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THE PONTIAC PRESS
Horn#
Edition
VOL. 120 XO. 831_________________ ★ ★ ★ ★	POyTIAC, MICHIGAN. TUKSDAlT. NOVBMBER ^7> m2 -*6 jPAGES	oinT.«Btf18taiirno.«.
STEVENSON. MKOYAN -> Adlai E. Stevenwn (right) U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, shakes hands with Soviet troubleshooter Anastas I. Mikoyan before a
ar rkatafei
dinner meeting held last night at the United Nations. In the middle are Acting Secretary General U Thant and Dr. Ralph Bunche.
Cuba Crisis Positions Rejnain Miles Apart
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -Soviet First Depidy Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan said Moadaf night that sharp differences ovsr Cuba stiU eidst between tte United States and the Soviet Union. He indicated there was no softening of Fidel Castro’s stand.
The Kremlin ‘ ’
ncr, said he espects to resume discusstons on Cuba Wednesday with Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Vasili V. Kuznetsov. Be said he expected the meeting to be “quite important.’’
Mikoyan said “very sharp questions’’ were discussed at the din-md John J.
talked to newsmen after ing a dinna* acting UJf. Secre-retary General U Thant gave for U.S. and Soviet negotiators on the
Mikoyan returned to New York Monday after a 2May visit to Ha-
U.S. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson, who attended the din-
McCtoy, head of President Kennedy’s Cuban coordinating com-
But there was no quarreling,” the Soviet leader said smilingly. -^Jdikoyan said the possibUity of his going to Washington for a meeting with President Kennedy was not discussed. The Soviets
earlite wore said to have put out feelers concerning a White Houil visit for Mikoyan.
The White House said Mikoyan was not scheduled to see President Kennedy today.
Asked whether there remained any pouibility of a Mikoyan vistt at any time before the Soviet deputy premier. retvws to Moscow, assistaut ■drew T.
Waterford OKs Seeking $l-Million Water Grant
Waterford Township will seek $1 million in federal funds for its proposed central water system.
The Township Board last night authorized the filing of an application under the Accelerated Public Works Act based on a proposed upgrading of water system plans from a T5- to a million dollar program.
Half of the ftmillion increase
would be borne by the township and the other half by the federal government if the application is approved by the Housing and Home Finance Agency.
This first stage ef Water-
PnbUc Works Act will grant $411 million to communities in so-called distressed areas throughout the nation.
Work 00 the water system is expected to begin la toe spring and sheaU be eonqrietod withte 11 nientbs. Plans for the pre-
cennecttoa of the eemmaite’*
exhtteg II water systems, croe-tertead sterags
Fhiancing will be through general obligntkm bonds with the Oakland County Department of Pidilic Works as agent An addittenal IJN	(Wtoi which wtUjT;
imiesSiS*	■bout |W. are exp^ to
ttea of two overhead tanks and testaHatten of tele-
1 be included in the ex-
h« to PeUx Anderson, vtee pi^ent of Johnson and Anderson Co., the township’s consulting
Oreatetllast •7th Congress,
SsBtenSber by , toe Acoelen
Dl)fl
TIH
PkaUtmMM
cover the entire cost of the pro-------taT*’- '—
Towntoip Board trustee Loren Anderson favored the applteatioo resotatton but siid he was not in aecord with the government’s policy of spending money it really doesn’t have.
Ttustoe Joseph McGee agreed, saying, “If we don’t get
I be com-plried and mailed today to toe Chicago office of the Hnoing and Home Agency.

e

later hi toe day.
Stevoison called at the W h i t e House this morning but Hatcher said Stevenson had not met personally with Kmnedy at the ttme the |x-ess secretary talked with
He did say he Was sure Kennedy had be^in touch with Stevenson in connection with last night’s New York dinner. SUPPORTS CASntO In his talk with newsmen, Mikoyan came out strongly for Ca»' tro’s five-point demands, including U.S. withdrawal from the Guantanamo naval base and an end to the U.S. economic boycott of Cuba. Stevenson said the Castro demands were not discussed the dinner. v
Brazilian Liner Was Missing for Eight Hours
Plane Crashes South of Lima; Bound for
LIMA, Peru —A Brazil-
Apn.M»	Angeles
LAST REPORT-Cross locates area at Pisco, Peru,
s»»amg u,
before crashing 75 ward Los Angeles with 97 ' Lima.	persons aboard, was found
^wrecked 75 miles south of
Record Set by Pontiac Car Spies
PonUac and Tempest sales have reached a new high in Ute Nov. 11-20 period, as the auto industry is sky-rocketing toward another Ibday record.
For the Pontiac division, the period’s total was U,no units — 13BZ7 Pontiacs 4,812 Tempests — surpassing the previous record of 14,170 cars in tiw same period of 1954.
Fir the taduatry, early reps^ ptvileted a total ef 2|l,-
Lima today with no sign of survivors, Peruvian officials reported.
The Varig Airlines plane had disappeared eight hours earlier as it headed for a landing at Lima on a flight that originated at Porto Alegre and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
A seardi plane said the plane semed to be completely destroyed. It was sighted near toe Pan-American Highway.
The piaae was bond from
tvsr toe	record set la
toe tirtt	of November.
Chevrolet is M the way to a twq-niUliaa sales year, ^t in
Ci
dor for Lafin-American points.
The |6-ininion Boeing 707 plane carried a crew of 17.
For Nov. 11-20, Chevrolet sales of 07M0 cars and 11,4>7 trucks, 14.8 per cent above the previous high for the period set in IMl. Ford Division sold nearly 49,-10 cars and 10,100 trucks Nov. 11-20, highest for that period in
to Slay Warm-^52
Clouds will dot the skies tonight and tomorrow but 01’ Sol Will continue to beam warm on the Pontiac area.
The weatherman said will be a frosty M and tomorrow’s high will slip up to near 52.
The outlook for Thursday is con-siderable cloudiness and mild.
Morning southo-ly winds at 8 miles per hour will become 10 to 15 m.p,h. late today.
- Twenty-nine was tite low recording in downtown Pontiac before 8 a.m. The reading was 50 at 2 p.m.
termediate stops sdwdnied to
Varig said it carried 00 passen-with niiM of them ticketed
The plane was due to set down at Lima’s IntemaUonal Airport about 3:30 a.m.
AuthoriUes said it radioed a normal position report five to seven minutes before the scheduled landing and gave no indication of mlttes. However. Varig offices in Rh) de Janeiro and New
(Continued on Page S, (>ol. 8)
Flashes
PARIS WPD - Presideat Charles de Gaulle today aSked Premier Georges Piimpidsn to iprma
I. Pompidoa agreed.
WASHINGTON (IIPD - The
day that it is “supendteg” the re^tions iastitiited dartag toe Cnbaa crisis which required all offlciab in the departmeat to report os their contacts and ditcnssions with aewsmen.
PRESIDENTIAL HONOR-President Kennedy ties an award streamer to the colors of one of the Air Force units that flew reconnaissance
over (^ba during the recent crisis. While at Homestead Air Force Base, Fla., yesterday, Kennedy presented awards to two such units.
Reds' Proclamation Denounced by India
NEW DELHI, India Uf>—India charged today that the (Communist Chinese account of the background of thd Himalayan border dispute contained in Peking’s cease-fire proclamation is a complete travesty of fact.
A statement by a Foreign Ministry spokesman was another in a serMis of	-----
WASHINGTON UR - The White House announced today that President Kennedy and British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan will meet in the Bahamas Dec. 10 and 20 for a review of world probtems.
appeared ot be piecemeal appeared to be piecemegl nese ttrms.
Expectations of an eventual renewal of the fighting mounted on this sixth day of the cease-fh«.
Qarificatkms of the proclanm-tion requested from Peking have been received and are undei study, the spokesman said.
“It is very difficalt to say-
informed observers feel India is piayiag for time to regroup and rebuild its armY after the shat; tering Red (Mwse blows in 32 days of combat.
Although fluoridation is not on the agenda for tonight’s City Commission meeting, action by Detroit’s Conunon Council todsy should make it a pcqxilar subject
This rebuilding is under way with U.S. and British help. Large diplomatic-military missions from the two nations have been here for a week, offering advice and drawing up plans for aendin( nibre arms to India.
Britain has delivered an estimated 200 or more tons ef io-faatry weapons to India since the Red Chinese offensive nf Oct. 20.
’The United States has sent weapons reported to total 1,000 tone or more, coming under fi-naiiciai terms that reihain to be worked out.
Q)uncil members have indicated they will approve by a 7-1 vote an ordinancn authorizing fluoridation of Detroit’s water system at a 4 p.m. meeting.
The conncil yesterday gave informal approval to a 841,000 ap-
ing ptans for fhwridntten equipment. Formnl npprevni is e|-pected at today’s meeting.
Pontiac, which is under contract to begin using Detroit water July 1, 1963, has officially opposed fluoridation on grounds that a city ordinance passed by voters at an April 4,1955, election, makes fluoridation of Pontiac’s water supply

Super Detective
Atomic War on Crime
WASHINGTON W - AtoMlic science, a super detective capable of sniffing out invitible, oentuiWrid clues, has bean enlisted the tear
to a repnT offered by M. J. Pro, tax agents have checked 250 imported qtiiite, and found 86 per cent of the
★ W
The American	____,
I heard a half-doaen lepoi^ today iboht
. 4tn2ns MnatlAm* Wli ailnnir tIftImMW lillMl
can qxR the culprit ta i ibootteg. Waoe narcotics imd test the age of jwitedv.
TRACE GUNPOWDER . > In anotho- report. Dr. Vincent P. Guhm of . General Dynamics Corp. told at other techniques to expose the smallest tracea ef guiqwwder on the hands' of tiioaa who have recOntly fired wea-
atod to tevestlfatt ytoil
/ One proof of its worth: by Ing the concentration of,
radioactive form of hydrof m, the In- radteUoo.
A samMe smear is taken of a suspect’s hand. Then a small sain|de of the waahiiM is braflatod hr the atomic iteactor. The resulting ratiotootbpee ‘ 1 by their fii«erprinte of
By determining the amount, they 1 can also get a measure ri how often a | gun was fired.
The FBI and a number of police ^ dtoMuHnents, he said, are cloeely following the results of tiiese experiments. |
★	★	★	I
General Dynamics, elaborating on 1 Guinn’s report, diacloaed other crime | detection api^atioas of activatioa I analyste are under study.	|
Experiments have been made which | indicate a tiny greeae spot on a r run victim’s clothing may be shown to | match grease from a suqMct’s auto-1
a whteky’s real age.
In tile post three years, according
traces ef gnapawerd reaMaaa as smaB as 18 iMsatts af a ffwm.
■k	-k -k
In the	same	manner,	a fragment	[
plastic, fleck of paint, sliver of | ass or	hair	may be	traced
Motor City Voting on Fluoridation
Confirming earlier reports from London, the White House said Kennedy and MaemUIaa “have felt that It wotiid be uwftii to have further meeting to contimie the informal seriea^^evteteteiirfie world situation which they have held from time to time.”
The conference, which will be the sixth between Kennedy and Macmillan, is expected to be held in Nassau.
Til White House did not say so directly, but a spokesman noted that presidential press secretary Pierre Salinger is in Nassau to-day.
♦ te *
The press secretary and other White House aides ordinarily visit
propriatioB to pay for eagUeer- the site of a presidentiai cenfer-
Fluoridation also has been opposed by Warren and Berkley, who use Detroit water, gum POSSIBLE
Gerald Remus, general manag-«■ of the Detroit Water Department, said that the proposal may bring some complaints and possibly some lawsuits from suburban cities served by Detroit.
Peattec City Attorney William A. Ewart, giving an infermal legal epiaiaa of the local antiflao-
said that “Pmitiac city riflctels ceaMa’t be held retpoosMe ter vtelatfaigthelaw.
“Our city officials can’t be blamed for something they have no control over,” he noted. “The contract for Deholt water was tegned kxig before this fluoridation proposal came up in Detroit.
The erdbaace reads: “Nepsr-
pteyes af the city... Shan here-
pMadsoffloarteearcaaseflas-ride ar aay compaaads of flaa-riaa to be added to the water sappiy of the City ef Peattec.” The maximum penalty pro Krifaed for “any person or per noi” vhriating the ordinance is a $188 fine or 90 days in Jail or both.
Mac, Kennedy Meet Dec. 19
MacmUlan reportedly lateads to confer with French President Charles de GaaOe befort
ence in adyance to make necessary arrangements.
The U.S. and British leaders first met two months after Kennedy’s inauguration in 1981. That conference was held in Key Wot, Fla.
Kennedy and Macmillan met ^n three occasions in 1901—in Washington in April, in Londtei in June and in Bermuda in December. They conferred again In Washington last April.
In Today's Press
Coasf m Eastern seaboard stmk by storm, fears high tides - PAGE 2.
Berlin 'Peace' Allied protection produces ctelm despite Red thimts. — PAGE 4.
Immigrants Many are skilled workers ~ PAGE 10.
Editorials .........
Markets ............
...tl j
...1M7
......10
TV * Radte propaau .11 Wiisaa, Earl ........If
Wtaiau’s pswea	U-U
Sparta

.1
’TWO
‘	'	"	■	'''	''	I „ '
THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 27. 1062
WASHINGTON (AP)-Carollne Kennedy ie 5 today and there’ll doitble-barreled- birthday party in the White House.
Brother John Jr. was 2 on Sunday but was unable to go to Cape Cod with the rest of the First Family fot* a long Thanksgiving weekend because he had a cold.
The word from the White House
LIFESAVING INSTRUCTIONS - Students at Pontiac Central Hi^ Sdwol yesterday were given a course in roouth-to-mouth resuscitation by Pontiac firemen Carl Widdis (left) sad Ed Manley. Practicing the technique
on the life-like mannequin, Resuaci-Anne, is 10th grader Jack Bletstein, IS, of 1071 Berkley St. The training program is sponsored by the Pontiac Firefi^iters Association and will soon be oftowd at Nmlhem High Sdnol.
Candidates List Campaign Expenses
It Costs Plenty to Seek Public Otfice
;:.>It takes more than detenniaa-r bard work and a lot of energy ^ So win election — or re-election 4 to public office.
* Itabatakes qMIe a Ut af •- msaey, aecardiag to clectlsa
- canty eiark’s afMce by 10 can-* didatca in the Nav. I geaeral
^ Ten candidates, nine of them un-(•successful Democrats, failed to wmeet yesterday’s deadline for fil-election eq>ense statements. :	WWW
z County Drain Commisaiooer “ Dudel W. Barry topped the dec-Itkn spendera who have filed so -far, with a total of 12,609 report-wad 9cnt in his successful cam-
from “ticket sales and contributions’’ and the remainder from the ‘Bill Huffman Committee,’’ according to the vouchers.
OTHER'WINNERS’
Running a close third was Re-. iiblican Prosecutor George F. Taylor, whose successful redec-tion campaign cost him |1,W.
Foarth piMe weat la Repob-iicaa Raymaiid L. Baker with $1,174 ia campeiga etpeases. Baker was redected to da state legislatare from the 4th
I rntrlhHan A tsial al UJUl • WMiepartedeaatribatodtoBar-» ry aai *ni1rleiis af Dn Bw-£
Z His opponed. Democrat Roy J. -Ruaaell, qwnt only $304.
•^Phase total was reported by the £wtaMof the 6th District state - l^lslative seat. Democrat Bill S. * Huffman, mayor ef Madison :HeighU.
f lepsrtad a Islal af $MM aped, • and IMH nedved.
£ Some fUOO of the reedpts came
reU E. Roberts’ $400 in the conn’s state senate race.
Only other losing Republican, Kenneth Waller, Huffman’s opponent, spent $228, less than 20 per cent of Ifoffman’s expenses. Canmittees who worked ia
Held’s saccessfol eampaigB for re-deetian spent $621, they tt-ported.
The committee for his opponent, Democrat George J. Fulkerson, has not yet filed its expense vouch-
also a RdmUfoae* and ( the “Committee for Re-deetion of Danid T. Murphy” spent a total of $1,116 and reported the same
tributions totaling $226 from personnel of his office.
Of five Denwerats who filed« Huffnaa aad Arthv J. Law were whuers. Law speat $I1S to wia redecHoa to the state leghlatare from the 2ad district
Law’s opponent, Robert C. Jknith, spent $528 to become one of two losing candidates to out-
The other was Denaocrat Ldand H. Smith, who spent $643 to Far-
City Commission action is expected tonight on two rexon-ing recommendations involving East Side properties.
One plann^ commission recommendation calls for denial of a request to rezone from tid-1 to Residential-3 about 30 acres for a “townhouse" development between Tasmania Avenue.
East Boulevard, north df Michigan Avenue.
The other recoauneads that a request to reseae property aa the aoatheast coraer of Central
The “Sparks for Treasurer Qim-littae” spent $1,466 to win re-election for RepuUican County Tireasurer Charles A. Sparks.
*	*	ry’s'ofto and several
County Clerk-Register Dankl T. tors whose Anns have contracts
Among contributors to Barry’s • of Bar-
on the Twelve Town Drain.
WWW
Other candidates were Sheriff Frank Infos, $925; County Surveyor Ralph A. Main, none; State Rep. Lloyd L. Anderson, $449; SUte Rep. Henry M. Hogan Jr., none; and Democrat Albert Kramer, losing candidate for state representative in the 4th District, ‘
The Weather
I	Fan U.8. Weather Bareaa Report
- PONTUC AND VIONITY-J^ aad miM today, high near r 66. lacreaaiag eloadiaeas aad mlH tonight aad Wednesday. I Law taalght 34, high Wednesday 8. Southerly winds 19 to
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LANSING IR-Michigan Republican officials today were e _ ed to abandon—once and for all —their much-discussed plans for recount on behalf of Clarence A. Reid, their unsuccessful candidate for lieutenant governor.
WWW
A top-level party worker said late yesterday the decision, far as GOP leados were concerned, aiready was made:
"No recount.”
Their verdict, coming after a sarvey af final naofficlal tabu-lattaas from key cooattea with
NAHONAL WEATHER-Snow showers are expected tonight h) the Bonhwii Md central Rockies whila rain is forecast for . the Pacific Northwest aad from the upper Lakes southward ths MMaaippI VaOay hde the weatam Gulf atalas. tt wOl ha eaU aki« the AHaatie Coast where a winter storm la
—^ protedag Brietoree i
May Abandon Reid Recount
DETIUMT (UPl) - TV Re-pabHcaa State Ceatral Cemmlt-today decided agaiaet li-aaaciag a receant for defeated candidate for Uenteaaat gaver-
Storm Whips East; Fear, Floods
Jr. League to Toast Carolinef Little John
2 Zoning Items onCityApda
Action by Commission Expected Tonight
today is that hell be able to go to the birthday party.
If it’s anytl^ like last year,
lot fun and surpriaea are in store for the President’s children and their friends.
Mrs. Kennedy won’t let word out on plans for the celebration. It’s a private affair for the youngsters. '
The First Lady is noted for some ingenious ideas when it to parties for her children. UVEMCWKEY
year, there live monkey, movies, plenty of g^ies to eat and even tri^de riding on the tong gnxmd floor corridor of the White House. One year, a clown called at the Kennedy home to entertain (Sardine and hw friends.
Likely to join in the ftotivities are some 29 youngstoiii who attend nursery school with Caroline on the thi^ floor of the White House. John Jr. has some friends of his own, too. His fdaymates, children of friends of Bfrs. Kennedy, msy also be on the birthday invitatim list.
tariag-l to M3 be approved. Commission action on the items as deferred frrnn the Nov. 13 meeting at the request of parties opposing the recommendations.
In anoRter move tonight, a resolution declaring the necessity for condemnatkm proceedidgs on R44 urban renewal project parcels is slated for iqtproval.
City Mmmger Robert A. Stter-er taid the proeednre s h 0 a 1 d help aeecBm the purchase af propertiaa:^ wiaded for rightwf-way for toe proposed perfaneter ■oad.
In othw business, action is slated cnw^resolutfott approving a66-50 split of costs between the city and Downtoom Pontiac Business Association for free parking in downtown metowd lots during De-embw.
Tentative approval will be asked for a new wholesale beer and wine license for Qty Beverage Co. at US Turk St.
Severe Storm May Hit Today
Delawora to Florida
Covered by Warning
From Oar News Wires An ‘‘exceptionally aevere’ storm roared menacingly off the souto Atlantic Coast today md the weather bureau warned of flood tides as much as five feet above normal from Delaware to northern Florida.
*	* w
Residents of loWJying areu subject to flooding were advised
abMt thh G
MSB today 319 milea off
streaftow e coater.
Mackie Plans to finish Term
la lit miloo of the Gale winds extending farther from the center raked the coast of South and North Carolina.
W H it Heavy seat kideed up by toe winter type storm” caused the 43-foot ketch Avian to sink off Charleston after banging tt ketch into the destn^ IK Manley urhidi had been towing and knocking a hole in the ketch’s hull.
WWW The dredge Virginia loose from a tugboat in the Chea-qwake Bay area	' "
LANSING m - Highway Commissioner John C. Mackie said today he plana to aerve out his current term, ending June 30, 1965, “and judge then how best I can serve the people of Michigan.”
what he termed “aafeoaded rumors” that he is plamdng te resip his $17,ll6«-ycar jsh next mtnto.
At the same time, he disclosed he apparently has changed his mind about possibly being a Dem-: ocratic mndidate In 196K
State Traffic Kills 1,410
EAST LANSING (R-Highway accidents have killed 1,410 persona in Michigan-so far this year, provisionaL figures compiled by state police ^wed today. The toll at this date last year was 1,406.
He said in July he bad no intention of seeking reflection. Today he said: “Since then I have ■easses^ my position.”
In Detroit, foUowhig release of his formal statomeat in Laatiag, Mackie aaU “It is tee far away” to oay whether he would s^ re-electioa or possibly
The weutoer bureuu saM tl
stathMiary today aad tonight with little change in sixe and
Birmingham Area News
Plot 'Unfit' for Rec Use to Stay Public Property
BIRMINGHAM - A small pu^ cel of city-owned hmd on Lakeside S t r e e t will reniain as “public property” although the Birming-ham Rwreation Department considers it unsuitable for recreational development.
A motion to rezone the property from its present classification to single - family residential use was defeated at last night’s City Com-misston meeting.
it n *
The rezoning proposal recpihred a favorable vote from six of the seven commisskmers in order to pass since more than 30 per cent of the adjoining property ownes objected to toe change.
However, ealy four members of toe cammlssteB cast approving b a 11 a t s. Vetiag agaiast it were Caaimlwlawers Carl F. graham, Ralph A. Mala aid Robert W. Page.
Birmingham Recreation Direc-
ts Donald Martin recommended expansion of recreational facilities at	School rather than the
Lakeside Street site in a rqxwt to
STUDY POSSIBILITIES Commissioners had asked Martin to study the possibilities of roe-reathmal devefopmant for the p r 0 p e r t y, wfaidi is loeatod adjacent to the Rouge River..
A lawsait ever aaetoar ia-feeted resoBlag prepaod was ra-ferred to the etty atterwey by
In the suit Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Newell are challenging a decision made by the commiaaton last month.
Hie Newells requested toat thefar pruierty at the northeast comer of Maple Road and Waterfall Lane be changed to any zoning other than sin^amily residaittial, its
Test-Ban Talks Hit Usual Snag
Gale warnings were poste from Cape May, NJ., to Daytona Bento, FTa^ and small craft warnings were m effect from the New Jersey coast to Provincetown, Mass., and from Charleston, 8.C., to Cape Canaveral, Fto-* ★ ★
Wind gusts of 60 to 75 m.pto. with heavy rain, swept Hatteras Monday, while Norfolk, Va., re-poled winds up to II m.pJi.
The roagh sea water destroyed about 160 feat af a tam-perary bridge hetweea Avea aad - N. C. Emergeacy ferry
Republican George Ronney’ two-year term as governor will end in 1965 and if he wishes to remain chief executive he must win re-election in 1964.
Mackie termed resignation rumors “purely factional.”
Hatteraa and Avon.
Water splashed across highways all along the Nags Head-Kill Devil Hill section, but no major property damage was reported.
LEAVE HOMES Some residents in low-lying
GENEVA (AP)-The 17-nation jsannament conference was back in its familiar deadlocked rut today after resuming with expressions of hope that nuclear weapons tests would soon be banned. Neither the Western powers nor the Communists showrt signs of giving ground on ' ' spection issue.
After both sides indicated at _ie reopening of negotiations Monday that the Cuban crisis had created a new sense of urgency for progress in Geneva, their statements on nuclear testing put toe«n once again on a dead-end course.
ON RED TERMS
Soviet Delegate Semyon *K. Tsarapkin expressed his willingness to sign a test-ban agreement, but only on Soviet twrina, without any kind of international inspection and supervision demanded by the United States and Britain.
Tsarapkin contended existing national detection systems are ade^ate to enforce a test ban. He also rejected an American-British proposal for a bah on surface and atmospheric teste-po-
the Russians want to atop aD nuclear tests now, not just some af them.
REDS RESHUFFLE
The Russians reshuffled their ptgposals for general, and com-pPB disarmament, but again the West found no real change In the Soviet position.
it it it
The usual impasse developed after the conference had beard a message from President Kennedy urging them to give hi^ priority to a testhan treaty "in view of the crucial devefopments within recent wetos.”
Tsarapkin also said “recent avente in the Carribbean made clear to evOryona the urgent need to solve the problem of disarma-
ahmg the Virginia coast Uced only by national detection
were forced to leave their homes yesterday.
No casualties were reported as ~ a result of toe storm.
systems-while experts try to get together on toe. thorny underground testing problem. He said
weald be werth the rtek ef ea estimated $20,MO la private and party fuds.
State Chairman Gtorge M. Van Peursem refused to confirm that be and other party officials had decided against the recount late yesterday, saying the *' decision would be left up to Reid at a meettog today In Detroit.
Science Teachers Plan ta Mark Unit's Birthday
Some 60 members of the Oakland County Science Teachers.As-sociation will celebrate the group’s sixth anniversary tomorrow at the River Rouge power pbmt of the Detroit Edison Co.
The occasion will include a tour and buffet dimer. Membors represent scienoe departments in junior and senior high achoois
FIBE SWEEPS MHME-Flre blaa$d throiqto the second Story Oxford residence of Mr. and Mrs. Waltace Grant, 17 S. Wathb«ton St. yesterday. destroying the entire contents of the
dwellhig- Oxford’s Asst. Fire Chief Ralph VanWagoner estimated the damage at over $6,000. The fire atartod at noon and was out 1:30 p.m. The cause \
Prank Sculpture Graces Side of MSUO Building
An imitation of-a $6,000 sculpture commissioned by Mic’' State University Oakland morning graced the side of the campus administration building.
The papter-aache scalptore appweetly was pot up ky student praaksters. It consists ef imitation recks decorated by gilded crows aad thimfaig»4ike lawn birds.
The real sculpture — not yet set up at the campus — ^ shows birds sitting on large rocks.
“Apparently it is a student parody a work which won a sculpture contest during the recent symposium of toe arte,” said Norman Prady, an MSUO nistrator and pubUcattOM editor.
Find No Life in Wreckage
((fontinued From Page One) York said an emergency call had been heard^ w
Lima airport said the plane apparently was flying at 12,000 feet CUBANS ABOARD
, passengers reported by Varig to be aboard were Raul pero Bonilla, economic adviaer to Fidel Castro and president of the Cuban National Bank; and the Peruvian minister of agriculture, Jesus Melgar, with his wife. They had been attending a regional meeting Of the UN. Food and Agriculture Organization in Rio de Janeiro.
The plaae was Vargi’s Flight 310, origiaatiBg hi Psrte Mefre, aeutoem BraziOaa city stoera Varig has headqaarters. It task off hr Lfaaa after makiiif Its
It connected with Flight $22 om Buenos Aires, Argentina. The airline said 37 of the passengers were bound for Lima, 13 for Bogota, 3 for Panama and for Mexico City.
it it it
A smaller Brasilian airliner wu in collision Monday with a private plane over Sao Paulo State, Bra-That crash killed 27
TODAY'S TYPICAL TOY SAVINGS Priced $S LESS Than MdkerU LUt
Cradle Tune Time
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TtiE PONTIAC PRES8, tUESDAY. NOVEMBER 27. 1962
three
20 Enttr Innocent Plea After Gambling Raids
BENTON HARBOR I
ty DMn pleaded bmocent to charge oi frequenting a gambling establishment yestwday. after weekend raids by Benton Harbor police.
. All were released on HOP bond pending triaU set tentatively for Dec. 6-7.
Some buses in Moscow have a capadfy of SIO are 67 feettong.
India: From Frying Pan to Fire?
WIONISOAY^ •• f tSO PM.
REMINGTON
By PHIL NEWSOM UPl Pore^ News Analyst While Indian Premier Jawahar-iBl Nehru dings wistfully to the hope that somdww the Soviet Union will get the Red Chinese off his bock, be also is bdng forced to the more unpleasant view that stnig^ with the Chinese ..........	"	** for
New Way Found To Stop Hair Loss, Grow More Hair
HOUSTON, Texas - For years “tliey said It couldn’t be done.” But now a Texas firm of laboratory consultants has developed a treatment that Is not only stop-pii^ hair loss ... but is realiy growing hair!
They don’t even ask you to take their word f«r it. 11 they believe that the treatment will help you, they invite you to try it for 32 days, at their risk, and tee for yourself!
Naturally, tiwy would not offer this no-rtok trial unless the treatment worked. However, it is im-pbssiUe to satisfy everyone.
The great majority of cases, of excessive hair fall and baldness are the begtanine and more fully develop stages of mal ** (baldness and cannot be
their hair loss? Even if baldness may seem to "run in your famir ly," this Is certainly no proof of the cause of YOUR hair loss.
Actually, there are at least 18 scalp conditions that can cause hair loss. No matter which one 4s the cause of your hair loss, 11 you wait until you are slick bald and
hair (or at least some fuzz) on top of your head, and would like to stop your hair loss and grow more hair . . , now is the time to act.
Loesch Laboratory Consultants, Inc., will supidy you with treatment fur 32 days, at their risk, if th^ believe the treatment will help you. Just fill out and send them the information listed oelow.
Adv.
And litis in turn means a severe selheck fer tiw^IndiM
seif-soffidehey is a matter still to herself between the great powers be determined, but it must be h measured tat years.
If there is a bright side, it is ^
In the fiscal year ending June SO, India received |727 million in U.S. aid for an over-all total of around M billion.
Even with massive aid from the United States and elsewhere, was Mtimated it would be at least 10 more years before India could become self-sufficiait. PROBLEMS MOUNT
As a nation of 400 million attempting a leap from a badtward agr^tural economy to full industrialization, even the ncumal difficulties made India’s problem a huge one. But with each Step forward also came new difficulties.
To: Loesch Laboratory Consultants, Inc.,
Dept. M-4, Box 68010, 2(08 Kiidlng St.
Houston 0, Texas
I am interested in knowing if you believe your treatment wiU helo me. I am submitting the foUowlng information for your consideration; and understand that you will answer promptly, by mail, and without obligation.
How long has your hair been thinning? .....................
Do you have dandruff? ......... Is it dry? ....... or oilyl
Does your scalp have pimples or other irritations? ........
Does your forehead become oily or greasy? ................
Does your scalp itch? ................ how often? .........
Attach any other information you feel may be helpful.
NAME ..............................
ADDRESS ..... .....................
emr ....................... STA’TE .
belaw capMity bMause at shortages of eleetrie power, raUway cars aad coal.
Gowernment operations supposed to turn in a profit to finance new projects failed to return a profit.
Training of new managers and tedmicians lagged behind the economic development.
Just how much the Red China conflid further will delay Indian
Movie Kisses Out in Malaya
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaya (AP) — Malaya’s home-grown films must remain kissless.
’The first kiss ever in a Malayan movie has been dropped from the forthcoming film "Dawn is Approaching’’ because of protests by the heroine’s father, political groups and Moslem leaders. Though it was only a peck on the cheek, they considered such a public display indecent.
Foreign films are another nutter. The Malays flock to them, and the love scen^ jren’t censored.
The Indian population is reported united now as it never has been before. ’
The IMHaa straggle win relieve Nehra frsni heeding the pleas el politicians for district pork barrels. Greater attention wfil he paH to devetopment of sack iadnstrira as coni, steel, transportatien and electric-power.
Of intmat, meanwhile, is the attitude of Nehru himself.
For Nehru it was a tremendous break with the past when he was forced to ask the United States for military aid.
It was an admission that India could not defend itself alone and that India’s attempt to balance
Tb the unhesitating United States and British aid, the average jKlian has responded -enthusiastically. Americans have been stopp^ on the stfeets by Indians who pumped their hands in gratitude.
Bat
thanked the United States lor M-Ms
eyes have been upon the Soviet Unton aad upon theoretleai Soviet aid ra'	-
received.
Having already been deceived by Red China, he appears not to take into con^ration the possibility that the Soviet Union could d^ve him, too.

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FQCE
THE PONTIAC MIESS, tVESPfAY, NOVEMBER 27, IWt
Allies Outlast Berlin Ultimatums
If CMOS BODLTIIOOD
BBRUN (AP)-fVw:
the HMm AIUh riz miaila to get out o( Weet Berlin.
nw Wted Stitn. Britaki and France are atfll here, eiercWng tlM^ naMran rights of occupa-
Their preance in supported hgr 12,900 combat-ready troops.
TbeComn
>ddty
b,«tjoyhigoneoflteino8t
far periods In years.
Berlinen are feeling more pt^
ky dian they have in a kmg time. President Kennedy’s firm han-dlUg of the Cuban crisis gave their morale a terrific boost They know the threat of a Red
takfroiver of the ftee part of the dMded dty has not mdted away. But they breathe more easily in the belief that Khhishdiev now inderstmds that UaiM States and its allies wUl fight if necessary to West Berlin’s freedom.
YEAK OP THE WALL On Nov. 27, 1961, the atmos-. iere in Berlin was very differ^ mt U.S. and Soviet tanks were parked near the wall dividing the city. There was a stream ol la-ddents along the wall and on ^le land and air routes from the Wesst
Michigan 2nd in Aid Orders
Monthly Share Goes Beyond $3 Million
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Vh'-ginia and liQchlgan grabbed the share of $28.7 milUon worth of foreign aid-financed orders recorded by the Agency lor Inter-p^itwial Develo|»Mnt during October.
Thhrty-fcur states shared to the orders. Virginia led with |S,8«,-
969 and Midhigan was seoond with
to sflghtfy ever $8 For the period January through October, Ifidiigap was awarded $8,938,799 to orders. New York led the way with $21.6 million during toe same period and Calt fbrnia, Florida, Illinois, New Jersey, Ohio, PennsyWrania, and Texas all had awards higher than Michigan during **" period.
Total awards for toe 19-month period were $185.6 million.
The sales to eeaunercial and
nMt ageMles to csantriri where toe U. S. has ecoMmie aeshtaare pngraiM are »-■daced tknagh ul- devdap-meat leans or ether tarms of
They include todustrialT ud agriolitiiral goods being markat-ed to toe assisted countries or used to spedBc development projects.
The usual transaction tavolves toe foreign purdiaser buying directly from the American supplier with credits furniriied by the UB. government
To Seek Extension ol Vatican Recess
VATICAN CITY (B - The Ecumenical Council decided today to ask Pope John XXm to extend its coming recess from five to nine
The Roman Catholic council, which opened Oct 11, is a uled to recess from Dec. 8 May 12. Reliable sources said the pistes will ask the Pope to extend the recess until Sept. 8, feast day of the birth of the Virgin Mary.
The Pope called the council and be has to an>rove any changes in Its scbe^.
BAKER
and
HANSEN
to the divided dty.
The West Be^nera were still daied and aiigry from the shodx of toe wall. Police daahed with students who tried a mass attadt on it
Now things are much calmer. There is still heartache over the brutal separation of families and friends. This gets harder to bear with the appi^ of Christmts.
Moscow’s puppet regime on the other side of toe wall has kept mum since Cuba. The propaganda machine no longer grinds out confident predictions that East Ger-
I will soon hare/toe I bditk wit
promised Tpeace Soviet Union.
This pod was auppoaed to sod Western aliied rights to West Berlin and cut out what Khrusbdiev called toe “cancerous tumor*'' side his domain.
CONTINUED THl^TS
Even after Khrushchev dropped his original six-month denu^, toe East German Reds kept up I steady stream of threats agatost West Berlin. In 1960 they said they would leave their treaty “this year.” But 1808 passed wito-
long-onta
Last year thay made toe same aiuifilled prediction.
Since Cuba, they have searee^ ly mentioned the treaty.
No new time limits.have been set by the Reds.
WASHINGTON fito-The States is the greatest . of fats and dls to tile world. In 1961, US. production.
West
of 17 years of odd war, don't eemed this to last forever.
They reason that the Soviets are having to rethink their strategy after Cuba. That may take
Maybe long enough for the Berliners to have a peaceful, if not exactly joyous, Christmas.
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I’HE l»ONTIAC PtlESS, TUESDAY. NQVEMBEk 27. 1962
FIVE
Nisei in Senate Gets 'Most' Ballots
HONOLULU-W - OnUel K. [iMuy« (pronounced in-no-wny) last month became at II the 9nt Japaneae-American to win ■ aeat in the United States Sen-
Two years ago, the shy, sensitive young Democrat from Hawaii wa$ the first Nisei to taka a chair Id the U.S. Congress.
b hefh eases, he was deeted hya
of ballots cast for a candidate for public office in Hawaii’s history.
Dan Inouye, one of four children, was bom in Honolulu in a small frame house Just across from the city’s exclusive Pacific Club which bars aU Orientals. He spent his early childhood in a 912-a-month. one4)edroom home.
WWW
Ifis fatter, a native of Japan, was a clerfc, and the oldest son of ths Inouye family back in Japan. As is Japanese custom, Hyo-taro Inouye was obligated not only to airport his own immediate family but also otter family members when occasion demanded.
Times were often tight in the Inouye household.
As a child, Das used to cea-verse at leagth witt Us nutter.

persr sf Japn, the bey asked:
• It I’m to lave Witt the em-perer’s daughter, aid she’s to love Witt me, caa I asarry her?”
He still recalls his mother’s sage reply.
“Remember at all times,” she said, “that no one is too good for you, but that you’re not too good for anyone else. You should have a great deal of humility.
SEN. INOUYE
but have pride within yourself; lie is not easy.”
Yeung Dan used to lupplemmt the family income by working as a beadiboy at Waikiki for 10 cents an hour.
This caadi also helped feed his hobbies — raising pigeons, building radios from junkyard parts, keeping tropkal fish, taking mu-c les^ and collecting stamps.
W W it
He had aspirations toward be-uning a doctor, I changed his mind and graduated from George Washington University, Washington, D. C., with a law degree.
IWs was to UK. He turaed te law becaase be ttoaght it the best way to “uado wrong,” the best way to work far the geaeral welfare of the people. Dan Inouye by this time, how-nrer, already was a hero in 'Vie eyes of the people of his home
Service dross — and the Bronse Star, the Purple Heart leaf chisto*. and a fistful of lesser medals. Ife lost his right arm. laenye changed his eul^sak
• ‘	•“ ecn-
. b a from
aO parto of the natioa, llsteaod to them talk, and lemraed from them.
One of the most valuable las-sons Inouye learned was combat veterans don’t Judge a man by his color. He himself discovered how to Judge men on their merits. Just as they Judged him on his.
He earned his law degree, re-i turned to Hawaii and became as-I sistant public {n-osecutm-.
He was elected to the teiri-' torial houw of representatives, serving as majority leader from
At the next seuloa of the leg-islatare. He was a territorial
to WpsUngton by giving him IIS,-
cver cast for a public office in Hawaii’s history. (His vote total when elected senator exceeded 136,000.1 TOP MAN OF TEN The same year, he was placed by the Junior chamber of commerce among tte nation’s ton
In 1059, when HawaU achieved statehood and Dan Inouyb became its first congressman, the people of the islands helped him
Alaskan Recount Starts, GOP Pays
JUNEAU, Alaska (AP)-A recount of votes cast Nov. 6 for governor and secretary of state of Alaska, demanded ^ the Republican party, began Monday.
*	*	w
The GOP deposited K.000 to cover recount expenses after the State Canvassi^ Board reported errors or omissions in 132 of Alaska’s Ml precincts. The board said most of the errors were minor.
n	-k	*
The ofiicial canvass showed Democratic	Gov.	William
Egan and Secretary of State Hugh Wade re-elected by 29,652 votes to 27,101 for Republican guberna-toral nominee Mike Stepovich and his running mate, Robert A. Ross.
The recount is expected to take nearly a week.
The advent of World War n found Hawaii’s future senator go-i^ to school and working part-time on pineapple plantations, as a stevedore, and in the fields.
A MEDICAL AIDE On Pearl Harbw Day, he was working as a medical aide for Territorial Civil Defense Agency. The bombing Pearl made a deep impression on the 17-year-old youth. When the all-Nisei 442nd Infantry regimental combat team was formed, Inouye was one of the first volunteers, w ★	♦
Rejected .at first because bis superiors wanted him in the medical co^, Dan persisted and finally, in 1943, was enlisted as a private.
★ * *
’The following year, at 19, he earned a battlefield commission, and finished the war as a captain.
He won the nation's second-highest award for extraordinary — the Distinguished
The woman to Dan Inouye'a Itfe is his wife Maggie. The coqile met at the University of HawaiL Also a Nisei, Margaret Shino-bu Awamura Inouye, petite, witty and pretty, earnri a master of arts degree in education from Columbia University. Until her husband was firmly established in Washington she was an instructs at Hawaii’s university.
While he was deaniag ap Us ■work to tte final stagee of tte
“I have watched (Inouye’s) contoarattvely brief career hare with far more than academic interest. I wanted him to succeed, not because of his politicar affiliation, but because he was to be a living symbol of what we did when we added the SOtt star to our flag.
”1 say now, cooly and dispas-stonately, that Congrenman In-ouye’a record here, his Impact on the rest of us. his seal and energy, have surpassed, by ) thousandfold, my g r e a t e s
Just befse the 1962 Congress finished Rep. Leo W. O’Brien (D-New Ysk) had this to say about Inouye:
This Christmas...
|give the greatest gift of
a#'
In ■ wtd# nnfiotftylM •ndprioMto StavtrynMd and budftt.
CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES
39 Ootlond Ave.	FE 9-9591
Collections Gone; Value 1150,000
MIDDLESBORO, Ky. fAP)-Coin collections with a total estimated value of 1150,000 are missing. They were stolen from a druggist in Middlesboro and a newspaper employe in Minneapolis.
Perry H. Siler, co-owner of two drug stores, said a collection he valued at ^,000 was taken last weekend while he and his Wife ere away.
Rogert W. Lanns, 31, said his 100,000 collection was stolen Sunday night while he was at his mailing room.
Girl Dies After Kidney Switch
LONDON (APl-Magda el Kaa-ry, 12, an Egyptian girl whose mother’s kidney was transplanted a week ago, died yesterday.
President Gamal Abdel Nasser of the United Arab Republic sent Mrs. Maxida el Kasry, 32, and her ailing daughter to London for the operation.
Doctors at Hammersmith hospital said the mother’s condition is satisfactory.
7g WORTH SAGINAW STRtET
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Boy, 2, Dies of Gunshot
DETROIT ill — Two-year-old James Morson of Detroit died Monday of a bullet wound received when his six-year-old brother accidentally fired a rifle in their home Sunday.
WILL AMERICA
LEARN rOO LATE?
Our lead in ecience and invention, in business, trade and world affairs came from learning how. Today higher education is the main teacher of our future leaden... in technical skill and in werhl outlook.
But kighor education is facing a eriaie. CoUegee are in a aqueexe. Maay have actual shortagea, whUa in Ism than 10 yearjl college applicaato will double.
If ire are te hold our lead, our hither iaetitutioaa nmt bare nwdon laboratory faeili-ties, Bsore claasroosaa aad, Sbove aU, quaUAed teacfcam,
HVIMCOUIM
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To ham sMie obooHiH saDete eriili wHto to Mom BUCATION, log 84 Nw YerkTtoae iWlea, Nmr Ye* 34H.Y.	_____
CotmoU omd the Noteepooer A
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THE PONTIAC PRESS
1UBDAT, NOVEMBEB 27. IIB
^'s.ssisn^
•MrtMiT
AOrartUlw OtTMtO
Why Are Ex'Legishtors Permitted to Jniiket?
In case you missed our Ruth Montgomiby column last week on junketeering lame-duck legislators, we would like to call to your attention this flagrant misuse of taxpayers* money.
★	★	★
For the atoBCBt wt aro not coBccniod wtth the dsetsd bw-■laken who win bo aerylac b tho next coBgroMloHal asssba. Our criticisM, like Mias Moatgoai-try% b aimed directly at the senators and. ^grcasmea who wiU not be h<ddin| office when the 1963 sesBbns conTene.
★	★ > ★
Either they were defeated in the recent election, or did not choose to run. Hence, any foreign travel by them, under the guise of '‘background information,” b worthless. It's Just a plain hoax.
The voice of these dbtingaished lefisbtors wOl not be heard in the congressbiud halb sinee they hare no vote. Why then are they allowed to trip off on these fantastic tours?
★ ★ ★
It would appear that the taxpayers at home are being taken as suckers of the first order. And, oddly enough, some of those same public servants are the ones who woul^ and did. v(^ a tight and complicated hating of future business expense accounts of their constl^ents.
In the past, and we expect it b tme now, onr government bw-makers have not had to sabstan-tbte in detail foreign travel
ndiether we should build now a com-merelal plane which wiU travel 1,400 miles an hour and be ready for use In 1964; or hold off until 1970 when we will be able to have a craft that will travel 2,000 miles an hour.
★ ★ ★
It seems that pride will have some bearing on the decision. France and England already have developed a commercial plane which will be ready for use in 1964 with an announced speed of 1,400 miles an hour.
Of coarse, Rsssb has not an-nonnced what she has on the drawing boards. The question our lop avbtbn authorities are pondering b: Shall we try and hold onr supremacy in avbtion by getting the jump on France and England, and perhaps Russia? Or should we pass up thb intermedi: ate stage and make the big jump to 2,000 miles an hour?
We’re of the slow school; we’ll take the one hour to Miami.
Voice of the People:
‘Why Difference in Yates for Various Office^’ .
laMeed a peculiarity ta the ebctkm returm. The flnal count shows a total of 2,750,S« voting on the governor, apparently the number that irent to the poUs.
★ ‘ ★ ★
Of these 19.01 failed ts v^ m a secr^ el sbte; HAM OB a I
119,171 I
I w4 care who became ear i Vt ewe who weSU be ear at » abeot SB aodftsr^ aad 991,7U bOed b veto on
it it it
Are the machines defective or don’t voters understand tlwn? Maybe they just don’t care.	A. B. Cotcher
‘Isn’t It a Bit Early to Celebrate?’
David Lawrence Says:
expenses. Thb includes the conn-terpart faa%s||k|.«cs «njpip checkbook fSr s«r bgbbtors to use at their diaeretion.
★	★	★
Not only are basic expenses covered to such deUghtful tourist spas as Hawaii, New Zealand, Figi Islands, Vienna, Bonn, Copenhagen, Lbbon, Paris, Hong Hong and several Latin American countries, but U.S. counterpart funds at all embassies en route are avaUable. Nice work If you can get it.
★	★	★
A few enjoying these junkets bclude: Sen. Ben jamb A. Smith II, the former roommate of President Kennedy, who dedined to run after keepbg the old JFK seat warm for Teddy; Rep. Laurence Curtb of Massachusetts, who failed in a try for the Senate; Rep. Marguerite Stitt Church of Illinoia, who was not running for re<«lection; and Republican Senator John Marshall Butler from Maryland, in the same category.
If thb b to be consideied a bona fide government expense, we can’t help but wondw, how come?
The Man About Town
Has Birthday
Senior Towser Citizen Is Doggone Long-Lived
By HOWARD RELDENBRAND Today 17 candles bum on his birthday dog biscuit and a howling good time is being had by the honoree and neighborhood friends of Cocker Spaniel
Wake (Carter) whose doghouse is at 866 Inglewood. At the same address lives his master Keith Carter. AUhoagh 17 yean it
Bstareecrdferthe Cocker breed (acted for
Imgevity). h iMt to a eealary fer a
Protect ‘Minority’ in Integration
Malformed Births Prompt Letters
I agree wtth the editorial on the malformed baby. Instead of judging the ones who had to bear the sorrow of that death, hadn’t we better look to be. drug industry which causes such terrible things to happen?
The fault really lies with the manufacturing of drugs (and there are othen doing damage and the prescribing of drugs that haven’t "Been fully tested. It’s too bad that the general public lai’t aware of all the effects of the various drugs so that we might be more careful. God didn’t create these wonderful human beings, in His image, far som^ to experiment with. The
*Two Good Rules: Understand, Use’
Itegular attendance at dairch is likened to my regular snbacripaon to Tbe l*reis. Neither one can profit unless he understands and
694 Parkwood
JehaPUpps
m nave nw neen
! full story of a racial diich oc-Bhthere national nrse in nupecte Missis-fedy.
d crowdM}IF!H : thanV^^H e r sons^M^^^I
onH9HIH
‘Hie pet. no	'♦ii'^outhful
exuberance, now spaids his days as oldsta-s art wont to in ruminative contemplation of past triumpha—conjuring up with smug pride the cmint>*«« mts chased, the bones buried, the letter carriers nipped, the fire hydrants sniffed, the automobiles raced, the flower gardens despoiled and the upholstery chewed.
Bat tw# years ago, beeaose of grow-
tag h^leasaess doe to failiBg bearfaig and
■1^ a rmUe Cocker was provided to sort of torse tee veteraa.
★ ★ ★
The auxiliary pooch took over with devotion and efficiency. He accompanies his charge everywhere, nudging her clear of obstacles the old eyes no longer see; seeing that his alter ego has fully eaten before himself faU^ to; and after rushing to greet the master on arrival home, quickly returning to break the news to his friend and seeing that she is guided into welcoming position.
A dog Is maa’s best Mead? .. . Tr^ feg to disprave tt to tee affectiMiate owa-er el tee caaiae Damon and Pythias wwdd indeed be barking up tee wrong
WASHINGTON - The Ameri-can pe<q)Ie have not yet been given the full story of a racial conflict addeh oc- “ curred riftet here in the national capital, worse in some
than the Mississippi tragedy.
A record crowdi of more thani 50,000 personsi gathered T h a n k s^ing LApqiENCE day at the D. C. stadium to witness a football game for the city schoolboy championship^, between teams representhiifeiJeqiectively, St. John’s Coltel^High School — a CUitholic and preponderiuttly white institution — and Eastern High School, a public hi^ school which is preponderantly colored.
When St. John’s won 20 to 7, a mob of approxtanstely 2,000 spec-, tators, predominanUy oolorad, swarmed down on the field from the Eastern Hi^ School stands, and the fighting began.
Extra details of police were on duty at the stadium, but they were greatly outnumbered. Sev-
Of tee 49 persons reqnMng treatment for iajaries, only eight were Negroes. Three
Watched for many years, there be others?
Mrs. C. E. H.
‘Can Do Without Fluoridation’
If people knew the facts they would never introduce fluoridation. Detroit wiU have to sp^ millions for new machinery which becomes corroded. Will industry welcome this?
hard-earaed deOars tote a bto*
OB to say teat, while to some extent “release of peat-op emo-
tomless pit? It cesb Ifeoi Hr 999to99MlyMrlytoBapp|y91 worth el this qaesttouahle F
ship gaam” to molerstaBdable, “aspects of llarsday’s fracas
mirror the ehaOeage of mach of America’s aaflalshed bosl-aess - fall partlelpatloa la aO aspects of eommaalty Ufe aai tee exerditag of total respso-slblllty to eemmaaHy affairs.*’
nials of the existence of any ra-	______
dal friction. But all accounts , „	,	„ „ „ .
agree on one fact — about 2,000	^	*****{*
persons swept down on the field J P^ge concerning a mal-from the Eastern High School farmed chiU as compai^ to mw
stands when the riot began.	being created in God^ ima^.	I d	themsehres or their-------------
The heads of the respective	or-	^ haPPy ^	with sech medieatlaa tor	a few
ganisations of students at	St.	B'We this can be found.	ceats If they wish.
John’s college High Schori and	Mrs. Etolse Bright	*	*	*
Eastern High School have come M Putnam	^ incredible that such a
forth with a joint statement for the two schools condemning the “unhqipy display of tenilier and
The Almanac
schools to determtoe the at-reactioos of the
This WM tee nearest my pub- boorish behavior.' lie expression came to suggesting IWy rise said they tatead to
that one cause of the riot was	.........
deep feeling between Negroes and whites.
Most of the news articles presented to the public carried de-
Bob Ckinsidine Suys:
Spa^MUhaaity Explains Need to Shoot for Moon
farce would be carried out if the facts were known. Let’s hear from you industrialists and many others.
Jsha ODsmwU
By United Pr
Today is Tuesday. NoV. 27, the 331st day of 1962 with 34 to fol- 1107 MyrUe
Jow.	-------------
The moon is new.	^
The morning stars are V e n u s PortraitS and Mars.	^
The evening stars are Jupiter By JOHN C. METCALFE Saturn.	^ nems Pm always wait-
On this day in history:	ing ... For the day when I grow
In 1901, the War Department up ... And the adults all around authorised the creation of the me ... Will not treat me like a
ficers<	speeds . bf the HsweSs in n
b) 1945, President Harry Tru- garden i . . Of ftoae pesty man named G«i, George C, Mar- scrawny wepds ... I am reaUy
NEW YORK-Mr. E. C. Welsh, value of placing hea^ objects Uve to*China.**^^ «present8 executive secretary of the Na- in orbtt and keeping men as well	grown up people ... I can also
Uonal Aeronautics and Space as devices in orbit for long peri-	Sve a	. It must be a
n»«	. . . X. b.
Of weapons in	M inadequate	fully gro^ . .
.	.	raminiiBiratiM mtenu	forevermwe recalling . . . ChiM-
“Ihe Soviets’ feats have faidi-	»y»*ems.	hood years which were your own
he mi^t have served as a stand-in far Mr. Qiips.
white toea-agers were hospital- Mr. Welsh is a bigger man than	cimqietence which In 1950, President Eisenbowtf ... On the other hand. I won-
ixed fer serious injuries.
Of the 14 men and one juvenile arrested, only one was white.’The full police report has not been made public.
OFnCIAL REACTION The next day the Rt.' Rev. John S. Spence, director of education of the Archdiocese <d Washington, announced a moratorium on diampionship playoffs in football and basketball between the two school systems in the district.
Carl F. Hansen, supertotead-ent of tee district’s publie

