The Weather ,1 V*. Wrnmrn Nmi rwniw . . <»»*■»«»%»w VOL, 119 NO. 268 THE PONTIAC JBRESS Home Edition tz ★ ★ PQfrTiAC, MICHIGAN. MONDAY. DRCRMBKRn 1M1 -UGPAftRtt A Space Creature? Mopw Severs Diplomatic Ties NEW RESIDENT — Pontiac's population Jumped over the weekend, but the newcomers are strictly seasonal visitors. Traditional with the first major snowfall is the appearance of several dozen snowmen. Youngsters had a long wait for snow this year, but made up for it with creations like this 12-foot giant in the backyard of Mr. and Mrs. John Lindgren of 27 Delaware St. The creature was put-together by the Lindgren boys: Edward, 11; and James, 13. Man Rates More Than Shirt, Tie By JANET ODELL You can’t Just buy him a new tie and a shirt. That man In your life should have the same careful, thought expended on his gift as anyone else. Maybe some men are chatty about what they want; we don’t encounter that kind. But we have run across some -------------------—♦Interesting gifts for the Things look Good for Kids-Not Drivers Pontiac area residents can expect snow beginning tonight, continuing Tuesday, the weatherman —ye. ________ Following a low of 28 tonight the mercury will rise slightly to a cool 35 high tomorrow. -• * * Temperatures will average 6 degrees below the normal high of 36 and the normal low ot 23 during the next five days. OjMtr tempetatureS are tore- male individual on you; list. If his ties are hung all over the closet — or on the door knobs, buy a tie rack that looks like a golf dub with hooks on it. Whea the chlMiea want ta know what to give Daddy, suggest a five-way gleaming set that Includes a definter, comb, shoehorn, nail fits and clipper. is a clothes brash. This year yon see them attached to animats carved train oltve wood. ______________________________ For someone on your list who cast Wednesday and Thursdayr-IhaAj—t become a trailerite, a with warmer weather Friday and •gain colder Saturday, according ta the ES. Weather Bureau re-pod. Precipitation will average five tenths of an Inch as snow Tuesday, Wednesday and again about Saturday. Westerly winds 8 to 15 miles today wUl become southeasterly 10 to 20 miles tonight. It it h The lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m. today was 26 degrees at 5 o'clock. BV 2 p.m. the rfter-cury reading was 33. In Today's Press First 11 Months First in series on how JFK is doing - PAGE ill - Peace Bomb AreaTraffic Kills Five onhSunday President Tshombe Up in Arms Staff Told to Got Out; Action Soon as Robuko to Peiping MOSCOW UP) — The Soviet Union has fevered diplomatic, ties...with..-Al- bania in the biggest Communist bloc split since Stalin expelled Yugoslavia from the Gominform in 1948. ' The break, disclosed In Tirana and confirmed by the Albanian Embassy here Sunday* has been expected; The action has been foreseen since Premier Khrushchev at the October Soviet party congress denounced the Albanian leaders as Stalinist and accused them of tiying to disrupt Comnni-list unity. Other Eastern bloc naflem an expected to follow the Kremlin’s lend, leaving tiny Albania supported only by Communist China and perhapa North VM Nam and North Korea. A spokesman for the Albanian Embassy said the Albanian ambassador went home several weeks ago. He said the rupture in relations came several days ago. The Albanian news agency Ata said an exchange of notea beginning Nov. 25 concluded with one UNITED NATIONS, N.Y* (AP) — The United Nation* declared today Katanga forces led by French mercenaries have acquired enough dynamite to pat iato effect a last ditch plan to blow up the installations of Union Miniere, the giant mining company in the province." ELISABETHVILLE, Katanga, the Congo (AP)—President Moise Tshombe declared today the United Nations' aim in current fighting is to reduce considerably if not to destroy, “the economic potential of my country." He said British Hold Up on U.N. Bombs Clearer Explanation of Congo Polities Sought Before Delivery Related Story on Page 19 Saturday announcing file withdrawal of the Soviet embassy and commercial staff from Tirana. Ata said this note also demanded that Albanian personnel get out of Mosoow. By diplomatic accounts, trouble between the two countries exploded In an angry exchange between Khrushchev and Albanian Communist chief Enver Hnxha at the Moscow conference of world Communist leaden in November I960. Albania boycotted the Soviet Communist party congress l fall at which Khrushchev attacked Albania and Red Chine— Premier Chou En-lai in turn criticized Khrushchev for airing the dispute instead of trying to settle it privately. Many Westerners here felt that (Continued on Page 2, Col. U Flies Stolen Plane; Almost Rams Jet mobiicTtwHr-park directory-Jt_a. welcome gift. SO Is the newest road- atlas. SWEATERS SHARP Sweaters this year are the handsomest ever. Even'll he has a pullover and a cardigan, he might like a colorful bulky sweater. Or, he comes home each evening and sheds his suit coat, a finely knit wool lounging sweater Jacket’ would plea— him. Y— know bis hobbles; cater to then. Perhaps ho to longing for a certain record be feels Is too expensive to buy himself. Surprise him with R Christmas UM Wants to Ruin K Katanga's secession from die Con-* go was not the target. After a weekend of air raids and counter raids, Tshombe —M Katanga’s communication have been largely cut by U.N. attacks on die postoffice and radio transmitters and the moat important and modern copper factories in Kolwezi have been heavily damaged. Kolwesl Is a Katanga baae and copper mining center ISO miles Northwest of EUmbetbvHle. U.N. planes attacked the town yesterday. Tshombe told newsmen he lacked full information on casualties, but said several railway workers were hit by a raid on the railway station. "This day wUl be marked with white atone by the capitalist bourgeoisie to mark the stojy of} Its decadence," he declared. "For‘ us and our African brothers this! day will be marked with a black! WSM."- - LONDON (API - Britain announced today it will not dollver the 24 half-ton bomba it promised to U.N. forces in Katanga, the Congo, until the United Nations explained its Congo policies more clearly. The ta the Ho—e of Commons by Edward Heath, lord privy seal and deputy foreign minister. In * stormy send on on the Katanga Heath stressed that Britain supports the general U.N. objective conciliating rival Congo factiona and removing foreign mercenaries from the fore— of President Moise Tshombe. But he said the British government "seriously disturbed by the way the fighting has developed." The British offered the bombs to the U.N. fore— last week but stipulated that they would have to be used only for defen—. Sharp questions are— here and Congo — to how air bombs could be used for defense. One of the moat useful gadgets we have run aero— could be a life—ver for the motorist. It's » slim red metal kit that opens up to show a double reflector in the r, There's a holder on one side for a red flag. l^ tn tbe ear trunk. it can be ft out on the side of the road immediately if the car has to stop for emergencies. It's visible both day and night. Israel Convicts A JERUSALEM (AP)—Israel con-ling, will require several days, ienclosed cage, Eichmann took the victed Adolf Eichmann of "unaur- Sentencing Is expected by Friday *1™1 Wow ®* conviction on the crimes against the Jew.1 In hi. bullet-proof. ch“«“ wtth Christian Cabaret SYDNEY. Australia (UPD- e no intoxicating drinks. wifi ____jrved has been opened kt 8yd- —y, by die Methodist church. To Our Readers The Pontiac Press announces aS-oeat weeklysnbocrtption price taorea— effective wtth the —I-lecttoa of Dqe. H. The home Flashes BAL HARBOUR, Fla. ( AP)—The AFL-CIO today slammed the door on taking back tha exiled Teamsters so long as they arc led by James R. Hof fa. That la the effect of a resolution passed by AFL-CIO convention delegates by an overwhelming voice vote, There wire no an-diable negative votes. WASHINGTON (AP) — So- flew a way in a derue fog Sunday. The plane almost collided with Jet airliner over Dallas. Police said David Mitchell. 20, took the plane after an argument with his wife. Although he received only four hours flight instruction — three years ago— Mitchell pulled the single-engine out of a spin and landed twice without serious mishap, ]"1 —me to my sens— in the cold air and decided not to do anything drastic," Mitchell told a and vice presidents of each were reporter. "Before. I wanted to kifi reindicted far Federal Court to-my—If." . * * I doy Meter Motorscooter MmHMHHHHHmH^hMMHHM Brigtan-Brittah company that prac—o— copper and cobalt-diesel oil and water tanks were hit and the town was left with- (The Brussels radio quoted Tshombe an saying the United Na-| tions destroyed the installations at Kolwezi and also the company’s! See. Pictures on Page 17 Lullu plant, one of the most modem-and most automated in the Hie company's Brussels headquarters lacked confirmation.) Two Katanga plan—, a light Piper and a Dander, attacked the U-N.-beld Elisabethvtlle airport in the night. Flan— fired by Katanga troops ringing the field helped to outline the target. U.N, sources said, however^ the dj *' and 'oim Negro 'Sit-In Convictions Overturned by High Court bethvtle. It oaM two Swedish Jet fighters fired rockets In two runs over the camp and thews Canberra bomber ot the Indian Air Force attacked with —mm. cannon. U.N. sources said the prime target war a mortar battery bolding np a U.N. advance on • strategic underpass. Katanga hospital authorities said the U.N. military had warned them that approach— to U.N. positions on the- main road leading out of Elisabethville to the airport were going to be mined and ambulances should not enter that Nt. Newsmen denied that U.N. plan— had attacked the Eli—beth-ville post office Sunday, as was repotted by a telephone operator in the Elisabeihville exchange. Evidently the operator had been warned a U.N. bomber was overhead and took this to mean the place was under attack. ’ The Brus—Is, Belgium, radio quoted Katanga President Moiohe Tshombe as saying the United Nations had destroyed bom the Kolwezi plant and the Lullu plant of the Union Miniere CO,, a Bel-gian-Britiah concern who— cop-per and cobalt la the economic mainstay of his secessionist province. Brussels headquarters of the company tacked confirmation. AM..WEATHER PROTECTION — Neither snow nor sleet will keep Pontiac policemen from catching up with parking meter violators this winter. Patrolman Leland L. Gormley is shown at the wheel of one of'two new enclosed motorscooters purchased for parking meter enforcement. The 3-wheelers arrived just In time. IRey were delivered Friday, the day before the first heavy snowfall of the —ason hit Pontiac. Car Rare Tree Bringing Death to 2 City Men Slippery Roods After First Snowfall Cause Most Accidents Five persons, including two from Pontiac, were fatally injured in area traffic accidents yesterday aft-' er the first heavy snowfall of the season hit Southeastern Michigan over the weekend. Most of the deaths, according to police, were attributed to the slippery roads and poor driving conditions caused by .Jthe several Inches of snow that was dumped on the area. The two Pontiac men. Jam— S. Thompson, 32, 1919 Opdyke Rond, and Damon Spence, 28, 794 Park-wood Ave., died after the car in which they were riding went out of control and crashed into a tree. Oakland Highway Ton in’61 88 Three other persons were seriously injured in the —me accident which occurred at about 12:30 a.m. yesterday on Mount Clemens Street in the dty. Thompson died at 2:03 ajn. in St ♦92 Joseph Mercy — Hospital while Spence was dead on arrival at . Pontiac' General Hospital. The driver of the car, Grady Ashley, 32, 3780 Bald Mountain Road, Orion Township, told police he could not remember what happened Just before the car skidded off the street and hit the tree. i fi«* M, la ta .... WASHINGTON OP—The Supreme Court overturned today conviction of 16 Negroes who by sit-in demonstrations’ tried to end lunch counter segregation in Baton Rouge, La. The ruling was given in the first sit-in cases to reach the high tribunal. There* have been many such demonstrations in the South. Chief Justice Warren delivered the unanimous decision. Warren saM that while the or- conotitatloaal questions in their appeals, the court found It as-decide the wide Instead, said Warren, the court bases its decision on the ground that the convictions “are — totally devoid of evidentiary support as to render them unconstitutional under the due process clau— of the 14th Amendment." ta • ■ ★ . . ■ o. 1 Hie 16 Negro—, all students of Southern University in Baton Rouge, were convicted tinder Louisiana law making it a breach of the peace to "act in such a manner as to unreasonably disturb or alarm the public." Each was sentenced to four months.in prison, with three months to be suspended on payment of $100 fines. ta three appeals, the Negroes asked a final raltog that their (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Three Arrested in Kidnap Case Two Royal OcHt Girls Claim Suspects Forced Them Into Car Two 13-y—rold girls told police they were taken on a wild, four-hour ride through Eastern Oakland County last night by three men whn kidnaped them in Royal Oak. His Sentence Can Be Death and said hit role in the Nazi pro* gram would be remembered “until the end of time." The special three-man tribunal, which for four months tried the 55-yedr-old Gestapo lieutenant colonel, handed down its judgment today, a Judgment which may firing him death on the galkwv. 300-page Judgment which they began reading aloud in turn, file three Judg— determined that Eichmann was proved to be such an important cog in Httteria machinery for destroying the Jewa that he merited conviction on these major counts: I. Crimes against’ me Jews. 8. Crimes against humanity. 3. War primes. 4. Membership ta the crknlaal Nasi SB Elite Gaard aad SO Reading tha verdict, with all its elaboration of the legal reason- Through his hornrimmed spectacles, he fixed a steady stare on the judg—. ADOLF EICHMANN The court delivered an exhaustive study of the “iniquiti—" of the Nazi Reich and said Jt later woukl-deacribe In detail the role Eichmann played as chief of the Gestapo's Bureau for Jewish Affairs, the man who- stappad-miL lions to their death in the extermination camps. _Tba trlbunal, headed by.Juatict Moahe Landau, went to considerable length to Justify its right to try Eichmann. CASE IN VERMONT Regarding Etchmann's co plaint that he was kidnaped, the court described at length a In Vermont in 1935 in which a man complained be -was seized * brought ar ‘ at—. J ' ■ *r I in the United Slat—. TV Vermont Supreme Court ruled that the method of bringing the man there was I trim portent. That, in effect, was what the Israeli, tribunal decided In Eichmann had argued. that he as only an underling who car ed out orders. But the Court tid: “The laws of humanity are binding on individuals The guilt of- Germany as a state does detract one iota from the personal re^f&BBMIRy dt did IttOaMT. The packed courtroom as the verdict of IjfiU&ty was pronounced. Mtny-of the 600 spectators had relatives who were victims of the Nazi were themselves vivors of the death camps. There was not a sigh or a ripple at the abrupt one-eentence ver diet which Judge Landau spoin rapidly before beginning to outline the court’s detailed reasoning. The rending of die Judgment (Continued on Page 2, Chi. 4) Minutes after the girls reported the incident, three mea they identified as their abductors were ar rested by Oakland County Sheriff's Deputy Roland Pie— at-Opdyke Road and Walton Boulevard ii Pontiac Township. Being held for Investigation -of kidnaping ore Thomas A. Ratio, «1, and Richard C. Hanson. M, both of Detroit, and Walter Mereauk, 35. of 1737 Cambridge Ave., Berkley . The two Royal Oak girls, Nancy Seeman, 1210 Irving Ct., and Bonnie Knight, 204 E. Harrison ~ said they were on their way home Washington Theater in Royal Oak when two of the men forced them into a car. HELD CAPTIVE The girls told police they were held captive white their two cap-, tors picked up a third t drove around Royal Oak. They said the men stopped twice to buy beer and later cruised through Roch—ter, Utica and Lake Orion. While being held prisoners, both girls said they were threatened and otraek several times by the two men. Neither girt was seriously Injured and there no evidence ot thorn being The girls said they escaped at about 9:30 p.m. when an three men stopped ta have s JrMut the Bo-tan Bar, 1132 8. Lapeer Road, Orion Township. They called poll— from a phone booth at Ctarkston and South Lapeer Roadrf tih * # The "girt* gave Sheriff's depo-ti— the license number and description —Dominicans back to work today despite «*■ ' lapse of negotiations lor h unity government and opposition cries that the nation was ' t Businesses opened and there was no sign workers were ready to.resuma the general strike that fwaHynd tbs Dominican Republic for 12 days In the opposition ef-tort to unstat President Joaquin. Workers already have lost considerable wages and Christmas ii drawing mar. JUUD BREAK DOWN Tht opposition ended the gener-al strike Saturday attar the goy-eminent and Its political foes reported agreement in principle on a provisional government tula oatU new elections were held. • * ♦. * But the talks broke down Sunday. Balaguer announced negotiators were deadlocked cause government officials and armed forces leaders objected to demands that be be replaced by someone agreeable to toe opposition. After the breakup, one .. tion spokesman declared "We are on toe edge of disaster." Another said the nation faced the tote of Cubans under Prime Minister IV del Castro. * * * Calling Balaguer a remnant of tot aid Trujillo dictatorship, the i groups said the Dominican people never wilt accept him as their ruler. #..to- Balaguer resumed his program of trying to pacify the people. In one move, his government bought lit taxicabs tom private com-anles and gave . them ■ to the rivers. \*i He also signed a decree atrip-ping Rafael L. Trujillo Jr., aon of the generalssimo last May, of bis general’s commission. TruJUlo left for France at the height of last month’s crisis. WORK ON VOTE LAW ■—Qomnwi WMJMJMriLffli a new election taw to gov May. Balaguer mid the taw to patterned after recommendations made by a subcommittee of the Organization of American States on a recent visit The opposition Is May, saying they would be controlled by the military. Balaguer replied he tawilling to allow OAS teams to supervisoruM control the election!. ★ * The opposition National CMc Union called a meeting of its lead-*> discuss new strategy fat the M the ooOspee of negoti- Moscow Cuts Ties With Albania (Continued From Page 1) when the Kremlin denounced A1-banla, it actually was attacking Peiping for not M . Khrushchev's policy of peaceful coexistence. The break was not mentioned by either the official Soviet news agency Tam or Moacow radio. ■ * ♦ i But Kommunlst, the party central committee’* monthly magazine accepted as a Red table, violently denounced Albania's lead-ers and asserted the "imperialists’* were welting to welcome Premier Enver Hoxha Into their ranks. The break deprives the Soviet Union of advanced strategic bases on tbs Adriatic at the edge of the Meditfgmnean from which scores of Soviet submarine* had been reported operating. However, they are believed to have left the Albanian bases some weeks ago. Albania, a poor country, to faced with the lorn of all Eastern bloc economic aid and must now turn to Red China. At Munich, Germany, Radio Free Europe’s East bloc experts said they mw the break at a Soviet attempt to force Peiping Into withdrawing support from Albania or else assuming responsibility for ‘‘declaring the open split hi the (Communist) camp which to now perilously dose.’’ U.S. experts hi Washington figured the logical next step would be Albania'# expulsion from the Warsaw Pact and withdrawal of relations with Tirana by Soviet mtdlltti. Auto Pioneer Is Dead at 89 Louie G. Hupp Aidod in Production of Fa mod Hupmobilu, Other Care Automobile pioneer Louis G. Hupp of Bloomfield Hills died yesterday following a long Illness. Hupp, to, ef IK Derm Road. (Continued From Page 1) driver of tbs car, Is In tolr condition RJL Joseph Hospital. * Also In ARTeondltion at the same hospital am I#!* Roam, 21, of 1100 Smiley Drive, Utica, driver of tha wrecker, and Christopher Pam, », of 4H49 Lira Utica, driver of ths car Room had stopped Robert C. Hupp, in production ef several early cars, Including the Hupmobtle and the R.C.H. Robert died In iMi. • to ★ * Hupp, an area resident nearly SO years, waa an 1885 engineering graduate of the University of Michigan. *•* * * to recent yean, be had been active In real estate, developing areas near his Bloomfield Hills home. Of REAL ESTATE He waa associated with the real estate firm of Jqdson Bradway, developer of Bloomfield Village, the fanner sits of the old Hupp family fartp. Born In Kmlamasoo, Hupp was tho oldest living member of too Am Arbor chapter of too fllgma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. • • % - ft * Surviving are his wife Lillian, two sons, Arthur H. of Grosae Polnte * Farms and John J. of Bloomfield Hills; and two grandchildren. . * ■ w , Sendee will he held. .SiUrnjn. tomorrow at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home, Birmingham, Burial will be in Woodtawn Cemetery, Detroit, The Weather Full UJL Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Snow beginning tonight will continue Tuesday. Low tonight 28, high Tuesday S5. Westerly winds 8 to 15 miles becoming southeasterly 18 to 28 miles tonight. At S « *».: Wind Vtlocllj It I Direction: W*»t.________________ Soil mW Ifouony u »:w p.a. Dmim TwruiOm Om Tor at* la PmUm BIRMINGHAM —.A Christmas festival will be presented Wednesday by the Birmingham branch of the American Aaaoctafion ef University Women aft ths Community Court Overturns Sit-InConvictions (Continued From Pegs One) thorn of tar Albert John Lutfautt, a former Zulu chief from South Africa, receives ths 1880 Nobel Peace Price from Gunnar Jahn at the Nobel Price awards ceremony in Ohio, Norway, Suriday. The literary prize went to s __ ’ V . . 1 OP Vhstolu Yugoslav writer, and three Americans received awards in medicine, chemistry and physics. A German scientist shared In the physics award. The estate of Dag Hammarskjold received the 1961 Peace Prize. 5 People Killed in Area Traffic Sunday classes ef the Osaatitatlso. Two of the Negroes were arrested st g "white” lunch count In Sitman’s drugstore; seven at simitar counter in a chain Kress . and seven at a ___________ lunch courier In the Greyhound bus station in Baton Rouge. ‘HISTORIC RULING In New York the Congress of Racial Equallty (CORE), which has sponsored freedom rides and a majority of the sit-in demonstrations in the South, helled the ruling as a historic decision that Utica PoUcs said Rosso had pulled off M58 behind Pace’s car his red flasher on to rive Pace gasoUns. Tha two men were standing between the vehicles tag gas when Bunting’s car smashed Into the wrecker. Pace had both legs broken and Rosao sustained one broken leg. Mrs. Hazelton was thrown through ths windshield from the impact. Police are still Investigating the tiding attempted to tors and was struck broadside by aa oncoming onto la Unlay Township Lapeer County. Hie driver of the car, Marie C. Proctor, 81 and another p Eva Hoffman, 42, both of Flint, are in good condition to the Lapeer County General Hospital ★ * a........ A passenger In the other car. [Mrs. Margaret Jameson of Marietta is in the same hospital ta serious condition with severe head and eye injuries. Her IS year-old aoa, Robert, waa driving the car when It hit the Proctor car. Lapeer County Sheriff deputies Shake-Up Denied by Dems WASHINGTON W - The White House threw down today reports of an Impending shake-up that would replace John Bailey as chairman of the Democratic National Committee. Soma reports also had it that the Democratic national treasurer, Matthew .H. McQoskey Is stepping out after sevqp years of presiding at ths party tilL Word got brio prist ever toe weekend tost Lawrence F. O'Brien, special assistant to hie shooter oa Capitol HOI, would Another version was. that would replace McOoskey. A White House official, in position to know, said the stories an impending shake-up akmg these lines were "totally^Tftac* ovate and baaed on pure speculation without consultation of anyone in the White ffausa" SAME STORY The acting press Secretary at the White House. Andrew T. Hatcher, took much the same line, telling newsmen: ‘The President Intends to lean heavily an John Bailey, Matt Me-Osakey and Larry O’Brien daring toe next year-da their prevent capacities." McOoskey reportedly has felt for some time that seven yean as treasurer of the Democratic U.N. Is Brake, Says U Thant Soys Year-End Deficit to Reach $107.5 Million; Colli for Action Mnliy ms Son Wsbwt trmprrnturn lo«Mt trmporoturo [Supreme Court Rules "loyalty Oath Invalid ii 5 Ln*Ant*ica g i?iSup^ecS^imalW todlj ” 8 J£fXSieh 3 ’ilf'oridA*. loyally oath as applied ran 34 ft Duluth M II 1 Rapid* » N Fort Worth tt W “““ *' a Rsasaa OR/ IS • Trav'M City 33 30 N«w York Albuquerque M SI Omaha . a Saa. Atlanta It SI Mstalt IS ssiSMtao si s* mtnsuMh *s 301 Chicago ' 33 M St. Louu 31 331 Denver 3 S Salt Lk. City n .. “ a Stan# S3 a teachers ta public schools. * ★ W . Justice Stewart delivered the unanimous decision, which found the state taw unconstitutionally vague. The ruling waa given on an appeal by David Walton Cramp Jr., a teacher in Orange County, Fla., tor nine yean. He lost his Job for refusing to take the oath. TEACHER'S OBJECTION Cramp said he was not a Communist Or a member of any organization believing in violent over throw of government. His refusal to tmlt» (k» ^ baaed on the belief it violated constitutional guarantee oft freedom of speech, thought and ai elation; also the guarantees „ due process and equal protection ef la w. NATIONAL WEATHER—An extensive area et precipitation with ( ■now In the North and rata ta the South ta expected tonight for the CTT! BTt ri ttf frqto the Gtaf Codst to the lokee Show-ers are forecast for the Pacific Coast. It will be oolder from the Ohto Valley eastward to tha Atfantic And southward to tho Gulf Oust as wqS as from tha Plateau area westward to flit, Pacific Omit r ■ 1 A M ____ ■( _ A Al Ista overthrow of government The law calls for Immediate discharge of any public employe who refuadrto take the oath. to take over. Jl Pittsburgh Post Gazette said Mc-Closkey was going to rive up the treasurer's post on his own initiative and that there was a possibility O’Brien might succeed him. Bailey waa out oft town and unavailable Immediately for com- UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. «-The United Nationa is broke and heading for bankruptcy, «-Hng Secretary General U Thant announced today. ♦ ★ # He estimated the U.-ffr year-tad deficit in 20 days will total 1107.5 million and that by Reset June 30 It wfll be around the HID million, with only $40 million collections to right for the first six months of 1962. Noting that there are $88 million assessments outstanding, Thant said "Hie situation requires that all member countries assist ta providing long-range financing, accompanying pledges of good will with support." Thant did not detail to the committee his [rfan for a J200-million dollar bond issue with a 25-year maturity at 2 per cent Interest. The bonds would be sold to governments and central banks. •aid Mrs. Proctor attempted a left turn off Van Dyke when tha youth, who waa driving with a driver’s education permit, smashed Into the side of her car. The accident occurred at H am. bout a half mile west of Weyer Road. Deputies are still investigating. Eichmann Convicted of Major Crimes (Continued From Page 1) will continue through today and Tuesday. Atty, Gen. Gideon Haus-ne^-who prosecuted the case, presented tons of captured documents and 112 witnesses—win then advise the court on the alty. Defense counsel Robert Serva-tins of West Germany, will make his final plea and Eichmann will be allowed to speak In his own ‘ [half. The court rejected Eichmann’s defense plea that Israel had no rlght-to try him for crimes committed elsewhere and under a law passed yean after the'crimes. BEST TRADITION The court finds the law in the best tradition of international the Judgment found. The court said International crimes were tried as far back as Middle Ages ta areas where the guilty were caught. Piracy were so conducted on the theory that “all mankind must declare war against" such violations. Tha Israeli Judges said this reasoning applies to Eichmann as well. ’A person guilty of piracy has placed himself beyond the protection of any state,*’ the court said. Eichmann, aa chief of th? Ges-ipo’s bureau lor Jewish affairs, was no better than a pirate, the Hie Day In Blr—fagfc—» University Women The program, which will Mow a 12:30 p.m. luncheon, will be opened by Robert Bates, organist and music director et Christ Church Cranbrook. TVs will be followed by oov-ml sstoeOms hy Sirs. Howard Best* topreno. An original story by AAUW’o Mrs. Walter G. Patton will *----“ J means a "new day" for Negroes, dr ★ # "Throughout the south local police officers have arrested CORE members and others," CORE said, "with nothing* to support their tetions . . . "In Jackson, Miss., over 300 freedom riders were arrested under charges based on a taw that to ward for word that of Louisiana. These arrests should be ended under this decision. We feta that a new day to dawning.” Panamanion Aid* Dies _ AIRES (AP)—Joee de ta Cruz Herrera, 85, counselor for the Panama Embassy, died Saturday night after a short illness. He was known widely for his works on the life oft Simon Bolivar, South American liberator. sound cftMts and mnrical back- Mrs. William Milligan will direct a play entitled "Keep tt AO The Year,’’ wham cast Includes Mrs. Patton, Mrs. Kenneth Kesler, Mrs. Donald Howarth, Mrs. George Mother, Mrs. Arthur B. McWood, Mrs. William Jackson and Mrs. Robert Henry. Audience participation In a carol stag, Ipd by Mrs. Howard Green, will doae tite pregra111* The children’s choir and tha youth groups oft the Congregational Church of Birmingham have com* pleted their plans for their annual Christmas caroling. * * * The Pilgrim Choir will go caroling at iraUam Beaumont Hospital Dec. IT at 5:38 p.m. Following the caroling there wfll be an open hone for the Junior High grovq> aft tim home of Rev. and Mrs. Mead M. Bailey. * A The Freriiman Fellowship and the Senior High Pilgrim Fellowship will go caroling to the homes et church members Dee. 23, meeting 7 p.m. at the church for trans- Service for George W. Hain, 41. I 900 Brookwood Lane, was to have been 11 a.m. today at Bell Chapel oft the William R. Ham- Ox with burial In White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. er of Lyon, Inc., Detroit, Mr. HaS, died Friday ef a heart attack at Highland Pull General Hoipttal He oerved as a lieutenant commander in tha UA. Navy durina World War n. member of St. James Episcopal Church and of Km rm. Golf Club, the Detroit Athletic Club and the Recess Chib. * * fr Memorial tributes may be to the Michigan Heart Association Besides Ms wife, Milda I., he to survived fay two douridera. Karen L, and Kimberly A., both at homo; two sons David R. and George w in, also at home; and hto mother, Mis. Alva Hale Of Birmingham. United Jewish Appeal After $95 Million in '62 NEW YORK (UPI) — Delegates United Jewish - Hi 1 iBp Hi win vote today eo a stepped-up goal of $95 million for relief protects during 1182. * * * Tha target was announced by UJA Chairman Joseph Meyerhoff of Baltimore. The campaign to Cast Iron SHU Called Officials Offseason EAST LANSING (UPI) — CM Iron has faced Us greatest, chal-i In recent years because oft widespread use oft aluminum, a Michigan State Univerrity metallurgical engineer says it still holds the top spot in technological prominence. * * * Dr. Howard L. Womochel said iron foundries are meeting alumi-competition by developing better grades of iron which can be cast Into thinner, lighter sections. It was Etahmann’a Job to round up the Jews, arrange transport to the death camps and see that the human cargo waa delivered. Out of that master Nazi plan to wtoe out the Jewkdi race, six mfl-Uoo died, moth than, hair of All]' of Europe’s Jewish population. IT Eichmann to sentenced I death, hto counsel can appeal to the state Supreme Court If the high court rejects the appeal, Eichmann can ask clemency from President Izhak Ben-Zvi. 3 Persons Injured as Train Is Derailed NEW ROCKFORD, NX). (I) . The Great Northern Railway's Empire Builder passenger train derailed near Sett, N.D., today, with 11 cars reported off the tracks. Railroad officials In tt. Pad Passengers on the 13-car train were taken toa nearby school and church for shelter from the Abe- low-zero cold.. The engine and two forward roro rwn«tn#d nw tho riw mtimr the Seattle-bound train derailed bout 8 a.m*. II das running s hours and 40 hdttates late out of Mtaneapolte-St. Paul. DIRECT-FROH-IUKEn Purchase Brings Priest D-0-W-N on SLEEPWEAR Right whan savings mean the most comes bargains in sleepwear for the entire family « . . hero are typical examples to show how much you will SAVE W SIMMS!. SPECIAL PURCHASE SAVINGS MEN'S Coat Style BROADCLOTH PAJAMAS SANFORIZED Non-Shrink-FIRST Quality 411 SIZES-A,B,C,D flair, stripes and print pattern*. Lapel collar coat wfl!t adjust-oble elastic waistband pants, fit size 34 to to men. SANFORIZED-Soft and Warm-MEN'S Flannel Peiamas Compare to 94— dhAA Two piece, button front stylos In many patterns ond colors. Size* .. AtoD. - eeeeeeeeeeesseeeesessssstsM************** SPECIAL LOT New Underpriced- Ladies’ Flannel Gowns 159 Stosj 34 to 48- 1 Full cut, long lie Up*, choice* or 4 color* In popular print*. (2 for $3.00) BROADCLOTHS and FUNNELS Lades’ Pajamas Print* and poMsta quality \ — Sol* Wifi expert tailor. Hgg long or *l»rt ileeves. ,34 to 4ft FuU and Waltz Lengthi '^Philmaid" Gown* ■eMe also chat- jo ne [lb In plain* and print*. E 99 AH tlzes lesesefesessssteeseteeet GIRLS' Ftann,l Pajamas Prints and Stripas 188 7tel4 I Ivy league cellar, • tors, elaiHc pent*. & to*Kwstytoqbe*. • to laender. Ion Irimip print* mi # __*. t ttripat. . J • ^ sr — PARK FREE. , . ' in Any City Owned let f . %. ' eeeteeeeMeeeeeeeeee* ALL SIZES Including Extra Large Sanforized, cotorfost, easy to launder. Pullover tops, draw-string pant*. Fit all to 50. Flannel or Broadcloth Boys’ Pajamas Popular 2-Pieco—Coat Styles Vs »«eqeeefeeseeeeieesees BOYS'Ski-Style Pajamas 31 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. DECEMBER 1961 THREE Boy Admits Involvement in Killing, Police Report DETROIT ®-Police aaid a 15-year-old boy told them he and three other youths killed an elderly widow who ran a tiny candy store la bar home because their tint planned robbery target was too bid. . "The guy was too Mg,** Arthur Elmore, 15, wai quoted at telling Detective Lt. Edward Jocque. “We decided not to tackle him.'' 'Larry was gotag„to grab him _.J I was going to stab Mm,” Jocque quoted Elmore as raying. However, Jocque said, after the boys saw the size of the man they decided to rob Mrs. Lillian Flcht, 80. QPfBOnoN pywawiTigp Jocque quoted Arthur as saying he objected to robbing Mrs. Flcht because he Jived only a few doors away and knew her well, but was The detective said the four entered her tiny living room store and bought .cigarets. He quoted Arthur as aaylag, "Larry grabbed has anI add ‘stab her* aad I (track at bar once. I don’t know If M weat to. I struck agalu. I felt the tadfe go la. Larry let bar go aad she started 'to (cream." With that, Arthur said, the tour fled, taking no money. Police tnid Roger told hto . eras and went to the police station, then implicated the others. An were held for investigation of murder. Police adld they would ask waivers today so that they may be tried as adults. Officers Break Up Still MUSKEGON HEIGHTS (It Federal, state and city officers broke into a building here Saturday night and arrested Howard Moore, 55. Police said they found, an illegal still In operation. They confiscated 95 gallons of mash and 2 gallons of whisky. $■1 HOLDS ANY CAMERA ITEM IN ■ FREE LAYAWAY TO CHRISTMAS KODAK "“Flash Camera Set As shown — already gift boxed. Set has camera with built-in flash, batteries, film and bulbs. Take B&W snaps, Color Snaps and Color Slides, (••••••••aaaaoaowwaaaaaaaaaaaaaaj"------- Brilliant Light From Oue Bulb For INDOOR MOVIES and STILLS Sylvania SUN-GUN Original f24.95 Value-discount As pictured—bracket , to hold camero . . . one bulb does the work or 4 ordinary light bulhs. (Casa For SUN GUN $2i99) RADIANT Movie-Side SCREEN GOOD QUALITY $12-95 Meteor 30x40".... ........ $13.95 Meteor 40x40"..«r»r------- $21.95 Meteor 50x50"............. BETTER QUALITY $19.95 Picturamastar 30x40"............. $21.95 Picturamastar 40x40"............. $28.95 Picturemoster 50x50" -------.”... 5" . r .13" .13" 15" 17" $32.95 Vo1-40x40"*W _ _Vol- 50x3Cr 4 **REVEREAutomatic Elactric-Eye Z-O-O-M 8mm Movie Camera CHA Plans to End Drive This Friday / ' ------1>. ----- DETROIT lit—A .drive to per* lade 150,000 Detroit area auto workers to change their health-insurance from Blue Chws-Blne Shield to Community ^fealth Association (CHA) end! Friday. CHA la backed by the United Auto Workers Union. , The twomreek "re-enrollment drive” is CHA's first community-wide effort to challenge Blue Cross-Blue Shield since the association was formed Ut 1956. CHA now tax 8,000 members. F^refiuest to let tuiion members deckle between tnh two programs was granted by Ford Motor Co., General Motors Corp. end Chrysler Corp. .during contract negotiations earlier this year. Modal CA-1U com.ro thot loomi from wid.-ongl.1 to t.1.photo movi« . .. otodric-oya lor outo- PORTABLE Battary Operated . ALL TRANSISTOR Tape Recorder SIMMS DISCOUNT ★ Exactly At Pictured , if Easiest to Operate Voices preserved forever—at home for your children, for executives and professional men, at school, for men on the go.. . . complete with recording tape, recording microphone and earphone for private listening. Uses inexpensive transistor -batteries. Amazing 3-Band 9-TrnnsiStw Realtone RADIOS Complete With Cate—Battery and Earphone—All In Box Compare to $59. Seller* 28 EXACTLY AS PICTURED 3-seperote bonds bring in short wove, long wove and medium wave —this meons you con get international broadcasts, aeronautical bond, marine bond and FAX' weather bands , . . plus standard AM broadcasts. Accurate tuning* tone control and powerful" built-in speaker and antenna. 25 SOUTH 1 Special Purchase! Save Now for Christmas Sale of TABLES Over 40 Styles—GUARANTIED UNDERPRICED —AUFin$ Quality— Stylet for Every Purpose—Prices for Every Purse • Map). • Step Tabl.t • Caffe. ToMm a Wolnuf • luma TuMm • Carer Tobfe. • Mahogany • Mohr Tobias • Cocktail Tobl.t O lim.j Oak * Snack Tabfe* O Piocruit Tublo* a laminated . • Drum Tablet 0 and Other* Values to $8 Tables— Now . ,... 3.90 Values to $10 Tablds—Now ...... 5.95 Values to $15 Tables — hlow^^^ ■ V? 7.90 Values to $20 Tables—Now ...... 9.90 Values to $25 Tables — Now . . ..14.90 Wa don't offer complete stock but if wu have what you want, you con bo certain that you will save money here. - NO CHARGE for LAYAWAY § SIMMS wNlYlfvmi# brothers FE 8-6839 • 23 SOUTH Seflnuw Between Penn*y*« 'A Crtwrlft Paint-Up Claon-Up Your Horn* for tha CHRISTMAS Holidaysl PAINT DEPARTMENT DISCOUNTS White and Colors—DRIKOtE UTEX Well Paint FULL GALLON a4||| Compare to $4.95 paints— ■■ICM Vinyl Latex paint In while and colors for walls and callings. . - — Long Lasting—DRIKOTE PORCH-FLOOR Enamel FULL GALLON Comport to $5.95 point- IlMH bo tile ship gray or light J gray colors for wood and concrete floors. Stop Basement Leaks With Famous ADDROC ZK? PAINT f Natural Soalor fort $3.95 Value e Comant Blocks ESP a Asbestos Shingles ! e Stucco and Brick 199 Choke of white and colors. aaty to apply matonry paint prevent* water • leakage. (ADOROC FAINT la 30-lb. Com.. .$1344) - .It*............................ ’ jua WATERLOX^ Transparent . Henry Body Fill...........MS Fist.......1.20 Qsart.....1.80 Quart...2.10 Gallse.... .8.00 Gadss.7.25 Sealer and finliher for fino floor* and interior wood surfaces ... rubs to high, piano lystar. PAINT THINNER j $1.19 GALLON : DROP CLOTH 1 “ ^ 79c Valuo bruibe*. limit J J gallon*. gi- Sturdy WOOD—Folding Style 5-F00TStepladder Now On £ Regular $4.9S Valua-Now Only All wood ladder with stool rodj^foAQ reinforced steps, handy pail™^Vw platform. Folds for corrying and storage.'Limit' 4-Pc. Paint Brash Sets $1.29 Valuo—New Set bos %-1-l %-2-inch (brushes. Pdra bristle*. Limit 1 sot par parson. FREE PARKING In Any CITY Metered RANKING LOT! SIMMS OPEN TONITE Until 10 P.M. and EVERY NIGHT Until CHRISTMAS! All Special DISCOUNT Prices for TonHe and Tuesday iShop Simms for big discounts on wanted gifts—for everyone] on your listv Plenty of hours—wa'ro open 9 b.rn. to 10 p.m.L doily—and plenty of frte parking spaces in city lots neor| Simms. Shop the Store That HoA-Mge—flAAMSI f TOYS at SIMMS BIG DISCOUNTS 26" Wide, 528" Length Clift Wrap Paptr 6r77‘ $1.29 value—full 528 inches, 6 roll* of paper in oMorted pattern* end. color*, limit 6. —Main Floor looooooooeoeoojtoooeew Sale of PLUSH TOYS GROUP No. 2 SUNBEAM ‘Drillmaster’ '/«” Electric Drill Regular 0S.S4 3 amp*, 2000 rmpa, g die. —2nd Fleer Famous SUNBEAM %" Electric Drifl 1M.I1 value— Samp, up la powerful 3-amp. up la ft HP. GROUP Np. 1 Your Choke T >lush Bear*, Dog*. S With .lattic card In Hoar - Your Choke About 12 India* toll—choice of Monkey, Poodle, .Shaggy Deg or Donkey. —Main Fleer TONKA ALL STEEP Pick-Up Track TONKA ALL STEEL Fanfl Stake Truck S3.00 SeNer J S4.00 Sailor Truck with movable tailgate, trailer P Removable Poke panel*, trailer < coupling for other acco*- Jp|in9> —hit* ddewaN 12%-lnch length. BWJH 14x6x6 Inchet. Assortment of Designs Christmas Cards *0X50. TONKA ALL STEEL CsrCsrHsrTNANSFORT p SS-OOSoSoe „ . „ "•BO ?Tr> ____________» a RepllcB of mol car carrier. Automatic Hydraulic dump with 2 petition toil- 4tv)cs. ^ goto for dumping or gUQA Z*hewn->294nch length, tproadtng. Heavy tread- raeusu ^ - ■ — •d tire*. 13W-in,.length.. —2nd Pfeer Steal Dump Truak • a lOlition tail- % 3*1 SUNBEAM ’/*" Electric Ml $39.95 29* 3-omp. motor, 500 rpm he feed (peed, geared chuck and 7-ft. 3-conductor cord. i«aaaa«apai ‘TONKA’ BOXED Chocolates 2-ROUNDS Pumper Fire Engine $9.00 7« A* shewn — painted red* _ just like the real ones j hooks-yp td miniature hydrant which connects to garden j [hose for flow of water. 17-Inch length. —2nd Floor ™ eeeeeeeeeeeececeeeeeeeecccccecceeeeeecee SUNBEAM Electric Sanders S3S.SS Value 27" 4000 rpm*., gear moth belt elimln. WELLER Instant Heating ELECTRIC Selkrisg Guns 499 ) watt ir FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1961 Tiny Rocket Engin* lAppokih Ex-Praridenh PiTSlfirurl for Satellite MDCKD CSR* (API — KH rar Mom um mm \ SHOPEVERY NIGHT Table separates for patties! / Wash and drip-dry to miiwtosl ★ Short dim droM shift VO. Duitntr mt OtmTUU tUdonllco Jr.. ITU Oraaflcld /■JErsii ffiA *— GIANT 40 " ALL STEEL HOOK AND LADDER TRUCK Regulation 5-ft. by 9-ft. PING PONG TABLE Our exdutlvs Fire Truck nude to lett for yuan of, fun. Sspsnfo windshield, realistic wooden ladders, feweled gun sights and dang. Ing belt add to the fun and action of this study toy. Safe alt steal construction in bright fireman red baked enamel. i. Holcim. SIT) Orchard Remer, 1«M Orchard ifiriittta. use iroaai KraUkourid, USt £K C. JotmMa. S10 Albany Battery Operated Remote Control ; 'larrnc# B. Syria L. Jerald O ttctivt, unrovtls mony o thrilling mysttry In books. You'll bo glad you did, when that big Christmas chock arrives next November, in time for you to do your Christmas shopping early! ■AST* FIRST COUNTING ROOK mokes figures fun end odding easy. Colorful illustrations and large type and figures combine to make e wonderful end Instructive companion to the Word book. SAVE WEEKLY in small amounts to receive a BIG check! FOR A TRULY MERRY HOLIDAY RtAOC RIAUTY is the fovor. It* of milHone of perants end each year It becomes the favorite of millions ef boys and gtds reading It far the first Mme. picture version. NANCY DRIW Is tfwherobie of • vary popular series of '2 A y2\ • ""L1 ’JR,., W-.t* j HAVTIMI BOOK TO TRACI AND COLOR Is fun —. and Mm develop skills of hand bet gift book, THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1961 Most Motorists Deputy Sheriff Bit on Ohio Turnpike [ BEREA, Ohio (UP!)—An army ■ may travel on Its stomach but a i survey shows travelers on the 1 Ohio Turnpike do not Is packing Us bag this year with the widest choice of play activity ever ottered to everybody from toddlers andUjn-ager* to oldsters who are young at heart. ^ U keeping with tfae ttmes. science has inspired much of toy-land’s output lor this Ttdetlde season, according to the Toy Guidance Council.... Wnm the looks of tone of the Lights Reduce Mishaps ST. LOUS (UPO — Good street lighting can reduce night injury accidents by 30 per cent, J. M. Waldram, of the General Electric Central Research Laboratory, Wembley, England, told the Illuminating EngJneqriiM Society here recently. the dog, which die said had been trained for police work, and explained that Sheriff John E. Steel had expressed Interest. Hampton reached down to pet the dog. It hit him. Six stitehea were needed to dose the wound in the deputy's right wrist. Author-Adventurer Dead MIAMI, Fla. (AP)-Wynant D. Hubbard, 61, author of six books on his adventures, hunting and mining in Africa, died at his home Saturday. New, ttio. are Uta which reproduce the manufacture of an kinds of plastics, and electronics provide the inspiration for dozens at playroom projects that help Junior and sis train for scientific careers. SHOP TIL 9 TONIGHT AND EVERY NIGHT TIL CHRISTMAS Use a Flexible CCC Chargo ROSE-PRINTED SHEETS SPRINGMAID'S PRINCESS ROSE COMBED PERCALE 72 by 101* or <« EMBROIDERED ROSE 1UXURY MUSLINS 72by10B*er so DRAPERY SALE! Short! Long! Single and Multiple Widths! Antique Statin! Rayon-Acetate! Blendsl These exquisite sheets with Sprmgmaid's roses scattered along the border ore probably the prettiest sheets you've ever seen I They are color-coordinated with the pastel and stripe sheets too, so you can mix and match to your hearts content. Wonderful for gifts, set thorn soon I Soo those luxurious Spring maid shoots foot • Pastel Percales (mix V match with prints) • Candy strip* Percales O Scalloped Percales • Whitor-than-white Percales aqd Muslins BEAUTIFUL CURTAINS Cafes! TJars! Tailored! Blands! Cottons! Synthatks! » fabrics •C Cup and saucar sots of translucont ENGLISH BONE CHINA Stratchas 8-feat, 5-inchas Famous freeze-cook-serve FLOOR-TO-CEILING CORNING WARE 3-LIGHT POLE LAMPS ROYAL FAMILY SET This Is the fabulous freeze-cook-terve wore that can go from freezer direct to red-hot burner without damage becouse It's mode from Pyroceram, developed for missile nose corns. Rosas all yaar 'round for your bath! PETIT POINT TOWELS by MARTIX .........1.99 Fingertip 65c 1........1.29 Both Mat......2.99 lloth ....... 59c Shower Curtain .. 9.99 MELAMINE DINNERWARE Five bhoutiful decorated patterns by Beverty or Texoswam -r-^r-r-oll in wonderfully durable melamine plastic guaranteed two years against breakage. Each set includes a platter, serving bowl, creamer e„ S3RF THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY. DECEMBER 11, UR LAmc Circa" Stevenson Will Remain Ambassador to U.N. with i wet nop it’a downright hard to tell whom the handle la. Adlai Stevenson has decided that he will not run for the United States Senate. *' ★ ★ President Kennedy urged him strongly to remain where he is as be has been creating a tine record for his country and has heen of inestimable value to the White House in his role of Ambassador to the United Nations. ★ ★ Adlai Stevenson been regarded as a keen man In a debate and n ready fellow with a well-turned phrase. In his current calling, this flair for formal and Informal speech has reached new heights. Repeatedly, when the Russian contingent begins arm waving and desk pounding, the ,UJf. delegation sits back and waits for Adlai Stevonaon to pat out tho fire and path the messy Reds back in their proper place. it .it it He has “reoriented" the bullies of bluster many, many times. After some of their more furious outbursts, it is usually Stevenson that punctures their trial balloons on all sides and then in the middle for good measure. ★ ★ * ★ He would have faced a formidable opponent in 8enator Everett Dirk-sin for the Illinois nomination. The current occupant has been entrenched in state politics for an extended period of time and could stand up under a lot of hammering. ★ V ★ ■ Had Adlai elected to try for the Senate—and had he been successful—he would have stood right beside the door pointing to the Democratic nomination for the Presidency when Kennedy leaves. Of course, there’s nothing to prevent him from knocking on that same tempting portal from hie * U.N. position. In fact, Henry Cabot Indge did precisely that very thing. Still, the Senate would have undeniably given him a greater “in." He known this and he was well-aware of it when he declined the invitation to consider himself a Senatorial candidate. ★ ★ The President has given him such an unequivocal endorsement he can return to his duties at the United Nations with renewed vigor and With the asiurance th&t he has the complete support of the Nation*! Chief Executive Officer. Rambler Goes Abroad Ocoaoi Romney’s 1 American Motors has decided that European auto circles need a bit of their own medicine, AMC and Renault will cooperate to produoe a Rambler model on the continent. • ★ ★ ★ ' - ' The foreign ante makers came to this country and sold well when American manufacturers delayed ' feft long In meeting the demand for smaller cars. Now AMC officials feel there -is a demand in Europe for bigger cere than the native versions. This la where the Rambler model will come in, they hope. —dr—it-—it ■ If the Rambler does as well In Europe as the European can did here, AMC stockholders will bp chortling over their profits. Voice of the People: Avondale's School Board Interested in Interest relative to the athletic program to the Avondnfo School District Is to be commented. ★ * Right asw many ef ear * seated to the beard to sestet to tutors pleas ter As e ★ it it One of these groups Is studying curtiedum in all It would he happy to hive any people to our district give us 1 thoughts la serving on such a group. A personal vdaRpr a t to the superintendent’s office or the board offices win give i motion as to tips of such meetings. ‘Why Did Justice Take Step Down?* How' could a member of thi Supreme Court leave that high poet to become a police com-missioner? I suppose another Justice win leave the bench to plsy third base tor the tigers. Tells What Makes Apples Beneficial ‘Brazil’s Problems Are Mostly Moral’ Toughness!—on the Installment Plan! Aa a result ef the work of morel rearmament, tor the first time in 25 years the streetcar workers’ Dr. Jarvis' book “Polk Medicine," toils what is to beneficial ts the apple. It tells of the value ef vinegpr and honey as a daily part of our food end the part It plays hi nutrition. DM Publishing Compefly his bean putting out a 50 cent paper cover of the book. One man got so much relief from arthritis tost ft is amazing. Go by ths county'market Saturday morning and ask tor Mr. Gflcher. I. too, have found it a greet remedy for an ailment of tong David Lawrence Claims: Communist leadership. The roots of the problem today are not economic. They era moral. is carried over into apple cider vinegar is potassium — a much' Kennedy Proves He’s Antibusiness ’Kennedy Might Get Nixon’s Treatment’ The Man About Town Air of Christmas Prevails in the Items We Receive From Readers On* who remember! when children didn’t any what they‘ demanded for Christmas; A boost for the clerks in Pontiac stores comes from our suburban Birmingham, as Mrs. Georgina Chltney writes that they are Invariably courteous and obliging, while many in Detroit are in the sour puss class. __ WASHINGTON - President Kennedy may wonder at times why his administration is so frequently ra-■ ferred to as "antlbuslneaa." need wonder no longer. For while the President promised the National Association Of fact ure rs last Wednesday speech at New York City that the next day in talking to the APL-V CIO convention hes would “stress",the! importance of| holding down wa costs as a factor" in price stability, he tailed to do so. Ha made only a brief reference to the sebject ef price stability and ha directed tfete to both to- longer. President promised m “If the end effect of the President’s campaign tor voluntary holding of the price line is to throw all the responsibility oq industry, And Secretary of Labor Goldberg Ke^wffl undo aU the sltorts “If we are going to keep the economy going on a sound nan-inflationary basis, wage increases over-all Should be earned by increasing productivity.’’ he has been making to persuade the business community that he does not apply a double standard to business and to labor." - President Kennedy should not-be permitted to visit South'America. We all know what happened to Nison and people are apt to be more inflamed now than they, were then. The results for good couldn’t possibly match the horrible risk. LLI. Says Some Citizens Protest Christmas This nation, founded under God. has sheltered the oppressed of the world and frtoeptTOd. Now Some of our cittern loudly protest s manifestation honoring His Son’s birthday. We are. indeed, inviting God’s he asked, is lAWRENCE Goldberg then immediately declared that this did not mean wages should necessarily be stabilized. He pointed out that the formula provides “plenty of room for advance in this highly productive country." America going to be bleased with a national leadership that eschews the politics of pressure groups and really champions the national Interest? When, morover, are recessions and depressions going to be nipped Portraits Ifoi. L. P. Pousar A president some day who learns how to get across the doctrine that W Stmt a METCALFE Oh, come with me, my dearest . . . To see the roses on the vines . . . Where eariyin the Springtime morning ... The sun into their faces shirtee . . . And walk with me into the woodland . . . Along a winding shaded Ism . The Almanac By United Press Isterwattoasl Today te Monday, Dec. 11. the 345th day of the year with 20 to follow in 1981. The moon te approaching its first quarter. A complaint comes In a tetter from a Pontiac, father, signed “Still Juvenile Minded," who is having family trouble. He wants a train set, but his boy doesn’t. A Pontiac merchant would like to'renew the historical “Jlogle Bells,’’ if he couid find any; together with "A One-Horse Open Sleigh,” and asks us to query our readers. If you can help him, phone this column. 1. Ms own Secretary of Arthur Goldberg, later Kennedy’* brief and Incidental remarks before the AM.