tU Wtofhtr ^ P. S-WMllMr ftcrM* IV MwMy (iMtjr THE PONTIAC PRESS VO^ no 1^6. 4 ★ ★ ★ ' PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, MONDAY. PKBRUAKY n, 1902-50 PAGES PIRnD*SSNr^Wl{SK!l^^ Welcome to Pontiec, Mr. A(^ims! NKW MANAOKE - Max Adam* (lefi) ii griKad M On OMr ot Pdatiac Area Chambar of Oonmwrce haadgOarters by Carl 0. Roca^ new ebambar preaM«nt. Tbc chunbar'a board of dtraetora today' named Adanu to Hoods Strike Western States HufMireds Flee as Raia. Warm Woothar Sot Off Mountain Woferfalls praaairt chamber manager John W. HlrUnger March 1. HlrUnger recently rcaigned the poet. Adama wUI leave hie pofltka aa manager of the Michigan State Emplt^ Q-edit Union In At a noon meeting today, the Peedlac Area Chamber of Oom-merce Beard at Directore named He wUI* leave hia Jab ager of the Michigan Stele Em-pioyea Credit Union In Laming to . ^ .. _ take the local Job. Adama had alao « maw. Max Mmim, to tormerly been tmbllc relalkma di- rector for the, credit ui of the Manlatee Chamber of Commerce. Gov. nobot E. smyOe of Idiho dediied a atate of emergency and National Guard, Rad Craaa and dvO defenae tutfu were ( WhUa la South! the tbiih day of aatutatioa atatt- I. ^raattvli in many pmta at the dty. A woman in the Hollywood Hilla reported water waa ni '' the City Commigsion Uiis spring. In making his decision not to run for a fourth t«0' year term as District 2 commissioner, Rowston said he wanted to devote more time^ to his law practice. 43, of <0 Cherokee Road, alao win have to reMgn aa a vice preaident of the Michigan of Boulevard and Pacific Highway early (Ma morning the water wae 7 feet deep. It. wm 4 feet deep on Ver. SOth etreete in 1 wu over the rooftopo of automo-biiea at aonie dS wna elected to imt officers are limited to municipal officiala. "Due to lacreaeed dmumds at my law praotiae It la aeecaeaiy that I dovato all af my eftoito to behalf af tbto reepeoMbUHy," Rewetow aaid la a brM state- major etreete hi the la Utah, too. The roared down UJB. Highway d) at Heber east ot Salt Lake Ci|y cioaed the highway. Rivera and creeks overflowed in the Rivertoo-Lander area of central Wyoming and forced more than 300 tomiUes to seek elne^ gency itadter. Temperatnns la the Ma aad raia liiaeaad aa avabuMbe In eaayoa cast at fMm la west- ton deullsh Dr. Max H. Stock, The Portneuf River in aouth-eaatem Idaho flooded on the southern edge of Pocateiio, The river washed out two bri<%es at the Lava Hot springa reaort aouth of Pocatello. Idaho National Guardsmen rescued 36 paUente from A rest home and tO( to hoa^tals In Pocatetlo. Cartoonist Darling, Prize Winner, Dies OES MOINES, Iowa (AP)-J. N. (Ding) Darting, 85, two4ime Pulitzer .wfamiiw cartoonist for the Des Moines Register, di^ today. He had bean in poor health for aiHne tlme^ Darting, a nBtionaUy known "beat friend ducks ever had' died of a heart ailment In Iowa Methodist Hbmital. Ne won the Piflltxer Prize tor hie cartoons |n 1924 and again He (vga named the natkm’a best cartoonist in 1934 in a poll of the nation's edUors ty Edltd*' k lishar nwgazine. Darling, a Cartoonist for thp Re^er from 1908 until he retired in IMO. was honoraiy Me 1--------- ^ dent ol the National Wildlife e Ped- To Manage G. of C r M 4he cbaoi- h 1. ♦ w ♦ «, wUI aueeeed John W. wh natkin from the loMtian last^Oe-hss a back- G-Men Recover Gems, Nab 5 in (1,750,000 Theft CaUod On« of Biggott Among Jtwal Tinck' in U. S. Hiitory FORT LAUDERDALE. Fla. (^Federal agents announced the recovery today of $1,750,000 In gema stolen from a Pompano Beach jewelry store and called It one of the largest gem theft recoveries in the history of the country. Wesley 0. Grapp. chief of the FBI office in Miami, said the recovery represented the bulk of the gems stolen Saturday in a daytight holdup. IVitel loss In the robbery was not established. Csri D. Rogers, newly elected chamber president, sak' itert work here Feb. X although the appointment becomes effective March 1. He is married and has two ^or Rowston Decides ^of to Ri/n lor 4th Term *PhlUp E. Rowston, Pontiac’s mayor for the last four years, today anhoulMxd he won’t run for r»W a share ia flw. British Keep Summit Door Open West Likely to Refuse Also found* in the car, Grapp Sid, were five loaded revolvers, three walkie-telkles, five sets of for the Police held three men and two omen on charges stemming fixan the robbery. Two other men bo, ». Cbtoaget Richard Willard Kay. M, TMeo Oaks, Mlek.: and Edward H. CoofL M, OaktoWB, m. - w- * * ■ The women, held $25.^ ______ as m I. They were identified as Betty Jean Moody. 31, and Mary Blanton. S3, Miami Beach, Fla. FLASHED OUNB Four men entered the jewelry and pushed the manager, Joseph Taranove and an employe, Jessie Edwards, into a back room. A fifth man apparently waited out-' -Me iw-w car. Tbe^robbere packed the loot to Witnesses said the men drove mth, parked their car, Jump^ into two outboard boats. The boats were found later. -W W A Pcdice Chief James Bogi Boggs said 8300,000 in JewoU was taken from the Jewelry store a 1958 robbery. He said three men w«re arrested at the time, but were never brought to trial for lack ci evidence. Back in Good Old U.S. A. JFK-Macmillan; Want Ministers to Consult Firi GanHva Assombly Dat» OvDr Dtiannain«nt Sot for AAarch 14 WASraNOTON (AP) ^ The West appeared today to be preparing to turn down Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev’s proposal for an assembly of heads k government in Geneva ne^ month. Analytis on Pago 18 But the British at least kept the door ajar tor a poasibie later sum- b SMlker devetopmeat la tbu el Mehai«es M waa die- Frederic tern plane after arrival at Willow Run Airport ftundsy. Ptyor was released Saturday ty Eapt .Gernisny Cbmmnnists after spending the last five and one-half months as a prisoner. Now Is With His Barbara The 28-yeaiMdd Pryor was releaaed in an exchange which swapped American U2 pilot Francis Powers for Soviet spy Rudolf Abel. Pryor today is home with his parents in Ann Arbor. Ing the part to be played by oqr representetlvea In the tortheomhig Powers Faces Questions Sun. Jlohn Sparkmaa, D-AkL^ Sakad ffla SUta Da-partMMi today to give tfca Senate Poreiga Relp-tiona Coaunitlee a *^iill report” on ita fntarroga-tion of U2 pilot Franda Gary Finrars. WASHINQTQN (AP) -‘ American UF; spy pilot FVaitria Gaiy teoea detailed grilling ,S. intriUgence agents completes a secret rendesvnus with ids wife. Among questions awaiting the flier, free after 21 months in a Soviet prison, tira- What really happened die morning of May 1, 1960, when he was downed deep inside the Soviet Union? How mudh did he tell the Russians Krim is in iT^ntary or giWi-ment custody, but ever since he Md a white line where Com; West Berlin begins, a carefully contrived aemoy has cloaked hia annaMiy beg^ shortly after the n-yearoM pilot eroeaed a Her- a two-fer-OH trade ter Soviet My Rudolf |..Abel. Offtdel ^eouroee am net saying ‘bias that futons was home dRdn nod that he had been reunited with members of his family. In a faMhing game of MdS-seek dogged newsmen tried for themeelves where ind his wife, were holding their reunion. Various leads pointed to Maryiand'i Eastern Shore, but the exact meeting place could not be pinned down. The White liouee declined lo say what family members Powers saw but presumably he met also with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver W. Powers, ot Norton, Va. (Continued on Page 2, Ool. 1) FRANCIS Q. POWERS By DON OAKLFY On Feb. 12. 1862, Abraham Lincoln was 53 and president of a divided United Statm. The first year of the Civil War was not yet over (and both North and South were now convinced that many nnore months o9 bitter fighting lay ahead before the mad-iKSs should finally cease). to dispel the « winter that b Waahhigtoa. Only in the distant West did the news tell of anything like victory. An unknown brigadier general naim^ U. S. Grant hud taken Ft. Henry on the Tennessee River on the 6th. Ten days later he wouid capture FI. Donelson, second step in his long campaign down the Mississippi to cut the Confederacy in two. But in the East, in the crowded, muddy, pestilence-ridden capital, the citizens still stood half in fear of invasion by the seemingly unbeatable Rebels Just acrofO the Potomac. And it was on Lincoln's tall, stooping shoulders that t h Rolatod Item in Man About Town on Page 6 hopes and |eara and grief at an entire people rested. * Byt fs it that weq^not enough tor one man to. bear, * trt«edy — hot the flr« visit him that month. The President's birthday was a happy one, aa happy as it could iie. His son Willy seemed much better. The Hitle boy had been ailing tor days. A public receptioa on AMC Adopts 7 Quarterbacks' Cross and Abernathy Take Over Top Posts as Romney Steps Down Hpeeial to The Prrea A second major automobile cwnpany today addpted the "two quarterback" American Motors COrp. directors announced the -Appointment of Richard E. dross ai chairman and Roy Abemethy as manager. man Oeorge W. Romney announced the changes at n prew conferenee this morning at the ot U. linc^ went fipough the s^f entertaining their 5T Mste^ but their minds were bout (Qoidiqued on Page 2, Cel- 3) achieved, however kmg this may BUOaiRT PRBMEBTINO The Kamedy-Macmillan prppoei- of last ihundbr i STAiT"^'" mMit oonfortflce which ti to hegtoi in Geneva Mareh 14. The White House made the text of the note I Khreshebev saggsstod to a er deHvored Iluadsy UMnhit e bo a meethw si batoto This brought an immediate round of consuHatkms annong the Western The direction of i apparently was reflected in re-inarlu by British AmbaiMMfor David Ormsby 'Gore to newaoMh after a forenoon conterence wMi Secretary of State Dean Rusk at the State Department. Asked what the British pasitian Romney, of Bloomfield Hills, was given an immediate te rary leave of ibsence. wltl termination date, so as to complete his duties as constitutional convention delegate and then to run for governor. General Motors (forp. made the first dual-leadership move several years ago with the naming of John F. Gordon as president and Frederick G. Donner as ohairman of the board. Romney's announcement took most newsmen by surprise aa they hid peculated that Abernethy, 56, of Bloomfield Township, would be chairman and president. TO RiSMAIN DIRECTOR In his senmd press conference I 48 hours, Romney said he would continue as director ot AMC, but with no salary or bonus title as vice chairman of the board —-."which has no duties except in the absence of new chajiinan Croas." Abmwlby, tormeriy 'exeCUBve ager ot the eompany. toM (Continued on Page 2, CM. 8) “We dM’t ihlM M b suHabto that dw beads of gevenuneiM •i But, Ormsby Gore added, the possibility that the leaders should meet "at a later date" has to be kept open. This was Ormsby Gore's second conference with Rusk in 24 hours. British ambassador had called on Rusk on Sunday, whfii Rusk also received the ambaiaf-dors ot France. Italy and C^iiadh. In Today's Press Much in Common U. S., Red spy .systems examined in firat at serlea— PAGE M. Q Ti tel Aria swer in twl Question Get Busy, Kkis (X)P needs young men, says Ike-PAGB lA Act, Don't Sulk There are ways to make dull course interesting —, PAGE M. I Atm News ............U t: } - TWO THE PONTIAG PRksS, MONDAY. FEBRUARY 12, 1962 ^ Area Friends, 2 Otfleis Hurt As Lift Jumps Track Thre Townihip _______» plummeted 15 feet to the ground |Mt»d«y when a iki lift cable JerlNd out of iu gro«w at Ciyital Mountain Lodge near Beu The two men and the wife of dlM of t^ are In ntWactory eondition today at Fnnldort Hoa pital. Two Beulah echool gtrli also were injurad. HeepttoBaed with broken riba were Rebeil f. CoHalaeen. 41, of Sm WeatbeenM DHve, and M. L. OaU. 4t, of no Weelbourne Drive. Gousineau'i wife. COnotance, 45. injured h^r back. Cbueinrau ie an executive with a Toledo, Ohio, MABVIN MAKINEN Powers Must Face Intense Grilling (CooBimed From Page One) a board el laqolry to look tally Into the Powero eaae. CIA Di-roetar John A. MeCoao will de- About 60 peraone were on the lUt when the cable Jumped out of ito grodvt. Three double chain In which the victlme were riding hurtled to the ground. Some to patrona were atraad-ed. dangiInK precarioaaly la midair, when the operator haHed the lift. Some were M feet above ground. All were removed in two houra by a reecue aquad uring Uu' ‘ aiid ropee. CHILOBEN TO BLAME? KcHh Van Dulcan, maaagor of the lodge which la located about 13 mUeo eoutbcaat of Beulah, eaid the accident might have been cauaed by youngeten on the lilt jiggHng their chain up and down cauaing the cable to Jump from the On Dec. 31. h Mft ot Nuba Nob near Petoekey went put of control, killing Urry Orr, ^of Ada, and ijuring two eerioudy. Another accident took place at the Mleslon Hill Ski Qub near Sault Ste. Marie on Jan. 4 when a lift cable Jumped from groove. No one waa injured. Former Editor at Press Hurt H. Guy Moafe, Sports Writor, 1 of 3 Injured in Wo^ond City Traffic Another figure in the unprecedented exchange arrived home Sunday. James Britt Donovan, the New York Uwyer who defended Abel In Ms 1(67 espionage trial and then negotiated his deportation In a trade lor Powers and Mndsnt IVsderto Pryor, brought nurd still another American Im-prlMficd in the Soviet Union may Marvta W. Makliiea. tt. a sta-tennetly of ChasM)!. R^h., la ^ la Kiev oa eaptonage ebargas. Donovan said: “1 bave what . believe to be assurance that If the better relations contemplated by this exchange should develop, the Soviet Union would contemplate extending demenc* to, The secrecy that ahrooded Powers’ return was In sharp contrast to the homecoming of Pryiv, the third principal Jn the tnide. The SS-year-old ahitWnt arrived in Detroit Sunday on his way home to Ann Arbor, Mich., and I fracly with reporters. He bed MmaelX as "Just a bonus ^ deal" and said he was "happy and gratetal to be here." Pi^ had been seized In East Berlin last August and held 514 months hi prison in the city for toveotlgatlon of poosible oaplonac activiUes. The White House stotement on stetad, he will be interviewed by gppro^te U.S. government at Sn^ks Phot(K Out of Havana Refugoo in Emboiiy Took Pidunst of Llfo in Cobono Fortross NEW YORK (UPI) - A Cuban ikteivound fighter stlU In Havana hu amugglad to New York at the risk of Ms Ufs • mtIss of of life M ndol Castro’s Cabana T The photographs were tskon ^ Hiram Gonzalei, a former Cssm army Itentenant now a poltUcU rofu^ in the Argentine ernbaa^ in Havana. He fled the Cabana loctreas prison a few weeks 0^ Ms third esc la anuggSat he taU his eeUeagnes te SM Mlh af Nsvembar Bmrotatteaary Movamitt la this esuabry Hut they aboald ha dtatrttetead te the world aad bo sboidd bo Idtall-Bed ovea It ho boeams a “aae-rillea." Gonzales Inslstod he be identl-flod, Cubon oxilo friende eald, be QIVBi ACTINO TIP* - Two area students St WUl-O-Way Apprentlco Theater In Bloom-field Hills ncelvcd vslusblo advice on their performances Saturday from a "master" critic, actor Vincent Price. Vicki Lightstone, 14, ot Orchard^teke (left) and Pam Heck, 16, Ot Bli^ mIngham. The girls appeared in a scene from tihakcepoaro’s "Two Genttemeii of Verona." Price gave critlquss of play exoerpto both in tha afternoon and evening at the theater. flad, Cuban exile friends said, bt-d the first to be made of the lot of political priaa 's dictatorial regUne, IS MONTHS Dr CABANA The young rebel officer spent 13 months In Cabana dungeons to which he was sentenced for being too opci^ aittM-omiiMiiilst to suit armed forcea commander MaJ. Raul Castro. A Sad President of a Sad Nation Lincoln Was S3 in 1862 The former qwrts editor of The Pontiac Press was one of throe persons hospitalized today as the result ot weekend traffic accidents in Pontiac. H. Ony Moats, Tl. lU State St., !