has a direct bearing upon what	issued	a statement in which be	der . . .	If the adults have	the
is necessary to defend our coun-	denied	differences over the Sues	fun : . .	That	we daily find	as
try and to protect our own rights	crisis	had weakened tee UA.,	children	...	In the snow,	the
in space and on earte.’’	British	and French accord	rain and	s
In Washington:
U. S. Keeps an Eye on Nikita
So Much Lies Ahead in Space Exploration
Next year, according to schedule, two men will circle the earth in Uie Gemini capsule. After that, three men will travel to the moon. After that...
It Is not unlikely that before this eentury is out, large ships with large crews will bejnaking journeys exploring the solar system.
★ ★ ★
To us it all sounds pretty far out, and as a matter of fact it is. Two-billion miles is hardly the first step toward the searest star, which la 13,000 timw two-bilUon arikaaway.
Men speak voyaging to the stars snneday. To us It Is almost unthlnk-M)le. Yet our nuclear engines si:| capable of speeds that We are sure our forefathers would have laughed at.
★ ★ ★
. A debate euireotly In progress ^ with higby-ups In Wsridxi|kHk Is
Newspaper folks are traditionally so modest (Offeta«e voice: How did that rumw get started?) that they shy from mentkming out-
Bst tee MAT has heroically rises above sach iahteltisas to let yw to oa tee fact teat everyeae at The Press b proad as . Poach if tee Ihaaksglving Dey edldM.
. ★ ★ ★
The edition ran a record 128 pages—surpassing by eight the record Centennial edition (d last year. Each copy weighed two pounds, and since the press run was 65,000, approximately 05 tons of paper were used-two carloads. It took two tons of ink for the total IMxmr printing. . . . Incidentally, the new press room equipment encompas^ in the lecently^nnounced expansion for next year would do the job in half the time.
Retiring after 45 years with Western Union Telegraph Company,
George H. Tardiff
•f 299 N. Paddwk 84.. was hsaired last evenlag at a dlaaer held at Waterfefd’s Old MOI Tavern ... Ike MATs heart-
statement as “very teeagktfaL weU worked oat aad eae teat shows very great depth ef aa-
For the statemmt placed no blame on the players of either team w on the authorities or on moot of the spectators or on the public-school systein.
The heads of influential Ne^ groups here — the Baptist Ministers Conference, the Teachers Union, the local NAACP, the Urban League, and various other community organixations — issued a joint statement deploring the “irresponsible behavior exhibited by some the persons” attending the game and said that “unsportsmanlike conduct and rowdyism can neither be excused nor tolerated.”
The Country Parson
association cmi- CONSIDINE vention in Las Vegas not long ago.
The question rose as to we’d do, having blown all that dough, if the Russians beat us to the moon. I quoted Gen. Bernard Schriever, the Air Force’s space authority, as nying he “hoped we’d make danrn certain that we get there a soon second,” if we can’t get there first.
★ w *
“I was the one who followed my comment if we <ton’t get there flrri,” Mr. Welsh corrects. I apotegiie, and hope we’ll get there first, too.
Mr. Welsh, whose remarks
-El
eBH
aervfee aad all best wishes for many eajsyable aad rewardtog years pf Mswe.
Verbal Orchids to-
Mr. aad Mrs. WUIam 0. UeUcr of 41 Putnam; golden wedding anniversary. Charles Scale
of 229 N. Johnson; ,99th birthday.
Mr. aad Mrs. James 8. Hkks of 414 Lowell St.; 9tod wedding anniversary. Mrs. A. M. Sherstoa
of 99 Stout St.; 9^birthdajr^ ^
ton, oatlined to tee dearest maimer tee Kenaedy admtols-tratiM’s m a a-to-tee-meoa in-teb-deeade policy, which seme have esteoatod b costlag as abMt H9 millioB a day.
In answer to “why bother?” he said:
“There are political, economic, defense, scientific, sociological and a number of other reasons for a moon trip. . . . They comprise overwhelming evidence of the merit and the necessity for tee project... There b no other idace so near in space where we
ByPEIEREDSON WASfflNGTDN (NEA) - Post-what mortems on Cuba are a dime a dozen in Washington now. Sonw of the detaib like the text of Rus-Sian Chairman Nikita Khrushchev’s letter of Oct. 26 to Presi-| dent Kennedy] may not be mader public for other 20 years or] so unless the Rua-'
»ee to
give it out. Thu bn’t considered likely.
Kennedy’s letter of Oct. 27 replied to thb fetter. But befme Khrushchev got it, he made 4iis broadcast ofOct 27. Thb changed the situatkm. Kennedy’s letter of Oct. 28, was therefore a reply to tee broadcait.
Ihet night Khrushdiev broadcast hb capitulation to remove the Citeen mbsiles. The important poim in these exchanges was that both sides were nwving on an hoar4o^oiv basb. Thewedi-end of Oct. 27-29 was the period of greatest danger, climaxed by the President’s, broadcast to the na-
as w^t to do about the IL4 bombers and steeteer the President made a definite profllbe not to invade Cuba were not handled clearly. As soon as |danning staffs were cut In on the iteration, these defects were dtaoov-
taken to tighten up loose ends. ' WWW
On the no-invasion promise, it b pow pointed out that tee U.S. cannot givs any assurances that modify security raquiremrnb of the Western Hemiqtevre, based on tee Rio pact. Abo, the U S. cannot create a Castro sanctuary.
It b said to be up to the Organization of American States to make policy on whether Castro, must be forcibly removed from power in Cuba. But the U.S. cannot settle {(»' ^ Cmnmunbt country )n thb hemisphere.
The matter of the IL-28 bombers WM not raised at first he-cause it was not considered advisable to complicate the removal of the missilss.
Hw UB. knows teat 42 aris-siles wen remsved from Cabs. It b Bit kaswa if ethers wen left sad as mbsile asst esaes were detected. Whether thb
deebion to postpoM a showdown on Berlin untU after tbo UB. elec> tions.
If the United States had not thwarted instelistioa, tbs mbsiles would have been operational about the end of November. Khrushchev could then have backed up hb demands on Berlin with the threat of missile strikes from Cubs. Thera were two possible targeb. One was tHe United States, the other Latin-America.
It b posstele teat wllhdrawal ef tee mbiBea frsia CSha was part of tee srigiaal piaa if Its exeentem met with eppecillM. bat tee degree of epposttba from tee United States, Latte Anrerica, Earope aad even the Afro-Astea bbc prehahly was
men (or future space travel . . The ehjective ef mt poUey b to ehtabi aad maln-taia leadertUp la space eetfe-bies fer tee' beaefb of i
e cschaages. TiKre sterSge b
ere seat to Cttea b CsMtnKttea ef a
In Shy event, Khrudidiev recognized he had made a mia-judg-roent in sending nUasBaa and offensive weapons to Otet. Thb time he was able to adjitet on hb mbeakutetion aafefy.
The important point new b to
in tee ftiton, whn ha abght not time to stop whatow he Btarta beforo it to too his. Ihst might lead to a.worid war by
a’B weU-being, mas’s Bsderstasdiag, and. nmi’s seleatifie prsgrsss ...” (as far Ssviet spaee policy)
“... Never forget the Soviete’ objegtiv* of oporld dpsilnsUan; do not minimize tee military
cevery of tec arisiBes in Cabe, tee case was handled by tee Presidcat aai ahost 0 dmea top White Hosae, State Depsrtmeat aad Peatofsa ofRciab. Thb was to prstect secarityaBd.pces. veatjwwsjMke behre psifey
to thb process
It b freely admitted that if Khrushchev had been able to get away with hb mi^ bases on Cuba, it wDuU have been a masterful strategic move. Othorwlsef just why he tenberked oa thb adventure early last suinmer b stiU a Kremlin aOcret.
------* *'
One anunqitiea given wide ersdibiUty b that tlija move tted in with Pnubchev’s announosd
THg PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 19fl2
Don’t Fertilize Your Plants, Entertain ’Em
mtm
SEVEN
Music
SfFSnjUSBATnUJE * NEWYOm-IVWtMBi^
lint I nng tt a Uttlt"broadway tune, "I In You/* ‘
and 0MB to mta
I plagtod tt a vhokaaiiw medlay *«B **OaUalM»a" on the iil4.
Laatly. ta toMk aD baaia. I tamed an an lAadiiit radio ihow and Heaven knen what it Ustened • o’clock ttiis moraing.
Bat know what - when the dawn (inallyi
ducthrity.
C
luf^lor Editorf Quit <
OLD SAYING
QUESnON: Where did the phraae “a flaah in the pan” comefran?
it it it
ANSWER: This canto from the dayi tiie flintlock rifle, which lattod from the 17th century to about 1160, when the flintlock mechanism was replaced by the percussion lock. Our upper picture shows how the flintloek worked. The hammer, holding the flint, was palled back or “cocked” (A). The steel “frizzen,” was snapped forward, uncovwing die “flaah pan.”
Thh was flBed wtt pewder and the frissea snapped back ever it. The anta eharge el pewder and the tadlet was to-serted tote dto barrel from tbe OMssle wtth a ramrod, a small hole tod from the flasb pea to the mala powder charge.
When the trigger wu pulled, the hammer fell down, knocking the frliacB forward and imooveriag the flash pan (B). Storks fell on the powder, setting off a flash which shot thTMigh the hole into the barrd, luting the main charge and firing the gun.
Generally enough flame or sparks shot through the hole to fire the gun, but sometfanes there might not be enough, or the main diarge mij^t have become damp. Then, although there would be a “flash in the pan,” the gun itself would not go off. A “flash in the pan” came to describe a person or event great in promise but short on performance.
★ ★ ★
FOR YOU TO DO: Don’t badr down on promises, unless for a very good reason. Don’t be a “flaah in the pan.” When you’re staling at something worthwhile, go right through with it, shoot!
SchmcaouRSBtly is proving thatiand vegelaMai are evaiy bit apmUaead Just as good mete, which not only sooths dm remarkable.	""	* ‘	"
savage, has the power to excite
plant life to a hi^ pitdi of pro- a few years age, to Canada, a lan broadcast Bad violin son-tas each morning brom May till i|Jtdy to an expettaiental crop of
other night ol BATnXLB songs and dances (I plan to try tbe suggestive “Mountain Greoiery” and “ThereH be Some Changes Made”), and it may be like flourishing.
* w *
To the lay indoor gardener, this idea of playing maestro to a miserable plant may appear somewhat lunatic-fringed, but the fact is that science lately has shown it often works.
Ifhen a flam Is off Its feed, don’t fertflisa It-oatertatott. TO the talhm patted palm,BBn-sic performs mbmeles; a night-eng^ caa be every bit as good Mr ptoats as the norse of the
Latest evidence of this from a com Inreeder in Notmali IB., who reported that he has erected a hmetapeaker system raoord piayw ta bb bam. WASDBUGBTBD He {dayed music to his com crop 24 hours a day — everything from twist tunes to “Rapsody In Blue” — and, although the neighlxMS objected, the oom obviously was delighted.
* w,
It flemished beyond all ex-pectattoas. Farmer George Smith reported Oat. ta fact, one hybrid com type went so wild with the mnsic that it prodneed 2NJ bnaheb per acre, compared with a nattonal average for coaventioaal, nnserenaded • of 11.1.
At harvest time, that < . a M per cent higher yMd ttiaa his otiwr crop of wheat which presumably llsteaed only to the
wheat pisntad taileh soil wtiboat In
He also discovered that wheat planted in poor soil, with music.
ImbtVd^tftmeiR^i
ri^ sugar and tapioca ciraps to grow Biare abundantly.
Mssssa pianls grew twice as talas,mimosas wMek hadn’t been exposed to enltnre. Aid the
Horticulture by hi-fi ioMm like the coming thing. I’ve personally
These are fairly spectacular re-wlts, but I’ve been told the other experiments with flowers, trees

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THE POglAC PRESS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2T, im
No N«wf Conforonco
WASHINGTON (APh-PnMmA Kennedy will not hold a mwi ooB-lis week. He met wtih last Tnesday evening, his first news conference in 10
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MICHIGAN BELL
Stcfte Sets Hike
in Premiums,
Classified Workers to See Insurance Raised
NEW YORK II^The image of the American as a cultural dod, says the Stanford'Research Institute of Califiombt, has been put to rout by a statistical bludgeon.
LANSING (IL-A 25 per cent crease hi health insiiranee premiuma-to be shared equaSy by the state and classified workers—was aimoanoed yesterday by the Michigan Civil Service Coae-
Americans, the
«P nratWas
DIES IN NEW YORK-MCS. Florence Anderson, 80, known to ehow people es “ma” or ‘‘.mom,’* died this wedc in h» home in New York aty. Mrs. Anderson, thou^ inactive for three years because of illness, vras lifted as wardrobe^ mio-treaa at Radio City Music HaU at the time of her dmith.
The commission said employe contributions will be increased in January, with the hi^ state payments to begin in July. The increase will total aooie $1.4 mil-Ikm.
Abaat Ujm af tba state's
Continues Project to See Atom
ky tea Aetee Uls Imm Ca. sf Hartterd, Caen.
Franklki Dewald, state peraon-nel director, aald premiums collected for thejrear totaled 84-W ""on and total daima paid or accrued are estimated at |4-44
TUCSON, Ariz. »l - A University of Arizona physics professor says he’s working on changes in the electron microecope that should make it possible to eee the tiniest piece of matter that exists
Atenw, wMcfc cembine to
teat virtually mUUoiis of teem can fit en a ptahead.
Although adentists haven’t been able to see the atom thus far, they have proven its existence. Probably the best proof of all is the atomic bomb, which works on the principle of shattering uran-ian atoms, chain reaction^tyle, to produce an «q>ioeion.
Now, Dr. ANar P. Wildte, a university physics professor here, says it may be po^le tai a few years to actually see the atom.
WDska, SI, said last sight teat to do tUs, it is necessary to correct spbwleal aberrattsns preeeat In all deetron mlcre-scopes. Tbat’s what he’s werk-bigen.
“By widening the aperture andl thus the field,’’ be said, “it abouidj be poasiUe to visualtee i
Fif^Mnillion Instttnto says, daubing, carving, acting, dug* big on their
The trend, it indicates, is home-grown. Behind it are instant-success gadgets, the do-it-yourself urge, enterprising business, dvic (Vide and social
new covered by the greop
Dewald said the higher premium reflects a 10 per cent factor for estimated increases in costs of medical and hospital care Jan. 1 through June 1964, a 6 per cent increase to equal the actual claim and cost load experienced during the first year’s operation, and a 9 per cent contingency fw claim
Uader the present pita, the state pays H.1 million of tee
But the new rate strwetere effective h July wfll find the state payteg H J millioa of an estimated |5.7 mflUM.
{dans to caned its so^ailed com-prdiensive medical care program next January because of a lack of support
Yonkees Turning Artistic
Largest chamber of commswaiBoenpa Abas. Mslhoaraa iH in the sotebsm'hHrtiliwrii hi k)|
Arnold Mitchdl, eeonomist, counted tiiose statistics: 81-milHon players d musical instnmwnts,. 15
la effect, says Btenfsrf, Ikcro is evideaee ttd Amerkaas are heeeiateg teterested awre ta
seulpton, a million art pbolog-rigihera and . a balf-milUon tors. Amateur writers were not
The result of such undertakings is a market for the arts now running about |2.5 billion a year, says Mitchell. He predicts a total arts market of |7 billion by
imo.
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K’s mainly a matter of widen-i ing the photographic field of the|| miscroBcqpe, he said.
His improvements, be added,|| are not expected to be conq>iete|| for another year or two.
Large reindeer herds are the]I main source of food and clothing I for the Lapps of the Arctic por-1 tion of Finland.


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THE PONTIAC PRESS, TtJESDAY. NOVEMBER 27, 1M2
KINB
PENNEYS
ByHALWmX YORK (APMI^hM been tome time liace we had a drill in double talk, the art of laying ona Sling while you’re thinking another:
we can’t affod to get can we?
le ever start saying exit they mean, and ^exactly what r say, It’U be the death both of language and of sode^. For safe-j ty’s sake we’d all! have to go back comniunicat-' ing *by grunts, gestures and whistles.
To brush you up on your double talk, here are a few seasonal iexamples-foUowed by what they really mean.
1 DONT CARR^
“You know I don’t really care what you give me for C3iristmas— it’s the spirit that counts.” But if it doesn’t come from a Jewelry store, you might as well give up thegh^.
“Of course, I still believe in
Time to Gef Back in Shape for Game of Double Talk
BOYLE
I Santa Clans, Fapi.” &nart’girls I do at any age, Daddy-0, w-	A	*
“Gee, boas,	thanks	a	lot.	I
dhbi’t expect a bonus this siae.” Frankly, yen	old	tightwad,	k
dMUght It would be at least twice Wg.
w	*	*
“Ho, ho, ho! And wtaat do you want me to put in your Christmas stocking, my little man?” If you try to pull off my beard Just one more time, you little runt. I’ll put tarantula in It
“That’s aU right ladies, look around dl you Uke.” You’re being watched by three store detectives and a hidden television camera.
“Gee, I’d love to get you that engagement ring in the window, iBsmerelda. except-!’’ Except 1 can’t afford to-until you inherit
YOU BIG LUO T always feel sentimental this time of year. Everything is so beautiful it makes me want to cry.” But I’m tired of staring at pretty windows, you big lug. Take me to dinner-now!
it it *
"No, madame, I don’t think your httshand would find that necktie too garish.” But it would
Apricot, Not Apple, j I the Sin
LONDON (in - A prominent British botanist said yesterday-that Eve didn't give Adam an apple, declaring, “It was more pr^bly an apricot.” WWW
“There were no apples in Mesopotamia then,” said Dr. Tatham Whitehead. “The only fruit were apricots and quinces.”
w ★ w
He said most people would agree that apricots were more tempting than quinces.
the region the lower Tigris and
.hatweea Ih Euphrates
she of the Garden of Eden, according to tradition.
Dr. Austin Fairer, an authority on church history, took issue with Dr. Whitehead.
WWW
“The apple has become the symbol,” said Dr. Fairer. “The apricot is not acceptable.”
WWW
But the Angelican bishop of London, Dr. Robert Stopford,
“tt’s possible, of course, if scholars accept the apricot theory, it won’t shake the foundations of faith. I imagine people will go on for years and years saying apple.”
make a fine rescue flag if he’s ever lost at sea.
“Rememher, boys, this time of year we all share our tips.’* ;;|hi first guy I catch holdiiig out is going to get tamps undyr his big
“Qatt crying, mtle gkl we’re not going to aend you to M JuM miiao you dropped and broke a I didl.” The law won’t let us. 'Lady, did your little boy have Tew-cut and was he wearing a lid windbreaker?” I’D bet that’s the little monster we’ve got in a straRJacket in the lost and ‘ «md department.
“We’re only too happy to exchange Christmas gifts for our clientele.” But you boughtHhis one two years ago.
“WeU, Mabel, if your heart is really set on a fur coat-” You’re going to wind up with a -broken
Mer of Two
BULLHEAD City, Ariz. (AP)-A IP-year-old skydiver plunged 9,200 feet to her death Monday when her parachutes did not open.
She was Faith Metcalfe Pap-pageorge of Las Vegas, Nev. mother of two diildren. w	★	w
Deputy Sheriff Lloyd Crawford said Mrs. Pappageorge “either forgot or didn’t try to open her parachute.”
w	w	w
Crawford and Coroner Ora Gruninger said the woman’s main and auxiliary parachutes were undisturbed and the ripcords had not been pulled.
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TEN
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THB^ONTIAC press. TUgSDAY, NOVEMBER 27. 1962
stininff	intiwhidiyr
ANNEBAWlOIT MlYDUi VICTOR winr
bnportatioa of «• into the U.S. Is up « per cent this yeer over hit. according to tiw Americaa Ore Institute.
HURON
Now of and 9
CU$l)C...STM«NO
GRACE KELLY
JAMES ' S¥EWART
' REAR
Window
By BOB THOMAS AP Mevie-I^leviaiea Writer HOLLYWOOD-Looking at the new movies—
This is the season of the long sit. Film coit^MDies bring out their most ImpcMrtant product this time of year to catch the IxMay trade and the Oscar deadline.
!how the studios equate length with importance.
'a movie needn’t be long to be good. Some of the all-time greats ran a mere 90 minutes. ButI nowadays the norm is two hours, and epics like "Mutiny on the Bounty’’ and ‘The Longest Day" are allowed 10 stretch t o three hours. Upcoming:	“Law-
ience of Arabia.’’ at ttiTM hours and 40 minutes.
THELMA RITTER WENDELL COREY
sai s«tey.«lrm« the eaiitra-versial best selUng nevel.
No OM widor 1$ will bs K H leceepisiod by is
- AND •

This Season's l^oyies Running Too Long
The new military specificatioosi roerce and Economic Devefep-llbrary; opened at Seattle by the ment. contaliui aO u—'—^ Washington Department of (k^tmmt^M»Kiftai^
"Long Day’s Journey Into fOght’’ is another three-hour film, but in this case die length seems warraAted. It is needed for the cumulative effect of hi^ tragedy, a rarity on the screen.
much happens in "Long Day^ Journey." "niere is no {ded.
as such*. The members of the Tyrone family prowl around their
.. other with vkioits words and then quld|lii trying to bind the wounds. TRAGIC NOBEJTY They are a bedeviled four: the tightwad father, the dopeeddict mother, the bum of an older son and the tubercular poet. In the bands of a Tennessee Williams it could be a sordid business. But the insight*^and word magic of Eugene O’Neill, whose famlfy it was, give the family a tragic nobility.’’
PONTIAC
OWN 6t45 P.M. IN-CAR HgATBtS PIB
LAST 2 NIGHTS
No wonder all the stars won the Cannes Festival awards. They are superb. Katharine Hepburn displays a range she has never shown before. Ralph Richardson, Jason Robars Jr. and Dean Stock-weU also have big scenes and make the most of them.
“Long Day’s Journey” is not for

