Th« Weather C.B. WMtkcr Bwmi rwwu« ( tempA«tam ImM THE PONTIAC PRESS Horn# Editi9ii 118th YEAR ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 20. 1900-64 PAGES """**.5ogWraK;‘®"*‘' At Victory Luncheon Turns Down Assistant's Job DeWitt Quits as Tiger Prexy Expect Russia to Offer Cuba Massive Aid Jackie Waves 'Bye to Fans Big Questions Will Be Whether K's Sincere and Fidel Needs Him •C»N came majority stockholder in the Detroit 'Tigers and announced ha would assume the prealdency. Fetzer, a previous one • third owner, became a two4hlrd owmr through stock purchase. PAY orr ooimuorr , Whether DeWitt will be paid far the next two years of hW contcact was a question not answered Immediately. DeWitt has been under verbal fire from the Tiger ownership since the American Leagoa season ended Oct. 2, with the Tl-grrs In sixth place. They wars lourth in 1959. Russia has been supplying almost none of these. Experts believe she could send such items to Cuba only by making the political decision to take them away from either Soviet consumers, satellite countries or underdeveloped countries ot Africa and Asia which the Communists have been trying to NEW YORK (A*)—Vice President Richard M. Nixon today proposed establishing a National Eefithomlc Coun-!rtl-.part of a 12-polnt program he set forth to accelerate econwnlc progress In the United States. The council he suggested would correspond to the ^National Security Council which advises the chief Many offlclala here think Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev wants to use Cuba for all the propaganda It's worth, but doeo not want to go to great expense over If. RaIpKHouk Steps Into Stengel's Job NEW YORK (UPI) - Ralph Houk, a war hero who never rose higher in the major leagues than third-string catcher, today named to succeed Casey .Stengel as manager of the New York Yank- executhre on the problona of security. Nixon said In a speech before the National Association of Business Economists that the new group would coordinate "the various government efforts bearing on! Accuses Vice President of M-Sided Debatin^'j TV Dispute Still On NEW YORK liB-Sen. John F. Kennedy today accused Vice Pnti-dent Richard M. Nixon of todng to debate with one-sided state-1, while refusing ‘‘to make his answers and charges in direct teie-70 mU- lion people watching." the promotion of healthy economic jgrowth." The Democratic presidential nominee, with this preface, issued his own written reply to a Republi-"white paper" put out W^es- day. Suddenly, It's Indian Winter Here Freezing weather and snow were forecast for Southern Michigan today, after some parts of the state got a mild aample of winter last night. lEditor* M(^. Itchlgan School Pro r approved, ttie pre, a permit dlitreaied • rt>w-«oodod—ud et 9 borrow building irt seriM dl-eu«>mg n the Nor. » balli^ It to the conatitutlon and operating fundi lacking of a ipecial A dissenting view expressed by jsome government officials is that Russia will be more than eager engulf Cuba economically with resulting ‘‘Sovietlzatlon’’ of the Cuban economy which might be hard to retrieve even U Castro is overthrown some day. By DICK SAUNDERS Proposal No. 1 on the Nov. 8 ballot mil concern two major financial factors: 1. The tax dollar. 2. The board of education’s “market appeal.’’ To simply say a vote for It will cost the public much less money Is not enough.^ The voter should know ffouk, a coach under Stengel the past thitie years, received a one-year contract for a salary estimated between $25,000 and $30.-000, compared to the $85,000 Stengel reeeived for each of the past two years. ‘The consensus among economic experts here is that the U.S. action will not topple Cuba’s economy qven^ht and bring about a revolution against Castro, but that it will cause economic trouble for Cuba — the seriousness depending what Russia is willing to do. HoJe is a tobacco-chewing product of the Yankee organization who was third-string catcher for tho Yankees off and on from 1947 through 1954. But hr declared It would Infringe in no way on the Indrpend ence of the Federal Reserve Board. In this earlier paper, Nixon said he was nailing what he lenned 13 mlsslalenienla or distortions Kennedy made during the eampalgn. This, Nixon said, "is some ; In » point by-pfjinl reply, Ken-fhing the opposition seems bent on nedy said Ni.\on repealed "some doing and which is already caua- «I tl>«* niost glaring errors" the ihg concern in responsible circlesjvicc president had made during both in our dountry and abrortd”|II'*’ niimpaign Much of what the Republican! Meanwhile, the dispute about the presidential candidate said in his future of the television ( He’s 29 years younger than Stengel, who was not rehired because his age. Why it will cost him less if the proposal is passM. The forecast called for isolated snow fiiBTtos near lakes in Southern Lower Michigan and scattered snow flurries w showers in North- re^lt in less tax cost to him. ern Lower Michigan. First he is voting to extend le 1955 proposal and, second, be 1 voting to make several changes in it which will improve the board’s financial position and speech-which he described as the^^rivs the candidates went most Important of his campaign Emissaries of the two *ched-on business and economic mattei-s:“J'’d discussions today on possible -expanded on proposals which he o' ^'’Wny niRhfs meet- previously had” made in criticism two hours, instead of of Democratic programs. i NIXON’S IDEA WARNING SYSTEM I This was Nixon's proposal, ac- For the first time he emphasked!‘^^P'«* j",, ^ the possibility of "an early warn-l«“‘»“I'^'‘’"’d'date Ing economic intelligence sys- Longest LA Criminal Hearing tern” Finch Retrial Goes to Jury ture hit the PonUac area with i (reeling 31 degrees at morning. LOS ANGELES (API—The jury,his pretty mistress, Carole Tre-ias the jury filed out after the J at last deliberating in the goff, klllrf his wife. 'judge’s instructions. He yawned. Finch-Tregoff murder retrial—the; handsome haldinr sur- i * A ♦ The proposed amendment was.longest criminal hearing in Los_ ’ ■. ■ ^ He clasped the hand of rCd- formulated by a state-appointed Angeles County history. ’ ’ nroseculor haired Miss Tregff, 23. his onetime! imittee headed by Louis H.' For I6V2 weeks one man and Wednesda.v "We .receptionist, and spoke reassuring- He said It could operate Ibrongti flexible credit and fiscal possibilities, that could Include tax adjustments, to protect the economy against threats to stable grawth. In this connection he suggested amending federal law to include easonable price stability” as a (Continued on Page 2, (bl. 6) WILLIAM D«Wm Schimmel. president of the Pon-1 eleven women jurors have heard, tiac Board of Education. evidence and argument support- Schimmel also was chairman of ing and denying the state’s claim ly to her. She smiled. And that’s hot all. The mcrcury the committee that drew up the that Dr. R. her lip News Flash Kennedy said today It Is interesting fart" that Nixon la willing to eontbiue the debate by Issuing statementa with a dnpil-eating machine. He has been lin|il.vtng that his opponent Is afraid of more face-to-face meetings with him. Kennedy said the answer to the Nixon "white paper’’ will be [lions of white papers cast on !Nov. 8." ■ ; And he added that while he wa.s; 1 1 na replying to Nixon, "the total record on WOTlu MortS of Nixon’s misstatements, slurs' by the chib, DeWitt oaM: “Ha came to the TIgera as presitort sale ct the rhib. "He lUted that the necessity to a new natural consequence, but« the opinion that as assistant to the president he was not convinced that hla program could be carried forward according to his prevtous plans." Amicable settlement was reach-ed, a club statement said. beWitt, readied at home, aakl hla plana were "Indefinite" and that he had not contacted any other ball club. He said he planned to take "a (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Gold Prices Soar in Frantic Rush expected to drop to a new of 25 tonight, with skies clearing. FRIDAY PARTLY CLOUDY Friday will be partly cloudy with the high temperature in the upper 1955 amendment. gatnrday and Sunday wUI be a will tarn colder ngnta Monday. Scattered showers are forecaal (or Soaday or Monday, with leas than one-half Inch in ralnfal. The lau proposal, which Expires done 36, 1663, did three major things to the way we II- grams la Mtohigan. took the limit off the of taxes, under certain conditioni, that could be levied to pay school bonds. guaranteed t a xpayers against a heavy tax burden on real estate, by establishing a State w ■ .. School Bond Loan Fund of $100,-1 j Morning iwrtherly « ”;000,000. The school ifistrict coul^T; milM per hour will diminish ^ night. ^ h h !leached a higher amount ot money; ' ...._...lthan could be raised by a tax raU iFrwn 10:15 a,m. yesterday until, - ^ ----- - flto same hour today .1 of an inchl ^rain fell in the downtovim area.(P‘ The temperature in downtown j ^ j poaed limit t „ district could tb in debt, as long " blooti (Continued on Page 2, Cbl. 2) " property valuation). Pontiac was 41 at 2 p.m. nay aerk-nssuter—H-B on your b After an overnight stay at a hotel, the jury continues deliberating on'an issue on which a previous jury deadlocked last March. The charge that Finch and Miss Tregoff went to his estranged wife’s home in suburban West Covina the night of July J.8, 1950, and that he deliberately shot socialite Barbara Jean Finch, 36, to death. ' JAASHINffim tlTll - ■The United States has recalled Its Ambassador Philip W. Bonsai from Cuba, informed sonrees said today. They said Bonsai Is being recalled "f and distortions could not possibly be answered in a single white paper” In Todays Press CAROLE TREGOFF I». R. RERNARD FINCB The state says the defendants wanted to avoid sharing his wealth with Us wUe In a divor.« settlement. The physician and his codefendant say they went to tn*: house to discuss a divorce with Mrs. Finch, that she produced a gun and it discharged accidentally as Finch grabbed it and fried to throw it ^away. Mrs. Findh died oT^k bdlRil in the back. On various points, the Kennedy rejoinder said: Kennedy had contended the United States last year had the lowest rate of economic growth o( any major industrial soctety. Nixon said the rate was 6.9 per cent, higher than that ol majw European powers. Kennedy replied the Joint Economic Committee of Congress placed the 1953-59 average at 2.3 comics 47 'P®'' Weatem Euro- county News St average. Editorials ... 6 —Kennedy said Soilet power Food Section S3 88 ctwalwcllow wwo to at- Markets.....................48 ! strip that of the UUted States by ObHnaries ............... $6 ! 1675. Nixon said the Snvleto’awa Pet Doctor .. .V........... 6 1 announced goals were below this. Sports ............. 43 - 46 1 Kennedy retorted official Soviet Thenters ................. 46 | pUrtientlons Usted the talk ganl TV and Radio Progranu . . H 1 at 1JW billion kllowdtta of elec- WIIsM, Enri ....... .......IS tricIty, approximate^ the Hgnre W«imen,’s Pages ....., . 36-81 1 projected tor the Unttod Staton. By The Associated Press The price ol gold soared to an unprecedented high today. Hu tween $37.50 and $38.50. And as the price the metal gained nearly V-80 in fnmtic trading, gold shares leaped ahead in Lemdon Stock Exduinge deaUnA ♦ dr ' to The story was the same hi Frankfurt, Germany, where tlw price was $37.68 an ounce when the price went to $39. Gold 1 on the New York exchange idM sharply. A scramble tor gold waa h off earlier this week by their customers to change i can dollars into gold. One dealer said this hu led ^ yeculaticn that t^ United 8MM may eventually devalue tts dci^ by fixing a higher Trice tor 'fall than its current fft.an otnot. :r..." ■1: r- TWO TH|: PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAV, OCTOBER 20, 196Q State Candidates Swainson Hunts for Pheasants Warm t/p ,To/W"^ D«m Takes Day Off After Heavy Stumping in Six Cities liirRoSE w rr»f swainson Ll. Gov. John B. Swainaon paused today in fii* hunt for votes' in Michigan's cities to hunt for pheasant in the marshlands. The Dc^norratic nominee for; governor headed for Sebenaing in the Thumb area after completing | another strenuous 16-hour day of' campaigning Wednesdav la Mops at six Htiea, Swali In St. Joseph, he stood bareheaded in the predawn.rain to shake hands with factory workers at the huge Whirlpool Corp. plant. Then the 35-> ear-old candidate had breakfast with M Benton Harbor schoolteacliera and outlined a 14-point education program. "Education is the ultimate salvation of our country.” he told them. ••'There is nothing more important' At sr ublican rival for governor, Paul , " ;iir'i;);iVarrivid here yesleiday in; A Rosary *'30 g drizzling rain to be placed per- p m- mimently at Eton Park. |ol the William R. HamUton Co. The obsolete plaae, with all Its T expeotlve esatnls missing, f" *“ be set ap la the park ■ Labor leaders won the Dem-! iocratlc nomination for Swainson' ’*’® *®*'’® problems created by and he is counting on their money jautomahon in industry, Nixon re-and organization support to put jscted t^-all consultation among him in the governor’s chair, stUdi®"!®'’' bidustrial and gqvemment Bagwell ; leaders. Instead he recommended IIts journey. -; The Democrats: 35'- year - old*':®'^"« for each majOTl choice to carry on the l^year re- »» gune begun by Gov. Williams tes! been described as "personable” The Sl-million craft was towed without any major difficulty from Selfridge Air Force Base. State police and crews from the Birmingham Parks and Forestry Division kept traffic from interfering H Film Star to Talk for Republicans The only real ‘trduWe in getting lems. ithe plane safely to Birmingham Discussing other approaches to was an underpaH just jfcst of - maintain a fixed economy, thejUtica. The tail of tte plane was GOP audience of moif Jian 200 in ±!. ' the Cheboygan Armory. In answer to’ a question, he declared it was even possible that neither tax would be necessary— but he emphasized that this possibility wu remote. On the Nov. i — -The Rev. Martin Luther King ■ (center) walks through a picket line under arrest for protesting lunch-counter segregation in Atlanta, Ga. At left is another demonstrator, Lonnie King, and at right an unidentified picket. 36 Negroes Jailed in Atlanta . . . Scheduled to arrive at the park George Murphy Will AppeqiL in Birmingham for Nixon, Lodge In his new role as campaigner for the Nixon-Lodge ticket, former screen actor George Murphy will be in Birmingham next Wednesday night. His hosts will be the Birmingham Volunteers tor Nixon-Lodge Murphy will speak at a 7 p.m. dinner at the Birmingham Community House. ^ A ★ ♦ Known belter for his career i AT PtoMii . King is in Jail with 33 others awaitmg trial. They refuse to put up bail and may serve their sen- for himself in behalf of the Repub-party. Me- Behind Bars vni iiir 13IW. Cl Dwioi proposal ^ for a boost of 1 per cent In the . eurrent 3 per cent sales tax. Swato-i, ^3TI-ANTA. Ga. (AP)—Follow-jNewberry 's, Grant's and son said he doesn't believe the^.* P*®***®** "‘W* *™'‘*®‘* ®* ***3”|Crory’s stores. White lunch_ average voter has enough facts P***’®^’ , leader Martin ter facilities at the other stores about the complex lax tssue ’ 35 otherjwere closed when the demonstra- make an Intelllgent decision on the segregated!lions began shortly before noon, matter. facilities were behind biini| jhere were a few tense situa- A taxation advisory committee!TV «charges ofjtions during the demonstrations headed by University of Michigananti-trespass land picketing, but no violence. Professor William F. Haber is ex-| , I All defendiuits pleaded not guil- must be attacked in all its forms | -p,. problem was solved by . ... ... "««*•«*! raising the nose of the Jet. The. Hat nis election, he said, will work rules for labor, and business! |a|j went down and the 36-foot- iiiean only more poillical war- pricing practices. ; wide plane UrtVinore bickering, more con- the «ime area, he called (or difficulty, fnsion, more stalemates and .fair-minded enforcement of the! more messes In Michigan.” antitrust laws' TW* GOP candloate set -out4iva..poUcy fw ____________________ _______, ^ convention I thktT the craft nao lo w vu u.r, thro^h Northern Michigan before „f business economiste iri-hls only road by 3:30 p.m. so not to tic up![" J’ the Nov. 8 election. Henceforth, he s,.heduled engagement of his sec-!traffic ‘'Jican tenre rather (han appeal in an etfort to stir the said, the campaign will focus en- jgy yorg ng w ♦ * Now chairman of the Celeb conscience of the South '®®*‘|y his Democratic opponent — Sen. The plane was pulled Into a , rttleo for Nixon and Lodge Com Metropolitan Detroit, where people f Kennedy-here in the last vacant gas station at Mound Road: milter, Murphy has been sUte ana votes are far more numerous. (,f ,beir televised debates Friday and M58, where superintendent (^chairman in CallfornU. a dele Bagwell flew through gray and . i ..... . threatening skies to the far tip of the Lower Peninsula to give an assist to Rep. Victor A. Knox of Sault Ste. Marie. Knox, trying for his fifth straight, term in Congress, is battling again with Prentiss M. Brown Jr., who' picked up 48 per cent of the vote for Sit-In At his hearing, the Rev. M. L. King, who led the Montgomery, Ala., bus boycott, said his family spent S4.500 at Rich’s during 1959 ami thHt “'we are welcome at all counters but the lunch counter. the huge 16-county district two, years ago. Brown, who has battled the former speaker of the State House of parks department, Charles gate to four national conventions. 'Gale, spent the night in a sleeping and has been dlrertor of the last fbag in the jet’s exhaust opening, j two. ' * * ., * u 1 **33)e evening of Oct. 26 will pro- .Sponsors of the gift ^m the Air|yj(jg opportunity for securing Force, the Norman Lyle Air Force I pjorp informatitm concerning the A r\ I r I ^ candidates and to hear an enter- A l/AU/drArl \l iKf®'‘®'®*®*"J}*® P*“®® '^*’®" ** ’*ltaining and able political speaker." 'Nikita Claims In a statement, he also said If [Representatives three times .. , convicted under the antitrespass | fore, is one of the few Democrats law, he may serve his sentence I given a chance of unseating one ( The plane will be placed between ^ j^erick G. Bahr coordinators of Tells 15,000 Soviets arthfpav? dinner, m a Mn, ^statement. Vessels Armed With! .7^ ... They’ve asked that Democrats j Shannon P. Iji i-oiitaiiie Nuclear Rockets ! and so-called independents—as well I A Requiem Mass for Shannon!as Republicans—come out and hear -----------------------.... ......................................................... ........... _ -------------------------- P- La ^ontaine. 48. of 2726 Teyn-|Murphy. Ticket.s are $4. pected to report to Swainson short-1 '“‘’^® ®"'®®8 Negroesty before Municipal Judge James rather than appe^. That, he de-| of the 11 incumbent GOP congress- MOSCOW (f)-Soviet Premier bam Place, will be said at 11; Richard C, Van Du.sen, vice 1y. and aides indicated the nominee P''’’’*®® arrested Webh. Charges against 16 were'I'lat'pd, would "bring the Issue un-| men. Khroshchev said today the Soviet;®-®)- Saturday at Holy Name chairman of the Volunteers for may have more to say on th*'- *®**"'‘'*"* *dismis.sed when an officer test!-<1p''the Scrutiny of the conscience| To one of Cheboygan's biggest Union, which is credited with the Church. Burial will be in Holy N i x o n - L o d g e. will introduce ^ A90A int/aaiAM i%t '4n«aoa*,s .1-- . .. . ______. . rs# sarxmmisnUst ** ' ** ^ matter next week. DeWitt Bows Out as Tiger President • Ctetlnued From Page One) varaHon for two or three tseeks** and that he and iWtser remnlned on the ‘‘friendliest of terms." He mM he had promised FetMr he would be available for "advlee and counsel.” DeWitt said he had spent years in baseball with the Louis Cardinals, old St. Lc Browns and the New York Yankees and that -all had won pennants daring his time with them. He* said be had hoped to pro- ! polllieal turnouts In recent yesrs, I world’s biggest underseas fleet i Sepulchre Cemetery. but that the Tigers were hurt by a “lark of hitting and lark of the double pla,v.*‘ He said he hoped the Tiger slump this past season was only a "one-year thing’■ and that he believed outfielder Al Kaline would become "the greatest ball player in the American League.” . Tiger owners — Fetzer among them — criticized DeWitt for the low i960 finish and also for the sudden resignation of field man ager Joe Gordon. Gordon quit the rhih a day after the oeason eaded, despite a coatract ruaalng through the INI season. Gordon Mamed front office Interferenre for his Interest I sought to divide warring groups. [ized invasion of downtown AOwta fied they had been I'equested to ®f ihe community. by Negroes picketing and staging leave the dining room but not the ---- ------------- sit-in demonstrations- a) stores;store ■ OL II with segregated lunch counters. | The other .36 were hound over ohOppeTS Mall * * * ,to Fulton County Criminal Court. King, who said he was an in- Webb also delivered a strong 1^11^^65160 lOT riled participant and not a leader!tongue lashing to several Negroirs . ± ..i i„ u u •. j - . of the damonstrations. vowed to:students who began picketing ix> DOWntOWll Flint ^ remain in jaU a year If necessary lice headquarters with hastily ^ness; small business a^iiHt rather than make bond. He also [drawn posters during the trial. He’ FLINT (UPI) - A downtown “8.®®®*"®*®- ®®® ™r®l residents said the demonstrations will con-[warned that any further such shoppers mall, similar to one set ®8®®)®* residents, he said, tinue '“until something Is done." 'demonstrations would be pun- “P In Kalaiiiasoo, and other In- ' Bagwell chided Swainson tor re- Copies of his speech distributed Also arrested was Lonnie C. ished. ! no\aHom have been reconunend- !fusing to take stands on "the bum-,by Tass news agency in English; Klj^ too kin), head of the Com- The judge also first invUedj od by a Hrm preparing a master jlng questions'of the day — taxM. gave a paragraph to his announce-; photographers into his courtroom,! plan tor Flint. jeconomlc growth, government re-jment of the nuclear, rocket-armed| but then reversed that decisioni * * h jorganization to promote efficiency!subs, saying the demonstrations were' Murnhv. Bagwell charged that Michigan now has atom-powered subma-[ Mr. La Fontaine died Tuesday 'ririlmized by selfish- rines armed with nuclear rockets.;following an auto accident near .Several species of hii-ds in Ycl-— Khrushchev spoke before 15.0flO[TUbury, Onl. lowstone National Park steam heat Muscovites packed into Luzhniki j ♦ ★ their nests by building them in Stadium. | He was with the sales promo-,the drift of warm vapor from It was his flr*| speech since he MacManus.! geyser basins, rebirned last week from his desk- ;■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ pounding visit to the U.N. Gen- ' eral Assembly. Factory Demonstration Appeal for Human Righto, which one of the demon-■traton said sponaored the dem-onstratiora. All arresto were made at Rich's Department Store on charges ot violating a 1960 act making it a misdemeanor to refuse to leave' private property when requested to do so. Demon.strations also were staged at Davison's, S. H. Kress, Woolworth, H. L. Green, organized for publicity and "my i civic leaders mw the plan nn- About IM city otflctals and courtroom is not going to be used | veiled Wedaesdiy by for that purpose" | * Associate of dnelaiiaB. The largest demonstration to The mall would include walks, date in Atlanta obviously was wtIIi canopies, landscsplag, a reflect-organized. It occurred three days! Ing pool and outdoor showcases, after a Southwide meeting of the! ♦ A * student nonviolent coordinatfng Tart Bonbright. Oty Planning committee at which new sit- “ ... tics were discussed. g*. iSl aiid^ rarffdiig"iowir northwest of American generals and admirals The high school band in the tour- Bay City treated him to a parade through the middle of town. Later, he shared a buffet lunch in Oge-maw County Republican headquarters with a crowd of more than 100. Bagwell told Mrs. Robert Mines ronimisston chairman, described that her pumpkin cake could "easi-the plan as ‘‘dynamic.” Ty win a national It said "he served this notice on; ^ MOVIE CAMERAS— , /y -PHOIECTOIS -BECOBDEBS 9 a.m. State Proposal No. 1 Concerns Tax Dollars , , FRI.^r SAT. , In connection with the report that 9 p m. Noon = the Pentagon decided to send *ub-lsA|» a - ■ bilSITC ■ marines armed with missiles and|^*'* 8"Rrell\e— Revere fictory representative will be ! nuclear weapons to tlie shores of '’*'^* *° «®V question and give expert advice . . . learn what's 2 the Soviet Union.” equipment . learn how REVERE has taken the guess- 2 jwork out of movie making ... see the CLEAR-VUE plastic camera 2 (Jane’s Fighting Ships, au au- [which shows all the functions of the electric-eye cameras and 2 tboritatlve reference work, errd- iO*» SIMMS extra SPECIAL DISCOUNTS during this event 2 IstdoSr pJJeVlw ............. ...... rinex. Though many are old types it has described them as "a formidable threat to the Allied j control of the seas.” The United States, with *00 (Continued From Page Onci [away, "nie hoiuls are paid off atjtere.vt as the district did its flnancingj®®8ular inleivals over a period of | plained, under proslslons of the 19j,“i law. So did ex-manager Jimmie Dykes, swapped tor Gordon Aug. i 2 in an unprecedented swap of managers -by Detroit and Qeve-i land. ■» The managerial deal engineered; by DeWitt. also brought criticism from the Tiger owners. The Weather Sail I'.S. Wrslbcr Barns Brasrl rOHXIAC AKO TIcnUTT.— Vstlsblt rsir and esM tanlibl vtth fraatlna ‘ taoMratsna. Ua Xf la tba rllT la SA ta ska akbOTbi. rridsy psrtht alaafT in< years, just a.s you pay a mortgage. ... money to pay off the bonds Sliort terra bonds don't have the PROILD ITS ElFLCnVLNLSs comes from your po<-kel in tire advantage of these rates. ' Now. sfter five years of proven form of la.\es. Many school districts have ta.x- effectiveness this amendment, or’ *■ * * able wealth to finance school build-' way of buying and paying for If there is a limited ta.v rate in ing programs over shorter periods ischool needs, must be renewed any school district, that district [of 10, 15. or 20 "years w ithout a[ w w * has a limited, or at least unc^r-jlarge increase in the individual's' I Proposal No 1 on the November f®*®- i®«)n®‘. .Wfhich lowers its tax burden, ballot will continue this basic'®"'’‘‘®‘ ®PP®«' ! So the fltst of the five promethod for 10 more years but ♦ > w make a few changes. The pur-' This means not so many firms| »»in make available to short- [ poses of these changes are; ^’’1' J’’*’ ‘® *f»® ‘>®"‘‘® »| term bonds these low interest 1. To extend the benefits of fi-,budding program, and therefore; rates by removing the S5-Tear I nancing with "unlimited taxes " U> |be board must settle for the best! umr iinilt. I all school bond issues. iinterest rate it can get. ; ’ » The interest rate Ls merely what ® P®r®)*ts the issuance of un-, P®-'^s '«>■ "borrowing " <®® *®®'®1 b®®^® ®®y| mariZr IS mllirto^lifv Pay- ““ ‘® “ "'a®*®'®'® ^ ‘"8 if back 10 or 20 years later ®f 30 years. a BUie loan. _ ^ ____ Other major changes listed above 3. To remos e the limit on the ^ . '* *’ will deal mainly with the state loani statoJoan fund. [ "*""• "®^®^ P®^ '* fuqd and its qualifications. To- defiw hond-x that ar^- Now., the only way to get (ho;QUAIJFirATIONR qualified for loan.s. best possible deal with the lowest „ [. . 5 To continue the unlimit.'d P®®®*b'® '"f®®®** » f® ®how who-' ^ ‘®[ faxing ptw^ gn-en school districts'®'®®^ the bonds that you ba)e;l!’“* I!!®* by the 1^ amendment. « solid, guaranteed annual )®«»n'f’^ Tliese may sound confusing mdi fbal .vour "credit” is good ‘ ®8 P 8 complex, but the 1953 law merely _ . * * * made it easier for schools to .tell , ®® fb'®- fbe boai-d must be; Ixinds to pay for buildings—nm-;h ®”’® I^'^®f * f®-'‘ *'®f® like yhu pay for a home. ate, as previously ex-^ provides for a ceiling of to mills. ; giving the power lo the State lieglslature lo change this to a lower figure If, In its judgment. H Is desirable to do to. rile tax r M ID ISU Tmasratan Chart 4T a Marasett* to a 71 W UsmohU V70 a M at MIsmlBtscii St TO tl M MUvsufcct tt a n « Mlnnespolti a U M S 8 8 M M PrlUten ti 31 to ri phoralx n ,n Pltuourth ^ ta The measure ^ law is a 13-mil! tax rate. A school! .. lirn '* guarante'ed backing from' terms of *^® ’®®" f®®)* *® P®^ f®*" ®®F '®)’ mills. ^ mediately needed debt above what A mifl is ^tial to $1 for ev“r> ® ^^-mill fax will raise. measure of 13^ mills is aot pay off the mortgage on your * ★ * , of much aM to a district like home ! This ability to set the tax rate Pontiac, wktek has a property ^ When .vou consider buying a at will is what is called "unlimited! vahattou that ottors.jt.-saiind ni miiio,,- aj^» TO ,Av «•«“ «< The person you make paymems: * w * property valtution. to isn't, going to take chances. He! One of these is that any bonds!^/,! “ Pontiac wants to be sure you have a rea-paid for by unlimited taxes must ^7'' sonably guaranteed yeariy be Issued to mature in less monthly income. than 25 year, trom the date they^ , Whan a school board buys a,are issued ' ®'"t®*' tbe 1955 amendment, school, or builds an addition, itl^ automatically leaves this dlririct most hicee a guaranteed Income, ir decidedly helps tost- ;out in the ctrfd. inmveet te^ state- The _____auwor and tax poor common loan fund aid. #» to MV for new bniliilaga bV ■ Property valuation ha, also gone! 'I"*'®«>®® P®rt« of the s^te, seOtog bo«h to coxer ^ total ^ dtotrict «*ch as PontliW.. making 13-mills too high a ' meaaj 4 ®"® ®* ‘be features-of unlimitedi’®’® ” ®‘ "reasonable local effort.”; money tax serial bonds is their low in-! Therefore, the Also, in man.v districts where a sudden, unexpected debt occurs where tax rate is lower than 13 mills, the district cannot get a state loan under the 1955 laxv. I This is taken care of in the new amendment by providing that such I a district can apply for a loan. Both these changes would help Pontiac. Schinunel says. ! The state loan fund does probably more than any one thing to give fast growing school districts good "credit." Bond "buyers” know that tf all else fails the fund will come to jthe rescue. It was set up as a fixed fund of $im.aoo.om in ISSi. when school districts had borrowed (lOA million, the fund was gone— or “used up." | Pontiac (Jeneral Hospital has It could not be a revolving fund. ,*“''®‘* “P ‘®*’ Christmas. Khrushchev again proposed the convening of a summit conference in 1961 to deal with the question' of Berlin and Germany. | He said new Western proposal;! to the UJ)f. assembly show the Western powers are continuing to use disarmament talks to cover up an arms race policy. "They are an ill omen for , the future" Khrushchev said. REVERE 'ELECTRIC-EYE' Sinin ZOOM clZ, 87 89 MtnuAl control Z-0-0*M action !■ likf T-i^tc.a i. r4»guiar. wlde-anglu me tusranteed Superceded • nd telephoto mstlea^jr. Life: Hospital Saves for Christmas Pontiac General Could Break Even if Losses at Holiday Stay Down All Xew - Modern Styling^- Compact ■ REVERE 8mm Movie Projector : s Compsre to list projector! . then Tee thh. RIVERE with super bright I illunilnatton !tme at s 7M watt bulb —-|wlnd'**Woflenssii nY'lens ?or r'"zo If 'holiday season lull. g if has been demoiulrated that' losses then don't exceed the 5 the sum of $100,000,000 is suffi-! ®®'i"8*T «he hospital will have 2 cient. Less than $300,000 has beenj ® break-even year, operattonally. g l®®ks good, said 2 and h^f of IHanias Sready been; Harold B. Euler! hospitdl adminis- 2 repaid. Itrator. ■ The 1960 budget estimated that m the excess over expenses at thisim time of year would amount only to!* $28,467. [2 Thanks to a sharp aptura in •ecupaiicy this month, the hop-pltol is more than 87,600 ahead The btolder gets h The limit would be removed by the new proposal. It becomes an unrestricted re-'dvlng fund instead of a fixed. Umited amount that can be used ;OnIy once. Proposal No. 1 also states that ;all bonds qualified under the 1953 law would automatically be qualified under the new amendment. Bonds issued after July 1, T962 [would be qualified under terms [Pretcribed by the Legislature, j Tbe new law is not lelf-exectit- Bring In Your Old Camera for FREE TRADE-IN ESTIMATE Today's Mott Modern ond Fool-Proof Comeros iliCTIIC IYi.mATIC CAMIIA OWE LENS takes the place, of 1—, telephoto, wide-angle and regular PUSH BUTTON Control... electric eye adjusts automatically to all light conditions — YOU C>N'T TAKE BAD PICTURES With This IriOVIE CAMERA. Cheek Simnw SpMial Prkec Onr-»"0 Tbit Factory [vent. REVERE —4 Track , Stereo Tope Recorder The difference could mean a lot as far as breaking even to con-sirire the' conaowative «*;. m-hmnd miut. ..S5S5S3,a irttsi tr" Occupancy was at 91 per cent!^.;,.’^?® as the present accounting period!price'aiiywhcr,. got under way. It Was at 81 per cent- the previous period. Euler said that In the 10th period, ending Oct. 8. income exceeded expenses by $10,600. trteke . . . L®/, 'ttodlo tod mmt immmiVImmmI CAMERA DEPT. —Main Float THK POXTIAt IMIKSS. Till KSUAV. (K’TQHKR JO. 19(10 TIIREK LOOK ON PAGE 11 IN TODAY'S PONTIAC PRESS - SIMMS IS LOADED WITH SO MANY DISCOUNTS THAT WE Had to Toke on Extra Page to Tell YOU Aiiout Our CLOTHING Vi|kLUES-Check Your Needs Here, Then Turn to Page 11 Deal” 0. K., So It's 0 Big Deal That SIMMS Has LOWEST DISCOUNT PRICES on Everything We Need, and Famous Quality Merchandise, and Famous Brand Names, and No Credit or Interest Charges, etc. So What? ... $0, If YOU Like To SAVE MONEY, Like to Have Personal Service, Then Year BIG DEAL Is Right Here At SIMMS! OPEN /\ FRIDAY arid I II SATURDAY 'til J_^ p SIMMS CASH YOUR PAY CHECK FREE! The Deep Cut DISCOUNT DEPT STORE BUFFERIN 7QC TABLETS l9 Rogalar $1.23 lise — full lOO tablet pack Limit 2 pecks BROMO fiAc SELTZER D9 Large eiee 98t Value — famous remedy for headaches. Limit 2, PEPTO |09 BISMOL 1 Regular $1.59 Value — 16 oz size for upset stomach. Limit, 1 MURINE A Ac FOR EYES Uul Regular 98c Value — choice of Lotion or drops. Soothes the eyes. GERITOL 484 TONIC 1 Regular $2.91 lise — choice of liquid or tablets. For tired blood. VICKS CAc COLD TABS 99 Regular 89e Value - pick of 20 double buffered tablets. FASTEETH 7Qc POWDER 19 Regular $1.13 Value — really holds dental plates firmly TURPUC 911 TAMPONS 1 $1.59 Value — pack of 40 tampons for feminine, hygiene. ' ABSORBINE A7C JUNIOR 91 Regular $1.45 Valua — has fhe new Press-O-Matic applicator. S.T. 37 A7c SOLUTION 91 Regular $1.37 bottle of 12-ozs. solution for cuts, gargle etc.. SOMINEX QOc TABLETS 00 Regular $1.25 ''•lu* — 18 tablets, that aid sleeping. VICKS 17c SYRUP *|| Regular 73c Value—3 ounces of meditrating cough syrup Limit 2. DRISTAN TABLETS Snpei Anahist Cold Needs Regular $1.79 Value—Choi nasal spray, or cough r Mentholatnni Deep Rub 59- rEENUlIINT imnvE tu Regular 69e pack of 36 chewing gum pieces- Gentle laxative. CEPACOL GARGLE MEDIGUM V AAc For Coughs Regular 39c Values — helps relieve coughs due to colds. LISTERINE UForMMt Toothpaste £ 44 Regular $1.06 Value—twin pack of 2 tubes. Limit 2 packs PERTUSSIN A4c Vapor Spray 01 Regular $1.19 Value — famous 'Pertussin medication vapor spray. ABDEC or A52 POLYVISOL L Regular $3.60 Valuet—vitamins drops. SOcc's. Limit 2 bottles. WIIDROOT OQ* Hail Dksi Ow Regular 59c Value — Wildroot Creamoil for all heir types. PEPSODENT JAc Toothbrnih 4v Regular 89c Value — Pepsodent Lifeline toothbrush at 40c saving. BABY NEEDS |^jS.M.A. or LACTUM ,orTlas 1 ly Regular 29c Cons—now liquid ^ ^ g formulas need no mixing. H Limit 12 cons, Dexlii-Mallose Foranla—lb. .. 