-CIO as meaning that demands lor Increased wages — and even strike* — were Justified If based on “productivity.” Now moat businessmen know from experience in labor negotiations that “productivity” te not* really based very* much on any increase in individual efficiency but is conveniently calculated nevertheless by labor-union economists to include substantially all savings made by new machinery and equip- Perhaps the best Summing up of in America “There te enough for When ta MBng mm- the damage done bythe President's everybody's need but not enough failure to speak out forcefully on for everybody’s greed" could find the wage issue te contained In the himself an easy winner of rs-elec-toUowing paragraph in a New York tion. "Times” editorial on Sunday: (Copyright, INI) Dr. Harold Hyman Says: There Are Ways to Stop Pinworm Infection Return met . . . The leaves are turning red again . . . Oh. Joto me to the rustic autumn . . . When winds are witches te the night . . . And ... In window* give an decte light . . . And let me take your hand in winter . . . Tb aae upon the heavy snow ... The fairyland of crystal snowflakes . . . Beneath the pallid moonlight glow ... Oh, never leave me tor a moment. . . Because If you should not be hoe ... The 8prtag, the Summer and the Autumn , WIU keep the Winter aU the year. The evening Mara are Jupiter and Saturn. On this day in history: hi IMS. Indiana became the 19th state to he admitted Into Ik* la MOT, President Theodore Roosevelt announced that he would not be a candidate for file presidency. In 1938. King Edward VIII abdicated the throne to marry a divorcee. to 19* MM & Rockefeller Thanks for a~ letter from ten-year-old Beverly Hanehett of Drayton Plains, who writes that her teachlr advised all children to Keep Christ In Christmas and nevar to write the word any other way. Theoretically some of the economies due to better machinery should be divided three ways — to the consumer in lower prices, to. the Stockholders in the form of earnings, and to labor in the form of Increased wagea But customarily tye labor unions The lea la not safer for skating on any ef our lake*, although s few ef the smallfC ones aro fresen over. This column will tell yea when yen’re not an Immediate prospect for the funeral director . by skating on them. demand almost all of the savings, and that’s what they mean by "wage Increases based on Increased productivity,” _____ By HAROLD T. HYMAN. >!.». Pinworm is the worm infestation of- childhood which occur* most frequently. Many mothers who write to ftie seem to think that its presence in their household is a reflection on the care they give their youngsters and their home. Other* regard tt aa a drain their nails in the crotch ar which eggs are deposited. Smiles ed to donate a I York Oty m a stte ter the United for s copy of Dr. Uystsa’t KetM “Bov to Choooo Tour Pintty Doctor," MBS II eoau to Dr. Hymsa, obis of Tho Pontisc Prow. Bob US. Dost. £ Radio City Sutton, New York IS. N.Y. How do such pretfy complexions com* out of such sloppy handbags? Some folks ride a bike to reduce and fall off quite a bit. A thought for the day: Prori-dent Abraham Lincoln said: "There is no grievance that te a fit object of redress by mob law.” tribute te H i Case Records of a Psychologist: Emotions Different in Men, Women A TURNING POINT The President’s failure to keep Accordlnf to a man who recently moved hero from that state/ . Bertram Oswald of Clarkston, one of the few quiet stories that come out of Texas is about its snows. his promise to the NAM and Secretary Goldberg’s speech before the AFL-CIO may prove to be a turning point In. Kennedy’s political fortunes. Unfortunately, Let me try to deal with these disturbing problems in a single package: The presence of pinworm is no reflection on thw conscientiousness or capabilities of the housewife. By DR. GEORGE w. CRANE CASE K-473: Loran G„ aged 29, was an attorney enrolled in my evening course in social psychology. “Dr. Crane, my sweetheart and I have been having an interesting debate regarding Jhe emotionality acquitted herself nobly, shell break down and cry over some trivial Item. It te thte toconaie- of women," ■mule history of the United Director of Art Exhibits Faces Tough Decision Oenivuve Habert of New York should get a prise for being able to tell when an example of modem art is hanging upside down.. It was she, you know, who discovered a painting by Matisse had been exhibited wrong-side up in the Museum of Modem Art for 47 days. But out sympathy goes to the director, of the exhibitions. |-:.. ★. it....it_____ Daily he must deride whether...... the red blob is supposed to go on the left, whether the unattached eyeball was intended to jump out front beneath the orange or over the noon, and whether the molten watch was supposed to drip toward the desert or be pulled upward by the symbolic purple train whistle. Maybe the artist was standing on his head when he painted itjtfsybe hi expresses his nonconforfnity by signing his name in the wrong cor-nan—iipgidd down. Wlfitt you’re hit in the face Most everybody will be in agreement With Harry flezman of Bloomfield Hills, who suggests that the best Christmas present the con-con bunch at Lansing can give us la to quit patting themselves on the back, and get down to business. A serious maladjustment to the form of a recession or depression next year could retard America’s growth and increase unemploy- In connection with the con-qon, we now may expect some heavy doings from Pontiac’s Dick Kuhn, since that new son has arrived at his home. The President raised high hopes at first when he talked severly to the businessmen at the NAM about restraints to prices and promised to speak as forthrightly to the te- A Pontiac suburban construction firm, owned by C. A. Hull of Bloomfield Hills, has been awarded a 987,477 contract for a highway bridge -near Flint, * , Hero te what he said to the NAM convention: “Labor, too, has its responsibility for price stability, and I shall stress this to addressing the AFL-CIO,’' But the next day Kennedy, to the course of a long speech at Miami before the labor union convention, discussed largely what bis administration had done for labor and would continue to do. Except for itching and the resultant effect of restlessness and scratching, pinworm infestation is of no consequence to file affected youngster. Several safe and effective drugs are available to rid the child ui pinworm*. For obvious reasons. I cannot give the names of these drugs nor instruction tor their use. Every effective drug has side reactions.- laughed. "In one of your sessions talked- about the emotional & U you will Just realize, however, that women are emotionally half child, half adult, yen can easily follow their moods. a woman can usually detect when her mate te developing an interest to another woman. h 9r * But men can go along In entire ignorance of such affairs between their wtves and other men. I know For example, a young woman may tril her hey Mead tost she hates him. Hell react with Bar- men and women.! We’ve been argu-l tog since then onl a somewhat re- crane lated topic. “For example, do you think men understand women better than women understand men?” qmrral violently, and then ge heme in a huff. After which she’ll cry antll da TOXIC EFFECTS It alio has Unde effects if given or taken to excessive dosage. Hence both the particular drug and the particular dose must be suited to the Individual who is to take the drug according to specific instructions. These several drugs do, In fact, “cure" pinworm infestations. But they can’t and don’t prevent recur- This would make an interesting ■aid on both sides. However, I believe m cast my vote for the women. Taken as a sax, I believe they understand men better than the male understands the female. Then what did she have in mind by saying she hated him? Very often she simply meant that she had stinted for n month to buy a new frock and the big lummox didn’t even notice it. Or she bad sat waiting for e kiss or some romantic petting, but he did nothing but talk about the chanorn of the Yankees versus the White Sox. scores of husbands who were completely surprised when their wives announced that they wen filing for divorce. And hereto why. to the Bret place, I think men are mere predictable In their behavior end Th« Country Parson One thing the matter with radio, according to that close listener, Mr*. Jane Pordman of Rochester te that It has a Guest too many. Verbal Orchids to- M Mrs. Mary Llndgren . of 850 East Man.'field Ave.; 86th birthday. 1 Mrs. Agnss Fulcrum of Aubum Heights; 82nd birthday. ’ < Mr. and Mrs. Gnat FeJdscamp of Waterford; 52nd wedding anniversary: Mr. and Mrs. William Daekef? of Romeo; 54th wedding anniversary. way yen gel rid ef date and dbt ■fee dnet «d dirt, they The prevention of reinfection te primarily your Job. And hereto how yOtr go about it: CD under your doctor’s direction, give til* worm medicine to every member of the household whose specimen contains worms or eggs aind to every domestic pet you permit to share your home; (2) scrub the toilet •eat with any strong household disinfectant; (3) until you get fen “ail dear" from yottr doctor, trim the nails of tail the infested until they're too short to pick up the eggs whan they scratch qnd (4) Women, ha I have told yon previously In this ootamn, are always halt adult, halt child la their emotional outlook. So they never reach the pre- A wise man foams that a firm embrace and plenty of low movie kisses wlH wipe away both tsars ha wen as feminine anger, unfortunately lor giris, the avenge nude argues with them to audi Situations instead Of overwhelming them with atdor. logical truth, when he wrote "The Taming of the Shrew.” gut men attain, tor they seldom grew to be the physical equals of the male adults whom they admired In childhood. Boys, bowevei, grow to be as ton and aa strong aa their fathers and superior in them respects to their mothers. But the tittle girl, even when die becomes n woman, is stffl inferior in strength and bright to tiie male. Hence, she retains some of her former childhood attitudes. Thus, women may be brilliant and CM. A’ child’s Mm ef aflsctlon la kisses or A hug. That view to also typical ef women. WOMEN GOOD FSTOMLOONt I brifove women an bettor pay^ chofoglris than men because they more often riufiy people instead of engtoanrtog, mattiematics, aa tag. oto, Women’s chief far 9, including “f&pyvfoht. 1 SEVEN THE-PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER, 11, 1901 Monroe Library to Cut Services in Next Year MONROE Ot-The Monroe County Library Board aays It must Swank NY Hotel Boasts of Fishing in Subbasement ^eJCagicof is everywhafg Drowns Under Ice The library board gets most of Its revenue from traffic fines. A spokesman lor the board said the new Petrolt-Xaiada expressway and the new U.S. 23 expressway allowed drivers to bypass the Both were counselors at the Gear Lake Camp operated by Bat-tie Peek public schools. The camp work was part: of a college training* program. When the pair failed to appear at dimer Saturday night, a search was launched. Students found trades leading across theItteTo a spot where the ice had broken, State police skht divers recovered Osar’s body Saturday and OPEN EVERY NICHT TO 9 Opon Sundays Noon to 6 EARLY r AMERICAN Wing-style lounger, deeply foam padded Even controlled heat with ELECTRIC BLANKET Match an ensemble! 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Tta ocean* contain about I quadrillion ton* of raagneatum, tta metal i* comparatively r on toad- Of • 600-pound BMtt of glass only about U pound* to generally tame lor tta production of lenses to he ground for human eyeglasses. S AT MMMit HEADS YOUNG OEMS - Allan T. Howe Of Salt* Lake Oty, Utah, and Silver Springs, Md., was elected president of the Young Democrats Clubs of America Saturday. He is shown headed for the platform as the announcement was made, accompanied by his wife. They are wearing campaign hats. {Suggest! Gift for Folks {Who Have Everything j mmmsi&ct JSnwT - | State Civil Defense Director Bobby ; Blalock has advised Alabamians to give fallout shelters for Christ* jiHir"-’-- ~ -•for--»j was found in a backwater of the St. Clair River. A post mortem showed she had drowned, Police said there were no signs of violence. This Christmas! 1 FINE CANDIES suggests The Sweetest GIFT FINE CHOCOLATES CHRISTMAS NOVELTIES OLO FASHION RIBBON CANDY Canister or Apothcary Jar, CANDIES CHOCOLATE NOVELTIES SpaehUQumtUgtObamnU ThU Christmas ettpress your friendship to those that serve yon — paper boy, mailman, etc. Opto I «.m. la 9 pun.—flaa. 1# ».m. lo 7 p.i Phone: FE 2-3509 WE MAIL ORDERS EVERYWHERE KITCHEN FRESH CANDIES by 4642 Elizabeth Lake ROSS’ - SEC TM6 tot OtOSMOUILIS. i *ei in—r AT TOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED OLDSMOSllC QUALITY DEALER* —— T can't think, of anything that would be a better family gift,” lie said. • ► , Find Woman's Body JEROME MOTOR SALES, 280 South Saginaw Street, Pontiac, Michigan m, f** TV AT ITS etSTI OLOSMOBIIE BRINGS YOU UARRV MOORE EVERT TUESOAV HIRHT. CM-TV I- SARNIA, Ont. un—The body of Mrs. Jennie Reid, 76, missing tor five days from her Port Huron, Mich., home, was found 10 miles south of hmTStinday. 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Choose .from plaids, solids, and neat pattern* Jby-famous Pendleton and Rabin. Team them up with a dream collection of pajamas in silk-finish cotton, broadcloth, flannel, or nylon. Middy or coat style, in solids or stripes. ROBES $10.95 to $25 S-M-L-XL PAJAMAS $3.95 to $tt£5 All Sizes In Regulcn^and Long CHARGE or LAYAWAY SMUN'S m-HUHON SHOTTING CINTU M, DOWNTOWN INn. H Dm ampup FREE PARKING ot BOTH STORES—OPEN EVERY NIGHT 'til CHRISTMAS 'til 9 --- i---------- ~ ' • ________ - ’ ’ •! : m THE PQNTIAC PB&S& MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, wwm Alliance for Progress Starting to Move Ahead ¥ By WILLIAM L. RYAN JP If MW Analyst President Kennedy heads Venezuela and weekend strengthened by a i pact that this Affiance tat Progress can' now begin to push ahead toward positive molts to attacking a key Lath American •t Punta del Eats, Uruguay, last Treoaory Secretary Doug-lae DiUoa estimated that 9 HWtoo of Investment .capital would be The problem is boosbg. virtually every Mg Latin American city is plagued by constantly growing and incredibly squalid alums. A A /*• These are in themselves breeding #aces tor violence. They also 9 are Impatient tor When the taMdlltaa Alliance for With little attendant publicity, Congress took steps to pave the Way for attracting private Invest? ment. An amendment Introduced by Sen. George Smothers, D-Fla., Sen. Hubert Humphrey, a ranking Senate .Foreign Relations Committee mem beet Frank P. Gatterf, vice president of die Chamber of Commerce of the Americas, and William Q. Wins-borough, founder of an interna-tkmal nonprofit foundation known as the “Economic Plan for Free- Dd, providing FHA-typC guarantees of up to 75 per cent of mortgage investment on request of U.S. investors in attaricing South America’s howei problems. DISCUSS PROGRAM Meetings were held lest week in Miami Fla., to discuss how to get a program on the rails OPEN DAILY 'til 9 P.M. SUNDAY 11 A.M. to 5 P.M. MATERIAL Qulitr SsctaJt • DiscoRtiRHsd Pattern • Firit Quality Material 4 yds. wily JS)9^ LAMGE SELECTION Drapery Fabric* 99* yd. Carderay Metarial . . 49c yd. Save Over Ik sad Msm On AH Materials BRAND NEW, 1961 AUTOMATIC ZIG-ZAG WHITE Sewing Machine finsniWI ONLY $59so #BMnS StlUbes WHITIS pinist quality Fully Guarantssd PfSS Hems D*mon«ratto» WkMn 25-Mils Rsdiut New 7-Foot Vacuum Cleaner Host Braided Cloth, All Briber (no plastic er vinyl! 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This corps, among other things, would seek out sources of private venture capital and try to interest it in investing in areas like Latin America Winsborough, represents, hlm- investment capital which ha he wants to get into project! at home and abroad to earn good returns and 'trtiere the principals are willing to reinvest some of these profits in humans and their im^vidual aspirations. “Others have already shown an interest in doing the same; tiling, he added. “An American group cemeto me to help them finance: a $30-million housing project in Veneiuela and they ere wring to turn back 25 per cent of profits into a revolving scholarships fund for students in the area where they ere .* to. invest is no atmqsphere of charity in this approach, but an appeal to Lathi Americans' own self-respect. Hie approach to the key problem of housing has been quiet, but it can generate much excitement in Latin America. It appears to have been a positive step.toward getting the Alliance for-Progress into action. Thatcher, ' and Warnet INSURANCE Open E A.M. M 9 PAL Deify Sunday 1:30 te 5 KUHN AUTO WASH The Miami conferees plan to mast with Washington officials to discuss a housing program under the guarantee setup. They expect thereafter to branch out to other Latin problems, including potable water end schools. The Congressional Record, at Sen. Humphrey’s request, canted a Statement by Winsborough on ’winning the economic hot war.’' Humphrey daacrihrd.Jt a reply to the President's Alliance for Progress challenge. Winsborough described Jtlmself s shocked by the frequently ex-. reseed notion that UR. businessmen do not care about the plight U.S. N-Investment WASHINGTON (AP) - The United States has invested over $25 billion in its atomic energy program, including development of the atomic bomb, since 1940, the Atomic Energy Commission reported Sunday. ...rr if......... The cost of developing the bomb, which was handled then under die war department, was approximately $2.23 billion. A A A Hie commission said the $2.61 billion required for 1961 fiscal year operations was divided thus-ly: $733 million tor production of nuclear materials, $637 million for procurement of raw materials, $516 mflllon for weapons development and fabrication, $437 million for reactor development, $154 mil-lion for physical research. $54 million on biology and medicine and $81 million for miscellaneous! projects. Succumbs to Injuries MICHIGAN CITY. Ind. OP-Syl-vester Bailey. 47. of Michigan City, Ind., died Saturday of Injuries suffered In a Dae. 4 traffic accident near New Buffalo, Mich. -pr"*'-------------— Divorce Decrees iron* a. im okv m im Mint from Clsrsoco E Ssnko (HI Awn Jam.i Hoflund Mpidn Awn Allrsd A. Brc 'ffwiby from OwW Unta Imofont E. from Clifford E. Bsrnss Snort O. from LllUan toms QWMrtovo from Jo«ph znk ■Mr f. 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Has hl-power 2-speed motor with handier automatic shift — throw-away dost bags — 50% mere enetioa (with attachments) hr cleaning up-holstery, walls, etc. FQfiTMLADMS.. .the Udy Norsk*. Twwtoa* whiy pink Ond •ray, w* com (AC/DO. Hm UpmdMbmQdL fitetepfcfi, pwfciwi. (ac/do. Wiwto ^»wn are prise* te fit every persel , TifiN rjfHB JPONTIAC P&BSS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1961 Santa and the FlyingShoe$®$® ^ HR By LUCBECE BEALE ««r^35« CHAPTER SEVEN The King thought at the tetter to Santo Claus which te had never flnUhed. He got it out and looted ------------ir • ” Besides asking tor non detective stories for himself lie had planned to ask tor toy soldiers for his minister of war and a ballota tor the minister oflmience and a book on sandwich making for the .cook and oh, — it was such'a wonderful Christmas bo had planned! Re pat the letter an Us desk aBT PI iky shouldn't It be, attar I write to Santa anyway He turned to" the desk and took up his pen but when he reached tor the letter it had disappeared! - ^ , It wasn’t under toe blotter or in In * ***** **• “*“*■*«' of science ripped np the letter to Santo, the drawer or on the floor. Fran- tically he went through all the papers in the room, emptied toe waste basket, searched his pockets, even shook out the pages of all toe detective stories on the shelves. HE WAS FRIGHTENED The letter had vanished. How the King was thoroughly frightened. He felt he HAD to -ranch Santa Claus, that, indeed, . Santa was the one last hope of tor. whole kingdom. He snatched up a piece of fresh writing paper and, gripping one end of the paper tightly in his fist, ha began to write. Ha told Santa all the awfal (Stags that ware happening, aboat the taunted palace mad the lpswttch and the panic of the people. He begged Santa far help or advice or, at the very least, tar Mine detective storiee that might help him solve the mystery. ! He wrote as fast as he could because he was afraid that any minute the pen would dissolve in his fingers or the paper evaporate in front of his eyes. When he had finished he folded toe* letter into an envelope and stamped it with the royal seal and wrote on the front “To Santa Claus. Special Delivery." Then clutching the letter in both hands, he rushed to the office of the minister of science. IMPORTANT 1 "Will you see that (his letter is defivered at once!" cried the King. “It is of the utmost importance." Since the appearance of the Ipswitch the minister of science and the other royal ministers had put all their energies into defending the kingdom. They met three tones a day to wring their hands and discus the problem. They wrote mem- So when the minister of science heard the King's command and aaw to whom the letter was addressed he flew into a rage. He snatched the letter from the King's hand. "What kind of a king an you? Santa Claus and detective stories! The people are right — you are Ferdinand the Foolish and not fit to be king at all!" * * * With that he ton up the letter and threw the pieces in the corner. Astonished and bewildered, the King crept back to hi “They an right,” he thought unhappily. "Perhaps I should step down from the throne and let the people have a wiser king.” ★ * * (Next: Sahte Land) lag steps some other should take. They made long Hate of thtags they themselves had done. Still they could not capture the Ipswitch or even find it and, in their hearts, they blamed the King for their failure and for all the bad times that had come to the Transport Company in Court Today Charging Ccnrrior TrOublo CATLETTSBURG, Ky.lA-A $l l million suit against Chrysler Corp., is scheduled to cqme to trial in US. District Court hew today. The suit was filed March 21, 1900, by Crawford Transport, Inc. It claims Crawford was damaged through conspiracy and violation of federal antitrust laws by Chrysler. This esasptoiat says Chrysler retaaed to deal wtto Crawford and retaaed % permit the firm to compete la toe hnrineas ef transporting Cteyatof’s pcodnets. This, toe salt contends, earited toe plaintiffs business to be destroyed. - Chrysler jt charged in the suit with entering Into an agreement or conspiracy prior to May IT, 1997, with Commercial Carriers and others to eliminate competition in the business of transporting Chrysler protects. * * # The Crawford firm began at Ashland, Ky., in I960 to haul cars from Detroit to Ohio, Kentucky and North Carolina. It went out of business in 1967. Commercial Carriers If a Michigan corporation and a subsidiary of American' commercial ba rg lines, Jeffersonville, bid. The petition lists actual damages as $900,000 and aska a court Judgement triple that amount Federal Judge Mac Swinford is to hear the trial, scheduled to begin this afternoon: Kissing in Cat Illegal Any Time, Rule kalians ROME (A — Italy’s highest court has reversed itself and now says it is a crime .for a couple to kite i automobile even ti the win-i lif frosted over and no one The Italian penal code outlaws public kissing. eanght them kiaeing in parked grounds a Hu l| M pubtle. Several months agoihe Court of Cassation ruled in ole esse that kiss hi a car was all right if file car had Minds or if its windows were frosted over. But if a person could pee into toe car, the court ruled, the kissing illegal. Romantic Racket Ended BUDAPEST, Hungary (jAP) — Bela Huzska, a 46-year-old bookkeeper, has drawn a six-year prison term tor a romantic racket. A Budapest court convicted him Thursday on testimony he became engaged to 25 women in succession and coaxed sums totaling M0,000 from them on the understanding that he would buy an apartment. Urge State Join Fair LANSING in — The Michigan; Cultural Commission met with Gov. Swainaon Saturday and recommended that Michigan participate jin the 1964 World’s Fair in New lYork. Your eyes are priceless... give them them best in sight! Every mod-erh facility for Itie proper examination of your eyes, tHe^ correct grinding of lenses and fitting of eyewedr is available at the Nu-Vision Optical Studios. Perfection is the creed by which our examining optometrists, laboratory technicians and fitting} room consultants mutt work. Which do yop, prefer? GLASSES? Here your Isnsss sty ground exactly to your proscription requirements. You chooM.frbm tear 400 frames . . . with the help of our fining consultants, and you are assured flattering frames to enhance your beauty and personality. 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Norolco’s other gifts of shaving comfort NSW 'flip-top' Spootohaver*. World's bsri sailor. 110 vote onty. -7— fifj NEW Norolco Sportsman. Ops flashlight batteries. Retractable cleaning. Miner, case. -______ on 2 cord, 'nip-top' OPEN EVERY NIGHT CHRISTMAS SATURDAY TIL 5:30 »c. LIVING ROOM tjjgst cushions end beck, 10-yr. guar. ^199.88 i-Pc. Modern Sectional, foam Colonial Love Seat by I foam cushions, heavy covers. NEW 4-Pc. BEDROOM SI Grey Doable Dresser, chest andMAQ A A bookcase bed, landscape mirror. lUOnOO Danish Walnut—triple dresser, FA A A $f|9 mirror, chest, bookcase bed... IvwiOO Breathable ooogohydo Sofa ondMAA AA Choir, foam cushions, washable IOvbOO Colonial S-Pc. Sectional, foam rubber cushions, heavy caver.. Walnut large triple dresser, *199.88 Walnut or Limed Ook—Chest, triple dresser, bookcase bed... 139.88 169.89 Safe end Chair, heavy * Colonial Bedroom ie Maple Dressers, nylon, foam cushions, bock El 90 fix Chests, Beds, Mirrors, etc.—All Reduced end arms.............. ■ wviWV MANY MORE SPEOIAL VALUES TOO NUMEROUS TO LIST! Give Your Home That] FESTIVE XMAS SPIRIT WITH A LIFE-SIZE ELECTRIC FIREPLACE LIFE SIZE! WITH YULE LOSS THAT ©LOW AND FUCKER LUCE A REAL FIRE! ★ Realistic YnlsUgSsf ★ 3 ft. Cord, Socket 4 Plug 'Ar Light Bulb V ★ Rovolvins Fan Attachment | ★ Imprinted Fireplace SRKis Srt eaase It to hater than i — mtot tgr trying to gat a S Dr. Urrutia pointedly told him that he takas orders only from the president of Guatemala, and that he would make the §] which he did. “Who cares if you make 1 one a Utde mad, If you are to the right?'' Dr. .Urrutia said. “You Americans timidly take a paper to nation X, and it says a comma go there. Then you tain it to nation Y, who says the comma must b* a hyphen. Finally , you hand it to Z, who screams that it must be changed to a period.' Sighing a little, he added: “Just give us some straightforward leadership, and never mind the pussyfooting.” Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Stops Itch—Relieves Pain For the fire* time found a new healtl, , with tiio astonishing ability to shrink homorehoids, stop itching, and relieve yarn - without In ons hemorrhoid easo after another .“very striking Improvement" was reported and verified by a doctor's observations. Pain was relieved promptly. Aad, while gently relieving pain, actual reduction or retraction (shrinking) took place. And moot amazing of all -this improvement was maintained in eases where a doctor’s observations were continued ever a period of many month*! In net, result* were so thorough that sufferers were able to make such astonishing state- ments a* “Pile* have ceaeed to ha a problem!” And arnout toeoa sufferers were s rery wide variety of hemorrhoid conditions, soma of 10 to SO years’stapding. All this, without the use of narcotica, anesthetics or astringent* of any kind. The secret is a new healing substance (Bio-Dyne*)-the dleeevery of a world-famous research inatitu-tion. Already, Bio-Dyne U in vridii use for’ healing tutored issue on til parts of th# body. This saw healing .aubatanea is offered in suppoewory or otot-ment form called Preparation H*. Ask for individually staled convenient Preparation H Suppositories or Preparation H " Ointment with apodal applicator. Preparation H ia sold at all drug counters. Mail Pita Up In Japan TOKYO (AP)-A refusal of pastel employes to work overtime is piling up mail at the outsat <4 the holiday season to which Jap* nese exchange New Year's gifts and greeting card*. The no-overtime movement to Intended to force toe government to hire more workers. The postal ministry reports 19,000 parcels and Vk million pieces of mall haw* already ; Ex-School H«ad Dim ALBION (It—Don Harrington, 87, who headed the Albion school system from 1919 to 1989, died Sunday. Harrington had been ill for two years. Before going to Albion ho was school superintendent at Soottvfila, Vassar and Big Rapids l»" HOME OUTFITTING CO. ★★★ 48 S- Saginaw Street , ( "S||J||||[ Maple Cricket Cocker ill.. Ilmt ALL ITEMS GIFT BOXED FREE MIRACLE MILE Special Purchase Nylon Slips Regular $6.98 Loco trimmed in white, pink, turquoise, blue, and belie. A marvelous gift buy! More Wonderful Gifts From Your Favorite Christmas Store a versatile pump that ’Naturalizer toe-free last. AND. YOU CAN BET WE HAVE YOUR SIZE! AAAA6-11 AAASVW1 AA5VM1 A 51441 B 4 Vi-11 C 5VM> mid-heel features tb m Black Leather Black Seeds Brown Leather Solid maple rocker complete with pod* for seat ond back. In your choice of brown, green or gold. Handbags $298“ *1298 From the smell dutch to die latter tote. Every type and style imaginable. Plenty to choose from* Record Storage Cabinet Holds 200 records, (double >lid- ^ 88! trig door*—available in blond, ** mahogany or walnut. MIMW No money down 50cawook ppp’s HOME 6u#fffli5 toMPAtfe PMrioa tf Thebe* Jewelry Ceeyaiy. faa.' 48 South Saginaw Street Bulky Knit Sweaters $998 Sizes to 46 A handsomely textured Orion Jacket that sparks your favor* He sheathe . . add* the perfect finishing tonch to your separate*. Wash it with ease, never losing its perfect shape. White. Navy. Beige. Special Selling Ladies’ Leather Snow Boots $69° Choose from Brown or Black in aims 4Vk to 10 in narrow and medinm widths. A Marvelous Gift Item Shoe Tote Bags $2°° tz Every women loves to have one of mom • • , *0 bendy, ao practical and so reasonable. IW a Convenient Lion Charge for All Yonr Chriatpifta Gifts tHE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY,-DECEMBER 1 TWELVE Claims Security Safe to Spite oLRoductions WASHINGTON OJPD—The State Department’* * * chief security officer raid Sunday U|. security has notljeen endangered by a reduc- CHRISTMAS MARATHON - This Christmas card made its 28th trip in as many years this week, mailed by Mr. and Mrs. Fredric White, Kalamazoo, to Mr, and Mrs. James Van Zylen, Spring take, near . Gram! Haven. The Van Zylens aoox rustic ,4 ft* k. 0VERIN6 FINISH ***** H RUGS Gray Ladies Saluted at Pontiac General .Millar, director of the Oakland (County Red Cross Chapter, and I Ellen Mitchell, chairman of Red Cross volunteers. 'Termite' Was Carrying an Aerial Machine Gun ATLANTIC cmr, N. J. W — Mrs. Leo Mara thought she had termites in her house when she noticed plaster on the floor of an unoccupied bedroom. * , However, an exterminator die-covered a hole in the ceiling, and Mrs. Mara then found a ,50-cal-’ iber machine gun bullet behind a closet door. ! Police'theorized that a military CERAMIC ll"air The traveling, the gifts, and the ■pwvfay up that help make e good holiday seeeon can upset the bast of .budgets. Loans are availabis Drum Hie Associates to fill these nssds or any etbma. Remember, you’re wsfamse to our moasgrl Loans $25 to $500 A ASSOCIATES LOAN COMPANY PONTIAC: 18-27 N. Sofinow St, R 24214 MICHIGAN MIRACLE MILE, FI 14*41 DRAYTON PtAMSi 4474 Dixie Nwy„ 01 S-1207 9"x9" New York State Debt Triples in 10 Years NEW YORK (UP!) - Total state debt grew from %4J2 Billion in fiscal 1960 to |1$A In 1900, according to the Tax Foundation. The 1960 • figure equaled *88.32 per person tor the nation as a Pontiac General Hospital saluted its American Red Cross Gray ILadieeTriday with a luncheon at the hoapital. • ! commended the Gray Ladies for their help in promoting better patient care. I Other speakers included David The auto .industry uses 400,000 bales of cotton a year. RCA VICTOR SPECIAL 19” jk- PORTABLE 1962 TV $142095 VARIETY STORES Taasr — big, -screen with IT picture area.'. • PORTABLE TV PLUS \ •STAND ELECTRONIC- TUFTED SUPER SIZED DOUBLE OR TWIN GENERAL ELECTRIC 19’ PORTABLE 1962 TV Completely washable. Needs no Ironing. Attractive all-over shell design. White on white, pink on pink, white on pink, white on aqut white on yellow, white on spice b Now ie the time... Limited Offer. ;. Hurry! Daylight Blue Picture Tube—gives far “whiter” whites end “blacker” blacks New square corner picture—175 «q. in. viewable area. No cropped corners. Console-like Up-FrOnt Sound—bigger than ever speaker. Better than ever tone. PORTABLE TV PLUS STAND PLUS SERVICE l ^rw MOTOROLA 19” P0R1ME 19(2 IV 1699S 72" x 90" • Machine washable. 94% rayon, 6% ocrylic ovisco*. Bound with 100% nylon, Circus red, buttercup yellow, powder bluo,.. greenmist, sandalwood, lilac. Limited Offer Act Fasti Big extra features ... 172 sq. in. big square corner screen-full 20,000 volte of picture power. Tube Sentry System protects ell tube* . %. Golden-Voice Out-Brent Speaker—1-year guarantee on tubes indpirte. SPECIAL I EXTRA LENGTH ROLLS GIFT WRAPPING PORTABLE TVPLUS STAND PLUS SERVICE OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL 9 P.M. 42 NOfttH SAGINAW STREET OPEN DAILY 9:30 to 9:00 OR BASTT7KEKLY OR MONTHLY PAYMENTS of PONTIAC 51 Vest Huron Street BUY-LO — SOLID VINYL r*«r* 102-104 S. Saginaw (Next Door to May's) Free Parking in Rear CleGO-Out «* Opou Monday end Friday 'HI 9 P. M. 9 THE PONTIAC Piaasa MONDAY, DECRMBER n^mi Both STORES Open M ’M19 Best Way to See Berlin Is Walking pointed caUee of the medieval buildings In tile Bryggen group (Mine the harbor. iap of tide 900-year-oJd port. Ida the only way you get to know die city, and lie friendly people, inti- Seated In akUne4ype swats or rocking on die breezy after deck, the 100 panengers get , a “quick, American tourist-style” glimpse of the startling fjord country'betwoea Stavanger and Bergen. Some Nor- GovT Inspected, Gov’t; Grade "A* 45 5. Telegraph ft Horen 14*5 M. Main—Rochester Ops* Mss.. Thm., 1st. 'Mi i — Other Days U 9 «*tTT op pan parking 9 Ms Ov*n Ready, Whole Center Rib Cut C Cut-Up PorkChops Medium, Thick or Thin Cut Sliced Bacon *4* California, Seedless Navel "Lmoes IT’S EASYAS 1-t-i To Shop for Gifts at YANKEE t 10 GIFTS For Lass Than t o Gins (gimW* »1 BOYS 1.69 SPORT f) SHIRTS a BOYS Mon1t Trooper CAPS 497 PUMAS Mon’s Gift Boxed STRETCH HOSE 3C.9* 1st Quality Full FASHION NYLONS 33 Gift Boxed HANKIES 77C Three Swiss M M Ladies’ Holiday GIFT -m APRONS OAe Oddanssd ■ ■ Bays' Flannel Lined CHINO SUCKS Ladies’ CUSSiC Cardigans HI-buHt DuPont Co. ofton. 34 to 40. 1 INFANTS9 CRESSES 7-Plece JUKE SET j4sseeMreiida psasitetsHk. i17 Men's 2.95 HOODED SWEAT SHIRTS Boys' Gift Boxed SHIRT U / SLACK Sill Knit or cotton (Mit, I flonnol ponte. 2 to t. 267 Women's Cotton Knit SUM PANTS Girls’ HOLIDAY § DRESSES a SAVE 11c ? SAVE 12c T SAVE „ 8c SAVE B 30c DOMINO — 10x, Brown or Yellow SUGAR CAMPBELL’S — With Coupon Tomato Soup ELNA — Regular or Drip COFFER Special Your Cholet Sile FLOUR With Coupon >10 3-25 s89* |69 ’SiX|S9 No Coupon I SO EXTRA GOLD BELL STAMPS With Coupon and Purchase of $I.M sr Mew Except Bair, Wine, Tebecce ntpiem Saturday, oac. u jLand-O-Lakes, Lightly Salted Butter Dinging In. Beef. Turkey, Chicken, 7 Salisbury Steak Dinners tr a 69* Philadelphia Cream Cheese 55: 29' “ 'tr |»*1 Tb^Frost Orange Jui*r 6*51" IAVI WITH THIS COUPON Basiss IPX, Brown, YsHsv SUGAR 10* Duncan Hinas Cake Mix Light, Fluffy Mdan Mix Poncokst 2-ik. Chippewa Chief pfe sywp WtoLjis. vjf GET FlfSJER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS ■,i’ 8-Plece Deluxe SNACK | SET Bone China CKPomI SAUCER SETS 97' MARX CAP RIFLE HeSlteldAdweSy 88' RARE Uks Iks reel iktegH ANIMATED sr StwdyMrtal HODGE CHAIRS 187 Who. DISH ^.A »,1* " I If * Large It" PLASTIC 4 *Q TRUCKS I Tow trucki, hovton, I • *1(6” Drink 'n Wet BABY DOLL AwdIBwdsO 1 79 TV ADJUSTABLE STUB A87 Electric CORN # 167 SET All Aluminum TtyMIa SERVICE 4'da. Msks here 247 fast FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1061 Hopes Dim for Early Berlin Talks (OA8) led by discredited Gen. Rauol Salon, a French war ben. BID COMA MANEUVERING* Some Western sources expect Red China to launch' bn all-out campaign tp establish friendly Lean-Layer, FlaYOrfiil -SLICED BACON 4^140 FRENCH NOT ISOLATED The prospect talks on Berlin wiU relation with Japan. The objective occuuy the spotBAt at this week's would be to strengthen Red! NATO council iftetii« in Paris. —r——--------------—r--------;——■ Expected to side with France in opposition to negotiation now with New Officttt Elected the .Russians are Greece, Turkey L , and Portugal. by League of the Blind ALGERIA " The Pontiac League of the Blind: President Charles de Gaulle has elected Ray Wadley, 494 Third feara a new era of bloodshed will St, Pbntiac, president for 1962. be touched off in Algeria when or Others elected at the annual' if it,Is announced that a cease- meeting were: Mrs. Irene Ward.I fire agreement has been readied vice president; Ray McDonald, with the Moslem rebels and that secretary; Robert Yontz, treas-l peace talks are about to resume, urer; and Mrs. Winifred Fleming Architect! Are Named for Building at Metro DETROIT (AP) — Architectural work on a new $8.5-milUon terminal building at Detroit Metropolitan Airport and a J2.5-millton expansion of the present terminal will be done by Smith, Hinchman and Grylb Associates, Inc. The Wayne County Road Commission said the terminal work is part of a 121-million airport ex- "deflniteliy” have been contacts between private American wheat Gang Up on Albanians BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) -The Albanian newspaper Zeri e PopuHt reports the 'Soviet Union and Hungary have canceled a consular agreement which permitted leaders of Albania, now an outcast of the Soviet btoc, to travel to and from those countries with- Hoffa's Tax Man Says He Quit Because Boss Wanted the Boob DETROIT W-James R. Hoffa’s personal financial consultant and accountant for all Michigan Teamster union locals denies that he resigned because of alleged harassment by Atty. Gen- Robert F. Kennedy. “I haven't been botiiered by Kennedy since 1951 or IMS," said Herbert L. Grosberf in reply to but never cuts quality! Center Cut Pork Chops known Saturday. He had served Hoffa and the Teamaters for IS years. - "I resigned because HriChi wanted all the (Teamsters) records and I do not believe he Is legally or ethically entitled to them,” Grosberg said, contending that he .would have "violated federal law" if he complied with Hotta’a de- “I have to go according to what I think is right. The Internal Revenue Code places a responsibility on the party who prepares tax returns as well as the one who files,” Grosberg explained. y no COUPON NfEDfOf TASTY VLASIC Sauer Kraut f^VOSiUt Bacon LEAN, MEATY, SMALL He also audited health and welfare funds. Hoffa said that he demanded the books' because "We’ve got to Cream Cheese Santa to Come Down Chimney it It's Clean Climbing through ‘ chimneys to deliver Christnias presents is one of Santa's most messy jobs. Chimneys are as ‘mpch of the tradition of Santa as his reindeer and sleigh. Fireplaces are also part of tradition and are now enjoying an upsurge in popularity. BORDEN'S SHERBET OB COUNTRY CLUB Ice Cream Cottage Cheese Applesauce CAN 12 SAVI 10c—FROZEN MORTON'S Pumpkin Pie jSce* 29 FROZEN KROGER Orangelulce FIRST HALF GALLON SECOND of fireplaces. Soot-filled fireplace chimneys also help to dirty the house, particularly on windy days when a back-draft blows soot from the fireplace into the room. When you aren't using your fireplace, it's advisable, reports the better Heating-cooling Council, to close the chimney damper to conserve heat and prevent drafts. But open it Christmas Eve for Santa. 25* OFF LABEL Kroger SAVI Me WITH THIS COUPON ■ORPIN'S IMRSIT OR COUNTRY CLUB Ice Cream FIRST O Q C SECOND CO I Tech Sweeps Series HOUGHTON ID - Michigan Tech drubbed Denver’s hockey team 6-2 Saturday night as Tech’S'captain, Jerry Sullivan, scored three goals to the lint period for the hat trick. Tech won the opener of the two-game series S-7 Friday night Both Tech and Denver now are 2-2 in Western Collegiate Hockey Association play. SSfORNUSUNKIST NAVIl Oranges JUMRO 50 Extra vXSi Stamps WITH THIS COUPON AND rURCMAM Of EMBASSY RINS OR MS. HOLIDAY OAR _____Fru it ca k e dozen Top' Value l Stamps Fresh Donuts White Bread VALUABLE COUPON QUALITY REMODELING BUY DIRECT IMPROVEMENT CENTER 490 each ings. Men’s sizes S.M.U XL BOYS' SANFORIZED .SHORTS BOX OF 3 1.75 59c Nth FE 4-1133 THET PONTIAC PRESS.MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1961 FIFTEEN Tun, 23, (left) and Vo ThlUl, 35, weer paratroopers’ uniforms as they participate In tmlnb« with the Sooth Viet Nam Array. They were among the South African Girl Santancad to 2 Years Mb ; ♦>* | j|ig|g|f Ijltt m ’■ A jfflEM Automated Model Train Takes Peak Into Future Back fa the good old daya, model railroading was largely confined to trains mat traveled hi a circle In the Tawaa Qty ana, however, • |S50,000 medical earn proposal Is expected to swell the Regular cycle for general wash and gentle cycle for special fabrics. Has lint filter. mi* NORGE Automatic WASHER DURBAN, Sooth Africa «-An 18-year-old colored (mixed blood) girl was sentenced to two years In prison after being convicted Of attempting sexual relations with a 17-year-old white Swedish sea The latter was convicted on the same charge last week and punished with eight strokes of a cane. The case brought diplomatic pro- Medical Expart Dead NEW YORK (AP)-Dr. Joseph L. Tenenbaum, 74, urologist and author, died Sunday in a Brooklyn hospital. A native of Poland, he was executive committee chairman and, in 1945 vice president of the American Jewish Congress. -MAGtJAVQXStereo^ Radio-Phonograph • 4 powerful speakers • AM-FM radio, ’Micrometre' Magnificent sound by Magnavox! The ’Intermezzo* features: 'Microma-... tic* - record player with- diamond -tfftiiv giinr*n*aag for 10 years. AM-FM radio, Record storage space. , No down payment required A a 095 Cherry or walnut, 259.50 JL*V7 A magnificent Magnavex from Grinnell's world-leading Magnavox dealer - "StehBb-Tfiiafre,i 23" TV-Radio Phono combination An entire family antartainmanf center in one magnificent unit! 23" filtered-screen TV, FM * radio and ’Micromatic’ record player with Diamond Sapphire Stylus. 4 powerful speakers for exceptional sound. Mahogany 399s0 Ch^nTx^wolnut, To^SO Grinnell's, 27 S. Saginaw Um year CHARGE. 4-PAY PLAN (90 days tome es eesh). BUDGET PLAN. 188 With trade Norge CLOTHES DRYER MIB WITH Oft WITHOUT TUMBLINO WITH or WITHOUT HUT Only Norge safely drlee delicate things such at knitted woolens, plastics, nylon and even cashmere^ 168 COLOR TV CENTER »* PONTIAC SWEET'S has them ALL! ZENITHT ADMIRAL RCA VICTOR <*. *495 FREE PARKING et the Rear of the GEORGE'S.,. YOU CAN CHARGE ALL YOI)R CHRISTMAS GIFTS... PARK FREE IN ANY CITY LOT give happy FRUIT&LOOM ___ MEN’S and BOYS’ GUARANTEED UNDERWEAR LIFEIi-ook MEN'S ATHLETIC SHIRTS NYLON-relnforced neck end erms for long-lasting good fit Men's sizes MEN'S BOX of 3 *1.45 MEN’S Sanforized SHORTS NEW HIGH QUALITY broadcloth with panel seat and generous cut Man's boor or gripper style In start 2842. NYLON-relnforced lag openings and 100% stretch live elastic waistband Insure tong comfort-r. Men’s stass 28-44. MEN'S BOX of 3 $< 2.05 699 each BOYS* BOYS* ATHLETIC TEE SHIRTS SHIRTS and BRIEFS BOX OF 3 BOX OF 3 1.15 1.45 S9c each 49c each % THE POHTI AC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER il, 1961 humM ■WWW|WmWMIWW»WWI)»W«IWIWtWWWIWWW«W»WWI WILL BUY ::-M TONIGHT and TOES. at WKC You Sava $10.95 LOVELY CEDAR CHEST WITH SELF-RISING TRAY *38 Your choice of Mahogany, Walnut or fray finiah. Perfect gift for bar. No money down. $1 Weekly « Md • Compares to $49.95 ; LUSTROUS WALNUT FINISH • 3-PIECE DESK OUTFIT *38 Spaeioai 40" top, with roomy drawer*. Choice wooda in wal-nut flniah. Plu* nuitching chair . You Save $11.95 REFRESHMENT DAR WITH 2 COMFORTABLE STOOLS *38 Reg. S49.9S. Marproof plaatie lop. Vinyl core red aide* and front, 2 matching aloola, too. Ample thilf apace in back. You Save $16.95 FAMOUS MODERN 5-PC. CHROME DINETTE SET *38 Family aiaa extension table with aMin, heal and mar-reeiatant plaatie lop. 4 sturdy chain, Reg. Hug What a Bargain )’J COMPLETE MODERN STYLE • HOLLYWOOD DED OUTFIT : *38 ! Il w«Ur Comfortable, Reatonair* inner-spring mattress and box spring oard. 39" )aaaaaaaafaaaaaaaa’aaaaaaaaataaaaaataaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaataaataaaaaaaaa|aiaaaaaaataattaaaaaaataaaaaaaaai|aaaaaaaaa*BaaaaaaaattaaaaaaaaaaaaataaBaaaaaaaaaataaaaaaaataaaaatat* Bast Comfort Buy! INNERSPRING MATTRESS AND DOX SPRING •nth Far *38 $1 Weakly Save $11.95 Now! FINE SWIVEL CHAIRS IN WASHABLE PLASTIC Doluxo 66"x42"x21" MASTER VALET WARDROBE IN HEAVY SADSE STEEL Sava $11.95 Nowl DEEP, ROOMY NYLON COVERED SWIVEL ROCKER look! Sava $11.95 MAN-SIS ADJUSTABLE RECLINES CHAIR BUY • vanu, aide handle*. , Rag. $49.95. - Retillenl spring construction. Choice of colon. Plastie coven atay new looking, Parfaet in any room. *38 SI Waakly "Sahara Walnut” finish. Plenty •f room for hanging load* of clothe* pine hat »helf. Sliding mirror*, alee. 3-way outlet, stor-age spaco, ate. *38 $1 Weekly Reg. $49.95. A apoeial bargain in comfort and beauty] Resilient spring Construction. In long-wearing nylon. *38 : Reg. 149.%. Tilt* to any position m ait, lounge or deep. Spring ▼ SI Weekly filled aeat Upholstered in waah* GENERAL ELECTRIC Now Pfbno Kay Controls GE CLOCK-RADIO WITH SNOOZ-ALARM New Portable Electric_ SEWING MACHINE WITH CARRYING CASE Regular $59.50 Value MANSFIELD “HOLIDAY” MOVIE PROJECTOR Wakea to mode or boaaer. Snooa-Alarm wakes yon, let* yon catnap—call* again in ten minnte*. Radio loll* yon to deep, turn* itself off. Ttun* appliance* on and off. *38 SI Waakly Round bobbin. Saw* forward and backward — include* carry-ing earn. Surprise bar Christmas! *38 Si Weekly 500 watt bulb for brilliant .illumination. 480-ft. real e*pa-’ city. Coated V«” f-1.6 Ian* for wide angle viewing. Lifetime guarantee. *38 SI Weekly Powerful, Brand Now Eureka Roto-Matic Swivel Vacuum Cluaner *38 SI Waakly Yon get complete set of attach* o-matie tool*. Powerful H-h.p. motor. Light! Qaiet! Cuaran-taodt New, Famous Pbrfablo EMERSON HI-FIOEUTY AUTOMATIC PRONOGRAPH Automatic 4-apeed record ehaug- *38 Complete 6-Pc. Double Dresser Bedroom Outfit 9 Compare to *169" *138 No Money Down 1-Duty 7-Pc. Decorator Sofa Bed Outfit fit® Reotonalre Innerspring Mattreoo, Bex Spring drawer double d reiser, beveled tilting mirror, book-ruse bed and cheat with fully center-guided drawers. Lustrous Pearl finish. Bright brass hardware. Plus famous Reatonaire innerspring mattress and box spring. Save $24.85 *138 No Money Down Living Room By Day.. Sloops 2 at Nightl Reg. $162.85. Foam cushioned sofa for comfortable seating plus sleep, space for 2. Concealed bedding compartment, 100% Nylon cover. Matching Chair.-Cocktail table, 2 step tables and 2 table lamps. All 7 pea. $138. New Frigidaire Big 11 Cn. Ft Refrigerator Cleat 61-lb. frseser cheit. meal tender maaea ever * lb*., S-*helf storage door. New —I—■»- doer. *168 TOTi,*': New Frigidaire Washer Automatic Soak Cycle ... make* “bobyvmkh” *o clean, an *a»y. Exclutive 3-ring pump agitator. Blaaehea automatically. *148 With Trad* Girls’ and Boys’ 28” or 24” Lightweight Bike tea, complete wh tool bag. *2488 Complete Remington Typrdriter Outfit Remington portable with eoae, table with buill-on lamp end sturdy chain. *78 Famous Admiral Portable TV with Stand *138 Famous Admiral Big 23” Consototte TV 20,000 volt ehawii for elaor llMiko pi tore. Lighted channel dial. Roll* on aa ora'- move it anywhere, ba*a extra. *158 WKC, 108 N. SAGINAW . .. FE 3-7114 . . . FREE PARKING THE PONTIAC PRESS * * MQyDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1901 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN SEVENTElm —■ ■ • I War in the Congo ....... A effort and Reaeffo, GROUND DEFENSE—A white mercenary and .. Katanga soldiers use automatic weapons outside United Nations Jet planes during Elisabethville post office to fight off attacking in the Congo. Gas Cloud Fails to Dampen Enthusiasm CAPTURED IN KATANGA Katangan soldier stands guard Swedish United Nations troops ii near Elisabethville. They were <*• An armed at rtairtu over captured ago by Katanga police as potential hostages in a i a prison yard skirmish with U.N. forces at Elisabethville Air-seized a week " port ‘Peace Bomb9Draws Applause Gen. Cecil Simmons Named Guard Chief CARLSBAD, N.M. (AP)-Scien-tists counted, blessings of knowledge from the first underground atomic “peace bomb” explosion Sunday despite the escape of a cloud of radioactive gas. They reported 70 per cent success in getting data on major scientific programs, but major mysteries remain. • They judged the steaming radioactive cloud hadn’t hurt anybody or anything, although its unexpected' fallout partially blockaded nearly 300 observers. hwidte steam turning into ai visible but quickly dying cloud of radioactive gas. A filter in the ■haft head apparently stopped solid particles, said Dr. Randolph. Atomic Energy Commission officials said the gas swept away essentially unpopulated areas. But for more than three Scientists pushed ahead to learn exactly what happened when they detonated the world’s first known. nuclear explosion intend) to find peaceful uses for the furies of A-bombs and Hbomba. 90 MILLION DRILL. The specially designed five-kilo too atomic devUu was detonated ,a quarter-mile underground. It was in a chamber at the end of a buttonhook tunnel dug 1,100 feet through salt rock from a vertical foten duft. TMA Rwfoet Gnome hole alone cost SI million, the ton tal drill nearly 16 million. A main objective was to learn what happens when a nuclear blast, equivalent to 5,000 tons of TNT, occurs in salt rock. Scientists hoped it might form a cavity partly full of molten salt steam. Red Nurseries Keep Children LEIPZIG, East Germany (UPIT —la Leipzig’s Roaental Park on sunny spring days one can often see groups of small children play ing garnet or spinning h under the supervision of girls in thsir‘Ms.—_______________ The earth shock produced _ moderate earthquake'in Carlsbad, 23 miles away, where a waitress saw “an itty-bitty Santa Claus shaking on a drug store counter/' It didn’t harm the Carlsbad Caverns. 34 miles west, or potash mines, kept empty of people when the blast detonated. Seiamic near and far.may help show the difference between the “si| tune’’ of an earthquake and a cret nuclear underground- bomb test. LEAKY BOILER The blast apparently turned the chamber room tato a leaky boiler, said Dr. Phillip Randolph, Livermore, Calif., deputy .technical director of Gnome. Somehow, the leak sent radioactive gasses up the mine shaft. hours they blockaded the direct road to Carlsbad until radioactivity across the road died down. And “for good housekeeping,” foe AEc washed seven cars between blockade points. ~Motf E. GermanTVdrtieh The highest radiation rating inside any ear was 15 milliroentgens (thousandths of a roentgen) per hour and declining, said ABC's Dr. Gordon Dunning. He said a person could live the rest of his life in the car and get a total doae of only 75 milliroentgens. A thoroughly safe lifetime exposure to radiation has been set at 35 roentgens, not milliroentgens. ■NO ONE INfURED’ Must Tedvi Offspring Order to Work The children, all under school age, are there because their mothers have been encouraged to work to help alleviate East Germany’s pressing labor shortage. atata-ew jured.” . While the diasipatii* radioactivity was small, radiation in the mine shaft was terrific ' ‘million roentgens at the bottom an hour after blast, Dr. Randolph estimated. Five hours after the Mast, it was about 40,000 roent - gens A lethal human dose Is 1,000 roentgens. This will delay attempts to recover a special wheel, near the bottom of the shaft, which measured neutrons flying from the blast chamber through a 23-inch > a child Off If the child is small four months to about a a-half—foe nursery will care for It night and day, foe days a week. The mother picks up the child on Saturday night when she finishes work and brings him back on The wheel is apparently intact, nd that experiment apparently worked. Dr. Randolph said. BIG TO BORE a day or two, a drilling rig Children from ooe-and-a-halt to about six can be left in foe nurseries eight hours each day, and school age children can be >d in special classes after The charge Is 3 marks (aboet Leipzig University student who guided visitors about the dty said “almost all” young bands and wives in thirarea have Jobs. The girls who supervise the nurseries receive a Id-week training- course, he said. 2 See 'Corruption' in Education Values NEW YORK (AP) — Two of America's leading educators aee the values of contemporary higher education as “desperately cor-rupted.” Both put some of foe blame an’ college presidents. for, A. Whitney Griswold, president of Yale University, said he believes that “we who hold foe office (of president) spend so much time Justifying what we’re doing that we don’t have -time to do what fre’rt justifying.” Dr. Robert M. Hutchins, former chancellor of the University of Chicago, asserted that university presidents too often were “foe go-getting corporate type, P»*«rsbjr one who is accomplished in public relations.’’ Their performance, Hutchins continued, is Judged “by foe fig--urea—by the amount of money that comes in, by foe quantity of brick and mortar fort to «► •enabled, by the number of students that enroll, and In some .places by foe digits-in the football scoreboard.” in a booklet, “The University,” published by the Center for Study hope that the "service station concept of foe university'’ might be on its way out. In education, Dr. Griswold said, the sales doctrine that the customer is always right’’ does not apply. He recommended that those who triad fo Interfere with academic freedom be reminded that “file doctor cannot help the patient who Artists on making his Griswold, expressing his views He attributed same of the defects In current standards of edd-cation largely to the preparation ‘ilgh achooi teachers, saying I “it’s at the secondary school level that these vames are desperately CorruPtM.’1 ; ’ Hutchins, president of the Fund _jr foe Republic, expressed lie views inlA comment published foe Irterviaw of Or,, Gris-. The fond sponmrs foe group that published foe interview. Test director James Reeyes said tiLfoe best of my will start boring to learn if. a cavity was actually formed. An experiment to capture radioisotopes flying up pipe, which peered info the Mast chamber from the surface, also apparently worked. But a three-foot thick concrete slab on which instruments stood, was tilted over, and the ground above the chamber apparently heaved up a few feet. The nuclear device, using new principles to make peace time explosives cheaper, also apparently worked quite well, said Dr. Randolph. Observers 4V4 miles away could feel ifo power from the rolling earth tremors. He said the experim—r «i«aw-|l itely advanced ultimate peaceftd Uses of nuclear explosives. LANSING UB-Brig. Gen. Cecil L. Simmons was named comman-of the Michigan National Guard’s 46th Infantry Division by Gov. Swainson today and moted to major general. Kennedy, 49, has been assistant division commander since Nov. 3, 1959. In civilian life, he is traffic engineer for the city of Grand Rapids. the 11,700 men in the Michigan force acting on the ’’dolphin'' OfRrd, chose Simmons from [would bh reduced when the model Santa Arrested for Plying Trade in Philadelphia _ eight man interviewed for wop located in foe forward part of «ho pomw.,,,«p, *... ■ ’ PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Hce waited until a long Hi children Dnlshed telling Santa Claus their Christmas wishes before citing him. for violating Pennsylvania Sunday blue law. Santa, better known as Charles Staeger, Cornwell Heights, four other workers were cited in a suburban discount store fog violating a law forbidding “gainful employment” on Sunday. The citation was made After a merchants’ group complained. Winter Wallops the Nation With Snow, Ice and Wind By The Associated Press A new snowstorm came out of the Rockies today as winter smote nation with disagreeable weather that included record sub-ero temperatures, road-blocking snow, flooding rains and shattering winds. Oklahoma City Sunday until trucks sanded the pavement. Snow or snow flurries were in store for the upper Mississippi Valley, the Northern Great Lakes region, parts of the Ohio Valley and New England. Flooding rains fell on Louisiana, Alabama and Georgia. Hie weather was a factor in the deaths of at leari 55 persons since previous snowstorm crossed the Midwest Friday night. Two major roads in Eastern Arizona were closed by snow drifts measuring from 2 inches. Hie new storm forced schools to close today in San Juan County in Northwestern New Mex- A child drowned in a rain-swollen creek at Mobile, Ala., Sunday. Mobile reported 3.53 inches * ol rain in 12 hours Sunday. Small streams in the area were flooded. Tombigbee River at Jackson, Ala. was expected to crest 2 feci above flood stage today. leo. SNOW IN NEW MEXICO Snow depths in New Mexico ranged from 8 inches in Raton to 20 at the Nageezi trading post in San Juan County. Snow fell from Northern Arizona Ito Wyoming and foe Dakotas ad eastward. Heavy snow, with accumulations of 4 inches or more NorfowcG Oklahoma' an Northern Texas-’Panhandle. One to 6 inches of new mow was expgcfod. in Southwestern Sleet and freezing rain tnoved from .New Mexico, across - Northern Temp, ’ Rpstern and Southern Oklahoma toward Southern Kan- Ice glased major highways la the northern half of New Mexico, Northern Texas and Oklahoma. Antes were lined up for 3 reHno on the Tinner turnpike east of Minor flooding occurred in Atlanta, Ga., where rain totaled 2 inches Sunday. An inch to 114 inches of rain fell in Louisiana and Mississippi, with minor floods in some places after weekend totals of 10 inches of rain. TORNADO STRIKES Twelve persons were injured Sunday by a tornado that struck the Southern Alabama town of Brewton, destroying seven houses and damaging 12 others. Heavy fog followed a weekend of snow and freezing rain hi the Washington, D.C., area. Fog and drizzle made driving hazardous early today in New Eng- Overnight temperatures tanged from' 23 below zero at Havre, hat: to'ti it. Key West, ffo-£ Minneapolis reported I below aero curly today. It was 1 below at Eaa daire. Wis., and 4 below ir'jrtprthBr^tpOrtiwfo IW1,, kune, Wash., and zero at Denver, which Sunday had a record tow of 18 below. Scientists Find Dolphin's Secret of Wave Riding PASADENA, Calif., (UP1) The dolphin's secret was no longer a sefcret today. d of foe 8.SOO-man unit when Maj. Gen. Cecil J. Kennedy of Flint retires Feb, lrt. Kennedy Final Hearing Set .. on Paving Proposal Scientists announced Sunday they knew how the sleek little mammals ride waves without wiggling flipper but managed to maintain the speed of a ship. Dr. Allan I. Acosta and Tarns Kieenlnk of Cal Tech's Hydro dynamics Laboratory and Dr. Biyne Perry of Stanford University solved the problem with a torpedo model in a water tunnel. AT ItowS HELMET LESS IN BATTLE — A policeman, his dislodged whitig helmet in the pavement behind him, wields his stick during a battle-with pro-Katanga demonstrators near the UJS/Embasy in Brussels* Belgium. Some 250 demonstrators, shouting anti-American phrases^ battled police near the embassy but. were prevented from reaching; . the building-.. • - - -— --------~ ■:. - Society to Urge 3 Legislation for 3 Mental Health - A final hearing for black topping Kempf Street, will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. tonight at the regular Waterford Township Board meeting. The board will aim receive bids for a two-year contracts for supplying gasoline in the use of township vehicles, art Clerk James K. Seeterlin will present n report on bide tor five two-way mobile radios. Legislative recommendations for mental health in the 1962 legislature will be revealed Wednesday The metal "dolphin,” about 1- used car lots and Ray Graesaele foot long and 2-inches in diameter, will discuss proposed cemetery en- Swainson, commander-in-chief of was used to show that the drag dowments for township residents. Not counting foe tv antenna on ifo tower, fog Empire State building rfareioohofobt o< lapT-P*. Featured speakers at the noon gathering nt Devon Gabies reg be Charles F. Warn director of the Michigan Depart meat tor Mental Health, art Harold Webster, executive dire*, tor of the society. The county’s seven n*en\bers of the legislature, as well as Pontfoc Mayor Philip E. Rowston a nd Royal Oak Mayor William Hay-W&id, ~WH8 ls .also a state itprr- -will attend, a spokes- a gift for the home brings joy thru the year! Custom Size Custom Quality 72-Inch, 2-Cushion Sofa, Only *139 WING SOFAS IN A WIDE SELECTION OF COLONIAL PRINTS, TWEEDS OR HOMESPUNS! P***** -JtLsMiTm • FULL FOAM, ZIP-COVER REVERSIBLE CUSHIONS ) FOAM OVER SPRING ATT. PILLOW BACKS • PROTECTIVE ARM COVERS fMm 96-lnch, 4-Cushion Sofa, Only sum *229 So many quality features ... so reasonably priced! For Christmas choose one of those fine colonial wing sofas . . . in just the right size, color and fabric for your homo. Como in today and see the wonderful variety in our complato selection. BUDGET TERMS OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY ' /TIL 9 CONVENIENT i FREE PARKING THOMAS Phone OR 4-0321 • Pontiac store 4995 pixie Highway, Drayton- Plains • * v , t EIGHTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY,/DECEMBER 11, 1061 ifwK Cm Bury YOU, Mr. KV ‘Go, Go, Go,’ They Prayed..MndtheTttanWhined *• (tutor*t Note: Making a world eoroeg of Ammwtfa nuclear might, Bob ContUUno .obtained on exclusive eyewit-neu vino of a critical mlttile tut. Bo describes it vMUg in the following article, seventh of a terletj By BOB CONSIDINE VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Caut—'The control center, bHUt like a brick smokehouse, was crowded when Brig. Gen. Roger Crow, deputy commander of the 1st Strategic Aerospace Divlaioo of ' the Strategic Air Command, led me in and painted to a*eat in front of one of the bewildering consoles. Crowded and tense. Across the room, hltfi on the wall, hung two TV sets whose screens showed nothing more enchanting than a view of the bleak California wasteland which once had been Camp Cooke, Infantry training center. Sto mas was alive with the esumcBtof eaieaee of a count- taut telephones in the free world. Their lines led to the underground command headquarters of SAC, Offutt Air Force Base, Omaha, and to the Pentagon and the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Fiv$ shrill beeps now burst from the room’s loud speakers. "That's ack, simulating Os 'Go to War* signal,” Gen. Crow said, in a room that now bussed with new intent. "Watch the _ off B aad the readings of Col. Joseph J. Cody, a sandy-haired Tessa wtth a lean Jaw, worked in the center of what sounded, to the reporter, like a aound track from the Tower of Babel, This was to be his "bird," ail 10 stays of it, all 110 tons, all 380,000 pounds of thruskrsnd —all those millions it cost to build. IMPOST ANT PHONES A major crouched over a panel whose phones perhaps might be-in time of wsr—the most impor- (ASvwUwmnt) * Worry of FALSE TEETH Slipping or Irritating? tSSS mppins?dropp!ns>or^wobbling stw sou Ml. talkartough. Just sprtnki* • Uttis PASTBTH on your dies This plssiaa* powdw stsss a 1—— -—1 of added comfort •naif. Mo gummy, roooy, pasty tasto or tmltim.it’s (motif). Qot PAMirnm at aay drag oountor. leave the earth which had harbored it so long. It literally inchad Us way upward, aad now die observers could speak again. A miracle of techaoiogy began to nafoid before air eyes. Two 400-ton steel and reinforced concrete door s—like modernistic doors on an old-fashioned cyclone cellar—lifted themselves from the deserted land. And up from a silo, dug 165 feet Into the earth, appeued a guttering Titan I, a simulated multi-megaton bomb forming its warhead. It rose on its elevator and launch pad until it stood revealed in all its impressive length and ‘ ulk. The aun at noon Minted off Its Ice-caked skiee as tons of* liquid oxygen, colder than minus 300 degrees fahrenhett, seethed in its ■' inks. "It won’t be long now," the general said. "Left go outside and watch It." In less time than it would take . S. Khrushchev to remove his shoe, fhe umbilical cords began dropping from the towering Intercontinental missile. A great alienee Ml upon the little group of oboervero—officers aad their wives, engineers from the Martin Company, whs built It, aad myself, by chaaee the only reporter present. The countdown, in what seemed the voice of God, reached breathtaking "zero!” and an in- It went aloft with a roar that caused the ground to dance in a miniature earthquake — the white-hot eyas of its twin exhausts too V for the human eye to endure. The general tilted his head back to follow it, holding his left hand high—not to shield his eyes against or the mlaelle’e scalding eyes but to follow the sweep hand on Us witch. MOMENT OF TRUTH "Separation in five seconds from, ah, now ” he muttered. Thin wan .the missile’s aad the epwaBen’a m—eat of truth. Tbs huge Titan Itself was hardly a piapott to the him tome above as Facility at Vandenberg. The Titan Intercontinental ballistic missile waa launched at 12:37 p.m. by the Air Force Systems Command’s Ballistic Systems Division and contractor crews with the participation of Strategic Ur Commend personnel.” A "it A It might have read melodramatically. What the 395th Missile Squadron launch team, under Capt Lester E- Treankler of Kingston!, Mich., had proved la and around the Titan's silo that day was that the United States can prepare and launch one of these incredible objects, as a retaliatory stroke, withan astonishingly short time. The precise number of min-uteo and seconds Is classified material, bat it Is sate to say that—If the Cold War ever heated ap to the boiling point—suck missiles could be well oa their way to punned Soviet targets while Soviet ICBMo were still la space. Suddenly, test trail was snipped as if my a gigantic unseen scissors. Another deep silence hovered over the observers, and then they let loose a. triumphant shout. A A A A second vapor trail .had appeared farther along in the trajectory of the Titan. The second stage, the pay-off stage, ignited on schedule. The Titan and Ifa warhead were en route to the target area off Eniwetok, more than 6,000 miles away, and at 15,000 miles an hour. "I fed like I Just had e baby,” e strapping Marti The announcement that went out from Vandenberg that day—Sept 33, 1961—was. couched in the stiff ferno of flame belched from the hare-bones English of the military: bottom of the monster, sending a great expanding plume of fire, gases and seared soil skimming across the forlorn land. ROSE RELUCTANTLY Hie Titan rose as if reluctant to "The first integrated total weap-i system test of an operational prototype Titan ICBM was successfully conducted by the Air Force today from a Weapon System Test 'firestone We Inspected “the launch site when It cooled oft The Titan’s flaming exhaust had fused the dirt aad sand near the a blanket of Jade and glass pebbles. It had budded and warped a metal shield on tha aide of one of the huge silo doors, and scored the heavy rubber tubing Of the mwhlMenle. Otherwise, the for miles to appointed bungs in toe hides of toe mMsOes. Riding a wire-mesh service elevator up toe ride of a parked Titan I gives oaa tha eerie feeling he is ascending the Washington believed to be the biggest and strongest In toe world—could have received a fresh Titan, and lowered it deep into toe earth. Tha “storm doors" could have been closed for protection against enemy nuclear attack^ the missile fueled, lifted NETWORK OF TUNNELS The earth far beneath Vanden-berg’s Titan sites is veined with a bizarre network of tunnels, piping and wiring. Great underground gen into the missiles at tremendous pleasure. Kerosene, pipelines run ■paeed base aad fhaea la the AstooUdagly, what with toe ’state of the art” moving as< swiftly as it does, the test aasaed was the test of an already than interior, lift. Tha trip endlesf, and the magnitude and complexity of modem waritae stays with Jgsuriewer tor many days to come. Nothing has been overlooked that would stand in the way of fart reaction, if toe tree world is attacked. If the vast doors of a ripped off by a Soviet warhead, what is believed to be toe largest complex of steel springs in the world would cradle and cushion toe shock below, and toe Titan I could still rise in terrible retribution. Safiifijriqf iiA-AaquaateUL But Titan n will be as ready to fire as a cocked pistol. -It will be Bred from the bottom of its silo, the heavy overhead protective cover, an improvament on alio doors, ia rolled beck on Its railroad wheels. . A A . A The toner walls of the.Titan II rite are thickly lined with spun glass, to absorb the shock wa and aoond as Titan II thunders ward from the bowels of tot earth. Without that cushion, ft might de- Ike minutes saved, at a cost of countless millions, could mean the difference in the Western worlds way of life. _ . If war rained down on toe West this minute, and it did not cripple eur counterpunch, the Air Faroe could give a cotoasal account of tffflf, using "obsolescent” missiles atone. A A A (Next: Osnotarion. BAG, toe heart of aay war ef retaUatlM, and a talk wtth the maa wke larged /teat mighty deteneat force, Gen. Curtis LeMay.) While it does seem a little rilly to mention it now, this country was founded as a protest against tsv^Hnw . . . Rices ere now Just about as high as pollticia*. prid nsver get... When nobody ____with you, you’re either or single. — Earl Wilson. 7irt$ton* NEW TREADS APPUEBl ON SOUND TME BODIES OR ON YOUR OWN TIRES COMPUTE SET OF TUBELESS WHITEWALLS ^“^049 Just say “Charge it”... buy on easy terms whoa your dollar buys MAES mart 146 W. HURON _FE 2-9251 _________ IS T Economical ROMAN CLEANSER FRESH ! GROUND BEEF 39 Hamilton, Farm Fresh GRADE “A” LARGE EGGS S9doz. Appign Way PIZZA MIX 29V J Tip Top CUT ASPARAGUS e Tall No. 300 Can 11 BANQUET ... Frozen POT PIES JC0 Chicken .Tarkey .Beef .Tans MPfel PEOPLE’S V FOOD TOWN FOOD MARKETS 1 263 AUBURN shu «»»w a wees i -i --UIUBU4.. . J.J ’ 46S I. PIKE ST. j —am s jus, mem.—| 700 AUBURN ST. ierucFnAnAawt r f AM vNt IB PM I SUPER MARKETS HI m mm THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1961 H Jm Elected...' Promised Nominee John F.-Kennedy idltor't Hole — Ho Preti-dent ever took office with more precite Heat of what kind of a President he wanted to be. How hot John F. Kennedy measured lip ftrMr*nit it the flrtt of five articles "appraising the Kennedy record, by a seasoned Washington reporter Who covered hit 1990 campaign. By ARTHUR EDSON AP Staff Writer WASHWGTON^-How is John F. Kennedy doing as President? It has been a year since his election, and 11 months sfrice his move into the White House. 4 * •* * Has Kennedy gone forward with the daring, imaginative leadership he said this Country so desperately needed? k ■’ k. ★ Or, as some disenchanted Kennedy enthusiasts of 1960 now suggest, has his administration compromised so frequently it has, in their view out -' Eisenhowered . Dwight D. Eisenhower’s? : ZZ3 Latching on to any political fact can be as difficult as picking up a wet watermelon seed, PROBLEM TOUGH But hen the problem is tougher. Talk to the men around Kennedy—as Oils reporter has—and the answer is almost always the same: He is doing exceptionally well. Except for Cuba, an obvious and admitted disaster, few mistakes are confessed, publicly or private-. ly. If one even dares to suggest that an alternative course might have produced better results, the rebuttal is Instantaneous and it is smooth, like a salesman’s speech that has b$en tailored in advance to meet each objection. * f ■ * Talk to men far removed from Notts ever entered Hie White House with a cleaner, concept of what Hie presidency should he, or with a firmer vision "of the President he wanted to become. _ Those of us-who followed Ken- nedy^^i^IP'tHr^wi............. months leading 19 to Ids dramatic victory over Richard M. Nixon saw the image laboriously hammered out: on a cold, windy airstrip in Presque Isle. Maine, at a j huge auditorium hi Oakland. Calif., before a street crowd that filled Penn Square in Reading, Pa. NEW CAMPAIGN Wherever he went, and sometimes it seemed he went everywhere, Kennedy tried to add a pew dimension of presidential campaigning. Earnestly and impressively, Kennedy, pictured an alert, aggressive, positive leadership that would move this country forward again and gain the' admiration of the whole non-Communist world. Only-two-days, before the elec- tion, his thoughts now firmly cry*-talked, he spoke at the Coliseum in New York City. A w k ’•'I want to be - a president, Kennedy said, “who bits the con-i ft&aSL-a? jReoele-an^ jrto takes the people mto His confidence—who lets them khow what be if doing and where we are going, who is for his program and who ia against I hope to set before the people our unfinished Hot simply follow t every whim and pleasure. . . ★ k k “I want to be a president who is the chief executive in every sense of the word." Here Kennedy came up with one of the most far-reaching promises ever made in a business renowned for over-reaching itself. “I am not promising action in the first 100 days alone,” he said. ”1 am promising you 1,000 days of exacting presidential. leadership.” be started out ha if he meant every word of it. A NEW GENERATION Hit eloquent Inaugural speech— "let the word go forth ... the torch has been passed to i *—awiarattan inf Americans’ was a fervent idea for peace brought, almost universal praise. Even Republicans reseed. Kennedy and the eager young men around him set such a pace in those early weeks that Washington, always an exciting, place when a new administration take* over, seemed in a ferment that would stir it to the bottom of its bureaucracy. But fate was unkind to Kennedy. k k it Whereas foreign affairs caused Eisenhower comparatively little difficulty during his first year, Kennedy was beset from the start with literally a world of trouble. Even then, before his administration had a chance to get shak- en down properly, came April 1? and the Cuban invasion—a shocking, humiliating failure that Was heard, aial denounced,- around die world. ‘IF I*M ELECTED' , "U I am elected next Tuesday,’ ~t&£f “ggiriirBEi“NeW York speech, “I want to be a Split Raises Prospect* for More Trouble Albania BreakShakesSolid Red Bloc O ; WASHINGTON (AP)—The diplomatic break between Albania and the Soviet Union raised prospects today for further cracks ap-seemingiy solid Communist world. * * * U.S. experts figured a logical next step would be Albania's expulsion from the Warsaw Pact, the Moscow-directed military alliance ef European Communist countries, and withdrawal of re- taw w men im miiuvcu iiuiu . ., JtL —^ . .« ____, . «d lilerally, Union’s European satellities. • k 'k- k Especially awaited was the reaction of Communist China, hitherto Albania’s patron, because the Soviet-Albanian rupture focused the spotlight on Peiping’s add the standard Republican response is exactly the opposite: The New Frontier is floundering; Kennedy already ii a failure. k k' k If one dares to mention that the administration pushed considers- _ ble legislation through Congress, j rivalry with Moscow, the answer comes quickly: These! k k k bills have been kicking around for whether the Red Chinese follow suit on the Soviet break with, Albania or whether they openly flout Moscow by maintaining friendship with the-tiny Balkan state, the omens of further friction in the Communist camp were pleasing the Western view- years, and any Democrat, moving into the White House, supported by a Democratic Congress, would have gotten as much. TRUTH ON BOTH SIDES The very vehemence of their replies suggests*'that neither side is too sure of its ground, that each fears there's some truth in other's argument. anedy! ress has to keep in mind that it is an ingrained political habit to see everything as all good or all evil. ★ k k But some confusion can be traced directly to Kennedy and the type of campaign he waged. For he not only made the usual1 promises — accurately called t"e Press. "campaign oratory” by Wendell Wilkie—but he also went far beyond. Repeatedly, almost constantly, he talked of the ideal president. Few men ever pursued the presidency so openly and persistently. Nor was any prediction available that the United States would soon extend aid to Albania, as it has to Communist Yugoslavia and Poland—still a member of the Soviet bloc. Albania has been getting aid from Red China and All’s Communist leader Enver Hoxha has said he would not accept assistance from the West. UA CAUTIOUS Washington officials were^ careful to point out that the Soviet-Al banian withdrawal ofr diplomatic representatives, announced Sunday through the official Albanian news agency Ata, was just further deterioration in a rift be-n the two countries which I been widening for some time. Both the Russians and the Albanians h^d been decreasing their diplomatic staffs in - the other’s capital before the break. The Albanians were abseiit from last October's Communist party congress in Moscow and from some Warsaw Pact meetings. As Soviet bloc aid to Albania has been! {chopped down, Red China’s has countries in that it has no common border with the bloc. Its land neighbors are Yugoslavia and Greece. Realty Prices Leveling NEW YORK. (UPI)-The boom in real estate prices appears to be leveling off in most areas of the'country with the exception of California and the southwest, cording to many land dcvcloj A Federal housing official contends that “the U.S. is at the top of the land cycle.” ** | coupon j Clip V Save WORTH TO* Toward DOZfN DELICIOUS DONUTS THIS WEEK ONLY . ‘DISCONTENT Undersecretary of State George W. Ball saw the Moscow-Tirana "evidence of a very eon-p*~.‘ siderable amount of discontent! " - JL ai ta *• * * + ean land about the size of Mary- • , | land with al-5 million population indicates another rift of i—js unique among European bloc consequence" in what “appeared to be a monolithic structure,” ’ Ball said Sunday night during a television interview—NBC, Meet! president known—at the end of four yehre-es one who not only held bade be Communist tide tut advanced the course of freedom and rebuilt American prestige— npt by words but by doing great deeds as a good neighbor—not by louri"anTcom^nM fay vitality land direction at home." A mighty high standard, maybe too high for these clamorous, uncertain times. DUdhuionment was bound to mm. Yet Kennedy judged the Eisenhower administration by these . upm ■ iinna be judged by them, too. v.. mm 1 so, as in subsequent stories and where he has succeeded, have Kennedy’s own high vfc the office to guide; us. -Nextt " Kennedy on tae l When you can’t leave home...shop by phone! 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Tuesday, Wednesday, Doc. 11. 12 and IS U.S. No. 1 MICH. POTATOES INGINGELLVILLE Gingellville SUPER MARKET 3990 BALDWIN' IN LAKE ORION L S. SOm 1MRKET 331 S. Broodway, Lake Orion BEER end WIN! FELICE 0(UUTT MARKET Now in Our New Location 1116 W. HURON Boor—Wine—Liquor mwmromuc isaubum heights VILLAGE SUKB MARKET 3342 Asksm M.. Auburn H.ijhta I ywiumr JHE FOKTFAC PRRSft, MQyPAYy DEGKMBElR H/1961 Jamaica Pushes Dfirb tb Improve Travel Facilities KINGSTON, Jamaica (UPI) -JM government oi this Caribbean BUM is pwUng a threc-gronged program to improve its land, sea ,,'%MMr,BailBlieK‘*>~'*'1' lfV,f ‘l*'_'**'*' ■ A aew Jet-age airport «rB be ; lXmpMM ban ae*t month, the seesad t* he Mlt oa the islaM hr two yeara. The other le at Montego Bay, program to rebuild the Island’s 2,600 miles of main roadways started in 1955 and if continuing at an anhual cost bf $3 million. Jamaica's railroad will re-tiro Its last piece o( steam locomotive equipment in little more than a year s* new atJfjropelled diesel uhlts take over. *_! Since 1950, three new ports have beat built and a fourth, now under construction, will bring thd island's total to 15, j. Howard Edwards Burial Service Today Service for j: HowardEdwards. 15, -ot 4096 Famer St„ Waterford Township, was held at 11 a.m. this morning at thcDonetoon_- Johns Funeral Home. Burial wasuTthS j Clinton Grove Cemetery at Mt. Gemens. A Masonic memorial service was held at the funeral borne Sunday evening. Rest Hone Owner Heart Victim at 63 Mr*. William (Amanda T.) Herrington. 98, of 1139 Myrtle St, Waterford Towinhfo, was dead on anrival Friday at St Joseph Mercy TBrifipipl a lissii si A retired printer, Mr. Edwards was owner of The Commercial Press In Pontiac for 30 years. He was a member of-Masonic Lodge No. 21 F&AM and Pontiac Typographical Union No. 512. Mr. Edwards, who is survived by his wife Blanche, died Friday at Pontiac General Hospital after an illness of several weeks. The collapsible tubes which coif tain toothpaste and other products may be made of tin, lead or aluminum. Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas WILUAM C. ANDEBSON William C. Anderson, 57, of 37 N. Park St died yesterday at Pontiac Ostaopathln Hospital following an ilineaa of one year. He was * owner, and operator of Ctaufcsto* Beat Haven and Colonial Convalescent Home In Bsllr. Orton-vtBe Beet Home In Orteavllle, She wee a member of the League ot Catholic Women, daughters of Isabella aad Altar Society, and St Benedict CathoUo Church. Surviving are a son, James C. of Detroit, and a; daughter, Mrs. Buerl W. Saincome. of Pontiac; three sisters, Mrs. Ellen Bradley Terre Haute, Ind-, Mrs. Ammon Martin of Pontiac, and Mrs. George Michaels, of Dry den; 12 grandchildren and four greatgrandchildren. it dr ♦ Rosary will beSecited for Mr*. Herrington 8 p. m. Tuesday at DonelsonhJohna Funeral Home. Service will be 10 a. m. Wednesday at St Benedict Catholic Ctfirrii with burial in Mt. Hope Cemetery, Surviving are his widow, Sally, two sons, Loyal and Lynn, both of Pontiac; and four daughters, Mrs. Marjorie Bell of Kalamazoo, Mrs, Lena Darnell, Mrs. Sue Brazelle, and Mrs. Geraldine Campbell, all [of Pontiac. Three brothers, three sisters, 19 grandchildren and one great grand; son also survive/' His body ia at the Pursley Funeral Home. CaJifornfeHafFlown 13 Different Banners SAN FRANCISCO*" (UFl)—Thirteen flags have flown over Cali* tornla in its recorded history. They include the Spanish Empire, England, the Spanish National Ensign, Russia, the Russian-American Company, pirates from Argentina, the Mexican Empire, the Mexican Republic, explorer John Fremont’s flag, the original Bear Flag, the American -Flag in ISM, the state's present official Bear Flag and the Stars and i-tsmpes ot th* tT.S:A. —--— VICTOR H, REYFF ___ „ Victor H. Reyff, 72, of 47 Hazel Mr. Reyff was forinetfy a tool and die maker employed with both Yellow Cab. and General Motor* Truck and Coach Diviaion. Survivor* include his widow, Beds, a son Robert and a daughter Mrs. John R. Edwards, both of Pontiac, and eight grandchildren. His' body is at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. MRS. CATHERINE DIFFLEY Mrs. Catherine (Eick) Diffley, 67, of 52 Center St. died yesterday fi'St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. A member of St. Vincent D# Paifff" Mr. Catholic Church, Mrs. Diffley in Daughters of' Isabella, League of Catholic Women and the Legion of Mary, Altar Society. Surviving are one son' Major Thomas Diffley, with the U.S. Army in'Turkey, and five daughters, Mr*. Elinor Rohrback, Mrs, Marie Landry, and .Mrs. Patricia Oueilett all of Fbntjap; Mrs. Ge-nieve Porter of Berkley; and Mt*. Betty Bannen of Traverse City. .Thirteen grandchildren and four gnst^-grandchlldren also survive. Parish Ro«lffy ^H-be-i»cited 8 p.m. Wednesday from Melvin A. Sphutt Funeral Home. Service will be held 10 a.m. Thursday at St. Vincent De Paul Catholic Church burial at Mt. Hope Cemetery. RUSSELL SCHLU8LER Russell Schlusler, 46, of 23& E. Pike St. was dead On arrival yesterday at Pontiac General Hogpi- an illness of. two year*. Surviving fie a brother and sev- Schlusier was employed with- Rontiac Motor Division. Survivors include his mother, one brother Howard .of Florida, and two sisters Mrs. Velma Crabtree of Herlong, Calif., and Mrs. Ardith Grata of Davisburg. His body is at the Pursley Fu-neral Home;------ FRANK N. FORREST Frank N. (Francis) Forrest, 93. of 52 West Fairmont St. died at his home following a lengthy coronary illness. Mr. Forrest was employed with the Riggers Union of Detroit. _ ___ Surviving are his widow Vtnar pontlac Vote slacken In Costa Rica are subject to fines. ft or.Dmim^SS^DmOX jUm MRS. CHARLES F. SMITH iiti. Charles F. (Claea W.) Smith, 83, of 56 Preston St., Waterford Township, died yesterday. She suffered from heart disease [ tor three-years. Mn. fifiSTwlinrfitst president of the Pontiac Womens Club. Surviving are a son Whitney of Pontiac, five grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. Service will be 1:30 p. m. Wednesday at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial at Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. JAMES S. THOMPSON James S. Thompson, 32, of 1919 Opdyke Road died yesterday at It It Your Privilege . • * ... And yours alone. No ..one except the immediate family may select the Funeral Director. It ia an American heritage to be carefully guarded. TIm* FEDERAL 4-4511 {Taxldntf Oh Our (Pnmiufm Qonehofr^cjm 859 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC mother, Mrs. Anna Forrest of California, a son, Max of California, three daughters, Mn. Frank Doll of Pontiac, Mrs. Richard Barnes of California, and Mrs. Albert Bergum of St. Paid, Minn. One brother, six sisters and six grandchildren also survive. Service will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Huntoon Funeral Home with burial in Oakland Hills Me-mortal Cemetery.. EDMUND GUIZON Service for 3-year-old Edmund Guizon of 254 S. Boulevard W. was held at 10 a.m. today at Melvin SChutt' Chapel with burial in Mt/ Hope Cemetery. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Guizon' died Saturday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital following a lengthy illness. Surviving besides his parents are two brother* Richard and Ralph Jr., and seven sisters Marta, Carol, Margaret, Delfiner Let a, Rebecca and Connie, all at fi>me. MRS. MARY V. LUCAS Mrs. Mary V. Lucas, 72, of 106 Judson St. died suddenly at her homo Saturday. Mr*. Lucas was a member of t. Vincent 'de Paul Catholic Church. Surviving are a brother George LaPonsa of Algonac, and two sister* Mrs. Mable Duprey and Beatrice Judkins with whom she lived; and several nieces. Rosary will be recited jat 7 p. Tuesday at DeWitt C. Davis Funeral Home followed by service at 10 a. m. Wednesday from St. Vin-cent de Paul Catholic Church. Bur- GEOBGE R. DEWEY H. Dewey, 78, of 48 Hovey St., will be 1 pro. tomorrow at the Boasardet A Rekl Funeral Home. Burial win be in Flint Memorial Park Cemetery. . A lifelong resident of the area, Mr. Dewey died Saturday at home following an r Kmths. Surviving are a brother, Charles and a. sister, Mrs. Carrie Decker, both of Okford; one grandchild, five great-grandchildren and six great-great-grandchildren. .MRS. RUPERT J. HAMEL AVON TOWNSHIP - Requiem Mass for Mrs. Rupert J. (Dorothy A) Hamel, 54, of 3358 Harrison will be sung 10 a.m. tomorrow at St. Andrews Catholic piurch, Rochester.-Burial will be in Mount Avon Cemetery, Rochester. Mrs. Hamel died at home yea-terday following a brief illness. She was a member of St. Andrews Catholic Church, the Brooklapds Garden Club and the Brooklands Extension Gub. Besides her husband, die is survived by her father, Gficge Austin of Massachusetts. Rosary win be said 8:30 p. day at the Pixley Funeral Home, Rochester. mrs. john McClelland ORTONVILLE — Requiem Mass for Mrs. John (Evelyn A.) McClelland, 81, of 3670 Seymour Lake Road, will be sung at 10 a.m. tomorrow at St. Ann Roman Catholic Church. Burial wilt be krSeyi mour Lake Cemetery. Mrs. McClelland died Saturday after an illness of six months. The Rosary wQl he recited at t.m. today at the C. F. Sherman FIX UP YOUR HOME for The HOLIDAYS! Open Tonight ’til 9 P.M. WALL TILE Take Your Pick All Plastic Wall Tile 50% MANY *•■- Price Sale Price MATCHING * J* "IMS J avs« OFF £ 2 GENUINE FORMICA Counter rr\f\r ill Quality (DU. Pat.) LATEX PAINT Ml Cotori *2« Guaranteed ' jLqa|4 Rog. f6.9S-Clou-Out Heavy Drip Inlaid |Va LINOLEUM kC Till If El. Ceramic Floor Tile n^'25%a ACOUSTIC CEILING TUB 12* SQ. ft. PLAIN 7i SQ. FT. FREE: UNoJvNMCS DISCOUNT PRICES cessed Ceiling Fixture . S4A9 POLE LAMPS S595Ea. We Have A Complete Line of DuPONT LUCITE PAINT_______ VINYL ASBIST0STILE c IstOuafry W CO. 8C SPATTER ASPHALT TSeftcPtt" fa. Beautiful Prefiniihed BIRCH PANELS S395 3'x7* VINYL FLOOR COVERING Reg. 99c sq. yd. dQC Special V» Off 7", Sq. Yd. Plastic Pertified RUBBER TILE 10* Solid Vinyl Tile Lifetime Guarantee M C Were 24c—NOW.. I Jo E< GENUINE ORIENTAL MOSAIC TILE QO< FIR SHEET fiF Q free estimates on all InttallaHonsI Plastic and Ceramic Tile and all typos of Floor Til*-all uncenditionolly guarcrntoed.________________ ing an auto accident He was employed with Pontiac Motor Division. Survivors include his wife Rachel, his father, George M. Thompson of Gideon," Mo., four Stanley E. of Joyner, Aik., Stanley Eugene Thompson, Royce G. Thompson and Terry Fowler, all of Pontiac; and a daughter, Mary Ann Thompson of Joyner. Three brothers and two sisters also survive. Service will be 1 p.m. Thursday t Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home with burial at Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. JOHN D. T REECE John Daniel Treece, 39, of 809 _X Clair St., was dead on arrival Saturday at Pontiac General Hospital following an auto accident Mr: Treece was employed as a machinist. ,—— Surviving besides his wife Nan-y, are his mother Mrs. Daniel Treece of Pontiac; a son Darell; ______daughter, Vicki; both at home. Two sisters, Mrs. Wilma Capel, and Mrs. Opal Oark, both of Poittiac also survive. EARL AND EDNA WC STERMAN Mr. and Mn. Earl Wisterman of 42015 Cherry Hill Rd., Plymouth, were dead on arrival Saturday at Wayne County General Hospital fallowing an auto accident. ^ Wisterman, 31, was employed as a truck driver with Ford Motor Cbmpahy. Mrs. Wisterman, 24, was a former Pontiac resident. Surviving are their children Jeffrey and Debra, both at home. Mrsr Wistennan*» survivors includes a brother Joe B. Collins of Pontiac. Mr. Wisterman Is also survived by four* brothers, Howard and Dale, both of California; Roy of Milford; Jay of Pontiac, and eight sisters, Mrs. Clara Walters of Florida, Mrs. May Haste, Mrs. Lois Villenuve, and Ira Wisterman, all of Romulus: Mrs. Lorene Vekaryasc, of Rogers Township; Mrs: Betty Freiburger of Union Lake, Mrs. Joy Howells, of Pontiac and Iris Wisterman of Bellevue. The bodies are at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. WILLIAM H. WOOD William H. Wood, 6120 Dixie Highway, Waterford, died ot cancer Saturday at St. Joseph’s Mercy Hospital following an illness of six months. He was 82. —Mr.-..Wood was -formerly em- ployed as a tool and die maker. Surviving besides his wife Lena are two daughters, Mrs. Carl J. Bergman and Ruth Wood, both of Detroit,, and one brother. Service will be 2 p.m. Tuesday at Sharpe-Goyette Funeral Home in Garkston. Burial will follow at' Ottawa Park Cemetery, Waterford. MRS. JAMES BROWN ORTONVILLE—Service for Mn. James (Oriel L.) Brown, Ji of 27 Mill St., win be 2 p.m. fomoiTow at C. F. Shehnan Funeral Home. Burial will be in Orfonvllle Cemetery. , y Mn. Brown died Saturday after HIRAM-SIMS COMMERCE TOWNSHIP—Service for Hiram Sims, 71, of 1900 Decker Road, will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake. Burial will be in Jackson. A retired Standard Oil agent, Mr. Sima died yesterday at home of a heart attack. Besides his wife, Florence, he is survived by a son, Richard, of Walled Lake; two brothen, and a sister. Phone 334-9957 If You Don't Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! Pra-Tested Rocipes for Flavorful Fruit Caka* Holiday-Diced, Flavor-Rich FRUIT CAKE MIX G*t that good hom* baked flavor with this tasty mixture of dic*d lemons, oranges, citron, cherries, pineapple and other fruits. You save^noney, tool . CANDIED CHERRIES.. .14 Pound.. .:.49* GLACE PINEAPPLE . .14 Pound. . . 49- IXTRA FANCY MIX ., . 14Pound.^. . . . . . 40* NEW CROP e v . 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(UPI) — The oil Industry plans a wen nearly live miles deep in Plaquemines Parlaa, La. The hole wm coet at least S3 million. * * *i The record depth now Is 25,340 feet In Texas at a cost of S3 mil. lion, and It-was a dry bolt. High above the earth the air growiT hotter. At an altitude of 30 mikm it it about 170 deg Fahrenheit. 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MONDAY, DECEMBER H, ij>61 tWenty«on» ftfillmns Likely to Get Higher Interest on Savings xSltor’i Note Recently the Federal Reterve Beard authorized commercial banks to ralte tome interest savinot.vp to 4 per cent beginning Jan. 1. The following article shows what has happened since this ruling and how it may affect the millions of depositors around the nation. elude Chase Manhattan erf New growth has been about six times as great as that of the eoquner-dal banks. York City, second largest bank in to country. * ;s‘ '-*r- Savings and loan officials every- measures at once. One of the largest in Missouri, Community Federal Savings A Loan Association of St. Ann, Jumped its div- would be a while before the in- By RICHARD H. HOENIG AF Business News Writer NEW YORK (AP)—More than 100 million thrift-minded Ameri- money in their savings accounts— just by sitting back and waiting. This win be the result of recent Nevertheless a big majority of banks indicated a cautious attitude toward raising their interest rates. Scone experts thought idend to 4.5 per cent from 425. SAFER WINS About the only winner in this looming tug of war Is likely to be the saver. For over a decade, banks and savings and loans firms have been filtered down to' smaller communities, away from financial competition is changes in an administrative rule ! cause these deposits are the basis for all their lending and other activities. The savings and loans President Clark Beis of Bank of America of San Francisco, me biggest bank in the worid, anticipated “little if any change’’ under current interest rate patterns. In the same vein, Crosby Kemper have had the best of its since 4 Pf» CENT 'The ride is Regulation .“Q" ■ of the Federal Reserve Board and the change will permit most of the nation's commercial bantu to pay up to 4 per cent Interest on savings left in the bank over a year and SH on savings left in for less their dividends aren't regulated by anyone. EUBQULATKD Since 1957 commercial banks, servicer have been limited by ItegulxBan Q to paying 3 per cent than six months. Until Jan. 1 file limit is 3 per cent. Not all of the estimated 110 million depositors in various savings institutions will benefit immediately. But starting next month a small number scattered from New Ygrtrto Cahfbmia witLbeglncarn-ing more on the dollars they sdveT The number is expected to swell as months Cold Produces New Amplifiers Most savings dollars are held by three different types of financial institutions. They are commercial banks, savings and loan associations and savings banks. COMMERCIAL RANKS Commercial banks are corporations owned by stockholders and can be distinguished by the checking services they offer. They pay interest to savings account hold- Savings and loan associations are mutual cooperative share account institutions which pay interest-dividends to account hold- SAVINOS BANKS Savings banks have no stockholders, are managed by trustees or directors and distribute all earnings to depositors in Interest. The latter two institutions pay more interest—as dividends—than commercial banks. One purpose of the new regulation change was to permit banks to compete better for the privilege of keeping the public's—money, and making it earn its keep. Just a week after the Federal Reserve and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. raised the maximum interest rate permitted, a score of banks in 14 states had announced higher rates. They In-' Since 1945 savings and loan Scientists Find Gaits Cooled to Liquids Hove Great Sensitivity " NEW YORK (AP) — An extremely deep freeze process, that has given birth to a new science, is producing some interesting results on the American technological front Called cryogenics, this science's stock in trade is supercold, ranging nearly all the way down to absoiute 'sero (minus 456'degreer Fahrenheit.).. This super cold'* is generated by liquified gases. By applying these gases ■ays Steeiways, the pobUcatlea of the Americas Iron and 8teel Institute, scientists have pro- hundreds ot times more sensitive than present radar, natural gas converted Into liquid form for easy shipment abroad, greater apeed la computers and other electronic devices. Sr. chairman of the City National Bank k Trust Go., one at Kansu City's largest, said he doesn't believe the Mg banks will nay htoh-er interest* because they can't afford it. go up," said a spokesman for die American Bankers Association. COMPETITION 9TIFF Others .think the regulation Q hange eventually will most banks. Over 400,000 savings account holders of Chase Manhattan of New York, will be earning 3% per cent instead of 3 beginning Jan. t « can estimate today would expect the average ratr-paid 'By' commSWal banks to move up to 3 per cent or ho, he added. That would be more than Vi per cent above the present average return of 2.36 pdf cent rates but there is no doubt that in most places where competition exist? for savings the rates Will Commercial banks have about |82 billion in savings accounts and time deposits, up 10 per cent in the first 10 months of 196L Time deposits are money left undisturbed for definite peHods such u six months, mostly by corporations. Banks have an estimated' posits accounts, based on Federal Reserve figure*. The country’s 6,300 savings and __jssKM^sthasis have about $78 billion in assets, or savings money, with over 30 million account holders, based on Federal * Home La figures. ONEY GOES WEST misa natural expectation that vings and loan associations will ove up from their present rate rel,V said Ed Hiles, executive vice president of the Georgia Sav-igs-and Loan-League. Savings and loans on the west coast have been paying 4ft per in a few cases. This has Attracted money from all over the country. These rates are higher than the average for the nation, however. In New York State the average rate is about 3% per cart. Full realization of Cryogenics' promise depends on successful fabrication of materials to store the supercold gases, the magazine says. The steel industry recently has made what may become a significant break-through — a new steel that could cut 10 per cent from the cost of erecting storage vessels to gases. The World’s Easiest Chord Organ to Play and Pay for Anyone who touches Pianorgan wants to play it — and CAN! One finger of each hand — that's ail it takes! No lessons or practice, yet wonderful organ music fills the room. Beautiful instrument, beautiful furniture, beautiful savings! $289.95 r Model* *159.95 to $365.00 PURCHASE NOW . . SMALL DOWN PATMINT GALLAGHER Music Co. Open Every Ivoniiif ta Chriitmn 'HI ttjt 16 W. Huron St. P« 4-0566 ifowntewn Pswriee |\ ill million savings and time de-'cent generally and 4.6 per cent Some 500 mutual savings banks chartered in 18 states hold another $36 billion of savings money in about 22 million accounts. Their rates are regulated to some degree in nine states. Nationally they paid an average 3.63 per cent on last Juhe 30, according to the National Association ot Mu--ttwl SfauEwff P.nlr. Almn«r half ‘ ofthe 127 in New York StatewD11 pay 4 per cent on two-year money after Jan. 1. Death Rate in Fires : Highest at 65, Over NEW YORK (UPD—The highest death rate by fire la among persons 65 year* of age and over, according to the National Boa** of Fire Underwriter*. The second highest rate, Is among children under 5 years of age. 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Melchior; Elgin Peterson, first Avenue. Balthazar; and Pat IT ampler. East Chicago Av e nue, tnwhFs mother. Double casting is employed for the four performances. Pontiac Northern Plans Menotti s Yule Classic Women's Section Tuesday Musicale Sets Concert The annual Christinas concert presented by the Pontiac Tuesday Musicale Chorus is slated for 1:30 Tuesday afternoon in the Grace Lutheran Church. Mrs. Ferdinand GaCnsbauer is director for the program. ■ ’ Helen Schmitz will be accom- panist. Jean Huttula, Pontiac Central High School senior,, will be violin soloist with Alice —Furlong accompanying, * Miss Huttula, Pontiac Tuesday Muticaie’s 1961 scholarship winnbr, attended the Na- ' ■ tional Music Camp at Inter-lochen for eight weeks last summer where her record was Party, Meeting Are Held by Church Units reported outstanding. She is concert mistress of the All-City Orchestra. Selections by Miss Huttula will be "Ciaccona,” by Vitali; “Cavatina,” Raff; and “Czardas,” Monti. Soprano soloists on the program will be Mary Ann La-Monte, with "Christmas Lullaby", . and Muriel Mercer, “Happy Sounds," a. 14th Century time. Holiday favorites scheduled Four performances of Gian-Carlo Menotti's "Amahl and the Night Visitors" trill be presented this week by the drama and vocal music departments of Pontiac Northern High School. Matinees will be Wednesday and Friday for elementary and junior high school students. Evening performances will be 8 p.m. Thursday and Saturday. Directed by Melvin Larimer, vocal music instructor, and Anthony Chiarilli, drama coach, the .performances will feature double casting. ARrahl will be- played by Peter Pratt and Earl Myers, sixth grade boys. The mother will be Cheryl Montgomery and. Patricia Warn-pier. a a ft___________ Playing the? three kings will be Albert Monroe and Ronald -McDonnell — Kasper; Jerry Brabant—Melchior; and Elgin . Peterson-Balthazar. Sandra Trietsch, pianist, and a full orchestra will accompany Hie presentation. Sandra Sommorvilie, Michigan State University student teacher in . vocal music, will assist in di- there’s still lime RE-UPHOLSTERED Before Christmas! recting the production. The choreography is directed, by Jackie Rae Voorhees, assisted' by Madeline McDonnell. a + * The children's Opera, now a Christmas classic, first was presented on television in IBM. Tickets will be. available at the door. Woman Discusses Yule Traditions Mrs. George Caches spoke concerning “Christmas Traditions’-’ when the Colonial Group of the First Congregattohal Church gathered at the h o m e of Mrs. Percy Hunt on Cherokee Road, Friday. * * * . Luncheon chairman, Mrs, William Knudsen was assisted by Mrs. William Gordon, Mrs. L. L. Dunlap, Mrs. C. J. Barrett, Mrs. E. M. Peterson and Mrs. Engel Greenberg. W A ■' ♦ Mrs, E. R. Bigler read a Christmas story for devo- hitlu fm, fkctn Pontiac1 Northern High School's "Amahl "and the Night Visitors” wilt open at a matinee performance Wednesday. Appearing in ike Christmas classic will . ~ ba- (from laftf-dlbart Monrot, West~--Anu:rArbdr!'^= Avenue, as Kasper; Peter Prod, North Edith Street, Amahl; and Cheryl Montgomery, Cameron Street, " the mother. ....r— Thelma Lee Edw Weds JohnG -lyMrs: Gaelics uf White poinsettias banked the altar in' the Christian and Missionary Alliance Church for the Saturday vows of Thelma Lee Edwards of Plnegrove Avenue to John C. Whaley. Rev. G. J. Bersche -performed the two o'clock ceremony. *■ A A ~ The bride is the daughter of-John C. Edwards of Union Lake and the late Mrs. Catherine Edwards. The Harvey Whaleys of Hogarth Street, Waterford Township, are parents of the bridegroom. The bride’s ballerina-length dress of. white silk chiffon featured a white velveteen bqdice with bateau neckline and shirred elbow-length sleeves. A pearl.crown caught bouffant shoulder-length illusion veiling. She held a nosegay of Miss Joseph Repeats Vows in Church Rites Ann Louise Joseph exchanged vedding vows with Robert D„ tobertson before Ed Wilson, ninister of: the Elizabeth Lake Church of Christ, at Saturday ites. The Everett Josephs of Loch-iven Road, Waterford Town-ditp and the Robert Robert-, L............-.....I W WJTMMMMWWWjTWWMJrMWW* AMERICAN SCHOOL. "" P. O. B.I IMS Allen Park, Michigan Send me rrar rill M-f>(e Hl(k School Booklet Birmingham News Bits on Parties By RL’TH SA1JNDERS BIRMINGHAM — Kir. and Mrs. Laurence B. Avison Jr., invited several friends to their home on Beverly Road Friday evening for cafe Brulot. This delicacy, served with blue flame of ignited brandy over archrcup, was made-by- Mrs.: Avison who learned the technique in her native New Orleans. Among the guests were Mrs. Harry Menard, Mrs. Mary Ellen Mead, Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Gagstetten, Mrs. Olive E. Harcke, Mr. and Mrs. James T. Maunders, Mr. and Mrs. D. V. Hapke, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Stecker and the Thomas Martins, * * ★ From Dayton, Ohio, comes news from Mr< and Mrs. James A. Brandt of the recent birth of twins Carolyn Martin and Douglas Littleton Brandt. Jim and Nancy and their family will he moving from Dayton to Madison, Ind., soon. ■ W ,★ - ★ • Birmingham Temple 94, Pythian Sisters, celebrated their fiftieth birthday anniversary with a dinner, at Birmingham Community House Saturday. Mrs. Robert ina Davidson and Mrs. Helen Snure served as cochairmen for the affair. Past Grand Chancellor Ray Burrell of Ypsilanti was toast-master. Mr. and Mrs. William E. Hartman Jr. were hosts at a breakfast Sunday in their home on Lahser road. A .* * Mr. and Mrs. Frederick G. Weed will be hosts at "brunch” Sunday at Bloomfield Hills Country Club. Crumbs Coat Dumplings | Baked With Veal Cubes five Ydu Tried This? Combine soup and water in skillet in which meat was browned- Bring to n boll and pour over meat. Bake at 350 degrees for 45 minutes. BY JANET ODELL Pontine Prooo Home Editor la answer to our request for more meat recipes, Mrs. Louis Towers of Cedar Island Lake telephoned in with this one for Veal Dumplings. It is a family recipe, she says. Mrs. Towers, the mother of three youngsters, says homemaking and cooking are her hobbies. VEAL DUMPLINGS By Mrs* Louts Towers 2 pounds veal steak % .cup flour 1 teaspoon paprika M. cud salad oil . . 'v'^M ________ , ...... 1% cups small cooked on- lhlh mixture of M cup melted ions, drained butter or margarine and 1 1 can condensed cream of cup bread crumbs. Place on chicken soup 1 cup water Coat meat with mixture of flour and paprika and pound in. Cut meat into 2-inch cubes. Brown in oil. Place in large flat baking pan and add drained onions. 2 cups sifted flour 4 teaspoons baking powder V* teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon each celery seed, dry onion flakes and poppy seed 'i cup salad oil 1 cup milk Sift dry ingredients. Add seasonings, oil and milk. Stir to moisten- Drop by spoonfuls Hi—II I fill HOLIDAY SPECIAL Simply Beautiful WOOL KNIT DRESSES Open Every Night til 9 p.m. Jacket Favorite (UPI)—The cardigan jacket first made famous by Gabrielle Chanel of Paris is a favorite . in New York collections. Oleg y Cassini, the designer who does many of Mrs.'John F. Kennedy’s clothes, showed Chanel-like jackets fastened with fob etmlns aeroM the front.— Gifts for Home Are Collected Gifts tor the folks at Hilltop Host Home were brought to the Brooklyn Avenue home of Mrs. Byfourd Laur Thursday evening, for a meeting of Rho Chapter, Alpha Delta Kappa Sorority. Mrs. Ronald Carr was cohostess. Mrs. Theodore Fauble of the Pontiac Story League told her sorority sisters the story of “The Juggler of Notre Dame” by Anatole France. Mrs. Melvin A. Boersma directed the singing of Christmas carols. New members, Mrs. I. Joseph Davis and Mrs. Curtis Cheek were welcomed. Agnes Shipman of Kansas City, founder of the sorority, will visit the group on Feb. 12, Heat a second can of cream | of chicken soup with 1 cup | sour cream. Do not boil. Pour $ over meat and dumplings, or 1 serve separately as a sauce. | . Serves 6 to 8. SSMIS iSlWilISli iaMSIillllllH iH I Mil I.* Fellowship Class Schedules Dinner The Fellowship Class of the First Baptist Church will gather for cooperative dinner preceding the Christmas class meeting Dec. 18 in the educa- tional building. ★ * * Dinner chairmen are Mr. and Mrs- Walter De Nio. The John Cowes and Mr. and Mrs. Ira Davis will present the program. Sr ★ " ★ Members Will bring gifts for the folks at the Green Lake Rest Home. Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone at 29 and lived to age 75. Reg. to 14.98 10“ Select group of our better one-piece flat knits. All siges in group. CHARGE ACCOUNTS INVITED FREE GIFT BOXES - PARKING . BOBETTE SHOP 16 rf. Saginaw Street “Hands-down” favorites — small I cables at the wrists assure y snug fit in these cozy mittens. Warm, wonderful for sports — every day! Cables add texture ae-j cent to mittens knitted round and round. Pattern 889: directions, small, medium, large. Send 35 cents (coins) for this pattern — add 10 cents for each pattern for lst-class mailing. Send to Laura Wheeler, care of The Pontiac Press, 124 Needlecraft Dept., P.O. Box 161, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, N-Y. Print plainly Pattern number, Name, Ad-dressand Zone. wt. DECEMBER SPECIAL! Al HALF THE PRICE The taller, oval look la flattering news, with hair lifted airily across the top, held closer at the sides and back, Many variations, personalized for you at donnell’s. Regular 610 to $20 Permanents1*1 *5“* for our $10 Controlled Permanent 6^50* for our 615 Permanent * for our 620 Permanent ‘Styling Department Pric.s Slightly Higbor MILE The shorter haircut for aU $000 FE 8-9639 re^*%!reB ^ Hows • to f DsUy—Appointment Net Always Necessary 6 Tables in Play at Bridge Session Six tables participated in the Pontiac Bonneville Duplfcst Bridge Club game Saturday ' Dr. and Mrs. Charles Patrick and the Ernest L. Guys-tied for first place. Other winners were Dt. Mrs. W. H, Barron; the R. Cana days: Dr. and. Mrs. Maurice Willis; Forrest Reed and Richard Simpson. Iraq Caldron Cooks Up Fete Iraq Caldron No. 70, Daughters of Mokanna, plans a card party Jan. 17 at the home of Mrs. May White. Arrangements for the evening of cards were made • at the group’s meeting and Christmas party Wednesday' in First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Oakland's building. Refreshments were served by Mrs. May White, Thelma Anderson and Mrs. Benjamin Richardson. The next meeting will be Jan. 3. 1847 ROGERS BROS. .. .._tnmputo , at 55% Off WMJLM PUCE WOULD BK f74.BE ONLY 15 SITS AVAILABLE /AT THIS .. PRICE CHEST EXTRA •UY ON iUDcrr hums 10 MONTHS TO PAY 2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU JEWELERS _ ktgUWnd lowolon American Gem Society . DOWNTOWN MIRACLE MILE ' M W. Bares 22*3 Telegraph ..... FE 2-0294 FE r«r „ Both Stores Open Every Night to Christmas ’til 9 P.M. Introducing Mrs. Sarah Trapp Graduate of the David Presley Professional School of Beauty Infinite charm and femininity is for yon for the holidays when your hair it professionally set and elegantly styled by Mrs. Trapp. Make your appointment soon. Open Evenings by Appointment HEALOIL BEAUTY SHOP 71% North Saginaw „ P™ .. FE 241226 &JNeumode UNDER THE CHRISTMAS TREE lovely NEUMODE NYLONS k beautifully gift wrapped f FREE OF CHARGE jp* w*. EVERYONE IN THI FAMILY I ’ * # MEN'S SOX # CHILDREN'S HOSE •6-All KINDS OF « WOMEN'S HOSIERY Nmmod&zflawsry Shop 82 JNorth. Saginaw Street FE 2-7730 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 11,1961 TWENTY-FIVE When You Need SEE STATE FINANCE Ui m halp consolidate yaw d.bti, r.poir your car or for any purpota. Repay In imoll, monthly poymonti. fo»t, friandly Mrvica. LOANS TO $500 ON YOUR SIGNATURE, CAR OR FURNITURE Juit phono ui and wo can havu tho mo nay waiting for you whon you call at our office. Phono FE 4-1574. STATE FINANCE CO. SOO Pontiac Stota Bonk Oidg. Phona FI 4-1574 Bridge to Understanding Door Mrs. Lawrence: What Jink you write. Hut article about the. girl who mid "rdon’t feel like it" when hoi mother asked her to turn dew* the TV volume nude me tick. her lease her landlord agreed to repaint it far her. .The painting Job took two days. Anxious not to tone any bustoeas, Miss F worked Until 3 a.m. on the first day, replacing stock on her shelves,' removing plaster dust, Hut mother titodd have gives ZJZZL * her a good crack in toe law In- “ - -...................... On the second night she worked util 10 o’clock. Then, dragging home her tired body and aching stead of taming down the TV herself and saying, Til want to know why you wouldn’t do what I asked when I've finished this phone can.*' ANSWER: I have a little story I want to tell yea. I once knew a Miss F who ran a little book and stationery shop which supported her and her feet, she entered the living room where her mother was watching TV. Looking up, her parent said, "Mamie, go and make me a cup of tea." Min F, an obedient child did as she was told. But the next day had ordered, she began to car. "You must forgive me,’’ dhe W Everything to still in a men i I’ve been working: late... . , l Mrs. Lawrence, my mother , she doesn’t love me ... last night when I got home ah tired I could 'e never notioed .. she never saw. She Just said, ‘Go * get ms . y. Min F had to see a doctor You see, tUo grown child hod mother. One ftil when ahe re- when she couldn't locate a book feeing ■» obeying Car mother's order to make her a cup of tea. Sometimes younger children-too! have reasonable reasons for not Jumping to our order*. If we feel no interest in his ransom gooner or later he may know himself to be unloved. The question "Why didn’t you do what I asked you to dp?” to the bridge We make between ue and a resisting Child across which he can come ever to ue and ten'us why he to worried,'how he has been unwittingly hqrt, what to troubling him eo that he has been unable to serve ue willingly. A * * Do you always feel like doing what ydu’ie told? Are there never times far you when you want someone to say, "Why didn’t you do as I asked? Are you tired? What to wrong? Tell me?” MOMS Members Exchange Presents The Fast Pratidekto Chib for Zone 8, MOMS of Atoertca,’ exchanged gifts- Thursday eve-~ ning at a Christmas buffet supper in the home of Mrs. Frank J. Polasek, Auburn Heights. Mrs. Jeanie Burgdorf assisted the hostess. Mrs. Malcolm Scantland gave the devotions and a Christmas prayer and Mrs. Arthur Burgess conducted the business meeting. New member Mrs. Joe A. Goedeke was welcomed. , - A Bible has been sent to the U.S. Veterans Hospital in Iron Mountain in mem-, my of the late Mrs. Samuel Sprague, Michigan State Board chaplain. Qne of the largest tunnels tolrado. It to nine feet in diameter < e wqrid may/ho the Alva R.land\extends * dtotoncaai jit . Adam* irrigat^m tunnel in £ok>- miles. .. ■ 't,| {pKI FIRE AUTO m Lout Far i Mowoy mam M.mbi N* into Ip Fean M. E. Daniels T*?ms ""** V#ca 11 Banieln Insurance Agcnnj M3 Weil Hues Stieet FE 3-7111 Chapter Shows Creative Gifts Creative gjliafor children to make were displayed by members of Epsilon Chapter, Alpha Delta Kappa Sorority, Thursday evening in the home of Mrs. Alton Row-ley on Seymour Lake, Ortonvilie. Mrs. Gerald Burley was cohostess. * toy •#- 5* ‘ Gifts brought tor the Oakland County Children's Home and far Pontiac State Hospital patients were tagged. + + * An exchange- student will speak at the January 4 meeting in the home of Mr. Lida F. Sandage on Nichols Road. ;'^r ~~ Theater CARAVAN to jfcj FISHER Theater Otshestrs Susts and TfsaspertaHen $6.25 I net. Tax Wad. Matiaee, Dec. 27fk "BYE, BYE BIRDIE" CAU 644-5111 HAtCKE-MEAD—Birmingham Fete Savedges on Milestone Yellow chrysanthemums and gilt pine cooes set the theme far the golden wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mr*. Benson H. Savedge observed at an open house given by their sons and daughters Sunday. w w ♦ Mrs. Ray Rooney of Oehawa Circle was hostess, assisted by the anniversary couple’s other children wnilKm and Benson Savedge and Mrs. Kenneth Sutton, all of Waterford Town- . ship. ' ..'":-J W A A.. The couple has 13 grandchildren”* and two great-grandchildren. none but the best in frames will do for your treasured pbotos Owlw Ol*f**A& Quality photo frames ... see ,oui; display flektrd M % rhct^cftiw $18 W. Huron PI 4-JW9 ‘Bad’ NICHOUE CALLING- When did you last evaluate your present insurance protection . on home and valuables? NOW, THROUGH OUR HOMfOWNIt’S ONI POLICY PROTECTION PUN tt cotta you only *pennitt t Roy* to mure -complete' protection Check today and make certain that your Insurance ta In Una with today's replacement value of ftu property ... If not, fife us a call today! 