i»0iiMA6iEisn
REQUIEM
HEAVYWEIGHT
- and >
JAYNE iANSHELD
every movie goer. It is tor those who Uto their drama done rare.
'Pbriod of Adjustmoit’’ is what you could expect when Tennessee WilUama (that name again) writes a comedy. It is funny and it is bitter. The laughs despite foe fact that most of the film is
pie disagreeing disagreeably. And they aren’t often Ug lau^, but they are foot.
AnfooliyL Francloea and Jim Hutton aregood as the bumbling < husbands. But the big news of “Adjustment” is the emergence of Jane Fonda as a comediouie of rare talent.
Powell's Troubled by Muscle Spasms
a hastily packed trunk, dni^ing with loose ends. But it hokb you beguiled for two hours, and what more can you aA of a movie?
“What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?” If you don’t know by now, you’d better go see foe flfan and find out. It’s "Sinset Boulevard” played for chills, most of whidi are more promised than produced. But it has Bette Davis and Joan Grawfod together and in grand, florid style. Now if we could only see those two great ladies as fo^ really are — smart, sophisticated and beautiful.
"Diamond Head” is otd-style melodrama, complete with murder, family feuds, island dynasties aid a hint of incest. The mixture is not totally convincing, but the plot keeps moving and the Hawaiian landscapes are appeal-ingf
HESTON IN LEAD Clharlton Heston doffs his tunic to play the land baron, and Yvette Mimieux continues her growth as a fine emotional actress.
“Manchurian Candidate” struck me as foe best shocker since "Psycho,” both on emotional and ..........levels. It is full of
tricks and stunts and seems like
SANTA MONICA. Calif. (AP)-Actor-director Dick Powefl, 58, already suffering from cancer, is in St. John’s H^tal (or treatment of muscle spasms in his back.
His doctor said the spasms, similar to bursitis, are traceable to a heavy cold. Powell was expected to be released today or Wednesday.
JA to Ask $270,000
DETROIT W-junior Achievement of Southern Michigan said Monday it will launch a drive for $270,000 late in January to carry on its work. JA in the area.„now has 8,000 teen-agers ainiv370 small JA companies.
Warren Gets Park Funds
WASHINGTON (M - TTie Urban Renewal Administration yesterday granted to Warren $21,100 for acquiring the 21-acre Pinto' Park site for a public park.
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THE POKTlAC PBESa Tl^SDAY, NOVEMBER 97, 1962
c-v
ELEVEir
3faking Candle Adds Zest to Christmas
Bus Ride WorVt Kill
Chrittmis and cMdtes go tofBitwr. Ekctrkity may In more pnctkal, but tbo flkharbif glow of cancUeUglit la bnportaat to boUday foa* thrUlM.
Ybucn a cholee you hart, depond- '
This attractive garland candle serves as a color-ful^jophisticated decoration for your table centerpiece, or as a delightful yuletide touch nearly anywhere in the house. You’ll find it easy to make and easief to enjoy during the holiday season. To fashion your garland candle decoration, such as the one shown, you need only a 12-inch red rope candle, a reed mat, heavy florist wire, boxwood, artificial stemmed apples and floral foam, >
You can maka caodki. Thia craft baa become more popular in tbe laat few yean —ao popular that in aonw arena classes are offered.
You can trim commercial' ly made candles or Just use them, adding a garnish of fruit or flowen around their
THELAIEST Ibe newest thing in candles la the gas candle. With theaa the light cornea from butane fuel. One flIUng of the inner duunber gives four hours of
Geggies Are Back From Nassau Trip
Returning this week from a honeymoon in Nassau, the - Richard Thomas Genies, who were wed in St. James Episcopal Church, Birming-hm, will make their home in Perrysburg, Ohio.
The forma* Patricia Ann Andrus is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Andrus of Birmingham, home also of the bridegroom’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Geggie.
Mrs. Charles Sharpe, Royal Oak, attended her sister as matron of honor. Bridesmaids were Mrs. Robert Parkin, Lake Orion, and Mrs. Gaytord White and Mrs. Jerrel Vickers, both of Birmingham.
At the right is a picture of a candle you can nudEO yourself. It’s a twist candle that you make in a milk carton.
ntake the twist, melt a pound-and-a-half of paraffin in a clean coffee can over boiling water, remove from beat and add two to three teaspoons dry dye. Stir to disperse tbe dye.
Cut off the top of a quart milk carton and prq>are the mold by threading string through a snudi hole in the bottom and attaching it at top around a pencil. Seal the hole in tha bottom with cello-
For the candlelight ceremony perfwmed by Dr. Kenneth H. Gass, the bride chose white slipper ..satin with pearl and crystal detail, styled drith chapel train. Her bouffant illusion veil fell from a jeweled crown. A white orchid centered her bouquet of white chrysanthemums and ivy.
On the esquire side were Wayne Geggie, his brother’s best man, and ushers George Charboneau, Birmingham; Gaitsgin Barr, Ann Arbor; and Carl Koskinen, Rochester. Gary Andrus carried the
The bride attended Wayne State University and her husband is a graduate of General Motors Institute.
Some 2S0 guests were greeted in the Executive Inn, Warren, foDowtng the Nov. 17 evening ceremony.
Pour colored paraffin into mold and a 110 w to set until firm but still pliable. Tear off center part of carton and gently twist top and bottom. UGHT OHDRS BEST Light dye colors are best for candle making as the cokr deepens in the denseness of the wax. Abo, since all purpose dyes are made to be water sol-uabb primarily, there wiB be ' dye left in
the can. This should be discarded along with the can.
Origin of 'Solitaire'
Sounds of Activity
NEW YORK (DfD - During colonial days, single^Uamond earbobs and buttons were called s(ditaires, gem hbtori-
Echo From Hills Area
The tmn, of French origin, means a single diamond or gem. Today the word solitaires b sometimes nsed |for a single large diamond set in a ring with a small diamond on each side of it. Solitaire also b a card game.
I
Cooperative Dinner slated for Retired
From Las Vegas, Nev., came Mr. and Mrs. Keith MacKenzie with their two boys, Robert Scott, age t, and Bruce Douglas, 3, to spend the Thanksgiving holidays with Mr. MacKensb’s parenb. Dr. aad Mrs. Barb D. MacKenxb of Oak Glen Drive. The senior _Mrs. MacKenzb’s laother, Robert Armstrong, abo arrived from St. Croix, Virgin
Chapter 7 of the American Assodation of Retired Persons will hold a cooperative dinner Wednesday at 11;M a.m. In the Pontiac Unkm Hall on East Kennett Road. Fdbwing the dinner will be a games session.
A family reunion for 35 was held Sunday with Dr. Mac-
f r 0 m Keith MacKensb’s school days were entertained. Present were: Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Patterson; Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Macksey; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Williams; and hfr. and hfrs. Charles Young. Mr. and Mrs. S. Obf Karbtrom came from Ann Arbor.
Today there b another family celebration. The young MacKenzies have pliumed a dinner party to honor their parenb on their 3tth wedding
Kenzb’s sa-year-oU mother as honored guest. Dr. Fraser A. MacKenzb, oldest son of the Earb MacKenzies, hb wife and their ll-month-old son Robert Armstrong abo
Thanksgiving Eve, friends
Price-Patton Vows Exchanged Saturday
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence R. Nebon of Momingvbw Terrace have had their daughter and son-in-bw, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Don Swanson, and their two sons, Richard and Erik, of Lansing as house-guesb during the Thanksgiving holidays.
Thb week the Nebons and Mrs. Nebon’s father, Alvin Beckstrom, leave for a few days in New York. Mr. Nelson, a member of the board of
Karen Kaye Patton held an heirloom Bibb topped with white carnations and iilbs of the valby as she exchanged marrbge vows with Edwin George Price Jr., Saturday, in the Ortonvilb Baptbt Church.
Rev. Jerry E. Redman of the First Baptbt Church of Waterford performed the eve-
best man. Thomas Buchanan seated guesU with the bride’s brother-in-bw James Pickett of Fremont.
The newlyweds are at honoe in Lapeer.
trustees of tbe foundation for the Lutheran Church in America, will attend several board
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas S.
Daughter of the Lester E. Pattons of Hatchery Road, the bride appeared to a wfalb snk brocade gown fashioned with Watteau busUe and chapd train. Her veil of silk illusion fell from a headband of seed pearls.
Maid of honor, Mildred Roth, wearing white Chan-tiOy lace over yeOow satin, carried yeltow and white carnations. Jnlb Koflinger, Walbd Lake, her
Sovoes, wore blue chifCon over sattai and lace jaekete.
Blue carnations were added to their bouquets, identical to the honor maid’s.
The bridegroom, son of the Edwin G. Prices of Orton-
. vilb,hadDnblJ.lWvolrtor
Torgerson of Burning Drive win give a seriae of .................... 1 sch^
ubd In their hoDK oh Dec. 1.
Mrs. Bernard O. Goode of Bloomfleld Hiib gave a tea to-
day honoring her dayghtertf ■ V, Mrs. Jte ^ •
1 Dreystadt of
At the Detroit AtiibUc Chib on Fri^ Here Ifr. and Mrs.-WaDMr A. Wmiams of Gbn^
giving hdldays with hb par-eitis. Mr. and Mrs. Bam B. Williams of Hammond Lake Drive were abo present. Fol-lowing dinner, they attended On New York City Opera performance of Rigoietto at the iTOmpb.
Couple Honored
Honored at a poet nuptial
MRS. EIHnS G. PRICE, JR. nrd.
the Guest
These permanent candles never bum down and eliminate die unpleasant odor, -smoke, drippings and burned-down stubs of wax candles. Butane fuel with a flame adjustment is the secret.
Milk carton candles take abouteight hours to harden compbt^. Remove carton
and trim as desired.'
At the bft b an attractive holiday decoration to be made with a rope candb, greens and artificial fruit. Here are
FOLLOW DIRECTIONS
To begb, place a saturated floral foam b a low contain-
Insert short stenu of boxwood bto the sides of the foam, forming a circb. Next, set tha candb directly on top of the foam. Short sticks can be inserted bto the bot-. tom of the candb to anchor it more securely on tbe foam.
Now, bend pieces of flwbt
Take a long, thin branch of boxwood and insert one end into the foam. Spiral the branch op and around the candb, following the rope pattern. As you progress, secure the branch to the candb with the wire “hairpins.” (Heating the ends of the wire with a matdi first makes
V.)
Remember, add water daily to keep your garbnd candb decoration erbp and fresh looking.
Peggy Weber Francb of Ut-tb Rock, Ark., has Austrian ancestors who were candle makers. She carries on the family tradition by decorating and making ho- own Christmas candles. Thb b what she has to say about decorating
and Mrs. Ronald Gofam Seme 43 guesb were preaeat It the home of Mr. and Mrs. Leon Hibbs of West Walton Boub-
ing hot wax frvm an old candb over it very carefully until decoration and c a n d 1 e are
For giving or getting, holiday candles can be made at home from inexpensive all purpose dye, paraffin and string. The new twist is molded in a milk carton, tree shaped Noel candles mdlded in drinking cups.
Pretty designs may be made with ordinary white or gold fashion cord, pine, holly, littb stars or scroll effeeb that may be cut out of gold paper doilies. she says. Dip them into melted wax to look like real wax effeeb seen on autiientic candles, she explains. SCULPTURE DESIGNS “The artist uses a forceps heated over a gas flame to sculpture designs on the surface of the candle, although geonoetrb designs or bas relief figures may be imprinted on sheeb of wax and applied to the candle, sometimes covered with gold leaf, sometimes given an antique patina. Somenootif are pi^uced in special wooden nookb.
Area Personal Notes
Commander and Mrs. Wayne R C h e a 1 and son James of Mount Vernon, Va., Were honored at an open house Sunday in the hpme of his brother and sister-in-bw, the Norman Cheab of North Lake Drive. Cohosb were hb parenb, the G. Lewb Cheab of Lake Orion.
Cmdr. Cheal b a native of Pontiac and since World War II has made hb career the Navy. Thb b hb f i r s t trip home in four yean after concluding two cruises aboard aircraft carrien. He b now sbtioned in Washington D. C. . where he expeeb to remain
for three years, with offices b the Pentagon.
Mr. and Mrs. David R. Ligon of Bloomfbld Hilb announce the birth of their second child, a son, Rodney Gbnn, on Nov.
By ^ Emily Pete lastitate
Q: Atmyson’snqumt.Ito-vttod hb girl frbod to vbft I us for sev^ days. W| llva a littb over a hundred mflei ’ from where she does.
For my son to go by ear to pick her up would mean a threeJwur drive one way and so when I wrote to her I suggested that she come by bus and that my son would meet her at the bus terminal.
The girl wrote back and said. that her mother would not bt her accept the invitation unless my son canM for her u she did not think it proper for her to go abne.
As my son wu anxious to have her come and vbit ns, he drove down and picked tor up. I feel that her mother was most unreaaimabb and that it would have been entirely pro-er for her to conw alone on the bus. Will you please give me your opinbn on thb matter?
A: I agree with you that it was very unreaaonahb on the part of the girl’s mother to in-sbt on your son’s driving a total of six hours to (tick up her daughter and drive her to
The baby’s grandparenb are the William Manecks of Nortiiville and the Robert Ligons of Lake Angelus.
Mrs. Earl Martin of Mohawk Road has returned from a flight to New Orleans where she vbited her son Jerry Martin. From New Orleans, Mrs. Martin flew to Philadelphia to vbit the Dan DrisceUs.
Women's Section
Fill in around the base by adding more boxwood. Garnish your decoration with red stemmed artifbbl apples, cherries or other coi^ul fruit
Tlw finbhed arrangement wiU look pidect by ibeif, or placed on a decorative mat or tray. If you wish, you can vary your decoration froin the one pictured by using bdly, short needbd evergreen, and real holly berries.
Lay Off! Lay Off! Lay Off! Rich Foods Cost Too' Much
SIMPLE DESIGN “You need not to be too ambitious b the beginning. A simpb but effective design can be made by carving a littb niche near the bottom of a candb, and inserting into it small nativity figures that may be bought in stores.
By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Every night after school (and on Saturdays) I work in my father’s bakery shop.
Lately I have started to eat everything in sight.
I know I am gaining weight, but I can’t stop eating. I suppose I eat so ABBV because it to free.
I am 15 and have never had a date. Do you think my weight has something to do with it?
I know chocolate makes my skin break out, but I can’t leave that alone, either. Please scold me or sonKthing. I have —
“NO WILLPOWER” DEAR NO: I could’scold you, but it wouldn’t help. You need to scold yourself.
Writing to me was the first step. It proves that you are unhappy with yourself.
The bakery goods are n o t “free” — you are paying for them In the most expensive way: popubrity, good looks and self-approval. LAY OFF!
DEAR ABBY: Is there a way b tell a dear friend, with-
out hurtbg her, that I DO NOT wish to btk to her child on the telephone? I seldom call her for that reason. But she calb me often and pub the child on the tebphone tbe moment I say “HeUo.”
I c a n n 01 undersbnd the phild and it b extremely exasperating. How can I bt my friend know that her child b not as bterestbg to others as she b to her?
DAILY READER DEAR READER; If you value her friendship — say nothing. The child will not be a chUd forever, and a good friend b hard to find.
“To trim the edge of the niche, merely twist gold ribbon, dip it bto paraffin and apply around the opening. Apply the goU ribbon by pour-
Local PTA toHearTalk on Scouting
Mrs. Carolyn Dorcas, district advber for tha Northern Oakland County Girl Scoub, WiU be guest speaker at the Benjamb Franklb Parent-Teacher Assoebtion meeting Wednesday at 7:35 p. m.
Theme for ttte evening will be “Readiing Out to Serve More Girb b the Community.”
The Parent-Teacher League of St Tripity Lutheran Church, corner of Auburn and Jessb, win spoiNor a spaghetti dinner Friday from 5 to S p. m. b the church base-
DEAR ABBY: My wife’s aunt came to spend a few days with us. She used the guest room whbh we recently redecorated. The new wallpaper has a lovely lifelike strawberry pattern all over it. The next morning the aunt came down covered with hives! She said she was allergic to strawberries! I saw the hives myself and called our doctor. I said she must have eaten strawberries before she came to our house and this was a debyed reaction. The doctor said- she could have gotten the hives from LOOKING at the strawberries on the wallpaper. I have never heard of anything so ridiculous b my life. Thb can’t be possible, can it ?
MRS. S. S.
DEAR MR. S. S ; It b indeed possible. It b c a 11 e d “pychoiomatic” — or, more sillily, “conditioning.”
say?
properly have come by but and had your son meet her at the bus terminal.
Q: Is it impolite not to look at a peradn aU the time he or she b taUcing to you? \ A: You are certainly ex^- ' ed to pay attention to the person you are talking with but thb does not mean that you have to look at him or her with a f bed stare and never glance anywhere else.
DEAR ABBY: A rebtive of mine gave me a blouse for my birthday and I have never seen an uglier one. It has every color of the rainbow b it and doesn’t go with a n y-thing I own. Every time thb rebtive sees me shc asks me how come I am not wearing that blouse. What should I
Coebairmen for On dbner
Mrs. Albert Papaxiah. Tickeb will be avaibbb at
^ On her way to classes University of Michigan student Elaine Garrett of Mark Avenue, pauses in front of her sorority house. This is the concluding piOure in the )fenes Press photographer Edward R. Noble took in Ann Arbor recently.
CONSERVATIVE DEAR CONSERVATIVE: Tell her you are saving it for a special occasion. (True — you never know when you’ll be invited to a Halloween party.)
What’s on your mind? For a personal reply send a self-
to Abby, care of The Pontiac
The Emily Post Institute cannot answer personal null, but all questions of general interest are answered to thb
2 Chapters Hold Joint Instruction
Pontiac Chapter, Order of
the Eastern Star No. 228, ami ....................., hekf
Areme Chapter No. 503, h a composite school of instruction Monday evenbg b the Masonte Tempte on East Lawrence Street.
R. Frederick Keteher, worthy grand patron. Grand Chapter of Mbhigan, OES, was instructor.
Mrs. Harry Eaton, wortiiy matron, and Charles Moore, worthy patrop of the host Pontiac Chapter, presided.
Special guesb were Mrs. R. Frederick Keichar, Grknd Esther, Grand Chapter of Michigan O.EJB., and Mrs. Atex MeVean, worthy matron, Birmingham chapter.
; Mrs. Earl Hoskins, Pontiac Chapter and Mrs. Robert Wasson, Areme Chapter, were dinner cochairmen. Mrs. John Schroeder planned the decor-
Representatives of Farm-bgtm, Cbwson, Royal (bk and other chapters were present.
HiARY van HOORELBEKE
The engagement of Mary AnnVan Hoorelbeke to Seaman Appren. Carlton R. Samson, son of theC. A. Samsons of Son Diego, Calif., is announced by her. foster parents, Mr. onA Mrs.S. J Vitasinsky of Franklin Boulevard. Her fiance is stationed with the U. S. Navy as a radar technician in the Mediterran-
1 I
TWELVE
TiffE VQ^TIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 27. 19«2
Then, there appeared Kaff and pbotocrqilMn. I waa getting a
By GAY PAULEY the boon o( a UPI Wenoa’a W#-	>><«*”■.	^
MANILA, PhiUpplneo Dear femily: Any tourist can meet royally. AU you have to do is be at the ri^ airport at the tight tttne.
I was, and did-when Japan's	I said. 'Tve beard IhM
.rinoe Akihito and Princaas the FO^Ibos me tannin for flntt Michiko paid a state visit to the lavish hospitality. But you're -hllipplnes.	-	-	--------------
When I arrived at tiw Manila airport I looked out to see thousands of people.
Must be some sort of holiday.
I first thought. But then, there seemed to be a lot (rf VIP types around.
“WeU,” I thought again. “The UPI bnreant have been alec at stops aU along this tear of the Far East, bat A1 laH (Philippiaes news manager) really has rolled oat the red
Military Jets swept overhead in a display of precision flying as Ip came down the ramp. As I started toward the arrivals gate,
You Never Know When You'll Meet Royalty
(Okay, Oklahoma, youYe hot-pitaUo too.))
“Come with am," said Kaff. “Yon’re just in time to watch Prince Akihito wnd Pitoccss Mkhflw take oft for Tokyo."
The royal couple was comidet-ing a state visit to the Philippines and I’d read along the way that was the day of departure, but had forgotten It for the mo> lenL
★ ★ ★
Crowds had gathered on rooftops, and Jam^ tiw terraces of the terminal—but no one pushed or dioved.
OUT OF ‘STYLE’
My flight had arrived &nm Hong Ko^ where the temperature was in the 40s. There I was, traveling in a wool dress, dragging a battered mink stole.
there ^
that Manila was a warm city, bat no one had prepared me (or a thermometer hover-
tag I to BM
IVy fliat la a wod dram on an airp^ Miron. Brallfaig san, too. No wonder almost every woman carried a parasol
le hot and tedloos wak akng le red carpet.
First, the bpws toward the Japanese iMiresentattves. It is not customary for the Japanme to shake hands, 1 was toU. Then
Lind, formerly of New York, with the Manila Chradde.
“Hiirry,’’ said Kaff, "it’s Mwut tbm for the Prince and Princess to start formal farewells.”
Nice thing about a prem card. AI’s and EDoi’s credentials for the royal visit got me right out on the airport apron again where officialdom was lined up for final ceremony of the state visit.
I of the womea were in e or pastel — the coolest 1 best behaving
a group of bands had bean Ulied in WMd War n. At this point, the Japa-lese couple begm shaking every land.
As they worked townH EBan, A1 and me, I kept thinking, “what does one do an meettng Japanese royalty? Cartsy — and say nothing? Or, “we’ve
A huge square of red carpet— about lOO-by-MO feet — had beei placed on the airport concrete.
On this, the royal couple, phis President Macapagal and the first lady of the Philippines, phis representatives of the Philippine
walk to say “sayonara.”
* * *
love closer to the rope,” somebody said — we were behind it. I looked toward my feet and noticed that the name plafe designated me as a government ad-
’ Or, “have a nice ite whea yon get
Then the royal couple started
trip - t work?”
As it turned out, the 'prince set^ protocol problems by remarking that it had been “ideasant visiting your country.”
The prinoem shook hmids abo, looked at my wool drem and re-V*hile -at her cool and creamy silk kl-equally cool cfeamy silk complexion thought, “How lovely she is!”
WWW Following the Japanese couple as the Philippines first family. Mrs. Macapagal, in white temo (native dress) made a friend instantly when she looked at my fur stole and broke into laughter.
“Well,” she said, “you’ll have trouble trading that in here.'
In Time for Christmas
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PUT to LAYAWAY
Try 9-Day Diet NOW
BY JOSEPHINE LOWMAN
My Nine-Day Reducing Diet is spring feature. However, remembering that this is the time of year when pounds are apt to strain at zippers and belts, I am printing the following lettm*. It should encourage you to get rid of those extra few pounds which may ive slipped up on you.
Also this letter will demonstrate for you what a great difference a few pow& can make in the figure and also the value of exercise in' distributing weight attractively.; The tetter says:
“I do want yon to know feat I used year Nine-Day Diet with great raccem. lasMe ef a week I tost almoto aiae penads. I rc-naiacd oa the diet a Uttte loag-er than aiae days and all toU lost II penads. I am net An a strict diet aiW bat am watchiag
I have also done various exer-
cises given in your column. My present weight is 111 pounds instead of 134. My measurements are bust, 35 indies, waist, 35 inches and hips, 35 inches. My nents were bust, 36 inches, waist, 30 inches and hips, 40 inches. I am past 40 in age. I have a small frame so you can set 1 was quite out of proportion.’^ ★	♦ w
This reader would have kwt al over with the loss of II pounds. In otiwr words all of her i ments would have becMne smalter but she would still have been out of proportion had she not exer-daed.
This is why exercise shooM be part ef a rednetag effort aa> less there Is seme nedteal rea-sw fer not deiag se. Abe, of come, we all knew new ef the benents to healtti which regaler
soon face the festivities and increased calorfe intake of Christman, I thought you might like to use my Nine-Day Diet in between these two figure saboteurs as s preventative measure.
A ★ w If you would like to have this diet which givee you a loss of from five to 10 pounds in nine days, send 10 cents and a
phine Lowman in care of this newspaper.
Tomorrow; “Men, Too, Find Lobs of Wei|^t Aids Good Health.”
Since we all probably ate too much at nianksgiving and oust
Polly's Pointers
Lamp Shade 'Grows'
By POLLY CRAMER
DEAR PWJLY — I cover the frame of an oM lamp shade with celar dastic, using small staples, to make a miniature menhouse for African violet rootings. Also paint onebalf of your darning egg a light color and the other half a dark color. Use the dark side when darning light socks and the light akte for dark aoda.	I- R- W.
DEAR POLLY-GouW you or one of your readers tell me how to stop the sweating on comment windows? It is ruining my sills and dnpee.	E. A. A.
DEAR POLLY - A qnkker aad easier way to apply even cteeaers is wife a medtoiiMhe point brash. It cev-
ers a forger tarfnes and Is ism Itobte to spatter than fee small stiff brashes feat came wife fee cteaaer.
I else am paper towels to remove fee first heavy layers when deoBiag off fee even selatfoa. Thea a good rinse off wife vtoeger aad water and fecre is a sparto liag even.	Mrs. 1. B.
DEAR POLLY — Instead of using nujttress covers whidi take three men and a boy to remove or put back on, use two bottom-fitted eheeta. The top one can be easily removed for washing every two or three weeks. It keeps the mattress or |wd cleaner.	Mrs. H. R. M.
DEAR PfXLY—Discarded matchstick curtains cut to fit and laced around wastrtaskets, planters, or other straight-skied objects make handsome accessories. They can be painted to match the decor or left In their natural finish.
Mrs. E. N.
Share your favorite homemaking ideas . . . send them to Polly in care of The Pontiac Press. You’ll receive a bright, new silver ddlar if Polly uses your ideas in Roily’s Pointers.
Card Playing Popular With Nation's Teens
NEW YORK (UPB - Card playing, one of the greatest adult recreations, abo is popular with teen-agers, according to a recent nationwide survey.
The survey dfocteoed the average teen plays card games most often on weekends and prefers to play with other teen-agers rather than with adults. Teen-age boys like Pinochle, Hearts, Poker and SOO Rummy, white the gfrfo iHofer Bridge.
$g98
Tbe Good Hoosdieqiiiig Shop
W
I
of Pontiac
51 W. Huron
B/UMglng.UpBcdy.
HINTS COUECTU ST MBS. DM 8USCS, aoTHn Of S
At firit oaw mother* m apt to think that ai-moat every cry i* a cry of hanger. (But they aoon learn that babie* cry for other thinga: air-bubble trouble, diaper diacooifort, kme-hnees, etc.) How can you tell if baby’s crying complaint it hna-ger? Well, you can’t every time, but a pretty reliable guide it bow much time haa elapsed since the last feeding. If be was fed only an hour or to before, be may need a little extra bubbling or cuMling before he’s ready for the sandman.
Mid aSosy. Baby's lirtt solid food it usually ccre^ tpecially prepared to supply Biieeded iron and ■ other important f nutrients. Gerber Cereal Sixes pro-I vide the ideal way to introduce cereal variety to your darling. This handy variety package contains 2 tmall-tize boxes of Oatmeal and I each of Rice Cereal, Barley, Mixed Cereal and High Protein Cereal-aU six are enriched with iron, important B-vitamint and cakium. All are delkalely delightfuL
SmcSss tfary. Early spoon food.
Don’t worry tf more food goes out than HI. The knack of swallowing hat to be lesmed. (Gerber Cereals are extra-smooth and easy to swallow.)
• If you make the cereal mixture quite soupy at . first, it srill totm mote like the formula baby’* teen
ably vUt on any 1^ without m hap. Gerber Baby Paiitt are made of i satin-soft poly- I vinyl film that’s I waterproof, leak- I proof, acid-proof. I
liwpnrsniwi Garber Baby Pana ate really nigged. wUl last and suy soft through many, many machino washings. Medium, large, extra-large, in pull-on or snap-on stylas. Gerber Producu Co.. Fremoiit,
The total contribution of the federal government to the Dfo-| irict of Columbia fm- this fiscal year was |32.7 million.	|
SPECIAL Mon., Tues,, Wed. Only I raiMANENTS leading Broad
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I Regular $30.00	>
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THB POifTIAC PRRSS. TUESDAY. NOYgMaKR 27, 1062
THIRTESK
BIG SAVINGS ON CWSE4}VT OF 1962 MODELS
Aids!
Odl FE 5-7569
TheM New Leet Year's Ids, Sye Glass or Be-hind-the-^, reg. I860 value now only 1189.00. We must make room for the 1963 models.
Only Fire 1962 Models Left First Corner First Served
AidiotMe of PoitUc
Fraternity Initiates Waterford Teacher
At dw 37tb aiinual conven* tk« of the AmtricaB Asao-dation of Commoas Chib Saturday at Adrian College. Charles W. Ssyie of HerbeU Drive was initlatad as an
hfr. Sayre is. a teacher in the Waterford Township SdKNd System and is a 1961 graduate of Adrian.
Gerald D. BenneviUe of Orchard Lake, a membw oil the board of governors of The Commons Chib, was a ddegate at the meeting.
The American Commons Chib is a national college social fraternity founded at Denison Univwsity, Granville, Ohio, in 1921 as a democratic social group without barriers of race, creed, nationality, economic status, the “blackball system” or similar restrictions odier than good character and scholarship.	*
*	* it
Sue Gilpin, daughter of the Watson GUpins, Bloomfield Hills is a membtf of the Alma College A Cappella choir, set for its fall tour. The opening concert will be in the First Presbyterian
Church of Jadown, Saturday
At the Woodward Avenue Presbyterian Church in Detroit, the cbdr iriB stag for the U a.m. Sunday servioe. That afternoon tta^ wifl be featured with the Sagtaaw Synqihany Ordieetra in Saginaw in a performance of
The ftnal concert is 9^ie^ uled for the First Presbyt^ rlan Church of Birmingham on Sunday evening.
The group has been select-., ed the 1963 official “Broadcasting Choir” for the United Presbyterian Church in the UjS.A.
Activities in diis connection indude four National Broadcasting Company “National Radio Pulpit” programs, four Columbus Broadcasting Sys^ tern “Church of the Air” programs, 12 programs for the NBC Protestant Hour and the NBC “Voices of Christinas” radio series.
Mark Socks
To help sort children’s bobby sox which are of almost the same size and otherwise identical, put each child’s initial on the foot of each of hid socks with an indelible marker.
Hove You Tried T/iiJ?
Fruited Breakfast Cake
Wt Hava Enjoytd Your Pqtronogo for
33 Yoort
MKER FOUNTAIN
35 W. Huron S».
By JANET ODELL Pontiae Press Feed Editor First of all, we want to put out a call for help. We need more recipes to keep this column going. We need most of all main dish, salad and bread recipes as we always have enough sweet things.-How about sending in your favorite redpe^ Be sure to attach your name— ,and a phone number helps.
Today’s recipe Is irom Mrs. Harry B, Edgington. She is a new Extension club mem-bw. When she has time after earing for her baby daughter, she likes oil painting.
Ifer recipe is for a breakfast cake, one you serve without fhM^. It’s an old family rectac-
DUTCHCAKE By Mrs. Harry B. Edgingtonil % cup shortening	^
2 eggs
2 cups sugar 1 09 raisins 1 cup currants IH cups milk m cups water L tablespoon nutmeg % teaspoon salt ^
1 tablespoon baking powder | 6 cups sifted flour
Cream shorteaiag and sugar and add egp. Beat welL Sift dry ingredients and add attemately wtth Uqnids. Stir in raisins and cnrraats.
Pour into 2 greased pansl (9x5x3) lined with waxed pa-i per. Bake 2 hours at 325 de-1
What do you know about “Second Car” Insurance?
Sboold bodi can cany dm same insurance? Is the cost the saaw toe both can? Win teenage driven make a difference in the rate yon pay?
These are only a tow of the tjoesdons titat youTl want answered if yon’re'a 2^ lamily..Can us today. Well be happy to ^ you the aniwen help i^an the right protection for you.
Thatcher, Patterson & Wemet
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Odd as it may seem to us — because we take such a lead in modem inventions — few American products are carbon copied by other countries. When American companies attempt to serve the needs of foreign women in personal and household fields they must conform to tiw tastes and habits of the people who will use them, even in the name they are called.
♦ w *
For instance what is known as a “Super Blue Blade” in America, is known as “Extra Blue Blade” in England. We would expect a baker’s half dozen itsomeone promised us an “Extra Blue Blade” . . . and in England the word “super” wouldn’t tell what it was meant to. It is all in knowing who thinks how.
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For rough and tumble playing, a Florida firm presents a nautical stretch suit for die Santa Claus set that is completely washable. For a quick trip to the supermarket with mom, a.dr ess-length corduroy jumper (also washable) buttons all the way down the front. Sizes 3 to 6x.
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OPEN EVERY NIGHT ’TILL 9 P.M.
This yaar . Shop Eoifyl Ramambar, tha Gifts you buy for Othors maon valuobla S&H Graan Stamps for yowl
Pottern Dtiivery Takes 3 Weeks
Laura Whedsr, Anne Ad-
va reminded that ft takea at hast three weeks for the patteme to ba de-Uverod. It may taka even longer diving tiie hidlday mail rush.
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J
9
ypUBTEEN
THE Pi)NTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1962
. 338 S. Africa Notivw ArrMlMi Aflor Riota
d^rMnatl?t■hmbMBa^ ntled In coonectkn with riots in the town of Pnarl Inst week.
CAVIETOirN, South Africa (UPI) ~ Actiag poUee
r OoL T.‘J. Chws said yester-
Eight persons died when natives ran amok with their panga knives.
HARRY FERGUSON aNONNATI (UPI) - Repub-can strategists JMiouting for rookie talent mi^ ffnd H rewarding to knock on the dooi^ of Room M3 in the Dixie Terminal Building
Robert Taft, heir to a long and JstinguUMd Ohio political tradi-tiott, already is being talked about as a poBsibk vice presidential candidate on the 18M GOP Ucket Given a little btt of hKk and
IN COMMAND - Rear Adin. James R. Reedy has taken over as commanding officer of the UR. Antarctic project Op-peratkxi Deep Freeze. He succeeds Rear Adm. David M. Tyree. Reedy was commander of Carrier Division 20.
5 in AF Transport Killed on Takeoff
atism, it h cenceivafale that he eeaU be rannhig far president in IM. He ta «, the right age. Ohla is a pivotal state ia a pcesiden-tiSl eleethw. Taft has Just demonstrated his ve^pnlUng power by being atterge.
Sitting in his law office here the other day. he disclaimed all presidential or vice presidential ambitions. Hut is standard procedure for a man vdio has Just sten>ed onto the national political state and is stin blinking in the glare of the spotlights.
SMYRNA, Tenn. (R - Five crewmm aboard a C130A Hercules were kiUed when the giant Air Force transport plane crashed on take^rff at Stewart Air Force Base.
klMjam ky Naelway. .6A6
Honorable mon-oround-house will toke most pleasantly ta his new look in pajamas, borrowed from the Orient. Wraparound, kimona-sleeved coat in rich print, with block sateen trim; solid black ponts, Oioosa from prints of red, blue, white or block. Sizes A, B, C, D.
As the pilot gaided the turboprop aircraft along the mala rnaway yestctday, he reported power faHsre oa a left engfaw. Moments later the plane veered oH to the left, phniied to the grennd a few haadrcd yards from the runway and exploded. The huge, black mushroom of sm^ was seen as far as 15 miles away in Nashville.
Only the plane’s large tail section remained intact. Wreckage was scattered over a sparsely wooded area.
Requests Kent County Be Involved in Air Case
GRAND RAPTOS (UPI) -The Kent County Aeronautics Board ■ • • t the
county bdie part in the air route case involvinig North Central
OUR PONTIftO MALL STORE . .. OKR EVERY EVEMIIHS TO 9 P.M.
North Central also has petitioned the Civil Aeronautics Board to terminate service by United Airlines to Flint, Muskegon, Lansing and Saginaw.
WHIRLAWAY
THE TOUGHEST STAINS
How About Bob Taft for President
sitioiL The strength of the American system is ^ enterprise.
“I am opposed to building np the concentratton of power in the 1 government to the | it interferea with fai^ liberty.”
REPUTA110N INVALUABLE Taft thinks his father’s reputation was invaluable in his first foray into national politics. Ihe rider 1^’s strength was his record of integrity, a back-breaking work schedule and his willingness to listen to all sides of a question bs-before making up his mind.
YeuMlTnRlMsmnekef Ms. too, and an example ef Us falr^ mindOMem Is thU he eaU he gave frill supportte the Kanhedy admiaMmtisai’s action in the Unhrorrity e« Misrisstypi tote-gratioa ease. He dm waa pleased by the aetiaa on Cuha, bat it is a neatter ed rseerd that Taft was Ingtog search aai selsan af si^ earryi^ offdi-slva weapins long befsce Kennedy acted.
Balancing those assets is what can only be desioribed as a political handicap. It ia an intan-
But what the intrfessional politicians already are recalling is that his graiidfather, William Howard Taft, was president of the United States and that his father, the late Sen. Robert A. Thft, was known as “Mr. Republican” to a large and loyal fo^w-ing across the nation.
Close year eyes as Taft talks
gible thing invriving personality lure mt
and the picture thht comes over the jteleviiiioa screen.
to his father. The voice is the same and m b mnch of the political philosophy:
“I am opposed to fiscal Irre-q»nsibility. The failure to balance our budget b damaging our po-
MLROY GONE - James J. Kilroy, M, a legend of World War n with hb slogan “Kilroy Was Here” died in Boston. A shipyard inspector, Kilroy put the slogan on equipment sent to the front.
If hanji work BkMM win do it, Teft’s future b promising. He b in hb fourth term as a member of the Ohio bgbtature and b majority floor leader.
The eld« Taft was not a _ minded man and did subscribe to toe theory toat a candidate had to stage a one-man circus fte the voters.
Thb may(have been one of the factors tori cost him toe Republican nomination for president pt toe 1952 convention.
He Journeyed badt and forth acroas aU the state’s H counties in hb campaign for congressman at large. He attended 35 county fairs and vblted newspaper and TV-radio offices all over the state.
And he beat a nmn named Kennedy. The Demoerutk nam-inee was Richard D. Keanedy,
Even Taft’s most devoted supporters kept loeking over their shoulders at toe	'
of Dwight D. Eisenhesrer.
Persbtent whispers went through toe hotel rooms and across the convention floor that while Taft was eminently equipped to be president of t h e United States, he couldn’t win and Eisenhower amid.
HONEST, NOT FLASHY
It may be unfair to form a judgment on the basb of an hour’s conversation, but the impression b that young Taft b not a flashy personality and b too honest to try to turn hinoself into one.
m, he rides to the
witbpnttti
warswithi Kb^wer’i . qrick' wit of Preettmt Kea-■ eagagtof grin ef
_ not appear oa too amitoh bal-loto dbtributod by toe Democrats.
Tift b qukto to admit tori (ha op-
I teU B ■
peatttoa no| too formldabie.
He waa graduated from Yale and the Harvard Law School and in WteU War H served in the Navy in both the Padftc and Eu-
The unofficial vote was T a f t 1,7M,133 and Kennedy 1,194,492, but the big margin of victory nby be deceptive.
LISTLESS CAMPiUGN Kennedy waged a Ibtleos campaign, nwde anunhappy statement t^t left him vulnerabte on toe civu ri^b bsue, and hb name
lilmsiithi k if laiiaa
opeon umiberB*
He has been speciahaing la cor-I porate law in toe firm of Taft, Stettiniua and Hoilister, but admits he has felt for 8«ne time toe U« to get into toe exdtlog game of priitics. ____________________
Husbands ScoM if Wives Look Old
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Ford ideas SO contagious they started a new trend in cars!
If you think most cars today have a lot in common, you can blame the Ford sketches above.
This handful of Ford ideas sparked a revolution In'car design and fathared most of the excitement you'll find In cars, today.
Ford ideas have a habit of being exciting (and downright practical, / too). Consider these new Ideas found In our '63s: the 1963 Ford Calaxie's new velvet ride that smooths out any road at any speed (it cost Ford $10 million to bring it to you but it doesn't cost you a cent extra) ...consider full twice-a-year or every 6,000-mite maintenance* th<*' takes the fuss out of driving and keeps the fun in (and saves you money in the
bargain) . .. consider a new^3-speed fu/fy synchronized transmission that lets you shift frdm second to first without coming to a stop... consider the brgest choice of mnv cars ever offered—44 models to help you find exactly the car to fit your needs and your budget. /
These are samples of the new Ford ideas. Only Ford offers you these advantages now... though we have no doubt that the other makril wilt get around to them eventually. So if you want to get tho car of tomorrow today... If you want the features of the future now... we can offer only one suggestion: See yOur Ford Dealer today!
Here's Aamkt’t most contagtews rootUne as seen on the 1963 ford Csluie 50D/XL
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A
THE PONTIAC PRESS
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 87, 1962 \
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN,
FIFTEEN
Rochester to Seek lIS. Spur to Industrial Park
By ROGER 8RIGLEY ROCSIESfBRr-Tbe Village Council last ni^ voted to apply for a |tt,6ao federal grant as a step toward estaUishing an Indus-trial park in the southeast cwner of Rochester.
Foilowing a presentation by Edward Hustoles, representing village [danning consultants Villkan Uman It Associates, Inc., the ooundl approved a resolutioa to
apply far the graid to cover sur-|||ieclty toportidpatiaolatheM-vey and planning costs for «! renewal program, Hu-the project	--u. ..w	-
ne prspesd was adapted hy a U vets. OwadlBlaa Edwin M. Aldrich cast the ealydis-
cse R. Martin was ahseat irdtt last oighl’s BMetiag. PreparMion of plans and receipt of a grant does not commit
The final decision would be made after the planning survey is completed and a pid>lic heai^ conducted.
Hustoles said at this time the Nualtaat firm estimated the
OK Civic Center Lease
SOUTHFIELD — A lease agreement with the Southfield Building Authority for construction of the first phase d a civic coster
ONE DAY SALESMEN - These three Troy Goodfeliows are practicing their sales talks in preparation for Dec. 7, when they and other Goodfeliows in neigi^ing Avon Township will be selling newspapers. Pro-
ceeds fixnn flw sale will be given to needy families in the area. Tbose pictured are (from left) Lee Morningstair, pr^ent of tiw Troy Goodfeliows Oub; Frances P. Baker, treasurer; and John Truesdell, secretary.
______________ (_________________
Utica C. of C, Pushes Metropolitan District
Eight 4-H'ers Visit Chicago
approved by the City Council last ni^t.
Specificdly, the agreement is for rental of office space by the City Council in the proposed City Hall which the building authority is scheduled to construct along with a police station, recreation
I AD sf these buildings wonU I be tacloded in the |7-million
would be eUminated, and two n bridges would be built to rq> the p
strnction at im-Mile and Ever-
The local costs, 14 of this, would be 1182,000. The federal government would pay three - fourths of the project under its urban renewal program, Hustoles explained.
WOULD QUALIFY The Vilican-Leman representative said the firm had been satisfied in its study that the village would logically qualify for a grant and that a grant would be l^ally ih order.
From a preUmiaary review of the area ad jaeeat to East Third Street, Hastoles said, N per cent of dws tract nr eswcre fonad to have “dcficleiicies of a major character.”
that 50 per cent of the people iw
Ihe.pseUem of rdoeation is
thiak, Hastolefl saU.
After agreeing to apidy for the planning grant, the council ap-p 0 i n t e d Vfflage Manager PanI York to the post of urban renewal coordinator.
Converses Go North
Couple on Honeymoon
DAVISBURG-Now on a Nbrth-ern Michigan honeymoon are Mr and Mrs. David 0. Converse, who ■ ■ ■ vows in a recent ceremony at the Davisburg Baptist Giurch.
Rev. Jack Mc(3urry officiated at the candlelight rites.
WWW
The bride, the former Margaret Ann Lawson, is the daughter of hfr. and Mrs. Orville Lawson of TindaU Road. The bridegroom’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Converse of 641 Warfield St.
For her wedding, the bride
chose a gown of Chaatifiy lace
Stormoat of Berkley and Wiliam PoweO of Obrkslaa. Approximate 175 guests ah tended the wedding and receptieo which foUowed in the church ball The newlyweds will reside at 226 Baldwin Ave., Pontiac.
UnCA--Despite opposition by Sterling Township, the Greater Utica Chamber of Commerce is contihuing its drive tablishment of a “metropolitan district’' in ^ area.
The disi^ according f» Camber of commerce spokesmen, weald kdade the dty of Utica mi the tewasUpo of Shelby and Starling.
“This entire area of Shelby, Utica and Sterling is the home and working ground of people who are one in business, service to each other, play, worship and cultural pursiiits,’’ released by the group said.
WWW “We recommend to the na^ef, councU and planning commlssloB of Utica and their
in the townsh^M of Mlby i Stmling, a move farinvito i urge one another to begin disc sions leading to the eventual merging of fhe three political dh visions of one community into a single body. . ."
CRITICIZE STERLING In anothm poflion of the state-
toes sa fte mtotor of appreadh lag affairs of the eemmaaity from the staadpoint ef what
sin to learn what may be best
Township will be faced with the question of incorporation in a spe^ Jan. 7
c(Hnmittee> December to study the possibilities of a merger. The idea of a metropolitan district was selected &0m a number of possibilities examined by the group.
WWW
InoOiporation into a huge city, ' ers said, should
be put off until residents could afford the tax burden.
Three handred acres ef SM-by Township were annexed to tiM city in Jeiy, tocseaslng Utica’s Stas aad popatotlsa by more than tt per eenL Sterling Township is dragging its feet in tiw ihive, according to W. F. Schuchard, secretary of the chamber of commerce, v
aider the beaeflto of a metre-pelitaB dmdet, as apposed to a city, before voting ia the
^	I a"*"”*”'	I Sonje of tho specific steps that
County Group Attends under the terms of the agree- would be taken with the federal
kj *• I •	starting in 1963 the city will grant. If received, were outlined, over satin with a chapel van
Notional L.ongress jj^y ^ building authority 875,000 by Hustoles.	| and a acaUoped neckline nad
a year for IS years, after which He said that Paint Creek would hem trimmed with seed pearls Eight Oakland County 4-H’ers **“ “"i"	city-owhed be straightened. Third Streetj and sequins,
are visiting Chicago this week	Shecarriedacascadearrange-
as a result of their hutstanding	* . *	*	|f;*rh«nw«r-	yeUow chrysanthemum
achievement in 4-H activities. | With the signing of the lease, MTCnenwore rony and pompons. The fingertip veU, While in Chicago they will visit the building authority plans to seU	Avon Twr» trimmed with Chantilly lace, was
w 41st annual National 4-H Con-11 miUion in revenue bond-- to fl-	held by a crown of seed pearls
nance construction of the build- AVON TOWNSHIP—A kitdien- and sequins, togs.	ware party, will be conducted at	WWW
The bonds will be retired with 1 p.m. tomorrow at the Elmwood' Jeanne Lawson served her sis-
Parent Unit to Hear of Jobs for Retarded
WALLED LAKE -Job placement and training for mildly retards diildren will be the topic of a panel discussion tomorrow at. a meeting of the Special Education Parents’ Unit for Retarded Chil-dren.
Tie meeting wffl be held at 8 pju. in the Home Economica Room of Walled Lake Junior High School.
Panelists include James Yoder, a special education teacher who has worked on job placement programs at WaUed Lake High
ment the Chamber of Comnwrce evJro^nimti^foict that there
took Sterling Towntidp to task. |j a Metropolitan Dtotoicttog	The first bulldtog to America for:
“We are depneatory, lhangh, ■’••tod.	^ supervisor of the teaching scientific agriculture was;
M the attitude fhswu by some Schuchard said he hopes ret- lEconomic Development Commis-ierected on the Michigan State Uni-of the Sterling Tewaship'^ trni- > ideals of Sterling weiM cen- Ision to Lansing.	'versity campus to 1867.
the
gress presently in session there.
Those selected for the trip by tile connty 4-H awards committee include Frank Williamson Jr., Waterford Homemakers Oub; Harold Barnard, Trey Livestock Club; Marilyn Pal-shaa, Ortonvllle Club: Ardis Storm, East Orion Club; and Liwla Ritter, Lyen Township NH Ly Wix Club.
Also participating in the trip are Douglas Norland, Eric Woodward and Linda Jacobson, all of the Bloomfield Qub.
Adults accompanying the ei^t' on their trip include Jack Worthington, oiddand County 4-H Agent, and Mr. and Mrs. Keith Middleton, leadore to the East Orion Qub.
the rent paid by the city out ef its general fimd.
About SO per cent of the construction will be paid by a federal public works acceleration grant recently approved to Washington.
To Show Germany Film
ROCHESTER — “Germany,” the second film of this year’s Lions CHub’s travelogue series, will be drawn at 8 p.m. Saturday in the high school. The color film 6tory traces Germany’s history from its toception to modern times.
Methodist Church, Auburn and Grant roads, under the sponsorship of the WomuB’s Society of Christian Service.
The public is invited to attend. Proceeds will go toward a gift (or the dtorch.
ter as maid of honor. The bridegroom’s sister Reva Converse was bridesmaid, whQe Linda Ahonen, the bride’s cousin, was junior bridesmaid.
John Pierce of Davisburg wus best man. Ushers wen David
MRS. DAVID 0. CONVERSE
Stock Show Grand Chomp
Iowan's Angus Top Steer
CHICAGO (UPI) — A polio serve grand championship last
crippled father of two, who works a family - size farm with his fath-.er, today owns the nation’s most valuable steer, a sleek Black Angus named “T^ ef Iowa.”
AW*
But Lyle Miller, 32, Osceola, Iowa, won’t have the 975-pound summer yearling for long. It goes on the auction block tonrarrow.
“Tap of Iowa” won the grand championship yesterday at the International Live Stock Show, which continued today with judging of breeding cattle, barrows and dressed carcasses.
“It’s just wonderful. It’s the most wondofol thing that ever happened to us,” Miller’s pretty brunette wife, Shirley, 27, said, laughing and soltoing with joy.
A	A	A
Tie grand championship was Miller’s first major victwy to 18 tries at the International. He also walked off witii other top awards in the steer judging yesterday.
A	A	A
Hb pen of three Aberdeen Angus steers, toclitdlng “Top of Iowa,” won the grand championship in that diviston. A Miller steer was judged the bast Junior yearling.
SECOND-BEST ANGUS MiiWw, a slender, soft-spoken, brown - haired man of medium h^t, with the sun and wind-burned cbedu of a man who works outdoors, said “Top of Iowa” was only his second best angua steer this year.
A .A W
Another Miller steer won (be rb-
week at the Eastern National Livmtock show, Timonium, Md. "Top of ibwa” placed fourth anu^ the Angus steers at t h e show.
AAA
Miller said he feh the Eastern N a t i 0 n a 1 Reserve chlrapion “was my best caU at the time. I would have bronibt him here
but they told me I would get $1 a pound for him. I get only about 61 cents.”
Miller’s grand dtanqiion edged out another Iowa entry, a curly-coated, senior, shorthorn cidf shown by shapely, brown - haired Kaye Pollock, 17, Mount Auburn. ■ A ■ A A
Miss Pollock had the grand champion steer two years ago, an
animal named “Herky” which sold for $16,725. She used half of her money to pay off the mort-_ _ on the family farm and banked the rest for her education at a Des Mlones, Iowa, business college. Her reserve grand champion yesterday was named “Thil ’L’ Do.”
A A A Finishing behind Miller’s and Miss Pollock’s entries was "Golden Chance,” a Hereford summer yearling owned by Don Geppert, 23, KimbaU, S. D.
MUlen Embrace, *Top* Awaits Auction
Troy Appoints 5 CD Deputies
TROY — The <3ity Commission last night ^ipototod five deputy directors to the Troy Civil Defense
They will amist City Manager David Ffarestona, udiQ aim is Trey’s civil defense director.
Fire Chief Lauren Ford was appetotod assktaat civil defense direetar aad d^uty director ef tire ceatreL
Otiier deputy dtoectors appointed include Police Chief David E. Gratopp, law enforemnent; Super-intendmit ef PubUe Works Cart Canqibell, englneertag services; and John Diefenbaker, princqml of Baker Junior Hi^ Sch^ depuQr director of sdraob.
take: a ixxjK AT the: be:8T-uke:d cadiixac of aix. time:!
There’s no question about it—America has fallen to love with this one.	,
' It’s the Cadillac car of 1963—and it is already attracting more attention—and more owners—than any other motor car in Cadillac history. And to be perfectly honest with you, we aren’t a' bit surprised.
You see, good news about earn travels fsst. And ilie news about Cadillac has never been better ... nor its owners more vocal.
Give a new Cadillac owner half a minute and he’ll tdt you hew much be likes the new Cadillac look. Clean. Majesto. Substantial. Eiegant.
Give him a full minute and he’ll talk about the ear’s new luxury and comfort—and about the incred-
ible range of models, colors and interior appointmento.
Show just a little more interest and he’ll hava you in the driver’s seat and out on the highway-reciting the roil call of Cadillac’s engineering feats, A km<tother, quieter engine. A new true center drivu line. A triple braking system.
We’re glad our owners aro demonstrative. And evsD if you nibtract the usual new ear fervor— you’ll find that what's left ow is reason soough to visit your dealer without delay.	•
If you see him fast—maybe you caBTfie the flag teTonm^bbriiood with a 1963 Cadiilae.
An sary move, you know, gives you a full year ai- .
the wheel,
VISIT YOUR XX>GAL AUTHORIZED OADIL.LAC DBAUBR
JEROME MOTOR SALES COMPANY
276-280 S. SAGINAW STREET !• PONTIAC, MICHIGAN
/ SIXTEEN
THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 27, 1962
Shrine Quarterback Reaps Bronze Award
Lov/tber Nanied County's Outstanding Prep Gridder
By JERE CRAIG lanother honor in his bulging fall CharlM (Chuckt Lowtber, a harvest of acclaim today when high school footbaU player rich he was named the wtstanding in tradition and talent, reapedrPtaJ**’ hi Oakland County for 1962.
He will be recipient of the bronze shoe Thom McAn Trophy.
As the local recipient, Lewv ther wilt be ceasidered with
It wilt be presented to him display by his scbod at the annual Pontiac Press banquet honoring the All-County players in mid-December.
tioB for a H,MI schoiarsliip to be awarded on the huts of football ability, team play, lead-
petitive spirit and schoiaBtic
The winner of the national eom-petitkm will be announced in the spring.
Lowther’s ri^t playing shoe
will be painted in bronze by the Thom McAn Company and
The 17-year-old passer has beea aamed to the Press’ All Caanty sqoad, the AllCathoUc team in Detroit, and the Associated Press and the United Press Internathmal’s AU-State Class B teams.
Selected by The Press, the 5-10, 175-pound quarterback for Royal Oak Shrine High School becomes the seventh county performer to be nominated.
While the award is in its 13th
presented in Oakland County until 1996. The first winner was WaOed Lake Hiigh School’s John Walker. He was followed by Lou Pavloff of Haiei Park.
the county gridders with 15 touchdowns and finished third in the county scoring race with 90 points, only three behind the winner.
In succeediag years the win-
of West Bloomfield; Charles Brown, Poatiae Central High
Jnday of Nor thville Hl^ School.
Lowther led Shrine to a 6-1 record this season. A three-time letter wirniw in football and a member of the varsity squad all four years he attended Shrine,' the blond southpaw signal caller led
tkm Of 56 pounds and iVh inches helped him to run a ’'little” harder.
PASSING THREAT
has a fondness for f
In addition, figures compiled by the school indicate Lowther hit 38 of 7S pass attempts this past season and accumulated almost 1,400 total yards rushing
He credits Shrine coadi A1 Fracassa with improving his ling ability.
T didn’t ran as a sopho-
ster admits. “Ifo (Fracassa) taught me to stay low and mn
Lowther, also, notes the a
pd M of 14 attempts against Beno-dicune. Last	he worked
at Titan Stadium in Detroit and had the opportunity to confer with pro quarterback Jim Ninow-aki who was working out with members of the Detroit Lions.
'It is the Lions who have provided much of the footbaO tradition in his family badigroiand. His dad. Jack, wns a player with the University of Detroit and the Li<ms; and his stepfatho- is Dutch CTatt; 'an all-time star for the
T Uo2m
”My tathsr Owns wasted BN to be • feoadk player,”
■led sen play one qaar-tar of a feetball gaam m he BMt aa aattanely deatt hi aa akplaae wwHfWt la 1992.
The year following his fadter’s death, young (%uck be^ his gridiron career in the Jack Lowther Uttle League. He spent four years in that league, played one yOar id Jane Adams Junior High Schod and has added another four at Shrine IQgh School. His parents have encouraged his play^ and his mother is probably his biggest booster.
While he admits Fracassa has beea the biggest hety to his foot-
ball playing, Lowtber hu a driv ing ambition to learn the gaim from all soutcn. He attends din les, talks football with his step father, and reads extensively.
•Tread ad awtalle(...mag-aifaws, books, aaything I can get my haads on.”
College is in the future; he ha. received approxlmatdy 1* ers but hasn’t made a dedsioi yet. He is a letter winner in trad and will compete again thu spring as a sprinter. He hM rut toe 109-yard dash in ;10J.
Hien in the bright, but stil h%, future there is the possl bllity of prd football. And if he’a good enough, toere is always the chance anotlw dmpter could be added to the Detroit Lion’s saga.
Trade Makes Yanks 'Even Stronger'
N. Y. (UPI) The New York Yankees defied baseball tradition today and broke up a winning combination “only becauM we feel we’re even stronger” with the addition of pitcher Stan Williams from the Los Angeles Dodgers for slugging flrst baseman Bill Skowron.
“We got the pitcher we wanted and we're all Mt now,’’ said Yankee general manager Roy Harney
elatedly. “This is it -nnajor deals for cerned."
Bathgate Ties for 3rd in NHL
Delvecchio Still First, GeoHrion Is Second
HOIITREAL (AP) - Slow-starting Andy Bathgate of New York
season, is begiiming to get on-tracked and make his presence feK in the National Hockey League scoring race.
The veteran Ranger right wing picM up six points in last wedt’s ganwai aiid leaped from 13th to a tie for third according to figures released today by the NHL.
Bathgate picked up two goals and four assists to run his total for toe season to 19 points, good enough for a tie for third wito Parimr MacDonald of Detroit Detroit’s Alex DelVecchio lacked up a goal and an assist to retain the lead with 22 points. He also leads in assists with 16. HOWE THIRD Bemie (Boom Boom) Geoffrkm of
Baizy Bavasl wu equally
althoagh he uid they probably lager Ralph Houk, who sees in the wiU make more trades. ”Oar |26^year-old right-handed Williams fiM* mmm m riahUtanird ««>ther rcgulsT Starter to go with ^	'y™ , Ralph Terry. Whitey Ford and BUli
long tydl Utter and we f^	'
ttowron can be toe man, ’ be “Wiiiiamg fits into our plans jperfecUy” Houk declared. “He’s
Possibly toe happiest man of all about toe deal was Yankee
Seasons Second Half Under Study by Army
WEST POINT, N.Y. (AP)-
________________ _______ Don’t try to sell Army Coach
ing his total to 20 points with two'Paul Dietzel on the idea that goals and two assists last week. Saturday’s football game with Detroit’s tireless Gordie Howe Navy is the "only” one on •*“ is Hfth with 18 poinU, followed Cadets’ schedule, by Johnny Bucyk of Boston and “No, sir.” Dietrel grinned slyly Ston Mikito, Ab McDonald and today before stodlng his
Bobby Hull, all of Chicago, with

0	a pw. « It a
1	u a It • ir
thro^ a workout. “Lets put it this way. We have idayed one-half of our season. Now we pbty the other half.”
a MeDoiliM aiMf*
SSkiul Cbietm
I » IT 7 M 17 t 11 17
2 Days Left for Sunday Bowlerama
to bawl in Sunday’s qualifying ruunds at either Howe’s or Nar-West aunt have their en-IriM tamed Is to tteir local t or to TV PreM itby mUUght
young, he can throw hard and he, won 14 games for the Dodgers this ' year. If he does the same for us next year. I’ll be more than satisfied.”
LAUGHED OFF On the heels of yesterday’s trade, there were reports that Skowron would move on quickly to toe Kansas City A’s for second baseWumrJerry Lumne. but Bava-si ifiei^ laughed at the thought.
“We plan to platoon Skowron with Ron Fairly,” he said, “and that will help us maneuver more. Last season they pitched too many left-handers against us. Now that we have Skowron, if something Vppens to WUlie -DaviSr Fairly ciii go to center field. And if we’re forc^ to play Tommy Davis at third, we can put Fairly in left.” Leaving the Yankees after Ine seasoBB was something of a wrench for the 3^year-«ld Skowron nlthon^ it wasn’t a complete shock.
“I hate to go,” Skowron said, 'but that’s baseball. I’ll do the best I can few the Dodgers. Tbat’s the only way I know how to play.” Skowron, who has had back trouble from time to time during Ms career, batted .270 last season but Mt 23 homers and drove in 80 runs for the Yankees.
Shortly after toey did, the Cincinnati Reds obtafoed first base-
TVm nailed and IWraday ntonhv wiB be pae-adttod to bowl SuNtoy.
Squads win begin at 11 am at each estobUshmeat with toe poosftBity of a 11 a.m. squad should capacity V reached.
TV top 6W.per cent from each ksase wiB^toder toe finals and mt assared of at^ tost $11 just for epaUfyiag.
Pairings wffl V mnonaced
Dietzel, of coutm, is under no pressure to beat Navy. He’s working on the first year of a five-year contract after comin| h«e from Louisiana State, and refiort-edly told Army braM not to expect miracles at the start.
Dale Hall, his predecessor, fired after Navy beat Army last year.
The Cadets know the key to success in this game. They’ve gcA to stop Middle quarterback Ro^ Staubach. To hear Dietzel tell it, Staubach can do everything but erect the goalposts before the game.
COMPLETE BOOK
'He’s fantastic, that Staubach,’ said Dietzel. “We have scouted Navy in all games this year, and we have seen picturM of their games. I can honestly uy I know more about Navy than any othm' team in the country except Army.
“Staubach is the man who makes Navy go. The things he can do on a footoaU field are unbelievable. But his accomplish-Wnts are not news to me. I heard about him when he was in high "scliool and I was at LSU. No, I didn’t get a crack at him.
field, and you have to cover them all over the field.”
Tlmt off his chest, Dietzel turns to his own club.
'You know,” he said. “I think we have a much better passing atUck than most people give us credit for. A lot of our pass plays are optional and t^ wind up u running plays.”
FAST RECOVERY But tome probably will be more passing against Navy becauM John Elleraon will be back after having been sidelined in the lakt five games because of elbow troubles. He undmwoit surgery 10 days ago and Dietsel said his recovery wu remarkable.
'Maybe he’U grab a . mu,” Dietwl oburved. also hope to be stronger through the return of George Pappas JMumy Johnson.”
Senior fullback Pappas has been on the borderline scholastically, while sophomore Johnson missed the lut two games because of an ankle injury suffered in a scrim-
Bell, Richter Unanimous
AP Names All-Big TenTearn
CHICACib (AP)—Tackle Bobby teams. Rounding out the first team i and outstanding' 'in practically
Bell of Minnesota and end Pat Richter of Wisconsin were unan-inuMis choices for the 1962 All-Big Ten football team named today by The Associated Preu.
guard Jack Cvercko oflevery phase of football. The line Narthwwtem, tackle Don Brumm averagu 220 pounds and the
With Bell being a unanimous selection for the second strai^t year, Minnesota placed three men <m the first team—all coming fiom the Gopher line wMch was rec^nized u one of the best in the nation.
Other Gophers making toe team were guard Julian Hook and end
of Purdue, and halfbacks Marv Woodson of Indiana and Paul War-field of OMo State.
Illinois, Iowa and Michigan were shut out.
The 1962 team is big, mobile!
______^________ year with! Micmgan sute au» papDeo pMt.	»»»»«•» •■"[♦h»ir gain*________________
San Di^o, for whom he hit .318,|two berths with fullback Georgejkey to the national collegiate foot- nia Saturday well could be the and later hit .214 in 14 games with Saimes and center Dave BMu--;baU champhmsMp.	determining factor in this year’i
toe Reds.	'man, both repeaters from the 196l| Coach Joe Kuhariefa’s lads from championship.
Sports Calendar
Cbrirtlu at at rr«d

KaV Tarit at Detroit
“They uy George Mira at Miami Is sensational. I agree. But Staubach. Fantastic.
“This Navy team givu you plenty of spreads, all over the
backfieid 186.
Seldom has the conference team come up wito a trio of backs who are eqiudly outstanding on defense and offoue as Woodson, Warfield and Saimes. Saimes was
second in the conference in rushing with 405 yards in 85 attempts, edging Woodson, who hqd 383 yards in 94 carries.
NEW RECORDS Richter, although a marked man, grabbed 33 passN for 440 yards in Mven conference games md added to his career pass
Irish Again Holding Key to Collegiate Grid Title
^ Bright	John Campbell. Joining Richter,
^nS^torsforf^b^	also made the team last
I^lio Alyerez in the fifth trade	^
of the ^tii^ so far.	ipion Wisconsin’s tremendous pass-
Bright, who can catch, pUy | combinaUon. quarterback Ron third baN and second, also, bat-, ted .273, hit 13 homers and drove'	u..	^	th-ifor the crown their old grads won
in 67 runs tor the Senators. Al- TWO BERTHS	As has banned so oft*" “> Light times, but the outcome of
verei spent most of the year with Michigan State also grabbediPWt. Notre Dame agam holds toeu^j,	southern Califor-
catching reonds at Wisconsin.
VanderKelen, a senior who had played only 90 seconds of varsity football before the season started was second only to Northwestern’s Tmn Myers in passing with 77 completions for 1,009 yards to Myers’ 81 for 1107. But the Wisconsin signal caller led the Big Ten in total offense with 1,237 yards.
By The Associated Press | South Bend aren’t in the running
Booing Has Affected His Ploy: Parker
Pittsburgh Fans Bench Layne
PITTSBURGH (AP) - A smaU segment of Pittsburgh’s capricious pro football fans havq accomplished what few National Football League rivals have done in 15 years-bench Bobby Layne.
they were when they booed Bob-
by in Detroit.”
NOTHING NEW Booing isn’t really new for the 34-year-old Layne. But this year.
He may be resented by Mme, but
he’s still* respected.
’GREAT INJUSTICE’
Buddy Dial, the Steelers’ pass-catching whiz, said tois about the
Southon California, with the [Rose Bowl berth in hand and an I, untied season in sight, closes its regular season against the Fighting Irish in California this weekend.
The Trojans, unbeaten in nine games, fought off a strong chal-' _ by Big Ten champim Wis-coii^ ^ retained the No. 1 spot in the weekly Associated Press
the malcdhtented Pittsburgh fans booing situation:
Troubled by the vociferous booing Layne has suffered all season by hometown fans. Coach Buddy Parker said Monday night he will keep his veteran quarterback on toe sidelines when the Steelers play the St. Louis Cardinals at Forbes Field Sunday.
"I don’t think he should be sub-jeCM to the abuse of the fans,” Parker said. “Bobby doesn’t play as wall at home as be does away. The booing has affected Ms play.
have been particularly loud and! “Bobby Is one of the aU time
derisive.
Although the Big Ten came up with some outstanding sophomores this season, not one first-year man made the first team. With the exception of CVercko, Woodson and Warfield, seniors dominated the squad.
CTnCAOO (AP) - TIm IM AU-Mt T*a
FINAL POLL
The national champion will be determined in next week’s final poll of the season.	*	>un>wo
Southern Cal, wMch secured the	*
“Bobby is one of toe aB time 8178^11*1; 7l«^mS»aA peats. Booing him when he Wasl»«„“
The climax came against the [injured was the greatest inpatice Washington Redskins two weekslever done to an athlete in Pitts-ago when acrid boos and catcalls burgh.” greeted Layne as he was helped Why do the fans boo Layne? from the field after being clob-| “I don’t know,” Parker said, bered by a hard tackle. |“Some fans have always done Resentment to the treatment ofjthat. And quartebacks are the Layne has formed on the SteeiersjprinM targets because they are team and wito other rooters. One;in the limelight A staunch fan is David J. McDonald,'	'	'
over UCLA, gained 19 of cKHTit-Bni Anutroiif. sti 43 first-place votes and 397 points “
on the basis of 10 for first, nine	“--------------
for second and so on.
presidant of the United Steelworkers, who severely criticized the
I’m not saying that Bobby Won’t booing in a Pittsburpi television
.....................-. appearance last Sunday.
A teammate of Layne’s who did not want to be identified said:
Acc.pt. Goto. Bowl BM -j;
Park-
only a portion
imiVERSITY PARK. Pa. (AP) who are doing the boo .
■Penn State’s ninth-ranked foot- er added. “But out crowds have ball team will play its fourthln^t been large this year. If we straight post-season game in thejhisd a large crowd, you would Gator Bowl at Jacksonville, Fla., hear very little booing. The bob-Dec. 29.	lers would be drowned out—like
“We don’t mind them booing us as a team—we can accept that. But the way they have been on Bobby has been terrible. Everyone on our ball club respects him.
get out of hancMike it has Bobby.”
By placing Layne on the side-linas, Parker will turn toe signalcalling duties over to Ed Brown, ex-Chicago Bear who came off the bench to lead tow Steelers to a 23-21 victory over the Redskins. Parker %aid he’ll use third-stringer Terry Nofoinger in rw-
Wisconsin (M) dosed its and won the visiting spot in the Rose Bowl with a 146 victory over Minnesota. Thw Badgers advanced from third to second in the rankings, just 37 points back of Southern California. They took nine flrst-plaee votes.
ouAspe --u Budd«. iiMUmB atai*.
■ACU — Oou* BUdnjtMui.ioU: Lea
• Vereet r»nner. 1