79c NORWICH COUGH nc SYRUP WW Regnlar 79c VoJue—S ott. |OHN$ON$ BABY l|7C POWDER llll Rag. 73c. Ccooomr site. conoN Me BUDS WW Regular $9c. Racks of 90. |OHN$ON$ "fAen 9Sc BABY 7f9 PRODUCTS 1W Oil. Shampoo. Creom. lolioa. Shop and Save Today Vilnatot Pdltnn Nalioaollr Advttifd Bronda CIGARETTES MAIN FLOOR SPECIALS KING and FILTERS •eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeaaeee Save On Famous Electric Razors 2-PIECr Kitchen-Scoop Sot $im O ^ l (line CASCO’ ELECTBIC BBAND Brand ney., FIRST QUALITY Casco Thermal heat arxl massage pillow , that brings a wonderful way to, relax, a teeling of well beirtg. Combination control tor massage ahd heet to .help your feet, abdomen, back, shoulders, neck, thighs etc. Guaranteed a fufl year. As pictured. PIPE TOBACCO a SI.SO Vofue ^26 $24.95 NORELCO SPEEDSHAVER WItb rare and raw 13” $31.50 SCHICK* , 10-66 MODEL 19” $22.50 SCHICK CU5TOMATIC Hllh rant and raw 13” $24.95 NORELCO SPORTSMAN 13" $28.50 RONSON CFL SHAVER 14” $28.50 SCHICK 3-SPEED ADI 16” $26.95 Remington ROLL-A-MATIC aejaalalilr hrad 16“ $29.95 NORELCO New Floating Head Nrnaal IIMI madal 17“ $34 50 Rollemetic AUTO.HOk4E IZ-Volt Rrmlniian 19” New SUNBEAM 555 SkevameiNr Nrwaat madal raaar 22^5 $34.50 Rollactric AUTO-HOME r: or e-Vall Urmlnalon 17” Lady Remington Princeae Model llt.M aalna—aarh 10" LADY SCHICK PATRICIAN Rri. I».».S arllrr 8” $18.50 Remington Ladiet' Adjuitabla AejaaUkla hrad 13” LADY SCHICK > CROWN lEWEL- Krfular l«I..S« 12“ $21.50 Lady Sunbeam Elegance 14” Simme hti le many ‘BIG DIALS' tkat even era a BIG DIAL — mere kcuri pa* tiraeli leifept kundeyti mere peeple can came In fer BIG DIALS . . . le keve a I DIAL tkii Week-lnd Here at Simms. 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS /Sock Up At SIMMS LOWER PRICES DUST STOP Furnace Filters Regular Voluei lo SI.2I Populor 1-Inch Thick Filtori Gonuino 'DUST STOP' Brand 3-Pc. Salod Sets SS.9S Value 148 Completeh Perlimued — With Cover 20-Gal. RUBBISH BURHER Regular U.9S Valua ^^00 FOUR THE POXTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 20. 1960 PACT. — Audrey Hepburn. fre*h in mind for her superb work in the “Nun’s Stor> " sns'ings far away from thiit serious role to play a ‘ Kwikte character In her next mo\w. “Breakfast at Tiffany’s.” George Penwrd shares star honors in the wacky comedy. Indian Houses Found in Illinois 131 Counted in Biggest Excavation in U. S. Date to 700 A. D. SPRINGFIFXD. Bl (APt-The nuns of 131 prehistoric Indian houses—the largest number of kacfa structures to-be found 4w one .excavation in North America— have been discovered near Collinsville. m. Dr. Thome Deuel, director of the Illinois State .Museum, said the excavation represents the largest single archaeological undertaking in the central United States since 1940. The loO.OOO-square toot site, he said, dates back to a period from 700 A.D. to around 1400 A.D. Along with the unearthed ruins, the museum found food storages, fire basins and - pits believed to have been location! of day usedj for pottery and hoase walls. Begun in April under the direction of Dr. Warren L. Wittry. curator of anthropology at the museum, the investigation has centered around an area 2,000 feet from the great Cahokia mound, largest man- made prehiatoric earthwork in the Western Hemisphere. I believed by archae-j ologists to have been the center of Indian population tor this] region for many centuries. Tlie museum is attempting to learn more about the people who once lived at the site. President of United Likes Merger Plan W'ASHINGTON liT-William A. ^ president of United Air iinea, said a merger of Capital Airlines into United ‘would move a serious threat to the credit of the entire airline industry.” He testified at the^ Wednesday opening of a hearing on the merger proposal, that many airlines are having difficulty buying neceaaary ’ Jet equipment. "I have felt strongly that bankruptcy or foreclosure upon the as-, sets of a major domestic trunk line would materially and adversely affect the ability of the industry to obtain the a^itional financing which it will require on reasonable terms.’’ he said. Vickers-Armstrong. Ltd., started foreclosure action- against Capital for $33,717,000 due on purchase of Viscount airliners, but agreed to withhold the action pending a merger agreement satisfactory to the British creditors. ' Shotgun Keeps Firing; Minister Loses His Arm WTST BRANai Ifl-A Michigan minister, the Rev. Newell Q Fort of Detroit, lost his right arm in a hunting accident at Clear Lake m Ogemaw County Tuesday. The Rev. Mr. Fort said he was sitting on a log with a 16-gauge automatic shotgun propped under his arm and that as he started to get up the gun went off. firing three times. The first shot missed, the pectmd one tore off the minister’s right hand and forearm. The third missed. State police said the gun must have been defective to have’ kept shooting. Chambor Dedicates Building in Big Rapids BIG RAPIDS OJPD-Robert P. Br4g=g»^ president of the State* Chamber of Commerce, was main speaker Tiiesday at the dedkaUan of a new Big R^iids Chiaiiiber of Commerce huiklbig. The atructure is s^it-level, red frame and locatrtl on U.S. 131. It TUi be used as an infonn center as well as a Chamber ot Coihmercc olflee. 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Doublo-Strotch / , / horrapowaw motor / Vacuom Claaaan Big sovings on white-on-white PICTURE WINDOW ANTIQUE SATIN DRAPERIES Value Size SALE 5.99 SW by 45" 3.99 6.99 SW by 63" 4.99 7.99 SW by 90' 5.99 8.99 T/zW by 45" 6.99 9.99 I'/zW by 63" 7.99 10.99 IViW by 90" 8.99 11.99 DW by 45" 8.99 12 99 DW by 63" 9.99 14.99 DW by 90" 10.99 22.99 TW by 90" 14.99 special purchase savings! Hang these shimmering white draperies ot your windows and note the lightness and brightness only white con add to your home. Wailo't Dtapotiot . . . rourfi Floor ■aiutitvin am BUT tdvtit ututmutt ttntmtuntt Color-locked cotton-ebromspun acetate Multi-use THROW COVERS 4.99 72x60 choir ‘3 7.99 72x108 sofa SI ‘6 Toss these throws over your furniture for everyday, whisk them off for company . . . ond save your valuable upholstery! Many other uses, too. Beige or charcoal. Waita'f Drapariag . . . 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It will be Interesting to hear what he has to tell the peq)le of the United Arab Republic now that he has re> turned home, ★ ★ ★ 'There la no problem which concerns our homeland, the United Arab Republic," declared President Nacsn, "or which conosms our nation or which relates to the two continents through which our country extends, Asia and Africa, or which relates to any of the world problems — I say. there is no such problem for the solution of which we are not ready to accept the Charter of the United Nations and Its principles, the resolutions of the United Nations and Its recommendations * for a just settlement, with the best of good will." ★ ★ ★ To the Western world these words, If uttered by a representative of a democracy, would mean that the Sues Canal would be opened to all shipping Immediately; that differences with Israel would be settled through the UJf. and that Egypt would make peace with Its Arab neighbors. Bat if past p«^ormanccs are any guide, President Nasser didn’t mean any such thing. Sinee 1955 his regime has been identified with the vloience and unrest In most Arab countries. Only a few days before attendintr the UJf. he publicly urged the overthrow of King Huesein of Jordan and President Bourguiba of Tunisia whom he called "American stooges." ★ ★ ★ Radio Cairo’s vitriolic attacks against neighboring Jordan, Iraq and Lebanon are notorious. Fundamental human rights and democratic freedoms long have been stifled and the free press expropriated. Any democratic change would be welcome. Study Press Freedoms at Meeting in Coleml^ The Man About Town County Vote in’56 When Ike’s Influence Was Evident in the Counting Biir: What, when iPa cheaper than perk, we have pork to beef 321. Freedom of the press is something the Inter American Press Association will study atdta annual meeting now In session at Bogota, Colcmbia. ★ ★ ★ Probably no other single group has done more to advance the cause of a free press than the lAPA. Actively working on the • problem for the past several years is Harold A. Fitzgerald, Publisher of The Pontiac Press. He is currently attending the annual session. At this writing six Latin American Countries can be considered to have a r e s t r 1 c t e d press. Governments where ctmtrols of varying degrees .«rist are: Cuba, The Dominican Republic, El Salvador, French Guiana, Haiti and Paraguay. ★ ★ ★ Generally speaking the Western hemicvhere has greater press freedom than most other areas of the wm^d. A recent survey by U.8. News & World Report showed 44 countries with a free press, 15 Communist nations with a controlled press and 81 countries with a restricted press. ★ ★ ★ Perhaps the most pernicious erositm of this precious freedom has occurred in Cuba. FmxL Castro’s 26th ol July Movonent totric power Jan. 1, 1959 with a promise of absolute freedom o/ this press. LltUe rh^ than a year later an lAPA committee reported that virtually the entire Culwn press had either direcUy or indirectly physically passed Into/the hands of the governmentor had Bhertff: Irons, 142,7»: Hicks, 109,896. County Clerk: Allen. 140,907; Johnson, 100,350. County TTeas.; Sparks, 180,146; Stevens, 108,097. Register of Deeds; Murphy, 139,587; Habel, 107,725. ■ Drain Com.T Barry,“t88,239; Rice, T08r 581. Surveyor: Main, 142,613; unopposed, dr. Court Com.: (non-pullaan): Hampton, 90,785; unopposed. Clr. Court Com.: (non-partisan): Cole, 05,102; unopposed. Legislator: District 1; Anderson, 22,299; Kolar, 15,262. Legislator: District 2; Miller, 12,848; Hudson, 17,439. Legislator: District 3: Roberts, 33,759; Smith, 13,519. Legislator: District 4: Hughes, 30A93; Clarkston, 23,525. Legislator; District 5; Brown, 28,790; Paul, 17,193. Legislator: District 6: Wheeler, 11,627; McMahon. 21,887. State Proposal: Qualifications; Yes, 111,906: Not, 13,516. Prominent Duluth, Minn., clubwoman, Mrs. Austin L. Lathers, Who died recently, was the former Miss Effie Godfrey, who taught mathematics at Pontiac Central High School early In the century. An extensive traveler Is Mrs. Susie Proper of Tawas City, now visiting Mr. and Mrs. Arthur KlinlstlTer Of 787 East Tennyson St., Pontiac. In spite of her 93 years she surely gets around. Verbal Orchids to- ,, ■/ ) f become so intimidated that it cannot be considered free. ★ ★ ★ When one man dictates what the people of his country will read It is following the Communist line. If honest Journalists cannot practice their trade then that country has lost any semblance of what ws know as a frcs nation. Four Havana editors—all now in exile who would not go akmg with the Castro suppression will receive the freedom of the press awards at this meeting of the lAPA. "IftNTAL stupidity Is usually . caused by a lack of iron in the system,” says a physician. If so, many a person should take a medium-sized tire tool—in broken doses, (rf course. Voice of the t^eople Today Prodyimed Credit Union Day by Prest4ent Th« thbd Thuriday lo Odobw hss bum pwcWmed by Praldeot Dwight D. El*ei*owir u Wenietimsl Owdtt Uuka Day. M wffl be eelebruted by bw*edi M meeflhgi amwii »e wwM. Thk li e tar ety frwu kt bwiMe btflataug ISI yeeri age In • Hiian Gerauu vUtage where the Bergomaster put tato | Oennau vUlege i Surf wedtt ebouM be taede evaUabie m (he befrfe «( seed pad b ★ ★ A gnrty yuaiR ago the movement mread to the Nnth American eon-tinenL Tbn yean ago about 3 pereone out o( 100 were Oedlt Union memben, but j out of 100 ere memben today. The total population in the Uidted Statee haa increaaed about 20 per cent In tile last decade. Credit Union membersUp haa more than doubled. ★ ★ ★ Om enptoyea of tae Poirtlae Poetal DepartaemL We have tod^, la Oaklaad Oouaty a total of M e ' ““ Mbato to oar leremaen for die helplag bead they a Let tM pattern ounwivet after them and let tbeir Ineptration give ua oounge and endurance. In the worda of Edward FUene, who gave over a mmuw doUan of hla own personal fortune to further the movement la (his country, "Let ua keep purpoae constant ben.” A. E. Silk 2155 Pontiac D^lve ‘Better Wake Up-Vote Republican’ Jack’s Flint Speech Gets Reviewing: "A PERSON should have a definite end in view when he or she punishes a child,” says a psychologist. Yes, indeed—in view and in handy position for warming up cwislderably. “It’s All Your Fault” David Lawrence Says: Wake up American voten who would vote for Mr. Kennedy, the man who would have our president apologize to that "slob" from Russia; the man who wotlld appease the "slob" from Russia; the man who belongs to same party as Eleanor Roosevelt, who entertained "slob.' Jack’s Line Is TV Demagoguery Vote tor Mr. Ntxon and Mr. Lodge, the men who will not give an inch to the Communists and savetour tieStbm and lives. M. E. C. Sen. Kennedy at the end of his speech in Flint on Labor Day told the audience that autiRiiatlon In industry is a subject of collective bargaining. Do we remember the fatal position of the revolutionists in England who a century ago tried to destroy the looms that replaced hand weaving? To oppose money-saving and labor-saving madilnery is to To WASHINGTON - When It comes to dramatics and achieving theatrical effects, the Kennedy management Is putting it all over the Nixon manage- Here’a how Oakland County voted In the presidential election of four years ago ths RepubUcan candidate being given first: Prssident Elsenhower, 153,026; Stevenson, 99,790. Oovemor: Cobo, 127,214; Williams, 123,-044. Lieut. Oov.: Reid, 131,520, Hart, 117,-104. See. of State: Martin, 133,157; RRre, 114,049. Atty. General: Van Dusen, 134,933; Kavanagh, 112^83. State Treas.: Padzleskl, 133,886, BroVm, 113,318. Aud. General: Bagwell, 135,947; Szymanskl, 110.980. Congressman; Broomfield, 143,884; Button, 107,617. SUte Senator: Lodge, 138,559; Ellas, 108,979. Prosecutor; Zlem, 141,289; UUey, 108,- LAWRENCE ment. One stunt out-Checkers the famous Nixon appearance in the 1952 cam> paign, and another piccapyrigbt. 1960) I see these Republicans are after Harry Truman again. Did they ever take a look at the record of this admfoistration. It isn’t so hot. Take the credit fway from the working people and I am inclined to think you would have another Hoover administration made to order. Let’s get behind Kennedy and let these diehards talk to ttiem-selves for a change. Jobmy MeOiuky 40 Auburn Ave. Zeeland THOUGim FOR TODAY flilngs, and from my Ups wUI «Hne what Is right;—Proverbs We should be as careful of our words as of our actions. And as far from speaking ill as from doing ill.—Cicero. Case Records of a PsycHologist: ’THREE MtOTERS In the Suiiday night show, there were three mothers who had lost their sons in World War II, and Sen. Kennedy mentioned in passing that he had lost a brother in the same war. The discussion centered on the horrors of war, and the plain implication was that Sen. Kennedy would spare the nation a repetition of such a tragedy. The Democratie nominee sat at a smaU table, havhif tea with the three elderly ladles to an informal, homey elmosphero. Tho women perticIpoBtn didn’t have much to sny except to reveal at the outset that they had lost their MU In the war. It wu n dramatic setting, and the Kennedy management certainly took advantage of the emotional undertones in order to help tho Democratic nominee get votes. medical school, and I was anxlodn to learn what advances therapeutics had made In the three years since I had received.my degree. It * * Upon receiving the book I dipped Into the chapter on alcohol, and I was flabbergasted. Prof. Hare was still positive enough in describing the physiological action of alcohol. He still asserted: "Alcohol never acts as a true stimulant to the brain, qtinal cord, or the nerves. It is in no sense a true stimulant to the circulation. On the contrary, its dominant influence is depres- Middle-Aged Spouse Accuses Wife Sam is a classical example of the middle-aged jealous husband. notice his accusatiojis against his innocent wife. She thinks he must be losing his mind. But his subconscious is simplg producing a clever camouflage to disguise a deep sexual secret. Scrapbook this clinical case and Us follow-up tomorrow. question that terrlflea nob a "I can’t offer as much as other males, so I must be suspicious of everybody else.” Cbiipled with this secret inferiority complex, is usually another talro notion of men, namely, that wives are pasfefoiuite creatures. "Let not your right bsM lour what your left hand doeth," to BiUical statement that perfect! describes the apparent barrier b tween the conscious mind and th subconscious. In the Tuesday night show, the technique was very mu<* the same, but the participants were That was all right, according to Hoyle, and it has remained so, up to the to’esent day. But, having present^ our 20th Century knowledge of alcohol. Dr. Hare drifted back to the 19th Cfentury and asserted baldly that "Alc<*ol Is a rapidly-acting stimulant in all forms of cardiac” ($1.80 word for heart) "failure, fainting, surgical shock, chronic pneumonia in its later stages, snakebite” and what have you. Every time I look at the 10th edition of Hare, irtricbl stiU have, I feel cheated.' The Country Parson The family d■ Sll.ft • rwir: •n o •iMwIwra la MMbltan'ud'at pUett 111 th* UBltM a«S« a r«n£“£5^-£a aa.*w*--Km mt A 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THtTRSDAY. OCTOBER 20. 10«o sEvpy Again Endorgeg Dcm Slate AFL-CIO Ignores GOP Auto Show Salutes liuiustry's Pioneers Republicans again have 'I______ •hut out the aUte o( tavorad candidates drawm up by the Oakland County AFLrCIO Council. received — endoraenwats, according to Fred V. 'Haggard, council It’s the Republican candidates’ fault that they didn’t receive any endorsemenu. the Union said, because they were extended invitations to appear before a screening committe, but didn’t show up. Hid fliey doM asi 1 Uraa camlVIaten woHhy el oMi-siderattoa had they aeaght the endoraemeata.** IMr a a me a weren’t nnattoaed. All Democrats requested — and OOP MOmtMB A spokesman for the Republican committee of foe county publicans were given too short notice. "We also felt from foe start this wu a propaganda gimmick so foe Union could toss barbs bade our way for not turning out,’’ the The Uafon’s Oonsmlttee oa Pd-Ideal Education (COPE) Is bw;k-lag ft. deroaoe Bronson didn’t win then, but his opponent Joseph T. Stadnik did. Bronson defeated Stadnik in the primary. Leadii« off the Nov. were Sen. John F. Kennedy and Sen. Lyndon B. Jolmson, president and vice president candidates. Sen. Patrick V. McNamara, candidate for re-election as senator from MkMgan, and James G. Kellis, Oakland County Congressional candidate. date for the Stale Senate, attor- date la the primary who went Leave Camp Pontiac 2 Prisoners Take Walk Two more prisoners walked ftway from Camp Pontiac I White Lake Township last night. Being sought today by area police are Lewis F. McKinley, 24, and Richard Cummings, 21, both believed to be from Bay City. Oimmings was serving a I'/t* to 10-year sentence for armed robbery In Ogemaw County. McKinley was sentenced to IVi-to If years for forgery In Gratiot County. The men were discovered missing when a bed-check was made * by prison guards at 10 p.m. They are believed to have walked away from the minimum security prison camp. Blake. 28. of Grand Rapids, were identified as the pair that held up Wayne Qty Bar last night with shotguns. They fled with MM from bar ’They also stole identification cards, a driver’s license and a pilot’s license from one of the bar patrons, Donald Cousins. ’Two escapees from Camp Pontiac last month, Gerald K. Davis, 32, of Rochester, and Melvin Benson, in State, ocratle AdnUaistrutlve Board of Sec. of State James M. Hare, Atty. Gen. Paul L. Adams, ‘Treasurer Sanford A. Browa and Auditor Gen. Otis M. Smith. Supreme Court Justice Theodore Souris received the nod ' nonpartisan’’ contest for. his post on the high court. Courtroom May Be In for an Ocelot of Noise DETROIT (UPD- helped pioneer In foe auto industry] were In the spotlight today at the] l-«thnip Village police have Natiohal Auto Show along with na-: ticketed the owner of an ocelot. ^ . which i.4 not an undersized for- 21 years ago, atteiKled a luncheon South American cat, in CObo Hall. I say the animal is dangcr- ’They signed a scroll which willjOU*-be presented to President Eisemj The «ce|of« awner. rdtth Me-hower as.a memento of his visit sy. tnao V.. ('allfornla to the show Monday. U,., village, mts her National Det^Day also was ^ being ^rved today, with t^ r.u and auto industry s contribution as the] mongrel dog "arsenal of democracy" under-i scored by display of a^ space tele-] Police said they have received Vision capsule and 'trucks and several complaints from nelghbori Club Ftekiration PIdtt Michigon Offktrt State FreewQYS Expected to Show Accident Drop tanks. Set Referendum Over Flint Bars about the animal, which Is about' ,a foot high, a yard long and looks 'like a small leo|>ard. Miss McNeal. who originally wanted to buy a baby lion but was' advised to take the ocelot Instead, said she keeps Wendy In the house most of the time and has heard no complaints. Mie said she U routacllug are-tat owners fram all aver the stale to ai'company her whew the appear* before Juotire of the Peace James K, O’Leary. Miss McNeal reported there are some 151 ocelot owners in Mtcht gan. There also is a national ocelot owners’ organization, she said. Justice O’Leary and the police belter be propared tor the invasion ot the ocelots. I GRAND HAVEN tl^Mnl. Cl ernn Camithen of Bancroft Is n president of the West Central District ol the Michigan Federation EAST LANSING (API — Tho of Women's Dubs. eomplelion of Mlchlgaa’s eon- She was elected Wednesday atltrolled-aceess highways will save a Grand Haven meeting attendedj«t minimum of one llfo for each 10 by 120 district members. miles, says Gerald W. Gtstm. Othipirticea forbidden by anltitniBt :tatutes. 13 Ask $5.47 Million in Domogos on Charge of Trode Conspiroqr Argentina Plans Look at Communist Activities Thieves Intrigued LYMAN, S. C. tf* - Brothert James, and Henry iMiUer decided to put a well house over the pomp at thefr lakeside property. For a month the pump had stood exposed and unmoiestMl. Then they erected their well house and some one promptly stole the pump. At one time spices were believed ^ to have the power to ward otf evil airs bearing disease.' They were tidded to magic p()tions and told to inspire love, (ear or hate. BUENOS AIRES, ArgenUna Uh-> The gwcmment Wednesday published a decree naming a aeven-I member <-ommittee to investigate jContmunlst acttvitles in Argentina.! CHICAGO lif —Thirteen (ormer Headed by Hector Caceres, ‘ Midas automobile muffler dealers] Monte, undersecretary of defense, sued the parts supf^ter Jbr nearl> ithe committee will a^ise the gov-$5.5 mlllioo Wednesday on-charges j^rnont of President Arturo Fron j of conspiracy to retain trafP* ‘dizi on measures to take against i * It * Communists, especially in public! The former desJers declared in office, their U.s: District Court suit their During a govemmeqt crisis last, actual d a m a g e a amounted to week, army general! charged that, Sl.KiflOO and that under the anti Communists or their'sympathizers truat laws they ate entitled to were active In many sectors of' ' triple damages of $5172.000 Argentina life, though the Reds I. the civil ..It are the Pmrewl Osmpan.v. Inter______________________________| Ud three wtbsidlaries. Officiols of StOtO VFW j Inc., Powetl Muffler Os., Inr.. .. u n and Muffler Cnrp. of America. Will Hold PoWWOW_____________________^ all •< r%teagn. i r^PIDS (UPD-Some The former dealera charged that n oqo officials of the Veterans of Bhtce Jan 1, 1955. Intematlonul foreign Wars chapters throughoutr and lU wholly owned subsidaries! the lUte were to meet here Friday forced dealera to sign exclusive.for their annual "pow wow." contracts few parts which forbade state VIM' Commander Hamid them from obtaining materials^L. Barr. Muskegon, was to preside, from other suppliers. ^during the three-day officers’ train- Some 250 such contracts In 23] {ng conference. ^ states were entered Into, the suit' ----------:-------- set terth, and the dealers werej A system based on a new elec-j compelled to pay higher prices forjtron tube can transmit photo-i parts than available from otherjgraphs from aircraft or satellites. BUppUers, |to ground stations with detail asj The suit said the arrangement sharp as the original. I OWN IVIRY NIGHT TO f Monday through Concerto* . . . remarkable curve control in two beautiful movements ... bcos by maidej^m Firming and fabulous with double-track circulor-stHched cups ... promising marvelous shaping and support... to undenhape ymw prettiest fashions •- Concerto . . . Rnk-stHched cupe. 32-36A, 32-408. 34U2C 2.50 8. 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Struetur-ally perf^. Damask cover. 210 over 210 qoils by Posturpedic makers. Popular 30-39-48-54" sizes. Save now . . . they go fasti —iiattrtuu Ml U Drayton Plmna DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON RUINS THK PONTIAC PRKSS, THI RSDAY. Y«ekdoys 9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. PENNEY'S-MIRACLE MILE, Open Every Weekdoy—Mondoy through Soturdoy 10:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. TBK THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 20. 1960 Deaths in Pontiac and Nearby Areas;S^“^“‘^^ LOSOMBA. Mi*. 0«*t* A.^ (MV»I It) EMw. ID. oOm Gnnlvtew St., died yeeterdey at tar tame. the Ooeta Funenl Home, Draytoo PUim, with burial la Waterford Center Oemetery. three daughten. Mra. Jaw Mixter of Pondac. Mra. Dorothy Phaneuf e( Biriningham and Mra. Ann Laraen of Artingtoa. Maaa.; five grandchildren and eight greatgrandchildren. ServH* wiU be held at 1:30 p.m. Saturday at the Sparita-Grlffin Chapel with., burial in Acada Park Cemetery. AWraiTK L. SCHNICIDER Service tor Arthur 1.. Schneider. 29. of 1251 Dufrain St.. wiU be held at 11 a.m. Saturday at the Moore Chapel of the Sparka-GrUtin Funeral Home in Auburn Heights. Burial will be in Perry Moutft; Park Cemetery. OH and llv* graat-crandehlMtan. Oomaia of IDinola and three grand-Servlo* wtll be held at 1 p.m. *'‘-~ WALTn BBIVtMk TROY - Service tor enoe, ». of 128 Lyona St., wlU be 1 p.m. Saturday at hla real-dence. Burial will be In the Cadil* lac Memorial GardCM Eaot. Mount bmil w. sihtomen WIXCM — Service for Emil W. Sihvonen. 78. of^1894Bruce St.. wiU be at 3 p.m. Saturday at Richard-son-Blrd Funeral Home, Walled Lake. Cremation will be at White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Troy. Mr. Sihvonen died yesterday at hla home after a 10-week illness. Mr. Benot died yesterday after an illness of five days at William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak. Funeral arrangements are being handled by Piira Funeral Home. Suiylvl^ besides his wile Lucille la a brother. V^anted: a Free Xule Tree PARIS /UPD - Premier Michel Only 67 days tlU Christmas. Debre called for a. vote of con- * * * fldence in the National Assembly Lots of time? No. not for the of small treea for transplanting. Most of the Clvk Center treea were donations. bate on President Chari*. I* *<>r » GauUe-s plan tor an independent | ,ree Christmas tree. (LTD-Francis E. nuclear striMng force for France. honey. 58., Genesee County sheriffs ThaakHglvIng bi only M days ;dfPUty'for four years, died Wednes-away, and that's about the lime ;<&>>• the city uMtaUy bolsl* Ike Mg He was a member of the Finnish de^ti^ who were e^ted to ^ ****“'*, *"7* MoyoKi Mother Dies ivoie on Debre'. motion X^day. | Tf * ! TOLEDO. Ohio «« «»>«“ ‘i-f "*e* ® that happened to grow, up his cteered. I Former Premier Guy Molleti The one that looked so cute as' shouted, “Resign. Resign" shortly a sapling outside your window but after Debre finished speaking. PALM SPRINGS. Calif. (AP)- SANDERS Bert L. Prentice, 71, a retired ex- GINGELLVHXE - Fred Sand-ecuUve of Standard Products Co..'eri. 81. of 3770 Gregory Road, Trusting Bandit Takes Her Word on the Subject Saylor of Waterford; two grand-;Marine Oty. Mich., died Tuesday of a heart attack. WHITCROFT JEWELRY « S. Bsclatw PaatUt FMwal l-USl COVINGTON. Ind. (AP)-George W. Crane. 82. father of newspaper columnist Dr. George W. Crane, died Tuesday after a long illness. I SPRINGFIELD. Dl. (AP)-Har-old Safford, 63. of Wheaton, Dl, a former radio and newspaper ex-lecutive, died Tuesday. Safft^ had [been associated with Radio Sta-Ition WLS, Chicago, 34 years and retired earlier this year aa pro-jgram director. died today after a long illness. His body is at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home, Pontiac. Mr. Sanders was a member of the Zion Baptist Church of Carmi, III. Surviving besides hit wife Laura re two daughters, Mrs. Ray- ^ mond .Rugglea of Clarkston and ' Mrs. I. 0. Brown of Rochester: a son Wilburn of Harrisburg, III.; 13 grandchildren and 5 great-grandchildren. FLY TO CALIFORNIA ’80 • SAN riANCISCO • tAN DIEGO • OAELAND Howoii $80 Extra 4 iBilm DC-SB rmiartieS Alrllacri CanpUmtinUrr Free MVtli Feny Seivice. Inc. 6129 HigkUnd Rd. tOpposile Pontiac Airport) OR 3-1254 Big Fire Leaves 10,000 Homeless in Philippines Dentist Reports 700 Million Teeth Decayed Murlunion that the government woukl win the flrat major polltl-ral battle to hit Franee Mine* Be Gaulle wan swept to power a little over two years ago. Debre's action was greeted by' TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Mr*. Hulda Damas, 76-year-old mother The city Is not e.xactty .looking of Mayor Michael ,V. Damas of lor a handout. , [Toledo, died in her home Wednes- day. , WITH THIS COUPON ONLT—OCT. 21, 22 Shoe Repair Special t' HALF SOLES Ganuiao Oak _ Laofkor or Com- V tpmiHoa Solos— V Sowed oa Whilo You Wait or Shop Sorvica 1 79 ONE IN WRONG PLACE? It isn't Interested, for instance,' in your favorite evergreen, the one' that proAidly dominates your front iAIN au woM oeaaaNmo Fri. oad Sot. Only S. S. KRESGE'S SHOI RIRAIR — lASIMINT DOWNTOWN STORI with growth. Is threatening I to burst in through the wall? Or; the one that’s gradually blocking jyour driveway? , ; “This Is the sort of free that's usually donated.” explained Donald Nagle, Pontiac forester. LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - Who' lauit year’s donation was king ever heard of a bank without anyrty, 40-foot-high specimen that had money In it? Somewhere todayj been overcrowding a home and there is a potential bank robber other, younger trees. who thinks he ha.s. Hie would-be bandit entered a branch bank here Wednesday. The city also accepts donations Buy Your Floorcoveriigs at Oir WnrehoHse Prices! G«miM IhIoM Tilt CEILIN6 TILE ^ 8FS,.Ft I have a gun In my pocket.“ he announced. “Do you have any! green stuff?" I ■■ replied teller Mary Dorra^— hue. i "That sounds strange," saW the[ bandit. But, not pressing thO point further, he left. i A-Rocket Forerunner: Gets 15-Minute Test Save M over MERCURY, Nev. (AP)*-A test reactor which may be a forerunner: LOS ANGELES (UPI) - There r MANILA (UPD-A seven-hour,if go much decay In Americans’!®* P®wer plant for America's; fire razed three fourths of the thnt hI) of the nation’* rien atomic-powered rocket has Southern Philippine town of Jolo! 7“* *7 ‘‘"^completed a 15-minute test run on- Wednesday and destroyed $3 mil-i“*‘» the desert here. | lion in property. Ten thousand per- wouldn't finish in two years. | The Kiwi A3 is mounted on a[ sons were left homeless. | Dr. Kenneth Randolph of the [railroad flat car. | Described as the worst fire toiUnlversity of West Virginia madej After, the test Wednesday the| hit that part of the Philippines, that claim Wednesday at the Amer-j Atomic Energy Commls.sion andj it roared through the commercial lean Dental Association. He es-lthe National Aeronautics andj block, completely destroying the timated that in all there were about 1 Space Administration reportedj . municipal building, the public mar- 700 million decayed teeth now in [that it appeared to have per-ket and the biggest stores. 'need of treatinfnt. 1 formed to specifications. | LAST CALL!! 60 MODEL CLOSEOUT OF WASHERS AND DRYERS TAGGED FOR SAVINGS! TOP of the LINE WASHER ond DRYER PAIR FMUIIAnE NASNEI aid DIVER PAID Frigidaire Cnitom Inperial WASHER Reg. S399.95 $27900 Wiu traat DRYER Reg. 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Kennedy's telegram, he said,|«W»te. my makeup man said I in'r ‘~|Renaulf Workers Nixon said the srorst smear of Nbmo referred to a statemenf s% A ^ ' campaign was a statement bylhe made earlier this year that a'rr0l6Sl I iriflQS arise only if one of the candidates had not faith in God. He said, "America must present to the srarid the image of a peopk nieraiare 3l known planetar* satellites in the solar system, in eluding the earth’s moon. As they walked away from a ! ptctaro-laktag seosloa, the vice | presideat tagged at Us tlgM -------------------^ ^ .judgment will not be based on anyj'*"'^ Kennedy In annual Alfred E. Smith Memorial I extraneous issue, but on the real Dmner, then turned serious to cx-<{ju{yes of our time." press hopes that the religious issuei . - j. of the 1928 campaign would not be I *■ ***‘^'* |- Hoos-er was the MnwUling bene- iiy dinner, "and it will not be ^*"*“5*”******^ *" certainly, if those of us who are P'»«i^‘'y-of good win . .. can do everything Also present at the 16th annual we can to keep the real Issues! Alfred E. Smith dinner were Fran-before the American people by not cis Cardinal Spellman. New York dist'usslng religion." jGov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, former w w w Kennedy put the same thought [New York Gov. AveraHHarriman,^ Kennedy said he had sent former this way; I Mayor Robert F. Wagner and the! President Truman a telegram con-i PARIS (AP)-About 10.000 Result workers demonstrated | Wednesday against tha govern-| ment-controlled auto firm's plan^ Iw^ wlirid ^use"of powr^'andito 3.000 employes, the worst beard since Sal disease and tryanny exist we would' * ★ W j Maglie. jt,* concerned even if there were] Renault. France's largest auto] SEFJI 8IMI1ARITIES jno communism.” rnanufacturer, announced the cut-j Kennedy said there were slmi- ------------------------------ Iback in iu eO.OOO-tnan work force; laraes^between the Issues of 19281 Somewhere between 500,000 tojearller this week. A company, and 1960 but that the Americanj 1.000.000 people are expected to] statement said a drop In export! voter is not the same, and lives^fall victim to poison ivy during a sales forced'a slowdown in pro-Un a Hlffdinmt WArlrf **Tn — Arma- as. or lieeause of a gradual dls- !owl disputed the right of way with UWSt^r StOyS in Roce M\m are moving out of West apwarance of their nonnal food a 2ti ton truck. Both lost. WOODSTOCK Vt prehistoric tlna-s my infantrymen weighs 17 out a loat-tlme Injury mile trial ride on horseback. She ____ THIRTEEX Ai4ears old. thiowhacks are slowly heading Inio east Tex - pouml.s TV previous high t CUSTOM TAROMO SIAT covns PAUL'S suT covas 2I« S. Saaiae* S». Ft 4-tfl4 Battery Trade-In Sale! 6 and 12- veir batteries TRADE-IN PRICES FOR MATTfiRIES FOR MOST l*OPl l.AR CARS ALLSTATE Silent Cushions '30 4 - 66 6.70x15 Tube-Type Black-walls, Plus Tax regular 88.40--no trade-in price for 4 tires, plus federal tax POWER RATING tiood Better More Powerful Most Powerful GUARANTEE 24 5to. 24 Mo. 30. Mo. 36 510. 