Commerce, Agriculture and Labor. Since consumer purchases account for' two-thirds of the to-: tal sales of goods upd -services. in the United 1 States, these forecasts] give a good indication of business trends. For toe sixl—- months tmme- EP80r______________ diately ahead, the Department of Commerce reports high consumer buying intontlons| on autos, houses and household appliances, the s o - c a 11 e d hard goods. Reporting a record personal income at the annual rate,of |470 billion (or October, the Department of Commerce credits the recent pay raise granted U. S. armed forces for one-third of the $3 billion Increase over September. The increase over October 1962 Is 5 per cent, or 822 billion. Anotoer 1 per cmt ls„predlcted for 1964. All tola adds to purchasing power, so it is a direct stimulua to the economy. * w‘ * * Principal focus of toe Department of Agriculture’s Outlook Conference* held at this time every year, la on toe prospects for farm , production, prices and nui6pit^ga>'! Firm output this year will be about 10 per cent above the 1087-BO average, establishing a new record high of $41 billion. With higher farm coats, however, too net may be below 1962’s $12.6 billion, and a little lower in 1064. Along with the commodity forecasts, the Outlook Confer- sions on family ilviag. This year analysts from Agriculture's Bureau of Family Economics/ and the Burean of Labor Statistics have come up with new material to show changing trends In consumer budgets. This is tite result of the first survey In 20 years on comparative spending by urban, rural and rural nonfarm families. Preliminary data Indicate average spending by city fam-Uies has risen from $3,800 in 1950 to $5,365 in 1060. Food, clothing, house furnishings and recreation now account for smaller shares of the spending than 10 yeari ago. Shelter, utilities, medical care, education and transportation take larger shares. * * t *....... Although the consumers’ price index, or cost of living, rose 24 per cent In this decade, food cxpeiuilturea are reported to. have dropped from 20 per cent of the family Income to 24 per cent. The reason given Is that, while per capita consumption of meats hai Increased, consumption of cereals has declined. expenditures. Lower prices on household appliances from the Korean war days to I960 ac- . count for another drop. * >*'■ ylkw, ’’l Food produced for farm-home consumption has dropped from 57 per cent of the retail value in 1941 to 40 per cent In 1960. Reflecting the increase of off-farm employment in rural families, 88 per cent of the rural families owned cars in 1980, and one-fourth of them were two-car families. 1 If these trends of the last decade or tWo continue, rural family spending patterns are expected to become much more like those of urban families. The proportion of shelter, transportation, medical care and education expenses will rise. The proportion for home furnishings, clothing and perhaps average family with expenditures of $5,365 in 1060: Item Cost Pot. Food, at and awpy from home .......$1,800 24.4 Housing and furnishings ......... Clothing and aervices ..... Medical and 1,890 29.0 050 10.2 500 9.S 826 6.0 796 117 —from $1 per cent of all dwellings In lfCjP to 02 per cent In 1M0—and Increased ownership of automobiles—from 10 per cent of the families In 1180 to 71 per cent In 1 HO—account Recreation and education........ Transportation ... Tobacco, Alcohol, miscellaneous . tits AMliW'MM h snutlfil ■Nowtumr is ms um Nr rupubii-(tint of all local now* prNNd In mi* iwwtpspfr «• wsH t* m ap now* dlipaldw*.-- TIN Pontloc Prof* lo doltvorod by c*rrl*r (or n Ntrii » WdSki whtrs mo I ltd In OoHlind. Oonoioo, Llv-fMtilni ’ MHBnK Lsptir and Wlinwtwjw Countfw If If S1MI • A continuing shift from natural to sptoatlc fibers la credited with reduction of family clothing 'ill ollwr pit... „ Mombor ft ABC. ini, i'OiviiAC JrHJiaa; o, ivoa HEY KIDS! VISIT SANTA V Santo's waiting here 1 to see you every day! I S, » Not at Drayton Boys', girls1 24, 26" American made bikes i**tf** FoljdijigsDt H q $. padded seats. Alum. SC legs,. 2 chairs. -Doll 'n«cradle Sleeping doll, jm qq plastic cradle. * Gift Ideal ~ ;Air infantry Helmet, rat-a- e% | tat tommy gun, .6.. Iugei,gi eiiuile. . NW ______ 'CHARGE IT' Regular 47.88. Santas pick' sure winners when they snap up these chrome-shining high-riding, bikes at this low, low price! American-made deluxe bicycles, jet-styled with chrome Renders, rims, handlebars. Dual headlights, whitewall tires. Wood burning A hobby gift! ^ qq 5et has won- J der pen, more. Fully dressed 111 girl doll, moving limbs. SALE! Leather palm AND DRAYTON PLAINS* 3 days TODAr, FRIDAY andsaturday v*'“* *> Limited quantities X'; while They . lost -MM ! W mm Tots' and girls' holiday Tables are gala with new Coats tor-three seasons Pinch pleated washable ZIP-LINERS GIFT DRESSES DINNERWARE DRAPERIES •Sins 3-6x W WW and 7-14 • 50 pieces •'Fortune Fern eettern •AH B4" lont •Extra full pinch pleeta CHARGE Weather's a pleasure when you can zip-in the lining to suit the day. Many styles to choose from. Sizes 8 to 18, A-lines, shifts, conventional styles in a bright array of Cottons, cotton corduroys, and rayons. 3 to 6x and 7 to 14. Slightly irreg. Sealed design. 8 eacht plates,. cups, saucers, bread/butteri, cereals, fruits, platter, vegetable dish. Moderns, florals and unusual abstract prints on richly textured white backgrounds. Pleated and ready-to-hang. $ 9 m HIS Woman's reg. 1.99 * colorful holiday Reg. 3.99 colorful missel’ holiday Rfg. 3.49 to 3.99 Infanta* stylish Tots’ 1.69-1.99 lined or linlined Girls* rog. 5.99 skirts and tops Boys’ rag. 3.99 casual or drtfi SLACKS LINGERIE SWEATERS PLAYWEAR SLACKS TWOSOMES 2 *3 2-’7 3.00 2-’3 5.00 3.00 Slips, pettlpantif gowns, pi's. Pretty trims, Avlsco® rayon, COttOn flannel, drlp-dr^ cotton. All sizes.. Choose several In nylons wools.' V-neck of crew-neck lllponi, cardigans. *^lsei 36 to 40 In group. Topper, crawler, butcher , sets, creepers. Cottons, cotton, knits, velveteens,, corduroys, 9-12* 18 mos. Prints and solids In cat. ton corduroy, some cot* ton flannel lined, some unlined Sixes 3 to 6k. Popu'ar pleated skirts with tops to match or contrast. All wool or wool/nylon blends. 7«14. Continental or Ivy League styling In boys' drip-dry slocks. Regular, slim, husky, 6-20 In group. 1 Hers and his smart matching zip-blazers HERS Your favorite duet will sing your praises, when you give them these dashing double-take sweaters. Brushed, 100% Orion* acrylic that machine washes, stays-in-shape, keeps the stripes In line! Popular cadet collar and smooth zip-front .Blade/gray/white or brown /beige /white. Men's, women's, S-M-L. *R»g. T.M. DuPont Corp, 3.69 CHOCOLATES Her favorite 51b. lift box Broch asserted c r • a m, nougat caramel fillings. VIEWMASTER PAK Viewmester viewer, reels T° Fairy tale and educational 3*0 scenes. 7 reels In all. 4.25 value! HOCKEY GLOVES 5.98 glovas model. Red Wing design. Protects your handsl SLIDE SORTER 1.00 SHOE TOTES DRIVING GLOVES R«|.4.»5n, Slide sorter Spread om out and ones you wont with ust flick OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9:30 UNTIL CHRISTMAS Easy care imart-looking 50* Sturdy plastic or cotton tapestry to “tarry shoal or anything desired. Plut V. SJta* ( ' 'W .8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1668 In Sleeping Bear Controversy Dunes Area Chairman Raps (Editors Note — This is the second in a two-part series of opposing views on the long-standing Sleeping Bear Duties controversy. This deiaUs the views of the Dunes Area Council Chair* man Ove Sensen. The first set down the position of V.S: Sen. Philip A. Hart.) By BEN BURNS LANSING (UPI) — Only the winds of LaTtcltiichigan-stir the sands ot the Sleeping Bear Dunes' in Benzie and Lee-lanau ; aunties because winter has come to the north country. The controversy over the dunes w h i c h has raged for several^ years is still brewing, however. At Issue is whether 77.0W acres of the dunes country should be turned into a national lake-shore recreation area. . ' * In an effort to spell out where the Sleeping Bear dispute stands, we interviewed the two principals: Sen. Philip A. Bart, D-Mich., sponsor of the bill, and Ove Jensen, Glen Arbor, rhplrman of the Citizens Council of the Dunes Area. ... . W ★...A This is Jensen’s View of the dispute. present status? • What is the present status of the dispute? "Sen. Hart’s bill now reposes In a Senate subcommittee,” —Jensen said. —-----------1 “We have no indication as to when any action will be taken. Whether it will be reported out before adjournment of the pres-tent session on Dec. 20 is problematical. , “Even if ft |s placed on the calendar, there Is little possibility of any quick action, in view of the press of legislation on foreign aid, civil! rights and tax reduction.” • When do yoti predict the dispute will be settled? “Presumably the subcommittee will act on Sen. Wayne Morse’s Oregon Duties bill before taking up Hart’s bill. ,. :* ' i * ■ “if so, the proposal of gen. Morse to amend his bill to prohibit condemnation of either improved or unimproved property will set a precedent that may affect the disposition hf the Sleeping Bear Dunes bill.” a What are your main points of contention? “A serious moral and legal question Is raised by any legislative proposal authorizing the use of condemnation to establish a public recreation area. JUST COMPENSATION “It has long been established In our law that once the Congress authorizes a taking of ..property by condemnation, judicial review is limited to just compensation and no question about necessity may be raised. “Traditionally^ national park areas have been carved fromithe p nbile domain or presented to the government as a gift. They lave jot been established by taking private property through condemnation until recently. '< " >** “Testimony at numerous congressional tamrings by national park and interior spokesmen, indicates they have seldom resorted to condemnation to take over private holdings in park areas. “Such testimony is apparently, intended to .allay fears and resist the condemnation power will be al looks the fact that the mere threat of condemnation and the power to hack it up is a compelling inducement in negotiating a so-called sale and operates to discourage any ..free market. ‘Of course, If the government does not use the power of condemnation, a question may be raised of why is it essential in a recreation proposal. “Hie answer to this is that the mere threat suffices to oontrol the entire taking area and the government can afford to wait out any owner and gently harass the stub- born holdouts into a sale favorable to tbe government “What the park people really want is to oontrol the taking area without having to pay except as they choose to spend. This is what all of Sen. Hart’s proposals provide. “An owner has no basiS/for a judicial challenge or to force a buy-out by the government. It that if an owner-deliberately challenged park rujes jmdZtteBad elf ftyteral controls, he might induce-toe lmfb~s< ice to condemn and this might be the course some attorneys would recommend to their clients. ;..rV;-?.-.'-,... • j£ ' ★' + • Why should it be settled as you propose? ‘AH'in all, it’s pretty shoddy treatment for home owners in the area. It seems to me one of the basic errors many fall into in commenting on Hart’s proposals is to accept hjsf assumption that the park' service should have the power of condemnation. ■ , ; . *•„ - ■ “The park service should be flTserv’- Umiteti! allowed to acquire only by negotiation and purchase with-' ont power to condemn. I suggest there be eliminated from the Sleeping Bear proposal any reference io condemnation. ■ ' 1 “Without this power, there can be do legal quarrel with a park proposal and toe sole issue becomes the feasibility of a recreation area established at going market prices. Boundaries then become'a matter of very Importance. ‘ReaUy^IeTT^^-xeal question of principle left and the whole issue be<»mes a truly political or legislative matter.” • How do you predict it will be settled? “So long as this Issue of eminent domain and suspended power of condemnation remains to any legislative proposal, regardless of the sponsor or the fancy names under which the limitations of the power to condemn is disguised, owners will continue aggressive opposition. “In my opinion, they ought to continue the fight.” . Decorate With Reef Tape wmmmmmmimmmir , $4 1 Yule Tree Dos and Don'ts A set of regulations pertaining to the installation and use of Christmas trees in public buildings, particularly schools, has been issued by Waterford Township Fire Marshal Russell •See.. , ••, " It specifies that Christmas trees dan not be set up in school buildings earlier than seven days prior to Christmas vacation ansi that trees la schools mast be dismantled, within 24 hours after the vacation begins. Before trees Are set up, toe trunks must be freshly cut at least an inch above toe original cut and placed in a container of water a minimum of 72 hours before setting up. • ■ ' ★ ★ • A ■ Trees are limited to eight feet in height and mtfliat he set up in a stand equipped with a water container. Hie container is to be kept full as long as the tree is hutide a building. MUSTN’T TIP The regulations further specify that trees must be substantially supported to prevent tipping and that they bis located in a remote area of the room, away from exits or aisleways. In schools, tree location is restricted to either toe audl- kindergarten rooms or toe gymnasium. The room selected mast have more than one exit. ■' ' Only electric bulbs approved by Underwriters Laboratories are allowed. They can be The Wisest Christmas Gift -ARROW* FENWAY CLUB high fashion that irons iMolfl FREE GIFT BOXES USE YOUR SECURITY OR OUR BO DAY OHAROE ' CarcJrM luxury I* lha k.ynot.1 P.rf.Ct fitting f.nwoy Chib# of 100% •pln-dry-cotton with ipoclal flnlih, lavndar* oailly,,, drlot Mnooth and wrlnkMroo. J'Sonfofli*dT1o»" IqbsM. Fwrturvd In pspulsr Ohm, collar ftyfe. $0.00 STORE HOURS 9 P.M lighted only under toe constant supervision of an authorized person. 4 .* ^ j The use of candles, paper or other flamniable decorations, whether they are flame-proofed, is prohibited. no Electrical contact , Metallic trees may .be used provided, they are out of contact with any wiring or electric lights. • *-.#:•• See’s communication concludes With a warning that any tree showing signs ot~ unusual dryness is to be dismantled and removed from the building immediately. Footwear Gift Pleases Men They Come in Great Variety of Styles A man can leap into leisure, feet-fjrst, this Christmas with a gift of casual leather shoes. Because men have more time on their hands as work hours decrease, and women are always looking for new gift ideas — the shoe industry has multiplied the number of styles, colors and leather textures to footwear for after - work and Ufrjfae of spiny lobsters are pearly transparent. When they ire in water, only their pigmented eyes are visible. REAL BIG NBfIRr-—- Biggest news in men’s casuals tills season are the slip-ons and chukkae in waxy leather, in which toe natural color anji handsomely highlighted. Ia conservative and dressy casual shoes, smooth and finely grained leather! predominate. Uaek and brown are still the major colors—in both sUp-on and tie styles. Popular winter weekend casuals include new brushed leather slip-ons with elastic goring hidden inside tbe tongue or. visible at toe sides to make the shoes snug but easy to put on. w . ★ / ★ At-home shoes (not to be confused with soft slippers) have firm leather sides and cushioned leather insoles. They can be worn any number of hours without foot strain. Included are low slip-ons or high boot styles in glove-soft deerskin and cowhide , leathers. SAVE! Vi OFF! JIM'S [ SALVAGE OUTLET MM HWeMo^CjwKAlfMrt US. Mora than 250 satellites or space vehicles are planned for launching by the United States during the next 10 yank. t More than 90 uOHon com brooms are sold sad} year, >or •bout tote a household m the U.8. Special Sale of lounge h Rockers and RECLINA-ROCKERS by La-Z-Boy See our flpeclii ahevang of Lomtjte Chairs* Reoliners, Platform Rockers and Boston Rockers. Modern — Traditional; and Early American stoles. The greatest in onr history. Oar location and lower overhead will save yon money! Satisfaction guaranteed. Onr 27th year at this same location. Lay-away plan or terms to suit yon. 144 OAKLAND AVE. Careful Free Delivery Ample Free Parking OPEN EVENINGS CHRISTMAS FURNITURE FEDERAL’S BEST-SELLING, MAN-SIZED RECUNER ORi SWIVEL ROCKER Foam-filled! it's tough, scuff less Vinelle •. . built for deep comfort, 'ii steady use! Sit ill it! Feel it! Look at It! Own it now for a song! CHRISTMAS SALE PRICBO! This chair outsails pracHeally every other chair In Federal's thrifty Furniture Department! It's scientifically designed to give you proper, healthful support, to relax •very Inch of your body from head to tool Just fool, the comfort! Notice toe buttoned backi luxurious deep-down seat! Neat, trim llnosl Resists soil, stain, has the smooth poltshod richness of leather deans with a damp cloth. It's waterproof, dustproaf, mothproof. In handsome shades of Mock, avocado, coral or sand. We've sold thousands at $88 ... buy h now and save a whopping $38 ot your nearby Federal's! OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO filO7 Open Sunday Noon to A* (Until CMmm) ■ FEDERAL DEPT. STORES THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1963 A—9 for Search Colleges Want Fundi ■ to Aid State Economy _ TlANRTNr, YAPWRap Gilbert Bursley, R-Xhn?Arbor, said today he will ask approval in the cumnt special session for $416,-555 in academic grants for re-' search to improving Michigan’s economy. Wayne State University asked Wednesday for the lion’s share of tills fund, $160,000, for the most comprehensive proposal . presented to the economic development committee Bursley heads, the Wayne proposal, one of U put forward by six state colleges —and universities, is for establishment of a coiter for application of science and technology and ___an institute for applied science. • BY DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) -Along about eleven a.m. on days when the Iioiise of Representatives meeting at noon, the pace quickens. Sometimes it only shifts from lethargy to languor, but it quickens nonethele&sr " ” Reporters in. the press gallery begin to'vacate their type-writerg and head for the doorway. They move at nearly the spied of light — a light tank. A bystander unfamiliar with the folkways of These would “accelerate the usd, in Michigan industry, of new technology resulting from research to provide new methods, materials, products,- businesses and jobs,..” Dr. Randall Whaley, a Wayne vice president, predicted Wayne research would produce new business and jobs within 12 months. Bursters money resolution, which would include the proposals of all six schools, would be under terms of a Special $750,-000 research appropriation made napTsiipi®^. 2 PROPOSALS The University of Michigan has two proposals calling for a total of $75,000 to make in “econometric model,” or statistical picture of Michigan’s, economy and to improve the training of private developers and local economic promoters. ■ Michigan State University offered five programs totaling $76,0# on specific topics dealing with new egg products, packaging, computers, a color -sensingdevice amt a~tradr de-" - velopment policy. Michigan College of Mining, and Technology proposed a $36,-400 Study of wppd pidft market, ing. Grand \^Uqy State’s $56,400 project concerned modern campus study aids. Central Michigan’s $78,715 proposal concerned ‘'touriaff a Snooze Conference House Speakers Don't Talk the congressional adjournment rush wak started. “I’m so busy I haven’t had a chance to level on that yet,” the speaker said. By my count, reporters got in four questions before the speakdr left to preside over the noon session. He replied to all of them with trenchant circumnavigation. calendar now down to its last*- .MORE PRODUCTIVE could assume. that I personally did not feel ai with enlightenment, but a veteran speaker-catcher told me' the news conference had been more productive than some he had attended. * ★ it He said there had been times when a speaker responded interrogation with “off the record, no comment.” JFK Memorial Bridge I LANSING (AP) - The State 1n ■ ] Highway -Department elens-tff - eHERTbridge carrying U.S. 41 over tiie Portage Canal between Houghton and Hancock in Indonesia's Sukarno Host to 3 Cosmonauts JAKARTA, Indonesia UFI -President Sukarno Was host to three Russian cosmonauts at a mass rally today. “With the arrival of cosmonauts, I hope you gain j j an example so that we, too, can become champions Of j crowd of 10,000. Cosmonauts Valery Bykovsky, A'ndrt Nikolayev and Valentina Ter- ihe Upper Peninsula the John F. eshkova are on a 10-day tour r Kennedy Memorial Bridge. (of Indonesia. / Apartments for Relit “live in the fabulous** FONTAINBLEAU 995 N. CASS LAKE^AD_^ 1 and 2 BedroomBehixeApartments NOW AVAILABLE Apartment “102** Open Daily for Your Inspection! J 1 Phone Today — EE 3-7677 or FE 5-0936 I the Capitol-might wonder what had promoted the. migration. And should he inquire of its nature, his wonderment would, surely increase. He would be told that the correspondents crowding around the elevator were on their way “catch, the speaker." “Catching the speaker” is a daily ritual in the House. As a form of exercise, it compares favorably with catching moonbeams. AN EXPLANATION For the benefit of those not porters do not actually “catch” the speaker in the sense of encompassing hint with a lasso or standing under his window with a firemen’s net. , The term means that they are going to the speaker’s regular morning news conference and try to catch him saying something newsworthy,-Which rarely happens, either. Over the years, speakers have been amazingly unspoken. The late Sam Rayburn, D-Tex., developed uncommunicativeness into a fine «gt- AiMJohn McCormack, D-Mass., the present speaker, has continued the tradition. £, ■ * : - For a random sampling of McCormack’s style, I caught the j speaker one morning this week When he admitted newsmen to his sanctum across the corridor from the House chamber. PONTIAC'S LARGEST Till CENTER Our Own installation Work' Done By fttyorts OPEN MON., THURS., FRI. HI ViOO p.M, ERIE PARKING In RIAR 1075 W. Huron S», Phono 334-9957 If You Don’t Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! A—10 /TOE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5, J963 Automatic Ranges Mean Harried homemakers need all the help they can get during die holiday season., One way a thoughtful bus* band can lend a hand without lifting a finger is by present? big his wife with a new automatic electric- range just before Christmas. With its automatic timing and accurate heat controls, a new electric range will save her 1 from constant pot-watching and j those tiresome treks to the) kitchen to make sure' every-thing’s all right. It’ll also "assure her of con-i sistently..good results.', TIME TO SPARE Christmas dinner *ange with two ovens will be just as lavish and succulent as Grandma’s used to, but Mother will have far more time to spend with the family instead of in a steaming kitch- Superintendent Says Only 13 Cheered Death DALLAS (UPI)-W. T. White, superintendent of Dallas public schools, said yesterday that only 13 pupils in the system acted with disrespect when the assassination of President Kennedy was announced; — The Rev.jttBBH I Method- Top Laos Neutral Murdered at Home VIENTIANE, Laos (AP) | Premier Prince Soqvanna Phouma’s intelligence chief, Col. i Leuang, was assassinated at his home oh the outskirts of Vieti-lane today. ~ • . ‘ The unknown assassins re- eluding Vietiane. portedly escaped in the dark. Leuang was the chief of the coalition government’s intelligence section.- Like Prince Souvanna, he was a member of the neutralist faction which in theory governs Laos in coalition With the right wing and the pro-Communist Pathet Lao. Actually, the factions control separate territories and the right wing and the neutralists Sports Events Tickets Qjfo Gtf fee fO Are Good Temn Present Contrary to popular belief, teen-age boys are not a special breed . . . they have individual preferences, just like grdwn-upslt * ■ Most teens are sports conscious thougi, and would be de-lighted with a pair of ticekts cooperate^ in some sectfe>ns,in- to artevorite sports event for a Christmas present. Many of the home gifts under the tree this~Yule are destined to go right to, the walls,. Homemakers have asked for larger, more dramatic wall accessories, manufacturers say, and they are obliging by supplying Santa with plenty of bnpressive designs. . A ship’s figurehead and a pair of joustlhjg knights are two feet wide and almostifour feet in height. Both are simiilated wood reproductions of an original wood carving. ■ :'a w Correlated groupings of smaller accessories can be arranged to $over an entire wall—cats, dudes, butterflies. 1st minister, charged on network (CBS) television that fourth grade students cheered they heard of the shoot-big. , "I feel fully informed and that I can speak with confidence,” Dr. White said. "They (the 13). were the only ones out of more than 142,000 students in our system who showed - , , any taste out of line and Baking ffi effimbigbatehesjo_ didn’t appreciate the Those double ovens will be especially handy during the weeks before the holidays — for making pies, cookies and cakes to give as Christmas presents. Pythian Banquet to Cite Chancellor two automatically controlled ovens saves hours of kitchen time. f‘ And it’s no trick to make Christmas candy on a new elective range with a thermostatically controlled surface element. It gives exactly the right heat — a must in candy making. Cleaning up after a big cook-! ing spree will be easy, too, since the new electric ranges stay cleaner during cooking and are designed to be easy to clean. '..........— -...... ...... A testimonial banquet for William K. Cowie of Waterford Township, grand chancellor of (.Michigan Knights of Pythias, will be held tomorrow at the Airway Lanes in Waterford Township. Cowie’s own Fellowship Lodge, No. 277, Voorheis and Telegraph, is honoring him for election in October to the top state post. Kenneth Hess, director of the \ Ohio Pythian Home, will be the guest speaker at the 7 p.m. program. A member of the local lodge since 1948, Cowie lives at 4302 Labette, Waterford Township. Fancy Frills Please as Holiday Present Lingerie gifts flatter her femininity, and even though she’s the tailored type, she' will probably appreciate a few frills at Christmas. 