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le«t; Bobbitt. Mleb-
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I
THE PQKTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27. 1962
SEVENTEEN
r&ssrl&s
Collegiate Standings
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HE GREW HAIR”
Lakers Lead Western Race
AP Pkatatas
HARRIER KING “ Tom O’Hara, University of Loyola (Chicago) runner trho won the NCAA cross country meet yesterday at East Lanaing, is assisted by teammate John Pendergast (left) and coac^ Jerry Weiland. O’Hara’s time was 19 minutes, 20.3 seconds over the four mile course. .
NCAA Harrier King Ran Before Breakfast
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Los Angeles Lakers appew to have hit their stride and after dx'victories they were atop thf. National Basketball Association’s Western Division standinp today.
The Lakers disposed of the Chicago Zephyrs Monday night 120-106 in the only game scheduled tad are one-half game ahead of the St. Louis Hawks.
The Hawks play Syracuse tonight, then move on to Los Angeles to meet the Lakers Wednesday.
BIG LEAD T	I
Los Angeles fashioned a 67-38 lead at halMme, but Chicago out-scored them in the third quarter, 36-27, and the Zephyrs pulled up to the short end M a 101-98 score before Jerry West and Dick Barnett began to hit the basket again.
night with 33 points and Dick Bellamy topped Chicago with 26.
Other games tonight bring gether Chicago at San Francisco,
EAST LANSING (»-One-inan entry Tom O’Hara of Chicago Loyola made practice runs be-fm breakfast pay off just before hmeh yesterday with his win of the NCAA cross bountry cham-
O’Hara covered the four-mile course in 19:20.3 taking the lead in the last half mite to finish only 10 yards ahead of Pat Tray-nor of Villanova, the runner-up.
San Jose State won its first
Maple Swimmers Meet Co-Champs
Birmingham Seaholm’s swim-S ming team, rated strongly for I ;i<7^ state high school championship “r honors this year, meets Grosse ] Pointe the team it shared the ‘ honors with last year.
The meet at 4 p.m. today at • Grosse Pointe will feature some I of the best swimmers in the
0	state. Last year Grosse Pointe j handed the Maples their only
1	dual defeat M the season.
NHL Standings
NATIONAL LBAOre
W L T Pta
......11	4	4	M	-	-
........I	I	4	M	M	W
........II	I	1	71	M	17
I .........III7IMM
hv ........7 u 7 II a n
7 II I II M 71
Coach Corey Van Fleet has three All-America prep swimmers back including Oakland County’s outstanding swimmer of 1961, Bob Wolf in the backstroke, Don Spencer, Tom Fritz, plus 19 other lettermen.
In other swim features this week, Pontiac Central plays host to Flint Central on Friday and the Royal Oak Relays will be held Saturday.
team championship with the low score 58 points and Villa-nova was second with 69 points.
"He worked hard getting ready for this one," said Loyola coach Jerry Wefiand of O’Hara, wIm placed fifth in the rna but year ud recently took the Central Collegiate Conference dbtancA run. "He’d nm eight or nine miles before breakfast and then work oat with the team later."
’The winning time bettered the former record of 19:28.2 over Michigan State University golf course route by A1 Lawrence
Houston in 1960. The best NCAA championship four mile is 19:12.3 by Max Truex of Southern California in 1957.
*	*	*
Danny Murphy of ^San Jose State was third. Vic Zwolak of Villanova fourth and GeofPWalk-er of Houston fifth. Dale Story of Oregon State, the winner last year, placed 39th in the field of 136 finishers.
♦	★	♦
San Jose State, second in the meet last year, had men running third, sixth, 17th, 18th and 30th.
The remainder of the team scoring: Third, Western Michigan 120; 4th, Houston, 134; 5th, Michigan State, 147; 6th, Ohio University, 165; 7th, Colorado, 202; 8th, Oregon State, 206; 9th, Idaho, Z29; 10th, Kansas, 232; lllh, Notre Dame, 251; 12th, Penn State, 253; 13th, loma, 244,-^ 14th, Texas A and M, 362.
and Cincinnati against the Knickerbockers.
Warmi Feathen, aayabwK. 1	,
KfiTW hair by the Lesley Home Trealmeat Method. He d have male pattera baldama.
Hair CoMultaat Here Tomorrow; Lean if Year Hair Loss Caa Be Slopped aad Baldaoss Preveatod
Mr. F. I. Brodle, represenllng the Leiley Hair and Scalp Consultants, will give hair and scalp consultation to hair worried men and women at the Waldron Hotel in Pontiac. Michigan, Wednesday! only, November 28. 1962, from 1:00 P.M. to 8:00 P.M.
Deckle tod^ to give proper care of that prized personal appearance asaet—a good head of hair. Come In and talk with the ling your s. Learn Urightin m home.
or oryneei. .uww scalp is
you have dandruff, excessive { hair,
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a incur absolutely m charp
dy and staoereljr whe^ « ve believe you cm be long it will take and iww I it will coat.
you are accepted for teeat-will be given a wiWen Mtee for the length of time ment is required, cm a pre-1 basis. Neariy half of (W tf are women. Lesley Hato Scalp Consultants have estab-d -a very high reputation in field for refusiox any case does not faU under the scope
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The penMM ysbowa ah not have male pattern
While male pattern taldneas la the chum of tlw g««t majo^ of casts of baldneii aid exceaalve hair toea, lor wtileh neMier Lealey treatment nor any other treatment ts effective, L*«lcy oftte
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""TIKOO.
lURON ST.
. Cau K 84424
I Mflrts 'M f F. M.
PRE-WINTER
SALE
KRAR
SILENT SAFETY
WINTER
CLEAT
TREADS
Get a New Wheel FREE!
SEE COUPON
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Wi will mount your Winter Treads NOW on your spare wheel end One New FREE Wheel.' You can keep your tubelen snow tires mounted, evoiding risk of Injury to tubeless seel beeds.
GET 'EM NOW ... PAY LATER
EdWILUANS
WHEEL ALIGNMENT—BALANCING BRAKES—MUFFLERS
491 SOUTH SACINAW AT RAnUkN — PONTIAC
i:g:Huihf:n5«H;ii.ji
Yes, Our dependable Fuel Oil scivice is YOUR assurance of wormer, steadier heat in your home oil ’" Wifiter. Call us today.
H H SMITH tlif' 4V' ,
^ 5901 PADDOCK IT ,PoAhAC MICH ^
	
! ExMrt Stirict ra au nUKSnSSIOIISI	
t This Woak'i Spociel J 19S6-'S8 N TORQUE-niTE	wnrnxN ss-oav ovAaairraa ON ALL WOU umteeaa
•105"	
! mm	,E Transmiuioa
j 41 N. Pork#	FE 4-0701
SPECIAL-CHf This Coipoi
«aEi3gaij|EiR'f5ii
HEAVY DUTY
WHEEL ALIC^\1E^T
•	Sciantificdlly moasurad and corract cotter and cafflibar
•	Corract tea-in and toa-eut (the chief couse of tire wear)
BRAKE LI^IMGS
WklTTIN LIFITIMI GUARANTII Meet Cere
HORIOMUTie E SHOCKS	N
I5.0M Mila $Q57 T
Ceereatee
Cemptotelv	|ach F
liMtallad	Eii
For the SMOOTHEST RIDE You've Ever Hod, LET US TRUE BALANCE end TRACTIONIZE YOUR TIRES
WITH OU« MMSWAY TIRI CONDITKmnt
30
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CHARGE

12
MONTH
TERMS
MOTOR MART
123 Eoit Montcelm
COITKR FE 3-7845


EIGHTEEN
PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY^, NOVEMBER 27. 1962
MARKETS
The following ve top price* covering tales of locally grown produce by growers and soU by them in wholesale package lots. QuoUtions are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Monday.
Produce
Upward Trend Resumes
Morf Wavers/Then Shoots On
NEW YOriK (AP) - The stock market weathered an unsteady opening and resumed.its upward trend early this afternoon.
Trading was fairly active. The ticker lagged twice during the morning.
Tn! Steels, aircrafts and savings and jSjloan holding companies provided j jjimuch of the upward push. All s wjwere braced by favorable news.
Aerospace Issues converted small morning losses into gains of arotind Vt point in many cases by midday. General Dynamics and Grumman, partners in the new TFX jet fighter program, each picked up close to Vi. Boeing, which lost out in the competition for the initial development contract, was ahead a minimum frac-
B««U. «
Bmu. It,,--
cibMi*. cunr M. ..........
r«d. •«.	-.....
C^bMt. farwu. V».
Mutfard wMf. I CarrtK*. iKh.
CtrroU, cfUo-p«k. I di. .. CUTOU. lopiMd. bu. CauUnovtr. d«. .
C«l«rT, root
Oourdo. pK. kakt. ........
Uorwradlah ...............
Early Bond Trade Very Light
NEW YORK Uh-Price changes were minor and trading very iSi ^ opening bond market ac-i.jjlUvHy today.
‘Sj An over-the-counter dealer in i:S|u.S. Treasury bonds quoted some f g intermediates off 1/32, but other-
wise , prices were um^nged. Trading was quiet.
Only light trading was noted in the bond section of the New York Stock Exchange. Gains and losses, almost all in fractions, balanced each other.
The speedy resumption of the market’s advance surprised few analysts. However, soi tinu^ to caution that the practically uninterrupted rise of the last four weeks could not be expected to continue.
U.S. Steel picked up more than 1. Youngstown Sheet and Tube and Lukens also were higher by 1 or more. Bethlehem, ^public and Jones and Laughlin tacked on fractions. The steel Industry was reported operating at over 60 per cent of estimated capacity fbr the first time in nearly seven months.
American Stock Exch.
niUTM alter dtclmal polnti art elthUu
Creole Pet . ~ Tiler .. ...4 Can ..
3TV« Kalter Indue . it UVe Mend John It* I4t Mluk R Rlni U« . T Pa«e Her . . . ft»( . tW Teehnlco ........ H
The New York Stock Exchange
NXW YORK (AP>—FoUoirtac U a Hatl
of eeleclad elook Iraneactloiie on III
' '	' I SA	*
VS aMoII l s.m
....., M ABC Vend .Mb
ACT tod l.Mxd
prtoaeijPMC Cn .Med Ford Mol I M ^^IPore Dalr .40 Nat Pool Wheal lb Jt Cbk. Pre.pt Sul no |H— W Pniah Tra l.S0a
haB.IMInk La I II Mtb •

Poultry and Eggs
; Allec Cp
DETROIT rOlTlTmT	Aljef Lud J »
DPTROW._ « (AP.-Prleaa_^	P- 1
da.) Hib Lav r	ff	MV
S	lllb	11	„	. ,
7	74tb	74Vb	74tb4	Vbl
2 IIH 114b 114b- Vb OamM. 8k l.M U M4b MIb HHt 4b Oan Dmam II 34b	14b 34ba 4b Oan Iltc 2
5 I74b I74b 174b+ 4b 0«> Pda 1.10 21 10	*%	4b Oan Inetru
■■	M4b	M4b	M4b-4b oan MlUe IJO
«a.>U|rilLa* Laal Cbs.
10 3m 104b M4b PubSeCO 1------------
H 404b	404b	4S4b-4b Publlck tod .171	.	.	^	.
14	04b	044	0>4, .iPulUnao 1.40	10 M4b	tl4b	ttVeb	4b
4 aVe M4b »V. . ..	___P
47 14V. 14	14V._ 4b	—H.—
17 2t 141b S41b
It 20	»4b .29%+ 4b Rex Dnif .Mb
u.; s:rr,'“	‘ z'-r ______________________________
“W' 7ypa bene >•-«:	«	--	-
htne 9; ronatare orer » Ibe 1044-10:	"
brMlera nnd Iryere 1-4 Ibe whitee 17-|J±™^	,
i>.	iiu.ii- turk.va: tome^ .^.7. .
I M 0144 M . oan Pub fa Ma
N 04% M'4 0444 4 4b O TelAKl
Am Brk lb 141	1 4T/b
17 1144b 1104b U4V«> 4b Oan Ttre .40 MU lOS u%4 4b Oar Prod (1) 1.10 1
.... IJ&t & 2*.CP ■	"
Mocora la 114	H>4	M	00 -	% RarnUat------
...................14	14H+	Ve Her Tob 1.60
04b	0% iRbaom Ml
II	11 +	4b RloMId OU	l.H
.	_	J44b	St'b—	4b Rob Pullan	i
U3	H4b	114b	114b—	4b Rohr Corn
.. Oan Pub Ut l.Mb 6 11 4b Oan Ry Me 1 Jb 0 » --------—iM --------------
0	74b	74b TJb ..
0 11% 11% ll%- 4b 0 104b Uib M4b4 Vt
41	104b	24%	M4b—	4b
»	414b	404b	404b-	4b
a	104b	104b	lOV
Tying Up Case Against Hoffa
U.S. Hopes Monday to See Completion
144b 144b M4b-
».	..T.	------—.K	.	.. 17% 14V.	17
N	MV. 10%	104.- % Royal Dul	l.Ma	110 ^ 41% 41%	41% a
_ Jl-lf; email »-M 4 larte 41-414b:
tarot 41-40:
Browne—4..™*, ™ —... -- —... — dlum 11-11: eaanll M-N: ebaeke 14-17. CRICAOO BCTTEB AND ROOO, CHICAOO. Not. “	•”
Mtreaotite —"—
Am N Oae 1 M
„	prtcaa unchan^: 91 Am fmell
acora aa 07%% 01 A 07%: oo B 17:	-
10 C 04: core 00 B 07%: 10 C 07%. AmTelTel LtOl Bua tope taey. balance eW^y. wbol^ ^ jeJ^M ealt buylDf prleat nnehangad to l% .Am vteoaaa^ lower: 70 per aent or boticr Omdo A,"3p in. u •hitoa M:	mixed »:	medluma Jl: JJIpexrt'
euuidarda 31: dlrUee M: ebeeke 17.	a,,, n
CRKAGO POt’LTBT	------- *
M	07*.	07%	S74b+	4b
2	U%	US	114b-	%'
M	M%	M4b	M4b'	'
- _____________ V. Hojel
04	43	43	41%e	%'
14	10%	lev.	10%+	4b .	.
to	liv.	M%	10%-	■■	—
7	10%	10	10
U 41% 43% 43% ..
»	31%	11	» +
11	10%	lo%	U%I^
ii%+iv. 51 w' Fta' l'7«	17	^	144b	S%^ 4b	'	“**■
•' oreyhd l.lObxd	31	M%	10	»%+ % J*"**-,
Drum Aire 1M	H	40%	444b	44% -%
-Oulf Mob*0 l.OOa 0	»%	104b	10%-
% OuU OU l.H	41	17%	n%	17%
_ ......... -	ji	37»,	J7	—•
«%+ % ^y,<>u
- 44%+ %'-. -	—
M	47	44	47	.	ooodrksta	I.M
M	14%	11%	114b-%	Goodyear	1
7	1%	1%	t%+ % Grace Co .00
M	MV.	M	00%+	%	orand Un .00b
44	11%	11%	»%+	%	Oran C OU 1.40
M	14%	14%	I44b-	%	OI A*P l.Ma
It	M4^.	M4b	11%	OI No Ry 1
i S'*
.	- .	„	,	00%^
n	13	13	13 -
71 114% 114% 114% +
Safeway el 1.00	07	41%	41%	414b-	..
St Joe Lead lb ad 0	10%	30%	H4b-	%
SU. StnP 1	1	11%	11%	10% +	Ve
81 Reg Pap 1.40b	14	17%	17%	27%+	■'
u _e. aneii uu i.ioo
40	11%	11%	11%+ 4
.00	34	10%	M%	»%-l
'	14	74%	74%	74%
a 9%	1% I4a+ 4
14	»%	33%	11%
1	11%	U%	11%. . ..
10	11%	nv.	13V.
7 122% U1 1214b- % 4 20% 20% 10V.
NASHVBliE —Government attoflvys begin today tying together loose ends of their voluminous evidence against James Hoffa in hopes of completing their case by next Monday.
James Neal, Justice Department lawyer from Washington, assured attorneys for the Teamsters Union president that they could call their first witness next Tuesday.
Hoffa, 41. is accused ef accepi^ teg concealed payoffs from Commercial Carriers, a Detroit-based antomobile transport firm, in retnm for labor peace. The government contends Commercial Carriers set up and operated Test Fleet Ck>rp., a truck leasing firm later renamed Hobren C^., for the benefit of Hoffa and the late Owen Bert Brennan, a Teamsten vice president.
Test Fleet was chartered here with the stocic listed in the maiden names of the two union leaders’ wives.
George Fitzgerald, a former Teamsters attorney at Detroit, testified yesterday he once gave Hoffa a personal check for $15,000
___ , in exchange for a dividend check
u^‘‘+ %	^	amount issued
to Mrs. Hoffa by Test Fleet.
’The white-haired said he did not remember why Hoffa wanted to exchange checks.
Fitzgerald was the Uth witness to testify during a trial that has seen 375 exhibits introduced in evidence.
Herbert Grosberg, a public accountant employed by Teamsters Local 99 at Detroit, told of being sent by Hoffa to Indianapolis to find out why State Cap Co. had not
BySAMDAWsm AP Bnslaeu News Analyst NEW YORK (AP)-A lot of but-nsmeq have the feeling that some of the old rules of the game are being dunged. Like it or not, they’ll have to adjust.
And the same could well apply I workers, investors, savers, debtors, and in time to consumers —which is to say to everybody. ★	* w .
Making money may be a differ-nt prdfMBition from now on than during the 17 years since the end of World War n. During most of that time profits rose, personal incomes went up even faster, the coat of living climbed-all of this almost automatically.
Has that era ended? Is a new one starting, with new rules to be
•snWik-c« 'mi	10 11% u% mi- %	been	repaying a	loan	made by Ho-
Hmllh KP I	U 61% 40% 404b—1	^	— •	• •	----- '
.430 M 11% 10
bren. This occurred in 1955.
___________ lAnxcond* 2.30«
_________ 17 (API—(OaDAI— Anken Ol .20b
U« ooultrj: W^taMta buy^o Pjlw Ai^^ 011^3 ’ AnnxI Ck
Livestock
AT04I XI .M 7 H% M
'! SiJ JT* sm* I? Htrdw N .H 29 40V. 30% 40%+ % Holluid P
— iimeslk l.M
s ^	....J “
1?	r7%
40 14% 13% 14 - %r'*'’
117	14%	14% ..-I
1 10 0% 10 ■ 1	4%	4%	4%-
i r
7 sou N OU 2 I ? lou Pm 1.10 S Oou Rt in 2 Ooerrr Rd 7» ".Opfexcl l.Mxd Squve D 1
•M*rt 10-10.M: lood to 10-30: low chotao bolloro «•**-*}•*; lOod to low cbolo. htlltro 10-17.00:
Utaiti cowi 14.M-II.M; eonnero oud euturt 11-UJO.	^	.
Hofx 106. Bbrrowi bod fUto un^r 140 lb xtebdi: otitarx not uMbItalwd.
10 Iwul mutli No I	**> “
17.71: ibaU lot 1 uid 1 «• ft taw 1 ond 1 100-IM lb 17-17.10: tout BWXtlir No 1 111 lb 14.74.	Belb 8lMl 1»
ColTW IM. Vtblort itcbdr: Cbolco Btoelow I .lOo OBd prlBO 11-41; itMdbrd and 80«a Bo«ta* 2 U-11: cull ond nUUtj 14-H.	‘5®'***"
■hocD 000 Limited ebclr tndo otaufh- Borg Worn 2 taftooT iuZjf Borket not tuUy Brl.t Mr IMo Oitabitabod; ovw uDohonfod; tow eholot Bniiurt .M
.41 M
ini Cent 1
.. . ..	. %*Sind*0tl
^ it'* il%+ 44'tol*Bue M-------
10% 10% M^ % tot	1.4^
Cb	lb	4	n%	M%	13%
Fin	1.40W 0	44%	41%	444b-.	..
1 H	1	lOOV.	104	1M% +	1%
07 11% IIV, 11% ^iSdoU^cMlb 4	1%	0	0 — % oy umI l.M
—I—	Old OUNJ l.Mo
>	«	«	**
0	40%	40%	40%+	%	“
1	41V.	42V.	41V«-	4b •**"
13	44	01%	03%+	%
34 10% 14% 14%+%-—.
10% l»v. . . . ,„	JH
2	10	43%	41	414*—	%
14	10%	M%	H%
14	U%	42	41%+
37% 17% 17%— %
________-	J 01% 01% 01%+ %
Old KoUe l.ur	00 31% MV. MV+- %
...	/■.,«.	j, n	^
0 474b 47	47 — %
1.N
no	40%	44%	H4b-	%
17	It	H	n .....
14	14	14%	lMb-%
I	44^
U.S, Businessmen Feel Gamers Rules Changed
tee squeeze «n profits are saying today that it has. Eami ' _ oar automaticallj sates vdume. blames still rising production costs, high taxes, price weakness. Many set in this year’s gyraUons of tee stock market evidence that the era of inflation is over, that stock prices now are tied cioeer to individual company performance and iMtispects.
Here are some of the factors that have brought on the era of tee profit squeeze, and some that may guide management in dealing with it in the changing business climate:
By ROBERT J. SERUNG UPI Aviation Editor SEATTLE — Boeing today roiled out the nation’s first three - engine airliner sidee the
Range Stays Firm on Wheat Futures
Lj“^‘
23 44% 44% 44 + V.
‘TexOProd Hn
CMICAOO LIVRSTOgi	I
OnCAOO No». 27 (API—HofX liNIO.,
ncu*«. buuboti •».?*
MW* lUadr to H hlfbcr;
8nund 00 per etol ol ••table »'ippl7.,	_
M^106.,ia0 lb	2.:
.......
14	loT* iw'*+ li tot Nick” iT”
1	S'*	To,
14	1%	1%	1% ftl ToteTbl 1
1 »% »% 37%+ % ITK BktBrk 70 «% gb
'ii i	&	iilSs”-??.’!:	Ti	as	sS
14 If*	u’*	u’^-l ibk»l«" «	14	14%	»%	»%-	%'ttmi	W	Air
io 114k	11%	M%7% N»r» N»ft -ft*	”	ft	l«b	11	.	Nft
*1 10%	Tilk	10%+ %*Koft*« -1 »A-	Old	14%	14%	^+	%
«■ w	Utk	S Keimceott 4	40	00	07%	07%-	% ™	Co“‘	•••
S Mk uik	C Ld 1.40	2 71% 71% 71%-1 | Twui Cen 7H
N MH »% M%+ ft B,rrMcOu 1	14 17% 17	17 — %
—C—	Koppefi 2	4 4I>Ki 41	41%...	__^
Wn«	7	Mfc 4^4- iA Korvettc	M 30% 29% 20 -f V«
r“iS 40 n uSb u5 11%*	...... ...... ■
M M H% H .I0V*- J

_	_^MO IIm l*.ww-»»-^-	|pi
’ * ........... bultaWy ^f
4 11% 11% 11%+
t 12% a a% .. '
7 44% -- "•	•'
tl 41% ..-- .
0	4%	4%	4%
8 r40c 14 S% ^ ^ % g;
a M% 15% M%- %
I Itudy: I I ofndr I
29.OOM.00; tout ■verkte c Ibi 30.14: IO*d high cbolec
Kibc •round l.ai Iba M.74. .40, lood BlxM .londord
Ilouihter xtoer. J

Sm lto" i Vob	ii 2i% 41% Bv;+ %
«t»nd»rd Crrt lccd .«	114 17% 14	17% + !%
-	Aiw 1	ta 9tX. 9IAA	Vb
, Ctn nl LI 1.64«d r 44	44 M
C«l k 8W I N	10 41%	JjPi
lb. n a
1 »»,
__________	______ ...3(C«	000-1.040 lb CuiPO Air 1
hcllcrt 10.00-20 00: good 24 40-37 74; lood; Oiwnp 80 1 M with taw ch«« NO lb* 27 M; Chomplta I uUUtT ond eoBmrrclil cow. u 34-I6 .Ml; ,Oi*ek Mot coniurt ond cuttari I1.0O-14 U: uuiltyi ond coBmerctal built 17 40-10 40: couple Cb M BP P>c head ot U.74; taw culbrt 14 46-n.»0; lr ***0bwT*l.S»; mo^rllrly ocllv*. itoucb- Chrlt Cli .41t ter loBbt (taody with Uonday't tat* Chrriler I decline, •lougbler ewti lully ateody-IClT Flnon 1.1 Botllv chotc* 00-I06 lb nail*# wooi«d riti« a. 2 4a
•lauxhlrr lamb* 14 4C-20 00, laraely gc----------------- -
17 M110 00: cull and utllily 13.00-IO.00. Ceca Colt " ' d woolrd ilaufliter ewci 4.4». Cota ~ '
-	iColllr
It 21% 21% 21% ^
4 n% 44% a% 70 20% a 20%
I 21% 21% 21% 4 44% 47% 44% 4 10% 1
T l.Ma 14 M% M% or,.
cji Nr.?-®.!- J “a IK
•V El m 2
. moitty SOP
Twa4Mf’§
P». mk. 0l Far- ^ Usia rM E«cpr4 «Mt
'colo Flrlr
Col PM U2t
atrk Ckblk Cp
Torttl C Katerpr .
Ako Prod tiupr
‘"ICoiNOMlM
11.7,r)lL14C«njunnP-^.ft
Cont Can I N 11-10	1-1 Cont tot l.Mb
i;.;:	i. com moi .ot
Sales Manager Appointed for Rochester Firm
.The aniointinent of Donald mb
CromXiiawl IJOxd J Crow CoU -OR Cm Zell I.M
J. Templeton to national sales J manager for Rochester Aerosol
1:	Si*:	Ml''" *1 Cb
H TitS T?% u ft®'* N®“ *
0 ol% 40% 40'-7 ^	***‘*‘-
If	40%	40%	401.
170	U%	n%	2! +	%
.! Fair: IS
17 40% 40% 4t%- % Hal BlM l.M * fft! ll.'k S'* JMUCIS .7M
^ NCaab Rat I M 5	40	44%	44”+SgMm*flO
11	14%	10%	14%+	tbjJu	oen
M 1% 0% :%+ % Su Oyu lb
Hr 1	17 It 10% 11%+ %	i'.T
__0_	NY	Central
.M	I	12%	U%	11%	^	l^NHAHart
12	13% 14% 11% + % Sy »l5d
"i.	a%|:|re7T4
.Nexd 14 12% «% U%+ JJ nJt H oaa l.H
.	!	S'*	2i*	0^1	^	»*»* P»e~»
M	2	41	42%	41 -f	M	Mgv HOB r— •
4 17% 17% 17%.
IV IS M% B% »%.
—l^—•
Uar Stag 4tb	17	14%	11%	19%.....
• &N .Mk	1	7	7	7 ..... 2f
art C 1	19 10% U	It	UnU FnA .OU
il tod	4	1%	IV.	1%....Un Ou Cp	1.0^
fl RR	1	5%	1%	1%....|H"'‘	ft
..._n l.tle	1	20%	21%	M%	lUO Bwu	.M
LOP Olau 2.M	10 11% llV. 41V..- Vb UO PrelghI	„	_	,,
,1b MeNBL TM 1	n	II	U .	US	Orp4 IHa	14	7gb	71%	74%+ %
.tag * My I	II	40%	09%	tt%—	%	US	ladual	7	11%	11%	13%
ilSSel	24	7	Tb	0%-	% UO Unat	M '	1	30%	M%	30%
Utton tod 340	44%	01V.	83 +1%	Ut	Plyird I	3	47V.	47	47
Lock Aire l.M	14	11%	40%	41 -	%	US	Rub 3.M	IP	40%	40%	404
Loew-a net	14	33%	31%	a%+	% UO Omelt 1.3to	1	39%	H%	364
Lone 8 Cem I	IS	M	10%	lt%+	% US Steel I.TSo	M	47%	44%	44'.
... -	. J,	„„	1,, u„ Hhelan .41	1 f% 1%	4%
4 40% 40% 401*- %< Uni* Match .30a	14 14% 14V. 14% . .
_	_	14	44%	441.	441. +	%1 Uni* OU Pd .lOld M	34V.	33%	34	— %
Lukena M. 1.300	4	43%	43V.	43% + lV.|Uo|ohli .M
•M—	"~V—
MaekTrk l.M	4	36%	lift	36%+	%'Van At SU 1.40	3	MH	29>b	3I%+	%
tiaditon Fd 3.Ne	4	21	30'*	21 —	% Vanad Cp 30t	4	IS	14%	IS +	‘
Magna*ox .40	24	34%	34%	34%—	% Va Caro Cb	7	37%	37%	37li-	.
......	70	44	44%	44%	Va XUlPW	l.4tkd	32	M%	47%	17>.-	%
4 M’b 30*« lt1b+ V.j	_W—
4 13% 13% 13 V.	..1	"■
34 11% 31% 3I%-
MayD Sir 2 M	4	13%	13%	SSV.-	% W»™ »
McDon Air lb	14	M%	M ..	H -	.% J%rn Ltto	.40
Mead Co 1.70	2	36%	36%	30% i	% WnBMCorp	1
Mrrck 1.60	14 76% 71	76 +2 |Wn Md .75#
13 U% 12V. «%+ % ft" U" ™
13 33'b 33	33% .. WetlgABk 1.40
“ «.*	i—V-mvettaXl 1.M
( WhIrTcp 1.40
...............-tblwhlta Mel 3
................ 36	44%	43%	13»b-	% WllMnbCo	1.6#
Mohaaco 40axd	*	0%	OV.	t%+	%|Wlnn Dta	M
Cb 1.3MI M 40% a 40%+ % WoMwIh 3.M .......- ■	34%+ V. WorilUiif :•
'4	N%	M%	M%+	%j	continued a steady to firjn range
M	»%	n	»%ii.'v«	today on the board of trade
_Jt~	^ December and March
contracts attracting best support in early transactions.
Both deliveries posted gains of major fractions during the first few minutes, but other grains and soybeans scarcely budged from previous closes bi quiet dealings. The small changes were in a mixed range.
Brokers said trade influences were scarce and minor. Except for a little export business in wheat overnight, commercial demand was virtually negligible.
M	10%	10%	10%—	%
00	10%	MVb	M%+	V*
14	43%	41%	4l%+	%
g	S'*	g%	a%T"
4	M	4Tb	4714+	..
3	10%	14V.	11V. +	%
3	16%	MV.	MV.-	%
M	M%	MV.	M%....
14	16%	IIV.	16V.—	%
1	M%	M%	M%.....
M	11%	11	11 +	%
17	^	«»'	““
11	7% 7',.	......
U 41% 41% 4I%- % 10 10% 10% -—u—
1 17% 11%
II	42V.	42	42%+	-	_ _	_
*}	Hi*	JS*	5?T	I*	Marith	on	i lOb	70	44
*	S>	E •*	?•	Marine	Mid	1b	4	M’
11	Si; 4*?:; S **	.»i?:
7 24% 24	24% t
101	1#	*li	10 ^
TO 41% 40% 41% +
12	14% 24	14%
10 21V. 10% 21% +
d 11 44% mb 44% +
14 21% n% 21%
12 42% 42% 41V.
UnOUCalM	17 10% M% M% + 1%
Un Pac l.Mu	1 3M. 33% 33%i '
Unit Air Lin -Mb M	31%	31	*'
Unit A— *	" ““
UnJwd	-
" " —- H 11% «■_ .. .
IS	34%	34%	34%
2	ItV.	10%	11%	.
, 2	20	»%	24V.-	%
Miner b Cb .M 4 lt>.
30 13*. 13% 13‘
14 22 % 23-23 10 30% 29% 24%_ % 2 10	17% 14
36 20% 21V. 26% +
4 24	24% «%—
04 33% 32% 33 +
13 33% 32% 33'W 2 43% 42% 42%
13 34% 74% 24'a— % 11 MV. 67% M + % 10 M% M% MVb-%
t% OVb-..	..	M%
10	71%	71%
7	U	13% _________ ,---------
10 11	14% 14% I a—Al» «_____________ ______ _______________________________________
4 3474 34% 3S%— % plua tlock' dhrldand. d-Declaiod cr paid n+ctronlca toUrnatlonal '	•- H4I plua tlock dletdand. e—Deelarad Prita c«.
_ ... ------------ »...w. Andrew Jcrgeni ...........
Grain Prices
...1M% Oatc ...l.flf% Dec .... ...S,ttv. Mar ...
today:
.1.11%

Stocks of Local Interest
Pliurca aittr decimal pointt art tlibUii
J Supermarkclt ........13
Arrogulp	Corp.............34.3
‘Tktnaaa	Loultlant	Oat Co. M.l
kld..Mont. Chem. Co. Pfd 11
^rriban	Pood Btoret .....11.3
Darldton	Brot..............4.7
Fed. Mogul-Bowir Benrtofi 10.1
Harrty Alualnum ...........10.3
Hoover Ball Ot Batrlnt .....M
l-eonard RetUilnt .......... 0.1
Pro^t Co..................; ,33.4
Rockwell	Standard	.......11.3
~oledo Bdlton Co............11.1
OVER TBB COUNYIR BrOCKS The (oUowtof auointlooo do not nte-eatarlly repreeent netual trananetlotta but are Intended at a fuUta to the ap. proxianto tradlnt rnnia ol (ho aaeu-
PAUL NEWMAN
Dodge Dealer to Celebrate' City Opening
The grand opening of the area’s newest Dodge dealer, Spartan Dodge in Ponitac, will be held Jan. 10, Paul Newman, president announced today.
The firm, now open for business, is located at 211 S. Saginaw St., in a completely remodeled building.
Newman, a resident of South-field said that his Dodge dealership is the only one within a 15 mite radius. ^
Specializing in complete auto-
days of tee old Ford trimotor— its new 727 short-range jet.
WWW
It bore about as much resemblance to its 35-year-old predecessor as a hurricane does to a house fan. Boeing’s latest jet-age entry, carrying a 14.5-mil-lion price tag, has two engines mounted on each side of the rear fuselage and a third inside the fuselage just below the tail assembly.
One engine alone costs three times as ranch as the entire $5I,0N Ford transport.
Boeing’s historic roll • out today involved the first complete 727 to come off the assembly line here.
Eventually, the plane will be turned over to United Air Lines but it will be used in a grueling flight test program lasting through most of next year.
WWW
’The sleek though somewhat chunky jet is expected to make its first flight late in January following a $30-million design and development program.
127 PLANES ORDERED Five airlines have ordered 127 of tee. new Boeings, which will bring the speed and comfort of a ^re jet to routes now flown by older piston and prop-jet airliners.
WWW
United and Eastern are scheduled to take delivery on 40 each, with 25 going to American, 10 to ’Trans World and 12 to t h e German airline, Lufthansa.
TIm 727 will carry between 70 and 114 passengers and
nrawiys only 5,WI feet long.
Its high-lift-at-low-speed char-acteristks are made possible by huge triple - slotted flaps in the trailing edge of the wings — increasing the wing area during a
mobile service, Newman said it' takeoff or landing by 100 square is on this that he intends to gain a reputation for the firm.
Newman has been in the automotive field for 30 years, the last 17 years operating a Mercury dealership in Detroit.
Eventually, 40 persons will be employed at Spartan Dodge, according to Newman.
News in Brief
The theft of a cash box containing $127 from the Standard Serv-ice station at 148 N. Main St„ ii|Clarkston, was reported to the ti;i sheriff’s department yesterday.
feet.
.WWW
’The new jet is about 37 feet shorter than Boeing’s famed 707 transport now used on long-haul trans-Atlantic r.nd transconti-""nental flights.
But much of its fuselage and other components were cut from the same dies used on the older Jets.
_ MOM’S Rnramage — Hinrsday, a| 10 to 1. Indianwood and Baldwin.
—adv.
AMT Corp.......... ........
Aunt Jana'a Pood .........
Oetrollar MobUa Hohm . Diamoad Cryital Ktaetroaica Capll
Treasury Position
■ !|4.'i	II.4|“o» Ol
. 1% 1% 1%— %................. .—----------------------
3	12%	11%	11%-	%	or paid ao tar	thta	year.	I-Pi
17	44%	44%	44%+	%	aMW durlai iMl.	aattmatad	ci
1100V+ 100% 100%+ V< 00 ex-dlTldend or ex^tatrlbutli 7 06% 64% M%+ % k-Pald laal year. b-Deelare^ 0 U	41	43	43 +	%	otter flock ^l	'
6	M%	30%	M +	%	ctared or pMd (
M 1 31% 33% 33%.- •*  ---------- —*
••	—V-	M%
WABHINOTON (API—Tho eoah potion of Ui. Trotanry eomparod — data a yjar o^:
Pi arreara. p-PnId
5553^iT4;iib	-0--
lots'* S5 357 5gS? 512.‘i" A S5 gj	.. .._and„pr
■ “ .vr J Sjb s| R%".® ssgStaS
« S.N ^70% Ti% T»Vb+ 8^1.-.--+-..-
VI Mich. Beamleaa	Tubs Co. ..It.l
“	Pioneer Finance ...........0.4
Trana. Ota Pipe	Line . .....H.4
Sante Pa DrUUni ............33
Vernora Ointtr	AM ........ 0.4
a Sett Ije ime M .70
Corp.,'Rochester, is announced to-lSl^ day by Robert A. Willihnganz, SXi'lim
iMMiaUtif	lUb* ft .-ft
presioeni.	Oynam Am
Templeton is first vice president	—r.—
of tee Chemical Specialties Manu- *^ ^	„ ‘J 5 SS St-^ Vb!®^ raoTiM 4 nvi tiib t»%+%|4tatribirttaii:~kr^
facturers Association and a mem- xa.t	**2® }»	s' „ ^	w ••».	|55rt£>« *^0-^
her of tea American Chemical So-in'Madal im 1 3754 37% *J}J-}Jpm tati,m * t «% «% 3?*b+%|?2i,	_________
ctety, the American PharmaceuU-g^‘“,'|*.i- ‘J ig ig75MVr"*» 55 85 li/t; ^	r«pi^«o»“’S2JrMdc.;;
cal Association and Kappa Psl, na-	**' '* »% 14% i3%*	d”“u’	44 i4*5 »% IT*7 %	«*“'*•
honorary jueuj*	r+ ^%	,, p«®„co.i ^4 m^ m^^ m,^ %	--------------
---	---P_	Pa PwALl_ 1 31 J H% M% My.- %	. ..NONO^VRSAOEg
He was graduated from Union pair cam .Head <4 43	4j% 42‘^ % Rpfi*coiii*i.4o *ll«% li’ 4i%+ %
»ijege, Schenectady, N.Y.. wite«V	IJ |g }g	.T*
innyltad br Tka Aaabrlaled ^aaa
M.4 Botanea ... 20 O .DepaaUa tlae 14 I July 1 .... 11.1 WIthdrawata 10.4 Total debt M.3 Oold oaaeta
Production coats have climbad steadily as wage scales rose eadi year. UnUl recently the coat d most industrial matoials has goiie up annually. The cost of transpesr-tation and distribution, and Ute increasing number of services required along the way from producer to consumer, still tend to
(H»iLY ONE P4^RT 11181 is one part of tee «.
For years, the prices of finished goods themselves rose, too. And there was no squ^.
But today it’s hard to raise prices. And here’s why:
During the easy profit years, nuuiy fields became crowded with new firms wanting in on a good thing and old ones diversifying for the same reason. Today these fields often seem overcrowded. The competition is keen, and one company can’t raise ixices because his rivals won’t. In more than one industry there’s idle capacity that could be put to work— if there were any profit in it. And complicating all this is the sudden spurt of foreign goods turned out by industries built up after the war and now looking for more markets.
WWW
Finally, there are new guidelines laid down by the federal government, design^ to discourage general price increases or infhh tion brought on by labor demands teat Washington might label excessive. Management got the word government in the squabble over the steel price hike attempt last April. Many in management still are skeptical about how the guidelines will work with labor. NEW LOOK IN 2 WAYS ’The profit squeeze gives today’s economy a new in two ways. Labor-management negotiations will be tougher—if prices can’t rise, management will be slow to grant new wage hikes. And if profits are held down, companies will find it harder to raise funds to modernize plants or build new ones. Ihis could mean fewer new jobs, as well as loss of markets at home and abroad to foreign competitors.
And a third factor—the role of government in business decisions, in labor negotiations, in consumer goods pricing win be greater and more evident in the new era.
Car Firm Gets Area Ad Man
A Bloomfield Township advertising executive. Burton R. Dur-kee, has been named director of marketing services for (terysler Corp., it was an-nouiKed today by E. C. Quinn, group vice president of automotive sales.
Durkee, 3575 Burning Bush Road, wiU be responsible for corporate a d -DURKEE vertising, sales promotion, sales training and used car selling programs.
Before assuming his new-Chrysler post, he was administrative vice president of the Detroit office of the national advertising agency of J. Walter ’Thompson Co.
Successfuhlnvesting *
^	: .*»■ L ll. 4 • (1;
Woleertse Bbee .........B4
Wyandotlt CheioUAl .....41
MUTUAL FUNDS
Keyatone Income K-l .....
KeyatoiM Orewtla E-2 ....
Matt. Ineeaton arevtb . Maao. iPTitton Troii ..
(elHafton Btulty . /elUniloa Fund ........
' Nominal Quolallena.
College,
a B. S. ____
Pharmacy. Prior to his new appointment, Templeton was products manager for Crown Cork k BrniCo,etmka^	ISd%r*S
, I .	.	J
.-it./..	' '	I -	.
3 41% 41' 10 «
U 21%
% Pttn« Bow
....... H Pit Mata 2.M
....
% Polaroid .M '
%iMoolh At#	77 7	NO	HO	tl.O
.......-	77.0	1U.2	M.t	M.l
70.7	102J	Ml	nt.
“•	“■	M.f‘
a VA KSS.iU’***	AYERAOE8
ria. L.Yd. 8Y0CK8 30 tadua
r.l 04.4 M RaUf .........
n.2	M.1 14 Ullla ........
"•	04.1 04 OtocU .......
By ROGER E. SPEAR (Q) “We bon^ some stocks eight years ags. ’Ikes* tochide Anghpiantara Nitrate, Pantepee on, and Pittsbnrgh Coke * Chemical. Do yon think we Blmdd koM or sen at present depTMsed levels?” J. S.
(A) It always distreaaes me I ”704?{ii.mM h««r from good people like your-' xaiwaselves, who hold stocks about yaar 4o.tw.t74.3M.tt which little encouragcment can be offered.
__________ 0 oMAMaoSjo' Anglo-Lautaro Nitrate is
wfiDqwift n^i Vw" '	Chilean company, controlled by
mI Wi&wata'tM'yMl ”;SS:m:48:M|tbe Guggenheim family, wfakte is ll®-!?* -"•“...........«»«*• However, it operates in, an
10.OT4.M7.400.07	countiy where
’'selariec and wages have risen over 50 per cent since 1960 and product prices have been virtual-• ly static, which is bad. I would get out of this stock and pocket
:: *»i noli ijoj 1M.1 .. art ntJ uo.7 237,0 m.t 114 0 uo i 334.3
So m 1 m s SJ1 Pittsburgh Coke, which has been »going downhill for years.
1003 Loir . 044 13 + 3 N IMl Htah 134.43+4.17 1201 Uw
M. AVSBA43BS
394:' iM.I 14AI Mj Psntepec’s outlook is very du-311.1 112 3 in.i M2.< bjouj^ but With the shares seUing at only 50 cents, I would put this one away and hope and pray for a better price level — in whkb [case ; TFould get out
r'
(Q) “We own IN share* of Merrltt-Chapmaa A Scott. It Is almost two year* siaee they have paid any dividends. Wonld yon advise ns to sen fsr Ineome dtex purposes and bay bnck-sr Jnst sen and forget it?” A. D.
(A) I could answer this ques-ion better if I knew more aimt your financial background. However, I’m going to assume that you can face up to taking a sub-
Although the company seems to be weU managed, 1 would get out of Merritt and stay out. Tkio of tee company’s roaj<r divisions — construction and shipbuilding — are subject to wide variations in |»roflt nuu-glns. At present, the outlook has improved somewhat and earnings seem to be rising a little. It is a fact, Itowever, teat with one exception - 1959 - tee shares have been declining since 1954 and earning* reached their peak in 1953.
I consider this stock a risk issue, and I bclieye you would be better off with a stable, groorlng situation, such as Green Shoe. (Capyrfgkt litt)
THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 27. 1962
NINETEEN
Doubting Thievos Fleo With $10Q From Soft
PEABOpy, Haas. (UPI) - A sign over a sniaU aafe in the J. R. Sousa servfeiB stathm and ap|di-ance store warned it contain little money.
WWW But police said yesterday safecrackers us^ dynamite to open the safe and escaped with about 1100.
Correction
la Hn» Wf Vala Saaoraurktl ad aaaeerias ia iWa PaaNac Pratt NavaaWar 26. 1962 Hm Waat "PilUary Caka klliat. 3 for 51c" WM la error aad tfcooM liavo road: "PJIItkary Caka Mhat. 3 for 15c."
BIG VALU Supermarkets
50 S. SAONAW ST.
536 N. PIRRY ST.
391 AUBURN AVI.
5060 DIXII HWY.
700 PONTIAC TRAIL
MODEL OF NEW NINATDRE HEARING AID GiVEN
A unique fret offer of ipecial
has iuit been announced by Qualitone Cot
A true, life, actual sixe, ln> active replica of the smallest Qualitone ever nwde will be liven absolutely free to anyone sending in this advertisement. Try It on in the privacy of your homo, without fMt or 'obligStioA of any kind\,U's yours to keep free.
The size of this Qualitone is only one of its many features. It weighs less than a thirci of an ounce, and it’s all at ear level, in one unit. No wires lead from body to head.
Here is truly new hope for the hard of hearing.
These replicas are free while the limited supply lasts, so we suggest you write for yours now. Again, we repeat, there is no cost and certainly no obligation.
PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CENTER
MS. J. SWEASINGEN
■ Only Oae Office end Ift Ike PeaUae Nell
Wremier Dies in Paris
AP Phetefu
ENOUGH FOR CLUB -- These seven sisters, nearly all grandmothers, plus their husbands, children and gramichildren, number 961. They are (from left) Mrs. Annette Grain-
ger, Mrs. Ocia Love, Mrs. Novelle Either, Mrs. Effie KirchgesSner, Mrs. Clara Herman, Mrs. Zula Engledow and Mrs. Gladys Herman, all of California.
30,000 Engineers in Last Decade
Many linmigrants Skilled Workers
WASHINGTON (AP)—Almost asilgor Sikorsky, airplane designer, many engineers immigrated to | and Eugene Ormandy, symphony |the United States in the past decade as were turned out by the
I nation’s engineering schools 'their 1961 graduating classes.
I The figures are included in a Labor Departmoit study of the occupational distribution of the more than 3.5 million immijpranta arriving in this country in 'he 15-year period of 1947-61.
> w w
The study concluded that stead of glutting the U.S. labor Iforce which has experi«jced high leveb of unemployment in recent iyears the newcomerd from abroad have helped fill shortage? in such skilled occupations as ehgineer-Ing, science and the medicaL fession.
There can be no doubt,” Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz commented on the study, “that by providing a haven for the oppressed, the nation has reap^ great profits.” *•
I Wirtz cited the contributions of isuch men as scientist Enrico Fermi, mathematician Albert Ein-I stein. Fell* Frankfurter, recently retir^ Supreme Court justice;
conductor.
MAKE CONTRIBUTION The nation is not so aware, Wirtz said, of benefits received from many lesser known professional, technical and skjlled workers who have entered the United States in recent years.
WWW
Many of these immigrants,” ihe said, “have been able to make important contributions to our economy because, before
in the 1947-61 period were housewives, retired people and children. Of the nearly 1.7 million immigrants classified as workers about one-third were reported in the professional, technical or skilled categories.
★ w ★
During the 195^61 decade more than 30,000 engineers immigrated to this country. This number compared with the 35,000 graduates of the nation's engineering schools in 1961.	|
arrival, they had been fully trained for occupations in great demand in this country."
About half the foreign arrivals
INVESTMENT BROKERS AND COUNSELORS
STOCKS-BONDS MUTUAL FUNDS
FE 2-9117
818 COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK BLDO.
PARIS (UPI) - Albert Saraut, twice premier of France and a regular minlBter in French gov-enta from 1906 to 1940, died yesterday from what doctors said were the effects of old age. He was 90.
WWW
The career of Saraut was inextricably mingled with the lurbu-; lent history of French governments between 1906 and the outbreak of World War H.
Journalist and son of a Journalist, he was bom in Bordeaux July 28, 1672. He was elected a deputy in the French National Assembly in 1902 and in 1906 started his ministerial career as secretary of state for the interior.
In the 34 years that followed he assembled a sequence of cabinet portfolios matched only in French history by Aristkte Briand.
The por^lios Included education, colonies, interior and navy in successive cabinets of Premiers Briand, Vivianl, Millerand, Poincare, Chautemps, Steeg, Herriot, Boncoud and Daladier.
Nis first tenure as premier lasted only from October to November 1933 and the second from January to June 1936.
Cat Was Surely Black; Or Is That Sour Grapes?
POIRINO. lUly (UPI) - A cat decided to cross the road yesterday juat as a truck carrying wine was passing a car.
w w ,w
The car swerved’ to miss the cat. The truck swerved to missi the car, ran off the road and over-1 turned in a field. No one, includ-j ing the cat, was injured buti 13,000 liters of wine spilled. I
:mHoniiuTmfi BAS NOT WATER SYSTEM
*77500
24M UiniT lOU
01 um
GIDLEY
lUCTMC iNOf
On HmHic 6T3-142S
sm Dom HWT.
Now
INSTANT SERVICE for Pontiao Investors
Walling, Lerchen 4 Co. is proud lo be the first in Oakland county to announce the Installation of the amazing new Stockmaster reporting machine in our Pontiac office. This remarkable new electronic unit place? Important InformaUon at your dlspowd within seconds ot the time It happens on the floors of the naUon’s leading exdianges. Important Information now Instantly avaUable on 400 stocks is:
Price, lest sole	Total volume tredod in tedoy
Bid price	Yesteidey's close
Ask price	Lest four quarter eerninti
Current high	Indicated yearly dividend rote
Current low	Time of lest sole
The Ultronic Stodonaiter is another first from WatUng, Lerchen ft CO. to our continuing program to provide investon with the very latest facilities lor high weed market feedback to today’s fast	investment worid.
For instant quototlons and Information, caU FE M2T5.
IWATLING,
I LERCHEN & CO.
members new YORK STOCK EXCHANGE I MS Pontiac State Bank BMg.. Pont PboM; FE S-tnS
[raft Calls fo^e Raised for 6 Months
WASHINGTON (APK^or the next six months draft be raised to add 20,000 td^^he Army’s ranks by June 30.	\
■it it it
The Defense Department authorized Monday the temporary increase in the Army’s manpower from the previously planned 960, 000 to 960,000.
The Increase, an announcement said, is intended to help offset the loss of trained personnel as the service of draftees called up in the Berlin crisis buildup a year ago expires.
♦
The draft quota for this month is 4,000. For December it is 6,000.' An increase in monthly quotas up to 8,000 appears possible.
The high point in draft calls during the Berlin crisis came in September 1961 when the quota was
2fr,Q00.
Czechs, Cuba to Sign
KEY WEST, Fla. (AP) - A Czechoslovakian delegation arrived in Havana to sign a 1963 commercial protocol with.Cuba, Havana radio said Monday.
Special to GM
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j What!Don*t You Like BrandX?
BjrDKXWEST
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Thew b a deep^ rooted raspidon in tiw television industry that viewers do not always giw the c«n-nercials the rapt attention they ao richly deserve.
Some of the mAe advanced thifdcers believe that certain members of the audience will invariably allow their minds to veer and yaw, and thus will miss part of the sponsor’s message .
TO c 0 m b a t any such ne^i-gence on the part of the public, they have adopted a policy of repeating key words and phrases often enough to stick in the brains of even the most abstract-
ed auditors, including those who have fallen asleep.
DRATTED PLAN
Sonne time ago, an enterprising group of interlopera, seeking to take advantage of this protracted commerobl pattern, drafted a plan to mmet a line of products called “Brand X.” '★ * 1
Tbey reasoned thai the constant mention of “Br^ X’’ on television was bound to have created a subconscious demand for it, even though the mention was always unflattering.
. Some time later, another growp of poachers, with similar motlvatioB, toyed with the
JACOBY ON BRIDGE
*A1
WAlOfI
4ASS
*KJ7$
m ti
WKJTS
♦Q7ia
*•
■ACT AJSTt VQI«4 ♦ JU«
AK»«
♦ XIS
Ntefli and aonlli vnhwnblo Nwtt Sam Mh Warn IN.T. Fbm a* Fbm
Opanlng taaA-*S
By OSWALD JACOBY
You show a big hand with one minor suit in the Jacoby Transfer system by responding two clubs, which	is Stay-
man, and following with a bid of three	in your
minor suit.
The immediate response of three in a minor suit is a weakness ] bid.
Today’s handl shows	how the	JACOBY
system facilitates ,slam bidding.
VMi^n South foUowed his two club bid with three chibs North knew that South had some interest in a club slam. North heid only 16 pcdnts for his no-trump, but they were the right slam points	and North	felt	strong
enough to invite a slam.
North opened his KHioint no-trump, and after South showed a big club hand by bidding tyro
I (Stayman), and chibs. North is definitely inters ed in a slam. He has three aces and excellent chib support.
North's three diamonds is Intended merely to see what will do next. South goes to three no-trunfp. Up to this point North has not shown club support.
North refuses to quit at three no-trump and bids four clubs. South says to himself, “My p^-ner could have i;;fiised clubs right away, but he took the trouble to bid diamonds first. He wants me to bid a slam and I will oblige.
The slam is a wrap-up because South can only lose one diamond tricks
-{X
Astrological ♦ For^ast