• In eattetaotory condltton today st Pontiac General Hoepl-tal. Also in satisfactory condition at the aame hospital are Mrs. Jessie M. Young, 46, 651 E. Tennyson Ave., and Karen West, 15. 450 Rivard St. Moats, who retired from The Press in September iMO, was driving east on Huron Street at 6:06 p.m. Saturday when, according to police, his car skidded on slippery pavement, skidded into the westbound tone and jwte etrock by A car driven by Winism C. Hayei, 37, of S. Marshall Sit. Tbe West girl waa a pasron-ger la a oar driven by Beverly " - -- yjj (Continued From Page One) to the child in bed In a room on the et second floor ot WMta Hoijae. not know today what Willy Lincoln's sickness wu. ♦ ★ * Medical diagnoses of the time were often unreliable. But it was a lingering, fluctuating fever that undoubtedly etched new lines in the aad, gaunt fact of Lincoln as he spent what time he could at Ms son’s bedside. LOST OTHER 90S Undoubtedly, also, his thoughts went back to that other Febniaiy In 1850, twelve years before. Eleven dson before his 41st birthday that year, his second-bom son had died. Eddie Uncoln had been not quite 4. ♦ ★ ★ CMldren’s deaths were common M those days, hut then as now, it waa the saddest thing in the worUj. wu to a coUtaton abeut tiW p.m. Satarday st Telegraph aad EUs-abetk Laha toads. Police said her car wu struck when she made s left turn In front of an auto driven by Hendrick L. Schonstra, 35. 4048 Lorn-ley fit., Drayton Plains. Mrs. Young wu Injured about 3 p.m'. Saturday when s traller-r ffimmted compressor unit broke loose from a truck and struck tbe front of her auto st East Walton Boulevard near Arlene Straet. Bob was away at Harvard. Willy waq 11 aad Thomas, ar Tad. wu I. ’The Lincolns would be considered indulgent parents at any time. According to tha Vktorian standarda of their day, they were extremely so. Willy and Thd had the run of the WMto Houw, to the Irritation and scandal of gemrals, congraiamen, cabinet members and the numar-ibers and office scekera who continually basiaged The Weather Full DJ. Wuthar Bureau Keport PONTIAC ANlV’TWWlTY — MuUy cloudy tomorrew, ■now ar rain likely tmnarrow night. Low tonight 30. High tomarrste SI —........*“• . (WBpsrstsrs pr«c«(Un| I mi s SSI.! WM Vtlscur 1 ■ :U-tand Park Players. Surviving are a aon, Dr. Ed-aon K. Pool of BInnIiigham; and Sarvlca la at 1 p.in. today at the BeU Chapd of William R. Handi-tan Funeral Co.. 803 E. Maple Ave. Burial iriU foUnr to Woad-laini Osmetcry, Dtenlt. Service lor Oven W. imith, 74, of 310 E. Highland Road, Bloon-field Township. uriU be aUO ajn. tomorrow at St. Hugo of the Hilta Church. Burial Trill be to Mount Hope Cemetery. An employe of the Pontiac Post Office for 44 yean until Ms retirement in U63. Mr. Smith died Saturday of a heart attack. He alao TTu a Fourthdiegree member of the Pontlae Council, Krighto of A Pariah Rosary TriO be recited at 1:30 p. m. today at Donelaaii-Johna Fimeral Hoom, Pontiac, fallowed by a K. of C. roaaty at •:45 pjQ. fiundvtog baaidu Ms wife am two sons, Edmund 0. and Wilfred D. both of Pootiaot a brotbar, John D. of Watldiia Lake; and tex grandchildren. Rowston Not Running for His Fourth Term (Continued From Page One) While he won’t be farced to give p hta post on the Board of Super-visdrs, RowMon TriU atuomatlcally torfeit Ms seat on the (3ty Planning Oonunitaian. Aa mayor, he has been on the planning commla- Rowteon has also served on the Oakland County Tw Allocation Board, Pontiac Real Estate Board, u a member of the DmntOTvn Pontiac Kiwania Oub and the bodrd of deacons of tbe Congregational Church. attorney alto _ from Detrtet Law School in 1963, Rowston la a native of Pontiac and graduate of Pontiac Central High School Before entering law aebool he Tvotked In the accounting department of GME Thick A Coach Divlsiob. ^ JLgnore JM Attempts to Reserve Areas Allies Fly Corridors to West Berlin BERLDf (UPD-AUied military and oommerclal ptanu flew the air oorridon Into Wate Berlin u usual today despite .jeariier Rus-tean attem^ to reserve parts te taro of theni to their own use. I tel^. The AIBm were toed ate to refreat aa Passengers aboard regular com-icrcial flights over East Ger-many today reported no unusual Rustean activity in the corridors. HoTvever, commercial planes usually fly..................... East Germansr. But they said that any Western backdown would only lead to further demands and ria-strictions. the RttssiWB bad tried to reteriof PtaV NTcB L>6^IM QoffiB for their own fitijitit. i-..-. -- " The tefictals called the qam-munist demeada tt)# mote serious challenge to date of Western righto in Berlin, wMdi lies deep Inside STEPHEhraLLE, DM. (dPD-FtreiiM hiere had plenty of time for chadnn raoantly. Tha only /r I • r Md • vkL dn d tte I ' THE JPONTIAC PRESS. Active Anti-R^d Ditf i - Bi. aT^ ynt Owrlw PBBwwy, 11^ Wad».Q New Woy Found To Stop Hair Loss, Grow More Hair riml the canee of jrour W loea UI Marriage Licenses » « raJWrBK»<» •>« T«St*a» •they eald it eonldn’t be done/ But now a Tiku firm of laboratory oonanltantc hoe derel-• trMtment that le not ait^ldiif hair loM ... but u really growlnf halrl font even aak you to take their word for it. If your aymptome Indicate that the treatment will help you, they inrlte you to try it for 82 days at their rUk. and eee for your-eelf! Naturally., they would not offer this no-rlak trial onleae the treatment worked. This le dll the more remarkable In light of the fact that the great majority of eases of neeadre hab faU and baldness are the beginning and more fully desel-opf<* »ta«M of male pattern baldness and cannot be helped. But how can any man or woman be sure what ll caualog their hair lorn? Bren If boldneali may seem tst “run . In your family,” this Is eertaln-lyno proof of the cause of TOUR hair loss. Actually, there are 11 scalp disorders that can cause hair lose. No matter whloh one le|i you watt until you are sllek bald, and your hair roots are dead, you are beyond help. If yon etui hare hair (or at least some fuss) 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 Ckmsult-ants will supply you with treatment for S3 days, at their risk, If they bellere the treatment will help you. Just send them Information to help them analyse your problem. This Information should Include bow long your hair has been thinning, and whether or not you now hare or erer hare had any of the following conditions: Do you bare dandruff? Is It dry or oUy? whether your scsdp ertvto In pimples or other Irrltallra, does your forehead become oUy or greasy? does your scalp Itch and how often? and any other, Information yon feel might be helpfuL All letters will be an-' wosjsrab Frankly,'BM l>ogt' Just Aran't App«aiing ELMRA. N.Y. »-Prof. Robert Baker of Cbmali UWveratty reported at ah agricultural meetiiig that chicken hot dogs had been aokl In an Ithaca eupeimar-ket. packaged under two dificmt names to ese which one was Ip-vorsd by housewives. nilckea hwuhs” was te “bird do|^” he said. One nrifa told him ths^'cbickan ■" were wonderful but that rikUw. W RIcUnU Md WUUsm, 4m asrdlot. Brazil AAoy Ask Bridgw RIO DE JANEIRO. BraxU (AP) —Brail) may propoee to Uruguay the building of a bridge over ' River tiuaray to ting the two ttons. Primary purpoee would be Increase trade. above Information, and your name and address to Loesch Laboratory Consnltanta, Bos (Moot, Houston g, Tasaa. _______________ .foediaw nomM W. TMlwr71|N BdM .- "***■ bfeTrSifws WKK.UIN4 SnCUL EXKIT ,WAT«i REPAIR INCOME TAX $ To be ujte you're gettinf every antae* the lew aliowi In r tax returns, let our ex-pertt figure your tax. Oiancet art ihsy can isve you anough to Mve the amaN fat involvad. IMWklarsnltaSwvlM’ fSt gShw dWraw *• ariM MMn 82 WEST HURON ST.-PONTIAC Waakdayt: f a.ak te t p.ni,-4al. and See. Pheae PI 4.»U| ■■■■■NO APPOINTMINT NICBURT■■■■■■I A. le Mwnae "dlultonrS! aSSr, «N1 SaMl, OrayWa PiaiBi auf jeuf L awns, me tairar. Hrmiiiaaam Md 7tetl O. aahnMaT Farmor Tokos a Ppko Of Hofdc A46rgon's Cor Tya Henry Itagaa. «d» drivea| i ---1, oempact French Bragaet recently traveled through .afarmbettendetoppedataanall i ear.in front of it. When Morgan > out be found a hudiy fanner In overalla circling the little ve- ' gan approached. ‘‘Good numing,” laid Morgan. ripe, dkhi't you firangcr?” AAusioology Dean Dios CAMBRIDGE. Maaa. (AP)-Walter Raymond Spalding, 96, frequently deacribed as (he ■ Uie Harvard niuaie died Sunday. was prafesstM' at Harvard. Only at SIMMS t ^mplete Watch t ^OYERNAULPius^ L Ntadad Ports for YOUi WATOI «VM Bat • Ditostamblati, Claonad , and Oiled • Worn or Broken Ports Raploctd I • Ganuina Foctory Ports * Used • Wotch Adjustad ond EiKtronicolly Timed | • Full Yaor OuorontM , Sinwnt low price of $7.95 include needed pertt ouch ilemi, 'crdwn, mein* | . , Ing, or belanee steff. Hurry thit week for needed , weraeai aaa t Oeeatag ef §95 Wetch eafy .. * .mam ■ WATCai OEPT.-4fOta flo«f ^ TMTEagd TBESRAT SPECMl SALE BASEMENT DISCOUNTS On BABY NEEDS 7-PC. COLONIAL LIVING ROOM GROUPING o Beautiful wing-stylo sofa with solid molded foom rubber cushions, zipporwd covers and arm caps upholstered in the very latest colonial heavy covers. • Lounge chair with same construction • 2 ^lid Maple stop table and coffee table • 2 Early American stylo table lamps SAVE ’100.00 All 7 PiwM *298“ Reg. $399 , NO MONEY DOWN ONLY $15 per month ORCHARD Phone FE 58114-5 FURNITURE COMPANY 164 Orchard Lake Ave Pontiac 4 Bhcke West of S.SogUimw BirdwysMAPERS 'Pull ttondord siza diopara of dorabla Birdeoyo doth. Limit 2 dezan pur IModoriaar Wall-PIASTIC { Hoob 0«ar Car Aaot' DjoparPaiU • Baby Car Saert Ml* 1 S!M.MS IS 4 A OPEN TONITE '10^ -TUESDAY HOURS 9 A.M to 6 P.M - TOO fit! Hera Thaa YN Pay Far ’ at smm... Here’s Proef-Compara! Yeu've kaard'lha exgiaMiea Teu^ hm what yeu aay far*... waH, Hurt's Mtlfve at SIumus-YOU OirMORI Than YOU Pay yar-Paar *—ndt at discowirt, aartenal serv' W other hewefUs. Hera's mime | LIMMS PAINT DEPT DISCOUNTS Super Washable-The Deluxe Wall Paint Super KEM-TONE Paint ... 089 y„lue — sn.BUiir«t 1.37 sfr.iHiiras 1.87 sn.nasrhi. 2.37 Folds Compactly t 40x40 Inch Folding Styl# MyP^Chair : BabyPlayPHS - SMOVMao pets'valim n jboo $3.95 Value Chocolates 29' f Famous SIko Homil|gn chocolotes In Vk-pound box for 'Young lovers', tegular 39c value—save 13c here. \^-Pound Haort Box SiKO HofflihOA chocolulu .AO* in HMrt box........ "tTr BRACK CHOCOLATES Ragillb 7Se baort box.l6-peundfer. BRACK DELUXE 59' BRACK GOLD HEART WHITAAAN'SJMILK Full pound of fomoui Mllfc ClKUOlorw for. 1*P« 'Sixo ...- ------ .tcgulor 11.25 voluo.. BRACK CHOCOUTES . -lagwlarll.iv kwrt OQC box. I pound for....'