'Bud' NICHOUE Per COMPLETE Carefree Protection 49 Mt. Clnmcni Struct Ft 3-7858 Pedicuring and Facials &wtonWtof HAIR STYLIST 1672 S. Telegraph TE 8-8085 1 Between Stewart-Glenn and Molls Units Busy With Yule Activities Members of the June Group of the First Presbyterian Church exchanged gifts at a Christmas luncheon Friday in the home of Mrs. E. G. Winn on Pemberton Road, Bloomfield Hills. Sharing hostess honors were-Mrs.' C. M. Saunders, Mrs. Dewey Taylor, Mrs. R. C-Cummings and Mrs. Bessie M.' Brown. - A ft : ■ to,; . eMrs. Asr L. Drury chose "Advent" tor her devotional topic and Mrs. Clifford C. Gro-vogel was in charge of the Christmas program. Officers tor'1982 Were installed by Mre. H. E. McCullough and Mn. Mallory F. Coleman was recipient of a gift tor her services as past chairman. Guests of the group were Mn. William Gamer, Mn. Charles Grant and Mn. McCullough, Mn. William Jones was welcomed as a new member. :r y »________* .* ' ■_____ Yomar Group met Thursday evening in the home of Mn. James Spark on Parkway ^A venue. Mrs. Sam Miller assisted with refreshments. Mn. Donald Williams gave the Bible study and Mn. Emil " Bruestle gave two Christmaa readings, "Story of the Christmas Bells" eiid “Christmas Yean Ago.” Mn. George Sullivan led carol singing. * * : # A gift was presented to Mn. Graybiel, outgoing president, who presided at the tea table. Members exchanged presents. The group will meet for cooperative dinner Jan. 4 at the chunjh. The Faith Group of the First Presbyterian Church met Friday for a luncheon and Christmas party at the Union Lake home of Mrs. Frank Wilson. Sharing hostess honors were Mn. Harold Smead and Mn. Robert Sigler. Mrs. Willis Brewer read a prayer written by Mn. Ching Ling Lee of Hong Kong from "The Fellowship of the Least Coin." A special gift acknowledged her work as chairman of the Faith Group. Mn. Randall Spurgeon to incoming chairman. * WWW Some 35 members of the July-August group were Friday luncheon guests of Mrs. Robert Oliver of West Iroquois Road. Oohostesses were Mn. Warren Abbott and Mrs. John Patter-eon. Mn. Paul Kern read a Christmaa prayer from "The Fellowship of the Least Coin"' and gave her impressions of Hong Kong,-recently visited. White elephant gifts were exchanged. W W Jfc— Mn. C. J. Nephler of Cherokee Road opened her home Friday to the Septem-ber-October group who gathered for the annual Christmas tea and white elephant gift exchange. . The afternoon opened with a prayer by Mn. Charles Allen and ctoeed with a Christmas poem read by Mn. Elaine Malone. Assisting -hostesses were Mn. Howard D. (Bonn, Mrs. Frank B. Gerls and Mn. E. L. Page. Radiant Beauty for the Holiday Season IN GENUINE WALNUT! NEW MODULAR WALL SYSTEM! • FOR BOOKS OR MAGAZINES • FOR STEREO OR HI-FI • FOR TELEVISION • FOR EVERY ROOM—TO SAVE ROOM Special S GENUINE LEATHER CHAIRS... *100 • Choice of styles as shown _•Choice of green, red, ivory • In stock for delivery when wanted The wonderful new world of storage A. Cane door cobiaot 32"Wxl6"Dxl5"H f 80 is yours in this handsome new wall f. Supports—36", |8; 54", fS; 72" .. f 7 system. Make your home more liv- jj Shelf—32"Wx8"D I 12 obi., mo* rcKxny «, convent.- p Cu, iK, dktt 32"V>1I"Di21"B $100 These hang on 32-inch centers—bring room measurements. E. Desk Unit. 32 "Wxl8"Dx4,/i"H I 40 r. Open front cabinet, 32"Wxl8”Dx21"H f 80 iil fit - COLD WAVE $6.95 Expert CUT included, STYLING STYLING that to yarn atone. NEISNER'S BEAUTY SALON 2nd Floor . Phone FEderal 8-1143 Appointment Net Alwoy* Needed 12 N, SAGINAW ST. Open Mon. and Fri. Till 9:00 Open Evening*—Monday throagh Friday—'MI Chriatdna Never hove we seen such well tailored, high quality, leather chairs priced so low. A fortunate special purchase is rwqpoi^I^e for the special value. Choice of either style as shown, diamond tufted or wing back. S. Saginaw St. at Orchard Lata Avenue OPEN EVERY EVENING *TIL CHRISTMAS PARK FREE IN OJUR LOT- BEHIND STORE! X THE PON7riA€ tfRESS, MOyDAY, BECEMBEBr H, mi m ttw^tq^QppiMon Mart, Etc. MARKETS The tolfowing are top prices cowering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by thenf In wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, r | Friday. Detroit Produce JVfart Sees Substantial Gain Steels and Motors Being Bought mand for steel combined with general optimism among market analysts as. backgrounafactors in the advance. Applet, Jonathan —••• Apples. Mrlnto+h —Applet. Northern Spy ... Apple Cider, 4 sal." VesataMee Beet*, topped ....... cabbage, curly, bn... Cabbage, red. bp- ....... Cabbage. Sprout* . , CabbaS*. »t*ndard variety Carrot*, du. beha. ... ...... sast""*-'........... NEW YORK (AP)-Industrials moved forward in response to strong Investment demand and gave the stock market a substantial gain* despite some profit-taking early this afternoon. Trading as heavy. *- I Gains of fractions to a point —.■ w. MAI among pivotal issues outnumbered at ,*he ope"in* an?. >** in losers in the same range. W “ aa ,he. aeaaon s.st! * a * {showing a gain of well over point. Irregularity prevailed among other utilities. Houston Repdhi of continuing strong de- worth advanced a couple of points as Christmas shopping was reported burgeoning. American Telephone touched itongradtph, pk. **i Sltels, motors and some oils were bought heavily, reflecting in-•} JJjstilutional interest. The leading ' ■ " tobaccos, some airlines and rails also improved. The picture was spotty among chemicals, electrical equipments, nonferrous metals and drugs. . Ml 8qu**h, Hubbard .....— Turnip*, dot. bob*. ..... Turnip*, topped, bu...... GREENS Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY » DETROIT, Doe U Price* MM per pound at Detroit lor No. I quality five poultry: • ■ - ...... . . ,_,.» «*. Il.ht t UM DETROIT BUTTER AND- BOOS DETROIT, Doe. 11 (API—Bgl price* pold per dawn at Detroit by fir* “ cel ms i Including U.B.I Whites—Orade A jumbo 3l%-45: — I 3I%-41; tars* **%-M; medium Light & Power added around 4. Eastern Gas & Fuel, Consolidated Edison and > Public Service Electric & Gas were moderate losers. ★ * * Xerox added more than 7. Kor-vette ran up more than 2. Wool- Bond Prices Are Steady NEW YORK IB - Bond prices were steady and little changed at the start of trading today. Over the counter dealers In U.S. government securities said the only price movements were a few, minus 1-Sta scattered throughout the Hat. There was little volume. Among corporates traded on the New Vork Stock Exchange industrials pushed upward a bit but this was balanced by a dip in utilities. Rails held mixed. There were hardly any changes amounting to a full point. An exception were Boston & Maine Railroad ttys up 1 at 45ty. -Prices on the American Stock Exchange were mostly 'higher th heavy trading. Gains of around 2 points were posted for Guiton Industries and Gulf American Land. Up a point or so were RrC. Williams and Livingston Oil. Active fractional gainers included Stanrock Uranium, Pacific Petroleum and H. L. Kllon. Technicolor was off about a point. Associated Ofi drGu wae fractionally lower in brisk trading. American Stock Exch. National Output to Be High in'62 Insurance Firm Sees Gross Products 9 Pet. Above 1961 & **Y ite *m uSx’f lung tor gain will represent Creole Pet .... 40 HJ tone .. **- *-— — 11.1 Movt Indus 13.3 Pacific Pet - S- rfH>. Hfe - . 17.* J7.2 Technlco . DOW JONES NOON AVEBAQBS STOCKS 50 M* .............. ...... 731.55 + 3 32 51 fiaSa .................. iU------- u thde ...................ist 65 Stocks ................ 140 BONDS 40 Bend* ....... ...........14. IS Btgbor grad* rail* .....7f. The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (API—Following of ooloeted aloek traoeaeUan* on York Stock Exchange with noo ,—, H) Browns—Orade A jumbo It 14: large 35%; medium 2t-N: small II; grade B check* 25-20.________ ___. CHICAGO Pb6dUCS CHICAOO. Doc. II (UPIl—Ur* poui- -^—— --- :ji-_ try: Roaster* 21-12; special ted Whit* 41? Y®4 41 *5? 1!" Rock fryer* IS-1S. Butter steady. OS score 00: 02 score ( 10 score toy.; SO score 1244. Egg* steady to film. White largo extra* 2414; mixed large extras 1414; mediums 2014; standards 30; dirties SO; h... Nei (bdt.) High Uw last Chg- —A— 12 m* 7214 2114. Sale* Net (hda.) High Law last Chg. Pood Pair ,00b 4 40 3014 39*4— *4 CHICAOO BUTTER ft BOOS CHICAOO. Dec. I (API — Chicago mercantile exchange — butter steady; wholesale buying price* unchanged: 03 »«, score AA; 02 A 60; 10 B 50; 00 C 57%; Ale— .... ear* MT B 5014; 10 C 61% Amerada 2 Eggs steady to firm; wholesale buy- Am Alrlln 1 Ing price* unchanged to 1% higher; 70 Am Bosch nor cent or bettor grad* A white* 13; Am Brk Sh 2.40 miked 3214; medium* 2014; itandsrd* 30; ,Am Bd Par lb iiirlto*.M: check* 29. Am Can 2 [Am-ey*n-4A6— I Am El Pw 1.96 —-----------Livestock— —fcgV Am Met Cl 1.40 DETROIT LIVESTOCK ^ imOr?0? * * DETROIT. Dec. 11 (Apt - Uvtfttotk: *J**xlg aiar gM- supply »Uuihtf"1Am sHfifi! ,b mlted tr—— 1 11% 52% S2%— 4 10 17% 17 V- 11 45% 45% 45% 40 47% 47% 47%- 1 IS 1 30% 30% l__ 47 &% 20% 20 20 25% *5%- —G— 1 20 4 44% 44 44 *• i .50p 00 »% 30%'36%- ... I 70 70% 77% 77%-% 00 3 0714 07% 97 %— “ 1*0 4 32% 33% 33%- 2a 3tJ 57% 57 57 — ■ 13 55% B (hds.) High Law Last Chg. Pblll Pet 1.74 • 00% 10% 00%. Pitney Bow .71 14 00% 50% 50%- Pit nolo O 230b 24 53% 43 03% .. . Pit Stool 21 13% 11% 11%-f % Polaroid .20 9 220% |3 l»~... ProcUkO 1.40 7 00% At *0>.. . Pub SvEAO 2.20 5 07 07 67 — % s^il-on I .0 30% 10 30 — % • 8v .75* 25 5 Ut 1.20 14 7%. 7%’+ % 93 03% 52% S3 . 0 30V. 30V. M% + % 73 41% 40%- 43%+ ‘ 11 16% 16% M%— 11 8% 40% 43% + 15 41% 01% 01%+ A Itt , 5 13% 13% 13% d OU 1.30 3 40 44 % 40 + Pulton lb 3 30% 30% 80%— ______Aire 1 10 33% 13% 23%+ RoyalDut l.gfld 304 35% 34% 30 4 Royal McB 20 13 u% 12%+ %t8atoway- St . swot Lead : NEWARK^ NX (UPI) - The Prudential Insurance Co. today predicted the largest increase in national output, in 1962 and a Gross National Product (GNP) of $566 billion. The prediction waa made in a forecast issued by Prudential President Louis R. Menagh. The predicted GNP represents a $46 billion, or 9 per cent, increase the estimated GNP of $520 billion for 1961. According.to thp foraast, the By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW JTORK-Bueineea on the upgrade again and a stock specu-bble that burst vied, for the headlines in 1961 with a gathering trade and tariff storm and the jump in def&se spending. And here, in one man’s opinion, are the 10 top business stories of a turbulent year; ★ ★ ★ 1. Recovery from recession. Industry, dragged along the bottom in the find tiireemoftths ofthe [year, made an impressive if short comeback, took a late and early fgll siesta, and then started forward again briskly at the end of the year. Each tym, or failure fo turn, made news. 2. The stock market. The spring in real output instead of a bookkeeping rise resulting from flated dollars." Public spending was expected to increase by 115 Milton; business spending by $5 billion and government expenditures by 111 billion,................ Unemployment, however, would remain a problem, the,forecast said. A large increase in the labor force plus "inadequate training, poor information regarding job openings and lack of geographic mobility" win keep the unemployment rate over 5 per cent through-the year, according to the forecast. * * * In foreign trade, ‘‘The U.S. is still plagued by the wage-price spiral; productivity is not advancing as rapidly in this country as r tn Europe and 'Japan; and the necessity for heavy government grants and loans abroad appears to be increasing rather than decreasing," the report said. “The best that can be hoped for in this area is that the trade surplus will be held at the 1961 level," Prudential’s forecast said. *6Vs Top Business Stories saw the public clamoring to buy stocks they thought glamorous, many of almost unknown companies. the speculative spree soon fry-yM » ”■> hanknHafc- Jcc aftectod dering a big jmnpjn *fenae •pending, Russie’s unclear bconbs, ah made headlines on financial •* as front P*ges. The spending many get-rich-quick artists. In the final weeks of the year many of the blue chips climbed to new 3. The Qommon Market. Europe’s experiment in trading blocs paid off big. Americans began to debate bitterly how the United States should, meet the challenge lowering tatifis to get in step, or by raising tariffs to protect home Industries from invasion of cheaper foreign goods. COLD WAR 4. The war of nerves. -The Berlin crisis, President Kennedy’s or- Dillon Is Not Concerned Over U.S. Dollar Drain WASHINGTON (UPI) — Treasury Secretary .^Douglas JErtflon expects tile U.S. gold-and-dollar outflow to lltcrease in 1962 to between $2 billion and $2.5 billion. Although this would be higher than the estimated 1961 balance of payments deficit of more than $1.7 billion, Dillon is saying in. private conversations the rise is no concern for alarm. A A ♦ Dillon points out that this year marked a big improvement from the gold-and-dollar drains of the preceding three years, each of which exceeded $3 billion. creased dividends on American investments abroad and reduction in the number and site of U.S. military bases overseas. There are expert* In and out •t government who weald challenge Dillon’s optlmlam. Seme II $7 Mil Jf o Ry 3 ,43% 43% + «r.Lhelt«r. to HmlteJ .uppifc gyM Am Sm.ltJ M 16% 16% l^ Si^U MoMO 'l ITOMTrt 3** %Hrt%%|c*>u r. or °2&-50° under 'tost °MondMr, IttU Am VUeosii 3 34 53% S3 M — % drelta* OB walghti H •tetdr: fev load* Un w» 1000-1150 lb. eteors 30.70-37; JM '^pjfm* ..... ........... 37.'&; _____ I_______000-1300 lb. 35.75-30.50; Made high good and loir choice BBgJa; good k ----- 15-15.50; ei I prime UMJb- < ■ 10-11. tort 1.40 » I SO* 21%+ % Here Pdr 32%__ v, Herlz 1.20 4i%_ % Heyden Npt - 25% 25 25%— % „ 37% 37% 37%+ 'i 1.50 1 25% 25% 35%+ M -3 42% 41% 42%+ V H— “ Ind .35g 13 34% 34% 34 %— Vi 5 134 133V* 133% + 11 41% 41% 41% I 18% MV* 2 73 1 1.20* 35 37% 22% I 23.60-35.00; i lllty cow* .. 13-li; ________________ Hot* 300. Barrow* and gilt* to 20c higher, advance on 340' IL,___________- ■ _______ . . . — down; oowt steady; few lot* Number 1 au Rohn 2 40 12 07 107-220 lb. 17 50-17 00; few head 230 lb. fttla* CD 32 3% nt 17.75; mixed number 1 and 3 190-2301 Autom Cent .00b 13 28% - lb. 17.35-17 40; number 3 end 2 110- Avco Corn 60 09 2SV« 340 lb. 16.IO-t7.lt. mootlr 10.0(7 up; w __________11____ Number 2 and 3 340-300 lb. 15.50-10.35; **77 Number 1. 2 and 3 300-400 lb. aowi Babcock ft W 1.00 11 54 13.35-14.50; Number 3 and 3 400-000 lb. Bald Lima 45g 19 151* •owe 13.50-11. Soaimit Ml 2 33% Vealer* 300. Steady to itrong: prim* Bosch Alrc oob I 19V* 37-40; good and choice 21-37: standard j Betl&How ,40b 0 53 22-20; cull and utility 15-32.--------- iBendli 2.40 10 03% Sheep 1300. Slaughter lamb* *teady; B*nguet — ewe* itrong; feeder l»mb» »te»dy; cholc*!-—- +•— and prime .woolod lamb* 17.50-1S.5C «mall lot 10.70: good * ' ----------------- lamb* 15.50-17.50; chotc* Umbo 10.60-17.50; nti__________________I two 4-7. Good to fancy toodor 1 \ Jf* Su Sit t Smith Cor i ,5J2 iSitiiZ sooony 2a . ‘tSt! fJiC + »ouC«Ed 2 Wb ■ 15/• 15'a 15/a Ifiouthorn Co 1.50 24 I V% i — ■(*» n Cia.H 2 5 124 123S U 42 50la 48% 49ra— ' local Cem .80 I"* Sperry Rd 1.12f 124 2 . !nf»nd“a , IntBu* Mch 2.40 16 570 570% 576' T.M ■d*r*Ul*mba Bor0 Warn 2 t Pnper it TeldiTe 0 13% 13% 13% 39 30V* 35% 36V« + 21 50% 59% 50%— + -r.-.Jl 1.50. , i Iquin D la . i^ 8td Brand 1.80 J^JiSld Kolb .75t -.IJTT’aid Oil Cal 2b »‘I V std Oil Ind 1.401 u Old OU NJ 2.301 «MI Oh 3 50 l 30% 30% 30%— ' i 48% «% »%+ I 42 13% (IV* 83%— > 20 MV* 35% 35%— ' 12 54% 54% 54%- ' 54 52 51% 51% + i —“ 50V* 49% 41%... Grain Mart Trade Brisk but Balanced CHICAGO IB-Trade was active but fairly well‘balanced And prices of grain futures started today in a narowly mixed range. Wheat, corn and soybeans shifted only minor fractions from previous closes during the first several minutes with more gains than losses. Oats and rye were mostly easier. Grain Prices CHICAGO GBAIN CHICAGO. Dee. 11 (API—Openti; _ WHost...... Mnr ....... 7I< Stand Pkg •jstan War 1' 'jsterl Drug Moreover, he long-run Influence* are working In the direction of further reductions in the deficit, with the ptMsIblUty that It can be wiped out entirety within n few years: Cornerstone of this optimism it the expectation of large sales of U.S. military supplies to other NATO countries. * t The Defense Department also is considering use of German army personnel in operating U.S. military depots in Germany which supply troops of both nations. This would reduce U.S. coats of main-] taining the depots. * * * Went Germany already has agreed tn purchase some ISOS million to MOO million worth of American military material a year- The French have oald they want to bny unspecified amounts of l!.S. made aircraft, electronica equipment and other Items. U.S. offlclala plan to talk to the Italians about similar sales. Besides strengthening NATO | forces, the joint-supply arrange- R Iments would serve to bring back! d«y to this country dollars spent abroad! by .the government and private citizens. ___ Some point out that Dillon, treasury chief, cannot afford appear other than confident and optimistic about the nagging gold-anctdoilar problem. WWW If he didn’t think that U.S. policies were curing the malady, they ask, who would? A failure of confidence abroad could lead to another crisis. More Freeway to Be Opened Add 35 Miles to Stretch From Ohio to Mackinac Bridge Next Week LANSING IR—Another 35 miles of the 330-mile Ohio-to-Mackinoc Bridge Freeway will be' opened to traffic in the next week, the State Highway Department said today. Twenty-five miles af U.S. 10 freeway between Midland and Clare will be opened Friday. Nine miles of UA S3 Freewty between Hart land In Livingston County and Fenton la Geaeeee County will be opened next Mon- tries, the mounting Trtowiy i Idt stirred talk of mob inflation to come, and botomi ee weD individuals joined in the big debate; To bdld iWte» * _ shelters, to *■» them or not to Maw them. _ 5. The price-fixing ecsndel. Bm* less news spilled efi wer the tnnt pages when » &c- trical equipment makers, including some of the nation’* top core porations, were fined $2 millioif after pleading guilty or no com ; to charges of price-fWng »nd oiu-rigging. Seven of their officials were sent to jell. At yeer end; ctvil suits seeitlng damages that some said'could run of doUars orere being filed by th{ utilities and other corporation* that had bought the electrical equipment. ^ ^ 6. Unemployment. Depressed areas, swelling welfare rotys, long lines at the unemployment benefit payment windows persisted through most of 1961.' In the do* ing weeks the business recovery helping some, but still not _ much «s_ Jioped. Variously Mamed: Automation, a fast growing labor force, a less than booming growth in the economy. ANTITRUST SUITS Government vs. business. Some businessmen began saying ♦Hot the ntimber of antitrust suits and roadblocks against mergers xhowed ah antibusiness bias in Washington, especially distrust of in itself. The administration denied it. The charge* and disavowals and later the reconciliation moves, all made news. * * t 8. Du Pont’s GM stock. The big chemical company’s efforts to find the least painful way of obeying a court order to get rid pf fix million General Motors shares made this a cliffhanging item. 'll. Texas vs. Wail St. The Murchison brothers of Texas won the year's roughest proxy fight. They took control of Alleghany, an investment holding company, away from Wool worth heir Allen P. Kirby. 10. The cost of living. The year’s sleeper—prices didn't drop during the recession, nor rise sharply during the recovery. Instead. the cost of living just kept roiling along, slowly rising much of the time to make successive new highs—the one thing in 1961 you could always count on. Pontiac Chess Club Downs MSUO Team tested the Michigan S » 47% 4 CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Buiki»* ru i CHICAGO. Dee. 11 (UPIl — Livestock: |.* Hog* 0.000. Active, steady to 35 htxti- 7." or; most No. 1-3 130-230 lb*. 50 Y&-1Y 15: Coi_',sp top 17.50; No. 1-3 130-288 lb*. 18.25-16 75. f“5vf(^ was« Cattle 32.008. calvps 100. Receipt* IBurl Ina '*’* l*r|e*t lor any day In more then three month* and Murgeat for a Monday atnc* Juno: however. 13-mtrket supply small-*«t tor n Monday since Aueust: slaughter steers rather slow moitly early sales steady except borderline high-choice and lo»-prt0>* 1.108-1.200 lb. weight* week; heller* fairly active, mostly steady; cowa slow, early trad* about eteody; other classes about (toady: three iood* prim* 1.300-1,371 lb. slaughter *ieer* 27.50; oarly bulk oholeo and .80 48 52% 51% Case, JI few load* mixed iood and choice 1.00 1.150 lt». 25.50-15 75: molt good 34 0 31.25; few loMo end lot* mixed choli nnd prime heifers 25.55-26.00. Stocks of Local Interest Figure* after decimal points are eighths - Ark I Had Supermarkets . — iroqutp Corp............ ----- * -■ listens Gas i Ch*m. Co. f 1 11% 15% 13V Kora C Ld 2.40 , I Kerr McGee .80 * Koppers 2 ’ Kresge.' SS 140 ‘ Kress. LH 15g * Kroger 1.10 —* jt 1.50 13 34% .14% 34%+ % HRs Pack 47 11%, U% U%+ is Sunray 1.40 5 30 27% 17% .. % swltt a Co 1.40a 14 41% 41% 42%+ >i 2! . —T— I Term Gas 1.13 10 34% 34% 24% Texaco 1.80a 141 54% 54 54 — % % Tax O Prod .M 0 35% 35% % fox O Sul 1 Of = ■*" >% Tex In* % Tex PCftO 1.10 Tex PLTr ,«5« -Lrd . , 1.10% Jan . Noo • .. 00% Mny . > .so*; [ ,75b. r 1 37%- % | Lear .4* M *5% »% 3t%+ 34% ■ / ■ lltohtxhCskN OOgxd 3 14% 14% 14%+ 30%- %|Loh Port C l 69 21% 30% -31 - 00%+ % Loh Val Ind 0 1% 1% 1% .. ” Loh -Val RR 6 0% 0% 0%— % Lehman 1.7% 11 15% 35% 35% + Tunk R B 2.00 Tran W Air Transtmer .00 1 15% »% 25Vi Champlln Oil 1 14 26% 26% I ChexAOh 4 49 M% 54% 8 Ot MSPAPac 3 14 15% 1 Chi POOU T 1.30* 15 29% 29% 3 Chi RIA Pac 1. Chrysler 1 Cities Svc 3.40 Clev El IU 2 Coca Cola 2.40 I 36% 35% 35%+ » *?!»— % LOP ____I i 76%— % ub McNAL I 33%+ % Llg* A My + % Luton Ind 1.90f . ; Lockh Alrc 1.10 Lone 8 Com 1 ■ Long 1*1 L b Lorlllard i Harvey Aluminum . RoctwVll OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Th* folowta( quotations do not E esssrlly represent actual Uhniactloni AM I Intended as n guide ta th* ap- h« Con N Oas 2.30 *'•* IWnm Pa Itt Codium Pw 2.00 Coatalnor 90g Cont Con 100 Coto. ml , Cont Mot .40 Coni OU 1.00* Cdppor Rng Com Pd 1.30 QdotoB Pot l crow cou I on Crown Boll 1.10b Crue 8U .30 Cudahy Pk Curtl AffUMIOi Fund ........... Common wealth Stock .... Keystone Income K-l ... Keystone Growth K-l .. Maes, tovuotoro Growth . Mae*, foowtin Soast , Putaim Otr—“■ TelevtMan K WeUhtstOB 1 I MsgmsCop Masaavox j . Marine Mid jUarqua — ;l Martin ' - D Sir ^ 34% M%+ IklS^U fk I 12% : h 110% 59 23% 33% 22%— % 34 37% g S%+ % 7 M 55 V* 54 + % > 41% 45% 41%+ % ... - 33% 22V 11 140% 10S 101 - 1 30% 30% 10%' IS 31% 30% 21% . .. 3 54 51% 53%— % 23 .12% 11% 11%- % IS 8 41% 4Mb- % 30 It 17% 17%— % I 2 51% 51% 51%— % Od 30 38% 3* 9 S3 31% —u— 6 37% 37% 17 137, 120 Pm. Day ■RTw Tear Ago *“* toto ; Miner ACh 50b + MplaHoo 2 * i MmnMAM .70 I 37% 371. .. . 9 34% 34% 24% . ' 14 110 1M% 1M%— 17 72% + % Von Un Bloo 1.10 Uh Oil Cal 2b v vnu wive itki- Un Pac 1 20t if 34V- Unit Air Lin 50b 16 3T» 38% 384fc+ —t Aire 2 , 38 43*4 42^ 43H + led Cp :i5g 86 8^4 8H 8V- t Fruit .88 115 25ra 25V« 28(44 Oas Cp 1.58 I 3»'n 38*b 38V- Borax .88 18 3SH 35«4 35vt— Freight 2.28 8 87V4 «7V4 87«4+ ivpgum 2.68a 1184 „ Hoff II 2 8^ U8 Indust IU 111 US Lines 2b 3 81 wove w US Plywd 2 2 48'n 411b 48*t •** * “ II Mtb 55H 88H+. .. W 5 48 39*4 2*4+ K VS Stool 1 19 (1% (1% 31%: I Un Whelan .50 2 14% 14% 14% Vnlv Match ,43d 47 20% 20 20%: ----OU Pd .90* 15 63 04% «4%- m JO------*----31 57___««u. fan. i 11% 31%-Ve BONO AVERAGES Ued by Tbs Aeseelaled Press S3 10 10 10 10 Belle lad. UWi. Fge. L.Yd. w* +T * —j S 76.7 333.0 85.4 M.9 016 MJ IMA 35-4 IS.0 91.2 If enough dollars were recovered, there would, be no net outflow despite U.S. private investment abroad, foreign hid and other overseas spending. TO BOOST EXPORTS Other reasons for Dillon's optimism are the possibility of b ing exports, the prospect of mile stretch, bypassing Flint, Saginaw, Bay City, Midland, Clare, Harrison, Houghton Lake and Grayling, is virtually continuous. Mi 36.1 92.0 TM Mi §71 864 Monday’s rktoads Declared V . . Pe- 81k. af Pay- ^to rMB~.ed.bl, t 60 mBEGULAR ,M# 1* — * POT. 800 .65 12-18 13-2: CeeamerqifhruF^S^,* Q ^ 1 8(1 1 Vanad Cp .40 .Varlaa A* , V* Caro !%— % [ U%+ T-t---- —D— M JO 7 14% 14% 14%— Doyco 0 15% » 15% + PayMrom .27* 14 « «%■«% Decca Roc 1.19 It »% M 30 + ftfopo R 1 00% 50% 80% ., - - q 17% 17% 17%... 10 20% 20% 28V- . » 90% 10% 30%+ % DS« U 1*4 • 31% 31% U%- % Baton ~iU[~ij9 * ’»% Mvl kibUiaS l.M 0 m M; i".' g^njdjn | Hi? E? «u. Sto tack ■■ -11 fvnne Pd 4 ■ in 71^ mSSSSf iM—t»i w% *%» —F— • S^:% so mi., . ni *l».4 P,ir cam *0b '* —' O ptnetool lJ^ NAFI Cp .25* 11 $3% 11% 31%— % Nat Sloe 1.M » 02% 92 H —" Nat can .«7f « m 14% 10%+ N CtihRog l.» 13 115% 134 135 — Nat Dairy 2 5 75V* 75% 7* + Nat Dtltul 1.25 27 17% 27V* 27%— _ Nat Gyp* 2b 13 £% 57 Mg M 0 3.25* * AT r ^ 7% .7%+ u zy'/b 26% 26%+- 22 10 17% 17%— 7 39% 11% »%- ■ f 1% * 1 - % -1 il% nw Tfit * 34 41 41% 457b-% 1 104% 104% MV+- a %iva u»ro un 11 33 11 33 T %_ v! V* ElAPow 1.30 3 04% 34% 44% r..i —w—_____________ Walworth 3 7% 7% 7% S’ M% M% MV, „ H ________ _ it 43% Wn Mary l.M* 1 25% 25% »%« • “ 50 41% “-T 11 25% M 90% ” 54% 50% 54%. M *0% M% + 1% ^52% 52% 52%— V* I 25% 20% 2f%— % 5 106% 100% 100% + % West* El 1.20 - Whit* Mat 3 *• Wilson A Co 1J3 M Woolworth 3 50 M Say Farm Supports Violate Divine Law k Zenith Bad .00* 7* 74% 73%+l% - » 47% 47 m >• <2% 03% 431., .. 37 M% 30% 20%+ % 1 74% 74% 74%+ % 59 22% 21% 21%— % t 35% M% 35%f % panto*. Treasury Position More than 250 miles of the free- ^ Chess Team, 9ty points to $*., way will be completed with theta_3® *Hmes. opening of the nqw sections. A 190- The freeway combine^ parts of four superhighways—U.S. 23, U.S. 10, UJS. 71 and 1-75. The remaining 75 miles of the freeway are scheduled for com-’ by the end of next year; It Lodge Calendar Pontiac Shrine No. tl, W.S.J., Stat'd meeting, Wednesday, December 13, 8:00 pm. Christmas party and gift exchange to follow, meeting. Mary A. McCurdy, Scribe. News in Brief will he extended from the bridge to Sault St. Marie by the end of 1963. ------------- Hie Pontiac Chets Club, which draws its membership throughout Oakland County, meets at 7:30 p.m. each Monday at the Adah Shelly Ubrary. E. Rundell Street and Glenwood Avenue. Meetings of the ’ MSUO Chess Club are announced firm time to time on bulletin boards on campus, according to Serge Shiahkoff, adviser to the dub. Hie club is made out of students, tpit faculty, members will join in competitions with groups whidi have nonstudents as members._____________ Wall Street Chatter "Washington iap> _ The »* Oitloa of the Treasury compared +-*- - J||f ||g. corrtspendlp* d posits ■ JtUy I fiscal year Withdrawaii fiscel yi ‘Total debt Gold asset* ........ A radio was stolen from her residence sometime Saturday by someone who forced open a locked door at her residence, Lola Tolonen of .763 Portland Ave. told police. A fire causing SIN damage at the Howard Lewis home at 966 Wyman St., was extinguished by Waterford Township firemen midnight test night. A floor furnace in the utility room was the 1i.«75;is4'.io«.»f cause of-the fire.-------------— Withdrawals ftoeal year ‘Total debt ....... . . . Gold assets ..... —eludes 5418,121.413 o statntory Unit. 04,306,074.231.10 '30.942,433.018.6* CHICAGO (AP) - President Charles B. Shuman of the American Farm Bureau Federation today attacked federal farm price twpport and control programs as violations of divine tew. WWW He said that by giving something for nothing through subsi-and by limiting individual unmistakable pattern of God’s plan” that individuate accept and discharge greater responsibilities. _ W ....W.... w Shuman .took that position in a talk prepared for his organization’s annual convention which opened Sunday and extends through Thursday. Hie form lead-been a sharp critic of Kennedy ndhtintetratton farm pot-’(Jcies. , Hot Water Heater, M-Gallon, Oas. I89A6 value 138.96 and 149.95, marred. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard* Lake. —Adv. Boxed Chrtatmas cards. Large selection. Names Imprinted. Quick service. Open evenings til 9. “ Washington St. FE 2-0918. Rob sons. —4 Business Notes Members of the Oakland County Chapter of the National Asaoda-ei Accountants will hear a talk on “Profit Planning Control with a Budget Technique" at theiy meeting beginning . at 6:15 Dec. 14. H. L. Mollenkopf, trailer of the General Hie i I Rubber Co. id Akron, Ohio, the speaker at the di to be held at Devon Insiders Fail to Makf a Clean Break for McALESTER. Okie. It/ - Two Oklahoma penitential? J inmates were sought by guards hounds for four days. Then they were tom inside the prison walls, hiding if hole they had dug under a f " stocked with-food NEW YORK (UPI) — Traditionally, December has been (he "silly season" for the stock market, says Winslow, Cohu t Stetson. Inveiton and speculators, with* out heed to prices or valuer throw over positions in stock! that have declined in order to establish tax losses, and blithely rush into other stocks that have declined in the hope of catching a good rally when the selling is over, the firm/points out. ___Winslow-CohU leels that the current speculative atmosphere is supercharged and suggests that the weeks ahead may sec some fairly wild performances. "Popular favor is turning to the old Hne blue chips and it is here that speculative excitement would logically be centered," the firm says.__________________ “We still look for a strong advancing market, but from now on / would expect increasingly erratic behavior among the lead-public participation makes era as public partidpi Ms pretence Mt1*_____ / Technical indicatla Technical indlcatiqna, according to E. F. Hufison At Co., itill show the major price trand tube a healthy one, and a good month for the market is a strong possibility. Chartercraft, discussing the immediate trend of the market, believes that bullishness Is spreading rapidly oner moire and more stocks. During the past week, the service reports. 51 stocks reversed their trends — S3 from baarish to bullish and bullish to 1 18 from bull l bearish. ..Trucking industry profits have staged qn impressive comeback this year, Standard A Poor’s Corp., notes. Based on prospects for further business improvement, the agency adds, the rising trend in intercity truck traffij and tonnage, should continue well into 1962. Firemen Spend Time Fanning Flames of Love CLEVELAND, Tcnn. «v—Fire-men spent 15 minutes recently fanning file flames of love. w w w ■ At 4:55 p.m., Charles William Merrlman and Linda Ruth Reed of Knoxville drove up to file fire hall and asked where they could get a marriage license. “At (5* ««■%*■ +■ ftrr — si, »M, rah^WMdy gto^fiva „ minutes.” The tomes rushed oft. At 5, they were bade with the license - to find that tha firemen also had been busy. - - W -W w' At 5:02, Sheriff Sam Cannon drove up with Justice of the Peace-John Clayton. ““ * * + At 5:05, Miss Reed became Mrs. At 5:06, the firemen served cake ind coffee. At 5:10, the newlyweds drive away. Farm Customer Slips WASHINGTON _ (SJPI) - Latin roerlca is buying fewer, farm products from the United States. In the fiscal yeer ending June 30, the SO Latin nations bought $336 million worth ttf U.S. farm prod-nets, tUD million leas than In the ^tmk puntiai: pmtsa -MoybAY,' December n, iwi TWENHY-glLVEM- to Appoint James Ginn ■ • ■ .atlaiwsyfirififttii far - ye*r», today handed Ida realisation to Mayor 8. James ■ Clarkson, According to Allan, his resignation will become j effective Dee. 11, and la the days remaining he will work - with his successor "for an orderly succession of work." . Ho said he Is last carrying eat the intention he first expressed—to resign right After the elty election last A|HL Be added he bears no aatsMolty toward anyone and will continue In private practice. SOUTHFIELD—Mayor g. James Clarkson's long battle to appoint James Gins, county Democratic party chairman, as c 11 y attorney “may come to an end tonight; -* * * I -It is expected that a compromise Will be reached between the mayor iKMMHMBIfl AREA- mm Remember That Lover of Music Instruments Are Easy to Play, in Many Cases —Variety Is Wide Easy-to-play musical intruments that fit personalities as well as pocketbooks can be this year’s easy-to-make decisions on what to give people who "have every* thing." Fretted instruments — guitars, ukuleles, hanjos and mandolins « are ideal for people who do their own entertainment. In I# weeks a budding amateur can build a repertoire of folk tines and popular ballada. Ukulele prices start at S4; other fretted Instruments at $20. Organs, last year’s star among musical gifts, are popular with the "life begins at 40" set, many .pit whom want a relaxing and constructive leisure-time activity. New portable electrics, from $100, can be played virtually at once. Consoles, from 1900, require about three months of instruction and practice. The recorder, • flute-ilk* In-a almost every and the City Council with the Council's approval of Ginn’s ap* poitment. In return, it is aatieipated that the mayor- will approve council’s appointment of Gerald Basil ck as etty assessor. The council has, turned down Ginn's appointment three time during die past eight months on the grounds that the job of city attorney should be nonpartisan. Further, city officials claimed that he did not have enough ex* with municipal govern- MAY BE, ASKED TO QUR If appointed, Giim will be asked by council to give up his political affiliations, if the appointment Is approved, Ginn will replace preset city attorney James C. Allen. Clarkson fired Easttck four months ago as city assessor because of differences of opinion Big Snotv Accompanies Rochester Yule Parade Council then appointed Easliek The mayor vetoed the appointment but later compromised giving the city clerk and treasurer authority to sign Easlick's pay-check. He had been without pay tor six weeks . As farlback as May 22; dark-son delivered an ultimatum of sorts to the council, in a letter stating: “Despite the action of the council, I am still of the opinion James Ginn is the best qualified attorney for the position. /"I have no intention of submitting the name of someone else whom I consider to be second best,” the Mayor said then. Often wed in grade schools as an introduction to formal music instruction, recorders are, equally popular among chamber music lovers. They start at $5. Other quick-to-lenm instruments include the Accordion, a variety of drums and the harmonica. Accordions and drums start at $40; harmonicas at 79 cents. Eight Carpathian walnut varieties rank higher in market quality and probably furnish the best source of .propagating material according to Michigan State University horticulturists. The superior varieties are: Hansen; Somers N2; Van Buren; Fickes; Somers N04; Noggle; Somers Nl, W3, -and Somers Nl, W4. Retired Persons Unit to Install Officers New officers of Pontiac Chapter Seven. American Association Retired Persons, will be installed 30 p.m. Wednesday at its meeting In the United Fund Building, Pontiac. Those taking office will be Maurice E. Fitzgerald, president; Wayne Devor, first vice president; Howard Bell, second vice president; Mrs. Grace Fitzgerald, cor responding secretary; Mrs. George Larson, recording secretary; and George Larson, treasurer. Details for the chapter's Christmas party will be discussed, according to Fitzgerald. BOUND THE WORLD — Young people dressed to costumes from many lands were on the local Rotary Club float in Saturday’s Uth annual JTmUm Frew Fh.lo. Christmas parade in Rochester. They were por- * fraying the theme of the float which was "Christmas and Rotary Around the World.” ROCHESTER — As If by pre-arrangement the 11th annual Christmaa parade in Rochester and the first big snowfall of the season began at about the same time Saturday afternoon. The snow provided a fitting backdrop for the arrival of Santa Claw who, although he was last in the line of march, wanned the hearts of the shivering children when be waved to them from his cart. -Several thousand nuggiy bundled spectators Hned Main Street to watch (the holiday eve^it sponsored by the Rochester' Area Chamber-lei Commerce* .. The parade featured gaily’* deco- Education Board to Hear Parents Bus Service Protests Will Be Reviewed by Farmihgfon Unit Tonight FARMINGTON — The Farming-ton Board of Education tonight will review the protests of mothers here who kept their children from school three days the last week in November because of a lack of bus service. it it it Nearly 40 children living in the 13 Mile-Orchard Lake roads area were not permitted to attend classes Nov. 27-28-29 by parents __ _ who claimed that their walk to the NeW EllCIlIieBIS Bond Elementary School was-- - __ - hazardous because of heavy traffic. mSSWS^SrmBSBFliSS and Senior high and Avondale High School bands playing favorite Yuletide music and the Rae-Vens, girls’ precision drill team from Pontiac. ★ ★ ★ Not far behind the veterans’ color guard was the Downtown Merchants float which had brightly colored and beribboned Christmas presents on it. » ; », One of the most appealing entries in the parade was the Avon Players -float. It featured live jacks-in-the-boxes, Mrs. Thomas Rl-Lusk and Mrs. Duane UtCch, popping In and oiit of their boxes and waving to the crowds as they passed by. BIG TEDDY BEAR Hie Mitzelfeld department store float centered by a large teddy bear in a rocking chair drew ad-rqlring oh’s and ah’s from both children and adults along the parade mote. More music was provided by tile choristers on the St. Andrew Catholic Church float depicting "The First Christmas." irar'iBKtt, tiMurxwr' *r the Blind buses and the Rochester Lions Chib clowns. ★ ★ dr The Avon Youth Recreation pro* gram and local cub scout dens also had youngsters in the parade. Another attraction was a U.S. Army missile from the Auborn . Heights NIKE site, and pony-drawn carts filled with children. Other entries! included the Rochester Eagles, Michigan Central Christian College, Cases Hardware, the Shrine rs and the Rochester 4-H riding group, the Trailblazers. No prizes were given for the best floats this year. After- the parade disbanded. Santa greeted his tittle friends at his temporary headquarters at Kaveriy Mercury Motors on Main Street a quartette of baton twirlers, called the Orlonettee. They were led by -Sandra Sheldon, Miss Orion of 1M0. Also included hi the tine of march were Rochester and Avon Township officials, Rochester Kl-wanis, Rotary Club, North Hill E2ZSKEEGO [Group to Honor i b-uaMnaMiiaMi All llie children, however, were back In school on the fourth day after the parents were told by AoptXtorald V- Harrison that the school board woald air their were iavolved la the boycott. Harrison also had threatened the parents with court action under the state’s mandatory school act If the children were not back ip classes the fourth day. -to the shopping center may wear your tires more than a long trip on a super highway. A tire can be worn as much from' driving 1$ miles an hour around one city street cqmer as from driving 10 miles without a turn, according to R. L. Marlowe, physicist at the B. F. Goodrich jer factors la the life of "While these operations take place over a very small part of the total mileage, their effect Is large because the rate of wear for theaa operations can ba 1,000 times as high as for normal straight-ahead operation*,” ha Spend Weekend Inside Shelter Warren Couple, Son Find Living in Structure Chilly but Okay WARREN ID — A Warren copple and their 4-year-old son spent weekend in a fallout shelter and found it chilly but otherwise A-OK. "It "was a good chaise to get away from the television and talk a tittle bit," said flax Lehman; 47-yearold production worker in this Detroit suburb. "We took along plenty of toys and games for David (the Lehmann’ 4-year-old eon). The only thpe W eeemed aaxieae to lee we was, Sunday morning when be heard about the snow. He wanted to build a snow maa." Lehman, his 34-yeamld wife and their son entered the family’s new back-yard shelter at 5 P.m. Friday. They emerged yesterday aft-era 43-hour test period, compitin-big only that It hat* 1 " L“ chilly. ' w * Lehman said he now is trying to figure out a method of raising the SMegree temperature of the shelter for use during the winter nity Hospital near Almont and are reported in satisfactory condition today. la one car were Seraph Dan-slngburg, $7, the driver, and her rioter, Cecil*. 43, both of 283 E. St. Clair St. The younger womau suffered facial Injuries and her airier, broken ribs and leg injuries.----—---f,........—> Mrs. Martha Kegler, 30, of 69200 Hicks Road, driver of the second car, sustained facial cuts and chest injuries. t f ★ Hospitalized with her were her four children. They are Kurds Kegler, 4 months, who had head injuries; Mark, 4, head cuts; David, LI, broken left arm; and their sister, Crysten, 10, head cuts and internal injuries. Driver of the third car, Raymond K. Greenman, 28, of 3530 Glover St., Almont, was taken to Che Community Hospital with head cuts. His daughter, Deborah J., 5. who was riding wtth him was the only person In the mishap to escape injury. According to Romeo State Poll c e, Greenman was traveling south on Powell Road and applied his bfakes Tor the stop sign at 32-Mile Road. His car skidded into the intersection and when he found he couldn’t stop. Greenman tried to go on through. HIT ON BOTH SIDES Hi* car ran into the side of the pansingbUrg auto agoing west on Church Women Plan Christmas Program WALLED LAKE - The United Lutheran Church Women of Shepherd of the Lakes Evangelical Church here will hold its annual Christmas program at 8 p.m. to morrow at the church. The program wtU be presented by Mrs. Betty Ridley and Pastor Robert Shade and will feature Negro spirituals and scripture. There trill be an 'exchange of dollar gifts. Members who are making sunshine bags for the library group at the Pontiac State Hospital are to turn them in at the meeting tomorrow as they will be filledi at. that time. They will be distributed at the hospital Dec, M Hie featured speaker at the meeting will be Richard A. Little, I president of the Michigan Society] of Professional Engineers. He witil review the history of the Society, its aims and its activities. ★ '♦ it He will stress the importance of engineering registration and the value of participation in the Society of Professional Engineers on a national, state and local basis, national, state and local basis. Rabies Warning Issued by Officials ROMEO—After laboratory tests showed that a skunk which attacked a dog near here was rabid, Macomb County health officials issued a Warning against the chance of rabies in wild animals. Dr. Oscar D. Stryker, director of the county health department, urged hunters and farmers to report any bites to his office and to capture the animal alive if possible and tkra it over to police. They also were asked to notify the health department. . Dr. Strvker said the rabid skunk had bitten a dog on a farm north of 35-Mile Road. The fanner was advised to destroy the dog. Blue Star BARGAIN FOR TODAY and TUESDAY fjj HAMBURGERS ONLY... 19° Giant Pandas t* Lucky Buyer Carry Out Call FE 8*167$ Blue Star Drive-In Plowing to a depth of 22 inches increased the yield of com 15.4' bushels per acre in research coni* ducted by Michigan State University soil scientists. 8-Year-Old Girl Dies in Blaze at Inkster Wheels that are out- of alignment also cause exceaslve tire wear, he sakl. A 1-degree mlsafigarnwri eaa Increase the rate of wear seven INKSTER IB — Rosemary Bal-lard, $, one of nine children of Mrs. -Mary B. Ballard, died in a fire whldh swept a two-story duplex bare shortly after midnight today. A neighbor, Ben Woods, 19, told ( police he climbed to a seeond-Mariowe said new highways artfftorbedrootn window, kicked out causing tires to wear out three the glass and dropped several of Almost simultaneously the Dan-singburg car was hit on the other side by the auto driven by Mrs. Kegler, going' in the opposite direction. From tiie impact, Greenman’s car made a complete U turn heading back up iWeU Road. He was ticketed for disregarding the ■top sign. times tester than olfier roads. This is because surfaces of roads grow less abrasive when ir* "ii i l ■ <1 isillta ■ am Inis—■ tile children to neighbors outride. Rosemary had crawled under a tug In another bedroom, appar* entiy to eiCafie the flames, police ■v?EV’. ■« OF* c *BEfMJNS* o FABULOUS MUSIC B AND MA6IC M ROSEMARY VSRA-H CLOONEY* ELLEN 2103 S. TELECRAPH RD. PI 2-1000 Opm 6:30 — Start* 7 P.M. ILECTRIC IN-CAR HEATERS FREE! In thehigh-adventure tradition of TheGunsOfNtvaronc! taNMmiou-inSfcm * NOW SHOWING Slwwt 1 i00tt«00-5i05-7:15*9:30 »*BBW| 11 BUnS-JHHHH m tWByTV-BmHT TOE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. DECEMBER 11. 1961 News of Service Personnel Special Rates far . RETIRED ,, JfEQPLE.. Two local men now stationed laws Ave.. recently achieved rec-wtth the United States Marine ognitkw as a top Army marks-Corps in CUHbrnia .are Pfc. Ron- man Iqr qualifying for the expert aid Altai Strevel and Pvt. Don>14 t wttiiin. the carbine at Fart Bliss, Tex. Private Strevel, son of Mrs. Private Baker, who entered the Margaret Mary Looney of .1619 Army |„ rannsiy. UM, u a Joafcm Ave, is now on didy as jui tiwek driver In the Radio Om-infantry rifleman at Camp Pendle- trolled Aerial Target Battery of ton, Calif. the 1st Guided Missile Group at Private Strevel is a graduate of Fort Bibs. Pontiac Northern High School. He worked for the Royal Tree OTTMAR BARDEN Private '-Harden received Ms paratrooper wings after completing four weeks of intensive ground and aerial training which included five parachute jumps. Excellent Food and Wonderful Relaxing Atmosphere • Adjoining Restaurant ► Downtown Location For Fro* Information CttU FE 5-8126 ROOSEVELT HOTEL 125 N. Perry, Pontiac STREVEL WILSON The son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank j Wilson of 96 Cadillac St, Private [Wilson is undergoing recruit train-.ing at San Diego, Calif. | Private Wilson Is a graduate of ! Pontiac Central High School. [ Pfc. Orville L. Baker Jr, whose [wife, Stripy, llws-st W1 fVrry- 2 Door Beauty! Frigidaire Work-Saving | Time-Saving Budget Buy ! No dafroating aver in Refrigerator Section! ' 4 • 6-Cycla Dial e No tabllition NOW WHEN YOU NEED THEM -PENNEY'S HAS BOOTS FOR THE „ WHOLE FAMILY — SHOP and SAVE! 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NO MONEY DOWN - TERMS TO SUfT YOU Mahogany OPEN EVERY NIGHT 'TIL CHRISTMAS 24 WEST HURON-ST. PARK FREE on our 6wn lorbeltfnd Vote .Detroit Retains 2nd by Beating Vikings, 13-7 But 49ers Keep Miami Hopei Alive as They Nip Green Bay By BILL CORNWELL DETROIT — The Detroit Lions had visions of clinching a trip to sunny Florida, but the San Fran-rtico 49ers have "held gp thelp-reservations. Y ‘ After sputtering their way/fo a rather lucky 13-7 victory oyfer the Minnesota Vikings Sunday at Tiger Stadium, the Lima hopefully waited for tha Gree^Bay Packers to beat the Cm opafie Weif CoH* it a trip to Miami for I payoff Bowl. uitniy Davis booted a Held god In the final It seconds b the Mere a ti ll verdict 4 the NFL’o Weetera Division " If they want to meet the Eastern Division’s runnerup team in the - 2nd annual Playoff Bowl Jan. * they'll have to conquer those i m ged Philadelphia Eaglet next Sunday at Detroit in the 1961 season finds. Giants Nip Eagles, Eye Title Contest By The Associated press Selection of the opponent for the Green Bay Packers in the National Football League’s title contest Dec. 31 had narrowed .to teams and two games today. The teams are the New York Giants and the Philadelphia Eagles. The pressure is strictly on the Eagles. They must win. And that won't do them any good if the Giants .win or tie. sltate a playoff in New York Dec. 24. The two-team situation in the Eastern Conference was set up Sunday when the Giants edged the Eagles 28-24 in a rip-snorter at Philadelphia to go out in front by one game. The Browns dropped out of the title chase when they were upset by the Chicago Bears 17-14. The games are Sunday’s Giants-Cleveland Browns encounter in the Eaglee-Lions tussle - in Detroit’s Tiger Stadium in the season windups. A Giants’ defeat and Eagles victory would neces- PACKERS TOPPED It didn't mean anything for Green Bay but the Packers were surprised 22-21 by the San Fran- New York’s Yankee. Stadium, and ciseo 49eror-who are battling the second place Lions for the right to represent the West in the Bert Bell Memorial Bowl fen- the conference runners-up at Miami, Fla., The Lions' hard-earned triumph before 42,655 fans boosted their * record to 84-1 and kept them in . 2nd {dace in the West. ; However, the 49ers stayed right ,*on -their heels by nipping Green 1 Bay, which hiked their record to ] 7-M. m u the 49c rs defeat the Baltimore £ Colts Saturday in a nationally tele->■ vised game at San Francisco, the Lions will be forced to whip Philadelphia the following day to earn £ the bowl berth. A 4#er victory and a Lion loan § would deadlock the two HUM 2 tor tnd place In which enne the « 4Sers would get the bid because of their decided edge over the ^ Lions In their two meeting* — a » 49 0 San Francisco win and a 7 20 20 tie. x Detroit's offense has seldom * been more inept than it was yea- * terday against the Vikings, who f have made remarkable progress roar under head coach Norm *4^:ar. vanBroci :klin. " Only a rock-ribbed defense kept Minnesota at bay and even then, Detroit's harrassed forces needed an assist from the offSciaTsflag. Fullback Mel Triplett raced 42 1 yards for an apparent touchdown midway through the 4th quarter, which would have put the Vikings ahead with the’ extra point, but a ; five-yard penalty for being off side nullified the run. _ Then the Vikings knocked-on-theJ Lions' door in the last two minutes and that threat to win ended on the Detroit 20-yard stripe as Gary Lowe intercepted Fran Tar-kenfon’s pass in the end zone. ——It Was a game of defense, erratic offense and breaks. Each team loot the ball three ttmeo Jan. 6. The Lions hold a one-game margin over the 49crs, who wind up at home against Baltimore Saturday. The Browns need a victory over the Giants and an Eagles' defeat by the Lions to get into the runner-up bowl. Such an outcome would leave Cleveland and Philadelphia tied lor second but the Browns hold a point margin over the Eagles after splitting their regular season games. In other games Sunday, Pittsburgh defeated Washington 30-14 to run the... Redskins’ non-winning streak to 23 games over twosea-sons (they tied three); St. Louis wallped Dallas 31-13 and Detroit got past Minnesota 13-7. Los Angles beat Baltimore 34-17 Saturday. — Charlie Conerly was the key in the Giants’ squeaker over the Eagles. The 40-year-old quarterback, a bench warmer most of the season, replaced Y. A. Tittle when the Giants’ attack bogged down in the second period with the Eagles leading 10-7., He threw three touchdown passes, one 35 yards to Joe Walton and two of 26 and 11 yards to Del Shofner. Before he left the game, Tittle also hit Shofner with a 46-yard payoff aerial. TOUCHDOWN PASSES Sonny Jurgenson also tossed three touchdown passes for , the Eagles, two to Tommy McDonald, and altogether picked up 367 yards in the air for an NFL single season record of 3,320 yards in passing. Johnny Unitas held the mark of 3,099 yards, made last year in 13 games. The Bears came from behind for their triumph with Roger Le-Clerc's nine-yard field goal 3:30 left deciding the issue. After yielding two touchdowns in the first period, the Bears put together all of their points in the final quarter. Touchdowns on Willie Galimore’s three-yanf plunge and 64-yard pass play from Ed Brown to Angelo Coin preceded LeClerc’s field goal. the Held goal try blocked lions Intercepted three Tarken-tea aerials. Cannon Goes Houston Sure of Tie Dick (Night Train) ome Intercepted two of Tarkenton's passes before Lowe pulled off his big interception and It also was Lane who blocked a field goal attempt by Mike Mercer late in the 2nd quarter. " The Lions left the field at halftime with a 7-0 lead, thanks to a brilliantly - executed seven - yard dksh by quarterback Jim Ninowski with only 11 seconds remaining in the 2nd period. Detroit drove 49 yards in three plays for the touchdown with the key play in the drive a 55-yard pass completion from Ninowski to Gail Cogdill, which put the ball the Viking seven-yard line.. After looking to the left side for pass receivers, Ninowski swung to the right and rolled into the end zone untouched for a TD. Jim Martin placekicked the 7th point kickoff and marched 72 yards la u plays behind excellent quarterbacking by Tarkenton, who’s gotag to be an outotand-tag NFL Held general before Tarkenton’s 27-yard aerial to 'ex-Llon Jerry Reicbow aided the push' and Triplett picked up 13 yards through guard. With 3rd and goal to go on the Detroit two and the Lion defense ma«ad for a rush, Tarkenton lobbed a soft pass to Hugh McEl-henny, who crossed Into pay dirt easily. Mercer converted and the score stood 7-7. The lions bounced back to gral^ , « 10-7 advantage. Their drive Stalled to Viking territory and Martin bootod a 43-yard field goal; to send them In Runt. Martin kicked Ms 2nd of the gome and 14th of the season ^•rhrhrth* 4th period. Following a Viking punt, another Lion drive was stymied and Martin put three AF HwMu , -Tl> SETUP — This pass interception by Night Train Lane of the Lions is the play which setup the Detroit touchdown in yesterday's 13-7 victory over the Minnesota Vikings at Tiger Stadium. Jerry Reichow (39) of the Vikings was the intended receiver of Fran Tarkenton. Lane also blocked a kick during the game. By The Associated Press There was some question early this season whether Billy Cannon, the Louisiana State All-America who had been no ball of tire in his. first year °f Pro football, would maike the. Houston leap. I falo but rolled on its defense to There's no question about_ Billy'siovercome a 10-point deficit, then wiped out the record of 158 set by Abner Haynes of Dallas Nov,, against Oakland. The five touch-downs tied the record for one [amp set by Haynes the same day.jtion of coach P6p~Ivy. 