Q-1he bUdlim has bsaa:
4W
• «
4IT.T. iN.T. • W
You, SouOi, hold:
4AQS7 YAQSI 4Kt «AM What do rowdoT A-^te. Taar partaar hM da.
alied asBiam laiBf to tka
YODArs ounnoif
laataad of raapondlnt o itnar laapondi o
thing but gives you the weirdest feeling.’’
- The second product I have in mind would be a hair tonic called “Kid Stuff ” - “For the discriminating few " who like^ greasy hair.’’
‘Ibeir idea was to cash in on the free advertising they would receive from television announcers who keep saying “and now a word from our alternate sponsor.’.’
As far as I know, neither of these projects came to fruition, and I think I know the rea-ison why. They were to vague. “Brand X” and “Alternate’’ are not linked in the public mind with a specific type of product.
I am convinced, however, that the basic formula was Bound. Using it as a springboard, I have been working on a revised prospectus which I believe will meet with instant success.
Consider, for example, the numerous assurances given by medicinal - type sponsors that their p r o d u c t s do not cause harmful “side effects.” nRST PRODUCT My first producrwould be compound called^ ■	‘
and I would ad^rtise it thus-ly: “Comes in liquid, tablet or capsule form. Won’t cure any-
‘As you can plainly see, your honor. Lady Godiva wwe flesh-colored tights during her entire ride. I move all charges be
BOARDING HOUSE
aner today. Rld» with 0»1» '»»»«« cycle! Strew Krtcoallty. Artee chert d Inltletlve. ¥e —---------‘	“
Very 1
•A.
(avorehie tot writ
I (Apr X to May 30l; .eXtBLK.	•*
0«lfl
•nit muw... ---
prove prodttcUvt, |
g; d' •TO “
’^UM,YAS.COUMSELOR,TME HOOPLE DETECTl'fE A©er4Cy IS KMOVJNl ^ /STHE eOLLDO© OUTFIT/ WHEN W6 TAKE A CASE we MENER LET so/ -ER, OCCASlObAALLV THe , UNFOR6SEeMOOeSHAPf?EM,OF 1 COURSE-^ BUT OUR PERFECT 1 ReC0(^0 IN RECQYeRlNS ALL
\PR0PERTV PROYES OOR . TDETERMINiATiQM.
i?ecovEt?iN6 all PROPERTV/ HooplEj ape You vzy-
IhiS TO TELL MB THAT MV HOME WAS PICKED OYER LIKE A 6ARSAIM COUMTERWHILEVOU 6COOMDRELS WE A6SAULTIf4<3 ME
~icDcy. ------
(eUnis indicated .........
—iing tor reedlnf, r the IntcUect.
I (May ai to June Jl); ra frland CO Idee WblCB
pronteble. Fine ^
a to July Sl»: Fleet-
____. ___________ Lees over to etc
»le* e< "otber lellow."
LtO (July a to AU(. Sll: thiois. (^lrb tendency to worry.
VUGO	--------_ .
Moeo bee itartcd cycle which IceU to ORBATXR HAPPINESS Todey rid yourecM Of Icere. Fecc liiuei ee they occur. Stop trying to crate btldgei before tbey epgeer. Be reellir '
UBRA (Sept, a to Oct. »l
Mia of public----*- --------
bring Ic. MCI - rsi
":a«'j.o lOcL'd to "not, «i: . arato feoU traai propsgeadie. Sec il atloR ec It exlete. Appllca elao to re._ tkate with aeaoclatea, loeed toet. Mceey aiaHort rcgulro atUatloa. Bat cycle rcBMlne high. Maaae recent -log’'
'sAOrmam Wor. St to Dcc. ni: Man pocMMa to«e yN to greater el» lea, InMUeetaal aetiruy. XiceUcat foi eoli-oapretalca. OsU ea (ricadi. Make thta day of ACTION. Pine tor Mtci vtoere. latprorlng peetUoa.
UPRIoSiw (DM. a to Jea. Ml AUbara to eehedula. Pindb iobe wblc regime attenUee to detailf. Puab fo eoendettOB of pr^oeta conateted will
VAUVt (ion. ti to Peb. U):
--------- ^— -----------
-------„ --
tog preeentliig i
, .a--a.,	caipU.
----OM1 nurk re-
ae grndgee. Estead
e ladiTtdael I
w!3t*«dJSV*^
trutH
-i
EmphetU
By Ernie Bnshraillwr

THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUEI^DAY. NOVEMBER 27. 1962
TWEXTy-OXE
Slate Meeting in Sylvan Lake
The Sylvan Lake City Coondl will hirid a apicial owetinf at 7:M, p.m. tomorrow at Sylvan City Hall, 1820 Inverness Ave.
* ia ★
The meeting will be with Don R. MacDonald, the city’s recently re-
Waterford OKs Plumbin0 Amendment
The Waterford Township Board ast idgbt adopted an amend-ment to the township idumbing code dealing With shower pans,
wine license transfer, pending
appointed iepresentativo on the *“rther information.
O^land County Board of Supervisors, to review recent actions df the board of supervisors.
City Manger LeRey 'Draftoa desertoed the meeting as n eda-catienal on to dlscns anything “going en in the county which aloe affects SyWan ladte.” i The meeting is open to toe public. The session was requested by city couKil members.
★ * 1 In other business, city council members met with Trafton Sunday atthesltewherethe new Woodland storm drain enqities Jn-to Sylvan Lake.
Residents had protested the dumping of drain watw intc ^ lake at the foot of Lakmriew Avenue. Discussion of an alternate terminal spot will be resumed at one of the councU's next meetings, Trafton indicated.
Following a public hearing on treet lighting for g portion of Watkins Hills subdivision, the board voted to proceed with the district. Unit cost on the SI assessments will be $13.38.
A motion of intent to proceed on the proposed blacktopping of Alhi Street was passed when residents of toe area present at a public bearing indicated favor of the project Estimated cost to property owners for toe paving was set at $14,347.e, approximately $2.78 per front foot Bids will be obtained and opened in about three weeks.
Will Appear Before Social Welfare Unit
Helen E. Slayton, whose firing last week as deputy director of the county’s Social Welfare Department led to a protest walkout by 18 women employes, will appear before the Social Welfare Board Fridayf Mrs. Slayton w chance to present her side of toe case at a regitou- meeting of the three-member hoard in toe Social Welfare BnOding at the Comity Service Center, according to acting George H. Williams.
The protesting employes, who walked off their Jobs Friday but returned to work Monday morning, have been placed on probationary status by Williams, who fired Mrs. Slayton for “insubordination’’ and "lack of cooperation.’’
Illinois Post Goes to County Planner
Qyde Cook of the Oakland Coun-^ Planning Commission has accepted the position of Joliet, III. planning director starting M o n-
Cook, 41, of 1103 McLean St., Royal Oak, has been with th planning commission since Dec. 1957. He rose from an assistant to hie present post o^ associate plan-
6T.
He is a graduate of Michigan State University and holds a master’s degree in urban planning from Wayne State University.
3	----------------
Thieves Get Watches Val'jed Near $300
Nearlv $300 in merchandise was tolen from the Webb Fuel Co. prly this morning after thieves rained entry by breaking a rear door window.
Stolen from toe firm at 351 S. Paddock St. were 11 wrist watches and a transistor radio valued at $298. The theft occurred between 1:30 and 2.30 a.m.
Pontiac Area Deaths
CARL F. GREME Service and burial for Carl F. Grens, 4878 Clinton Rond, Waterford Township, will be from the Perkins A Reeb Funeral Home HlcksviUe, Ohio. His body was taken there from the Coats Funeral Home today.
Mr. Grenz, a carpenter, died yesterday of a heart, attack.
His wife Lena survives.
DEVEA L. McCANTS Prayers will be offered at 8 p.m. today in the Carruthers Funeral Home for Devea L. Mc-Cants, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dave McCants of 372 CK>ing St. Burial wiU be in Oak Hill Cemetery.
The baby died Sunday in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after an Ulneu of two days.
Surviving besides the pwents are five brothm and '
Billy, Andrew, Mary, Sandra and Jerry Roach, all of Pontiac. ^
JOHN PAVLOFF Service for John Pavloff, 74, of 5171 Thomapple St. will be 3 p.m. Wednesday in the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery.
Mr. Pavloff, a self - employed builder, who suffered a heart attack, was dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital yesterday.
Survivors include his wife Bessie; a son Paul of Garden Gty; a dau^ter Mrs. Charles Hemuui of Pontiac; seven grandchildren; and a sister.
MELVIN RUNYAN Service for Melvin Runyan, 88, of 4154 Quillen Road, Waterford Thwnship, will be at 1 p.m. Thursday ftom the Methodist Church in Walkerville with burial in the Restlawn Cemetery.
Mr. Runyan died yesterday after an illness of several weelu. He wu a farmer and a member of the Walkerville Methodist Church.
Surviving are his wife Myra; two sons. Coral of Muskegon and Raymond of Hesperia; four daughters, Mrs. Albert Miller of Riverside, Calif., Mrs. Kenneth Souders, Mrs. Norma McDonald and Imo-gean Runyan, all of Waterford Township; 10 grandchildren:
20 great-grandchildren.
SYLVESTER J.SCHONS OXFORD-Sylvester J. Schons, 55, of 111 OUve St, died today at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac. His body is at the Voorhees-SipleFuheral Home, Pontiac.
Surviving besides his wife Lola are his mother, Mrs. Paul Donner of Pontiac; three sons, QpnaU and James of Lake Orion, and Debnar of Port Huron; a rfepson, EKis, in the military service; two stepdaughters Miss Francis V. Hutchins of CincinnaU, Ohio, and Miss Oltberine N. Hutchins of Oxford; ^ brothers, Leo of Pontiac and Edward of Union Lake; two ters and three grandchildren.,
LESTER C. SCHOOLEY OXFORD — Service for Lester C. Schooley, 83, of 14 Center St., will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Bossardek'Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Lakeville Cemetery.
Mr. Ahooley died Unexpectedly at his home.
Surviving are a son, Marsden of Pontiac; a daughter, Mrs. Virginia Roberts of Oxford; five grandchildren and two greUt-grandchildren.
MRS. MICHAEL R. SULLIVAN CLARKSTON - S e r V i e e for Mrs. Michael R. (Alison H.) .Sullivan, 37. of 6101 M15, will be at p.m. Thursday at the Lewis E. Wint Funeral Home. Burial will be in Lakeview Cemetery.
Mrs. Sullivan died today at her residence after a long illness. She was a member of All Saints Episcopal Church, Pamui, Ohio.
Surviving besides her husband are two sons, Michael and Shawn; a daughter, Molly Jo, all at honw; her parents Mr. and Mrs. Rawlcy G. Hallman; a brother Keith W. of aarkston; and two sisters, Mrs. Carol Darling of Birmingham and Mrs. Marilyn Benson of Wayne, Pa.
«t LM* OrtM; d«u unclt lloktrt	Mr. Orm»_._
taken to to* PtrUai a Ftotornl Rob*. HlckirtU*. Okto for lerrleet nito knrtal. n
’sssa
CAI Plans Family Night
Mrs. Slayton denied the| Community Activities, Inc., will
charges and requested a chiuce to appear before the board.
Her appearance
hold a family night program for members only Thursday 'from 8.30 to 8 p.m. at the CAI building.
“courtesy audience,’’ since the 5848 Williams Lake Road. Water-
county has no civil service and a formal hearing In such cases 1s not required.
ford Tosmship. A cooperative dinner and entertainment is
Library Unit Meets
'Friends' Re-Elected
President Mrs. Ralph Eaton and three of four officers of the Water ford Townshfo Friends of the U-brary were re-elected for another term last night.
Mrs. John Naz, Mrs. Minor White Jr. and Mrs. James Robinson will resume duties as first
tary, respectively. Mrs. Millard
Death Notbs
I tr* by CmU W-
loTtd wU* o(
-------	- Sin, Ad«lb<
IT oi John
ton* irandehUdna *ad tmt-truidchlMrm. F a n i ••rvlca will ba b«M Wadaetday. Noatnibar St, at 1 p.a. at Iba FlumarfeU Faoaral Hoiaa, Oxford. with Rar. Harlow Royt oftlelatlnK. InUrmant In Saatlawn Cemrtary. Laka Orton. Mra. Johnion .will Ua In itota at tha Flumarfalt FanaralHoma, Oxford.
MeCANTB. NOVSMBia M. Ittl Baby Oaaaa lornn. 37S Oolnx furaat: baloTad Infant dnuthtar of
Dava and Mona Blnora sTcCr-----
daar afater of Billy. Am Story. Oandra and Jarry Ri
Prayar aarrlca will ba today---
------ tha Frank Carrathara
SFIamlnjr^fflelattni. Intt Oak Rlu Camatory. Baby Lynn will Ha la atata a
Frank carrathara Fantral________
attar 4 p.m. today antll tlma of
PAYLOirt^.~'kfi^ito»BS!R sd. dohn. Sm Thornappla; aya baloTod hatband of Battle

RUNYAN. NOVEMBER Sd. IMS.
Melvin. 41S'  ......-	~—•—
Plaint: axe of Myra Ell: father of Mi Soadert, Mr Mra.
aurvlyed
SO ireat-trani.------- --------
aenRea wUI ba held Thartdai November SS. at 1 p.m. at Walkerville Methodlat Chau... Walkerville. with Rev. BanxtUm ^clatlny. toterment In Reaiaawn Cemetery, Walkerville. Mr. Ran-yan will tie In atote at the Coata Faneral Home. Drayton Plalna Hinraday mornini.
and Dtimar Bchona: ■'•ther of Blvlt R.. and Catherine N.
---------- _„r brother of Leo and
Bdward Bchona, Hn. Loy Henn-man and Sira. Itabell Rarrlt: alto tmvlvad by throe yrandchlldren. Faneral arrankamenta are pand-tha Voorheet-BIpla Funeral
City Woman Terrorized by Imposters
PUBLIC SALI At 0:N a.m. OB Noaembar SS. IMS a laof Chryelar 4 Dr. H/T terlel No NOT S444S Win be toM at pubUe tala at SSSM Woodward Ayanna. Famdalt. snehlgan. That addraaa balnt whart tha vahlela U atorad and may ba la-
way. SS. SS. IMS
The board of directors is comprised of Mrs. Robert Kaminskis, Mrs. Douglas McGinley, Mrs. Clayton Mumby, Mrs. William Shunck, Mrs. Edmund Windeler and Mrs. Paid Atkin.
WWW
The only new board member, Mrs. Atkin replaces Mrs. James
UNDERSTANDING
Moking g constant study of thd needs of those who coll us is port of our professional - life. We try to serve os we would wont to be served.
Outstanding in Pontiac for Service and Facilities .46 Williams St.	FE 2-584 V
WIUJAM J. SISK Service (or former Pontiac resident William J. Sisk, 54, of 851 S. Grand Ave., Los Angeles, Calif., will be at 11 a.m. Friday in Donelson - Johns Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery.
Mr. Sisk, a former employe at GMC Truck & Coach Division, died Friday in White Memorial Hospital, Los Angeles, after long illnesa. He was employed by Hughes Sales Co., Los Angeles.
Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Davis L. Sick of Pontiac; and a sister Mrs. Jessie Watson of Pontiac.
His body will be brought to the funeral home at 7 p.m. Wednea-day.
MRS. JENNIE M. HADLEY HADLEY-Servlce for former resident Mrs. Jennie M. Hadley, 84, of 12311 Rosemary St., Detroit, be 2. p.m, Wednesday at the iBaird-Newton Funeral Home, Lapeer. Burial will follow in Greens Corners Cemetery.
Mrs. Hadley died yesterday after a lengthy illness.
Surviving are a son, John of Ypsilanti; two daughters, Mrs. Carlton Glann of Detroit and Mrs. Roy Moore of Newaygo: five tmthers and four sisters; and 10 graiMlchildren.
MRS. HERBERT A. JOHNSON OXFORD —Service for Mrs. Herbert A. (Edna) Johnson, 72, of 2001N. Oxford Road, will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Flumerfelt Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Eaatlawn Cemetery, Lake Orion.
Mrs. Johnaon died Monday after a lengthy illness.
Surviving besides her husband are a daughter, Mrs. Adelbert Strong of Romeo; a brother, John D. Sioemaker of Pontiac, three 1 and four greatgrandchildren.
MRS. ROBERT MARQUARDT UTICA - Service for Mra. Robert (Helen) Marquardt, 88. of 48811 Wright St., wffl be 1 p.m. tomorrow at toe Trinity Lutheran Church. Burial wUl follow in CadU-laa Memorial Gardens' East Cem-|etanr, Mount Clemens.
Marquardt died Sunday in St. Joaeito Hoapital, Mount Clem-lens, after a brief Illness. Her body is at the MiUiken Funeral Home.
Surviving besides her husband are two daughters, Mrs. Elsie Wilbertt of Utica and Mrs. Almg i Schabn of Rochester; three sens, Arthur of Utica, Elmer of Winter-haven, Fla. , and Harold of Min-............in.; and nine grand-
An 88-year-old Pontiac woman was terrorized at her home by two men posing as gds meter reaejm.
*	* w
Mrs. Bertha Lamb, 51 Carter St., was locked in the basement of her home by the pair after toey ithreatened to kill her.
She told police toat one e( the men held a pistol to her head while the other forced her Into too basement. A. visitor heard Mrs. Lamb’s screams and let her out.
The dining room of the house was ransacked, a|q>arently search of money, police said. Mrs. Lamb a^, however, that she had no money in the house.
She said the two men arrived at the house about 2 p.m. and gained entry by telling her that they were from the gas company.
★	★ ★
One of the men had been at the house earliw in toe day, she said. She was taken to Pontiac General Hospital for obaervatfon and released. ,
NOVEMBER ». ifi E 8.. 7061 Ftriblnf, Unli xf« 01: dmr totlixr
Funvral lervlc* will b« Wvdnendav. Novxmbxr M. p.m. xt the D<mtl«on.Johi neral Home. Intonaent li. — Hill Cemetenr. Mr. Moen will Ue la stole x( the Donel
brothel
Alto t_______
chUdrea. finu held WedJeedi
Ftuerci'liomV'Tnter^ent la Fer-nr Ml. Park Cemetery. Mr. FavloII will Ue la state at the Donelioa.Jehae Funeral Home.
by _______
.. -—ral eervice wlU .. redaesdey, November M. m. at the Daaeleon.Jobns
IN DEBT
Airaati la jtaT *0 yanr MB witb eoa OM waakly payaMoL
BUDGET SERVICE
ttoaa. m tot aaiiiaattT FE HIM.
MICHIG “ CREDIT COUNSELORS
BLACE SCHIPEBEE. BBOWN ayaa, aa talL arty aratato aHalb. aaawtra to cmdy. xleliUly e( Vw-hala. mam and Talairaiib. FB tlS&apar.
08T; MALE BHITtANT. NAME
City Adjustment Service
TI4 W. Earm__________FE 6-MM
Loa WffiSIf SAFELY AND
aeaaomMlly wltb aawly raal-'
Do-A«Sl tabiata. M atn
D. E. Pursley
Donelson-Iohns
COATS
FUNERAL HOMl DRAYTON FlStDtS
HUNTOON
Voorhees-Siple
imp Wtorttd lNIt ^	(
Attention
Whan yaa plaa a ppm—lal ai rtar ytn wtal to ba aara yaa m aatartw a irawlaB baalnaat. mm
LOST:	BROWN NND ^WRf
Mafia puS. 4 moaSt aldt Her ~ HlkbVlelntty. FR 4^03S.
LOST: BLACE AND AFRICOT TOT
Poodle. Aaewert U -------- "
------ VlcrRaldwla
RundeU. FE %mi.
LOST: MAM-8 WALLET to el Medleea St. R
LOST ONE BBAOLE. kskwkwt
IN VIC leweVd. I
roST POODLE (NANETTE) ORAT-- black, red eoUar with beU. vl-ly of Cbamberlala and Pefry.
LOST: GERMAN SHEPHERD DOO named "Malor." boy's pet, vl-‘— - Weehto^ Jr. Hilb -Lik^?Veward. FE 4-lSM.
LOST: 4 MONTH OLD ORRMAN Shepherd, by Ibe nemo "Duchesa".
FB I-710S. Bewprd._________
LITTLE FEEAPOO. BLOND
LOST: KEYS ON E. HUBON ST. or Florence St.. Nor. n. Reward.
FE S.W15.________________________
LOST: DARK ORBY TIOBK CAT. vielnity of Jobnton and Maaondata. M reward. FE 4.M7S.
A MANAGEMENT POSITION
tiH a weak to elart. Dm to ipa Inf of naw atore. an amblUoue ai neat.appearlnf man la naadad learn buslnaas Exparlaoca not n« aeaary but helpful Atea il to ». Phone Mr. McIIroy. OE Mta 44
£3ST
yeer4raaB4 laaam* meotb.
refeftUeaa tt faaenl
Yea da aw
n aa tampiaa. and batp aa I Ton Mt an your Haw ter ,— aae purpow, maktaf mamnr far youreelt. IbU aieoelattoa wlBi aur
bara a aar and ba ready M elart Inaaedtateiy. Call FE SSOf *~
OPPORTUNITY
KNOCKS
a a raaanl pi
aatabliM rout# dred^Mular euel lebif. Lookkif ft
abeva artrata I iwM n«Mi M to 43. Mart M IlM plaa par wtak. OR S-SMA.
ATTRACTIVE,
POSITION
tor wldo4waka man — ba apt limit — oaat appaaranca —. mod charaetor—atoady work—no lav-ofte. Call FB Milt tor api
BORING MILL OPERATOR
Must be experienced on Tool work
Lucas or DeVIetg Boring Mill
DETROIT. BROACH AND MACHINE CO.
950 S. ROCHESTER RD. Rochester, Michigi
SCHOOLEY, NOVEMBER M. ItW. Lester C., 14 Center Street, Oxford: ate tJ: dear father of Mersden Schooley end Mrs. Vlrx-Inte Roberts: also survived by five arendchlldren end two treet-
toV ai:at'if a:m”it toa ko»afd;t Funeral Rome. Oxford, with Rev. Fred Clark offlelatlnt. Interment 1 n Lakevtlle Cemetery. M r. Schooley will lie In state at the Boeeardet Funeral Home. Oxford.
BISK. KOVEMBBH fl. INI. WIL-Ham J.. Ml S. Grand Avenue. Lot Antelee, Calif., formerly of Pontiac: am 64: beloved ton of Mr. and Mra. David L. Slab: dear brother of Mrs. JtMla Watson: dear unela of Robert Warren
<16 Mllel
mu! *0? tbop 'expertimee.'MI 4 StW.
K ' '		
		


ALCOA ALUMINUM Bn>»0, etoRD wlndowe. duors, awntaim,
Kraft Siding & Roofing
>REE EiTMATfi FE 44WI
Interment In Perry Mt. Peril IliQUID GLASS AUTO POLIOT. Cemetery. Mr. Sisk will He In wholeiele end retell. PE 4-6324 ■tite At the Donelson-Jc*'
VANDBRPORD.
I OlAsple
REBUttT MOTORS money down—S4 rooe. to pay Motor Exchanf a Cp.
•SI B Satlnaw_________FE >-7431
daar
ard Vanoeriora: near oroxnsr or Mrs. Dorothy Taeter; also survived by nine trandchlldren and •lx traat-trandchlldran Funara] servlet win ba held Wsdneeday, November SS at a p.m. at tha Boeeardet Funeral Home. Oxford, with Rev. Anthony Nelson oftlcl-etlnf. Interment In Oxford Cemetery. Mr. Venderford will lie In state at the Bosterdet Funeral Home, Oxford. I
BULUVAN. NOVIMBER 37. IM3. Alison H . 6101 M-16. Clarkston: axe 37: beloved wife of Michael R. Bulllvan: beloved danthter of Ur. and Mrs. Rawley O. Hallman: --nr mother o( Michael, Molly Jo '	Sullivan: dear titter
Hallman and Mre I
day, ___________
at the Lewie —	....
Funeral Rome, Clerkston, with Rev. Alexander T. Stewart etflel-atlnf. Interment 1“	*	—
Cemetery, Clarkston.
Car-Truck Crash Hospitalizes Man
A 2^yea^old Waterford Township man is in fair condition at Pontiac General Hospital following a car-truck collision in Pontiac Township yesterday.
♦	★ w
Dennis Peters, of 2817 Barkman Road, received head injuries when the truck he was driviii{g collided with a car at the intersection of Perry and Walton Boulevard shortiy befora 2 p.m.
The driver of the car, Mra. Doris M. Sponsellar, 30, of 368 Northill Circle, Rochester, a not injured-
Utica Man Killed as Car Hits Tree
A 26-year-old Utica man was killed last night at midnight when the car he was a passenger in failed to complete a left turn and craahedintoatree.
WWW ayde Middleton, 45562 Kenmore St.. Utica, died shortly after hie car, drtveit 1^ 98-year-old Nada Maloney of 2000 Collins Road. Utica, cradled into a tree at theinter-■ectlen of Bi-ewer and Deqtiindre wds.
Miss Maloney was treated and released flem Communiti^ Hospital near Almont. Police are continuing their investigation of the ac-
-KIX REPLIRft-
Al 10 s.m. Tixlay there were replies st The Press ofltce Ib the lollowing boxes:
17. 28. 58, 88, 88, 72. 74. 77, 78. 81. 88, 118, U9.
FOR FAST ACnON
Pontiac Press Want Ads Dial FE 2 8181
FROM t A.M. TO I P.M
MitoO Frau a lly f6r
Immrdlately. Tha
el Uw advarttaanMOl which
Tba SaaCUIaa for eaiwalla. Uoa et Iraoalcnt Want Ada la S a.m. Uw day.of puHleattim
Bdx mmibmi
The Pontiac Press
REUABLE laraatoad. FE 4-
TBAN TOU THINEI
---la and Motors not prop...,
WDTRRIZBD wUI osum OMUy rtpMrs In Uw SAVE by caUInc 1113 Evbmidai and nvovuvrwa NOW ON DUPLAY
Harrington Boat Works
•Tour Evlnruda DOalor"
IIW 8. Talekrapb Hd. FE 34033
xafn. Houae !
Concrate Work. N
PAUL GRAVES_________
Frta Eatlmatoa___OR 41611
BUILDING MODERNIZATION
AIRPORT LUMBER CO. HOME
IMPROVEMENT
HEADQUARTERS
lUoa. addttfiu. racraatlon roemi
COMPLETE BUILDDfO AND RE-modellnx Nrlaon BMs. Co. OR 3-6131 FE 64843._____
HOME
IMPROVEMENT
SPECIALIST
Addttlona. porebM. isrsma. tarts-riot altorsUou and ramodallnc. Caaamt work — otty oldowalki AU work fnl& mmriatoad. Oulnn'
ConatruettooTra 8403._
W. PDfE STOBk SASH .I I.IS
The More You Tell the Quicker You Sell! Want Ads Do the Job Try Them 1
laildiHg Modernizatian
I CAKPBT SEEVICE.
Iff fend flta
■ weeewsaeeJ BnQIMttS
iiid^TLncr coAi o> rm mn
CHRISTMAS TREES
Wholaaala • Ratoll View Mmpira now
TALL TIMBERS NURSERY SALES
IMS Telofraph Rd.. Fonttao 1 Milo N. of^uart Laka Rd 333-3441 Home Phone MA S-637S
DRYWALL
lad, toped, and tinlal
852-3661
DRYWALL
FlNiaHlHO AND REFAIH I-30S7________7314S4S
ANCHOR FENCES
„otl	Aluminum	Wai-
NO MONET DOWN FE 1-7471
Ftowr Sondliii
THURMAN WITT
- WATEBLOX - WAX
j.JI	****°~
TATLOR. floor LATINO
CUSTOM CHAIR CANIHO AND
Haatiag Sarvlca
BLOWN IN INSULATION. FIBEB-alu or mineral wool. Wolvtrtao Inaulalton. MArkel 4-3663.
TALBOTT LUMBER
oiaw Inirtanid In doori and wli dowa. Complete bulldins urvtce. lea^kUnd Ave______FB 4466
EXPERT PIANO TUNINO By Maetor CrafUman IMMEOUTEnCRVICE
Wie^nd Music (>nter
Oeear Soluntdt "
4-1 FLASTERirO AND REPAIRS.
Rasa. Faf Lea FE 3 7633. •LASTERINO FREE BSTIMATBS
OOI6PLRTB UNB OF FIXTURBi.
m a. s^aw

Bags - U^alttofy Ford’s Cleaning Service
Couch ind chair claaiwd 16.66. Avarsta llvtax, dlnlnx room ar-haU oarpat daahad 11346. 3 or pc. ooctlooAl tloanod I7.IS. I ah tla ebair and ottoman olaam
Tries aad Shnibs

UlMlMk. L iBad#
“"xsasf • n
ACa T»n SIITICH STUMP RBMOY Air Ttao rama^ trlimntaa. Oi6 a» bid. 6634616 ar FE EMM.
removal. Lew ratoa. FE 6-1666.
Genera! Tree Service ^ »
HAULDfO AND RUBBISH. NA6IE your prloa. Aay Uma. FE S46M.
Track laMtaT'
m TON VAN FOR t
Trucks to Rent
Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co.
63 S. WOODWARD 'B 444«	FE 6-1443
w
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BLOOMFIELD 7 Walls aro win

ACMH aUAUTT FAINTS INC.

pit'
' K	"
THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. NO^MBER 27> 1962

OM nAnOH AT----- -T»rt M»
wllooil. FEXIMNO. UDDINO.
•iMalBC. JDOrntnt* «r'
d»(. T*lM^-Un«
^ mamSb. .
filood Donors Needed
wjrsisSi.”Kr
Detroit Blood Service
W>Urt«cd. _____________
ICAN laOPEBlElfCED Ilf AUTO-
With hthk* hMl
wtth bra* *nd n*ede<tl (dUMtlOO

“5Sr?i
W*«Jw«rt «nd Sqbhr* LU*
nti^ictoeol. Khowl^* ot tjpliw *iiB o<fle* micblne* UnporUot. Bal-
“’pSkstok WALXCR SMITR
Exccumn: personnel
COUNSEUNO SERVICE SSS X. M*pl*	BIrmlnil
PART TIME
X*Mlns work between 7 ud p n. tUS a month su»r»iit*«). C JASBI- --------
ImtrvctiMi—^hMlt
PHARMACIST REOtSTERED FOR ...rth Detroit oub-
t otor*. north Detroit urb. Our emplojei know of thU ^ RopiT to iKnttoe P»««« »«»
HEAVY EQUIPMENT TRAINING— Leim doMri, drofUne. el*.
Job while trtinlnt. ActuoUr ole equipment. Free pltce Writ* Key Tr»lnln». «M
SALESMAN T0^_AN^E
mrt* It writ* <
wiHTKD. FIRST-CLASS AUTO AND
"taSa moamUc. etrmsht.
tJlARN TOOL AND DIE MARINO, tool deeltn. dreftlns. tir condl-tlonln^	“ ii?
^Pon't'liic'i^ee* Bo« ISI
Wark Wmtad M«h
“ICO"?-
* jSp*^e«"S» "»ni'w. Hbron.
AVON
CARPENTRY. BRICK ATOBLOOT. CONCRETE. CHIMNEY TOP-
PINO. FE ^544^. ___________
ELECTRICTAN. » YRS. BX^RI-
I. Droy-
baby sitter while mother
TL:.. D_.ll.. wmleUDl Air.
BEAUTICIAN, t TEARS B****®*:
with followlns. Apply MW
»eth La* Rd._________________^
BABTSITTBli PR E FER WHITE ■nlddieesed. Hr* I- «*-**“ iBTsnnm
'^?isTO.
PLASTERINO. ALL KINDS. H.
Meyere. OR S-IM5._____________
WANTED CHAUFFEUR WORK. EX-perlenoed. FTC A36M.
CAFETERIA Counter Attendant
WOMEN DE:.IRE WALL B m« A-1 work FB 4-1131.
DESIRE TYPING IN MT HOMET
neceoeary. Apply Oreeafteld t
C06k wanted. MUST BE NEAT
S?y *I«^r*'SS«.t.‘*ffS
DEPENDABLE OU«R LAOT TO
DISHWASHER PULL TIME EVE-
1 Dial* Hwy. Dray-
weniwi. Apply, a M._*— era. xm orabard Laka Rd. i Mlddlebelt. PE MSTl.
EXPERIENCED
machln* bOoaecpIns *x-
r^lSouT^wlc* {os*n:
_____JUiT WOMAN TO TAKE CARE
of home tor couple.---' " -
—------- -c-ysft
LADY FOR OEHERAL omCE
w*a oxparloaoo. a otatua.
HOUSkkxiPER FOR S DATS. SB per week. OR EISM attar S p.m. iodteKEXPER FOR MAN AND
HOUSEKEEPER. W AH TED TO
If You Must Work . . ENJOY ITl
And yop cartalnly .wUl enjoy this General Houackeephif Occupation.

the eomtorla tt
Naturally, referanee* are reqi For a pleaeant. new. ud mjoy;
Midwest 4-9264
LOCAL FINANCIAL COMPANY need* younc wouu between M and 3S year* a< ase. Muit ■■— a pleaaut peraooallty and meeuat lha public. Typto* * tial and aome eimrlenc* In iertns deelred. TUa I* a ~
a perma-
____________ ________J air conditioned otnc*. WrtM to Box 17. PmUac Prea* tlvt pi pact experluee.
r FE S-KM. aa for
EVELYN EDWARDS
'sEUNOnCR^ICB''
Telejihone FE 4-O.W
*RMH--RR_------^--------
f SALB SVBBT SATUB-.
BhM Bird iSedm —”
LEGAL SECRETARY
I'juijrasdjsr
_____1 plac*__________
___a FE V7IS1. ____________________
Lif US "but it OR SELL IT TOR
Midwest Employment
4H Pontiac Stata Baa BuUdms FE S-MW
SALES
_________laleunan for local- area
aat J»-M. Minimum a ywi col-leae. ExoeUent lalary tmh ear
funilshad. Flue commlaalon and txpenea. account.
Midwest Enyiloymeni
«S Fontinc Bute Bank Bulldle
MANY TENANTS WAITWO. C^ ■ IM. Adaini Rcnity. FE S-MSS. n a-7053.________________
Statistics
Extremely Inicreitins poaltlon f
SbiTB LMiif OvErttrs
CAREER oniL TO SHABI^ROOM apartment wtth inroe. 4717 D|xl* Hwy, OR i-nai.__.
Mile. Detroit ai.
Allied Inelllute. FE 4-4SW or
wiahea n ja In PooUnc nren.
MIDDLEAOED W O M A H WAHTS houicwork. live In. ra a-MSS.
RELIABLE WOMAN DESIRES bahyattUni. dayi.jOB aSSia. RELIABLE WOMAN WANTS WORK
iHiUh^i SMTvkt^iqpflH 13
MASONEY AND GENERAL nlrulln*. realdenOid. eemmer-1. John W. Capiei. MY a-IUS.
CEMENT CONTRACTOR. GUINN’S
Cuetructlon Co. FE 5-*ia.
CEMENT. BLOCK ------- ^
work. Rcaeooaie. SSasild.
L D I N O modernization.
b*a r*ter”and~cjnTanlent Wnna. Pontine SUle Baa. FK 4-3M1. EXCAVATIONS - Bl LLDOONO Septic Syeteme
____ __________KM aaati
. D. YOUNO .NOUSE MOVING. Fully eaulpocd. FE t-MM. .. PLASTERINO. NEW AND REPAIR. Krllrr UL 7-' '
wllh bath, lifhl houaekeeplnf ilred. by exeeutlee with Eira
ment Securttlea Comm--------
four daye. FE XOm.
wiloy-
Rome
/	JOIN
the
‘HESf SELLER LIST"
• NOW" lor quick courteou/icra-Ice. warren Stout Realtor. 77 N.
Saalnaw St. FE }dW.__________
wanted FOR^BELECT
tenanU. Jamee Realty. OR 4-
r^'issurySTwirrou'^j
uUon luaruteed. CaU i* — Stout. Rea— ” “ FE MISS
XAsr
ROLFE B. SMITH. REALTOR. PR
3-TSa.	_________
EAST BIDE. RANDY TO EASTERN
WEST SIDE a. apartmuta. H**..	^
and rtfriseralar fumtahad. Near ■«. Benedict and Oonaleon aehaola. ahop^nj^and baa Una. FE 4-Oia ar
I BEDROOM.	CLEAN.
if?UBNiaHED. AT ITS? Wallar* La*. W a n»
.________M2-3477.
a-BEDROOM.
"“tOD Rd.. IVwawam Muuai. «ww --
childf a. 4-4>13 or MA 5.W11.
a-B*DROOM."w A T K I N B l^-

Drayton. OR M1I3.
4 BOOMS, HOT WATER. 470S
MACEDAY LAKE AREA-^BED-room. partly fumlihed. tan per wk. OB a-aiaa.
UNION LAKE area-mode^ lake front houie.^a b*drm*.. W month. Phone Detroit aVa^MI, evuinci.
WILLIAMS LAKE FRONT, a BED-
; BEDROOM. OAS HEAT, am WIL-
_____ Near PontI**' Drlt
Coupl*. S47. OB a-477a.______
a-BEDROOM. MODERN. BABE-
l. Waat Strathmore. OR a-aiaa.
a BEDROOM. FENCED YARD. OM 1. IS74 Haael. Blrm*««l>mn. 1*5 month. Ml 7-S414.
ApHrtHWHtt-NraMMd
ROOM AND KirCHEN.
IIS. Waehar. FE Sdssa______
1-BEDROOM EFFICIENCY AP*BT-
____________(umlahad. Parkin*.
Nocth-Northeaat aid*. FE S-aa*l
or FE 4m«.	_____________
ROOMS. BOS AT DOOR. KLDER-
a-BEDROOM ROME AT PONTIAC
La*. «7a-is4B.	______________
ROOM ROUSE NORTH OP PISH-
lot. tara**. Schick--
4-ROOM ALL MODERN TER-
a-em
utilities.
31M Elisabeth ’	"_______
ROOM BACHELOR APARTMENT.
BEDROOM APARTMENT AU ulUltlei. ns a wk. as Crora SI. Pontiac._____________
couple. FE 5-24*5. 40 Ediecn.
dS AND B aNoelu.
CUTE ROOMS. PmVAlX EN-juc*. Near town. FE A*4a4. a AND a ROOMS. PRIVATE BATH.
ROOMS. STEAM HEAT, NEAR
S44 Baal Bird, at Valencia
_________ F£ 4-7>SI
FARM BOUSE 3 BEOBOOMS. bath, nawly decorated. BaaemnL “ hut, tarage. satjasa.
a ROOMS AND bath: laundry faclUtlci. CaU MI 4-148*.
3 LARGE CLEAN ROOMS, entrance and bath, plenty cup
from la noon — * pm. 334-2*53.
3 ROOMS AND BATH. NEAR FI8H-er Body, *7S per mo. PR 3-7M*.
after 5 p.m. OR 3-H23.___________
LAROB ROOMS AND BATH.
USED BUILDING MATERI^S,;	j|,„. Rot water and heat
aaad 2x4't. I3e each. 2x1x12 foot	(^01* In. Adult* uly. PE
and 14 fooL w as each. |u —*	----
BENCH ASSEMBTy
attention teachers. mcE a-
“J'CTEI® motor, MeRVlCE. HR-
b^'d-otovrxs. petit fours. paatrtaa. tea tandwleha* and coa-W Mad* In my home. Delivered. Florence Colllne. caU Holly *l4-a*0I
W743.
BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL
women. ’	-......... ......’*
axeelleni
■mldutpim 11«»»	1*
bookxxxfino. all taxes
DmnMUaf A TiOwtaf .17
alterations of ant type, aaa-
lAKUfO AND DEBION-in*. wni lae all kind*, M aeam; ttreei work etarttn* with ladle* •klru and flnlthln* with eloquut
4-Siaa. M Pine St ____________
CLEAN 3-ROOM. UTILITIES FURN.
no children. FE 34I7M.
COBT. BACHELOR APARTMENTS-OT for coupl*. All utilities fum. $13 per wk. Phone Mrs. LUey, *7a-l»8. *110 Highland Bd. EXCELLENT rROOMSrbAS HEAT.
FURNISHED ^ROOM APARTMENT
IN LAKE ORION 4 ROOMS AND bath, completely fum. —*	“
trance., beat. Ilehti ud 6*3-1173 r" - ' "
LAROB 1
_____________OR 4-1312.________
MHfiNf t DKWirtiHl 23
LADY FOR WORK IN LINEN room, some lewln* eapertene* neeeaaary. Apply between 3-1* p.m.
MOTHERS HELPER. LIVE IN.
713 W Huron
PART-TIME EVENING WORK FOB
ehua*. Apply Mtrule MUe Drive-In Tb**^. aiU S. Taleiraph Rd.
TOANKBOIVIMO is over. CHRIST.
way! DonT le^your
at taday. sb
__________tly. For I
appeintmut. FK 4-I7S3.
y balwam 3 and t

whItb woman tor light "-iMwark. ooaktBK ml ilay nmb^ b atdariy co^. FE tmi.
WOMAN wahthd pqm rcaWfiM idnalty era*. ApEO bi paraoa
'waitressbs or car hops, for
daye ar ny ------ "	------
14'k MBe Rd. lU 3-2373.
ttjTwiiiii----------------


a-1 DECORATORS. _ PAINTIIW. plaatarlM andpaparlDf. Fraa aa-
tlmat*. n 4-3773.____________
A LADY interior DECORATOR.
iverage ila< ■E ^3.
I. 333 per room.
MASON THOMPSON. DECORATOR.
i, FE 4-33S4. .
PAINTING
........ PAPERING WAL
WASHING. TOPPER. OR 3-7*31. FAINTINO. PAPERIKO. REMOV-ml. weqini. 3^2372. C. Whit*. PAINT1No7 F a P I B RE3*OyAL. —hm*. no Job too email or fra* eathnate*. '211-7734-
INTRRIOR AMD 1
RRIOR.
Ins. dacoraUn*. OR a-7*34-
SmwIm ^ 24
NEED TV OR RADIO TUBBB7
Ffe-'fu^TEsTrXG
MONYGO^RY*“vn'R D
ROOMS AND BATH. SEPARATE
------ -'oe* to dr--*—”
block of^
ROOMS AND BATH. PRIVATE eniruce. Ill N. Tclciraph. apply aflcr *:3B p.r
. everythint lur-
______jc December '
. Huron. FK S4M27.
a BEDROOMS. OARAOE. OAS beat. Near Northern High and Pontiac Motor. OB. 3-3721._
.. «... Arbor. FE S-7423.
4 BOOMS AND BATH. TOBHEB lot. aaraa*. Schick. MY 2-3371.
4-ROOM BOUSE. OAS BEAT
ncr mo. Can FE 2-1271.
- ——n-T—T wv	D
ROOMS AND BATH.
. __ 731-4313 after 3 p.lt
weekly. Call FE 3-7333.______
BOULEVARD HEIOUT8 — 2 Bedroom Unit —
TOR COLORED a
FOR COLORED. 3 ROOMS AND J. *u boat. 433 Rubum. Call 3-ms.	_______________
r*l24.
HOUSE FOR LEASE.
FE 34WM after 3.
LOTUS LAKE. WATERPORa 1 " ’room, modem, lake piivUegea. Hid welcome OR 3-^. LAKEFRONT 2 BEDROOM BRICK.
LEASE WITH OPTION TO BUY. 2-
CARNIVAL
Br Dick Turner
NO MONEY DOWN
NO MORTOAOB COSTS. Brand iww. ^t a Job roova* you tat. Lara* S-badroam with walk-in ele**{*. famUy utebm. SS3.7I a month.
“Yourtg-Bilt Homes”
REALLY laUN BETTER BUILT RUMtU Y«M>i	■» X woa

‘We’re going to bed early, Helen. Joe took the day off from his office and didn’t get his usual nap!”
ISXW STORE, PABKINO„ LOT. good location. For rotaU oMlc* or
ttudlo. CoU FE »aai».____________
SJif OB LEASE RAILROAD depot. l.OIS iq. ft. of heavy pluk floor, truck and rail dock fulUtIca with a-7xS aUdlna door*. Inquire aoe E. Huron. Milford, asism.
HOLLY AREA. S 3UHUTES CHRTS-ler Hwy. Now a-bedroom rueh. paved itraau. city water, near everythlns. tSS a month. Nothlna
OA s-aoia.
eomar of Blaine 1 Macks K. of Oakland a Mocks N. of Montcalm Opu 1:3S to*
FE $-27*1	LI 2-7an KVea.
ne lot. Ideal for *M*r-
. _______________
_____,m. and 4 p.m._____
2-BEDROOM BUNOALOW.
•uburbu do** to WOtorfora man. 1-car Sara**, tenead yard. Raeal-■— ^ondiuon.	■■--
WEST
paymi^. CUT tarm*. Call fOr t|^ pfeL WATERFORD RRALTY. OR
t. Owner. MY 2-3711.
12* SEWARD STREET
___air funukce. 0*r**e. paved
street. tS.*SS with 3300 down and Sts per month. -----------------------
a E. Huron. FK 4-32*4.
:“r':ss;;
*31 B. TENNYSON 3-bedroom homo with good alaod Uv^ room ud dining spoc*. Full boaomnt. 14x31 ft. Auto, gu
4 water heater. 14.330
5 lormo or lower pile* S . mnrtMfo. K. O. Hemp. a E. Huron. FE *
*720 DOWN
a nice opartmonts plus 3 i---------
fof owner, both bousee hi good condition, new gu heating plut.
Oakland Heights near Drayton Large lot. Lake privileges. ”-‘-at tia.400. 3400 down. Call Wi FORD REALTY. OR N4S2S.
Avalia.. --- —
only. 31*0 mo. OR 3-34*1. NICE 3-BkOROOM 3--------
and rooreatioo room. FE 3-1744
•ary. Real Value Realty -
BENT -*53 MONTH -OPTION - ■ Iroom eihgle boro*, eamted. heat. In north part of city
near Northern High and Pootlu
Motor, conelderof—---------- —
Ready soon Rea: ly 12-7.-------
VACANT. 4 ROOMS. OAS. LABOE lot. aias Avalon. *t Auburn Adam*. Eves, or Sat. UL a-lSM.
WILLIAMS LAKE
Ibedroom. modem, very ---------
Leu* with option to purehaee. L. R. Sllddlaton. PR 4-2S41 or FE 4-S312.
WaUAMB LAKE
room. DOWNTOWN. 7* E. Huron FE 4-4334. LAKE ORION -- ROUBEKEEPINO
cottagM. all utimie*. 31* “P — week. True Rustic cab B. Broadway, MY 3-3*3*.
NICB 4_^MS^ SlTut?", %■
I. FE 3433* or FE
PARTLY FURNISHED 3-ROOM
____________FE 3-33*2.________________
SECOND FLOOR. 1 ROOMS AND - -	preferred. 212-147*.
b^.^^^i*dy
a ROOMS. STOVE AND----------------
stor, utllltlei furnlihed. private entrance, deposit required. —
Milford. *33-1*30.______________
1 - BEDROOM apartment FOR
--- gu beet. After *. OR 4-4006,
— Pleltie. OB 3-1031.