.70 BRACK GOLD HEART $235vo|ue-fua |9S pound in hoort box.. I WHITAAAN*S SAAAPLER Full peistd box s)00 of cnacolalM.....F.. d. WHITMAN'S FAIRHIU M po^ of fomoui jj 75 Bulk VALENTINE CANDIES fiHOCOUTE HEARTS RED Slid WHITE JEUY BEAKS 6«»29* p£i 26* ishnolew esrtsm 0» Old fashlonod VeleellM VALENTINE CARDS 28o Valtntino Book 100 Cut-outs for.... 19* "DOJJOL-QLO*’ Valentines «Qe Pack of 6—With Envelopes.. . .. Tho original, tho gonulne SUPiR KEM-TONE doluxo wall point in wbHo end dneo-rotor colors . . . and a compiete soiectiorr fwro or SIIMMS. (No Hmit). **VoVil noVrf-‘VaiVo-rt* ’ PORCH and FLOOR ENAMEL S4.M Yslus-OALLOH Battleship Gray or Light Grey colors. For wood, con- SSI WHITE EMMEL $5.95 Valua-GALLON' Ideal for kitchen, bathroom, woodwork, etc... wosluble ORIKOTE in white only. Sovo here. ^ Jab/ Walken ^99 Only $1.00 Holds This Revolutionary AUTOMATIC SLIDE PROJECTOR in Layaway I KODAK ‘CaraussI’ Automatic Projector Regular $149.50 Seller 180 Nator ruvolving ipill-proof ay holds 80 slldti, chonges hi-fi rncord, storm slides lil . . .yet you can reach any .slide ady time during the show. Show slides outomoHcolly at pre-selected intervals, < you advance and reverse slides—ev« locus- by remote control. Jam-proof, 500 won lomp with brightness control, f3.5 lens. (Zoom lens, slightly higher). ADDROC Motoi fromo with removobl# ond washable fabric. Adjustabl# for child's’hoight— toochas 'am to walk. Not axacMy os shown. (ss;PUNT NATURAL SEALER FOR. • CsNnont Blocks 10 POUNDS • Cindor Block* a Aeboetoe ShinglM • Stucca amf Brick* • Pewrod Concroto ^FT. Stepladders Regular U.9S yetu* Sturdy wood lodder with steel rod retnforced stops, handy poll plotform. Until . I lodder. Fun9x12Foot iPlastic Drop Cloth 79e Value 34* I Protects floor a and furniture • against point • sploner. limit 2 • Pepular 7-lxek Siae Raint Ran tnd RsNar Sst nil' Fdiil Brash Set .Us. Sst For tkienlng points, ' cUonlng brushvs, otc. i llmil 2 quorH. SothosVk-.l-ond )00%purobrlXtM w rr q dillllMflr WfLTERLOX fSSS TIIAHSRAREHT HUVY BODY Rlnts....S1.H Rintss...Sl4B Quarts... SI JB Quarts... S2.1B ,QaHen...SB4t QsNon...SUE Sealer ond finisher for fin# floors and • interior wood surfoces . . . rubs to hi-• piono luster. ___ SIMMS HOUSEWARES DISCOUNTS 6-PR. SHBE RACK $1 I'alue — Mow 1 22x9x 11 inch rock to keep I shoes neat, save spoce. Plate I I • finish wire. 4-^. Mixing Bowl Sot $1.19 Value-Now As shown —sat of nest bowls in 6-in., 7-in., 8-in., >9-in. sizes-. GLASBAKE 7-PIECE Ovenwares Set tl.19 Value—Nam Set has cosseroie ond .cover, pie plole ond custard cups ds shown. Oven-proof gloss. aaaaaeaeeaaaaaaeaaaaaaaoaaaaaaaoaa^aaaaae STURDY ALUMINUM FRAME Child’s Folding Chain $3.00 Value-Now As shown—for indoor or outdoor use. Tubular qluminwm fioine; convos bock and seol, sipndt 22” high, seat, is 12” from ground. I mSOOUNTS FOUR I HE PONTIAC PHl&SS. MONDAY, FEBjalUARY 1962 ItowMmy Wmt FALSE 1EETH WHhM«r« effort Pair in Hoad-On Crash; Sht DIm, Husbdnd Hurt DELPHI. iBd. (AP)-M bmUmt at two boyi wn t'Siiai^sssa ^ on the nwd. The huebud «m Injured ud taken to a hoepttal at Lafayette. ■ 0% a autt driven by her huaband. ~ ite pelke aaid neither the victim, Eva Uly, 3T, nor her hue-band, Vernon, SS. knew the other Airlino Exocutivo DIm SAN MATEO, Ckllf, (APMI John A. Herlighy, 5T, aenior vice preeUent of engbieetini and maintenanoe for United Air Llnoe, died Friday night after a Jong Ul- Water Shortage is Finally Ended Wisconsin Town Goh Roiiof Aftor a Wo ok With Brokoh Main Local JA Drive Edging Toward Goal of $9m u than two weeki at flw campaign remaining. Junior part-time in 8« JA corpotntloni Computere cm Sumatra hha.l oeOtiaUelr of lOout 11 railUon pereoaa cm ' within an area of about i MELLEN, Wit. (UPI) - It wu thb flret waeh day in more than a week for up to three-quarten of Meilen'e homee today. OURBinUHNG IS COMING DOWN! WE MUST CLEAR OUT! in Pontiac la about two-thirda of the way toward Ito goal of fS.SOQ. M. r. Rumrn^, local hind chair-man and director of purchaaing and production control tor the Pontiac dlvlaion, today annouced a collection of |6.0r haa reoeivad |ia,MI to date. M per oeat of tta goal of ttMJM. Rummel aaid there are 1.000 teen-aged induitrialiati working Poiish Rtd Po«t Di«s WARSAW, Poland (AP) - Wla-yelnw Bnniawaki, 65, promlnanti ommuiM ptnrt in Pohind, dlad Saturday in Waranw, the PoUah Praai Agency reported. 'FREE! WoanPKrtl WITH HAODIR IRRITATION W agaam gieatr m Mwiaw n- carbla* IrrUaUaa ■•»!« lo ilron*. u wta» >aa hr ■aalndThhia raUrf. 0 onm at anaairta. rati h*t(«r lai COCCI • si*®c'At- TKCC! th»ww««i» ONE DOZ. GLXZID^PONUT CINTtaS WHh PoMhM ef Ml POZEN GLAZED DONUTS CLIP THE HEARTS AHD SAVE AT BOTH YAHKEES THE PONTIAC PgESS. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 12, im FIVE ■ I A. M. to » r. M. 1^ »— moat of tta l«KU«Uve builiMM tM$ wcctr to |lv« Ita Repttbilcui momben an nady tor toota etnnM to worii i— ________ Qua at them to PreaMent Abraham Unoola "No buaineaa" wu the order at le week in both the Senate and the Houae although aeveral oom-rameeo tei both aUea of the Capitaol pteimed to hold bdartnga. uled tor Monday and Thuraday in both chambera. waak. The Houae Republican Policy Committee hu oppoaed the ment at urban attain and houalng headed by Robot C. Waavo:, I a Negro. Hie plan becomea effective at the end of Manch imteaa either the Senate or the Houae reiecta M. Voting la achedided for the senate next Monday. If the plan la not defeated there—and ita I don't believe It will boT^ uae may vote latec In the em Demoorata may join the GOP A *- Alao ready for Houae debate are biUa to Increaae thejwtlonat d ‘ and to provide for program of ntanpower retraining worken. With the t3-bUllon Increaae In celliiM to SSOO biQlon. , ♦ A * Bottled up in the Houae Rulea ommittoe until after the receaa, nd perhapa much longer, to a achqpUld biU paaaed by both the Senate and the Houae. The Houae da only tor college daaa^ room conatructlon. The Senate broadened the ineaaure to iixdOdc atudent acholarahlpa and f help eatabtlah junior coll The menauro cannot get to a Senate-Houae conference without Rulea Oommitlto approval. ] in conference. that the be dropped Osetosod Michigan AAon ixiudaci by Stot* D«pt. Washington » - socretary of state Dean Ruak haa named Robert A. McKinnon of Mareniaoo, Mich., poethumoua winner bf the State Department’a auperior aerv-fee award. Ml waa the tirat American charge d'affalrea In Ouagadougou, capital dty of the new Af-, rican republic of Upper VoHa. He died Sept. 8, 1981, aa the reault of an illneaa. Ruak preaented the decoration to McKinnon’^ wife and Early Bird Values at A&P! SAVE ON POODS NEEDED POR EARLY-IN-THE-WEEK MENUS "Supfr-RIght" Quality Mature Beef rouMd STEAKS c FULL CUT 79. ‘’SUm RIGHT'^UALITY, BONfLESS Rump Roust '^UfER-RIGHr' MATURE BEE^ Cube Stenks 894 99c FRESH MUSHROOMS 49c Completely Cleaned, Gevernment Inspected FRESH FRYERS WHOLi FRYERS LB. 29 FRESH FRYER I^ARYS legs ... X 49c Breasts » 59c WITH MBS AHACHiD x CUT-UP . SPLIT ok QUARTERED fUPIR-ilOHr AU MIAT Polish Sausage...................» 49c OUTSTANDINe PROOUa HITS RM MONDAY AND TUESDAY MICHIGAN GROWN U. S. No. 1 GRADE . Winesap Apples 4 & 29< WESTERN GROWN Golden Carrots 2 ^ 19< A Reel Value! JANl fARKIR, VANILU IC^ Danish Nut Ring 39c MF IRAND, FROZEN Green Peas 4!^'^ 69c AAP Spinach . . . ; 2 lim 29c AAF Broccoli 2 39c Beef Stew 49* Fiesta Punch '™*-’ 4 ss 99* Bisquick .... 39* Libby^s Cbili 49< Margarine 5 89« KUAR FLI 79*^ DOR WAX 1^P9 NonaDHi Towns list*' 2 -“s. 33c ■ Ac OFF LAIRI ^ ^ ''' ^ ■ - '..■.■I...:.-...--:-:.'-. — ■ , -v,. RISDON'S CREAMY Cettnge Cheese 1-POUND 1 KS# CARTON ■ POt VALENTINrS—WARWICK CHOCOLATE COVERED Cherries..........'^x 49c • 0« Pockofle Ciaaewto^ All prkea In Hiit od nffectWe thru Tueadkiy, Fab. iSHi in all loetern Midtigwn AAF Super Markata mi «hat ATUWIIC a 'ractrtc tia ce>«r*MV, twc. SeamlessI Two Lovely Prints in RANCH HOUSE . . . SHORT FIBERGLAS DRAPERIES ^6 99 50" wide 45" long 50" wide by 63" 7.99 80" wide by 45" 9.99 80" wide by 63" 10.99 Beautiful SEAMLESS printed glass fiber draperies (biy' Owens-Corning wiffi the world's only permanent n» iron guarantee) thot are shrink and strelth proof, obsolutely no sun rot, firesafe and washable. Choose i from two lovely prints, "Aspen" or "Cascade'' iiv.! predominotely green, gold, charcoal or brown. /IrapenVa ... Fourth Floor Famous Charm-Tred 100% Rayon Pile 9 by 12-FT. ROOM SIZE RUBBER BACKED RUGS ... NO RUG PAD NEEOEDI • Save $5.07 on each iuxurioi>s rugl • Special rubber backing needs hp rug pod, does not shred or .peel away! • Choose beige, sondolwood, gold ort^uoiso; tf dife'j Ruga... Fifth Floor 45-Pieco . .. Service for Eight ALL WHITE EARTHENWARE WITH EMBOSSED EDGE Such 0 lovely sot $1099 for just... 9 mi • 8^ 10" dinner plates e 13"plotter #8-8" soup piotoB e 8" rgund vpg. bowfr-■elB -6" 8A8 plates f covered sugar ^ • 8 cups • 8 saucers • creamer Ine/pensive enough to ute every day, lovely enough for entertain-; ingl This fine white eortheriwore hoi a pretty Bird of PBrodtoe ond; flovrer decorotion embos»ed*on iroch piece. A full 45-pc. lervicg, for less thon plostic dinnerworel : j’ Chiga ... Lowtr LeyifSr' ) m / * THE PONTIAC PRESS « WM Huron SUM* . Pontine. M MONDAY. FBBUARY 12. UU "pwNJTnjrSrPtSudW Hrt ^^XS^lbSSSrimt wmm *iprAiiy^ kiwtMM Muww XdT*itiihromMM %sssr&..^ Now h Unsuitable Time for Legislative Pay Hike A tdll proponed by State Senator BAsa W. Biown, D-Detro^t, would double the legislative salaries from $5,000 to $10,000 and increase their expense allowances from $1,250 to $2,500 a year. With the State Treasury in such an embarrassing position we can’t help but feel that Sen. Brown is merely talking for the sake of publicity. ★ ★ ★ Just a few of the reasons we feel LegUIators would shy from any such action; the Administration’s reasons for backing certain legWation. Quite naturally, they wont explain argument^ against certain bills. These same officials are urged to accept speaking engi^ments before interested public groups. ★ ★ ★ It isn’t likely that the order will • be ignored by many of the bureaucrats. They would like nothing better than more funds and personnel for their departments. Our naive Impression has always been that civil service was created to take such officials out of politics. November 6 election. , Michigan’s contemplated 171,500.000 deficit. One hundred forty-four potential rivals in Con-Con. Fifty-six Con-Con dslegates have already announced interest in running for Legislature. Obviously this is not the time for any such raise in pay. First things must come first and we would suspect that would not include doubling legislative salaries. Following his usual pattern, the Governor has indicated he would not veto the bill should it reach his desk. We trust the issue is already dead. The Man About Town Odd Lincoln Facts Voice of the People: ‘Our Lavish Giveaimy Plan is Destroying Our Nation* Th« UiitMl MatM has bma anS lUU Is Uvtais beyond Its moans. Tho natloa's moneycrodlt system has delerioratsd undnr the iaflumoe of 1 at home and lavish flvlsf and tanflag to wUtaaB the gKotast threat Is not Beriln, or Viet Nam or the Congo or Um. It Is the prseaHous situatkm of our balanes of tatemstlemd payments and the potential erosion of world confidanoe la the dollar. *Should Excuse Aged ^Responsible People From Paying Taxes’ Are Losing Out* oare tor the agad 1 think all perooni of tt nr more should be excused Irani paying that nwdlca Income tax. I also ballcvt their should not c __ social aacuritrbaneflU should not cuiity. Under iIm preaent astup. be rut If th^ earn a tew more medical wellarc is sometMng-tor-dollars than the $1,300 permitted, nothing system. So the responeible With the extra monv, these eWsen is on the wrong sMe-the elders could pay thalr medical aide that ksspa ooatiag moaay for expsnsei. Hist would give them payment of other peepla'B btUa. a greater feeling of Independence. A * * M. to. Kawnek Mast peeple aaa*t hang snie a part al llwto asndmp. They'd - - > hut rtgaretoi ar wait Quotes Russian Text on Corrupting Youth *mihey enrt After listening to arguments on obscene books. I would like to gttote from a kussian textbook used to train their agents ori how to Uke over tho world. It says; making readily avallabit ; varioua kiitito, by the m per eaat aeearding te eradto bnrean sswin, oa caA aie Mgh wtm 7 payers have to aanry S “By mal drugs of ' Put Together by Pontiac Area’s Genealogy Expert Vin Rouge David Lawrence Asks: Popular book: What now rausl ba liiannod In Boston, and panned In Pontiac. Who Apologized in Swap of Spies? Why not dock thaes addle they're taming so provldtiit people won't ------- - - , be stuck UitmrT There's the greet ,ances and the aP***!*^ ®lble .^vantage of social aecurlty. from the public ad>^ by gl^ng ^ better solution would be com-the teeiKSge alcoho. by praWng ^ e>*emsm Ms wildness, by stimulating him _ appears to be via sSil se-with sex literature and adv^ ^ parties riiould lag to htan or her practlcOe as Mpp^t h. taught at ‘Sexpol.’ the peychopo- A. T. O. i. Btlcal —---------------------- neceseary attitude of cMwa. Me- ni and worthleamam bdo which Foreign Aid Plin There’ll Be Lots qf Wind From Coast to Coast In observance of the 153rd birthday of Abraham Llneoln this column la privileged to present some chronological facts, put together by Oakland County’s expert in that line, Wilbur James Seger of Lake Orion, who Is putting his findings In book form, “Oenealoglcal Journeys With Our Presidents.” z Doe»’t Hdp ua* WASHINGTON - The American people were not tooled by the self-righteous attitude assumed by Pre- ier fOirushcbev as he demanded I “apolo^'' from the President February .may be the coldest month, but politically speaking It might well be the windiest. Witness the agreement between Senate Democratic Leader Mixx Mansiuld, Montana, and Republican Leader Everett Dirxsxn that there will be no roll call votes between Feb.-9 and 13. ★ ★ ★ This ki the annual deal which frees Senators to make Lincoln Day speeches acroee the country. Similar arranlgenenta are made in the House. The four day slowdown is matched later in the month for the Democrats who havs Jackson Day spceehas to make. The hoUday for haranguing this year comes just as both Houset of Congress appeared to have gotten off to a somewhat more promising start than usual. ■k if it But violently as they may contend in campaign or debate, one great bond all Congressn^ have In common: A healthy respect (or their own and their fellows’ freedom of speech, especially when it iheans speaking at $100-a-plate fund-raising dinners. To show thst Lincoln wm an every-dsy man, Mr. Seger points out that he was bom on Sunday, first elected to public office on Monday, twice elected president on Tuesday, admitted to the bar on Wednesday, delivered his Gettysburg address on Thursday, was shot on Friday, and died on Saturday. He was our only 0.1. president In all of our history, his military rank when elected president being that of a private. Lincoln was the second member of his family to die by an aassssln’s bullet, the other being his grandfather. Both were named Abraham, both had a wife named Mary, both bed a son Thomas, and the name Abraham has not since been given to any member of the Lincoln family. The Uneoln Brothere, fourth eouetns of tbe-Oreat Emancipator, were goveraers of their respective etatee at the ea^ie time: Enoch of Maine, and Levi of Massachusetts; ign-M. The following epitaph appears on the Unnbetone of the early tragic sweetheart of Lincoln: “I am Ann Rutledge, who sleeps beneath these weeds; beloved of Abraham Lincoln; wedded to him, not through union, but through separation. Bloom forever,. O Republic, from the dust of my bosom. January 7, 1813-August 25, 1835.’’ of the U n i t e d States when Francis Gary Powers was forced down in his U2 plane in May I960. The Soviet premier used the Incident break up the ing in Paris and I and give his life so as to prevent capture. He will be asked whether II Is true, as the Kusslaas claim, that be was shot down at a height of M miles by a Soviet rocket aad. If «o, how It happsnsa that Ms plane was vIrtoaRy Iqtact aad cxMblled later by the Russians. The biggest risk the Russians knew they would incur was that Powers, If released, would tell tSt whole truth. But they evidently so much wanted Col. Abel released that they were willing to pay the price. treedem everywhere.’’ Maybe "the orderly conduct of International affairs" now can be' resumed since espionage on the ground by Abel—which., was far worse than Just taking pictures In outer space—has resiilted in a mere exchange of two Individuals who took big risks for their respective governments but now are once more free men. (Copyright ttit) Forced to Pay Fees on Stolen Auto 1 was given the run arodhd by our police. My car was stolen out of my yard aiad pushed In the THOi;«HTR FOR TODAY to cause a fur- LAWRENCE ther estrangement in the relations of the two countries as he added tension to an already serious crisis in world affairs. But now, as the Soviet government officially exchanges its own master spy, Col. Rudolf Ivanovich Abel, for the American pilot, the question may well be aak^; “‘Who has apologized to whom?’’ It will be recalled that the then senator froth Massachusetts, John F. Kennedy, as be campaigned for the presidential nomination toi the spring of I960, said that he would have expressed ’’regret." This was construed by many at the equivalent of an apology. Few people mold have foro-■oea ^ tt weald beeome Ken-■edy'a faaotlea as President abont SI montha latecto approve the exehaage at twn pttooMn in what MW to behig Interpretod in Momow at toast as a mava toward beftermeat of retadloas Certainly the new ■ a I e 11 i t e a which America and the Soviet Union have launched can lake photographs from graat distances in outer space. Russia has publicly boasted it had cameras aboard the planes of both Gagarin and 'Dtov. Moscow press dispatches have claimed Jews or Greeks, staves ar free hoodlums found it was locked aild had no battery. I was given a hartirdous driving ticket and paid $5 wrecker fee end was told If anyone oonws In my yard, steals my car and wrecka H. lf I want It beck I Btlll pay the damage coat. How is the city run? Fraak Mungia 393 Weat Kennett Road ^ The torthright testimony of Ambassador Pawley and Ambeaaador HUI togves litUe doubt that the misguided policies of our state department directly assiated Gssira tai establishing the first ConununkB regime in the Western Hemisphere. Again we are learning that giving away bllHona of dollara In aid buys us neither friends nor respect. Latin America looks to the United States to lead end not to he lad. Fairness and flrmnem In ovr foreign policy would commaod the respect of all nations. The'United ■tatos should not be in the OAS an one of the 21 members nations but fluence from the outside. 1t.-l Oar. U:U. Equality is the ihare of every _ne at thalr advent upon earth, and equalky Is alio theirs when *CD More Important Than Mon Realize* ^Coach Penalized for Tactieg Used* these were good enough to make placed benMth lt-»-Nlnon de Len-pholographs showing the difference doe. Dr. Harold Hyman Says: Must Patrol Ourselves on Matters of Health Why do eome think dvH detenee Is a tof (d hooey? It roeens being prepuvd for any emergency on the home front and an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of I AH Sainta N. I. In a game bsMito Al High School pt Oetrak end sumption Hi^of Detroit on Feb. e, All Saints sal a new record for the moat points (151) ever scored in a high echool game. A only eeored 31 points. ‘We Need Tax Law Like Indiana’s* Why doesn’t Michigan aidopt a When that traffic cop chugs up and motions you to pull to the side of the road, be asks to see your drtveris license and your car registration. Macy Brifiging Politics Into Civil ^rvice Jobs More of our feathered friends are coming the way of the Pontiac arel They quite evidently like our ways. The latest newcomers, according to Mrs. Lome Weaver of Lake Orion, are a big flock who stopped at her home. She cannot find tbeli: description In any bird book. The case of Col. Abel was not emphasised very much at the time of the crash of the U2. It waa not generally realised that he began his spying In 19W at just about the same time that the secret U2 flights were begun. These requests are quite proper and you comply because you know the officer is acting in the best interests of the community that pays his salary fronq tax revenues contributed by you and your fellow citizens for your common protect tion. ' tax law like Indiana? When you He was, in-filet, "a former er- ^ rend boy. new^mper vendor »nd £«tto5fUtoken^' baker’s apprentice. ” k ^ ygur pay check, then you know A Or .* where your dollara go. If snne- TTirae Cheers tor luiph Owen ^ he had been sentenced to a year In what you ,pay. 1 Mved In Indiana rolt I Uiink he liandtod the prtoon and a fine of $465 on cbaige. for «.me time and thought it wea vara weU that he had "bilked the gullible swell. siiuaiwn very weu. with a ‘miraclQ* diagnosifl ma- OeraWX. fXaaa M. F^edefk*'Hlgi Betoal chine.” 548 Emerson Orateale tM Case Records of a Psychologist: Now there are time* when you Generally speaking, two classes of officials staff the hundreds of Federal Jobs In Washington. Civil service is supposed to be nonpartisan. The other jobholders are handpicked from the party in power and quite naturally that* is where their allegiance is. it it it Since this difference suppdbedly exists we are surprised at the public remarks of John Macy, Civil Service Commissioner (a political ^rpointee). Word has it that he has told the career off!-cials'Ccivil service) that it is their duty, and also their right to promote the Administration’s upcoming legUation. . Now, Mr. Macy, since when has civil service turned into a political Rim to beat the drums for either of our parties? This type of maneuver is not cricket and it is actually of-fansive to some of the jobholders. it k k GovmuBeat regulations forbid offkiilH from epending Govem-/ntnt titee and money to push po-liticia bills. Mr. Macy gets around this ruling by saying that it is o. k. fer Um officials to ’’explain” A letter from former Pontiac resident, Arnold Bellew, now living Just west of Chicago, advises US to stop alluding to the "poor tarmer." He says he bought 80 acres of rough land nine years ago for $8,000, and recently sold it for $85,000 — for a golf course. Regardless of what other local historians may say, Mrs. Prudence Benedict of Drayton Plains phones that the icy walking has been the worst t)ils winter in her'00 years recollection of the Pontiac area. Abel was arrested in the summer of 1967 after one of his aides defected. He was convicted and sentenced to 30 years in prison. The Soviet gwerament said it was “having no^g to do with the case." FWm that day to this, it has not acknowledged that he even worked for the Russian government. Today, howevei;. the Soviet government is put in the position of officially acknowledging its own spy who actually atole American defense and atomic secrets. The deception hasn't work^. siblllty tor aeif-protectloe. In Give Pupils Unique Mental Tonic Let me Uluatrate what I am driving at by calling your attention to a,pair of news stories that appeared reoantiy. Ihe first concerned a ’’doctor’’ who conducted a daily radio program on nutrition and allied subjects and who wrote a book on whose front cover he was listed as a "foremost nutritionist." ’ By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE L-431: -IWdy R„ aged U, sat forlornly in my office. His mother is a friend of Mrs. Crane’s and had means you must become a good “O” la roatrasUng tern "doer'’ va. "wtodow." 8haffle CM at a time. ■ to 1 Just celebrating her 88th birthday, Mrs. Maggie E. Partridge of 405 West Iroquois Road, haa 12 living children, 41 grandchildren and 68 greatgrandchildren. Ria> SPY SYSTEM For, during the entire time that the Soviet premier was denouncing Powers as a spy—though he never did more than photograph from the air as the Russians have been doing—the Soviet government was maintaining a comprehensive spy system on the ground in this and Some embarrassments may flow from the whole affair. Pilot Powers will be interrogated Inten- BOOK WAS SiaXED The book was seized the Food and Drug Agency on charges that the federal low prohlbiAig false labeling of foods and drugs was being violated, ^lecifioally, the aetkm challenged "false claims of the medical value of vitamin and mineral food supplements.’’ When Hmi oharges' to light. It 1 k set ia e brenght sively and in secrecy ^ to why ...........destroy his own tfanfi,.. nibjeet Verbartlireludrs to- • The Coimtry Parson Mr. and Mrs. Fred H. Travis of 191 Cherokee Road; 62Bd wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Mturtee I. FUagerald of 10 Lincoln 8t.; 51st wedding anniversary. Mrt. AnUtony Bellaire of Keego Harbor; 83rd birthday. Mr. and Mii. Ebner Hurting of Walled Lake; 52nd wedding anniversary. Rayasend L. Jenefe of Flint; formerly of Pontiac; 90th birthday. bits. Edith Martin of CUo; 8dth birthday. The doctorate was in philosophy in the fields of health education and recreation: . NO FORMAL fRAININO . Indeed, investigation disdoaed the fact that the doctor had had no formal training or educational qualifications aa a nutritionist. The aeoHMl Iqatof esacemei what could done for Teddy. "What’s the matter. Tefldy?’’ I casually quired, after I had shown him a couple of magic tricks to gain his cooperation. I "Oh, I’m the pR. CRANE dummy in my dass," he spoke bitterly. "1 can’t read fast like the other Mds. And the teacher nags at me. So does Mom. "But, Dr. Crane, I can’t help It. I really try." SCHOOL TRAOfQIBS,.----------- - - 'TeJlSy's fathd- is a successful doctor. His mother is active in ao-cial affairs. But Teddy still can’t read properly. Yet when I gave him an IntelHgence teat, he was normal. 8e Ms problem Is net dow to lack of mental "horsepower" (1. q.) And hie vkion le O. K. So we poychologMs wotod at- He nodded with vigor. "Well,*'’you know that crooks often leave fingerprints, don't Keep adding new words. Next day he will profit immediately if you have used words from hla current reading book. Eend for my booklet "How to TSjtor a Child at Home," enclos- flogerprintot "Those HMe bleok mariu Ve-veal the MeatHy of worth ftM "But it took tbousands of yeaiY before anybody wan smart enough to figure out a waj( for leaving mental ‘fingerprints.’ "Think back thousands of years ago. If you had then gone to visit Camp: moffier” written to you or told you any news about your dog or the other kids at home, for nobody in those days had invented these little black marks. "So rn now rfiow you how to surprise your classmates. We’ll make some ‘flash cards’.’’ The award was contorted at tha U.S. embassy in Bertie by our am-' >r. When the award was 0 the attention of (he Swiss that the "Profeasor 'Doc'tor" h^-ored by our academy and our ambassador was "neither a doctor nor a profeaaor’’ "Teddy,’’ I began, “would you like to, Surprtae evetybody and become an expert reafcr?’’ ■ He nodded eagerly and his eyoa were misty wMi miahed Tears, so I knew be was sincere in his desire to fit out of the vdummy" -role:- ', "0. K.,’’ I added, "I’ll heljijyou ' V- But first you should real-at being a good reader l»B FLAHH CAROS Just cut white cardboaM into strips about 2x13 Indiea. Then have the boy (or girl) go through his current school reader and point out the words he doesn’t ing a stamped rsturn «svel(^, plus 20 cents. Mrs, Crane and 1 used "flash cards’’ on our yourtprters, ao aal-vaga your child's itiarale by doing Ukmviss. aivajn vrtt* io Dr. (Morg* W. Ctmm to oar* tt no PooUm Pron. Panttoe, Mlciuaw. tpoiaotos a toat , 4 e«at (OHDrrfgRL MSt) Let him use a printing outfit mywtf. B toe that partment store, or lettei by PtoefoK one on each strip. Then hoM up lw«, ahowiag the Afferenee to general eontonr er '/t \ y-f \ 1 THE POXtlAC PRESS. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 12, 1962 SEVEN Ponfiac, Nearby Area Depflis • p. m. tiawtnwr i |fc». HorttaMr (UDlu Ifay) Cm. M. o( 4Sa Lot« IMm, Watwtonl. 4M Sumky at tht Mn. Springer "(Arine ' Mm) ■nMaa. «, of 6« Mnride St., Ing a Dag Uimm. died Sunday at St Joaeph Mdrey S“vlca wlB be Md iVniday at lendoa wffl be hrid Tuaeday at foUowli* a la« UhMaa. She waa empkqwd at GcBwat|i Melon Iriiek and Ooaeb. I Kaymond Hutton, T2, of SIW Splov of Pootlae: a Mn. Cbnl Jean Obnaa of Pontiac; a aMer, Mra. Marge SOdae of Kaago Harbor; and two bcetb- PoBtlac Oaneral HoMtal toUoadng a long lllnaao. He waa retired from General Moton Thick and Coach and waa a member of the American LeSlon at Orid. fcrrivon Include hla wife Mary; ion of Ovid: a ah.____________ Dandlaan of Pontiac, and a bralh-er, CUffton of WatUm Lake. Sarvloe win be bald Wedaaaday at S p.ra. from the Huntoon Fit-d Homa. Burial win be In Bfr- LAKE ORION — Mra. Helena berlae, 77, of 141 E. flint St., died e^ today after a brW ID-Iter body la at ASaa’a Pb- beth of Lake Orion. rvice wlU be bald Wedneaday at 1:80 p. m. from flm Sparka-Griffin Funeral Home. Btrtal will be in White Chapel Cemetery. JOHN F. STEWART F. Stewart, M. of MW Saturday at Pootlae General Hoa- mbtr of Ombnl b, . iide tim digfiiaM. Mra. Addlaon OaUay oftatec and Mra. Roy Schaefter of Lorahi, i; alx grandebOdren and a aie-ter, Irma Stewart of Pontiae. 3 p. n. from the SpariorGritfin fteoeral Home. Burial wfll be in Woodlawn Cemetery, Detroit SurelriiE an Ml wtfo A two dbitfitera. Mn. Margaret McDonough and Mn. Ruth Tbp, both of Lapeer; and a aiater. OBOROB R. WBXIAMS CmiON TOWNSHIP — Service for George H. WlUlame, 7S, of TTS Merritt Road, will be at 1 p.m. Wedoeaday at the Voorheea- HAROLO DFRIGHT Harold Upright, O, of 236 North]: Saginaw St., died Saturday at Pontiae General Hoepital following a dan, Mr, WilhaaM died yeatarday at Pontiae Ocnaral Hoqpltal tei lonii« an iUnan of two weeks. He retired from Pontiac Motor Division in 1942. win be held Tueaddy at 1 pjn. from the DoneteonJohno Funeral Home. Burial wOl be ho lac: two RRara, a brother. 