36 Mo. Chevrolet I940-.54 1955-60 8.77 11.77 Tins ro«— T515 17.95 16.9.5 19.95 Ford I93S .53 5iost 1956-60 8.77 17.95 12.95 15.45 20.95 Plymouth 5lost 1928-55 1956-60 8.77 11.77 15.95 12.95 15.48 17.95 16.95 19.95 Buick ~ 1938-52 1955-57 1959-60 10.95 16.95 13.95 18.95 20.95 21.95 Pontiac 1988-54 3Iost 1855-60 10.95 11.77 15.95 13.95 16.95 17.95 19.95 Olds. Most 1949-52 .Most 1954-60 10.95 16.95 13.9.5 16.95 20.95 21.95 Dodge 1934 53 1956-60 8.77' 11.77 15.95 12.95 15.45 17.95 16.95 19.95 Mercury 1939-.53 Moxt 1956-6ir 8.77 17.95 I2.9.-. I.V45 20.95 Chrysler Most 1934-55 Most 1956-60 10.95' 15.95 13.95 16.95 17.95 19.95 Cadillac 1940-.52 1957-60 10.95 16.95 13.95 18.95 20.95 21.95 DeSoto 1936-55 Slost 1956 60. 10.95 11.77 15.95 13.95 16.95 17.95 19.95 Rambler 1956-60 11.77 15.95 17.95 19.95 24-Moiith Guarantee! SIZE Tube-T>-pe Blackwalln Tube-Type Whitewalls Driving is safer than ever before on All-•state Silent Cushion-s with TYREX—the Ret. No Trade-In Price Tor 4 TIret Pl«s Fed. Tot Sole Price For 4 Tires Pl» Fed. Tox ^riit ^il4. ToV* Hole Prire For 4 Tires Rl«s Fed. Toi tire cord of the future . . . runs smoother, rides softer, stronger by test. Tread design assures safer stops and fa.ster starts. 6.70x15 88.40 66.30 104.40 78.30 7.10x15 98.00 75.50 114.00 85.50 Allstate tires mounted 7.60x15 ' 107.80 80.85 ' 123.80 92^5 at no extra cost! 8.00x15 1 125.80 94.35 141.80 106.35 Auto Acemsortes, Perry St. Baaement • THERE’S AN ALLSTATE BATTERY FOR OTHER CARS. BOTH AMERICAN and IMPORTED—SPORTS CARS, TOO. COME IN Fill Once, (.iiards Kiigin«> \){uitiHt Ire All W inter 6-volt Ijattery fits ‘40 to ‘54 Chevrolet, '28 to ‘65 Plymouth, '34 to ‘63 Dotige. The Allstate “48” is a good (juality battery . . . that's why we guarantee it for 30 months. Save at Sears! 12-volt batteries 12-volt installed while you wail -HL _flL and old battery^ 1'2-volt battery fits ‘55 to '80 Chevrolet, '56 to '60 Plymouth. '55 to '60 Pontiac, '56 to '60 Dodge, '56 to ’60 Chrysler. 30 month guarantee. Power for all normal driving needs . . . save! Auto AeccMoiira, Perry 8t Baramrnt Allstate 169 Fill up once . . . then forget alxiut damaging ice and rust. 3 ways best in lab te.st: (]) rust resistance (2) low freezing jKiint (3) high boiling IKiTnt. 3ave at Seari. Start Stalled Cars with Quick Start r.ables 6-gauge insulated aluminum v?ire with large clamps prcKliice adequate curwnt for fast emergency starting. A must for automatic transmissions. Regular 1.98. New. Economical Latex Flat Paint 2n.'.r694 Sears Chxrt* It M*ster-Mlxed Oecor-eze gives lovely Interton at ‘budget Adjustable Choke 12. 16. 20-Gaugc Shotgun Fingertip twist adjusts choke for all game. 3-.shot tubular feed, self-cocking bolt action. Independent thuml» safety. Full pi.‘»tol grip American walnut stock. new Master-Mixed decor-eze semi-gloss Gives a smooth finish in 18 colors plus white 2g«ls- Z , for O 94 Charge It Our new low-cost semi-gloss finish that is ideal for ' trimming or for painting your kitchen or bathtpom. Colors match latex and flat oil paints. Gives a stain and mar-re-sistatit surface. Gallon :...................3.47 t Paint Dept., Sean Main Baacment Paint Fast with RoUer Tray Set 2-pc. Set 2’8 exarf. It ’ Includes tray, roller Lets you paint walls, ceiUngs with 3 hands. Hurry In and save! M-ineh Handle S«r ^Satisfaction guaranteed 6r your money back** SEARS 154 N. Saginaw Ph. FE .5-4171 J. C Higgin. 12-ga. 89^® . Pump Action Shotgun The 12-gauge for sportsmen who want a fast, short-stroka pump action gun that stays on target. Choke control changes pattern quickly. Rich walnut stock- Sporting Ooods. Perry St. Basement Ph. Two-Seater roadster Regularly $162.90 _144«« lt% D««a 2'/g-H.P. Engine Separate brake and throttle pedals. Solid, sturdy tubular steel frame. Auto type steering. Easily assembled from kit. Includes 2Vi HP. motor. 16-In. Direct Drive Chain Saw 4.71 cu. in. |3488 matic clutch. i___________ phragm type cerboretor. 36-in. Gear-Drive ... IIM Big Tough 60-H.P. SjO-In. 1AQ95 Gear Drive Saw 2- 6-H.P. industry rated engine. Made for the heavy duty tree felling jobs. Air vane governor, hard nose guide bar, twin spike bars. Maintenanee kit included. rol RTKEX tHE POXTIAC PRESS. THIUSDAV. OCTOBER 20, 1960 |He Predicts Negroes I{q Vote for Kennedy WASHINGTON (UPD-IU-p Wit-UiftmL. Da^ion. D-111., prt-dklfd Itoduy a n-cord six million Negroes i would vote this year, 75 per cent of them foi- tJentoeratie presi-|denlial nominee John F. Kennedy, The Negro congrt'SHtmin wiid in a statement. “Negroes have con-^fidenir in the Democratic party, jOo civil righu and the basic eco-' ,nomic luws which affect the working man." Dawson said “Many Negroes who voted for President Elsen-' howei have had enough of the .Republicans,' <’ ' Oh, the Wine Will Fbw WIESBADEN, Germany 'A' - . West German vintners will have a record harvest of about 132 million gallons this year, the federal statistical bdaid reports. That iaj alxHit 5,2 million gallons above] 'the previous record mark ol 1968, Two U. of M. Scientiits Named to Miuiie Group ANN ARBOR (JR—Dr. George Ziaais and Gwytm SulU, of the] University of .Michigan’s Willow: Run laboratories, have been appointed to the government’s newly-' formed technical advisory group ^ ;for ballistic missile defense, ♦ ♦ ★ Dr, Zissis is head of the ballistic I missile radiation ^alysis center! lof the laboratoriea. and Dr. Suits I is director of the infrared iabora-| ! The group, which also includes lacientists from Stanford Research Institute and Cornell University, Willi be a^ iaori in a gov-;emment reseanh project known as Defender, a program developing antiballistic missile defenses. About 21 countries are expected to take part In Japan's fourth International Trade Fair. The fair open in Tokyo next April 17. Eye Provisional African Government i o , . 'V ^ - \ BRUSSELS lAPi-Belgium hasi proclaimed that Ruanda-Urundi.i formerly atMnistered in associa-, tion with old Belgian Congo.! soon will have a pravisional government as a first step toward!; independence in 1962. Congo, formerly were parts of ok German East Africa. A hiHTicaiie that hit Florida in November 1935 was called “Yan* kee Storm" because it moved in from the north. CUSTOM TAH0ME0 AUTO INTERIORS PAUL'S SIAT COVERS 2I< t. Saginaw S». FI 4.9«3« sr Pk*«*ut NEW WEAPON'Spec? 1 Charles Ii. Greer oT Ft. Meyer. Va„ . poses with a -tO-millimeter grenade launcher newly developed by the Army, The weapon weighs six pounds, has an aluminum barrel and flies a nine-ounce pro]ecti|e i left I designed to kno» k out enemy bunkers, machine gun nests or small troop i-onci'iilration. The Army announced Wednesday that the weapon would lie issuecl to troops earl.v in the year. Says It’ll Put State in Step Dem Swainson Outlines 14-Point Education Plan KS ROUTE WITH SWAINSON tt: Gov iRfrn B. outlined a 14-point education prj-grani which he said would net Michigan “in step .with the Im-! mense new challenges o( our. times." i The program was announced at a Wednes^y meeting with some. .i0 schoolteachers in Benton Harbor. one of the stops along the campaign trail for the Democratic nominee for governor Highlights of the Swainson program indnded: — A n.(0n minimum annual wage for all teaehem with 10 .vears rspniieiiee. and a Hlarlliu pay of M.MW a year lor all with bachelor degree*. The Republl cann, he saM, offer teaeher* iiiegely gratlliide and praise, “I offer them money.” —Defense of academic freedom —Elimination of diserimination in any area of education activity. IMPROVED AID —Improvements In state si-hool aid dii-eeted toward equalizing education opportunities between com-! muniaes and special help where re-j orgapization imposes unu.sual li-nandal ^rdships. —Slate asMsIanee for school ronstruetlon. —Reduction in pupil-teacher ra-lio to ’28 to 1. il'urrent average over all raiio in the slate is ’26.8 lo 1: 28.8 to 1 in elementary grades and 2.’5.9 to 1 in high schools I, Swainaon blamed wliat he termed a Republican-controlled legislatuiv Tor the fart that no funds have bet'n 'appropriated for new classrooms and laboratories in the past three! j years. The lieutenant governor said j that raising tuition fees for stu-I dents at the University of Mlrhi-I gaa and Michigan Stale Univer-I ally was the equivalent of setting I up a quota system. Those without adequate money! , ., , arp thus prevented from getting a Lodge Also Believes college education, he said. Nixon Would Nome a '»««■ sai- valion of ,our country. Swainson Negro to His Cobinet declared. “Thei-e.ia nothing important ” EN ROUTE WITH LODGE (UPl) — Hemy Cabot Lodge, campaigning in upstate New York Wednesday, charged that Sen, John F.i Kennedy is "blaming everytWng that goes wrong in the world" on the US. government. He also expressed his “belief' theie will be a Negro in the Cabinet if Vice President Richard M. V ~ I?Fxon is jpivsTtffftf.. Lodge directed his criticism of Kennedy to the Massachusetts senator's comments on U.S. loss of prestige and. specifically, to Kennedy’s remarks deploring the advance of the iron curtain to Cuba. Lodge said there has been a shift In the power balance in the world! since World War il because the' United States did not wish to be “the only power" and helped to: restore other war ravaged nations. Says Jack Hits U.S.forAIIWoe: Be stressed that prestige is a matter ol whether a nation's word is good and whether Its p noble. He said U.S. «lns high. He said Kennedy and other Democratic campaigners are blaming all world problems on the U.S. government and such a policy is “like blaming FDR i Franklin D. Roosevelt) for Hitler or Japanese militarism " Asked lor his views lie admittance of American newsmen to Communist China. Lodge said he generally favors a policy of “freedom of information" there with the understanding that newsmen wBb " entered Red China could not be protected b>’ the U.S. government. A former newsman. Lodge ^dl he thinks police harrassment. language barriers and other difficulties would prevent UA newsmen from piling up “a lot of good stories’’ about that nation. Fiance Signs Ovei Claim on Mauritania PARK —Pr«*mier Moktar Quid Ddddah of Mapritania and Premier Michel Debre of France gigned documents Wednesday under #hich France formally relinquished any claim on the Islamic reptMic. Mauritania, on the northwest coast d| Africa, has a population, ol only (23.000, Its economy b neagerl mostly agricultural. watch repair Seam craftsmen will clean, oil, adjust and time vour watch. watch bands , o®* only 2.95 esBas ONLY SEARS GIVES YOU i-YEAR NATION RIDE GUARANTEE Week-end Specials! AUTOMATIC WASHER AT $51.95 SAVINGS! gularly at 219.95 $ 16S $5 Down So easy to use, just load, set, for«eL —- abuts off automatically. The huge 10-lb. capacity porcelain tub resists rusting. New acrylic finish resists rust, stain . . . lasts longer. 2-speed Kenmore w a s h e s denims or sheers with gentle care. Appliance Dept„ Main Basemrnt AUTOMATIC DRYER regularly at 159M 139 S» $5 Down Installed FREE on Detroit Edison Lines. No scorched clothes! Choo.se from 3 heats for sunshine-safe drying . . , indoors! This f^ous Kenmore has a huge 10-lb. capacity that saves you time. It has a special fabric setting on dial. Available in gas. Come in and see it today at Sears! RANGE SALE K(‘niiiore .‘LO-in. jjas Ironing Table SALE! SAVE ON 3 STYLES NOVI! Regularly at $11.98_ JI'T97 • Steel Vent-O-Top ^Charge II Regular 7.98 4.97 Regular 13.98 9.97 Now have the ironing ease you've wanted at Sears extra savings Sitting or standing ironing's easy with your Maid Of Honor table. Steel Vent-O-Top gives cooler, faster ironing. 3 chrome-pleated legs. Pads and Covers Available for All Hoards Household Dept.. Main Basement LAST TWO DAYS of SEARS fall sale! store-wide savings in every dept. ‘79 $5 Down lightweight |M>rtable TV Tiny in price, big in value! Here it Is ... at the price you want to pay! Handsome Kenmore 30-in. Gas Range with a big 25-ln. wide oven that pre-heats In seconds. Has a giant size smokeless broiler . . . many more features. Come In and see it; shop ’til 9 pjn. semi-deluxe gas *139 175 Sq. $ in area 169 Down 19-in. (overall diag.) TV So slim It fits on a bookshelf. Smart, ebony-finish metal cabinet with “up-front” controls and glare-free safety glass. You can have “big set” picture size in a Silvertone "transportable” TV, easy to move! $5 Down 30-in Gas Range Has a wonderfully handy top of the range griddle for breakfasts, quick pick-up meals, party time snacks, converts to work space. You’ll like the Vlsl-Bake oven window thpt lets , you see in without heat .'16-in, deluxe gas $ combination radio^ stereo and phono Reg. 139.95 109^^ IS Down • Stand included at this price Table model combination with aetmrate speaker enclosure for true stereo. Play.s stereo or monaural records. Synthetic-sapphire needle, separate baas and treble tone controls. Hurry and save! $5 Down 159 2 Broilers, Rotisserie Modem broil-bake oven works on ordinary ciirrent ... separate swlng-away ga| broiler under big 20-ln. oven is smokeless, swings out from heat for easy viewing. turning of meat. Buy now and save at Sears. Satisfaction guaranteed new Silvertone tape recorders 119 Dual Speed Record and playback at 3?« or 7(4 in. per sec. Play half track, or new quarter track tape. Has stereo preamp, add. any amplified speaker for true stereo. TV and Radio Dept. .Mmin/F1oor iction guaranteed Q-p A 15 C your money back” v3Ij/\ J\iJ 154 X. Saginaw Phone ¥E 54171 / N THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. OCTOBKR 20. 19B0 FlFT^y 6-Sf8feVisitSef Up I for Nixon Nexf Week i ar WASHINGTON (l?Pn _ VTce^^" ' it!«i4ent Rkhant M. Nbron hat' announc«d a campaign achedolc! for next week that w«l cany hfani throogh ate Eaiteni and Mklweat-em itates. * * * For the tint time in hia cam-| paign. the GOP candidate will trav-^ d by railroad. His "Campaign Victory Train" f will leave Washington Monday morning, and conduct a whistle-: stop tour through Pennsylvania. Ohio, Michigan and Dlinois. On Oct. 28. the party will resume! air travel in Carbondale. 111. and wind up the week’s campaigning the next day in Chicago. EXPiXHUER STAMP — Eariy pioneers are honored by Australia in this flve-penny stamp conuncmorating the Northern Territory centenary of exploration. It bears a reproduction of Sir Daryl Lindsay's drawing, ‘"nte Overlanders. ” Harold L. Ickes served as I I secretaiy of ^ interior tor 13| The motto of MaryUnd U "Fattl j The Sahara Desert stretches years, » i^rd ter members of maschil, parole femlne”-Manlyj 3,000 mUes acrtMS Africa from ihe president s cabinet. deeds, womanly words. east to west. Acrllan acrylic* long sleeve shirts wash and dry In a Jiffy, stays luxtirlottsly soft. Hl*bulk knits come In a host of colors. Men’s small to large. *Chemstrand Reg. TM. See this Special in Men’s Furnishing Dept, Main Floor, Tomorrow and Saturday ^ Sitisfaction guaranteed or your money back” SEARS „ 154 North Saginaw Phone FE 5^171 ComplMel, INSTALLED CARPET SALE includes padding, metal, labor... nothing else to buy all-wool pile-ENSTALLED liirludea Padding, Metal and Installation ... Was 11.64 Handsome high-low design goes well with all furnishings. It’e clpsely tufted for -maximum resistance to crushing and greater durability. There are 2 pounds of fine quality wool yams per sq. yd. Sears exclusive quality and colors. 12. 16-ft. •q. yd. No Money Down call for FREE home service Let our carpet consultant bring aamplea to your home at your convoilence. nylon pile...INSTALLED Includes Padding. Metal and Installation! Was $11.64 Heat-set twist texture for 100% DuPont Nylon pHe. Long lifv—best quality nyton oTUiarpnsed by any other carpet Hber for wear and durability. Double back for firm tuft bind and better service. Choose from 4 lovely colors! In 12. 15-ft. widths. _________new CevfTlat. ieafi Saeoad flow____ 8 99 •q. yd. No Money Down simply set clock ... you have —htattwhen you want it. 1660 im or 1000 watt selectkm Autosaatlc tfaemuMtat. *' Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back” Kenmore automatic heater heats area almost instantly Regularly at 126.95 Automatic Thermostat Select the heat you desire . . . heater jMXxvides full heat in just 10 second.s. Dual control gives you 1660 or 1320 watts. Top mounted automatic thermostat IS easy to set. SafetjtAwitcb for extra protection. Electrical Dept., Main Basement SEARS 154 N. Saginaw Phone FE 5-4171 SIXTEEN r THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 20, 1960 ONE com NOW STARTING TONIGHT AT THE YANKEE STORE! «RAND YANKEES NEW TOY and Gin CENTER in DRAYTON PLAINSl NOW 2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU FOR CHRISTMAS! oomTomi STWE 1 WILL HOLD YOUR SELECTIONS Till CHRISTMAS! \n Manufacturer Unloads fOJNO HtUOWE^ Costumesr Many. WwY CH*r«**»" <129 O ll W Jj® PtasaBIsSetocHcu** LOOK WHAT 66- DUYS! DOLLS AND GIFTWARE —SHOP TODAY L-/,^.afag£ UM* ■•iiUig Unjk Doll Carriago a Calari to jack- CCC CUE. OrMMiMi ■ 4 ItolalMt. TOTS A<|( COSTUMES QQ Now Only . • -----Uw loiUallowton UOBOT HANDS ______ AND MASK 1t*CK or TREAT BAGj \ ^ J7 With Every Cortum* TOOLSET in Mftal Cas6 8aw. Haanncr, tcrewdrlver, PU^ etc. Jwt right for Dads "Shirlet Tanple" 15” DOLL Reg. 9.00 Tlg«r. Green Pawlel Doll Slioller R««. 4.9U Jael like real-Urye eadjwean HOBBY FIGURE KITS GUdlatora, SenoriUs. Cabklleros. Chinese Figures — Easy to Assemble Plastic — Complete with all mater V ALL STEEL COASTER WAGON LSSTilse |%99 61 Pc. American Flyer Train and Trestle Set {35.00 VdM .A a ^ I Watt Traae- 24' ON SALE BOTH STORES DOWNTOWN *'Admirol” TABLE RADIO ns8 * Highest Fidelity Speaker o Built In Antenna DUCK CAPS Water Repellant Jockey style with peak Sitea a«4 to 7H. Duck Coats i|44 Snag Proof Water Bcpellant SUca U to 4S Dock Pants 097 7.95 ®Hostess CART SET 88 39..9S Dinnerware Set 88 AlirtHW* WheHra Ctrt. PRESTONE ANTIFREEZE NOW |64^ YANKEElL STORE ONLY! Genuine British Enfield RIFLES Bg9. 14.9S 97 HUNTING BOOT SPECIALS Men's Fully Insnlated A O Leather Boots 9 ssn Callkor Reta-Ur BrItUk AraiT U«B« — IS Baaai CIlB — MUItarj Sl(ht — BaH Ac-Uaa—Oaaraac^ ServlecabU. The heel thaPs madefer tinrltineii! ^FAMOUS^vi llkV.C/7VK Mta'f Flaual SPORT SHIRTS i J* S Bona Chino I fanout MiloJy CUPS ond ' SAUCERS Bcaatifan DacaraUe U ~ ^artod aattcrai, cksa I caton. All gcaali jHAiR DRYERS 99‘ 188 WItk sejaatoku Drytag Baa« I a gacittoa iwltok—Bat. caU. atl 3 Air flaw aaatral a? kaad. 3 DrUa aad Hto kato butoaUv. aavas kaada fraa. Pariirt Qulitfj^ ^ Toll' DnUt. Ciotcli NYLONS 1 I ‘ d r ’ y TRAINING St tawa ■ IS Da- f aUr Dark SaasL » Pan raaklaaae la- .D lafaraae kaai aad § tot. Slam S to II. I [/ PANTS Fun double crotch. EUstic walsti white only# Sizes 2t 38f Yduikees ^ Grand VJ C Opening Price AAeii't FnnoiH "GoMbh FakoN" Fully 6ewe*teed WaterproBf < 14“ L^VallU Girls' COTTON DRESSES naHdt. PtaMf. Cbaaka. laa-farlatd catlaa, daao BMa. ataai Men's 8" Gelden Nngget Biid Boots Sim 7 to 1 Moc Toe, Soft'Golden Sim MSt 6-lnch HM upper with cushion sole. - -*”2 5*" |k|^ 4** Men's 12" Full Loce Rubber Boots 688 iBsuUted 088 style H With Steel A88 Areh, 1 to 12 BOYS' INSUULTED BOOTS I Wodge Sole. Moe Too, Biics S to 0. Men's Wotk or Sport OXFORDS 28« MEN'S FELT HUNTING PACS REGULAR nJt. SIZES T TO 12. dC99 51 S. SAGINAW «OP£N NIGHTS Till 9 •SUNDAY TILL 6 P.M. 4516 DIXIE HWY., DRAYTON PLAINS ''.-» '. : ".' 1 ■ ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS ) THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1960 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. I SEVENTEEN Pontiac Products Share Spotlight at Auto Show Blti ATTRACTION — Record crowds at the 43rd National Automobile Show In Detroit's mammoth new Cobo Halt had thinned visibly by the fourth day. but the General Motors Truck and Coach Division display was still a major attraction. V’isitoni were greatly Impressed at the many trucks. vanKinR from the Imif lon pickup to the big tractors, "kings ofllie highway" and the gleafhThg sulmriwn hits coach. CKiiWn IM.KASKK - Yawning jaws of Pon-Iwc's new conipact Tempest is drawing a large (lowcl constaMtly .at the auto show, which lasts until Sunday. Tlic uniti/cd Nxly of the Tempest lifts from the wheel ba.se in this exhibit to stiow revolutionary f|U‘chanifal advances madc_ pos.«ihle by placing the transmission over the rear axle, connected to the husky gas-saving four-cyliiulcr'; engine by a flexible drive-shaft. T'lds not only cuts down space lost to the floor hump, which is virtuolly non-existant in the Tempest, but provifles a ri()-r>0 weight distribution fill n sniiKither ride; Tliree other clean-styled Tcmptists ificiudmK the statiom wagon are included in the Pontiac display Tempests will apjM'ar In dealer shmvnmms Nov, .3. DRKA.M CAR COMES TRIX-These attractive young ladles were enticed by the luxury,'of Hie ciBtoffl-tHtttt 1961 Bonnevttte^ convertible 1n the Pontiac exhibit area at Cobo Hall. They are (from left! Kristina Knutteen, Heather Bennett and Lisa Knudsen. Lisa and Kristina are daughters of Pontiac General Manager S.E. Kriudwn. The special Bonneville, appropriately termed the Moda d’ Oro, featmes a pearleecent gold exterior color and gold lame cloth with ivory and gold leather interior. It is one of 17 Pontiac models at the show.—................... Heavy Stock Modern Walnut or Blond Irtcludes two 39" twin beds that easily convert into trundle or bunk beds, two Serto mot-tresses and two springs, guard roil and ladder. Complete for only ni9 Hard Rock Salem Maple Bunk or trundle beds easily convert into twin beds. Comes value, complete. Indestructible Harvest Brown Oak Use os trundle bed or two twin beds. Comes complete with Serto mattresses and springs. Regular $209.95 value. ^139 Sil OUR LARGI SCLICTION OF TRUNDLI RIOS, SUNK RIDS AND MATCHING OFCN STOCK FIKiS IN SOLID FINI, OAK, MAKI AND WALNUT Expert Design and Decorating Service Terms to Suit You *MY DAODir MAKER 'EM’ - Fw«r-y«ar-old Dick Coombs Jr. of Utica inspects one of the trucks Ills ■father ^Ips build as he visits the GJRC Truck k Coacb Division display at the N^auto show Judging by hh own transportation, the youngster plans to become a truck man himself w hen he grows up. 1 Bloomfield Hilb-2600 Woodwoid liure mr. H—n taf M.)—aaieoi fna Tort FE 3-7933 Open 10 A.M. to 9 F.Ml Moo., Hion-. FH., Sm. — Taea.. Wa4., HR S Ml. 4- FJGHTEEX THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 20. im Stevenson Criticizes Ike's Soviet Pdieies Strong Newspaper Is Your Protection <«DITOII S ROm Mia I to BMiattM *RtMr of th« a«i4 Ttaiw-mtpaieb »a< m»t-•r TIm Amocmm PraH Mui- Mlat Uiura . By JOHN H. COlJHTfN The scopp and poww of your NEW YORK (ft - Adtal E. StewMi aaid Wedne^jlay the Ei-aentoww administration ‘ talkwii and carried a «nal! • We need a to»«Wy pealistic poli-cv which lea\-es the Russians in no doubt of the fart that military newspaper as a cooimunity for advBrtures do no pay." he told a havf changed drasticall> during nieeth* Of members of the Na- the past SO. .veam Toclay the di-tional Counsel- of Jeawh Women, menaions of this force and the r'• •ith muat sliip being obscssed-stftrikms ceriam gisiup* se« k to with tsiiat, Mr. • Soviet Premier impose on H aie loo liffle under-Nikita S.) khrusta hev is after and »tood. rmiirt start to find out what poaithely and geoerously and de-cisivtty want to do ourselves." How often have >ou viewed your 1—A stout defender of your lib- 2—A voice against injustice; I arts e( your pablte sfllcbda; Two English automobiles have automatic transmissions which depend on a magnetic clutch in which driving and driven members are separated by powdered iron. When' the iron powder la mignetUed by >-A construcUve Influence in the application of an e^Uic cur->w community? rent-it solldIfiN and connects thr * * > 0 members. An American community has' many corttponenU but at the huh of every vibrant community is its esied in keeping pace with the widening horiaons of our readers. Our job is to provide Information through the written word and freefy or to distribute views in printed form. I'HE r.OOD TASTE The only restrictions are the le-,„..v»*.. ~ ga] ones dealiifk with libel and ua| aids such as pictures, charisl slander laws and the moral ones'and maps to help readers apprat<.e which (ome under the heading of jthe chailengii« issues and de good la.stc. ; tnenis of our day. Newspapers must conslaiitly lace op to these same restrtr Ihms bat these prohleim are not iM-arty as dlfflcall as those of GUITAftS By- Stella Kay Harmony Supro for heginiiers and esperts SPANISH •Jr* $1995 ELECTRIC “JT" $6495 AmpUfters and BappUes AR-rS Music Center tl S. Sagtaaw St. FE 4-5WI newspaper. If- there was ever a dime that there was a need for strong, stable newspaper hubs in our communities it it today We need newspapers so that people can see and understand the|| vv-orkings of our society . . . vp that they can get the feel, fascio-I *lnOT and excltemfftt of flattoBBl ami international affairs achieve a sense of participating in current history. OFF EM ■AtTttiBOl'NDfl ' Newspapers arc needed to make the city’s budget hearing night's ball game more tiian a I jumble of statistics. DeopHe enormous progress by newspapers in renehlng a Some oMhifp suppression is inadvertent, resulting from th» lack of knowledge of news operations. Much Is deliberate. .Some Information is suppressed on the pretense that its disclosuie would violate the nation's security. There is no dispute among responsible editors that legitimate security information should be withheld. However, when government agencies classify Information •'secret" to keep it from the eyes Public business should be the of Congress and the public to cover public's business—not solely the up inefficiency, poor judgment and business of public office-holders'sometimes corruption then the and their allies. !|)ublic Interest is being jeopardized The, newspaper, as the eomi It# hub, also is the market place (or 'merchants and shoppers. It makes a diligent effort Hi keep aJ-vertising truthful and clean so that through tts columns the buyer ai)d seller can baixain over the needs e( the day—whether it be food, furniture or automobiles. JOHN H. COLBURN pie public's right to legliimalej News Is what intere.sts people, fofwmjttion is g yita^^^ Courts Rot it meiKlse Is information that and leglalatlve bodies have recog-jyou wouldn't get if newspapermen nized that newspapers represent didn't break down the barriers the pttbHc aa n medium of tnf-; flpctor for teletype messages and| Your newspaper can expose m.t.lpictures transmitted between Ha-| stamhng performance as well asjwaii and Maryland 1^ the Navy.' misfeasance—and it does. By )n-|The method will be used whem terpr^ing and clarifying issues, it [sun distrubances disrupt normal creafft better understanding. I radio Let's not dismiss the distressing parts of the new g product as being ^ some editor's malicious obsession Our C^stitution says that "Con- with in and gossip. Such matters grew shall make no law . . are a part of our life and their ex-abndglng freedom of speech or of ,^*ure Is a healthful process. '•he press • ■ ' IMitors—and this Is reflected In * * * “the conttnuing Btudierof The Aiso- This means that every person Is dated Press Managing Editors protected In the right to speak|Association—are primarily Inter-' Record Player Clearance 2 SPEAKER STEREO Rpff. $69.93 NOW AUTOMATIC CHANGER 4-SPEED AUTOMATIC Reg. $34.95 $5.00 Down PHONOLA STEREO “LIVE" SOUND REPRODUCTION Opon an Account or Loy-Awoy Today JCiIM jewelers ONI SOUTH SAGINAW STRUT FE 5-5731 Ynu'll Find Them at Barnelt's! ARROW' IlllXi SPORT SHIRTS LENGTH Don't settle for less — get perfect-fitting ease in these fomous sport shirts tailored in your exoct sleeve length! Choose from exciting new "Patterns of Paris" plaids, smart solids, checks, novelties. Here's everything you could ask for in fine quolity fabrics. You'll Find Them at Barnett's! ARROW' TABS and EYELETS The Popular Styles in Whites and Colors Tabhar: soft, round collar to be worn with collar button S5 You'll Find Them at Barnett's! Jodaq IB ar nett’s COMPARE Shop lUKITT'S rinl Thiiy Taaaiiaw Saa Rw Taa MVEt More of These FAMOUS "DUSBROOK " ALL WOOL SUITS AND TOPCOATS the Scoop of the Year-On Sale Tomorrow at UNDERWEAR V iockar Athlatic Shirts $1.00 locker T-Shirti_ $1.25 leckay Brieh . . . $1.2S lockay Midways . $1.65 Ihckey Ankle Length Dmnts ............$2.50 feckty Boier Shorts $1.50 leckay Thennal Knita $3.95{ All Sisas 21 to 50 IF NOT SPECIALLY PRICED THEY WOULD SELL FOR MUCH MORE! We repeat beautiful all wool twe«f coats and wool sharkskin suits at a pnee you can't beat. Be sura to see these before you pAy $5S Of $60 elsewhere! See them Frhtey or Sstufdsy surtf Yog cen't save money any easier. Don't Seed the Cash! IBarnett! IBarnett; 150 NORTH SAGINAW ST. 150 NorHi Sfigifidw—Nexf to Saort IBarnett’s REPEATING A SELL-OUT! SPECTACULAR Double-Barrel SAVEVGS FRIDAY, SATURDAY, MONDAY! FREE BUS RIDES Made of These Famous “Dunbrook" nne Wool SUITS AND TOPCOATS A NEW SHIPMENT-Jyrt Arrirae! On Sole Tomorrow at Just If ISot Specially Priced They Would Sell for Much More! MAN, O, MAN! We firmly believe you just can't metch this superb collection of fine clothing at this price anywhere—end we mean anywhere! jUfT LOOK I the suits ere all imported sharkskins and worsteds—the kind that wear so well. The coats are smart imported tweeds—the kind you're proud to show off I^lno You-H find your correct size and you II be delighted with the savings. You Don't Seed Cash! Opan Mondoy and Friday Nights 'til 9 IBarnetts 150 North Soginow/—Nayt ta Saars / T ■ THE PONTIAi C PRESS^ rm RSDAY. PC fOHER 20. 10(M) JS^IXETEEX olSr^l Embarjfoes About Reach Limit Not Much More Can Be Done With Cuba Sficcial OF THE WEEK Utility I S*ot CusWon R«fl. 1.14 Miny uies for *ut«, home, gemet, picnics Soft cotfon filled Colors. I3',2" stiuare, BI0-I4-E 0|esteis||Dto 162 N. Soginow St. By JOHN M. HKillTOII'ITR ment ordered a curb on all U. S. rtricted in what they-can do be-WASHINGTON (API—The Ualt-i^PO*^ to Cuba except medical cause of Castro's appeal amonK ;ed States apparently faces seriousWpUfs and some foodstuffs. The:many of their own people difficulties In imposing any major j partial embamo applies mainly to, new economic or poWical pres-machinery and industrial ,e<|Ulp-J SUITS '*>'■•'1“. tion has bwn given to a wide .. * * * range of measuiex •’V u da.v of golf and TTie next most likely step— lelaxHtion in this desert resijrt though it is nof yet uorkwi out In msu. Ill** f’resHlent armngi'rt to detail—eould lie the fiTe>:ing of *'ike off als'ard his jet aiiiiner al Cuban as.sels in the I’nited Slates, luidmorning (or .San Krancisco, Officials 'said they were not sure *’hy is planning a big wel- (»f the viituBie of ..HiRmhower un Tii motor tlial they probably were not more Ibto Ihe dowiitown area. To than a few million-dollars. uight he will make a major i Apart from keeptag friendly ihe uilorna- 'Latin-American governments in-''“U”* ft'luation. at’a iliimei iiwt formed of all that can be learned '"K “1 Fram isi o s Common-about Communist activities in "'’‘“111’ Club, • Cuba, the idea of Isolating Cuba " «man< e of Ihe addir from the rest of the hemisphere ™mnie,,i by Ihe While House has not been worked out a« to'“" “’J*’':.''’?’'’ I'’!*’, „ specific detail ^ nonpolltical - Ce label Press * * * SiH-iTlary James C. ilagert; ' ' , on Ihe PiTsident’.s cross-country wlien it was aunounivd. ti-,«ald Ideas have arisen oT the posv^nhower siart«l Ihe nine-,tav trip iRibUity of establishing some kind Monday of patrol of air and sea craft | « * * around Cuba and of toing to pre-' flow nto C^a of arnrs fi^ 33 Communist countnes, ^ch aetlv.,i„ presidential c«n.,mign e(. I ties, however, responaible aufhori- ,0,3, Republican candidale, lies «ald. cotne rl(»e to hlockllde^yjee President Richard M. Nixon, if they are to be effective. the Democ'intic nominee. Blockade raises questions of the sp„ joh„ y Renmniy use of military force which appar-j . ___ ently no one In the government _ , _ co^iders seriously. JQ MOIlthS AQO.* There has also been some talk —, . , m 1 ^ of the possibility of breaking oft TrinletS’ ThlS diplomatic relations with Castro, * rn • 1 but the State-Department officials Tfmp• TrjnjQfcl discount this completely under, * C present conditions. They would' JOHANNESBURG. South Afrl-prefer to maintain some channel (AP)-Mrs. P. J Steynvaart of communication with the Cuban has given birth to her second set regime such as is afforded by the of triplets within Iff months |U. S. Embassy in Cuba. ♦ W * I * A ★ : Three girls, bom al Queen Vic- I The possibility of taking joint,toria Maternity Homo Monday' I action with other Western Hemi- had a total weight of 8 pounds, sphere allies through the Organ!/- 6*4 ounces. They must spend 1 ation of American States is under week or lO da.vs in an incubator I constant study at the State De-j A ' * A ipartment. The problem is thal ih^ The Tii>t seT of triplets born lo^ many Lafin-American countries the Steynvaarts last Dec. 1,'> died. :Castro has the status of a popular: —---------------- revolutionary hero. Though the! Breeding of Palomino horses governments are aware of the ha.s long ls>en a specially of the Communist danger now, present in an'a around Nanion. AllH'rta, .V)j Cuba they feel themselves re- miles south of Calgar; GEORGE^S DEPT. STORE "Ckm9t U rnmfk, t t. GEORGE'S DEPT. STORE HOUR SALE FRIDAY ONLY—9:30 A. M. to 4:30 P. M.—HURRY! Be Here WhUn the Doors Open. All Prices Go Bock to Oripinol After 4:30 P. M. LADIES' PURSES $277 NYLON SUPS $188 LADIES' ILDUSES $177 > Hour S*l# Ffid»v 9: JO to 4 30 10.9S POPLIN WtBM $^88 lADIES’ CkB conn f Goei bock to SI0.9F ofter 4:30 $277 7 Hour Sale Fridsv 9:30 to 4 30 3.99 NOVELTY LADIES' SWEATERS $188 Goal bock lo SJ.99 odai 4:30 PUYTIX MAS $199 PLAID jVcKETS $888 . 7 Hour Sale Friday 9 30 lo 4.30 I CHOICE OP 5.9J 5^88 UDIES' BOBES GEORGE'S DEPT. STORE 74 N. SAGINAW NEAR HURON FREE RED StAMPS FREE DOWNTOWN PARKMT TWENTY THE i^ONTIAt'PRESS. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 20. 1900 I'AR-DAKTIMi u»’K — ThlM in a Mark III noar tho UKual pa>loail ol an Allas rntsaitr. Ahlrh Is the unl> operational RUM in the V arvnal A l*i ton mie of this typt> was hurled 9.000 miles in 52‘s minutes b\ an Allas May 'JO. Traveling in a 1,0O(Vmile-hit{h trajeotory. the ivne spanned two oceans—the North and South Atlantic - and dropped into a third—the Indian Ocean. .'lOO miles noilheaM of the Prince Edward islands.. It was covered with a material wluch bums and vapon»s during re^^ntry into the earth s atmosphere, thu.s dissipating heat and keeping interior kr.imtY Grain Nntrir9p»ta.1ltPriMr SrkMrtsftMnlttmCs .NY.C. UNDER FOUR DOLLARS (and great) NOW IN MICHIGAN: Red Satin by Schenley -the most remarkable buy in whisky today! •3.93^/5 quart. *2A8 pint. 'JORMNIE BISCOVNT'' MUMS lYElYONi IM«il1)AY. CK'TOHKR Umo TWKNTYONE Lakeland, Players to Open Friday With 'Sabrina Fair'i The L«keUml Pla^’rn of Wat«'- Jack ,McCaffrey. Mm. William' RKHEAR8ING PLAY - The Lakeland Playem of Waterford Township will have the final rehearsal of "Sabrina Fair" tonight. The curtain will open at 8 p. m. Friday and Saturday at the Community Center. Here, ex-suitor. Verne Vackaro (left) would like to hit Jay Wlieeler. the bridegroom-to-be, as he talks with the heroine Ctaol Lozenby (Sabrina). Her stage-mother Mrs. Joseph Lbtozas bends her ear to listen. State Insurance Tab Exceeds $1 Billion 849 to 861 at the end of the year. From Jan. l through October of this year, an additional 18 companies were licensed. Kim Novak Gives Cop Autograph—on Ticket SHERMAN OAKS. Calif. . Insurance benefits paid to Michi- ^ *^NSING (B - Miclugan resi-residents last year totaled bUlion more than S745 million. Life Insur- ^te Insurance Department re-jceeds $24 billion. ♦ * * I "7 Premiums oft all types of Insur-, Fong Kin Could Win Way ^ SACRAMENTO. CR. lUPIl - crease of aonroxininteiv Hiram Fong, R-Hawaii, asked iM^er Ws California relatives - hon over last ye^. _ * * * 'Nixon for the presdiency—and that The nunsber of companies li- could be a deciding factor. Fong censed by the insurance depart-lsaid he h'fks 2.000 cousins in CaU-ment increased during 1959 from fomia. ford Township will open their second seMon at 8 p m. tomorrow, and Saturday at the Community Onter with the presentation of "Sabrina Fair." it - * ♦ Authored by Samuel Taylor, the play had a long Broadway run and was successfully Interpreted as V movie. Carol Lazenby will hold the title role. In tMs msdem romedy of manners. Sabrina the ehanffeur’a danghler makes oft with ttw rich man's son. Mnch hUarlty accrues from the family’s rmclion, and the fading Is ebvtousfy happy. Other featured players include Asks Election Stand by Catholic Church WASHINGTON (AP)-A Metho- __________________________ dist bishop says responsihle offi- {claln of the Roman Catholic . . IChurch should join Sen. John F. beparate Maintenance Kennedy m saying a catholic president would not be subjected Aebershid, Mrs. Joseph Latozas, William Sollcy. Vernon" Vackaro and Jay Wheeler. | ♦ w ★ ■ ) Production of the play is under le supervision of Patricia Hott.i director, and Mrs. Han^ Crlgger,| producer. The griHip Is offering season ticket sales for the first time tor $3.60 for four productions. The group is sponsored by tMf Waterford Township Recreation Department. , DR. HENRY A. MILLER OfOometrut 7 N^rth Soginow Strtdt Phon« FE 4-6842 *'Better Thing$ in Sight’* Contact Lenses Optn Fridoy Evenings — Closed Wed Afternoons He even got hw autograph-on citation for following too cloaely and not having a driver’s license In her possession. it it it Officer Hall met Miss Novak on Glen Boulevard, northbound, Protestants are waiting for such isurances from the Cathollr churclLitafIf.. Bishop John Wesley told a news conference. LOS ANGELES (B — Elizstoeth to church pressures. M. GImbel, 48. is suing Frederic A. Gimbel, wealthy member of the Motorcycle officer Fred Hall got ]^ew York department store fam-meet actress Kim NpvalTjily. for separate maintenance. Wednesday. w it it She said Gimbel, 69, makes more than $100,000 a year. She asked' He said Kennedy has made a reasonable-support. I "completely satisfactory state Her petition, filed Wednesday. Iment" of his own views on separ-charged cruelty. She said they'®**®" church and slate. But the were wed in Cuernavaca, Mexico. »dded that some Catholii- : In February 1955, and that he left|P“P®”_ pro^vssors Indicated her in November 1958. The plum gouger is a fruit loving bestle that lays its eggs in the skin of young plums. A new, fast and easy-to-use vice for determining the protein content of milk has been developed in the Soviet Union. Hunters and fishermen s|>end more than $35 million annually in British Columbia. Here’$ the Most Sensational Tape Recerder Ever Made! 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Record ot parties, weddings, onni* verseries, etc. They’re regularly 37.95 reduced to 88 LAY-AWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS ‘MICmAN'S LARGEST JEWELERS' OPEN FRIDAY and MONDAY EVENINGS I UNTIL 9 P. M. «1 Dnri WIU HtM UatU Dm. 20 24 NorfA Saginaw* Strtof Pontiac Sta^ Bank Bldg. Robert Hall makeeand tells for eathmore men's avita _____end coats than anv other clothier in America Complota altarotions ot no extra chorgo A suit like this for 29.88 is UNHEARDOF1 One glance will tell you of the distinctive styling, the finer tailoring... the high quality of the fabric. Newest fiiw Ivy herringbemes... in smart 3-button models witKthe plain^froni trousers you voantl Hurry-tfais ia toegood to missi Uso our loy-awoy plan.#.no oxtra cliorge Oir New Glarkston Salesrooin in IIIV|C i^ONTIAC R-Waleriord UIAI^|200 N. SAGINAW OPEN SUNDAYS 12 to 6 P.M. TWENTY-TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 20. 1960 Air Reserve Paratroops Are Laid Low by Rain By MAX B. SIMON FORT CAMPBELL, Ky.—Heavy rain poured down on this Army post early today throwing a monkey wrench into the (^;)ening of the fourth annual Air Force Reserve troq) carrier competition. Some 36 aircraft were scheduled to drop 200 paratroopers of the 101st Airborne (Screaming Eagles) dlvisioQ during the first*-------------------------— phase of the exercises today and a briefing. H 0 »t V t r, eoaunandert be paetponed for 34 hours. Many of the pUnet scheduled to paiti- dpate were unable to reach Fort Campbell because ct rains, heavy winds and poor visibility in ANsfelher N Air Ferre ti«op carrier plaaes win partMpate hi Tfsep Carrier Wtaf slatloard at ScIfrUc* AFB. navigators aboard the aircraft willj guide their troop carrier tram. over a designated course hilly through navigational "fixes" from the stars. No radio aids will be igtlized and at the end of the flight competing crews from eadi air drop wUi drop 360-pound cargo bundle over the Fort Campbell drop sane. Aerial umplrea aboard the |>lane win score the navigating resulU and ground umpires at the drop xones will check crucial points of the paratroopers. One—manned by the S3rd Troop Carrier Squadron-carries two Oakland County men. They are Reserve Lt. Col. Leroy Selton. 3611 Rietman Court, Avon Township, team captahi, and Reserve Capt. 17 Kuhn St., navi- Plugged-Up Flue Causes Explosion Alao on band to watdi the earn-petlbon was James R MePartUn, 1083 Ibp View, Blnningham, oom-mander o( the wing. The 403 Wing will fly for honors A pluggedup chimney flue was the ewHe of an explosion at the Waterford Town ‘ buUdli«, 45M Pontiac Laka Road, at 1:30 a.m. today, according to wain uwi ^ vuirr •nhc*. Moat of the crews will fly the now famous CU9 flying boxcars. Under a revised schedule, a 6-bour night flight tonight will be the first event Poland Asks Block on Bases ed by the Soviet Union. Wants U.N. k> Call Halt on Military installations in Other Countries The debate continued under the shadow of a Soviet boycott threat and a U. S. diarge that the Com-mnnlata are using the critical arnu UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (AP) — Communist Poland asked the United Nathms today to call on all countries to cease buUdihg military bases and rocket 1st taig Inatallations on the territories of other countries. The proposal was laid before the General Assembly’s 99-natian pcdlf-leal committee by PoUsb Foreign Minister Adam RapacU. Rapacki also i»ti|>oaed; 1. ttat osaatriea wUch da aat straeOMi af each IretallatlsBa. That caantries which do not have aoplear weapoos shoold not trieo and shoald not sook to The Polish foreign minister further renewed his appeal for adoption of the Rapid plan for a partially disarmed zone across Central Europe without nuclear weapons or rockets. A night amfdoye, Roy Locke, on a achool bua In the front of building when he heard the explosion In the furnace room. A bade window wu fe and pipes connecting to the furnace exploded. Firemen estimated damage at $35. WHO’U. WEAR THE CROWN? - Baglcy School's Parent-Teacher Association-sponsored festival Friday will be highlighted by the crowning of a Idng and queen. Two candidates for queen. VeU Smith Heft), 381 Howard McNeill St., and Jacqueline Banks, 16 Wessen St., both IL smile approvingly as festival chairman Mrs. John McGallister (left), 300 Hughes St., and Mrs. James Overton, 374 Rockwell St., PTA president, teaslngly hold the coveted crown above their heads. While offering his own proposals for partial disarmament measures, Tha lexpreHioB "truck enpa" hu no eitonectlon witk flw method of hauling vegetoUet to market. It derivea from the French word troquer, meaning to barter ar Exchange. In the United States the. term became syhMiyinous with s in general because much produce was once barterei or sold In small lots. .r I, W. HARPER OlSmUNG CO , LOUISVIUE, KV. ROTTLBO IN BONO MtLLOW SB PROOF $661 $416 $570 $357 An altar stone dating from thej lurth century was unearthed during renovation of the I2th century Roman Catholic Church of St. Lawrence near Inrimick, Austria. Bagley Revelry Friday at PTA School Festival Terrific Selection SALE MEN’S sum • Newest Fabrics • Latest Styles • Sizes to 46 Available We Aha Hm 41 ta 52 Salta BUY ONE At Rtg. Prict.....$39.95 S«cond Suit Only . . .$ 1.00 2 SpiTS "• *40.95 ONLY 3DAYS0NlY!Fii,S«t.,Moii. • Corduroy Sport Coats .. .$1.00 • Gabardine Dress Slacks . .$3.00 • White Dress Shirts...$2.00 Open sn INTIRNATIONAL ar SECURITY Clia NO MONEY DOWN! ) JOHNNIE WALKER STYLE CENTER anehMTe"wa1fesr*s 86 Noith Soginow St. 0pp. Fedtrol't FE 2-7795 The Bagley Elementary School Parent-Teacher Asaodation turn Bagley Schod into # three-ring circus Friday night. The annual PTA School Festival will take place from 5 to 8 p m. In one ring will be'the royalty. Pontiac Mother Hurt in Crash ■ Candidatee are Jacqueline Banks, Veta Smith, Beverly Batten, Mary Edwards, Annette Johnson, Ruth Walker, Jessie Bennett and Anthony Pilgrim. Others are Edwin Byrd, Charies Anthony, Azell Powell aixl Frederick Edwards. Truck Runs Red Light^ Say Mishap Witnessps; 2 Boys Injured A 45-year-old Pontiac mother of three was to critical condition today at Pontiac (General Hospital from injuries received when a tractor-trailer rammed into her station wagon at Perry and Montcalm streets yesterday afternoon. There will be an dd-fariiioned country store with canned and baked goods, all producta of moth-eni’ kitchens, and a "white ele-store, where Jewelry donated by PTA members will be on The victim, Mrs. Julius Hogan-son of 350 Linda Vista St., sustained multiple fractures and possible internal injuries to the crash. One of her chOdren. John, iS. and his friend, Robert J. Sestor, IS. of SU Unda Vista St., were John was in satisfactory condition today at th hospital. Robert was treated and released last night- Both boys suffered facial cuts. Witnesses said the tractor-trailer, I driven by 31-year-old Ludwig P. Weimorts Jr. of WUllston, S.C., failed to stop for a red light at the Intersection. He was heading sooth on Montcalm Street when he rammed the westbound ^tkm wagon broadside, knocking it ISS I feet from the point of collision. Neither Weimorts nor US wife. who was a passenger I tractor cab, were injored. He told police his brakes failed. Police said they checked the brakes after the accident and found them, to be in working order. , Assistant county Prosecutor Robert Stirling advised Weimorts to I remain in Pontiac until released by Pontiac police. He was not I held. to another will bs tasty and gilt tog morsels on sale, and to third will be plenty of fun for The king *and queon of tl year's festival will be They are chosen from fifth and sixth grade students. Mrs. John McOalHster Is fro-ttval chairman, asMsted by Mrs. Louise Ruooell, Mia. Lonise Ed- PTA preoMeto. Everyone will find sometWng of interest. Including music, naovies and games of skill, according to Mrs. Walter Johnson, publicity chairman. is at 330 Bagley Brigitte Back From the Brink oi Disaster PARIS (UPl) - Brigitte Bardot has returned to her Paris apartment, tanned and healthy and apparently recovered from her suicide attempt earlier this month. The 36-year-old actress qient 10 dsyt to St. Tropez, part the time to a clinic, and two days at hex luxury cottage near Paris. She slashed her wrists and took an overdose of sleeping pills because of what doctors called a period of deep depression. Brigitte’s husband Jacques Char-rier, with whom she has beep quarrelling, was reported to southern France awaiting his retoduo tion into the French army. Their baby Nichtdas was at the apartment here with his mother. FOR TROUBLE FREE HEATING ^ Have “SUPER-GLO” TREATED FUEL OIL delivered to your home today, ako with each fill, get the woaderful S&H GREEN STAMPS. Now Budget Terms available-adjust your moathly oil paymeats into I a regular payments suitable to your budget "24 Hour Service — FE 5-6747 — Metered Pritrted Ticket Service" SB.ai PHONE FOR FAST SERVICE! -------------------------- ANY ONE OF THE FOLLOWINO DEALERS^ MAcxm Oil! PI 14SII 3021 I FUGrrr on s«vkt PI 4-1014 200 i GBE Jud OiT Strvict IM 3-2449 9970 SeSeek UTHAM t SON FimI oh S«rvlc9 PI $-2071 7227 Irswu R4. PsnHsc, Mich. GREGORY Oil ( PI 5-4141 94 i: wabM m I FE 8-95S1 I Qwii*$eailMleBto Discount City of Fine Furniture «mAcu wasTOFraG cixni. imu aiul TMatlTBAid^ roxTiAc : ^ *•“! ^“Wngtoo admitted u • in IW and It became the tebcTeaaethellowof Uoc^tothejdSnd In wcceBaion to enter the I Union. VwEXTY.THREB LOW DISCOUNT PRICES ANTIFREEZE niMUim S1.94 M. METHANOL .. 97c Gal. CERTIFIED USED TIRES $^95 u, YOUR TRADE-IN MAY BE YOUR DOWN PAYMENT Tmnbtor RodlM 2A9S ofi Cw RmUos ...... 39.95 op Room RodlM .... 14.95 op Store# HW Sots.. 49.95 op Clock RodlM — 19.95 op TV Sots........119.95 op KELVINATOR ReMeenten .... $199.95 e# Wriflfer WMhen . .$09.95 up AatomaHc Washers $119.95 e# Oorhes Dryers ...$149.95 a# Heme Freeaers .. $249.95 ■# ..$109.95 ee 2 YEARS ,7r REGoodrich 111 North Porry Stroot m.a^s. FE 2-0121 Rut Nobel Award Unit May Consider Him to Be Too Controversial OSLO (UPI) - U.N. Secretary ■ €enerel^.-Dag .Uammacsk.jold..ter. cently under fire from Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev, is a leading contender for the 1960 Nobel Peace Prize, informed sources said Wednesday. But. the selection of the veteran Swedish diplomat may be too controversial for the Norwegian Nobel oommittee which must announce its choice by Nov. 15, the sources reported. Hammhrskjold bore the brunt of strong attack from Khrushchev during the Soviet premier’s recent session at the United Nations General Assembly in New York. Hie sooroes said (he oommittee la wary of creating another Issne similar to that which arose wh««i Soviet author iBoils Pasternak was given the lltera-twe pitse In ISM. Pasternak relinquished the prize after he was bombarded by criticism in his own country, including heavy criticism from Klunishchev. •k it 1, It is possible the committee, which brooks no Intrusion into fts affairs, will not award a prize this year and simply wait untfi 1961. There have been persistent rumors Hammarskjold was the top candidate but that the committee was split on the controversial issue. Gardner-Denver Sale$ Near All-Time Record DETROIT (UPI) - Gardner-Denver Co. sales this year are expected to exceed $83 million, an all-time record, company President G. V. Leece said. it it it He said this would exceed by more than 10 per cent the $74.7 million in sales last year. it it k He said sales of products of the Grand Haven Division, with plants at Grand Haven and Reed City. PARTNERS — The press and the people are partners in Freedom. Schweitzer Confirms Steel Heir's Death NEW YORK (UPI) - Mark Higgins, 20-year-old heir to a Massachusetts steel fortune, was shot and killed in the Congo July 21 by a Congolese soldier who mistook him for a Belgian, according to word from Dr. Albert Schweitzer. Higgins’ mother and stepfather, New York attorney Stanley' R. Doman, received a telegram from the famed humanitarian in Lam-barene, Gabon, confirming the; death of the adventuroiis, 6-foot-five youth. it k k Higgins went to Africa in 1959 to work as a volunteer at Schweitzer'a hospital and was registered the Massachusetts Institute of Technology this Fall. He is the SMI of Carter C. Higgins, president j of the Worcester Pressed Steel Co., Worcester, Mass., and was graduated from the Milton School, Mil-ton, Mass. are the best in histo^ Ws div^j^^^^ One local A woman may suffer in many ways, but one way she never suffers is in silence . . . You can always find a lot of people willing to give advice, but a pitiful few willing to offer help . . . Those' who say TV keeps you from meet- ‘ sion makes pneumatic tools and ifeliow's already met four repair- 'special automation equipment.. Imen. —Earl Wilson. TOYTOWN Pontiac’s Year ’rend DISCOUNT WONDERLAND iILtAaIns Pick Up Your FREE Lionel CotologHC- Complete Sets Priced - IF LAYAWAY NOW! HUUWEDr ■ COSTIMES * AH CbiMrmi's Sizn Bofvkur 12.00 99' isr ^ TOnOWN DISCOUNT WONDERUND 23 North Saginaw ACROSS PROM POHTIAC STATl RANK Ipuvc Vxtamm^. at £om ^Di^^eunl YOU SHOULD KNOW THE ABCs OF BUYING VITAMINS! Atiored poteocy when yoo boy Weh V«Hty when yoo boy Tbrifty opproved vltominc. ^th K •proved vltomiM. ■■ tcocy itoted Is guorentMd. U 90**rnm#iit ipo- ^ eifleotioM. W beck tfce Potcocyl Compore ffco pricci Yktie ore typicol orery. doy low pricet oo YkrHty op-proved vitomioil Wky poy more? 25,000 U.S.P. UNITS 100'. Reg. S4.S0 " 25 MICROGRAMS lOO'e $139 Reg. IJ.95 50 MILLIGRAMS Reg. SJ.» ^ O 250 MILLIGRAMS lOO'e 50 MILLIGRAMS lOO'e $|59 Reg. $3.9$ | 8/c smites ON TOP ooAiny moMms TUMS mints Reg. |f.00 6 Roll* VICKS INHALER Reg. 39e 37f V-OS HAIR DRESSING Reg. Me 73* 1.00 I 44e| ^isAKAeiHrZn89f SLOAN'S LINIMENT 49f MOMRON TABS S11» B«| Me Tab« BEN GAY 67* a*(. *•« HAND PACQUINS CRiAM 49* TBUSW LOTION 41* BRECK SHAMPOO 67^ Hpacol GABGLE 39* N«f. BBe rOWDRI BISODOL 86r 98BAH KOLL-ON DEODORANT. Reg. 69c KOLYNOS TOOTHPASTE becoMS tr,sh. end young*' leel*»g wHh Ptuj 10 lotion The perfect •o*e-ep base. P*u* 30 loHon leeps »aTe up wee*. SoneHng and *re»h bo« monwng eN eight NOW! HALF PRICE POe TMt etOUiA. $3.50 4 Plus TAX iSSLL. 2‘^ 57 SALE ONE-HALF! winter specials Give yourself that young look all through the harsh winter months with these three wonderful Barbara Gould preparations. Hurry in today, the special prices are for a limited time only! AMAZING COMFORT ~ NO FITTING REQUIRED RU PTU RE-EASER •M. eeg. «.». m. OH. _ fflfoffRtfrf r left Side S495 $5.95 W« Give Holden Red Stomps drug store IQ A PACKAGE ^ "^4895 DIXIE HWY. 10 H LIQUOR STORE^ • CoN tfce TfcrHty NeorMt Yaor Homo ~ PRESCRIPTION 148 North Saginaw St. Huron Street Corner Telc^rjph N FILLED BY US QUALITY DRUGS LOWEST PRICE 4895 Dixie Highwoy i twenty-four r THE PONTIAC PRESS. TftURSDAY. OCTOBER 20. 1»60 FRASER 01 141M Travel Service, lac. 436 Moin St., Roch«sltr, Mich. AVON BEAUTY SALON Mr*. DkTejr. Owner COMPLETE HAIR and Beauty Treatmcnta Speclallstnt tn the latest penr nents and hair style*, a Expe. raced operators on duty during U day. OPEN THURSDAYS BY APPOINTMENT E-fior-B WMwn Supply Uather |acketa la see^ wMi western deeigna New kecklae In silver erna* wanted In geld, aN new ... AN bese> end eld te enieg. Sne ear wolf i ceapJeto with at best ia kersaaaaskip eappiiee. Open Fridoy Nights 'til 9 OBERG’S APPUANOES Lamoreoux JEWELER’S FOR THE FINEST See us for the finest of all fine gifts. r WrtMWfttch Rtvii HOTPOINT AUTOMATIC WASHER e le Ik. Tek Ckt*
>*rr e ! Twr PfM PsrU Brrrltr Doris Hayes Open the door to the vast new panorama of wonderful Autumn fashion. Doris Hayes has one of the most stunning collijctlons of dresses you.'ve evac .seen. So whether you're In your tender teens or temptress thirties ... you will find the dresses made especially for you. See our latest fashions, the smartest styles, all in qgy Autumn Colors. TEL. OL 1-1022 303 Main Street Rochester, Michigan CASE'S HARDWARE MASON A. CASE, Prop. OL 1-4211 335 Mofn St., Rochester, Mich. TOY Gin DEPARTMENT STEEL WAGONS *29$ I. *99* e WHnkIr rm •■dilae $19900 Terms nrrtiuged to fit your budget 435 Moin Street Tel. OL 2-9461 Cel OL 24SM Mein It. TOWNE MARKET The Watch Shop tour WATCH CAM N RVAMDI Ptu BTIMATIS peoNPT cotrmool innci iri auAMAinu 001 woMt Leinenger*s Footwear CRADLE.... TO__CAMPUS wear, we an pwtieidaily Steed a« ev ChU Ufa Aieh reaten ahaea, and far feed reaeae. They hare built tai Muatruetlae faataree that Srerlda added aaspert far Utt(e feet — aad aaa ehild la every tear dees aet have a nenaai font. Ooi experl liller* — eapecially Ireiaed lot work with cbildrea —will be glad lo cback year child. Do come ia (or n viiil. Open Fridays ’til 9 P.M. OL 1-7571 Rochester Village SHOPPING AREA! Always Courteous! Always Friendly! SINCERE IN SERVICE-HONEST IN SALES! SEE IIS TODAY! This Is the Time to Think of Your Winter Needs!! ioueimrA'/ VIUAQE...TEM1 • WHITE CARPET CO. • PIXLEY'S FURNITURE CO. • MITZELFELL'S DEPT. STORE • FRASER TRAVEL SERVICE • LAKE JEWELERS • LAMOREOUX JEWELERS • THE WATCH SHOP • OBERG'S APPLIANCE CO. • CASE'S HARDWARE COMPANY • 4urr hardware COMPANY • AVON BEAUTY SALON • LEINENGER'S FOOTWEAR • B-BAR-B WESTERN SUPPLY • TOWNE MARKET IK.WHITE CARPET ARMSTRONG YllVTL FLOORS at WHITE CARPET SAVIIVGS RACERS and SPORT CARS MOOKL Km . All tht Itteat and newest of apoft $139 to $300 CRANES ... ALL THI 110 MACHINIS USeO IN OUR CONSTRUC-TION COMPANIIS. TRACTORS, lUU DOZfRS, CRAO-IRS...WI HAVi THIM ALU DOLLS f .1.—'ttk Tiiu'"' " $4 I. *8 DUMP TRUCKS Mkde^ of dutkbl, stMl end rubber wheel, too! All color,, ll-lochtt loot ind l-lbche, htfh. $298 iimi lAoiES' aoN ActukU bwu, eompletolr jate. Mar wk««utlful TOO! WESTERN GUN SETS Oun Flfht«r!*”«tt * nnde‘ 'or *the LAYAWAY NOW' READY TO ELY PUNES SEWING MACHINES USE OUR LAY-AWAY tLAN YOUR GIFT SELECTION NOW! CUSTOM CORLON VINTL SPECIAL SELLINGS 9x12 Insuloted *42 00 INUUD LENOL SPECIAL 9x10 Areo Initalled *2950 Over Your Prepared^ Floor Carpet Remnants Installed 12x12 Inttalled <3900 Over Your Prepared Floor LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS ARRANGED! WImier for Mreem Carpet MRS. EVELYN MUNSON . 385 Apple Hill Rd., Rochester Specialiaiing in Lee’s Carpet Colonial Furnitnre Home Service Car WHITE CARPET and FURNITURE 828 N. MAIN ST., ROCHESTER, MICH. TH. OL 1-18166-7 TOR timely BUYING SUGGESTIONS AND VALUES FOR QUALITY AND SEt|CTI0N . . . SHOP NOW 111 Sea Our New Fail...Oelorfui...Selections BURR HARDWARE CO. 429 Main, Rocliettcr WROUOHt IRON ORATES STRONG, DECORATIVE «n4 DURABLE Price* le Pll Tear ledge! OtMlIfil Brm WoodNiMtn cal a^ Decorative. ONLY •14* SEE OUR NEW AND BEAUTIFUL FNimAa ENSEMBLES . . . AU BBASS Wrm WIOUGHT WON CONTRASTmO OUTLINES AND SCREEN. "TBULY" TNEY BEAUTIFY YOUR HOML ART CARVED AND BRASS COLORED ANDIRONS ns 95 FOLDING FIREPLACE SCREENS Made te Order ‘24” Brass Framed WROUGHT IRON SCREENS Beautiful, practical and only $2200 OL 1-5311 Friday 'til 9 Lake Jewelers PeraonaUy Teare la Jewdry Wrtet WatelMe and Dtaaiende CaU OL 1-8888 OL 1-8171 312 Moin St., Rochester Department Store Quality store of moderate prices. Nationally known brands tor tho family. Visit the men's deportment. The Geld Coost Coat Per AAtN end leys 'Sturdy corduroy with durable tab trims. Wide knit collars. Bright plaid linings. Men's Sites *2095 Boys' Sisos *1995 Wask-’tr-Wem Sport Shirts Sizes S, M, L and XL. Oaly $1^99 Swooters by /ctaiiea Bulky Knit, Shawl Slip-overs and Cardigan. The New Square Collars. Argile Shag In Slipover and Coat Style*. Others by Joe- -keyfc Revere, Brentwood and Welgrume Priced from *7991. $2499 FI«-T«», OMMatM STRnCH SOX In Nylon ... 7 Open 'til 9 P. M. Fridoy Evening We Have a Custom Charge System to Fit the Needs of Every Customer FREE PARKING-A IffW TOPPED PARKING LOT AT OUR DOORSill SEI OUR TREMENDOUS VARIETY of SPORTSWEAR for MEN ^Van Hueian Jockey, Ossley and KIrw Kola IncKidIno "Ixtn nili SSar** ’ f*8Worw". fallmw, Shirtt and Man THE PONTIAC PRESS. THIIRSDAV. (K TOHKR 20. moo Dentists Uphold Stamp public confldmc* in the of Approval on Crest ^ ^ LOS ANGELES » - TTie Amer- to ADA’e lOO-yeu- lean Dental Aaaodation’i Houae ^ • oonuaerdal lootb- Delegatei hm upheld an aDA **“*'“**" •******‘*- Coundri endonement of Oeat' ----------------------------- toothpaste.^ ^ The larjest block of commercial' . _ . 'forest land under one manase- *** 81.SM.000 acres in national foreste. Of this, some 15 J** ^ «>- miUlon acres are in national paries i doi^mMt clai^ in^vement of or game refuges where no logging conitnerdal productior hunting is permitted. TWENTY-FIVB FALL DISCOUNT COHN'S BOYS' UD RUN'S WEM SUE lElt SUITS aid TOPCOSTS S«v* SIO to SIS OB E«k TOPCOATS Gobordines...$19.95 Wools $24.95 Twoods $29.95 Up SUITS Flonnels, Worsteds, Sharkskins $24.95 to $44.95 Income Tax Lieni Filed Against 2 Actreues LOS ANGELES (AP)-Tm liens have been filed against Margaret 0 Brien and Eleanor Powell. band. Hershel R Allen Jr., owe; TV wife who used to rompUlfll Idaho, with Its two had s____________ U0T3 In Incoma taxes fbr lssl|ahhut dUhpsn hsnds Is now suf imiUlon nhsep, is loirth la ths UA j-esr TV lien agslnat Miss Powellferli* from puah-Vnon finger! Is fnr 110,«l. siso for last yew. L . . Taffy 'Tuttle figuroa Santa! The amount of thslr tncomes Claiw is juat a beatnik at li was not dlicloead In tV papers V wears a Vard and works only filed Wednesday. <>he day a year -Earl Wilson. The Internal Rev*enue •Vrv'lceic Sew S«rtith Wale* v the flntl ■nw ptaimigan's color changes , . ...... Ii-olony to V-established m Aus-grudiially with IV seasons to blend iaims Miss 0 Brien and ber hus-'tralia. uith Its surroundings MUNI noM nun PM ML CAM PAUL'S SIAT COVnS 2IC 1 Se«da^ St. SI IMSIKATER SALE n m BULKY SWEJITEBS JACKETS HI.V, $7.»5 < >1 QQ ■•y»' aad Mm's 100% Woeh “ Warm lackati for Cold WMrtiMr Tu Cmt Stylw C AQC 111.00 OHou •ad Wool O Boyi* $4.95 to 14.95 Men'i $8.95 to 18.99 t SPORT VESTS conocaoTs *3.95 'OOL aU LAID8 4 I5.9S IVY PANTS Sit Flannel or Worsted |sv9S PANTS — A" "• ^ •3" 7* WE RENT TUXEDOS LOW PRICES CONN’S CLOTHES 71 N.Saginaw sr Pk*«*ui STALK BAIJIS — Sixty feet high way befoiT the Fourth of July is the story of this com stalk shooting out of an eaveitrough on the University of Midiigan'i West Engineering BuUcUng. OtVr, more normal com Is content to stay earthbound but not this high-waving hybrid which will have some trouUc ever getting an ear to the ground. Supervisor Named to Run for Sheriff FLINT fAPi-TVmaa A BeD. Mount Morris supervisor, was! named Democratic candidate for sheriff In Genesee Cbunty to re-, place Sheriff Don Carmichal, who died Tuesday. ★ ★ * ' Bell was an unsuccessful candidate for the nomination In the August primary. A f o r m e r chairman ef the county Democratie committee, ; Bell was ehooM at a hastily summoned meeting ef the committee’s executive committee. 'The new nominee stands to lose votes In absentee ballots that already have been mailed out with :tV name of Carmichael on them ;in his race with Republican Orle [Clark, chief of p-^ tV end of NovemVr 1,300 troops from neudy Independent Nigeria will V serving In the Congo under U N. Ownmand, saya MaJ. Gen. Noriunan Foster, the amiy| commander. ★ A A . The. Nlgeriana will replace Mall troops, who are going home uoon, and an Irish battalion, which iN Ving moved to Katanga pinvince.! Sane Lee EMTIRE STOCK COATS “ AU Regular $19.99 Smart collection of brand new tweeds, fleeces and blends. New silhouettes and warmly lined. All Regular $5.99 All new season styles in rich fabric blends. New prints stripes and solids. All sizes.** SPECIAL GROUP DRESSES Total Clearance 2 41 N. SAGINAW ST. DOWNTOWN ONLY MARK DAVIS lAMERA Mart Fabulous Mansfield Holid " MATCHED HOME MOVIE OUTFIT AU FOR ONLY Perfect Gift fbr All Occaaions ,jjgfl'Ajasift iht, fomlly %ytll aw|oy for yoors fnd i years to come — ond on our budgot forms poymanfs i ora toilored to your intUviduol needs. The ideal gift for young and old Buy What You Need NOW On Easiest Terms in Town! , MARK DAVIS lAMERA Mart 13 NORTH SA61HAW POHTIAC n 4-im yWENTYSlX THE PQNTiAC PRESS. THtjRSDAY. OCTOBER 20. 1960 . Women*g Divigion Adds $27,000 to 1960 Budget Sugar-Bowl Change Spills Over the Top for Uf First again to top its goal, thie Women’s r Division of the Pontiac Area United Fund has ! j;ons over the top in contributing its $27,000 I; piece of the total budget pie. : Contributions are still coming in, accord- ; ing to Chairman Mrs. Roderick Taylor. Most ? of the money contributed was what Mrs. Taylor proudly terms “sugar-bowl money,”— the odd bits of change and small bills a housewife tucks away for nonbudgeted needs. rMHM rtM« rka«M »» M Tuitenrvt Proud of her Indian award was Mrs. Floyd Foren of Lake Angelas. Division chairman in her area, Mrs. Floren was elated that the small community surpassed its goal at such an early date. According to Mrs. Margaret Libby, Lake Angelas is always among the first communities to make its final report. Realizing that most of the women contacted in the house-to-house drive have husbands making the family’s substantial United Fund contribution at work, the canvassers were looking for the small personal contribution that is the typical woman’s pride and prerogative. That the aggregate of these contributions could ,total many thousands of dollars is a testament to the power of a woman and her “sugar bowl mite,” according to Women’s Division Director Mrs. Margaret Libby. .. Wednesday, at noon, more than 600 volunteer workers and division chairmen of the United Fund Women’s Division gathered to celebrate their drive’s success as luncheon guests of the Pontiac Manufacturers Association at Elks Temple. The Rev. Galen E. Hershey gave the invocation and Mrs. Roderick Taylor welcomed the assembly and introduced the speakers. Leo N. Kimmler and his Kim Tones orchestral group entertained with musical numbers. Mrs. LaVon Ryden, vocalist, was accompanied by Mrs. John McCallum at the piano. Elwood Bigler gave the Industrial Division report, John Niggeman, the Commercial Division, and Milo J. Cross, the Advance Gifts Division report. Mrs. Charles Pangus gave the report on Brandon Township Women’s Division and Mrs. Harry Fahmer reported for Independence Township. Mrs. Taylor reported on Orion Township in the absence of Mrs. Dacey. Representing the Women’s Division, Mrs. Ben Hawkins introduced her area chairmen, Mrs. Glenn Griffin, Area I; Mrs. Richard Fox, Area II; Mrs. William Coulacos, Area III; and Mrs. Leonard Buzz, Area IV. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Walter Noffsinger, Waterford co-chairman presented MrsI Leslie Howey, Area I; Mrs. Percy Dunn, Area II; Mrs. Elmer 0. Johnson, Area III, and Mrs. Norman Dunn, Area IV. Mrs. Floyd Foren gave a report on the Lake Angelus area. Robert Nelson^ president of the United Fund Board of Directors who is also president of the Pontiac Manufacturers Association, spoke liriefly on / the goals of the UF. Indian statuettes were again awarded as trophies to areas achieving their quotas. Syml)olic of Pontiac, the small figures were present in tribal numbers at the successful dri ve luncheon* —................... ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Hawkins presided as district chairman, while Mrs. Griffin, Mrs. Fox, Mrs. Coulacos and Mrs. Buzz were named Indian award winners in their respective areas. Mrs. Noffsinger then introduced • Waterford district chairmen receiving Indian awards. Mrs. Taylor presented an orchid to Mrs. William Williams, first women’s campaign district chairman, to go over the goal. Also honored were Mrs. Louis Matich, volunteer office assistant, and Carol Ballard, Mrs. Robert Butler and Sandi Buck, staff workers. •k it ★ Centering the luncheon tables were sugar bowls, symbols of the drive, made by the Pontiac Council of Camp Fire Girls, a member agency of the Unit^ Fund. k k k The floral arrangement from the House of Evergreens which graced the speakers’ table, was presented to Mrs. Margaret Libby, director of the Women’s Division. When the Women’s Division was originally organized, according to Mrs. Libby, it was named the Geographic Division. Ralph M. Spadafore II (at right) of West Iroquois Road is being made up by his mother, Mrs. Ralph M. Spadafore. He portrayed the symbolic Indian figure, motif of thi successful drive, and delighted the large audience with his spontaneous antics as he circulated about the dining room. t The overflowing sugar bowls which were center-pieces at the table tvere the informal theme of this years Women’s Division United Fund drive. The clever decorations were made by the Pontiac Council ................................ of Campfire Girls. Admiring them and pleased at the drive's success u>ere Pontiac area chairmeji Mrs. Glenn Griffin of Ogemaw Road and Mrs. Richard Fox of Pioneer Drive. The good news theU the women have topped their goal is received hetppily by volunteer workers (from left) Mrs. Robert Lazelle of Ostrum Street, Mrs. Thomas Holbs of South Genesee Avenue and Mrs. Robert Shorey of Wenonah Drive. Luncheon as guests of the Pontiac Manufacturers' Association was a pleasant climax to their effort of several weeks. *H)rchidt to yemP* the coriages of Mrs. Walter Noffsinger of Drayton Plains'(at left) and Mrs. Ben Hawkins of Mohawk Road seem to say. The women were among (chairmen of 1960's sugar-bowl drive. Karl Bradley ,, exftetUive director of the Pontiac Area United Fund gives Mrs. Charles Pangus of Or-tonvillelan asjsift with tht mkiophone. Mrs. Pangus, admittedly “a 'little nervous,'* was quite obviously proud of her canvassers and Ortonville's contribution - to the fund. Devoted workers in the United Fund Drive listen inteMly to the figures reported at Wednesday's luncheon^ They are (from left) Mrs. Bernard » Stickney of SouHi Francis Sireist Mrs. H. 0. Sirbaugh of South Francis Street and Mrs. Robert Sirbaugh of DrayUut Plains. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20. 