3 AND 4 ROOM AFAItTMENTS.
heel turn. FE 2-3031.
3 ROOMS AND BATH HEAR OX-bow Lae. I child welcome, aiO w«^E^Mieo^M_M344,___ ROOMS. BATH, UTfIJTIES furaUhed. White.
I ROOMS AND BATH. OAS HEAT.
30 FRONT STREET
^rai» t
DfSURAHCB FIRE WINDSTORM IS
M	Ft 4-30S3.
Pwr Tmwaiiii
D^R
ered or while and children i ceptabl*: Beferucee required. I
j^UpMead Il**«w’’Iia’E.' Hiin
IXIMS, KITCHEH AND RATO-
SLATER'S
NISbU FE f-3137
RENT or SELL
Rental* With Option
READY SOON , ,	.
S35 Kinney,- corner of Blaln* 2 blocks east of Oakland. 3 blocks lorth of Mon tea lo. I:3S to

1. $2.100. ownar. MA 3-I1I2.
r‘ra’2'
ovar my moi^ag*. Call
FK 24127. 10 Feneley Court. Ownei
James^A. Taylor, Agency
7733 H^M^Road
TAKE-BACKS
WALLED LAKE, ucellent 3-bad-
WATKINS LAKK. like ns
— 2-bedroom, bath. —--------..
t. awnings. Only |7,**3. tarmi.
COLORED
3 Bedrooms "O" DOWN
DON'T U1B8 OUT
___ l:»toS
U tMJ7 Bntr 7 p.m. -------W KBALTY
$9,500.
mn build 3-bodroom rueb-etet* bon* OB yoor lot. Full btumenl, oak floors, til* Oath. Mrcb ai~ boards. OR 2-7030.
RLSS McNAB_________ART MEYER
TIU LEVEL
Model open. 227 W. Eennelt, new Fisher Hedy and Fnn-tlM Motor*. Prlctd from 211.020. '
WOULDN’T YOU LIKE TO LIVE In a WM btmgalow for 1 and no moraTJuat what thi tor ordered, a coay place. too and Bald* In. Tel. LI 7-2471
NEW 3 and 4-Bcdroom
Brick Homes
Ga.s Heat—Paved Streets Large Rolling Lots FHA TERMS
$69
ANCHOR BAY. NEAR_____________
aalr: New home, 3 Iwg* I roomi, aluminum elding, stove. »-Uched gwage. large lot. gu heal. BmaU down paymut. Si.lOO. Phan* **2-27*4.
A MONTH
ExdudMi^lJxu^^taurue,
3-Bedrooms Brick Ranch \t:ached Garage
AUBURN-CROOKS ROAD AREA sharp 3-bedroom alum, ruch, patio. tputous lot. Paved elraet. Ter-value $10,300 might trade.
CaU H C. Newtngham, Baallor.
UL *3210. UL 2-5375.
-T ASSOCIATE BROKERS
lea Fraailn Bird._____PE
BY OWNER:	3-BEDROOM. CAR-
COMtfUNUY NATIONAL BANK Par Romo Owntnblp Loau R’e Buy___________FE 24171
CHEAPER THAN RENT. 2-BBD-
itlons are
____jat. fence’
tehools. 4'/>'
...____mor'"'-
OB 3-S27S.
mortgage with gilt monlUy. Only *1.3011 down. OB 3-327*.
CUSTOM BUILDIHO Your Lot Or tllne John C. Mylee, Bldr.
*2.30* CASH
I this g-room 7-b*lh homr. Ex-
113 down on lalee movee you In.
FE 3-27*3____________
BAM WARRICK HAS W SYLVAN La* 2-bedroom, garaf*. «0S leue. 3-bedroom, car^. BIOS leau.
482-2820 or 0*2-1714.___________
-WATERFRONT tBEDROOM. CAW

TfHITE LAKE FRONT - 3 EXTRA
wooded, lias m
WEBSTER SCHOOL DISTRICT AND near Oeheral and Slat* Hwpltal^
llvlns i pan-
c^Huirr district and
Thorpe. FE 2-1337.
R«iit Rmris
..... utruo* and ehoWer. V wk.
V«!	_____________
CLEAN, QUnST. NEAR FISHER'S.
at W. Tennyion. FE 340*3.
NICE. CLEAN. LARGE BLBXmO
town. 34* N. Sulnaw.
ROOM FOR RENT FOR WORXINO
eowri*. Anderson at. 334-31*1.
Rewns With iMrfl
AN EXCEPTIONAL. CLE^ HOME • Beet, nf food. FE *4377.
OFFICES, OROUND FLOOR: HR AT.
itl3 Ellubeth Lae Road.
BRICK OFFICE I
_________ OVER
..........feet. Very altracUv*
bldg only shout 12 yurt old. Idea for any kind of prafeuhmU. Only *B* Moa (mm Horth. Sag; »•*
pavad. CaU Mr. Jenningt FI 2-«S*.
IN rochesteIT^
n and d
I*, m hi
$190
Moves You In, FHA
GI's
No Money Down
attached garage. 103x112 ft. lot ...
' ' " York Building Co. Open ■ ‘	12-7 p.m.
Dftily ud Sunday IX-’i
04^11
. prlca. 12.000 down.
NEAR ST. MIKE’S
2-bedroom bungalow, nicely furnished. full buement, gu ’ gwage. gt,300 tuU price, termi PAUL JONES REALTY -	■ FE 44*30	"	.
NEW- HOUSES
$00
Down
$68
month plua tazei and U3ur>
I Stantoy. 1 blacka
Son Bqdr'
OPEN 11 TO 3 DAILY APOTUTE BUn-DINO CO.
LAKE PRIVILEGES GOOD LOCATION
Clou lo new Htthodlal ehurcl
2-cw sitnahad awna*. (uU aaant. earamlo tli* bath.
Don McDonald
Daily 12 to 8
brta, lUU £U h*M.
SMn*UB. 'MSoBiitOM lUUL TATE. OtS W. Huron. OR 44M. Evaa.. enU OR--------------------
SPECIAL
"B.TJSStas'.J
A naal claM Mbatfawm I
RAY O’NEIL, Realtor
aoiK^a
HO DOWH FAYMXRT tlaalSt •> anly. 2 or 14*drocmhaSN *U nawly iaaOratad and In A-1 **•■
Uiau aUk*. They ar* vuaot
$9300
William Miller Realtor FE 2-0263
*?* W. Huran______Open 2 ta 2
fleora. su beat, coppar p
In*. No mcasT down on M. Modal nTallaU*. W* ni
UU DOWN - COZY IWO-BEIN raoBu bungalow with 4 Ma. Good daan IttU* hom*. PuU prlM oUy gt.tao. immedlat* poaaaaalen, aura can't bast ttilt on*.
'a*^ plS^uS^d iSalicw. Eaiy
FHA Urm*. 'Two-badroom bwga-low with oU AC fumu*. tUa baUi.
"SPECIAL"
Oakland County’s Ilncet lau. In-cludea IwnUy rodm, flraplue In living room. 1-cw gwag*. teneod yanf natural asnd beach, c—— leaviM stale. wlU lacriflc
HIITER
.......... water heat, attached
garage, lake prlvUegas. Only tO, iso, low down, payment.
ACRES VACANT, clou .to Oarki-.oA>	axcellent bulld-
I. C. ,HUUr. R^
£*t*{r‘3*a"&.‘'Lk““Rd-.. -. 4-2bW or ra 2417* or FB 1-733*.
HAYDEN
TOWARD ROCHKSTIR. W Blvd. Large lot *0 x 240. Cli school. 3 bodroome, recri room and extra bedroom In b***-ment. Oil fumac*. gsrtu*. *1.0*0 down plus mortgag* cost.
*440 D07VH plus mortgage cut. Act TOW on ihl* well kept,ranch boma on 1 wooded WU. IVk-exf garage (Iniaed and bested. Rx-
decorated. PrlvlTegu o
3-BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL $9,995	$1,000 DOWN
------BS: tl’ lot. FInUhed family
Painted InUrlor. IH-cw
MLLER
*U fired bat water, beat.
rtnj^tuuSt'Rwdu'^ a *%■* aWcIna hai^ -"‘-ice far 41* ehtekau. I
IRWIN
Rancher	.
schoaL paved st. Nlu cleu Iwo-tamUy rms., aa hath each. ”— u one iui wUl glv* you a .
show you a goa in-
LIST WITH US — We
trad*. 23 yra. axj^aoc*. Open S4:1S. MuttUte Ust&g Sarvle*.
L. H. BROWN. Realtor
yS*4W ti^R ^0
CLARK
FOR 2 BKDR003U. WUl accept your emaUer hooi* ar aquUy *i tU cr part down paymant an this datlrabl* ranch	Hu 1-3
wre lot fencad raw y^. har-hequs. compIcMd In ISt*. Nicely dacorated. oa Doore. Ulad b*m. —■—1 kltehan. Iws* Uvhis and
CLARK REAL KSTATi_______
3101 W. HURON S,T;_	« J-JM*
-—■— —" FB 4-02SI or FE ^3*l*
vtninga caU FK 4-0203 or FE 3-Multlpl* Llatinga Sarvle*
WILL DOFLICATl OH YOUR LOT
J. C. HAYDEN Realtor
187*1 BIchland Rd. (R-M*,,,, , IM 3-3*04	Open *U1 I
East Boulevard
•utQm*tic heftt. i
Brewer Real F-state
JOSEPH F. REISZ. SALES MOH, FE 4-31S1_______Evw. FE *4*23
Washington Park
Birmingham

pavad drtv*. SU.104. FHA
North Side
FIve-rocm bungalow -room - two-ow gwag* m lot. *7.33* - Terau.
Brewer Real Estate
JOSEPH F.
4a51tl _____FB KfC
Attention GI
DORRIS
Beautiful _.w altu—-*
jiaira
venlent circle ditve,------
to th* 2-ear iwage. 2 » patios, spaclou Utenen,
Slcnf wlth**6ull^ln fci
baUi. A boat of VclU
tached gwage. tlg.tSO Unanced.
RORABAUGH
FK 2-S05S
_________________jsisf
*13,330.
OWNER LEAVnjp STATE .—	Mcrifle* thI* a
----- boa
DLORAR BLOO. CO.
OPEN
NEW 4-bedroom
Full ba«ement. Elisabeth Lake Es> tatas. m Roslyn. Nelson Bldf. Co. OR M191.
$500 DOW.N
_______haS?*.__
HILLER-GREER RD.
S-badroom rana. allstihed tmf. beautiful ttona (root, hug* lot. *11 «M 10 ^esnt down.
'LAITLET REALTY
3-Bedroom Ranch
eonventencM. NO
approvals needed. Juet ae-
Includee evervlbblg. Must seU. OPEN ll TO t DAILY 8POTLIOHT BUILDIHO CO. ____________PE 4-0**5_____________
CLOSE DOWNTOWN
Juil off Franklin Blvd. at tS Lorraine Ct.. ■ U UiU fine a-bc--
---------- ...
K apprdvcf lU.SM. eti
WOULD YOU
like uparate dining room. I raomt upitam, fun basemei ew gwage, etty convenience.. erythlng ehip-aape. No work to be desM here and oi^ I3.SM.
HA(',STROM
REAL BaTATS
4Mt W. Huron	OR w^ww.
Evenlnff ci^ OR 34ttt or M2-043S
2 Big Bedrooms
k and fraiM nuMh boma an
room, gararnk tUa baUi. LAROl
Roottt nRouoEoirr. IiQtb
OF storage.________
larag*. Full haaamtnt wlih bug* ------—, A TREAT TO
3 Acres . . .
tr garage. DANDT BA8K-T wUh oil heat, taundry. wa-leaur. Almost 3 Km, a| f City. BARGAIN
PRICE <a tU.tgSI Dob'I delay!
tng to et LAKEPRt ranch wli rage. lH ment r*i biM* In room w ssrpettni bult-lns.
.	________ Brick
______	„ 3-car altachsd garage, Itb baths, eparkllnt Sum*-_._i ... room, mammoth llre-
new wall t
kitchen with ,na a wooded lot with lake IronUge. *33,300.
70 feet
A REAL BUT
home ll thin siiaip e-weui
brick ranch hom* with Ilnl-----
bS'.emfnt rec room. Ledgerock
■ via -	■-	•*-- “ ■
- Ideal
fireplace In this llal* living -----	...	..--- plutered
hulll-ln oven and range — ■buodance *f eating space. This home Iq. In «gb*llent eor-““—
HGNEYMOON COTTAOE
Just u bright at a new tUvsr
......	—.——.It. ludweped
ment. oil pjP heat. llHgSO Using room, oak floora and very quiet iMatlon In Grion Twp. Eacellent etarter home to. be sold on reaeonahls twms.
®38 Dixie Hwy _ OB 4-KI2 MUL'nPLE LMTlNO SERVlgE
Val-U-Way
WE TRADE ON ANY HOMR
$650 DOWN
7-romn home on Judton W._____
basement with extra lavtlor^ ga-
LAKE OAKLAND
- ‘- -t dUtnnen nway from
I brick hcobi fnmlly
.. a.----InedscBped
idltiOB; P«y>
Exchange
OR
Trade
Tour equity lor what yei
dlrKtlon. You need no inoney — let u* volve your Reel Estate problemi. _	.	„
“Today's Top Trades
Rancher
dfoom raneaer www t-rm — baument. attaobad 2 oar g*.
OXOROE R. IRWW.
KENT
TeSS* ^raML IlT. rm., MU baeml.. oU heat. 14W garas*. M«v at *7.2*0. terms.
NORTH SIDE Me* Yim hmna.
*43* DOWN — Scott Lae Are*. SmaU
___ Veuwe. mHOtl V.lH hatll. WMlI
$5,950.
Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor
*FEMlM - byraRi __________Free Paifang
ANNETT
New Brick Ranch
X 1*. Ilraplac*. larg* i^r* window, dinins .’V. Ub balb*. kllchcn 3 x 17. hraa-
etsndlni vtlu* at 317.331.
Clarkston Area
1 hiidraamt, brie 3 luU t
Florid* mom. OvanU* 2 ew attachad **raf*. Lwt* to. Walking dUlane* to all schoole. Only 117,56*. 31.00* down plus clMlnt outs.
20 Acres—4 Bedrooms
WE WILL ............—
ANNETT IN'C. Realtors
a* K. Huron St.
Open svantase and Bun. 11* 4
FE 8-0466
'BUD"
Clarkston Area 3-BedrfKim Rancher
with one wre land: California Conlemporwy Ranch Style Hem* wllh attached 2 ew garage, log burning fireplue. IVb baths, full
Income
Five (II apart to **1U^ d
Two-lamUy toeom* — ill rjim
room apt. raottoi I
wea. TWMW garags, toeatod on Wbittamor*--------
ar-s.'
KAMPSEN
hmna la trad*.
"Bud” Nicholie, Realtor
43 Mt. Clemeu 81.
FE S-1201
After 6 P.M.. FE 4-8773
Realty fe Butktlng Ca
......1. Huron	F*
Altar t caU	UL
gu but, ONLY 33*3 down monthly.
PERRY PARK gUBDIVIMOK - to
y 111.^^ - Brick 3^ bjlnm..
ATTRACnVB 3 BEDROOM CAR-
—--------------idcr lined
bMcmtnt, nmuc oil
TOM
GILES
ALUMINUM SIDED 3 BEDROOMS
..	..	lull I——-
_ _... Ui24 re*. ------
etor. Good toaatwn. Only
lanwU ttoy. G 1.73* with Ww BLOOMFIELD SCHOOL DISTRICT
mslDB CITY 3 bedrootna plus full bawmant. Atoo I ew |wu*. On)* 213.7*0 with larmt.
GILES REALTY CO.
FF 34173	831 Beldwto Av
__MULTIPLE LISTINO SERVICE
BARGAIN PRICED ^..?iu'to'TSK.;sii.'5J?h ir'satoMsJJt-aSi iihT“bS,
PuU hlahhasaAbt. attachad
JOHNSON
------- of 3*3 per month Includes
taxes and tniiiranito m n tow S --------1 mortoa*. CaD us today.
R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531
243 OAKLAND AYE. OPEN M
WALLED LAKE
3 awM With brtok rai_ _____
-----way to attaobad 2-cw ga-
Itoo faaturu tamUy dlabia 2 Iwi* badrouma and attto for sxpanaton,, ee-tfto botb. aU etoaqu aadw
■ m
brick flreplMC. nMwaTSSi twdcidnf a cdU for doUtti*
ACREAGE CLOSE IN Tw5!*SSk*boBi^mJ*
Is 14UI rM-
rllh
Humphries
FE 2.9236
M H. Tetonaoh Roai f Ns AnswarCau PE 1-
Smith
Wideman
Lovaly landic*^
Id to Dstow martat
n.Mo'down. bslaoe* on tonii cc
ir I Br.
WILLTRADR
od aim Itvhig [Ua*n, jMved niJO*. Tarm*
beat, esnvantont tonns.
REAGAN
HOYT
FOR THAT PERSONAL INTEREST
14, dlntu room.
SCHRAM
Off Joslyn
3 bedrooms. 2 di
llvtof
I 12x14'
I. I I3'xl3’ t
txlS?
_______it.’* covered Tporchei'*front
and rew, 20'x22’ t*rag* on a SO'x-ur tot with eoncrela drtv*. All thla lor only 211.26* with Sl.Sg* down plua cloaing coats. Don't da-Uy. *M u tadtyl
Immediate Possession
oa floora. glared waUa. p< drive. feMCd yard. I frutt U Itb-cw fwase. priced lo uU si 8IS.SSQ and rauoDabI* down pay-
•IVAN W. SCHRAM Realtor . FE 5.9471
**1 JOSLYN COR. MANSFIELD OPEN EVXNINOB AND SUNDAY MULTIPLE USTOtO SERVICE
NICHOLIE
A. JOHNSON & SONS FE 4-2533
COLORED 3 BEDROOM
I* DOWN - CLOSING COSTS
ONLY - MANY XXC.. 'EXCONOI-
WRIGHT
Jaktondi An:i , F» i<M4I

THE PONTIAC PKRSS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1962
TWENTVTHRKK

4fiSrf» Nmmm
OTTAWA HILU UrtlT	WwiiiA TtUt on
Ian*	Wt. £v|« carpctMi
knoMdlaU oceupaDex. Prteaa ■(-tracttralx at «17jN. aanU Mwn.
STOUTS
Best Buys Today
■elNiola and afeon^. N««ly lad. i baUU. (uU baMOMBl u haal. laundiT trap, (ai^ lid (or afeUdren. Mr MM
TOO’IX LOVE nr — Poriaet eom-

too. (Iraplacc , aalural (bi ly room. It.
_. _____________flaaid porch.
dock, covorad potto. heoM 2-cor tamo Prleod to lall linnu-dtotcly 7 only IM.SW orlth euy tamo. (DanTiaU to aaa thlo ona.)
BliOOlinXLO ICROOU:
For that handy moa bora U what
Su ora ookint lor. An older.
rgo bonw wlita ilk aorea - 5 Wta roomo and bath on lot floor. 4 bedroom* and I batha ua. Very
tamu. (Dan’
berrinotom Bnxd
bbedroom brtok-----------
carpeted Urlnf room, the
FOR COLORED - 4 BEDROOUA: 147 Raeburn Btrcot: Large well-kept homa. Ilvbig mat. dinint mm, kltdicn on 'dal door. 4
Warren Stout, Realtor
THIS TOPS THEM ALL
Built In tm. thla 3-bodmom brick ranch homo to an amaatna yalua. Ha* 1 full tile batba. 17'a»’ lam-Hr rocin. built-in alacliic range. On largo landacapad lot In above
PARTRIDGE
REAL ESTATE REALTORS Itao W. Huron St.
ARRO
HEW ALUMINUM SIDINO - on Ihli altractlvc a-roeni ranch. M It. Ilv
_________I acreena. nicely
___________I. egcclleni privilege* —
Ellaaheth Lake. Ill.MI. Term*.
GAS HEAT -
r t-bed-
EAst BOULEVARD
Naar wunamoro. S-raoa tarraca.
PONTIAC REALTY
IT Bahtwtp	FB Min
•T'EI'M U^VUiat. .~
Tba anawar 'to a pray*. „ _ larga (anaUy or a sood ptaea a(
-----Flrtptocr nod
kU orrMctoante m Mu, t*r«ct* 9mM locof'^-■choola, boopltol nd doi Prlcod to mU at IldJ

Lini room. dtolngTo^ kltch-an aritb hroaMM apaca. 1 bed-roonu. batha. plaatarad walla and oak rioora. 1 firaplacaa. baaa-mont, ttbtoar atlacbad garage.
Ivgo woU laadaeaped tot. School bu* at doarnTra by appolal-
peling.
Prtead
BaaemenI, ga* heal
"WE NEED LISTINOS ”
John K. Irwin
COLORED
HOME AND INCOME (or a OI. 7
completely fumlahed. alaa w gaa boat for Income. Total pri for I home* n.MO — 1400 a
wl* dining room. Looking for V priced home? I3.IM total
privilege* with gi^ beach. M.2M. terma.
NORTH SUBURBAN - Sharp 4 room ranch, handy kitchen, oil luma'" fully inaulated. Lot IMaHO ft. * ahruba and aomo troa*. Selling
MULTIPLE LfSTINO SERVICE lit) CAS8-ELIZABETH ROAP
PHONE 682-2211
BATEMAN
New Models
Your Choice of
TRI LEVEL $1L975
On Your Lot
RANCHER
$10,600
Iraluree. Your tree end clear lot cauld bt tbe down payment, otherwiee only 10 per
O'NEIL I
OPEN NIGHTLY FIVE TO EIGHT
Dream Ranch
On ..larij^e lUMoot^ deep^ loL
ly landi
Carpeted bcdnoint, oik parquet "----'•— natural fireplace —■
VioblftC
lake. aU high and dry.
1 ACRES. Madroom
US-teot troBUgk. oo^ mm,
CRAWFORD AGENCY
3 ACRES
OIM with Low Torma
__	91,999 wita ijow roraio
n Mill or OR yim afUr T:3I
LADD’S, INC.
It Lapaar Rd. (Parry MS4)
CASH
.. .,jur land eontntei or wqolty.
ACTION
Bnkor. a--- -
Check These
t teanto acraa. SMO par acra. Law down pgpmmt.
“C P^GUS', Realtor
ORTONVILLB
a MIU Bt.	HA T-MM
Manty ta Um
WEBSTER
oodc
iiuu^g~a'itoc. 'ou'oos wttb I C A WEBSTER. RBALTOL.
OA 0-au________________MTi:Wi
S«l«FanM
92 ACRES—BUILDINGS
Lcrgc 4 bedroom modem (am
.„v—....	—
no wlUi temu Warren Stout Roal-tor. 77 N. Siflnaw St. {^MIOS.
ton Bcho^ __________
00 ACRES OP VACANT ACREAGE — Good location — ClarkaUm acboola — MTS per acre.
MO ACRES - located ni Lake — ttSS per acre
n ACRES WITH SET OP BUILD-
terme — houae hu S bedrae down — full* clone bacentont mlla road frantasa —> 1379 acra.
tO-ACRE CORNER PARCEL — Farm
FOB TOUE
Land Contracts
Rs.t"L2£r7rN.‘^krwT
PE Mitt.
Get $25 to $500
ON TOUR
Signature
AUTO or FURNITURE
OAKLAND ..
Loan Coimiany
Fontlae Stata Auik Bldg.
___or Olbar Sacurl^
FAST. CONVENIENT 34 Monttaa to Kapay
Home & Auto Loan Co.
FE MIH
TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 N. MAIN
214 E. ST. CLAJR ROCHESTER ROMEO
LOANS 123 TO H
UVESTOCK HOUSEHOLD (KXIDS OL ^*711	“• '
, S-StlS	PL 3
"PRIBNDLT SHHVICB’’
BUCKNER
FINANCE COMPANY
WHERB TOD CAN
BORROW UP TO $500
Sale ItnliNts Frafarty S7
m aquara foi awly blackl^
kloppcd parking, uruan eeiabllahad locailoc way frontage. oU heal. HAOiTROM REAL ESTATE. 4*0C W. Huron. OR
Templeton
WALLED LAKE
Vacant canunerolal buHdtnf. approximately SIM K- fl floor area, approximately 1 4-10 acree with 134 fl frontage on Pontiac Trail, near bank. Priced for quick ealc or will leaae to reliable tenant.
iHtiiMU OppartviiHhi $9
LOANS
tso TO nw - 333 - tSM COMMUNITT LOAN CO. 33 E. LAWRENCE PH II
WHEN YOU NEED $25 to $500 ■
Wa will be glad to halp you.
STATE FINANCE CO.
3dl Pontiac glato Bank Bldg.
FE 4-1574 _____
MONEY TO PAY BILLS >nco your lale. modemlie, . ei. Century Mtt.. PE 3-7311 ON ONI
— frantage. No ap-. D. Charlea. Equit-abla Parm Loan Barylct. 1717 S. Telagrapb PE 4-0331.
34xl34ool ground-leve
thoii ytara from now! One level plane which Include aunken living raoma. kitchen*
our builder. "Beauly-RIle
m 0 u a Laiy Buaan pautry I laland aink. We can build wat any place you deelre live. DupUcatlon nrlce. .3M wllb excellent ftnanc-StratcM out MM (W Ru-I to Twin Lekee vuiage
TRADING IS TERRIPIC - 4 BieoROOME 1 up. 3 down.
32 fool Hying ty
r e IX h -me .a on 2 Iota, with tree* and baa Ellaaheth Lake prlvUegee. 314.333. WUI
3300 D O W N WILL MOVE -dOME LUCKY PW.PLE who etn quality on PHA or OI In thla dandy 3-room bungalow
Plabar Body, taoaad rear y^
PRICE REDUCED - You art aure to apsrac|al* Ikla axcal-Icnt 3 - bedroom brick with larga cotmtry alyle kitchen. Baiemeni partUloncd three wara. for utility. *a * work
Price drailieaily reduced to *31.-3M with $3,133 down plue coeta on -BW 30-yr-----------■-----
WUI convince
(iiveaway Prices
Our auditor* aay: we mual dlipoae of tbe following properllet before Jan lal. U your cradU to O.K.. get youiwaU a BARGAIN.
decorated With baaemeni 300
3. 3-bedroom. 3 belbe i
privilege* Only gl.430.
3. rbadroom rancher, gaa beat, family room and 3«ar garage' — Only M.3M.
toceme: Good cU)
WWW., -..w J un. Good cur Only 17.900.
Ask About Our
Trade-In Plan
PE 4 n5->3 Realtor PE 37141 ....
MLS.
alloa room. 2-ear garage, plue e covered patio. Encloaed lot fully landacapad. We haven't Been anvthlnc comparable cl 313.300 end with Welkin* Lake
dratton woods is bea-
Tiroj.: Let uo allow you ihl* new Itatlng. ooe of Uit «tr* Icrg* ran^ homea with dining apace galort. Of course It la a ecnier haU and haa
Cnee* In lb# big kitchen.
axpoaed baaemant "rac mom la a baauty and lead* to a gorgeou* ahaded yard, we hivllt compkrUon witti other* you mar hare eeen In ih* IM.OOO range YeuU need about 3310 down.
G.L
No Money
310 RABBURN OI - Oel happy and own your own home with mile dawn. 3IM ing ooila buyt lbl».3-k^-0 iVb-atoryheane. Il'e to p abapo and hu full
DRAYTON PLAINE. right araund tba oonwr from tho aeboal. Plo^t 3bodm«. bath aad a^^ hooio. P^ plaea Ona 'badrocm to paneled and eonld uof “ •
U praftrrodi it ^ Ito own
m beat*^i^luckYripM
Some'ud toyeit|^fs^^
elcalng coaU wllb about Ml total paymapl Including property taxee and btouranee.
RAY O’Neil. Realtor
feSRSJr*.'?
COLUMBU VALLBY REAOT _J-1713	Eraa lildl
LAkB LIYINO Ldrs
AU Thumbs?
IBI. pftTtd Btr^ •:
*,w umWP payOMBt. 0*4 *“4
Ipplo aad glTt ua s eoU.
Highland Village
Clarkston Area
mem. 2-car garage, chicken h«i**. end other outb^togt. Locate^ mSaa aoulh of rUlagt op pavad
daa. Only giJIt'la aottia oaiato.
Rolfe a Smith. Realtor
ATTRACTIVE SERVICE STATIONS! Birmingham and Pontiac. Training available. Pure OU Compeny, 6g3-3344. Eveninga. Ml 7J------
Cash Loans
$600 to $2500'
BARBER SHOP. GOOD WORKING
ihop. 0g2-»Sl._______________
BEAUTY SHOP AND 3-BEDROOM home, complately f u r n I a h e d. 33.0g0 down. tSi a month. OR 3-3336.
TRADE RESTAURANT
Inea* ahowing t* line of good
tou* large klicben. 3room llvlw quarteri. Owner retiring — will r. Iruck. ^------------- —■
contract or l.MN
DRI-CLEANING
A real money 10 mllee.
maker. Only ona within 10 i • wl'h or wllboul real ealato. v«*i tor more detalla.
State Wide—Lake Orion
1173 N. M34__________OA•0-1000
Lew Hileman—Pontiac'!
TRADEX
FOR LEASE
TWegrapb li
TREASURE
down tor propel
place In Oikland County
Voss 6t ’Buckner
H AVAiuinL.n I.UW
off all your bUU. L or morigoge. provM a homa Improvement xiee. Mual have M ulty or more. Big B tlop Co FE 37133.-
irtgage Problem
we maae mortgage loan, to nm> your raqulrtmanu. Any property, any amount. Prompt, dependabto tarrlca. Ramodaltog and e o n •
atrictlon
•olldate debU.	,	_
Cbetf Mortgage and Realty Co. PE 3*7» or 063-3790
CASH
Loans to $2500
TIZZY
By Kat* Oaann
C-*SH AND CARRY
4i7 pre-flntobed mahogany .. 63.30
«*hT Mawmlto ...............3’ “
4x3x>'. no nolae train trackboardO Accoufttcal celUny tOe 13c sq. PONTIAC PLYWOOD CO.
at to pg*. am rJA top 0L3 M. OA.
‘Tve got aiyidea — let’s start a rumor about somebody!'
Sale HeaseboM Gaadt 65
33CUB1C^P(X>T KBVCO UPRIOBT
r. 2 yra. old. 0
10 A MONTH BUY* 3 ROOIU OP
1 '’pc!’'Xtag room aulto Wttb 3 attp tablta. I pocktaU taMa. aad i i4bit Uunpt*	ud
3 po. badrponi act with inatraprlBg mnttraaa and bM aprtag to aatoh wUb 3 yaoUy lanani.
3 nc. klteban dtowSt sat. aU tor 3333. tall rug InAndad. B-Z tanne it Um Wyman Pumllurs Cs. IT
USED TV'S 013 H AND UP SWEETd PAJIO AND APPLIANCE
«_W. HU>^N _________PE J-1133
GAS STOVE. I40r PULL efa»D JEN-
VINYL LINOLEUM
GIBSON B L E C T R 11 chroma dtotttt atl an 033-4S30 alter 0.
R TV. rs, BED ARD D
40 INCH ELECTRIC BTOYE. Double bedspread, canopy, 3 pair cur-laln* MI 4-*0P3_____________________
A SINGER CONSOLE
ONE EIORT-PIKCC DINING ROOM •ulto. Three limed oak formic-bloc. EkC. condition. PE 0-1033. ORIENTAL RUG. 3X15.	2	(
AUTOMATIC SINGER
Dial control cabtoet mddel. Jual eel dial for buttonhole*, blind hem* and jdl the other work. PuU price 304 30 or payment* of 33.13 a mo. BUU under guarantee. Tel.
Watte'e. PE 4-2311.	_____
17-lNCH TV COMBINATION RADIO
LARGE CRIB AND MATTRESS
21 INCH USED TELEVISION. 333.
WaflOT TV' PE M237
_ 313 E. Walton, comer at Jaairn__
31;INCH OE CONSOU^ NfTV PIC-
R son
r. No ITtu
rlNO MACHINE
embroidery decorative ellleht^. etc. Want responalbis parly to pay off 323.13. Terms U dceircd. Call PE3-73a.____________________________
ABOUT AHTTHlWi too * A M 1
A little out of Uia way but a liR
.....	m
tradt eist. lor
OBED. 'Tlalt ea| bargaloa.
We bnv, sell or trade. Come out
•pS?kt'nf A^Sp^hUWi.’""* PRI 3 TO 3 OPEN MON -RAT. 3 TO g 34 MONTHS TO PAY I mllee C of PoMac ar 1 m
BLONDE HI-FI.
BUNK BEDS. COMPLETE. LIKE
new. 330. FE M4I4 after 3.
CHRISTMAS SPECIALS
OE eweeperi. with aU
Hoover Upright, new ........... $ 33.35
Hoover polisher complete . 3 37.T7 Hamilton gas drytr, dl ton-
ing UtStoi paved'"parktag lot, lure. 344s monthe to imy. Group Kate at Telegraph locstum. Nea all your debts wltti only ona amafl monthly payment.
I Family Acceptance Cprp.
I 317 Natlimal Bldg. IS W. Huron
Telephone FE 8-4033____
---- -
tmaee. 330 35. Alio meple or ^d
000 each to mortgage men who can.. A oi and maintenance. K dead. Realtor. 103 E
_,.......iaa. Lot 70x170 Price 30.300.
3300 down. 317 a month Including taxe*. Phone Holly 334-33M
jeautiful spot
hlTlitde. 3 acre*, no Ideal for club, but dmca. MAple 8-3353.
h of Oxford.
51
ARE YOU PLANNING
Tca iMillil ft hnm# of 999'9M Of take chitncfi

with Four invti
..._^50
'S2I-
__ ‘ivai9 maw, fn§.
919 k moBtb. Csotll^nl «•'	Cor-
penillcn‘*^^Sl03. OR 3-1^
LAKEFONT l6t
Beautiful wooded hilltop lot with 133 feet on Upper l^g Lake, Bloomfield Two Bellod*. magnlf-
Icent view. LI t-1136.________
.AREPkokr BOMB. It* bath. I^rge kllcbeo. bulll-tot. hot waler
Mm------------------^
IIUI BPim DON’T RKHT. BUy. 7» kff* 9» down. 09 • ““““ OK Mm. p>l> Brtkn Ojfi

acres at COHNkR OP BALD-Win and Morgan Road Land no-Uy roUng aid parUy wooded. Will divide readUy Into ilala smt. 3N
_________ per acre am
esaV ionn*.	,
Leslie R. Tripp. Realtor
___________PE Sgltl_________
BII'I.D'NO IS BOOM'NO IH
:herokf.e HIUI.S
SELECT YOUR SITE BOON!
h5nle?"uto 100 R"wtSxled.'nrtling ?i^7lton'^’D%lVrt?ElllS5^‘S
Rd. to gcpu UM Ed. Turn right 3 bUcki to LocotP.
NATIONAL BUSINEBB BROKERS — Incorporated —
1343 Orchard Lake_______PE 3,7141
PARTNER WITH 38.000 FOR PROV-
iti%r
j,|5«ls CiMhiiii ~
PORi"
-sii(fiu.i.\(rcENTur
lncludf.x Urge iuper market, plux gl.lOO MINE^ JACKET. rUR-. new etiached store »ult»ble tor a'	chased In	May.	wore one*. *»■
drug »tor«. Addition*! room fori	penxiye clothing,	IS to 13.	Men*
eipanstoii. Also hiclude* brick]	midnight	blue	cexhmrre	overborne end 3-roon* brick eparlmenl.l	co»t. *lre	40-44.	paid 1150.	MAr-
WHl take part irade.	ket *-jm__________________
MICHIGAN BUSINE.SS LADIES .aborted S.\UES CORI’OR.VnONi 'i,,ic. m Linda VUta. pe
1373 g. Telagrapb	FE e-toliy
WYMAN’S BARGAIN STORE
Rebuilt w Rebuilt RebblH refrigerator
3-pc. Sofa bed cufte Beds, aprlng*. Battreei ..
Oaa ranges ................
Electric rangei
CLOSING OUT
ALL FLOOR BAMPXEB
Men. ’U1 I 30
treat. Using i
HinniMft t ARK RREA ■UPERET'*E NEW FULL L E H O T H NATURAL rknrh mink _co.i, n.yir_bt.B
''*VV\:R%'gN\W3'or
BEDROOIf oStPI^NO cb 4703 Dili*	Drayton plan
aalato 'bKhiueo •. vx*.v«i stock on tcimc or TRADE.
BBAUTT BALON cnc of the flnaal pperaticne Jn_thc
3 WO I-I7l7,_	' L,
a prwN’r" P 1 N C H E R kHOPM? 1 •'—•- women’* and rlnihliic. takan e
CLOTHES DRYER
ROTPOINT — RATBD NO. 1
Oelur---- ---------
Prta i
r- BARS FIFTH Aj^NI^ *yjT8 AND
>- drea«e«, itoe 12. EM 3-4304.__
*■ Y O U NO MAN » SIZE ''EDIt'M
PARTRIDGE
REAL BITATB REALTpRB Aaaoctola oHIeea Ibrotoil Mich. lOM W. Huron - PB 4-3301
U.ROCERIES—St>D
Over 113.0W monthly groee. P- _	_	_	----
tlec iuburban area with or wiih- i laROB FORMICA TOP DROP-out rsai aatale. Ill 000 plus alack latf tgUo 3 chain In brsms-fto b^toae. toi torma. wfi conahtor, Ke, ^riaaraton^ dl ricn.
KELLY’S APPLIANCES
8317 Dikto Hwy^__Drayta “
CHEAP. KINO BIBB HB~Ab1 cheil of drswara, llvtog i
satin comlogtara. PB O-WW._
CARPEJ 8WEEI*ER.'.DRAPB8.
OAS RANOE
ny Und bed, good c
OE DIB^ASpR. 335. LATE MOD-
fl In flrst-ciMa condition. CsU our office or sec caretaker. Pm 3-7430. K. O. Rcmpcicad. Rinllor.
> ROOM BET. EX-
at candli.on OA g-l453
.TEWINO MA(MINB. BIO-ZAO PUU ly automatic. ne*d* no cat— — goaeaaaed. you can't ml.
mlue'thl
VScuua
>. 41 Orchard Ukt Ayt.,
gao.OI U| I 1.06 up OB 3-3100
53* WHieelwHes
___jr
OQ* ARD
A si
mhr. Awtom

KITCHEN CABINETS
Too E**bnitoo Day or In '
FORMICA TOPS
sslo*"
Formica Headquarters
RWw“a"r\ 'wlirnl
^t;Ti!.*pntoa.^;uj;;?.'^fa
FOR SALE: m GALLON PURL Oa
O A S INdNBRATOR. tit; OAR-bags grinder. 334 M. O. A. Thomp-*on, TOM M-81, Wcit.______
OAS FURNACE USED. LIKE NEW.
Call PI 3-7101.
OLASS TUB ENCl^URl
poODLk PUFinii. wlix h6lo
DACRSRURD sliAai. BduaMb-kta T mantlto. PE 3-001*7
DOOB BOARORD.
14 - INCH CRAPTBMAN JIORAW,
POODLE PUPPIES. ARC. *POgIT - - ,a,m Chrlalmas. Orodns
------- J370._________
POODLE CLIPPINO ARt) jUHf ' lg
and pm Also poddtoa (or MiB.
70
I LAND
ACCORDIONE LOW PRICES. LOAN-cr« anq leiaona. PE 6-5430. fcUNDT n-UTE. CALL XMCR 4 p.m. PE 3-3007.
BALDWIN OROASONtc WALNUt
e new. $000 PE 3-
BRAMBACH BABY GRAND PIANO.
g 1350. make afler OR 4-OOt4
Save 1300 on tbu (ma.
MORRIS MUl'iC CO.
34 g. Ttlagranh ' PB 34317 lAcroaa from Tel-Huroni HAMMOND SPINET OROAN WITH
inraneen transStar a ccmplcU Una a
la ara in baautUul condl-
^ ttoo. and all. ar* ------------....
Make your (Uirlttma* aelaclton no' .Terma to aull your budget LEW BETTERLY MUSIC (X>.
SOHMER
HOSPITAL BED.
el chair. PE t-33»l.
HOT WATER HEATER. 3SOALLON gas. CcneiAcn apnayad S33.M ySuc t33.33 and *11.16. marnd. — Pluercaponi, 131 Or-
PI.\NOS
THE MUSICIANS CONSOLE COMPLETE LINE LEW BETTERLY MUSIC CO.
MI 3-3003	Opon Pri. ’Ill 0
GALLAGHER’S
___HUfcn _____ PE 4-0300
IP YOU WANT TO BELL YOUR
OFFICE DESKS 624.30:	PILES
020.30: secretarial chain 0130: eiecutlvei chair* 334 80: drafting table* 313.30:	storage cablneic
037.60: new portable typewriter* •40.03: Sddmg machine*, ebep
chine*. tM*,et pres*, eoat reek*. FORBEB. 413 Prank Bt,. Birmingham. MI 7-3444 or 430t Dint
Hwy.. Drayton Plains. OR 3-
We also buy._______________
-ORNAMENTAL ikoN PORCh SND
____ _______________________I poiU.
room diTidsra. AVIB CABINETS. 1870 Opdyka. PE 4-43S0.
plastic tile
c iACK •e Foot . M Each
PLUMBINa BAROADtB; PR El
MBINtt BAl
standing tout. Oil.**: lo gai. heator, 043.M: 3-pieca bnth seta, gOi.M: PIberglat laundry tray. trjB
632.M: 2 bowl i
SAVE PLOMBINO CO.
PON^TcjiALLl^]
8INOER ZIO-ZAO SBWINO MA-eompletaly auto. Take |«^ment*, 03.06 per mo.
SMALL PIANO, apartment SIZE electric range, bookcaee. rooking chain. COC* Highland Rd. (M-S»>. BBWINO MACBINE8 AND VACUUM clcanara. wbolceato. lA *UI, Singer —BIg’Eaf Cbneole model, in.SO. Electrolux yacuum. 314.31. Over 73 model* to choa*e from, (tori’* Appliances. 0431 Hatchery Road. ^R
SINOER DELUXE SEWING MA-
t. Pay oft account In 0 months
at 35.50	------ .. „ ----------
balance. Unlyanal Co. FB 44305. TWO 30 - INCH En: C T R I C ranges, extra etoan. 130 and —
delivered. 335 Whittamore. I
VACUUM CLEANERS
$14.95
Brand new Mil taak-typo with aU
VACUUM CENTER_______PE 44340
TRERMADOR '#TAINLB88~iTEja, built-in oven, 3 spit remoyeable rotiseerle. never uicd, $400 value only 3100. CL 3-3103.
WESTINOROUSE PORTABLE DISH-
new. $73, OR 3-3940
WE8TINOHOU8E REFRIGERATOR.
1B37 model. 830. PE 5-0980.
WANTED USED CHINA CABINET
Call after 0. 074-10

onograp and woi
steno-type machine.
records, men's-----
pants, ladle* i IttU* girl elol
music. 134-1387.________________
RETIRINO-CARPBNTER't STEEL ........... ■	------------; olooA
cable* snd drum*. Porttr C*M* Pl«*ner, P. C. Router. P. C. door templet, approx. 300 ft. of coble.
pad. Jlnil* --------------
office dm *_____________
protector, 1 melxl fUc

-s-way bad. wlTtl chair,, c
____I fUt cabinet —
!. Itcmc. UL 3-3343.
RUMMAGE SALE. WASHER, DRV-er. stove, furniture, organ, dlehe* and clothing. MOO Mtddfabelt, near
BET OP OOLP CLUB8 AND BROE8.
------- M phonograph -------------
about lb elaaalcal: racraatton bar and 3 ctoola: gun caaa: pato of
tTAINLISS 8TSKL 8IXK8 WITH
1095 OaMkod Ay.
939 90 Michigan Fluorment. 393
I TWO LAMP 4-FOOT FLOURB8CXNT
WHY NOT A NICE ANTIQUE FOR ------------ gy-----Uj-away. Open
—a.----- ,(§45
U8-10.
Sunday. Y-Knot Antiques.
FOR SALE:	1959 V.M. TABLE
model tape recorder in excellent condition. .PhoM 339-4^4 between
3 90 and 1.30.___________________
INTER COM lYsttM. 4~MASCO
. I II
I. 137 a
INDOOR-OUTDOOR SPEAKERS Regular 3I2.M . . now only St.fS Chenael maeter antennas, rotators Ree. 949.5U v«iue now 999.15. 1 only
JOHNSON’S RADIO and TV
45 E Walton -
PE *45M
U Bettor
OVERSTOCKED
New Portable TVe Budget terma, 13.33 per week OOODYEAR SBEYICE STORE Caaa Ay*.____ PE 54133
t cooiolea. Ideal for aoednd
.. ..	—----------^uar-
» tirory
5«h SlbcElliim-i 67
APARTMENT SIZE OAS STOVE.
I. T. WARDEN. Realty;
5«h tmd CMtnIm HO -----------------
Land Contracts
aLt-EeasrrN.nSitorrc
PB 14138
20% Di8c6iliTf~ ■
On land eentraet told In 1313 — 34.153. Balanta owed (at 7 per cent mtereeli 33Jf7 - dUcour' 3173. Total cost S3.7M. everal cUiar oontracU with dt count ol 13 to S3 per cent.
C. TANGUS. Realtor


CARL W. BIRD, Realtor
______ . _____ NA 7.9it5
FOR SA& niiABSNib^ 9 FBR
nUe sewtaig mtehinec. SU:
314.3* up: portable record STSd: child'* d**k. 34.33: odd
Orchard Lake At*. PB 4-7131
sign, monogram. anpUqu*, ovrr-eaat. blind Mm. and many oOitr a«wlng ereattona. l*yaar gusran-toe. Pay off 341.41 at 33.SC monihto. Free home lrt|i. CaU PE S7$a.
CONSOLE SINOER AEWINO MA-eblne. Simply aatoet a tUlch lo VittonBoto. monogram, appUkuo, orercasL nutomallg daeorailyi •tItelUng. ale. Ho aMlMo"".* "•«-ecasry. Pay oR 333.M TOkly. Can FE 3-7123.
*ftOOM DUO THERM OU.'HBAT-**e^a(2? 1 Frt^dalre range, $34. O.B. dlah-waAir. elnk and cabtoal. gSS. IS triple track ilorm wtndswi. 31x8* 341. 1413 Eaaon.	Cut tree when randy. AU etoe*. 2422 Btoeth Rd.. 1 mile* weat of Commerce Village.
	CHRISTMAS TREES. SCOTCH ptdea. 4-11 It., enrayed. pruned. SI. cut your own Wholesale loU 91 ea. 9901 Indian Lake Rd. MT 9dl5i.
IS-liRCH OAS RAMOE. S~S90xl5 tiree. PE 9^. iSOALLOR AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC	CUT YOUR OWN TRU. 1 FEET TO 34 feel Ugfe — atoo pine bougha. EM l-2ggl
5«r. Sill 0 i. 313: IlTt
_________—I: twin bookcaee ^
bed* (btondl), 343: knee-hole desk ■ (solid). 312: odd bode, dreeseri. cheet*. soring*, dinette* and rug*
U MVENroRT and CHAIR. LARGE I. mtrror. Ti4 felt, ne^iftii bed. OB
Maytag a
shop*. 3II.M Tthia SU N marred. Calf factory ihewroonn. Mtchtgan Pluorccecnt. 3M Orchard Ukt.
center, 22*t3».
UBE^L^yER.
USED GAB CONVERSION UNITS
piano call Mr. Duienberry at
GrinnelTs
USED BALDWIN OROAN " " ’ 1, I year old Ith ptmiatlon
Walout
WIEGAND MUSIC
FE 2-9424
». arery night
JANSSEN
Dare Orubb i kannela. PR 1034*'
SSirTSr..
- ' OA 312M._______
____fiRED COLUE P.
week, eld. IN. M3 3NI.
^ PE 4-3467 after 3 p i WANTED — ROME FOR FRIENDLY, l-yr.-otd German Shepherd and (S) S mo*, old long haliwd kllMas. OR
4IN2_____________
YEAR-OLD AKC DACRSRUND PE-
m«l. $73 OR 3dll3.
BVBR^ PRiliAT "
* B AUenuR I
“«F
EVERY SUNDAY „
l^tng Oooda - AM Type*
Door Prise* Ertry Auetton ■ *• W« buT-**n-lr*d*. rttoll 7 dagg Gootlxnmanto waleenw
____________________OB >WIT
SATURDAY. DECEMBER. I. At I
foriE
UvNttcil
~IJ
RIDING LESSONS
> ALL APPALOOSA ROBSE|'	'
Children, Adults
GOLDEN H. CORRAL
lin Hlllar Bd . Pontiac
Eli 1^11_______
Twiitry ^ B
Umhi tqiiipiiwiit____________
FARMALL MODEL A TRACTOR IN A-1 SHAPE PRICED AT S3H Credit trrmc —We teke trades
KING BROS.
PE 441724	PB 4-ms
PONTIAC RD. AT OPDTKK
Priced from t4N.
o ^0^7 uo
enlIn Pebruery.
Acreea from B’ham Theater
NEW DELUXE CONSOLE PIANO. 41 Inches high Only 83M. Bench and delivery Included Slightly higher to walnut. Pu>l N-neto direct blow action Pull reaonant tons. BxctUanl accuracy. BeautlftiUy designed case - Very fine workmtniblp.
Ns down payment Up to M months to pay
’SxtSG'fii'rr
SHO*">UNb AND RIPLBS
_____________ BUY.
trade Oun repair and Burr-dball 278 S
fflttaig Burrd PEY47N.
Then you can’t ■Mford to miss THIS DECEMBER SALE
Entire -Stock Travel Trailer* REDUCED
14-POOT TO 23-POOT ALL SELF-CONTAINED
ElU^vortli Auto Sales
. «	I - 7 Dixie R«y	M* H4W
•liei Raatonablt. EXPERT lt<'BILB H0641C REPAtR • —	tervice. a e oxttmttei. Ala*
parte aia. ecteeeorlei. Bob RuteR-
_______________ _ _____. .. .	fnsqn kloblle Home galee. lac.
1723 N. WUllama Laka Bd.___ |------------------------ - - |	p,,,, Hwy... Drayton Plain*.
WAREHOUSE CLASSfPIBb AD QN A-l TOP lOn.. HLL. ROAD ORAV-	UM*
McCULLOCH CHAIN SAWS
PRICED A3 LOW AS
$149.95
CREDIT TERMS - WI TAKE TRADES. USED CHAIN 8AW8 PRICED AT 873.
KING BROS.
PB 44(734	PE 4-III3
PONTIAC ROAD AT OPDVKE
MEW IDEA, ONE-ROW CORN PICK-. er. rebuilt. Dtvto Machinery Co.. OrloaTlIle. NA 7-im. YeW dabn Deer. Mew Idea. Otbl aad SaaBs-ttla daator. Also Wtnnabago Can»-ara wHb or wltbcut p|-—
1337 modal In Exc. condHton. n ' cold. Make oftf- -W'l'W.H
.831: AND A 1313. 13x33.
ilnga and icrMned petto. 3S.1H. b asrptiqd. Very good co# I. 3t7-S3&. call after 1 dBd
TRAVEL TRAILERS — 'luarantoad
r frailer gl
ARE YOU
Florida Bound?
id|
oil furnace Call MA 3-1341
MA 3-2537. A t H galec_________ *-iw
jrc~iTi o o i n g 22 automatic I ssnpu
Barnet fe Rargravat Hdwt.
OR 3-WI3, belon
'. 15«Ml4rHV«l-INrt
.. .TtSt:... .
_______ no ^ fuU. New-
d Surpluc at THl WHOOPEE ^_RL. IM DIxto Hwy., aarka-ton. MA 30122._____________
674
ALL PINES. WROLEBALB. ALSO pint bough*. Cedar Ltn* cbrlalmt* Tre* *torm. mnt Dtxt* Bwy. (USUI, 12 ml. M. of Poo-U»c. MA 3-lte.	_______
iiAUTiPUL sheared scotch
pin*, atoo natural ,aeoleh. R*at. Call UA *1MI or tis 3-lsr. A A
----.... Mxr^S/illea Bird. 2
Drayton Plato, MA 3-l3gl.
I AND BEDROOMS Sofa
LANUN'I OWNER WANTS TO aeiriaDd wmiraet '«r oropariy In VWallfd^Ltka. Lansing. TUrnw
LAND CONTIUCT Poi SALE SMJftfirwu tan tor urn CMI UL 2-1414 dllar * pjn.
tacond* about >b prtoc. E-E I BUr-SELL-TRAOE Bargain Houaa. ISS N. Cast _ «?"•«“»
■ PIRST TIME IN MICBIOA WHOLEdALE MEATS AND OROCERIRl ---------^ DEUTERI
. —...Twaaiar' gif S3 !lda<re tpT rtfrigerator tM.N
CRUMP ELECTRIC CO.
2463 AUburr. road_FE *4272 -
AI ALUM'NtTM i'OINC WITH Celolex Inxiall anw and loeulale:
8COTCB PUtsI PRUNED Affb urayad. 4 lo 1 ft. Wbolaaote. Oa Hlg^ay M-M jual north at Oxford.
TAKE TOUR TREE ON THE Bri^lha wboU fx|^^5i
.„	_______mn mnVrn,’luViiii
- 12 ml N of PeotUc. MA *1322
*1. beach find. OB 2
I TOP BOIL. CRUSHED ATONE, —mi. gravel an-i ml ' «<■ cenk-. FE *6612.
------- „ STOEWALK
Ulning wane. Ft 4-2ffl.
CRUSHED 8TUHB. SAND, oIlAV-
GOOD DRJVEWAT yards (or N. dcUvcken. •and. PB 4411*
fftiti TbiI'
A-l FIREPLACE AND SLAB WOOD.
KINDg OP WOOD. SLAB.
1 APRICOT. 3 SILVER. 8 BLACK PmcHm; 9 wirehaired; 9 crown PoodMt (ItOM?):	toy CoUtei 9
houndf. Cheap. WA 7-9931
9 REOX8TXRRU DACHflHUKD P
k 5-M94. nfttf 9