4 * ★ ■ * ' Safest course, however, Is to steer clear of an overabundance of lace and ruffles. Even the simplest lingerie styles acquire a festive air when Santa selects them in new fashion| hues, rather than white 788 Panty Stylo Reinforced bands of elastic follow your natural muscla lines! They live eleek. comfortable flt e# they flatted your tummy and Girdle around to smooth your hlpg and derrlere. Made of rubber elastic (nylont rubber, rayon) powernet that’s machinewashable at low temperature In •ises 28-34,36. CHARGE IT on Saaifc Revolving Charge Cortttry Dipt,, Mieatid Floor * Fri. and Sat. Only Charmode Easy-Care Natural Fit Girdles "Satisfaction guaranteed OT? ADC Downtown Pontiac or your money back” OI/Alvi} PhoneJf E 5417 1* i‘r mSm 1 < ; ' — 'V *- ' n ‘ mm READY FOR HOUSE OF WAX-Jean Fraser, a sculptor at the famed Trussaud’a Waxworks in London, puts finishing touches on • clay head .of Lee Harvey Oswald, accused assassin of President Kennedy. Oswald was slain himself two days after the President. Dead These 30 Years DETROIT (UPI) - It was 30 years ago today that the nation slaked a thirst pf nearly 13 years .as Prohibition came to an end. Bat for Michigan the thirst lasted even longer and was continued 21 days past die repeal of the ttth Amen ‘ to die U.S. Constitution. Michigan went “dry” on May 1,1918, almost two years before Prohibition went into effect nationally. The state went “wet" in January of 1934, 21 days after national Prohibition was repealed. The liquor industry likes to boast that actual consumption of alcoholic beverages per capita has dropped in contrast with die consumption during the days when liquor was prohibited. It was when Utah became the 36th state to ratify the 21st Amendment that the nation gave up on Prohibition and decided to legalize the sale of liquor. WAITED FOR UTAH On April 27, 1933, Michigan dampened its nose slightly by permitting the sale of 3.2 beer. But it hid to wait for Utah, to join the repeal movement before it could legally sell liquor. The liquor industry to Mich-igan now employs 48,831 persons with a payroll and earnings of $183,197,989. Michigan residents last year paid' 188,-182,888 in taxes on afeoholfc In addition, they’va paid a whopping $1,210,778,066 in taxes on ateohoUe beverages since the endofl^rohibition. ejr It made during Prohibition to set up gambling and other vice operations following repeal of the 18th Amend- The end of Prohibition also brought an end to bootlegging and the speakVasy. It also marked the demise of the notorious Purple Gang in Detroit and the rise of the Mafia or “Cosa Nostra.” MAFIA MOVED IN In toatimony before a Senate committee in 1868, a Senate investigator aaid the Mafia moved in when the Purple Gang went It’S generally conceded that the underworld need the mon- * this Christmas., , * * GIVE HIM COMFORT in this hnndsome shoe with the FORWARD THRUST SOLE PONTIAC'S POPULAR SHOE STORi & s V NORTH saoinAw strut w M In Downtown Pontiac r Next Door to Ftdarol's - jj In Downtown Pontiac r» Next poor to reaerors ^ According to Thomas J. Donovan, president of Licensed Beverage Industries, Inc., per capita consumption of distilled spirits during prohibition, years was 1.95 gallons. MODERATE AMOUNT Over the last 15 years, Donovan said, it has averaged a “moderate 1.25 gallons.” “Today’s moderation trend is further reflected,” according to Donovan, “in the fact that Americans now are spending far less of their expendable income for distilled spirits than they did in the .prohibition years. “During the period 1947-m die percentage is 1.78 of the consumer dollar, as compared with 4.34 per cent In the 1920-33 Now President Named for Science Academy NEW YORKW^^now president of the worldwide New York Academy of Sciences Is the Rev. J. Joseph Lynch, director of Fordham University’s seismic observatory. He was-Jchosen at the annual dinner of the 18,000-member society. JE90HF8 WATCHBS art COITUMI J8WBLBY Jiiii an* of many from whtoh to rnemf THE PONTIAC -TOBSS. THURSDAY,1 DECEMBER 5,1063 Word when he lost the presidency to Kennedy by an eyelash. •?.** * _ Consent of the candidate is no required in die preferential primary. The filing period "runs Jan. 10-30 and any candidate can withdraw his name if he acts to do so before Feb. 0/ in tfie next 10 days they will have difficulty in pulling together an organisation. The Goldwater people have had to stand by fuming while supporters of New Yodc Gov. Nelson A. Rodctfeller have been blanketing the state mi a town-by-town basis drumming up sUp- was required to honor the memory of his predecessor.” H W ' Cotton put no deadline on any decision Goldwater may make. But other supporters of the senator in New Hampshire are known to believe that if they don’t get a go-ahead signal with- the South. He noted Johnson's endorsement of civil rights and other key provisions of Kennedy’s legislative program. .-p “Every pronouncement the new President makes has been putting Goldwater back-iii business,” Cotton said. “He certain- port for their announced candidate for the nomination. NIXON BACKERS Supporters of former Vice President Richard M. Nixon also are reported stirring in the state. He carried New Hampshire by 20,000 votes in 1960 dency he thought that Gold-water’s chances for the nomination had skidded sharply. ALTERED OPINION But he said he subsequently has altered his opinion that Johnson might cut into Gold- shortly after Kennedy’s death that be was canceling all political appearances for the 30-day period of mourning.' Cotton said that immediately after death removed Kennedy as Goldwater’s chief political target and elevated Lyndon B. Johnson, a Texan, to the presi- water’s stronghold of support in ly has gone far beyond what #4550 Kenmore Elect. Range in White or Coppertone Gas Ranges in White or Rich Shaded Coppertone Includes SUDS-SAVER Regular 1179.95 30 inches wide #4340 WASHINGTON (AP),- Sok • Norris Cotton said today he is delaying New Hampshire presidential primary campaign plans ' until Sea. Barry Goldwater indicates whether he is willing to^ run. ■ 1 Cotton, New Hampshire Republican who heads a commit-tee to put Goldwater’s name on —^JhfcidarchlOpreferential ballot, said in an interview-he nas not talked with the Arizbna Republican since President John F. Kennedy was assassinated. ★ 'A ...Possibly reflecting indecision / about political matters, Gold-water Has declined to talk to newsmen since he announced Rights Talks Offin Chicago School Board Again# Policy of Integration CHICAGO (AP) - Civil rights leaders broke off negotiations with the Chicago Board of Education Wednesday after the board voted 4-3 against issuing a policy statement in favor of , integration. . * After‘ WlhOetifig. WTB«Fl grationists threatened to step up support for an economic boycott of Chicago’s downtown “ shopping area that started Tuesday. They'also promised more demonstrations. * * a Board members, led by Pres-1 ident Clair M. Roddewig, said they were in favor of integra-tion. But Roddewig said the board, before issuing a state-[ menu should have the advice of a five-man committee now studying the problems of the city's predominantly Negro public schools. The Coordinating Council of Community Organizations, a group of 18 civil rights organizations, presented six demands to the school board at the beginning of the negotiation meeting. r. HEAVY CRITICISM the board’s neighborhood school policy has been under heavy criticism by the Integra: tionists. They contend the policy creates de facto segregation among the 500,000 public school children. Besides seeking public endorsement of the integration policy, the council demanded the resignation of controversial School Supt. Benjamin C. Willis, along With two members of the five-hum study group, who' were described as partisan to Willis. After tiie meeting, Lawrence Landry, chairman of the coun- ' cil's school committee, said he< would “recommend that the! council never again deal with! the school hoard tmtiHt adopts j a policy favoring integration." He described the meeting as a big nothing. ★ * * Last October, a one-day walkout of public school children, sponsored by a civil rights! group, resulted in the absence! of 250,000 students, nearly half the city’s total public school enrollment. Radio Permit Switched WASHINGTON . (AP) — The FQC Wednesday announced approval of an application by ilWMAB, Munising, Mich., for assignment of license to Pictured , Rocks Radio Corp. for $18,000. famous In Chicago ,.,t landmark known to Chicago visitors... equally ranownad In Hta heart of th« loop Is (ho 44 itory high CAROUSIL-1N-THI-SKY I <(50 mil* view of th* city) t No cover * No minimum luncheon! from $2 dinner! from $3.30 .1800 newly EXTENDED WARRANTY Automatic Features... Value for Your Money! 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Pbwerfal Eng aaaninyActftp- Satisfaction ftuarantood Or your money back” THE FUiN llAC P-liksS,' IHUKSjUA ¥t]fe(Jli/iyt PA k 19# large-scale search for himwas organized. ^ £ 'j"J The trial of Heyde and his helpers is expected tb* provide the first fulf picture of the “mercy killing” program, often referred to as euthanasia; In the official Nazi jargon, the goal was “destruction of life unwor- By tf life,” .• , It was one of Adolf Hitler s it ideas. Vague references to it are contained in his “Mein Kampf”. In 1935, Hitler told the head* of me Nazi doctors’ association that he would put his thoughts into practice during the next gar. _________ Nazi Chief of Killing1 Fqies Germciri ways was in 1947 when he fled from a transport of war crimes suspects. Using the alias “Dr. Sawade,” he rose to the positiohr of chief medical adviser to a state welfare Court which handles disputes over pension claims, In 1959, Heyde was denounced ip police but vanished again. to Spain in 1961. Spanish authorities turned him oyer last March. % will be tried separately*-.........................-v Heyde also trledto slip opt of the country. The state attorney general said a recent search of his cell in Limburg produced evidence that he was preparing 4ioul>reak jail. Prof. Werner Heyde, former SS colonel and head'of the office whiGh supervised operations. Heyde, 61, is charged with murder in the death of 109,000 mental patients and concentration inmates. Iengers were reduced to ashes in the crematorium of the insane asylum at nearby Hadamar. Billowing clouds of smoke from i the . chimney signaled that the Nazi "mercy killing" program was in full swing* * ' * # M . Now, more than 20, years lat-left^—a—mastermind Of the LIMBURG, Germany/(AP)-»| Schoolboys shouted “murder boxes" when the gray buses made, their way through this! medieval town during the first years of World War II. With drawn-curtains screening the doomed passengers, the buses became a familiar sight Sawade’,, he rose to the position Two one-time, collaborators, Gerhard Bohne, has vanished. Dr, Hans-Hefelmanh and Fried- He, is now believed io. South .Tillmann, will be codefen-1 America, haven of numerous OPEN AT 9 A.M. Say Merry Christmas ' ^ Wj Save on Your Choice § POWER TOOLS rom I jFj For Him! Choose Oile of Thpse 3 Craftsman' Elec. Hand Tools! ■ riiilili, invuii •Ut.ini-li ill-ill flint lil-tll* slfi'l. YOUR CHOIC Values Up To $69.99 Choice of Impact Tool, 714-in. Elect. Hand Saw, Belt-Sandcr, Sander-Polishcr, Disc. Sander or 7-inch Craftsman Polisher. Every one a fine Quality Sears power tool that’s perfect for the handyntan. Save now! $hr- ~—#65.96 Router -----'tjiiii'-0!!! case & acc. _ .... -49-92&fr ■ . msuLHioa ROEBUCK AND CO. Variable speed %-incli electric drill that drills steel, non-ferrous mctfals,masonry,plastics or wood,Multi-speed samlet-polisher develops 2/5 H.P. Includes ' wool bonnet. Multi-speed Sabre Saw cuts all materials with a full 1-inch stroke. Each one priced at $10.00 savings at Sears during this „ ’sale! Charge It ,s|gp Craftsman 59-piece Socket Seta Regular sepurate prices tdtul $54.99. Ten Vfc-iri. dr/sockets 7/16-l-in., seven * %-in. dr. sockets M taJA-in., spark Q /\QQ plug socket, seven '/4-in. drive sockets |-\U77 —7/32*7/16*tn., 5 open end wrenches and ^ ^ more, CWaeli Your Choice of Seven Hand Tools Every one a Craftsman! Choose a / ... o Camp Axe, 13-pc. Drill set, 50-ft. tape, 8 or 10-inch adjustable wrench, %• inch -ratchet or a utility cabinet. * Master-Mixed Latex Flat Paint Reg. $4.98 333 Reg-*5.98 Goes on easily with brush or roller. Dries hit and it's scrub-tblsJtianycolors... , 9-hi. 3.P«ek Roller . . .. 1,34 Master-Mixed Semi-Gloss Paint charge It For rooms (list take hard wear. Use as trim or for entire wall. ,Choose from many colors. 2-In, Brush, 1.66 $-ln. 2.66 New Spray Enamel Dries in 8 Minutes Reg. $1.80 Rustproof 4—fit. Alum-Step Stools Now Only I H« , rhara. It Wonderful aluminum ... if a lighter than steel, stronger than wood. Wide, safe steps. 6-ft. Step Stool v. . 4• 13.88 Sale! Craftsman 8-Inch & 10-Inch Bench Saws REDUCED *61“ AT SEARS ... 10-Inch Radial Arm Saw $118.97 8-Inch *124.99 10-Inch Regularly at $249.00 Craftsman Quality >188 ‘n-. 75,000 BTU Space-Saver ‘600’ Series Gas Furnace Regularly $199 You Save ISO! NO MONEY DOWN On Soars Eusy Payment Plan Two great Craftsman saws at sale-prices . . . perfect g|ft suggestion for the hobbyist. Hears bus motor*, grid -extensions, adjustable Extensions, heuvy-duty stands and guards available fyf both models at alight additional cost. See them at Sears tonight! NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan The famous precision-made saw with blade above work so you can see whqt you're doing for more safety, accuracy. Plus-powEred 3450 rpm motor developes 2-H.P., protected by overload devise. Saver at Sears! 9-lneh Radial Arm Craftsman Saw, Reg. $139.. ..$119 Hardware lltjtii • Snort Multi Butement NO MONEY DOWN on Soars Easy Payment Man Life-elnd ceramic coated heat exohanger for longer life. High efficiency burner. Overslse blower. Insulated cabinet. Includes fan and limit controls. 100% pilot shut-off. A-G.A. approved. Other Homart Furnaces REDUCED $30 Now! , Plumbing A Heating Dipt- Perry St. Basement FiberglaA- Insulation Is So Easy to Install, Covers 70 Sq.ft. 3-In. Q99* Thick. P«iit!Mov«rwl ' roll Foil Covered--4.99* 6" Batts,4S-sq. Pi.. ...3.99* .L V;//;;, / .■;-,Vn 1 ; - 1 •"1 Aluminum Doors Choose 30« 32,36x80-lnoh ilses. .......... 20** Blown-In Insulation Avg. Frame Home, l-»tory; Attic $128* Sidewalls $187 Complete average house....................... $239 Building Mainrlalt, Perry 9$. SaiaMml “Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back” SEARS Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5-4171' " gg • ' "y* ■ ,f |g||| • \ ;• 5 i- ■ ■ i. v.- ^^3 .;.Jk^K;j ^ fell . ■ §■■ ; 1 ’ ?rj \ ' • tfev£ON-j|AC. PjRESS,' TyIJESDAY>- DECEMBER A 1963 ■;;> ' ! A—15.' m [SI n ROE IAI BUCK ANt LS ) CO. i •4 Allfitatp Trail .-In Sill..' Sait Mcrri/ Christmas BATTERIES Wit Save1 Up to *5“ At Sears Now! • ‘mw-r Reg. 1X2.98 Chaiguft ! Recharge both 6 and 12-volt batteries with a flick of a switch. Easy "to-read meter. Folding wire handle^ 7-ft. charge cables, 7*ft. power cord, i*ack. 12-Foot Battery Booster Cable Sets Be ready for emergency starts. 6 or 12 Sears Price volt batteries Can use it. 49-strand ; A A. aluminum wiretrubber insolation. Steel ^ Charge It clgirips with insulated handles. Regulation Size 7-ft. 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Built-in dual headlights; big red taillight. *ln>th«^oo"< TakwWith 20” Convert-A-Blke...... i... -.....• * • *19.88 ■ Sal^fiae Precision Engine Testing Kh* 14*8 Charge It Includes; vacuum pntge, Neon Rea. *10 98 Transistorized Car Radio Sale . t: • Charge It Combines transistors and tubes for fine performance., Fits all Reg. *34.98 ALLSTATE All-Weather Motor Oil 297 R«g. j&jks____ 'V;:‘tT^t. can" 3 oils in one. Spqcigi additives fight rust, 'iscid and eorra8ion. Doable detergents keep engine clean when hot or cold. 10W-20W-30 for finest action. > Ted Williams Sleeping Bags 19*8 Charge It With 3VMbiof Forte!® polyester fiborfilL Green cotton drill cover. 33X794S. siae. .Reg. *2* Boys’ or nlrls’ .Figure Skates - 769 At Only . ; *....: Charge it Foam insnlatcd. shoes with split-leather uppers. Steel blades. , Sizes I t to 3; Adu|ts Figure Skates... 8.49 Men’«4 Women’s Club & Bag!Sets four Choice 34®* . Contains No. I and 3 woods, 3, 5, 7, 9 irons with putter. 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Guardsman Nylon Tires Guaranteed *7 Months 6.00x13 Tubeless mmm , « piM x„ NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED 6.50x13 Tubeless Blackwalls.. 15.88* 6.70x15/7.50x14 Tubeleaa BlackwaUe.... 18.88* 7.10x15/8.00x14 Tubeleaa Blackwalla .... 20.88* "Plus Tax, No Trade*ln Required o Modern tread for faster stopping, easier in ruing, extra skid protection ' • Silencer buttons in tread grooves reduce lire aqueul vibrations •‘Our most popular tires offer you soft-rid* rubber *, • see them—save tonight! Whitewalls'......$3 Mora Free ALLSTATE Tire Mounting , Auto Accgiutrl#*, Perry ft< BaMment , P MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Men’s Reversible Quilted Sid Parkas Reg. .. 1 g88 $19.99 Xtl Posy-Prifit Quilted Reversible Parkas Reg. $19.99 1588 “Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back” SEARS Nylon shell, polyester insulation. Sixes small to extra large In colorf. Save! $ 19.95 SkiPants... 14.88 S/xirtlng (ioodt D*pt. ■ Reversible from qujlted print to plain. Warmly insulated, nylon shell. 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'Not long afterward,, he took a job as streetcar conductor for the Detroit United Railway on the Detroit-FIint run. some 30 years ago. The old courthouse was across the street. j 1 _ . “We had less than a hundred people iWorldng for the county then, and die population was 210,000.” Today die county has 1,516 employes for ment as vice chafamau of the capacity, leaving muChoithe County Board of Auditors administration to the two won't change the.operation of younger members, county government. But 77-year-old Moore will Tor the past couple of yearsf bemissedaroundBreeounty e has been serving on the courthouse he was instrumental oard-- mostly in an advisory in building. Not only will his large frame be gone, but also' the courtly manners and his friendly way of discussing county affairs. lliose who follow in' his footsteps can’t help but benefit from his past accomplish- Moore was born in Birmingham in March, 1886. - At that time, Birmingham was just a village in Bloomfield Township. His father owned a farm in nearby Troy Township, where the Ford Tractor & Implement plant is now located. HEADS WEST : "^r~graduating from high school in Birmingham, Moore worked briefly dn his father’s farm before deciding “to head west to make my fortune.” He got as far -as Utica, 111., By DICK HANSON The man who was known for most of his 34-year career as -theboss-of jOakland County will leave the courthouse scene dan. 1 Robert Y. Moore’s retire- . That lasted for about three years, when Moore decided to get a horse instead. He,joined the Detroit Mounted Police and trative helm of county government. He was chairman of the board for 24 Of the 34 years he has served on it. Only at the end of 1961 did Moore ask the board of supervisors not to reappoint him chairman because of his advancing years. Moore snapped at the appointment to the board of auditors, even though it was for consider-jihiy fe» money than he had earned as township supervisor. The Jobgrewwitb the county. ENJOY LIFE “Now, Pm going to enjoy life at home and take a few trips around the country,” declared Moore, i\hat-waa county government like 30 years ago? • “There were 86 jail trustees working here at the center then before we built all this,” said Moore. “They were housed in what is now the welfare building (oldesi at the center.) We called it the work farm then. downtown streets for die next six and a half years. FARM# MARKET He saved his money and bought a farm in Oxford Township. The farm made money, and Moore waa also able to As Moore looks back over his long career, he sees ti]e role oi the board of auditors, particularly the chairman, greatly reduced from what it was -in his heyday. DIFFICULT COURSE Looking ahead, he sees a much more difficult course for his successor to steer. this is due to growing complexity of county government that results from In-creating urbanization of the area, noted Moore. “There are many more problems today, thkn when I first got started in county government,” he said. “Of course, the depression years were no picnic.” Moore counts the movement of county government from downtown Pontiac to the County Service Center as his major accomplishment,* though lie shares the credit With others. OLD COURTHOUSE He can recall when county government was conducted from a single floor of the former Peoples Bank Building downtown “There was a dairy herd and some 80 acres planted in feed. The produce was used entirely by people in the county’s care. “I remember the poor bouse 1 where you would see old women on their hands and knees scrubbing wood plank floors. “But the really hard times came during the depression^ Jft really hit the county when bond holders started suing for their money. The county owed them $16 million. v ^ ‘“The county budget dropped from $2 million annually to zero. We were broke, except for delinquent taxes owed. , SINKING FUND 'f “I recommended placing all delinquent taxes in a sinking fund as they trickled in, so ns to meet tiie county’s obligations^ and end Uie lawsuits. ~ “That satisfied the bonding OFFER . drop their suits, “By 1646, the county was back in sound financial shape and has stayed out of red since.” 1 BOWING OUT — Robert Y. Moore, 77- county correspondence. He will retire Dec. year-old vice chairman of the County Board 31. At left is his secretary, Mrs. Elaine of Auditors, signs his name to a last piece of Milleur. 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Schenley is also available beautifully gift-wrapped in other sizes. Put life in your gifts and in your holiday drinks ..'giye and Serve Sociable Schenley! ■ ‘l52 *1ft85 *285 OPEN EVENINGS ytil CHRISTMAS 140 N. SAGINAW FE 4-9970 5 mu THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5, Itto mmmms FIREPLACE FIXTURES EO-CUP ELECTRIC ^ AUTOMATIC PERCOLATOR INIVERSM. BUFFET FRYPAN Complete Electric Blanket FnH Q88 . Guarantee 9 with Cover and controls ; SAVE! BLACK A FIREPLACE GRATES 'w'SS 5.29 «r HOLDER MRlfflimSShk. ELECTRIC CAN OPENER Magnetic arm lit lid out of way STEREO Ski Bindings 'MR. KELLY'S' HOCKEY STICKS Mai extension speaker , built in cover, True Big business at play! Fill water Playiall DOLL Clothes REMCO FASCINATION POOL and FASCINATION CHECKERS |89 He’s halMurffc, he’s hilt-frog Drsii ms, Chongs ms, Love mo and Ml levs you. v 20.00 Valus {mzvwm Cluisl Codes! and Criminal* . . . there's plenty ef them herel And you compete with other detectives (y^ur friends) to see who con. spot the C famous Dick Tracy culprits, first. If you're correct, the board lights up "OvIMy." It's a thrlllra-mlnutc track dawn. Ages 5*11. Tammy, the typical toonagor from the top of h«r teased lialr to her sneakers . ,, her kin etetar, Pappar... pretty, sophisticated mother and (Nipper, handsome father. All Of sturdy plastic , , , movable limbs. ^ OPEN DAILY 9 to 10 lAME PAID MERCHANDISING [Ml#E rHIK CORPORATION DISCOUNT CENTER-Phone 332-9137-1108 West Huron Ar-18 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER Brazilian Murdered in Senate BRASILIA, Brazil (AP) - A senator fired three shots at an • opponent in Brazil’s Senate .chamber Wednesday. He missed his target but accidentally killed . a third lawmaker. ★ fe ★ ' The victim was Sen. Jose Cairala, ..who died while undergoing surgery. Cairala, from the western frontier state, of Acre, was struck in the stomach by one bullet fired by Sen.. Amon de Melo. TOOK AIM Witnesses said. De Melo whipped out a pistol and took aim from the speaker’s platform at Sen. Silvestre Pericles. Pericles, 67, a man known for his violent temper, had said he would shoot De Melo if he rose to speak. Both are from the northeast state of Alagoas, which has a reputation for stormy politics. Pericles, a member of the Senate since 1657, had opposed the election of De Melo, a freshman. DISARM HIM Sen. Joao Agripino told newsmen he grabbed Pericles, who waswbouttoreturnthe-firerand disarmed him. Pericles and De Meld were placed in military qistody .The Senate appointed an investigating committee, r. * ★ .★ A Senate sources said the feud was personal with no bearing on national politics. De Melo is a member of the conservative Christian Democratic party; Pericles belongs to President Joao Goulart’s leftist Labor party. >>v Cairala had not been involved in the dispute, they said. RAISEb QUESTIONS The shooting raised questions about senatorial* immunity from prosecution in the courts. The investigating committee will be asked to look into the issue. In 1956, several state assemblymen in Alagoas were wounded in a gun battle in the assembly chamber. 1 who led negotiations for the 1955 Austrian Independence Treaty urges that moves for better East-West relations be extended because the West is sure to win. ' • . “The more the. forces of democracy can penetrate into Communist lands ..the better,” Julius Raab says. “I know we’ll win. The Communists just have got to come our way, if only in the matter of economics. They cannot give their-people .— the living standard which is de*. manded increasingly by these people unless they turn to private enterprise and give an incentive to peasants and workers and merchants.” OFFICE INTERVIEW Raab,72;Austria‘schancellor" 1953-61, was interviewed in his office. He now is president of the Austrian Chamber of Commerce. Roosevelt Lauds LBJ as Prepared for Post NEW YORK m~“l think it can be fairly said that never has a man, including my father, come to the presidency of tee United States better trained and mors experienced than Lyndon B. Johnson.” The speaker? Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr., son of the only man to be elected president Mur times. Rod China's Premier . to Visit With Nasser CAIRO (AP) n- Red China’s Premier Chou En-lai will arrive Dec. 14 for a week-long visit, it was announced Wednesday. The announcement said Chou will discuss with U.A.R. officials “some international questions and latest developments in the Chinese-Indian border conflict." Freedom Wrung From Reds Austrian Confident West Will Win Out VIENNA UP) — The Austrian > also a matter of satisfying their hunger for more consumer goods and more cultural freedom, more opportunity to travel abroad. DESTROYS ALL “The Communist system first 'starts by destroying everything, especially economically. They press it up on the farms and in the factories. ’ * As one of Europe’s “Little statesmen,” Raab was a canny fellow whose shrewdness and toughness were hidden behind a big smile. Nikita Khrushchev a n d V.M. Molotov, from whom he wrung Austria’s Independence, learned to respect his toughness. Raab, although out of office, was a host to Khrushchev and President Kennedy at their 1961 meeting in Vienna. ... .. * 'I believe that modern weapons do finally serve the purpose of peace,” he says today. “They are so horrendous*, these weapons, that even the Russions realize that full-scale nuclear and rocket war is unthinkable because it would mean the end of the World, 1 TITO REPLYS “For instance, I once asked Tito (Yugoslavia’s President) if he thought there might be another war and he said no, because nobody In his right mind would dare think of it. “Yes, and I think even) the Chinese communists will realize this one day—if they at all remain human beings. “Maybe Kenned^! talks with Khrushchev here in Vienna were tough and turned somewhdt sour but I think the recent efforts on both sides—Washington and Moscow—toward a detente and ming of tension is a good thing for us all. ‘I personally hav e always favored negotaotions and have never been afraid of negotiating.”''1 'Would I sell Russians American Wheat? Of course, I would. On commercial grounds — not humanitarian, particularly. We Austrians have always tried to expand our trade with the Russians but found It difficult to get hard currency, out of them. I’m all In favor of getting all the gold we westerners can out of the Russian!...... “Khrushchev has economic and. political problems at home in Russia and throughout Eastern Europe,. It's not only a question of feedlhg his people, it is “0’s I Have a Rsg for My Roam?” Of coursa she can! We've many attractive, , eaty-to-care-for area rugs loomed from the most durable synthetic fibers. One will be perfect for your child's room. Come see. 1 OPEN 9 'TIL 9 MONDAY THRU FRIDAY FINEST Uv CARPETING IOSt W. HURON ‘PONTIAC, MICH. • 7?^ FE8-9675 ..................."'RIRlRjfRmmuteHMMMMMMI T \ Then they wake upjto their, failure and start to rebuild, but find they can't raise living standards unless they enlist private initiative and enterprise by giving their producers a profit incentive. . “The more the Russia^ people and those of the East European countries see of our western culture* and prosperity the more they will want them. , ■Sr ir * ir - Czechoslovakia and Hungary have virtually opened their borders to the good for those people and for us. ..............