10«0 TWEyTY^SEVBir Montoya Delights Crowd I tv hwbuai WMld |MV» M « B7 MAS40RIE DCKER WWBM’B Editor n* PmUm Prcw j Senor Montoy«’« control, hli toft Pontiac-Otkluid T«#a Hall hand technique (filigrae. he calls ---«V_ ^__________________________________I____^ .._ Dance Saturday Square Set Dance aub will meet Satunky at Herrtoi(ton School. Members will appear in cooturoe Weds , Susan May Ladd Lt. James H. Schwarts of St. I Seating guests were the hride'i Via., claimed SuaanP*'^’^^^ David ot Pontiac, Jooeph '• May Uw’aa hta biie in •»«»">• I didn't expect to be holding ® p.m. Club|n(|ptjni, performed by the Rev. Ed-1 Plan Slides of Cycle Tour Three young women from Pon- ’ the metropolitan Dctroitiit) and the strumming and tremulo area yesterday when it preeentedjeffects of his right hand are Carioa Montoya, flamenco guitar- unique. Senor Montoya's hand, but most of {members will call, us at ^ table did! ist. and hit beautiful dancing totle Trlanita to a opacity crowd at the Oakland Tbeaiter. A tiut Spanish gypsy, Senor Montoya ddighted his audience for an hour and a half with music in .16 gypsy roaimer. He was totrodaeed by Mia. Paal Ken. Towa Hall pretodent. jfiM expialned 1»riellj the Eato-aad Moorish laflocne^a la tae masle. The gaitar has a kla-ridp to the Into, she potatod oat. Intense, balding Montoya might have been anyone's businessman friend from Anyplace, U.S.A.— until he sat down to play.' incredible dexterity With incredible dexterity and obvious love of his medium, he became a magic figure as he wove his sl^ll with the haunting, sensuous melodies. Most liked by the audience was Ms version (rf "St. Louf ^ the Saeta "Arrow Song” with its effect of advancing and retreating drums aq^ an encore which produced a bagpipe effect. theater pleases wife Hia American-born wile added dor and dinieniion to the prw gram with her lithe interpretations of Kypey dances. American-born Mme. Montoya served as interpreter for her husband. She expressed delight at the size and quaUty of the stage at the “tester. “Moat New York theaters have Uooleam-floored stages." she said. TUs makes It aerxt t» lro-poariWe for a Spaoish dancer to achieve the marked beat and crisp heelwork that are the hallmark of tUs style of daace. Her beautiful carriage, fluid ' In Spanish, which hia wife translated, Senor Montoya explains he "plays with delicacy and loving kindness — the way the Spanish treat their womep.” GEN. ROMULO .VEXT Town Hall’s next presentatipn will be Gen. Carlos Romulo of the Philippines. He will speak Nov. • on "America’s Stake la Asia.” The celeteity luncheon which will follow his talk is set for Devon Gahles. Beware Leopord! (NEAl The rage for leopard prints has invaded nearly every field of fashion this fall. But since a little leopard can look,like a lot, experiment w Ith this print before you go over* board. {ward D. Auchard in Orchard Lakej Community Church. I, I Parents of the couple are the ' ;F4wsrd S. Ladds of Neome Drive {and Col. and Mrs. James P. Schwartz of St. Petersburg. Mrs. Stoned B, Brown e| Ar-■ogtoa Heighta. 01.. waa hoaor I mairaa at tha Oc4. ■ weddlag { aad Lt. James McCM el Mln-I ,nespolls was best maa. The nfwljweds, both Michigan Lsrtte University graduates, will The heart of San Francisco's busy maritime induatry la the Embarcadero — the Spanish teon for "landing place.” It extends for S‘i miles along San Franclaco Bay. lourista, e h a p t a r n trioBda at g p.Bi at Dtoroir»0» tral Yoimg Woman’a Chrtoliaa Aa> ■ociatlon on Wlthereil Amt Mac Wtti .hnw ihi. Something different for that bat. tiac will show slldea this evening ,upp«.. pe^ baftey hi of their summer cycte tuur of {beef or chicken broth with a Uttla Europe to members and friends {chopped onion, f ............... of the Metropolitan Detroit flwp-jham, ter of the American Youth Hoatell Association. Ann and Eilen Si hachern of Miami Road and Janice Smilif of South Marshall .Street loured seven countries this summer os hostelers. * * * They Win share details of their ANNIVERSARY SALE! Woman Honored at Stork Shower Mrs. Richard E. Dumbaugh of{«, Richmond Road, Waterford Town- r He was a master at hiiilHintr the . turnsgc, iiura rununona ivoaa, water tdtement of the onwram from a tndions and grace endeared i ship, was honored at a recent vcitement of the program from uMamrct;. |stork shower In the home of her' Those whp attended the celebrity (Sister Mrs. Edward Lynch ot Myr-| exdtement of the program from relatively staid beginning, using contrapuntal and tapping effects to the complex fast and tricky rhyttuned dances that set feet tep-throughout the auditorium. It aoeaed a bIuuim fhat Ow ex-eHtog ihTthnto were heiud by • luncheon at Orchard Lake Country Qub were further endeared by her charm. tie Drive. Cohostesses were Mrs. Richard Johnston, Mrs. Carl Mil-i ler and Mrs. Joseph Boyd. "AiHoiig the"J5 guests werp mem-1 r hers of the Church of the Breth-^ Speaking for her husband, she uer* IR8. EDWARD C. KRAMB Accent Navy Suit (NEA) — To accent your Bridc-elect Ann Barrie MacDpn- Id was honored at a tea and show-1 frosty teal aqua taffeta with soft p Friday evening in the home of! fabric roses accented their dresses Mrs. L. R. .Sampson of South Shore of radiant aqua taffeta, worn with j Former Pontiac residents the Mr. Riethmeier and the former!»he matching feather hats. They car-i ‘’•“ck dresses and Rev. and Mrs. H. J. Riethmeier, - - »• c*- -----------------' ------------------------------- now of Detroit, will mark their 26 at West Bethlehem Lutheran, | Robert Kramb stood as best man for bis brother. They are THREE miLDRRN The couple has three children. golden wedding anniversary Sunday, at the 11 o'clock service at Thomas and St. Peter Lutheran Oiurch on Kelly Road, Detroit. mauve. Clara Nemitz were married Oct hostess were Mrs. E. G. Winn and ried yellow Fuji chrysanthemums. ! suits try touches of yellow o 26 at West Bethlehem Lutheran! *'’■;*• 'y- Don^ds«"- „ | ' ------ Church. Detroit. n ^ r Robert Bratton and Mrs. Albert .o Flynn of Binaingham. Mrs. C. N. !?* T** ®‘ ^ Mr*. Geoire , Anderson OTClarkston, also Mrs. After greeting friends and former parishioners fdlowing the service, their-guests will be served dinner prepared by the Ladies' Aid! in the school dining room. The attendant* at their wedding are expected to be present. Aycragt 30 yard job includot Genuine Allen Rubberized Pod and tocklest instollotion. *17995 Noymenri at Lew at $6.20 Per Month I "Phone Us! We'll Bring Samples. I 1 See Actual Samples in Your Home!" I MILL FLOOI^ COVERINGS FE 4-2778 ffoBfs: Op4m OoUy 9:30 tp 5:30 Neadoy clpal, will be guest speaker at the school's first PareHt*Teacher Association meeting of the season Tuesday at 7:30 pm Mr. Selden will relate the early history of the school. The membership committee will be present to recruit new members. Refreshments will follow the meeting. MYRM Louise frizzle A U. of M. Letter... B.> SU.tRUN H'.tRRE.N thp council. Myrla is s member dents has again produced a whirl orary*" sorority Her home is ':i “vd; m Ponu..., made and carried out (or the Tecoma Court. Homecoming weekend Friday a Pontiac senior at Ann Arbor, through Sunda\. l» president of the Assembly As- Focused on' the theme of a Roijnan rampage, the weekend pro- body. She i* al» a mem- •gram includes displays by the fra- Governors temlties. sororities, and resident ^hich goveyro the womens resi-halls the football game with Min- Memberehip in the nesota; and the dance, featuring IWary .Senior Society is another Woody Herman, Preweekend activ- ®* Mj^a s achievements, ities included a Roman Sli WISNER SCHOOL The’October Wlsner School PTA meeUng will be at 7:30 this evening In the gymnasium. Presenting a talk on •‘Citizenship" will be Laurg Belz who will define the three propasaLs on the state ballot in the Nov 8 election. A Ford Foundatiop film will follow the dlscus.slon. Mrs. Mary Morse, Wlsner principal, will Introduce Arthur Goff, new fifth grade tearber and Helen Jessup, sixth grade teacher who has returned to teaching after Illness. Former fifth grade teacher Mrs. Leah Herveat Is teaching French and spelling at Wlsner. Mrs. Fred Ooines will dispense membership cards preceding a brief buslnesa meeting. Children will be entertained In the classroom of Helen Mercer. Oeraldlne Oibbs and Mrs Martha Robsrison wlU se^e: refreshments. PONTIAC PTA COUNCIL The Pontiac PTA Council's executive board has elected Mrs. William Anderson. Dr. Dana P. Whltmer, Mrs. Ray Ritter. Mrs. Lyle Dusenbury and Hrs William Wright to the nom-limtlng committee .Mrs. Melvin Norbcrgjs general chairmSn for the Founder's Day banquet. Committee heads are Mrs. Charles .Coppersmith, program: Mrs. Thomas Fowler. Invifhtlons: .Mrs. Russell Bell and Mrs. Thomas Bartle, reaervations; Mrs. Keith Pawley, Mrs. Roland Stephlson and Mrs. John Turner, hospitality. Others are Mrs. Howard McConnell and Mrs. Lyle Dusenbury, guest table; Mrs. William Anderson, coffee; Mrs. Stanley Boyd and Mrs. Albert Stephens, decorations; Mrs. Ray. Ritter and Mrs. Earl Oltetfvlg, publicity. Plans are under way for a Christmas luncheon for the executive board and local PTA presidents and vice presidents. The next council meeting will be at Lincoln Junior High School. j Vincents hMnj 3049 Orchord Loke Rd. Kutfo Horbor OPENING UNDER ORIGINAL MANAGEMENT After Tiro Yearn of Retirement FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21st Watch for Opening Specials f hr rh«uu« til derkfil ntH in lUt’iiinn near ■// a ihnuVr U vuuesda\ in meninr\ aj tlfn-d Smilli. "Mr. Ueinorrul" and ftam»-i le .*ttrppeis coinplcted plans for the 1>-|. '2f» Halloween Dance Satunlay evening during the regular dance at WIIIW Schixil Randall May and I-xlwurd Farr, were callers for the exening. Tlle nnind dance "Short Cake" was luughi 27 South Saginaw Street lion Tuesday in which twelve of the big men on campus are auctioned off for ‘ hour. Jan Brooks of Birminghsm, a junior and recent transfer from Albion College, says that her sorority, Alplia Chi Omega, has “the Gaul to divide Minnesota into three parts." This is what they have used as their house display theme. Don Lucas of North Marshall Street and Doug Read of Orange-grove Street, Waterford, both of whom are members of the Sigma Nu fraternity, attest to the work Involved in Homecoming. Men’s rush, during which time interested men students become acquainted ■ with the campus fraternities, has just ended, and pressure has been great on the fi-aternities to plan and execute displays in time. Don is a predentistry- student, studying on a Regents scholarship. Valeric Aimstrong of Bloomfield Ten-ace lihds that being officer secretary and Panhellenic representative for the Delta Sigma Tlie-ta sorority and studying ai-e a full schedule. . Myrla Henry heads the iudicial council in Hunt House of Mary Markley Hall. Rules and regulations arc: ipade and enforced by Dames of Malta Members Fete National Officers Condne .Sisterhood Dames of Malta members entertained national officers at a banquet in Malta Temple We(\nesday. One hundred members from Detroit, Highland Park. Deartwin and Farmington attended. . Mrs. James Schram ot Bontlac offered the invocation. Queen Ksther Mrs. Christian Thelo introduced Mrs. Roro Gelgle, sov ereign protector; Mr*. Florence Hiininier of sovereign senior deaconess; and Mrs. Kdna tdler of Farmington, sovereign pianist, all of the Sovereign Body. Mrs. Geigle was presented a donation for the Children's Lukemia Fund, the projert during her term as national officer. DEPCTIIS IXTRODITKD After introduction of visiting deputies Mrs. Alvina Chapel and Mrs. Humrifer. Mrs. Edith L. Lev-ely was presented an honorary (ertificate of membership. Sie It a (Aartet imhiber of Mrs. R. F. l.Ange, chairman, ,nd Mrs. James Schram. cochair nan. directed the banquet. Committee workers were Mrs larence Vldlund, Mrs. Ed Schram, Irs Theis, Mrs. Don Bustard, Irs. Elsie Bally am| Mrs. Albert lark Sir Knights Don Bnssard, WR-im Walls and Albert Oait also The group has scheduled a ba zaar Nov. 11. Women Attend Dessert-Luncheon (embers of the Sylvan Shores maa s aub were guests of Mrs. m Gottschalk of Woodbine Drive dnesday evening. Mrs. Robert will. Mrs. George Newton, Mrs.) rman Mack and Mrs. Ronql, ite were cohostes-set. Irs, Harvey Johns narrated edi-, slides of her recent vacation i Alaska. Irs. Felix Ballard was winner, the crazy-hat contest. Charge It or Budget Your Payments If you’re « groaMMlii^liiiiitress,KIMBERLY hat an oxcitiqg trophy for you: this three-pfoco flat wool knit enoemble. Its big news is the sleevelets ovorblouso that has knitted-In leopard opoto. Ito bonus is that you can change pace and personality with other blouses. Pon't lot this one got away! (n exciting Foil colors of green and red ... Sizes 8 to 16. Look for knits ... KIMBERLY KNITS ... to become your fashion uniform. Why not?.., when they’re as easy to wear and as wonderful looking as this flat wool knit with ribbed cowl collar, smboth leather belt. Not the least of its considerable charms is the price. In pretty Forty colors of red, bfock, blue and brown . . . Sizes 10 to 16V Op€|n Every Night 'til 9 P. M *45 -4h- TlglKTY THE PbNTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20. i960 Practice Smile (IPCA)—n'a struKc tad ta»-cindMhg the way a lovely amile p a face and turn a And the eyea should amile. too. Practice ia front of your mirror If you want a amile girt into a beauty. It I that’s enchanUng. ift) ^ The Hi-Fi Trio \ PERFECT FALL 3-Piece COMBO 19.99 You'll go on record as a real swinging sensation: PI a .v i n g --. 4.|_a mgl-* .VselvR Tfiov IVllX “Wool Wardrobe Tricks" Full fashioned imported Sweaters, fully lined Jacket. Straight Beat Skirt. They really swing. A compliment collectors item from California. Colors: Bongo Brown and Banker's grey. "Woimo Gtt in on o Good Thing, Honey? Then Give Hie United Woy!" AUSTIN-NORVELL AGENCY. INC. 70 W. Lawfanca Camar af CaM Ava. ^Mother^ Health, Edtication Are Paramount Be Give Their Requisites for President By E.MILY POST Dear Mrs. Post: My sister died about two and a half years ago.' Her husband recently remarried. His nfw wife is a very lovely person and we are very happy for him. , * My sisterithad two daughters — 15 and 17. They are very fond of their stepmother — so much (to in fact, that they have taken to calling her “mother" and refer to her as "their mother." I’m very pleased that a happy relationship exists between them, but I think calling her "mother" is going Just a litHe i>it too far and is certainly very unkind to the memory of their own mother. I would very-.much.Ilk# to Jisve. your opinion on this matter. Answer: I agree that it would be preferable if your nieces found another name than "mother" for their stepmother, but this is a matter for them to de<-ide with her and their father. ter is going to be married — reception to be held in the basement of the church. Guests will l)e seated kt small tables and served. Is it proper to use paper plates with a wedding design on them? The dishes supplied by the church are the heaA-y restaurant type and not very pretty. Answer: If you are having a caterer provide and serve the food and drinks for your reception he will be able to supply the china and glasses that will be needed. On the other hand, if there will be no caterer. pretty paper, plate# will be better than unattractive heavy Dear Mrs. Post: I have often read in your column that a girl IS supposed to return the engagement ring as well as any other present.^ of value given her by her fiance, when the engagement has been broken, but I have ne\er seen anything about the man’s returning valuable presents given to him by her. Does the same rule apply to him? Answer: Yes. Any presents of value glwn him by her while the engagement lasted should be returned. A ♦ * • Dear Mrs. Post: I plan to be married at a ten o’clock nuptial ma.ss. ’The men in the bridal party will wear cutaway coats and striped trousers. However, my problem Is this; Arrangements have been made for an evening reception and I have been told by my friends that the men will be required to change Into tuxedos. Is this true? I am very much concerned over this as I don’t want the men in the bridal party to go to the double expense of hiring tuxedos in addition to the cutaways. Answer: It is not necessary that they change into tuxedos. It will be quite all right for them to remain in the same clothes that they wear at the ceremony. I Bjr eVOENE UIUEilT |teen-agers across the country in an| Not have undergone psychiatric! 52 per cent would vote (or a, <*1 aaswer when M earns ts I Presldiwi s( Iks attempt to determine the image'treatment. , Jew. ' vsttag Isr a Jew. ! OUbsit YsMk Bessarab Cm. America has of whati Never have belonged to the Com-L„^« -mg , Most of those who would turn 1 ^ J* presidential candidate should munist Party. I ‘ . down a candidate who had been a TiSSrin ^eiS *'■ ** ^ 'bwl I communlJt at some time in the Tue^y in NoivemMr we will te|youngsters interviewed »1U be objector to the draft. candidate'a ho had had no doubts about the possi- 'M^ive*alSnfLS!i Not be an active advocate God^'^^ conversion but felt i^pwtive qualification# of Richart few of them wlU be able to vote World Federalism. didnt believe m God («, '^kground would be a draw- ir !!!** when the next pFesidential election' These are the minimum things, ^^h'back in dealing with world prob- ''/‘r'yPresident i„ 1964. in the minds of most teen-agera,!"*^!" ’’Evra thoiU completely of tfie United SUtes. Despite their temporary status ‘^at a candidate must be or. must ' , one who had *«»»>* inou^^pieiey ,tric treatment'converted, commented KJ-year-old ar. P*'"®* Mittle between Republican (47 per cent). electorate Hself. should be. PESntEO qUAUTIES licadsita that meet voten e^ | P®*’* eianfy Prasideat? »irity group who would vote for he would arouse suspicion among pon-Communist nations and hatred in the Communist bloc." EDUCA’nONAL 8TATIT8 The roost striking division of opinion was recorded in answer to a question of whether a candidate must be a college graduate. The 40 per cent who said they would What^slMBU h« be meui i, jjM**^*^^**! candidate murt at candidate who had Jumped parties.|a candidate who did not telteve ^ non-college, man oted 95 per cent would vote for God. 18-year-old Thomas Engel-! Protestant. mann of Cliarleston. S. C. argued would vote for Abraham Lincoln. Benjamin Franklin. ’Thomas Edison and othfr Short Skirts a Problem Bj J0SP>H1NE LOW.MAN The present styles make us seem to be all arms and legs. Skirts are I shorter than ever. I imagine you have had the same experience I have had. My hemlines have been taken up three times, and in some instances four. - The grooming of the legs is most important. No matter how lovely your leg contour# are, superfluous hair or flaky skin showing through sheer stockings can ruin the effect. Shaving or a depilatory are the two most practical methods of removing the hair. My opinion is that cosmetic wax is too big a Job o\’er such large surfaces. HHAVINU. DEPILATORY I Either shaving or a depilatory I is satisfactory. The depilatory has jibe advantage of leaving the hair lends less stubby because it melts ;the hairs rather than cuts them. For this same reason It may give that "Jurt a man does iwtjsp,, men who figured so believe in God, does not mean prominently in the history of the is incapable of exei’uting his Republic as President” AAA “A <•« l*;jear-old Olivia Kredel of niarleslon, S. C.. “doesn’t make ^ __________ _ _ a man any better, nor does the who would reject a Catholic candi-11*^ W™ “y worse idate may be of more than passing' Rut the 55 per cent who deemed 'interest. Their objections ranged|a college education an essential from frar of the Pope and ihej qualification for the presidenc.v candidate’s freedom to act on a I argued that the world has become 'birth control bill to a belief that'too complex to entrust its future to jwe are "essentially a Protestant,the whims of the self-made men. ination by heritage and population.”! ^.^ich gets One girt fnuikfy admitted that | smaller each day while the pn>h-she would not vote for a Catholic Items get larger, an education is “because I have a religions utmost.” said 17-year-old Sharon prejudice." 8he gave the Mend- iGlickman of Miami Beach, Fla. ........flabby upper arms do this exercise: Bend you a .lltiJe “closer” shave, al- your elbows and touch your clenched fists to your rt'l'eS'S rSKJ' coun. 'o si, ,lo.lr. WlU help out It takes time and must be done regularly. most attrsujilvn ones have extremely short slem-es or none nt all. 8o npper arms wlU be la view also this winter. When necessary, the hair also should be removed from the arms, although I do not think .that so many women have this problem j since the hair is usually sparse and fine. LARUE UPPER AR.MS Some women have extremely large upper arms, arms which are out of proportion to the rest of the silhouette. Our glandillar setup dictates weight distribution and this condition , is sometimes due to low thyroid. Of course If you are overweight, a general rednclioa In Smooth 'Papa's Way for A. M. Happiness By RUTH MQXETT its in no need of pressing, the first An ex-English butler who is now]shirt he puts on doesn’t have a running a school for butlers tells I button off the cuff, and there’s no UkeUhood of his putting on a pair Don't Miss Diem's 21st Anniyersary : savinqs on SHOES ' A a/ a W« ragrot that wa war* unabla to toko cart of oil our customers lost Friday end Soturdoy when wo opened this groat tolling ovont, hewtvtr, the tamo lew prices ore still in effect, the some fine quolity, notionolly known, famous moke shoes for men, women ond children ot fobuleus low prices that save you mony dollors. You con bo sure of Diem's bettor quolity footwoor. Diem's personal service and export fitting, hero ore but o few of the nationally fomous brand nome shoos you will find ot Diem's, Pontiac's Popular Shoo storo, at sonsotionol low priest. Women -Choose from , . . Men - Choose from . . . • tam«u« Msuatic hy Wsysnbsrf • Wrieht Arch trcsurvsr • Olymstc • tsnshi „• Waymhsto Work SIMM IImi's eenry * eempMm liau ml all sisM apS widths end pmrtmct lit is guoraalMd. I Stock of New FeH md Winter Shees lecieded in Tkis Greet Seie. Den't Mbs Hi ' Op«n FrMoy Biid DIEM'S Evtningt Unt|l 9 r. M. PONTIAC'S POPULAR SHpE STORE 87 North Sagina^ Street although they may still rnnalu out of proportion nniras io uoed to speed the loss. Flabby upper arms add up to one of the main beauty hazards with which the middle-aged woman !must cope. If a woman has indulged in sports or taken arm , exercises consistently, she iHX>b-.ably will be spared this. Other-^w;iae it is sure to happen sooner or later. Exercise will help but it take# time and must be done regularly. A A Try this one. Stand tall with your arms raised sideward, shoulder height, and your palms toward the floor, aench your fists HARO. Keep them clenched as you bend your elbows and touch the flsts to the chest. Hold while you co to six slowly. Return arms starting position and continue. 1 If .you would like to have my routine of arm exercises, send a stamped, self-addressed envelope; ;w1th your request for leaflet No. 11. ' Address Jo^phihe Low man in care of The Pontiac Press. students how to get the master started off right in the morning. "In waking the master, draw the curtains gently and tell the master the time. Nothing else. Never say ‘Good morning’ unless he does so first. Lay out the suit on the back of a chair; underwear, socks, and shirt on the seat, shoes the carpet. Never choose a tie. The master will do that.” In your house to get “the master" off to n good start. But yon might assnra his getting oot on the right aide of Iho bed. Instead of coming to the breakfast table with n scowl. If yon would pay If morning is n time of hectic rUkhing around and ot short tempers in your household, try to give your husband a sense of being well-looked-after by making yourself a of rules; of socks with a hole in the toe. IS M1NUTE8 EARLY To have a little time for yourself, set the alarm fifteen minutes ahead. 'This should permit you to pay a little attention to how you are going to look across the breakfast taUe. (In case your husband ever looks up from the morning paper.) Make a practice of setting the : table the night before so that gHttng breakfast is qnlck nod Make your own “Good Morning" cheerful, but don’t follow it up with ^ ^ a lot of talk’ if your husband is! **?**?^ **** natnrally uneommunicative in the| morning. Above all, don't worry him with your problems or chatter about last; night’s party wh^e he is trying to “iest the front page of his paper.. And by all means, -give him ai real kiss instead of turning your' cheek (or a husbandly peck, as he leaves for work. ONDERELLA SPEQAL Your choice of floor length or short gown, hoop, headpiece, bra and blue garter 99 95 GOWNS MADE TO ORDER All Beautiful Weddings Start at .. . INGRID’S Bridal Salon One of Oakland County's Largest 1 PERRY AT PIKE FE 8-3300 Your Home Needs Soft Water WHY REIW? YOU CAN OWN YOUR OWN W ATER SOFTENER FOR AS LOW AS $1.25 PER WEEK. FHA APPROVED NO DOWN PAYMENT FREE WATER ANALYSIS ARTESIAN SOFT WATER 1645 UNION LK. RD. EM 3-0613 Wash Baby's Tay It’s important to choose washable stuffed toys for babies. And it’s equally important to give these dawn-through-dusk and bedtime animals a sudsy bath at the first sign of soil. Not only will a beloved creature last longer, but it will be clean for baby's affectionate nibbles. Socks Over Shoes sm YORK (UPI) - Wear a pair of dean socks over new shoes when .trying them out at home. Then, if you want to return the shoes, the soles still will be spotless. Glamoronfl DRESS SHOES All the Latast Fasbisns g99 T. y99 Mating Shoes 50 N. SAGINAW STYLE PACEMAKER) OF THE YEAR This 96" 3 CUSHION SOFA Your ckoico of fabric colon. $10S.00 Matching Choir. $85.00 Sovt $50.00 on Dovenporf—ond $20.00 on Choir Beauty - Adaptability - Economy Gracious, comfortable living is emphasized in every dramatic fine of the excifirig NEW ^collection of correloted living room pieces. • NEW AS TOMORROW FEATURES • FARULOUS FARRIC SELECTION • QUAUTT-PIUS ECONOfnr These clean modem,,.0««n( style pieces are priced low ervough for everyone to fit them into any budget. BEFORE YOU BUY ANY FURNITURE ANYWHERE—SEE OUR PRICE TAGS ORDER NOW FOR HOLIDAY DEUVERY IHI-WAY FURNITURE MART /S32 WOODWA/?D AV£ .B/RM/NGHAM M/CH 4§lOCKStikOFM HIM,., ........ THE PON’TtAc press. THI RSDAV, OCTOBKR 20 THIRTYONE Housewiveg Organized German Woman Turns Head That Rules MUNICH. Germany (ITIi-Th« bo»a of th* family in Germany to all outward appearances is the man. But from tallfing to both men and women in this hustling nation, there seem* Increasing truth to a poem of Orman folklore which when freely translated quotes the husband as saying. “I am the head, the man. You follow the direction of my nose . . , And wife answers, ‘Jfou are quite right. But I am the neck, and I turn the head. " three that she is—like her American counterpart—holding a job outside the house. And. like as not, she alw . is a member of an extraordinary organization called the German Housewives Assn, founded 70 years ago. forbidden to operate in the Hitler regime, but res’ived in 1949 with fetieral government sanction and financial support. The “new” German wife is not as active in politics as her sister in the United States But the chances are one in Today it has branches in almost all of West Germany's large cities, in most case*, the branches are nonpart isait and nonsectarian. In others, memlicrship may l>c based on religious or social interests. GordenCluB Hgs Annual Card Party • Lorraine Manor Branch of the Woman’s National Farm and Gar-den Af^cocifttion BtHgfnl itn-wuiUfll— card party Wednesday at Pontiac Kederal Savings and Loan Build- ing. Highlighting the evaping was the introduction of four new hair styles hy a representative from a local beauty salon. Mrs. James Shultz. Mrs. Donald Lloyd. Mrs. Kenneth club officers, modeled the coiffures. Refreshments w ere served with Mrs. Warren eleven at the coffee service. Mrs. Burton Strong was, head of refreshments and the kitchen. Party chairmen were Mrs. James Shultz and Mrs. eleven. Proceeds from the event will be usrf for local^vic Improvements: and the Lapeer state Home and Training School. SiudyVlub Gets Instructions on Procedure Rules Over-all. the purpose of the sssocistion is impiwement of homemaking skllls—and what man will argue that motheT i Here in Munich, the association has one of West Germanys largest branches—3.000 members. 1 talked with Mr* Helmut Haselmayr. its president, who also runs a .television network show directed to the housewife. liOUise Haselnui.vr. a ha/el-e.\ed blonde of 38. holds a doctorate In economics fnom the University of Munich. She became interested in the associations work wiiile she was a newspaper reporter covering the activities of the Munich branch .She listed some of the asso-<-iation projects: Advice on purchase of lipitie a|)pliam*g and other consumer Rotyis, family health and wel-faiT, the exchange of recipes and guidance in nutrition— "We are certainly not knocking beer in Munich," said Mrs. Haselmayr, Mbut we would like to have all children getting the proper amount of milk"— classes in homemaking j-aiig ing from knitting to cookii^g and budgeting "Courses in cooking for housewives?" 1 s.sked because Llhougfat thaL this was- * skUL-carehilly.handed from moiher to daughter. "Yes." said Mrs HasHma.u ".\nd we have both brides siwi women in their middle .teai* enrolled In oui country there aie no home economics courses in h|gh schools—onl.\ in special colleges. Becau.se if you study home-ec, it Ls to he a demonstrator or dietician." Mrs. Haselmayr said budgeting was a constant problem W PROOF! ... that the latest in carpets is the best value at BECKWITH.EVANS cause “statistically, the ovei^ age housewife spends almost .tO per cent of her budget for food. ‘ "Yet we would like to add the new lahorsaving appliances "The woman may want to buy something for the house, but if the man wants a car. the family gets the new car." EXCLUSIVELY AT THRIFTY DRUGS NIW! Oil PROTEIN SHAMPOO CURLS and WAVES HAIR The Pariiamentary Study Hub opened the fall season with a study hWeting Wednesday in the Masonic Temple. Mrs. F^rvin Christie, as leader, explained the lesson on order of exercises, introduction of business, duties of officers and members, purpose of a motion and steps of a motion. 4855 sNi ■ HA Without Pormonont Woving MM Mrs. Robert Nienstedt, Mrs, R. Earl Springer, Mts. Stahlly Warwick, Mrs. John Braid and Mrs.! Russell Larkins as officers of the! demonstration group, conducted a: model regular meeting. Mrs. E. D. Moessner, charter member, was made an honorary] life member._Mrs. Robert Cain,] Mr*. Hayden W. Henley . Mrs. Me!-1 \in Norberg and Mrs. William R. Winkler were elected to mem-tiershtp. Slim, poised, easy-sew! Softer shaping above the wraist 'lends 1961 importance to this go-everywhere sheath. Cbtton. jersey, wool are' ideal chojees for a casual you'll live in and love! Printed Pattern Misses' Sizes 12. 14, 16, 18. 20. Sze 16 takes 3’i yards 35-inch fabric. Send fifty cents In coins for this pattern — add 10 cents tor each> ipattern tor Hrt-dMs nailing. Send: 'to Anne Adams, care of The Pon-' tiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243] West 17th St. New York Ml. N.Y. Print plainly Name, Address with Zone. Size and Style Number. FLORES8 rondlUoaa hair, carls, waves R Shtmpeo your b«lr vuh trstraot liquid FLORBaa. the b*v oilrACl* hqlr-condltlAiilni PROTRIM aU «sn ihampoo. OItm you loTily tUurlns Curli ASd WsvM ritht vblto you ibsinpM wad wt. Mb mort mMilnt »1tb hemt pprmantnta and All tbe txpdoalvq iprdyji iscqutri And wav* tpt* tbit to with them. PLOREBS ProUln Oil Wtvi BliimpAe rAIUTtntte* yAur hAir CAch •hAmpoo And **t ActuAlIy eurh your bAir beAutlfully with ipArkllnt Ilf* And luitr*. No mottor wh*thtr you'rt blondo or brun*tt* ... or If your hAir I* dyed or blreched . your hair will comb out Into mlraculouily bFButIful "AtAy-ln* curl* and wave*. Pull money-back guaranttr IN PONtlAC—ON SALE EXCLUSIVELY AT 1 4985 Disia Hwy. Ndit to N*tl*"*l Aa SOO State Huron, Cor. Toltgraph SE3W NOW! Big. beautiful. COU lOR-IFIC Fall and Winter Pattern Catalog has over lOO styles to sew school, career, half-sizes. Only 35 cents! Exciting Hondknit Ski Sweaters 100% WOOL WORSTED YARNS Christmas Ideas . . . Sweater Packs The OXFORD SHOP 59 West Huron FE 4-7212 on any of these HOFFMAN HOUSE dressings Bring home and enjojr anjr of these delicious Hoffman House dressings. Mail us the label from tbe front of the jar and we’ll send you a full purchase price coupon worth on your next Hoffman House selection. This 33 L-wW aat ba kaaarad. Offar aapirat Havattbar M. 1940. K CONTINUOUS FILAMENT TEXTURED NYLON YARN . . is 0 new continuous filament textured nylon yarn. Because it is continuous filo-ment, Cumuloft retains nylon's full strength. Because it is textured by on exclusive Chemstrand process, Cumuloft gives carpets entirely new properties . . . combining nylons famed strength with new beauty ond luxury. * Incredibly strong * Richly luxurious • Resilient * Easy to clean * No Fuzzing or Piling • Beouty plus durobility Special Introductory Offer/ | EVEREST BY ‘PHILADELPHIA’ ... a crisp textured carpet This crisp textured effect, up to now, available only in the finest wiltons ,is ready for you at Beckwith-Evons in the new Cumuloft nylon. 12' and 15' widths with Q 10 year wear guarantee. The manufacturer's suggested price is $9.98 sq. yd. As a special introductory offer, Beckwith-Evgns odds heavy foam rubber pad ond our famous tockless instollotion at no extra cost. CHOOSE FROM 12 DECORATOR COLORS: • Earthgn Brown • • Geldtnrod • Yorrow Boigo • Tigar Lily • Soofoom Croon • Fam Croon • Field Loco • Sugar Mopla • Sky Blue • May Flower • Star Cray A FEW OF OUR DYNAMITE SPECIALS WaaI TEXTURED WnrON 6 Colora $j^98 Sq. Td. WOOL TWIST PEE 6 Colors $^98 Sq Td. NYLON PILE TWIST 15 Colors $ J98 Sq Yd. WaTON LOOP PILE 5 Colera $g98 Sq^ Td Now Carpet Your Home the Easy Woy ... In Your Own Home A tAlephone to OR 4-0433 will bring one of Our Ireined homo decorator saleimen with lamplev from the largest velectioo of floor covering anywhere Choose your carpet from your easy chair . . . light in your own home ... right where you'll use it CALL OR 4-0433 No OWigatlen, of Course $A98 9 Sg. Yd. ConplaMy litlsllsd ladidn: e Corpet • Foom Rubber Pad e Tockless Installation Here's How Easy It Is To Get Everest, Now ... Tsrds 40 T«r4s Taidi 60 p^ rsr! $279.40 $29 J4 399.20 39.92 4m.oo 49.90 598.80 59.18 USE BECKW1TR-EV8NS CONVENIENT CREDIT Only 10% Down and up to 3 Yoors to Pay Beckwith-Evons ONI OF THI WOeiO'S RpoilfTIOOR eoviRiM* SPICIAUftfS 4990 DIXIE HWY. DRAYTON OPEN 9-9 DAILY EXCEPT TUESDAY 9-6 OR 4-0433 THIRTY-TWO THE POXTIAC PRESS, TIltRSDAY. OCTOBER 20, Auto Men in Dilemma: To Plan for *61 Show? •.* BICX P«miAK Man y William*, managing direr-Mlftmen icurry around the floor DETROIT «»»-Direftor* of <™nkly called it hoping to write order* Automobile Manufacturer* Asaod-l« ' experiment " He told ♦ * ♦ ation are facing a problem of how ^*^*'*'^ had an option The AMA had three thing* goingS good is good enough i®" *he hall fbr IWl. but that it,in its efiort* to attract attehtion- Their dUemma .'ontern* the Nil-of a new city;, the nation’* neweat and I ■««,« h... ,h, chuuk............... running in Detroifs fobo Hall.