'San-Diego had trouble with Buf- OAP CLOSED - Captain Joe Schmidt (left) of the Detroit Lions and big Roger Brown quickly dose a gap which was opened for Hugh McElhenny of the Minnesota Vikings. The Viking bade got AT rktMu six. yards before getting hit by the two Lion defensive stars, and it was this type of defensive play which carted Detroit to a 13-7 victory over (he Vikings at Tiger Stadium Sunday. . Weekend Sweep Puts Wings in Fourth Stasiuk, Howe Provide Punch in 3-2 Victory Vic Nets Two Goals, Gord One at Chicago to Edge Hawks CHICAGO W—Gordie Howe and Vic Stasiuk provides the punch that put the Detroit Red Wings all alone in fourth place in the National Hockey League today. Lou Groza kicked both the extra points after Cleveland’s touchdowns to set an all-time league career scoring record of 826 points, two more than Philadelphia’s Bobby Walston, who kicked a field goal and three extra points in a losing cause. Don Hutson of Green Bay held the mark of 825 points. LONG MARCH The 49ers moved 91 yards in the closing minutes to edge Green Trailing 19-21, the 49ers picked up yardage through the air to the 8. Tommy Davis kicked a 14-yard field goal with 11 seconds ‘ It to decide the game. Dallas Jumped out in. front of St Louis 134) but Sam Etcheverry’s and John David Crow's legs enabled the Cards to win handily under the direction of three assistant coaches. It was the Cards' first game following the resigna- Stasiuk scored twice—his second the game-winning goal—and Howe once as-the Red Wings heat the Chicago Black Hawks 3-2 night. Howe set up one of Stasiuk's goals and Stasiluk set up Howe' The Red Wings had been Jed for fourth with Chicago before the victory. Chicago Jumped off to a quick lead when Eric Nesterenko beat Wing goalie Terry Sawchuk In the drat period. Bronco Horvath •cored on a power play early In the second period to give Chicago a 2 0 lead. ability now — not after Sunday, when Cannon scored five touchdowns, rushed for 218 yards to break the league one-game record and caught passes for 114 yards as the Oilers beat New York 48-21 and became "dormle” in the Eastern Division of the American Football League. Houston Clinched no worse than a tie for the title and became a prohibitive favorite to take it all, since only lowly Oakland remains to be played. That would set up a repeat of last year's championship game in which Houston licked the Los Angeles Chargers, now San Diego. San Diego, which already has sewn up .the Western Division championship, beat Buffalo 28-10 while Dallas bashed Denver 49-21 had Jack Kemp come off the bench and pan it to safety. Keith Lincoln’s 57-yard punt return the Charges moving and an intercepted pan set up the go-ahead Bobby Layne, Pittsburgh’s veteran quarterback, got back into the good graces of the Steelers fans when he tied Sammy Baugh' all-time league record of IV touchdown passes in a career. He fired four in the Steelers’ easy triumph. Detroit came roaring back in the second period as Howe tipped in a long shot by Stasiuk. It was the brilliant right winger’s 12th goal of the season. Stasiuk tied it up Just before the end of the second period. Eddie Litzenberger passed to. Alex Del-vecchio, who fired a long Mast and Stasiuk knocked if ln. Jim Chariton, of Pontiac, a member of the 709 Bowling Chapter, died Saturday after a long illness. Ken Rosewaft of Australia defeated Earl Buchholz of St. Louis today 6-4, 6-3, 6-1, in the final of White City professional tennis tournament in Sidney, Australia. af nmiu ON TARGET — San Francisco 49er quarterback John Brodie (12) picks out Ms target, R. C. Owens and hits him with a pass In the second quarter against the Green Bay Packers. Hank Gram-minger (46) of the Packers pulls R. C. to the ground after the pass gained 40 yards. The 49ers upset the Packers 22-21 to stay In contention for the runnerup spot with the Lions in the Western nfaiirini _• : • . • ' Penn State officials were snowed in, so the Lambert Trophy, emblematic of major college football supremacy in the Ea&t, was accepted by Robert G Urban, president of the Pern State dub of Stasiuk's final goal came in the last period after Howe took (he puck away from Chicago defense-men Jack Evans near the Hawks’ blue line, slipped past a defender and fed a perfect pass to Jhe charging Stasiuk, who tipped it in. Maple Leafs Set Sights on 1st Place Canadians By The Associated Press Hie muscular Toronto Maple Leals, now ip solid possession of second place in the National Hockey League, have their sights set on leading Montreal — but catching the Canadiens may be in other Sunday AFL games. Boston, which whipped Oakland 35-21 Saturday night, remained a game back oj Houston in the Eastern Division race and could tie for the championship. Cannon's 216 yards rushing Lion-Viking Summary TOTAL'TAJlDe *OaSSId" Pisses Attempted .. Hum Completed ..... te-jSSKST51 * ' Yard. Ftnalutd ..... Opponent.' fumble* IOWNS: LIONS: Nlnow.kl ._■) VIKINOB: McElhenny . - ... |**roiI$TOIOMB: UOWS'°M.ftln mmu ;** on «* u0„: , *| id 23-J---- J field goal from the Minnesota 23. Is»d$isrdi). FLAT SAVE f-,Detroit Red Wing goalte Tarry Sawchuk dives Chicago. Chicago’s Ab McDonald (14) lain the center of the flat on the ice to btock a puck fire^l by Oiicago Black Hawk wing activity along with Red Wtog defenseman Warren Godfrey. Detroit defeated Chicago, 3-2. • Us tikSh, -4 Ken Wharram (IT) in the second period of yesterday's game at The Leafs gained one point on the perennial leaders over the weeked and are now three back. Montreal meanwhile extended its string to 12 without a loss. Of the five games Montreal has lost this season, two have been the Leafs. They don't have head-to-head meeting until Jan. 3. Toronto’! two weekend victories enabled the Leafs to stretch their margin over third place New York from two to five points. The key was Toronto’s 3-2 victory over the slipping Rangers Sunday night. In the others, Montreal got a 4-3 decision over Boston while Detroit beat Chicago for the second straight evening, 3-2. Toronto Jammed in three quick first period goals—two of them on power plays—then held off New York rallies the rest of the way as veteran Don Simmons, subbing for injured Johnny Bower, registered Ms second straight victory in tbs Toronto nets. Billy Harris and Bon Novin each scored on a power play, and Frank Mahovllch contributed Ms 12t£ goal of the t VI first period lead. Dean Prentice and Adny Hebenton scored tor the Rangers. Ralph Backstrom’s second goal. Ms 14th of the season, broke 3-3 tie and gave Montreal the victory over Boeton. The shot came only five minutes from the end. J. C. Tremblay and Don Marshall got the other Montreal goals with Andre Pronovoat, Jerry Toppaz-zini and Don McKtmey scoring tor Boston. In -Saturday game*Montreal and New York tied 2-2, Toronto ut out Chicago 3-6. jk from. The PRESS BOX day Roth, former Waterford High star, was named on the AII-NAIA Michigan college honorable mention Uat. The HUkdale College senior end scored 4S points for the Dales this year, posting two touchdowns, three field goals and SB PAT. He set a school record by kicking eight of eight conversion attempts in The New York Knickerbockers of the National Basketball Association have purchased «-2 rookie AJ Butler from the Boston Duke. New York. Lehigh received the Lambert Cup tor being the best small college team in the East. OSU Fullback Ferguson Now Back of Year NEW YORK (UPI) - Bob Ferguson, Ohio State’s line smashing fullback who already has signed to play with the Pittsburgh Steelers next season, is college football's “back of the year" for 1961 in a nationwide poll by United Press International. The 207-pound Buckeye star captured the honor by a small but dear margin over Syracuse University halfback Ernie Davis in voting by 324 sports writers and broadcasters throughout the country. Ferguson, who previously had proved the top vote-getter On the UPl All-America team when he was mentioned on 90.1 per bent of all ballots cast, was the “back of the year" selection on 94 ballots. Davis, who broke Jimmy Brown's rushing records at Syracuse, was •econd with 70 and speedy halfback James Saxton of Texas was third with 58. The steelers, who made Ferguson their No. l choice in the annual National. Football League draft, announced Ms signing last Friday. To get Mm they had to iOBttw the San Dtoso Chargers, who made him their No. 1 choice M the American Football League UCLA Starts Practice for Rose Bowl Game LOS ANGELES HI — The UCLA Bruins begin dosed training sessions today for their Row Bowl meeting with Minnesota New Yeafe Day. —R-ia the test time UCLA hes conducted cloaed workout* since it met Michigan State in the annua} football classic to 1198. m THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1961 THIRTY-ONE 73 A dded for Bowlerama Finals 145 Bowlers Wegteide 39 Pina Short With 3,050 Early leader Lakewood Lanes held off some strong final bids Sunday to win the 1st Pontiac Press Bowlerama team championship. . A house trophy will be awarded the establishment and $$ gift certificates will go to each member when prizes arefiistributed Sunday following the individual finals at 300 Bowl. The Huron Street quintet put together 3089 In the opening round on Bill Bull’s 668, a 622 by Gary Thompson, <13 for Carl Behrick, Bob Lowry’s 58t and Bob Kukllnskl at 87*. "It took the mighty mouse to beat the big houses,” said coproprietor Bill Kukllnskl of Lakewood after the final totals were in. He was referring to the fact that his 14-lane establishment won out over places ranging in alleys from 16 to 401 An unheralded Westside Bee-" . reation team gave the champs their biggest scare. Competing At Huron Bowl yesterday, they finished at 3050 featuring 681s by Jerry Hamack and Bill Richards and Jerry Pema at 609, Jack Chambers added 598 and Coilier’s Lanes hit 2704, Howe’s Lanes 2671, 300 Bowl 2061, Coolej Lanes 3633, Motor Inn 2598, HHi top 2589, Elks 2513, Maple Lane) 2724 and Fairgrounds 2442. dr ’■; ♦ h Montcalm Centre did not have a complete team taking part at previously planned. •* The three top teams each had three men make file handicap finals. Dixie placed two. Two from East Highland are alternates. Unofficial Cutoff Point at Huron 636 as Monti Leads Qualifiers The Pontiac Press Bowlerama qualifying list was completed at 145 Sunday when 73 more happy keglers made fids week’s finals with topnotch showings at two sites.* A total of 52 made the grade at Huron Bowl - where a handicap score of 636 turned out to be the cutoff point. Twenty-one advanced at Collier’s Lanes with 634 good for th^Jast berth there. MSU's Hatcher First Negro With Redskins WASHINGTON lit — Michigan Slate fullback Ron Hatcher Saturday became the first Negro football player ever to sign a contract with the Washington Redskins. The 215-pound Hatcher was the Red-skins eighth National Football league draft choice. Hatcher .said he had no feeling “one way or another” about being the first man of his race to become a member of the Washington team. "I’m here to play football,” he Wonderland Lanes finished No. 3 .with 2984 as last bowler Paul Horie hit 652. Next was Airway Lanes at 2952. Dixie Recreation took 5th at 2861 followed by Huron at 2842. Jay Lovett fired S37 to lead the latter groups Sunday. Sylvan had 2168, Nor-West Recreation 2725 and East Highland Recreation 2724. BOWLERAMA SHOW — Jay Lovett, left, and Bill Leigh shake hands after staging quits a bowling show on the next tp the last Pontiac Press Bowlerama qualifying squad at Huron Bowl yesterday. Lovett, Press actual invitational runnerup two years ago, rolled 637 and Leigh 643 competing on the same alleys. Canadian Golfer Nods After Birdie Captures Coral Gables Open -CORAL- GABLES, Fla. (API—' Joe Monti and BUI Jarrett clinched high qualifier trophies yesterday. Monti topped 363 men at Huron with 726 sparked by a 649 actual. Jarrett had 685, including a 604 actual, at Collier's where 152 participated. HAPPY TEAMMATES — These thr«e members of the Westside Recreation team had high hopes for winning the new “house” trophy after big individual showings Sunday but they had (o settle for 2nd behind Lakewood Lanes for lack of help. Jerry Perna, far left, Jerry Hamack, center, and Bill Richards Ml qualified for the handicap rtn«l«. Hamack had high game at Huron with 258. That was Shirley Knudson’s' first question after watching her , husband George finish the final round of the Coral Gables Open golf tournament Sunday.- 1 The Canadian, realizing his wife] is not a golf expert, nodded sol-' 'There were ‘ five “Others in the [ 700 clast at Huron. Larry Crakel rolled 716. with a 643 actual, Paul I Miller hit 713 featuring the high1 tourney actual of 1961 with 688,1 ____. Jay Carroll had 711, Gene Lund jm Mono mi .......... and Mike Kachanuk 709. CarroU iffiifiS*tiff1 downedWf pins. Ifocimu mi 7TTTTT |Gene Lund (Ml ...... Morris Widemaa took Sod KMiuauk im* .. place honors at Collier', at 681 mi 7 edging Ken Ashbnngh by twe *225? SS................. pins. Vie Stoddard had 668. im? . . . . Ray Kitchen, aa early paeeeet- ®°b cuiien. ****** m Paul Horie 652 there. Bill Leigh Lovett on ......... and Jay Lovett put on quite a “t»> show on the 4:15 p m. squad hit- oer.id sioot mi ... ting 643 and 637, respectively, on • the same lanes. w.o. Point* umY ! ! Hamack's 258 headed the games m, at Huron. Mike Kramer hit 256, Dud Moor* mi ........ J. Dentsutk 248, Richards and■■ Charles Melton 247, Leo Boxe, ra PnytnUki mi Jim LeBow, Roland Rothbarth and '«» Dr. E. E. Ludwig 246. Melton had Sob suSwr m. . . . . ; to settle for an alternate berth. j»L*tm<» »j*> ... LeBow and Ludwig did not qualify. John c*>per mi YY. Bowlerama Qualifiers LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)-Gene Fullmer has got to be the working man's candidate far “man of the year.” As a boxer, a world champion, he is a magnificent day laborer, There is nothing spectacular about Fulimer. He Just uses his hands, and maybe a little elbow grease and a shoulder here and there, to lift that bale, tote that load and knock the hell out of the other guy hi the ring. It's Just like any other working stiff: It brings home the bacon. It also keeps Gene in his proudest possession, the National Boxing Association portion of the world middleweight championship. 237.303-1M—dtt . 182-177-182—664 117-159-301—601 KRAFT Geoff# Chtcovsky John LeRoy (Hi Mike Biker mi Jim Mulllnli (Ml Two nights ago Fullmer in the same dig - that- dttefi fashion knocked out Benny (Kid) Paret in 10 rounds - to keep his cherished side of the title, ahd wreck Benny's dream of becoming a double . division champion. GAINED WEIGHT Paret owns the world welterweight, or 147-pound championship. For .Saturday night's effort the Cuban kM weighed 156% and Gene 159%. There was really nothing singular about Fullmer’* victory. He Just pinned Paret against the ropes for most of the bout and belabored him with a constant barrage of short lefts and rights to-wherever they might and dki land. TltEADS P. L. of P., the Huron Bowl Classic team kpown only by these initials, again'threatens to make a runaway of the league title chase. Although an element of mystery surrounds the meaning of the three letters, there is nothing mysterious about the way Carl Behrick’* crew has opened a seven game lead «n-the^ remaining 15 teams in the tough Huron loop. Irv Or*} mi ... Clayton MclBwr*!* Jerry Pern* <3H . Actual's Invited List to Be Known Wednesday The Invited Hut ef the top bowlers In The Press Bowlerama wHi be printed In Wednesday’s Press. Those receiving Invitations will be bowling in the Bowlerama Actual's Invitational Tourney Immediately following the handicap champion next Sunday at 966 Bowl, There are numerous ad- ATTENTION YOUNG MEN Finally, after 2:30 of the 10th round, in both exasperation and utter exhaustion. Paret simply pitched over backwards for the third time in the round and received a 10-count toll from the referee, Harry Krause. For the 6.100 fans in the Convention Center, and the viewing TV fans across the nation, it apparently was a fine fight. Some of them booed the plodding, craggy-browed winner. But mostly there were cheers. "This guy was as tough as any I’ve ever fought. I can’t remember.” said Gene, nursing a badly swollen eye, -"hitting anybody as hard without his falling down. I thought, ‘He can't take this all night,’ but I thought he was going to.” HITS TACTICS Paret's manager, Manuel Alfaro, bemoaned what he called Fullmer’s "rough house” tactics. But he said Paret would try no morej middieweights for a while. Ex- Latest results showed (be P. L. of P. sharpshooters firing a 2996 to blank Stroh's Beer despite cloning efforts of 973 and 987 by the brewers. Captain Behrick paced the winners with a rousng 214-212-255, 681 with teammate Bob Lowry next at 629. Kart VanDeMoortell's 635 led Stanton Plumbing to a six point win over Felice Quality Market and a tie for second spot with West-side Mobil, who blanked Montcalm Centre. George ^filler was high in this match with 606. Your future is in electronics . . . the fastest growing industry'in theworldtoday! Plan for thot future by taking the finest training available. Enroll now for our next “Electronic Engineering Trolning" program. Mall n tall fur, Muytata lilwutln. Stoddard and Schmidt had 614s. | Bob Gormong scored a 246 to J lead all single efforts at the M-24 bowling location. Puertas was , close behind with 244, Jim Mul- i Unix had a 240, Chicovsky 236-232 j aqd Schmidt successive 222s, < Gormong was actual invitational victor two years ago and Lovett was runnerup to him. All scores are unofficial until a complete check ot all averages is j made by The Press. Both; teams were unbeaten in 10-game regular season schedules, with Pittsburg going on to live up to its Associated Press rating as the No. 1 small college team in the nation. Electronics loslitits of Technology The game, formerly called the Holiday Bowl When staged six times in St. Petersburg, Fla., annually decides National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics lirS3u7«7» I championship. Jim Walker’s 617 helped Calbi Music to a 6-2 win over Frayer’s, and Ron Damico hit 619 as Gauk-ier Storage downed Westside Lanes by the same margin. Harold (Skin) Keith and Pat Sweeney combined for 614 and 600 as Sno-Bol shut out Veteran's Disposal despite a 611 by Qz Jewett. welterweight champion Griffith or challenger Jorge. Fernandez of -Argentina—will be Paret s foe next March 24. 1962 FORD FAIRLANE GUARANTEED NEW TREADS I SNOW { TIRES 7.50x7 4 6.70x15 -TUBE or TUBELESS '* Plus Tax and Retreadabl Q Casing. Blackwall Only. NEW SIZEI -Full mm inside, but « foot shorter to park. Fine-car interiors. NEW ECONOMY! Routine sendee only twice a year, or every 6,000 miles for oil changes, minor lube jobs. Major lubes only every 30,000 miles. Brakes adjust automatically. NEW PRICEl Coata less than previous Fairlanes—even less than some compacts. Smooth. Rare. And worth looking for. The straight whisky in Sir John is aged 10 Sir John has been bottled in the magnificent years and ikiUftilly blended with the choic- cut crystal Regal Decanter. It it available in a est grain neutral spirits. This patiently aged beautifulgift-wrap at no extra cost. Not many whisky it not only incredibly smooth and are around. When you find Sir John, count light but extremely-rare. For the Holidays, yourself lucky. a /.* Also Have Large Selection of New Treads for All foreign and Compact Cart' ALL SERVICE GUARANTEED MOTOR MART SAFETY CENTER JOHN McAULIFFE FORD, Inc 63D OAKLAND AYE., PONTIAC Schenley I 3-7845 7*1 t. wionreaim . gt. jt. Schenley Dutillen Co., N.Y.C • Bkoded Whisky • 80 Proof • 60% Grain Nsutnl Spirits GUARANTEED USED TIRES Las low $g95 NEW TUBES Mom $195 Sixes t “ i tHIRTY-TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1961 Rochester Outlasts PNH Rally to Win, 62-57 * * * Ifwato m Drake Tonight Cinci and' Ohio State Win By The Associated PlM The Buckeyes crushed Wake rwim«n one o( the giants of Forest's third-ranked Deacons 84- 18 in addition to his fine defen- (its two giants, 6-10 Jimmy Had- 62 at the top of the weekend schedule. Ohio State held only a 37-31 halftime lead, but broke it open with 13 straight points soon after intenpission. Lucas scored 23 points in pert-time service; Mel Nowell con- c$ege basketball, faces its first major obstacle tonight in a tough Drake team that hasn't been tested in winning two games, - * #'•'* Cincinnati, defending NCAA champion and ranked second in season preview Associated Press tributed 19 and Johnny Havlicek pall, chalked up its 25th .straight I — victory with an 8647 romp ever Wisconsin Saturday. Coach Ed Jucker then hustled f$m the afternoon game to scout the impressive Drake team that crushed Illinois Colelge 110-48. It was the second straight for. Drake and pushed their average to an even 100 points per game. * * .★ The Bearcats, upset victors over OMo State for the NCAA title mid trailing the Buckeyes in the current poll, had no trouble in winning their third of the season. Cincinnati, paced by Paul Hogue's 15 points, stormed out to a 44-24 halftime advantage and coasted in from there.' ...... . DEACONS WHIPPED Ohio Skate, led by All-America Jerry Lucas, stormed past its first major challenger, Wake For-ett,‘ and now takas a week oft sive work. 4 'All' dthpr ifghked teams in action came through on schedule, though Seattle,. ■ No. 10, got a scare from Idaho before pulling out a 69-68 decision. Providence, ranked fifth, got another good performance from BASKETBALL SCORES Majar Mm Bei be limlaM Pr* Ihl ---------1tMn------- VIOsimtb M, Niagara U Canlitui 89, Scranton 83 Williams 64, Columbia 41 Dartmouth 88. Now Hampshire M fl—" — —“ SI ______ ...________Unt*. N Providence T», 8. Francle, N.T. II PHtSbUnb 83. Cnme*le Teeh M Butters 77, Mtssafhusetts IT Seton Hall 7*. retrlelfb Dtekteenn 71 CoonocUcut 71,.Boston Col lege 71 Princeton 71, Army 88. overUme Pordham 78. Rhode tstaUd 58 ----71, Colgate IS _______ amhjrjT W P«m 83. Nary IS ■t. Bonarenture 79. Xarlar, Ohio 17 DePaul 73. I _____i S, Iowa State t4 Kansas State 8S, Indiana 71 Purdue 91. Detroit M Cincinnati M, Wisconsin 67 SOUTH ______ma 58. Loyola, La . u Texas 90. Tulane 63 ~ Rice 79, Leultlana state «7 Mieettttppl 17, Centenary 63 la Collate M l Dakota 51. UNITED TIRE SERVICE OMCI ARMS not and (-U John Thompson 7541 breeze past St. Francis of Brooklyn. Hadnot had 28 points and 17 rebounds, Thompson 21 points and 18 rebounds. EA8Y TRIUMPH Powerful West Virginia added impetus to its drive for s national a 98-79 thumping id previously ^unbeaten Furman. Tod Thom got 30 points. some of the other major games, Dayton defeatd seph’s, Pa., 78-67. Iowa trounced Miami, Ohio, 75-55, Illinois best Oklahoma 7240, UCLA got past Kansas 69-61, Utah punished Loyola of Lob Angrips 100-71, Michigan State wcriirom Tulsa 90-70 and Texas tripped Tulane 9565. ■' . ' ' h it' dr". . . Highlights of tonight’s schedule iclude St. Louis at Kentucky, Clemaon at Duke, Notre Dame at Nebraska, Denver at Michigan, Wichita at Purdue, Iowa State at Vilianova, Alabama at Vanderbilt, LSU at Texas, Tulane at Rice, Texas ' A&M at Memphis State, Davidson at George Washington [and Furman at East Tennessee. f; ON NEW TIRE PRICES Cragm Ipedal Tim Monday BRAND NEW RATING 6.70x15 WHY BUY A RECAP? BRAND NEW SNOW TIRES NOT A SECOND, CHANGEOVER OR NEW TREAD YOUR CHOICE 6.70x16 Blk. T.T. OR 7.60x14 95 Blk. T.T. EXCHANGE PLUS TAX NO RECAPPABIE TIRE NEEDED NO MONET D0WNI SPORTS, IMPORTS and COMPACT. NEW lit UNI 100 LEVEL NO TRADE Most Nisi ~~ COUPON ISPECIAL—NO TIADB NKIDBD Open Monday, Thursday. Friday ‘tU 9—Closed fasday UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC _______» Phreet 83 ■MU gtotjli BMft 17—■— Wm. A Mary 81. O*o. Wuehlngton II SOUTHWEST ----—--------O. PL Oregon H Baylor 73. Trinity. Tex. 61 Oklahoma St. 65. Haw Mexico St. 54 os* st. 71, Nevada M ____igton st. m Montana 81- SI Yettn«" Oregon State 55, Washington 48 Air Pore* 58. Nebraska 49 UCLA 99. Kansas St Colorado Slate O. 71. Regie 51 Wyoming 82. Oklahoma City M Utah 101, Loyola. MICHIGAN I ______Detroit 86 Butler 88. Michigan |). Taylor (Hi.) 79. Calvin 71. Perris Institute n. Wabaeh 61. Marquette 88, northern Michigan 10. Loyola (Chicago) S3, Wayne State 41. Aquinas 111, Muskegon JC 71. MlltedaU 73 Olivet It. > Boo Teeh 71, Detroit Tech 11. Lawrence Tech 100, Northwood M. Hope 11, Adrian 74. Wheaton II. Albion 88 Valparaiso a. Western Michigan 77. Mlwtlgaa Tosh 71. Miwrhead (Mina B. Wooster (Ohio) M. Alma II. . HIGH SCHOOL Rochester 83. Pontiac Northern 17. RO St. Mary* 10, Watortord OLL 61. St. Bonedtet 58, St. Michael 44. Boat Detroit 68, Roseville 60. • O. R. Creeton 60, Flint Central 63. Jaction 86. Flint Southweitern II. Swimming Detroit Tech 77, Eastern IlUnoti 14. Wayne Steto 07, Western Reserve SO. Rowling Oreen 71, Kent Steto 00. Miami (0,141 Obto U. IS. Weitern Michigan 15 (MM-Am>nohn Conlerence »wlm-mlng relaye). Wrestling Michigan 10. Rofatra g. Hiram 34, Adrian 0. Eastern Illinois 36, Eaetern Michigan 0. Boll-Steto 32, Western Michigan 0. Gymnastics Eastern Illinois 70Vh. Eastern Michigan *0*. Mackey Michigan 4, Toronto 3. Michigan Teeh 0, Denver 2. Will the Stilt Slows Down’ *SkW 10 55 Point* After Scoring Binges of 78 and 61 Action of Fans After It's Over Mars Contest St. Mike Is Defeated, So If Waterford OLL in SCL Play Rochester beat down a Pontiac Northern rally in the fourth quarter Saturday night to defeat the Huskies, 6247. ★ ♦ ★ Northern fans moved onto the court after the .final- buzzer and clustered around the game officials and scorers table. One PNH fan shoved and half punched one of the officials before cooler heads prevailed. 8t. Michael and Waterford Our lady of the Lakes dropped Bob- Saturday, gt. Benedict darned Named Top Performer in Junior Rose Bowl PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - Bill Harper, slippery quarterback for the Cameron, Okla., Aggies, has been named Junior Rose Bowl player of the year for his part By The Associated Pres# You’ll pardon Wilt Chamberlain if the pace of three games in 4R hours began to show on Mm. After scoring a record 78 points Friday night and coming back with 61 in the national TV game Saturday afternoon, Chamberlain managed only 55 in guiding the PhiladelpMa Warriors to a 118-106 victory over the Chicago Packers in the feature of two^arne Sunday program in the National ball Association. ★ it .★ Cincinnati toyed with New York’s hapless Knicks, 134-94 in the other game, almost lost in the hoopla over the 7-1 Chamberlain and hia fantastic weekend. In the three games, Wilt scored 194 pointg—and only a letdown in the first half. Sunday night kept Mm from getting over the 200 mark. The Packers, With Walt Bellamy and Si Green leading the way, bolted into a 34-17 lead one period and, with Chamberlain held to 20 points, still led the half. Then Chamberlain and the Warriors' fast break, triggered by Guy Rodgers and Al Attles, got going. Big Wilt added 35 points after the Lakers dropped a So-41 decision to Royal Oak St. Mary. Rochester sprinted to an 114 lead on the way to its first victory over Northern. The Huskies failed to dent the scoreboard until Ride Fisher dropped in a fielder with 2:54 to play In the first quar-— Rochester, behind the shooting of Ed Fliss and 64 Mike Wilson, held its margin and left the floor at halftime with a 38-22 lead. PROTECT LEAD The Falcons of coach Ralph Van-zo played a conservative style of ball in the second half, trying to protect the large lead. Wilson, who had picked up four fouls In the first half, did not play in the third period, and appeared only long enough In the fourth quarter to ioul out He sedred 18 points. In the game, Rochester held what lodged like a commanding 68-48 advantage. Northern suddenly came to life and with one minute left trailed 68-<7. But PNH'i Larry Hayward drew his fifth personal a half minute later, and then was given a technical, and Rochester’s Jerry Olson dropped all three shots to put the game out of reach. ★ ★ Fliss topped all scorers with 18 points. Olson added 11 to the Falcon's victory. Gary Hayward pumped in 18, Mike Birklow 11 an Wayne Daniels 10 for the Huskiei STRONG SURGE , A strong second half carried St. Benedict to its win over the Mike-men, The Ravens held a slim 24-20 halftime edge, but quickly moved to. a more comfortable advantage. George Straago topped the winners with 26 points. Charlie Deal scored 20 for the Shamrocks. A cold third quarter spelled de- HE took IT AWAY — Marquette guartj Ron Glaser, left, takes the bail away from Northern Michigan guard Bob Picotte, right. Duane Solnes, AP rhetetsx former Roseville High ace, Is the Northern Michigan player in the background. Marquette won, Michigan Stale Wins; Wolverines, Titans Lose Century Mark Broken in Two Games By The Associated Press The 160-point barrier fell twice Saturday in Michigan small college basketball action. Lawrence Tech raced to a 106-86 rout of Northwood College. Hottest of the Tech shooters was John Bradley with 34 points. Aquinas scored 59 points in the second half and coasted past Muskegon Junior College 101-79. But despite the 101 Aquinas points, the losers’ Mike Pedler was the game’s top scorer with 37. Tom Williamson led the balanced Aquinas attack with 20. rookies, edhtlnued their scoring artistry Saturday night, but received little help from teammates. The result was a 6941 loss to Butler. For the second straight season, the University of Detroit basketball team saw a 14 mark ruined at the hands of Purdue. Michigan stepped Msrqnette n here two potato short of the century ftgnre while was the fourth straight lorn for Northern, bat the smeller Wildcats held surprising leeds twice In the first seven minutes. Jim ^ Packers. pLSSte Sjow ^ jffhS score oassed for their second and Bnd Arlen Bockhorn did the PrTrff.rIg0 lifr? scoring tor Cincinnati, with Twy-l£!wi Shd!.™ man wKh man with 38 potato, produced the . deciding touchdown Boclc))oni Robertson each had Harper, of Detroit, is the first Negro quarterback in Cameron I history. intermission. By the timethethird {eat (or Qur Lady. The contest Jh“^* was tied 21-21 at the half, but St. St, *!" rJ? scored 33 points, Green 25. and that was «■» % dif- ference. George Sharpe Mt 21 potato for the Lakers. And Lou Mettler added 14. Pat Moroski topped the winners with 15. Pender Rejects Fullmer's Oiler to Fight Briton BOSTON (API—Former middle-eight champion Paul Pender today flatly refused Gene Fullmer’s offer of 615,000 to let Fullmer get first crack at Terry Downes of England. h it it “I won’t have any part of It, Pender said. "This is the first I’ve heard of It and It can be the last. I won't listen to it 1 Where was Fullmer when was looking for Mm to fight me? He wasn’t interested then. Tm not interested now.” Downes is recognised as champion in Massachusetts and New York and by the European Boxing Union. He dethroned Pender last September in London. They are due to meet again in March. Fullmer to the National Boxing Association tltlist. Divide First Place PHOENIX, Arts. (AP) - The Arizona Winter League season ended Sunday with the entire schedule canceled by rata. As a result, Baltimore and San Francisco ended in a tie for first with identical 32-17 records. Lakeweed Lam 3121 West Huron St. OpM Bowling 40* per lint MODERN COCKTAIL LOUNGE • Bouden • 7-7 It DtBMlS 0 2-5 2 Shields .3 6-9 it LJf‘wyr< S 0-3 4 Birklow Flitter - ST. MIRK ST. M* FOPTTP . POPTTP _ Ul a 4-4 30 BtraagS 10 6-5 31 rn’brf 4 0-1 B Rice 3 O-l Huron 4 3-10 10 Mull 1 4-4 Rlndfui 1 4-4 f Witter S 3-3 „ Herding 0 3-2 3 O r'trelle 3 4-4 ll OKItll 10-1 S Welle 1 * * * with 28 potato. Wayne State fell to Loyola of Chicago 93-43. The Tartars trailed at halftime 45-27. Fred Prim paced the Wayne attack, with 12 points. ' It was a dark day for Western Michigan as the Broncos absorbed losses on two.-fronts. In addition to the 28-12 Aviation Bowl' football defeat by New Mexico, Valparaiso edged WMU basketballera, 82-77. TECH WINS Other action saw Michigan Tech notch a 7242 victory over Northern State conference* toe Moorhead (Minn.) and Soo Tech rolled over Detroit Tech 71-51. MIAA teams had a rough night. Wheaton (ID.) knocked off Albion 8148. Dennis Groat of Albion led all scorers with 28 potato. In MIAA conference action, Jim Vanderhill scored 31 potato while helping Hope to a 93-74 victory-over Adrian. Don Harned, of Troy was top scorer for Adrian with 22. The Dutcthmen are 14 in conference play. Adrian to 1-2. In non conference action, Ferris held oa to defeat Wabash (lad.) 6741, bnt Wooster (Ohio) The Boilermakers snapped the Titan streak at Lafayette, lad., Saturday with a 91-88 decision. Titan ace Dave DeBusschere led [Ms team with 18 points. * A * The Titans wifi meet Xavier «t home tonight. ONE MORE WEEK! . B 14 It 14-441 Michigan State fared best among the’ state’s major colleges. The Spartans rolled past Tulsa 90-70 for their second straight, non-conference win of the season. Michigan and Detroit both lost. NO SCORING From good to bad in 10 days in the aad situation confronting Michigan basketball coach Dave Strack. John Ooaterbain and John Har- is, the Wolverines’ two transfer FM Sc/M WORLD’S LARGEST AUTO PAINTER BE SURE IT'S EARL SCHElB 147 South Saginaw FEderal 4-9955 NO MONEY DOWN! 24 Months to Pay on All Types of Service Work FOR 6 CYLINDER-1952 THRU 1959 WE DO ALL THIS: TUNE-UP SPECIAL includes Plugs, Points, Condansur, Labor, CompItPa IS45 -•■■■ '' ------------ Motor Overhaul Specials | ~-1952 THRU 1959 *99“ •129“ For 8 Cylinder (272 and 292) 1954 Thru 1959 John McAuliffe—Ford 630 Oakland at C«s* FI 5-4101 1 MR# North of Pontiac an UC-10 l ...^-Vj the PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, lifa THUCT i •TraKJvJS; Broncos Lose in Bowl, 28-12 Small Crowd Strike Early Western It Outclassed by New Mexico Eleven in Aviation Tussle Pittsburgh St. Loula .. Wellington...... 0 13 1 .(Ml WESTESN DIVISION Oreen Shy ...... 10 3 t .789 1 *■—4 ......... « 1 .067 I Lot Angelei Mlnnuota SLUSpy RETURN- Roger Theder (14) Western Michigan quarterback, TetUns a New Mexico punt through the snow and slush at Dayton in the Aviation Bowl Saturday to his own 30. A15 yard AT Photalix penalty put theballon the Bronco 45hut die final score showed New Mexico winning, 28-12. No. 80 lor Western is Allen Schau, an end. Baylor Triumphs in' Gotham Play Bowl Games Under Way By The Associated Press Chapter one of this year’s bowl «tgs is over and chapter two ol the ever-lengthening series is coming up this weekend in Philadelphia and Houston. In Philadelphia’s Liberty Bowl, Syracuse, led by All-America halfback Ernie Davis, tackles a hot Miami, Fla., University team which should feel right nt home in Pennsylvania. Over half of its team comqs from the Keystone State. " * * * The third Bluebonnet Boud game will be placed in Houston’ Ride Stadium, pitting Kansas of the Big Eight against Rice. Both games will be nationally televised. The Liberty Bowl begins at 1 p.m., EST (NBC-TV) and the Houston affair at 2 p.m. (CBS-TV). There still are plenty more to come, continuing with the North-South game in Miami,^Christmas night. The following seven days will be crammed with bouds and all, star games, culimlnating in the Roae-Sugar-Cotton-orange affairs New Year's Day and the Senior Bowl and U.S. Bowl in Washington the following weekend. WANT MORE viously unbeaten, but once-tied Utah State. The prompters, who [got last-minute help from natlon-al television to help avert a severe red ink hath, say they’ll be back for more in 1962. The Liberty Bowl people feel that this year, their third-, will consolidate the Philadelphia game. Syracuse, with Heisman Trophy winner Davis the big selling point, NAIA title in the Camellia Bid; brings a 7-3 record against the Hurricanes, who won their last five games, and also finished with a 7-3 mark; passes that nullified fine line play by Aggie Ail America tackle Mer-lin Olson and also stopped Utah State's touted offense. * ★ i In other games, New Mexico’s strong running game powered past Western Michigan 28-12 in the Aviation Bowl at Dayton, Ohio; Pittsburg, Kan., State won the at Sacramento,' Calif., beating Linfield, Ore., 124; Florida NAIA title in the Camellia Bowl, at Sacramento, Calif., beating j Linfield, Ore., 124; Florida The Hurricanes also have a‘A*M’sRattlers squeezed by Jack-couple of M-M boys in soph quar- son, Miss., State for file mythical terback George Mira and All- national Negro collegiate title in America end Bill Miller. . Miami’s Orange Blossom Bowl, Kansas brings a 6-3-1 record,*^; Ft. Eustis defeated the against Rice’s 74, but the Jay- Quantico Marines 25-24 for the] hawks John Hgdl. a Jack-of-dl-!l"t*MWvice title in the Missile footbaU-trades, gives them a I Bow! at Orlando, Fla.; and in the slight edge over the Southwest Junior Rose ^ Bowl ^ at Pasadena, Conference Owls. A capacity house of 76,000 is expected. fumbles hurt Ronnie Bull, Baylor's blockbusting halfback, and a flock qf fumbles and interceptions were ‘too much for the Aggies. Utah State DAYTON, Ohio (UPI) — The first annual Aviation Bowl played here Saturday was almost as big a flop as the Gotham Bowl. it it it Snow, sleet and rain dampened spectators and the playing field; Bowl chairman Don Millar said , the meager 5,000 attendance caused an 38.00Q loss at the gate. Those who braved the miserable weather were disappointed at the match. Western Michigan tried hard but couldn’t approach the finesse of the New Mexico Lobos, who took a 28-12 decision. New Mexico punched across two quick touchdowns in the opening minutes of the game to take command and held control thereafter. The game was Just a minute old when New'Mexico, favored by one touchdown, marched 56 yards to score in three quick plays with Jtny Cromqrtic roiling -out and over from the three. The extra point attempt failed. ;—-» ^ it—*_________ Moments later, Chuck Cummings recovered a Bronco fumble on his own 42, and nine plays later, New -Mexico's Bobby Santiago scored from the 10. Bobby Morgan ran for two extra points. ★ it it The Broncos picked up one touchdown in the first quarter when Bob White plunged over the four and another in the period when Dave Cook took a five-yard pass in the end zone from quarterback Ed Chelbeck. Both runs for extra points failed. * *____& The Lobos added two more touchdowns in the third period when Morgan went over .from the 10 and Cummings returned an Inpass 43 yards. Herb SATUBDAT’a RESI LT Lo» Angele, 34. Balttmor* 17 SONMY’S RESULTS NHL STANDINGS By UnlleA Tress International w l t ru. or Montreal ;.77.777JS-----S S H W Toronto ...........is a ra n Now .. York___...-.il 1*~ Montreal 4, Boston 1 Toronto s, New York S Detroit t, Chicago 3 Today’s Schedule Football Bowls By The Associated Press Hie debut of the Gotham Bowl'signed a professional contract, this past weekend was a 244 suol An alert Baylor defense grabbed cess for Baylor’s Bears over pre-lsix fumbles and intercepted three tackle Clyde Brock was withheld OoUinm Bowl. « Now York-Biylor 34, from the game by Coach John AriaSon Bowl. at Dayton. ohio-Ncw! Ralston amid minors that he had “«£*• JE^^SSSJSi. Cam.------- ---------1—t-----' ----a ---- —— is, f ioflotil Or*.. T. un CIr&sIc. *t Miami— HalP8 Ouster First Step Army Beefing Up Football Associated Press Sports Writer WEST POINT, N.Y. (AP) — Army is making plans for beefed-up football program, with a' new head coach the first order of business. It is apparent that the dismissal of Dale Hall Saturday, was' just * one step in West Point’s intention to bolster football at the Military Academy. Hie announcement of HaU’s firing contained several broad references to a proposed new look. * * * ‘ ■ ■ • Army will not slick io the tradition of restricting the coaching! post to academy graduates. Waft Point has not had a nongraduate as football coach since J. W. Beacham of Cornell held Job in 1911. '—rffAj There are at present a number of potential candidates who served as assistants at Army during the 18-season tenure of Earl (Red) Blaik. This includes head coaches Paul Dietzel of Louisiana State, Andy Gustafson of Miami, Fla,, Murray Warmath of Minnesota and Tom Harp of Cornell. ★ * There are two ex-West Point line stars with considerable experience as assistant coaches who should be in the running. They are Johnny Green, now ait Florida, and Bill Yeoman, at Michigan State. If West Point plans any drastic overhaul in its football program, recruiting would have to be accelerated, there would probably have to be an increase in appointments allotted to football candidates, and a relaxation of policy regarding players’ adherence to academy routine. Hall had pinpointed some of Army’s -disadvantages and made a strong stand for a heightened effort in its football program shortly before his dismissal. He said, | “West Point has some problems to face up to, some decisions toj make’. . . If it wants to play big time football it’s going to have to work at it.”’ Hall was surprised and bitterly disappointed at the decision to terminate his contract, even though he waa-weli aware hia Job was in Jeopardy. Hie action was taken by West Point’s superintendent, Maj. Gen. W. C. Westmoreland, after consultation with the .athletic board. He succeeded Blaik in 1959 and won 16. lost 11 and tied two. There'were rumblings of discontent toward the end of this past season and the 13-7 defeat by Navy in the final game probably swung the balance,. oranit swuom uimw. Fiord* ADM 14, Jttkson. MU* . Romeo Player Honored DAYTON, Ohio III - Five Western Michigan players were named Saturday to the Mid-American Conference's first and second all-conference football teams chosen by the coaches. Dennis Holland, an end. and quarterback Ed Chlebek made the first string. WMU men on the second team were tackle John Lotnakowski, of Romeo, guard Pat Emerick and back Bob White. DEC. 39------- Gator Bowl, >9 Jacksonville Po — Ororgla Took 7-3 r« Peon Slate 7-3. Sun Bowl, at El Pare. Tea.—VUlonova ■2, vi. Wichita 1-3. National Trophy Bowl It Washington, cancelled. Cut All-Stars, vs. West Altaian, at in Francisco. Chit. All American Bowl, It Tucson, Arts. Blue All-Star VS. Oray AU-Stari. It MoDtgomiry. All. JAN. t Rom Bowl, it Pialdsnt, Calif.—OCLA -3 vi. Minnesota 7-3. tutor Bowl, it Now Oris ana—Arkansas . Louisiana Still 3 , Miami—Colorado M Rams Sign Irish Back | SOUTH BEND. Ind. (AP)-Clsy Schulz, 190-pound Notre Dame' quarterback used mostly on defense, said today he has signed! with the Los Angeles Rams of the National Football League. Schulz. 21, of Schofield, Mi, Is the fourth Notre Dame, player toj sign a pro contract in the last! week, all with NFL foams. ’ 1 EAST BUDGET PLAN! You pay in equal installments spread over the year —avoiding big bills in cold months when oil consumption' increases. FRANCIS COAL and OIL 682-3600 1 MONEY fh&tnihute you Mart-HI ‘ Holiday Money la youra' * \ at Beneficial today — Just phonal Want cadi fast? Call Beneficial. Get Holiday Money for shopping, for paying bills, for any good reason. Just teU us how mudi you want and when. RU be ready and waiting the minute you come in. “You’re die boss’* at Beneficial. Loans $25 to $500 on Signature, Furniture or Car lonoflciat Finance Co. of Detroit 7 WIST LAWAINCI STRICT, PONTIAC ■-BENEFICIAL- FINANCE 8Y8TEM .THIS WEEK’S BIG BUY AT YOUR GOODYEAR • Adjust Brakoe • Repack Front Whool • Chock Oreaeo Soak o Add Brake Fluid O Read Test AVOID ACCIDENTS WITH OUR BRAKE SPECIAL! $119 FOR ALL FOUR ANY WHKIS CM goodAear SERVICE STORE I Pro League Standings **—"tosssa?*- SNOW TIRES For Safe Winter Driving! I ■ Amite tel prm I DIVISION witrnrb.0 . « S 9 .615 313 363 £ . • 7 • .443 399 1 B . • 7 S .463 359 1 WESTERN DIVISION 14*4 l|ik fute'y SATURDAY’S RESULT 0 31* 31*1 9 .314 151 433 f - 154 221 411 . 7 6 0 .536 275 2*3 „ quality EXTRA WH I 05 ** Black-_________ 7.50x14 Wall No racappabla exchange necessary! Not a Sacond, Retread But a 1 st Quality Now tire! . *9 I Black 6.70x15.. $5.88 | 1*7.50x14. ...$10.9¥| |T.T. 7.10x15... $7.80 1 | 8.00x14... . ..$13.981 Casing — Add $3.00 for Whitewall Syracuse ....... it u .316 New York * u .306 WESTERN DIVISION ■ Angeles .... 31 7 .750 CtnctimsU ..... is 12 .53* Detroit ........ )I 33 .411 St. Louis .......10 1C .316 Chicago ... 4 IS .113 £ SUNDAY’S RESULTS jTlPhllaHeltHakaSi-CMeago 109 " 301 Cincinnati 134. New York M SATURDAY’S RESULTS -------------9 111 | MUFFLERS INSTALLED | os low os $7.95 • Ducounl Price, an Fiafc, Goodyaar, Firailona Tirat. nt C rad it — No Money Dawn — Opan night, 'til 9 P.M. 77 WEST HURON ST. AT CASS A " mm m 1962MERCU best-looking buys..mow in each size 3 MERCURY COMET , MERCURY METEOR MERCURY MONTEREY Only car with the best features of big cars and compacts MERCURY METEOR Th* beautiful balance between big cars and compacts Longer than compact*.., thortar than big car* HANDLES LIKE A COMPACT... ROOMY AS A BIG CAR! TURNS, PARKS, handies like a compact. Turning IQUMS THE room in most big can. This is a radius is only: 19J^ ft. Wheelbase: 1165-$ inches, six-passenger car without qualification. Us vaca* Over-all length: 203.8 inches. Yet inride it . , . tion-size trunk (81.5 cu. ft.) tops some big cars. PRICED LIKE A COMPACT... LUXURIES OT A BIG CAR I tow INITIAL PRICE like compacts—actually below several. Yet the Meteor is quality-built throughout, *d luxurious inavary detail that it has .., Di luxe APPOlNTMiNts, e^en rfh§ extra driving convenience of an ammeter and oil-pressure gauge. Tower steering and power brakee are also available. SAVES LIKE A COMPACT...PERFORMS LIKE A BIG CAR! TWO THRIFTY ENGINES to choose from. Pick the ”6’’ A beautiful balance between power and weight, or the new top-performance Meteor 221V-8. Either (less than 3,000 lbs.) designed to deliver brilliant way, you get compact-car gas mileage, plus . . . performance for smooth cruising, hills and passing. .i. PLUS ALL THESE OTHER FEATURESI MORI ride advances than any car near its price. ROUTlNt service only TWICI A year or at 8,000-These include Cushionf-Link Suspension, and a to 30,000-mile intervals. 6,000-mile oil changes new type of unitized body ("torque-box" design) and minor lubrications, 30,090 miles between major to check vihration outride the passenger compart- lubrications, anti-freeze, anti-rust radiator coolant ment. Result? The first car to handle like a lasts 2 years or 30,000 miles, and many more compact, ride Ukea big car: smooth, solid, quiet, ’’honey-savers. 8ee.it at your Mercury' dealer's. LINCOLN .MERCURY UVIStON • 1962 MERCURYS • PRODUCTS OP MOTOR COMPANY ATTENTION LIFE MAGAZINE SUBSCRIBERS! M| You may have already won one of 365 new Mercury Meteors. See pages 5 through 8 of the Dec. 15 Issue. (Offer not valid where lotteries an prohibited by s^ta or local regulations.) LLOYD MOTORS LI NCOLN-^MERCU RY—COMET 232 SOUTH SAGINAW STREET m PI 2-9131 t THIRTY-FOUR ¥^8rt|qr Answer Their Questions! Science Begins m^lementary Schook By LESLIE «. NASON, Ed. D. ihilmir of EthmttM, ... Ww»m of ln>iw. CMMwt* There’* & revolution brewing in oar elementary schools! Children an bubbling with interest in sd* eaot and their questins an “bug »their teachers. Today’s c b41 know facts wen only | Their world is full rocket ships. ■Jet aircraft, giddied missiles and ■ satellites. They ■ know more about ■ them than you DB. NASON might think. Children have a vast ablfity- to soak up information, especially when they, are fascinated withr* subject. . They gather surprising bits of knowledge from toys, books, picture, eomio strips, newspapers, television and )ast asking qure-tiou. Before long they have ac-eumniaied an Impresoive store of facts. Every parent knows that very young children can ask dazzling questions, especially about science. QUEWKMfSt . . But we had better answw Swm if we. are to stimulate enough young scientists to match the Rus-'ans in this field. ♦ .★ * . There ere good reesons why children ere fascinated by science and learn a great deal about it. Far one thing, children are alwayi attracted by the exciting and impoa-sible happenings in fairy stories and tales of magic. They still Are. But today- we are living in a world that's full of magic—real magic. The manned satellite has "outflow" the flying carpet. Adults are Just as fascinated, but they approach it differently. We accept atomic energy and apace flight as the work e( scientists; interesting, bat we don’t expect to really Understand them. The child, however, IS the acl-enttst or astronaat in his own Imagination. He expects to na- What happens when our little astronaut goes to school? la his consuming interest in science whetted, discussed and encouraged? * ♦ h - In the past—and too often even yet — our budding scientist was| handed a primer with very little scientific content and taught to read. There's nothing wrong with j that. But science, said the experts, must .wait. Just as soon as you V write and do arithmetic well talk about It. Junior’s rocket-powered interest in' science never got - off - the ped. The countdown looked too long! * * * Today this is being changed. Junior ia going to get science, but it may not be quiet what he expected. It may not even be the kind of science he is most anxious and ready to learn. AN AFTERTHOUGHT Science has been tacked to elementary sch9ol curriculum a sort of afterthought. Specific science subjects in the secondary schools were designed as college preparation. As the subject and scientific knowledge has exploded—the sheer volume of material has farced some at it downward into elementary schools. The things forced downward have been, by eoiyiqon consent, the simpler concepts: Magnetism, simple mechanics, plants and animals, etc. This Is perfectly reasonable and, In most cases, has led to good remits. Pnplls are Interested and learn n great deal. ways in which we might get even better results. Properly presented, many concepts in electric- '* My, magnetism, the -solar-system.... and even the structure and nature of atoms anil can be understood by 6 and 7-yearold youngsters; ■Bv- .. . • ^ £ The difficulty is with the presentation of the concepts. Incorrectly done it may be more confusing than educational. Properly handled, it can stimulate and encourage the scientific "spark” and keep it. burning all the way through college. . -*■■■ ; * * * What does it take? First we, need a plan for teaching science-one that places science in a logical sequence from kindergarten through high school. One that introduces cadi concept in a and at a point where it wUt best succeed. It also requires teachers who are trained to do this specialized job. If we develop a continuing science program we may even need special teachers in elementary grades, at least until oqr regular classroom’ teachers develop the new skills they will need. Boys' Club 2 New Contributions (If you have a question for Dr. Nason, write him in care of The I Pontiac Press. If yonr question j is of general Interest, he will Recent research, however, points discuss It In his column.) OUR ANCESTORS By Quincy Christmas spirit of giving is gladdening the hearts of over 2,000 Pnntip/- Roys' Club members. * * -■»' Two contributions, a handmade $3,000 model train and 400 towels for locker and gym activities, have jacked up the youths’ morale, according to Frank Cashman, assistant director of the Boys’ Club; Many of the boys have spent hours helping clean up the northwest section of their club building gutted by flames last month. t’poa reading of the *40,000 fire which destroyed equipment Including the trains forming the basis of the Casey Jones Clubs, Dr. MUton Okun, psychiatrist, decided transporting his 23-foot spread of trains and scenery from fats basement at S2«l fiber-bourne, Detroit, to the Pontiac club would be very worthwhile. The move will proffcbly be made as soon as the clubhouse is paired after Christmas. FIR8T TRAIN SET Pontiac Boys’ Club received its! first train set just a year ago as| a- gift from Thomas E. Wilson, | Marriage Licenses Arthur McNeill. Cincinnati, Ohio and Hpbble M. Mathis, 326 Barden, Bloom-(Md HUM William H. Stewart, 4335 Elisabeth take Road and Edna L. Bturgla, Rooae-r*!t Hotel Dod O. Cantrell, 1311 Pontiac Trail. .. Wailed Leke and Trie P. T----- Lucille, Walled take '’Robert W. Dombrowski, 3670 Garland ------------ I, 4000 Joyce, Drayton of GMCf Truck and Coach, whose had outgrown interest - in the - trains. Boys club members had just resumed fall railroading when flames devoured the set; Another move, this one before the holiday, has been taken by Banner Linen and Supply Co, of 9M N. Cass Ave. who contributed too towels for locker and gym-nailum activities, Cash man To date, these have been the only donations since the fire, but various local groups have enabled the youths to participate in field program outings, tours and small parties at members’ homes, while repairs are under way. _____ > ' * * * Rochester VFW post officers are now using' canisters to collect money to help replace games lost during the mishap, Cashman noted. “They didn’t say anything about < post, too!" HOARDING HOUSE E6AD, MADAM,I HANie'i Adjusted mvself to FlNfE-UAy, 40-HOUR / WEEK /THAT MEANS 1 / AM ENTITLED TO 126 { HOOKS OF LEISURE 1 eh? Well,You'Re NoTffiotJRg Iki/SL Un mJsiol/ cnJcnA ic rrfc: T» \e-r Ak.\ < I vveets • lUU AKtr d Sharon M. I Hum David B, Black, 8501 Clarrldtc. Clark- aum and Pal* A —‘r H------tag rldac. Clarkatc Barclay J. McMullen, 635 Vaughan. Bloomfield,. HUia_ and Dorothy M. Ha- , 316 Nett. Oroeee Polnte Donald P. Geaequeb 301 Mill. Apt L ' * Morrla, .)1» I Ruth i Edmund O. Edwarda, 1816 Milverton. Troy and IMna O. Owena, 1664 Utcb-wood. Troy . Nell E. McClellan. 337 W. Hopl Ruth K. Ollleaple. 44 Willard “Prod Oiilette. 13 N. Casa and Dorothy DolUa’t. Chavera. 316 N. Paddock ond! Joanne M. Cart. 7340 Sandy Beach.' Waterford . Owen J. Profler. 123 Lafayette' and IfuttAehMi. 63-Ruth Htilllp H. Armatroi Walt. ig. 433 Bloomfield1 423 Bloomfield 1 ... ,, _______| 822'a Baldwin and E. McCormick. 264 N. Jobnaon y »y H. Imua, 23617 Whitaker, Parm4 i nod Nancy E. King, 34101 Gkk-i Farmtnirton / Angua 8. Hlnda Jr., 166 8. Shirley Md baron M. Darling, 766 Porteaux, Lake OUT OUR WAY Robert L. Williams, 1] wiener and Mary L. Goodwin, 286 N. Saginaw Oary E. Drum. 786 Mt. Vernon, Lake Orion and Diane K. Cox. 2642 Lir Leke Orion John c. Whaley. 666 Hogarth i_________I Thelma L. Edwarda.' 3166 Sasbabaw Road, Drayton Plama Charlea R. Kitts. 512, 8. Jeaale and JttXm 306 N Saginaw - Carlo* Napier, 102 E Tacoma and WandajP, Plum. 26063 Dartmouth, Madl-•on Heighta Oary . L. Roll*. 3643 Hickory 1 , Boeboetor and Carol E. Bratcher, Jarman. Troy Wlfitam A. Hayet. 344 Proapect and Ruth A. HlUa, 4036 Arcadia Park Thom a* L. Longpre. 33t E. Bhadbolt. Lake Orion -and Sybil A. Wealey MB Scaorn. Lake Orton TJoha I. Prteeh. 47M 1414 Mile ________I U^th“1 l. Jiamllton.1* its 1M?-” -BMW and Patricia A. Taylor. 636 M Sterling H. H!U, 6S1 Snell, Roc gl ilBmi J. Mlhallc, 1361 Be ftUT Cox. 16M Baahebaw Road. Ox hflT and sharao m. Knowiton,------------ Matthew DRIFT MARLO - By Dr. L M. Levitt. Tom Cooku mud Phil I WMCN0T SPILLING 3RB& m ADAM AMES A WEARY AND RELUCTANT JEFF RUNKLE IN BKXOGy FUNDAMENTALS... UNTIL THE DfZZy By Lou n»f THE BERRYS BV Carl Gruburi PETER/YOLTRE OT LEARNS THIS F HOUSE UNLESS ¥ LVOU^flilW By Y. T. Hamlin I PONT \ YAW NOT? 1MNKVOU1 ITS A CAN USE J PERFECTLY ttHM/yCeoao enxt CAPTAIN EASY By Ernie Bushmiller MORTY MEEKLE By Dick Cavalli iTHINUrrWILU. ANVWAV. I'M ©CUN? TO TRY ir. By Charlea Kuhn DONALD DUCK By Wnlt Disney tflr/i Im/l/ms t Gm YOUR FRIENDLY CAR DEALER wri W A TOE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. DECEMBER 1 L THJRTYsFiVR- Todc^s^J^&Ba^g^egBtSrii^ffiflR Coyfl Savs Sfig^ to Preserve itep(Ki§ Ustod 1b m Mtem Iff rabfoctod to chuge without notice Nix to Teamsters Sfafue of Justice ctunm i-wmwrr r>n-i •—cklw-tv cimmmi w—wtdi Monday evening (2) Movie (ant.) (4) Wyatt Earp, (T) Johnny Ginger (coot.) •tit (2) Meditations " •ttt (3) On |he Farm Front •tM (2) College of the Air (4) Qpnttatntal (cent.) (SB) Contrails till (4) Weather •tat (3) News (I) Cannonball (56) French Through Tele- cm wflegta—— ...............: . m 44) Sports 8t45 (2) News (4) News (?) News. Weather, Sports 7:88 (2) Big Ten Highlights (4) George Pierrot Show (?) Expedition! —1 ... • (t) You Asked For It (94) Portraits in Print 7:38 (2) Danger Man ■* (4) George Pierrot (cant.) (7) Cheyenne (9) Movie. “Throe lor Jamie Dawp.” (1956) A notorious young woman Mils her boy _ friend. Laraine Day, Ricardo -Mbqtalban, Richard Carlson. . (56) Way W Life 8:i»o (2) Pete and Gladys (4) National Velvet (7) Cheyenne (amt.) - - (9) Movie (cont.)* (56) Strategy of Truth 8:30 (2) Window on Main Street (4) Price is Right (Color) (7) Rifleman (9) Movie, (cont.) •:M (2) Danny Thrfmas (4) 87th Precipct (7) Bing Crosby (Special) (9) African Patrol' (56) Guest Traveler 8:30 (3) Andy Griffith (4) 87th Precinct (cont.) (?) Bing Crosby (coat.) — (9) Festival ’62 10:00 <21 Hennesey (4) Thriller (?) Ben Casey . -—(9) Festival (oonU-----j,— 10:30 (3) I’ve Got A Secret (4) Thriller (cont.) (7) Ben Casey (cont) (9) Harbor Command 11:88 (2) News - (4) Newa _ (7)News (9) News 41:13 (7) News, Sports 11:18 (2) Weather (4) Weather , (9) Weather 11:38 (2) Sports (4) Sports . (9) Telescope UAW 11:38 (2) Movie. Ruggles of Red] Gap.” (1935) An American gets an education in gentility from a British butler. Charles Laughton, Mary Boland. (7) Weather | 11:30 (4) (Color) Jack Paar | (7) Movie. “Aip’J No Time! ' for Glory;** *(1957) An American captain, is ordered to! < capture an/enemy fortress.! Barry AgUjlvan, Gene Barry. I (2) To be announced. (9) Movie. “Don’t Blame the Stortc.” (English; 1958)’ Shakespearean actor returns _____ home to find a baby on his doorstep. Ian Hunter, Veronica Hurst, Reginald Beckwith. 7:88 (2) B'wana Don (4) Today (7) Funews 7:11 (7) Johnny Ginger 8:88 (2) Captain Kangaroo. (56) French for Teachers •:M (7) Jack L&Lanne (56) French Through TV 8:88 (2) Movie:, “By Your Leaver “Black Dia- (4) Ed Allen. (?) Movie; monds.” (56) MatbemAtics for You •:38 (4) Gateway to Glamour (56) Book Parade 8i4l (4) Debbie Drake 18:88 (2) Caiendar ^”'”' (4) Say When (56) Our Scientific World 18:38 (7) News 18:31 (9) Billboard 18:31 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color). Play Your Hunch. (7) Jackie Cooper . (9) Chez' Helene „ (56) English V. 18:48 (9) Nursery School Time 11:88 (2) Video Village (4) (Color). Price Is Right, i - - -T7) Texan * -----CP) Romper Room. (56) Spanish Lesson 11:18 (56> German Lesson 11:88 (2) December Bride (4) Concentration. (?) Yours lor a Song (56) History With Heih Hake r~~ TUESDAY AFTERNOON 13:88 (2) Love of Life —(4) Truth or Consequences. (7) Camouflage (9) Mary Morgan (56) What’s New 13:38 (9) News (7) American Bandstand. (56) “Strategy of. Truth.” 