--—’ .... ■” We people of the free world should never ^shrink from such peaceful penetration, because I think we can’t lose.” As for the European political scene, Raab says: * “The big problem remains Germany. It’s not .only that country’s reunification. “There’s that Oder-Neisse line border that gave large territories to Poland, which the Russians agreed to but the West has not; formally approved. “Should the Germans get back these territories from which millions of their citizens were expelled after World War II? “Qr should the Oder-Neisse border remain? That’s a really tough problem , and thank hea-vens I don’t have to settle it.” JFK Guards Seen in C/ub Not on Duty WASHINGTON W - The Secret Service agents who wtere seen ip a Ft. Worth, Tex. club early on the morning of Nov. 22 were all off duty, A Treasury official said v yesterday. Sen. Stephen M. Young, D-Ohio, said Tuesday he had reliable information that some agents were seen in the club as late as 2:30 a.m., but he had no information whether they had been drinking. The Treasury official said that the agents who were seen In the chib had been working late and were off duty at fhe time they were in tee club. Somq of them_ did not reach the club until 1 a.m. •k ★ a ■ “We are satisfied that these men acted' entirely property and correctly,” the official said. , There also were indications thait some persons who reported that the agents were in the Club assumed that all the men in a party of ten or more were Secret Service agents, White House aides.and> newsmen also were In the group. Automobile driver training for students is now offered to about 50 per cent of all students in tee United States public and private secondary schools. STUDENT UPRIGHT *X1| PIANOS till Magnus < lEA chord *jm ORGAN VW GRINNELL U|4| Ho Orl*. tt s *368 S'IB FAMOUS MAKI SJ Aft STEREO *|Qx RADIO PHONO | 9lr USED $4 A A GRAND *1/11 PIANO IfcV s m USED MAONAVOX tdhdh m •||!l CONSOLE HO -Mb, mm* w ssr *429 PIANO OULBRANSON BJBJA MM CONSOLE tOllfc ORGAN (193 Extra Speaker ■ w RADIO $15 - New. From ' SSkT* SAAR pianos ssay . five w lo SIM * w w 5" *695 extra Soookor FM TABLE $4 ME RADIOS) *12| Reg; 24.il IV “799 Hammond Oiig. $985 CHORD dbm ORGAN f1 In Demo. ■"’ww automatic SA^ RECORD * Y f PLAYERS m 1 ■MS. (NjST GRINN ELL'S DOWNTOWN 27 S. Soglndw St. OPIN EVERY NIQHT TIL.9 I*. M< LOW EASY TERMS (itur TJmtrsrlf (iDsmmt’s fur Christmas '-lli'the'liaBojr'trlte*dressy. "And who else but Osmun's gives you a fresh approach to the Holidays? Shown here are two suggestions by World-famous PHOENIX SUITS. Background: The Classic BLACK MOHAIR in 2- and 8-button models. Perfect year-round weight in a true luxurious suit. Plain-front trousers, superb fit.‘175 Foreground : SILVER GREY SHARKSKIN. The smash-hit of the year! Den picted by PHOENIX in .high 2-button or 8-button models. An added touch ... your choice of center or side vents. A very elegant suit to carry you impeccably through the seasons ahead. Plain' front trousers in a- wide variety of sizes jtnd proportions. $75. Note: .The Oimun't gtft certificate make* If eaiy to of that# f) any gift. LAYAWAY YOUR GIFT. A small deposit holds It till Christmas. a part of Christmas since 1931 SMUN’S STORES FOR MEN & BOYS FREEfARKING Use One of Osmun’s Individualized Charge Plans OPEN EVERY NITE ’til 9 DOWNTOWN STORE FE 4-4551 TEL-HURON STORE FE 4-4541 T THE PONTlkc PRfe. THfaltSp^Y/pECEMJBiER 1963 A governor, of PenneyIvanit she was 14. Fancher, who has ! appeared in several television cannot be reelected as his term 'Lolita' Set for Marriage HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Sue Lyon, teen-age actress who first gained fame as “Lolita,” plans to marry actor Han^ptofi Fincher HI Dec. 22. m Airlines Sue to End Town's Antinoise Law Between New; Old World shows, recentlyjiivorced Joann ends but must wait forjb^fol-Lansder. " towing term; • NEW YORK (AP) - Hempstead’s Town Council passed an anti-noise ordinance, and nine major airlines say it can't do that to them. Pope's Statement as .Council Ends for Year faded but political unrest has continued to mount. PARTY WINS OUT Finally, in last month’s local elections, the opposition/Justice party emerged the chief winner and this week premier I s m e t TwAnil TSirtray’q link with Ataturk, steppeddown. The Justice party widely is regarded as the heir to the ' outlawed Democratic party which was led by Menderes and traditionally favored the Turkish farmers from whom It drew its chief support, Reflecting the farmer’s rising discontent, th e Justice party centered its fire on the new taxes necessary to pay for Turkey’s ambitious five - year development program. crease of seven per cent in her gross national product if she is to keep ahead of an annual population growth of 4.§ per cent. P o 1 it leal unrest makes achievement of the goal uncertain at best. The’17-year-old Miss Ljton, currently in Puerta Vallarta, Mexico, working in “Night of the Iguana,” annourtcedthrough-a representative here lhat they would he rharried at the home of designer Dorothy Jeakins. In a suit filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Brooklyn, the airlines said the Long Island community!s law would dose Idlewtld Airport and; interfere With the nation’s commerce, postal service and “war power.” The ordinance sets maximum noise levels and provides fines and jail terms for violations, it is impossible for pitots to Judge their noise level, said the suit filed by American, frane World, United, Pan American, Northwest, Natiop%l, Eastern, Braniff and Delta. - The mtmher of coat miners in the United StatesThas declined from 400,000 in ms to lao.ooo today. Eighteen years ago coal supplied half the nation’s energy needs; today it supplies only 22 per cent. ’ for better viewing, pendable full • transformer powered chassis, SAG sq. In. optically filtered screen. In Traditional style shown, mahogany or walnut. NOMONir damaging heat. Four speakers—two 8" plus two 5“—surround you with truly beautiful music. And, your tic- *188 *149** 8-PIECE ___UXE MODERN BEDROOM QROUPINO Double dresser with minor, chest A 4 n n of drawers^ bookcase bed plus«b1^!9D Inpetspring mattress4' and box ' D,dO Spring. 2, colorful vanity lamps. ^_t m usaagi|i|gK&nt T-PC. LIVING ROOM or SOFA BED GROUP Stunning 100% nylon safe-or sold b matching lounge dtelr. Beth with Hetou slppeted teem cushion*. Hu* S end ) modem table*. ;*i29 Deluxe 30-Inch GAS RANGE ,*98*2 • FREE SERVICE • FREE DELIVERY • FREE WARRANTY SOYS’ and GIRLS’ 28” BICYCLES f»36« RECLINER CHAIR RecBnec f* onv position. Attractive, km® -wearing, radhoble plastic and dtc- MATTRESS Sft. Complete with innersprtng mattress, hex spring, washable• plastic Headboard • ROLLAWAY BED .With FOAM MATTRESS Felds up complstely and rwHa " ray for UOSy StOtaae- •» w for that heeded ^ _ “ 2-F0R-1 FUTTON FREE MATTRESS ANO BOX SPRIMO SET rise firm smooth top Ip nerspring mattress and ' matching box spring by Rastonalre. *39 •W •If OPEN MONDAY, THURS., FRI., SAT. UNTIL 9 P.M. Ssrvlce for 0 Rogers Silvorplata ysu Mrs tor th* S-PIEOE STEAK Knives A 3-pc. Carving Sat . . All II Necat ONIlOA CRAFT BAIT SITS Urge sstscHsn ti 25 la alaamlna I” lalnlsw trim Mew I Polaroid m lutomatio CAMERA * Color pictures In SO seconds e Electronic Shutter makes colbr flesh plcturp* automatically. e Automatic tlm:—■-- DISCOUNT SAVINGS fouhoioadapur kits i.m *129" SQ88 •harp ctelnles* sieel. |P' ELECTRIC HAIR DRYER Smart hat hex case. Quiet, quiet operation. *12" COMPLETE SELECTION OF FAMOUS WATCHES and“STARFIRE” DIAMONDS AT DISCOUNTjAVINQS! 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American Star .ALUMINUM WATERLESS COOKWARE and OANISTM SET With Mitehlni Daooratad knobs and handles YOU OIT 20 PIECES SOMMch Own ,* KhySMlUlar j§3|p* eptin Nm* *19" w Dry iron Hsotrlo Can Opener ?Nmmr \ b Atttomstio Htp-Up Testier Yaur 088°'"*^ |M- Savings Choice I 41-Po- Servioa STETSON MELMAC DINNERWARE SET DISCOUNT SAVINGS MAYTAG AUTOMATION WASHER [ NAYTAGJRYER 8 oSmXmSS m ■ Steel Cabinet Be TheneeststOsntrsI ' e FsR Oeararrtee :G ^g*118 e is eass e si xeys ■§ qa e ■ * StaMsss slstl raedt 4DH •SWSS1LJ" 1 tr FREE PARKING REAR OF STORE NORTH SAGINAW...PHONE FI 3 Tun POTSTTIAC ERESS^ TEURSDAY, DECEMBK i » 4 ’ Mb'A •A'1''* ‘ V&'\ $?T: I * ' h ill; - Shop The Moll's 45 Stores and Services In Perfect Comfort FINGER’S ART A OFFICE SUPPLY • PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CENTER GRINNELL’S MUSIC STORE • PONTIAC TRAVEL SERVICE. HIGHLANO APPLIANCE • RICHARDS SOYS A GIRLS WEAR JBULUGJW WATER CONDITIONING • ROSE JEWELERS j ‘ FLOWERLANO FLORISTS * SAVON FOODS . HUDSON’S BUDGET STORE • STANDARD SERVICE STATION HUGHES-HATCHER-SUFFRIH • SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINTS KINNEY SHOES • SINGER SEWING CENTER S.S. KRESGE — • TANDY CRAFTS KROGER’S' • TED’S RESTAURANT ...... , MARIANNE SHOP * TIE RAK MIAMI RAKE SHOP ^ ' • VANITY FAIR SAM A WALTER SAUSAGE • ZUIEBACK’S SUBURBAN MONTGOMERY WARD • COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK NATIONWIDE INSURANCE • CORN CABIN HHHI ALBERT’S ARDEN’S DRAPERIES ASSOCIATES LOAN BAIRD’S BARBER SHOP BAKER SHOES BECKER SHOES BOND CLOTHES BOOKWORM BOOK STORE CARDARAMA CLAIRE NATS CROCKER CANDIES CUNNINGHAM’S DRUG STORE DONNELL’S HAIR STYLIST EMPIRE SHOE REPAIR FATHER A SON SHOES FREE PARKING FOR OVER 4560 CARS * SOFT MUSIC EVERYWHERE ENJOY ALL THE EXCITEMENT OF CHRISTMAS IN COMPLETELY-ENCLOSED COMFORT SHOP 9:30 A.M. TILL 9:30 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY <*"»• Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rd Pontiac Mall Shopping Center EB; ggjL j B—2 4till: X l i I ■■ /" : THfl PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1963 College Firm on Negro Fight Dixie's Auburn Out ^To Walt Integration’’ ’ AUBURN, Ala. (AP) -Bffi--eials of Auburn University*xay they will press their legal fight to-halt the court-ordered deaeg-rogation of the school despite refusal by a federal appeals I court to .delay the admission of a Negro student. ' At the same time, university sourees=say that^it appears Harold J. Franklin of Mont* I gomery will be enrolled for the winter quarter If Franklin enroilSi he will become the first Negro admitted to Auburn. Negroes previously have been admitted to the University of Alabama,! the university’s Huntsville Center and Florence State College. -A three-man panel of 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New • Orleans turned down a motion Wednesday by -Auburn attorneys' seeking a delay in the desegregation order pending an appeal. BARS DEAN ----— U.S. Dist. Judge Frank M. John Jr. of Montgomery had issued the order Nov. 5 barring William y„ Parker, dean of the Auburn Graduate School, from rejecting the application on grounds Franklin lacked a degree from an accredited college. Franklin, 90, is a graduate of Alabama State, a Negro college mMontgomery.Hedidnotgr^ uate from high school. ★ w * A university official Wednesday night that the school’s policy, as stated by the board of trustees and President Ralph Draughon remains unchanged: To continue the court fight and, meanwhile, prepare for the orderly admission or Franklin. No trial date has been set on appeal of Johnson’s ruling. Registration for new students for the winter-quarter is scheduled ■ vJan. 3-4. •*tgn,c..L LANSING.(AP)-r-A Democrat-ic lawmaker, Rep.Alexander Petri of Ecorse, has formally asked that the special legislative on take tip the question of aid to dependent children of the unemployed (ADC-U). In a resolution introduced Wednesday, Petri urged Gov. George R o m n e y to expand the scope of the special session Holiday Cards by Jackie Are Now o n Sale NEW YORK (AP) - A growing trend in Christmas cards painted by artists of renown and sold for the benefit of char-itable-or cultural projects has a new and distinguished contributor. —4k==^a»-—*—-~==M She signs her paintings, “JBK,” for Jacqueline Bouvler Kennedy. Two cards bearing reproductions of Mrs. Kennedy’s paintings are being distributed by Hallmark Cards, Inc. Net proceeds will go to, the proposed national cultural center In Washington, D.C. MONTH AGO Mrs. Kennedy suggested several months ago that she design the cards for the benefit of the center. A bill has been intro-dueed In Congresa to name the. center for her husband, the late President John F. Kennedy, •* ★ * Mrs. Kennedy’s cards are reproductions > of original water-colors she completed earlier this year. "The Journey of the Magi,” depicts the three Wise Men on their way to Jerusalem. “Glad Tidings” portrays an angel heralding the birth of Jesus. NEW POWER PLANT—This Ford.truck:-carries the new 330HD V8 engine, one of a new series of high displacement heavy duty gasoline engines announced with the introduction of the company’s 1964 trucks this week. The. power plant is said to offer maximum durability, a instant-temperature carburetor air induction system and a wide variety of engine options. _ Urges New View of ADC-U Question the legislature can enact a biUqualifyingMiehigafif for federal funds in the ADC-U program. 1 “Michigan loses (50,000 each day that we are not qualified and these children remain hun-gry and unclothed,” Petri said. Romney has said that he wants the legislature to act on ADC-U in its 1964 session. JohnsenrSoapy^onfer WASHINGTON (AP) - President Lohnsoiuconf erred Wednesday witirG. Mennen Williams, assistant secretary of state for : African Affairs. Williams, a for-' mer Michigan governor, will return to Africa at the end of the week as a member of special U.S. missions to the celebrations of the independence of Zanzibar and Kenya. DETROIT fUPD—The real zip in ZIP code is still one to three years away. Postmaster Edward Bakto of Detroit, whose post office handles about 5% million pieces of mall dally and up to 18 miffionpieces a day in the Christmas rush, said today there are two elements necessary before the Ultimate efficiency in handling mail speedily can be achieved. One is the cooperation-of the geherar publlc, and business, houses in particular, in adopting the practice of using the ZIP code numbers. ★ 'W / ★ Two is the building of automatic scanning devices that can presort the mail at high speed, read” ZIP code numbers and presort the mail at high speed. BEING ACCOMPLISHED Bakef said the first element is being accomplished steadily and Since 1096 Prepare Yourself for’ A JOB , With a future Learn to qualify for higher paying office positions. ^ PONTIAC BUSINESS INSTITUTE 18 W. Lawrence St, FEderal 3-7028 Accredited by Ike Accrediting Commlirlon lor luilneir School* Waihlngton. D.C. transforms you into a ‘different* woman after Jim with MAGICAL HOLIDAY DRESSES A. Beaded crops split level (heath. Black, blue, yellow. 84Q). B. Glitter knit bodice; ribbed faille skirt. Gold. 7-15. ....... C. Sculptured rote brocade. White, royal. Petite 5-13. ....... For Mail Delivery Real Zip in Code Is l to 3Years Away will be achieved probably before the seconds — Acceptance of the ZIP code system, said Baker, has been good and will get better. Many individuals, and some small businesses, already have adopted the practice of using ZIP code numbers. And big businesses have indicated they also will adopt the practice. Baker said the larger businesses have an understandable problem. Adopting the ZIP code involves complete changeover in hWeplatar gnBiectronic tapes in their addressing machinery, which is not only time-consuming, but expensive. BEGIN SWITCHING But he s$id he c::p:cted that within three months, many of the large businesses would begin switching as their mailing lists changed, and that eventually, all of theni would be completely transferred to the ZIP code system. Business is the big target.. Baker estimated that of the Vh million pieces ot mail going through the Detrot Post Office daily, about 80 per cent Baker said that experimental* models of the new wanning device perfected for use with ZIP coding, would be, installed In some post offices within the next year. Within three years, he said, the scanners would be installed in most of the major post offices and postal dlatrlbu-. tion centers of the nation. • * ★ ★ When most of the mail is ZIP coded, Baker said, there Will be a considerable speed up in deliveries. But not until the machines are—inat*U«L nnJhe department’s existirf sortT?tg"-equip-ment will foe total efficiency of the new system be realized. BY HAND Until that time, he said, even the ZIP coded mail will have to be handled iargdyby hand. And while the use of die ZIP code will permit more efficient handling by the sorters, the greatest efficiency will be attained when the ZIP code number can be “read” by machine. This involves instructions to mailfers on printing the ZIP code numbers on a specific place on the envelope. This will allow the new scanning device to “read” the number, and automatically direct the mall to. its proper slot in the sorting. Baker said about 5 per cent of the mail going through the Detroit post office toddy has both the ZIP code number of the addressee and a {return ZIP code _ He said a larger amount has either one or the other. ...* ' ★ ★ _ How about the mail from individuals to individuals, the latter to Aunt Sadie, for instance? ON YULE CARDS Bakersaidmany^ersonsUet-^ tors are now being mailed with the ZIP code number. Some persons are even using it on Christ-mas cards. He raid public understanding of ZU? code has increased since those early (lays when it was first announced and the post office started an intensive publicity drive for people to “use the ZIP code.” ■ i • ★ ★ ★ Bade then, the Detroit Police -i Department received one letter; from an individual who addressed the letter “Detroit Police Department, ZIP Code.” Ex-Eirt Laborite Dios DUBLIN (AP)—(Wiliam Norton, S3, former leader of Ireland’s Labor party and a former cabinet minister, died Tuesday. Hq headed the Labor party fqr 28 years before he resigned in I860, i .. 4 ||j^^ pfWPi r T fwwpTr,^ Ml THE PHTCSS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1963 mmmwGPv* l; , 'T / |(( ■ jgj g-4il- M WtSTHMMOUSI holf dry.* s 997|S^:.s127 GENERAL ELECTRIC 23" GENERALELECTRIC STEREO PORTABLE With QE AUTOMATIC 6-TRANSISTOR Q.E«*FM-AM TOOTHBRUSH------POCKET RADIO TRANS. KAONT TAPE RECORDER “"Hi 2 Tubes Orest *10*r *5‘6 Cordl.it, with 4 c' „„ „ bruth.i ond wchorql 0(Mj h«H.ry. 4-TRANSISTOR :RECORD“ $gn WESTINOHOUSE Si... WESTINOHOUSE A. Port obi. O..h«o.l rrioid co^cW !gear *13*^ asS&S/ ^mSSnli HUNDREDS MORE NOT ADVERTISED-HURRYI RCA WHIRLPOOL Wrings (fhAQQ ^a-sr... *Bo Olympic CombinaKon COLOR STEREO HI-FI ADMIRAL STEREO COMO. WESTINOHOUSE STEREO COMBINATION ORCOA FULLY ELECTRONIC ORGAN ZENITH 10” PORTABLE TV Home entertainment center. color, TV with (tereo. Beautiful wood furniture cabinetry. WAREHOUSE SALE PRICED! . 4 tpood automatic changer. 4 stereo speakers. Built-in AM-FM, FM-Stereo radio and A’.F.C. Flhe furniture cabinet. Previous'year't model. WAREHOUSE SALE PRICED! With AM-FM radio. 4-speed automatic changer. Multiplex ready. Handsome wood cabinet. Terrific buy! WAREHOUSE SALE PRICED! Touch and play in 60 seconds'. 37 full t! II PH0HE 682-4840 | Tabirtph el Elizabeth Lake Rd. ' . ' ft ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1963 "Capitol Letter 3 It's Time to Halt Kennedy Glorification By RUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON - Let’s give the family of John Fitzgerald Kennedy a break. Americans are historically a 'warm, outgoing • people, but surely it Is time to call a halt to. thd __ well-meant supersenti-’ ^mentality that RUTH grow to useful MONTGOMERY adulthood in as normal, surfoudings as possible, despite the glaring spotlights of his political career. / Will this be possible if John-John and Caroline drive to a “Kennedy ” sfehool alohg Kennedy Memorial Parkway, attend sporting events at Kennedy Stadium, symphonies at the Kennedy Cultural Center and plays at Kennedy theaters, cross Kennedy. bridges to fly from Kennedy airports and buy supples with pictures of their father on ten-dollar bills? The American people have been understandably fnovqg by ij the tragedy but a pause for stock-taking is now due. Wiser heads than ours, in tiiries past, have cautioned against erecting a memorial to any president until 50 years after hll death, to let history rather than emotionalism and politics influence the decision. it ; ★ - Already President Lyndon Johnson has renamed the Atlantic space-station in Florida for his fallen predecessor. This is good, for in a real sense the dynamic) young Bostonian typified the drama o(\ the space age. CAPE KENNEDY LBJ went a big step further, however, in rechristening the , geographical landmark of Cape Canaveral itself “Cape Kennedy.” From this historic site the nation’s first earth satellite was launched during the administration of Dwight P. Eisenhower on Jan. 31, IMS, when the presidency was only a gleam in JFK’s senatorial ...eye. ..............—...-..-..... . Pressure ta change the napie of Washington’s as-yet-unbuilt National Cultural Center to the John Fitzgerald -Kennedy ^Cul-tural Center is already at fever pitch, and Democratic Sen. William Fulbright has hastily introduced a bill to that effect in , Congress. ★ ★ p . Here again, the enabling legislation for a cultural center was passed during’the previous administration at the request of President Eisenhower. It is true that the center received much impetus from the succeeding administration, because Jacqueline Kennedy was an enthusiastic patron of the performing arts. NO SYMPHONY John F. Kennedy, however, was not. In fact, he had about as much enthusiasm for long-haired symphonic music and opera as the average rhan-in-the-street. * His own musical tastes ran to the bang-’emrout ballads of a Judy Garland, and even though some other art forms will use the facilities It Is difficult to believe that he would "want America's first and only “national” cultural center called “John F. Kennedy.” This correspondent believes that the sports-loving JFK would have liked the Washington stadium renamed‘f6r him, hnd perhaps also Ney York Idlewlld ' Airport, Since the Idlewlld designation holds no historical significance. I question, however, whether he would have wpnted his two children to thrive In an all-Kennedy nation. Jacqueline Kennedy, shortly . (before her husband’s inaugura tion told this writer: •My major effort must be devoted to my children, I feel very strongly that if they do not grow up as happy and secure Individuals—if Canoline and John turn out badly—nothing that 1 would accomplish in the public eye would give me any satisfaction As long as this father Is the fig1 ure of authority, and the mother provides love ahd guidance, / children have a pretty r 'd .chance of turning out all right." y DEPRIVED OF AUTHORITY Caroline and John-John have now been deprived of that lov* & k KfTather “authority” by a vile assassin. Jacqueline Kennedy faces a • difficult enough task in being both mother and father to her children, without haying so many memorials named “Kennedy” that they might become spoiled by self-importance. The brave widow is still-beautiful, young and intelligent. Those who love and admire her will surely hope- that- at some future time she can again find marriage. Americans Could make this “happy ending”' almost impossible, if they now begin naming civic centers and other - landmarks for “Jacqueline Kennedy’’as. well as her late husband. * ' ■; • STATUE FOR SHERIDAN A case in poirit is that of General Philip Sheridan, the dashing Civil War hero who at death left a young widow ancL three lovely teen - aged daughters. None of them ever married, but continued to live at Sheridan eirdle where they could constantly see 'the status erected to “Papa.” .. ' '■ , ■ ----4R-——~~ .. Two of. the daughters are still living, and when asked why all all of them chose to remain unmarried, the elderly spinsters invariably reply: “Because We could never bear to give up the name Sheridan.” King FmIuimi Syndicate) . TO GET KENNEDY NAME-This is the new $10-miUion bridge linking Louisville, Ky., and Jeffersonville, Ind., spanning the Ohio River. It will be named the John F. Kennedy AS Photofax Memorial Bridge tomorrow, honoring the late President. The bridge is approximately one-(half mile long and has six Hanes. But- No Santa Claus Yule Joy Comes to Filipinos Go Home, You Drunk, but Turn Off Heat First! MANILA (AP) - Christmas Eve, for children here, is a time for'midnight Mass rather than for Santa Claus and Christmas stockings. 1 The custom-is for the children to wear only brand new clothes to this Mass. Nine days before Christmas, chtldrenarearousedineariy morning darkness to attend the Misa de Gallo, mass of the cock's crow. Emerging from church, they find, vendors waiting with still warm cakes to eat on the way home. ir it it Coming home from Christmas Eve Mass is again an occasion for eating—usually pastries, del-icacies made of rice, and hot chocolate. MANY GIFTS But although Santa Claus is generally not knoWh, it doesn’t mean children go without gifts. All through the Christmas season—which extends to Jan. 6—children visit relatives and godparents to collect presents. This is particularly true on Christmas Day, when every-one i» either at home, receiving g u e s i s or out visiting themselves. Each household prep ares plenty of food to provide for neighbors and relatives dropping in. 4 4 ' * In many towns a program of entertainment is held in the plaza. / In sorm areas lpageants are held Christmas Eve, With woman representing the Virgin Mary going from ho.use to house in search of a place to stay. DECORATIONS ' Christmas decorations a r concentrated in the churches and the homes. The favorite home decoration Is a star-shaped lantern made of paper and lighted from within with bulbs. Some towns make huge elaborate lanterns each year which are carried through the streets In colorful processions. OPEN EVERY NIGHT TILL 9 UNTIL CHRISTMAS EXPERTS CAMERA SHOP It W. Nunn it. ■ * ! M »4411 Christmas is also the time to go home. It Is a time for family reunions, a time when aiil relatives, rich or poor, gather together under one roof. CHATTANOOGA GD- When Police Lt. W. T. Nelson spotted ah Apartment house fire and ran inside to rouse its sleeping occupants, not everybody appreciated his efforts. (hie apartment dweller sleepily ” yelled, “go home, drunk!” Thanks to Nelson,'nobody was injured. _________-FOAM ZIPPERED CUSHIONS NO MONEY DOWNk $8.00 P«r Mo. RECLINER I AIRS OF cutfc 100% nylon * olor*. Relax a *39“ OPEN 9a.m. to 9p.m. Vv, 44”' I ' Mgj^high 1 flpl 1 r®Ai TERRIFIC DINETTE BUYS! BURN PROOF TABLE $00 ' No HONEY DOWN VJITI 36 Months to Pay! ■* FREE PARKING AT REAR OF StORE I MODERN BOOKCASE 14" 1 HE— wjMMWMEm SWIVEL CHAIR 21* Uose really cuts the cos tof Christmas ' Rose Guarantees: NO LOWER PRICES ON FAMOUS WATCHES YOUR MONEY BACK IF YOU CAN BUY ANY VyATCH FOR LESS WITHIN 30 DAYS! ZLI Compare prices, trade-ins or guarantees anywhere on any nationally famous watch. Because Rose is Michigan's, largest jeweler with 11 -store buying power, we can guarantee "NO LOWER PRICES ANY* WHERE!" Take your choice of such famous names as Bitlova, Elgin, Gruen, Benrus, Longlnes, Wlttnauer, Waltham, Hamilton and others! Choose now for Chrlstmasl Any watch, regardless of age Or condition, Is worth dollars more whan you trade in ^ now at Rose! BELL A HOWELL MOVIE SET with 3-Lens Turret Camera and Remote Control Projector F/1.9 3-lens turret camera with electric eye meter plus F/1.6 lens projector plus lens cleaner plus leather camera carrying case. ROSE REGENCY PERFECT DIAMONDS with exciting new "Contour Brilliance1*.. a unique new concept in^iamond ring styling! Capture the starry magic Christmas with the one gift that lasts forever... a Regency Perfect diamond from Rose. Only a perfect diamond can say "I Love You" so well. There's something special about its unmarred splendor and. brilliance that's forever exciting, forever a source of pride. All the romantic thoughts of love are expressed beautifully in a Regency Perfect diamond. Choose hers now at Rose I * A. Pgrfsct diamond. In Florentine finish 14 karat gold. 2 matching side diamonds. J. Fiory porfoct solitairo In 14 karat gold sotting, matching wedding band optional axtra. C. Brilliant flawless diamond in 14 karat gold Contour Star sotjlng for addod lustra and firs. INCLUDES CAMERA CASE AND LENS CLEANER AT NO ADDITIjONAL C05TI Sit anywhara In tha room jtemoto control turns light* on or off, itarti and itopi projector, loo EE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1963 best way to find his favorite sweater is to find it at his favorite store . . . Arnold Palmar 60% alpaca/40% wool alpaca stitch cardigan with ball sleeves and rib-knit wal$t. S| M, L, XL. 19.95. ■Robert’ Bruce brushed wool blazer-striped cardigan. V-neck 6-button front* and rib-knit. waist, 13.95: Jantzen's brushed knit 65% rno-nair/35% 'wool V-neck cardigan with 2 lower pockets and ski-styled wristlets;. S, M. L, XL. 1.9.95. All-wool alpaca stitch cardigan with intarsia design, straight bottom front, rib-knit back, button side vents, S,. M, L, XL. 18.95. Robert Bruce machine wash and dry lambswool cardigan. Styled with rib-knit Waist and 2 lower pockets, S. M, L) XL. 14.95. Pure alpaca 2-ply 6-buttdn V- Oleg Cassini Imported all-wool neck cardigan wlt|i bell slaavai, rlb-knlt waist and 2 lower pockets, S, M, L, XL, III. Italian cardigan. Waffle weave, self collar, Inset pockets, S,. M, L, XL. 42.10. ■*'. bphhmmH WKKKm Jantzen's virgin wool - Canadian cardigan. Classic 6 button V-nfck style with 4-color vertical stripes, S. M, t, XL. 14.95. Puritan Brooks in bhn-lon cardigan with contrast panel front, 2 lower! pockets and rib-knit waist, 38-46. 