_______d bathlof. frto wick
9 ftod delivery. Alao w^lee la 1 colore aad toy etud aarvleo. A 40079.______________m_to_
ette. PE 9-9M9. enea *1 Monday aad P^y______________
^al braided
_________ Jttji. 12x11 _
42 Oribacd Itoki Ara.
All natlonaUy a Savlngi up to d augar. caAti. 0 mix, carat'
r
f food -- 84 Mr 99
r/SgTto^
cavettrauxbx. •kutteri. AU avaU-akle In color. Inctsitod or malerlato only "Guamv work ooly at bon-•*f prtece •• PHA tarme JOE VALLBLY CO
OL 1403__________________PE 3-1843
AUTOMATIC ZIO SAG SEWIMO Maeblnt to lovelr bkmd cabtoet. Make, batten holea, blind hem*. do*lm. tie. Pay S tooaanl to 3 ' tooSlm. at Sg par mnnih or 144 laab bitnei. Unlrarial Ci. PB
il’tmtox.;, CbristME* 6Hti
BROWNIE 1 MM MOVB CAiaRA.
..........
POUR TWO-WAY RADIO* FOR CAR
i	ft*
COLLIE PUP8. ARC. EARS . TlU> * *	" ~teka. 999.
POOOLM
Mm”;
AMERICA’S PllfXST
DETROITER ALMA
See the rest, then tee OUR BEST , OUR BEST fuaraaiee OUB BEST irade-ln allowaaee OUR BEST deal In town
Bob Hutchinson Mobile Homes Sales Inc.
4141 Dtoto Rttbwiy_ ^ OR *1211
FALL SALE
Oarwi?. !l!ayiranu Pmlto Wa-Wa . and Holly. Alee many uial traOarc to cboota fron.
JACOBtditraAILBR SALBa_^ Ml WUllama Lnko Bd. OB *3ft
OXFORD TRAILER SALES
r •STe'V**Si5i
I priced M yanr
— MarltUe't. Yagabtnd’t.
aalUtactlon.
60 Units on Display
tots of good ntad nnita, aU *laai Cuparto to 34 wlda.
We know we have ana «
eellena In this nrn*
Parkhurst Trailer Sales •non at mobilb utiiki-
i2r.r
uf«R^NT*S8wii‘cnr’f^rilS and taltolMe toauiled Ootoplat* Una Af Bftrift and bottle fte.
W. HSrqB
Sales and Rentals
TneUlw trnllerf^ II. U. IT ft
*^*’make ySiur fBAnSir**^
REgBRVATIONi NOWI
F. E. Howland, Rentals
I2« Dixie Bwy._____OR *14|g
TBIB WnK’B BBTTBR Bof . Oetrtoar SYir. Sbedreom. eenn-ptotely tomtohed Sato artoa. K«*
Cob HUTCHmoir MowtLft. BOMB BALKS. dSilDIxto Hwy" Draytatt Ptokaa. to ...ft, -Ik.
A'
TWEXTV-FOUR
TllEfPNTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 27, 1902
flUTBL TKAILIB. IM*OOT.
3 Ntw «Ml IM Cm
Holly Travel Coach, Inc.
UtM RoUr M RoIIt. MK —Optii 7 P«Tt » Wett—
4 ALItOCr NXW rs ROTAL TntBA
ill*. 414«. Mud w
CRANKSHAFT ORINDtNO IN TUM e»f Crllmleri rebomi Zoc» Mr chia* Sb«R. 44 RiMd. Pbou* FM
_____
. NIFTY. THRIFTY. HONDA 4* m ml. per tsi.. 44 mpR. has eleetrk: stirter 114 down.
HKW SCRVIFNS 444.14 op. OOAR.
iMtt-AccttssrWs
I'fcft'Crift - Old
— -—I. Ftnnt Slip
_	______ _rwoili r------
I4PI4 Feotow Rond. Fen toe
Boat-Motor Storage
Innido or ouUldo—low mien BAR04IN ON NEW AND 08EO BOATS-MOTORA-TRAILBB8
CIu l-A with qunlllTlnf iwcord. 411 quarteriT - 4 can 414.
BRUMMETT AGENCY
410 S. Telcgrapb___FK 44141
CLOSE-OUT
Oa all Star Craft RoaU. OWEN'S, MAiJNE SOFFLIES
PINTER’S MARINE
CANCELED?
REFUSED?
I'OUNG DRIVER
Over It m. cioertenea tnuirlnt Canceled and Reluaed Auto Local Service—Tenna FRANK A. ANDERSON, AOENCT
WILL CLOSE AT INVOICE
- ONLY 2 LEFT WALT MAZUREK’S LAKE & SEA
SOUIE BLVD AT SAOINAW MARINS INSURANCE, BA NR BN Amocy. FR 4 ISS4.
F«rai|N C«i
block S. of 19 U
yteo u
CRn-tradn 101
SRARF LATE MODEL CAES
Averill's
bjusl!'
I4SI RENAULT DAUPMINE FE Msn after 5.
UTEE. 5 PAS vardriva. radio, OM ownar. Law
______ _______ISON CHEVRO-
TeT 00. loss S. WOODWARD AVE., BIHMINOHAM. Ml 4-4144. 1441 RENAULT OAnPRINE^~SE-luia, X444 mt, 4M4. FR M4I4.
BMC for ’63
AUSTIN REALY. MO. SPRITE. MIDGETS
A Complete Line of 25 New Sportscars PARTS AND EXPERT SERVICE ON ALL IMPORTS
AUo a cbolea of 49 uied Importa

OUT-STATE MARKETS r- Extrs Top Dollar
»• FOR LATE MODELS
^M&M
• MOTOR SALES
Ellsworth
t :. AUTO SALES
SHMj>ISto Hwy.	MA a-IS
» TOP IX)LLAR $$
V- <•	FOR
;r Oean Use.I Cars JEROME
!'Bright Spot"
Orchard Lake at Caia
» FE 8-0488
"&K IfY OFFER" RUNNING OB
SAAB. ItSS, BRAND NKW BNOINI.
pal. J n bur. M9AS4S. 443-7944.
............
WE NEED YOUR CAR!
■ la your opportunity 4o make ta "Caab" lor Chrtatmaa We y top dollar tor clean, late
Matthews-Hargreaves
dll Oakand at Caaa
FR MI4I ___________FE 4-4947
CARA AND eRDCKS WRECKS OR
row "cuiAn ubao t^Atta
GLENN'S
tU Weft Huroo 81
fg 4-7371_ rg 4.1717
Um4 A«H-Tr«f Nrts	^
4 • BARRglA CARBUftETOR AND mvitfoM for 'Si-'M Ford encteto.
ta> 3W WM. _________________
is94 CHEVY parts. GOOD FRONT
IIM Ptynoouth enalne.
IIT e: Butiera. off Bil, __
MnrMfiMIncto 113
I TEUCBS. tb • I>A TON. S14S ■ SIS aCOROITY InmRS DISCOUNT
________4998 Dtale Hwy.____
MSS CHEVROLET ti-TON FLAT
a&aT
41 IN. dEROME-FEROUSON.
Better
;; Used Trucks
t CMC
Factory Branch
b VOOOR SERF STAYIOR "WAO-jm 4 wbtal driea. 4 cvllodcr ap-Bs. 4 apaad traiMnlsaloa. Bapt-^44aoa palm. Only Ssss. Bam Ite. JEfioUB - FEROUsra.
OO iSM S. WOODWARD AVE..
RIEMINORAM. mi 44119____
1MB CEeVboLET 4 TON PICE-
;bevrolet I
SARD AYE. BI
JEEP^
olIve^
EEP
Now On Display at
OLIVER
JEEP
The Complete Line
1963
JEEPS
They’re .Ml New
Pickups
4. Wheel or 4-Wbeel Drlrcl
Station
Wagons
. 4-Wheel or 4-Wheel Drivel
•Mso We Carry -a Complete Line of Accessories
OLIVER
JEEP
1M
MM CHEVROLET f. 4 - D aica FE 1T944. H BISSbia, D< ITATIOR I
,-----------------wlfb rad
trtm. ObiT W.iW. Raay t PATTERSON CHRVROLBT . last 8. WOODWARD AVR., BIR-
Auto insurance for
ANYONE
NICROLIR a RAROER CO.
1497 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 4-DOOR hardtop. V4 encine, Fowergllde. only Mm. Ensv Herma. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. lOM S. WOODWARD AVE BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-4739.__________________________
llSr CHEVROLET S-DOOR. RADIO. HEATER. AUTO. TiAnsMISSION ABSOLUTELY NO MONET DOWN Aaaume paymenla of 423.32 per mo. Call Cndlt Mar. Hr. Parka, at
1194 CHEVROLET. RADIO. HEAT-
1494 CHEVT. BIO ENOINE. SOME ektraa. FE 9-9404 after 4 p m.
1444 CHlmv POWER 8TEERINO. auto. Irana.. radio, reaa. MI 7-11748.
1499 CHEVRULEI BROOEWOOD 4-' 4<rvllnder.
_____ ____-er. whtte-
Only 91,499. Eaay terma.
ivMOkAti'la’liiv.
BMC. TRIUMPH. PUT,
-Superior
Rambler
550 Oakland Ave^_
1959 CHEVROLET >
Convertiblo. 4 eyilndor. standard Iranamliskm. radio, whitewall Urea. 41.449.	.......
^Vaa Camp ChevfblefTTnC.
Volvo Dealer
Pontiac Sports Car, Inc. 467 Auburn FE 5-1511
1144 PEOOUET 4-DOOR SEDAN.
9SJSS
L 1-4711.
I. aBROMB-' Ford Dual-
VOLKSWAGEN’S
Ohto eoupa ....... 4IMI
Volkawaten. coovaHIhlt . HI4! Volkawagen. sua roal 4144 Tolkiwasao. sadaa . IMS
WARD-McELROY, Inc.
I W. Huron TROCEC PE 4-4114 OR 4-4444
i iiire3~SiiidXiir~
1M
MU BUICE. HADio beator. Drnaflow. 4114. 7 API. 447. PE 4-4444.
i4M BdiCB. 1.M id.
1958 Buick 2-Door
with V4 tnglne. automatic thif
$695
Marvel Motors
191 Oakland Art.
1M7 BUICX 4DOOR HARDTOP.
food condltloa. Urea -------*“*
PE 9-3744 V HarrU.
INI BUICK CONVERTIBLE. P.AOIO.
>441 BUICK ‘ ELBCTRA 349 " CON-vertlble that we heller - --sharpest In this area, wiui lop to ’malch an red leather Inlerlor. E,_„^-_
E?:k'eV‘ bucket teaUi	-
confole r«dte. beater.
tranemltflon- and like _______ -.....
wall tlret Like a new car In both
be the ahlte «tlot with
Chevy I. 1108 Ford Mdaa. B. Con* way, dealer. 88>»7».
M94 CRBVkOLBT BEL~ii3i
Iloa Just taka ever payments of M4I par week, call credit manaaer Mr. WMta. KINO AUTO SALES. 119 S. Saftnaw —
CHEVROLET. AUTOMOBILE
LLOYD'S
LIncoln-Mereunr-Comei Uataor-Engllab Ford m 8. Sailnaw St. ______FE ^913^___^
CHEVT, 14M. 3-DOOR. » CYLINDER '{**!«	**'**'’	clean.' -
1999 CHEVROLET CONVERTIBUE. RADIO. HEATER. AUTO. TRANSMISSION. ABSOLUTELY N O MONEY DOWN. Assume payments of 449.79 per mo Call Credit Mpr . Mr. Parka, at MI 4-7994. Harold
LLOYD'S
Uncchn-lfereuryvCoinet Meteor-EnclUh Ford 232 B. Saelnaw Si.
FE 2>»13l
MAIIMADUKE
Bx Andtrson A LBcmlng
This is the last time I walk by Sw* with you!
New and Used Cars
ANY CAR YOU WANT—AT my coat, plus fee. 4:30 to 9 p.m. 414-9471, Seaaun
V-4. Fowergllde. CaM OL 1U17
I new. 174 Oneida Rd:
I CHEVROLET IMPALA 4-DOOR
powe, Bteering. whila with blue _ terior. Only 11.999. Eaay lerma. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. urn S. WOODWARD AVE.. DIR-MINOHAM MI 4-4739.
MU I
iff CREVROLBT alaUaa wagon. VS glide, power ataerta OnW 4LSM. Eaay ta 8CM CHEVROLET „.. —- -WOODWARD AVE.. BIHMINOHAM MI 4-4749.
I. PATTER-
1944 CHEVROLET T4 IMPALA 4-door hardtop. Automatic Iranamte-alon. radio, heater, double power and whila aldew:ill tiros. Turquolae eatorlor ftnlah and barmonlalng In-tarlor trim In new ear condltloa. Only 41949. BIRMINOHAM CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH. 414 8 WOOO-
WARD Ml T-4414______________
SCDAh.
_____ whtto-
.... ..........Ease terma.
PATTERSON >:HEVROUiT CO., loss S. WOODWARD AVE.. BIIL
MINOHAM. MI 4-4748.__________
Ml IMPALA 2-DOOR. HARDTOP.
14S1 CHEVROLET !
fSS. Eaay I----	..
CHEVROLET CO. ISOI -. ----
WARD AVE. BOtMINaHAU. MI
INI CHEVROLET BEL AIR 4-DOOR ladan. S cylinder, standard sh“* radia baaler. whHewaUs. Only . SIS. Baa' terma. PATTERSON CREVROLBT CO tSSS S. WOOD-WMD AVE BIRMINOHAM. Ml
Ml CHEVROLET BnCAYNB 4-doar V* engine. Paarargllde. Power slotrtag. Only SIU9. Eht terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. IfSS 8. WOODWARD AVE.. BIR-MINOHAM Ml 44739.
INI CHEVROLET IMPALA 4-OOOR
. whltawnUa Urea Onl;
6. hMl-
-	____________ -ily llJi9.
Ease tarma. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1099 8. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMIHOHAM. MI 4.4749.
ISn CREVROLBT WPALAThaId-lop. VS angina, pewcrgllde. power steeling, red and white finish. Only It.lH. Easy terns. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., lOST -WOODWARD AVE., BIRM04OI
lUlmRSON
---8. WOO______
____IHAM. Ml 4-4T99._____
power iteerlaa. mdla. healer.
waUe, UgU bhie finish. Only_
Ban tarma. PATTERSON CHBV-
^,gihi.yHAV*s?°;s^
M CHEVROLET (W ilMOR. AU-tomaHe. iwffiiM Mua with white wM area, tm actual nniea. Only sms. Eaay tarma. PATTERSON CREVR(»Jt OO.. UOt B. WOODWARD AVR., RUUUNOHAM. —
S CHEVROLET BROOKWOOD 4-
Tell Everybexiy About it with a Pontiac Press Want Ad
Dial FE 2-8181
e^. anatne ai for edy SlM
LLOYID'S
Blft-Mereitry-Comct leor-EnHiSlb Ford I 8 atfSitw 81.
WARD AVg.a BIRlIlNOHAkl. Ml
»1738.__________________
Ml fOFgR 8PORT nu Cbovy. 4 tpMdt. m vltb
guads, Pual-lracUoo. ISM i___
Whlta Witt red ISttrlor JE 4-lSW. 1197 diBVY. BEL AIR. 1-DOOR, with sparkling black and white ftnlah with rad and while mtertor. Has stick shift and Vi engine, full price only I4i7. Take over paymanu of 44.44 per week. NO
money down.
UNIVERSAL AUTO EXCHANGE
-1%1 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE
4-door hardtop with power aleerint and brakes.
$3495
SEE THE "DEPENDABLES "
KESSLER'S
DODGE
M N Lapeer Rd.	Oilord
(Neat lo world's largest eravrl pit)
_____OA S-I4g» or OA 41991
1494 CHRYSLER. NEEDS MECHAN-"Ical work ■	. . I 49
'98 Ford delivery. '99 Ford 4W5 1494 Buick. good running	9149
1494 Plymouth	9149
1499 Pontiac and Chevy	4	149
Plenty others to chooaa from ECONOMY MOTOR DISCOUNT _______444S DHIe Hwy.
steeling and brakes, sutomallc Iranandaslon. radio, healer and ax-cellenl whitewall Urea. A tip-hm ear In every way for only SI44S. BIRMINOH/.M CHRYSLER. PLY-MOUTH. 411 4. WOODWARD. MI 7-3414_____________________________
1M» DODGE V4 CORONET 1-DOOR sedan with nutoroatic U-ansmtuloo, radio, healer and power steeling.
way. and priced to sell quickly at ohiy 1849. The low down piymenl -and, eaay monthly notes arranged to lull your budget. BIRMINOHAM CHRYsLeR PLYMOUTH, 411 8 WOODWARD. Ml 7-3414
IXIDOE MATEIXm' VS sport coupe with sulomaUc transmission. radio, healer, power steering. powef brakes, and excellent wbllewaU Urea. Beautiful melaUlc turquoise with 3 tone leather In-teiioi trtm and wall lo wall car-— ■	•	■ " Dodge
people pay
at^li
Iba price m
_____rl Only II-----------
anieed for a fuU year. BIRMINOHAM CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH. 413 S. WOODWARD. Ml 7-3314.
ftST TORD COUNTRY SEDAN 4-
elean. JEROME-PEBOUe.....
----Ford Dealer. OL 1-4711.
1898 iDSEL 24 404 MILES. 4149. 239 Florence 81. f a.m. to 3 p,m nSS FORD. RED AND WI
ISM CHEVT STjmON WAOOH. V4.
lAI.Ax'lB V-4 3-D<»R
Russ Johnson
HAS THE BARGAINS!
1461 RAMBLER CONVERTTBLE Brand new and all dolled up and ready to go. Now ta Uw time to save on a convertible.
SAVE S99S
1441 RAMBLER CLASSIC WAGON Brand spanking new. The Iasi one of thase wc have a real deal 1s waiting (or you.
SAVE tSOS
1443 TEMPEST 4-DOOR SEDAN Aulomatlc (mnamlatloo. radio, beater. Brand naw and Uit only one of Uicst left
SAVE 4900
1443 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE Power sleeting, power brakes, hy-dramatte and many extras. This
!oR5! low-oost bank loan for your now or used car. sea Poolfae Btata Bank. FE 4-3441.
Ilia rvKU x-iwuis
$99
BIZTr AUTO SALES
Like New
tng Interior. S2SM.
WJLSON
PONTIAC-CADILLAC
1350 N. Woodward
Birmingham MI 4-1930
IMsToRDTSooRTRADfOrBSST. ER. AUTO. TRANSMISSION. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Aaeume payments o( 434.79 per mo.
1IS4 FORD 4«OOR. RADIO. HEATER. AUTO. TRANSMISSION. AB-SOLUTBLT NO MONEY DOWN. -—me payments of 914.M per can Credit Hgr^r. Parlis.
MECHANIC SPECIAL
S eara - ‘94 Buick. Cbryslar. Porti and Chevy	939-45.
Plenty other late modeU ECONUlis OTORA DISCOUNT _______*449 DUIe Hwy.
1957 FORD HARDTOP
A vary clean, ireen and whila Paliiana 9S4. radio, heater, aulo.
ISM FORD wmr A ALL WHITE finish. 4-door hardtop, sctlaa la belitvinci 1447. Universal Auto. Exchanat. IN 8. Saelnaw St. PE S-4M1
IfSa PORD OALAXIE 3DOOR, RA-tUo. heater. whilewaUt. slick wllk overdrive. 41.418 Ml 4M44 after 9, 1899 PORD COUNTRY SEDAN STA-Uon wagon. Vi enilne. automatic, power steering, red and while ftn-bh. Extta clean. Only 4448. Easy terma. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., loss S. WOODWARD AVE BIRMINOHAM. Ml 4-1714.
IM. call altar 4.4S. PE 4MU.
ISM FORD 1-DOOR. AUTOMATIC. V-S. Very clean, sharp Mack and whila finish, new snow Urer final owner. WiU aecepi traf
I-IS14.________________
ISM FORD 4-DOOR RANCk WAO-on, V-i engine, heater, power steering. silver grey, extra sharp. On.y IL4M. Eaw tarms. JEROME-FER-OUSOM. Rochester Ford Dealer. Ot 1-4714_____________________
, $697 '
Lqw Weekly Payments M.M
Estate Storage Co.
_1M 8. Bait Baulavard at -------1	PI 4-IIM
NtHM^UMd C«rt______I^M
1441 FORD OALAXIR WITH BIO - -Ine. OaU 444-M44.
onaoit Rochaatcr Feed Dealer.
W90. Pvt, owner. 8184471.
73.' Ludlow. Rochester. OL 1-4489.
IMI PORD 4-DOOR SEDAN. S CTL-
whllewtU Urea, solid white ftnlah. Extra nice 4.4M nolunl miles. Only 4U9S Easy terma JEROME-PER-UUSON. Rocbesllr Ford Dealer.
01 1-4711___________________
1141 FALCON WAOON. DELUXE.
Ml PORT COUNTRY SEDAN. 4-paasenter wagon. V-i engine, CniiseO-Matle trniumtukn. rndto. heater, chrome luggage rack. Low mileage, eatra sharp. Only 43.2H. Easy terms. 4EROME-PEROU80N. Rochester Ford Dealer. OL 1-4711.
I CHEVT. A-1. 41.444. hrvslr--^	— *
Also' many Buni Moo
3344 Dll	____ ________
I4H CHEVY 4-DMR. AOTOMATIC this ottt (or
radio, beater, drivi
Birmingham
Rambler
Is a demonstrator and cariits new warranty.
SAVE 410M
1941 CHEVY CORVAIR "SM " Aulomaltc transndsalon. r n d I heater, whitewall tires. You ca: miss at Ihls low price.
. only |M4S
1M4 PORD STATION WAOON
a rebal wilh V-d ai
Inf. power brnkea and extra ahup. ONLT 41345
19M CADILLAC 4-DOOR HARDTOP
------------------ ..
brand
I miles A I
heater. Extr
ONLY 14518
1459 PONTIAC 4-DOOR SEDAN ■uwer Steering, power brakes. L, Ic. wtiHci^ tires, rndto. ONLY*il4M
SELECT USED CARS
1499 Rambler station wagon ... Mt
--------- -----hardtop , . *59
lardtop . . 999 I wagon ... Ill r sedan . IM
ivae rmu x-uoor sedan ... 939
IIM Ford ranch wagon	949
1169 Pontine 4.daor sedan . 429
1494 Dodge 3-deor sedan ... 419
IIM Olds 4-door aedan	439
1164 Chevy 4-door aodan ... 414
1969 PooUae 2-door aodan . 911
Russ Johnson
; Pontiac-Ramlilcr » >1-25 at the Stoplight Lake Orion MY 3-6266
1154 DODOE ^DOOR
$79
SIXTY AUTO. SALES 69| Mt. Clemens gtttel PE 4-4479
1959 PLYMOUTH
$595
KESSLER'S
DODGE
IMU fALCON WAOON. DELUXE
IIM POMT>£bEanE "9M	.
door sodaa, 9 cylinder engine, nuto-matlc, radio, ncator. whltewaUt. Pull piioo 4aM. Only 4144 down. 434.44 per .moolh. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1444 4. WOODWARD AVR.. BIRMIHOHAM, Ml
1164 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR lUck ehlft. good Uret. real good tranaportatlon. alwaya
Suburban
MOTORS USED CARS
— ihop bare before y< rhere Our value- rated

VVE KEEP THE BEST, WHOLESALE the REST
4H B. Weedward Ava.
Ml 4-4485
Nsw hmI Vm4 Cart
LLOYD'S
■SaiSSKtK*
333 g. Saglaaw St. ______PE tdUl___
ANT CAR TOO WART-AT ‘
Motors.
REMEMBER
144 S. Woodward	Blmata
MI 44144
I49f PONTIAC CONVBiTTBLB. kED with white top and red and wUto faitertor, power ctecrlng.^power brakes ful. price of only $W, as-auroe payment* of M 73 per week with NO ilONET DOWN!
UNIVERSAL AUTO EXCHANGE
('i block B. of Oakland)
' JUpitor 8-6010 'ARKHK
STARK HICKEY, FORD Clawson
On 14 Mila Road aaat ft Crooks Across Irsin tha aawton Shop-ulng Center.
14M PONTIAC SAFARI STATTON wagon, hhio and whito with matching genuhto leather faitertor. full power and no rust, full pries ot ODiy nil. payments of $4.14 ptr Week. NO MONEY DOWN.
UNIVERSAL AUTO EXCHANGE
Oi hto;k E°"
I960 CADILLAC
1469 Mercury Club Coupe M 'M Edsel. like new
100 others to choaeo. 449 up ECONOMY MOTOR DI8COUNT 4439 Dixie Hwy.__41 Auburn
1457 O
.	__________ji 8UPBR n. HAS
md o and heater, sparkling Mack and whito. Ji^ take over payments of R7 a month. Call r Mr. While, KINO
INI ENOLI8H PORD ANOLIA 2-
LLOYD'S
! PLYMOUTH 4-DOOR SEDAN, ulo. Iran*., exc. Urea, eood run-(. cash Miy. PE 3-141
14M IdiRCURT 3-DOOR HARDTOP
at only IIM down, paymenU 138.14 ptr month.
LLOYD'S
1982 MERCUnY CUSTOM 4-DOOR ■edan. one owner, radio, beater.

and assume paymtnls of E
LLOYD'S
V IJneobi-Merourj-Comet ^eteor Boffllob Ford
1956 Ford ■
E-“.5(X)” Platform
this one la a one-owner VI engine healer and w sbari. MM.
BEATTIE
"Your PORD DEALER Since 1434" ON DIXIE HWY IN WATERFORD AT THE S10PLIOBT
OR 3-1291 ___
■atume parmtnu of fSt.M.
LLOYD'S
Ltoeotn-Mereanr-Oi Metoor-Enaltsh P 434 8. Safrtnnw I PE"4141
full piico, paymonu of 4.B pi weak. NO MONET DOWN.
UNIVERSAL AUTO EXCHANGE
(■4 block E. of Oakland)
INI MERCURY CONVERTTBLE. with radio, haator. power ateciins and brakes, sharp while flnl.<h. full prlct MJ49. One year warranty I
LLOYD'S
Lincoli_________ .
Meteor- Enf<lah 333 8. Saginaw FE 4-4131
im PONTIAC-NEED CASH! Heavv debU. must sell my new '43 Pontiac Catalina t-door hardtop aporta coupe. It hat soft ray glast all around plua power hrakca and stteiint. many other line oxtraa like Firestone Whitewall Ursa. Low mlleaga. carefully broken In. Asklna 43.439. Call 344-9411 or OR UttI after 7 p.m.
Wc’ll Help You Write Ads That
Get Results
Courtaoua Fonttaa Frtai
ly can pot your wnntt Into
•‘Tffiir
MUSICAL INBTRUMBNTt
CARS AND TRUCKS
OX OBT A TENANT
FOR TOUR SPARE ROOM
ram you a job
DIAL FE 2-8181
T
■SIOL&S^i
WOODWARD AVR., BIRMIHORAM
SH pyrMOUTH 44>o(tt" bard: while ftaim.'Saipl'‘Mi7. uSv ” *•
UM PLYMOUTH 4 PA88BNOBR VS aUttan wagon with nutomatic traoamlaaton. radio, hoator. power iteer^ end exceUent whitewaU Urea Original ataiilght blue -	'
and vinyl ------------
----llUon.
MINOI JTH
14.	________________
PLYMOUTH Vg "FURY'
> With automalle transmla-Itower steering ind brnkea.
.Easy letma can be arranged ^^.Jlt you end full price la ocUy M«9 BJMIMORAM CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH, fit 8. WOODWARD. Ml 7-4314
1*98 PLYMOUTH "4" t-DOOR WITH automatic transmlaalan. radio, and beater A line performing, eco-nmlcnl fmmilT eer. Any old enr or 449 down wUI handle thta one at mir low full price of only 9749. BIRMINOHAM CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH, 814 8 WOODWARD. MI 7-4214.
ISM PONTIAC 4 DOOR. AUTO..
XMTT BUT ANT NEW OR USED CAR unit' voi' eel ew deni! Com-Metelv recondtUoned used can al
ffOVFR HlGHr
MOTORS, me. Cbevrolet-Fontie-Buick OXFORD________________OA 8-4948
BIG STOCK
DEDUCTION
power windows, radio, healer, wbltewall Urea. Sava $M on Uits one. Only $3,116.
19H CHRYSLER New Yorker 4-door, lull power, radio, heater, wbltewall tlraa. 1 owper. Only SI.SN.
MS PLYMOUTH 4-door. Economy S. with auto, and baaler. sharp. MSS.
NS FALCON 3-daor. tUek. exceptional. SIAM.
.SEE US BEFORE SAYING YES TO A DEAL
R 6c R Motors
R «E< IM Cart	IM
ESSE
[AC 4-DOOR. SE-
Birmingham Rambler '
484 S. Woodward
HASKINS
Sharp Trades
1441 PONTIAC
HASKINS
Chevrolet-Olds
"Tour Crcaaroada te Savlata”
BUY YOUR NEW RAMBLER HOUGHTEN & SON
534 H. MAM A Boabaatar OL 1-471
Factory-
Official's
« tadan. A low ■
real lew price. 41
iST '
lUeaf*
white
WJLSON
PONTIAC-CADILLAC
1350 N. Woodward
Birmj^ghaTm
IMI AMBEICAN WAOON. RADIO.
744 OAKLAND
Cbryaler > AVE.
I960 Falcxin.
Drive thta cut (or $1M down.
Birmingham
Rambler
4M S. Woodward
111 4-
1440 PONTIAC CATAUNA 3-OOOR hardtop, power ateertnt and brakes. 1 owner, tinted glass, 43.«M miles. MANSFIELD AUTO
BALEB, 107g Beldwin.____
1497 PONTIAC CATALINA COUPE. 1-owncr. Can PE 9-44M._____
I9H MERCURY MONTEREY 4
BEATTIE
"Your POPD DEALER Since 1918 " ON DIXIE HWY IN WATERFORD - AT THE STOPLIOnT
OR 3-1291
PONTIAC. 1497. 4-OOOR HARDT*.
itpment. OR 4-S0S7.
Any make or model Tou Dick It - We-U ftnanee It. You etll or have your dealtr Call FI MMI. H e aatf COMUUMITT NAHONAL BAIfK
PONTIAC. SAVE MONET WITH a Ponitee SUM Bank loan when buylDf a MW or uMd ear. Call Piwmac 8Uta Baafc. FI 4-3881.
$1050
KESSLER'S
rXDDGE
448 N. Lapeer Rd	Oxfo
iNexi t, world's laneel gravel p OA S-14W or OA S-OiB
I, hydra., power ateering
___ brakea, whitewalls, radio.
PE 4-3479.______________________
1962 TEMPEST LeMANS COUPE. stick ihilt. very sharp. PE 3-8479,
1943 PONTIAC. WHITE. 4-OOOR Catalina tadan. power. Ilka naw. pvt, party. MY 3-3WI.
1957 PONTIAC
Canvartlbta. Continantal wheel — automobile. FuU price only
Surplus motors
171 g. Saginaw____PH S-4034
1959 Ford>
Custom “300”
4-door with va eiwine. Pordor Iranamliilnn. whitiwaiu.. r a a i o.\ 'heater and washers. MSS.
BEATTIE
’’Your FORD DEALER Since 1«Q * ON DOCOB HYW. tN WATERFORD AT THE S’TOPLIOirr
OR 3-1291
wi UERcukr, ••PAsraiidER
ito^r^ tnuxmSisioo’*"
Birmingham Rambler '
“ONI TEAR WARRANTf^
One Block s. of 18 UUe R4. o BIRMINOHAM
.80 PONTIAC CTARCHUP WITH fuU power. AutaouUte tnaemto-•Ion. eitrs low mUeMet Very cleaal wm take old m dm pay-
BMBt.
Haupt Pontiac
Open Monday. Toaaday and Thursday until t p.m.
Ona Mas Mortli el U.S. IS oa MIS
Clnrfahfc:________MA MSM
CLABBIC 4-d5oS,
'Im.' apaSal'
Birmingham
Rarnbler
SM a. Woodward
INI PONTIAC TKMPH8T 4-DOOR •odan wlUi radio heater, itanderd traasmlialon. M79 down and aa-tum- paymanta at S0.4S par mo.
LLOYD'S
I960 Ford
Tudor
Has radio and healer and llki new whitewaU tlret. Save lou o tUs honey.
$1245
John McAuIiffe, Ford
SM Oakland Ave.
FE 5-4101_____
IMl AliiERICAN 1-DOOR. AUTO-
Birmingham
Rambler
m m. Woodwerd
Nw, U»M Cm IM
1962 Comet
4-Door Sedan
$1995
John McAuIiffe, Ford
838 Oakland Ave.
. FE 5-4101
' - Special -
1959 PONTIAC
star Chief Adoor that has radio an. haator. hydramatta traasmta-atan. power brakes tad power steeiins Thta one alto baa tir ditlonlnq and iT a real nica buy. act with baato
$1695
' PONTIAC RETAIL STOREar
65 Mt. Clemens St.
FE 3-7954	'
IMI AMBASSADOR WAOOH, PULL power, with air eondlUoninf. A beautiful aulomohUa. Weaktad apcetal. tl.415.
Birmingham
Rambler
IMl PONTMC TRMPRST STATON

one I. yours (or only 91.9M.
Haupt Pontiac
Open Monday. Tuesday and Thursday unlU 4 p m. le MUt North of U S. 10 on MH
1497 DeSOTO. 4-DOOR HARDTOP, with M down, and asiume pay-menti of 914 per nMntb! aim la and took this banuty overt \
LLOYD'S
MetoorEnfuS Pord 232 8. SMlncw 8t.
_______PET-8131____
^ 1959 Fold
Galaxie 2-Door
With radio, heater, autocnalie Irans-mtaaton. white with a rad Interior I
$1195
John McAuIiffe, Ford
434 Oakland Ave.
FE 5-4101
1443 PONTIAC CATAUNA 3-DOOR
Low mlleago. very aharp. Ilk M.490. CaU FE 4-1714. allei
tMe widls
One
Owner
1M4 Tampaat LcMana convertible, standard transmlaslon. This ruby red beauty hat white bucket seats and a heat of other oxtraa. And only M.M9.
WILSON
PONTIAC-CADILLAC
1350 N." Woodward
Birmingham MI -1-1930
IIH RAMBLBR 4-TXX» SEDAN, with radio hoator. S ctI. engine, automalle Iranamlaatan. nn down, tno auuroo payiiwnto of 841.43 per
LLOYD'S
144 8 Saelnaw St.
_______FE 4>sm___
I9S , RAMBLER 4-OOOR. TltAifS-portatlon apeetal, SITS aomplete.
Birmingham
Rambler
IIM FOHTIAC 4-OOOR CATALINA Vtata. radio hoator, hydramatlc. M1-34U.
tisi BAMBitat WacmW, AWdilA. He ,^tosnaarti^^ rmina he«er.
with extrae, and llt.ll
Birmingham
Rambler
Ml R. Woodward
US7 PONTIAC 8"-AR CRIEP 4«O0R.
IMT PONTIAC BTAH C
ART CAR TOO WART-AI
r.’S' tiu:
WE HAVE
A INI Foatlae --...
tton waton. Power stecrini, power brakes, and n host ot oxirat. A real sharp red and whito beauty at only Sl.tlS.
WILSON
PONTLVC-CADILLAC
1350 N. Woodward
Birmingham. MI 4-lil30
$2499
BRAND
NEW
1962
CHEVY
Impala
Convertible
Yes, this car is brand new. Equipped with Powerglide trans., padded dash, whitewalls, wheel covers, 2 speed electric wipers with washers, white with red interior. 100% new car guarantee. 12,000 miles or 12 months. Add $89 for V-8’s. Only 9 of these beauties left so hurry.
Patterson
Chevrolet
Co.
1000 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham. MI 4-2735
Will Accept
Bill Spence
Rambler-Jeep
11S. Mata llrtsl
BUSINESS IS TREMENDOUS! BUY NOW and SAVEl
l«H Buick 4door __ ,
tM7 Chevy idaot wsgen . .4
SHELTON
PONTIAC-BUICK ROCHESTER OL 1-8133 wS.’.RriamSi’to*?*’*
THE PONTJAC PRESS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1962
TWENTY-VIVE
--TodaysTelevision Rrogroms-
I m nbjact to atotoie irtihMt mOsq
I t—WXn-TT CfeMMt I
l;2S
<:4I
f:2S
(2) Newi (4) M Squad <7) Action Theater (Cwjt) (9) Popeye (Cont.)
(56) American Economy
(2) Editorial, Sports
(2) Weather
(4) Weather
(2) Highway Patrol
(4) News
(7) News
(9) Quick Draw McGraw (56) French Through TUe-vision (4) Sports (4) News
(7) News, Weather, S^rts (2) Fair Exchange (4) (Color) Weekend (7) Mike Hammer (9) Whiplash ^
(56) House We Uve In (2) Exchange ((3ont.)
(4) ((}olor) Laramie (7) Combat
(9) Movie: “Up Goes Maisie." (1946) Returning to civilian work after stint in war plant, Maisie lands' j(d) with inventor. Ann So> them, George Murphy.
(56) Turn of the Century (2) Lloyd Bridges (4) Laramie (Cont.)
(7) Combat (Cont)
(9) Movie (Cont.)
(56) Age of Kings (2) Red Skelton (4) (Color) Empire (7) Hawaiian Eye (9) Movie (Cont.)
(2) Skelton (Cont.)
(4) Empire (Cont.)
(7) Hawaiian Eye (Cont.) (9) Movie (Cont.)
(9) Playback
(2) Jack Benny
(4) Dick PoweU
(7) Untouchables
(9) Front Page Challenge
(2) Garry Moore
(4) Powell (Cont)
(7) Untouchables (Cont)
(9) Inquiry
19:M (2) Moore (Cont)
(4) Chet Himtley (7) Close-Up (9) Mary Morgan 11:11 (2) News (4) News (7) News (9) News
11:11 (7) News, Sports 11:15 (2) Editorial, Sports (4) Weather (9) Weather 11:21 (2) Weather (4) Sports (7) Weatber (9) Telescope UAW 11:25 (2) Movie - “Sealed Verdict.” (1948) In postwar Germany, Allied authorities attempt to administer justice at Nuremberg war-crimes trials. Ray MUland, Florence Marley, Broderick Crawford.
(7) Movie. “State Penitentiary.” (19S0) Man is sentence to prison for embezzlement though he is innocent of charge. Warner
11:N (4) (Color). Thnight.
(9) Movie-“Thrill of a Romance.” (1945). Beautiful swimming teacher is wooed and won by a ybung business tycoon. But their wedding supper is soon interrupted. Van Johnson, Esther Wiliiams.
7:99 (7) Johnny Ginger 1:96 (2) Captain Kangaroo (56) German for Teachers 8:M (7> Jack LaLanne (56) Industry on Parade !:«(56) Spanish Lesson 6:51 (9) Warm-Up 9:61 (2) December Bride (4) Living
(7) Movie: “Three Smart Girls.”
(9>“Chez Helene (56) Let's Read
9:11 (9) Nursery School Time 9:19 (2) MiUionalre ' (9) National SdKxds (56) English V 9:51 (2) TV Editorial 16:19 (2) Connie Page
(4) (Color) Say When (9) Romper Room (56) Our Scientific World 19:11 (7) News 19:25 (4) News 19:99 (2) I Love Lucy
(4) (Color) Play Your Hunch (7) Dragnet (56) French Lekson 19:56 (56) German Lesson 11:99 (2) McCoys
(4) (Color) Price Is Right (7) Jane Wyman (9) Adventure Tinae 11:95 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:99 (2) Pete and Gladys (4) Concentration (7> Yours for a Song (56) Dancers’ World
WEDNESDAY MORNING 6:99 (4) Continentaf Classroom: Atomic Age Physics 6:15 (2) Meditations 6:29 (2) On the Farm Front 6:25 (2) News 6:99 (2) College of the Air (4) (Color) Continental Oassroom: American Gov-
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 12:69 (2) Love of Life
(4) (Ck>lor) First Impression
(7) Ernie Ford (56) History 12:25 (2) News
12:99 (i) Seardi for Tomorrow (4) Truth or Ckmsequences (7) Father Knows Best 12:49 (9) Morgan’s M e r r y-Go-
(7) Funews 7:69 (2) B’wana Don (4) Today
(7) Sagebrush Shorty
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Aaever la Pratleai Peeila