1:18 (2) Secret Storm. 1:88 (2) Edge of Night. ($) Adventures of Kinky 4:41 (9) Flower Pot Men 4:10 (7) American Newsstand 4:18 (4) News (2) Movie: “Caught Plastered.’’ it) Johnny Ginger. (9) Jingles (96) .What’f JNefci 5:30 (56) British Calendar 5:45 (9) Rocky and His Friends <56)News Magazine 8:88 (4) Kukla and OUie Rejects Locals' Appeals tq Prevent Inspection * of Union Records TV Features By United Press International EXPEDITION, 7 p.m. (7), “In-sect Safari,” a journey across Africa in search of the Embioptera — a silk-spinning insect. THE BING CROSBY SHOW, 9 p.m. (7). Bing, searching for the rams of his famlly-Asee 4n this one-hour special, tours a London tearoom,- pub add courtroom and meets such helpful British companions as comedians Dave King and Terry Thomas, singer Shirley Bassey, and a buskers group called the Happy Wanderers. There’s a small part in the show lor one of Bing’s old golfing partners, ioo, DANNY THOMAS SHOW, 9 p m. (2). Uncle Tonoose (Hans Conried) announces he has some plans for the family burial plot. * * * ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW, 9:30 p.m. (2). Barney (Don Knotts) sets ItiM (2) Search for Tomorrow out Inteach Andy the art of heing The UA Supreme Court today rejected an appeal from. International Brotherhood of Teamsters Locals 814, in Pontiac, and 299, in Detroit, regarding the inspection of union records. The court let stand a decision that the Secretary of Labor may Inspect union records under the lese tabor Management Reporting and Moelopure Act without any Indication of o violation. The ruling was handed down last August by the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Areals. It was promptly appealed by the twb locals.. A A .* The controversy arose when Labor Secretary Arthur Goldberg subpoenaed records of Locals 299 and 614 on Sept. 19,1960. Union officials refused to Comply. The law requires uatom to file organisational and annual ft* nanrial reports with the seen- a sophisticated member of Mayberry society. HENNESEY, 10 p.m. (2). “The Sightseers.” Chick (Jackie Cooper) and Martha (Abby Dalton) go on an off-beat tour of Hawaii. BEN CASEY, 10 p.m. (7). “A Certain Time, a Certain Darkness.” The gentler side of Dr. Casey’s (Vincent Edwards) nature is shown as be treats Ellen Parker (Joan Hackett), a woman who is keeping a secret from her husband. (4) (Color). It Could Be You. (7) Make a Face (9) Susie ^ (56 ‘ Spanish Lesson 18:48 (2) Guiding Light (56) German^ Lesson 13:88 (4) News. ' 1:88 (2) Star Performance (4) Groucho (7) Day in Court (9) Movie: "The Man From Down Under.*! . 1:18 (56) French Lesson 1:88 (?) News 1:88 (2) As the World Turns (4) Californians (?) Life of Riley (56) World History 1:18 44) Faye Elizabeth 3:88 (2) Amos *n* Andy • (4) (Color) Jan Murray ----CD Number Please (56) French Lesson 18:18 (2) House Party (4) Loretta Young (7) Seven Keys (96) French Lesson 3:00 (2) Millionaire (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Queen for a Day (9) News - ^ # 1:10 19) Movie; "Law and Dis- J UniCffiO CiflGS order.” THRILLER, 10 p.m. (4). “The Return of Andrew 4 Bentley.” A vounsr counle moves into a man. ;U.S. Helicopters [Arrive in Saigon . firtf Aircraft Sont tor^Wrocf Support of Henry Morgan drives dans around Hollywood and cently the panelist Of Tve Got a ftcret" narrowly missed a walker. The latter yelled after him, “Watch it, mister, you almost JUSTICE Gdf His Irish Up, but Callahan Won MIAMI ' (UPI)—A 4‘i-year-old It gives authority to the secretary “when he believes it neces-sary in order to determine whether any person has violated or is aboutiThrQnt to Finder to violate” the law “to make an _ 1 /* investigation ...” for this purpose he has subpoena power. SUED FOR ORDER When the Teamster uniofls balked, Goldberg sued for an enforcement order. Federal District Judge Frederick W. Kaess of Detroit ruled against him but was reversed by the Sixth Clrctiit. The Teamsters’ appeal to the Supreme Court said “Congress has not granted such arbitrary power to one government official, but rather hag limited the subpoena fmmd" ii(m ~ypii(ng"fl»twTy power to those situations in which there appears some reasonable necessity for the seizure of i ’• books, files and records.' pervisor Edward Cheyz. He anxious to see the august lady preserved for posterity. atop the vacant old downtown Pontiac, she is threatened with extinction. Obeys beHeves the stately statue Is worth saving, along with any other relics of the post still remaining la the building that Is soon to be offered for sale and probably for destruction. He announced today that he intends to propose at the Oakland County; Board .of Supervisors meeting that “a suitable location lie found for the statue and any other properties of true historical i{alue "to-Oakland County-“I intend to propose placing the statue and such properties at the county service center, perhaps in the halls of the. new courfltonse, where they may be on public display for generations to come,” he said. The old rourthouse and county prosecutor's office behind It win be ottered lor public sale lalcr this mouth. The County Board of Auditors is hopeful that some business enterprise will purchase the site for mercantile expansion in downtown Pontiac. Vietnamese Army Woman Neari? j SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) j— A converted U.S. carrier steamed into Saigon today with a load of U.S. helicopters earmarked for uae against the Communist VIM Gimi. ’ '^rfi WWW Aboard the vessel—the Core— were two ftill U.S. Army helicop-ter companies, including service “f Bsarfr ixiafadro* 7M y**n. Tbtm Iftmmd* Max I'm h^yy,” wrim P.RamutyofLAXatif.MmwWL Han’t IW ralM -TlflHtt end wunn with m^juaiijuw ecietUlSc lorawlt celled LAWACAMl.Tflt B ■ tnS|fc ■edicawd rrtnt kitotoanttfcsaMroroBps while k aoothea raw, uritaaed aod inSuMd Kr,sr,sstearsS; troops‘and pilots, as well aa 15. H single-engine training planes for; the use of Vietnamese air force. The airiyal of the helicopters,! wjiich will remain under the control of the U.S. Military Assistance Group hare, marks the first j tbott -UJl. aircraft will be used, in direct support of Vietnamese] ground forces. • RENTAL • SOFT WATCR Unlimited Quantities ... % «■ S^h it it ir ’ The two companies arriving on] the Core were identified as the! 57th fight Helicopter CO. of Ft. j Lewis, Wash., commanded by] Maj, Robert J. Dillard; and the LINDSAY. SOFT WATER CO. It Nswbarry St. PI 1-6621 Vietnamese and U.S. officials declined to make official sta^e- -4 ilnce~"the> Gatthadiodock rush hour at a pier on oHFTjf Saigon's busiest streets, real secrecy was impossible. for the preservation of historical facets of the old buildings which now seem doomed to disappear fighting Irishman, reduced tp tears soon from the scene. Saturday, was the hero of the “Repladng the antiquated build-neighborhood today. ings in favor of our spanking newjCoal Firm Founder Diet Timothy Callahan, got the ring courthouse tower in the countyj finger of his right hand stuck in the hollow handle of his bright green tricycle Saturday and couldn’t get it out. His mother Secretary at U.N. Pummeled in NY NEW YORK (AP)-A secretary of the Danish mission to the United Nations was pummeled in an argument stemming from a minor automobile collision eariy today, police reported. service center is certainly for the best, but some reminder of their past existence and what, they stood for over the years must be tained,” Cheyz said. Labor Leader May Get New Court Hearing His parents anointed the finger with ice, cooking nil, nnd soap. When they tailed to dislodge It, they called the fire department. Three policemen, five firemen! and a huge hook-and-ladder showed WASHINGTON (D—The Supreme Court set aside today the convic- ... __ excitement, I suppose! M°n of John J. Killian, former they didn’t quite understand the Milwaukee labor leader, on a message," Mrs. Callahan ex- charge that he falsely denied he pinimut ever was a Communist. “—"A A —A1—L———4—At- the same time, the Algh The kids in the neighborhood! Wbwml ordered the U.8. Disirfrt crowded closer when a fireman Conrt ,n CWcago to hold a bear-produced an enormous pair of **E *° determine whether KU-metal shears. | Man should have anew trial. ”6on’t cut it off,” • howled| The hearing will be on the ques-Timmy. j tion whether the district court, TW, uiiiiiuyi [lo trials of KUUan. should have r the hawdiehar^L the F-** Broduction of statements! NASHVILLE. Tenn. (AP)—Justin Potter, 63, founder of« the Nashville Coal Co. and later president of Virginia-Carollna Chemical Co.. died Saturday at a hospital. A native of Smithville, Tenn., Potter became a multimillionaire and a leading conservative spokesman. He was an outspoken foe of the Tennessee Valley Authority. Sweet's Radio TV young couple moves into a mansion and soon are terrorized by a ghost. Starring John Newland, Officers said Erik Svenningsen, Philip Bourneuf and Antoinette *. °* Yonkers, was hit several Bower. __ times by Julius English, 33, of the I JACK PAAR SHOW, 11:30 p.m. Bronx- * chauffeur. (4). Hugh Downs is host. Guests:! gave this account: Mare Conneiy, John Tolan, Oscar’ En*,uh. drivin« « taCBe Ameri- of the handlebar from the trt- i-------------t ^ rel bv , j iBrown Jr.. Betty Johnson. (Cotori.ican ear- bumPed ta,° tbe "W* ol cycle and hustled Timmy sff to . Michap, - - a small foreign vehicle occupied a hospital. I-., .” , by Svenningsen and' his wife, ' . statements ™ -------- Elaine Nurses, doctors, parents and of- of payments made by the JFBI to i # + fleers moved toward a special so- informal, i The two men got out and ac-,ution t0 the ■woUen fin«er| Justice Whittaker deliver^! the Workers Strike at GM Plants in 3:38 (2) Verdict Is Yours (4) From These Roots (7) Who Do You TYust? 3:55 (2) News 1:00 (4) (Color) Continental 4:00 (2) Brighter Day.. Classroom | (4) Make Room for Daddy TUESDAY M MINING MUSIC MAXING 12 WlDi-thtpod II Uocit Tom's ft Coffin eorer II Sulk it ns** It Laak's pro • It Mumcal groups 5!sa%.,roup* 32 Bwsru* 31 Muitc holder 31 Pramcsork 30 Oalc r si ApOfllr *----_ S3 Porm. 33 Mr 31 Exlit to RrUUIrea 41 An|ry 49 Brfor* inrtflxt so Wander ST Always 93 falaenood r r 1“ r r IT1 IS II IT 11 IT nr 1 ■ J f 9 1r r r IT a a ■r 1 H B B- ■ r 1 B r W ST ■ Ir 1 ■ r IT IT 1r ■ r IT r IT W w 56 IT D B U H U j, TELEVISION BARGAINS! 19“ Motorola TV with Remote Control ........... .-.$109.95 19“ Admiral Conaolatto itlond) .. ...... r. . $179.95 Open 'til 9 Every Evening ELECTRIC COMPANY •25 W. Huron St. H 4-2525 JUST EAST OF TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER TORONTO (I) — More than 15, 000 members of the United Auto Workers union (CLC) went strike against General Motors of Canada at plants in five Ontario cities after negotiations broke own between them at 4 a.m. Workers manned picket lines in Toronto, Oshawa, St. Catharines, London and Windsor, tying up the company's16800-million annual production of cars, trucks, buses, diesel engines, appliances, parts and engines. It was the second time in six years the union had struck against GM in Canada. I cording to witnesses, English began striking Svenningsen about Ihe head with his fists. Police intervened and arrested English on a third-degree assault charge. Timmy inspected his finger slow-ly. chuckled to himself and ran off to play. 5-4 decision today. Dissenting opinions were written by Justices Black, Brennan and Douglas, with ■Chief Justice' warren and mack concurring in the latter’s dissent. Twist Craze Made' Very Amusing Year U.S. Assistance to Be Revised Ribicoff Reveals Plan to Elinriinate Abuses, Cut Down Relief •OWN 1 Curtd moots 3 Tropical plant 1 Defeat, 14 Ocean 9 Prayeri . rnoram I Mltat 3t Soon 9 Musical dramaa 39 Containers • t Pacific lalafid 37 Ply 10 Medley 31 Unoccupied II autdo’a note, 3S Defeat, St ca II Cornbread 33 Respected 37-Timing devil ’Soviet Envoy Leaves Canada on Order OTTAWA (81—A military attache at the Soviet Embassy has been expelled from Canada for attempting to buy secret documents from a government employe. The Foreign Ministry said today lit asked the embassy last Thursday to arrange the departure of Lt. Col. Anatoly F. Loginov, assistant military attache. An embassy spokesman said today the attache left yesterday by plane for Moscow. By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — If we hhdn’t had the Twist, 1961 would! have been a sad year. I’ve never seen so many cops and celebrities oat in front,” Bob Hope exclaimed the other night on a Waldorf dais sparkling with President Kennedy, Cardinal Spellman, Oen. Mac-! Arthur and others. “Why you’d think this was! WASH INGTON (AP) — Sec-j the Peppermint LoungeU* iretary of Welfare Abraham A.; — Give credit to Hope — he’s our only great;Ribicoff announced*-today 10 ad-humorist left. "Nixon couldn’t be here; he’s mtl!ta!r*tive Fj!an*e* =1„, WWJ, Bualnoaa New, wav A Ale* Drtor WPON. Newt, S. Green# WCAR, Sheridan', Ride CXLW. Bud Davlea______ 1:99—WiR. Outft Houae •> WWJ, Ph. Opinion WXVZ. Id Morgan CXLW, F. Lewi,_____ wjbm. Jack the Belikov WCAR, A. Cooper T:1»-WJR, Choral CXLW. Tfetr Si miiB -wxvx. Prod Wel„ 9:90—WJR Toolkbt at 9 CXLW..R. Xnuwle, J ' 9; 10—WWJ. Interlochen ll:aa—WJft. Co-1re11 WWJ. Pare Blaabetb WXYS, L. Sherman Ilsto-WWJ. World Naira WCAR. >. Morrla WCAR, A Cooper TtittOAY MORNINO •:Mt—WJR. Volet l-f A«d«, WWJ Newa. Robtrla -WavA faod VST . , ' > CRLW. Perm. Byt Opener WJtt, Newa, Avery wcar. New,. SberiSaa WPON Newa, CbWk Lewll WXYZ. Wolf, Nawa WJBK. Nava. Avtry WCAR. (WTO WPON. Bporta WX.YZ, Newa, WOU CKI W, hr— ~ * WJBK, j iw:ar, J IS, Newa. n w. fitwa T< IK. kfawa, A JX Cn, )N, Newa. I wwj, Ntwa. Mariana WXVS. Paul Harvey, R CXLW. Neva. David WJtt, Newa, Avory 10:00—wjr, Ravi Rata WWJ. New*. Marten# WX»k iwaklaaf CKI w. Joe van WJBK, Nera. Reid WPON Neva, Jarry Olata 11:9b—WJR, Health. WXYS. McNeeley WWJ Bob AlUaoa CXLW, Jot VM WJBK Newa. Bold WCAR. Newt. Martyn WPON, Ntwa, Olatn show lt:M—WJR. Ttmo for Muale 1-Sb-WXVB. New,. Wol CKIW, few, WJBK, New,, Avory TUESDAY AFTERNOON it too-wjr Newa, Parat_ —WWJ, Newa, Lynker——i WXVZ. New,, McNeeley CKtW.'joe van wax Newt, Reid WCAR. flewo Puree WPON. Nawx Jerry Olaen 1 !**—WJR. Newa, Showcaae WJBK Ntwa, Retd 1:9B—WXTK McNeeley. Newa *i**~WJR, Newa, Showcaae , WWL Nawa- Maxwell gttW. Newa Davie WJBK. Newe. Lee WPON, Newa, Don McLeod 9iSb—CXLW. Shift break *i*t-WJN> Newa. Shew cat# Ribicoff told a news conference! the changes, approved by President Kennedy, are the first steps! broad program for welfare I revision. Legislative changes will be proposed to Congress next year, he said, and further administrative changes are also under study, but he did not detail these. -The-ohangBAJjtjHrief, will require that; A STATE OUT__________________ Each state establish a special ui}it responsible for, locating deserting parents of children, who I*™ amrflcants tor or redniertts Yju can hardly blame Fred Astaire for setting up some of public assistance. The special rules fdr press Interviews. He will not discuss (1) his age unit will seek to reunite families (2) Ginger Rogers or (3) Barrie Chase . . . Jane Russell’s whenever feasible and to obtain “Gen. MacArthur didn’t have far to come; he lives right here in the Waldorf. That OI Bill Is wonderful!” Hope said . . . “But the General Is used to roughing lt. He was Id ’South Pacific’ before lt was a hit . . . ★ ft • ★ “Listen, ’touch football’ is not a sissy sport. Up there In Hyannis Port, roughing the passer is a Federal rap .. . Students out there, stand by! You eould be the next Cabinet; if you were from Harvard, you’d be la tomorrow! ... New York has changed. I took a cab from the airport and Carmine De Sapio was driving.** . V ★ ★ * I THE MIDNIGHT EARL .,. /. C~~ WM0 wxvk w>____ WJBK; Newa. Lot WCAR, Newt. Sheridan WPON. Ntwa,- Don McLeod 4:10—WJR. Muale Hall WWL Xmphmala. Bumper CRLW. Bud Daelri »jg*rWJR, Nowk, Muale Hal WJtt Ntwa. Lot ....... rehearsing her cate singing act — to open in the Chicago Living Room ... Julie Andrews closed her eyes and guessed some of the food set before her at the Tower Suite. “I have 20-20 smell,” she said . . . Kim Novak will Christmas in Chi-cago. EARL’S PEARLS: An executive is a fellow who is able to think a problem over tor a few days; before he makes a snap decision. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: A young mother (notes Quote) iyiM found her kids quietly watching a cowboy show on TV, and said, “Well, all’s western on the quiet front. WISH I’D SAID THAT: Comedy writer Jay Burton offered1 a toast: “Well, here’s to me -» you people are doing all right by yourselves.” . ‘Man’s best friend Is no longer his dog,” claims Tyson' and Flicker at the Blue Angel. “Now It’s hla. expense account’’: That’s earl, brother. ^financial support. State aid plan* include:* definition of fraud Jn accordance with state law as it relates to receipt of assistance payments; strengthening of state administrative procedures for identifying, investigating, evaluating, and referring for legal action cases in which there may be fraud by assistance applicants or recipients. r«rtlK t Oily MtMruM TV SALES and SERVICE IQ1 RCA COLOR TV CHICK OUR DIAL! 1 Team Raptrioaoo lu , COLOR TV. Opea 9 io t Mend*. u4 t rldajr CONDON'S TV 730 W. Huron St. 81 4-9716 CONSOLIDATE DEBTS Become Debt Free the Sensible Wqy Arrange for a Schedule of Payments to Fit Your Income • NO LIMIT TO AMOUNT • Requirements: Your Sincere Desire to Get Out of Debt Phone FE 8-0456 os sit Michigan Credit Counsellors 702 Pontioc State Bonk Bldg. Pontioc'a Oldetr and UrgatJ Dobr Mana«sman» Company Mambar—Aaisricaa Association Credit COUxoifora —Michipon Aaxocialion ol Credit Counxo/fora .4 lafcn M. Hanson. Director Locally Owned aad Operated HEATING EQUIPMENT Forced-Air Gas Furnace mein installed "til I Conversion Burners ICOOO Ww plus installation MICHIGAN HEATING COMPANY 88 Newberry St. FE 8-6621 tHIRTY-SUX THE PONTIACpSeSS. MOyDAY DfcgMB^R 11, 1961 Death Notices PORltMT. Die. 6. 1MI. FRANCIS N 1 PrankV, t! W. Fairmont. -age 46: beloved husband of Vina Par-rr«t; balm ad son of Mrs. Anna art (Vtnai Barnaa. Mrs Albert (Joyce) Barcum and Mil Forrest; dear brother of lira. Helen Smith. Mr*. Marla Patterson. Mrs. Haul Warwick, Mrs. Helen ■vans. lira. Blaine Burke. Marshall Forrest and Mancha Howard: IM lurrlred by I erandchll-dren. Funeral service will ba hold Wednesday. Dec. 11 at 1:30 p.m. from the Huntoon Funeral Home with'Hew. Malcolm Burton officiating. Interment In Oakland Hllle Memorial Park. Mr. Porrest .will HEKRINOTQM, , DEC I. INI. 9 Myrtle, ate (3; near movner of Mrs. Buerl W. Batneome and James C. Herrlng-ton: dear sister of Mrs. Ellen Bradley, Mrs. Ammon Martin and Mrs. Gsorxe Michaels; Aleo tur-' vivpd by ;u grandchildren and 4 great-grandchildren. Recitation of the Roeary will be Tuesday. Dec. U at I p.m. from the Donelaon-Jtohns Funeral Home. Puneral service will be held Wednesday. HICKMAN. DEC. I, 1M1, ROSK-mary Frances. 4040 LaPoreet. Waterford: age 45; beloved wife of . '" Dana ■tibmsn hslnreddaugiiler ■ . of Charles P. and Mary McBhane; Mary a PHONED MOSCOW — Ed Klein lleft) and Steve Murray pose with a telephone at the Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity house at the University of California In Lot Angelet after making a phone call to Moscow to invite Nikita Khrushchev .to the New Year’s Day foothall game in the Rose Bowl. UCLA meets Minnesota in the bowl game. The youths tried to put the call through to the Kremlin but - had to settle for a Pravda reporter when the phone operator said she couldn’t get anyone who spoke English at the Kremlin. dear sister of Mrs/ Albert (Shit-ley i Barnes. Recttstlon of t b e Rosery will be today st 1:11 p.m. At the Costs Funeral Home, Drayton Plains. -Puneral servteewHl be held Tuesday, Dec. 12. st 10 a m. from Our Lady of tho Lakes Church. Interment In^toly Sepul- ■ Cemetery. LUCAS. DEC. *. - sr II. MART VIR-Street, age 73; never in ueorge LaPonsa Mre. Mable Duprey r Beatrice Judkins: Also survived by several nieces. Recitation of the Rosary wlll.be Tuesday. Dec. 13 at 7 pm. from the DeWltt c. Davis Funeral Home. Funeral service Win be held Wednesday, BigA Judes Agree on Congo Priority Vincent DoPaql Catholic Church -with Rev; Fr.. Thompson Mar-cero officiating. Interment in Mt. Olivet, Detroit. Mrs. Lucas will lie In state at the DeWltt C. Davis Puneral Home.____________________ McClelland, dec. t. imi. eve- lyn A.. 3670 Seymour Lake Road, ___Ortonvllle, age 31; dear mother ---nftftiRgglrlm Cornrli- Hrrlts lion of the Rosary will heto-night at i_p.m7Trom_the C.t st. Ann's Roman Catholic C PARIS OD—The Western Big Three foreign ministers met today in hopes of settling serious policy differences -and agrfgiMQ-gnrlf for.a united, peaceful Congo. U.S. Secretary of State Dean Rusk, British Foreign Secretary Lord Home and F r e n c h Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murvllle were joined at lunch by West German Foreign Mlnj is ter Gerhard Schroeder. This afternoon the discussion was to turn to Berlin. The chief U.S.-British aim in the talks was io persuade the French government to drop its adamant opposition to negotiations with the Soviet Union for jsnme aort Of compromise future of West Berlin., Reuther Pledges AFL-CIO Battle A French spokesman said the morning session wbs devoted only to the Congo and Southeast Asia. As the three ministers conferred, Foreign Minister Paul--Henri Spaak of Belgium sent a cable urging them to ask acting U.N. Secretary-General U Thant Jor an immediate cease-fire Katanga, the Congo. He said the "Belgian people were shocked by the U.N. military action in the former Belgian colony. The Issue o to plague the Western Allies just as they were preoccupied with finding a common approach to the question of negotiating with the Soviet Union. UAW President Vows Fight to Commit Unions to Refereeing System BAL HARBOUR, Fla. Iff) — Walter Reuther today pledged an all-fight to commit the AFL-CIO to a tough new system for handling labor's internal wars and to a mul-timillion-dollar organizing drive.. Seymour Lake Cemetery. Mn Clelland will li* in atata at ,C. P. Sher Ortonvllle. i Funeral Home. REYPP. DEC. 10. INI. VICTOR --------------------------‘ ¥B53“5r i*j* TUyrf" B#6r father of Mre. John R. Edwirds/ and Robert Reyff; Aleo survived by I grandchildren. Puneral arrance-menu are pending from the Sparka-Orlffln Puneral Home where Mr. Reyff —Hu - H after 3 p.m. Tue f will Ue h i of Mre. ier: dear brother of Mre. Veil Crabtree, Mra. Ardlth Greta"i y Puneral Home when r broth ttan. Funeral aervlce will BMP Wednesday. Dec. 13 at 1 p.m. from the Rlchardton-Blrd Puneral Home. Walled Lake with Pastor Lawrence Kinne officiating. Interment in Woodland. Cemetery. Jackson. Mr. aims will Ut In itate at the Rlchardeon-Blrd Fu-neral Home, Walled Lake. age 03; dear mother chlldrao^ and 4 ^reet^rsndchlL KttJuTSfOES ARE DEBTS* WORRYING YOU? LABORATORY ASSISTANT II Involving collection, preparation ' testing of specimens related o sewage trreftuent. OhieiS.d lsborato: Oct out Of dost e can afford: -employer no -Stretcher you. ga snelwo nndfrt_ t"*1?*'* Write or phono fdr tree booklet. MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS e horses. (Jutland's Riding B Pontiac's oldest and largest budg- dORH HANCdat liD’k ' Has opening for 3 career life Insurance agente, 33-40. In Oakland County area. A 3-year training prdfram wlth salary plus bonus. Lifeline lead service ntiBoMo. Fuir fringe beneflti. can or mall resume to Jones and Humphrey Agency. 300 First National Bldg.. Detroit 30, Michigan. 1%. wo -Michigan Assoclstlo Credit Counselors -American Aerostation of Credit C------- 1-2730 ARE YOU WORRIED OVER | PARKINO ATTENDANTS DAY f work. lOIL,BEl -hAVO Michigan I driver's license. Apply 3 to ~4 i. at W Wayne, DEBTS? CONSOLIDATE ALL YOUR BILLS ■ AND LET US GIVE VOU ONE PLACE TO PAT BUDGET SERVICE 10 W, HURON PE 4-0001 and. . Jt% t.ffoauj SINGLE MIDDLEAQED MAN FOR SALES’ Man aged 36-44 experienced in contacting business and professional men Salaried. MIDWEST EMPLOYMENT. 40* Pontiac State Bank Bldg PE6A337, SALES ssa 3-3707. PIANO LESSONS. LeBARON-Northern High----- Mwwthitakr ..Q. PE 4-4430. 11 ^OOUOE^d gree and nn— fn sales. Salary plus _____ ____ furnished Midwest Employment. 406 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. PE 4-0337.______;________. CHRISTMAS WORKSHOP. FREE instructions. Flower making and floral arrangements. Walter W. Morris Nursery, 4001 Rochester rmy, wi nwonwr of Loos Lake. Troy. >ld. Party and shower it* for lent Open Mon. ___ from i tUI 4.Tues., Wed. and Thitrs. from noon tlu —. Open ebb. ; Materlsls TT STOP!! FINISH -—HIGH SCHOOL No classes. High awarded,. Study al home In spare for most jbhs. 01.10 hi CARPENTER WORK. NEW AND repair^small Jobs a specialty. Watt Wanted Female 12 awn IRONINGS, white shirts sporiaHT. OR 34004. wanted^ymniot. oa a bUsh- BriMtegSarvIca lappBaa 13 BAKED ENAMEL ALUMINUM STORM WINDOWS AND DOORS PE FREE Estimates __________________________OH 3-4000. fiAN AND TRUCK BY HOUR, J-- '------------1 PE 8-3503. ' ' BAROAIN. FACTORY SECONDS. Steel overhead garaye doors, *" sites, StoreaU ProJ - ‘ ■ Co. 625- - BULLDOZING YOU NO FAMILY MAN NEEDS Work! PE 341 Work Wanted Famalo 12 zESUrt^ 3 WOMEN DESIRE WALL WARE lng. A-l wo*-. PE 4-1131. A-l IRONINO, REAfibNABLE. Ft 4-3031, art for Mrs. Williams._ EXPERIENCED WHITE WOMAN wants daywork, own tranaporta- excavatIonS" Septic 8yet»me — FREE ESTIMATES OH AI— -“• - ‘— R. B. Munro W, Huren. L W1R- JTouse moyino. , eomppea, pe 4-000 ^ J Business Service IS Reply Pontiac Press Boa i. ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE RE-pilrlQff and rewinding. 31$ S-Pike. Phonb FE 4-3081........ I This iry uuo memueraniu, i prlvUeies, MA 0-1400. Dex-A-Dlet tablets. 04 cants, a RIDE8, KITCHEN AVAIL- MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS 703 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. PE 8-0456 ‘ontlac's oldest and largest budg-et assistance company._ Year around income Secure feature ' ____Group Insurance program No samples or 'Inventory Earnings $100 plus per W( If YOU ARE 36-55. MARRIED AND HAVE A CAR ------E >»* PLA8TERIHO-EREE' I Of lltran EM >4143 ] PLASTERINO—IMMEDIATE JH»V ' ICE. 1. A. DAVIS. OR 4-1S34. iiAIXRES: COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON FLAWS OB 3-7757 Donelson-Johns SCHUTT PUNEHALS PROM I200. • — *— PE 3-34 1 Auburn Ave Voorhees-Siple ward At Maple. Bg'ham CURB GIRLS | Apply ft Big Boy DrlV*-In, Dixie Highway., AUTO INSURANCE FOR ANYONE ©on Nkholie,. F E . $r7J57 •WK» BUN‘T!HE~TUEL Otti' — i Quality coal. FE 4-1518. DETROIT CITY ICE AND PURL Fuel Oil And Heir Stylists mlngham. e and Pierce. Blr- CITY OF PONTIAC _______LIBRARY AIDE __ SALARY $4,19^^5,075 At least 3 years Uberal arte college. An egcellent opportunity to BoliMlBI . sub-prolesslonsl library assignment! in a congenial at-" motpbere. Appljj personnel olflce. Auto Insurance Denied OR BEEN CANCELLED DO YOU NEED FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY YVISH "’TBS Insurance Mench R t f y L T S HOUSEKEEPEE.— ' EMPLOY ED couple, 3 girls 6-7. live In. pvt. room. TV, i’k days. «0. Write si PoaUao Prose, PUNERAL HOME FE 3-0370 — Established Over 38 Tssre — Cemetery Lets 4-A r I P U L LOT. PERRY Pare Cemetery.- call after ■ PE 4-4433. ----- MIDDLEAUED OR OLDER W.OM- TOP SALARY TO THE RIGHT party. Must stay In 3 nights a week, General housework and references. MI S4I30. ______ _____ ALTERING AND repairing Collins Cleaners. 650 Woodward St.. Rochester. OL ANY OIRL OR WOMAN NEEDINO 2-6123. After 5 p.m. ewer call PE 3-6734._______ DAINTY MAID SURPLUS. The industrial unions headed by Reuther made it clear at a caucus Sunday night that unless the AFL-CIO convention adopts their pro- SPENCE. DEC. 10. 10fl. DAMON C.. 704 Parkwood. age 38; beloved husband of Murllne .Spence; DANCE LESSONS VI Katanga So -On SS their bat- tling with rival building trades. The United States has backed the use of U.N. force to restore order In Katanga with an Blillft o* military supplies. The British government has objected to the use of force, and France has no . .sympathy tor the entire U.N. operation In the Congo. There was no indication that differences over Katanga had been ironed out. Conference officials limited themselves to the statement that the three powers agreed on the broad aims for the Congo. They include the consolidation of the entire country under a stable government to prevent! a slide into civil war and anarchy. Reuther heads the Auto Work „ ers Union and the AFL-CIO industrial union department. He told reporters he will lead a convention drive lor these objectives; The .building trades called a meeting of their own today to decide their course. It was strongly Indicated In advance they will veto the Industrial un-lofi's proposals. _________ir brother l_ i Shrum, Mrs. Jemei i Lewis end Willie R. * orranctfntnit iri il DoneUon-John» THOMPSON. 1 . $1.00 All the Old—All the New Open 9 a.m. 19 p.m. Music Center compromise disputes settlement plan—This would let outside umpires decide which of two feuding unions is right over such matters as membership raiding, work rights, boycotting products made by members of a rival union, and name-calling. OPPOSES CENSURE A strong civil rights program—! i .* .7 iuM.5 Reuther said he disagreed with The reintegration of the^break- , member| ^ lhe AFVciO away Katanga province ^^WuUve CJOtmctl^In the state-1 central Congolese government lent iggued monthi ago| should be done byconciliation, I cengurtngy A philip Randolph, Ne-the three Allies agreed. W president of the Brotherhood The foreign ministers’ confer- 0f Sleeping Car Porters. Randolph ence will emerge into the broader jg seeikng to get the censure state-annual review of the North At- ment withdrawn. , I a b 11 e - Treaty Organisation -----------—y—------ Rusk will leave Pins Saturday! and rfctura~homeHjy way of Nte-j drid. He is expected to see] Generalissimo Franco. , Death Notice 4NDERSON. DEC. 10. Radio Listeners See Spots as Talk Turns to Leopards i Mrs. OersMIi DAYTON. Ohio (AP)—A Dayton mfhliifer, to illustrate a point in a radio sermon Sunday, told of an imaginary train wreck with caplng leopards. Police said the effect was smaller but similar to that produced by Orson Welles in his “invasion from Mars’’ broadcast of the 1230s. Apparently several hundred Daytonlans heard only that part of the broadcast 'referring to the train wreck. Excited telephone callers began bombarding police, neevspapers. sheriff’s deputies, , and radio-TV stations with questions. WHERE ARE THEY? Police Sgt. U -l. Pragh said one caller asked: "Where are those tigers- that broke loose?’’ He arid It won’t imaginary hpn tea Bey. Harvey Hahn told aril only tear, not IS. ifil _.... _____ I_____ Mre. Myrtle White end Mre. Psuline Otewsrt: Also survived by IS srsndchil- „ l ftreet-srandi______ Aerel errensemrnte are pending from the Puolty. Puneret Home vh.r. Mr. Andenon will lie In > niter 6 P.m. today. BROWN, DSC. ». 1M1, ORREL Sherman Funerel Home, ra. exe io. awr „. ■ ________ Cerrle Decker Cberlei Dewey: Aleo survived —1 teeth ter, i greet-I. Funerel eervlce Tueedey. Dee. f* ‘ grendehfldi Is Flint Memertei Perk. Mr. ; deer mother -ohrbeck. Mrt. _— Mre, Merle Lendry. r Thomei Pontlee Prexi. work experience e WANTED: MIDDLEAOED WpMAN. Building ModarnizatiaR o live in with BLOOD DONORS WANTED: 5 AND T. 0 e.m. to 3:10 p.m. Tuee. end Wed. Del. Blood Service. 18 s A-l ADDITIONS, FALL-OUT 8HEL-tere. House RMsInx, Oereges, C~~ 1 crete Work. Notlung Down. , PAUL ORAVE8 CONTRACTING .1X8 PINE ROOF BOARDS 5c UK. ft. , prop Eetlmetee OR 4-1511 1X3 FURRINO STRIPS 3e lln. It. COMPLETE MODERNIZATION »« Kljn Pry Bl *« "" 1 eervlce. Resldenliel end commer- *’*-* 3‘, TD beee. .............■ . IVe — 3 It! el. inch - 40% Of! Waterford Lumber W Airpoiyitaf** C*rl7UR 3-77W - Plywood $50000 etoek et ell time* ALL THICKNESSE8 AND SPECIk Oct our prices before you buy i sintrj on car load « Plywood Distributor 376 N Ceee_______ FE 3-043* ; 1 Moving Service HOUSE MOVTNO equipped. FE 4-6450. L. A. YOUNQ Musicol Instructions ! H A U L l N O AND RUBBISH. .031 toed, enytlmo. FE 4-0304. i LIGHT HAULJNO - YARD CLEAN, I up. OR 3-2643. OR 3-0174^ ] LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING RubbLh. (ill dirt, gredlng end grevel end front end loedlng. FE MEIER FE 6-3465 We Teach BUY — SELL RENT—REPAIR ALL MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS 9-9 Every Day 31 Years in, Pontiac Music Center 368 N. SAGINAW 4 Floors of Music To Serve You Better Fg 4-4700 Trucks to Refit Va-Too Pickup* fU-Ton ________ TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Tmke—8enl-Trlilera Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 730 a. .WOODWARD PE 4-0441 PE 4-1443, __Open Doily IndlUdlns Sundey Upholstering I Used TV TVs, RADIOS. HI-FIe, STEREOS Johnson Radio & TV Wolton ___PE 0-4803 REBUILT, USED TVs Guaranteed OBEL TV SERVICE Ellxebelh Leke Rd. PE 4-4046 ■ * " — 0.00 PM1. Forty Stem 4 In HU keeping, 5 Uie^hepplneee, MJ» hen end Meier Thomei nlfflev; 1 Auo Jurvivea by IS frendemL dren end 4 gfeet-.ereneehtldren. Perlth Roury will be Wednex-devTDee. li e — Melvin a. Oeh— Funerel eervlce —_ Thunder. Dec. 14 et 10 j 5t. Vincent flHRIflr Church, interment * " ----ry wUI II 1 et It s.m. from MOeul Cetholie _______ _____—At to Mt. Hope. - ____i««y. u l —— i which f'U never pert; .. juth Qtod hee you In Hie keeping I gihl neve you in my been. - Sedly mixed by Mother^ $5,900-$6,800 Cereer poettlon wir — ty Friend of thi court Srertt end _ in domeetlc reletloni, ftnerel ne-ture aI work deilree men «f patience and even temperment. Benefit* include paid vacation and elck leave, bpePlMImnumi. social •T WjWRy end retlrerneollUmu. Interested eppiicenu should submit resume to pehsonel OFFICE. OAKLAND COUNTY OFFICE BLDOTJL LAFAYETTE sT. i, pontiao, iaoa7>i »iwL —Join’s Party Store 030 BALDWIN AVBNUB Oped ‘til 3 e.m.—7 dare ~ — Moat Taring ACCOUNTING ORAD. Must be iumbI (rad._________ credited school with 33 accounting bourt. Training program. ON THESE PAOE8I New* of Whet People Her-to SELL, RpHT or WANT 1 BUY, Order your Ad on U EXPERT PUNO TUNINO By Master Craftsmen IMMEDIATE SERVICE ‘ S Day. Low Cost Plan . . . Cancel When Results Art Obtained . . . It'r ------—- Way. Junt DI VViegand Music ( Phone PEderel 3-41 TUNINO AND REPAIRING Oscar Schmidt PE 2-52 REPAIRIHO. a ____A Packet f’U 11 of Money When You Soil Tour Burplue Items Through Went Ad* — Dlsl FE 3-1111 Now I f?AH. PLACE' A itek tA-WOMEN Pontiac area to supply euetomeri with nation ally advertised household products. For appointment. MECHANICAL ENGINEER ........... ..... OPEN j Recent grad. _ from accredited,.. T U XIW O AND hour service, ell___ by iectohr. trained-m CALBI MUSIC THOMAS UPHOLSTERING 107 NORTH PERRY ST. FE 5-8888 tej^8174 Cooley Lake 1 Wall Claanars BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Welle end windows. Rees. Setls-feetton gnetenteod. yi S-4031, ACME QUAUTY PAINTS INC. _ Complete selection In etodt 3 N. Beglnew PE 3-3500 REACH CASH CUSTOMERS through Classified Ads, Call FE 2-8I8L and ask for Want Ada MECHANICAL ENOINEER lORFASTACTlON High School Students ' Mato 10 to 17 to work after'school from 4 tg 1. Her^irygur uptwr- EVELYN EDWARDS R. Smifh. Ro Vocstlonsl Counclllng Servlet 341k East Heron Suite 4 TELEPHONE PE 4-0504 U$T Y08R BUSJHESS FE 2 B 1 8 H m m 7 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, Ml THIRTY-SEVEN fgaum8g»ssa^^ ■i^rtriipi^ t T«m» U Pm*atafcIaB 8 Tonoriwfl 17 Iot CAnliFuL MOVUVO. LOW rate,. PL *3»t, 638-3518. It L.TbT8fa.*"" rRooxi anp batm. grm. week n MW. ’ “ jlioba-private bAVM* tl«, torn 307 BUU gt BOOMS AND BATH. PRIVATE •HUM, Tel-Huron Atm. F* MWT. DerS A >cn. Hahlty. ROOM upper APARTMENT In %iT* furnished, prlVata “entranee "and Mb, adult*. Be* after 6:10. 16 f. Thompson, PE 44364, A LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR. Papering. PR MM3. INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR painting. Wall washing. Free estl- EaPEr^ ' 14* Aaietei,_ Die*o, >7>.50. Beweli, -J225S21! Wanted CkiMrsii ts Board 21 CHILD CARE IN LICENSED home. OR 34417. DAT CaKe OR POLL TIME. LL tented home Ut, Orton. MT 1 CALL BUI ALL. MORE CASH £1; CASH FOR FURNITURE AND A* i«ah.wwr ■ WaOttd to Boat Ihm tWf ftswtm ~M WIDOW WOULD LIKE TO SHARE . Ml S. Martha!!, Land Contract See ut before joe deal. Warren ■tout. Realter. 77 N. Saginaw. PE HI" . ALL CASH OX OR FHA EQUITIES If you are leaving Mate or need assay Micro ca" ”■ K* ■ "r^l wFckkroi TIM W Maple MA BUILDER- NEEDS 1 OR MORE. Taeaot LoW Cliy of Pontiac — ASP area. Fart Action by buyer. CALL. PE t-ym. U to • ^ B^sls. BUILDING CO, Middleton. Broker, PE VlML PE *-»H3. WANTED: 7 TO 10 THOUSAND •Sdore feet on* floor for war#-home end ofneea. Reply Pontiac Prete Boa T. , proiwrty, farm*, acreaie. We b and tell land contracts. Call i PONTIAC REALTY TT Baldwin__________PE Mm A^rfuntl hniiii 37 I BEDROOM DELUXE KITCHEN-olio apartment. Newly decorated, first floor parttagat door, (ta heat. PI paiotrl MW, 1-ROOM EFFICIENCY Alberta Apartments we n. Paddock_______HL l-ROOM KITCHENETTE FBI- 1) 4-ROOM AND 111 1-ROOM. 63 Norton. MA 5-3436. 1 OR | AbULTiTTmUTlES Rear parkins. 180 Robin wood. PR 1ST FLOOR, WARM D1TOKATEU i/tViiV*mo *nd np n *'UT*' 1- AND WtOOM APARTMENTS, furnished or unfUre. Clean. Uttll-tiea. Hast. Rent MT and op. Close to church, stores and downtoi Apply at 101 Auburn. Adults p 1 ROOMS. RATH. «WLY DECO- 6-ROOM, CLEAN UPPER. M Nor- jj&J 3 ROOMS. PRIVATE EICnukCB, clean. worn and eoay for eoupla. to Poplar. PE 1 ROOMS GAB H 1 ROOMS in FLOOR. WANT wtlcomo. SI B. Howard. PE S ROOMS,- PRIVATE and bath. 107H N. I- S-ROOli, NSWLY DECORATED Evnm% 3 ROOMS. UTTLITISS PAID. 030 i ROOMS, PATH. PRIVATE EN trance Adulta only. West lid* gr5a7ay SLATERS S3 N, PARKE ST. Days PE 4-3MS fight* PE 4413T 3 ROOM DUPLEX. INFANT'WBL- 3 ROOMS AND BATH. CLEAN. adults only. PB MISS. J ROOM asm ™ I AND 4 BOOM APAB+kWT ________I ALL FBTVATTL. . week WhmaMor* St PE e 1 RM„ PVT. BATH. BN Infant welonme. PB 4-1 ROOMS, PRIVATE BATE AND •ntrana*. utilities, adufta. PE _ i crt w oral. Call after 4 p m. Bf 3-444 NEAT, 3 BEfttMlf f E Al around , cottage. modem. El NICE I ROOM HOME. NICELY furnished. NOOr AToodale High iira!-ifattH. Pi a Bt. First floor. PE LAKE FRONT HOME A3 BEDROOM. CLOSE IN — OEATTIl CLfcAN 4 LARGE ROOMS AND both. Near Oaneral Hoepttal. Pro. fer adnlte. PE 3-40*0. GLOBE TO DOWNTOWN. 3 ROOMS sod both. Children welcama. Only "IS V6» SttlOLE OR COUPLE, CLEAN AMP LARGE NICE 3 AND BATH. NEAR airport Adults only. OR 3-1043. Partly furnished i bed------out. Phone *03-3410. 6ATXRPORD. 1 hath, eta month. 1-BEDROOM LAROE NEW APART-neat, utilities, (tors, refits., laun- dry facilities included. SSI----------- Bhaddlck. PB 6-4707. 3 BEDROOM. GROUND FLOOR, privet* entrance, near Blue Sky, 3*3 MO. PE 44836. 3 R06m CLEAN UPPER. U1 W WUson. PE ASTS3.________________ 3 LAROE ROOMS AND BATH, End floor. Close f *■■ *■----hjgt---------------- e BEDROOM INCOME FOR RENT with optkm to buy. Ij th, tnonti Call after l p m. Or 1-3144. e ro6ms and bath east side PE MW 4 AND 3 ROOMS. PRIVATE EN-trance and bath. Call PE 44763 t ROOMS, FIRST FLOOR, 1 BED-rooms, bath, newly decorated, new sas furnace. Near Crofoot school. References required. PB ASMS____________________ 5-ROOM TERRACE Only SSI a ■■*. Vary clean to responsible couple only. Child wet---- B*«r»etlon rm, OR 3-Oeil. S ROOM TERRACE, AJkS REA?. West Side, garage. PE 4-MS4 f ROOMS. “ ” utilities US. extra NIC! ■* rood location. C RMS., 3 BEDRMS. 5 LOE. RMS . ] BEDRMS.. STEAM boot, near Sean. STS mo. An* nett Inc Realtors. M X. Huron. ROOMS AND BATH. HEAT FUR. niched. STS. State Bt. SSA3444. ROOM TERRACE ON 8? EDITH, near Auburn Avenue, MS per mouth. Inquire US S. Edith, or call PB 44378.__;_____ AVAILABLE NOW. ALL NVWLT decorated 4-room spt. 3 large walk ln closets TIM M nfi shower Aulomatle so* heat i ‘hot water. Good laundry fat tlaa. On busline and convent & aSC c“ __ churches. All clean and Well decorated Good neighbors. Children permitted. Pin* laundry facilities. |4I per men to, K. O. Hempstead, Rentier. 183 E. Huron. PE 4-S3S4. after t P.m. FT AS43S Brick Flat — Heated AflraaSlva four family., building 3006 Auburn Avs , Auburn Hta. Front k rear private entrances Mvlne room, l bedroom, kltebonott* llnetls. both A garage. References roonlrod.:- ISO per-month, phono. PE ATlol or ni l IMS. COLORED. 4 ROOMS A CLEAN, 4. BOOMS AND BATH, Stove, refrigerator, boat furnished. COLORED > Rooms. Private bath and private •ntraneo cloee to dowislown ttae, SIS par weekl Call atoree. ch’urehoa. MA AlSdS. DELIGHTFUL APARTMENT WEST Huron Bt Newly decor*tod near Tvl-Huron shopping center. 1 spacious bedrooma no ehOdron or fstTuBW^Tfli rent to quiet ref 1 nod nooM*. STS. FI H43S FOR COLORED I ROOM LOWER m TMpeoi bs— 3-0T14. After LAKE VISTA APTS. sin coourr lake rd. 3 rooms and bath, stove, iwfrir-•rotor and oil uuHttu furnished. PI 4-TSOf. ORCHARD COURT APARTMENTS fiODERN S ROOMS AND S*m stove and refrigerator furnished. m b month, utllltloe pm »P-pmtaatalg Im 111 to Hi * vtfy WH spts. tbb, | Included. garan.—Ml* •ncea. See Mil CRapn._ . Ant. E Plil Dttlrgsb .1.1 - I ROOMS AND B emerit, gas heat, r*-eens. PE ATSSS. IROOM, COST, CLEAN. TTfarnsr ^'awsr^^ ■S' oil farasoo. neer soboi Woodhull Lake, OB 3-0013. ELISABETH LAK1FRONT—BKAi tlfully furnished t bedroom kon To rooponslW people. (W mont, Siwoo^TrUHo^®MaSu*!7' " ‘ 344 W.** h-l“ IEDROOM HON 1 MT 3-3401. IN VILLAGE OF WATERFORD wimi eiMr^e, Mf RENTOPTIOk Onto 3 bedroom and den win rent with sptfw to buy. Only mo. Cafl or 3-4S0I after tTw RENT OR BELL - ltfEAT 1-BED-,1T<.- •outh-Ik {I'Ll aattt. ihtodt66M Heated Joragr Mhi privileges, OA 8-305T,_ BAM WARWICK BAS IN STLVAN Ink* 3 kedroom frame, fireplace In large living room, full basement with recreation room, out-•tandlng dream kitchen with Weet-Inghoose built-Ins, glass sun-porch lurisra fMm P6hSIBtE PAiW, WATERFORD— 1-BEDROOM TRI- Level. aim beat, j—*■- ---- Vacant |1«, Avallab 30 only. VE S-T100. BEDROOks AND OARAOE, OAS heat, JjS jjjr^^month. ‘ * heat. Youngstown kitchen, lsbed floor*, full basement. -Fenced yard, carport, aluminum storms and screens. PB< 4-SOU. 1-BEDROOM. BRAND -2-BEDROOM BRlOt Duplex, full bnaement, gas heat, decorated. SU per month, i NICHOLIE - HARGER 53J4 W. Huron FE 5-8183 1 BEDROOM OM OENE8 DR- NO email children, references, me. PE SPT80 or PE 4-0014. Shlrll BLEEPINO ROOM. IS SCHOOL ST. PE 1-3TS0 2-BEDROOM DUPLEX Anlomstlo boat — Pull besement WILL DECORATE $75 PER MONTH FE 4-7833 144 East Bird. H. at Talonola 3 ROOMS AND BATH. INQUIRE 4-S BEDROOM HOUSES NEWLY decorated *n Williams St. at Huron. PE Aim. 3-BEDROOM BATH AND H. NEW- S-ROOM AND BATH. INQUIRE II » X M STORE. M-M AT WIL-llams Late Rd. OR 3-13S1, 31XTO ON DUDE HIQHWAT Drayton. Heat, water, and el tog included st 1100 a mi________ More space available or sell eh«j>. Phono OR 3-STS4 m OR CORNER OP MONTCALM AND "ore 10x60. full basement, r. beet, perking lot tur- country near Lake, fenced yard, Clarkston area. Immediate poe-aeeaton, 466 per month. MA S4MT. ROOMS. BATH AND A HALF, gas heat, buy the furniture. 10 Liberty. PEM3TS. option to buy, by itfuoT 4-BEDROOM’ stevo —-Cloeo _____ . BATHS, refrigerator furnished. ____ _ .owntown on tors* lot. Oarage, list per month. Rolf* H. i. 'Realtor. PE 3-T0U 40'1160' Mein Line . ll'lM* Shop ......... Wx45' Shop . ........ ROOMS AND BATH. OAS PUR-nsee~TM Blgbam. Pontiac. OR 3-330*. ____________ S ROOMS. OAS HEAT, ALLMOD-ern. 133 N Perry PB S-1S14. -BEDROOM, 3 EDNA ST. C<----- ner Telesraph-Bdna. PB i-sni. 422 EMERSON :e - Featherstonc im*. Oil ecreene. fenced. Rent option to Charles Burnt Baal Bata RENT Or Will Sell 3 Bedrooms Carpeted living Room and Hafl Large Walk-in Closets Formica Cabinets Family-Sized Kitchen ALSO Full Basement Models Oak Floors Vanity in Bath 3 Bedrooms 965 Carlisle Ott Bennett Rd_, s block* wet t of Baldwin near Plaber Body. We have almost new hornet I various part* of this ores. OPEN DAILY II TO SPOTL1TE BLDG CO. BIRMINGHAM. S ROOMS, GAS hast, garage, kitchen. Ur with alcove for stove and re era tor. Large sunny living i and dining room. Basement. trahy located. Ml per mi______ Referenoee required. Phones PE g-3U3 or MI 4fSL 4 ROOMS AND BATH, . month. OR 3-6764. OR 3-1 ■1%. * 3UPLEX, WEST BIDE, I R06MB anda bath, basoment. gany. — NrWlY DECORATED 7 ROOM tat furnace and WM*r heater. Ml per mo. laqMro at II Kent IN DRAYTON PLAINS OH Airport Rd. 3 bedroom, a month, i child woleomt. _ garage. OR 3-0407, nCMHI. IDEAL FOB---------- bom*. downtOWE JS gMBI parking. PB 4-7*41. Lease with Option to Bm 3-bedroom ranch, elean ond fc good condition, gos but, (M me. Pleyd lent. Realtor, pj Ml*, — TysW sbl. 4015 "Eetirt. off Bashabaw Rd. roomi. bath and baU. gli Mill Street. OR Dlxie . Vaa Harmon Lake front. gM s month. RenUI option If degbroA. 3 bedroom bun-'' galow. DORRIS * SO 3531 Dixie Hwy. basement. Reasonable. At. NA T-3M1. NICE 4 ROOMS. OAS tdtAi. Ft b option to buy. * Whittier. OR mice. , , OFF CA*g-ELIZA$ETH f V L L NiejkiM|M but, children wei- By Kate Osann N SLEEPING II N. Cast. Cooking prlrlleget. px EARLY AMERICAN TRI-LEVEL COLONIAL BI-LEVEL MODERN EFFICIENT RANCH All hove 3 bedroom*. IM hatha, baaemwte,- all are unique In their price range. Please let us show thee* to you. Terms arranged. Nelson Bldg. Co. OR Oaklend Aire. PB 4-11 ' Immediate Possession NEW 3 AMD 3-BEDROOM HOME OFF BALDWIN. SI.M0 WITH LOW DOWN PAYMENT.' NO MORTOAOH OOfT. _ J. C- HAYDEN, Realtor M X. Walton _____PK 3-0441 LOW DOWN PAYMENT ISO monthly buys this 3-bedroom home, new well, sewer, near schools and bus. In Keago Xar- CABB LAKE WATERFRONT 4-bedroom, large living room, country kitchen, hot water beat, aluminum aiding, fllJM, 1350 Mrs. Elwood. Realtor IM-llie XCBLLIMT TELEGRAPH yrantogi. 1,000 -- | —Iltloned - Ideal VwiHPli Johnson Realty. PE 43113. MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER The following excellent location* . *150 oo •460 00 .1300.00 latlocery .............Toy Store Ut* Shop .........Floor Covering lortat For lease Information call_______ local representative Oray Ora- —- JSt —RENT OR LEA8E— 30-xgr STORE with 3T front o Weit Huron Street Parking area gas heat Inqulrb gt 1071 Wei Huron FE 4-H67 SMALL STORE MllP ... ______ Baldwin Avo. Inquire at Hollar-hack Auto Parts. Phone PE 6-1061. tdBt Offict Spoc* 47 FOR RENT. 4040 DIE MM-" ,330 BdUARX FEET. PULL DAT-light on 3 sides, to th* Hunt* I Bird. Bldg., IM N. Hunter Bftrd., Birmingham. (Also, available got LieVSt NEARLY NEW PANELED OFFICES, " block from downtown Pon- ____Will partition to *ult teimnt. Lights, beat, parkln^^^turnlsned. Light*, he After 10 a OFFICES AVAILABLE Ideal for Doctor 573 Sq. Ft. AMPLE PUSH PARKING’ SUFVATOR JANITOR SERVICE ALIO FOR OCCUPANCY JAN. 16 . 360 SQ. FT. 800 S. Adams Bldg. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-1330 W*bP.. . '—’ • IMIrBLhaMngMNlN • - iZ-U “Want to bear something great,- Father? Davy recites ‘The Village Blacksmith’ while Arnold plays the bongos!” 49 REAL BAROAIN, 130,M0 INCLUD. tog lot at builder's cost Bi-level ■lodgj liisf louon wrt ifiloii apahe, 4'bedrooms. 3Vk baths, large jpaneled family room, 314 Silver iak* Rd. 3333 Huntington Park Dr. 333-0031. Blnbrooke Building Co. VERT CLEAN, 0-room, bath, basement, garage, large lot. 613,600 Excellent terms. g. F, Holmes, Inc. FE 5-3063 NO DOWN PAYMENT Lovely 3-bed room home. Located on targe let. Waterford Twp. Recently decorated. Only 064 per * — —ne - year-i “— ove you to Com* see l IATERPORD REALTY, C DOWN PAYMENT Clarkston area. 3 bedroom touch. I* hath*, oarage. Close to schools and ibnpping. All newly you>to!*HJL ^aohtrom real! tor. 4000, Highland ^Rd^ ,(M-ta), Need Different Home If-your bom* la paid for or nearly so and vou can't get your monr-out we'll help you trade yOUr su urban home either up or dow W. H. BASS, Realtor SPECIALIZING IN TRADES ’ — 3-7310 OFF BALDWIN 4 bedroom. Reasonable down payment. During day, call at ta Forest. Eves, phene Detroit 133- PONTIAC TOWNSHIP MSUO BY owner. 3-bedroom home, gas best, walHo-wall carpeting, breeaeway. 3-car garage, quick poeecgelon. 3633 Pontiac Road. 336-7606 ROCHESTER - 3-FAMILY 6000 down. Weaver, Broker, OL 1-0143. ROCHESTER. 4-BEDROOM HOME. 00,900. Weaver. Broker, OL 1-0143. SYLVAN LAKE 1H etory tram*. 0. rm., bi and basement, oat beat, 3 e garage 016,000. Ph, *03-3030, URBAN RENEWAL PEOPLE 38 Palrerovr ‘ responsible ROCHESTER I! I 3*00 to Move It 3 bedroom, full basem Heat iMiRttl Property 47-A 533 NORTH IAOINAW, NEAR gfaata Warehouse Larf« 3-*tory house. Good condition Lot 70x177 Rent 1100 month. Phone Holly ROOMS. 3 BATHS FOR 1 PAMI-ta or 3 apartments, g rooms and, bath with 3 room* and bath 3 rent. UN and boat privileges. Oas heat, newly decorated. Wata-out basement Owner. 003-35*3. sacrifice. cash. OR 4-0007 after g. 3-BEDROOM HOUSE. OOM North Sid* location, to dm ja^ment an toad contract. PE K5qmi and bath, SSflDf 007 Kenilworth. ’3~--'ROOMS, FULL BASEMENT. Extra tat^JJI tarmi., 404 Oagfun, 3-BEDROOl V Mi. Now ^jaomont. Landaeaped. aterma. New 314-car garage^Bykm^ _ 34378. 3134 Lake Road, Weet Bloontflel. lY OWNint. 1-BEDROOM BRICK bom* with full basement and u, rag*, beach prtvu*t*« Oas u 1081 Yaarbeta Rd. PE 38731. RAND NEW. BEAUTIFUL TWO bedroom ranch bams, one garaa* attached, natural i Tf» 11 to * p Mon, thru Fn. 3 to I p.m. * J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 12116, attached garai BUILD RED BARN The Orton Star" $11,000 New 3 ---------------- basement, aluminum sldl Sq. R. Can be seen thl end only. Happy buyer noviue In. We can make you happy. tool Nelson Bldg. Ca. OR 3-8161. i week- Best Offer Takes It Must be sold ta settle court or der. Ranch type, I large room: plus hraeseway and double ga rage, one-acre, 9 blocks frot new shopping center and aeheah Drayton Pains are*. OB 3-67M. Save $$$ on This City North, FHA Terms Low dawn payment take* tbit I roam bom* with large utility roam.' Scar garage, beautifully landscaped lot. — <«--»*-- OTHER FINE FEATURES TOO I Two-Family Income Gty North Duptai featuring I 4-room apartment* with bathe, separate tor-naoee and—water beaten. Oak flood, plastered walls. Aluminum —screens. The House of Eease 3 Bedrooms - Pace Brick - Oas Heat - Free Carpeting — Attached garage. The Oxford Squire -3-Bedroom Tri-Level F»ce Brick - Oas Hflt Select Oak Floors ----^he-Expandable——* 4 Bedrooms - Full Basement Oaa Heat—Birch Cabinets Large Walk-in Closets Alban’s Country Cousin Lake Orton ana Oxford. OPEN 11 g.m. la I p.m. Daily la HipMii JA ‘ Birmiiigltam Bargain 65.im. With 64M dawn. Les. fer cash to mortgage. - VACANT. Owner transferred, g bedrooms, besement, garage, fenced tat. HtlTER EAST BEVERLY. 3 bedro tJreena, only 610.6*0 an 1 NORTH BIDE, 3 bedroom. I POUR BEDROOMS, 10 HOUSE SHOPPING? NEAR ORION.’4'r6onS»rt~Wto*r NEAR ORION. 4 rooms, 3 acres. WATERFORD. 3-bedroom brick and garage, 616.HM. CLARKSTON. Nl home With baeeme clarkston RD. brick, new, Sll OOt. AUBURN HEIGHTS.^ g rooms and Varag*. on 3 .sciws. 613.360. 3- AND 3-BEDROOM HOMES, .jttog apse*, nice living and dining L, oarpated. Ree. room to basement, gas heat, gas-toator. Mg 3-car garage. Near bus and stare*. AU tar 613.8M. JOHN K. IRWIN Contemporary Ranch Beautifully located oo two-thirds acre tat to eiebulv* residential area an Oreen Lake. Deluxe kitchen. Unusual dining area with most attractive built-in features. 3 nice slaed bedrooms. Hug* brick wall flraptae* ta th* living room Tilth Its studio celling. Has 1*0 t at the lake. Den- PARTRIDGE - ASSOCIATES. REALTOR 105q W. Huron___rE 4-33 KAMPSEN Garkston Rancher Save 63.ooo.oo Seven rooms, two baths, utility room and carport, large ___wttoov«r|3.0Mr worth ef 1 Near Isaac Crary, School Three-bedroom brick with ceramic til* bath, full basement 79x100’ tot, pavod street, sawei and water. Only 6371*0 81 down Sple Homos KENT «Erwems**fiuHbath plus i nart baths. One 'bedim, on mat floor. 4 an second flodr lea would be good Investment-r rental untt. 65.400 total pftaa,| WEST SUBURBAN—ImmoO seiostan to this attractive home. 3 oomplete ’bathe. Fireplace to llv. rm Pull bent., oil beat. Nearly 1 acre of good leva! land. *11,500 wlth ga.OOO down. CUSTOM BUILT BRICK—V yen ora looking far a bi-level ranch With all the extra*. **• thl*. 3 bedrm* . Sled bath. Uv. rm. with fireplace. 'Sliding glace doors to petto. Ootn- &v.. gas heat. All wall ednsti Everything h< i prlv. gli,M Sols Hsossi *ssffs?4ra«aiep ff£wsria,“ WILL BUILD ■ WfLS’arsgs . Have 3-bedroom, lb bath. Ml basement modal la •aw. Dan.-McDonaId LICENSED BTO-DER * HURON GARbfe^g"" Most attractive Fbedroom bungalow In Hnran oardana. near new Hudson'* Oept. Star* and (bopping cantor. Natural brick fireplace to apacloua living roan, separate dining raoca. hand* utility room. Only 6 GAYLORD t 66.600 total price. < HURON OARDENS. gla-room home! ' —‘th full besement. Oaa heat. Ga- j Kb Gaslnator. 57.660 total price. I THREE-BEDROOM HOME. Beautl-j ful fireplace to 10-ft. living room. BullMn bookcases Fenced yard workshop to garble wall to wall I carpeting to 2 bedrooms. Center island to well planed kitchen. Total prte* 611.700 with only 61.-000 dqm payment. See this home today. OaH MY 3-3631. I ACREAOEt 'Cali MY 3-3031. Lake] ONLY 2 LEFT) “0” Down s No Mortgage Costs MODEL OPEN 851 5TIRLING. i Perry-Madlson area) TtUtVSV RANCH HOMl’ ^ $29.00 * CAN MOVE YOU IN YOU CAN'T AFFORD' TO RENT WHEN YOU iawrenceW. Gaylord _* E. Pika St. PE 04003 Broadway and Pitot MY 3-3*31 PRICED TO SELL Colonial bom* on Sylvan Shores Drive with good belch. Attractively decorated, hand-finished woodwork, three bedrooma. large sun porch, fireplace, gee beat. 3-car garage, drape*, and wall-to-wall aarpeta, make this a home worth, seeing. -633.000. Shown by appointment. SASHABAW ------ built kitchen, tiled__ g»* beat, lta car garage on large lot, *6.400 on terms. Terrific savings for cash to present martgag*. FAMILY HOME This beautiful home Is truly a family bom* with Its tour bedrooms. 30*30 living room. 30x30 activity mom. 16x17 |Umm ||d Over two seres at land with fruit trees and evergreens glvei — the children to play safely. 500. Win take trade. UCAN BUY ff THfTJrrr of ■ • PONTIAC $49.70 A MONTH Excluding Taxes and Inauranea 3 Large Bedrooms AU Carpeting Included -—MANY OTHER DELUXE FEATURES CHOICE LOCATIONS IN ALL PARTS OP NORTH PONTIAC CITY MODEL AT 108N.EastBlvd. 1 Black N. of Pike on Bast Bird. Open Daily, Stm. 12 -9 *,' Model Phone FE 5-3676 a.R.S. BUILD1NO CO. Hagstrom Immediate Possession Nice roomy, comfortable, modern, 3 bedroom home ta excellent condition. Overlooking 3 lakes Oarage. Fenced yard. Fruit trees Only 66.360. . W.B; HAOSTROM. REALTOR--------1 M00 Highland Rd. , (M-69) Pontiac OR 4-0366 ___________OR 3.0338 PRICED AT ONLY I7.M0 — 6300 I. Good two-bedroom 'U£S Lake. ______ „ __ __ Easy term*. Call Mra. McCarthy. EM 34413,- 8ELL OR TRADE — One O Val-U-Way MILLER SALiTDR TRADE tor ear or hou . to Pontiac, 3-bedroom ranch located to Clarkston on n black top street, dose to schools. 1V4 baths, filed with built-in vanities. Large tat 1*0x104. 10.3*0, tarns. BRICK t-PAMILY. A good sound investment. 4 rooms Ana both up completely furnished, end rented at 111 woekly. 4 extra targe rms. and bath down, owner occupied. Well ta wall carpeting, drape* Included. Extra Vi bath In basement. 3-car garage. 111,116. res- William Miller Realtor FE 2-0263 176 W. Huron . Open 6 to 6 $50 REDECORATED 3 bedroom home off Baldwin, basement, oak floors, oil furnace. 4 years old, only 6376. require^ mediate possession. Only ’ 1*60 down and 6M a month. R. J. (Dick) VALUET Realtor FE 4-3531 346 OAKLAND AVENUE MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE “We Trade —We Build’ ARRO CLARKL- 6660 OR LESS DOWN. 63,660 — TWO NEW HOMES. A 3-bed room and a 3-bedroom, lots 30x130 feet. 1400 DOWN. 611.600 FHA TERMS — | rooms and beta down, 1-bad-room up, 3’bedrooms, oak floors, plastered walls, basement, gas heat, ntaa corner tat. 3-ear gang*. . 0400 DOWN. 613.600 PHA TERMS. Dealrabl* 1-floor brick borne overlooking Crescent Lake, large tat. 114-car garage, ell beat. CLARK REAL ESTATE TO BUT. JELL AND TRADE 3101 W. Huron. Open 0 to I O'NEIL MULTIPLE LISTING ERVICE TOUR LIGHTED CHRISTMAS TREE will look lovely to tola prize winning home on Watkins Lake with 71 ft. of water frontage. 3-bedroom—Srtck - contemporary-Studio living room with floor to celling plotur* windows, 3 brisk fireplaces, CM in living room, to* other to ree. roam to walk-out basement. Attached 3-car garage. PriOMt St 833.800. MR. RIGHT can haadl* with about $3,000 dn. lodgiwoR tone with ggrpotoS living room and natural burning log flraptae*. Cosy dining roam, modern kitchen and tavelfpaneled family room or possibly 3 bedrooms. Basement, 3-c«r garage. 