15.95.1 .., All-wool blazer striped cardigan with straight bottom front, ‘ rib-knit back, Jsutton side vents, i S, l, XL. 1|,95. All-wool alpaca stitch 6-button V - neck cardigan jwith /lb-knlt waist and two lower:pockets, S, M, 4, XL. 15,95. r White Stag all-^ool zip-front ski , cardigan. Tube knit, reglen1 shoulders, likl-styled waist and cuffs. S, M, L, XL. f IT. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, DECBMHER-ftrT985 Open Daily 10-10; Sun, 12-7 Realistic Christmas FLOWERS Poinsettias, holly, pine sprays and glitter fern of fresh-looking vinyl. Holiday flowers to last from year to -year. Fine-Recorded Christmas LP ALBUMS Christmas. ORama! Enjoy Christmas Sing Along, Rudolph, Night Before Christmas, Organ and Chimes, many more on 33Vh monaural or stereo. . ' frnrx^p,, | y„ , ■WH***^ -(,<■ i r r j"i ■■ SAVE AT K-mart ON WRAPPINGS^ TAGS! 4 20” ROLLS IR CUTTER BOX 3-201 Foil Rolls «Te 6 BIG 26” WIDE ROLLS OF PAPER Gay Holiday Lights and CANDLES. ^—Christmas— Gift- Q-Rama! | .. The mellow glow of traditional candlelight... Welcome Lamp and cylinder candles . . . glitter-trim glass globes ... Pilgrim chimney lite. Jumbo size, a total of 528” — for those hard - to -wrap packages! In a variety of holiday prints. 6-26” Foil Rolls 68c 200 PCS. FOLDERS SEALS, TAGS, CARDS Festive, finishing touches for your prettiest packages. An excellent value! 70-Pc. Set... 33c Eight 5/8"x96' on Spool! TIE RIBBONS Christmas --—Gift- O-Ramal ^ Tie a pretty package with gay two-tone, solid or tinsel stripe Christmas colors, r- 420 ft.. Thrift Pack curling ribbon 67c Box of 25 Gold 'or Gl itter YULE CARDS Christmas Gift- O-Ramal 77* "Our Policy - Satisfaction Guaranteed or your Money Cheerfully Refunded”! At Home For the Holidays! Snowy jll CAPE COD CURTAINS Pert pearl edge 3” ruffles march till around these charming colonial cafe curtains. Sparkling white drip-dry percale. Ruffled tie backs are included. Save! Matching Ruffled Valance, 52x11" ....... 86" .2.14 pr. ■ Gute as a Cageful of Canaries! BIRD GAGE TIER SET 30x36" ea. side Trimly tailored white polished cotton tiers, 30x36” each, flaunt a row of gay red or gold bird cages. Matching 54x10” valance included. * COTTON TERRY BATH TOWELS COTTONTERRY YULE TOWELS 1964 CALENDAR COTTON TOWELS Bid 20x40” Cannon Iriwtl* In ohnlos’ of lovoly color*: Wash Cloths 16c 38' 10x27” low*)* In r> now ChrlntniMH, iihI* lento. “PnltlHStUx”, “SlinlU A New Year liny", «le. rollon. V* wood < ‘ » Mama A 15” cloth doll with cloth body and screened face. Yarn hair and a removableprint dress. :• 9” wheels. White enameled masonite body. ' "* IIS OurPolicy - Satisfaction Guarantaad or your Money Choorfully Refunded”! 11 Finis Quality Whispering Rose jt ' > DINNERWARE 16 & 52 Pc. Sets SLuJX. J/223L-. Handy All-Metal, Portable TV BED TRAY In lb. big*. Holiday 12-os. boxes of delicious eoeonut brittle with scads of peanuts. Get plenty forChristmus In butterfly or wheat patterns. 12Wxl7”. Good for TV viewing, bed or as Now you cun have this exciting dinnerware at K*Mart’s discount price, Also available in open stock. 100 ONLY “ROLLER PERM” Cocktail, End Tobies at a Bargain - 3-Piece Set Kit has neutraliser , powder, end papers, women who want smooth hair styles. It's the Ideal Jiehnunent for todays 'ashlnits. Marvelous cocktail table, 18"x36"xl5” and two end tables I6,,x24”x^7”. Bt-us. ferrules, M|hogany. Charge it. * • , GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWQOD THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1963 SAVE ON ROBBER FOOTWEAR AT MEN'S-BOYS* 4-BUCKLE a ARCTICS I CHILDREN'S THERMO WflFS ZIPPERS W^T INSULATED HUNTING BOOTS 4.47 WOMEN’S PLASTIC BOOTS . . 1.97 Thefre Shopping Barnett’s More This Year Than Ever-Giving More Things to Wear-and Barnett’s Have Just Want! Here’s What to Give That Favorite Guy! Jk Custom Tailored Suits and Superli Topcoats \ Tailored by Rocklyn They're So Good Looking—The Look and Feel of Luxt Such a large selection It will be easy to get just what he wants. Rocklyn Clothes hove a notional reputation for their smart styling, meticulous tailoring and exclusive, patterns. They are clothes you will wear with eaje. comfort dnd prtdepl So easy to find fust whclt you want" In your exact size from this grand selection. SWEATERS by Jnntsen and Robt. Bruce e Bavarian Zippers • Canadian Cardigarft • Mohairs-Wools-Orlons • Pullovers, too ' Sold Exclusively at Barnett’s :Spectrum Sharkskin SUITS PRICED AT One of the worlds finest sharkskins. In sparkling new colors. : Sold exclusively ft ; Barnett's . i !JTawswstoPATI k.6M°NTHSTO^ New Ivy, continental and pis ed styles In •smurt colors t lilmitl perfectly with yi 150 NORTH SAGINAW-Next to Stan fust say CHARGE IT! Deaf Dog 1st Patient ANN ARlBOR f® — Pudgie js a black Labrador Retriever who never has barked — because she doesn’t know what a ____ Jbark sounds like. ■ • - Pudgie, completely deaf, is the first patient To be admitted to foe new multimilUon-dollar Kresge Hearing Research Ip- _________ .★. • i ~ -ft ________J. , r She is probably the first dog ever to have available a full . staff of consultants — otologists, physiologists, anatomists, , ptyci/»icta and Seohnioianf)—her own dutlm and tlm facilities of one of the nation’s major hearing research centers. Here condition is nnnsiial for a dog, but relatively common in humans. U. of M. scientists hope to come a few steps closer to solving similar hearing problems in people - through detailed tests with Pudgie. /________° _ . /j ‘‘Hopefully, this information may have a direct bearing on our future ability to help human beings,” said Dr. Merle Lawrence, institute director. Pudgie was a gift to Sandi Forster, 16, of Ann Arbor, Who ' offered the dog to the institute when she first realized her pet : was deaf. ★ ★—^ The puppy’s response to hand signals, while failing to an-swer voice commands, and the subsequent realization that she —t-—never borkedrtipped off the owners that something was wrong. Area Citizens Asked to Public Hearing DETROIT (AP) *-*- The Commission on Legislative Appor-tionment camehgre today to hear the views ofarea citizens on how to set up fair districts^ mittee^wlll act before Congress for electing state lawmakers. The commission,/which winds up hearings at Lansing Friday, started its tour Monday in the Upper Peninsula. dr * In Grand Rapids Wednesday, the eight-member commission was urged to leave detals' of drawing district lines “» technicians that you’re going to have to hire/' Grand Rapids Mayor Stanley Davis said he saw no “reason for flyspecking” on particular locations. He called for “logic* and common sense’’'ip the group’s approach to -the task. URGES STUDY Mrs. Dorothy Judd of Grand Rapids, a member of the Constitutional Convention’s local government committee, also urged, the commission to .concentrate on the bread Outlook on problems before it. “Metropolitan problems are local in nature and stem from provincial thinking and bad state laws on incorporation and annexation,” she said. She urged action in “the direction of equal legislative districts.” . Sen. Milton Zaagth^t, R-Grand Rapids, criticized a districting plan which would cut Kent County from two state senators tg one as “an impossible situation.’ He termed unfair an allotment of three senate districts to the Upper Peninsula. Zaagman said the Upper Peninsula had a population of 50,000 less than that of Kent County. Senate Unit Seen Acting on Edwards WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. am J. Ervin, D-N.C., a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, expressed confidence Wednesday that the com- adjoums on the nomination of Detroit Police Commissioner George Edwards to be a judge of the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals. . ■ . -. ★ . ★ * . Ervin is chairman of a judiciary subcommittee that has held hearings of Edwards’ nomination. 4 During Wednesday’s dosed session of the, full committee,’ Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., asked that the group act on the nomination^ without waiting for a decision by the subcommittee. ANOTHER MEETING But Ervin said he would like to have his subcommittee first hold another meeting. He promised that the meeting would be held promptly and- in time to permit action by the Senate before Congress quite,'novk expected shortly before Christmas. ★ * * • J If Edwards’ nomination by tiie late President Kennedy is not confirmed before the end .of this sessjon of Congress, It would have to be resubmitted by Pres-ident Johnson after the second j session gets under way in Jan-wy. ....... , ★ ★ Hart said he does not believe this will be needed and predicted the Senate would confirm Edwards* nomination before it quite. But should Congress not act in time, Hlart said he is confi-. dent Johnson will resubmit the I name of Edwards for the post. Residents Protest to LBJ J 'Cape Kennedy'Opposed I CAPE CANAVERAL Off)—The city of Cape Canaveral and the Greater Coroa Chamber of Commerce don’t like the idea of renaming this cape ott .the Florida East Coast, and President Johnson is going to hear aboiif it. | The town council and the chamber adopted similar resolutions yesterday opposing the change. Copies went to the President, Florida’s congressional delegation, Gov. Farris Bryant and Florida Atty. Gen. Richard Ervin. # it It’s all right to defelghate the missile center in honor of . tlje late President, the council said, but it doesn’t want the cape renamed. £ ' " The town council questioned legality of either the President or governor “renaming a mass of land which has borne a name of historical significance for more than 400 years.” „„ Spanish navigators first named Cape Canaveral—Spanish foT reed field or cane field. aaBSBiii HEALTH CHECK-A $1,000 check, repre- dent, to_WiUiam Polkinghorn, potentate of senting three years of fund-raising efforts by,^Detroit Moslem Shrine. The money will-be Pontiac Shrine Club jyaaj*centiy-preseSed used to aid crippled children ^ theJ3iicagtr by (frorrneR) club Secretary C. R. Keaihley Shrine hospital. • and Warren Hargraves, Pontiac Shrine presi- ' ____ ARCHIE BARNETT SID BARNETT visit oitr. Sleep Shoppe featuring' famous SEALY mattresses in all sizes and shapes} Including KING SIZE! EXTRA LONG! QUEEN SIZE! J ROUND! House of j&ehrooms 1662 JS, TELEGRAPH RD. j, jnii South of Orchard Lake ltd.-Next Door to Moll* -PONTIAC ' I tally 9, Sat. ill Si80 PHONE 8384400 Free Gift Certificates Get your FREE tickets now at Barnett's ... no .purchase necessary. ' ■ A GRAND SELECTION EXACT SLEEVE LENGTH -ARROW* SPORT SHIRTS Now colors, plaids, chock! and solids In his exact sleeve length! A perfefct fit'and It's an ARROWS - Give Him Hit Favorite I -ARROW* I DRESS I' SHIRTS j Whites and colors in all ;j the popular stylet. Just :• get his correct size. * PARK FR r—Tkh, s»omp«d Offict •‘“'cho,. ,*69® ng” y i JTWi, memf. w.ssa IW. — .. enjoy It nowl It's a real buy I You can charge It, pay after Christmas. Remember — You Don’t Need the CtuV He’ll Appreciate One of These Great Dunbrook Fine Wool Topcoats LUXURIOUS IMPORTS, SAXONY HOMESPUNS AND VELOUR* They’re So Good Looking-He’ll Love You for It Men, tell the ladles' you want one fof Christ- AS RTfe l*WSf — Or, jbejter yet, buy on« for yourself and K 9 G.P re OE .www -- | FOR THE MAN WHO WANTS THE VERY BESTlf He WdtitH Famous . Wonted Tex -i Look! Hard Finish All Wool Sharkskin TWO-PANT sots The Gift He'd Really Like! SMART DUNBROOK SPORT COATS All Year 'ROUND WEIGHTS. Choice colors Sizest regular's, longs, ihorti ondstcuts Reg. $70.00 Value *29 v Itfi u Pair of Phene Smart HAGGAR SLACKS #12°* the Pontiac rress, Thursday, December 5,i963 Poinsettia Lasts With Good Care Favorite flower for Christmas giving is the poinsettia. It'S especially appreciated because it lasts1 beyond the Christmas seafeon — but only if proper care is taken. The poiasettia loves warmth and humidity. KEEPS FOODS HOT — This handsome tray keeps foods hot, makes serving easier and with an unheated trivet, too. By Salton Hotray. and at a safe distance from TUn; |r:nr. Turns Ann *IA extreme heat or cold. Set it on lhai Turns Age 36 a tray of pebbles and add water BANGKOK (if) - The ruling up to the level of *the pebbles monarch of pro-Western Thai* but not touching the pot. land, King Bhumibol Adiilyadej, ' ■ ★ ★ * : , was 36 years old today. A week- As the water evaporates, it in-4 long Buddhist celebration ends creases the moisture in the air. i Saturday when the king will be Add more water daily to. keep I carried through the streets of * constant level. i Bangkok , - Now union mombtri in Fontioe can Share the benefits enjoyed by union members in Chicago, Detroit, Flint and Lansing. If you ore a member of any union, this sale is for you! / This sale sponsored by United AutO/Workers locals, AFL-CIO. If you are a member of any e Admission by Union Card or Badge only. This sale Is not open to the general public. Pontiac yoo may shop at this sale. a full money-back guarantee. SPECIALS FOR FRIDAY; SATURDAY and SUNDAY DECEMBER 6,7 pnd 8 ONLY! The fighting infantry game. Based on the TV network show. BABY PEBBLES Flintstone's adorable new daughter. 14" high, porky MW The luckiest teenage doll In tho world that's me in pny basic bluo and, white play suit with white sneakers. The doll you love, to dress, complete assortment of clothes to fill out her wardrobe available. every coaf is your guatantee of the utmost In quality I 2*9 • Original price ticket on every coatl • Sizes for regulars, shorts and longs! • There's never a charge for alterations .at Robert Hall! ' Plenty Free Parking „ | "OPEN SUNDAYS IS NOON to A P. M." ---- IN PONTIAC, 200 North Saginaw St. —- IN CLA^KSTON-WATIRFORP on Dixie Hwy. Just North of Wotorfo^d Hill UNION TOY SALE OUR ENTIRE STOCK COATS OF IMPORTED REG. 34.88 REDUCED TO 121 WAYNE ST. at WARREN — PONTIAC OPPOSITE OAKLAND COUNTY JAIL Open Daily, 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Sunday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m, Lgji Ml wMPi Jyf nn J Sturdy / LL f Oenstruotlon I LsrislI’W f Mardi Oral THIS 1’0'NTIAC itKS& ?T11 UltSDAY. I^ECEMBiSR i>, 1963 Police Want Your Photo on driver PemtiY LANSING (AP)-Your picture may, be on your driver’s license ' soon, if the Michigan Chiefs of Police and the Michigan Sheriffs Association have their way. ~~ The tWT groups Wednesday. announced they will campaign - i... — $09.50 2x8, 8' to 20' lengths ............... .... 03.50 2x10, 8' to 20' lengths ................... 03.50 DOUGLAS FIR PRECUT STUDS Construction & Better, 25% Standard, 10-15%'Utility ,2x4, 7'8%" long........... ...................$07.50 Lauan Econoply.. , Rustic Birch o Birch, Coral Khaya . Cordovan Khaya. Silver Oak...... Clear Cherry.... Clear Walnut.... DRY WHITE FIR Construction and Bettor, Kiln Dried - ... 25%-30% Standard 2x4, all length*, full 1 %" thick .......$103.50 LOOGEPOLE PINE STUDS Construction A Better, 23% Standard 10-15% Utility 2x4, 8' long, kiln driod...................$85.50 MINATILE PREFINISHED TILEB0AR0 Made of VS" tampered hard board with : an attractive gold panel, baked • enamel tintacs tnot tailit* warpotf*. PINE SASH DOORS Grad* A - Olaitd - 1 Lift 24x64x146 . . . $10.05 24x64x146 .. . $1|.M 24x64x146 . . . 11.50 24x64x146 . . . 15.85 34x6-1x146 . . . 11.85 14x84x146 . . . 15.26 PINE DISTINCTION DOORS Throe largo panel*, plain or with fop panel glazed. Toxic Treated. $23501 3-0x6-8-146". BIRCH INTERIOR FLUSH DOORS ' 146” Thick -"A” Top Quality Doors 1 -0x64 1 -4x6-8 1- 6x64 . 14x6-8 . 1 -10x64 2- 0x64 . 2-2x6-8 . 2-4x6-8 . 2-6x6-8 . 2- 8x6-8 . 3- 0x64 . court's Democratic Action party, will be the winner. • ★ ★ ★ With 2.1 million of about 3 million votes tabulated, Leoni had 639,387 votes to 413,644 for his nearest rival, Rafael Caldera of the Social Christian party. Humorist's Father Dies BUFFALO, N.Y, (AP) — Edward L. Schulefand, 62, father of comedian Dick Shawn, died Wednesday of a heart attack. Schulefand, owner of a men’s wear store, was bomim Buffalo. The greatest of all the boars df Alaska is the brown bear, sometimes also known as the Kodiak bear . StiOP 9:30 O.III. 'tit 11 p.m.l P Fu M • DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORES MW Mu M nig • SELLING FIRST QUALITY ONLY illNTElTlE 24 MONTH NATIONWIDE GUARANTEE! MIRABOARD BAKED ENAMEL HAROlOABO Available In throe pattomsi Cherry Chateau, Cnorry Roma, Cherry Victoria. W—4x8' Panel*........................ $032 j $092 BUILDING SUPPLIES COPPER WATER LINE Vi" "M” Copper, rigid, 20’ length* ... .... $ 2.30 %" "M" Copper, rigid, 20’ length* ..., 3.6S 1" "M" Copper, rigid, 20' length* .... .... 8.70 jl V*" "M" Copper, Rigid, 20' length* 8.06 Vt" "L” Copper Rigid, 20' length*.. 3.18 %" "L" Copper Rigid, 20' length* .... 4.80 96" "L" Copper toft, 60' Ceil* 6.0B Vi" "L" Copper Soft, 60' Coll* 9.86 Vt" "K" Copper Soft, 60' Coil* 12.60 V*" "K" Copper Soft, 60* Coll* .... 21.TS 1" "K" Copper Soft, 60' Coil* .... 20.68 : INTERCOM RADIO AND SPEAKING SYSTEMS ‘' An Involudbl* aid In performing daily activitie*. Monitor !; the nurtory, fho tick room and far away room* while the :: : radio ll on, or have p room-to-room convocation. It 1* ij ; designed for quick, oa*y Installation. ! 8400/8401 AM............ ........ *50W!| I 8400/8407 AM & FM.............. MIRAPLANK WALL PANELING Itlamln* Plattic-Flnltjtad Wall ■noling. 3 Wood Flnl«h*t $020 i"—16"xB* Panyit.... V MIRAPLY PREFINISHE0 PLYWOOD PANELING Random-Plank-Stylo 3 Pattern* - Cherry, Walnut, and Oak %"-4'x ........... $0” HOT WATER BOILERS You need no longer epond hour* toloctlngand aitombling accoMorio*, puzzling out wiring diagram*, control*, burner and circulator. That* boiler* are ready to hook up to* wafer, go* and electrical lino*. Boiler lit mad* of cait Iron - tho lifetime metal. Thli* boiler is *poclflcally do-tignod and, therefore, deliver* tho meit heat out of ovary fuel dollar.,Wot ba»# conttruction permit* intfalla-tlon on wood floor* In now and modernized building*. Go* Fired (Nature! Go*) Extended Jacket Input 11 5,000 BTU.. Oil Fired Fluih Jacket Output 83,300 BTU.... For Tanklott Coll.Add $21.60 BASEBOARD RADIATION Cabinet, Element and Damper 3'.................................$4.05 4'...................................5.40 5'.................... ..............6.75 6'.................* *315,# $383" 109": ■........................8.10 8'........... ................10.80 BASEBOARD DIFFUSER - Forced Air Heat 24”..........$2.18 48” .. ...$3.75 YOUR COMPLETE BUILDING SUPPLY CENTER ON HIGHWAY M-53-1 Va-MILE SOUTH OF ROMEO PHONE Ll/lMIR-BUILOINO SUPPLIES. PLUMBIN0- HEATINQ ELECTRICAL ..... 752-3501 752-3604 HOURS ItM to Stic Monday-Friday Till It 4iM lalurday BRAND NEW 100% NYLON SNOW or REGULAR all oif one low prke! 600 x 13 BLACK TUBELESS BLACKWALL full TYPE ' 2 For 4 For 670xl5~~22.88~~43.88 710x15_...25.88...49.88 760x15..28.88..55.88 600x16™ 25.88..49.88 BLACKWALL TUBELESS 2 For 4 For 650x13^13.38—45.88 750x14..25,88.„...49.88 800xl4~~29.88~~57.88 670x15—25.88—49.88 PMf f MOUNTING A ROTATION except pontiac store f'KClC FOR WHITEWALLS, ADD 2.501 BIG SAVINGS ON OTHER SIZES AND QUALITIES! SNOW OR REGULAR TIRES 16.88 18.88 T^TioiBSl «7»xi5 J, ~..«*HW*I»utcK row......»'"• 50x14. ^ rVtimG BLACK TUBELESS..dL for Ixtra-doop, 90 A.M. TP 11 P.M. DAILY SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 8 P.M. * the; Pontiac, press, Thursday, ^ace^ber 5,%^ Old lady Caf s Meow kitten at Heart Publisher, 90, Dies By HAL BOYLE ' new YORK (AH)—Cats, like women, rarely reveal their age. They wouldn’t tell the. truth even if you put their paw on the Sa lt is 1 don’t i kndw for cer- j tain how old La-j dy Dottie i was in an ... ^ / kittenhood when A\ jr she adopted our -family--* * omeJ years back, and ' began tarrule US BOYI.E With her iron Whims.. - r old La-m JO e Is, She 4^' T1* an ad-'W • vanced stage cf "*Z9)'J I would mess she is now in the equivalent of early middle age. Certainly she acts more like a spinster every -day. She has developed a bad case of xenophobia, or fear of strangers,- Unlikea Spinster. she doesn’t look under her bed for strange men before retiring. She merely runs and hides under" the sofa when a strange man enters the apartment, and usually stays there until he. leaves. ‘ .. BE GOOD Formerly she liked to escort me into the hall when I went to work, and stand there gravely waiting until the elevator had whisked me down. Looking at her I sometimes had the eerie feeling she was a kind of fur-covered, four-footed wife, silent-“ftr^lit®=m^,t<^NouMvoEk- hard all day like a nice little husband, earn me a good living, and be sure to get home early.” Lately, however, Lady Dottie hardeclined to go into the hall. She merely follows me to the door, gives a ' farewell rob against my legs and walks away. • ‘v\ ■ ■ ^Jtfc . / Apparently she has lost dearly'all curiosity about the outside world. Now and then she. Is stirred to a tail-lashing jungle excitement when an-impertinent sparrow perches on.our windowsill. But for the rn^st part she seems content tp .be an indoor cat, taking our apartment as her placid place of empire. Maturity nas changed her in other ways. As a kitten she was so clumsy I called her “Miss Clobberfoot.” She awoke us In the - night knocking over ash trays, turning over lamps and skidding back and forth on a plastic runner in our hallway like a baseball player sliding lido third base. about their pets’ tricks. The only trick Lady Dottie ever ■....... i iccr tm learned' was, when accidental^ shut into the bathroom, to leap up on’the washstand and turn the doorknob with both paws, sometimes opening it. . Now she sleeps most of the night quietly, or perches on the sofa and gazes out at the lighted tugboats plying the East River and thinks long dark philosophic cat thoughts. She used to reach out and bat Ann, or. the two children down hall if they teased her or tried Jo. fondlehe^too^muehrNowshe puts up with their petting with a regal air of resignation. When we try to get her to do this trick for friends, however, die merely stands behind the door and plaintively meows for release. Cats, like children, never show off when you want them to. TASTE She must have scratched up at least $i,00^-worth of furni-ture. The only thing she hasn’t put a claw mark on is the burlap-covered scratching post we Most, cat lovers like to brag bought for'her. That is now the best looking1' piece of in our home. ' ■ My wife, Frances, sometimes wearieg of preparing Lady Dot-tie’s meals. -“I must have cut up and warmed enough beef kidney and frozen codfish for that cat to fill a freight car,” shersays. But when I remark that cate are more trouble than husbands Frances replies: “YeS, in some ways. But on the other hand, they are more intelligent conversationalists. When I talk to Ladi ■ tears me. That’s more than I can say for some husbands.”— I guess she must have been referring to one of the neighbors. I hear that guy never listens to his wife. - --i~...an*- zines and onetime owner of[ the J0|U yp af Mackinac Madison, Wis., State Journal, __ Tv......... | bought the Tulsa Tribune •. then known as the; Tulsa Demo-. erat—in 1919. He was .born in - Chicago. ST: IGNACE (AP) - November toll collections on the Mackinac Bridge were $419,200, the highest since November,. 1957; -t when the -bridge had just opened, foe bridge authority x porte. The authority sa 1,162,621 vehicles have crota the bridge so far tjhis year,1 per cent more than during t same period last year." New Italian Cabinet Takes Over Today ROME (AP) - Italy’s new center-left government takes office todffy, bringing the Socialists into foe cabinet for the first time in 16 years. Premier AMo Mora and his cabinet were to be sworn in by President Antonio Segni to become Italy’s 25th post-Fascist government. 1''Tv” -• Formation of foe four-party coalition ended a political crisis that began last April when foe ruling Christian Democrats suffered a setback and foe Communists gained a million votes in foe election of a new parliament. For 13 months before foe election, Christian Democratic Premier Amintore Fanfani headed a. center-left government supported by foe Socialists but foe latter stayed out of foe cabinet. The election results strengthened a Socialist faction that wanted the party to return to its traditional alliance with Italy’s big Communist party. Socialist leader Pietro Nenni finally brought the party back info alliance with foe Christian Democrats. OTHER PARTIES Other parties in the coaltion are Giuseppe Saragat’s Democratic Socialists and foe Republicans. They were foe other two-members of Fanfani's coalition. The new government is pledged to support foe. North Atlantic Treaty Organization in foreign affairs and to begin new economic planning. „ Moro, 47, a law professor and Christian Democratic leader, is expected to survive his first parliamentary test when he seeks' a vote of confidence next week. % The four parties together hold eats in foe Cham-es, a majority of ber of Deputies, a irfajority 141. Socialist .defections may reduce foe majority. , The Christian Democrats — Italy’s largest party — domin- Warns Raul Castro Army Eyes Presley Types MIAMI (UPI) — Cuban Armed Forces Minister Raul Castro Indicated’yesterday he wasn’t an Elvis Presley fan. He warned Cuban students that if they begin emulating foe long-haired, hip-twitching crooner, they would be inducted into foe army immediately. The younger brother of Caban Premier Fidel Castro, in an announcement broadcast over Havana Radio, said good students: would be given draft deferments like they are in the United States. “Those who don’t pass their courses for unjustifiable reasons, foe bums, those who misbehave, and foe Elvis Presley types .. . these are foe ones we shall call up for active military duty immediately.” ‘ ,d Whiskey. 65% Grain t^eutral Spirits ® 1963 Caiv#rt DSTCoTtouM*. Ky. TULSA, Okla. (APO-Richard Lloyd Jones Sr.