^' and it* immediate fuluix- pi pects. ■j^cutTent show «Pf>ca.* on me d«y*-ha* been , .urf.ce to N* an un^.lified *uc espenallv -record crowds, unprec-e- novelty to this area. More than SO per rei aalioa’* automoblleft i within IM miles of Detroit and more than StW.tMW Michigan real dents aw directly Involved In Ihr ■ maaalatitaee of cars. In the >«r* from \m to World; T.^e attendance as announced by War II nation, auto show, wera ^MA has caused some raised an awunar fixture m Ne« ^ork trowds j^ .^ttercd down the ^all and no paid admission «Pires are disclosed. But cniwds! ably good And the Nw York,been large ami fire marshals f t\’ I • r \-t otale ^led t„ generate the nu !barred the dooi*. for 45 minutes on tOf DlCK IR Caiiinmia lional Merest i^c m.umliR-turer* Sunday a. a safety precaution. '''' '^**'^^11110 sn much uantnl f...- non cess dented national attention GmM a follow up presentalloa neat year be aa sm-ressfni? !to tw, the AMA Is uacominltled. A spohesman says no decision will be aiUHMM-ed until this year’s show Is rs ablated. s received resumption of the show after a| four-year lapse complrte with four The reception—more than half ‘ompa<1 cars. ' j million adnitasioiu m the first; \ * ♦ a little over-' V’w ibese factors could vlej you for^imilar national attention next e no y«*ar\Neither the hall nor the city would\be new and none of the jmanufaMurerti has Indicated plans i*® bririgXoui additional line* of Having r^ponded In record numbers. Detroiter* obviously are expecting a ,sh^ next year. Now up to the Ai ’iSees Slight Margin Paper of /an. 1, 2000, Reviews Past Century By PH1XU8 BATTELLE Also front-paged U NEW YORK--The monvihg paperin^t. wis^RatLJJ’n Ffr®'^ dated Saturday. January 1. 20(»-i^' “ Mrs. Nils Ralsro Dl^c, has been dropped at our doorsteps.:^ ' It has all the good news that's *be says, te l^puig interested^ I And it’s hard not to be interested tit to predic^. ^ ^ "because pY , j ..u„~ Iwomen have to always, well, sort ! the lead story. Iwadlmed Hate ^ py New Century!. ” sums up ‘he most important newspaper yarns; _____________ in the past. 100 years: : 1-Discovery of the MartianOt-lrOn River culturb by the-U.S.A. and Japa- ^ . nese cosmonaut scienUsts in 1983. Quih Over Salary Rate J — The wayward H-wket I (origin anknown) destroyed over I Arctic; Jolted by narrow escape, all earth aations accepted total j 3r-Colonlzation of the moon, |flr*t by U.S.A. space troops in 11971. IRON RIVER (UPI) - Donald Pedo has resigned as Iron River dty manager because the city com-misaion refused to hike his pay $25 a month. ♦ ♦ * Pedo, former assistant city t National attention through thel daily press and periodicals has ^«”*^ibeen more extensKe than at any York Coliseum in litt^was only iprevious show One national maga-modesilv Then came .j...—••.j j-i —__- LOS ANCJELE.S (IIPH •Sen. FALLOUT SHELTER - This is one type of basement fallout shelter recommended by Leo A. floegh. Office of Ovil and Defense Mobilization director. Steps in it* construction arc shown, above. In sketches that are included in a booklet. "Qay .Masonoi Family Fallout Shelt- ers,” available from the OfTDM m Washington. The booklet states that such a. shelter can be constructed by a do-it-yourselfer and a friend in two weekends. All i-equirements such a.s heating, lighting and ventilation are included in the booklet 4-World Wars I and II (1911-18 ginecr at MUwaukee. took the job and 19.19-15,) last great interna- last spring for $7,500 a year with tional wars waged with pre-nu-!the understanding he would get clear weapons. ;the pay raise after a six-month ' j—Adolf Hitler, a "most wanted period- war criminal,” found working as! ♦ ★ ★ laundry assistant in remote Peru-i The six months ended Oct. 6 and vian monastery, 1969: later ban- the commission last night voted ished to penal institution on moon, [down the pay increase. Detroit, the nathm's anlnmoMIe ■ • devoted 42 pages. Thomas Kuchel, R-Calif.. town hall meeting he beheves'Wiee President Richard M. Nixon hljl a slight edge in his home state' • " * ICalifornia over Sen. , John The show rated one sponsored,Kennedy. -.r—■. was able for the first hour of national television lime—j W * S time to offer aa exhibition ball |definitely national attention despite While refusing to predicf beyond, large rnongb to Mage a nattonal some critics’ comments that, the his own state, Kuchel said he had! show. The city needed some ,presentation was one solid com-1been told by friends that it ap-thlng Mg for an o|>enlng atirac. merdal for cars. pcnrcd nelfliei of the candidates ““ “ “■-------The enrrenl That’s what the whole auto showlhad a dear maigin ahd the elec f^^^^ |ly haked hot bread will give break-e eountryride has come in- tost an added toterast. Wbeh you enliven the brealdfst table, chooae these sparkling fruited muf-flns, enthusiasm at the breakfast table is a^red. completely written shopping list. I the shank bone leaving about a| mid fill each with i [best experiences of the-day - You can start breakfast with a lopping that .teaming baked apple, rosy and' Tap braa matHns wtlb a dollop of whole cranberry sauce for a ruby-red accent In a meal of orange aectlene. com flakea Combine whnla bran ceieal, milk honey and butter with Ihc hut muf ening dnd bent wall. .Sift together flna, and round put breakfast yrtlhifkiar, haktaig powder, aait and mg>|and appienaace; let stand grapefruit Juice. ovTn-toasirii riee|ar Add to fimt mixture, stirring cereal with milk and sugar, grilled'only until c«)mblned. nil greased^ pork link sausages, and milk uriniulfin pans 3-d full. Press 2 tea-' “ “ ■ ‘ ‘ jspoons of cmnheiry sauce Into the top of each muffin Bake In moder-' coffee to drink. Cranberry Bran aiufflns Today’s average food shopper/jpund of meat on the bone for!*»‘“ complement the flavor of the'iart Or. rook eranberfies and buys ]3 to items per shopping .t^w. Then have a few steaks cut nppfes together to make a tempt-1 tuck I tnp. spends 27 minutes per visit f^m the sirloin end of the leg. With jellied red madrilene or a Ing brenkiasrt fruit combinalion lo _________^____ , i and spends an average of $7.74. these steaks cap be broiled just'bisque (a croamy seafood or to-.seixe warm with a sprinkling of, T „„ V" j She makes most of the trips to the ^hops. The cemmato concoction) we like cucum-nutmeg. gr^ry store on I-nday and Sat-ter of the leg then becomes a Iambi her. avocado, pimiento-s t u f f e dj AnoUier way to use your favorite roHKt wMoh cftn be used for anolh'lgrpen olive# — all diced: minced'fruits of autumn at brraklnst 1r Spicy \pplei«aucr Bran Muffins The average food Mhop|ier livM er meal. :chi\es or scallions. i|n quick breads. Almost sny fiesh>lenhance Ik^kfasl or brunch Pass In a famHy of three ^ ' « ImIuiii lately hot oven <400 degrees F. about ’25 minutes. Serve Immediately Yield !) niufllnr, 2'-j Im-hes in dliiriu’lei most of moisture is laksn up. Add egg tiri ihorteniihc and best well. Sift together floor, bak^ powder, soda, salt, spices and sugar. Add hi , first tnlxtore. stirriiv only ^11 eomhlned. FUI greased muffin pans 3-3 full. Bake in modenlely hot oven (401) degrees F.) about 30 minutes SeiAe Imrm^liately. V'ieW 11 muffins, 2aron add to the goodness andj iiourishment of breakfast soup. j Save Orange Shells Save orange halves after you have extractrii the juice a lop the cut edgM, zig-zagTaSuon,' with your kitchen shears. Cut away: inside memjirane. Pack tlje orange ( shells with a layer of fruit sherbet and a layer of vanilla ice cream;. freeze. Nice to have on hand for company. I !Now the richest coffee you can buy is an instant coffee! New Instant Ynhan-richest because it is blended with aged coffee beans, aged like the best-flavored wine, cheese and steak. Deep, dark, delicious^Ynhan- at grocers now! See The Difference AQEO COFFCC BEANS t hat Yuban -adOs-1« its ~ blan^ art mtllowad MOST COFFEE BEANS SFS fMdtad^stdt-frMa in color—gsod, but <4 can't comparo in nc)«-nofs wd.h agdd lyaant. X TOmTY^yoUR 1.000.000 nl@B£/GOLD BELL Nothing To Buy ............ No Purchase Necessary!! IRESR GROUND BEEF •LEAN GROUND MANY TIMES DAILY C Lb. SHOP wd SAVE HERE Form Frtth-Grodf A CHICKEN PARTS LEGS BRUSTS 0*nicKS WINGS 39.U 1C Lb. BOSTON BUTT Hygrade's Sweeteniied Peter's PORK ROAST Sliceil BACON HOT DOGS 39l 1-u. ^ HYCRADI'S AU MIAT CHVI BOLOGNA LIVER . SAUSAGE U S. CNbiCI CHUCK STEAK Have You Ever Tried? JENNIE'O U.S.D.A^.l TURKEYS BANQUET-Fresh Frozen -- 2 39® • Family Siio * PEOPLE’S ^ APPLE Campbell's Frath Frosan POTATO C SOUP _ ___________________ A ACC i I 'ij.I"w*" FOOD MARKETS PIES _f*»N»VF»«4 T««a B*an ■laa^ 1 TASTE O' SEA ^ 1 i 9 CA GOLD BELL 9 VV ^*c*P> '*1*1' Pivdina ffii CA ^ m I: Frosh'Frozon 1 HADDOCK DINNERS , , —‘ \ j 2B of Any Doien of 9 oranges IfwwMiwwHJwwnuwaiwwmwilw ll j)f 2-IIn. or Mora of ■§ GRAPES tt ( 'T^ THE PONTIAC PRE^S. TIIU^RSDAY. OCTOBtiR 20. lOflO THIRTY.FIVII ^ Last Week’s 24 Winners 100,000 FREE GOLD BELL STAMPS to be given to 24 LUCKY WINNERS EVERY HURRY IN FOR DETAILS! !l YOU MAY BE A WINNER!!! wwNins or io,ooo ooio im stamts M«r#M |w«M, ly Mn •••J HaHlltry R4. M«. N.1^ 2„, w- *5 I, Yita loo Mmm A*« Nfrey,. ,41 0^ WINNBS Of KM mi OOIO oiu „um Sir K. I. MfCUln, 210 Cli.MdUf or 1,000 mu Odo im hamts Mn. Rmm, 20^ H* 1. Plk*. 2MO OmU. M. ^ WMMm. 240 lyOMM W Om4«««, ,44 Mn. Om N«twM4, 471 u/ W.»« P^Hn. fi«| 4^ Un.i C. IriHi, 1,4 |. Mn. |. V«l«n«l, III I. M,rfi„,| Inn# I. An4«n«ii, 2115 RmMm d,i,- «. 1,10 £3r^"'* G.t Connot Ootoil. Of l>oopl.',.Food Town Sf.^. PURE CANE DOMINO SUGAR Pound Bag With Coupon SALE DAYS Thunday, Oct. 20 thra Sttaday, Oct. 23, I960 Burnett Farms APPLE JUICE c Giant 46-oz. Can Refreshing REG. SIZE Shpdd't PEANUT BUTTER 3 SQUIRT c • Case of 24 only • 99 Kraft's ITALIAN DRESSING 2 Nut Brown PANCAKE SYRUP Duff Blueberry Pancake Mix PIE CRUST MIX... ^ IQ® Wilderness Raisin Pie Filling.......... c;? 29 39^ Vlasic Pickle Sole PiUsbury or Ballard BISCUITS 3'!Sr25V SWEET • Cucumber Slices • HOT MIX • SWEET MIX •SWEET RELISH YOUR CHOICE QUART JAR Blue Ribbon Morgarine 69 COMET CLEANSER THE All-Vegetable WESSON OIL SHORTENING REG. SIZE 11 ^ 5HORTENIN( MWMMrift i FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS Pr/sk/e ALL FOOD TOWN MARKETS-OPEN SUNDAY 9 A.M fo 6 P.M DOC MEAL 20 - M*’ 339' SORRY — limit 1 50 Extra GOLD BEU @1 Stankps wHh Purchose ||) 'll ^ Boxm or Bags of HI Holloween Candy C—>»■ g«y>rw o«i. a. tm 'I se Extra GOLD BEU Stamps with Porchosa * l| el Any 6 Top FroBl Fresei , i| Fniits, luces, VofeUbles - cm»n—Biptra on. a. im ■ Vn HIRTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1960 Universal Food Put Pancakes in ■■■(•rtaa FaBcakn MVAT ’> TATU—Meat-and-poUlu pir Ipoks light an meringup deaaert, oombinw hearty nourishment and rich flavor. The secret: a well-spiccd meal loaf mixture, Us juiciness'and good beef taste By lABfET ODRLL Poatiae Press Home Editor What would you ehoose as a{ universal food? United Nation^ Day is being observed October 24.1 V
at New York, was among the \-ocatibn and the presidential candidates dellv-guests, with Sen. John F. Kennedy and Vice ered several Jokes and an air of good fellowship. President Richard M. Nixon, at the 16th annual Both candidates said religion should not be an Alfred E. Smith Memorial Dinner in New York election Issue. CLAYTON’S and SPRAGUE & CARIETON Cordially Invite You To come in and see the Most complete Display in the area Here it is . . . the charming Sprague & Carleton Solid Rock Maple you have seen in leading national magazines. B^utlful, yes, but practical, too! Sprague & Carleton Maple _ is finished in MAPLELUX®, resists scra^^es, bums, stains, warm plate marks, and a host of other household accidents. Won’t you come in and see how comfortably these authentic Early American reproductions will fit into your home'... and your budget? America’s Most Beautiful Maple—‘ior Living Room, Dining Room, and Bedroom. Sp/uiguc 6 GoUlfeteTl^MAPLE WE ALSO HAV^ A COMPLETE COLONIAL LINE OF THE FOLLOWING MAKES: • HEWOOD-WAMM Sofas and Ghairs • BETTY LEE Floor and Table Lamps • JAMESTO\^T\ STERLING Bedrooms • SIMMONS Hide-a-Beds • BENT BROS. Solid Maple Rockers and Chairs • COLONY HOUSE Sofas and Chairs • MAGNAVOX COMPLETE COLONIAL LINE OF STEREO AND TELEVISION 1 CLAYTON’S ''^TpST *’Tke Quality Furniture Store” Appliances 3065 ORCHAIU) LAKE RD. KEEGO QARBOR FE 5-9474 O^EN MONDAY and FRIDAY EVENING TIL 9 P.M. Brrh! Winter and Cold Weather IS COMING.... And Who Wants to Hang Up Oothes During Bad Weather Take Advantage of Our Oose-Out of 1960 Hamilton Gas Dryers EXACTLY 21 LEFT WHILE THEY LAST! lOO • Full range heat—Temperature regulator for all fabrics pine "Air Only" setting! • Exclusive twin air stream drying! • 188 Minute rotary timer with ante-matie wrtnlpe free period. • Lifetime sine bonded drum wlU not flake, chip, peef or stain. Includes Free Installation Special Factory Purchase — Order Yours Now! ONLY *10 Down FREE DEUVERY! FREE INSTALLATION! 1 YEAR FREE SERVICE HANnTON NOW! LOWEST PRICE EVER Deluxe -1960 Automatic Washer Two Cycles-Lint Filter 5 Wash *n’^ Wear Rinse Temperatures Water Level Gantrol Switch Big Capacity and Fully Automatic ONLY YOUR PRESENT WASHER WILL MAKE THE DOWN PAYMENT 2> WEEKLY OR 90 days same ---* AS^CASH INSTALLED-DEUVERED AND SERVICED FREE SYLVANIA STEREO HI-FI and AM-FM RADIO ' Double value, a- powerful AM-fFM radio combined with a multiple spelaker high fidelity stereo 4-speed automatic phonograph. 90 DAYS SAME AK CASE ORJUONG^ASY TERMS 1960 17” TV CLOSE-OUT OF PREVIOUS MODE^ Only17 Left At Big 150 aq. Inch of viewing area. Portable carrying handle and built In antenna. If You Are Unable to Come In , — Shop s by Phone Shop^Mpnday and Friday Nighto ’til 9 P, M. HOUSEKEEPING of PONTIAC 51 WEST HURON STREET , FE 4-1551 TltE PONTIAC PRESS, THrRSDAY, OCTOBER 20. lOfiQ Lakeland Players to Open Friday With ‘Sabrina Fair' The Lakeland Playrn of Water* Jack McCafhry. Mm. William Aebenoid, Mra. Joeeph Latozas, WiUiam Solley. Venton Vackaro' and Jay Wheeler. j TWOTY-OXE ond aeaaon at 8 p.m. tomorrow and Saturday at the Community Center with the preaehtution of “^brina Fair.” * Authored by Samuel Taylor, the ^ay had a long Broadway run and waa aucccsafully interpreted as a movie. Carol Laienby will hold the title role. la this medera comedy at man-aera, Sabrina the ohaaftear’s daagMer makes aft with the rich maa’a aea. Murk hilarity Pitxlurtion of the piny Is under the supervision of Patrlria Hott,| director, and Mrs. Harry Crtgger,. jlixiducer. The group Is offering season tick-' et sales (or the first time for $3.G0' (or fbur productions. The group iS; sponsored by the Waterfoid Town-! ship Recreation Oepartmenl. ' DR. HENRY A. MILLER Opiometria 7 North Soginaw StrMt Phone FE 4-6842 '‘Better Things in Sight” ^ Contact Lenses i|| Open Friday Evenings — Closed Wed, Afternoons REHEARSINO PLAY - The Lakeland Players of Waterford Township will have the final rehearsal of “Sabrina Fair” tbnight. The curtain will open at 8 p. m. Friday and Saturday at th? Community Center. Here, ex-suitor, Verne Vackaro (left) would like to hit Jay WTreeler, the bride^room-to-bc, as he talks with the heroine Carol Lozenby (Sabrina). Her stage-mother Mrs. Joseplr Lotozas bends her ear to listen. State Insurance Tab Exceeds $1 Billion LANSING (fi — Michigan residents paid in excess of $1 billion last year for insurance protection, the State Insurance Department reported. ^ ★ W ^ w Premiums on all types of lnsur-|^®*'9 Coold Win Way ance coverage in Michigan last year totaled $1,«».591,00(). an In- 849 to 861 at the end of the year. From Jan. l through October of this year, an additional 18 companies were licensed. ★ * * Insurance benefits paid to Michigan resident! lari year totaled more than 8745 million. Li ance coverage in the state now ex-Wds $24 bilHon. Kim Novak Gives Cop Autograph—on Ticket SHERMAN OAKS. Calif. ■ LOS ANGELES i» - Elizabeth M. Glmbel, 48. ie suing Frederic A. Gimbel, wealthy member of the Motorcycle officer Fred Hall got ^ew York department store fam- SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI) - crease of approximately $13o mil- ,,,g California relatives today to back Vioe President Richard M. ''this California relatives today lion over last year. ' — Nixon for the presdiency—and that The number of companies It-roukl be a deciding factor. Fong censed by the' insurance department increased during 1959 from said he has 2,000 cousins in Cali- T.......... Separate Maintenance meet actress Kim Novak Wednesday. He even got her autograph—on a citation for following too closely and not having a driver’s license in her possession. ♦ ♦ e Officer Hall met Miss Novak on Glen Boulevard, ‘northbound, Knob Hill Drive, in this Los Angeles suburb. The plum gouger is^a fruit losing beetle that lays its eggs in the skin of young plums. Asks Election Stand by Catholic Church WASHINGTON (AP)-A Methodist bishop says responsible offi-dfU of the Roman Catholic Church should Join Sen. John F. Kennedy In saying a Cathoile president would not be subjected to church pressures. lly, for separate maintenance. She said Gimbel, 69. makes more lan $100,000 a year. She asked reasonable support. Her petition, filed Wednesday, charged cruelty. She said they were wed in C^iernavaca, Mexico, in February 1955, and that he left her in November 1958. Protestants are waiting (or such assurances from the Catlurilc churcJi Itself, Bishop John Wesley told a news conference. * ri * He said Kennedy has made "completely salts(a»'tory stirte-menl” of his own views on separation of ohuivh and state. But the bishop added that some t'atholtc papers and professoi-s Indiealed [that Kennedy was "at variam-e 'with his faith's official position.” A new, fast and easy-to-use do-vice _ content of milk has been developed in the Soviet Union. I more than $35 million annually in British Columbia. I Here’s the Most Sensational Tape Recorder E¥er Made! t NswinryoM Cas ~ Afford 0 Topt Rocordtrl PORTABLE TRANSISTOR TAPE RECORDER PORTABLE-PLAYS ANYWHERE-INDOORS OR OUT-NO PLUG-IN ELECTRICITY REQUIRED-FULLY TRANSISTORIZED ONLY... Plus $2.95 for Corryin| Con Nom Sold Withovt Corryiii| Com Compitti witli NUcrophoM-Topt and TnkoMip RmL SnOotUamatdlaclistM $^00 DOWN A WEEK FORTABLE-Tolf onywhere —lightwaight—No plugin aloctricity roquiroef. STUDENTS-EXECUTIVES- PROFESSIONALS-EDUCA- • fORTABlE—weighi Itu than 3 lbs. compact • PUTS ANYWHERE-Ploiw-Troin-Aato-BMt-IndoorfOutdoorsJtc. • FIMY TRANS(ST0RIZED-Na tubes to reploce or bum out. • NO EUCTRKPLUG*IN. Operates on 2 ordbioryfloshlightbotteries (1M plus bitxpenthfe small 9V. Transistor bottory. • BURT IN SPEAKHt-SENSmVE MKROPHONL • RASES AUTOMATICAUY-PiAYS-REWWDS. • RECORDS EVERYTHIN6-Vokt-iNusk4Ladio-TV progroms-Phoiie ‘Ricirds. Topo coo eosiiy bo nMiledouywiiere. - --------- • STANDARD TAPE-3" reol 150 ft. standard mognetk to|M iflclvded. Topo con btVeosed over and over ogoDi. • INSTRUCTION SHEH incioded. Easy to understond. HUNDREDS OF USES-STUDENTS-EDUCATORS-EXECUTIYIS AND BUSINESS MEN ON THE GO 5AIESMEH-WRITERS—lAWTERS-DOCTORS-ENGINEERS-HOME USE-PARTIES, ETC. Here you have the result and reward of years of electronic research and development This new RMB TRANSISTOR TAPE? RECORDER is truly imrtable. So cornfMCt and light that it can accompany you anywhere. No plug in electricity needed since it is self powered. Operates on two ordinary flashlight batteries. It is unmatchable at its price, and compel with tape recorders costing jnany times its very lowrprice. Complete with sensitive MICROPHONE, tape and take-up reel. LAY-AWAY NOW FOR . CHRISTMAS TORS, Etc. Hundrodsof usas. CHiLOREN.Childronsvoicos captured foravart Imprava tbair schoolwork. - ___ ‘memm largesi jewelerv RECOllD YOUR FAVORITE PROGRAMS. Racard at partial, waddings, anni-vf riarlas, ate. OPEN FRIDAY and MONDAY EVENING^ UNTIL 9 P. M. They’re regularly 37.95 reducedin Robert Bali tnakeeand ieUefor eaehmore Wien's $uit$ emdeoats than any Other clothier in America Complota alterations at no extra chorge A suit bke this for 29.88 is UNHEARD-OF1 One glance win teU you of the distinctive styling, the finer tailoring... the high quality of the fabric. Newestfine Ivy herringbones... in smart 3-button models with the plain-front trousers gou toont/Hurry—this is too good to ni»l Use our lay-oway plan.!.no extro charga OUN tVlMY Nienr mi 9 Oir New Saletrooa in Clarktloi-Waterford nilTIP! UIA|k|200 N. SAGINAW $1 Dmn ViU Brid UbUI Dm. 20 24 North Saginaw StrMt Pontiac Stata Bank OPEN StUNDAYS 12 to 6 P.M. TWENTY-TWO II THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. OCTOBER tO, 1960 Propose Ceiling vfBlj , Ht Mowte^ ttm addition of at - - , •*“* W appralaen and flv* CoimnfW— Holds Sorios derlcal woriwra at an eaUn amutl coat of S3S2.000. Next year, however, Eckhardt [aaid. he la only aikhg for 12 ad< LANSING m — k oeOinR on prop.|ditionai ataff nembera. of Study Mootings *\Lathrup Village * "ilHoIIeis Scat *^|to Big Tabby ~ “ST'“LT wna oMced aomething must be done to provlda more equitable OaaiOago aald he, yeraanally, There’a an ocelot dty dala want it to leave. Edith McKeal. IS, owner of the South American cat which took* like a leopard, fam't going to give her pet up without a fight, bow- * A conatitutional probably would be needed to make aodi a limttatloo legal, he aald. , The committee wound up a aerlaa "Dangeromt." repllea Mias Mc-o* hearinga ta a twoday meettag Neal. •'Why, Wendy ia Just a big at Lmataig with members of the kitten.” «^ate Thx Oammission and State! The 10-month-old cat Is about a| Board vt BgnaBfation, The full foot high, a yard long and weighs, commltleo w«l present recommen- » pounds. Miss McNeal says the datkMW on foe problem to the next ocelot geto along fine with her two regular cats and dog. ★ * She said she bought Wendy from a pet shop about eight months ago for Miss McNeal la to appeal ta court ionday to show causa why she shouldn't have to get rid of Wendy. Ceerllngs said he thought the State Tax Ooramiaaion has been doing a good Job with the avaBaUa manpower. A istaff increaae probably is needed, he said. Hw eammlttro chalmi Rob«r A. Ei^foardt, tar 1 Cheesecloth raincoats are now 1 the books. Highly efficient waterproof cotton fabrics of all sorts have been developed by Depart-meht of Agriculture chemists re- Watch Fire, Childien on Halloween BOSTON (UPI)—rive rules for a ite and sane HiAaween were suggested today by foe Natfooal lire rateetfon Ai The lulea: fits wlfo yards of material la b^gy deeves and bilfoarii« shifts. A tottch ft flams can atart t School Principal to Talk for AAontol Hoohh Dopf. Pontiac State Hospital has an- repseaent the Department of Ifen-h aa a speakH* at foe St Clair County Home demooatration meetias Goodeils, Friday. Biean ia pitadpal of the Fair-lawn School for Emotiaoally ~ —Avoid wigs and maaka wta dbraua/'hifo.” «• -OanOta chSdna la atay away frem name — bmttee and ben-ing leaves esMssvs, foteplaeas and alevsa fodmia. —Don’t allow children to cany a pumpkin Bghted by candle. —Keep the smaller children in charge of and in sight ofate-aponalUe person at all timea. * ♦ ★ The association warned ts can be as dangerous a mixture aa witch’s brew. Picking Up After Donna NEW YORK (UPI) — A tireek after hurricane Doqnn passed, New York City’s Department of Sanitation reported it had picked up 7,000 tons of debris — mostly fallen trees and branches — and WHO’LL WEAR THE CROWN? - Bagley School’s Parent-Teacher Aaaociation-spoi^red festival Friday will be highlighted by foe crowning of a king and queen. Two candidates for queen, Veta Smith (left), ,2X1 Howard McNeill St., and Jacqueline Banka, IS Wessen St., both 11, smile approvingly as festival chairman Mrs. John McCallister daft). 300 Hughea St., and Mrs. James Overton, 274 Rockwell St., PTA president, teasingly hold the coveted crown above their heads. tmbed Children on foe bMplial rounds. . •i fo * The program, at foe (fooddia 4-H Onb bunding, ia spoaaared Iqr foe Michigan Instttute of Local In UBS foe UnWeraHy of Toronto leaaed a laiRe tract of land to foe dty for a period at M yaara afr aonual rental ef five fofoinga.: I. W. HARPER OISTILIINO CO . LOUISVILU, KT. •OTTLIO IN BONO MBLLOW BB PBOOP $661 $415 $570 $357 «/S«t. flat 4/S«t. Hat An altar stone dating from foef] fourth century was unearthed duri ing renovation of the 12th centt^ Roniar CBthDUc Church Bagley Revelry Friday at PTA School Festival DOLLAR Terrific Selection SALE MEN’S sum • Newest Fabrics • Latest Styles • Sizes to 46 0 Available M aim Nava 41 ta 52 Saitt BUY ONE At R«g. PricB $39.95 S«cond Suit Only , . ,$ 1.QQ 2 SUITS *40.95 3 DAYS OfftYrm; Sot., Mm. • Corduroy Sport Coots ... $I.M • Gobordine Dress Slacks . .$3.M • White Dress Shirts....$2.M Opaa aa INTIRNATIONAL er SECURITY Cbire# Accaaat IVO MONEY DOWN! ) JOHNNIE WALKER STYLE CENTID.- 86 North Soginow St. 0pp. Federarg FE 2-7795 'The Bagley Elementary School Parent-Teacher Association will turn Bagley School into a threa-itg circns i^’riday night. The annual PTA School, Festival will take place from 5 ta 8 p.m. In one ring will be the royalty. Venezuela Presses for Dominican Ban WASHINGTON (UPI) - Venezu-ela, spurred by the new U.S. trade embargo against Cuba, has intensified its drive for an economic boycott of the Dominican Republic. Nelson Himiob. Venezueja’s rep-rwcrttalive to (he (irganization of American States, said be planned to press lor speedy consideration , of. a proposal to broaden sanc-tlons adopted against foe Dominican regime by the American foreign ministers in August. I He told a reporter his government had prepared a resolution falling on the American republic to impose an oil blockade and ban shipments of machinery and indua-trial equipment to the Dominican government. Electra Investigators May Rule Out Birds WASHINGTON (UPI) - The question before the aviation world Wednesday was: Have investigators knocked down the theory advanced by Federal Aviation Agency chief Ehvood R. (Juesada that bird impact probably caused the crash of an Eastern . Airlines Eelctra at Boston, (3rt. 4t * it It Sources close to the investigation of that accident report that thus fay, no bulky bird remains have been found in foe vital parts of' the engines now being examined at the Allison Plant in Indianapolis, All that was found, these sources revealed, was (1) bird remains in tbe^ ^ coolers which would not cause a Jet ei«lne to flame out; (2) microscopic bird remains or some of the vital parts; (3) one tiny feather about an inch long. FOR TROUBLE FREE HEATINO Have “SUPER-GLO” TREATED FUEL OIL delivered to your hone! today, also with each fill, get the wooderfni S&H GREER STAMPS. Now Budget Terms available-adjust your monthly oil payments into?^^' regular payments snitahle to your hndget "24 Hour Service - Ff 5-6141 — Metered Printed Ticket Service'* PHONE FOR FAST SERVICE! -------------------------- ANY ONE OF THE FOLLOWINU DEALERS HACKETt - man OiE UTHAM^A SON GREGORY 01 Stnfct OH Sfrvkt FmIOHSmyIco ' Fuol Oil Sorvko OH C ompcMy ra 2-D91I FI 4-1014 IM S-2449 Ff 9-2071 Fi 5-4141 10^1 >UMalRvtow 200 WUHMMre 9970 Aadfock 1227 l«m»a Ud. 94 t. Wakm Hvd. AvWw IWfbta, Mkh. Rwilfac, Mkh. Fwrtiac. Mkb. PMItiM, Mkb. kMrtiac. Mkb. In another will be tasty and glitter^ | ing morsels on sale, and in foe (hinl vdll be plmity of fun for a ^iw ifoig and' qneen of this year’s festival wiU he eleeted. They are choeen from t sixth grade iludeots. C^mdidates are Jacqueline Banks, i Veta Smith, Beverly Batted, Mary Edwards, Annette Johnson, Ruth { Walker, Jessie Bennett and An-thOTy Pilgrim. Others are Edwin Byrd, Charles Anthony, Azell Powell and Fred- I erick Edwards. ★ ★ ★ There will be an old-foshloned . country store with canned and ' baked goods, ail products of moth- , kitchens, and a ‘‘white t phant” store, where Jewelry do- , nated by PTA members will be on ' sale. Mrs. John McCallister Is (estival chairman, asefsted by Mrs. Letiise Rnssell. Mrs. Loeis^ Ed-“ wards and Mrs. dames Overton, PTA president. Everyone will find something „of ' interest, including music, movies , and games of sldll, according to Mrs. Walter Johnson, publicity t chairman. Brigitte Back From the Brink of Disaster PARIS (UPI) - Brigitte Bardot ' baa returned to her Paris apart- | t, tanned and healthy and apparently recovered from her suicide attempt earlier this month. * It ....... The 26-year-old actress spent 10 days in St. Tropez, part of the time in a clinic, and two days at hei luxury cottage near Paris. Sht slashed her wrists and took an overdose of sleeping pills because of what doctors called a period of deep depression. ★ B Brigitte’s husband Jacques Char-rier, with whom she has beep quarrelling, was reported in touth-ern France awaiting his reinduction into the French army. Their baby Nichedas was at the apartment here with his mother. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 20, 1060. ms A fainting tx^raon should be laid Ml the door with his feet raised to increase the flow of blood to the bead. state in US9 and It became the Cnd in successkn to enter the Uakn. Winterize your present old bold tires with genuine B.F.Goodrich TRAILMAKER NEW TREADS ANTIFREEZE PCIMANENT $1.94 (^«1. METHANOL . 97c Gal. TIMILY SPICIAL UWN SWEEPER $1.00 Hakb Any Hm '61 CHRISTMAS CERTIFIED USED TIRES HE’S NO DRIVER - A drivcrless convertible automatically follows another car around the country's first full-size electronic test track. The specially equipped car responds to signals generated in burled circuits by the lead car. It starts, accelerates, slows and stops, always keeping a safe distance behind the other car and all without a human driver. The track is built at RCA’s David Samoff Research Center in Princeton, N.J. *495 u. Baltsty Spstialt BIKES ARE BEST! Dag Contender for Peace Prize But Nobel Award Unit May Consider Him to Be Too Controversial jO (UPI) — U.N. Secretary^ General Dag Hammarskjold, re-j cently under fire froOi Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev, is a leading contender for the 1960 Nobel Peace Prizy, informed sources said Wednwday. But the sefectfon of flie vetenm Swedish diplomat may be too controversial for the Norwegian Nobel committee which must announce its choice by Nov. 15, the sources reported. Hammarskjold bore the brunt of strong attack from Khrushchev during the Soviet premier’s recent session at the United Nations General Assembly in New York. The sourres said the committee Is wary of creating another Issue similar to that which aroae when Soviet author Boria Pasternak was given the literature prise in 19S8. Pasternak relinquished the prize after he was bombarded by criticism in his own country, including heavy criticism from Khrushchev. NATIONAL NEWSPAPER WEEK $2995 u. YOUR TRADE-IN YJSSlSr Tramittw Riiliig 24.9S Cor todiM....... 39:95 Komi Rgdiot — 14.95 uy Sltrtt Ni.R S«ts.. 49.95 Cluck RmKm — 19.95 «|i TVSufs.........119.95 up KELVINATOR ..$199.95 up Wrtotw Wasbors . $19.95 up Automatic Watkora $119.95 up ClotlMa Diym ...$149.95 Hema FiMura ..$249.95 up ..$i$9.95 up 2 YEARS ,7, REGoodrich 111 North Perry Street Mt FE 2-0121 TT“ is possible the cofnnSittee. which brooks no intrusion into its affairs, will not award a prize this year and simply -wait until 1961. that Hammarskjold was the top candidate but that the committee split on the controversial issue. Gardner-Denver Soles Near All-Time Record DETROIT rUPIi — Gardner-! I Denver Co. sales this year are pected to exceed $83 'million, all-time record, company President G. V. Leece said. ♦ ★ ★ He said this would exceed by more than 10 per cent the J74.7 million in sales last year. ♦ ★ ★. He said sales of products of the Grand Haven Division, with plants at Grand Haven and Reed City, are the best in history. This division makes pneumatic tools and special automation equipment. PARTNERS — The press and the people are partners in Freedom. Schweitzer Confirms Steel Heir's Death NEW YORK (UPI) - Mark Higgins, 20-year-oid heir to a Massachusetts steel fortune, waS shot and| killed in the Congo July 21 by a' Congolese soldier who mistook .him for a Belgian, according to word from Dr. Albert Schweitzer. Higgins' mother and stepfather. New York attorney Stanley Doman, received a telegram fi ^ famed humanitarian^ in l-am-barene, Gabon, confirming the Higgins went to Afric{( in 1959 to work as a volunteer it Schweitzer’i hospital and was registered to Massachusetts In-stitute of Technology this Fall. He is the son of Carter C. Higgins, president of the Worcester Preased .Steel Co, Worcester, Mass., and was graduated from the Milton School, Mil-ton, Mass. A woman may suffer in many ways, but one way she never; suffers is in silence . . . You can always find a lot of people willing | to give advice, but a pitiful willing to offer help . . . Those who say TV keeps you from meeting people are wrohg. One local fellow’s already met four repairmen. —Earl Wilson. TOnOWN Pontiac’s Year ’roind DISCOUNT WONDERLAND QNEL TRAINS NEW OUTFITS CARS and ACCESSORIES Pkk Up Your FREE Lionul Cotologuo— Complete Sets Priced r». LAYAWAY NOW! HALLOWEER COSTUMES 99‘ lifikr 12.00/ TOYTOWN DISCOUNTa WONDERLAND 23 Nortl^ Saginaw ACROSS FROM PONTIAC STATI RANK LOW DISCOUNT PRICES ‘Jliuf ymvc VUamUtd, at £em S)i^£ount YOU SHOULD KNOW THE ABCs OF BUYING VITAMINS! fc-T Mlk r-Nty Wk.. YW ksy Tfcrifty spF«««i law priet. m^rifty si- Mu4« to rigid g•v•rlllMnf ipt- ■■ prwtd vitomiNii Wky pay clficatioiM. m*rt? i si«r»d potoncy whan yM bsy I Thrifty apprevad vHmiim. Ps-I toNcy itotad it grarairtaad. B VITAMIN A 25,000 U.S.P. UNITS 100'. Rug. I4.S0 f O 25 MICROGRAMS lOO'l Rug. fJ.IS 50 MILLIGRAMS 100's Rug. S3JS 250 MILLIGRAMS < 50 MILLIGRAMS 100'. $|69 Rag. S3.IS | BtG SAVINGS ON TOP mUTV V/TAIAINS ITUMS ."•• ''ifi I VICKS MINTS 6>t.ii<44e| INHUER SLOWS LINIMENT 49* Bif. Tikr DEN GAY 97* cSpacol'gabgle 69* HAND PACQUINS CRiAM 49* Ri-I. Hr rOWDEK BISODOL 86< TkSHAT LOnON 4i* FBESH DEODOBENT 57* QHtPAAl Y0V p/llf pboDORANT. Rsg. 69c KOLYNOS TOOTHPASTE tooling wMi •uioHIom FIm 30 lofkM. The ooHoei I ^ I Moto-up bos«. Fho 30 lotion toeps noliu -ve 1 P*** v J Uo^ring and *re»h (roul noralng IW eight NOW! HALF PRICE Jt”... ______________ Foa THE atouua »3.S0 4-ot. IOjll£_ 2'‘-59’ SALE ONE-HALF! winter specials Oivtyoursalf that young look alt through tha harsh winter months with these three wonderful Barbara Gould prapa-rations. Hurry in today, the epacial prices are for a limited timeonlyl AMAZING toMFORT~NO FITTING REQUIRED RUPTURE-EASER f JL Itg. «A fW. ON. u No Nool or bollMr bM* 4A FiFU atACi nuis) ' u Nr ■oAnMo logolnol Homlo u UgM or MtiMo or rkoWo M. $/$95 $s-9S OVER 1,000,000 GRATEFUL USERS! Wg Giv« Hold«it Rtd Stioinips drug STORE |C A PACKAGE 4a95 DIXIE HWY. 10 H LIQUOR STORE PRESCRIPTION OA fha TMfty ^ Na«rMt Yaar NiM FILLED BY US QUALITY DRUGS LOWEST PRICE 148 North Saginaw St. Huron Street 4395 Dixie Highway TWENTY-FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. OCTOBER 20, l9eo FRASER OL I41M Trivd Service, tcc. 4M M«in St.. RocliMttiv Mkli. AVON BEAUTY SALON Mrv D«T«r. OlTMT COMPLETE HAIR and Bcaotj Treatmentt OPEN THITRSDAYS BY APPOINTMENT BSarS Western Supply hi aaM, aM mmm ... 