19 grandchSdnn and 44 great-grand- BARL B. DtIRENBIlRy Eart B. Duaaabnry, S2, of Ebaaad St, diad Sunday at Growo- Fpraot Walhar, 90, of 36H IVont a . ' —*---------- or. J IF« Dare to Prograu... .Yuan ogo, thu Dontlion-Johns Fungrol Home dond to build a modtm itaicturu, to lead tha way to bettor furtorol Mivice. To^ os itien, we offer prog-reu — better fodlities, ond more and better equipment. With the new, we also retoin the best of the old—kindness, dignity and completely competent service. (PLm FEOBRAL 4-4S11 0)onelsonr Johns OmOm^PmmSi. m WIST HURON ST. PONTIAC a brief iOneaa. He waa employed by the TeDoar I Donald at home. Ill Waymoutb and Mn. Eva ScragRt both of CoUlnaville, DL. and a brother, Ron of Chicago. by the Huntoon Funeral Home. Arthur E. (Lava E.) Chatflald, 70, locwerty bf Roebaeter. win ba 3 p.m. Wedneaday at the Pixley Funeral Horae. Burial will be la morning at the home of bar daughter, Mra. Richard Heater of Mar-loOowing a brief fllnooa. IS a mendker of the Detroit woriv aid Seventb-I^ tat Church, Detroit. are a fon, Arthur E., Jr., of Etticboro, Maaa.: aeycn gnnd- mmnk.com A. Onry. 70, of lU Nepeering St, wUl.bel0a.m. WeAieadayat the Church of Immaculate Con-rial wiU be in Mount of the Curry Jewelry Ob., Mr. Qiny died yaater ODOnWNAL OBITS PAGE « at hta home aSar a leiwthy be radted at be la WMte Chapel Memorial Ha waa laat employed at Orin- Sundvun htduda a aon, Lyle B. of Pontiae; duet danghters, MTa. IMIta Stayten of Ortanvilla, Mra. Iva McDonald and Mrs. Marvel Hopp, homf ei Pontiae. Also vlvlng Is a'brother William R. of Service win be held Wednenlay at 3:90 pm. from the Puraley Funeral Home. Burial wiU be in Oak Hill CLARENOB V. WABD Oaronce V. Ward, 9S. of 3Sn Shoata Drive, Waterford Toamahip, died early this morning In darka-ton of a heart attadt. He was a delivery truck driver for The Detroit fbee Praaa. I body ta at the Shi Goyette Funeral Home, Oarkston. Surviving besidea his wife Ethel B., are hla mother, Mrs. Maui I of Detroit and a niaoa, Diana Sakoteke at home. TROY - Service for Mrs. Cart (Berdce) WoircO. », of 1041 E. a Road, will ba 1:30 p.m. Wedneaday at the Price Funeral Horae. Burial wU be in Roeeland Park Ceraeteiy, Berkley. Mn. Worrell died* yesterday at nUiam Beaumont Hoepital, Royal Oak, foUowtng a heart attack. Howard D., of Royal OaK; and Firit Sgt. Richard of Tacoma Waah.; two daugfaten, Mn. Jimmie Ulman of DefroH and Roae of Lapeer; a bratheb and 13 ANNUAL SPRING 20% to 40% DISCOUNT on Ihw PURCHASE of YOUR CEMETERY MEMORIAU PHurs iRShMle UWoHrs, Heiwl CendRi R»d DeRuery leyoRP CeewlRiy Uk AiM Iw SOKT YOUR MEMORIAL FROM OUR DISPUY- SEE WHAT YOU BUY 10B MONUMENTS 450 MARKERS On Display WHhlvoiyONgr ar’foi«,irwiiar4”hidi SALE nUCEDot.... •3900 aWlai«,Wwldai,ii”Mgb SALE nuaDot.... ^9^ As Shown Abovh Ov«r*AII Length 4-ft., 4-in. OvoC"AII Height 2»ft.f 8*in. ON SALE AT *265“ OHiefg NomSMSAO to $6Sa00 OompeHiioii Murkors- 'IS In Stock SSlMsaf$78-$9S-4110 CtHpariM SfaMl Faetfl laifctrf 06^ LONG, 10» THICK, 1A*t HIGH ACT NOW dispiqy b completn oiid Mumorlai Day erection te assured. Sole ends May 30th, ONLY •125“ Chock Our Prkoe.wn Your Brofisu NuuSs Buy Your Mumoriol Frqm a Locql^ Rusponiiib.lt .firm . ,u« A Compony thcit is pormonont Hsoff. Wo oroct n^moriols in any ctmo^. OPHCi 4Rid PLANT OPPM DAILY • AJk to ■PJS.-iUM. 1 to JPAL ^ PtMTUCGMIOnAIUniEGa Ma I. UONAKIR 4 SONS OUR S2«d YEAR R6G Oakland Avoniia Pontiac 17, Mtch. Phono FB 2-4800 Crisp new cottons to win her heart 99 Kookie gowns go (to young hearts |9.9 ^99 2^ y dOni fown Mojud 'Seamless Supreme' nylons 3” prt. 'CHARGE ir 'CHARGE IT' CHARGEir find bar fovorita itylai in our huge lalactioni All lura to pleoM; they'rf mode of carefree cotton and the Wendt the prefert. Her moit wont-'ed colort, too ... in tolidi or checkt. Sixet for oil in the group. Priced to low, you'll wont Mverotl Sl4w her you're hep to tier Kookie toilet... give her thii nny Horla-puln print ileeveleti coot with lotid color gown; or tha gown ' alone in the Harlequin print. So novel-bound to bo the hit of any p| portyl Woih 'n weor cotton. S-M-L. Be o tweetheorl! GIva har 3 poirt of her favorite nylont-ond o whlmtl-col ituHed toy for her bedi Nylont oHer flowleM fit, greater tnog re-tittonce for longer wear, Wegont loco topi to help itop garter runt. Short, overage, loll; Sliet 814-11. Black patent plastic ^ bags are big news in spring ... idealgifts 499 'CHARGE IT' She'll leva tha Wg newt intide, fqol Some ' hove comb ond mirror; neat pihtt Iningj pocketi to keep keyi, etc. In eoiy raoch. Many ityUtI Mg anough for. avarytWng . tha copiai; amort anough for Eoiter poroding, too. Chooto yourt tedoyl ’Bag rriet$ Ptu* VS. T** raOUftALDUPT, STOllUS DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS A KIGIIT ^ ^ I THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1962 Practkally all cruda ol t ti «Mcb la suWar. yiBdiem In Content U,S. C^*t Lose EoaKSBiiii Arms Rate Doesn *t Faze Doolittle savm BullHins, Letters, etc. FAST SERVI8EI : CbiiliM LHmtet Sdea : H Oakland n 4-IWl Eack member ot oongreaa la _ dtkd to WnUrte fMr yoottn tor appotatmeat to the UJ. MQIIary •oadaaay ol Wert^^oiii eaicli j NEW YORK-Pwvle loces . . . lUnga*. . . Jlnuny QpoMtle^ one Amerl-an not enirried about the coat of the arma race with Russia. "If H'b Juat that, an arms race, » cant loae,” aaya the man who led the Aral raid on Tokyo 20 yean ago come AprO U. "We can keep going iadefinitely ta any work a little harder. But kmg race would mean great hardship for the Russian peopk ' they don't have many tore oomforts as it'ia. “It rnlgM get so loogh tm ttaTwSL Speaking of the Russians, the National Aeronautical and Space Administralion wishes they'd knock down our Explorer I GOLD CREST kind of contest like that, an people would be called «pon to I ks al Isaisfc eay |l's eraeked hp to be leTs never be ' It won’t Slop Its eternal yack-W- . Exploaer I put the UJ. in Una satellite race after several hamlUating failures. Khrushchev laqghed at Us alae. three and a half pounds, and was called a grapefruit. But rent to work In a perttH orbit ,000 miles out and, thanks to its ing back by radio ever since. It All 7 Men Feared Lost as Tanker Plane Falls f, Beimuda W — A exploded In the air and erasbed Into tile Atlantlo Friday. An Air Force spokeamnn said ot the erew-iniw balled out. But an nlr-sea search I was lanncbed. Economy Oil Co. GuH Ustribirton for Oakland County Safe and Snug GULF SOLAR HEAT heating oil! There's nothing quite like that ostured satisfied feeling that parents get from kno'ving that "th« little one" is bedded down to slumber — sqfe and snug in OOD TOWN BONUS COUPON |l Lan|. 20.Ounc. Loovm BREAD 1 III 2 loaves 11^ |3| Limit 2 Ooapon—None to Pealets ar Minors, ispifet Feb. 14, 1962. w WITH COUPON Fresh — Lean—Tender STEAK «tp' Fresh—Lean — Tender Fmrt,Ntokery Neste __ SUCED BACON FARM FRESH CHICKEN PARTS! NloSondT^ CHICKEli BACKS X- WINGS 4 LEGS ? BREASTS 10*u. |2tfc |4R jSR Evaaorotad All Grinds MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE Hart Brand 1-LB. VAC. ,j:aii. ELBERTA PEACHES W PEOPLE’S FOOD TOWN FOOD MARKETS SUPER MARKETS ■ ormssATiA wm ■ efWfAjx^fu. ■ e#|M 7 SAYS A WriR ■ \ ^ I wtfc—li'.M, I I B 465 E. PIKE ST. eriMvAiXMiifu. I 700 AUBURN ST. e#bl 7 SAYS A WlfR * AJUOSFJa. i HE FON I IAC PRESS jkONDAV/ FEBRUAHV Tif^stonc Trial Seeks Answer fo$55-Million Question BRAKE AND FRONT END SERVICE WASHINGTON - 1%o U. 8. corporate glanUi ooUlde In a iton, Ttx. oourtnnoi today gaa to waMto wM ite i I to Am ^ ' too Onot tite Mccito flutter raadtet ahtg aa toat m tka a a< twa ptap-Jet Btoetraa . - 14 at Mtotok Tteb. lapt. M, SAtt SBArn MMHaE um. aad • al Trfi dtjr, M.. Hie oonteatante we Loddwad, r of the huga alrUner, mode oaimot raault unkaa a Aatt la the eiwlne Iteelf breaka. * w a The trial lUdf. adteduled to open today ^ the lUlh 8b|te Die-trict Oourt, involvea a ahtgla suit I- breaks developad at both Buffalo e and TeD City, and that the aever-anoe stemmed frpm rapid roalal Altosn dsntoe IHI wIM amle hdtod fnm sknsnnsRy high designed to show that no part of w fwdd piiitoty raadO Wens* a hraak to the Audi (toehatoeW. the ladaedsB gear has wbtob toads — etaar air tortaliam la toa aam at M OW, sad atoa- tha engWs could have played a ■< rale in the two aeddente. ** lw«fa the prspsdsr tram pllat amltoBaiton feanMIng la A CAB spBkesmaa aald toe ahtg as tost as ths tarilais). aa ossnitoibii, Mghspiid dtoa teet raealls were hotog stadled, s| It wfl present evldanee that the at todtoto. hot deettaed to egnminl on w abaft damage found In the twy ao- Hw CAB Itadf absolved thf im- whotom toy dtepnved the whH « cidents resulted from either Im-MCtdamnn or violent mansava that took place BEFORE danme occunred. gtoee toemeelvea to Ms rapscts on the two accidents. tt add wMrt mode developed bmn some prior demate In the mode thaeay. ^ "Aa of now we'i* codvlnced that ^ whirl mode caused thp neddenta,” * ♦ * ontboard aaeaUe atfuoture hot he said, "but tt'e sy to the eeurts AOieon engfaieers are not oveo oouid Bot ptnpotnt the enact loca- to dsdde the raspoMlbtllty tor convlncod that whirl mode wee ho tion or cause of that damage. what eauaad the whirl mode." volved la ellher accident. •niDon mrr BnuLTg The CAB official emptiaatiiwl Htey pnhably wUI attend to AUlaon has been pouring date that no matter what the Houston 1 Mmw that toe Ktoetoa's wli« from rsosiit teals into the CAB, Jury decides, in effect It wiU be' voting on paat Msloty and not the safety of Um faectra m It la oper-lay. re positive that the rood-program (|2S mlllioa jvaa. •'We are ** tflrattmi rm ways the lattor operator of oast id the S3-S«allUoa aircraft Sirn nNOE ON BMCLTS beea deanaei ef the -tow'’ aaM to have cawed Wo Beltoto aad TM CHy disastsas a phtw firtstoiit NEW TREADS Complete Set of TubeloM Whitewalls QmNmTntht«miUUih NmtoaasddTrsds^Tlrw Couple Took Prisonor !on Tholr First Dot* Jubt say "Charge if . , . buy on (‘asy term Minnosofa Prof Deod wlwr* your Mbr kvya MtES H 148 W. HURON rs 2-0251 partment, died Saturday. John L Ltwis li 82 GRAND OPENING SPECIALS OPEN MON., THURS., FRI. TIL 9:00 P.M. Jhk A: If You Don’t Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! 1 075 VV Huron St Phone 334-9957 PINNir S GREAT Hie Quicks are asking tSOO,Ollp ifendants, but Branlff nlao la i cnM pialntlff. The airline has pantos and alrilnss totel about |S6 ndlltai, but moat of them may ! oa the results of this single Itrlal. ★ ♦ e ring Fabric The Civil Aeromutics Board of-tlclally has Mamed both soddei ion whirl mode, which roughly c be compared to what happens a gyroscopic top begto to * * w In the enae of the Xtoctraa, the leome weakneas hi the atructure that holdf the outboard engines In AKRON, Ohio on - The first time Naacy Carter and Oi took a pltooaer to tha Unas Slate Hoqdtol lor tha Ofaniaal la Recently they were married. i But they are eonUnuii« their Jobe — Nancy aa a sherttrs deputy on ilea and CharlM ai a deputy in lummtt GDdPly ahertfra yail ST. PAUL, Mlrni. (AP)-James B. Fitch, 7S, profeaaar em and termer head ef the Univenrity WASHINGTON (AP) - John L. Lewis, 0_________ . lunion leader, calibrated hit OBd birthday today. TKN THE PONTIAC PfeESS, MONDAY. FEBRUARY 12, German Cara Symbols of Fear f. Dominicans Remember Tyranny the Slkonky wU MU teit u A taibMiler mtty m.____ In Oregon. The twla^urMnc c*r> _ have a payload capacity fld more than eight tons and be oapahte ei haistiBC a lead at a hever^ hci|d>t of 300 feet. unQ CBrnon b 1 W aeent. W1 d MMeads toft automMe tiNSlthat of the mbbsr noer of eyathetk! nih- eawe the natorialvla J her withoat lahrio. mstolanes to the tirse may be Ihnsh abraatoa Is saM to he hstlir than [toe tasUs. SANTO DOMINGO. Dominican employed. Many of them go bon-gry. They live in one-room shacks and their children beg in the streets. * a But there is one tl^ you oouldnt give them. You couldn't force them to take a certain German-made car. TMs make af ear was i by seoret peBoe and opies ■ his own once he’s been branded a calie (pronounced ka-lee-aye). RMC VIOUENCX Some of the automobiles are used by poUce, who risk being objecto of violenoe every time they venture out in than. Describing use of the little cars under TTujiUo, a t«^ driver said: **lt yea hsppsail to be Artotog along a dark lead sanM night. ebno Rafael L. TngiOe, noted last May to. For a private individual sesB one of these automobiles now is to Invite disaster by being singled out as a former calie A Dominican's life c s to be papers Were t id saw ana af them, yen'd tty ‘If another one popped up In front of your car, you'd try to cut off and outrun them. If you lost, you'd probably disappear and never be seen again. "niat's how things were during the last yeara of the tyrant.” Another illustration serves to pen pal eat by tbs of dans poWleal and eOMr sneb gr torse el ansa aal splas. These so-called informers find It even more difficult to get a Job than the other 400,000 or so unemployed. They may be spat stoned. They may get beaten insensible 1th long, flat boards by as many as 30 or 30 men and bo»e. Their homes may be ransacked, or they may sbnply be murdered. mOMA ItNUUOWB The stigma is with them wher-ver they go, whether the dccuaa-tkms bo true or not DaOy a Suddenif an eventnf gown turn$ a ItUlt girl into a goung woman,,,.one ot gouth'e warm, magie nwmenU foil'll treaeuro—and want to let other$ enjog, too. Uttte thlnge are Mg newe to thoee who love gou. . Phone the Folks Long Distance Why not call tonight? You can dial most slbtion calls direct. If you call person-to^person or collect, you can help speed your calls if you give the operator the . Code of the place you’re oallmg. Michigan _ ^ Bell Telephone Compang with the hei ly to toga avan. The tyranny under which Dominican ppopla lived for 31 yearn ■eema. to remain wiili' them In many ways. Boy-Slayer Yenik Gets Life Sentence _____ by Luce County Circuit Judge George S. Baldwin, dr ★ ★ Yenik. fO-year-old Flint auto worher, was convicted by a jury Jwi. 31 in the fatal dmoting of Mlehasl Riefamond, 14. laM July Before announcing tha aenfance, Baldwin baked Yenik if he had any remark!. Yenik maintained Authoritlee saitf Yenik would be imprisoned initially at Marquette Priaon In tha Upper Peninsula. State Men Joke About Weather at Alaska Post FT. WAINWRIGHT. Aladui iB-Men from Michigan doing Arctic tests for military vehicles testified the weather can be rough. Wlnda of 70 miles an hour tempciatHrsg,ff 62 degreea below nsro. . . . ★ ★ A The Army Ordnance Tank Auto- expertenoea of Charles G.' Mar-shall, 41, of Groase P(Me Woods and Dr. Chailea Bruce Lee, 40, ot Highland Park, among oth^ on dutys / \ Dr. Lee, a human engmeerlng expert, aaid he waa surprised at the reaotton of men to the rigorous climate. He said men were living to tenta with the mercury 90 below and "joking about it” A ★ A Marshall and De Lee have been at Ft. Greeley. Alexander Hayes, 45, of Warren, and TIlMr.Czako, 38, of Detroit, are at Ft. Waln- Ex-DSR Chiefs Bid for Pay Denied DETROIT - A request by former Detroit Deportment of Street Railways general manager Leo J. Nowicki for |17,000 to cash to make up for 176 vacation days he didn’t take during hla 14 years Friday. Assistant corporation counsel Vance G. Ingalls ruled that Nowicki waa entitled to pay tor as many unusued days as accumulated In his last year of employment. That is 20 days, worth sU|d>tly over |1 JOO. BAZLEY MARKETS SPECIAL FOR TUESDAY ONLY! LEAN-MEATY SPARE-RIBS 19^ old fashioned ■■ BULK He SAUERKRAUT Wit />dvywdv/j>i UlkMKpoot SALE mm ’’uiii w I $n-ii-cvu AirroMim wahr TUP-OF-THE-LIl PUSH BUTTON While They Last! \ Safe for All Fahrice PUSHiBUTTON AU Operation! “Magie Mix*^ Filler Dispenser! Rinse and'Bleach Dispenser! Extra “Cold Wator Wash!” New Wash ’n’ Wear Cycle! lUgminated Control Panel! Inrludrs Iminrtiialr Delivery-lailallalion-l-Ymir Expert Service, and f all S-Year Warranly! 