1% acne. Priced at 310.000. CHRISTMAS IS CO MING. If toe "Spirit of Christmas" means one thing more than any ether k means bom* life. Certainly a wall located (West of town) brick ranch with attached 34ar garage could mean aaeurity for many years to some. Wonderful, filed fgagjtaM; Han iMtot. AMiaattvily decorated throughout, beautiful new custom draperies. Carpeting, water softener. This one la really complete, right down ta Marian Blue sodded lawn and professional plantings. Full wise 617,100, 64.400 dawn and to* per n " 4t4 per cent Interest, tool taxes and Insurance. . Numerous other i. Priced gt only SELL OR TRADE — Near WIN boyhood. This-repossessed brick bungalow -with 3 large bedrooms can b* bought far below actual cost*. Two complete filed baths. Pull slse dtolng room. Large kitchen . with tault-ta even and rang*. Fun basement. ATTACHED two-ear garage, oak floors. Ptastered -walls. Gall - ut. for complete details. Located In Lovely COLONIAL HILLS. . WHEN BETTER VALUES — ere to be had we’ll have them. We Invite you to Inspect the above listing and are sure that you'U agree that they are all real values. LIST Wlffl US — We buy, sell and trad*. 33 year* experience. Open 8-6. Multiple Listing Service. L. H. BROWN. Baaing- 50* Elisabeth Lake Read Ph FE 4-3504 or FE 34818 TRADE inhuman ana. Ht inSorm* Lapeer Road . Zoned Commercial im boar Walk-la base...-..- iwil&B Vt¥Xh rOR SMALL SMITH WIDEMAN 413 W Jtoron street OPEN EVES. EE 4*4526 Don’t Pan Thii Bay Owner selling at. value. 3-bedream 'O' SCHUETT Phone FE 8-0458 G.l.'s No Money Down WALTON HEIOHTa BUB. g-rona ranch. 3 'll dream, large UvEg roam, madam kitchen tad lift! 6 pin* 114-ear garag CHARMINO 3-BEDROOM BUNGALOW Beautiful Urtog roam with natural burning flreptaii. Ptoitofid; .wfo,. »<* utility RAY JO’NEIL, Realtor Ml g. TOilfBN---opto 84 p.m FE 3.7183 FE 3-16R ------ features. Otxij I BEDROOM HOME - Newly dec- tag room, full basement,** rec! | room, knotty ptae healed porch. ! spacious lot an paved road. Bet- ] floors, plastered walla, I polntment. MODELS OPEN DAILY 4-7 3 AND 4 BEDROOMS. ALL - BRICE 3-CAR OARAOE. WE BUILD TOUR FLANS OR OURS. CALL FOR FURTHER INFORMATION. ted McCullough. Realtor ■ - 0163 Cais-Ellxabeth Road OPEN*-* SUNDAY 11-6 PHONE 682-2211 BATEMAN MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE LAKE FRONT Built to sail for afar 630.000. Our price IlMoa for faatsale. Thto almost MW lak afreet home with 3 ear attached garage la •Busted to* vary distinctive area « finer homes and offer* you to* vorybaet to lakefront Uvtog. W vunw alone la ovar $7,000 S»U»fy yourself as to tt'e value, ft* >* new: tbet If jroe Uke it. RUT TT for under 81,6*8 dawn. Immediate possession. SPECIAL oven, fireplace, earpsilnj _ mremed rear parch. Newly deco- SStTrS-MT* pl“ e#rtl VACANT 3 bedroom brick with basement »od gas. heat. Just g years I ’ * tepstraets^Md dKe'to’rtionpin* center. Just 616,**a with {1.400 teW DOWN Is almost unbeflovabl* for thb J bedroom Dutch Colonial, dost to aeboei and eity bus. Oat Real - and ctbar features make* ton terrific. Jurt *0.000. 6408 dowi ” and 6*0 per month. Big dleeoun tor Saab. There Is na catch M this; jurt leak for yourself. REALTOR ' FE 44S28 FE 8-7161 large kitchen with dining space. Eitra big MmktoSf plastered walla, oak floors, full basement 0017 WM. T (TOM) REAGAN NICHOLIE *66 PER MONTH Faye everything on tots fine two-bedroom home. Automatte , heat. Decorattd to and out. renting | D<|» 7t Ksot TraBsr jpwr POODLES AKC. TINY TOTS AN] POODLES AKC, TUIY TOTS AND miniature,. Slivers, black,, whites ZLS&rfib *»S*5£ wtrm ■ _ __.. .jr Christ- —■ »M«. W1 4th. PE 2 4025. POMERANIAN. Tlfii tots Track POODLE PUPPIES. PICE TOURS now- lor Christmas. AU color,. Pomeranian pupptei- Call PE REASON- -. RABBITS FOR Si______ _________ able tor Christmas, pg 4-4151. WELL BRED PUPPIES, for ^od h^me ,^lhq ul re UN Tay- A-l USED TIRES, StNTVP. WE buy. ball. Alio whitewalls. SUM ,Tjr« Sal*,. MS g. gagtsaw st. PE 4-4561 or PE HIM STANDARD BRAND NEW TIRES. Trad* to on Oauql Safety SINS. ED WILLIAMS B. Saginaw at Ra*ban» B TIRSS.iJ i DI,count-U.S. AUCTION SALKS EVERT PRIDAY .... .7:30 p.*. EVERT SATURDAT ..... 7:» p.m. EVERY SUNDAY ...3:0* p.m. (OHEf V DATS WPt 6-6 BUT—MIX—RETAIL DAILY ---------B EVERT AUCTION ES&SSfc Im Open Ew DIXIE HIOHWA 'AT CHOICE BEEF. QUARTER. BALP, oa silts , BAT AND STRAW, 1 BALE 6,000 bales. TO Scott Lake Road, ■PE 4-0330. OB I-01M. wanted: Timothy or TnI5^ thy and slaver mixed in quanttttoa of MO bale* or mere. EM PINT 100 ROOSTERS, 5& EACH HT LOTS of 10 or more. 1 to 8 dap old fresh OSES. 3621 Gregory Rd., FE 4-0804 Form Prsdm^ APPLES FOR SALE, 1125 ~ ~ ~ ' a^Mpg Basil Tin North ot j£I M _____I _______rd, gr«e--------- apiary. Many holiday specialties. OAKLAND COUNTY MARKET. MM Pontiac Lake Rd. PE 2-9078. even Saturday a.m. throughout the year. Free prlaei ea. wk. McCULLOCH CRAIN SAWS. NEW and need.- W. P. Miller. Oarden and Lawn Equipment. 15t! s. Woodward, (North of lt Mtle Rd.) Blrmlnoham. Phone MIdwett SPECIAL! t USED ALUS-CHALMERS TRACTOR MODEL O WITH PLOW AND CULTIVATOR t ---SNOW BLADE IN A-l CGI nON.. PRICED AT 1895. CREDIT TERMS KING BROS. FE MIN • FE Aim PONTIAC ROAD AT OFOTKE TRACTOR. MANURE SPREADER - and l__________ Darlsburg. Mich GLEN VIEW TRAILER FARE Under New Management Convenient to all .OH plants— M8UO—modem pleasant country HUT — JwasooaWo rata*, me Rd. Rd off u-tt. hrsifs tm IQS CRANKSHAFT ORINDINO IN THE ear. Cylinder, rebored. Suck Me-chine shop. 83 Hood. Phone PE Mstsr Scooters der»on Sale, A service, PE 8-83W VOLKSWAGENS! • VW sedan, eharp .tt WARD-McELROY, INC. NEW MM W. Huron USED OBAMM. • OR HOI Bicycles 25a nsimui., SCHWINN BICYCLES, NEW 01—. 81.88 per week, B. F. Ooodrlch, III N Perry. FE 3-0181. Boots-Accessories Captain jroui __ _____________ Outboard Skee-Craft Runabouts, Crullers Owens Ptberglas, Oator Trailer, Bvlnrude, Mercury. Volvn Motor Inboard . . Owens Sea-eklfu. All Model! 35 Ft. Sleepa 4 equipped. 84.888 Easy Terms—*0 Mo,.—We Trade Winter Inside storage free We reflnlih—repair—haul., Matureft Marine Sates ------ ' S. Blvd,--------- CHRISTMAS GIFTS Ice skate,, hockey sticks, skit, sleds, toboggans, guns, barbell, football, baseball, archery, flat Ing, hunting goods,- ' ~ CRUISE-OUT BOAT BALES I E. WbltOb FES-4402 ally 8:3A8 Cloaed ~ 89 liyi- TO 29-FTTU 1961 CREES. V ■ Note on Display at “Large Discount,” ONE OP OAKLAND COUNTY'S LARGEST SELECTION OP NEW AND USED TRAILERS IN THIS AREA! Holly Marine & Coach 18810 Holly Rd. BANK RATES _________Open Sunday, GASOW Boat,. Marine e Big discount, on INI merchant DAWSON'S BALES at TIPSICO LAKE “HARD TO FIND BUT EASY TO DEAL WITH’ (M-5*I to W. Highland. RUM Hickory Ridge Rd. to Item Rd. Left and follow aignai Phone Maine 8-8118 SEA RAY BOATS JOHNSON MOTORS Winter storage, Inside and On Complete Repair Service PINTER'S 1370 N, Opdyke Rd. FE 4-< ANDERSON •' AUTO INSURANCE $37*FQR 6MONTHS Complete Oovarage on The Average Car ter Good Driver*, Cancelled or Refused I urr^vnA- *fflSS3g| AUTO INSURANCE FOR ANYONE ’It ISETTA PB 0-0045 IMPORT-SPORT CAR SERVICE Olds SUme Front Service 6110 Orchard^Lk.^ Cor. Staple Triumph Dealership ■ALES PARTS ^'■RSVini (available tor all foreign cars) stop in and look over THE TR-4 TR-3, and HERALD Superior Auto. Sales ----AKLAND AVK. — --------- New ond Used Cars hardtop with powc *-DOOR ——_ ,------------- clean. PE wail IMS BUICK HARDTOP. Sinughout, 'If. 88.ll'w< ^3^ l-DOOR « t, radio, b_. and. OR 3-7047. SAFETY-TESTED USED CARS Suburban-Olds steering, I owner, full price iLM|7XLOYD MOTORS. Lin-cotn-Mercury-Comet-Meteor, 888 S. Saginaw. PE 80131. . iiSs BUICK SUPER f-obOR Hardtop, banter, power steering and Brakes. BORO down and as-sum, payment, or 83.50 per week. LLOYD MOTORS. Uncoln-Mer-cury-Meteor. 383 S. Saginaw. PB FISCHER BUICK USED BUICKS . 13 MONTHS WARRANTY 784 S. Woodward B'bl MI 4-6332 ACROSS FROM QREENPIELD'g ll' CADILLAC. 43 AQUA 4-DOOR. 4-w,y seat. AllFewer. 8,Ml CADILLAC COUFE, 1855, BY OWN-M-kept both mechanically y wise, aUractlve two-ten* body wl* >. 4*50 ] come, Full pries ti.tn._____ MtNOHAM RAMBLER. 44* S. Woodward AY*., Birmingham. MI f-3000. CADILLAC. 1ML LIKE NEW. excellent condition. Low mileage. Mum. ___ 55 CADILLAC HARDTOP COUFE. S3 ‘Series, with all power. Only 8488 UL 8-1186.____ ’51 CAblLLAC HARDTOP. BEST over Dsyments ! OAKLAND MARINE ‘KXCHANOl 381 0-41°l; 1454 CHEVROLET 8-DOOR. STAND. INBOARD - OUTBOARD 1 ——r.—1—•—— SALESSER VICE-STORAGE LIGHTWEIGHT L Huron. (Plan t, — shift, excellent 'condition throughout, toko over payment* of ILM weekly to pay off —’ ----------Jrnfe:: MARMADUKE By Anderson i Leeming ’58 METROPOLITAN Btdlq. hotter white tires. Mil* "R & C RAMBLER SUPER MARKET EM 3-4155 1148 Commerce Rd. A- TORS, Lincoln-Mercury-Comet-Meteor. 8M B. Saginaw. FE 4 FORD 4-DOOR, MML #IUi trade I Crake MOTORS, FE 8-6B28; (00 MERCTO*’ MONTlCREI. *• door. V-4 automatic traneiulaelon. Power steering and brakes, midnight blue Mb matching Inttrior trim. This Is a beauty. Pun price 0L080. BOB BORST, INC. LINCOLN MERCURY COMET 8M HUNTER BLVD. BHAM. There go the nuts I bought lor Christmas! New osd Used Con •85 "CHEVY OR 3-2173 855 T-BIRD CONVERTIBLE. Beautiful alpine white, automatic transmission. full power, excellent inside and out. Full price *lBdB BORST, INC. MI 6-4534 B’HAM. . ZERO DOWN and full price ol S, Llncoln-Meieor ° aw. FE 2- 1955 CHEVROLET BEL-AIR 8-•— Hardtop. VI engine with 1 .. .......ifl-he*t>ij H-prtm--' ...__________ S, Line irtury-Comet-Meteor, 232 iy Speci: HARDTOP _____ __i EXCELLE... CONDITION THROUGHOUT! .. 0414 Surplus Motors W 6. Saginaw St. FE 4-4034 1180 DO DOE WAOON. PERFECT cond. Radio, beater, standard traaa.. >1.475, OI. 1JB44 tag. radta and beater. ._JMI Two tone rnie. TVlU need rocker panel* and muffler before long. Otherwise no rust, excellent run----- condition. Ph, FE 5-0755. ’57 FORD FAIRLANE 2 DOOR Hardtop, ISIS. _ ’58 BUICK SPECIAL Very dean 1878. . ’67 OLDS Sharp 1148. BOB HART MOTORS 040 Orchard Lake at Voorheta— OPEN TONIGHT______FE 4-1080 1054 FORD. CU8TOM. ’57 FORD V-4 FAIRLANE CLUB Coupe. 4385. NO monty down ’ SUPERIOR *”■J AUTO, 550 Oakiar HEATER AND WHITEWAL-TIRES ABSOLUTELY NO MONET DOWN. Assume payment* of 816.75 per mo. Call CredU Mgr , Mr. Park* at Ml 4-7800. Harold Turner, Ford. 1080 FORD OALAXIE CONVERTI- ■ (Hi 1-1000. FALL SPECIAL 1M0 Ford custom 300 4-door. V-4, radio ana heater, whit* sidewalls I year warranty. Priced to tell. TOM BOHR, INC. “ S. MAIN UH 1960 THUNDERBIRD Full power, must (*11. Private owner. M.4M, MA4-**M. •4* FORD V-* NICE—400 price 8105. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER. 600 S. Woodward ay*.. Birmingham, MI 6-3M6. 1*64 FORD VI STICK. MJOOR 8E-dan. New battery, 0135. 134 Ty- D HARDTOP AUTOMAT- Whlrh w* feel will b* of great Interest and Importance. Now tor a— “*-i possible r rad : 'loor plan eWijment lent used monut nomn at Ifi duced price. Stop out toon! You Trill bo glad you did. Bob Hutchinson Mobile Home Sales, Inc. ' 4301 Dixie Hwy. ----OR 3-1303 OPEN 7DAYS A WEEK —...CLEARANCE-SALE . TUI December list el unheard of low prieoel EXAMPLE: -1952 45x10- all i completely furnished. New Mi 83.495. CLOSEOUT SALE All 19S1 Johnson Outboard Mol_ Owen’s Marine Supplies 304 Orchard Lake Arc. FE 3-003* Wanted Car*—Truck* ■$25 MORE For that high grade used ca us. before you tell. H. J. Welt. 4540 Dixie Highway. Phone OR 3-1385. _______________ ELLSWORTH 6c BEATTIE Mbw tad U«ed Cart___________ *87 FORD PAIRLANB ’*600’’ 3-DOOR HARDTOP will. . . auto. transnilselon, radio, beater 1955 FORD CUSTOM 2-DOOR, RA-—dlo and heatari overdrive, pood transportation, ZERO down-ar-* 44.00 a week. LLOYD MOTOR Lincoln . Mercury • Comet Meteor, 838 8. Saginaw. F -asm. - ‘ „ 7018 Cooley Lake Rd. Stuart Con-way. Deafer. 181 FORD CUSTOM 2-DOOR. V8 engine with eutomatlc, rad’-and heater, extra nice and on - 187 down with payments of 17. a week. LLOYD MOTORS. LI 4 Can IM Now and Usod Cars 1858 CATi hardtop. Very ciean. V, *1780. May b* seen bi a.fn.-3 p.m. 330 Oneida, J58 MERCURY PARKLANE 8 door hardtop. Power steering, brakes, radio and heater. One owner. Low mileage. 11,295. R & C RAMBLER. -SUPER-MARKET potwac- wrashuiF • ' Hydra.. I* Seneca. FE 8-1903 1951 PONTIAC 3-DOOR HARDTOP, radio and heater, hydrwehellr tranemlsslon, whitewall Hr#*, mt-LLOYD^SoiXmS1 iJfncoln-Mer-cury-Comet-Meteor. 338 8. Sag-lnaw, FB 2-9131. IM 3-4! 4145 Commerce B 1941 MERCURY MONTEREY door Hardtop, radio and haater, power brakes • steering . seats • windows, whltewaU tlres, tuU price 63,M8. LLOYD MOTORS, Lincoln • Mercury - Comet • Meteor 333 8, Saginaw St. FE 3-0131. 1959 MERCURY PARKLANE 1-door Hardtop.' radio and heater, automatic transmission, power brakes • steering - windows, full price $1595. LLOYD MOTORS, Lincoln-Mercury-Comet Meteor, 232 8. Saginaw, FE 8-0191. 1960 MERCURY 2 DOOR HARD-top. automatic tranemlsslon, radio and heater, power brakes and steering. 1 owner and fuU price Of 11.895. LLOYD MOTORS. Lincoln-Mere ury-Comet-Meteor. 232 8. Saginaw, FE 1951 PONTIAC CATAUNA COUl^. Radio, beater, power brake*. U57 OLDS 4-DOOR HYDRAMATIC, RADIO. HEA17BH POWER “STEERING and WHITEWALLS ABSOLUTELY NO M O NgY DOWN-. Asssume payments of 427.85 per mo. call Credit Kir.. Mr. Parks at MI 4-7500, Harold Turner. Ford. > OLDS FOR SALE. >Mercui7'-Comtt^etw, ’mS! 1959 OPEL 2-DOOR. RADIO Saginaw, FB 2-9131. ----- • ----- - —’ - , FE eater, I owner. FuU price, 0378- BOB BORST. INC LINCOLN MERCURY COMET maker, 895 down and assume payments of 88 a week. LLOYD MOTORS. Lincoln • Mercury-Comet-Meteor, 232 8. Saginaw 1960 ONLY $895 Plymouth 4-door V8, good co TOM BOHR, INC. 1959 FORD CUSTOM 4 DOOR. 6 cylinder with automatic trans- . million, radio and beater, ll owner and real nice. Pull price 98 4 IMS.-LLOYD MOTORS, Lincoln-Mercury-Comet-Meteor, 232 8. Saginaw. FE 80131. ONE OWNER. 1955 FORD COUN- steering, power brakes and white- JOHN McAUUFFE FORD «30 Oakland Arc.______FE 8-4101 1954 FORD 4-DOOR STATION on. etandard shift, *** WILSON PONTIAC - CADILLAC - 1350 N. Woodward BIRIflNOHAM__MI 4-1930 ’ over payments of il.M weekly to pay oft balance due ot 1197 NO CASH NEEDED. Kins Autc Sales. 8878 W. Huron. FEMQM. ■01 FORD T-BIRD HARDTOP Wttb radio, beater. 934*8 __PPP_______tOUFIE FORL *30 Oakland Ays* FE V4161 1187 FORD HARDTOP. AUTOMAT- LUTELY NO MONEY _ _ Assume payments et 834.7s i me. call Credit Mgr.. Mr. Pai 4-7500. Herold Turner, Po ________06. Herold .. FORD S-obOR. STICK excellent condition, take___ -------- -------I weekly to Today's Special 11' 1959 OLDS DOOR. Metallic green with Ite top. Full. power Including idows and seats. Hydramatlc, PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE. 3-—ar, hard*— * ! 4-0370. 106 BUY YOUR NEW OLDSMQBILE * HOUGHTEN tc SON - - - • Rochester OL 1-070I aOLWaJ” T*ALINA dKuXB 3-D< 1M1 PONTIAC STATION WAGON, .i — Very clean. Loaded U, 82.678. Call U r 6 pm i» PONTIAC 470-4 DOOR SEDAN, power brakes, hydramatlc. good mechanical condition, 1 wheels and 1 good tires, PE 3-0003, 105 Baldwin. MO VENTURA HARDTOP. LIKE breok Altar., 4. . irlng and 20,000 n power. 0».4(io.MA' 5-15*4 r FE 8-4111. eat. 8470, —Special--,. I960 PONTIAC Catalina 4-door with radio and --heater Hydramatlc—transmission Power brakee and power steering. Whitewall tire* and $2295 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Ml. Clemens AND Corner Cass and Pike FE 37954 Key imI Vm4 Uts W 1*60 PONTIAC. LIKE aMEW, HT-dramatic, radio, *1.401. FE MB' after 4. 8«20 N. F«rfF. •10 RENAULT BHABF . , ■, SUPERIOR AUTO. 5M OAKLAND ’62 I .ARK 2-DO0R Heater, defroster, tax. llcensa. DELIVERED - - MAZUREK 8TUDEBAKER SALES g. Bled, at Sa^naw ■00 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE . 4-door hardtop, let blacb, with auto, radio, heater, power steering and brakes! Tinted glass, this Is a beauty! On* owner, 52.295 HAUPT PONTIAC SALES. CLARKSTON. one mile north off U.S. l® on M15. open Mon, Tuet, Thun, till * p.m. MA 8-8804. I960 RAMBLER. AMERICAN SU-per 4-door radio and heater. 6 cylinder with automatic, whitewall Urea, full price *1.1*8,, 0100 down and as low as 44.50 per month. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER. 666 S. Woodward Ave . Birmingham, MI 4-3*00. 1959 RAMBLER CROSS COUNTRY --------I m OUT OP WORK—MU8T SELL. 1957 Plymouth, very good cond. New. aulo^tranemltsion^siKl^radlo-heal- 0 cyllndt. ------- -----, transmission, radio and WHHWwhitewall tires A sharp Birmingham trade. Pull price 11.1*5. BIRMINGHAM RAM- 57 PLYMOUTH HTOP NICE. 1499. SUPERIOR AUTO 550 OAKLAND 1957 PLYMOUTH CLUB COUPE, RADIO, HEATER AND AUTO-TEATtC—TRANSMISSION^—ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments of $22. meets of 91-05 weekly to pay off balance due of $147. King Auto Skies. 115 S. Saginaw. 1960 STUDEBAKER Automatic. V-l, power steering, brakes. Radio, neater, 2 tone paint. Low mileage, *1.190. R & C RAMBLER — SUPER MARKET. KM 3-4158 S145 Commerce Rd. WILL ACCEPT Boats. Motors. Guns, Echo oft a steam whistle. Sunshine from n beanery, Exhaust Fumes fro- — EM 3-4155 FOR THAT “TOP DOLLAR" ON 8HARP LATE MODEL CARS - Ayerills ’58 CHEVY V-8 Automatic, radio, heater, 3 door. *R & C RAMBLER SUPER MARKET 5 Commerce Rd. .. CHEVROLET 310 3-DOOR, cylinder with automatic, ft price of-850*. LLOYD MOTOR • Lincoln . Mercury - Comet Meteor. 338 S. Saginaw. F 2-9131 CHEVY BEL AIR 3-DOOR, *• -.Under, Powergllde, FE MIT8. 1950 CHEVROLET AUTOMATIC transmleslon.- -radio and heater, whitewall tires. 3 and 4-doori, from 4295. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER. *64 8. Woodward *»•-. Birmingham, Ml 6-3900. ____ 151 CHEVROLET V8. FOWfi-gllds. Exe, cond. Ot 1-107*. 3020 DIXIE HWY. FE 2-9979 * HI DOLLAR. JUNK FE A SAM ALLEN B SON INC. JUNK UAH ft AND TRlfCKfl, JBKE (Wing. OR 3-2938. _______ CHEVROLET 4-DOOR 8TA- IS’ AND TION WAOON. RADIO HEATER ■rtnlngs-l AND WHITEWALL TIRES. AB- --- SOLUTKLY NO MONEY DOWN, BDIINO - t Assume payments of 417.04 per H.1. vv S-HH2 ■aasMlsA-7500. Harnid Turner. Ford b Hutrb-Home sales, toe. y, Drayton Flalns, 10x40 ONE BEDROOM. DELUXE fixtures, new condition, will sac* rifles 43,100. Ph, 334-31*0. EXPERT MOBILE HOME REPAIR service, free estimator A1*" parts and aoei lnton Mobile 4301 Dixie Hr OR 8-1202. _________ FAIRLANE 32 FOOT. LABOB LIV- tt HUNTING TRAILER —Sales and Rentals — Trail Blaxer - Apache camoei Reese and Draw-tlte Hitches Opening tor Bow and Regular ama i«Si Oxford TraUgr JACOBSON TRAILER SALES Good buys on display models. Service and parts. Winter prices op rental*. 5685 Williams Lake, 'jDragtoh'JHgtai, OXFORD Trailer Sales 11* Th1»g it* -if- *" tTl” and glgga.. Price* and term* to T^MoMNrihff, • stae*. 1*'- Used' 8aft?*AJl slae**rj’-iv'wme Heed can be purchased en rental For A Reklly Good Buy . See'' Usi'i'odiyl THE TIME1 FOR US TO PICK 1—your trailer. -ABy-WE HAVE BUYER CALL U« SHORTS M Oopd used I 10FER CBN’ NOW I 1 AND ULI fwArriNoi _ fcgf DOWN, Gap trar-e| traUers. Wolverine TOM eatap-. 8W8 w. DOUGil Finance* got you In a plnchf ,ct us help you—Top Dollar Pali tor elean>a859. ‘60 and ‘tl Model Glenn’s Motor Sales 53 W. Huron St, , PE 4-727 atca rE. pi CARS AND TRUCKS,-WRECKS OR JUNKERS. ROYAL AUTO PARTS 19M CHEYIE, V-4 BEL-AIR JIE-& standard irahs., 8Af|uS, ____H. Riggins, Dealer. 1*57 CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. RADIO. HEATER ANP WHITE-WALL TIRES ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY down. Asaume mm ments of. 632.16 per mo. —,, Credit Mgr . Mr. Parks at MI 4-7500. Harold Turner, Ford. TOP DOLLAR FOR JUNK CARS and trucks, 682-2059. WANTED JUNK—CARS A N~lX trucks. UL 8-5940. p. moan cm. M&M Hew wd llml Tntdnr 1*4* OMC ir STAKE BED OOOD tlr»». Oetf reasonable. FE HW. ’18 % TON CHEVROLET STAKE! >88 CHEVROLET PICKUP . ’ST CHEVROLET PANEL Marvel Motors 351 OAKLAND AVE. FB 8-4079 ' / 55 OMC WRECKER. CRAKE MO- F170. 4 WHEE1 l"pfilW,li! A-l condition. OA 84M a ______________Harold ___________ 56 CHEV1E STATION WAOON. 363. ■ 7888, Stuart Osoway. dealer.^^m l CHEVY. 4-DOOR. STICK 960 CHEVROLET IMPALA 3 -door. 0-cylinder engine. Fewer-glide. Power eteortag, radio, heater, whlto exterior — turquoise Interior. Whitewall Urea.; Lea* than 8.000 miles. *1,160. Call Russ, FE 3-8111, Extension 88 til 8 p.m. After * call Ltaeoln 1-1418. 1*61 CHEVY 0. 8-DOOR HARDTOP, Hydramatto, whitewalls, radio, hrater. Sharp, >7M. EM 8-30T ’60 Chevy Suburban 6 Radio, healer, straight stick 1495 FE 5-2629, 53 K. Ann Arbor ’60 CORVAIR •Radio, beater. 4 door, M80 Bei tlful green ftlltih, M,18*. R & C RAMBLER i Commerce Rd. Eddie Nicholas Motors 181 OAKLAND AVE. __toirN ■ WE BUY VE. PE 4 ,RS 'to-’M^SoDELf iCTION OP OARSl^ We Affns8*FinahJgS 81 Down I SPECIAL “r ?c"raMbler SUPER MARKET EM 3-4188 8140 Commerce 1. CHIVROLXT. V-6. STANDARD CHEVY V-*. PARKWOOD . loor wagon. 31,008 mi Pepper elth white ton. Eg*, send. PB DObt’f ^AY YES TO ANY DEAtT't TJNTIL you oibcic Rammler -. Dallas DOOOE . CHRYSLER . IlfHMMt. 8IMCA-DODOE TRUCKS OL Ml” N. MAIN Birmingham, MI (• 1959 FORD 4-DOOR STATION $ pyUnrlpy ^rlth auto- transmission, radio and , whitewall Urea, 1 owner jl_price of tJt3e5^LL01 rt-Meteor, 233 8. Saginaw, ’65 FORD CONVERTIBLE. LIKE .I I 1*63 FORD VS^ OVERDRIVE. $75. 1956 FORD CUSTOM 4-DOOR. VI engine with- automatic, power brake* and power steering, radio and heater. No rust on this sham ear, *28 down and 13.20 a month. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER. *0* S. Woodward. Blr-mlngham, MI 0-3000. Meteor, 888 8. i860 FORD FAIRLANE *00 3-DOOR. Radio and heater, sparkling white finish, Ford-0-lta8H traaa-mission, atr-condltloning, *180 down and payments of 858.15 a month. LLOYD MOTORS. 838 Saginaw. Llncoln-Mercury-sct-Mr*— ”” *“«• , FE 3-9131. ______________ . _ ENGINE, radio... and heater, overdrive, ZERO down, assume payments of 53.75 a week. LLOYD MOTORS. Lincoln - Mercury • Comet - Me---- 232 ■■ Begin* w —--------- REPOSSESSED CARS No Cash Needed Just take over payments t payment due Jan. 10, 1882 1*50 PONTIAC price 1*1 *11.0* Mo. 1153 CHEVROLET Pull price 8188 111 Mo. 1858 FORD Full price *14* 88 *8 Mo. 1884 PLYMOUTH Full priee 1188-- 97.24 Mo. till FORD WAOON Full price *699 83* Mo. 1*54 FORD Full price 114* 07.08 Mo. LAKESIDE MOTORS 313 W. Montealm ____330-7181 ’60 FORD T-BIRD With radio, heater, auto, misstep, gower steertng^ Whitewalls l°"*' PLYMOUTH 4-DOOR. 30.000 , ■« actual miles. 0 cylinder with n;i| cn '■ FC standard transmission, full „ ’ ‘ --*TD MOTORS, HU ry • Comet • Saginaw, FE — BRAND NEW — ’61 FORD GALAX IE ’ Hardtop, V0, With Crusa- ) BONNEVILLE CONVERTI- le. can after 4. UL 1-3212._ r^ONTIAC. 4-DOOR, POWER. 1*87 PONTIAC SUPER CHIEF STA-ragon, looks sharp, lots of adlo. heater, hydramatlc, steering, whitewalls. 4900. 1-03*3 between 7 and BEATTIE — Your Ford dealer since 1930 AT STOPLIGHT IN WATERFORD OR 3-1291 1954 LINCOLN. PREMIERE Door hardtop, ebony black 1_ whlto top, full power. Come in and drive this on* today. Full pries $795. BOB BORST, INC. LINCOLN MERCURY COMET 3*0 HUNTER BLVD. B HAM. MI 0-453* 1961 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, 03.050. EM 3-8*53 after 6:30. PUBLIC ; NOTICE lie received i (two) Oakland Coun- money down. 1957 Pontiac 2-door. straight sUek. $490 full price, no money down. W* also Wlll nav* 8 1861 Pontlacs, Oakland County Sheriff cars priced for WMBiM*, ' Lucky Auto Sales 183 B. Saelnaw — * PORD. VI 2-DOOR. VERY “t throughout. FE 3-7543, H. '53 FORD, WAGON A good running, VI, country gqutr*. Radio, boater, standard Shift. Winterised, ready to go. il2t' Chevy, I door. Don’t took so good, runt real good. 8165. PEOPLE'S AUTO SALES 88 Oakland__________FTC 5-235’. 18*0 PALOON 4-DOOR WAGON — Real sharp, siklWW, w-'-win*, auto, transmtaslon. e uolse and whlto. OR 8-8744 STOP! LOOK! S^M IM* Pootlae Starchlef 4-dr. II.M 184* Pentlae Catalina H-top *1.71 I960 Pontiac station wagon *1.71 UMBtaek 8-dr. hardtop :... IM 1885 Pontiac 2-dr. hardtop .... iM III* Chevy Impale 4-doeg ... JW 1940 PonUao 4-door H-top ... *3.0*9 19*4 Pontlae atatlon Wagon ...If* lMt Bullk 9-door sedan ... $1.8 195* Pontiac BenneriSo Wgn. 92 31 1947 Chevy Bel Air Convt. *1.0 in I*** p 1H5 » SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK ROCHESTER OL 1*8133 a •61 LARK. 2 DOOR. DEMO. 1.500 miles._Auto, trans. Radio and neatej, etc. New car warranty, save, trade. Masurek Lark baits, 8. Blvd. at Woodward. __ 1081 LINCOLN PREMIERE. 3 door, hardtop, fun power, beau-tiful tan and white with match-- to* Interter trim.->1*11 price — BOB BORST, INC LINCOLN MERCURY COMET 288 HUNTER BLVD. BOUONOHAM MI 6-4538 1955 MERCURY 2-DOOR, RADIO end beater, automatic transmission., no money down, payments, of only 84.08 a week. LLOYD MOTORS. Llncoln-M ereury-Com -rt-Meteor, 238 I. Saginaw, FE 2-9131. 1958 MERCURY, MONTEREY, door, VS, auto transmission, .. dio. beatsr. Sharp. Full, pries ’‘'BOB BORST, INC. LINCOLN MERCURY COMET 280 HUNTER BLVD. BHAM. ■___________MI 5-4838 __________ ' RUSS JOHNSON o Oet Bargains Like These I960 Ford 2-dr. Six, auto. . ..81. till Pontiac Mr. SUek .........if, 1888 Chevy Mr. stick, sharp SI, list Cadillac 4-dr. hardtop *8.1*0 18*0 Rambler atatlon wagon . 11*6 -881* lence. Rambler 33 S. Main St. IM151 CLARKSTON OPEN EVES. MA 5-5»61 KESSLER'S Inside Used Car Lot All Inside — All Sharp io N. WashingC 1960 AMERICAN WAGON HflAter. white. $140. will finance. • R & C RAMBLER SUPER MARKET EM 3-4155 8145 Comerei '62 BUICK .TRADE-INS ’61 CLASSIC SUPER .—(—WAGON" "7 Radio and beater, white tires, window washers, 0100 down. 055.86 *rTc RAMBLER I ’60 Olds ....$2495 . 8UPER MARKET - SUPER “II" HARDTOP KM 3-4158 8145 Commerce Rd. I -----------’——1---------- | $179 5 HASKINS LIKE NEW TRADES CHEVROLET 2-DOOR BEL AIR lUt VI engine, Powergllde trans-■salon, radio, solid light blue ’W FALCON DELUXE 8-DOOR with Auto, transmission, radio, heater. Like new, with white finish i -M OLD8MOB1LE “80“ CONVERTIBLE with ’ Auto, transmission. Power steering, brakes, radio, beater abd many ether accessories! Solid ersam ftaMhl HASKINS! U J . 1* AT . MU “Your Cross Roads to »aTings’’ MA 5-6071 CLARKfTON *59 Buick ......... ’59 Chevrolet .... Blscayns 3 Door, C ’58 Pontiac .... STARCHIEP * Door $1495 to* ■■■» $1295-$1095 $ 895 $695 tor ..$ 895 OLIVER BUICK . 210 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 2-9101 NO MONEY DOWN 1153 Packard 4-Doer 1*54 Chevrolet 4-Door 1183 Buick 4-Door 8*dan -1158 Pontlae 8-Door Hardtop 1880 Packard 4-Door 1*84 Chevrolet 4-Door 11*4 Olds S-Door Sedan $886 PULL PRICE YOUR CHOICE 1*51 Plymouth t-Door Sedan 1883 Packard 4-Door Sedan 1865 Pontiac 4-Door Sedan 1888 Olds 4-Door — Power 188* Chevrolet 2-Door Sedan i8M Chevrolet 6, Automatic IMS Chevrolet, Atick Shift RUSS JOHNSON m «->« i l p.m. Ink* Orion si h> SPOT DELIVERY!! NO MONEY DOWN We Handle and Arrange All Financing ■84 PLYMOUTH HARDTOP •8* BUICK jUjUFTOP ‘84 CHEVROLET 1-DOOR .. •IS PLYMOUTH 3-DOOR — I ‘8* PONTIAC HARDTOP .. >8* MERCURY 8-DOOR . •88 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR ’M BUICK HARDTOP ’ll OLDSMOBILE 4-DOOR . mi Ell per Mo. 4 4 per Wk. $11 per Mo. Plus Many Other Makes and Models • LIQUIDATION I,OT | Corner of S. Eait Bhrd. snd Auburn ./ PP 8-4071 FE 8-4072 Msur wi tot Cilra H» Ml 4-780*. Harold Tarner, Po*d. CHECK OUR PRICES . BEFORE YOU BUY ■** Chryeler SarataSS. •** Sfj**’ ***** ■57 Plymouth ----- l-YEAR WARRANTY R&R MOTORS Imperial, Chrysler. Plymonth, 724 Oakland Avs. " ,FE MM* SANTA'S SPECIALS! 1962 TRADE-INS- - ALL CARS Are WINTERIZED ^1 CADILLAC Coupe .v. $4795 ’61 CADILLAC Sedan .....,,.$4695 ’59 CADILLAC Coupe fleVille ...... $3195 ’39 CADILLAC Coupe ............. $3095 ’60 CHEVROLET Convertible ...... .......$2095 ’58 CHEVROLET 2-Door Har.dtope ^ ...™$U9* *Sti CHEVROLET 2-Door .......... $1095 *61 FORD 2-Door Hardtop '56 LINCOLN 2-Door Hardtop .......$ 695 FOLKS! Now at the "BRIGHT SPOT"— NEW *62 OLDS AND CADILLAC -^•-SALESMEN. ON THE LOT — ’61 OLDS Starfire ............ .$3595 ’61 OLDS Convertible .... ....$3195 ’61 OLDS F85 Cutlasi .........$2695 ’61 OLDS FS5 4-Door ..........*.$2399 ’60 OLDS 4-Door Hardtop .........v,:....$2395 *59 OLDS “98” Convertible ....: ..$1995 ’59 OLDS Station Wagon ..............$1995 ’59 OLDS 4-Door ............$1795 ’61 PONTIAC 4-Door Hardtop ...$2695 JEROME “BRIGHT SPOT” ORCHARD LAKE AT CASS . ~WHAT5 GOING ON IN BIRMINGHAM? PATTERSON CHEVROLET t§6i CHEVY . r:... v: ■. $2295 Nomad station Wagon. Powergllde. power steering, power brake* and tinted glass. 1956 PONTIAC .......$ 395 4-Door ^edan. ^ V-g engine, Hydramatlc. radio, heater and whitewall 1957 CHEVY ........ .$ 695 “310” 2-Door Sedan, e-cjrUnder engine, standard shift, radios heater and whitewalls. Beautiful turquoise finish. 1960 CHEVY .......... .$1295 d whitewall tires. Really 995 ie transmlssloa, ahltowaU tires. ...$2195 1957 FORD Retractable Convertible wltt power steering, power bra] Absolutely immaculate. 1959 T-BIRD brakes* Midnight blue f/msh. ” 196[LC;HEVY .....■.■ ■■$1695 Bel. Air Sport Coupe with o-cyltader engine, Powergllde, radio, hatter and whitewalls. Brand, new spare. ... . J959 CHEVY .......................$1295 Blseayne 4-Doer sedan with V-0 engine. Powergllde, radio, heater -------“- ----“’ ■’-'■I beige finish. *7y .......$1995 ■eyhnder^nglne, standard “^795 1 whitewalls. Suntan c 1961 CHEVY Brookwood 4-Doer Station W shift, radio and htator. Two 1959 RAMBLER American 8-Door Sedan with whitewall (tres- Light Mu* I 1960 CHEVY $1495 engine, standard shift, radio 1959 RAMBLER/7........$895 American Station Wagon with Cylinder engine, standard shift, radio, boater and whitewalls. Rod and white finish. Strictly beautiful. 1959 CHEVY/.......... $1195 »‘*c»n>e 8-Door Sedan with7 Powergllde, radio, heater and ’ wall Ores. Jewel blue finish. Better hurry I 1959 CHEVY .....’.....$1495 Impale 4-Doer Sedan/ It’s a hardtop, with V-l engine. Powerghdo, power steering and power brakes. White with red trim. Yon Joel eaa’t beat Ml / . 1959 WAGONS....... ...$AVE We've geg ’em. Brookwood wfth-f-cyUnder engine and standard sb 418*4. Brookwood with Poworgllde and ^cylinder engine, 0U Brookwood With Powergllde—loaded, 114*5. PATTERSON CHEVROLET: FORMERLY NORTH CHEVROLET-1000 S. WOODWARD ^ ' MI 43735 BIRMINGHAM 1 t i T THE PONTIAC PRESiS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1061 PONTIAC NOW... For Even Faster Service ^ GEE’S TRUCKS ARE RADIO DISPATCHED G«e s Fleet of now, modern CMC-trucks art radio equipped, which means that out office is in constant touch with our courteous, drivers.. Should you need fuel oil immediately, we con* tact one of our fleet of GMC trucks and dispatch it to your home. However, it is better to ploce your order early and use Gee’s modern “Keep* Fill" service! When Better Fuel Oil Is To Be Had...Gee Will Have It! YouCan Depend on Gee! There is no,substitute for quality... quality in the product ... quality in the service ... for in reality it's the "service after the sale" that really counts. The dependability of your fuel dealer is the essence in complete heating satisfaction, the first factor is in having the fuel oil of your choice available when you need it ... This is where the dependability of Gee really counts... Gee's automatic service assures you of always having plenty of better quality fuel oil regardless of the weather as we keep track of your fuel oil need through our modern. "Degree Day" method and before your present supply is exhausted your fuel tank is refilled with the better quality fuel oil that has made Gee one of. the foremost Tuel distributors in this are.a. NOW 1$ THE TIME TO SWITCH TO GEE! Ucallv Owned aid Operated 37 Years Pontiac’s Fuel Dealer Year after year, month after month, in wartime and in peace Pontiac and Oakland County residents have depended on Gee for better quality fuel for the past 37 years. Today, as in 1925 you ^con test assured that our staff of Pontiac and Oakland County people know your fuel needs and^fhe service given throughout the past 37 years is your guide to complete heating satisfaction. You get Holden Red Stamps at no extra cost when you order better qualify Fuel Oil from Geo . Dial FI 3-8181. CLARKSTON No matter where you. live in Pontiac, Drayton Plains, Waterford, Clarkston, Orion, Auburn Heights, Bloomfield Hills, Keego Harbor or the surrounding area, you, too, can enjoy trouble-free warmth and comfort all Winter long as our trucks (motor equipped for accuracy) are in your neighborhood almost dally. Be sure . . . Be Safe ... Be Comfortable . . . Dial FE 5-8181 Now! wp WATERFORD MAYTON PLAINS laEl a LK. ORION WHITE 1AKETWR AUBURN HIESHTS BLOOMFIELD flif Weather Meter Motorscboter VOL. m NO. 5 THE PONTIAC PRESS* ★ * ★ ★ ■ "v PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1961—40 PAGES' JMHMfci p Aiirit 11 1 iiai 5 People Die in Area Traffic Sunday Katanga Plane Bombs Airport Held by U.N. Swedish Fighters'Raid Bases, Mine Road to EiisabefhviUe * LONDON (AP)—Britain announced today it will not deliver the 24 half-ton bomba it promised to UN. forces in Katangn until the United Nations explains its Congo policies more dearly. EUSABETHVILLE, Katanga, the Congo I* — A small Katanga plane , bombed the U.N.-held Elisa-bethtille airport before dawn today. Light flares fired by Katanga troops ringing the fidd helped the pilot to get on target. U.N. sources said no damage or casualties resulted. President Moise Tshombe’e government acknowledged a U.N. aerial attack on Camp Tihombe— the main military center to EHsa-bethvillt. the camp mad thn a bomber of the Indian air form attacked Elisabeth vine. . Union Mlnlere Co. installations, African quarters and the center of the town woe hit, according the Katanga government. No See Pictures on Page 17 Moscow Severs Diplomatic Ties With Albania Staff Told to Got Out; Action soon as Robukt to Paiping MOSCOW UP) — The Soviet Union has severed diplomatic ties, with Albania in the biggest Communist bloc split s t.n c e Stalin expelled Yugoslavia from the Comlnform in 1948. j The break, disclosed in Tirana and confirmed by the Albanian Embassy here Sunday, has been expected. The action has been lore-sen since Premier Khrushchev at the October Soviet party congress denounced the Albanian ALL-WEATHER PROTECTION — Neither snow nor sleet will keep Pontiac policemen from catching up with parking meter viol&ters this winter. Patrolman Leland L. Gormiey br shown at the wheel of one of two new enclosed motorscooters purchased for parking meter enforcement. The 3-wheelera arrived Just in time. They were delivered Friday, the day before the first heavy snowfall of the season hit Pontiac. them of trying to disrupt Commu- Big 3 Aides Agree on Tongo Priority PARIS (A—The Western Big Three foreign ministers met today in hopes ot settling serious policy differences and agreed to work for a united, peaceful Congo. U.S. Secretary of State Dean Rusk, British Foreign Secretary Lord Home and French Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville were joined at 1 un ch by West German Foreign figures of casualties were available. but a spokesman said a gasoline storage tank was set afire and “we fear the worst." Katanga hospital authorities said the U.N. military had warned them that approaches to U.N. positions on the main road leading out of ElisabethvMe to the airport were going to be mined and ambulances should not enter that area. Newsmen denied that UJf. planes had attacked the Elisabetb-ville post office Sunday, reported by n telephone operator in the EUnhethville exchange. Evidently the operator had been warned a U.N. bomber was overhead and took this to mean the plaoe was under attack. The Brussels, Belgium, radio quoted Katanga President Moishe Tihombe as saying the United Nations had destroyed both the Kolwed plant and the Luilu plant of the Union Miniere Co., a Bel-gian-British concern whose copper and cobalt is the economic mainstay of his secessionist province. Brussels headquarters of the company lacked confirmation. is ter Gerhard Schroeder. This Afternoon the discussion was to turn to Berlin. The chief U.X-Brltish aim in i talks ’ was to persuade French government to drbp Its adamant opposition to negotiations with the Soviet Union for sort of compromise on the future of West Berlin. A French spokesman said Christian Cabaret SYDNEY, Australia (UPI) - A cabaret “for adult Christians" where no intoxicating drinks will be served has been opened In Sydney, by the Methodist church. In Today's Press first 11 Months First in series on how JFK Is doing — PAGE is. Peace Bomb Afnerica’s first drawn praise for successes—PAGE 11. Your Money Higher interest rates now allowed — PAGE ft. Questions! Parents, teachers better be prepared - PAGE M. Aren St Man ■Ini tortal rkete tuarta its mton TV A Radio Program* WDaoa. Earl Women’s Pages .#4 Radio Listeners See Spots as Talk Turns to Leopards DAYTON, Ohio (AP)—A Dayton linlster, to illustrate a point in . radio sermon Sunday, told of an imaginary train wredi with escaping leopards. # A * Police said the effect was smaller but similar to that produced by Orson Welles in his “invasion from Mats" broadcast of Apparently several ' hundred Daytoniana heard only that part of the broadcast referring to the train wreck. Excited telephone callers began bombarding police, newspapers, sheriff’s deputies, and radio-TV stations with questions. HERE ARE THEY? Police Sgt. L. J. Prugh sail caller asked: “Where are those 15 tigers that broke loose?’ He said it wasn’t imaginary tigers the Rev. Harvey Hahn told about, but imaginary leopards— and only four, not 15. KramSn’s lend, leaving thy Albania supported only by Com- A spokeAnan for the Albanian Embassy said the Albanian am- weeks ago. He said the rupture in relationacRM aeveral days ago. The Albanian news agency Ata said an exchange of notes begin-Nov. 35 concluded with one Related Story on Page 19 Saturday announcing the withdrawal of the Soviet embassy and commercial staff from Tirana. Ata said this note Mao demanded >oSH «f sly to the Cengs and South-mat Ash. As the three ministers con ned, Foreign Minister Paul-Henri Speak of Belgium sent a cable urging them to ask acting U.N. Secretary-General U Thant tor an immediate cease-fire * in Katanga, the Congo. Re said the Belgian people were shocked by the UH. military action in the former Belgian colony. The Issue of Katanga has arisen to plague the Western Allies Just they were preoccupied with lng a edmon approach to the question of negotiating with the Soviet Union. The Halted States has backed the me of U.N. tone to restore order h Katanga with an airlift of military supplies. The British government him objected to the use off sree, and France ban no sympathy ter the entire U.N. operation h the Osage. There was no indication - that differences over Katanga bad been ironed out. Conference officials limited themselves to the statement that the three powers agreed on the broad aims for the Congo. They include tite consolidation of the entire country under A stable government to prevent a slide into dvtl war and anarchy. The reintegration of the break-•way Katanga province with the central Congolese government mould be done by conciliation, the three Allies agreed. Hungs look Good for Kids-Not Drivers Pontiac area reakientc can expect mow beginning tonight continuing Tuesday, the weatherman says. * * dr Following e low of 38 tonight the mercury win rise slightly to a coal 35 high tomorrow. * * dr Temperatures will average 6 degrees below the normal high of 38 and the normal tow of 33 during the next five days. Colder temperatures are fore- By diplomatic accounts, the Three Arrested in Kidnap Case Two Royal Oak Girls Claim Suspects Forced Them Into Car Two 13-yearoid girls told police they were taken on n wild, four-hour ride through Eastern Oakland County last night by three men who kidnaped them in Royal Oak. Minutes after the girls reported the incident, three men they identified as their abductors were arrested by Oakland County Sheriff’s Deputy Roland Pleas at Opdyke Road and Walton Boulevard in Pontiac Township. 1 Pontiac Men Killed as Car . Rams Into Tree Police Blame Slippery Roads, Poor Condition! for Most Accidents Five persons, including' two from Pontiac, won fatally injured in area traffic accidents yesterday after the first heavy snowfall of the season hit Southeastern Michigan otar the weekend. v m | Most of the deaths, according to ,police, were attributed to the slippery roads and poor driving conditions caused by the several inches of snow that was dumped on the area. The two Pontiac men. Jamas 8. Thompson, 33, 1819 Opdyke Rood, and Damon Spence, 38, 794 Park-wood Ave. died after the car In i they wen riding went out Three other persona were aeri-oualy injured in Oakland Highway Toll in ’61 then which occurred at about 13:30 a.m. yesterday on Mount Clemens Street in the city. exploded In an angry exchange between Khrpahchev and Albanian Communist chief Enver Hoxha at the Moscow conference of world Communist leaden in November MB. ★ * ★ Albania boycotted "the Soviet Communist party congress this fail at which Khrushchev attacked Albania and Rad Chinese Premier Chou En-l&i in turn critidaad Khrushchev for airtaq; the dispute instead of trying to settle it privately. Many Westerners here felt that (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) ■all. bates! De trait, sal Walter Mereauk. ss, aSntlCam-bridge Ave., Berkley. The two Royal Oak girts, Nancy Seeman. 1210 Irving Ct., and Bonnie Aright. 304 E. Harrison said they were on their way home from the Washington Theater tn Royal Oak when two of the men forced them into a HELD CAPTIVE The girls told police they were held captive while their two cap-ton picked up a third man and drove around Rdyal Oak. They said the men stopped twice to buy beer and later cruised through Rochester, Utica and Lake Orion. with warmer weather Friday aad again colder Saturday, aeesrdlag la the U.8. Weather Bureau report. Precipitation will average five tenths of an inch as snow Tuesday, Wednesday and again about Saturday. dr A A Westerly winds 8 to 15 miles today will become southeasterly 10 to 30 miles tonight. dr * dr The lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m. today was 36 degress at 5 o’clock. By 1 p.m. the mercury reading was 34. Flashes SAIGON, Baste Viet Nam HI -A converted UA‘ carter steamed into Saigon today wtth a toad of UJ. com! Be assistance program. He aaM they an aimed at eOmtesttag bypaco$ in cHy lots near] Simms. 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Limit 1 sef ppr parson. 71 BOXED Chocolates 2-POUNDS As show — pointed red! _ jest like the real ones! . hoeks-up fa miniature hydrant which connects to garden* hose for flow of water. 17-inch length. —2nd Floor S •••eeeeeeeeeeeaeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee ■ ELECTRIC SoMeritg Guns «■« 499 Evar-Lasting Aluminum iriHwx SKRS •o»y te reed Math lettert end numerelt mounted anto permanent ‘bracket. Simple lo leetaS on eqt ; rural meHhux. Jewel She raC y- faf oddid btouty lM$eee„„ ■■■ . US Lettsn aad Nstohers st.1V ,«$. O ,Mp V I t m.PJgKrZ-. Rambler Goes Abroad Stevenson Will Remain Ambassador to U.N. Adlai Stevenson has decided that he will not run (or the United States George Romney’s American Mo* Senate. ton has decided that European auto ' % it it ★ circles peed a bit of their own modi* President Kennedy urged hta|. ctofi. AMC and Renault will cooperate STEVENSON strongly to remain | where he is as he has been ereatlngj a fine reoord for his country and hah been of inestimable value to] the White House | In his role of Am* baasador to the| United Nations. . it ★ Adlai Stevenson always has bees regarded as a keen man in a debate and a ready (slow with a well-turned phrase. la his current calling, this flair for formal and informal speech has reached new heights. Repeatedly, whin the Russian contingent begins arm waving and desk pounding, the UJt. delegation sits bach and waits for Adlai Steveaaoa to put out the fire and push the messy Reds back in their proper place. ★ it ' it He has ‘‘reoriented” the bullies of bluster many, many times. After some of their more furious outbursts, it is usually Stevenson that punctures their trial balloons on all sides and then in the middle for good to produce a Rambler model on the continent. ★ it r it The foreign auto makers came to this country and sold well when American manufacturers delayed too long In meeting the demand for smaller cars. Now AMC officials feel there is a demand in Europe for bigger cars than the native versions. This Is where the Rambler model will come in, they hope. ★ it it If the Rambler does as well in Europe as the European cars did here, AMC stockholders will be chortling over their profits. Voice of the Peoftle: Avondale's Sc Interested in C "•ithl m fnpwdi tebepew-ploas lor the education of nur ★ -dr 1b ' One of these group# is studying curriculum in all Mi aspect#. We would be happy to have any people in our district give us their H"«f end thoughts in serving os such a group. A personal vMt or a telephone can to the stveriatandanfa office or the board offices wO give awim information as to time of mob meetings a. Greet Graham, PraUlwt . AresriWto Beard el Why DidJustice Tell* WhatMakes Take Step Down?* Apples Beneficial How could e member of tlw Or. ^srris* book “FWk Medi-Supreme Court leave that high ctoe,” tails what Is so beneficial ffiliifi.fTSp?. fS.tT* * Ifc apHe. ».teltool the value tie* win leave the bench to play third baas lor the Tigers. part of oar food aad the part M Hays to nutrition. Del Publish- Toughness!—on the Installment Plan! David Lawrence Claims; ‘BrazU’s Problems Are Mostly Moral’ As s result of the weik at moral rearmament, lor the tint thus in 25 yean the streetcar workers’ union in Brnril has elected non-Communist leadership. The roots of the problem today are net economic. They are moral. Id. a E cent paper cover of the book. One man got so much relief from arthritis that M is enuring Go by the eounty market Saturday morning and a* lor l|r. Gilcher. I. ton bare found M a great remedy Mr an ailment of long riaodlng. The beneficial part which Is carried over Into apple cider vtaegnr is potassium — a much ★ ★ ★ He would hnve faced a formldable opponent in Senator Everett Dirk-sen for the Illinois nomination. The current occupant has {wen en- The Man About Town Air of Christmas Prevails in the Items We Receive From Readers Pioneer: One who remembers when children didn't any what they demanded for Christmas. A boost tor the clerks In Pontiac stores comet from our suburban Birmingham, as Mrs. Georgina Chltney writes that they are Invariably courteous and obliging, while many In Detroit are In the sour puas^elass. A complaint comes In a letter from a Pontiac father, signed "Still Juvenile Minded.’ Kennedy Proves He’s Antibusiness Kennedy Might g* Nixon’s Treatment* WASHINGTON - President Kennedy may wonder at times Why his administration is so frequently referred to as "antibusineea.” He need wonder no longer. For while the President promised the National Association of Manufacturers last Wednesday to a He made only a I to the subject of price stability aad he dkeetod thla to beta to- ward T. Mart MMBulck St. « Says Some* Citizens Protest Christmas TMa nation, founded under God, of the trenchfid In state politics for an ex- wh0 is having family trouble. He wants tended period of time end could stand *a train set, but his boy doesn’t, up under a lot of hammering. ★ ★ ★ m • ' 1 Had Adlai elected to tiy for the Seaate—and had he hew successful—he would have stood right beside the door pointing to the Democratic aomtaatiofl for the Presidency whoa Kennedy leaves. Of course, then’s nothing to prevent him from knocking on that same tempting portal from his U.N. position. In fact* Henry Cabot Lodge did precisely that very thing. Still, the Senate would have undeniably given him a greater “in.” He knows this and he was well-aware of it when ho declined the invitation to consider himself a Senatorial candidate. ★ ★ ★ The President has given him such an unequivocal endorsement he c&n return to his duties at the United Nations with, renewed vigor and with A Pontiac merchant would like to renew the historical "Jingle Bens," If he could find any; together with "A One-Horse Open Sleigh," and asks us to query our readers. If you can help him, phone this column. Thanks for a letter from ten-year-old. Beverly Hanebett of Drayton Plains, who writes that her teacher advised all children to Keep Christ in Christmas and never to write the word any other way. The lee to net aafe for Hutting on any ef our lakes, although a few of the smaller ones are frosen ever. This column will tell yea prospect for the funeral director by skating on them. According to a man who recently moved here from that state, Bertram Oswald the assurance that he has the com- ot clarkston- one of the few quiet stories plet* support o! the Nation'. Chief **'— «■>«*«■ Krtwt Executive Officer. Moat everybody will be in agreement ___________ with Harry Pieman Director of Art Exhibits of Bloomfield Hills, who suggests that the n m i n a * b*st Christmas present the con-con bunch r dees iOUgn Decision unsing can jjw ui Is to quit patting themselves on the back, and get down OxNEVixvi Habert of New York to business, should get a prise for being able to tell when an example of modern art is hanging upside down. It was she, you know, who discov- In connection with the con-con, we now may expect some heavy doings from Pontiac’s Dick Kuhn, ered a painting by Matisse had been 8lnce that new son has arrived at his exhibited wrong-side up in the Mu- home‘ seum of Modern Art for 47 days. But our sympathy goes to the director of the exhibitions/ ★ ★ , it Daily he must decide whether the red blob is supposed to go on the left, whether the unattached eyeball was intended to jump out from beneath the orange or over the anon, and whether the molten watch was supposed to drip toward the desert or he pulled np-> ward by the symbolic purple tittla whistle. i‘it it Maybe the artist was standing on his head when he painted It. Maybe he s«pwnn his nonconformity by signing his name in the wrohg corner—upside down. ‘ When jwnVt hit In tho lies speech at York City that the . next day to t tog to the AFL-CIO convention heg would “stress” the| importance holding down wagcB costs as a factor LAWRENCE in price stability, “ he failed to do ao. Iadeed, kls «n Secretary ef Labor Arthar Goldberg, later "Interpreted”. Kennedy's brief aad laddeatal remarks before the AFL-CIO as meaning that demands tor increased wagee — and evea strikes — were Justified If baaed aa "productivity.” Now moat businessmen know from experience in labor negotiations that "productivity” is net really baaed very much on any increase in individual efficiency but is conveniently calculated nevertheless by labor-union economists to lnclude substantially all Savings made by new machinery and equipment. Theoretically some of the economies due to better machinery should be divided three ways — to the consumer to lower prices, to the stockholders to the form of earnings, and to labor in the form of increased wages. But customarily the labor unions demand almost all of the savings, and that’s what they mean by “wage increase* baaed on increased productivity.” A TURNING POINT The President’s failure to keep his promise to the NAM and Secretary Goldberg's speech before the' AFL-CIO may prove to be a turning point to Kennedy’e political fortunes, f Unfortunately, the Preside* dM not come to gripe with the extremism of labor-anion leaders at a craolal moment In the economic history of the United States. A serious maladjustment in the tom of a recession or depression next year could retard America’s growth and Increase unemployment. « ' The President raised high hopes at first when he talked severiy to the businessmen at the NAM about restraints in prices and promised to speak as forthrightly to the labor unions. Here is what he said to the NAM convention: “Labor, too, has its responsibility for price stability, and I shall stress this to addressing the AFL-CIO.” We are, Indeed. tovith« God's wnth. Mrs. L. r. Pouar “If the end effect of the Preri- President Kennedy should not dent’s campaign tor voluntary hold- be permitted to risk South Amer-tog of the price line is to throw lea. We all know whet happened •B "•PonribiUty on industry, to Nixon and people are apt to RH_ ___________________________________ _ And Secretary of Labor Goldberg Kenedy will undo all the efforts be mere inflamed now than they *w dttoene loudly protest e the next day to his speech to the “ been "“Ho* to persuade were then. The results for good manifestation honoring His Son’ same convention said thia: the business community that he couldn’t possibly match the bor mm _ doe# not apply e double standard rible risk. fi,*?. -5TJ5 to btutaM. and to U*,." _________________Ul inflationary baste, wage increases Nton, ** may be asked, Is w> ' , . over-all should be earned by to- America galng to bo bleaned with I Oft 1*3118 creasing productivity.” a national leadership that ww* esehewS the potfilea of pressure Of JOHN C. METCALFE Goldberg then immediately de- *ry ckamp*"" the Ob. ooine with me, my dearest dared that this did not mean *■■■■* totereetf ... Tto see the roses on the vines wages should necessarily be eta- When, morover, are recessions • • • Where early to the Sprh«-bilised. He pointed out that the and depressions going to be nipped I formula provides “plenty of room in the bud? < their _____ ________ for advance in this highly produc- a president some day who learns wlth Into the woodland . . . five country.” how to get across the doctrine that £Jong * w?ndb« ■boded tone . . . The Almanac By United Prase International Today is Monday, Dec. 11, the _ ______P|B M5th day ef the year with X) to The sun into Mtow to HU. ' I And walk The moon to approaching Its first Perhaps the best summing up of to America “There is —"»g»i for When to the days el ___________________ the damage done by the President’s everybody’s need but not mer • • > The leaves are turning failure to speak out forcefully on for everybody’s greed” could find red *E*to • . . Oh, Join me in the the wage issue is contained in the himself an easy winner of re-elec- nutlc autumn — following paragraph to a New York tkn. “Times” editorial on Sunday: (Copyright, INI) Dr. Harold Hyman Says: There Are Ways to Stop Pinworm Infection Return are witches in the nigh* . . . And ... to windows give an aerie light . . . And tot me take your hand in winter ... To see upon the heavy now . .. The fairyland of crystal snowflakes .. , flmratti fito pallid moonlight How ... Oh, never leave me for a moment... Because if you should not be here ... The Spring, the Summer and the Autumn . . . wm keep the By HABOLD T. HYMAN, M.D. Pinworm to the worm infestation their nails to the crotch an which eggs are deposited. frequently. Many mothers who write to me seem to think that its presence to their household to a re-flection on the care they, give their youngsters and their home, others regard H as a drain Smiles How do such pi _HPP___ coma out of such sloppy handbags? Tte evening*** an Jupiter and Saturn. (to this day qi history: to INS. fntoaaa become to* ' to 1907, President Theodore Roo-sevelt announced that he would not bo a candidate for the presldeiwy. * * * to 1896, King Edward Vm abdicated the throne to marry a divorcee. _________ to MM, Jsha D. Beckefoller Jr. ana—bi< to* he had offered to denote a I sera pore* ■tong the Ha* River to New York CBy as a *to tor toe United =— -r- ■——S----------- Hyman, can K The Poottec Prtcc, Bn 4M, Dept. V, mNO PAYMENTS UNTIL FEBRUARY! OPEN EVERY NITE UNTIL 9 PM. TIL CHRISTMAS CHARGE or USYAWAY LOWEST INTEREST RATES IN TOWN! SMUN’S ‘Your Appliance Specialist’ APPLIANCES. TV from WAYNE GABERT’S THE PERFECT Gin FOR THE HOME RCA COLOR TV BUDGET PRICED CONTEMPORARY COLOR TV CONSOLE |Ug| BIG TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE 2 YEARS TO RAY 121 N. Saginaw‘St.. i. m FE 5-6189 TIL-HUDON SHOPPING CINTU ml DOWNTOWN IN— MO. — I FREE.PARKING at BOTH STORES—OPEN EVERY NIGHT 'til CHRISTMAS 'til 9 | THE PONTIAC PHESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER Latin Frets Over Lack \ Science Shrinks rues New Way Without Surgery Stops Itch—Relieves Pain riety of hemorrhoid ceudMens, HM of 10 to tO years'standiag. All this, without the emit narcotics, aMsthetks or astria* gents of eny kind. The secret ia • new healing lehilaim (Bia* sos^SStSi tion. Already, Bio-Dyne la in wide nee for healing injured tissue on all parts of the bedy. another,"rory striking improvement" was i spirt iSaadverf. fled by a doctor’s observations. Pain wae relieved promptly. And, while featlyreUeyiag Lindbergh's Son Becomes Father tor First Time PORTLAND, OK. (AP) - Jon Undbergh, 34. a son of the man who made the tint aok> flight acroaa the Atlantic Opean, is a lather. Mr*. Undbergh, 22. gave birth last Thursday to a girl, their first child. She left the hospital Sunday. Lindbergh'* lather, Charles A. Undbergh, became a national 'and leadership. The Communist r doctrine la wrong, but at least it has vitality and an implacable I plan of action. You an too timid." ft*. Ask fnfiMMhii convenient Preparation H! positories er Preparatis Ointment with special ai must be a hyphen. Finally you hand it to 2, who. screams that it must be changed to a period." Sighing a little, he added: “Just give ns some straightforward leadership, and never mind the pussy- More Wonderful Gifts Your Favorite Christmas Specie! Purchase a versatUcK pimp that' Naturalise?