4 MM aaC aaaMtaf . . . VW tl aaC aM ta aatay. Op«n Fridoy Nisktt 'til 9 OBEM’S APPUANCES Lantoreoux JEM'ELER*S FOR THE FINEST Se« u» for the finest of ail fine gifts. HOTFOmr AUTOMATIC WASHR a If Ik. Tifc CsfMUy Doris Hayes Open the door to the vast new panorama of .-wondarfuL Autumn... iashion. Doris Hayes has one of the most ' stunning collections of dresses you’ve over seen. So whether you're In your tender teens or temptress thirties... you will find the dresses made especially for you. See our latest fashions, the smartest styles, all In gay Autumn Colors. TEL OL M022 303 Main Street Rochester, Michigan $19900 Taa racLVDBD Termt arranged to fit your budget 435 Moin Street Tel. OL 2-9461 CsM OL 2.«IM TOWNS MARKET TUKH . OPEN PI The Watch Shop wm WATCH CAN H RVAMDI PtU DTIMATIS wt avAtAintk 001 wom Leinenger^s Footwear CRADLE .... TO .... CAMPUS As aeaclslbl la JaraaOe faat-wasr, va sia earttaalarly etaei af aar ChlM Ufa Aiab Wm*m alMaa, smI far gaaS raaaaa. Thar haira ballt la oanstracUae faataraa that eravISe addeS saepart far Uttle faat — and aae child la everj faar daaa nat hava a Our axparl littara — aapaciuJIr trained for arork wilk ckildraa —wifi ha glad to ehack pour child. Do coma ia tot a risil. Open Fridays 'til 9 PJW. OL 1-7571 Rochester Village SHOPPING AREA! MwaysCourtooutl Always Friendly! HNCERE IN SERVICE-HONEST IN SALES! SEE US TODAY I This Is the Time to Think of Your Winter Needs!! loacHiHmity inUAOE..-.TElUI • WHITE CARPET CO. • PIXLEY'S FURNITURE CO. • MITZELFELL'S DEPT. STORE W FRASER TRAVEL SERYICE • LAKE JEWELERS • LAMOREOUX JEWELERS • THE WATCH SHOP • OBERG'S APPLIANCE CO. • CASE'S HARDWARE COMPANY • BURR HARDWARE COMPANY • AVON BEAUTY SALON • LEINENGER'S FOOTWEAR • B-BAR-B WESTERN SUPPLY • TOWNE MARKET CASE'S HARDWARE MA60N A. CASE. Prop. OL 1-4211 335 Mein St.. Rochester, Mich. TOT (^IFT DEPARTMENT STEEL WASONS Stardy Caaa»racMaa, haill ta lae, bunt ta ha adth. Ail Sisaa. $295 I. $995 UCBBMdSmtTCAIIS Moan am an tlM aiMt tna ntwut et iport tan AH tt» ikUtt et the ruteii HUOI aCLBCTlON TO CH006K FROM. 5139 I. 5300 IRwhite carpet ARMSTRONG VI^TYL FLOORS at WHITE CARPET SAVDVGS CRANES .. . ALL THI 110 MACHINES USED IN OUR CONSTRUCTION COMPANin. TRACTORS, lUU DOZERS, CRAD-IRS... WE HAVE THEM AUl see Out Camplala WESTERN GUN SCTS Wt bevt > I«n Mt to fit kBjr itM Om nchter. »n mod* ter the UthtniM drew men' BB OUR WiaTKN COlXlcnON MOW. layaway howi maois list: OUR LAY-AWAY PLAN YOUR GIFT SELECTION NOW! CUSTOM CORLON VINYL SPECIAL SELUKiCS 9x12 Insuloted *42 00 UnJUD lENOL SPECIAL 9x10 Areo Initolled Ovor Your^ Prepared Fleer Carpet Remnants Installed 12x12 tnntalled sggOO Over Y would turn dawn a candidate who had been a Communist at some time in the past had no doubts about the poaai-Ullty of sincere convenion but ^t hia badtground would be a diWw-badc in dealing with world prob-Even though completely converted,’’ commented 16-yearold Sue Parriah of Richmond. Va., he would apouae auapkion among non-Communlst nations and hatred in the Communist bloe.” Try to Make Legs Pretty By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN The present styles make us seem to be all arma and legs. Skirts are shorter than ever. I imagine you have had the same experience I hpve had. My hemlinea have been ' n up three tiroes, and in some Instances jlour. The grooming of the legs is most Important. No matter how lovely your leg contours are, superfluous hair or flaky skin showing through sheer stockings can ruin the effect. Shaving or a depilatory are the two most practlcrt methods of removing the hair. . My npininn is that cosmetic wax is too big a Job such large surfaces. SHAVING, DEPILATORY Either shaving or a depilatory is satisfactory. The depilatory has the advantage of leaving the hair end.s less stubby because it melts the hairs rather than cuts them. For this same reason it may give you a little "closer” shave, although the difference Is slight. 'If shaving is easier, use that method. While there are maay evening clothes with sleeves, some of the moot attractive euea have extremely short aloevea or aone at all. 8o upper arms will be la view also this wtater. When necessary, the hair also should be removed from the arms, although I do not think that so many women have this problem the thinking behind the 25 per cent who would reject a Catholic candi-jdate may be of more than passing 11nterest. Their objections ranged from (ear of the Pope add the candidate’s freedom to act cn a birth control bill to a belief that we are "essentially a Protestant nation by heritage and population.’ One gtrl frankly admitted that she would not vote for a Gatholie I have a rcHgious She gave Mie Meqp- EDUCATIONAL STATUS Hw mUBt striking division of opinion was recorded in answer to a questioQ of whether a candidate must be a college graduate. The 48 per cent who said they would 'ote for a non-college man cited Abraham Lincoln, Benjamin Franklin. Thomas Edison and oth#r self made men who figured so prominently in the history of the Republic. *‘A college diploma," Inabted 17-yearHdd Ollvih„iKredel of CharleotOB, S. C.. "doeoa't make a nun any better, nor doeo the lack of It make him any worse." But the 55 per cent who deemed a college education an esaJhtlal qualification for the presidency argued that the world has become too complex to entrust its .future to the whims of the self-made men. In today’s world, which gets smaller each day while the problems get larger, an education is utmost,” said 17-year-old Sharon Glickman of Miami Beach. Fla. Smooth 'Papa's' Way for A. M. Happiness LARGE UPPER ARMS Some women have extremely large uppqf arms, arms which are out oi pn^rtion to the res^ of the silhouette. Our glandular setup dictates weight distributim and this, condition is sometimes due to low thyroid. Of couTM it you are overweight, a g«B€ Don't Miss Diem's 21st Anniyersary savings on SHOES J W« rsgret that wa war* unoble to taka cora of all our cuttomora lost Fridoy and Soturday whtn wo opened this groot soiling ovent, howavor, ^o tamo low pricot art ttill ih effect, the same fine quality, nationally known, fomout make shoot for man, women and children at fobulout lew prices that soya you many dollort. You con bo sure of Diem's better quality footwoor, Diom't pononol torvict and oxpoit fitting, hero ore but o few of the nationally fomout brand noma thoot you will find at Ditm't, Pontioc't Popular Shoo ttoro, ot tcntotionol low pricot. to the chest. Hold while you count to six slowly. Return arms toj I starting position and omtinue. I I If you would like to have myj routine of arm exercises, send a I stamped, self^ddressed envelope! with your request for leaflet No. U. Address Josephine Lowman in care 'of The Pontiac Press. Women — Choose from. * HivaMNi • lelUsM Men — Choose from . *. • PauMut Mastatic by Wayaabert • Wriaht Arch Pratervar • ReveteNem * Oev-eH fer earsea, I Oieai’s eany a Omt brtire Stock tl Nt OpRB Fridoy and EVdiiiiigt Until 9 P. M. F-* • Waytnhere Werli Sheet ami maay ertiert Abe . . . -r-— • Rehher feetweer by Heed lie line of all sisea t/nd widiht and perfect iU is paoroaieed. ond Winter Skott Included hi This Great Sole. Don't ,Mitt HI DIEM'S FONTtAC^S POPUUkR SHOE STORE 87 North Saginaw Street although they may atUl remain out of proportton unleM exerdae Is used to speed the hms. Flabby upper aims add up to one of the main beauty hazards with which the middle-aged wonian must cope. If a woman has in-idulged in sports or taken arm exercises consistently, she probably will be spared this. Other-iwise it is sure to haiqien sooner lor later. Exercise will help but it |takes time and must be done regularly. Try this one. Stand tall with your arms raised sideward, shoulder height, and your palms toward I the floor. Oench your fists HARD. I Keep them clenched as you benid lyour elbows and touch the fisi For flabby upper arms do this exerdse: Bead your elbows and. touch your clenched fists to your chest. Hold while you count to six slowly. Exercise will help but it takes time and must be done regularly. By RUTH MILLET! An ex-Engiish butler who is now running a school for butlers tells students how to get *the master started off right in the morning. "In waking the master, draw the curtains gently and tell the master the time. Nothing else. Never say ‘(tood morning’ unless he does so first. Lay out the.^ suit on the back of a chair; underw’ear, socks, and shirt on the seat, shoes on the carpet. Never choose a tie. The master will do that." Chancea ate there ia m butler In your house to get "the muater" off to a good start. Bat yon might aaaure hU getttng out on the right tide of the bed. Instead ^ coming to the breakfnat table with a tcowl. If yon would pay aa much attMtIoB as a well-trained butler to making the morning atari ont smoothly. If morning is a time ol hectic rushing around and of short tempers In your household, try to give your husband a sense of being well-looked-after by making yourself a set of rules: Look after your husband’s clothes so that the suit he wants to wear is in no need of pressing, the first shirt he puts on doesn’t have button off the cuff, and there's no! likelihood of his putting on a pair of socks with a hole in the toe. U MINUTES EARLY To have a little time for your-1 self, set the alarm fifteen minutes ahead. This should permit you to pay a little attention to how you are going to look across the breakfast table. (In case your husband ever looks up from the morning | paper.) Make a practice of setting the t table the night before so that ^ getting breukfnat ia quick and i enay. Make your own "Good Morning” I cheerful, but don’t follow it up with a lot of talk if your husband is naturally uncommunicative in the ONDERELLA SPEQAL Your cilice of floor length or short gown,, hoop, headpiece, bra and blue garter 99 95 GOWNS MADE TO ORDER All Beautiful Weddings Start at .. . INGRID’S Bridal Salon ' One of Oakland- County's Largest 1 PERRY AT PIKE FE 8-3300 Above all, don’t worry hint with your problems or chatter about last night’s party while he is trying to digest the front page of his paper. And by all means, give him-a real kiss Instead of turnintf^ your cheek for a husbandly peck, as he| Your Jome Needs Soft Water WHY RENT? YOU CAN OWN YOUR OWN WATER SOFTENER FOR AS LOW AS $1.25 PER WEEK. FHA APPROVED NO DOWN PAYMENT FREE WATER ANALYSIS ARISIAN SOFT WATER 1645 UNION LK. RD. EM 3-0613 Wash Baby's Toy It’s important to choose washable stuffed toys for babies. And It’s equally Important to give these dawn-through-dusk and bedtime animals a sudsy bath at the first sign of soil. Not only will a beloved creature last longer, but it will be clean for baby’s affectionate nibbles. Socks Over Shoes NEW Y(HIK (UPl) - Wear a pair of clean socks over new sh^ when trying them out at hoiito. Then, if ybu want to return the shoes, the soles still will be spotless. STYLE PACEMAKER OF THE YEAR This 96 " 3 CUSHION SOFA Yaur choice of fabric colors. $10^.00. Mofehing Choir. . .$85.00.^ Sove $^0.00 on DoYtnport—and $20.00 on Choir Beauty - Adaptability - Economy Gracious, comfortable living is emphasized in every dramatic line of the exciting NEW collection of correlated living room pieces. • NEW AS TOMOIlOW mTDIES • FMULOUS FABRIC SELECTION • QUAUTT-PLUS ECONOMY These clean modem Danish styla pieces ere priced low enough for everyone to fit them into any budget. 6239^ BEFORE YOU BUY ANY FURNITURE ANYWHERE—SEE OUR PRICE TAGS ORDER NOW FOR HOLIDAY DEUVERY iHI-WAY FURNITURE MART, /S32 WOODVVAfiD AV B/RM/NGHAM. M/CH. 4 Macs M, DPH mM. < THE PONTIAC PRESS, TIirRSDAV. (K TOHEH 20. 10 organtzatiqn cant'd the German Housewives A.ssn. founded 70 years ago, forbidden to operate in the Hitler regime, but revived in 194*1 with federal government sanction and financial support. Over-all, the purpose of the as.sociatk>n is improvement of homemaking skills—and what man will ai-gue that motive? Here in Munich, the associa-tkw has one of West Germanys largest branchM—3.000 members. I talked with Mrs. Helmut Haselmayr. its president, who also runs a television network show directed to the house- clas.ses in homemaking ranging from knitting to cooking and budgeting. wife. The "new” (k^rman wife is not us active in politics as her sister in the United States. , But the chances are one in Todiay it has branches In almost all of West Germany’s large cities, in most cases, the branches ace nonpartisan and nonsertarian. In others, membership may be based on religious or social interests. Garden Club Has Annua [ Card Party Lorraine Manor Branch of thej Woman's National Farm and Gar-' den Association staged its- annual card party Wednesday at Pontiac' Federal Savings and Loan Build-, Ing.- .. .«f Highlighting the evening was the ’ introduction of four new hair styles by a representative from a local t beauty salon. Mrs. James Shultz.! Mrs. Donald Lloyd, Mrs. Kenneth, Downing and Mrs. Ifcirold Hackett. dub ^officers, modeled the coif-j fures. , i Refreshments were served with Mr*. Warreti eleven at the coffee service, Jilrs. Burton .Str+mg was head of refreshments and the kitch-, en. Party chairmen were Mrs.j James Shultz and Mrs. CTeven. Proceeds from the event wiH bej used for local civic improvements! and tlw;-Lapeer State Home a.nd-Training School. 'i Study Club Gets Instructions on Procedure Rules eyed blonde of 3». holds a (hxnorate in economics from the University of Munich, She became Interested in the asso-rr.itioiM itork while she was a newspaper reporter covering the acth'itles of the Munich branch. She listed some ol the association projects; Advice on purcha.se of liome aiipliances and other consumer goolnui.vr. "And we have both brides and women in their middle years enrolled In our country there are no home economies courses in high scliools—only in special colleges. Because if you study home-ec, It is to be a de^m-strator or dietician,” , Mrs. Haselmayr said budgeting was a constant problem . for housewHe- members, because "statistioaHy, the average housewHe spends almost N) per cent of her budget for food. "Yet we would like ams lor FLORE8S conditions hnir, curU. waves like SliAmpoo your' hilr «lth trsxrRnt liquid fLOREaS. the new mirtcle hair-londltlontnii PROTBIN oil »»ve shampoo Qlves you lovely allurint CurU And Wau-s rl»ht while you shampoo and set. No more meisthi with pernjanems and all the eipenslve spraye. lacquers and wata teU that ao with them. FLORE88 Pjotetn Oil Wave Bbampoo reJuysiiaieA youV hair Each shAmpoo And set actuAlly curls your hwlr beAUtllulIy with sparkllna lllc And lurtre. No matter whether you’re blonde or brunette ... or if your hair it dytd or bleached . . your hair will comb out Into mlreculoualy b'AutIful • Atay-ln” curls and naves. FuU money-bsek tuarantce IN PONTIAC—ON SALE EXCLUSIVELY AT i:;arl Springer. Mrs. Stanley War- Pattern for Ist-class mailing. Sbnd. wick, Mrs. tfdfin BraTd’^aiW Mft.i'o’Annc Adnms; ewe of The Pon-; Russell Larkins as officers of the tine Prt'ss, 1.T7 Pattern Dept., 243 demonstration group, conducted t"th St. Now York 11,-N.Y.i model regular meeting. Print-plainly Namci Address with Mrs. E. D. Moessner, charter Zone, Size and Style Number, member..was made an honorary! * * * life memhtr. Mrs. Robert Cain. SEND NOW! Big, beautiful, COL-Mrs. Hayden W. Henley. Mi’s, Mel- OR-IFIC Fall and Winter Pattern vin Norberg and Mrs. William R. Catalog has ovej:^ lOO styles to sew Winkler yere elected to mem-'— school, career, half-sizes. Only bersblf 35 cents! Huron, Cor. Ttlegroph Exciting Handknit Ski Sweaters 100% WOOL WORSTED YARNS ('.hristmas Ideas . . . Sweater Packs The OXFORD SHOP FE 4-7212 59 West Huron on any of these HOFFMAM HOUSE dressings Bring home and enjoy any of these delicious Hoffman House dressings. Mail us the label from the front of the jar and we’11 send you a full purchase price coupon worth 33f on your next Hoffman House selection. This 33^ coupon offer good on any Hoffman House dressing or sauce. America's finest family of dressings I HOFFMAN HOUSE SAUCE CO., P. 0. In 1120, ClINTON, IOWA I S" ! NAI -’I STOt* WHERE PURCHASEO - wy iwv vwwwy •» ptkaf « . I VAill dol b* hunorud. Otlur^Ap -» .t. i Novuiwbw so, 1440. that the latest in carpets is the best value at BBCKWITH-EVANS . . is a new continuous filament textured nylon yarn, Becouse it is cor>t'4Tuous filo-ent, Cumulofr retains nylon's full strength. Because if is textured by on exclusive . combining Chertistrond process, Cumuloft gives carpets entirely .new properties nylons famed strength with new beauty ond luxury. . 4M5 Dhiia MWp. I4S N. Saginaw I Noxt t* Hai* Saaib | Notlwial roodt An SOD Stora I JU Incredibly etrong * Richly luxurious 4 JUsilient * Eoty to cloon * No Fuxiing or Filing • leouty plus durabitify Special Introductory Offerl EVEREST BY‘PHILADELPHIA’ A . . a crisp textured corpet This crisp textured effect, up to now, ovoiloble only in the*fine$t wiltons ,is ready for you at Beckwifh-Evons in the new Cumuloft nylon. 12' and 15' widths^ with o 10 year wear guarantee The manufacturer's suggested price is $9.98 sq. yd. As o special introductory offer, Beckwith-Evons odds heavy foom rubber pod and our fomous tackless ' installation at no extro cost. CHOOSE FROM 12 DECORATOR COLORS: • Earthen Brown • Primroia • Geidenrod • Yarrow Btigt 0 Tiger Lily 0 Seofoom Gretn • Fern Green • Field Loco O Sugar Maple O Sky Blue • May Flower O Star Grey 9 $A98 H- U OmpleMy letlalM • Corpof • Foam Rubber-Pod • TaeklaM Instoliotion A FEW OF OUR DYNAMITE SPECIALS Wotl TEXTURED waTOH 6 Colort *4 ,98 Sg. Yd. WOOL TWIST PILE 6 Gelert $^98 Sg. Yd. NYLON PILE TWIST 15"Golere $^98 Sg. Yd. WILTON LOOP PILE 5 Colort $g98 Sg^ Yd. Now Carpet Your Home the Eosy Woy .., In Your Own Home A telephone to OR 4-0433 will bring one of our trained home decorator salesmen with somplas-' from the largest sel^tion of floor covering anywhere Choose your carpet from your easy chair . . . right in your own home ; . . right where you'll use it. CALL OR 4-0433 Here't How Eosy It Is To Get Everest, Now... 30 Tiidi eempieietf ImUIM $279.40 $29.74 40 Tiidi MaUU*^ 399.20 39.92 M TaiAs A««eMel* laetolM 499.00 49.90 fit Yiiis cABieletAly hMtaUee 598.80 59.88 USE BECKWITH-EVANS CONVENIENT CREDIT Only 10% E>own end up to 3 Years to Pay Beckwith-Evai» 4990 DIXIE HWY. DRAYTON iiUtf ij ONI OF THE WORLD'S diwviitmo MfTi f OFiN 9n9 DAILY EXCEPT TUESDAY 9-4 OR 4-0433 :'Y Aw- -V THE POXTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. OCTOBER 20. 1960 AWH*Men in Dilemma: I To Plan for *61 Show?\ By PHUUiAK DlfTROrf «l>—Dii»ctor» of ihc AutaiMbilc Biliinubirtureili Atunci •tidn are facing a probfcm of ho« good ia good cnou^. Their diienuiM iwicerBs the Na-Ikmai Auwmohilf Show now lutuiing in I>eiwh'» I’obo HaU. and Its immed«tf_:JUfU!X__E!3»: pecti. Harry WilliHma. managing dir«c-of the AMA. (rankly called it 4 “coitly expi'rlmeni.'' He lold Detroiters the AMA had an option op ttie hall tor 1961. hut that it aoold depend on a number of (actors tocloding how the IHfid show ua* re<-«ved. The recepnon-^nrore Than half a niillJon admissKrtts in the first fixe days—has Ijeen a little powering, especially realize cam certainly novelty to thia area The eurreni show appear* on the curiace to be an unqualified sue j-eaa — record crowds, unprecedented national attention OmM a follow «p pneoeniati^ ^ ^ ^ ^ MKI year he as s*>ce«diil? So ,„,on,oWles .re built far. the AMA Is aaconimlllrd. ; ^ A apakeoman says m» dects» announced by Wat U national auto shows aMA has caused some raised an anotmal fixture in New Yort ^^ere are no tumetileH Crowd* rarely l>attered down tlieig, the hall ahd no paid admission ratet but nltcndAm*e xvm reason-,- - ___J *W- V— Sees Slight Margin fWy good And the N’«*w Yorkj(,j,yp ^ |x; i • | locale teented Uj generate the n* |barred the doors for 45 minutes onIfOr [/ICK Ifl LdlilOrnid' lOtMal intarost tha mamirMctiirersIn.. . . _ . . _ ______ 'S#l leivix III XeMlllWl liiu . lional interest 'he. manufacturen|su„j^,y „ , - wanted (or their ' - ............... National attention through the; bOS ANGELES (UPl) - Sen. model*, daily pre»s arid periodical* hMiThonia* Kuchel R-Calif told a »n«*“n8 he^lieve* Vice ™ '"^“ |Pr«ldent Richard M. Nixon holds rno^ succes.s(ul. Then camelrine devoted C pages ! ^ * ★ . * jCalifornia over Sen , John lletrsM, the nattoa’s automobile Tlie shoA rated-one. sponsored Kennedy. rapUal, was able f"r the first hour of natidnal television time—' ♦ * * time to offer au exhihltMn hall (^finitely national attention despite While refusing to predict beyond large eaoagh to stage a nalluaal som<‘ critics' comments that the his own state. Kuchel said he had show. The city ae«‘ded some- ,{Hrsentation was one solid corn- been told by friends that it ap- Ihlag h^ lor an opening attrao- mercial for car*. pea^ neitlier of the candidates That’s what the whole auto show {had a clear margin and the elec-r-a commercial (or cars-and'tion would be close. lioa at the arw hall. The curreat , Which of these two whiskies is insured for One Million Dollars.^ Answer: The tchkkey in the bottle on the left. It is drawn from the limited stock of CaJvert Reserve’s precious “Standard of ExceHence.” This limited stodi, insured by a world famous insurance company for one million dollars, is never sold. The Calvert Reterte on the right, and evt»y bottle you buy, niust match this "Standard of EzeeUet^” for,^perb lavor. uotna aodsniooUneBs. Excellence like thi$ is attained by combining as many as 35 great straight whiskies with rare grain neutral spirits. The reason: All straight whiskies vary from distillation to distillation. They are never the tame. Thanks to Ms pric^ass "Standard of Exoeneooe* you are assured that Calvert Reaerve's magnificent taste and character never vary from bottle to bottle. That's why yonr first tip wiD say *4“ ^ «/i qt. . $275 *<»• ei-'-Tf ^ AB. -■ , U wu ** cffoof ■ auEuBet) WHtsugv-aB» eitAm «euTa*L sm»rrs-#i^*cALVE»T ofsr co„ M.V.& You deserve Calvert Reserve salesmen scurry around the floor] hoping to write orders | * ** * j The AMA had three things going I M Its efforts to attract alteatkm—| a new city. tlM> nation’s newest andj exhibition hall, and al resumption of the show after a| tour-year Iap8<> complete 'virh four! ^w conTpact cars. ' ♦ ♦ * ' None of these factors could vie «• Similar national attention next year. Nelthei- the hall nor the city would be new and none of the manufai tureni has indicated plans to bring out additional lines of Having responded in r««rd numbers. Detroiters obvkNuly are expecting a t>how next year Now]' up to the AMA. ' Paper 6t Jan. 1, 2000, Reviews Past Century By niVLUS BATTELUC NEW YORK-The morning paper dated Saturday, January 1. 2000— has been dropped at our doorsteps. ' has all the good news that’s (it to predict.* * * ♦ 'The lead sto^. headlined "Happy New Century!,’’ sums up the most important newspaper yarns in the past 100 years; 1—Discovery of the Martian culture - by the U.S.A. and Japanese' cosmonaut scientists in 1985. FALLOUT SHELTfS - ’This is one type of basement fallout shelter .recommended by Leo A. lloegh, t)ltiGc ol OvU and Defense Mobil-izatien director. Steps -in its construction are shown, above, In sketches that are included in a booklet, "day Masonry Family Fallout Shelt- ers, ” available from the OCDM in Washington. The booklet states that such a shelter can be constructed by a do-it-yourselfer and a friend in two weekends. All requirements gjich as heating, lighting and ventilation are included in the booklet. Also front-paged is the announcement of the "Mom of the Year Mrs. Nils Raison D’Etre. 75. Her secret (or staying periry. she says, is keeping interested. And it’s hard not to be interested these days, she adds, "because women have to always, well, sort of wiping up after the progress of men, you l^w. 3— Colonization of the moon, first by U.S.A. space troops in 1971. 4- \t orld Wars I and 11 (1914-18 and 1939-45,) last great international wars waged with pre-nu-clear weapons. -Adolf Hitler, a "most wanted war criminal.’’ found working as laundry assistant in remote Peruvian monastery, 1969; later banished to perfiil institution on moon. AAanager at Iron River Quits Over Salary Rote mON RIVER tUPi) - Donald Pedo has resigned as Iron River city manager because the city commission refused to hike his pay S2S a rmnith. ♦ ♦ * Pedo, former assistant city en-. gineer at Milwaukee, took the job last spring for $7,300 a year with the understanding he would get the pay raise after a six-month probationary period. ' * ★ ♦ ’The six months ended Oct. 6-and the commission .last night voted down the pay increase. CELEBRATED IN BOTH STORES Don't miss this onnuol ovent. Over $70,000.00 worth of "1960 merchandise must go. Prices on every* thing in both stores sloshed to make room for "61" merchandise. Unbelievoble borgoins in both stores. But hurry, some items ore limited. BK13 Cl Ft WESTMGHOUSE COMBINATION with exduBive Cold Injector System FREE! • DOOR PRIZES * • GIFTS * for the LADIES REFRESHMENTS NO MONEY DOWN! LESS $^70 THAN * ^ ^ I P.r WMk WEstiNeHousec mSHWdSHtlf mBm START MVING "TODAY" 00 SALE Cl PRICE • only liST FREE! HOT DOGS COOKED IN 30 SECONDS In Tha Westinghouse MIRACLE OVEN (ORCHARD LAKE STORE ONLY) PEOPLE’S CHOICE BECAUSE It’s simplest to cook on! It’s easiest to dean! WESTINGHOUSE 30-INCH ELECTRIC ^ RANGE with electric clock m timer that lets you oven-cook •lutomatically MANY OTHER FEATURES SALE s PRICE WestiRghoDse, “1961” Laundromat SO4400 I BOTH STORES OPEN EVES. TIL giOOrSAT. TIL 6:00 PRAYER'S FURNITURE and APPLIANCES 589 ORCHARD LAKE Ajf£. - FE 4-0526 4410 DIXIE HWY., DRAYTON - OR 4-0415 THE POXTlAr PRKSS, TIU USDAV. ori'OHKH -»0. Grid Calendar WCEKCND ritcr rOOTKAU. ArUEDt'LE, BoMlhfieM At WallMt Id R O Klnibsll at Ea»t Detroit 'M,' Gophers Awoit D/g • Clash Oxford at ITorttt Branch Ortonvl lie at Mllllndoo Imlar City at Lakcvillo Anchor Bay at Almont Monroe at R O Dondero Lak* Shore at Utica Cherry Hill at Birmingham Orovri ■ Cheixea art South 4.XOO.__ f.amphere at Clintondale - Huron at Country Day Rontlac Emmanuel at Orosie Potnte TABLE TENNIS EQUIPMENT RAWUNGS FOOTBALLS ‘converse all stars BOWLING BAGS and BOWLING SHOES BOWLING SHIRTS AWARD SWEATERS VARSin JACKETS ATHLETIC HOSE 45c WELDEN SPORTING GOODS 51 Mt. Clemens FE 4-6211 ANN ARBOR (UPll-The Uttlo Brown Jug. a battered symbol of I gridiron conflict between Michigan and Minnesota for more than five decades, will be almost a forgotten issue when the two Big Ten schools clash Saturday for the 51st time. The classic quarrel for possession of the hallowed Jug has been one !of college football’s most enduring traditions. ' ; And in recent years, when the two teams suffered through several ‘Seasons of lean pickings, it wmJ 8 i often the struggle for the Little 1 Brown Jug that enlivened an other-:wise dull affair. But the Jug won’t be needed to inject interest in Saturday’s ’conrj test. The (iniden (iophera from the I North have muHclrd |>ast four ! straight opponents for their fast-' est start in years. Two of those victories ha\e been against Big Ten foes and last week's 3116 ' verdict o\er Illinois set Minnesota up as the nation’s fifth-ranked team. Tlir Wolverines are also on their way out of the woods. Coach Bump KilioK, rebuilding around- a host of talented sophomores, has driven his charges to three wins in four starts and the only Michigan loss was a ’i-t-17 thriller to Michigan Slate. ♦ * a ^ The result is that the I960'Little Brown Jug affair stacks up as the ^osl important. Michigan- Minnesota game since the late liMOs when the Wolverines wei-c riding roughshod over everybody ami Minnc.sota furnished some of their stiffest opposition. I Over tlie dTf rtlTS the LttBe Brown Jug battle has had its ups and downsL The whole thing started as a joke back in 190.1 when the Wol- | I verlnes left a Jug on the Mlnne- I ; sola (leld and Mlehigan Coaeh i Fielding H. VosI wrote to Mlnne-a|N>lls and asked that It be i returned. ' The good-natured reply was, "If you want it back. I’ome wi up here and fight for it. ” The two teams didn’t meet again until 1909 when it was agreed that tlie lilt Ip brown jug would go to the winner. The rivalry over the liislgnlfl-eanl-louklng bucket picked up i niomentum In 1919 when the two sehools began playing annually and In the I9»0s when both s r h o u I s developed national powers year after year, the argument rear bed Its peak. Minnesota has never matched the fumed Bcmie Bicrman teams of Uh- 1990s and Michigan’s fortunes Ix'gan to warn' after its great teams of the Tate "-lOs ~ - Bui both schools have, coincidentally. chosen this season for resiirganee. The Gophers, especially, havi been one of the year’s b*g surprises so far They arc one of two tennis with a piv'fcct slate in Big Ten waidarc. The other one is Iowa, the nation's lop-ranked school. OPEN^WLING 3 Games $1.00 FREE INSTRUCTION WESTSIDE LANES Central Harriers Notch 1st Win: SVC Meet Today After five defeats in dual meet I competition, Pontiac Central’s In-1 experienced cross country team hit I the virtoi'y trail. The Chiefs scored I a 26-29 verdict over Royal Oak I Dondero on the PCI! roui-se for | their 1st win of the season. Central’s Jim Nelson finished Ist i in the time of 10:44, followed by I Dondero's Don Kelly. Walt Seger I of Dondero placed 3rd. Bill Camp-1 ‘ bell took 4th place for the PCH I Close>0nt on 1960 RAMBLERS - MERCURYS Save Up lo $900 Wilson Anto Sales. Inc. TIRE DISCOUNTS Brand New—First Clast 6t70x15 Whinamit Jrrw 7.50x14 No Money Down riu« Tai and Voar Old^Tirr Discounts on Foreign and Compact Car Tires! United Tire Service IHfl? B.lJwln Avr. FE S-S4U ' Check brakes— adjust for proper contact Repack front wheel bearings BRAKE FRONT END I *^501 THIS fOROHV^ Replacement Shock Absorbers Now/ Resfore ricle comfort Proved Safety Featured i $' and driving safatyl Goodyear double-action shock absorbers have dependable 0-rin^ piston'^ seals; coil spring loaded valves; sealed-insteel construction. Only $1.50 Down $1.25 Per Week GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE 30 S. Cast FE 5-6123 ED WILLIAMS SAYS: Wade Wilkinson 7lh and Ken John-1 son 8th. W'ith Dick Johnson leading the I way, the PCH junior varsity also | won its first i with a 25-30 decision over Dondero. | Johnson's winning lime v The PCI! runners arc competing I in the annual .Saginaw Valley Con- f forenee meet today at Sw-artz Ci oek I Country Club. The meet got under- T way at 4 p.n Booters Start Anew EAST LAN.SING (UPIi-Michi-1 gan State Univcrsily's soccer team I will be seeking a reluni lo thg I winning column Saturday when itJ travels to Wheaton College in lUi. ■ last week by uiHirg... X lB«lF0ITNI$$»N0F0WUTy*T \^l i€ Your Tiro HMidawarton . . . Qualily-Duill Knily Tiro* in ivnry Six*. Typ« And f rlM NanM For Sv«ry Kind Of Car, Including Foruign And Compact Mod#la. EDWIUIAMS 45l S: SAGINAW CASH or Quick CRSDiT JAR //- YOOB ^ BESIBBV' JtR GUARANTEES Full taivlca lor in^nlht oi ipreified. Adjuitmanfi pro-rottd on tha montht of larvica rrcaivad baiad on current trade-in pricet. vvSf yeu lesSf uy m of GUARANTIED SERVICE Comporo fir yeltrself—md seel 12 Volt "GMWr POWER 12 VOlT-0«arant#8d 2 Yaon For Cher. ’55-60, Ford ’56-60, Plym ’55-60; Chryt., Dodge. Oeiolo '56-60; Hudion '56-57; Mercu. '56-60; Noth ’56-57> Fontiuc '55-60; Stude. '46^60; Rombler '56-60 •Guwtmteed Monthly Coat- —your JSe BaHwry can't coat you moral It vtaolly cvtlacU tha guarantaa lor mvOa lawar OMC than i/iowrn above—. far Offctf Cor* — Call at Store for yeori and Afodefif Similar Saviogc on tvary Battaryl SAVE! It’s IV/nfer.' CAR CARE" rime! THERMOSTATS ReplocDineiitWATER PUMPS. For CHIV. '40-54; FORD oil ’40-53, PLYM. '28-55, Oad«. 6. ’33-55 Marcury’47-53, No.h’46-55; 5t«. *39-55 and oth.ri. 1. i-Hsmiium Jack Ibmcock a Southfield High Ned {School junior who played with the Ihe |Thomp.son Cain team in the Dc- Mondar. Oct. 14—Wlndior TucMtsy. Not. I—WsUocobUri Mondsjr, Not. 7—Chsthsm MoT..S»-4^mm^*ton Uondiy, N COtD^CRESTl Monday. Jan. S—RlTcrildc Monday, Jan. 10—Windsor Monday. Jaa. 23—Chatham ■ scoops t/iem alii IN 15 MINUTES I ▼ AMAZiNC P D/f/Vf Ml Msfflirs 409$ |:NEW> lit wot i WAITING I , Junior Wings won the league itroit .Midget League where he v championship a year ago. The {second in scoring, team plays most of its games at { * A * Ihe Olympia on Monday niglits. ! The youngest regular and o Royals Beat LA in NBA Opener I custom-coated! 'M - '57 FORD !M5 19 - -a* MERCX'KY Sf.»5 55 • '59 CHEVROLET f.9,»5 '54-'55 PONTIAC ..-SJ.SS '55 . -5« PI,YM-« .. 59.35 '49 ■ M DODCE-C S9.M' OUnr Sm 0* S»lt. Tm •« CTIMIOM J CINCINNATI (API - Coach Charley Wolf sums up the "ngw look" Gncinnati Royals' record victory this way; "Rebounding djd it.^ RL CREDIT CARDS and CHARGE PLATES honore^ OPEN SUNDikY 8 A.M. to 4 P.M. Oaan Daily 8-7 Open Sat. 1-6 [GOLD^CRESTJ iBRAKt 1 ^3^ V/JtltXU o X SHOPS J 97i OfcharJ Uka RJ. Car. Telegraph Rd„ Fi i-7936 > He' referred specifically to the t first half of Wednesday night’s! season opener, when the Royals! grabbed 47 rebounds to 25 for the| Los Angeles Lakers, and raced to a 140-123 vlcton(.. i "RebovndiDg is. ,all we need," Wolf said. "If we can get the ball can score. They know what to do with the ball." ’They" meant players like Jhek Twyntan. last year's second-highest NBA scorer, who Wednesday | nigh't paced his tc.im with 30i points, hitting 11 of 18 attempts, j And three-time All-America Os-' car Robertson lived up" to expcc-i tations in his pro basketball de-| but, scoring 21 points to detigktl the record crowd of 8,176 fans at the Cincinnati Garden. LOS ANOELEa |B*jrlor JI NIOK WIXtJ — One of several county boys on the Junior lied Wing hockey team in the Border Cities Hockey League is Jack Hancock, IG-year-old Southfield High School stiKicnt. The Junior Wings won the championship in their first year of opiTation in the league last season. Monday night's opener at the Olympia against Windsor starts at S p. m. 2 4 1 Jordon 4 U 21 need 2 0 4 RoberiCn 7 2 14 Rollins 7 6 24 StAT'msn Twyman WUtong 42 31 121 TMalt » n 4 NV*Makes Nice Haul DRIVE the 1961 PONTIAC We Have 20 New '61 PontiacV far You to Drive! "Before You Buy Any Cor — In Any Price Ronge - See Us About Pontiac for 1961 f# 40 BRAND NEW 1960 PONTIACS Left to Bo Sold at Onheaid of SAVINGS TO YOU! PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mr. Clemens Fr 3-7954 ALBANAY. N.Y. (APt - Summer harness race metoings at five New York stale tracks pmduced S15.427.507 in pari-mutuel tax enue for the state, the State Tax Department timtouncGd Wednea-;day. A UNIQUE OPPORTUNITY FOR YOU SEE PAGE 54 of Today's Paper Oliver Motor Sales 210 Orchard Lake FE 2-9101 COMDIG .Mon., Oct 24Q| Detroit Times - Brunswick WOMEN'S I BOWLING CLINIC With Demonstrations by These Brunswick Star Wonwn Bowlers ^ Marge Burton lit Maxine Cruchon 'A'Ann Setlock j A'Elvira Toepfer ALSO 1 Hour of FREE BOWLING COMPLETE PRO SHOP FREE ntsTBocnoN SHOES ChMie Stylo «mI OMiHy f,«4n $6^5 ; bags Om to FH YOUR NMUt (ta. i M ! _______ . t Id FREE DOOR PRIZES CLINIC WIN R* 1/til 4 P.M. OPEM BOWLING !Tt HURIHI BOWL ^25 Etrsobdtii Ufce Rdi FE 5-2525 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUI RSDAY. PC TO«KU 20. 