00 With TRADE RCA Whirlpool means the finest of Home Laundry EquLt>menb—and Imperial Mark II is the very best of RCA Whirlpool. When we price it so low~why accent lAs? It’s an exceptional value, but our Quantity Is Limited —hurry in now, or Phone Your Order! RCA WHIRimL BARCAIR NEWEST 1962 - S\LE PRICED 2.RPRED10-III. AUTOMATIG WASHER-^ m WITH IHADE e 2 CYCLES-2 SPEEDS e FILTER AND DISPENSER e WATER LEVEL CONTROL e 3 TEMPERATURES NO DOWN PAYMENT DELIVERED;,-INSTA^LED (Suds Miser Optional Extra) MODEL HA-91 m DIVER wmm NEWEST 1962 RCA WHIRLPOOL Full 10-Lb. Capacity and handy topside Lint Trap. Satin smooth D^ing Drum . .. Won't tangle or harm even the most delicate ^ 2-CYCLE DRYING-Adjusuble to Any Type Fabrie UD-2i DELIVERED-INSTALLED-ALL READY TO tSE-1 YEAR FREE EXPERT SERVlCE-90 DAYS SAME AS CASH! Open Monday and Friday EvefiinRs Until 9:00 P.H. - d00l> HOUSEKSIKi OF PONflAC 51 West Huron Street FE 4-1555 INSTANT CREDIT-No Money Down or 90 \Days Same as Cash! ^ I1-. fHsB PONTIAd PRESS. MQyPAY> FEBRUARY la, 1062 liLEVElSr ofi Board Members sHto NL *m», emdrtivi dine-r the Pontiec Urhen L^igue, meAen nominated by the 9 ent<«Mrd, to be voted on at uvAl dinner raaetlng to be heU Fri^. reb. le. at Pontiae North* enSfli^ School. Nkoiilnatad Ut teeaia «o*m MM- W. B. Chny. IM daekaea M-t Dr. John ■a^ raid, m Undo VMa Ava.| Andrew OKaeA, Md Mohawk Building Jobs Are Bigger; but Fewer in Pontiac B pemite heued tor a total of “l.dBhi - — - Cbmtniction and repair Jobe hi Doodae aiere latfer, but fewer in number durtiif the tint nwoft of Belaney. 1» W. Huron St., and the Rev. J. Alien Parker, 1« Franklin Blvd. Caone W. Romney, prefUeot ofikeoedtat IR CM r. Att, boildiaB American Motoro C^., and vine prMdwt M Michigan oa ........ ha |W PlSufM Jar fhtB laoMh of ary, reMkapd tedey by **' '‘-~ I to mtf m,n$. henoea oaah.WMBth but value ef tha hoMa bUt droi. ermn ISJIS fat Paaember to |»,on fat Janany. Officials of 5 Fairs Agree to Plan Circuit LouisviLLi;, sy. « - ummt an of Ova Btojor fain fat 0TO aOtoa , aMuad Friday to mako plane to] tom a elreutt th«. would 1“ wad IS of naMw ■ paira. Fl h^vrlh ef I aMahdtoaa and ro- ifu State Fair Commlaaioo, and Walter Cteodman, fiaeral or of the MleMfan Slate F rtetor of the Kintooky State Fair. Bratettf aunaated eisninK up a Kantueln ht^ laat year, tor the propooSB fair dreutt. ★ ♦ ♦ no repmnnlatlvoa aireed to aaat asiin March ST at fidtotepw-la. ■ Ateent thoee attendtaf watt 3> aaph Xurite, chalman of tha Mtotolaanler. Woman, 91, to It Buriod; Mothor Svrvivts of 107 GREDtSBORO, NC. (API-A j han today. Amons her ew-Ivora to her mother, and 107. Mn. A.^ Chatevana, U. died hi a nurahif heme Ihuiaday. Her mother to Mn. Grivhi Pondry. lOT, of Yadkhivlllo, If yean her OAS Uktiy to Drop Ax on Cubo Wodnoiday Wi^lNGtON (AP) >> Formal ouat^ of Cuba, toom the Mar-American eyatinn to cipeotod Wedneaday at a moetliic of the Oouncll of the Ommaatton of unerican Statea. * A A The hemiephen'B foreign mht- Pinta del Erie, Uruguay, diroei-ed the oouncll to expel f nltt Cuba. Double Double van Stamps h»free food wHh Diily Double Coupons No.3&4 Kngor towers load cost**bvt novOr cuts quelUy! Get Extra Top Value Stamps during DAIliir DOUBLE DAYS Get gifts faster! ox «*PATTRRNr* KITCHEN WALL. » \HB PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. 't’EBRUARY H. 1968 Ingenues Fete New Members I Club of Pontiac _________ V membcra and otficcn with a formal ban- quet Sunday at the Dosiax Roud home of Joanne Stait. New Ingenuea a» Michele Morrow, Mickey Chappell, Jean Van Develder, Loll Wii- combe, Inei WiM^ombe, Sharon Bradihhw, and Nancy Lee. i ♦ ♦ Laraln Baril. wUl eerve ai president foe the year, to be aiaiited by Janice Golnes, vice preiident; Joanne Stark. recordinK lecretary MaMha Rahja. correeponding lecre-tary: and Edna Isenburg, Irea-lurer. Oetgolng o f f,l ce r ■ ^ elude Sue HUU, Sue Dorman. Sue Lee, Marilyn Sharette and Lynda Qnwley. reipectively. Each new member received a white roee, the club flower, durii« the banquet which preceded a formal InitUtlon Society Sets* Birthday Fete Womens Section Abby*g Readtfrg Think So Potato Cure for Warts? By VAN BVRIM DEAR ABBY: TeU the gill Who got rid of her wart by what aooe people would cill hocue-pocui that 1 believe her. IhadapNV-er bfd of 1 DEAR ABBY: Don't laugh. When I wap a child I had a wart on my little finger. 1 wae told fay wn old la^ to ateal a tdg fran a Arieiid, mb it How le the world treittaig your Unload your proUeme on Abby, care of 'Hw Pontiac le 4ih rag I l^ed Aflar dark. ANOTHER BAFFLED For Abby'i booklet, "How to riavo a Lovely Wtddlng.’’ eend SO cenU to Abby In can of Tht Pontiac Prow. Wefl, I did it and In two Festival of Culture Opens alMSUO Today XI Chapter. Delta Kappa Gamma Society (kdemation-al honor aod^ of women teachen) wttl hold ita annual birtliday luncheon tfarch S at Devon GaUei. Outgoing Ingenues Club president and vice pfesi^ dent Sue Hiltx and Sue Dorman (left to right), discuss upcoming events with newly elected officers Lorrain Baril and^ Janice Goines, president and vice President respectively. All new officers, along with seven new memberf were honored at a formal ^utquet Sunday at the home of. Joanne Stark on Desiax Hoad. week! the warta dliappeaitd.' And they e WARTLESS FMirC KalWw.*^i fMftnan ediy Ronald Miller rf PantiM ■paclallM, opened the eecond cry, ai Noted Sculptor Defends Fenmle dear ABBY: If I told ypu all the degree! I had yon wmdd think I was bragging, but I only mention thla ao you won’t think I'm a nut. I have had experience with curing warts with a potato and Intematkmai i of the eociety and a former teacher in the Pontiac achoota. Dr. Ola B. HlUer wlU be the speaker. Tho atate president, Mrs. FTorine HaU, will attend. Guecte will be preaent from Kappa. Lambda and Alpha BeU chapters. Says Wo^en Creative as Men Unit Meets The Mayflower Group of the First Congregatlooal Oairch were Thursday luncheon guests of Mrs. H. E. Hotchkiss of Chandler Street. w w * Mrs. Dexter Craig gave devotions and Mrs. Amo Hulet presented a reading on Abraham Lincoln. GuesU were Mm. Otis Case and,Nancy Dudley. The next meeting wUl be held In the church. By OAY PAULEY UPl Woroen’e Editor NEW YORK-Next Ume the party alumps, here’s a aure-flre method for livening It up. Proclaim for all to hear that ^ women have *ist as much / creative wblllty as men. / : Is, you’llbe I by numerMs The betting shouted down ------------- opinions on « subject which through the centuries. , One t h e o ry bound/ to be heard often la that men far outnumber the wom« as great compoaers, great anleta and great architects because there Just aren’t that ^any women Aether theory is that woman already is the greater enrator — the bears the chtl-dm. And. by so doing, she /kuftidently satisfies the creative instincts. Still another argument ia that nature blessed women equally with the men in the ability to write great music,/paint great pictures. The men have Just made It harder for the women to arrive. The argument goes on and on, without any final word. But h’s fun. * that he be half a doten other thii«s. If he works at home, as the house running, and the "But the woman is wife, mother, housekeeper, family chauffeur . . . then artist." "Maybe there’d be more era, sculptors, if It were woman’s nature to live for herself ... be so dedicated. But you galleries in European and United SUtes citiee. The lateM one la scheduled for New Yoik!s Pelngartcn'Gallery be-glnrilng.,March I. ^ The Bcnilplreee works in wood, stone, metal or plastic. ♦ W When she waTacuip^ his royal highnera Prince William of Sweden, the prince kept ducking his head Into a book. "I was having trouble getting the face,’’ said the sculptress, "artd fbially picked up It does work. Only I cut the poUto In half and nibbed my wnit with it and buried the potato, cut side up. Within three weeks, my wart disappeared. Everyone I told this to got the same iw- Internatlpnale,’’ at M8UO today with a talk, "The Crisis^ of Berlin. This levenHlay internationBl fete includee other lectures to which the pubUc ia invited, a 12th C e n t u r y Oiina* pl^. "Lady Precious Stream," and an elght-houP' program next music win be used. Gall Avery and Carol Van-aallo, both «f Royal Onk, are in charge at the internatloiial fashion show fanturiag 1| "bcautifnl nnthantic em turoea" M8UO students, fad-' nlty wives and cMldien will df the modeling. A BEUEVER /aycee Women Meet Pontiac Junior Chamber of Commerce Auxiliary held Its monthly meeting st Rotunds Iim, Pine Lake. Past pretidento of the group were honored guests. Attending were Mrs. Leslie Lang-foid, Mn. Donald Weddle, Norman O’Brien; Mrs. Forest £ 1 w e 11,*^ Mrs. Don Wilson, Mrs. Joe Mouse, ¥«• Elmef Johnson, Mrs. Leslie Hotchkiss, Mrs. Don Anderson and Mrs. William HDtz. , ★ ■ * ♦ / Robert twnpllrt. nsslstnny prosecutor of Oakland Cou^ ty. spoke on the "Importai#e of Having a Will" at the pro- gram, for/whlch a Valentine ■ wM carried out in rri white. Mrs. Clyle Hasklll charge of, arrange-isted by kra. Wil-llis, James Ruhl, .... irvli« Merknvitz. present as guests were )rmer members Mrs. Cramer brtridge. Mrs. Robert Berry, „;ra. AI Hansen and Mrs. Ar-/men Googasian and a new / member. Mrs. John Salow. The group formulated plans for the hayride and party to be held at Mrs. Weddle’s home in ^arch and a dance slated in June with Mrs. Richard Templeton, chairman. And, 11 you need someone to speak convincingly on the subject, invite Arllne Wingate to the party. IUOCE88FVL 8CULPTOE Miss Wingate is 124 pounds of energy, with blue-green eyes, red hair and n low-regls-ter voice like Lucille Balls’. Miss Wingate happens to be one of the nation’s most suc- . Kiss Wingate manages to fill DEAR ABBY: Please don't think I’m crazy but I got rid of a wart when aoroeone asked if they could "buy ” it from me for a nickel. We Jtat shook hands, I took the nickel, and sure enough, the wart went away. Sincerely yours. MINNIE WWW DEAR ABBY: Hie resident On TusKlay MSUO students will meet two African stndenU from Michigan SUte Unh«T-sily to discuss current and future African problema. SET DOKUmorf ^ MSUO faculty members will participate in a panel discussion M "America’s Respoml-bilitles as a World Leader" Wednesday evening. Feb. 14. at 7:30 p.m. la the Gold Room of MSUCTs Oakland Center. Dr. Lowell Ekiund, asMclate A Gourment Inlernationqf, Buffet Dinner, international snacks and a variety show are also part of Sunday’s pragranv Dinner reservations must ha made In advance at the MSUO dean of Btudente office. pink-lacquered nails look as if they’d never touched chisel or butane torch. "I Just use polish to hide what’s beneath,’’ she said. "Do I think men are more creative than women? No!,’’ said ihe sculptor. "I Just think It’s tougher for a woman. HA8 OTHER DUTIES •if father is the artist of the family, he’s let alone to be Just th&t. Society doesn’t demand FAMILV SVMPATHEnO "But I have a family sympathetic with my time," she said in an interview at the family apartment where one of her two studios is located. The other Is In the summer home at East Hampton, .N. Y. Miss Wtogate In private life is Mrs. Clifford Hollander, wife of an Invmtment banker, mother of a grown son. and grandmother K n boy, aged 4H. A native bl New York, the sculptress studied at Smi.th College and with a couple of sculpting's greute — Alexander Archipenko and Alfeo Faggl. She has been sculpting tor 26 yean, she said. Jules Bache, baidcer and prt collector, sponsored her Brat exhibition. NUMEROUS EHUmnONg There have been numerous exhibits since, at museums or ,____________ rould.you mind sitting up straight? 1' can’t see you properly.’ ’’ "My dear gtri," royalty answered, “why didn’t you say ing to exerdse his subconscious niiiid for reliel of bodily ills has bsen recognized by medical science tor several gener- An address on "Tlie European Common Market" will be given Thursday at 13:S0 p.m. iiy OsrIOB Tbro, manager of the world trade department of the Detroit Board of Com- CRANCELLOR TO SPEAK Chancellor D. B. Varner will be the main speaker Sunday afternoon. "Culture Internationale’' is being sponnared by the university’s Aipociatk» of Women Studentn. Dr. Mary A. CUsack, dean of women stu-ddiU and AWS adviser Is director. Laurec Webb of Utica Is chairman. Evelyn Adams, Lake Orion, la AWS prasldent Mrs. Walter Reuther and Mrs. Robert VtnderKloot of Rochester are members of ths sdvi-I Chancel- Sorority Planning March Instollotion It is called "sutq soggestion" —which la vriiy the wart disappeared. It is neither voodoo M. D. Mrs.. James S. Hudson Jr. opened her Sylvan Lake home recently to members of Beto Omega Ompter, Lambda CM Omega Sorority. Pledges initiated were Mn. Wayne Magnan, Bin. Martin > McLaughlin and Roma Neph-ler. Fornul Installation is scheduled tor March 9. DEAR ABBYi Why didn’t you tell that stupid reader that the STRINO she tied around her wart cut off the blood supply and IdUed it, and the piv ti^ she buried had nothtaig to do with it? How can anyone with any sense believe that potato hooey? NOT STUPID The exciting climax of “Od-ture Internationale" comes Sunday when Oakland Crater Is open to the pnbUc team 11:00 s.m. to 7 p.m. Vahmble art objecto, rare books and costumes from all over the world will be displayed. Films about foreign countriet and In-tercultural reintioiia will be TO PBESENt PLAY At 1:30 a traditional Chinese play, "Lad^ Precious Stream.” will be ptesentod by sutdents lor Vainer. Other student chairmen are Jeffrey Nickora of Huntington Wooito; Peter Irwin, Summit, N. J.; Richard Garlscn. Pontiac; Mary Stewart, Rochester; Dang Xich Viet Nam David Welih. Royal Oak; Bruce Plaxton, Fetndalc; Sally Shunck, Waterford; Michael Deller, Detroit; Marilyn Andei^ ■on. Bloomfield Hills; Lyime Humpimeys, Royal Oak; William Hoke, Birmingham and Sandra Pi^ Metnbcra of the MSW) Foundation Scholarship Committee wlU act M boateaaes. To Address Child Assn. ' Donald K. Oabora will be guest speaker at the annual Association for Childhood Ed-ucstton dinner meeting and guest night MR. OSBORN ogy at Emory University and his master’s degree at the State University of Iowa. He is working on his Ph.D. degree at Wayne Ftate University. * ' ★ * * He is a member Of Sigma Kl. National Association of Nursery Education, ACE International. His book "Creative ActMtiee" co-authored with Dorothy Haupt is in its second edition. Numerous articles tearing his by4tne have appeared in national magazines, i Dr. and Mrs. Dana Whitmer will be guests of honor st the dinner. Personal News July vows are planned by Carol Elisabeth Lehman whose parents Jjehmans of Alberta Drive ^ have announced her engbgement to James Hughes. Her fiance*s parents are Mn and Mrs,, Garland Hughes < of West Yale Avenue. CAROL EUZABETH LEHM/fS The youth of Christ Lutheran Church Joined young folks from 11 other Lutheran churches around the sUte at a winter retreat at East Tawas this past wwkend. Attending from the local church were the Olek wrgs, counselors, BlU WUton, Janet Usluger, Jerry and Nancy Johns. Merrily Weber. Gary Trueblood. ^n, Rlstilna Wlggr BlU Noble, Anne Green, Cindy Bchutow, Paula LucreUa and Wanda Flenef, Gerrl Cunningham, Lenny Nyberg, Terry SaUsbury. Mark Bytogton, Madalyn Webber and MUton Valdivia. ★ ★ ★ The CUfford Cochranes observed their silver wedding anniversary February 3 In their new home on Pelton Road, Drayton Plains. Buffet supper wae served from a done in sUver and aquamarine after an evening of music and dancing. PontUe couples present Included the Hugh Fentons, "*Se" liilfensr Earl LaClairs. From ^ayton Wooda ware the Robert Pattons m»d Arfhur Purdys with the Jack Rolflfa and J. W. Sheetses from Drayton Plains. The Carl WUsons came from Dtarbwn and Mr. and Mrs. John «yes and Jaaaa Ballant from OrtonvUle. Mrs. James DovUn of Wood Haven, N.Y., vdio attended- the recent Sapelal^Roberts teeddini. in Avenue United PresbyterlMi Church, wUl be the houseguest of the Stephen Sapelaks of Wesbrook, AVtaue, through this veek. W ★ ★ ITie Maxlum A. Morrows of Clarkston announce the nof their third child and iwcond daughter, Jan. 31, . Joseph Mercy Hospital. A The baby, named Roeann Marie, Is the granddaughter ' of the Victor Stschlefs of DoVer Road and the Edvrard Morrows of Sloomfleld HUls. , National Beauty Salon with emphasis on a special public service projetA has been declared in Pontiac through Saturday in a proclamation signed by Mayor Philip E. 'Rowston, meting above with (from left) Mrs. Thomas McCleary, Pontiac area chairman for the observance; Mrs. Stuart Croteau of Rochester, president of Pontiac Unit 168, National Hairdressers and Cosmetologists "Association; and Mrs. Nellie Thayer who has been named **Mrs. NBS Week.** Patients to Be QVen lift' by Beauticians In obtesyaiiee spring haire8te,-ahaiapoes.and.. a ‘iMychologlcal Eft that cannot bs measured." Many of the _ .Stmtlar. •'hMjity Bfl" by hairdressers will fafe plhce ■ I week in hospftals and to- fariiM a "beauty Ult" to patients and resldsuts of several aitiea Inatitutioiui this Week-Mn. Rextoid Smith, ehair-. man of the NHCA’a instltutlto-al service program for Pontiac, aimouncril ^t profesatoiial cosmetologists of Oakland County will viatt the Oakland County Medical Care FadUty.'^ Oakland County Tuberculosis Sanatorium, Oakland County Chlldren’i Home and Pontiac Stote Hospital to give new * beds, wheel chain or kutitutiona tor s^any yann, stod Mn. Smith. "mpee the NCHA's pubUe Jbrvice obeerviiice began with >lational Beauty Salon Week 12 yean ago, doctors, nurses and ices will be rendered this week. Carlson, Aubuni Hrights, pubv Ecltyr Mrc Ebrt Bailey, At^ ‘ burn Heights, irdfafe; aniiU Mn. Stuart Croteau, RpcbewC ter, president of the Pmtiao unit 168, NHCA. ---------------^ Mayor Phihp Rowston has signed a proclamation for the obaervance in Pontiac. •ut the nation have had high |pEire tor the progiwn which out the feeling ot many psychologista who believe good grooming has a direct relation-£ip with patients’ mental nn-look," Mn. Smith added. Cbmndttee chairmen f«r beauty service in Pontiac area are -Mn. Thnnaa McCleary, NBS week; Mrs. Smith, special eveiata: Mn. Handd Woody, re- < ports; Mrs. Oscar Sutton of Rochester, wetiare; Mrs; Ue Hairdreaaers and cOametolo-gists throughout Michigai^ ' neighborbig states and Canada-' alao will be in Detroit IhrougC Wedtoes^ for the 23rd annuM Narth^bl^can Beauty an^. Fashion Slow at awraton< Cadillac Hotel. Dale Strebel o£ Atlanta; Ga., ‘ noted ■ SAUI INTERNATIONAL STERUNC FAVOmE MnON SAU ■hoot and dw daauiat they niuit do to foot. 1 heard from aiany* of Biy Madere eoaoeminc thlaj and think you wUt bt Intareeled in eeelnK tome of tho oommente; ♦ ★ * "I w«it Aopping the ottier day Hm miauto I eald, ‘oan»-_ _ th« „ lalruaB weal When I oomplalned about extremely pointed pm, he looked at me curioudy though I were eomething from a dlttant planet, while the other lady cW tornart were ihoclnd that I would dare defy tte dktatee of elyle to that extent. Whif waity. buy a set A tarvlea for 4, A ar • paa* pla...aoea fraia OSW to I7S« oa yaar pardiaea. COmniTE 0PM STOCK SiUC1KMATM%0TP Ideal liwete Min and odd on le yeer lervlca In ene AflwNknafySAlfMal VUWRIiVS PARK FREE DOWNTOWN Tfe* aion wa«r« Quatf CnaW F. N. PAUU CO. 28 Waat Hnroa FE ^7257 Oqch, Ciy the Women Points Ruining Their Feet BT JOUmra LOBMAN neighbor and my daugb-lbeCoK there were pokilad fee Not long ago 1 wrote an artldllw would like to jota me la eay- •**•••'*, extremely' potntad-toethat we lim oorae (almoet he daauua they mutt i___» ...“W powaa«oe noa, i Talet of a Tub Mac the Ifidda Agee, gm bathing at the homee ol the rt le eald to have been eo gay th h baeansa a tourlat attraettea. Aa nyaldaBn played and rabeA-1 icata were eerved to the batbera. I *iha pnblle" waa admittad to ape-1 dal galladfa whtre people who I didn't have mba of their own could I > three poke et ae^ritod. ttoU atator to htna, mr fMl.am feelhw « bit drafly. "WeU, I Anally bought my thoee to now I have four poire of point* ' e caaaal thoea in m deed, my feet arc cncatra In two palrt of ttocUngt while I go about my houadwld choree.” Your DropM CLEANED-PRKSSED Mivi MAIN CLEANERS Md SHliT UOMOgyV I uuMh Lot* at. as tato Suwbva or pinaforel It'e easy to eew of crlip cottoD-opene flat lor speedy Inming. etttch; light a Uttle girt. Pattern 509; trantor of bands; pattern In •toes 2, 4, f. • todaded. Send thirty-Ave cents (coins) for this pattern add 10 centi ' each pattern for Itodasi i h«. Send to Laura Wheeler, care of Tho POnItoe Prem, U4 Needck craft Dept., P.O. Box 18L 014 Chdaca StatioB. New York U, N.T. Print plainly pattara it bar, aame, address and tone. M/hCs For Your 'King of Hearts' Allow UI to Assist you In chooslnji from our wide, selection . . . Dress Shirts L_fcem^4B Designer Neckwear framtRJO Hand Crerfted Belt from *340 HURON ot TELEGRAPH Nton, HHTt.'I'ri- ’ “ Tvw.. Wd, Sm. 10to ^, them wider or longer or both. At a remit, they are rubbing my toes caiiatog conp, and rtmkig my heele caualBg oaOouses." ★ ★ w "Ihday you Mt my great pet peeve, the extremely pointed toe. Let me tdl you srhat they hern done to tow. My Mtblg too new actually It overtopping my neyt lac. "Anythlmr tod eewhe totwto bring hack a awwal feet thtaagh 'Tt'p time eemeone took .an Interest io our toet. No wonder we cannot walk to the comer grocery any mote.’N ‘T did not develop oorts flwi Readers sound off^ with pointed remarks in •*Why Xirow OUF' about the uncomfortable, pain-producing, pointed - toed shoes in response to a former article by Josephine bowman on the sub-/«*• _____________________ toea tvra In and a exerctoee fbr week arches, aend a atampadf, selfwddreased envelope with your request for leaflet No. 14. Addraaa Joaephlne Low-|man In care of The Pontiae Proas. 0 SPEQAL o PEBMANENTS Limited Time Only! {arrs? »6“ CHILDBEN’8 PBRMANKNT8 RBO. riM, NOW IS.N hiUetlef tiFl* Md mA KENJALO’S BEAUTY SHOP for f aetkor IslormeUom CeO er Wrilei M. E. DANIELS DISTtfCT MANACIft MODERN WOODMEN Open TonigM Until 9 P.M. /JAiS ms S'® *#.•40 .•:•# w'to.ao.* •• BLOUSES...................$4te$9 SUPS.................! $5 to $17.95 PEHICOATS.............$4 to $10.95 ' HOSIERY...............$I to $1.55 SCARVES..'... ......$2 to $5 SWEATERS......... $6.95 to $39.95 HANDBAGS...........$8*0 $19.95 aUTCH BAGS .............. $4 to $6 C50WNS.................$6 to $18 ROBES..............'..$7 to $29.95 40.w:*#yto.*o.' Your Valentine Deserves a Gift from Alvin's!, Gift Wrapped Free .# f 0 •• MINK TRIMMED sweaters.......... $79.95 to'$150 ATOMIZERS ........... $1.50 to $10 JEWaRY....... ...........$3 to $20 GLOVES............... $3 to $22 COLOGNES..............$1.50 to $11 PERFUMES-.--....... . ..ST.iSSto $25 BOUTIQUES..............$2 to $10 BILLFOLDS,............ $5 to $16’ •SLIPPERS .......... i... $4 to $6.50 CIGAREntCASES, ETC. Cl •• #wN frtJRO’Nit TELEGRAPH Nton.. Tkurt., tri. 10 to 9-Tuer., Wed., Sot. 10 to 6 Ji^ MIRACLE MILE 100% Alpaca Canligan GIFT GUIDE! Th# ckuiie nwealer mad# of the moil luxurlpvt of fibers. Rtd, block, whH powder, notvral. Com* , bridge. YnHeosmCaiitiiy Vaflalux ftam/tff stockings Irrtthflbh nylons to Hotter her legs ^ and wh her heart ISO |9B AAYSIN ‘r LANVIN- .« most promnirfiw perfimet ' The new kind cf shirt! Self-lronlng, spin dry, oil cotton, no raiint added. OuaroXteed Wash and Wear for the Ufa of the shift Spring Jeweliy All the ntw Spring celori Ban-Lon IfaftSliirts America's favorite k|^it fhirt. Comfortable and moKuline, it's knit to fit ond It mochlna woshabla ond dryobla. A new dozz* Ung array of colon. Ude^onvenienHi^^ FOUUTKEy i:iIE PONxIaC press. MONUAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1962 \r / IMarr/age fUndersfahding' Ultra Selfish • / Mwyijyggifiji^ry iDr MinntL LAWMBNOB tfie older OW ~ • Klrl ot 13--teldkl not hiarnTon tlw uBdMUnd* AaMven An ym by vty V—^ ^ No«w« «««*»>*» A*i. ctpodally )«Uom of me. Yet WotL, tht 1 hod to roiw anoBicr «n>*f «» — Snce my liiubuid*i tint died two moothi ago her hove boon UvInK «tth i tfie older one — • girl otl3 — loidkl not tnarr/on the imderotond* eepedaUy Jeokws of me. Yet not L, that 1 hod to rttoe another do2?t^ iS • ir homrto them!*^ column op the Ipluotloe of what l am only 27 yean old myaelf. limy huaband wante me to do.' Phone Rings and Rings Mom Turns Info Secretory Try NRJMODE'S MIRACLE NO-WNO TOPS... droM or walking iheen with nude heel and domi-tod or heel and Sl.lSopoIr J{eumodeJ{osi0t2fSlw/K 82 N. SAGINAW, PONTIAC FE 2 *25 to»500 CASH IN ONE DAY OR LESS YOUR CHOICE OF PAYMENT PUN — PhoH* in Advance — ■ We’ll llgve Everything Heady for You When You Arrive STATE FINANCE COMPANY sot Pontiac Start# lonli tldg. FE 4-1S By BCTH MlLLBTf . . I According to the latest figures, Amerl-K cans are talking on the telephone more every year. That may be good news for the telephone company — but many a housewife could wish that the family telephone didn’t ring quite w often. Especially could she do without those coy little calls where an unknown voice Informs her that she has won a free dance lesson, a sitting for a photograph, or that .If. she name ttie first President Of the United StatA she will have w4affwL FLAIR COLD WAVE ^7^® MON. • TUES^ •vWED. BUDGET COLD WAVE INCLUDING HAIRCUT BEAUTY SALON PHONE: PE I-IMI $595 "Ask Abeut Our Baauly ionss" APPOINTMENT NOT ALWATS NECESSART Three Honest Mirrors Promote Good Grooming By KAV SHKRWtNID Few accessories aiv of more help in encouraging better family grooming than an honest mirror. Better than one hoiAst mirror are three that tell the full story, in the round so to speak. Any member of a family will be forced to take a more critical look at posture, hem lengths, clothing fit and general appearance if placed in line with The revealing gtass. ★ w * Our daughter, like most young girls, can spend ^ours scrutinizing her face and hair in a dressing table mirror but the examination stops at the neck. Would a longer mirror encourage a longer view and more attention to the petticoat showing or the hang of a coat on slumped shoulders? I’m willing to try but finding space for a three-way mirror in a bedroom with limited doset and wall apace is difficult. CONSULT EXPERT Such a mirror ranks almost as a necessity for a home aewer ao I sought the advice of the best home sewer I know. Sure enough, Lucile had designed her own mirror arrangement for her tiny aew-ing room. Her design utilizes the wail apace