* 90, founder and publisher of foe Tulsa Tribune, died Wednesday., Jones, a for-meT~editoF--ofinationai maga- ROBERT HAIL A huge selection of DAVCf ate the 26-member cabinet with 16 posts, including the premier- ship. The Socialists nave six memblrs. the Democratic So- members, the Democratic Socialists three and foe Republicans one. 1 ’ Nenni, who returned his Stalin Peace Prize to the Russians after they crushed foe 1956 Hungarian revolt, was named deputy premier. Segni accepted the resignation Wednesday night of Premier Giuseppe Leone, who formed; a caretaker government last June to steer foe budget through parliament. CLOTHING 251OFF Original price tickets on every garment! Look for the red tags on this sale merchandise! 7.99 to 13.99 OUTERWEAR REDUCED TO... 5.99 to 10.49 14.95 (to •25.95 FALL SUITS REDUCED TO... 11.21 to i9.46 ORIGINAL PRICE TICKETS ON EVERY GARMENT SvW.' ,1. w *■ O long-wearing fabrics in the newest fall shades, juniors and preps, sizest) to 18. wools, meltons, poplins; models include suburbans, surcoats and zip-front parkas. UU4V VT muaavjy swhvJi Forfrlonds,youm»y prefer something a bit fancier—especially since the decanter doesn’t icost you any extra. 7 ,10.88 to 14,88 2.99 to 7.99 SPORTCOATS ■ SLACKS REDUCED TO... REDUCED TO... 8.16 to 11.16 2.24 to 5.99 pure wools, wool blends; ’ juniors 6 to 12; preps 13 to 18; huskies 12 to 18. i wools, rugged cottons, long-1 wearing rayon gabardines, 1 LOOK FOR THE RED TAGS AND SAVE 1040 OPEN SVflV NIQHT 9,30 Plenty of Free Parking ^ * "OPEN SUNDAYS 12 NOON to 6 P. M." —- IN PONTIACi 200 North Saginaw St. - IN CLARKSTON-WATERFORD on Dixie Hwy. Just North of Waterford Hill B—14 THE I OWtIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECBMfiEtl 5,1963 Av.< ■*??> VB '.** IN Wife bf Dallas Policeman Widow May Get $200,000 DALLAS (fll — Police pre-^lict donations to the family -of slain policeman J. D. Tip-pittrmay reach $200,000 when a mountain-sized stack of mail ^rfe processed^: and three auditors work daily to keep track of money arriving for Mrs. Tippit and her three children^. Hipskind supervising the tabulation, said, me final count is "weeks and “It’s getting more amazing -[wini|iu menthr ww — every day,” police Lt. V. K: T Hipskind said yesterday. ------- Thirty miles west, a young Fort Worth housewife- reported a fund to* the widow and small daughters of.ao; cused presidential assassin Lee Harvey Oswald has grown to morcthan $6,000. - Tippit was killed while trying to arrest Oswald shortly after President Kennedy was killed Nov. 22. _____HAVEN’T MET Mrs. Shirley B. WlfflamsonV • ■ tii, said ■slw h«s not met Ma- rina Oswald, the blonde Russian-speaking widow of Oswald, but communicates with her through the secret serv- — jjWr------------*-----_ ’ ______....... Contributions .have come as far as Hawaii, she said, “and' they just keep coming in. I’m glad to do what I can — that girl and her children need help.” > . it if it • l After night club owner Jack Ruby shot Oswald, Mrs. Williamson said she looked at her own four children and thought: “What will happen ^to-his little kids?” She de^ elded to start-a-fund for the Oswalds. . Vei*y few letters have been critical1 of her decision, she said. KEEPOUG TAB In Dallas, five policemen The flow of letters! dwindled from 1,000 Tuesday to 500-yesterday, hutjtoere. still were 14 unopened mail sacks. Hipskind estimated they held 'Up to 45,000 letters. He said it is probable the fund will reach $200,000. On deposit aireadyls $81^774. In addition to the contflbu- LBJ Isn't Prisoner of HisOffice WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Johnson has told his old Texas colleagues that he isn't going to be -a prisoner in the White House. The President made a surprise, 45-minute visit yesterday to a weekly luncheon of the Texas congressional delegation at-the Capitol. He told the legislators that be would not stay behind the walls of the White House. Rep J Jim Weight, D-Tex., said . Johnson recounted a'.story told ‘ a* the time Harry S. Truman became president. . ★ * * The late speaker Sam Rayburn was reported to have told Truman,/“Now, Harry, they’re goingJO try to put you behind a wall down there at the White House, and shut you off from anyone’s ideas but theirs. , They’ll try to tell you you’re smaller than anyone else. Now, Harry, jtou and I know better than that.” NEGATIVE ADVICE •••/■- Johnson said he was advised against going to the lunch. “But I'm not going to be shut behind that wall,” the President was qdote^ as saying. “I know there’s no man In the Texas^ delegation who would hesitate to tell me when I’m wrong about something.” it iti i ' it ' , Johnson posed briefly for photographers in the doorway of the private Capitol dining room after9 the lunchon. Before he left, he gave a waitress $3 for his own and two companlona’.meals, Some Food for Thought Clues to giving come from closets. Colorful, matched sembles of garment bags, hat add other storage boxes please women of all ages, while men appreciate such orderly closet aids as wardrobe bags and shoe racks. ' Space expanders such as pullout door racks get a welcome in crowded closets. i They'll Bounct Off j SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Policemen who ride three-wheeled ^motorcycles in San Francisco will wear crash helmets from now on—to protect them from rock-throwing Juveniles who have been pelting police lately as they try to disperse crowds. . A large New* Yolk newspaper uses the equivalent of the not annual growth frpm 500,000 acres must be used. Shop Downtown Pontiac You'll Always Gut Mors in Participating Stored ^ONTl'lc PRESS, f'YHtJRSiDAY,. DECEMBER gf 1963 Be Ready for Christmas with Christmas Specials from the Friendly Center SANTA- IS AT TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER TO GREET ALL OF THE KIDS! ■ggg.ggjg. Dooms OF STORES! msm. Assorted necklaces, earrings to match, in colorful ceramics designed for wear with winter wools. Were $1 to $3,, . . NOW Pontiac, Birmingham, Royal Oak, Farndalo, Reohaiter North Hill Rim 1 Enchanting Gifts Attire them prettily with up-to-date Sleeptime, Dresstime and Playtitrim Fashions. Shop Our Beautiful Daddy’s Girl Dacron-Organza Party __Dresses 8" „ 14" Sizes 1 to 10 Christmas Gift Suggestions For The Home Sawer ADJUSTABLE DRESS FORMS Available in sizes, Jr. A, Bf C. Special ; $jj9s DRITZ ELECTRIC SCISSORS Cuts safely, quickly, accurately No tired fingers! A BEAUTIFUL SELECTION OF SEWING BASKETS WITH PLASTIC TRAYS •19. $U9B Danskin Stretch Pants 6Colors $095 $/|95 Sizes 2 to 14 ^ »" LOW-UOW s OhHHSS i IlflQ L 1109 KODAK | | “V Mmiilioieo Flashbulb, ANSCO CADET II IS SMART... SIRS YOUR ORDERS TV ™e CAMERA MART -TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER" 53 S. TILIORAPH, Pontiac, Mich. , FI 4-9367 Open Every Night Till I P.M. Until Christmas Design KITCHEN TERRY TOWELS Reg. 39° Now Only.,. 26° GRAYS ONLY... The theniht It yeilral The eheloe le Me with an Oimun'i am If ...I —- tauie/ • M By JANET ODELL Pjmttac Press Pood Editor It’s that lovely time of the year again .. mas cookie time. Forgotten are the cares of the world as you* mix, „ roll, cut and decorate, cookies. Any artistic talent comes to the fore and you turn ’ 1 . ' ★ ★ ★ Schedules are ignored; the kitchen upset; there’s! flour on the jend -of-your ?nose. But -you’re contented. You know you should stop, but you try just more recipe. Then vou remember an old favorite you can’t pass up. ★ ★ ★ But when you survey the boxes and canisters full of sugary goodies, it’s all worth while. ■ So ... dig out the star, tree and Santa cutters. Lay in a good supply of staples. And settle down to make your list of recipes. _________;.J__________'if -k i..* '____ Be sure to include the ones below: > THE&E MERRY COOKIES are made from authentic European recipes. They eggnog. Try all four:, French Sugar Strip*, German Filled Butter Flakes, round go with the Christmas greetings from those lands as .perfectly as with cool, creamy Spanish Sand Cookies and Italian Neapolitan Bars. fmm A GAY 4HRAY of cookies in your prettiest jars Is a del|fi^tfiulISii®ay’ tra3ftlrtn. catches the colors cd Christmas: Cherry Jewels, Snowball Meltawoys, ppicy (linger Crunchics. CHEERY JEWELS Buttered baking sheet 3 dozen Preheated 3SO* < Vi cup (1,stick) butter * 14 cup sugar 1 egg yelk. 1 teaspoon grated lemgn.rind.... 1 tablespoon lemon juice 1tobleipoon orange Juice I , . 1 teaspoon vanilla 114 cups sifted cake flour VLcup finely chopped pecans 18 candled cherries, halved cf-bonl udtitttKhrarid fluffy. ____^ , |...., I , ton juice, orange juice and =Vaiflijjfl7htrip»JL,lPcls----■^*by2)i lnches;' remove lb wire rack to cool. ( GERMAN FILLED\ BUTTER FLAKES Baking sheafs 2 dosen 2 medium slxe polaloes * 2 cups sifted flour 14 cup sifted confectioners sugar Cook potatoes until tender; cool and sieve (should measure .1 cup). Meanwhile sift together flour and confectioner* sugar; chill. Using a fork, mend chilled flour mixture and ^potato. Cut in butter. (Keeping all ingredients, cold result* jn Oaky cookyT) Shape Into ball; chill: several hours. On' lightly floured board roll dough* 1/4 inch thick. Out round* with IK inch diameter cutter. Using 3/4 inch diameter cutter, cut center' from qne-half of' the rounds so that a ring is formed. Place rounds, rings and centers on baking sheet: hake 10*12 minutes. Remove to wire rack to cool. When cool spread preservbsijon each round and top with ring and center, Notei Use Only law potatoes or leftover maghed potatoes, SPANISH SAND COOKIE# Buttered baking sheet 4-6 dosen tbihiafed 330* even - 1 cup (3 sticks) butter h , 1 cup sugar .. _ . 2 eggs 2 cups sifted flour 14 teaspoon ground claves 14 * teaspoon salt 2 tablespae Cream together butter and sugar; beat until light and fhiffy. Add vanijlla, egg and molasses; beat well. Sift together flour, baking soda, salt, cinnamon, ginger and clove*; ndd gradu* ally to creamed mixture. Chill several hours in refrigerator. ' Shape into balls 3/4 inch ih 'diameter. (If dough seems sticky, •mix in thoroughly s*n additional 1/4, cup flour. RcChill and .shape into balls.) Roll in sugar and place 2 inches .apart on baking sheet, Buke 7f18 minut(r'S. lVcmoye lu wiro rack, to opol. Cream together butter and sugar; beat until light and fluffy. Add eggs one at a time, boating well after each addition. Sift together flour, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, cardamom, doves and salt; gradually,add to creamed mixture. On lightly floured hoard, roll dough 1/3 Inch thick) cut into rounds with cutter IK inch in dlnlnotcr, Place orr baking sheet. Combine 2 tablespoon* sugar and 1/4 teaspoon cinnamon; sprinkle, on top of booklet!. Bake 12*15 minutes; remove to wlrd rack* to cotil. Decorate witK cherries if desired. ____ ITALIAN NEAPOLITAN BARS ZTiloIun ’ ” Preheated 373* oven H cup finely chopped walnuts '. • . ,s — baking soda „ , . . H sup finely chopp'd semkWeet ehecelate plecee . ...er; add sugar and egg; beat until fluffy. Sift together flour, baking soda, cinnamon, doves and laltj.gradually tamed mixture. Blend in walnuts and chocolate; chill. add to c; _ IIOHT DOllOHi 14 cup (I* stick) butter Vi cup sugar 1 agg yolk Vi Itetpeen vanilla V4 leaipeen almejtd extract 1-*up sifted flour' ■ < id'DR, = : ' i « , , , ' Cfnnm hntteri edd sugar, egg yolk, vanilla arid Mmorid extract: heat until fluffy. Sift together flouf, gait and bakjng soda* > grndriiilhHiidd'W Blond In water; raisins and cherries; chill.—,. , _—’ Tn Make Nneiwilltanm Line pan with waxed paper. Pack 1/2 dark dough Into pan; add light dough and pack firmly. Pnck lit rVmainmg uarKuougn. Chill overnight. Turn out of pan and remove waxed paper. Cue in thirds lengthwise, then cut in 1/4 inch shoes. l»«ke 10*12 minutes* remove to wire nick to cool , ,. ft • I soda W cup finely shepped rtililns 10 candled sherries, chopped V THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, D^CEMB^R, 5, 1963 ' C08Y Unbreokoble vinyl — fully jointed body, moving eyes, rooted ponytail hair style. Knitted turtle n#ck blouse and perpplo skirt, shook and seek*. 18.00 VALUE by IDEAL Dick Tracy Copmobile Motorized Police Car En|lish Style Baby DOLL CARRIAGE Give-A-Show Projector ALL MAPLE FINISH 4-POSTER REMCD’S MONKEY GUN: BIG 37" RACER SLED LH VALUE A eoei U.S. Air Fore* work horso. Big 22 inches long. Heavy duty plastic. 24 pc. play set. Fun and excitement. canopy-top,- fluffy mat-tees*. A gift every girt will cherish. er. Tommy gun loaded ,w|th play valwf. American Made ™ CHRISTMAS TREE ORNAMENTS MADE TO SELL AT MS __ ^ - Big heavy foliage. Natural look almost real in appearance. Perfectly safe, shock-proof. Fir*-militant for lights or roflactori. Made to Sell at 12.98 • Adjustable islf lock... Multi - colored C-6 bulbs. O'ol.d e |l, SVk'i C—2 "IIMf . Jfll * THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER) 5, 1963 Indian Headdress, Building Sticks Toys for Less Than $1 a Delight You don’t HAVE to give -oung children expensive toys. Many intriguing Joys are availatteatflorless: For instance, there is an.In-’ dian headdress kit with which a kid can make himself a feathery hat. And he can do it himself. The kit comes complete with a plastic headpiece in which /the youngster inserts hyed feathers in precut slots. • \ It also c o pi e s with fluff feathers and brads for side buttons. Glue can be used to make the headdress permanent. QLDING STICKS Then th«TliY>eHddiyilding sticks with which those agt four and up can construct towers, forts,'houses and free designs. The 53 self - locking sticks are 7% inches long. Each end is notched on three sides. Again the projects can be made permanent by gluing the sticks together. A plhatic windmill that doubles as a bank and bubble gum dispenser is colorful And amusing. PAPER DOLLS Even paper dolts have their modern, versions, instead of fpldingj paper clothes around the doll, today’s Susies and Janies press on the doll’s fashionable wardrobe. Hatboxes with cardboard handles contain sets showing little girls how to sew, knit or weave. Other toys useful in keeping a y< _ or long, dull printer afternoons are sets from which they can make Indian belts or head-bands; plaques and trays out of beads and shells; charm jewelry and mosaic tiles; Then for the junior soldier, come camouf lage helmets, 1 flashlights, canteens or mess kits. . ' " ■ WATER GUNS ’ The young general 'can take his pick from a variety of water guns, named for real .guns, the most expensive of which runs about half a dollar. Most come in assorted colors, and one revolver boasts a “glittering silver-plated snub nose.” , “Let’s pretenders” can let their imaginations roam as they play af being farmers or gas station attendants. ~ A farm set contains 14 pieces of plastic equipment including a vester. In the service station kit are 18 plastic pieces such as gas pumps, oil can racks, mechanic’s pit, some cars and trucks. BAKED IDEA — Both decorative and nourishing afe Christmas cookies, baked at home and placed in sparkling glass jars. } Aluminum Foil Useful for Making a Wreath Crush lengthwise a long length ot aluminum foiland the two ends together simply Shape top- into a wreath. Use weather - resistant ribbons and Christmas balls for this wreath and hang it on your door for a bright CHHstmas decoration. Direct Idea for Gift toa Man's Hobby Because of .the nation-wide trend to shorter working hours, more men have more spare time on their hands than ever before, and — even more to the point — most of them are miking much better use of it. / What is happening might almost be termed an “explosion’* in bobby activity, all ef which playd Ms part in sim-plifying the male side of the Christmas gifting picture. If a man has a hobby, hardly anything else will please him so much as' a gift mat will halp him' “rjd§" H. While, If ha doesn’t have a hobby, he’s probably ripe for one; and your gift canhelphimgetstarted. Hobbies are as diversified as men themselves, but practically all of them abound ip good gift-ing ideas. collectors or every kind from stamps and coins to old prints, maps, special recordings or tropical fish like to get new. specimens to add to their collections. “Sunday painters” always and canvases. A good portable ' kit might also be most welcome. . For the amateur craftsman In wood, leather or metal, new tools (hand or power) or a fresh supply of working materials are always in order, For the camera fan, there is usually some" special item of aqulpmant that he needs to help Him taka or process better pictures. And Jw-uan certainly always use more film! HAPPY LIFE Hi-fi fans live happily in a world of woofers, tweeters, ree-4ifie»rtttrhtable and pickups. They are seldom completely satisfied with their outfits. Constantly they have the yen to improve their results. gift Table, floor, wall, celling and pole types are at hand to adorn every home, every decor. And don’t forget desk lamps, popular with Mom apd Dad as well as young students. Here’s where your gift of a wanted component may be “right on the button.” - - d ★ ★ ★ Model building is a popular hobby for the deft-of-hand. Many specialize in ship*, motor icars, airplanes or machines. They may start with molded plastic kits to assemble, and proceed to the creation of their i own exact scale models, Jitart-ing with the raw materials. Lamp Light for Yole Glow Lamps cast a glow on the Christmas scene. Since lights have long been associated with the celebration of Christmas, lamps of all sorts _ nwke o particuiaily appi'uptlale||~ -HIGHESTPRICES l PAID— We Pick Vp FE 2-0200 JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS . WANTED BIG SHOE BUYS Children's , Ladies'-Men's LaOICS Slipper Buys Loafers Men’s Navy Shoes Boys’ Ladies’-Men’s Rubber Insulated BOOTS! Youths Boys Childrens Boots Men’s Arties • Bright mirror finish • Industrially ratod • U.L, approved WITH WONDERFUL LOW OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. to 10 PM.-OPEN SUNDAY 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. -NEW SHAVER! REMINGTON 25 348 cutting edges with fine hardest cqrbon steel cutters* Adjustable roller combs. ONLY... 7” RAM FURY SAW Regular 29.95 Value RAM FURY ELECTRIC • Featuring the meter that , won't bum out e Uiet itandord elm sand paper • \ a Black and chrome finish 14.95 Value 3/1” 1H0R SPEEDWAY •ELEC. DRILL Featuring thq motor that • "wetYt burh-oErt——- —■ Fully guaranteed I Bright chrome finish I Complete with Jacobi chuck and key Industrially rated and U.L. approved EVERHOT-DELUXE OVEN BROILER IV/jth thermostat control. Broils and bakes. HAMILTON BEACH PORTABLE MIXER ♦ With 5 year warranty 2 great STORES in PONTIAC ... PERRY AT MONTCALM & MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER NIGHTS ’TIL 10 SON. TIL 7. THE POKTtAC PKgggjrHtjRSDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1903 ran mi w ■i C-6 Oswald s Mother Worit Believe Her S Was Assassin PORT WORTH, Tex. (AP) Perhaps one day in the year 2063 a school boy will , open a history book and read the Black Friday 100 years before on which President John F. Kennedy His study will bring him to Lee Harvey Oswald, 24, a malcontent whowas accused ofthe assassination but was murdered before being brought to trial. If he goes deeper into the story, he may come across the name of Marguerite Claverie Oswald. mjLs Practical nurse -Mrs. OswaWt- 56,. a gray- haired practical nurse, is the toother of Lee Harvey Oswald. She is convinced the Oswald Ute si^aHtfstewensensejitaen and events being recorded for ail time, in.the sense of Caesar and Brutus, Lincoln and John Wilkes Booth. “Any guilt .1 have for making him what he was I will accept,' she says of her son. “But this is not for the assassination. I do not care what the FBI says, or what any specialcommission or couMmay say. He did not have a trial. He did not have his day in court. I heard him say on television, the same as millions of. others heard hito,*T did not kill anyone. I did not kill anyong.’ I know he/never did it. I know The death of her son is another burden in a life littered with millstones, according to her recounting. Life began for her. in New Orleans July 19, 1907, when she was bom to Dora and John Claverie. At 2% she was left motherless. Little is'knowirof toe 22 years following, and she evades discussing her childhood and young womanhood. This, something she is saving—along with' many • other facets of; her Jife-for a projected book. But in 1929 she became the wife of a man named Pic. “I was with Mr. Pic 2V» years,” she says, referring to him in formal language. “I became with child, but he didn’t want chil< months pregnant when I .left him, Mr. Pic voluntarily supported me and then the‘baby, John E. -Pic, until the child was 18.»;;... v--. . • we gave our first child, Robert Edward Lee Oswald Jr.” He was bora in April 1934. Robert Edward Lee Oswald Jr. works tor tjre Acme Brick Co. in' Denton, Tex.,* whqre he lives with his family. -11 became witn ehiid in early 1939,” Mrs. Oswald says. “I was in my seventh month when Mr. Oswald died of coronary throm- John E. Pic is ah Air Force f sergeant of 14 years service, now stationed at Lackland Air Baser Sam Antonio, Tex.,: where he is a laboratory techni- cian at the 1,000-bed Wilford Hall Air Force Hospital. About 18 months after John Pic’s birth in 1932, his mother maiTied Kobert Edward Lee wald, a salesman for the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. LeeT’lihe explains. “It jfas the same name The infant bora Oct. 18, in New Orleans was named Lee HarvOy Oswald. THREE BOYS three boys,” she says. However, there was $3,500 in insurance. With the insurance money and some cash from the ' ’ ite"”05 •to hold blit, staying home to care for her kids. But then times turned hard for her, *and an home for children where she now says they received “a wonderful religious education.” ’ Lee, the baby, stayed with her and was xaredior byjher sister and whomever else she could get to baby-sit. When Lee reached home, remaining there until be, /Was 5. g # “That was when I married Mr. Edward K. Eckdahl, who made $19,000 a year and had an ex- pense account,” the mother says. “We lived in Fqrt Worth. Lee was with me. After a few months I planned to file suit for PI divorce but delayed it because penniless, ■ With 1 did not want to take Lee but of school. While I was waiting, Mr. Eckdahl got a divorce from was 1,1 the I ?^er 0,81 ^^e^eW^^howthatiH^eTicen able to sec,” she ,saflfc “Yesterday I had 18 _ interviews andL Aarnr and all sorts, of visitors. I’m just exhausted, I haven’t even bad time to -read . armed.services there. “Lee was such a fine, high-class boy,” die says. “He didn't ONLY SHE waste time with comic books trie treatment. What does she say to this now? ji She doesn’t d take h lave lunch somewhere and hr her conviction that as a „ to the zpo. He knew the ^ s^and only she, could Jmow names of every animal there,! ,,T T®' t and to the planetarium he just! I have to face this alone,’ I haven’t read all the letters far. -With those that came today there are 239, and the and to the museums.” gjg[them will teU.yiy grtone is This idyUtopicture of *®h on relationship jars with ess away- 1 nav® fauh. i do not - - “Mr. Oswald was named aft- when the war started she Went j NevrYork. She son relationship jars with less |P5W* * “ayc„ 1 uu am\ giving me ‘sugar-bowl monev * romantic official documents question the will of God.” XS Wf such as described in docket No. * * * doctor and $25 f -----j 2379, Bronx Domestic Relations The television in her living'else.” ‘ XSurtrJrtrich~sai» it Ham Markham and Dnnnid-RM^ The building program, which should run to about $1.3 million, would include a new 650-student senior high school completed for the 1965-66 school year and an immediate four-room addition to the existing high school. VOTERS REJECT ' Voters turned down a request for $1.5 million'to build a high; Opinions on toe issue also played ■* important part hi toe election of two new trustees. .V - Mrs. Rita Chenoweth and Alfred Ueker, both campaigning against construction ot -a high school, wei;e elected to the hoard then. The board spent toe sum- at which they managed to readi no agreement. Coiestock described the plan as permitting "one of the lowest-cost, long-range building programs while moving to provide adequate housing of our entire student body.” . Wife new facilities, the-district could accommodate all grades through 1970. The issue would also Allow toe administration to “effectively employ teaching staff for a high school of grades 9, 10, U and 12” and would provide for the earliest conversion of the annex building to administrative uses. 2 State Teens 4-H Winners Take National Prizes at Club's Congress CHICAGO m — Paul Miller, 18, Eaton Rapids, Mich., and Jean Sparks, 19, Cassopolis, Mich., today were named national winners in 4-H cotopeti- Paul, a freshman at Mich- el a $1,660 forestry scholar-, ship, and Jean won an $800 scholarship in toe home economics division. The winners were announced at the 42nd National 4-H Club Congress here. _ Paul ip a nine-year 4-H member. Since his father’s death in 1962, the youth has operated, with his mother and two sisters, toe/family’s 86-acre farm. PROJECT BACKGROUND He has complcted projects in forestry, poultry, entomology, conservation, find aid, automotive and junior leadership. Miss Sparks, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sparks, is a sister of Glen Sparks, 16, named Saturday as winner of a $6011 scholarship in toe field props division. In 1961, she was a delegate • to toe 4-H Congress jn Chicago ‘ aria leadership winner. She previously received two tuition , scholarships and has been ac-tive in 4-H activities for many The University of Michigan Was the first university in the west to'prqvide instruction in modern languages, 1846. 1 ;684 Dead in Traffic EAST LANSING (UPI)-State police provisional reports today showed traffic upetdents claimed 1,684 lives through yesterday this year as compared to 1,475 highway crash victims killed in toe same period in 1962. FIREMEN HONORED — The oldest and one of the youngest of Milford’s volunteer. firemen were honored last night at toe .annual banquet to which village and township officials are invited. Floyd R. Sands, 73 (left), 1$ retiring after J50 years of service to the de- partment, 18 as its ohief. Gary C. Childs (crater), who has been with the department twoi years, was named fireman of the year. With them is Chief Cloyd Feigley. The awards were presented by John Addis of Clay Stokes Insurance Agepcy in Milford. $ i THE PONTIAC PR#SS,c iWrSDAY, DECEjVfBERy 5, 1963 ISS&ta SUNDAYS DISCOUNT CENTER NORTH SAGIN ®00:1 TRIM-t-TREE K/UKKIUHEJS WHITE DRESS SHIRTS ORIGINAL ETCH-A-SKETCH Draw, design, writ*. Manipulate knobs, to form letter*, pictures, etc........ All whit*, Sanforized oxford cloth. Button-down collars, pearl buttons. Sizes: small, medium, large. TUDOR ELECTRIC FOOTBALL, BASEBALL,, SPORTS CAR RACES and HORSE * RACES. s t All one low price. Beautifully tailored Capri pants, 100% cotton, mach in * washable In large variety of plaids. In sizes TO to 1,8. STORMY WEATHER BARBIE DOLL CLOTHES Complete, selection of Barbie WOMEN'S MEN’S - BOYS' • YOUTHS' DRESS or STORM SNOW BOOTS • High vamp 0 Durable construction • Colon bleak MISSES' - CHILDREN'S OVER THE SHOE . RUBBER BOOTS MISSES’ * CHILDREN'S INSULATED VINYL STORM BOOTS Soft and fluffy In assorted floral print's. All cotton; washable. Sizes 7 fo 14, I® llPARKER BROS. DETECTIVE fcVBMIE OF “CLUE” 2.B7 iiiOBIBlim BABBIE GAME . ■ MOLD MASTER KENNER'S HICTRIC MEN’S 4 BUCKLE RUillR WORK BOOTS ARCTICS ™4t' Complete Lina of NKA and BUDDY L I TBUGKS ' MOLD and AiiiMdti this coiSat orowin^'^1 »MJft Fun! Include* evewtidM TfiS "fllmeke BO or more sturdy e Fleeee lined sxrii Bat THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, DECEMBER g, 1963 tress’ apartment which had words clipped from them. He said he had no idea what her motive may have been other than the hope the messages may have kept Prine from breaking oft their romance. HOLLYWOOD (UPD - Detectives, puzzled that Karyn Kupcinet would write death threats to herself, today looked few new leads in- the strangling death of the beautiful actress. Investigators proved yesterday that at least one of seven threats pasted together with tape from words clipped out of magazines and newspapers was put together by death ^vaitts iONI’XJNESS •KRESGE COUPONi u%&ner Prine and Miss Kupcinet Were going steady for months and still dated regularly up to the time of her death, Walsh said. REPEAT QE A m SUH Docombor 6th and 7th. Friday 9:30 A.M. to V P,M.