I Number
10	To the Inilde
11	Soft palalti
13 German etream
10	Crafty
11	Oepot chip
11 Incllnei
34 Indoneelani i
(56) Spanish Lessons 12:45 (2) Guiding Light (9) News 12:51 (4) News (9) Playback 1:99 (2) Star Performance (4) Best of Groucho (7) Gale Storm (9) Movie: “Ninotchka” 1:19 (56) Frendi Lesson 1J9 (2) As the World Turns (4) Peofde Are Funny (7) One Step Beyond (56) World History 1:55 (4) Faye Elizabeth 2:99 (2) Password
(4) (Color) Merv Griffin (7) Day in Court (56) Adventures in Science 2:25 (7) News 2:99 (2) Divorce Court (7) Seven Keys (56) Young Artists at Work 2:55 (4) News 9:99 (4) Loretta Young (7) ()ueen for a Day (56) Discovery 9:99 (2) To TeU the Truth (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Who Do You Trust?
(9) Scarlet Hill (56) Superintendent Reports
9:55 (2) News 4:96 (2) Secret Storm
(4) Make Room for Daddy (7) American Bandstand (9) Razzle Dazzle (56) Menu to Teachers 4:99 (2) Edge of Night (4) Here’s Hollywood (7) Discovery ’62 (9) Popeye and Pals 4:45 ( 56) French Lesson 4:55 (4) News
(7) American Newsstand 5:06 (2) Movie:	“Frenchman’s
Creek”
(4) (Color) (^rge Pierrot (7) Action Theater (56) What’s New?
1:91 (56) Industry on Parade 5:45 (56) News Magazine 5:55 (4) Carol DuvaU
-Today's Radio Programs-
laiTdtl CKLWilOOt WWJIPM) WXVZ<1S7S> WrASlllSW WMNddMl WJSSlISOO) WHri.FNlP4.7)
WWJ, Nc«i CXLW. JM omitn# WPON, Niwi. Civtetr WRPI. McPi. Mimic for M
11:10-^. Muile WWJ. Muilc WCAR. vie Archer CKLW. Bob SUtoB
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WPON.
... .... ..jwc. Aril. WiotoS WRPt MimM. McLeod d:M-WJn. Mucic HeU
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7:«B-WJR. Newx UhHo WWJ, Newi. RoberU WSrX WoH
WJUK. Neve, Merc Aecry
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•we. Toby Delia
1.W-WJR, •
WXTS. Rev. ....
CRLW. Reve. Oeeid
5.Vi^:e'!i.'¥3?rD.«d
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WCAR, Neve. Mertye
WPON Neve. fViii MelCOd
WJnt. New WPON. Neve. V WRPI. Kfve. I
liW-wn. Move. Bee WWJ, Neve, Lyaker
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WNIRISD.tV APTBRNOON IHfV WJH. Neve, JJjrm
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l:f»-ORLW Neve, ahlft'bi •:CP-WJR. Newt, Bhoveae
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CKLW Neve, Daew ■ -WJH, Neve, Clerk
XiXYZ. Nevt. BcbeetlaB CKt,W. Rewt, Dct.it IK, HeVe. Lee
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•i»-WJII. Mnile NoR WWJ. Boaopor qnk -----------■%^t»eo
WCAR. Neve. Bhi
Pinllet Preet Pfcele
TO BE HONORED - Wilson Elementary School cheerleaders and football team will be honored at a banquet Wednesday, at 5:30 p.m. sponsored by the Wilson Parent-Teacher Association. Shown above are cheerleaders Cynthia Hatcher (left) of 365 Ferry Avenue; and Julie Sharako, 505 Irwin Avenue; and football players Michael Shelton (left) 359 Central Avenue, and Johnny Jefferson, 229 East Wilson Avenue.
2 Bases Sent 8,400 to Cuba
QUONSET POINT. R. I. (fl -The Navy relaxed local security rules yesterday and disclosed that 8,400 sailors and airmen from Quonset Point and Newport took part in the Cuban blockade.
Fifteen destroyers, two destroyer tenders and three aircraft carriers from those two bases were used, the Navy said.
In addition, an undisclosed
TV
Features
Still Mum-on Fate of Ole Miss
DALLAS, Tex. (AP)-Secmt da-liberatkHis on what to do about alleged political InteHerence at the University of Mississi^i con-M today with no chw as to what the Southern Aaaodation of Colleges and Schoola wiU deckle.
%e matter is in the hands of the nine-member executive council of the association’s Commission on Colleges. It will present its recommendatiqns to the college delegate assembly Wednesday morning.
Council members, all prominent Southern educators, met behind closed doors all day Monday and into the evening h^s.
Most delegates to the associa. tion’s 67th annual meeting believe the council will recommend a period of strict probation for all eight state colleges and universities in Mississippi. ^
LOSS OF CREDITS *
The decision could range from exoneration to loss of accreditation.
Credits and degrees awarded by disaccredited institutions recognized by other colleges and universities and by many professional societies.
Part of the question being decided here is whether Gov. Ross Barnett and other state officials interfered with the administration of the University of Mississippi in late September when Negro James H. Meredith was seeking admission to the then all-white school.
By-United Press International
COMBAT, 7:30 p.m. (7) - Tab Hunter plays baseball pitcher who fears injuring his valuable arm in battle.
HAWAIIAN EYE, 8:30 p.m. (7). Dorothy Provine portrays former movie star who faces death on her comeback trail.
THE UNTOUCHABLES, 9:30
Equally important |s whether there is a threat of future interference now that Meredith has been admitted.
Barnett and the State Board of Trustees for Institutions of Higher Learning have assured the association there will be no interference.
number of destroyers from New- P-*”-pwt were involved in secret “ - - —	—
port operations.”
A spokesman nt the Newport base said its supply depot had only three hours k which to pat supplies aboard some of the destroyers, before they sailed.
One of the Quonset ships, the antisubmarine aircraft carrier Essex, was operating temporarily out of Guantanamo when the crisis erupted. Her aircraft s'lb-sequently logged 624 consecutive hours of flight operations in the blockade area.
The other (Juonset antisub carrier, Lake Champlain, also participated in the emergency maneuvers.
JFK Plane Put in Wrong Zone
low who conducts school for underworld assassins.
DICK POWELL SHOW, p.m. (4). John Payne stars in ma about drifter torn between form-minded girl friend and his happy-go-lucky — and often illegal — life.
JACK BENNY, 9:30 p.m. (2) Jack has trouble with Japanese theatrical agent.
CLOSE-UP!, 10:30 p.m. (7). Half-hour study of India’s economic, political and psychological strengths and weaknesses as it faces invading Chinese Oirnmu-nist forces. Participants include Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, students and teachers.
CHET HUNTLEY REPORTING, 10:90 p.m. (4). Views about capital punishment are presented.
NEW YORK orr-The ZeigfsU Theater, built by the late ahow-man Florenz Ziegfeld during the Roaring 20s, is undergoing a .^quarter-million dollar restoration and will return to legitimate productions.
The theater opened on Feb. 2, 1927, with “Rio Rita.” But after a few years, the Ziegfeld fell on hard times and became a movie ter until 1944, when showman Billy Rose took it over and returned it to the legitimate fold.
Investigators Say -Bird Caused Crash
[^HINGTON (UPI) -ernment 1
Gov-
attributed the crash of a United Airlines Viscount in flight last Friday to a whistling swan which struck the plane’s tail.
Investigators say the bird, migrating south for the winter, probably broke off a stabilizer.
The airliner plunged into a wooded area near Ellicott City, Md., killing all 17 persona aboard.
Identifying the bird, estimated to have weighed between 11 and 14 pounds, the investigators confirmed previous reports that a bird had struck the plane.
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Air Force jet President Kennedy uses was accidentally cleared through an altitude used by military trainers over Arizona lasti March 17, the Federal Aviationj Agency said yesterday.
The President was not aboard, an FAA spokesnian said, and there was no evidence of any near-collision.
Judy Garland Hypnotized; Sings With Laryngitis
But the air controller at Phoenix who provided the clearance was sent a “cautionary letter” — a mild form of discipUiiary action.
County Teachers Plan Seminar on Retarded Child
WILSON
An estimated 50 county teachers f mentally retarded children were to meet at 1:30 p.m. today for a seminar at the Oakland County Board of Education offices.
Mrs. Evelyn Gottschalk, teacher • counselor in Pontiac Sciioob, was Mhednled to dis-enta the retarded child who is physically handicapped.
Mrs. Marjorie Walters, teacher for mentally handicapped children in Waterford Town^p Schools, was to explain ways of srorklng with retarded children who also have perceptual problems. '
Prince Visiting Indonesia
JAKARTA (AP) - Cambodia’s head of state. Prince Norodom Sihanouk, and a party of 42 arrived in a special Royal Cambodian Airline plane yesterday for an n-day state visit to Indonesia.
By EARL WILSON
NEW YORK-Judy Garland’s been getting hypnotized lately -Vegas and Chicago-to help her sing when she has laryngitis.
Hypnosis gave her such relaxation, ease and confidence in recent engagements that Judy invited the hypnotist to join her entourage.
In a 42-day date at the Las Vegas Sahara, Judy was hypnotized about 20 timea—but never sang while hypnotized.
She’d be hypnotized an how before singing. Poit-hypiMtie raggetUon convinced her (1) she’d sing at her maximam ability, (2) she and her vocal mnsclet would be relaxed, and (I) she’d enjoy the lingtag-and so would the audience. And it always worked.
During her troubled years, Judy unsuccessfully tried hypnosis about 20 times.
Then a few weeks ago, Judy “acceptfid hypnosis,” as they say, from Stan Irwin, vice-president and eiv tertainment director of the Las Vegas Sahara, where she was working. Irwin, a foremost authority on the subject, previously liyp-notized Teresa Brewer, Aim-Margaret, Kay Starr, Connie Francis and Mary Kaye when they had “tenakm laryngitis."
But Jndy’s was acute, she sang over and around it, and Irwin contirned the hypnosis when ihe moved to Chlcago-where she asked If he’d like to join her organization.
“I don’t know,” Irwin answered ... To me. he said, “Judy’i no ’slave’ to jiypnoais-ohe just uses it to relax.”
Night club impresarios say Irwin’s hypnosis has unlimited possibilities—“he could even hypnotize customers to come in when they want to stay home.”
★ ★ ★
TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Gentlemen prefer Blondes - especially some gentlemen m^ied to brunettes.
★	★	★
WISH I’D SAID THAT: You’re getting oW when you find wrinkles on your forehead, lines in your face, and five kids wait Ing to get into the bathroom.	'
, ★	★	★
EARL’S PEARLS: Updated nursery rhyme, via Hugh Allen: “There was a young woman who lived in a shoe—as usual, two sizes too small.”
Comk Dave Madden tells Blue Angel audiences: “Some of you never aeen roe on TV. For those who have-boy, have you got great reception—I’ve never been on!” ... That’s earl, brother.
(Copyright, 1912)
DUNES MAP - Released by Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., this map shows how roads would cross the controversial proposed Sleeping Bear National Park in order to avoid private resort cottages on the .inland lakes. Sen. Hart plans to , reintroduce the bill when congress convenes in January.
Renovating Old Ziegfeld Theater in NY
LOS ANGELES (^An anthro-. pologist known for dramatic demonatrationa against nuclear testing'laya the Atomic Energy ion is suppressing reports on Hiroshima radiation
After offering several mnsl-cab, the Ziegfeld was leased •even years ago to the Natkoal Broadcasting Co. and nacd as a color TV itwUo.
The Ziegfeld is undergoing extensive renovation, Rose said, “to get the heady aroma of TV of it.”
He added he was going to open the theater Jan. 29 with Maurice Chevalier in a one-man show.
Rose also owns the Billy Roae Theater, where the current hit “Who’s Afraid of Vlrgiida Woolf?” is playing.
Fog Shroud Escape of 5 E. Germans
BERLIN (UPI) - Five East Germans fled to West Berlin der cover of fog and darkness today. Gimmunbt border guards fired bullets and flares presumably to stop the escape of others.
The escape routes were not disclosed. It raised to 21 the number of known escapees since Saturday, an unusually large exodus.
West Berlin police reported four shots were fired coupled wKh shouts of “stop, come back” the French sector Frohnau District border at 1 a.m.
It was not known whether refugees were wounded in the shooting or arrested because <^rva-tion was Impossibb in dense fog.
Hollywood Hit by Steve Allen's Zany TV Antics
HOLLYWOOD (AP) Vine Street, not a c
Lower
of filmtown at best, has become unbearable since zany Steve Allen set up television headquarters there, residents say.
They marched on City Hall, 50 strong, Monday with their female spokesman demanding of Board of Public Works:
Would you believe It if I told you that I went outside and found Steve Allen litting up in a tree and a chimpanzee seated in my flower garden?”
The board promiaed to biveati-gate after the group added that Alien’! late night show also ties up traffic and b too noisy.
Near 1,000-Mile Mark
LANSING W - Michigan will pass the 1,000-mUe mark to free-
Says Report Stilled on Hiroshima Bomb
Earle Reynolds, former Antioch (Ohb) College professor, told a newt conference yesterday, “the AEC’s policy to one of deliberate concealment to pby down the effects of Ae dangers of radbtion.”
He claimed the AEC measured the effects of radiation on children exposed in the 1945 bombing of Hiroshima but refuses to release its findings.
THE
DICK
POWELL
SHOW
John Poyne Hoxel Court Fronk Siivero Pomelo Curron
star. in
"BORDERLINE
RrMonlod bf
CONSUMERS
POWER
COMPANY
TONIGHT AT 9:30 P.M.' NBC-TV
ing of the final 51-mile section of the Detroit-Lansing-Muskegon fr^way on Dec. 12, the State' Highway Department reports.
SONOTONE
House of Hearing
29 E. CORNELL
(OW nuivM)
iltae	ra Z-IZM


TWKNTlf-SIX
THE PONTIAC PRESS> TUESDAV, NOVEMBER 27, 1962
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0.1. VMM*	Vwwul
THE PONTIAC
VOL. 120 NQ. ^51	it it it it it	PONTIAC, -MICHIGAN. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1968 —26 PAGES
STEVENSON, MIKOYAN - Adlai E.. Stevenson (ri^t) U;S. ambassador to the United Nations, shakes hands with Soviet troubleshooter Anastas I. Mikoyan before a
dinner meeting held last night at the United Nations. , In the middle are Acting ^Secretary General U Thant and Dr. Ralph Bunche.
Cuba Crisis Positions Remain Mile^ Apart
WASHINGTON <UPI) - The White House said President Kennedy would not meet Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas Mi-kovan today. But It held open . the possihiltty such a meeting might be scheduled lor tomor-
UNITED NATIONS. N Y. (AP) -Soviet First Deputy Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan said Monday
ion. He indicated there was no softening of Fidel Castro's stand.
The Kremlin troubleshooter tallrntl to newsmen after attending a dinner acting U.N. Secre-retary General U Thant gave for U S. and Soviet negotiators on the Cuban crisis.
Mikoyan returned to New York Monday after a 24-day visit to Havana.
MORE DISCU^ONS
ytinbasiador Adlai E.
Cuba sUU exist between United States and the Soviet Un-
discussions on Cuba Wednesday with Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Vasily V. Kuznetsov. He said he expected the meeting to be quite important.”
Mikoyan said “very sharp questions” were discuss^ at the dinner with Stevenson and John J. McCIoy, head of President Kennedy’s Cuban coordinating committee.
night that sharp differences overt,	^
Cuba still exist between the’Stinson, who attended the din-
ner, said he expects to resume
Waterford OKs Seeking it-Million Water Grant
Waterford Township will seek $1 million in f^eral funds for its proposed central water system.
The Township Board last night authorized the filing of an application under the Accelerated Public Works Act based on a proposed upgrading of water system ---------—------^ ■—♦plans from a $5- to a %!■
Pontiac Sales Set Another New Record
Pontiac and Tempest sales have reached a new high ip the Nov. 11-20 period, as the auto industry is sky-rocketii« ^ another llWay record.
For the Pontiac division, the period’s totel was 18,639 units -13,827 PonUacs and 4,812 Tempests — surpassing the previous record of 14,179 carp U the lame period of 1»4.	'
For the industry, early re-porte predicted a total of 220,-MO to 230M0 tw ««	-
over the 217JM record set in the first 10 days of November.
Chevrolet is on the way to a two-million sales year, best in history.
♦ ♦ ★
For Nov. 11-20, Chevrolet sales of 67,340 cars and ll,4n trucks, 14J per cent above the previous high for the period set in IMl.
Ford Division sold nearly 49,-000 cars and 10,100 trucks Nov. 11-20, highest for that period in histoo'.	<
-------------1-
million dollar program.
Half of the 22-million increase would be borne by the township and the other half by the federal government if the applicaUon is approved by the Housing and Home Finance Agency.
TTiis first stage of Waterford’s water program eutafU connection of the community’s existing U water systems, erection of two overhead storage ____________^_______ ___________^
tanks and installation of tele- j administration would make no meter controls.	Isuch concessions to get fulfillment
An addiUonal 1.200 existing |0( Soviet Premier lOirushchev’s
Weather Expected to Stay Warm—52
Clouds will dot the skies tonighf and tomorrow but 01’ Sol will continue to beam warm temperatures on the Pontiac area.
The weatherman said will be a frostly 34 and tomstr-row’s high will slip up to near $2.
, The outlook for Thursday is considerable cloudiness and mikL Morning southerly winds at miles per hour will become 10 to IS m.p.h. late today.
Twenty-nine was the low recording in downtown Pontiac before * a.m. The reading was 48 at p.m.
97 Persons Aboard
Plane Lost Near Lima
‘But Uiere was no quarreling,” the Soviet leader said smilingly.
Mikoyan said the possibility of his going to Washington for a meeUng with President Kennedy was not discussed. The Soviets earlier were said to have put out feelers concerning a White House visit for Mikoyan.
SUPPfHtTB CASTRO In his talk with newsmen, Mikoyan came out strongly for Castro’s five-point demands, including U.S. withdrawal from the Guantanamo naval base and an end to the U.S. economic boycott of Cuba. Stevenson said the Castro demands were not discussed St the dinner, w
Mikoyan also praised the Cuban government’s offer to allow U.N. infection of Soviet withdrawal of off^ive weapons from, Cuba in !tu^^fQ^ the dismantling—under .N. ins^tion—of bases in Uie United States,* Puerto Rico and elsewhere from which anti-Castro exiles are operating against the Cuban regime.
U.S. IGNORES The State Department brushed off the Cuban proposal. U.S. officials said privately the Kennedy
Pilot Signals Trouble Near Andes Coast
Jfttliner 20 Minutes From Regular Stop at Peruvian Field
LIMA, Peru m — Wreckage of a missing Varig airliner was spo^ ted 75 miles south of Lima today near the Pan-American Highway, Lima Airport officials reported. There was no evidence of survivors.
From Our Newt Wires LIMA, Peru — A Varig Airlines Boeing 707 jet airliner en route from Rio De Janeiro to Los Angeles with 97 persons aboard disappeared today.
The plane was on Its approach to the Lima airport after the pilot radioed he was going to try for an emergency landing.
The airpor^ control tower here said the giant airliner with 80 passengers and 17 crewmen aboard was due toland at Lima at 4 a.m. EST.
homes and over 900 future-home sites will be included in the expanded water program, according to Felix Anderson, vice president of Johnson and Anderson Go., the township’s consulting engineers.
created last September by the 87th Congress, the Accelerated Public Works Act will grant 2411 million to communities in called dibtressed areas throughout the natioiy.
Work OB the watecsyitem is expected to begia ta to spring and shouM be completed within II months. Plans for the pro-
agr^ment for U.N. inspection of
Thant was reported urging the Unit^ States and the Soviet Union. to go before the Security Council with a joint statement closing out the current phase of the Cuban crisis.
Financing will be handled through general obligation bonds with the Oakland County Department of Public Works as agent. Connection fees, which will average about 2400, are expected to cover the entire cost of the program in the township.
Township Board trustee Loren Anderson favored the application resolution but said he was not in accord with the government’s policy of spending money it really doesn’t have.
Trustee Joseph McGee dia-ap«ed, saying, “If we don’t get it, someone else will.”
The application will be completed and mailed today to the Chicago office of the Housing and Home Agency.
Bnt when it was enly about 21 mhrates sway from the Lima fif M. the pilet mdia«I ward of aa emergeacy la the vidBlty af PIseo, along the coastal strip south a( here on the west side of
Planes were sent out to search for the missing craft.
* Sr a
A Varig spokesman said tbe pilot reported he would try to land at Guayaquil, Ecuador instead o ' Uma. But thro was no indication that he had arrived in Ecuador.
There also was no indication why he wenM try to go so far to the north beyond his scheduled landing point.
Varig said 9 of the 80 passengers aboard were ticketed fw Los Angeles, the others for Latin American points.
The 25-miliion plane carried crew of 17.
Varig is a Brazilian airline.
The airline said the plane was close enough to the Lima airport
(Continued on Page .2, Col. I)
PESIDENtlAL HONOR-President Kennedy ties an award streamer to the colors of one of the Air Force planes that flew reconnaissance
over Cuba during the recent crisis. While at Homestead Air Force Base, Fla.,, yesterday, Kennedy presented awards to two such units.
Detroit Council Voting Today on
fighting's Expected to Resume in India
NEW DELHI, India (Jf)—Expectation of a renewal of fighting on the Chinese-Indian border in the coming
weeks mounted today as the cease fire went into its Washington (AP) — The sixth day.	white House announced today
Indian leaders gave these indications of impending] that President Konncdy and military action:	j SritlBh Prime Minister Harold
President Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan declared India i Macmillan wiU meet in the Ba-
Expect Word on Mac Talks
Kennedy Flies Back From Base Tour
Issue Expected to Stir Interest at Pontiac Commission Meeting
Although fluoridation is not on* the agehda for tonights City Commission meeting, action by De- i trait’s Common Council today should make it a popular subject for discussion.
Council members have indicated they will approve by a 7-1 vote an ordinance authorizing fluoridation of Deteoit’s water system at a 4 p.m. meeting.-
The council yesterday gave informal approval to^ |4S,IM ap-propriatiM to pay for engineering plans fer flnorldatisn eqn^ ment. Formal approval is expected at today’s meeting.
Pontiac, which is under coqjract to begin using Detroit water July / 1,1963, has officially opposed flu^ ridation on grounds that a city^-dinance passed by voters ay an April 4,1955, elecUon, inak^fluo-ridation of PonUac’s water supply iUegal.
*	* a
Fluoridation also, has been oppose by Warren and Berkley, who use Detroit water.
i^Mpossibli
Gerald Remus, general manager of the Detroit Water Department, said that the proposal may bring some complaints and possibly some lawsuits from suburban cities served by Detroit.
Pontiac City Attorney William A. Ewnrt, giving aa farfemul legal opialoa of dM local aatHin*-
would show the world that ■ Chinese “aggression does not pay.”
The course may be full of hazards, suffering and sacrifice, but “however high the price we ace prepared to pay it”( he said at a banquet last night for the visiting West German President Heinrich Luebke.
Shastrl, one of Prime Minister Nehm’s closest aides, told a rally: “We have decided to get the aggression vacated and if China does not vacate It peacer fully, our forces shall have to fight it ont.”
Shastri, as	by the Hindu-
cessary India would use its air force against the Chinese.
India so far has used only transport planes, fearing retaliation against the jam-packed Indian cities.
The Foreip Ministry issued a* statement rejecting the key point in Communist China’s seif-j>ro-claimed cease-fire and withdrawal plan.
The ministry said the Chinese plan would leave them in control of 2,000 square miles of land in Ladakh which they had occupied by force this fall and also in pon-tool of key Himalayan passes in the northeast which they seized
hamas Dec. II and 2t for a review M world problenu.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Preai-dent Kennedy, fresh from aa encouraging look at U.S. military strength on guard against Russian weapons in Cuba, was expected to join today with British Prime Minster Harold Macmillan in announcing plans for their meeting next mgijfi.
The Resident flew back Washington last night after an intensive 2,400-mile, one-day swing Jirough armed-and-ready military ‘ ses in Georgia and Florida.
Plans for meeting tbe Prime over the past
Istan Times, am said that if ne- in the recent invasion.
■'■•■-I
Super Detective
Atomic War on CrJme
WASHINGTON m - Atomic. I science, a super detective capable of i sniffing out invisible, centuries-old I clues, has been enlisted in the war ^ agpinst crime.
★ ★ ★
^ The American NOclear Society < heard a half-dosen reports today about this nuclear Sherlock Holmes which ean-spot the culprit in a shooting, trace narcotics and test the age of whisky.
’The lechniqne has even been used to investigate what killed
One proof of its worth : by measuring the ooncentratiori o^ tritium, a radloactivtf form of hydh^, the!' In-temal Revenue Service can determine a whisky’s real ajge-
In the past three years', according
to a rerart offered by M. J. Pro, tax agents have checked 250 imported spirits, and found 95 per cent of the imports were labeled improperly. TRACE Gt^WDER
In anotiwr report. Dr. Vincent P. Guinn of General Dynamics Corp. told of other techniques to expose the smallest traces of gunpowder on the hands of those.)*ho have recently fired weapons!	-	..
A sample smear Is taken of a suspect’s hand. Then a small sample of the washing is irradiated in the atomic reactor. The resulting radio-isotopes are studied by their fingerprints of
traces ef gnnpewerd residues as small as II blUtoalhs of a grauL
By determining the amount, they -can also get a nwasure of how often a gun was fired.	'
The FBI and a number of police ' departments, he said, are closely fol- " lowing the results of these experiments.
WWW"
General Dynamics, elaborating on ^ Guinn’s report, disclosed other crime : detection applications of activation ■ analysis are under study.	*
Experiments have been made which v indicate a tiny grease spot on a hit- f run victim's clothing may be shown to match grease from a suspect’s automobile.
Iq the same manner^ a fragment of plastic, fleck of paint, silver of glass \ or hair may be traced or
said that “Pontiac city officials couldn’t be held responsible for vIolattegaMlaw.
“Our city officials can’t be blamod for something they have no control over,” he noted. “The contract for Detroit water was
was expected during the day.
The forthcoming meeting is expected to be on British sqil somewhere close to the United Statn. Despite some speculation to the contrary, the two leaders are expected to get together on an island in or close to the Caribbean area.
♦ *
MacmHlan and Kennedy have met in the United States three times since the President too office, plus once in London and last De<»mber in Bermuda.
JFK REASSURED Kennedy returned from vTO fluick visit with the Army, Navy, 'C Air Force and Marine Corps convinced that the defenses of the nation were solid, alert and capable of dealing with any new' threat that might develop in Cuba.
Massed weapons and manpower which he saw from Ft. Stewart, Ga., to Key West, Fla., were brought together hurriedly at the Cuban crisis, which toBcbed off by discovery of Soviet long range missiles to Cuba.
Without question, the forces will continue in strength at least until this country is satisfied that the Russian IL28 jet bombers have loft Cuba. There has been, however, a decrease in the state of alert for the units involved.
tkm proposal came up in Detroit.
*	★ a
“Furthermore, the city has unanimously gone on record aa opposing fluoridation due to the local ordinance.”
The ordinance reads: “h/o person, including officials and employes of the city... shall hereafter add flnoride or any compounds of fluortoe or canse fluoride or any compounds of fine-rine to be added to Ihe water . supply of the City of Pontiac.”
The maximum penalty wtr scribed for “any per|on cr imsons” violating the ordinance is a ' 2100 fine or 90 days in jail or both.
In Today's' i PresS)
Coasf Hit
Eastern seaboard steuck ‘ by storm, fears high ' tides — PAGE 2.
Berlin 'Peace'
Allied, protection pro- ’ ducesi calm despite Red -threats - PAGE 4.
Immigrants Many are skilled work- . ers - PAGE 19.
Area news ......... 15
Astrology ......... 26	,
Bridge.	26
Comics	: . 26 i
Editorials	6	f
Markets	12	|
Obituaries .......  21	|
Sports...........16-17	I
Theaters............II	f
'IV A Radio programs 2S |
Womea’s pages ...11-lS
WiisoB, Earl .......2i
(
THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER ^7, IWii
Yfair-cnd Clearance
BIG SAVimS ON CLOSEOVT OF 1962 MODELS
Hearing
Aids!”
CaU FE 5-7569
These New Last Ypar’a Models, Eye Glass or Be-hind-the-Ear, reg.. $360 value now only $189.00. We must make room for the 1963 models.
Only Five 1%2 Models Left First Come, First Served
Andiotone of Pontiac
Fraternity Initiates
Waterford Teacher
At the ,37th annual convention of the Amvican Asso-^ciation of Conimons Gub Saturday at Adrian College, Charles W. Sa^ o£ Herbell
honorary member.
Mr. Sayre is a teacher in the Waterford Townshijf &hool System and is a 1952 graduate of Adrian.
Gerald D. Benneville of Orchard Lake, a member of the’board of governors of Hie Commons Club, was a delegate at the meeting.
The American Commons Club is a national college social fraternity founded at Denison University, Granville, Ohio, in 1921 as a democratic social group without barriers of race, creed, nationality, economic status, Uie “blackball system” or'simi-lar restrictions other than good character and scholarship.
Sue Gilpin, daughter of the Watson Gilpins, Bloomfield Hills is a member of the Alma College A Cappella choir, set for its fall tour. The opening concert will be in the First Presbyterian evening.
Church of Jackson, ^turday
At the Woodward Avenue Presbyterian Church in Detroit, the choir will sing for the 11 a.ra. Sunday service.. That afternoon they will be featured with the Saginaw Symphony Orchestra In Saginaw m a performance of Bach’s “Magnificant.”
The final concert is scheduled for the First ITesbyte-rian Church of Birmingham on Sunday evening.
The group has been selected the 1963 oHicial “Broadcasting Choir’’ for the United Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. .
Activities in this connection Include four National Broadcasting Company “National Radio Pulpit” programs, four Columbus Broadcasting System “Church of the Air” programs, 12 programs for the NBC Protestant Hour and the NBC “Voices of Christmas” radio series.
Mark Socks
To help sort children’s bobby sox which are of almost the •same size and otherwise identical, put each child’s initial on the foot of each of his socks with dn indelible marker.
i
W« Hove Enjoyed Your Potronoge for
33 Yeors
BIKER FOUNTAIN
35 W. Huron St.
KENDAIE STUDIO
Ladr witbiag lolerMliag pari or fall-timo ploaiaai work Hi studio. Ago or oxporiouco no Handicap. Apply.
45 W. HURON
Fruited Breakfast Cake
L
By JANET ODELL Pontidc Press Food Editor First of all, we want to put out a call for help. We need more recipes to keep this column going. We need most of all main dish, salad and bread recipes as we always have enough sweet things. How about sending in your favorite recipe. Be sure to attach your name— and a phone number helps. Today’s recipe Is trom Mrs. Harry B. Edgington. She is a new Extension club member. When she has time after caring for her baby daughter, she Hkes oil painting.
Her recipe is for a breakfast cake, one-you serve with-frosting. It’s an old family recipe.
DUTCH CAKE By Mrs. Harry B. Edgington Vi cup shortening 2 eggs
2 cups sugar
1 cup raisins	i
1 cup currants	i
IW cups milk	. ^
cups water	|
1 tablespoon nutmeg	i
Vt teaspoon salt	I
1 tablespoon baking powder I 6 cups sifted flour	i
Cream shortening and sugar and add eggs. Beat well. Sift dry ingredients and add alternately with liquids. Stir in raisins and
Pour into 2 ^eased pans (9x5x3) lined with waxed pa- • per. Bake'^ hours at 325 de-|
What do you know about “Second Car” Insurance?
Should both cars catty the same insuraiaceTls the cost the same for both cars? Will teenage drivers make a difference in the rate you pay? These are only a few of the questions that, you’ll want answered if you’re a 2-car family. Call us today. We’ll be happy to give you the answers and help plan the right protection for you.
Thatcher, Patterson & Wemet
PonKac't 01d»$l InSurooc* Agancy ■ - 711 Community Notional Bonk Bldg.
FE 2-9224
It's All in the Name
Odd as it may seem to us — because we take such a lead in modern inveiitipns — few American products are carbon copied by. other countries. When American companies attempt to serve *lhe needs of foreign women in personal and household fields they! must conform to the tastes and habits of the people who will use them, even in the name they are called.
* ★ ★ ■
For instance what is known as a “Super Blue Blade” in America, is known as "Extra Blue Blade” in England. We would expect a baker’s half dozen if someone promised us an “Extra Blue Blade” . . . and in England the word “super” wouldn’t teU what it was meant to. It is all ' ' who thinks how.

CUSTOM DRAPERIES
FEATtJRING the largest and jiwst exclusive selection (over 20,000 yards in stock) in the entire area.
QUALITY WORKMANSHIP known for over 20 years as processors of fine draperies (in our own workroom).
DECORATORS trained and experienced to assist you with all phases of interior decoration.	i
PLACE ORDERS vory seow for pre-holiday delivery on draperies, slipcovers and bedspreads.
A Luft Ctmp of Highoi Piicod 48" Fabricf Marked Down to .
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■'niiiiiHir'Tir II
For rough and tumble playing, a Florida firm presents.a nautical stretch suit for Santa Claus set that is corhpletely umhable. For a quick trip to the supermarket with mom, a dress-length corduroy jumper (also washable) buttons all the way down the front. Sizes 3 to 6x.
DEMERY’S
Detroit-^ Birmingham
OPEN EVERY NIGEfr ’TILL 9 PJM.
This yoar . . . Shop Eariy! Ramambar, tha Gifts you buy for Othars moan valuable S&H Graan Stamps for you!
Pattern Delivery 'Takes 3 Weeks
Laura Wheeler, Anne Adams and Spades patterns ire reminded that it takes at least three weeks for thr patterns to be delivered. It may take even longer during the holiday mail rush.
LOUIS BEAUTY SHOP fe s-sooo
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wiss spKS.f'sa?
toPtnoii.lM Fro	FEDERAL
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1 497 N. Pony	R 2-17n
THE PONTIAC AREA FOR OVER 41 YEARS
Open Nights ’til Christmas
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The San Moritz
SAN MORITZ—0 name borrowed from the famous Old World jki resort that woi the intpirotion for cloulc knit cardigan. This it truly a ilmpls but tiriking approoch to sweoter depgn: Of 100% virgin wool, this kportimen't envy is available in many color combinations.
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Forstmonn and Worumbo luxury wool fabrics—each lined with nutria, muskrat or opossum. The warmest, most stylish coot of the season.
Alvin’s present
spray
by Parfums Weil
” ,' No>^ ' always at your fingertips ^ gentle, exciting mist of this most beloved trench Toilet Water. 3 ounces
Available also in Zibeline, the brilliaj^t companion trdgranc$ to the tabulous Secret ol Vjnus.
Black/Browns Go-Together on Pumps
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ll'i that '$plit-penonalily',so faihionable in shoe-coloring Q 'Jpdoyl from on* »ide-vi«w... they're block... from the ^ other... browni Smart, anyway you view them. High heel sizes to to, tnid heel sizes toll.
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r 4 . if V f t	.' ,
THfy PONTIAC PRESS. tUEStSAY, NOVEAIBER 87; 1962
I MARKHS
Tilt foUowiBg are top prtcfs ooveriiig aalap of kxMy grtfwn produce by growers aad aoU by bom In nbolesnlo package Mb. QuotaUona are furniahed by the Detroit Bureau of Marketa, aa of
Produce

iss:
^^xssii:k
CUTOU.
CkrreU,
______ 1
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JSjt ft ftft.................tte attention of inveatora yeater?
ihmrwfiS	i^day aa the reault of a long awatt-
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PMOIOM. •
momm. a
Dealings Moderately Heqvy
Tying Up Case
Mart Prices Move Back, Forth Against Hoffa
NEW YORK W - stock market
today in moderately heavy deal-inga.
Few duu^ of key iaaues ex-ceededa
veiame leader, c^wied on a 10,ON alight
Grumann Aircraft, which won the jet fighter deveiopmeiit contract along with General Dynamic*, was down
_____	the start but
Jft quickly caught up within the firat ^half
fraetiaaa. Hw kadaittry operated _ at above N par eeat capacity >ft| last week far the fkst time in n almest aevea mentha.
Aircraft iaaues, which caught
ed contract award, were mostly a btt lower.
General Dynamics, j
U.S. StaOl, Republic, Jones aad UughUn and Youngstown Sheet and Thbe were aO ahead fractions while Bethlehem was off di|ht-
The ticto lagged behind floor • miniipimi fraction.
loeer in competition for th^ tract, held unchanged.
Market aaalysta iwpeared more nwertala tto asaal over the immediate eearseofthe market Smae believed yesterday’s dawatara, the M ia a
was as reason ether thaa prafR takiag to ae-conat far Ms begiaBiag.
On the other hand, other anal-, ysts believed the time was right for what they called a fairly sus-
U.S.HopM Monday to Soo Com|dotion
NASHVILLE (f>
The motor group, although headed into the Oiristmas season with new production records in sight, dwwed m 0 s 11 y small losses. An exception was Chrysler, up about % after yesterday’s dip 1%.
~ also Opened mixed on the Stock Exchange.
merican
p«i^f.ui;; iig
The New York Stock Exchange
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gether loose ends Of their vohuni-nous evidence against James Hoffa in hopes of comple^ their due by next Monday.
James Neal, Justice Department lawyer from Washington, assured atUuneys for the Teamaters Union president that they could call their Hrst witness next Tuesday.	, '
HoHa, U, is accased of accept-lag coaceaM payoffs from Commercial CarrMrs, a Detroit-based aatomobUe transport firm, hi retara for labor peace.
The government contends Commercial Carriers set up and operated Test Fleet Corp., a truck leasing firm later renamed Hobren Corp., for the benefit of Hoffa a~ ^ the late Owen Bert Brehnan, Teantsters vM president.
Test Fleet was chartered here with the stock listed in the maiden ^ names of the two union leaders’ I- Wives,
U,S. Businessmen Feel * " ^ ’ Gamers Rules Changed
By 8AM DAWSON AP Baslaaos Nows Aaaiyst NEW YORK (AP)-A lot of bus-tosamen have the feeling some of the old miss of the game Ire bring changed. Lke it or not, thqr’Q have to adjust.
And the same could well apply to workers, investors, savers, debtors, and in time to consumers —which ia to say to everybody.
•WWW
Making money may be a different prop^tkm from now on than dur^ the 17 years since the end of World War H. During most of
learned, new dangers to be overcome? '
RISING com
istneasmen vdw complain of the aqueese on profit* are saying today that it bu. Earnings no
________went up even faster, the
cost of living climbed—all of this almost automatically.
Has that era ended? Is a new one starting, with new rules to be
_ still rising production c^, high taxes, price weakness.
I in this year’s gyrations of the stock market evidence that the era <rf inflation is over, that stock prices now are ti to individual company ance and prospeetd.
Here arc some of the that have brought on the profit aqueese, ant may guide management in dealing with it in the changing business climate:
Production costs have dimbed steadily as wage scales rosf each year. Until’ recently the cost of nxwt industrial quterlals has gone up annually. The cost of transportation and distribution, and the increasing number|of services re-miired along the way from producer to consumer, still tend to
ONLY ONE PART That is one part of the aqueese. For years, the prices of Rnished goods themselves rose, too. And
3-Engine Plane
Boeing UnveilsUew Jet
By ROBERT J. SERUNG UPI Aviatioa Editor 8 E A T TL E — Boeing today rolled out the nation’s first three - engine airliner since the
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George Fitxgerald, a fo Ik Teamsters attorn^ at Detroit, )4 testified yesterday he once gave Hoffa a personal check for i in exchange for a dividend check k for the same annount issued S to Mrs. Hoffa by Test Fieri.
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said he did net remember why + H Hoffa wraatad to exchange diecks.
Fitxgerald was the 14th witness to testify during a trial that has seen 375 exhibits introduced in evl-
lert Grosberg, a public ac-int employed by Teamsters M at Detroit, told of bring .. . by Hoffa to Indianapolis to find Iwt irhy State Cap Co. had not been Repaying %k>an made by Hobren. Tliis occii^ in 1955.
Sales Manager /or
Rochester Firm
The appointment of Donald J. Templeton to national sales manager for Rochester Aerosol Corp., Rochester, is announced today by Robert A.
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Banaaa Pood otore* .........11.3
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Templeton is first vice president of the Chemical Specialties Maim- cm facturers Association and a member of the American C ciety, the Amerk^ P cal Association and Kappa Psi, national --------- ....
societ3
He Tras graduated from Union College, Schenectady, N.Y., with a B. S. degree and a degree Pharmacy. Prior to his new appointment, Templeton ucts manager for Crovrh Cork A Seal Co. of Philadelphia.
Itll B« an Accident if H« G«tt th« Job .
DERBY, England (UPI) t motorist char^ with speedingi aNed a Judge yesterday not to mention the offense on his dri ‘
He said he had apiriied for a Job with the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents.
, Boat CapsizM; 8 Drown
MSBON (AP)-Eight fiabenaen ^wned Monday when their long] iftt jcapaiaed off Sao Pedro de UMlfn^ of here, naval author-1
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PAUL NEWMAN
Dodge Dealer to Celebrate City Opening
The grand opening of the area’i newest Dodge dealer, Spartan Dodge in Ponitac, will be held Jan.( 10, Paul Novman, president announced today.
The firm, now open for business, is located at 211 S. Saginaw St., in a completely remodeled building.
Newman, a resident of South-field said that his Dodge dealership is the only one within a 15
m^ile service, Newman said it Is on this that he intends to gain a reputation for the firm.
Neirman has been in the automotive field for N years, the last 17 years operating a Mercury dealership In Detroit.
Eventually, 40 persons will be employed at Spai^ Dodge, according to Newman.
days of the old Ford trimotor— its new 727 short-range Jet.
★ ♦ ♦
It bore about as much resemblance to its 35-year-old predecessor as a hurricane does to a house fan. Boeing’s latest jet-age entry, carrying a $4-5-mil-lion price tag, has two engines mounted on each side of the rear fuselage and a third inside the fuselage Just below the tail assembly.
One engine ahme costs three time* as much as the entire $50,0N Ford transport Boeing’s historic roll - out today involved, the first complete 727 to come off the assembly line here.
Eventually, the plane will be turned over to United Air Lines but it will be used in a grueling flight test program last-ing through most of next year.
WWW
Ttie sleek though somewhat chunky jet is expected to make its first flight late in January following a |3b-million design and developnMnt program.
127 PLANES ORDERED Five airlines have ordered 127 of the new Boeings, which will bring the speed comfort of a pure Jet to routes now floivn by older piston and prop-jet airliners.
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United and Eastern are scheduled to take delivery on 40 each, with 25 going to American, 10 to Trqns World and 12 to t h e Geiman airline, Lufthansa.
The 727 TirlU carry betiveen 71 and 114 passengers and
runways ^y IN* f««t loiig. Its hlgh-lift-at-low-speed characteristics are made possible by huge triple - slotted flaps in the trailing edge of the wings — in-
___	_ _	creasing the wing area during a
SmoM to <sm»iata AHtd) 4a^
But today it’s hard to raise prices. And here’s why:
During the easy profit years, many fields became crowded with new firms wanting in on a good thing and old ones diversifying for the same reason. Today these Reids often mm overcrowded. The competition is keen, and one company can’t raise prices because to rivals won’t.. In more than one industry there’s idle capacity that could be put to work— if there trore any profit in it. And complicating all this is the sudden apurrof foreign goods turned out by industries built up after the war and now looking for more markets.
♦ * ★
'Finally, there are new guide-llhes laid doivn by the federal government, design^ to discourage general price increases or inflation brought on by labor demands that Washington might label excessive. Management got the word from government in foe squabble over the steel price hike attempt last April. Many In management still are skeptical about how the guidelines will work with labor. NEW LOOK IN 2 WAYS Tho profit aqueese gives today’s economy a .new look in t)vo wayi Labor-management negotiations will be tougher—if prices can’t rise, management will be slow'to grant new wage hikes. And if profits are held down, companies will find it harder to raise funds to modernise plants or build new ones. This could mean fewer new Jobs, as urell as loss of markets at home and abroad to foreign competitors.
And a third factor—the role of jpovernment in business decisions, in labor negotiations, in consumer goods pricing )vill be greater and more evident in the new era.
feet.
* ♦ ♦
The new jet ia about 37 feet shorter than Boeing’s famed 707 transport now used on long-haul trans-Atlantic end transcontinental flights..
But much of its fuselage and other components were cut from the same dies used on foe older Jets.
Car Firm Gets Area Ad Man
A Bloomfield Township advertising executive. Burton R. Dur-kee,/haa been named director of maneting services for Chrysler '	Corp., it was an-
nounced today by E. C. ()uinn, group vice president of a u 10 m 01 i ve
Durkee, 3575 Burning Bush
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responsible for corporate ad-DURKEE vertising, sales promotion, sales trainings and used car selling programs.
Before assuming his new-Chrysler post, he was administrative vice president of the Detroit office of the national advertising agency of J. Walter Thompson Co.
News in Brief
The theft of a cash box ceataia-ing $127 from foe Standai;d Service riation at 148 N. Main St.,
Clarkston, Was repotted to the sheriff’s department yesterday.
A power spader and a television set Trith a total value of 1180 was stolen from the home of L. E. Nix,
41N DeMode Road, Rose To w n-shtp, he reported yesterday to foe sheriff’s department.
MOM’S RummageThursday,	_	.
10 to 1. Indianwood and Baldwin. ^ (A) U al^
hear from good people like your-
_____________ ■ selves, who hold stocks about
which little encouragenunt can
UAW Strike Ov«r Safety ,ba off_^.
' Ai«h>-Lautaro Nitrate is
Hitt N. J. Ford Plant iChiiean cbmpany, controlled by . Ithe Guggenheim family, which is
MAHWAH, N.J. (iH-A strike ffcmever. It operates in an halted operations at the Ford Mo-M>g|on.rldden country where tor Co.’s assembly plant today. !,„ riea and wages have risen
A company spokesman said theig^gr M per cent since 1969 and United Auto Workers Uhkm product nrices have been virtual-
Successfuhinvesting *
By ROGER E. SPEAR (Q) **We bought some stocks eiifrt years ago. These Include Anglo-Untaro Nitrate, Paute-Pfc Ott, and Pittsburgh Coke tf Chemical. Do you think we should hold «r sell at prescut levcIsT” J. S.
health and safety measures and Iprofoictim ralfos.
Income liaises Outgo
LANSING on - SUte Treasurer Sanford BrdWn reports that income Into the Treasury for the ( of Nov. 19 was 94614 mll-and expenditures totaled 117.87 million.
ly static, which is bad. I )would get out of this stock and pocket my loss.
The same advice holds true f) Pittsburgh Coke, which has been going dovmhill for years.
Pantepec'a outlook is very dubious, but with the shares selling at only M cents, t would put this on* away aad hope and pray for a better price level —^ in which case I wrouM get out.
(Q) “We own IN share* of Merritt-Chapman A Scott. It is alniost t)« year* since they have paid any dividends. Would you advise ns to sell lor income tax purposes and buy back-or Just sell and forget tt?’’ A. D.
(A) I could answer this ques-Uon better if I knew more about your financial background. However, I’m going to assume that you can face up to taking a substantial loss.
Although the company seems to be well managed, 1 would get out of Merritt and stay out. Ttro of the company’s major divisions — construction and shipbuilding — are subject to wide variations in profit margins. At present, the outlook has Improved somewhat and earnings seem to be rising a little, it is a fact, however, that vrifo one exception — 1K9 — the shares have been declining since 1954 and earnings reached their >i«ait In INS.
I consider, this stock a risk issue, and 1 believe you would be better off with a stable, growing situatkw, such as Green 3hpe. (Cepyright 19N)
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3KVKMTEEN
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Collegiate Standings
HARRIEI, iONG - Tom O’Hara, University of Loyola (CSiicago) runner who won the NCAA cross country meet
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C i*M. acNcriciAL
Pendergast (left) and coach ilerry Welland. O’Hara’s ffiSe was 19 minutes, 20.3 seconds over the four mile course.
NCAA Harrier Kiqg Ran Before Breakfast
EAST LANSING (ifi-One-mani team championship with the low
Kent autc 14 0
Utah S«. Oregon St.
VUlMUTS So*ton Col.
Ploild* at.
Rutaero Notre Dome i
Coyote
“HEBREW HAIR”
Wanvli Featbnra, aayHbvg, PeniM. (near Altoona), show* >w Rgiew hair by (be Lesley Home Treatment Method. He did not have male pattern baldness,	*
Hair Cansultant Here Tomorrow; Learn if Your Hair Loss Can Be Stopped and Baldness Prevented
Mr. F. I. Brodie, rgiresenling the Lesley Hair and Scalp Consultants. will give hair and scalp consultation to hair tarried men and women at the Waldron Hotel in Phntiac, Michigan, Wednesday only, November 28, 1962, frpm 1:00 P.M. to 8:00 P.M.
Decide tqday to give /proper	,	_ Before if'
care of that prized personal appearance asset—a good head of hair. Come in and talk with the Lesley Consultant regarding your hair and scalp problems. Leahi how you can treat yourself right in the privacy of your own home.
Regular checkups in your elly by HiLesley Consultant assures suc-cdhs in the minimum period of time. . .	^
If you have,dandruff, excessive
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BIG	EIGHT
Cesleresce AU Oas—
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5	3	0	.714	0	3 0 .000
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0	.333	4	5	0
1 0	0	.143	3	0	0
0 7	A .	.000	0	10	0
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NHL Standings
I 4 3( SO ,	»	0	0	34	54
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MONDAY'S RESULTS mn Mhedulad
TODAY’S GAMES nes icheduled
WEDNESDAY'S GAMES
cnfty Tom O’Hara of Chicago Loyola made practice runs before breakfast pay off just before liinch yesterday with his win of the NCAA cross country championship;
O’Hara covered the four-mile course in 19:20.3 taking the lead in the last half mile to finish only 10 yards ahead of Pat Tray-nor of Villanova, the runner-up.
San Jose State won its first
Maple Swimmers Meet Co-Champs
3im, and tha Zephyrs pulled up to the short end of a 101-98 score befmre Jerry West and Dick Barnett began ^ hit the basket again.
West was high scorer for the night with 33 points and Dick Bellamy topped Chicago with 26.
Other games toni^t bring together Chicago at San Francisco, and a doubleheader in New York that pits Detroit against Boston and CincinnaU against the Knick. erbockers.
Birmingham Seaholm’s swimming team, rated strongly for state high school championship honors this year, meets Crosse Polnte the team it shared the hlHBir with last year.
Tfie meet at 4 p.m^ today at Grosse Pointe will feature some of the best swimmers in the state. Last year Grosse Pointe handed the Maples their only dual defeat of the season.
•A ♦	★
Coach Corey Van Fleet has three All-America prep swimmers back including ^Oaklaikl County’s outstanding swimmer of 1961, Bob WoU in the backstroke, Don Spencer, Tom Fritz, plus 19 other lettermen.'
In other swim features this week, Pontiac Central plays, host to Flint Central on Friday and the Royal Oak Relays will be held Saturday.
:iy no c ing/ui b vtll' teU
d take positive acti once. A little time spent now may save a great deal of regret later.
-You Incur absolutely or obligation by comint ixmsultatkMi. We wll frankly and sincerely wdiether or not we believe you can be helped, how long It, wlU take and how ■ much it will cost.
If you'are accepted ment. you will be riven a wttten guarantee for the length of time (raotment is required, on a prorated baaia. Nearly half of our cUents are women. Lesley Hair and Scalp ConaultanU have eatab-liahed a very high refaiUtian In the field lor refiising any case that does not fall under (he acope of Its work.
While niale' patten baldneas is the cause of the great majority of cases of baldness and excoarive hair iosa, for' which neither LMley treatmeat nor any o»har tnatinent Is effective, Lciley offers you a me exaBifnatlan 10 detnnine whether you are one of those who can be helped. ■	. - .
ALL NYLON
Dayton Thorafared.w^iMiiMeM)Y
INTERURBAN $4495
	
I.TtilB T.ieiii T.ltili T.BOxll B.eoxH I.BiiU •9NHI	Ykao 14.05 14.30 . I7.M “•** •Jill. “ 14.47 n 17.73 I5.0a 10.40 n.41 1 31.14
I. Nont .. HatiKi I noiit. iiltil Wtaal IrKtiis tiro.
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TIRE
points and Villa-nova was secoiid with 09 points.
"He worked hard getting ready for thU one,” said Loyola coach Jerry Welland of O’Hara, who placed fifth in the ran Inst year and recently took the Central Collegiate Conference distance run. “He’d ran eight or nine miles be-, fore breakfast and then work out with the team later."
The winning time betterejl the former record of 19:28.2 ove^ the Michigan State Universit golf course route by Al Lawrenc of Houston in 1960. The best NCAA championship four mile is 19:12.3 by Max Truex of Southern California in 1957.
AAA ; Danny Murphy of San Jose State was third. Vic Zwolak of Villanova fourth and Geoff Walker of Houston fifth. Dale Story of Oregon State, the winner last year, placed 39th in the field of 136 finishers.
A. a
San Jose State, second in the meet last year, had men running third, sixth, 17th, 18th and 30th.
The remainder the team scoring: Third, Western Michigan 120; 4th, Houston, 134; 5th, Michigan State, 147; 6th, Ohio University, 165; 7th, Colorado, 202 ; 8th, Oregon State, 206; 9th, Idaho, 229; 10th', Kansas, 232; 11th, Notre Dame, 251; I2th, Penn State, 253; 13th, loma, 244; 14th, Texas A-and M, 362.
Lakers Lead Western Race
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Los Angeles Lakers appear to have hit their stride and after $iz vktoiies. they iferci atop the National Basketball Association’s Wentern Divlskm standings today.
AAA
The Lakers disposed of the CM-engo Zephyrs Monday night 12B 106 in the only game scheduled q^nd are oneJialf game ahead the St. Louis Hawks.
The Hawks play Syracuse to-. ight, then move on to Los Angeles to meet the Lakers Wednesday.
BIG LEAD Los Angeles fashioned a 67-38 lead at halftime, but Chicago out-
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3. n*Tlar. L ‘
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M	31	101	300	SS.I
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. 31	170	147	503	34.0
. 10	140	01	300	30.5
. 10	155	00	370	10.5
. It	145	70	IN	U.4
NBA Standings
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WHEEL ALIGNMENT—BAUNCING BRAKES—MUFFLERS
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