10(50 FORTY-SRVEV Tougher Than on Russia V Restriction Off on Sugar Bwts Curbs Tight on Cuba ADAM AMES Allow More Planting to Compensate for Recent Bon Against Cuba WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sugar-beet growers can plant as much acreage as they want next year. The Department o( Agriculture lifted aQ advage restrictions on the 1961 crop Tuesday. ♦ ★ * Lifting of the acreage restriction waa part of the d^rtment's planning to assure an adequate supply of sugar. In July the United States stopped buying cane sugar from Cuba, hitherto the principal supplier to this country. The increased sugar which will come from an increased acreage of sugar beets will help ^maintain the nation's normal quota. The sugar beet acreage allotment (or NM was t8t,MW acres. The tIM crop of sii|^r bMts. esdmated af 16,7t7,M tMH ao of Oct. 1. was grown on N6.900 acres. The domestic beet sugar allotment for this year was slightly more than 2.5 million tons. * a a Unrestricted acreage for the 1961 crop of'Sugar beets can be expected to result in considerably more beet sugar than from the 1960 crop of beete. • RAINS IS 5 ports to Cuba imposes tighter curbs than this country maintains on trade with Russia and its Euro- _ a 'Sr a The U.S. move Wednesday, tor-bidding export of neariy all goods save food and medicine, cuts Cuba off from the vital flow of machines and replacement parts needed to run many of the island’s American-equipped industries which were taken away from their owpers. It also shuts off many American-made finished goods. Unhm and Its bloc, export of many commodities which could not be ns The Cuban Embargo, howev’er, does not equal the complete (J.S. boycott on exports to Red China. * * * Export control la administered and enforced by the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Foreign Commerce. Through licensing of exporters-4md possible heavy fines and prison terms tor viola- Can*t Escape Motorcade Likes Kennedy, but ... lions—it wield.'i a potent weapon in the economic Cold War. CAN KNFOBCK CONTBOtg The government enforces export controls by acting to lift an American exporter's or foreign importer's privilege to ship or buy U.S. goods, and by prosecution tor crim-vlolation of the Export Control Act. Each coavlrtioa carried penal-tlea up Is 91d.m fine and 10 years In prison. The export contra apply to U.S. goods which might be sent either diiectly to a prohibited destination or via a third country.’ For exami^. goods which may not be sent directly to Cuba also may nut be sent indirectly or trans-shipped through Mexico or some other country. Faces Deficit NEW YORK Uh-A red-haired typist came out to watch the Kennedy motorcade Wednesday, got scai^, tried to run away from it and wound up in it. ^ Miss Josephine Casella’s'^^ adventure reacheid its climax in the crush at Broadway and Wall Street when, with others, she was squashed against one of the press cars. Mlu Casella pleaded pretHIy,^ “I think I'm going to faint. I’ve got to get out of here. Please help me.” The press opened the door. Miss Casella hopp^ in. When she recovered her breath and composure, she gave this sidewalk eye-view of the tickertape reception: street. That didn’t all. s. Next thing I knew here I* was smashed against your car.” Miss Cosella, who liv^s at 1716 Gates Ave. in Queens, said she is for Kennedy, but; “This is my last parade." and foreign firms (or violation of the export controls. This administrative sanction is imposed only after a formal hearing at which the accused merchant may defend himself. By Franklin Folger , "1 got an extra half hour (or Foundation Expects to|'‘‘"‘^*>. and got away from the D ginAniW • u I M a DO ^UUfUvIU in nolo from here, and the crowd was all right. But all of a sudden, all the I people poured in. by End of Year ‘T was carried one solid blo<>k. I loot my two girl friends. The MINNEAPOLIS (APi-The Sis-j ter Hizabeth Kenny fnstitute 1 ___ _____ faces a $400,000 deficit by the end i of the year. Dr. Frank H. Krusen, new di-1 Sam Raybum All Out rector of the polio treatment and I r research center, hoisted the finan-|TOr Kennedy, JOhnSOn hickory, N.C. (UPI)-House| ^Ul the (oundaUoo has only $100- ^ Raybum, D-Tex.,! OM in funds available to the end | ^ ^ oemocrats here John i of the^year and will need haU a i p_ ^ " president with the help of Lyndon j million. Dr. Krusen said an emergency fund drive will be launched "very soon.” Several months ago Minneosta Atty. Gen. Walter F. Mondale accused former officials and fundraising associates ot the .Xani^ Foundabon of mismanaging and raiding donated funds. He said it amounted to millions of dollars. ★ ★ ★ Marvin L. Kline, former director and one-time Minneapolis mayor, has been indicted 1^ a grand jury for his alleged unlawful profiteering. Alfred R. Nelson, partner in the Chicago accounting firm of Arthur Anderson & Co., disclosed results of an audit Tuesday. Krusen and Nelson said emergency steps are being taken. Johnson.' Of Vice President Richard Nix-1 on, Raybum said: "I Jmow him | well, and that is the principal! reason I do not want to see him I president of the United States.”^ I *Tt’s nothing serious, Ralph — Ohio isn’t pink like it is on the .map." BOARDING HOUSE I AMSftA,! AM MA30R AMOS 01 MOOPie.COACW POPS SLURG'5 T&MRORARV REPLACEMShTT.' i P£RMl$5lOM,rD SOWs OF MY ROYS TO ( GET A LOOK AT YOUR TEAM fSANAE.' You ME AI4 --- ? are You TRy- ) INS TO make me BELI EVJB MV ------------------------ MQTLEV looking CRENAi OF , SALOON eoOt^CEfZS ? wlMY YOO'YE COME UP WITH MOPS RINGERS TKAN A CHAMP M0RSESH0EP\TCHER/-«--SUlP/' 60 SOMEVdriERfJ Many Small Papers Plan New Equipment NEW YORK (UPD - Twem.v-cight per cent of the nation's weekly h^spapers and 24 per cent of the small dailies plan to replace their presses within the next two years, according to a survey by the magazine American Press. A Sr *• The survey said the "revolutionary” program of improving printing equipment was disclosed by a poll of 1,014 ol the nation’s 3.150 weeklies and small dailies. It said all dailies do the.ir own I>rinting but 802 weeklies have tlieir newspapers printed outside. The magazine said one of presses by weekly newspapers. It was generally supposed that all weeklies used sheet fed flat presses hut 46 per cent are now using led. presses. The survey said 629 weeklies and 32 dailies are printed by offset methods and 779 weeklies contemplate switching to offset in the next two years. There are 23 small daily tabloids against 1429 tabloids in the weekly field . Jackie Quitting, but She Has a Valid Excuse Nfew YORK John F. Kennedy is quitting her husband'; presidential campaign—lor a very good reason. Her doctors ordered her to ft(9 because of the expected birfti of her second child in December. Her last appearance was with her husband in the ticker (ape parade staged in his honm* Wednesday, the candidate's press secretary said. She will remain here a few days then return to their home . Jn .............. Dry ice is being replaced In W dustry hy liqukt carbon dioxide, which is easier toUaiKlId and rei (hires costs. But dry Ice qontii> . ues to bi^/lrieful as a refrigreafll in milk wagons, nnd lee^'cream By 1j$/n However, the governpient ha.s nO| st I saw of them, one of them over-^gbods manufactured | „ crying. *" a foreign country by an American-owned or controlled firm. | I tried to turn into a aide I department frequently haa suspended the privllegas of U.S.j By Ernie Rushmiiler By Dick CavaUi By Walt Disney THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 80, 1960 Prcgident Hag Korner on Kiddies* Vote Ike Avoids Being a Partisan on Tom MARKETS iGold Shares Keep Rising Some Grains Rise in Moderate Trade OflCAGO Ufr-Gralw we»e mort-ly stc«iy to In modenUely ^ active tranaactioai on tbc board ol trade today. ^ ___ tract advandng more than a cent!'**®"****^-a bushel before profit-taking appeared. — ..... - raom By WILUAM d. ISATON that the President has decided to SAN FRANCISCO lUPI) If there avoid anything that might be inhere such a thing m a ’‘kiddies’lterpretied by the American voters .. .V—ij— —u--------------extreme partisanship. The following are lop prices covering sales ot localiy grown Hoduce brought to the Farmer’s Market by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Detroit Product vote," President Eisenhower would I win it hands down, i The TO-yearvoid grandfather of four seems to be making a special point of tweaking ifoses, tousling lered Republicans — Eisenhoser expected to make a" appeal to what he terms “ " Grain Prices ■AtiriUt. artenmi. ■hair, chucking chins and shaking hands of children on his ‘‘nonpolH- NEiV YORK # - Gold hi. continued to boom in a mixed! stock market early today a. thej^^JJ® price of bullion soared in the Un.! Republics ticket t|^ f^J^ don market.. |»«*“ observers are convinced Trading was fairly quiet over-all { in the market but the gold stocks resumed their activity which 1*7*^ 1 •J placed several among the most 1 X One I deid RIoiMrd M. NIxsn nawt capture a Mg share of the sa- ceed la Ms WMte ftoaae M4. Especially in states like California — where registered Demo-crats far outnomber th sis ^ economic and political ini- r^jVf T7 1C*K9% J Jt plications of the London gold rash . SEOKTABLES s gave Wall Street I There was very little of say dr<-Med lendeae.v la other slock groups aside from the golds. in Action 2G[abS5,H al Taylor Bank Press Secretary James C. Hag-erty is having a tough time keep-fay a straight face when be tells reporters that the president’s trip in the midst of the election campaign is non-political. Ha grinned broadly the other day M reamrmiag this pesitfoB B then Inquired If they ipolltlclans.” Hagerty f ss • Beet', toppes. t lErsccoll. do* S< OsbOsst. bu. ;Ctbbst< Curly, ^bu. CsrroM, TSppeS.'**bu Ctulinovtr. «M. Csltrr dos. itslti _______.—- Celery, PsksI. J'j d burn Heights. October 31. — Adv.jW^.^dos. ^t>»- .. Rummage Sale. FrI. Oct *L g*ourdi t' bJ^"" I a.m. 128 W. Uwrence St. —Adv.iHorMtsdA pa. .. NEW YORK, N. Y. - Brilliant color transparencies displayed byi j ji| Some of the gold mining stock* gMC Truck and Coach Division 1 WK_Wocks. A*_dealinga ^yju bring several New York street- News in Brief Rummsgr ( irn Heights. Rummage and Bake Sale. VFWiLceki. dm. bciu. Hall. 4j||was up well over s point, i.os Dome Mine* was a point higher. [^ Campbell Red Uke and South American Gold & Platinum gained 1 So j fractions. T is! * * * «.ool Benguet, fhe Philippine gold | .|i'mlnlng stock which paced the en-1tire market on volume Wednesday, was traded on a succession of big blocks and showed a fractional gain. Radio Corp. fell more than a , 140 point while DuPont recouped a i s point or more. U. S. Smelting. Mso in gold mining, advanced more than a point. Steels, motors and rails wen very narrowly mixed. The President is traveling .Ui mites by helicopter on hi* 6,728-I mite cross-country tour. -’This is the gfeatest use ol the ‘choppers Stolen Car Recovered ^ ' Blades on the helicopters are changed after 100 hours' use as scenes to life in the Waldorf Hotel’s Grand Ballroom during the General Motors Motorama. The scenes illustrated by 40-by-60-inch backlighted color transparencies were shot specifically for the show. Each features a new GMC truck In a typical operating situation. Two of the photographs were made at night. One ahowa ja sleek GMC panel track dropping off newspapers la Times Square; the other a steel tllt-cab GMC laklag oa cargs at a Brookljw dock. Daylight scenes Include a GMC Junior Van delivering parcels Mile From Scene of Wednesday Robbery DETROIT tUPll-Wayne County, state and federal authorities are searching for two bandits who robbed a branch of the Security Bank in Taylor Township escaped with between-S3.000 and S6.000 Wednesday. A stolen car used in the holdup wag recovered about hall an hour after the robbery was reported a little over a mile from the scene. Mrs. Jane Shepard, 38, of AUen Park, a teller, said two men entered the bank shortly after noon with drawn guns and wearing Mack gloves which they held the^ United Nations Building, ^ from of their faeesr Collard. bu Endive, bu. .. .. Endlv*. binched. bu. .. ■kearole, bu........... t*c*roU. blnclMd. bu. Kmle. bu............... UttuM. Bibb, pk........ Lettue*. L«i(, ba...... MuiUrd, bu............. wideside pickup hauling gardening supplies in front of the Queens-boro Bridge, and a GMC Suburban I station wagon parked at the In-Iternational Airport. unchanged. Drugs managed a string of fractional advances. Oils trended slightly lower. Aircrafts showed litlte if any change. ■roe market was a bit lower at j The transparencies will be dis-the start but as more stocks played on the mezzanine over-opened with plus signs the over-allJ looking the grand ballroom during pattern became irregular. Ue famed GM automotive show. _ . extraordinary safety precaution. In normal military use, the switched after 500 hours flying time. ’They ordered her and another employe, Mrs. Ports Westphal, 38, also of Allen Park, and the only customer, Mrs. Mary Homa Taylor TownshljLiDtDJBL comer, - * * A The bandits failed in efforts to open the safe of the bank and fled after cleaning out the cash drawers. Poultry and Eggs i W«t ch*B|t Noon Thurt. IRrtv. Hoy Wuk SCO . Rummage Sale — Sat. Oct 83. ot?*2oun?^'iH^tr«d* for^N7**i* B.m IMW mb. 04 cvh.n. E*' poun* «ll*trM for No. I OETEOIT EOOS prices'-------- . _________ . . .. , quillty ISSO low poultry; Hotvy typo h«oi - - I typo htni ll-U; hoovy typo---------- . - -vor $ lb(. n-lS; brollori ond fryeri S4-lbi. vhttei lt-H; Barrod Rocki »3-iS: dueka }S; turkuya. heh> »-M: tomi e Sale, Tri„ 9 to 9. 8at„ lagc Sale, Ti . _______ to 1. Reorganised Church ' hrtst of Latt ~ ' Temple. —Adv. Rumaiage Sate, Sat., Oot. tSnd, 8 to 1. St. Vincent, 311 Parke St. —Adv, Raaunage Sale Friday at 7 pan. All Sahus Church, Guild M. Adv. Most of the Brussels sprouts in the U. S. are produced on Long Island. down br ftrit recolvori .. Detroit; looM in se doicn _____________ trade (Included 0.8.1 white umbo 4(-S4: extra Uric 41-—. 44-tI: iman SI-SI: mtdtum S4>%-4t: Oradt B Urft 41-41; browns Oradw A medium St-44: email 34: cbeeka SI-SI TIUCK SEATS REPAIRED OR RECOVERED PAUL'S SEAT COVERS 286 S. Safinaw St. P| 4<99}6 hiRh I "so-Ts'i i*H ly The Aceoetated Preen 1# IS ' 15 (d iBduat BaUa OtUB^( .. —.1 (-.1 Unch Ooch 30S.S IM.I I0S.4 set s see.e ini ios.4 sms .,M7.4 W*:» less SM4 . sm.o IN S IN S sn.a sna.isi.T N.i siso 354 1 134.3 IN.t SS31 3»S 7 103 0 NO 303 " Nome Local Pastor to Ohio State Post LivHstock DETROIT LIVBSTOCE DITROIT. Oct. It (API (D80A)-Roll 3N. Butcheri unrfar 444 Ih oenle lower; welfhta DOW-JONEB II A.M. AVERAOES I Inda. SM.70 off 0 35 I Ralla 130 4l«ff 0.13 01 Stocki 111.01 0 DETROIT STOCKS (C. J. Nepblar Ce.) _ Rich Low Noon Mich. Seanileac Tube C5.* 31 31.0 Allen nee. R Rqpt. Co.« 1.0 1.7 Baldwin Rubber Co.* 10.4 10 Ot. Lka. Oil ft Cbm. Co * 1.7 1 Plturea liter decimal pointa are elththa. The Prophet RbOy Usnufacturini Bhatterproof Olaae lb. to ______ aowa iteady to 30 --------- mixed Uta D.B. No. 1 and 1 IN-... „ 17.35-17.M; small lot Mo. 1. 313 lb. 17.70; mixed No. 3 and 3 lN-330 lb. 17.00-17.50: No. 1 and ] 130-U0 lb. IC.lt-10.50. few up to 17 70: No. 3 tM-lM lb. IS70-I0.N: ho. I. 3 and S SN-IW lb. aowa 11.N-I5J0: tew head 170 lb. aowa No. 1, 15.15: boars I1.3S-13.M. Vaslers—70. Steady, prime 3I.N-43.00: food snd choice 3I.OO-3S.N: utility sod standard 30 00-3S.M. . Bhatp—HI. No early tsiet. ALUM. SIDING VJOE VALLEl Ol I t(23 nuge nests ter and return to them year after year. Before migrating south in fall, ospreys reinforce their nexU with fresh sticks as a buttress against winter storms. Smaller birds sometimes hollow out homes in the lower portion of the bulky nests Poland Asks Block on Bases Wants U.N. to Call Halt on Military Installations in Other Countries CRASH GO PRICES ON ’61s F:SS OLDSMOSILES »2384«> Dyniaic II Oldiaobilts $283500 Sapti IS OldsHiokiles *3176 CADILLACS *4892 AU Cart Includ* Full Factory Equipmont and Fodocal ExdM Tax Jerome Olds Cadillac 280 South Saginow Street FE 3-7021 Iumf Ale. inc.® i; bid end Mked RobordSy Lauren Bacall to Wed After Divorce NEW YORK (API-Actor Jason Robaixls’Jr., declared his love for Lauren Bacall today and said they would be married, love Betty (Miss Bacall). And as soon as this is over we.’ll get married,’’ Robards told reporters. He referred to a divorce suit in which his wife Rachel Ta.vlor Robards, charges he committed adultery with Miss Bacall. Robards^"” IH BuUk 'rOM?. ‘aerial TBinoiH, IN be held October 35. 13H> xt 10:H • •* 5??‘lrknT'5f.‘«So Tsylqr C. PhlUllM. John Pl|( Vlrill R. Uwla. JACob avaurtu Jitk McKinney. lUrbcrt Powell, Ivxnny Snwyer. Pcoptet rtd. a«v. ft L0(U1 Aean Vince L. Shram, B. ... .w——--------- ----- - Bdwxrda, Mr. ChnrMra. Thomxa Mclr. Lnwrenee Coaiey, Bob Onrrlaon. Delay McConnell Ktv* Roaa. Jerome Bldl. -----U Brofcch, Rtrl A. Rudd. Rlc ilonu, Robert B. MePheraon. UNITED NATIONS. N. Y. (AP) ■ Communist Poland asked the United Nations today to call on all countries to cease building new' military bases and rocket'launching installations on the territories of other countries. * ♦ ♦ ’The proposal was laid before the General Assembly’s 99-nation political committee by Polish Foreign Minister Adam Rapacki. Rapacki also proposed; t. That countries which do not have foreign military bases on their territory shouM ban con-stnicrion of such installations. 8. That countries which do not Dr. Joseph I. Chapman, pastor Of Bethany Baptist Church for the past three years, has accepted a call from the Ohio Baptist Convention to become executive secretary of the state. He will assume his new position Dec. 1. In his new woric Dr. Chapman will have charge of the Ohio convention and its various departments including iSromotion, Christian education, youth work, camping. student ministry, children's work, laymen’s work along with the business and financial affairs of the convention. During his ministry at Bethany. two new youth groups were formed a sceoud worship service started and membership grew from 814 to 1,0^3. Dr. Chapman has served two terms a* president of the Pontiac Pastor's Association, as chaplain of the Civitan Club, as a member of the General Citizens Committee on Youth, and as one ol the leaders in the (hergy Friends of Michigan State University Oakland. A director of Michigan Baptist Senior High Camp, he is a member’"’of the board of directors ol the Baptist Hospital Fund in Minneapolis. He has served on many committees ot the Michigan Baptbit Convention and Is a director ot the Michigan Council of, Churches. ............. D(»Ald Oueckenbuah, ooorie RetAl, Rens L. Brown, Vln<»nt Androl, Peter Cuenrelll. Clnude ft Audrey Brewer. Ueyd Clnney. Mra. Pearl Prnnklln. W. Burton ft P. Netdirk. Chxa. H. Rockey. M. A. Benaon Co. Inc.. RuaaeU P. Bhermnn. Wm. R. Tracvlek. Arthur J. Law. John R. LWIngatone. Taylor PhllUpa. Jainva O. Ramtlton. Lcn Irwin. Mr. Bchram, W. A. Oreen. Prank Pfeiffer. Jr.. Mr. Dunn, Daniel • *--- Brneit L. Cox, Vincente Qulntani. Prank Koenlsar, Sir. Rowaey, Clifford E. Braden. O. B. Olandcr, City of Pontiac. DR. JOSEPH 1. CHAPMAN A member of the editorial com-littee of Baptist Crusader Maga-.^ine, Dr. (Chapman was second vice president ol the American Baptist Convention during 1958 and and laurently serves as a member of its general council. ♦ ♦ ★ He was one. ol 3,000 delegates from the United States attending the 10th Baptist World Congress held in Rio de Janeiro this year. Mr. Porter, Raymond Rempton, ____________ Montroaa. Robert C. Rlghflald. Daniel A. Levan, Lata Preaton. Edward D. Bdintton, E. Blmpaon, Emeat Herman, m. w-------- Edwin Bennett. E. IClni. Edgar _. ________________ _jaman. Wagoner Homei. Rarlan M. Burney. Clair Atirood, Carl Panky. Michigan Mtg. Coy).. Mr. MeCutrly. Dorothy Bowdtn, Wm. C. Pox, Jacob Ranee. Oerald DeRausae, WllllAm Bandarotf, Thurman O. Treadway, Barton H. Robinaoh, Lloyd M. '--.kaon, R. A. Thorne. Wm. McConell. deraon A. Bee. W. L. Barton. Lonio Mooney, Donald R. Hawaa. B. Bolen. R. Keith, Mr. BInttenberger. O. Carney and to all peraona Intanatad. take notice; That the foil of the Bpeelal ABaetsmant heretofora made by city Aaaeiior for the purpoae of fraying that part of tho coxt w the Commitilon dtelded ahould be ' irne by apeelAl bauumont latruetlon of curb, gutter, grade, and rtlated work on Stirling _______ from Mt. Clement street to Mtditon Avenue la new-on file la nty ...... pubUc Inapectlon. ti also btrtby given ADA R. EVANS. city Clerk Oct. N, lOH accept them frem Dther ccub-trtes and should Rot seek to Notice of Public Hearing The Pontiac City Commission has scheduled public hearino for Tuesday, October 25, 1960 at 8 p. m. EST in the Commission Chamber, City Hall on Intention to Construct Water Main in the follovfing street— kennett Road from Stanley to Carlisle. For further informatiorf see legal notice. Interested property owners ore urged to appear. By Order of the City Commission Dated October 19, 1960 ADA R. EVANSy - " ^ ^ ^ City Clerk J \ The Pedish foreign minister further renewed his appeal lor ad<^ tion ol the Rapid plan tor a partially disarmed zone across Central Europe without nuclear weapons or rock^s. While offering his own proposals for partial disarmament measures. Rapacki urged the committee to begin work Immediately on a treaty for general and complete disarmament along the lines demanded by the Soviet Union. The debate continued under the shadow of a Soviet boycott threat I mongrel deg. and a U. S. charge that the Communists are using the critical arms issue as a propaganda springboard. Courtroom May Be In for an Ocelot ot Noise NOTICR OP INTEHTIOW TO CON-I tiiuet—JEAtit- BAla le, Konneu Read from Stanley to Carliate. - hereby notified that • * Sir. plan, profile and aatRnata of aald Im. provemant la oa fill for pubUe ' apaetloa. It la further intended to eonatruet October IE ItH by reaolutlon It declared to be the Intention of Cemmlatleo to eonatruet i — la Keanctt Road from Stanley Lathrup Village police h a ticketed the owner of an ocelot, h to not an 'undersized foreign sportscar but an oversized South American cat. Justice O’Leary and the police better be prepared lor the invasion ol the ocelots. Police say the animal is danger- NIS. .The ocelot’s owner. Edith Mc-Neal, 33, Of 87938 E. Califor|iia St., Lathrup Village, oays her Wendy Is not dangerous and gets along line with her two cals, and Tuskegee Arguments End in High Court WASHINGTON (UPl) - The Supreme Court concluded arguments Wednesday on a challenge to the boundary revision of Tuskegee, Ala., home of the famed Negro school, Tuskegee Institute. Police said they have received |''A Justice Department spokes-several complainU from neighbors high court that the about the animal, which is about apcelal aaaaaament teeerdini to f an and that all of the lota and parcel, of land frantint upon either aid Rennett Rood from Stanley Avtou Cerllale Btreot ahall eooatitute the clal atieaament diatrlet to defray U.S3S.01 ot tho oatlmatad eoat and ~ ' wa tbenot and thai IT.HI.N — aatlmatod eoat and expenaaa thi.. ot than ba paid from tho Copital Im provamoot Fund. NOnCR IS RRRRBT OIVRN ...M tho Oemmlaalen of the «Ky ( Pontlae. Mlchioan will meat In tl Commlaalon Chamber on October 3 ■ A o’doeh p.». to heor aw _______ ond ebjeetlona tRat may I made by nartlea intereated. Dated October 10. lOH ADA R. EVANS. Clerk Board ot BdueaUra^XvSrt Ue Bchoola; 010 N. Poatloc Trail ' Lake. Mlchtfan. Raeueata- Seeled bid, tor Rlfh Bchoo lie mprovrment — Contract 1 Rough a foot high, a yard long and liwks Uke a small leopard. WANTED BABY UQN Constitution bars the states from passing any law which results in setting up ‘"racial and ’rellgfoui ghettos." A cbaltenger need noily show inranted to buy a'baby lion but was advised to take the ocelot instead, said she keeps Wendy in the house most of the time and has heard no complaintf. Halloween Mop Slated at Brookiands School AVON TOWNSHIP - A "Halloween Hop" will be presented for elementary and Junior high school students from 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. Oct. 28 at Brookiands Elementary School. Two Pwifiac disc jockeyl will appear at the dance, which sponsored by the Brooldaiids-Avon Parcnt-TeacheP Association. Prizes, including 25 free Tccords, will be given to those nith the best costumes, 'nekets may purchased at the school the eve- jgan. There also i.s a national pce-is(liqol qnit* than riing the dance is held. 'lo* owners’ organization, she said, state. appears before Justice of the Peace James K. O’Lettry. Elman referred to a 1957 Alabama law which redrew the boundaries of Tuskegee to exclude most ot the Negro populatioii and all but tour or five Negro voters. The city, which previously had been a square, now has 28 sides. city c let. -3E ; Death Notices '. SaUabuix. D. C. tad Mri. W. S RUUa: auw aur-vlvad by el«bt frandchUdrcA and Uam R. RaraUton O Mapk Avt.. Rlrmlntl noon Prlday. Puneral ; Prlday. Oct 31, p.m. Prtday, a Rpbe^ itRR]Mi~ocfTTi. i3df. 'injbf O.. IStl RoaadAla. Pontiac Town-ahlp: aft 44: belovtd wif# al Val-mort Rarrldfa Rr.: dear mother of Mra. Reward (BettyI .WIUlnma. Mra. Stephan (Jannlai Potter. Mra. Iteymond (Barbnral Barrow, and Vnhaart B. 3kn1^ Jr.; dear alater ot Jack M. Warrtn. Richard Warrtn, Kcnnath Warrtn. Mra. O. A. Orant, Mra. Oarald McOratn. Mra. Darid Pika and Mra. Barnard RlektlmMa. Punoral aarvlea win ba htM Prlday. Oet. 31, at 3 p.m. from the Pural^ Puntral Borne with Itev. ETSLER. OCT 13. 13H. MABBL R., 3H1 Grandview: age H: belovad wife ol Oeoric A. Btelcr: dear mother of Mra. Jane bUxter. Mra. Dorothy Phancut and Mra. Ann Laracn: alao aurvlvcd oy five xrcndchlldrcn and clahl tfedt-(randchlldrcn. Funerat ac r V I c c will be held Saturday. Oct. 33. at 1:30 p.m. from tba Sparka-Orlftln Chapel with Dr. Milton 1-------- HdLfzT^. IS., ISH. SIMM ........ chter of Mr. ‘ ' Mra. Harold J Porter and Mra. Mary R. Ooldlni; alM aurvlvad by one oranddaiiihter. Puneral aervlce will ba held Friday. Oct. 31. at 11 a.m. from tba Donelaon-Johna Puneral Home. Interment In Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mra. Holti will lie In aiate at DoncUon-Mna Funeral _Hoiue. JOHNSTON. OCT. II. 13H, STBW-art Cochran Sr.. 4SS Central. Lake Orion: axe 71: btloved huaband of Mary Johnaton: dear father of Mn. Frank O'Brian. Jamea. Stewart, ...* " ' children ■ 'Ived by 15 irand- _____________four or«»t-Sr»nd- chlldren. Puneral aervlce will be held Saturday Oet. 3E at 3 p.m. from Allan'i Puntral Rome, take Orion, with Rtv. Albert R. Johna U« Cematerv. Lake Orion. Mr. Johnaton will Jit In a'Ate at Allen’a Puneral Roma. Lake Orion. bdLLBR. OCT. IS. ISSS, PR*®-• • — 97 S. Jaaale: — and leveral niteta and nephawt. reneral aerriei will be held Prtday. Oct. 31. at U a m. from tba Sparki-Orlffln Chapel with Rev. A. H. Meyer offietatinc. Interment In Ann Arbor. Mr. Miller will no IB itat* ut “thC“Sp«rkr-- OritflB Puneral Rome. ____________ SANbiDta. OCT. 30, IHO. raiD, 3770 Oreiory RoAd. OlnteUvIIle. Orton Townahlp; tta 11: beloved huaband of Laura t. Sandera; dear father of WHburn Sandara. Mra. Raymond Runlet and Mrs: I. O. Brown: alao aurrlved by 13 irandchlldren and five treat-trandehlldren. Completed funeral arrangementa will be announced BIple Fu-’. Bandera SCHNEIDER. OCT. It.lOH. ARTHUR L.. 1301 Dufraln: tia 33; beloved huaband of Barbara Schneider: beloved con of lira. Helen Schneider; dear faJher,ol IHvId an(l MraV*" r brother of Charlet----------- -------- John Schneider. Puneral aervlce win be held Saturday. Oct. 33. at 11 a.m, from Moore Chapel of the Sparkt-Oriffln Puneral Home, Auburn Helihta. Interment In Perry Mount Park Camatery. Mr. Schneider will lie In atatc at Moore Chapel of Sparka-Orlftln Puneral lteme, ^bura Halghtt. SIRVONEN; OCT. li; low. emil W.. lOM Bruce St.. Wlxom; age 70: beloved huaband of Anna Sihvonen: dear father ot Mrs. Tenho Rlndert. Kauno and Taatte Blhroncn; dear brother of Tolbl B. Sihvonen; aUo aurvlved by II irandchlldren. Puneral aervlce will be held Saturday, Ocl. 33. al - 3 p.m. from the Blchatdaon-Btrd- Puneral Home. Walled Uike. Cremation. White Chapel. Mr. Slh- wlll 1 ( atatc ■ I. IMO. n.OR- ence Beta'y, 3344 Warren Drive. Drayton Waina: ace 13; dear mother ot Jamea Saylor; dear ....___ .. -------- Saylt-. ------ irandmothcr of Harold Palmitler --i John Saylor; alao aurvlved by 1 treat-grandchildren. Puneral d John Saylor; i ,,ve great-g---'*-* aervlce will I 33. at 1 p.r Home. 3141 __________ PUIna. with Rev, Saturd». Oct ----- Funeral Drayton Card of I’hanks 1 ORATBPUtLT ACKNOWLRDOING ----------- v.i. .. (fienjs during j.f.. ..... Cooper x_... .. .....___ ____lk Rot. DuBole, the alBfer Marsha Patteyaon, Mr. and Mra. Morrow, the pall bearer, and Sharpa-Ooyatte. In Memorium 2 away 1 year ago today Oct. 33. Juat when your life waa brtghteit, Juat when your year, were best. Tou were called from this world To a home of eternal real. Sadly misted by mama and dtd-dy. Slater and brothere.__ FiincPR' Directors ' 4 COATS puneral ROSIE DRAYTON PLAINS OR 3-7757 Donelson-Iohns Voorhees-Siple AMbulAnCa BOrVIc* Ceiytery Lou___________S FOR BALE 4 PLOTS IN THE OAR-daw oO Weiurrectton at Whtte Chapel---- --------------— 3-3533. PERRY 1_.. _______ Baautlfnl 0 gravt lot. 1 ataa. Archlteete, ‘-bar. Michigan. >lAn Dapoalt: AvaUabU at tho architect upon dapoeit of I13.C. ... — Dapoalt artn bt rafuAdod on doeu-mtate fwtureod at time of blddiBi. RIA Bttwttf :^ddlt bid Oft «Mh ddd- ■^‘-(et nuat b« Acemnaamted by a bid bmd aa accaptebla siAty, eaiiaten eback .. a etrtiflod cliaek. wtUNxM rqatrietldBi. of nvo pareaat (S«) of tba bid aatout-ted. Sdcurtty thaU bt made payaMt *-Waited Lake FnbBa Salianli pSw lUduni; AU pteaa aad tptdfUa- ----- atteU bt ratnaad at tiaia at bU- ---------or Than MeaUfy With bit ------------‘■eaUdB, whieh —‘ qpmraet ........................... Jron an DBtracter nalatt Uda Item la fulfilled, Owatri’ Raairtatleai: Tba Board rw-tryat the rtgbt to rciadt any tad aU ..1 .. waive any Irragularfctet when loa of the Owner aach aettes ha beat tat---------------- - aaryaa bldi Al wl^rvaThTbaat tetereatiT'al'tha SclaiSl Dlitrtel. Ho bid may ba w1ui4rawn after loalnt time for .a parted. ^Urty (3SI •^!nt____________:....... tract by each tedlvtdual •‘■"•'’”1 I. BOX BCPLIES At If a.in. Today tlisrp were replies at The Press office Id the foUowteg Boxes: 13, M, T7, U, 39, 8R, 88. 78, 71; 73. 78. 88, N, 88^88.4U. 113. 114. ^ Hdp Male 6 I WARTBD. APPLY CARETAKER For 4 family apartmeat buUdlng. Mnat llvt la 1 unlarn. apt., rent-, Ins at SS5 per mo. on which at-lowaqet ol S3t par mo. wlU bo deduettd for caroUktr work Muit do minor repalra. dtanlnt aad Interior painting. Prefer old-tr couple on Social Socurity who want to keep active aad earn ( keep act _____ rantel whl(________ utUltla^. yp^hijmirw moly. ______ IW I. Hurtei'st” Help Wanted Msto 6 2 SALESMEN Mlaiamm 3 yawn wgwarteaea. No o^^^may^ajyy.^Cten OL l-dsil, AFTER 6«) P.M. immadlote opoaliw tor a pradantly * --I. to tir- BAXaE piniTxRAROR BRBAD Aod roU arodaeUmt. lUtftS wh. Tel. U 3-31IE Alter g:3S PJX. SAVE ENERGY, USE WANT ADSf To a job. place to Hv^or a good used car see Qassi-fied NOW! elder, dependable. OR 3 EXPERIENCED CAB DRIVERS, day end night sbifte. Steady aod part_time 131 W. Huron. BZPERIBN(^ WOOL PRtSSBR. steady work. Apply Walkers Cleanera. Lake Orton. ~~rOftNiTORE SAXsaMAN” Must have experience and Initiative. commlaalon basis. Write Box li4^ntlat_Prexa, ___ POUR MEM (Ml WOMBti WITH cars to tin vacanclee. Pull or part time. Opportunity ' to earn good Income. 150 N. Ferry. 1.13 te n:93 a.m._ FULL OR PART TIME REAL Estate pcraonncl seeded at once to handle custom model homes and chalet lakefrontege. Contact Mr Chapin, MU 4-lTM between 1-5 only._________ ___________ WOMAN OR RBTIRRD MAN TO manage trailer park. Must llvt on premlaea. PE 5-3333 or 8L 7^4 OAB STA'nON ATTENDANTS. Experienced only. Maple and Telegraph Sunoco Station. MARRiED MAN'ON DAIRY FARM must be able to run milker. 3815 North_ Rochester Road. MECHANIC WANTED. EXPERT on V.W Write Pontlae Press , Box^53.________________ M4H WAHliCb: OOOD OPBNINO In N.E. Oakland Co. or Pontiac and Keego Harbor, (tell Rawlelgh Producta. Ytar around steady work; good profltt. Write Raw-lelgh'a ^t. UCJ-fSO-137. Pret- Orion Area — Part-Time Needed at once — 3 man for eve-nl^^work. CaU Mr. Oage. MY OPENING JQR 3 MEN w factory branch has opened ‘ neada 7------*■* ilcally li which :—_ . ------- — ... meebanlcally IneUned to inatall new revolutionary electrical unit. For appolntmant call FE 4-4141 hatween 1 and 4. T and 3__ FIN BOYS. WEEKENDS permanent connection and I---- advaneament^ojiportunltr If you peraonallT train you for this po-attlon. For Intervtew Call FE ..3rgl» helort 5.p.m, ___ REAL ESTATE SALESMAN. PULL SALESbOEN WANTED FOR RE- Oood rate ot pay. Dare BuikUng Co. lit Joalyn.____________ SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT, part lime. Shell Station. 735 Baldwin.____________________ SME8MEN. PHYSICIAN ft Hospital sni^aa. Warahgiaa Juat opaned Phone PE 4-dW.________ Wailed Lake - Part Time needed Immediately. For ' n call MA 4-3411, 4 daily. WANTED; BSTIMATB ON REPAIR and InatellatloD of new 37" picture tube on Munla TV. Diogenes. YOUNG MEN TO ASSIST Manager In local branch In coa.tt to coast chain organliatlon. Ages II to 38. Experienct unnecessary, but must be able to eonverae In-teUifant^ ud mtlafla^wlU UO . vaneemopi to thM accepted, W* tur^lahto" Call **Mr. *8tu^U te-•— • --“.PR 4-0S03. Hdp Wanted Female 7 ADULT BABY SITTERS _________OR 3-43q _ __ BABYSITTER. LIVW Ilf _________ORJ-7313_________ CURB WAITRESSES TED’S WOODWARD AT SQ. LAKE ROAD BXPBRIBNCXD b»mO ROOM waltreaa. nighta. Experienced cook, days. Apply 1:38 to 7:30 p.m.. Harrlaon's Orlll Room. 1338 N. Perry St _______ EXPERIENCED Electric typewriter operator Apply 3:33 to 11:30 a.m. 243 Or- chard Lake Ave.______ EXF. B O if AH 1 DAYS. 3-1 nlghte, 3 Infanta, cook and housework. After JJS FE S-3113. EXPERIENCED WHITE HOUSE-k«3P«i^llve In. FE 3-4»W. IXPERISNCro DRUd CIERK Over IS. Wonder Drug, Cor. UB-10 and M-IB._______________ Box 13, Pontiac Pratt. EXPERIENCED NURSES AIDES, and cooks, lor Nursing Rome, Oniy experienced need apply. Ml BXPXRntNCBD WOMAN TO TAKE charge of Fountain and light lunches. Wander Oroga. Cor. vS-10 and M-15. EXPERIENCED WAITREBS, 13 ~ni I pa. HCAl Park Inn. EXPERIENCED WAIIWESS FOR ....--- ... W.. ton only 3831 bpdykc.________ PULL OR PART TIME REAL ito tala pertnnnci needed tl once to handle cuatomr model homea and riiolce lakrlrontave. Contact Mr ^^apln. MU 4.17S8 between 1-5 ~FREET-bYS — FUN“ office full I iirbaBsy. om gpoo ROMR and wages OIRL OR ELDERLY WOMAN VU molhar't ht^r aod child tart. Abie In praatlie botloata. Ho uaw-al eaavaaalas—oe IravaUim. Our OAttoimUy iSiw? ornok^aii la . Bombar got In Ite fteld. M yon I.ICLNSED P.-N.’S _ -------mo, atartlog aalaiy. tncreaalM to $311.Sa pad mo. tUfteraatlaTfor yvfntags and -night duty. 40 brara a week. ftS laundry. jnany Trtnse bnoettis.