~ Saturday 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. WERE DATING Sensational! Amazing! The partially incoherent messages were to 1 both the starlet and her former steady boyfriend, television actor Andrew Prine of the “Wide Country” series. “Their friendship seemed to have cooled, but they were still dating,” he said. - Miss Kupcinet, "daughter of Chicago newspaper columnist Irv Kupcinet, was found dead in her apartment last Saturday by friends who had become worried when they did not hear from her. She had apparently been dead ginnf Thursday morning, the coroner’s office reported. Dinner Rescheduled. LANSING (AP) - The testimonial dinner for Thomas Bums of Saginaw, former chairman of the State Public Service Commission, has been rescheduled .middle finger of Karyn Kupcinet,” Walsh said. nerrnriwinally^^eHor-N^M, the late President Kennedy. OertWicata a No Carrying Charge • Make Payments At j Our Store A TUFTED BACK Swivel Rocker Early American Platform Rocker Reg. 699S He turned over the seven messages he received several months ago to I#t. George Walsh, of the'sheriff’s department. MYSTERY MESSAGE—This strange note fashioned from words clipped from newspapers and magazines is one of several being studied by Hollywood police. They were turned over by actor Andy Prine, boyfriend - of Karyn Kupcinet, starlet found strangled in her apartment last Saturday. The girl’s fingerprints were found on one note. of the'sheriff’s depart HER FINGERPRINT “Our identification section personnel said they have posi-tive identification of .a fingerprint on the bottom side of the ^scotch tape used on one of the Film Director Dead •-LONDON (AP) - Robert Hamer, 52, Brltlshlfttftr-directer. best known for his “Kind Hearts and Coronets,” died after a brief illness. PLENTY OF LIGHT — it’s when and where you need it . for movies and stills, when you have this new portable Sun - Gun Cordless unit. Balanced to stand by Itself, here it is in •-action as a side light /left foreground). Normally the re* chargeable battery-operated unit la on a bracket with the Home Specialties ,Nqw Items Movies As photography moves along In the fall season, a couple of dew item's for home movie fans haver Bbeii introduced. They’ll make the jobs of taking and showing movies a bit simpler. For easier shooting whenever extra light is desired, Sylvanla has come up with a l self-contained, rechargeable hoi&e movie light weighing less than four pounds. It provides portable continuous illumination without the necessity of plugging into an electric outlet with Ua trailing wires and limited distance. Nor do you have to carry heavy separate battery pack which other portable lights presently entail. BATTERY-OPERATED ~ Called the Sun Gun Cordless, the light operates on 10 sealed .-rechargeable nickel cadmium batteries enclosed in the' head Of the unit. . The recharger, built into the handle, operates on household current. When fully charged, . the unit provides light for 10 minutes, enough for approximately two 10-foot rolls of film. Five hours of recharging will restore enough power for* five minutes of light which Is enough for ode 50-foot roll of filmr- A full charge is restored by recharging for 16 hours. VARIABLE CONTROL The unit has a variable beam control permitting the photographer to regulate the light from a concentrated spot to over-all flood. The light comes from a special 11.1 volt, 100 watt halogen lamp which screws into the reflector socket like an ordinary light bulb. It has • rated life of 10 hours, operates at 3,400 degrees Kelvin. The Sun Guh Cordless is balanced to stand upright by .Itself or it can be attached to a • bracket which will hold the On the 8mm projector front, Kodak’s newest machine has a unique feature: the ability to view a single frame on the screen without any light loss. It’s almost like looking at a color slide. It’s accomplished in the Chevron 8 Projector, Model 10, with a dual air-jet cooling system, a new principle in projector cooling systems.—...—..........._ Other features of the projector are: flicker-free slow motion with the flip of a lever; automatic threading; single lever control for forward, still and reverse projection;, on-off troom control and special Voltage control switches for, maximum lamp life and screen “She at least made up the ... He said a number of magazines were found in the ac- shop without cash— "CHARGE IT" AT KRESGE'S - -pay only once a month! g o»»B’»TrmvmTrr»TinnrrirmT»'rirmTrrrinnry The new projector is available vWlth an f/L2 lens, an 4/L2 zoom lens or with a superfast f/1.0 lens which gives a 35 per cent brighter screen picture than the f/1,2. vnryrrrrrnmnnfm njnrm REGISTER HERE ^foryeerFREf^ Gift Certificates ,N downtown font,AC ■ J “ " 4 COMPLETE FLOORS OF HOME FURNISHINGS St SAGINAW ST. % Provincial • Colonial • Traditional • Modern — All fay America's Leading Manufacturers! special purchase “You Mu$t Bo SatUfled-ThU ” Airman, Woman. Killed in Collision PLAIN WELL UP) — A 63-year-old rural Otsego woman and a serviceman from' K. I. Sawyer Air Fdirce Base near Marquette died late Wednesday In a head-on auto cqlllskn-on MOO, about five miles east of this Allegan County community. , Killed were Mrs. Ann Marguerite Julian and Airman l.C. Tom Keitler, 16, of Kalamazoo. State Police said Mrs. Julian was riding *ln a car driven by her husband, Andrew. 73. Kes-tier was driving the other auto. Congressmen Vote WASHINGTON (AP) - Michigan’s two Damocratlc senators were divided Wednesday-when the Senate approved a bill extending for one year the law permitting -the importation of farm labor from Mexico. Sen. Philip Hart voted for the measure, while Sen. P a f r 1 c k McNamara voted against It. The number iff full-time teachers has Increased about 50 per cent in the nation the last 10 years. OPEN Free delivery MONDAY thru FRIDAY 9:30 AM. - 9 *>.M. OPEN TONIGHT TILL 9 P.M. Your Choice No Money Down—Months to Pay I EVERY CHAIR ILLUSTRATED*, REGARDLESS OF PREVIOUS PRIOEI foam cmhtonsd Swivel Rocker All covorod in dura bio Reg. 699S Swivel Rocker nylon and supor loft vinyl. Choose from doc? orator colon to fit your own docor. Othor chairs not illuitratod art also sale pgjcod . . . so como In and tako your plgk. 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MANY COLORS You'll find a full palette'of colors from which to choose, with - many brown tones and de e p greens find reds most prominent. ‘ Neutral shades such as taupe and fog grey, and the natural look of waxy and an- SeHorEarlyH® YAnCANOTYW-Tbeun-precedented pilgrimage to the Holy Land by Pope Paul VI will be.made in the first 10 days of January, a Vatican spokesman said today. Jews and Arabs alike welcomed the news. \* . break a second precedent by. making the trip by plane. No pontiff has flown before, although as a cardinal Pope Paul frequently used planes. half occupied. The public gallery, seating 35, was unfilled. STRODE IN FIRST Christine strode in first of the four defendants. On trial with her are Paula HamUton-Marsh-all, 23, who shares her flat; Mrs. Olive Brucker, 56, who is housekeeper-friend to the two, and West Indiah Rudolph Fenton, 39. All have pleaded innocent. The Crown says all four conspired to bring about conviction of Jamaican jazz singer Aloys-ius (Lucky) Gordon for assaulting Christine, On appeal, the high court quashed -Gordon’s conviction and three-year sentence after hearing a tape recording Christine made to sell as ttr life story. Livonia Man Eyes Seat ip Congr Christian and Jewish leaders around the world praised the Pope's decision to make the pil-grimage, coming at a time when the Catholic Church hag These sources recalled that the Pope, as Giovanni Battista Cardinal Montlni, always flew America and even from his diocese at Milan to Rome. < ' l < * -jtf ' ★. "vy It will be the first time any ruling pontiff of the Roman *0 ®q m* o«t* tt putrt iCjOH eqj puil«fA suq qojnqo onotpeo first time Pope Paul has ever visited the Holy Land. ' Pleads Innocent to Embezzlement A Walled Lake woman yesterday pleaded innocent in Pontiac Municipal Court to a charge of embezzling $3,000 from her .... . former employer, R & R Mo- Highlighted with brushed gold fors, Inc. closings, flat little bows or chain please. For c o ckfa 11 and evening wear', shell cherish a pretty clutch or small envelope with a soft, wrinkle-free leather lining. These after-dark handbags of smooth, lustre and suede leather are sometimes starkly Sim- on his long trips to Africa, to Ida, and may be sparked with a touch pf jeweling. If she thinks you’ve been extravagant; you can magnanimously point out the lasting qualities of leather, and how easily she can clean smooth, grained, antiqued and waxy leathers with a damp cloth — Mrs. Doris Jean Lake, 44, llS Dekalb, was released ea 1500 bond following berar-raignment before Judge Cecil McCallum. He scheduled a preliminary examination, for Jan. If. Mrs. Lake wu office manager at the automobile til last ApriLshe had been employed at the firm, 724 Oakland, for years. Sport Rifles Taker Student Vies for 'Governor' R. Jan Appel of Waterford Township High School is one tit four candidates vying for youth governor at foe three-day State Y*ur * - ith Legislature in Lansing beginning today. Some 3M members of Hi-Y and Tri-Hi-Yclubs In Michigan Win take ever the legishrttve aad executive brandies of state government hi the lltt annual session sponsored by the YMCA of Michigan. Other WTHS students in Lansing are Dickldiller, Fred Rohr-er and Laiyy Price. Representing Kettering High School are Jim Nhmolie, Steve Morch and Steve,_____________ appointed at* general. Group Says,'Don’t Split College Ballot Proposals' Dividing the three prgposal* for a community college on separate ballots would be lmprao-tical, a three-man legal'com-mittee fold members of the Commumty college Citizens Committee laat night. The citizens greap had previously considered the prospect of splitting the millage question from the two proposals setting np the two-year college and a boatd of trus- Flowers Add Charm to Holiday Seasop Hunting equipment vajued at 1600 was stolen in a/brerihin Flowers have a deep signlflc-of art Orton Township home dur- ance at Christmas. Legend has ing 4he evening. it that on the very first Christ- * * * ' mas, every tree, bush and The owner, Robert Braeen,1 fiower burst into magical bloom. 2465 Baldwin, discovered tte| Fresh blossoms speak of the burglary when he returned holiday spirit and are easily home from work at 3 a.m, to- available b all for Yule giving, day. -v A rifle with scope, a Spanish 10 gauge shotgun, ammunition, a hunting bow and wearing apparel were taken, along with a w committee, by Burton R. Schifman, Oak Park, reported to about 30 citizens last night that it would be impractical to have a vote on -ontyJwe-of-Jhe three ballot, propositions next June. , Shifman said that under the new state constitution spring elections would be no more. S NOVEMBER VOTE Thus, he said, if the college issue is passed next June and a six-man board of trustees elected, the millage question could not be voted on before November 1964. ; “Even If It pasted,” RMf-man noted, “then would be revenue until 1166 for' the college district.” | In addition, tbe Oak Park lawyer said the college issue would get lost on a November ballot that would also indude state and national offices, in eluding a presidential race. The CCCC members Also heard a summary report on a 1961j^idy-^me^aucatonal Tsbfhlgh school students in relation to a proposed communis college. ENROLLMENT Harold Abnuns, saewtary of the citizens’ group, said the proposed two-year school could have an enrollment hy ,1970 of 8,000 to 14,000. He suggested that the technical and vocational Aspects of the college be emphasized in talking to the public. Abrams felt this was what die public tfos concerned with. The COCC will meet; Jan, 8 at the offices Of Oakland Schools in the County Service Center. making your gift a “practical i television set, Braeen told sher-luxury?’ | if fa deputies. taken steps toward Christian unity, King Hussein, Moslem monarch of Jordan, announced that foePope would be his personal guest. A spokesman for Israel’s embassy to Rome said "We are waiting impatiently to be contacted by the Vatican.” Bothj the Israeli and Jordan embas- j said no Visas will be required.- LONG DIVIDED The pontiff will be visiting a Holy Land tong divided by toe hostility of Arabs and Jews. In his surprise announcement at toe end of the Vatican Ecumenical Council’s second session yesterday, Pope Paul said he wanted to make the pilgrimage “on behalf of peace aimong men.” The 2,Eft cardinals, archbishops and patriarchs hastened back to their dioceses after the council's second two-month session. By JIM DYGERT A Livonia Republican who won a seat on the formerly all-Democratic State Board of Education last April has suddenly taken an interest in running for the U.S. Senate next year. He il James F. O’Neil, a 39-year-old planning and programing director for , Ford Motor Co. who also has won for himself a reputation for feuding with foe three Democratic members of the four-- wan odnratlnn board. Several Republicans have reported that O’Neil has contact-,, ed GOP leaders throughoutthe state to ask their opinions of hir seeking the~nomination to chaUenge incumbent Democrat Philip A, Hart. The OOP’s leading prospect for the task of opposing Hart has been Traverse City Congressman Robert Griffin, who has delayed his decision on9 whether to run because of the assassination of President Kennedy. WORD EXPECTED He is expected to announce his intentions about the first of February. GOP leaders are said to be discouraging O’Neil on the State Sen. John W. Fitzgerald, R-Grand Ledge, said earlier this year that he might be a candidate, but he la now reported to be more Interested in running for the new state appellate ■ court to be set up under the nsw constitution. Only announced candidate for the U.S. Senate nomination is Grand Haven businessman Edward Meany, who has been campaigning for a couple of yesrs. * Other possibilities mentioned have been GOP National Committeeman John B. Marital, Gov. Georgs Romney's legal adviser Richard C. Van Dusen, and Henry Ford II, chairman pf toe board of Fordffotor Co. Italian newspapers interpreted the Pope’s words that he would visit the “holy places where Christ was born, lived, died and ascended to heaven” as meaning he would go to Bethlehem-, Jerusalem, Nazareth and the shores of the Lake of Galilee. Bethlehem and the walled Old City of Jerusalem are in Jnr. dan. But Nazareth and the ports of Galilee associated with the ] life of Christ are in Israel. WHAT PLANE? Vatican sources took it for granted that the Pope will fly— possibly in Italian President Antonio Segni's official four-jet plane with a special chapel in-...........................- ■ Some Italian newspapers thought he might go by Italian airliner or —' to underscore his peaceful mission — seek the use of a United Nations plane. Communist C^umrrillas Shall Viet Nam Boat SAIGON, Viet Nam iiD-Com-rnunlst guerrillas shelled a big river boat carrying two companies of Vietnamese troops in the Mekong Delta today and killed 19. They wounded 69. The attack was staged with mortars and 57MM recollfoss rifles irom the jungled of a canal In Kien Hoa Prov- ince, southwest of Saigon. GIVE A “COMFY" SLEEPING BAG {jgfJ..........:... 18.98 » 142,50 TOP TENTS wiml raw jssjaiat fijf DELUXE PUP nNTS >11.95 COLEMAN 2-BUBNEB STOVE .. >10.45 COLEMAN LABTBBNS ....... >10.48 COLEMAN INSULATID COOLERS AND JUOS IN STOCK 100 LB. BAB BELL Ctmplrtt WHO SwwMwII Mr* 116.11 ISO LB. BAB BEU SETS ■kink W.IgMt AvaIMM Sr te aesilMS. >27.50 BODY BUILDING EXERCISERS Chart IxMndar, SkW Naaa, Hand Orfpi S3.90 ANKLE WEIGHTS ..... $6.95 BASKETBALL UCXB0ABD >16.50 GIFTS FOR THE BIG MAN! SPORT SHIRTS Sisat 11 »o 20 FLANNEL SHIRTS $495 /.■. ■' #■ WOOL SWIATIRS Sliai 48 to 54 1 WASH RANTS $(» TliirTT Vi »o 20 HEAVY HOODED COATS to Slae 56 $2595 To Sl*a 60 INSULATED UNDERWKAR To Slse 54 ■ 43PS . $8’8 WE ALSO HAVE EXTRA URGE SIZES IN MIN’S T-SHIRTS, SHORTS, UNION SUITS, SWEAT SHIRTS WORK SHOES AND BOOTS TO SIZE 14. INSULATED BOOTS TO SIZE 15 JOE'S S SURPLUS SiSSr Shop 9 A. M. Till 9 P. M. Till Christmas Oive SlHISIC this Christmas S ON¥ NEW PERSONAL TV This amazing "Micro TV" Is barelv larger than a teleohone, yet gives a sharp, clean picture everywhere I Hah 25 transistors, oneretes Indoors on'AC, outdoors on Its own reehareeable power peck. Dark grey or silver. 18995 Boy's Prank Results In School Bus'Mishap NEWPORT NEWS, Va. UPI ^ A 12-year-old boy's prank with a . Joy znake resulted In the crash of a school bus loaded with more than 40 children. None-was injured. FM-AM CLOCK RADIO Brighten every new day With this handsome FM-AM radio ... awakens you to music, then shuts off automatically. Police said the youngster threw the toy snake Into the lap of" the driver, Verdell Jarvis, .causing her to lose control of the 'vehicle. The bus struck a utility pote. Hat axcallent Talafihrott movement, handy lumlnoua dial. Appliance outlet, too. 39” POWERFUL ELECTRIC AC TAPE ■ ‘ RECORDER IS ALL TRANSISTORIZED "Solid State Clrcultry".tape recorder with unique "Golden Head" gives noise-free recordlngi. No tubes, hast or Interference! Has 2 speeds, Igyel mater, microphone. Can be used as PA zyittm, Weighs only 8 lbs, Case Includued, fTl I69m PONTIC MALI, GRINNELL'S , - Phono 682-0422 " Uso Vour CHARGE, 4-PAY PLAN (90 days foam* as cosh) or BUDGET PLAN pOWNTOVVNp 27 S. SaglnaW—pfe ^ £ • ttr THE PONTIAC PBESS> THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5,1963 EfiWiitnefsKin Dies at 101 Years .MANCHESTER, N.H. (OPD& , including a hub brake for George Eli Whitney, 101, invent* cycles, a fora of pressed or of the first steam-powered au- phalt brick and a coal fara tomobile and grandnephew of stoker, fit WWtney, died yesterday at when he put his first st Elliot Hospital. automobile on the road, aul Bora in Boston, he was be* ities were so upset .they ord lieved to be the oldest living him to Have another man graduate of Massachusetts In* ahead of-it waving red flag stitute of Technology. He ap*. ward horsemen so their anil Jolted Nazi Leader Hag Ailmeftt lit Leg BERLIN (Br-Baidur von Schirach, former NazT youth leader serving 20 years for war crimes, has been taken from Spandau Prison in. Berlin to a hospital for ..treatment' of a circulatory condition. \i * w , An ' allied spokesman ' said Schirach’s condition was not serious bid a blood dot in a leg- could not be treated conveniently in prison. Schirach, 50, is diie for release in 1966. Car-Truck Crash Fatal DOUGLAS the correct way to eat beef or chicken pot pie? In most restaurants it Is served in a small baking dish which is placed on a dinner plate. Is it proper to eat directly from the' baking dish, or should the contents be emptied,onto the dinner plate and eaten from there? -—it. ★ ★------> -J A: You may eat It directly from the baklrig dish if you wish or you may empty It onto the dinner plate and eat it from there, whichever you prefer. Q: I am 14 years old and a Junior in high school. Whenever I receive jl letter, my mother feels it Is her privilege to open It and read It. ★ it It isn’t .that I am trying to hide anything from her but I feel old enough^ for private mall. What is your opinion? ★ .★ ★ ( , ... At I agree with-you, Parents should not open their children's mall. Even when a child Is too young to read, his mother or father, should allow, him to open his own letter, and then ask, "Shall I read It to youff of"guestr-aret-Mr. and, Mrs. James Gunn, Mr, and Mrs. GJEord-A, Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Rich, the Matthew McLaughlins, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Osborn, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Schlachter and Dr. and Mrs. Lloyd A. Seyfried. Others are Mr. and Mrs. Dale a Miller Sr., the Edward B. Thompsons, Dr. and Mrs. Paul Trimmer and tbe Robert D. Rowans. Still others who have reserved tables are Dr. and Mrs. John R. Hubert, Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Diettrich. Mr. and Mrs. Jordan H. Stover III, Dr. and Mrs. Orra Crego, Mr. and Mrs. N. J. Rakas, the Chester A. Cahns and Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Judd. it it it Mr. and Mrs..Finlay Mac-Queen have invited friends to have cocktails with them prior ‘ to the dinner gance at Oakland Hills. ‘ MOVING Mrs. William H. McGaughey leaves for New York Friday to join her husband who left Sunday to assume his new. position as vice president of public relations for the National. Association o‘f Manufacturers. There will be a busy time house - hunting, Mrs. McGaughey says, and no definite plans have been made to move. There will also be a reunion with son Andy who is in New York. David is a freshman at the University of California; Bill Jr. Is a Senior at : Yale and Margaret is a sophomore at Bloomfield Hills 1 High School. , I’ * ______*.. Since the McGaugheys lived in New Yoric for a good many years after their marriage, they are looking forward to visits with friends there. By MADELAINE DOEREN Birmingham Branch, Wom-an’s National Farm and Garden Association will close' its 26th Christmas Show in Birmingham Community House at nine o’clock this evening. AWARD WINNERS lh» btwoipA sweepstakes awards for the highest number of blue rib-bon entries are Mrs. Julian ~ fc. Gailev. for artistic, design. 1 and Mrs. R. B. Pokorny in horticulture. ★ Mrs. Richard Kaliz’ table setting won the tri-color award. Bronze and white chrysanthemums were arranged with balsam in an antique iron grocer’s .scale. Black, candles in brass holders and Spode’s. India tree pattern china were arranged on a dark green corduroy cloth, with matching napkins. . A ceramic Madonna centering a double wreath of pine cones on a huge straw mat won a blue ribbon for Mrs. Thomas Fitzpatrick of Bloomfield Hills. ★ it it j Truly a show-stopper is the auditorium stage transformed into a colonial dining-room by Mrs. Galley. MADE IN 1780 A Raul Revere lantern and a tiger maple ‘nursing chair’ made in 1780, also a spatter painted .doUghbox are highlights. Nothing made since 1630 was used in the setting. it ★ ★ Mrs. James Hunter’s Country dinner table, a blue, ribbon entry, was set with white English ironstone and pfessed glass tumblers on a red and) white checked table cloth. Cored red apples held red candles combined with holly, on a wooden 'lazy susan.’ ' ★ k it Contemporary china, banded in olive green and maroon, on a white, Irish linen cloth, centered with red poln-, settlas placed Mrs. James V. Oxtoby among the first prizewinners. ★ ■ it • . Bloomfield Hills resident, Mrs. Walter Anderson, chose purple satin and royal blue glassware for her] prize winning supper table, lit was centered with a pyramidal arrangement of bokwood In a Chinese urmtype container, flanked by striped candles. : — * •."•r^jisas Mrs. J. Reed Alexander displayed gifts made by he r class in hortotherapy at Pontiac State Hospital. Oval paper platters were sprayed with silver paint, for a composition of cardboard flower pots holding dried weeds. POTATO TURKEYS "Turkeys’ made from raw white potatoes impaled on toothpick legs stalked about among the leaves and corn: stalks for a harvest scene. The patients will gifte these wall paques to thejr3|P'- ABWA Has Annual Fete This Week The annual Christmas dinner was held Wednesday at Airway Lanes by the Tipacon chapter of the American Business Women's, Association-(ABWA). Zigmiind J. Niparko, former mayor of Hazel Park, and Nicholas Gullij presented a talk and demonstration on. how professional card manipulators cheat the public. Mrs. Roland Zilka gave an organ recital of Christmas music with Mrs. David Anderson as soloist. Norma Lewis and Shirley Dobson also sang.' New. members installed were Audrey Allison and Gladys McVean. ilies or friends at holiday^ 1 •• time. •k it it A gold angel centering a wreath of gilded magnolia .leases and pine cones, fashioned Mrs. William McCal-lum’s inraational entry for a large window or-door. ★ ★ ★ —Mrs. George Llmp’.s hang-, Ing arrangement ot soM~crim-son carnations with narrow . - border of boxwood and red“ velvet-bow suggested "Mery Christmas” from its lovely gilt picture frame. . ★ ★ ★ A huge brass church-type' candleholder entwined with holly rested on a handcrafted table brought from Thailand by Mrs. Herbert A. Cair pf Bloomfield Township. -,"1 f ■ * High-button shoes from the gay 90’s and sturdy hunting socks were featured in Jum ior arrangements for a Christmas Eve fireplace. Presiding at the punch ta-1_ ble today from three to four o’clock and again from 7:30 to 8:30 this evening win be Mrs.'Russell Heyl and Mrs. Howard Willett. Pontiac Prat* Ptiatai by Edward R. I ' V Mrs. William H. Burgutn of Birmingham admires a punch table arrangement of‘ Yuletide ; roses, variegated holly and red apples in cran-• berry glass basket at. ihe 26th Christmas show presented, by Birmingham Branch; Woman’s . National Farm< and Garden Association. Pinon, cones from California, cocoa roses, ,magnolia leaves and mar honia are arranged on avocado velvet wall plaque by Mrs, Claude A. Welles Jr. t>f Birmingham, A brass teakettle purchased at a Pontiac Antique Show and a rattan birdcage filled wfth greens highlight a supper table entered by Mrs. Jolin von Rosen of Birmingham, The antiqueJoodwarnfer (left foreground) holds sauce boats. Red candles rise from holders of cranberries and maraschino cherries, t iflEl C—12 THE PONTlic frHfUR&PAY, DECEMBER 5, 1963 J^on't Seek Help Auxiliary Hos Sale Wife Wants Divorce By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE R-417: Herman T., ...' ' aged 42, has been mamedTor 20 years. “Dr. Cra ne," he began, “my wife got a ioh_ recently---^---^m!^B5w~sIie~wants to divorce' .“She says she is dissatisfied with housework. And she argues that'I have been guilty .'yof mental cruelty. “In addition, she says I run around with other ‘Women. tWell, that is a bald lie, and she knoWs it. REFUSED^ HELP “So when-J demanded-that~ ihe aCcompany me to see our “In past years, whenever your column contained a crit» ~ idsm of husbands, she’d always call it to my attention or-tear it out/fend lay it beside my plate.____________ _ ... “But when you’d expose the faults of wives, I’d call your column to her attention. * • • * *, , “Then, she’d Sipply s a y you didn’t know what you , were talking about. 