* tofrfrmlast fmidrheel features Lace trimmed in white, pink, turquoise, blue, and beige. A marvelous gift buy! Maple Cricket Roeler Boxed Jewelry Hundreds of boxed ear* rings, pins, necklaces, bracelets and some sets. Special Selling Ladies’ Leather Snow Boots •690 Handbags *298«o*1298 Solid maple rocker complete with pods for seat and back. In your choice of brown, green or gold. From the smell dutch to the Inge tele. Every type end style imaginable. Plenty to choose from. OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9 P.M. A Marvelous Gift Item Shoe Tote Bags $2°o Holds 200 records, doubje slid* Ing doors—available in blond, mahogany or waltiut. A handsomely textured Orion Jaekel that sparks your favorite sheaths . . . adds the perfect finishing touch to your separates. Wash it with cose, never losing iU perfect shape. White, Navy, Beige. I se a Convenient Charge for All Your Christmas Cifts' 48 South Saginaw Street MIRACLE MILE wwmmm jClpTr ' *", THE PONTIAC PBJEgS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1061 TWELVE RUGS ATLANTIC CITY, If. J. m Hie auto industry uses 460,000 bale* of cotton a year. OPEN EVERY NIGHT m 9 JMfc of PONTIAC 'SI West Huron Street | Loans $25 to $500 ASSOCIATES LOAN COMPANY PONTIAC* 125*27 N. Saginaw It* Ft 24214 MICHIGAN MIRACLE MM, FI 14141 DRAYTON PlAMSt 4474 Dixie Hwy., OR 3-1207 »"«»* 13Gary Lowe intercepted Fran Tar-jkenton’s pass in the end zone. It was a game of defease, er- • ratio off ease and breaks. Each ' team lost the ball three -times on fumbles, each team bad a field goal try blocked and the Cannon Goes Houston Sure of Fire Dick (Night Train) Lane cepted two of Tarkenton's passes before Lowe pulled off Ms big interception and it also was Lane who blocked a field goal attempt by Mike Mercer late in the 2nd > quarter. " ♦ ★ 4r The Lions left the field at halftime with a 7-0 lead, thanks to a brilliantly • executed seven - yard dash by quarterback Jim Ninowski , with only 11 seconds remaining in the 2nd period. Detroit drove 49 yards in three plays for the touchdown with the key play in the drive a 55-yard pass completion from Ninowski to Gail Cogdill. which put the ball on the Viking seven-yard line. After looking to the left side for pass receivers, Ninowski swung to the right and rolled into the end zone untouched tor a TD. Jim Martin placekicked the 7th point. Mlmeeota took the tad baa kickoff and marched 71 yards ia IS plays behind excellent quarterbacking by Tarkenton, wbo’s going to be ah outstanding NFL field general before very hag. Tarkenton's 27-yard aerial to ex-Lion Jerry Reichow aided the push and Triplett picked up 13 yards through guard. . With 3rd and goal to go on. the Detroit two and the Lion defense massed lor a rush, Tarkenton lobbed a soft pass to Hugh McEl-henny, who crossed into pay dirt easily. Mercer converted and the ■core stood 7-7. . The Lions bouiibed back to grab a 10-7 'advantage. Their drive stalled in Viking territory and Martin booted a 43-yard field goal to said them In front. Martin kicked his 2nd field goal of the game and 14th of the season early to the Oh period. Following a Vlkfhg punt, another Lion drive was stymied and Martin put three mpre paints oft the scoreboard with a field goal from the Minnesota ?3. AT Ph.tofix TD SETUP — This pass interception by Night Train Lane of the Lions is the play which setup the Detroit touchdown in yesterday’s 13-7 victory over the Minnesota Vikings at Tiger Stadium. Jerry Reichow (89) of the Vikings waa the intended receiver .of Fran Tarkenton. Lane also blocked, a kick during the game. By The Associated Press There was some question early this season whether BiUy Gannon. Louisiana State All-America ... had been no ball of fire in his first year of pro football, would make the Houston team. There’s no question about Billy's ability now — not after Sunday, when Cannon scored five touchdowns, rushed for 216 yards to break the league ooe-game record and caught passes tor 114 yards the Oilers beat New York 48-21 and became "dormie” in the East-Division of the American Football League. Houston clinched M worse than a tie for the title and became a prohibitive favorite to take since only lowly Oakland remain! to be played. That would set up a repeat of last year’s championship game in which Houston licknd the Loo Angeles Chargers, now San Diego. San Diego, which already has sewn up the Western Division championship, beat Buffalo 28-10 while Dallas bashed Denver 49-21 dr -h A in other Sunday AFL games. Boston, which whipped Oakland 35-21 Saturday night, remained a game back of Houston in the Eastern Division race and could tie for the championship. ’■ 216 yards wiped out the record of 156 set by Abner Haynes of Dallas against Oakland. The five touchdowns tied the record for one game set by Haynes the same day. San Diego had trouble with Buffalo but called on its defense to oome a 10-point deficit, then Jack Kemp c-o m e. off the bench and pasa it to safety. Keith Lincoln’s 57-yard punt return got the Charges moving and an intercepted pass set up the go-ahead touchdown. Lion-Viking Summary FINAL STATISTICS Pint Down* Putins - Jan. 6. Hie Lions hold a one-game margin over the 49ers, who wfnd up at home against Baltimore Saturday. Tbs Browns need a victory,o the Giants and an Eagles’ %Iert by the Lions to get into the runner-up bowl. Such an outcome would leave Cleveland and Philadelphia tied for. second but the Browns hold a point margin over the Eagles after splitting their two regular season games. other games Sunday, Pittsburgh defeated Washington 39-14 to run the Redskins’ non-winning streak to 23 games over two sons (they tied three); St. I wallped Dallas 31-13 and Detroit got past Minnesota 13-7. Los Angles beat Baltimore 34-17 Saturday. Charlie Cooeriy was the key In the Giants’ squeaker over the Eagles. The 40-year-old quarterback, a bench warmer most of the mason, replaced Y. A.. Tittle when the Gianta' attack bogged down in the second period with the Eagles leading 10-7. He threw three touchdown passes, one 35 yards to Joe. Walton and two of 26 and 11 yards to Del Shofner. Before he left the game, Tittle also Mt Shofner with a 46-yard payoff aerial. TOUCHDOWN PASSES Sonny Jurgenson also tossed three touchdown passes for the Eagles, two to Tommy McDonald, slid altogether picked up 367 yards in the air for an NFL single season record of 3,320 yards in passing. Johnny Unitas held the mark of 3,099 yards, made last year in 13 games. The Bears came from behind nr' their triumph with Roger Le-Clerc's nine-yard field goal with 3:30 left deciding the issue. After yielding two touchdowns in toe first period, the Bern put together all of their points in the final quarter. Touchdowns on Willie Galimore'a three-yard plunge am) 64-yard pass {day from Ed 'Brown to Angelo Cola preceded LeClerc’s field goal. ♦ w ♦ Lou Groza kicked both toe extra points after Gtevejand’s touchdowns to set an aB-’tlme league career scoring record points, two more than Philadelphia’s Bobby Walston, who kicked a field goal and three extra points in a losing cause. Dan Hutson of Green Bay held the old career mark of 825 points. LONG MARCH The 49ers moved 91 yards in the closing minutes to edge Greta Bay. Trailing 19-21, the 49ers picked up yardage through the air to the 8. Tommy Davis kicked a 14-yard field goal with U seconds left to decide the game. Dallas jumped out in front of St Louis 134) but Sam Etcheverry’s arm and John David Crow’s legs enabled the Cards to win handily under the direction of three assistant coaches. It was the Canto’ first game following the resignation of coach Pop Ivy. GAP CLOSED — Captain Joe Schmidt (left) of the Detroit Lions and Mg Roger Brown quickly close a gap which waa opened for Hugh McElhenAy of toe Minnesota Vikings. The Viking back got AT nwMu. six yards before getting hit. by the two Lion defensive stars, and it was tMs type of defensive play which carted Detroit to , a 13-7 victory over the Vikings at Tiger Stadium Sunday. Weekend Sweep Puts Wings in Fourth Stasiuk, Howe Provide Punch in 3-2 Victory Vic Makes Two Goals Gord One at Chicago, to Edge Hawks CHICAGO un-Gordie Howe and I Vic Stasiuk provides the punch that put the Detroit Red Wings all alone in fourth place in the National Hockey League today. - * * * Stasiuk scored twice—his second the game-winning goal and Howe once as the Red Wings beat toe Chicago Black Hawks 3-2 night. Howe mt up one of Stasiuk's goals and Stasiluk mt up Howe’s. h.. kt h The Rad Wings had been tied for fourth with Chicago before the victory. Chicago Jumped off to a quick lead when Erie Nesterenko beat Wlag goalie Tony Sowchuk In toe lint period. Bronco, Horvath scored on a power play oorly In toe second period to give Chicago a M lead. Detroit came roaring back in the second period as Howe tipped in a long shot by Stasiuk. It was the brilliant right winger' goal of the season. Bobby Layne, Pittsburgh’s eras quarterback, got back graces of the Steelers fans when he tied Sammy Baugh's league record of US a passes in a career. He fired lour to the Steelers' easy triumph. - Stasiuk tied it up Just before the end of the second period. Eddie Litxenberger passed to Alex Del-vecchio, who fired a long blast and Stasiuk knocked it in. Stasiuk’s final goal came in the last period after Howe took the puck away from Chicago defensemen Jack Evan* near the Hawks' blue line, slipped past a defender and fed a perfect pan to the charging Stasiuk, who tipped it in. .... ...... AP HhWu ON TARGET — San . Francisco 49er quarterback John Brodie (12) picks out his target, R. C. Owens and hits Mm with a pass in the second quarter against the Green Bay Packers. Hank Gran-minger (46) of the Packers pulls R. C. to the ground after the pass gained 40 yards. The 49ers upset the Packers 22-21 to stay in contention for the runnerup spot with the Lions in the Western Division. Maple Leafs Set Sights on 1st Place Canadiens ■orlation have purehased M rookie Al Butler from toe Bsstou Celtics and asked waivers on Doug Matter, <-• rookie from Duke. ft * * Penn State officials were snowed n, so the Lambert Trophy, emblematic at major college football supremacy to the East, waa .ac-ceptedTfiJr Robert C. Urban, president of the Penn State Club of New York. Lehigh received the Lambert Cup for being the best small college team in the East. By Tie Associated Press The muscular Toronto Maple Leafs, now in solid possession of second place In the National Hockey League, have their sights act on leading Montreal — but '•? 11 *lj *l! Fumble* ... ........ f Opponent*' FumMu Recoeered 1 SCO SB BY FBBIOD8 Fare us from Terkratont CONVXMION8: LIONS: Martin. VIK- nwa; Marne. FISLO OOAI4I: LIONS: Martin S (43 and sl-yard*). % IH FLAT RAVE — Detroit Rad Wing goalie Tarry Sawchuk dives flat orf the ice to Mock a puck fired by IChicago Black Hawk wing Ken Wharram (17) iq the second period of yesterday’s game at Chicago CMcago’s Ab McDonald (14) is ki the center of tbfe activity along with Red Wing defenseman Warren Godfrey. Detroit defeated Chicago, 32. catching the Canadians may be something elm again. The Leals gained one point on the perennial leaders over tbs weeked and are now three back. Montreal meanwhile extended its ring to 12 without a loss. Of the five games Montreal has *t this season, two have been to the Leafs, They don’t have a head-to-head meeting until Jan. 3. Toronto’s two weekend victories enabled the Leafs to stretch their margin over third place New York from two to five points. The key was Toronto’s 3-2 victory over the slipping Rangers Sunday night. In the others, Montreal got a 4-3'decision over Boston while Detroit beat Chicago for the second straight evening, 3-2. Toronto Jammed to three quick first ported goals—two of them on power play*—then held off New York rallies the rest of the way as veteran Don Simmons, subbing for injured Johnny, Bower, registered his second straight victory the Toronto nets. Billy Harris and Bon Nevin each scored on a power play, and .Frank Mphovlich contributed his 12th goal of the season as Toronto built a 3-1 first period toad. Dean Prentice and Adny Hebenton ■cored tor the Rangers. Ralph Backstrom’s second goal, hie 14th -of the season, broke a 3-3 tie and gave Montreal the victory over Boston. The shot came only five minutes bom the end. J. C. Tremblay and Don Marshall gat the other Montreal goals with Andre Pronovost, Jerry Toppai-zlnl and Don McKenneJr scoring for Boston. In Saturday games Montreal and New York tied 2-2, Toronto punished Boston 9-2 and Detroit shut out. CMcago 34). PRESS BOX Jim Charlton of Pontiac, a member of the 700 Bowling Chapter, died Saturday after a tong illness. * h it Clay Roth, former Waterford High star, was named on the AU-NAIA Michigan college honorable mention Hat. The Hillsdale College senior end scored M points for the Dales this year, posting two touchdowns, three field goals aad <8 PAT. He aet a school record by kicking eight of eight conversion attempts in Ken Rosewall of Australia defeated Earl Buchholz of St. Louis today 6-4. 62, 6-1, in the final of the White City professional tennis tournament in Sidney, Australia. h it it The New York Knickerbockers OSU Fullback Ferguson Now Back of Year * h* NEW YORK (UP1> - Bob Ferguson, Ohio State’s Hm smashing fullback who already has signed to play with the Pittsburgh Steeled npxt season, to college foot-“back of the year" tor 1961 nationwide poll by United Press International. The 207-pound buckeye star captured the honor fay a small but clear margin over Syracuse University halfback Ernie Davis in voting by 324 sports writers and broadcasters throughout the coon- tty. proved the top vote-getter on the UPI All-America team, when he was mentioned on 90.1 per cent of all ballots cast, was the "hack of the year” selection on 94 ballots. Davis, who broke Jimmy Brown’s rushing records* at Syracuse, was second with 70 ■and speedy halfback James Saxton of Texas was third with 56. The Steelers, who made Ferguses] their No. 1 ahoiee in the annua) National Football League draft, announced fate signing last 0 get him they had to, outbid the san Diego Chargers, who made him their No. l choice the American Football League UCLA Starts Practice for Rosa Bowl Gama -ios ANGELES (ft - The UCLA Bruins begin dosed training ses-' ly for their Rose Bowl meeting with Minnesota New Year’s Day. It jn the first time UCLA has conflicted closed workouts since R met Michigan State in the an-‘ football clastic in UBS. TILE PONTIAC PRBSS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1961 73 A dded for Bow Finals j ij q | . ' k k k k k ★ —v>, ji ★, k k 14j DOWlerS Wctoide §0 Pina Short With 3,050 i? ™ ■OB 'Team' Crown Goes to Lakewood Unofficial Cutoff Point at Huron 636 as Monti Leads Qualifiers The Pontiac Press Bowlerama qualifying list was completed at 145 Sunday when 73 more happy keglers made this week's final* with topnotch showings at two tites. A total of 52 made the grade at Huron Bowl where a handicap score of 836 turned out to be 'the .cutoff point. Twenty-one advanced a( Collier’s Lanes with 634 good for the last berth there. three men make the handicap finals. Dixie placed two. Two from East Highland site alternates. MSU's Hatcher First Negro With Redskins WASHINGTON tit — Michigan State fullback Ron Hatcher Saturday became the first Negro football player ever to sign a/sontract with the Washington Redskins. The 215-pound Hatcher was the Redskins eighth National Football league draft choice. Hatcher said he had no feeling "one way or another" about being the first man of his race to become a member of the Washington team. ‘Tm here to play football,” he BOWLERAMA SHOW - Jay Lovett, left, and Bill Leigh shake hands after staging quite a bowling show on the next to the last Pontiac Press Bowlerama qualifying squad at Huron Bowl yesterday. Lovett, Press actual invitational runnerup two years ago, rolled 637 and Leigh 643 competing on the same alleys. Wife Inquires Canadian Golfer Nods Afttr Birdie Captures Coral Gables Open joe Monu ana mu jarreii Mlnnif ^ .r clinched high qualifier trophies HAPPY TEAMMATES - Them three members of the Westside yesterday. Monti topped 363 men Recreatlon team ™8*> hopes tar winning the new "house” at Huron* with 726 sparked by a trophy after big individual showings Sunday but they had to 649 actual. Jarrett kdd 685, in- settle for 2nd behind Lakewood Lanes for feck of help. Jerry Perm, eluding a 604 actual, at Collier'^ . far left, Jerry Harnack, center, and Bill Richards all qualified for where 152 participated. the handicap finals. Harnack had high game at Huron with 258. CORAL GABLES, Fla. (API— "Did you win?" That wad Shirley Knudaon’s first question after watching her There were five others in the 700 class at Huron. Larry Crake rolled 716 with a 643 actual, Paul Miller hit 713 featuring the high tourney actual of 1961 with 688, Jay Carroll had 711, Gene Lund ; and Mike Kachanuk 700. Carroll downed 674 pins. Morris Wldemaa took gnd j place honors at Collier’s at 661 Bowlerama Qualifiers grease and a shoulder here and there, to lift that hale, tote that load and knock the hell out of the other guy in the ring. It's Just like any other working stiff. It brings home the bpcon. It also keeps Gene in his proudest possession, the National Boxing Association portion of the world middleweight championship. LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)—Gene Fullmer has got to be the working man's candidate tor “man of the year." As a boxer, a world champion, he is a magnificent day laborer. There is nothing spectacular about Fullmer. He Just uses his hands, and maybe a little elbow KRAFT Two nights ago Fullmer in the same dig • that - ditch fashion i knocked out Benny (Kid) Paret in 10 rounds to keep his cherished side of the title, and wreck Benny’s dream of becoming a double division champion. GAINED WEIGHT Paret owns the world welter-1 weight, or 147-pound champion-! ship. For Saturday nights effort ■ the Cuban kid weighed 156% and ' Gene 159%. ■ There was really nothing singular about Fullmer's victory. He, Just pinned Paret against the ropes j for most of tkb. bout aHd belabored , i Bert Schmidt 660. J Jerry Harnack and Bob Rich-, aids matched* 661 actuals, Kach-, anuk posted 650, Lund 655 and Paid Horie 652 there. BUI Leigh and Jay Lovett put on* quite a show on the 4:15 p m. squad hitting 643 and 637, respectively, on ’ the same lanes. t Hsmack's 258 headed the games I at. Huron. Mike Kramer hit 256, J. Denisuik 248, Richards and Charles Melton 247, -Leo Boxe, Jim LeBow, Roland Rothbarth and Dr. E. E. Ludwig 246. Melton had te settle for an alternate berth. P. L. of P., the Huron Bowl Classic team known only by these initials, again threatens tor make a runaway of' the league title chase. Although an element of mystery surrounds the meaning of the three letters, there is nothing mys--terious about the way Carl Beh- j Pittsburg Bowl Winner Before Slim Gathering SACRAMENTO, Calif. News -47) News (*) (56) French Through Tele- (2) Sports \ll) Sports (2) News 11 News (7) News, Weather, Sports 1:N (2) Big Ten Highlights (4) George Pierrot Show (Trfitpedtttab! (9) You Asked For It (IK Portraits in Print IsM (2) Danger Man (4) George Pierrot (cont.) a (T) Cheyende \ (9) Movie. “Three for Jamie Dawn.” (1956) A\notorious young woman kUls her boy friend. Lanina pay, Ricardo Montalban, Richard CaHwn. (56) Way of Life \ S:M (2) Pete and Gladys \ (4) National Vdvet - (7) Cheyenne (cont.) (9) Movie (cont) (56) Strategy of Truth 8:89 (2) Window an Main Street (4) Price to Right (Odor) (7) Rifleman (9) Movie, (canto) •:M (2) Danny Thomas (4) 87th Precinct (7) Bing Crosby (Special) (9) African Patrol (56) Guest Traveler 9:30 (2) Andy Griffith (4) 87th Precinct (oont.) (7) Bing Crosby (cont.) (9) Festival TO 10: OS (2) Hennesey (4) Thriller (T) Ben Caaey (9) Festival (cont.) 10:89 (2) I’ve Got A Secret (4) Thriller (cent) (7) Ben Casey (cont.) (9) Harbor Command 11:09 (2) News (4) News CT) News (9) News 11:18 (7) News, Sports 11:18 (2) Weather (4) Weather (9) Weather 11:86 (2) Sports (4) Sport* (9) Telescope UAW 11:81 (2) Movie. “Ruggles of Red Gap.” (1935) An American gets an education in gentility from a British butler. Charles Laughton, Mary Boland. (7) Weather 11:89 (4) (Color) JackPaar (7) Movie. "Ain't No Time tor Glory.” 0967) An American captain to ordered to capture an enemy fortress. Barry Sullivan, Gene Barry. ' (2) To be announced. (9) Movie. “Don’t Blame the Stork.” (English; 1956) Shakespearean actor returns home to find a baby on his doorstep. Ian Hunter, Veronica Hurst, Reginald Beckwith- TUESDAY MJBNDTO •:8t (2) •:» (2) On the Farm Front 6:66 (2) College of the Air (4) Continental (oont.) 1:66 (2) B’wana Don (4) Today (7) Funewi 7:86 (7) Johnny Ghiger 1:66 (2) Captain Kangaroo. (56) French for Teaehars 1:19 (7) Jack LaLaane (56) French Through TV (2) Movie: "By Your Leave.” ' (4) Ed ABen. (7) Movie: "Blade Dia- monds.” (56) Mathematics for You 9>ai (4) Gateway to Glamour (56) Book Parade 9:16 (4) Debbie Drake ilt: 66 (2) Calendar (4) Say When (56) Our Scientific World 16:86 (7) News 16:86 (9) Billboard 19:86 (2) I Love Lucy (4) (Color). Play Your Hunch. (7) Jackie Cooper (9) Chez Helene (56) English V 16:46 (9) Nursery School Time U:66 (2) Video Village \ (4) (Color). Price Is Right. (7) Texan (9) Romper Room. (56) Spanish Lesson 11:16 (56) German Lesson 11:69 (iKDecember Bride (4) Concentration. (7) Yours for a Song (56) History With Herb Hake (7) American Bandstand. (56) “Strategy of Truth.” 4:1* (2) Secret Storm. 4i» (2) Edge of Night (4) Hen's Hollywood (9) Adventure* of BUnky 4: as (9) Flower Pot Men 4:** (7) American Newsstand 4:16 (4) News 6:66 (2) Movie: "Caught Plastered.” (7) Johnny Ginger. (9) Jingles (96) What’s New 1:10 (56) British Calendar 6:46 (9) Rocky and His Friends (56) News Magazine 6:86 (4) Kukla and OUie Tag and Cut Own Yule Tree New Wrinkle NEWARK. N. J. (UPI) - A new wrinkle in die annual selection of Christmas trees by families to gaining in popularity. TMs to the “you pick It” or TUESDAY AFTERNOON oo (2) Love af TJfe (4) Truth or (kmeequeecn. (7) Camouflage (9) Mary Morgan (56) What’s New \ 18:96 (6) News \ 18:89 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Color). It Could Be You. (7) Make a Face (9) Susie (56) Spanish Lesson 18:46 (2) Guiding Light (56) German Lesson 18:66 (4) News. l:M (2) Star Performance (4) Grouchp (7) Day inlCourt (9) Movie: “The Man From Down Under." 1:16 (56) French Lesson 1:£6 (7) News ■* (2) As the World Turn (4) Californians (7) Life of Riley (56) World History 1:66 (4) Faye Elizabeth 6:16 (2) Amos V Andy (4) (Color) Jan Murray (7) Number Please (56) French Leeaon 8:66 (2) House Party (4) Uwetta Young (7) Seven Keys (56) French Lesson (2) Millionaire (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Queen for A Day (9) News 8: is (9) Movie: “Law and Disorder.’’ (2) Verdict Is Yours (4) From These Roots (7) Who Do You Trust? 8:65 (2) News (2) Brighter Day. (4) Make Room for Daddy stems from the eld Americas family tradMoa sf geing Into the forest to eat a Christmas tree and haul it home. In New Jersey, about 300 farmers are engaged in growing Christmas trees. In many cases families drive to one of the tree plantations weeks before Christmas to Inspect the crop. They make their choice* and the trees are tagged with their and the dates they intend to pick them up. TV Features FITNESS EXERCISE? — Some Peace Corps trainees and members of its headquarters staff didn’t let a light snowfall and freezing temperatures interfere with their plans for a touch football workout on the Ellipse, a park drea south of die White House in Washington, which to visible in the background. Dick' Lundgren, a trainee for AT rhstafax Puerto Rico project, has the ball in the photo. Others are left fh right: Nick Ray (rear) headquarters staff; Tdm Mathews, Information director; A1 Read, trainee for Puerto Rico;^Rlch-ard Graham, special attendant; and Rowland Scherman, photographer. US. Must Hold/fa/y's Put on Good Sh&w Instrument 11 Wlni-tbeped IS Uncle Tom e 14 CsMIo cover IT r IT II i?“ IT II p IT IT IT ■ r a a r ■ r F r B" jjj R r ■ w IT p i r ■ ■ r 49 IT IT ■r it D r H ■ ■ By United Preen International EXPEDITION, 7 p.m. (7), “ll >ct Safari,” a journey across fries in search of the Embtoptera —\p silk-spinning insect. I BING CBOSBY SHOW, p.m. \(7). Bing, searching for the roots pi his family tree in this ut special, tours a London n.Npub and courtroom and such helpful British companions as comedians Dave King and Terry Thomas, singer Shirley Bassey, and a buskers group called the Happy Wanderers. Then’s small part in the show for one of Bing’s old golfing partners, Mo. DANNY THOMAS SHOW. 9 pm. (2). Unde Tonooee (Hans Conried) announces he has some plans lor the family burial plot. * * * ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW. 9:30 .m. (2). Barney (Don Knotts) sets ut to teach Andy the art of being sophisticated member of Mayberry society. HENNESEY, 10 p.m. (2). Sightseers.” Chick (Jackie Cooper) and Martha (Abby Dalton) go an off-beat tour of Hawaii. BEN CASEY, 10 p:m. (7). Certain Time, a Certain Dark-The gender aide of Dr. Casey's (Vincent Edwards) nature to shown as he treats Ellen Parker! (Joan Hacked), a woman who Is] keeping a secret from her husband. * * * THRILLER, 10 p.m. (4). "The Return of Andrew Bentley.” young couple moves Into s mansion and soon are terrorized by a ghost. Starring John Newtond, Philip Bourneuf and Antoinette Bower. JACK PAAR SHOW, 11:30 pm. (4). Hugh Downs to host. Guests: Marc Comely, John Tolan, Oscar Brown Jr., Betty Johnson. (Color). in S. Viet Nam' America Should Send Troops if Necessary, Rep. Gerald Ford Says CLEVELAND (II - U.S. Rep. Gerald R. Ford Jr. R-Mich., said Sunday the United States should send troops to Southeast Asia if necessary to block the spread of communism. * * * ’We must stand up and counted” to keep the Philippines and South Viet Nam from being overrun by communism, Ford said on KYW-TVs “Open Circuit” program in answer to s question from the viewing audience'. Ford attacked the Kennedy ad miaiatratloa tor what he called the dUtarbifcg tendency to centralise power In Washington and Operating Again Company Plans Appeal of Circuit Court Order to Restore Service DETROIT (61—Intertown Suburban Lines buses have started foiling again. * ★ ★ The first buses to operate since Aug. 1 made regular pickups Sunday. Kenneth E Totten, regional manager of the line which serves 14 . Western Wayne County com* muni ties, said increased service would be offered today. A Circuit jCourt order has been issued to restore toll service, but an attorney for the company, Edmund M. Brady, said ho piano to appeal the Circuit Court order to the State Supreme Court. “We feel that the company has gone out of bust ness aad the order to restore service to uajustllled,” ho said. _ Detroit Street Railway buses operating to Dearborn were pulled out of service Saturday night. : * *. ■ Meanwhile, negotiations for the purchase of Intertown by a Washington, D.C., firm, reportedly were still going on. s drivers and mechanics struck the firm in August and later in the fall the firm said it going out of business. A state order, however, said the line had to resume business when the strike was ended. those compact French Peugeot se-dans around Hollywood and^ recently the panelist of "I’ve Got si it” narrowly missed a jaywalker. The letter, yelled aftef. Mm, “Watch it. mister, you slHisnt BY FRED DANZIG think that through the pressure NEW YORK (UPI)-North of th*‘ *he Oomunlsto- exercise ml-lltome He, Italy's ric&Mt lanulnnd. ‘"’’ A Yet, this area is called the Red ( Deflate 04 Ocean 1 Rodent* SI iS#**1 0 Mutlcal dramaa as Container, \ Pacific laland St Ply so Lsfjolnla si Fouaveri sS Hast to Nautical ten SI UBsasupM __ ____________ 50 Delesta at card, 10 pennant 51 Cora bread 40 Bacchanal'! SS Front St Tranamlt ------------------ 41 poid SI Raima ted It Tlaalni del “We now are seeing the ill effects of the great Increase in federal spending,” he said, referring to an aadmatsd 97 Milton deficit far the current ftochl year. it it , A.. "The government should hold back in its expenditures for area redevelopment, depressed a're help and bousing,” he urged. “The way the economy to going now, federal help to not needed. And besides, the job can be done locally" Belt, for well-organized Communists and fellow-travelers control] most local governments, operate flourishing co-ops and recruit patent with comparative ease. South of Rome, the land is arched. Only the anempioy-ieat Hat seems to grow. Ironically, la this area of greot need, the Communists find K difficult to overcome the strong Catholic faith of the peasants. This apparent paradox was explored Sunday night in "The Remarkable Comrades.” and uncommonly eloquent documentary presented on ABC-TVs “Clode-up.” blended excellent photography, reporting, writing, background music and narration in an impressive fashion. REDS ONE IN FOUR Filmed over a period of months, "The Remarkable Comrades” displayed In obM forma the tnftu-ence of the opportunistic Italian Reds, who number 1.5 million of 'Italy’s 6.7 million population. One ay four Italians, we wpre votes Communist despite Italy’s explosive prosperity. Why? It seems that expediency to a major factor. Aa Italian writer, Ettere Delta Giovanni, explained It: “They Just Woman Nearly Itches To Death "leumij Mtdte dteth 7 Vi yt*n. Then /fmmd* ntw wtmdrr emu. New; I’m bsppy,” trritts Mrs.1 P.HtmuiytfLA.OsUf. Hul l bkaaad icliaf fawn1 tortarea ot vicinal itch, racial itch, chafing, raah aad acaaou with an formula called LANACANEThial ■a. Scopa acratciung—ao aaaadi hailing. 3 I'taaflerlGatLANACANSudruggiaa. • What the film showed us of the field hands and factory workers bore out Della Giovanni’s theory. Along with such well-spaced interviews, the program consisted absorbing, intimate photographic compositions as the camera traveled up and down the peninsula to show Italy’s industrial: recovery, Communist festivals, 1 Red rallies, leadership schools,1 welfare offices, co-op* and cells In action: Moving south, we were then shown how the Roman Catholic Oun* counters the Communist drive. Hie script pointed to a lesson: Prosperity alone doesn’t necessarily defeat Communism. NOT WON OVER Is there hope? Executive producer John Secondary the narrator, concluded with this opttmis-The Communists have not convinced the majority of Italians; they have not Cool Firm Founder Dies NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)-Jus-tin Potter, 63, founder of Nashville Coal Co. and later pie*, ident of Vlrginia-Carolina Chemical Co., died Saturday at a hospital. A native ot Smithville, Tenn., Potter became a multimillionaire and a leading conservative spokesman. He9 was an spoken foe of the Tennessee Valley Authority. • RENTAL • SOFT WATER •■•r *3 month LINDSAY SOFT WATER CO. 86 Nswbsrry St. FI 1-4421 RCA COLOR TV Soles and Service Sweet’s Radio TV United Jewish Appeal After $95 Million in *62 NEW YORK (UPI) — Delegates to the 24th annual United Jewish Appeal national conference will vote today on a stepped-up goa) of |95 million for relief projects during 1962. The target was announced by UJA Chairman Joseph Meyerhof! of Baltimore. The campaign to aid Israeli immigrants and needy Jews elsewhere raised $60> million this year. WILSON -Todays Radio Programs-- met* ansi wcab (i 4:00—Wjh, Novo WWJ, Nava CKLW, Nava WXYZ. Harrtjr, Wlrrter WJBK. Rohart X. Loo WCAB, P. PauUn WriJM. MOV*. Sporta 0:00—WJR, BuaUiMa * wwj, Bnrineas thee WXYZ, Ales Drier WPON, Norn. a. Oreeno WCAR, aharldan'a Rida CKLW, Bud Dorioo WCAR, A. Cooper CXLW, Bob Staton WXYZ. Frad Walaa 0:10—wwj, latoriatoaa 11:00—WJR, Cooaort WWJ. raw aiiMboth WXYZ, L. Sharmon CXLW. Hopvood WCAR. B. Morrla TUESDAY MOgNINQ 0:00—WJR. YOlM of Agrto. ' ipa •lOO—WJR. Uualo Hall CRLW, too Opanar WJBK. Nava, Amy WCAR. Nava WPON, Sporta 7:00—WJR. Nova Mulls WWJ. MOW*, Roberta w£fk Nava, Wolf __ cklw. nova Toby Do*M WJBK. Moan, Amy ItSO-WXYX Nova. Wolf CKLW, Novo WJBK. Nova, Amy ll4B—WJR, Nova B. Quaat CK'J SS* WPON. Nova. Ltvla ShOV 0:0A—WJR. Novo, Murray WWJ, Navi, Hi— WXYZ, Foul I cklw. Nova tllOp-WJR. Tima for Muato TUKSDAY AFTBRNOON tiioo—wjr. Nava, Pons WWJ. Nava, L/aker WAYS. Nava. MeNeetey CRLW, Joa Yob WJBK. Novo, joid wcab, Imr Mas, ix,;. WFON, Nava. Jorry Olaan 11:00—WJR. Tima for Motlo Twist Craze Very Amusing Year By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — It we hadn’t had the Twist, 1961 would have been 6 aad year.^ • , ^ “I’ve never seen oo many cops and celebrities out In front,' Bob Hope exclaimed the other night on a Waldorf data sparkling with President Kennedy, Cardinal Spellman, Gen. Mac Arthur and others. “Why you’d think this was the Peppermint Lounge! Give credit to Hope — he’s our only great humorist left. “Nixon couldn't be here; he’ running for Governor . . . he’ll campaign on radio,” Hope said ... to enormous applause and loud laughter even from JFK who remembered the TV debates pretty well . . “Gen. MacArthur didn't have tar to came; he lives right here in the Waldorf. That GI Bill is wonderful!’’ Hope said . . . "But the General Is used to roughing it. He was in ‘South Pacific’ before It was a hit . . ★ ★ dr "Listen, touch football' to not a sissy sport. Up there In Hyannis Pert, roughing the passer Is a Federal rap . . . Students out there, stand by! You could be the next Cabinet! If you were from Harvard, you'd be In tomorrow! ... New York has changed. I took s cab from the airport and Carmine Do Saplo was driving," ★ ★ ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... You can hardly blame Fred Astaire for setting up some rules for press interviews. He will not discuss (1) his. age (S) Ginger Rogers or (t) Barrie Chase rehearsing her cafe singlhg act — to open in the Chicago Living Room ... Julie Andrews closed her eyes and guessed some of the food set before her at the Tower Suite. “I have 20-20 smell,” she said . . . «■ Novak will Christmas in Chicago. KARL’S PEARLS: An executive is a follow who is able to think a problem over for a few days, before he makes a snap decision.— I TODAY’S BIST LAUGH: A young mother (noses Quote) found her kids gdltly watching a cowboy show on TV, and said, "WelL all’s western on the quiet front."' WISH I’D SAID THAT: Comedy writer Jay Burton offered a toast: “Well* here’s to me — you people are dolfig all right by yourselves.’’. \ “Man’s best friend is no longer his dog," dafans Tyson and Frleker at the Hue Angel. “Now'it’s his expense account” &£%&*“*”**' • • • t**1* ^rtter* \ Italy, they probably, never will. For in these hills to the birthplace of Western man ... the first laws the renaissance. All these things are in every Italian, even} in the Italian Communist.” * Moja Spirited music by. Giovanni! Vicari was an asset, as was the ]understanding script by producer! Helen Jean Rogers. But I thought ] the real hero of the piece was the cameraman, Bill Hartigan. Once! again, his personalized, adventur-! ous style made the program's statements come alive. 1:10—WXTa. McNaaley, Novo 0:00—WJR. NOVO, OboveMO WWJ, Novo, Maxvall CXLW. Novo Doalo WJBK, law. Mo wpon. Navi, Dob MoLaod till—CXLW, Shlftbraak 1:00—WJR, ■ NtVO, BbOVOMO WWJ. Mono. MOmU WXYZ. waiter CKLW, Doalaa WJBK, Novo, Robert Lea WCAR. Novo, BbarWu WPON. Novo. Dm MoLaod 1—WJR. MW XW. Rod I WXYZ, Wmler WJBK, Novo, too WCAR, Novo. Sheridan WPON, Revo, Don MoLm 4:00—WJR. MONO RbU Qifo-WJR Bays. Mario Rtl TELEVISION BARGAINS! 19" Motorola TV with Remote Control ..... ..............$189.95 .19" Admiral Consolette (Blond) ... ........... $179.95 Open 'til 9 Every Evening ELECTRIC COMPANY ampictft JUST EAST OF TEL-HURON SHOPPING CRHT1R ■lorse Ambushes Boy! Chasing Lost Chick YALE, Okia. . Funeral aontoo lONM sday. Dee. II he Huntoon P tev. Malcolm B . Bradley, Mr*. Ammon Martin and Mr«. Oeoree Michaels; Alee ear* diet by U grandchildren ini i irmt-graadctiiMrealtoctletloa of (be Boebty waTheTiaSMf, Dee.< llall a.m. from the OontUon-Johns Funeral Home. Funeral DkTd at 10 a.to. irom Bt. Bene-• dlot'l Church. Interment In Ml. Hope. Mn. Herrington will In etote at the Dontli v -Funeral Some. HICKMAN, DSC. lerioru; aae wi oeiovea Donn Hickman; beloved dauihter ofjCharJee F. andt Mary Me8hane; Mary Mri. Karl uuiia I Ann I Mantyla; IH —— ..—.i. Albert (Shirley i Barnea. Hecltatlon of’the ------------Sm AT Ffcotofex PHONED MOSCOW - Ed Klein (left) and Steve Murray pose with a telephone at the Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity houae at the Unlveroity of California in Los Angeles after'making a phone call to Moscow to invite Nikita Khrushchev to the New Year’s Day football game in the Rose Bowl. UCLA meets Minnesota in the bowl game. The youths tried to put the call through to the Kremlin but had to kettle for a Pravda reporter when the phone operator said she couldn't get anyone who spoke English at the Kremlin. ■H ■________ A» at «;« ».* he Conti Funeral Horn*, Dray-Ptolm. Funeral sendee win be I Tuesday, Dec. — LUCAS, BBC. 0, 1M1. MAST VIR- 4, Mri. Msbl* Dupr Blames Parents for Delinquency _________ __ „___________________idly. 1 PC*. II M 10 M. from m. \ Vincent DePnul Citbollc Church «"h Soy. Ft. Thompion Mar-g officiating. Interment In Mt. 'The/v /ve Lost Their Guts/ Says Serious Comic Sam Levenson NEW YORK .(UPI) — What's wrong with American kids? What's wrong with the schools? "Parents!" said Sam Levenson, a comedian who wasn’t Joking. “I think they’ve lost their guts!" 'They’ve given their children’s playgrounds to gangsters and they're buying them TV sets Instead of education, he said. Mounted Police Given 17 Dogs, 2'Bad Hombres' cero officiating. ] Olivet, Detroit. ] lie In state, at me Davit Funeral-Home. of Mri. Beatrice Cornell Reclta-nlght HOLLYWOOD (UPI)-The Royal Canadian Mounted Police are 17 dogs to the good because of a Walt Disney picture filmed in the Banff, Alberta, area of Canada. a. Requetm Man win ba . .eiday, Dec. M at 10 a.m,'____ at. Aon'a Roman Catholic Church, OrtonvUlo with Rev. Fr. John Hardy nmatoltof Interment JR Seymour Lake Cemetery. Mri. Mo-Cli Hand will Ua' ln itata at the C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, Ortonvllle. The company, filming "Nikki, Wild Dog of the North," ended up with 19 extra Animals. Production manager Erwin Verity called the Mounties and offered them the dogs. “We’ve got a couple of bad hombres, too,” he said. RfTFF. DEC. IS. INI. VICTOR H.. 47 Haiti St., act 72; beloved hui-band of Beda Reytf; dear fathar of Mn. John It. Bdwerdi, and Hobart Inf); Alio survived by 1 grandchildren. MBOfM arrangements are ponding from the Sparki-Orlffln Funeral Home Iparke-Orlffln Funeral Hi .rhere Mr. Rovff #111Ue In • aftor » p.m. Tuaaday. When the mounties arrived for the dogs they found the "bad hombrtf” to be two wolves who had showed up on location site and been picked up with the dogs. SCHUSLER. DEC. 10, INI. RUB-lell. aiVt B. Pike St., age 44; beloved ton of Mra. Helen Schue-lar; dear brother of Mra. Valina Crabtree, Mr*. Ardith Orate and Howard Behulusler. Funeral ar-ransemanta art pending from the Puriley Funeral Home where Ml. Schulueler will Ue la (tote sfter Levenson was a New York City slum boy himself and taught for a number of years in the city' schools. These days, between TV and club engagements, sading at PTA meetings. "Six parents are enough to wipe I NEW YORK (UPI) - foie num-out any two Juvenile delinquents,’’ ber of service stations in the nation Emhbmb aakL “TMrty parent! | increased hy 14.8 per cent in the j Filling Gasoline Needs SIMS. DIC. 10, IM1, HIRAM. U00 Decker, Walled Lake. age 71; beloved husband of Florence simi; dew father of Richard Sima; dew brother of Bartel and Herbert Una and Mri. Roy Christian. Funeral aarvlca wlU ba held Wednesday, Dee. it at I p.m. from the Rlehardaon-Blrd Funeral Heint. wBiid1" -*“■ Lawrence StaM I *»l 1 — .. . lt_~ --------- - -------uiucoacu uy iw.o per mil in UK could demolish any street gang, past decade while consumption of-"That chunk of concrete In front motor fuel increased by 66 per of the house is the most valuable cent, according to the American playgrovmd in the world. Mothers Petroleum institute. There were _ t to keep k sale for their children. "What do they have to do? Watch their own children. Pattol the streets. Get the kids home for dinner. Can the kids home when she sees them playing with the wrong kids. If every mother did that, thero'd be no gang, "She's got to make the die-tlnefion between a gang and a club. Even a well-intentioned child can gel confused If the choice Is left to him. Any kids that carry knives don’t belong to a elnb. "Second, she can go to the corner and say, ‘boys, you go home.’ "When I was a kid, every parent was a policeman. My mother would call the policeman against her own child If he wouldn’t come in when she said. "Now a policeman gets a rough deal from the parents when he tries to protect their streets. The disrespect for the gentlemen of the law is unheard of. "These parents a i police- "They're so afraid of depriving their children of aomething, if the kid needs a book from the library, they go get it for him—when the kid should be going himself and learning to use the library.’’ How will it .all come out? “I think the children will save themselves," said Levenson. "in spite of their stupid parents.” | Death Notice tNDERBON. DSC. 10. lMl. WIL-ltam Coborn. 37 N. Park B(.. an 57; belovad husband of Bally Anderson; dear father of Loyal and Lynn Anderaon. Mri. Marjorie Bell. Mri. Lone Darnell. Mri. **Sue Braecll* end Mn. Ooraldlne Campbell; dear brother of Homer, gamy and WUIIe Anderion. Mri. Lulu Little, Mn. Myrtle White end Mri. Pauline Btewart; Alio turvlred by If grandchildren and 1 great-grandson. Funeral arrangements ara pending from the Punley Funeral Home •hen Mr. Anderion win lie In SPENCE, DEC. 10. 10*1, DAMON C, 704 Parkvood. aae 20; beloved husbono of Murllne Spence; ___________pf Jenle B. Spence; dear fathar of Olenda X. and Linda P. Spence; dear brother of Mn. Vera Bhrum. Mrs. Jamee Wlleon and Lewie and Willie R. Spence. Funeral arraniemente -pendlni (ram Oka Funeral Horn THOMPSON. DBC. 10. 1001, JAMES S.t 1010 Olidyke Road, age 32; beloved husband of Rachel "^iS5S‘---------1 i BROWN. DBC. 0. 1061. ORREL L. 27 Mill 8t.. Ortonvllle. age 74; dear sliter of Raymond Hyde: Tarry Fowler; Star brother of R L, Robert and Virgil Thompeoi Mra. Lonnie mm and **-Leona Thompson, Funi tee will be MdT I Thursday. Dee. fheodore R. AUebaeh officiating. Interment In Ferry Mt. Park Cemetery. Mr. Thompion wlU the Voorheis-aiple i Funeral Home. Orton- If DAN- DEWEY, DEC. 0. 1281. OEOROE H.. 40 Hovey St., Qaford, age 70; deir brother of Mra. Carrie Dicker and Chariai Dewey; Also survived by 1 granddaughter, . I great-grind children. Funeral service will be hitd TlMiday, Dec. 12 at 1 p.m. from the Beeearedt 4k Reid Funeral Home, Oitord with Rev. Harlow Hoyt otfletotlna. Interment In Pilot Memorial Park. Mr. DeWey will lie to atata at the Bounredt A Raid Punaral Home, MTW KfflrifilPSPIEI.-- huiband of Honey Treece; beloved eon of Arvenle Treece; dear father of Darell and Vlclk Ann Traace; dear brother of lira. Wilma Canal and Mrs. Opal Clark. Funeral service wUI be held Tuei-day. Dec.12 at 1:20 n.m. from the Puriley Funeral Home With Dr. Tom Malone offlclatlni. Ini ferment In White Chapel. Mr. Treeee will lie In ete'* *• in* Puriley Funeral Home. Oifon 3IPPLEY, DBC. 10. 1M1. CATHER' lae lEIcki. 42 Center 8t., age 07; dear mother of Mrs. Elinor Rohrback, Mrs. Qenleve Porter. Mn. Marie Landry,. Mrs. Patricia Ouelette. Mri. Batty Ban-nen and Malar .Thomai Dlfflev; Alio survived by 12 grandchildren and 4 gnat-grandchildren. — “------------- will he Wednei- WI8TERMAN. DEC. 0, 1061. EDNA E.. 42010 Cherry Hill Rd., Plymouth, Mich., ege 24; Imlovod daughter of Mr. Collin* Funer_.... pending Lrom the Sparki-Orlffln Funeral icrvlce will Thursday, Dee. ,14 at lb a.m. iroin St. Vincent DePeuI Catholic Church, Interment to Mt. Hope. Mn. Dlfflcy will II* *- —r- -the^ Melvin A.* It Jeffre Wietf Domlil ' Sebutt Funeral . Clara Walten. — -• —7 nn..,, Mn. Loie VIII-enuve. Mri. Lorene Vekaryasc. Mre. jtotly Frelburger. Mn. Joy Howells. Howard. Roy. Dale. Joy, ~~1 Iro Wlsterman. Funeral ■MM* —e pending *--------- n Funeral t Ihe Bparke-Orlffln Funenf Home WOOD. DEC. 0. 1061, WILLIAM II 0120 Dixie Hwy., Waterford, age 02; beloved husband of Lena Ottawa Park Cemetery, Water- et the 8harpe-Ooyette Funeral Home, Clarkiton. WYMER, DEC. I. 1001. EARL. 9877 Elisabeth Lake Road; agt 70; be- dear brother »grandchild reo Will bi held 11:30 p.j I by 10 Funeral , .. .... uesday. Dec. 11 at .... PM w Doneleon-Johm Funeral Home. Interment in White Ctapol Csawtery. Mr. Wy-mer will lie to etate at the Donelion-Johne Funeral Home. > panel away Dae. 1 itMW you are to We keeping, i There is nothing T f t-----------*--t iffl to That you and ____________ Badly mined by wife end famllr. in lovino IdMUoRV of ro6Er R. Curtis who passed away Det. I never part; ----__ ________a yo« to Hie k< I still Save you to my hear -Badly mleeed by MatoOr. nn MW or SCIENCE Shows up in a new version of an old Invorlte. Getting ready for another space shot, this youngster bads hfo erector set rocket latmched. Hie motor raises the rocket into firing position and launches it automatically, while a revolving radar screen "keeps track" of the flight. It’s only one of an endless 'variety of fascinating models he can build with this versatile toy. A Pocket Fan of Mossy When Toa San Tsar Surplus Items Through Waal Ado mi ARE DEBTS WORRYING ■ YOU? -NS charge for foBaat analyeU rnWmmm COUNSELLORS ARE YOU WORRIED OVER DEBTS? ONE PLACB TO FAY BUDGET SERVICE. 10 W. HURON FB 4-0M1 PUT CHRIST BAC«! l For o family Btbla • ------Jhlp, MA 4-1484, LOSE WBIOHT SAFELY________________ economically with newly released llAY RIDES. KITCHEN AVAIL- » for enacke, FE 4-4238 MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS 712 Pontiac Stats Bank Bldg. PAY OFF YOUR BILLS WITHOUT A DOAN) Arrange to pay all your Mila p “ “** weekly pi ment you can afford, AS LOW AS $10 WEEK Jggd tarnl.hment COME IN NOW*ORnCALL ‘i HOME JWmnmaniT CITY AmUSTMENT SERVICE FE 5-9281 7M W. Huron Pontiac. Mich. OPPOSITE MAIN POST OFFICE COATS funeral bomb DRAYTON PLAINS OR 3-T107 Donelson-Johns _FPNBRAI.BOMB SCHUTT . FUNERALS FROM MM. II Auburn Ave FE S-34M SPARKS-ORIFFEN CHAPEL Thoughtful Service Voorhees-Siple CsmotgryLdtg 4 CEMETERY LOTS, WHITE ANY OIRL OR WOMAN NEEDINO a friendly adviser, phone FB 2-0122, Attar l p.m. or If no aiv —ewer call FB 2*134, ConftdenUal. DANCE LESSONS $1.00 All the Old—All the New Open 9 a.m. - 9 p.m. Music Center 268 N. SAGINAW FE 4-4700 VISIT POITIAC RESALE 8HOP BOX REPLIES , At M ul Today there I l were replies si The Pres* I office In the following ! boxes: 1 14, M. M, 56. M, 61, 64. . | 65, 66, 66, 11, It, 16, 76, I SO, It, SI, SS, M, M. Help Wanted Male A Management Position Due to opening of now store, 2 ambitious ana neat-appearing e needed to laurn business. necessary, but Experience .1__ helpful. Salary and boons, oar i lowaoce sod other company ber Ills. Ages tl to 25. none U Taylor. OR 3-0S22. 5 TO 9 P.M. Are You Ambitious? National organisation needs married man »-40 with high school education. |U7 weakly guaranteed white training. Rons OS Ambitious Married Men Oct acaualptcd meeting Tuesday Eve; a P.M. DEC. It fdr nasi Interested In a. uito Interestfng kjBLaa. Must ba wUttSl E bard for sloadyjr * C Food Co. toff. Tile-graph, Pontiac. Mian. ATTORNEY $5,900-$6000 Isreer noaltlow with Ctoklaad County FneS cf too Court. Includes of met desires man of ps-• and even taaippnPMl. Ben-Include paid vacation t dad Wjsafd, MaaMMM, klftoi jecurlty tad retirement beneflu. Interested i— > PERBONEL OF- WCX OAKLAND COUNTY OF- can place 2 men or wombn Pontiac area to supply cor------ * school supplemented by iaswaHI AfpJy peruool^ office. City XaB, ■ m________■ dam area, a . 3-year - trail—. pragram wtth aalaiy plus bonus. t-Hellne lead service available, run fringe benefit*. Call er man roeuma to Mtt and EHumr Jaiuey. y ifom Itotioaai wdg.. Detroit M, Michigan. Ph. WO SALES bustoftst and praltulonwl IX. Irak BMg tm hw SALES tareatod to a tohmtob area. Write pSattoa Fraaa Boufe Must be amrtiaMfc Efoy; ~i home than wagee. FE 4-4326. STOP II TUa Is what you art looking tori Yaar around laeomo ' Secure feature Group Insurance .program No samples or Inventory Earnings |M6 plus per week IP YOU ARE 25-56, MARRIED AND RAVE A OAR CALL FE 1-4)438 FOR APPOINTMENT. T & C Food Co., Inc. ventlon. Full i ' pari time. Hug# rclo Mfg. Co.. 3514 Help Wanted Female WAITRESS Apply to person. Angelo's 6 B. Woodward At Moplc, Bg hi CLERK FOR SODA FOUNTAIN, CITY OF PONTIAC LIBRARY AIDE. SALARY $4,190 - $5,075 At least t year* liberal aria co lags. An excellent importunity I ----- -----feeeional Ubrai City 1 Tl pereonnel office. HOUSEKEEPER TO LIVE IN. Neat, dependable. Cooking and cleaning. Reference* required. Small family. MI 4-4375._ room. TV. t<4 days. $26. 1 Box 61. Pontiac Press. vs HOUSEKEEPING MIDDLEAOED OR OLDER WOM-an to live to, do housework and babysit. BM 2-24S3. TOP SALARY TO THE RIOHT WANTED: ELDERLY WOMAN TO ears for ehlldrea while mother works, more for home than wages. call 673-6411.___________________________ STSySHtino and mother's helper. Exchange for pv- lnj^quarters WOMAN FOR GENERAL OFFICE work, typing required. Must liki detailed clerical work. ' Write Pontiac Prase, Box 71 giving age, work experience and family ata- , Man aged SMS with nolle ge do- esSshSS Ijgtnmlaw IcNah no., Bouse Material *. arrangemei ami Fit »» P m i J. ini tvocoesser f Lone Lake, Tray. I. Party and shower i tar rant. Open Mem. m 6 tin 4. Tuea.. ran. from noon All FINISH HIGH SCHOOL No classes. High School diploma awarded, study at home to spar* time. For free booklet unite to National School of Home Study. f S314. Detroit 24, lastructim—Schools ' In your home. Accordion, organ, jtow. Aeg^e^ ^to* ^ • FT. BUSBY WANTS WtiM OF say kind. Bara car a*d tools *------7 «1.M hr. UL sjgj. OABFBNIBE WOSI „ kind. ReSanable. Call I p.m. FE.S-B42B. CARPENTER 'WORK, NEW AND regalr^$|Small jobs a specialty. MAN WITH PICKUP DUMP AND •take trucks wuh walk. PI 8-8532. CABINET MAKER. CARPENTER. P«ato)ly. FE $4$M Feeds work bad- badly, any type work, OR MAN AND TUDCK BY tar or VNk. FE 8-SMS. HOUR. YOUNG FAMILY MAN NEEDS work. PE 24675 or FE 4-3421. Work Weafod Feawda 11 2 WOMBN IBCSIRK WALL WASH-■»f. A-l WO--. FE 4-tlfl. IRONINO, RBABONABLl!. M 1031, ask tor Mre. WlUlame. WHITE WOMAN warn oayworx, own tronspor'* tlon. Reply Pontiac Prase Box IRONINGS — Uvary. FB 5 S IRONI iMlttkis waiWER-'"’ "■ ________yriwii M1MEOORAPH1MO. TYPINO. 8BC- WINDOWB ^AND DOORS ExcsmIts Heating Bills a d BCau"^*1 **»- SO^AIN FACTOktY 8BCOND8. Steel overhead earave f--- else ELECTRIC MOTOR 8ERYICB RE- tisvxifusa!- “* *• Appliance Sgrvics FLOOR BANDINO AND FINI8H-lng. 23 years experts— guaranteed. FB 4-6637. Automebiia Insurance AUTO INSURANCE FOR ANYONE Don NichoUe, FE 8-7157 63 tk West Huron Street Hair Stylists Auto Insurance Denied OR BEEN CANCELLED DO YOU NEED FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY WISH Mench 3.------- AvtoPorts Auto Repair REBUILT MOTORS No Money down—24 mos. to Motor Exchange Co. 461 8. Saginaw nt 3-7432 Batteries BOAT - TRUCE - AUTOMOBILE EAR-LIFE BATTERY CO. I Auburn Ave. . FB S-IBI4 Boats—Accessories SPRINGTIME IB ON ITS W— SO PREPARE FOR IT TODAY I A FUN CHRISTMAS orrr for the whole FAMILY I BRUNSWICK BOAT 1266 8. Telegraph Rd. FE 2- EDNA’S BEAUTY SHOP JFormerly LaChlcJ^ ^ 76 Chamberlain o 2:16 p.m. Tue*. a toarge. gam ledger experience. Must be to handle entire accountlnc protram and prepare operating and financial statements. Write giving age and complete resume of your experience to — COUPLE. CARETAKER. LAROE apartment building, good on maln-tenance. give 0|M, health and ate. Previous experience not necessary, Reply Pontiac Frees EXPERIENCED CARETAKER couple for 28-famlly apartment HmBMMtoAraMiiMial rvleee. Diamond 1-24' r pari time. FE 2-3063 Evelyn Edwards DOCTORS ABBUTANT . ___________String.__________ Crete JKprk. Nothing Down. PAUL ORAVES CONTRACTING Free Eetlmatee OR 4-I2II COMPLETE MOD ERNIZATION service. Residential and commercial. All work guaranteed. FHA terms. Licensed—bonded—Insured Quinn’* Conetructlon FE 6-8132 Nsiotu Opporiuaitids _____*9*. run osnu., * oau per unit, bultt-lns. Parking, walk*, lawn. 6*3.660 on your __________ E. J. Dunlap. Bidder FE 6-1166 Cabinet Making CABINET MAKINO. COUNTER topping. Reae. prteaa. FE |Mdg. CABINET WORK. REMODELING, carpentry. Free set. FB l-T*~~ CarpatClaaowB Chain Saws- , HOM ELITE ALL MODELS^ON DISPLAY FREB DEMONSTRATIONS , Cuff Dreyer Gun & Sport Center 15316 Holly Ad. - MB 4-4W1 —Open Dally —* .—-— CASHIER ..........110 A PART TIME. Night work. _____ 23 to 35. Mdtt have pleasant Coal MACHINE OPERATOR CASHIER i Days. Light experience. MACHINE OPERATOR . Full time for B-----to motie machine. AUTO BILLER .............. Must have experience and awn transportation. . iteijigent BXORETARY .............. 6306 Age 26 Id 26. Boms experience, pilgd phone volte. Opportun- Top executive la swank offices. AttraeMve, Intelligent girl It essential. Type |6; ihortband 10d. Alt M.to 26. Bxparisnead. ACCOUNTING ORAD. X-OPEN Must ba recent grad, from accredited school wtth 32 accsunt- MECHANICAL ENOINEER ...........OPEN Recent grad. Oom MECHANICAL ENGINEER EVELYN EDWARDS VosaUfloal caunciiing service MH East Buna ■ Salto ■ TELEPHONE FB44IM OLGA STOKER A FURNACE COAL LOW SOX POCAHONTAS COAL Kentucky Lump, tgg and stoker Utility else coal. $17.40 ton BLAYLOCK COAL A SUPPLY CO. »1 Orchard Like Ave. FE 3-7101 U-WASH-IT 16 LB. WASHERS SOFT WATER OPEN 34 HOURS PLUFFY DRYER Hi -* Marira. Mhos Tala. Cnttooi Tailoring BE PREPARED tom-Bulft Fallout Shel tor free^esttoiMes c*1 RON JOHNSON QUALITY FALLOUT SHELTERS Alas A-l brick, Mock aad vl cement wwk. Ne Job tan email. _____CALL BM 3-7416_ ON THESfe PAOBS7 anTWPpi ( S Day. Low , . I Cancel urban Resjii* Art Obtained ... , It's tbs Ecom mtcal Way. Jut Dial FB MUB. OIL WAVE STYLING - COMPLETE 16 s. Saginaw gt.____FE $-4341 STREET LEVEL Bet. Eagle Theater and J.C. Penney CLEARTONE HEARING AIDS Hooting Strvks Day or Night Service Joseph Gauthier. OR 3-6132 Service Call $4.50 HARNECK HEATING Salsa and Service Fit. 662-6226 UNION LAKE HEATINO. ee. Special O caned, 66.61 WE LL DO YOUR LAUNDRY FOR ydU. Finished laundry aery. But-tram'A 14B0 Baldwin. FB 3-0376. Rock Wool ......... 16c a bag 4xSxM Hardboard ....... 61.86 4xSxV« Fir PlyWOOd .... 62.75 PONTIAC LUMBER CO. Yard Prices, Delivery Service Available 631 Oakland Ave. rE 441613 MX* — F ECONOMY BTUDd ea 2to 6 11* U 2x4 No. 3 fir 10-16 ft. Oto Bn. ft. Mn * — '' Sit TD _ _ lVe — 3 It. st. saeb . 46% Off Waterford Lumber Cash^a&d Carry^_ ^ 1271 Airport R Plywood 660 606 stock at an tli ALL TH1CBNBSSRS AND B Plywood Distributor 176 N. Casa . FB >#436 Moviog Service houSE MOVING Fully cqulspad. fe <-i * y YOUNG PRIVATE LESSONS IN VOICE RIClfiKS’ J*trbfil^irUFE,tV> We Teach BUY — -SKLT-RENT — RfPAIR ALL MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS 9-9 Every Day' 31 Yearn in Pontiac Music Center 268 N. SAGINAW 4 Floors of Music To Serve You Better , FE 4-4700 Hsw and Used TV TVs, RADIOS. Hl-Pb. STEREOS Johnson Radio & TV 4»e WUra '• jjtogi REBUILT, USED TVs Guaranteed OBEL TV SERVICE 3236 Elisabeth Lake Rd. FB6-4S41 John’s Party Store 136 BALDWIN AVENUE Oath ‘til 1 ajn.—7 days a we EXPERT PIANO TUNING ,_________SERVICE Wieeand Music Center Phone FEderal 2-4634 A-l PLA8TKR1NQ AND, REPAIRS Reae. Pal Loo. FE 2-7622. PLASTERING FREE ESTIMATES Ogm NEW AND USED FIXTURES. Woatrido Plumbing Seles A^SejrvL- Popcorn Products Wholesale—Rttail Rantal Efripaaat OO^^RS^tS&ERS WALL PAPER STEAMERS I Ssptic Took Service TODOROFF BROS. Staaifs fsr CeHeclers 'REE NICARAUOA LIST Squirrel Stemp Sbop Box 4604 Auburn Height* LYNN'S TV SERVICE. WE BERV-leo all make* ol radios, TV, hi-fi, stereo. Farts and labor gnaran- —------ specialty. TE H740. Serv. available oi MICKEY STRAKA TV SERVICE DAY OR BVBB- FE 5-12H THIS SPACE RESERVED FOR YOUR BUSINESS OK SERVICE AD ' DIAL FE 2-8181 TODAYI General Tree Service Wt M72S Or QB 3-e04«. HAULINO AND RUBBISH. NAME your prleo. Any ttmo. FE Sir ITU LINO AND RUBBISH, toad, anytime. FB 4-8864. 3T----------- HAULING - YARD CL OR 3-2843, OR 3-8374. LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING Trucks to Rent AND EQUIPMENT Damp Treeki—Semi-Trailen Pontiac Pann and Industrial Tractor Co. 711 x WOODWARD I MW ru 4-1441 Open Daily Including Sunday THOMAS UPHOLSTERING 117 NORTH PERRY BT. FE 5-8888 BAKU’S CUSTOM UPHOLSTER. U^fiT* Cooley Lake Roat BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEAKBRB. Walla and windows. Reas. Satli-faction Euarantocd. FB 2-ld2l, ACME QUALITY PAINTS INC. Complete eeiectlon la stock N, Saginaw fe 2-3302 REACH CASH CUSTOMERS through Classified Ads. CaD EE 2-8181. and ask for Wont Ads by factory trained men ... - HHIJNH flO. , . 1 111 N. SAOINAW FB 6-2231) w A N T R S U L T S ? TRY w. A N T A D S FE 2 8 1 8 1 A