1 “Dr. Crane, she is thus a chronic buck-passer. She will never admit that she may be at fault. But why does she accuse me of running around with other women?” PROJECTION STRATEGY , This is often an example of what we call “proj^ti """Suppose this wife has been "two - timing her husband and now feels guilty. . . ; * * * • 'She tan either confess and suffer severe criticism. Or she can wiggle of the hot seat, as it were, by conjuring up the picture of her husband as being unfaithful to her. ★ . ★ ★ The more guilty she feels, the mgre vigorously will she Ten projecttierown sins ub mt husband. ' That accomplishes two re-sults. First, it makes her feel less guilty, for if she cari stell herself on thinking her husband has also been two-timing her, that makes them even. CONDEMNS MATE Second, it lets*her indirectly berate herself via her caustic condemnation of her mate. This is much the same strategy used by people who have run up big debts oHong-standing to a grocer or doctor.,' ■ '■ ' They will thus develop a deep sense of obligation, which wounds their priife^hy-making them feel inferior. There are then two ways to eliminate this. First, they to pay up and thus square accounts. But that is fraught- with hard work' and .might take months or years. PICK ALTERNATIVE —So such people often wiH subconsciously, pick the second. alternative. They begin to tear, down the “image” of their former benefactor, bit by bit, until they re-paint him as a shylock nr money-grabber, etc., etc. obvious did meanie or an enemy, they no longer feel obligated, for hums a. beings gloat at besting a'foe. . W. F. Wangner of Birming-ham. Mrs.. Ralph M. Fox served as program chairman. woreMfs. Charles pi Barker, Mrs. Ralph Margins, Mrs. Wallace W. Me* Whbter, and Mrs. B. J. Szap- For Your Wedding ,_ QUALITY •nd Quantity • 12 Photo* in 5x7 Album • Free Coantelint • A Large “Just Married” Sign • A Miniature Marriage C. R. HASKILL STUDIO 1 Mt. Clemens St. FE 4-0553 When either a husband or wife doth protest too much' and make false, sexual accusations, it is smart to suspect the critic^ , . ★ ★ , ★ And that was the underlying problem in Herman’s case, for later facts proved that his *wifeJ&d been having an affair with a co-Worker~aL tha_ office. . ^ if - ■ She was scared about the approaching menopause so had wanted a final fling before she felt she!d be permanently on the sexual shelf. ■ Bo s e n stocking hung up near the fire to dry, Saint Nicholas slipped some gold pieces into In some countries, Italy for example, the children put out thdir shoes instead of stockings. - Plans Joint Meeting Plans for a joint ceremonial with the Ann Arbor unit were made at today's meeting of Iraq Caldron No. 70, Daughters of Mokanna., The Ann Arbor unit, Zaf Gaz, will meet with the local unit after the first of the year.. A Christmas party was held after the meeting and gifts were exchanged. Mrs. Eugene Bragen and Mrs. Wayne Scott were hostesses. ■ *» ,* • *. .■■ ■ OPEH SOL U •'rAVf.: SHOE (£ornfl a ke C rusts Whai making^^^apple or other fruit pies, tey a cupful of eorn-flakes and a half cup full of stigar in the bottom crust before putting in the fruit. Unit Lights Raam I For the judget-Wise Mother . ^-gooi-way-to Ugiifttse" kitchen counter work areas is with a 30-watt fluorescent unit attached-18 to 22 inches above each work surface. i ACCESSORIES GROUPINGS ■ LAMPS MEN’S NIGHT DEG. 9 REFRESHMEV1S- SMITH’S EARLY \MEKICM 128 S. WOODWARD Designer Tips on “Michigan’s Largest Florsheitn Dealer” §IM 1A .M use'YOUR 'VoAAA SECURITY CHARGE ‘ I. T*l«(rapH At Squaro L*k« Rd MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER OPEN EVES. TIL 9 P. Mi MM3 ItufpRE rf; mm ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS . THURSDAY, DECEMBER C—U Gifting, Glamour, Glitter and Gloves This Year Spell Christmas G's Glitter, glamour and gifting put three 0's into Christmas. Adding a* fourth is the celled tlon of gloves which famous creator Aris has provided in i both leather and fabric of all lengths end varieties, but al* crafted for hand and amr flattery, are the Aris classics in the finest of French kid-Skin, The William F. Slades of Percy King Road an-nounceJhe^engaQemerd of their daughter Marsha Lee to Terry Lee Benedict, son of the Kenneth Benedicts of Grayton Street. She is attending Ferris State College, Big Rapids and plans a spring wedding. Junior Unit Performs to Local Group A string ensemble from the Junior LeagueofJhkl^ Musicale performed at the Tuesday dinner meeting of the Pontiac Branch of the American Association of Uiti-versity #omen. , * ■ . ■it it it i ’ The Christmas meting was held at Devon Gables where arrangements were directed by Mrs. Arthur Lake/1 ★.’★ "etrr~~ Assisting her were. Mrs. Chester Arnold, Mrs. John Bills, Mrs. Norman Cheat and Mrs. Ray Allen. Others assisting, were Bonnie Davidson, Lillian Davidson, Margaret Harms and Mrs. Georg e Robins. ...★ *. v— Composing the string ensemble were Alice Cheal, Linda Hess, Cihdy Jones, Beverly Patton and Bill Quist. Caroling followed their program. Yota Can Afford To Be In Style at these wonderful SAVINGS Th«ll nut kin* nppoin tnionl •»k for'ihc , THRIFT DEPT. MoikIuvh thru lininnluvii SHAMPOO AND SET PERMANENTS Complete ^ lurwuaya— $J75 HAIR SHAPING $125 E .1... TINT TOUCH-UPS $rj95 Includlns Sliuniitoo uml gal Thrift Dept. — Priraa Slightly Illihrr On Irldiiy it»'l Saturday 6pm Into Tuatttluy, Thiir.day, PrUpiy RvanliiftW Please ask aVaiiti tlonnellV Styling Salon Prices Permanents From $|Q00 Open'9-9 Sat. 9-6 donnelPs PONTIAC MAM. 682-0420 ApinHHlmnni net aluv}> neoetiary • , Girls who keep their fingers in fashion will greet Santa with glee when he leaves the luxury, gift -of leather gloves under their Christmas tree. Sure to please are these handsome mid-arm gloves created' from the finest of French kidskin. And for those who lows die added luxury of a lined glove, the same mid-, arm classic1 is availobU widt% diin silk lining. Other briefers have more of a daytime mien via tiny bows, stitched cuffs or a bordering of leather cording in a contrasting color. Even the-/ mid-arm glove" is given a suggestion of dressmaker detail-}) tag such as the faintest hint of embroidery, the better to accessorize, a classic costume and to put on a festive appearance when drawn from its Christmas wrappings'. C]OR FORMAL OCCASIONS Siri<5e December ineans gala doings and long gloves, the formal- glove, 16-button high,, in'icy white or ‘ inky jet kid —show^itshand. Mousquetaire-fashion, it is. . buttoned at the inner wrist"" with three tiny buttons, per- * mitting the wearer to keep her arm gloved while baring her - hand for dining" and drinkingr-A luxury accesso-note, this is the “sable” of any glove gifting. ★ it it Like, their leather counterparts, fabric gloves will also keep fingers in a holiday mood. Soft-to-the-touch double-woven cotton as well as nylon in both short and to the elbow gloves contribute to the sparkle of the season with spatterings of glitter, sometimes as a cuff effect, other times swirled or sprayed upward mi the back. Glowing pearls, too* add their delicate feminine air to bright white, while agleam on OU Worker Speaks to. Local Club James P. Dickerson, assistant to the chancellor of Oakland University, spoke to. the Pontiac Republican Womens Club at their Monday meeting. ■ it...a . ★ ' ■ ■ Speaking on “Our Debt to Our Party” rMnlfm,Tin x*m to thank our many, many friends and customers who have made the continued growth of Atlas Market possible.’ Starting in 1939 in a small family market at: 1460 Baldwin, Ernest Cosmo Sr. had one thought in mind, to give finest quality foods and meats at prices which would enable his customers to enjoy better meals at low costj plus a personalized service which would make for a friendly store. In 1954 Mr. Cosma, with hls twO sons Abe and Sqm moved to the comer of Baldwin and Walton, the larger foca* tion affording two checkouts and a larger variety of foods, vegetables, frozen foods and meats. Today and for the next two weeks we celebrate the Grand Opening of the new Atlas Foodland . . . over 16,000 square feet of floor space devoted entirely to give you one of the largest and finest super markets in Oakland County. Mere you will find the same personal service, the same friendly atmosphere, better quality foods, freshly cut meats from the choicest cattle, everything you need for your daily meals, snack* and special occasions. A new and modem liquor department where you will find nationally known liquors, beer and mixes. i ’ Special gifts await your visit, prizes galore, values as usual. Come in, we will be looking forward to seeing you and the family. j All FOODLAHD SUPER MARKETS Join the Celebration With FREE T 4 CAKE and 4 f COFFEE p-J JOIN T : the FUN-^ SANTA Will Be At ATLAS Bring the KIDDIES ATLAS FOODIAND ATLAS FOODLAND ONLY FRIDAY, II un. HI 9 p.m., Dee.. 6 _______ SATDRDAY GRAND OPENING BEAUTIFUL FRESH rtFOOD G1FT OEWWWTtS Drawing 2„dPRIZEfl00 OtrtHlosisj jvoTbTpw*^1 ZchmeNecettay-;-pr alt Foodland Markett BALLOONS GANDY and PRIZES for ALL TURKEY CANNED ham * DRAWING FOR ALL PRIZES WILL , BE AT THE ALL NEW ATLAS FOOOlANDi ORC. 14f at 1 P.M. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3. 10M If s The Greatest Sale ROUND" STEAK CHUCK ROAST • Large Family Size Apple, Cherry, Peach LEAN 'n TENDER Pillsbury flour 3 Sag STRAWBERRY I09 Chuck ROAST 89° Stew MEAT ■ssfo. 49° BumpROASTnsr* Chocolate, Yellow, White Porterhouse Steak Ib Smuekors .11 ox. Jar PRESERVES chicksn, Crr « u LZL SWANSDOWN Jmxweu house jJJSWlf COFFEE Carnation Rod or Yellow ■ , 46 oz. Poli.li or Kosher 04«os. Jer ;NT.”,V THE PONTIAC PRESjS, THURSDAY, PECEkBEE 5. 1963 D-i MANY GIFTS AND PRIZES TO BE GIVEN AWAT DURING OUR GRAND OPENING CELEBRATION! • 8 Bicycles to Be Given away • $1000 In Cash To Be Given away • Free Cake and Coffee to Everyone ■ Free Gift For The Kiddies from Santa •^reelosKlOir^Thrladier1——: YOUNG, FRESH ’n TENDER. . Lb. QUT-UP FRtERS Lb. § Fresh Ground Spartan Lean Sliced BACON Tray Pack lb. No* ib. 39« >«■'*• One Loaf Oven-Fresh Soft-Twist Bread i|M WHEN YOU PURCHASE 2 LOAVES AT REG. PRICE Short Ribs of BEEF ......... Young Steer BEEF UVER ...... "* 49 Eckrich SMOK-Y-LINKS .. Hickory Smoked PICNIC.. Rath’s.. .10 Pkg, 49C 4 lb. £69 can 104b. Bag U.S. No. 1 Maine D(|A HIHKS 3r U.S. No. 1Rod Skin jij|A PCIAT0K_W U.S. No. 1 6onuino 50 Idaho Potatoes ®Wen sjor TOTAL OF LOAVES 52° fattest Hyv Save On This Big Buy ;t T Velvet or Glacier Club x ICE OHM Spartan Fresh Frozen ORANGE m&m MAVIS CAN POP ■ UPW STARCH Monday a ■ ■ ■ Vt gal. 29° LIQUID RINSE m. . __Monday ■ ■ a a BRACKED WHEAT-BREAD.. 2u..» 43 1 lb‘ Otn ftnw, wnnfiF«^j 79< *MZOLA * Button COHH on Oat. FLAVORS ... 12 oz. oan .. SHEDD'S DRESSING. ;0 MARGARINE . . .e^ I Glazed Donut Stioko KLEENEX \ FACIAL j? llwre’i TISSUES *"> Pan Vs DEL MONTE CREAM or WHOLE KERNEL % fuhS2L> for EVERYONE *h9 Cmeqratwn CORN 8 £ P , ML„ ^iSooWlAND ■T^Awiaro 1 20 1. WALTON 1 Mon. thru Thun. I to • I Prl.ilto ti.lan.ltol I LAKE ORION I Mon. thru lat., I to 1 1116 W. HURON i Man. thru lat.. Ota 10 1 ' UW v Hllllf I 35I5SASHABAW I Mon. Wru lot,, It* I 1 , lot.iiot 1 Sunday. • ta 1 Sunday, Ital Sunday, 1 i* I THE-TOrtTIAC PRESS.. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1963 use mass transit to commute from New Jersey to New York switched to autos it would take all of Manhattan below 42nd Street just to park their cars. . Parking Woe Avoided OAKLAND," Calif: (DPI) -Kaiser Industries study Showed that if all toe people who now feet upward ami 12 feet forward in the air, a feat that could be (tccomplished only by leaving the Water with a velocity of about 14 miles per 'heur.'-V^-- Feats of the Salmon A'salmon headedupstream .to spawn is estimated to be capable of leaping about six 78 North Saginaw DOWNTOWN PONTIAC . Open Friday Evening* ’til 9 P.M. 4348 Dixie Highway DRAYTON MAINS Open Thurs. thru Sat. 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. Thit Ad tn Effwl Hath Store# Friday and Saturday BAZLEY BETTER TRIM ROUND-SWISS SIRLOIN or CLUB NONEH1GHER— SWEET FLORIDA SEEDLESS The perfect finale J |a elegant guest dinner, buffet or' after the theatre supper are tiny chocolate cups. V —- This newcomer to the dessert course family can be served with a wide choice of- fillings either conservatively simple or ■ as offbeat as your imagination will go. Ice dream or sherbet topped with whipped' cream, nuts or chocolate bits, pudding with a favorjte topping, or as the piece dc resistance with black coffee when filled with a cordial or Hquer. T The chocolate .cups, can be made well/in advance and stored in the freezer until ready to serve. Here’s how to make them, CHOCOLATE CUPS — Little chocolate eups- like-^hesb are very- expensive to buy . -Making your own is time consuming, but worthwhile. Family and guests will enjoy eating not-TOly"the-contents; but toe container as well. Eggnog Pie Has Cranberry Layer Cranberry sauce is usually served with toe holiday bird. While it .often appears as an accompaniment for the main ,cour8e, it is especially good in a cranberry-eggnog pie to top off the meal. Cranberry Eggnog Pie 1 9-inch pastry shell, baked 1 l-pound can jellied cranberry sauce Avocados Are First Course Cut fuUy-ripe avocados in half; remove pit but leave the fruiNn the shell. With a sharp knife, cut grooves in toe fruit. Combine 3 parts olive oil with 1 part vinegar, spoon,enough of this mixture into each avocado half to fill the cavity. Leave in refrigerator overnight. Sprinkle each with salt, pep* per and a dash of garlic powder before serving as a hors d oevres 'or first coursd. 2 egg whites 2 tablespoons sugar V< teaspoon nutmeg Vi teaspoon rum extract Vi cup ^hipping cream Whip jellied cranberry sauce to smooth consistency* Spread evenly in bottom of baked pastry shell. Chill’ in refrigerator until firm. Soak gelatin in cold water. Let Stand about 5 minutes to soften. In toe top of a double boiler scald milk, bugar, and salt over simmering water. Stir a little of the hot mixture into toe beaten egg yolks. Immediately blend into milk mixture in double boiler. Stirring Constantly, cook over simmering water until custard thickens, about 10 minutes. Remove from heat and thoroughly blend in softened gelatin. Chill until thickened. When egg yolk mixture is alt Fluffy Sweet Potatoes Served in Foil Cornucopias Foil cornucopias can be used huts, raisins and candy* for fa-tor Sweet Potato Puff or your IvorB- youngsters can fill them with j MfeT C00«IAY ency. Fold into egg mixture. Know Signs of Freshness in Eggs Q. What Is the name of this cut of meat?, A. Pork Boston Butt. -q. Where does It come from and bow Is It identified? A. This is the upper half of the pork shoulder and contains a part of the blade bona. Q, How Is It prepared? A. By roasting. Place tha meat on a rack in an open roasting pan. Do not add Sweet Potato Puff 6 large sweet potatoes, cooked and mas hed cup molasses 4 tablespoons butter or mar-/ garine >/» teaspoon salt y» teaspoon nutmeg Vb cup milk or light cream " To hot mashed poattoes, add the molasses, 2 tablespoons of the butter, salt, nutmeg and milk; beat until smooth and fluffy. Fill 6 foil cornucopias with the mixture. Place On cookie sheet. Dot with extra butter and bake In a hot (400 degrees) oven for 30 minutes. Makes 8 servings. , Foil Cornucopias For each cornucopia — Tear off 2 sheets of super-strength nlumlnum foil (12-inch roll) so that they arc iv» times (about 9 inches! the length of a small fruit juice glass (about 8 laches). —H Place 1 sheet of foil on top of the other. Placing rim of glass along the long edge of foil, roll the double piece of toll around the glass. Filled Chocolate Cups 3 squares (1 ounce each) semi-sweet chocolate 1V4 teaspoons shortening Vi pint ice cream or sherbet " % cup “sweetened whipped cream Shaved chocolate, chopped “ huts dr coconut for garnish Melt chocolate and shortening over hot water, stir until smooth., Cool until thick enough to spread, Spread chocolate onto bottom and around Sides of 6 paper cupccke - liners - (2-jnch size)* Freeze until firm; carefully peel, paper aWay from chocolate. k Fill chocolate cups with ice” cream or sherbet; top with whipped cream and garnish a.i desired. Freeze untiT serving time. 2.tahlespoons cold water j most thickened, beat egg whites IVi teaspoons unflavored gela-l until frothy. Fold sugar and nut-tin j meg into egg whites, and contin- cup milk [us) beating until stiff. Fold beat- 2 tablespoons sugar jfen egg Whites and rum extract y< teaspoon salt . into gelatin mixture. Beat whip- 2 egg yolks, slightly beaten | ping cream to a medium consist- Pile eggnog filling over cranberry layer In pastry shell. Refrigerate 2 to 3 hours. Makes one 9-inch pie. Many complaints about eggs are really misunderstandings about high quality eggs, advises the District Consumer Marketing Information Agent, Mrs. Josephine Lawyer.' . Some characteristics of fresh eggs include: cloudy or milky egg whites; eggs .with a thick, white, ropey-like material wrapped around the yolk; greenish or straw colored egg whites; eggs that cover a small area when broken into a pan; and hard-cooked eggs that are difficult to peel. Cloudy or milky whites are prominent in eggs which have been oil treated while very fresh. A fresh egg has bicarbonate present, but as quality declines this breaks down into carbon dioxide and water. The carbon dioxide passes off as a gas through the shell pores and is replaced by air which - enlarges the egg air cell. The presence of a thick, white, ropey-like chalaza indicates a high quality egg, and Its purpose Is to. hold the yolk In toe center of the egg. As the egg becomes poorer In quality, the chalaza tends to disappear. Researchers have found that greenish or straw colored egg white Is frequently due to the Vitamin B2 (Riboflavin) content in the white. This color represents a desirable characteristic. Peeling Is Key toOrange flower Perhaps you’d like to add fruit flowers to the tray on which you serve the turkey. These look beautiful, yet they’re really easy to make. For fruit flowers that look like Mums, tjry making them from oranges., Beginning at the blossom end of the orange, and going almost to the stem end, cut the peel in 16 equal sections or “petals.” Lift the petal ends with a knife tip and then, with your fingers, gently separate the peel from the fruit. Remove the fruit, leaving just the petal! shell.. Repeat on a second, Smaller orange, except cut only % way to stem and leave the, fruit inside. Set this orange in the first pafrl ahalh —nj4 Mild Cure SLICED BACON Fresh Dressed STEWING HEMS BLADE CUT POT ROAST FRESH LEAN Hamburger Gently crush ths portion of toil that extends beyond ths bottom of the glass so as to ___ form the tapered end of the water antTdo not cover.’In-1cornucopia; curl the tip of the Bert a meat thermometer cone into h small ball. Remove Into the center of the thick* j glass and place fingers inside ____, eat part, making sura It i cone to mold Into cornucopia J fore hard-cooking, dou not rest in fat or on | shape, bone. Roast In a moderate oven (880 degrees F.) until the thermometer reals- Eggs which, cover a small area when broken into the pan kive""more thick white surrounding the yolk. Ai egg quality lowers the white becomes thinner and the egg hae a tendency to spread and cover a larger area when broken. Berk is a relationship between the Acidity of the fresh egg white and peeling when hard-cooked. The older the egg, the easier It is to peel when hard-cooked. To have eggs peel easily, keep then) out of the refrigerator 24 to 38 hours be- MICHI6AN #14 ALL PURPOSE i POTATOES 50 LB. $139 PETER'S SLICED DAC0N Grad*! ^ . MWSMJMJMINStaSlMaMMMNMMMMMI Smoked a hickory nna .FrMh _ . APA hot h:M DOGS* ** POLISH yD( SAUSAGE Gw>l Smoked ync picnics A3* Lean Pork NEC STEAKS HVlk HICKORY is " . Young Tender m Ml 1 Grain F*d ■ IBP ST W SMOKED |I|IA SLAB BACON ia m lari* m i * FRESH MM1 DRESSED REF FRYERS fill FRESH AGAGA ground nnr BEEF 09* VI Or ff nOI6 ' * 1 HICKORY SMOKED IP A BACON |h¥ SQUARES IN'b FRESH _ ~ , GROUND Alia PORK Ml SAUSAGE liVlb' Lean, Meaty . spare m ribs PORK 9QC ROAST fc«» Fresh Holiday Fruits and Vegetables |||iia PASCAL CELERY ntt.... 19* Florida Oranges39a California Oranges.......■....«•■ 59° Fresh Cello Carrots........... 10* Fresh Cello REPRA0I8HES.....2»-10* ter. 188 #>W i88 degrees F: Allow “ minute. |MF p At the opening, crush and Ever mush a ripe avocado* bend In edges until one side is season It with suit, freshly shorter than the other, forming j ground pepper and lots of the traditional wid. slanted minced onion and serve It as a mouth ofth# cornucopia. % ' dip for corn .Chips? , | Gordon Fresh K U.S. No. 1 BANANAS PEPPERS CUKES Farm Fresh Grader Doz. EGGS SMALL 294 I Afl Print* Subject to Market change “ 3 SISTERS’ SUPER MKT. 608 W. HURON ST., Near Webster School; "rpr'-1 l§F^vJ. f ’ * * \1 p • vv* ; 3 ? : im 'Vhk PONTIAC1 Pii^SS THURSDAY. DECEMBER 5, 196? f ' *\ . ' ' - D^i ' I ■ <«*4Sr^ Beware of Shoplifters Around Christmas Unfortunate^, as soon as Christmas shopping begins in ry a shoulder strap bag when shMgjng^dfBsh; ornotyr MULTIPLE CHOICE — One batter, three results. Fruit cake, cookie bars and steamed pudding are all made from the same recipe. Use Fruit Filled Batter for Cakes or Pudding This magnificent raisin bat- Stakes to a variety of festive layfreatment^beautifuily: Baked in a loaf pan, it produces a gorgeous fruit calm of unmatched flavor. If you want a s^n^^addta®7~poor—int* molds and steam in the tradi* tional maimer. For chewy cooky bars, it is baked In flat pans 'and personalized with almond paste frosting. Taste surprising California raisins and candied fruits go into this spicy rich batter. Unlike many. heavily fruited mixtures, a cake made from this batter is ready to slice in 24 hours. If you wish to store it, place in a airtight contatoer in a cool place as long as you like. Raisinable Yuletide Bakings 114 cups dark or' golden mi-sins (4 cup seeded muscat raisins (4 cup currants (4 cup chopped candied pineapple 1 * 14 cup halved candies cherries 1 cup peeled chopped apple' 14 cup coarsely chopped pecans or walnuts 14 cup soft butter or margarine 114 cups brown sugar (packed) 1 teaspoon vanilla 2 eggs 14 cup milk 2 cups sifted flour Heaspoop soda 14 teaspoon salt 14 teaspoon EACH ginger, allspice and nutmeg Chop raisins or leave whole, as desired. Combine all fruits and nuts. Blend butter with sugar and'vanilla until light and fluffy. Mix in well begten eggs. Stir In raisin mixtare and milk. ,Resift flour with soda, salt and spices into raisin mixture. Stir until thor- fruit cake, steamed pudding and bar cookies follow. into 1 heavily greased and floured ft X 8 x 2-inch pan. Bake In moderate oven (350 degrees 00 to m minutes. Remove from papa aritf cool thorimffiily before storing. Cake may be used in 21 hours or may' be stored in an airtight container and aged in a cool place. Spread top with Almond Paste FYosting before serving, if desired. Makes 1 square loaf. .........*. a . STEAMED FRUIT PUDDING: Spoon batter into 2 heavily buttered 1-quart molds. Molds should be about % full. Cover tightly. (Use foil if mold has no cover). Place on rack in large kettle. Pour in boiling water to come halfway up-mold. Cover kettle tightly. Steam ft hours in continuously boiling water, replace water as it evaporates. Serve- pudding warm with hhrd sauce, if desired. Makes 2 (1-quart) puddings. ★ ★ *■ FRUIT CAKE BARS: Turn batted into a greased and floured 10(4 x 10(4 x 1-inch pan. Bake in moderate oven (350 de-F.) 35 to 40 minuted. Cool. Cut into bars. Store bars in airtight container with waxed paper between layers. Roll in powdered sugar or frost lightly, if desired. Makes about 1(4 dozen bars. ..1..- ■ Directions to use batter for I With Roquefort Cheese Want a “different” stuffing for deviled eggs? Mash the egg yolks (removed from the halved hard-cooked eggs) with butter and Roquefort cheese. Season to taste and pile' the stuffing back into the cavities of the egg whites. Ruffle with a fork and sprinkle with paprika. Raw Rice Cooks During Baking A new version of an oid favorite. New^inlrtRice 1 can (1 pound ifitfkor-4. ounces) tomatoes Water_____ 1 cup converted-typerice-- 1 envelope (144 ounces)) chicken noodle soup mix with pieces of chicken (4 green pepper, cut into strips (4 cup grated cheddar cheese, not packed down Drain and break up tomatoes. Add enough water to tomato liquid to make 2(4 cups. Mix together the tomatoes, uncooked rice, soup iiiix (just as it comes from the envelope) and greed pepper strips in a 1 (4-quart casserole. Pour in tomato liquid; cover. Bake in a moderate (375 degrees) oven, stirring occasionally, until rice is tedder, 40 to 60 minutes. Sprinkle mixture with grated cheese. Bake, uncovered, until cheese is melted, about 5 minutes. Makes 4 to 6 servings. Olive Oil Helps Keep Shrimp Moist m , When shrimp are to be served with a dip at cocktail time, first take care that they are not overcooked: never boil shrimp. Place in wftlfit that is already boiling, but turn heat low, simmer gently just until shrimp turn bright pink, no longer. After removing from liquid, toss shrimp with a spoonful of ■olive oil and any desired* seasoning until time to serve. This keeps the shrimp moist and tender. .earnest;-shoplifters amlpetty~~} tNSIDE POCKET. Melt Would be wis< t h e i rJiiHfeld'Tnthe inside g.~ -poricetof their coat. If it is carried In the hip pocket of slacks be sure the pocket is ttoned. Women should carry a handbag that closes tightly at the top, Open-top bags are a real invitation to thieves. hpw much cash you are carrying, especiafryJH_t js a con-. Mint.- ■ V'l * ★ ' It’s wise, too, to check your purse or pocket every few minutes to n)ake sure you 'have your wallet. REPORT THEFT The sooner you report a theft, or loss, the better;your chances are for hating the item recovered. If yon will pot all of your packages into one or tw i large sacks or shot bags, it wfll be easier to keep up wife ftem. ;.i Small packages, especially,. have a way of disappearing. * These suggestions are good ones to follow at any time of the ypar, but do be extra Cautious now when stores are so crowded. Rhode Island was fee most solidly urban ot all of the states in toe 1950 census with. 91.6 per cent of its population In does If that loaf of homemade bread is hard to cut neatly, re-’ frigerate it and slice it after It is chilled. MPHARDSON’S MILK COSTS LESS . . , IS IT AS 0000 At OTHER MILKt You bet your family's health It III Only dairies with the VERY FINEST QUAL-JP^ — ffYei'r* allowed to label GRADE A. You can't buy better that); Richardson's Milk... and the only way you can get It fresher Is to take It right from the cowl It costs less because there's no middle man... we pan the savings on to youl i WHAT AHI RICHARDSON'S STANDARDS? GUAUTYI FRESHNESSI CL^ANLINESSI Our modern stainless steel equip-,wJ'_ :J merit Is sterilised dally ,.. rigid control standards place special emphbsls an personal and plant cleanliness. Money can't buy better or fresher dairy « ifo products! TUI REST 00STI LIIS ... 10 I 36c THE HAI> GALLON GLASS 135* AT ANY OF TNISB ITORIS HALF GAL IN QUANTITIES OF 4'er MORE Richardson SBairy THIRE'ft A STORE HEAR T>H HATUSIHO RIQHARDION’I QUALITY DAIRY PRODUOTS 4949 DIXli HWY. DRAYTON fiAIWS • VILLMI PARTY IMQF UNION laki 1940 W. HURON AT IUtAWtH lAttl •I14M-1S CURKirOH U.S. Gov% Graded Good Genuine Corn-Fed Iowa Beef Steak Sate U.S. Graded Good Blade Cat Chuck Steak Full Cut Round Pin Bone Sirioh or Special Cat Rib U.S. Graded Good Ctab or T-Bone Steak 40k 70i 00\ “58* t 7-Bone Steak «S» Swiss Steak lb. Sirloin Steak ■cS?r « 89° Family Steak Round Steak vE™.* « 99° Cuba Steak »99# p »88* Skinless Franks 3 *«■ $1w Cottage Cheese fey £19° lee Cream Bars 12b,n49e Havel Oringes ‘its * 49# VALUABLE COUPON KRAFTr* Pure Concord , Grape Jelly 12* Limit: On* 10-Oz. Jar SAVE ON EVERYTHINO... EVERY DAY AT SAVON! I With this coupon and $3.00 purchaaa excluding boar, win# and cigarattan. J Valid at SAVON thru Mon., Deo. tth. Limit: Ona coupon par auttamar Id MarUI Clniif orPI,Uborv jQc * lu lYlBQal rlOUi AHP0rp„.. ... »•« W| mMMmrnl VALUABLE COUPON Bake-Rite Pure Shortening Popular Coffees orftcidi-Nut . Granulated Sugar 10 King-Size Blue Cheer « Samsonite FOLDING TABLE ^PLASTIC SURFACE TUBULAR STEEL LEGS* CAMPBELLS - Condensed Chicken Noodle j Scop Hl2s.il With thia coupon and $3.00 purchaaa axcluding beer, wine and cigarettes. Valid at SAVON thru Mon., 0*0. tth. Limlti One eoupon par ouateman ( | * VALUABLE COUPON BETTY CROCKER - Purity Quick Oats Prices effective thru Men., Dec. 9th. Right reaerved to limit quantities Dixie Highway in Drayton Plains At Williams Laks Road aril Walton Blvd. , Dally 9-9, Sat. 8-9 — Sun. 9-6 Pontiac Mall Shopping Canter on Telegraph in Waterford Township Dally 9-9,' Sat. 8-9 — Suit. 9-6 "Thn....t—.............. Glenwood Plaza in Pontiac South Qlenwoed at Perry Dally 9,10, Sat. 8-10 - Sun. 9-7 -----—f—j 1 IBM CHOICE BEEF SALE! USDA CHOICE STEAKS SIRLOIN......79i 79t 791 maxwell house"""1* Drip or Regular | Coffee I . 49* ' USDA CHCflCT” Pst Heist is USDA CHOICE STANDING ribroastI 79* FRESH, LEAN GROUND HOURLY HAMBURGER 3 ns. 994 USDA CHOICE CHUCK STEAK » U.S. #1 Fancy Ripe ai 9ANAHAS 3j Thin Skinned - 180 Size ||||a Tangerines 391, MARSH SEEDLESS GRAPE- FRUIT U Fancy CalHcmia HEAD LETTUCE 'I had been hoping "to have some time to ease into 4he role,’’ he said. “But no. For my first scene I was . put into a purple toga with those damned gold leaves on my head and plunked Into the middle of the bloody Forum with thousands of extras and ,a . lot of senators I had to play, lines to. “I was disastrous, but fortu-nately very little of it ended tip in the picture.’/ SOME DIMENSION The action moved to more intimate scenes with Elizabeth Taylor and he was able t dow Caesar ''with some dimension. .._ “I played, him with very little movement,” he explained. "You’ll notice that 1 scarcely move my hands at ell in ‘Cleo-a,’ whereas Higgins uses his hands a great deal. * * * “My reasoning was that a man with such great power diet not need movement to command attention. His jpower would have Up Come from within. CO-star Audrey Hepburn com-jiletes her role in “My Fair Lady” this week, and Harrison! will be finished as soon as he films the final number. What, next? I-.______a____w a “I honestly don’t know,” he said. “It’s hard to know what to do after a pair of roles like Meals at all Tunes *THIS COUPON ITALIAN FOOD A SPECIALTY Your Choice From Our Appetizing Menu STEAKS—CHOPS CHICKEN, Etc. Takeout or Delivery fh flf c on f &&site PIZZA orria EXPIRES DEC. 11 QmOmsmEm H4 Woodward, Ph.; 3884338 ^ Comer oi Woodward aad South Mvd. ^ Anniversary of Ropoalt That Calls for a Drink NEW YORK (AP) - If you want to drink to something to-day, how about the 30th anniversary pf the 21st Amendment? Nearly 14 years of prohibition ended Dec. 5, 1933 when Utah became the 30th state to ratify the amendment; which returned control of alcoholic beverages to the states. Today Mississippi is the only orie that forbids liquor sales. It Is reported that some of the new automobiles will be trimmed with brass. ' NOW SHOWING! HURON lit TrlO* Ml ELIZABETH RIGHABD TAYLOR BURTON ■ ROD TAYLOR 0R80N WELLE8 ?Ffll8E£9NI Adult* . h Dixie Bull* ■ aHA saltines 1-19* Royal Guest_ Red Kidney Beans io< No. 303 can Table King OUT GREEN BEANS 2 303 OQC CANS £9------ Butterfield Whole WOW FOOD CENTER —ftHHAf; HUROPT ^ BEER—WINE—LIQUOR IRISH POTATOES 10° NO. 303 CAN Thera Prices Good Thursday, iW iwrw m 'm I s ' V'~-wry ; -fW > 3 '•' ’-I!- > ' -f' ■' »■•’ | _______ ’) _______- / THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, DKCKMSKR 8,jtl | ^ V {*F«f I >; ’Vf' ''i'-''.; ]: 063 ;'' ~ , I M | ■ I § $$» • , i <’V1 - 1» ( -fl D—7 , Holly Hurler Joins NL in Flayer Draft The recent baseball draft of i first season in professional first-year players found right- baseball. n* Andean !«*» Orioles, ['however, sold his contract out-| right to Rochester of the International League, a Triple-A af-I filiate of Baltimore. r-Tho Colt .45s. one of the two newest teanwT GiisTriarrdos Surrendered 24-Year-Old Pitcher Also Giyen Detroit, .JUjjkedvby, Dressen LOS ANGELES ,(UPI) ^League and building with an ac-1 u'ulf. a,'f Fiyi^elphla CWflffik 1 celerated program for young- first inter-league deal of sastwictt rookie Appalachian League, was “In a way I’m kind of glad; draftedby Houston. , I understand they need pitch- The major leagues have a rule' ers -(at Houston) and there is which perm|t8 0ther teamstera good chance to move op the draft any first-year player left unprotected by the parent organization for $8,000. ^ Ray had a record of 5*1 with M strikeouts in 62 innings and a 2.88 earned-run average his American Loop Sets Title Tilt Back 2 Weeks ladder,’1' Ray commented He added that he enjoyed the treatment; he received from the Orioles. Former' major league hurler Ray Scarborough worked with him at Bluefield as the pitching coach. The latter helped him develop a changeup pitch and also "I^I^^ncOTlrCnftay^^^fanned | more than three times a§ many .las he walked this past The Orioles had advised him [they felt he could pitch in Tri-I ple-A ball next season. Houston’s new YORK (AP)-The Amer- [AAA club is Oklahoma City, ican Football League has fin- Okie. in the Pacific Coast ished reshuffling its schedule, and set back its championship games two weeks to Sunday, Jan. 5- 1 /Ty That- change also forced the AFL to shift the date of its East-West All-Star Game at San Diego, to Jan 19. It had orginal-ly been set for Jan. 5; The changes, were forced by the postponement of one weekend’s play in, the AFL following the assassination of President .Kennedy. .........J The title game, originally scheduled for Dec- 22, was set back two weeks instead of One to keep a date open for possible playoff in the Eastern Division, where all four teams Still are in contention; The championship Will be played at either Sain Diego or Oakland, the two teams still contending for the Western Division title.. ' The NFL’s championship game is set for Dec, 29, and the NFL’s Pro Bowl for Jan. 12. AFL Commission' Joe Foss also said the annual meeting of the league’s owners would be held just prior to the All-Star, game, also in Sian Diego/ Jan, 16-18. .Cranbrook Iced, 6*0 Detroit Catholic Central bagged a goal on the first shot of the game and skated to a 6-0 hockey win over 0ranbrook Wednesday at Riverside Arena in Ontario. The Detroit squad scored twice in each period to ruin the Cranes’ 1963, hockey opener. Pat Ryner scored twice and Bill McSween added a goal and four assists to pace the Detroit team, fc The Cranes play host to EcorsO next Monday hr their home hockey debut. League. It has an AA team at San Antonio of the Texas Church Loop Sets Opener f our Games tilted on Friday Schedule The YMCA Inter-Church ketball League’s senior division will tipoff the season Friday night wifi) the same eight t« represented who participated last year. Four games are on tap for the YMCA gyiq with the first one starting at 6 p.m. between All Saints Episcopal and Central Methodist. Games will follow at 7tlS p.m. (First Baptist vs. First Congregational, $;,2| p, m. (Macedonia Baptist vs. Oakland Park Methodist) and 9:45 p.m. (St. Paul Methodist vs. Trinity Baptist). Trinity is the defending champion, having won 14 and lost none during the regular 'campaign last season. Macedonia and All Saints tied for second with 11-3 logs. ’ ' The league Is for boys under 18 years of age. Both Len-worth Miner of Macedonia and Tom Smith of Central are returning this season after sharing the Sportsmanship Award last year. The Pontiac YMCA. will be the host for the state Inter-Church basketball tournaments in March, an honor it received last winter also. outfielder Don Demeter and pitcher Jack Hamilton. Demeter and Running were the key players in the' four-man deal, which was the fourth trade consummated during the+. Current baseball meetings. ^ Jf ★ ★ Detroit manager Charlie Dreg-sen explained that his club had sought an outfielder since dealing Rocky Colavito to Kansas City' a--few days before the meeting started. “It had to be either Felipe “They’re both about the same. We’ll play Demeter in center field,” 1 1 IN LAIR—New faces in the Detroit Tigers’ lair next sea- son will be pitcher Jafck Hamilton (left) and outfielder Don Demeter who were obtained in a trade yesterday with the Phillies. Detrbit gave up Jim Bunning and Gus Triandoi The Tigers lost their chance-to get Alou when the Giants, dealt hita to the Braves last Tuesday, but they grabbed the 28-year-old Demeter after trade talks with the Phillies that lasted several days; Demeter, wjio began his Major-League career with the Dodger?, was one of the Phillies’ leading sluggers during the past three years, during which time he tolled 72 homers. He had 22 of them last season, along with 83 runs batted in, while batting .258. He also can play third base. ** STARTED IN 1955 Running, a 32-year-old right hander, had a disappointing 12-13 record for the Tigers this year and a 3.88 earned rqn average, but has won'99 games for the Tigers, since/breaking in.with them in 1955. A 20-game winner in 1957, the lanky Ft. Thomas, Ky., fastballcr also turned in a no-hit, up-run game against the Boston Red Sox In 1958. Triandos and Hamilton were the secondary players in the deal, but Dressen said the 24-year-old Hamilton, a right-hand-ed pitcher, could be the “sleep-“ in this entire package. Hamilton won nine games and lost 12 for the Phillies in 1962, and was optioned to Little Rock, Ark. of the International League after posting a 2-1 record for the Phils last season. Triandos, 33, will back up the Phillies’ first-string catcher, Clayton Dalrymple. He Jilt ,240 and collected 14 homers for the Tigers this season after they obtained him from the Baltimore Orioles last winter. A right-handed long ball threat, Triandos played with the New York Yankees before being traded to the Orb Endurance Record Set CHICAGO (AP)-Andy Heben-ton, 34-year-oid Boston Bruin right winger, became the National Hockey League’s new Iron-man Wednesday night. He played hi his 581st consecutive game as the league-leading Chicago' Black Hawks tied the Bruins 2-2 on Bobby Hull’s goal at 19:29 of the final period. . Toronto beat Montreal 3-0 in the other NHL game scheduled Wednesday at Toronto. “I guess it is the thrill of my career to set the record^’’ said Pistons Drop Another Game Khicks Win, 120-119 in Cellar Battle - Hebenton, who has, played eight years without missing a gi “I hope they let me play 581 more. I feel good. Naturally, I wish we had won. The game got away from us.” . STREAK Hebenton, a native of Winnipeg, began his streak on Oct. 7, 1955 in Chicago Stadium (When he was with the New York Rangers. He was with that club until Boston drafted- him last summer. ' , ' * * * He said his key to endurance is simple: , “First, you have to have a lot of luck. Second, you must avoid major injuries,-And third, you have to stay in condition.” Hebenton cracked the NHL mark of 580 straight games set, by Johnny Wilson when he played from 1952-1960. Five» of hts seasons were with Detroit,! two with Chicago and one with Toronto. . * i AFL Outbids Lions Chiefs' Offer fo No. 1 Pick ford Refuges to Bid for Southern Cal QB Against Kansas City DETROIT (AP)—Kansas City shagged the Detroit. Lions’ top National Football League draft choice because the bidding was too rich — even for millionaire owner William. Clay. Ford,___ La mar Hunt (oil millionaire owner of the American Fobtbpll Leagud franchise at Kansas City) apparently was preparfiTT to go first cabin all the way,” Ford said Wednesday. He made tife comment after Kansas City landed quarterback Pete Beathard'of Southern California. “But he’s welcome to the boy,” Ford added. “It’s good riddance for us at those prices.” Admittedly stunned by the deal Beathard made for himself, Ford said he “wouldn’t dare match an qffer” like Kansas City’s. He described it as '‘exorbitant and unrealistic/' According to Ford, the rival, tional Basketball Association’s western division, couldn’t even beat New-York, the worst team in the eastern division, Wednesday night. The lead changed hands 26 times, but New York came out ahead, 120-119, on Len Chappell s basket with 32 seconds left. the wee hours of the morning, said “We’ve added speed to our club by getting a fellow like Demeter.” In the final 32 seconds, Detroit had three shots—Including one by Willie Jones which rimmed the basket and came out—with one second to go. Meanwhile, st._ Louis closed with one-half game of Los Angeles in the western division title race. The Hawks whipped San Francisco, 105-83, while the Lakers lost to Baltimore, 118-98. The Pistons, with three regulars irfjured, had only eight men on the bench for Wednesday night’s game. Two of those fouled out and three other play-General manager Jim Camp-| ers came within one foul of hav-1»ir of the Tigers, who com-linS to leave, pleted the deal with his Phillie! ★ * * . counterpart, John Quinn, during Detroit led 36-33 after the first __•____ ' , ■ ■ I Hebenton tied Wilson’s record DETROIT (AP)—The Detroit Sunday in Boston’s 3-1 loss to Pistons, worst team in the Na- the Montreal Canadiens. He was struck on the foot in that game and a hole-was drilled in his toenail to relieve pressure of the bruise. The injury didn’t bother him Wednesday night/ He said the closest he came to missing a game' was, when he was hit by a stick three years ago and got a black eye. “The trainer finally got it open in time for me to take my regular turn,” he said. ★ W A Hull’s tying goal against the Bruins came when Chicago goalie Glenn -Hall was off the ice in favor of a sixth skater. Hull took a pass from Red Hay and drove a 20-foot shot past Boston goalie Ed Johnston, It was his 16th goal of the season and it enabled the Black Hawks to remain unbeaten in 13 home games. TAKING SHAPE In Toronto, the Maple Leafs’ coach, Punch Imjach, thinks his club finally is rounding Into form. 'We were skating better than WEEK’S BEST ~ Ron VanderKelen (right) the rookie quarterback of the Minnesota Vikings, who no one picked'in the draft in 1962, was named this week’s AP Pro of the Week in NFL jifter relieving Fran Tarkenton who was hurt and helping Minnesota to a 17-17 Ue With the first plane Chicago Beara. tarkenton (left) was showing yahderKelen a few playe In the snow just before the game started Sunday. “fiW'f’' *T*. Cage Scores WEDNESDAY'S COLLEGE •ASK JTIALL NYU n, Cornell 65 Anumptlon, Mass. II, Provldanca 10 Niagara 71, Villa Madonna S3 _ jlllaiwv* jSl^rliwfeonw * f® Van n, Sprlntriiajd n Pannaylvanla fl, Rulpari «> /3, ovartlma * 73, Arkaniaa M r.*,,.,, Ohio M, Tannattaa 37 KalamoMo M, Albion tf CanlrofMkWBifl Porrla M IMmr11 atofe/ iwr quarter and 61-60 at halftime. They were behind, 96-91, at the qnd of the third quarter. Chappell and Detroit’s Ray, Scott led scoring with 30 points each, Butchor Butlor Chop'll Cortfey i o-t iMim lj Moral'nd urten a i-a ♦ Scotl 11 a-iuju Htlymtn 0 o-o 31 Jiav'man t 3-3 30 AttOIll 9 4-a j, TOtal»n 43 34-ii 130 Totall 4] 33-43 119 NOW York .......... 31 37r 34 34-110 SS»L'^NiwiWfjF1? Butchor, Chappoll 4, Con lay S, Oola 4, holf 3. Jonai 3. MOreland 4, Scott f, Ifavorman 4 , Atlandanca 3,331. ★ ★ ,, w NBA Standings r-t IfncInnAil ' 11 10 ,'2n L J? WBITBRN WVlIieKL' -a, ; LOI AndOlOl ..... Jltffif .409 — SI. LouT» ....... 14 ]0 .III VO ---,... a .. .474 1 | WEDNIIOAV‘1 MSULTI JW, 'olrtroltW- ■ we have been,”'he said after substitute goalie Don Simmons shut out the Canadiens. “But we still have .players who can do better,” Imlach pointed out, “and (hey better be in shape for the next one." fTPJ * * * i 3-10 7! The next one is against the f Black Hawks. . .. . Simmons was in the nets .in place of Johnny Bower, out with! ; the flu. ,ne iook ioilon at Cincinnati II. louli *1 Phllodtli PRIDAY'I •oltimoro v». Rr" SJWhiin rf loai it. n dm! iiodtiphio ay's oamii aw York «l I S’B, Pro Wrestling Switches Date BEATHARD SNORTON AFL club beat out the Lions by handing Beathard: 1. A bonus in excess of |l0,- 000 for signing. 2. A no-cut contract calling for more than 820,000 a year. 3. A paid-up life insurance policy. 4. Option on shares of stock 1 in a west coast pay-TV corporation, cost of which would be financed by Kansas City: 5. A new car. 6. Free rent in an apartment for an unspecified duration but presumably for' no tess than si year. ... The Lions reportedly went as high as a 820,000 contract offer In their attempts to land Beathard, their No. 1 choice in last Monday’s NFL draft and Kansas City’s top pick in the AFL draft last Saturday. “It was a real poker game while it lasted,” Ford said. However, he added that the Lions had no intention of trying to outbid Kansas City for the 6-foot-i, 208-pound Trojan star once they discovered how high the Chiefs were prepared to go. “We wouldn’t) dare match ah offer like theirs,” Ford said. “It would be completely unfair to players we already have on our club. A thing like this, if we had gone for it, would have been the most damaging thing possible to, team morale.” Ford, who recently shelled out $6 million to buy the Liona.4ialri part in the actual negotiations with Beathard. Li-ons general manager Edwin J. Anderson went to Los Angeles Monday to talk to Beathard. Coach George Wilson reportedly wanted Ford to present the Lions’ offer to Beathard. But Ford declined because “I Just didn't think ii; was my place when we have a general manager, a coach and a talent scout. Vtkmgs Win of Drafting Talent By The Associated Press Minnesota’s .Viking's never got but of tiie' trenches the last time, but they’re winning this year’s .checkbook war for the nation’s top college football talent. The vengeful Vikings, who had their top two 1962 draft picks intercepted by tie American Football League, have turned the tables this time while pulling- the. National.Fcwk ball League out front in the early roundup of the country’s outstanding players. The Vikings signed their seventh and eighth selections Wednesday—Arkansas tackle Wes Bryant and fallback Bill r McWatters of North Texas State/ The Vikings previously had grabbed off their Nos. 1 and 2 picks—tackle Carl Eller of Minnesota and Southern California end Hal Bedsole. The Vikings’ signings account for one-third of the 12 draft selections signed by toe NFL. The AFL has seven draft picks un-contract, Including Matt Snorton, a Michigan State end who probably is the most confused football player in the country. Last' year, the Vikings lost their No. 1 choice, tackle Jim Dunaway of Mississippi to Buffalo of toe AFL while Minnesota tackle Bobby Bell, their second round selection, was signed by Kansas /City of the AFL. I' 1 This time the Bills and ' Chiefs have been on the debit side of the ledger, Eller was the No. 1 pick of Buffalo and Bedsole was Kansas CMy’t eighth selection. The Chiefs, however, have made the AFL’s biggest grab so far this year—and they paid »ily1^r It. ""A They Outbid Detroit of toe NFL for their chief choice, quarterback Pete Beathard of Southern California, making it three quarterbacks toe Lioiu have lost to the AFL in three years. Detroit previously was. outbid for John Hadl, now with San Diego, and Eddie Wilson, now with toe Chiefs. Besides Minnesota, Dallas and St. Louis In the NFL each have signed four players. The Cowboys have inked Georgia Tech quarterback Billy Lothridge, their No. 6 pick, No: 12 Johnny Ray Norman, a flanker from Northwest Louisiana and two free agents from Tennessee—tailback Mallon fair-cloth and end Buddy Fisher. The Cardinals have contracts from No. 2 Hershel Turner, Kentucky tackle; Syracuse and Dick Bowman, their No. 6 pick, and two futures picked last year —Kansas State fullback Willie Crenshaw and Arkansas tackle Bob Clay. and it doesn’t cost you one cent extra 16 OUNCES AT THE SAME PRICE U>CAL 1 2 OUNCE BOTTV-^ Professional wrestling switches to a Friday night: schedule this week with a four-bout card slated to get under way at 8:80 p.m. at the National Guard Armpry.. * * * \ The Lone Wolf AAU Boxing Louie Kline will battle The Club is opening Its doors to ama* Student In the main event, with teqr Golden Glove fighters, 16 Club Stiks Amateurs Ricky “Crusher” Cortez matching muscles with Glno Brltto In another feature bout. Other, matches have thaJVhlte to 39 years old. Interested boxers can Rain additional information from veteran trainer Benjamin Acosta, 397 Eagfe paired with Romell and .Ferry, between 4 and 6 p.m. Gary Hart meets Tom Londea. | dally. THE PONTLAC VKKSS, THUKHDAV, DKCflMBKft g, 1968 tional foes, will clad) on the Bulldogs’ court in another Friday non-league game. Armada will play at the latter’s gym, also. Birmingham Groves will find its hands full with Cranbrook in a non-league game at home. Mount Clemens will visit Royal Oak KimbaU in another EML contest while Ea?t Detroit wUl meet Ferndale. Ortonville Brandon and: Millington will {day a nonleague opener as the Cardinals seek to break their long losing streak. Walled Lake and Plymouth, traditional h«ve-*-*«lgsir listed for the Vikings court Friday night.7 Fitzgerald, the title favorite in the Oakland_A.jwill play Madison in a loop opener. Borneo and Utica,, also tradi- The title ambitions of Birmingham Seaholm in the Eastern Michigan League and Clarkston in tbe Wayne-Oakland .League will receive another test tomorrow night. Seaholm has a home date with Port Huron and Clarkston will Journey to Miltord. Bloomfield Mils, another W-0 con-tender, has a tall tost at Bright- Key League Clashes on Local Hoop Card Prep Sports Card FAmlnmn: 6LS*t) Emmanuel Christian, with two triunphs under its belt will visit Country Day at Birmingham Friday night. The latter won its first game in two seasons Tuesday night. Rochester has some good-looking reserve players moving up to the varsity this season while Avondale -Is a veteran ball team with hopes of moving up in the league race this sea- Both Squads Own ..1*1 Marie* Tlpoff Set for 6:30 P-M. weekend will find important games to the Oakland A League for Rochester, Avondale and Lake Orton; and Pontiac Central to an important Saginaw Valley game. Rochester and Avondale WUl Capac will be host to Dryden as the Southern, Thumb race opens Friday and New Haven will be at Alinont. Memphis and St. Michael and St, Frederick wUl touch Off ,fr big week end/of cage action tomorrow night [to theirs ftnnual battle for me Jim Brown Memorial trophy.____ The Mlkemen will meet the Rams at Madison Junior High School gymnasium , with the reserve game slated to get under way at 6:30 pim.. to highly favored Flint Central, will open its SVC home schedule against a tall Bay City Central quintet. . Pontiac Northern, which opened its season victorious at Flint Southwestern Tuesday, has Lake Orion is rated a definite contender to the O-A scramble, also with numerous returnees and good height, Both the Dragons and Rochester may resort to platoon systems to an effort to maintain good fast break attacks. In other games o* the Friday night parochial schedule, Farmington Our Lady of Sorrows travels to Waterford Our Lady of Lakes, Detroit De LaSalle journeys to Birmingham Brother Rfoe, and St. Cecllia plays host to Ferndale St. James. hi a Saturday night contest, Orchard Lake St. Mary Jour-hey# to Royal Oak SL Mary, the 1962-63 Northwest Parochial -• COUNTED UPON—St. Michael coach Jim Niebauer will be counting on guards Boh Patch (left) add Rick Stetohelper to get the Shamrocks’ attack rolling tomorrow night to the first of two annual clashes with the St. Frederick cagers. The contest is slated tor the Madison Junior High School gym toQomng a 6:30 p.m.reserve tilt. j Youth Basketball m Waterford -Starts Saturday Standings ■■ WITM.WM .... IS 3 * M W W ........ u 7 4 H B a .... 10 7 f 25 M *1 .... on i is si w Syracuse End Signs |«lgned Wednesday by the St. SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP)-End|Lo“i, CanUnal5 N*tk)n*1 Dick Bowman of Syracuse was I Professional Football League. H. W. HUTTENLO ★ AGENCY INC.-*- Waterford Township youths to grades 5-12 will start basket-- bail programs beginning Saturday, the district Recreation Department has announced. The programs are set up for i three sites and there is no cost l to the players. Rally Sinks Titans ception, 45-42, to their season opener, but they ran into foul trouble at Farmington OLS last week and came away With a 59-56 defeat. ris State 63-56 to the season opener for both: Dave Nelson paced the winners with 18. Hillsdale went down to defeat for the third time, dropping a 98-56 game to Bowling Green, to the Ohio city. John Riowan had 32 for the Deles while Howard Komives netted 29 for the win* LAFAYETTE, Ind. (UPI) -Mel Garland mid Doug Trudeau paced a .late Pur due rally Wednesday night to help the Boilermakers to an 86-80 hasketr ball victory over Detroit. Detroit led 40-33 at the half and was in front until Purdue knotted the score at 67-67 mid went ahead at 69-67 with 8:25 to play to the game. With 4:43 to play the score was tied at 7474 mit Detroittrailedthere-after. FOR YOUR PROTECTION 320 RIKER BLDG.* PONTIAC-FE 4-1551 Dave Schellhase had 20 for Purdue. High scorer for Detroit was Dick Dzik with 25 points. qTRER GAMES toother games involving Michigan schools, Kalamazoo edged Albion, 68-67, to an MIAA opener. Kamo led at halftime 35-32. Jiit) Peters led the scoring with Players should bring gym shoes and shorts, plus a towel when they report, to their respective sites Saturday. Teatns will be farmed and fundamentals will be shown to the 5th-6th graders. Boys to grades 7-12 who are oh school squads are not eligible. TIMES AND 8ITE8 ['''’WfimL ‘ 7:00 *.m.—Adam*. BMumont, Cootay. Lotus Lake and Waterford village grade Kftool ‘ ragltfram*. . 7,45 ajn.—Drayton Plain*, Houghton. MeVIttto, Pontiac Laka and Watartord cantor 10:30 a m.—Grayson, Lula*. AAontelth, Schoolcraft and Wl1|gn»..gffa itudtnts. ' 1:00 p.m^Zp^Donmon!PourTawn*, UauilMii MdTamiMiNi thutente Mike Pope, picked Up four personal foute early to the contest and sat most of the game with Farmington. . $ St. Frederick surprised Emmanuel Christian, 54-51,' in Its 1963 opener and battled ROSM on even terms before bowing 5341 to the final period. Forward Lowry Holland ah* guard Marcello Gallardo haw provided the spark to the Ram? attack. ,.;rS. I , ' Holland has pumped to lt:> points to two games and Gain do came through wjth 16 to tii near win over ROSM last week Central Michigan overcame a (jold first half to win over Fer- Tris Speaker, who is enshrined in baseball’s Hall of Fame, became the first to be included to the Texas’ Halt of Fame whan that institution was founded to 1951. FINAL CLOSE-OUT DEMONSTRATORS & Executive's Cars Tin Christmas for Christmas? |hem bright, thlny automobile* arm available for immediate delivery — BANK RATES! ALL HAVE POWER STEERING-POWER BRAKES-RADIO, WHITE WALL TIRES PLUS MANY OTHER ACCESSORIES! , Our Stocking is full of 'eml itE SKATES **• 11 ft 4 ^ _ i hookey or figme SAM Ins II Is S D dim akaloo w DYNAMIC 88 Holiday Coupe Oonufne Volt BASKETBALLS leaded with oxtras WAS $3,779.79 ELECTRAS-WILDCATS LE SABRES - SPECIALS HARDTOPS - SEDANS CONVERTIBLES - COUPES RIVIERAS and WAGONS STARFIRE Convortiblo red, white top SKI CLOTHES Men'* end Women's SS JESS'1' jar WAS $3,609.02 now • g a ALL READY FOR DltlVIRY! "2.895 all can carry Now Car Warranty 24,000 MILES or TWO YEARSl *14" SHELTON PONTIAGBUICK INC. ROCHESTER 223 Main St. OL1- 24 E. Lawrence THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1963 Middies Have Gimmicks Cadets Worry: What'll Navy Pull EAST LANSING (UPI). -Western Michigan’s little Manny Newsome put on a show by himself last night at Jenison Fieldhouse but his efforts went for nit as Midtigan State edged the Broncos, 101-100, for the Spartans' second straight basketball victory. they rallied in the final seconds to pull the game out. The turning point' for State came when three of Western’s starters fouled out in the closing minutes. Hie Spartans took advantage of the opportunity and moved into the lead with Mar- WEST POINT, N. Y. <* -* Coach Paul Dietzel and bis Ar-my football team might be excused for tossing around in their bunks these nights, wondering aloud: mick that seems to toss the Cadets for a loop. mth Meeting , It could happen again Saturday when 'file Middies from Annapolis and the Black Knights from West Point clash in their 64th meeting at Philadelphia’s In 1959, the game, that started the current streak, Hardin id-stalled a brand-new formation for the Army, game — a. formation calling for wide flankers and plays not used all year. All, the Cadets’ scouting reports and hours in front of the movie screens went for naught. They might as w