between a cloaet door and the room door, the making of thia too difficult for a ' man. Ludle had a k penter makes hers fqr speed’s sake. To avoid blocking passage in .and out of the room, this three-way folds flat wHot not in .use. Pegboard is used as the base and frame for the mirror. A sheet about four feet wide by six feet long is mounted on a frame and braced solidly. The miiror consists of a center one about 24 inches wide by four feet long and two side panels, each about 12 inches by four feet. The side panels are hinged to the sides of the center so they fold shut like a screen. Join the Hammond RENTAL plattime plan Here's a wonderful chance to learn to plat/ the Hammond Organ, Play-Time lessons are easy and fun. Coached by one of our experienced teachers, you'll learn by playing real songs! # 6 Organ Lastoni # Organ of your choice in your borne for 30 days # Instruction Material *25 J7 South ^ginow # FE 3-7168 Opened, they give complete front and side views. The mirrors are attached to the pegboard and the aide panels are laced with more of the pegboard. Apace for hooks To the aewer the pegboard area around the mirrors often spoce tor hooks to hold fabric swatches, special threads, pictures of future projects. Group Holds Dinner Party ^ Members of the Child Cul-' ture Club gathered tor their annual revelation party dinner at Michigan Stale University Oakland dining room Thursday evening. Following the dinner they revealad their secret pals by exchange of gifts at the Tallahassee Road home of Floyd Crump, Rochester. The group will again meet Feb. 22 at the home of Mrs. Dale Swanson, COolidge Road, Troy, with a book review by one of the members highlighting the gathering. In the meantime I you look at your attitude toward time and change. Nobody on earth can promise you unchanging ctr-cumslances. As time has moved you from childhod to womanhood, L’hangjng your circumatoncea regardless of your wishes, so it now moves your husband and hia children. changing their situation through the deaUi of the mother gardleas of their wishes. * * * We are not. Prter Pans, j now. We do not live in a clodc-lesa fairyland where time otands i ■till, but in a real, human world where we all have to learn to aub-ilt to aUerlng drannatancea. That “understanding” upon which you married your huaband aeema awfully romantic to me. Daily M; SwUy 11-7 Assortment of Fine Chocolates SPECIAL GIFT BOX REMEMBRANCE DIETETIC CANDIIS-BUOAR PRO. SALT HUS We paclulfe and mail everywhere! ALL PRICE RANGES Ro88^ Fine Quality Candies rb0M:PBt-U|S Sisterhood Plans Dames ol Malta Anniversary Fete Ooninne Sisterhood, Dames of Malta gathered at the Malta Temple Wednesday evening to make plans for thsir anniversary banquet Feb. 23. Mrs. Kart- Ely will be honored with an honorary membership, to be followed by ■ gifts presentation by Queen Esther Mrs. Merle Cur-less. GUU are Irom the sisterhood to all proicctoni. charter members and past commanders of Corinthian Commandery. Knights of Malta. Serving jt* chairman of the banquet wilF be Mrs. Clarence Vld lund, asslated by Mrs. Albert Clark, program chairman. The group also slated a card party for Feb. 17, with Mrs. George Kayga chairman of thc aocial. did you know? . .. that Wright custom builds new sofas and chairs just the way you want them . . . YOU CHOOSE THE STYLE, SIZE. COLOR AND MATERIALS... AND save 30% to 40% AT FACTOtY-TO-VOU FRICBf Have You Tried This? Five Cans of Beans Are Called for in Salad By JANET ODBLL 1 can whole green beam 1 can lima beam Today’s recipe is for a aalad 1 ld*>ey beans that keeps well in the refrig-- I c®" del beam erator—that is. If you have any left. It’s 'w mixed bean salad that everyone seems to like. ★ 4 * Mrs. Joscfih Franz ol Williams Lake Is our cook today. She doea riiurch work and lots of volunteer work. Knitting and crocheting ore her bob' bies. MIXED BEAN SALAD By Mrs- Jo«eph Pram 1 cah whole wax beam 1-2 onions, chopped fine Salt and pepper IH cupt vinegar (uie H cup white vinegar and 1 cup cider vinegar) 114 cupt sugar Mix wtth beam WIUIAM WRIGHT rsiailw# Mahan mmd Upkoletanu Z79 Orchard Lake Ave. PE 4-98SI Easy laigrt TaroM ar Senriaa Oakland Coeaty Ovor J9 T« flM OiAMI $Nso Tha Faapla of Ookload CoBiity HIGH SCHOOL g arc iavHcd to write tar fBgbeeMet. Trik hmr yea eaa ^ earn yaae Aanrieea Bekoel INplaaM. % I ^ AT HOME IN SPARE TIME ^ ^ amnuoAN bcmkh, r.r. t-it k S « r. o. bm IMS H S Altoa Itar*. lliaiMs BmA SM rear rBOB W-raft Hlfk Bcbaal BaakM « ................................... s I W ASAnm ..................rtaas ......... W log. Keep left ever eelad covered in the refrigerator. Good for buffets. PROFESSIONAL DRY CLEANING ot FATHER & SON ^ ^ What It Means to YOU The benefit of many years of prafessionol experience in handling plicate fabrics ond fugitive colora ... BY TRAINED PERSONNEL. WE Pick Dp aai DtliTW FE 2-6424 FATHER & SON CLEANERS 941 Joclyn {'Whera Quality Counts' ALL PERMANENTS $•>75 Cat and Incim Why Pay More? Hollywood’s One Price Flan Includes: Eiby to manage haircut, permanent by an experienced operator and styled set. ' Hollywood V*^!.^*"*”* 1 THE PONTIAC PEBSS. MONDAY, FEi^tJARY la. 1062 FIFTEEN V' st^sftom"the meSS uS Efci Chapter n la ehtwliig out Holds Meeting at Galardi Home Zau Eta OwDUr o< Btta Hsm PM Sonittx BMt to tha heoM at Mn. Joatph Galardi oo Rm Driv*. WaliriQfd 1V>wMiilp. Mra. Dooglas Pox, viot praaldaot. * ♦ Flam wcra Mntflatod tor tha M IM. IT la aw A poctlaa at ttw aty Onaaa tor Hank H la ~ - laHaia aad at OaUaad'a A nominating committaa oga-alitli« at Mn. OyM Haakin, Mn. Thoinaa BleUey aad Mia. C. M. flhalton waa appolnlad to prapare a slate at oBIcen lor presentation at the March meetiaK. a * * Guests awn Mn. Dennis Lowes and Mn. Eugene Bulgoady. E«sn if TM can*l road amrfs, pom «aa onfar plsrlnfl the U«t«7 OpiMl (Mgaa lodar. CowM hs, for a fioo kasaa First Baptist Class Plans Co-op Dinner The FeDowsMp Class of the Pint Baptist church wlU hava a eowpsT' atlve dinner at d:10 p.iB. Peb. 10 In the church’s education bulMUng. Mr. and Mn. John McOormlck ad thstr oonuMUea will ho In chaf|o at the dinner, and Mrs. Mrs. Walter Denio and Mr. and Mrs. WUUam Barron WlU pr Guest spoafcer will be Leone LOWREY ORGANS 1 Priced From .,. ISIS - II2S ~ I1I2S I $llfS-$14fS-|214Sl |2HS-$2StS~$3MSl Shouldn't Send Check Qs Present «r the rnmUr root hwOtato Q: At leaeo a half doaen times during the past several yean my husband aad I have been house gueets of an old fratomlty brother of Mo and his wife. They have been to A ★ k. Last menth we visited them again upon their fawletence tar a few days. During this visll, the wUs montlonsd that they would bo oelebntlng their twontydUth woddlng anniversary on a certain date. My husband and I thought It would be nice to send them a present on this ocoeslon In appreciation for their hospitality. ★ A A The wife has very definite likes and dislikes and has been known to give gifto she has received away if she did not happen to like them. Not want-li« to run the rMc of having her do this with our gift, we sent them a chock for 3 dollars, one for each year of their maniags, and told them to buy whatever they Ukod with It. About 10 days later, much to my diainay. the chock was returned with a note thanking us for our kind thought of them but that they Just couldn't no-oept our chock. AAA our gilt. I would very i FEderof 4-0020 Carole BlevuC$ HAIR FASHIONS 92 WMf Wolton Blvd. 1 Block West of Baldwin GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. os« wm. Mi m *01 e r.w. ffoif ftylisg. Weviof smd BsA CoMag I Open Evenings by Appointment pn* coo asnr Nw wna ■rarr rwWaMBi Pre-SeBBon CLEANING SPEQAL! AU Hotuehold Items • Dnpmicn • SUpcorera • Bhuikctg • Bedmrwidi 15% Off ! FOX DRY CLEANERS TltWei . $59.95 Value ^ Imperial CULTURED PEARL JEWELERS 1BB4 Weirt Maroii FE ^M41 A: Although they were very ewdrlt li Id have k by lecelvlag a cfaadc aa a gift and wIMwd to. return U. It would have been gredoua of them to have ccneldared only In wMeh it waa eant K with thanks. AAA Q; I was manrisd three weeks ago at a largs wedding (SdD guesta). I received many wedding presents and Ow thought of havli« to Mt down •nd write all of thoee thank-you notaa has me In a dither, I going to buainees and trying to keep house. In view of the number of preeenia reoeived. would tt be permleslble to eend printed Uiank-yoil cards? A; I am eorry, but printed thank-you cards would not do at aU. - Form-Go^deni Women Arrange ^uncil Event # gweOM Msmeaday at the ■leimflalinii Qxmtry Odh. IW IB hraaeh preMdsale and thMr DMMsn Pwaima Mn. P. Qe»> dca Davla and har dMa 2 Church Units Hold Luncheons and Programs Twe woasen’e greaps ef the Phet CciuFsgstlensI Chiwch met recently at dtffsrsnt hamaa tor AAA The PUgrim’s Group met at the heme ef Mie. Ivaa Kalght en Maih Bireet at 1 p.n aad OMMd vmtaeSm to eiaee 10, U. li W, IB. Btaa II takee 414 yards IMmA hStria. AAA md imr eaota in eetne tor tl leriH-iMd IB ernfs tor cnch pattern e Adanm, ema ef The ppm West ITA lk; New Yesfc^NX Fanhtllenic Grot^ Plans for Moy 'TBa Mn. Oeerge Yansen Omm ilidet of Milt Pontiac Chy I A A Tentetlve plaM were aaade lor a tea • ‘ " ’ ^ --------- “ I aa4( __ L.f. amtolad lA mmakan of____ (Ml Bna^MreL R. A. Chitor aad meai bi^aV OsMM lag thh kaidHMh Dr. rvmt pe^toal ef the Na-ttsiM wnmis htoaidaHm. wJ maah aa •ttattoMM Consarved Imaea.” Or. Heihart was head tor alx yeere at ------ _ Uahwetly. A greduate at Ootaan - nelty, he Ma a Ph. D. la Mory-Mortho Group Meets The MaryAButha Misdmsry QraopsfMailaHmBaBaatO ^ iHad the theme of Imday lehodi Ploys Hostess to Church Guild woili of LOa Honoahock aad Doao Dolglatoh at Rod Jwtoat. W. Va.. aad too BMkh« ef artMae tor the am tor too It. Aatoen/a Guild mootlag at har Burr Avmhw >. Mrs. Laae IViator amtoM I iM dun eh Roaaiy u ha fluM each lhaaday at haro* hemw. Miu. WUUam RrMdt, proMdeat of too goOd, waa pre- The EmUy Peat InaOtute often leaden booktoto en a variety of eUbJecte cencemlng etiquette, if you would like the beeklet entitled "The New Baby," send 10 cents In coin, to cover cost of handling, and Qr> When a man to asked to Join two women friends who are already lunching, must he 'todobllgcdtopaythelr checks? I mean, could he be consideted "cheap" If he made no attempt to do this? A; tt to not hto obligation to pay their checka and I can’t Imagine that they would consider him cheap for not doing ao. AAA The EmUy Pom Institute but aU questions ef gentral interest art answsrsd in this E. STEINMAN, O.D. 109 PhoM FE 2-2B95 OpsN DaHy PilOAe PiMay f:i0 te I JO ^ SHE*LL LOVE )4 It’s Such a Cheery Surprise! Beauty, fragronce and d lovely, Ceromic figarin# ore •combined by Pearce Artistry to givs this Volenlino Gift ■spedlof'attrocftvcness. A Red Heart blends with assorted, pink and red mihioture roses, heather, ond greens Id make thls one of the most expressive of Volentines you could possible send. ( . Figurines ore in delicate pastel shades. V Value $400 delivered with ijMlf Tear fafeniint’s D»y will ha reach happiar Seen use yea ramambarad tamaana. Floral Company ' 599 Orchard Lake Avenue Open DcTly I c m. to 9 p.m. ClaMd Sundays FE 2-0127 ' Two deliveries to Detroit end intermediate points j every doy. at Mm. tory BMm if toStiMsdei sn: Vinegar Rinse (MBA) - Yon oen give daih eoltone e parhadM msk srito n Ultto vhMgnr mtosd hi toe aseond rinee utoM we Mmim tosm. RhM agMi to atom vm- Ihs Ml Aemrl. sMmp el eto-i The luml mnB gHiton ef t tom tost ■pumul to tot UA to DA travM shout sm IM, 1r««toB tole Time tosrn huM rntmorn usOse eml MsRles^ Iday. LENOX SHELL BOWLS fof tfc§ tmly cIsQORt qHH lee eer wuadsiM colacilBe of an-qvlsltc Umm GIfiwars CUTE CRICKET STOOL wHh tiend-hooksd, poddsd top $<593 remember thote you love with il daslgn cover over poddtoe. Maple (inbk legs. A dellgthM ValeeNea gfftl from »2” Choose charming and distinctive gifts for everyone you wish to remember on Valentine's Day ... from our wide, wonderful collection! A cherished gift for the collector of fine English Bone en, at serving tin cut heart.ahaped pieces with cookie ratter and put them top of the gelatin. ValealiBe Owrry Mold .1 No. 303 can red watershed cherrlet H CUP sugar 1 tablespoon (1 envelope) unfla- % cup cold water H cup 1% ctfos tiny cut-up morshmal- H cup chopped nuts ballli«. Mien geiatiB la % eup el eeU water. Drala eherHea aad add hot Jrfee to seMoaed Into bettwn el «-e«p rli« bmH. OhUL » Soften cream cheese; add maj^ liie antique mold is topped with gay red hearts — here’s how to Pour the plain cherry gelatin chiU. Clit hearts using a cooky cutter and place these atop your ring mold. A party calls for party food. Our picture shows the beautiful coke you can make. The fluffy frooting fonns a heart around the top of the cake; in it you spoon acariet cherry sauce. Not Just pretty as a picture — prettier. iweelwart Cherry Oske package white cake mbc and f^ heprt by outflnlng it with tnnOaf. Gii^ Oforry Sauce is some-thhig new to serve with roast pork, ham or polStry. Ihia esa bo kept in the relrigeraior foi salt. Blend in cherries and Juice. Cook, stirring constantly, until thickenad. Cool. Prepare frosting according to di-rections on package. Frost between layers and around outside of cake, bringing frosting up over edge to form a 1-Inch border. Sprinkle i^teny sauce into heart formed on lop of cake. *U you do not have heart shaped pans, bake cake in 3 round pans Otauier Cherry gauss 1 No. 308 can red wato^packsd H cup a 1 1 11 H t . % cup chopped unpeeled apple Mi eup chopped belery % cup choM oAfjy powdenid gh 0, sttrrtag esastanlty, aagi ttoeksaad. Adi sematolag IngrshsBto. lam M Pink Cherry Gelatin Is i Friend of Calorie Counters Partios, parties, parties . February's social calendar .is filled with them. Higidight of a Valentine’s Day party might his low o< a daasert, debdous-ly sweet and party-pink Cherry- in piaoa at sugar. For those try-ii« to stick with diets, even at a party. It’ll be low. at first bite. In honsr-of George, this same tony dessert might be spooned into a pretty ring mold or into individual parfait ginesee, then garnished with low-calocto CraCMV-gHEBBY VAUENTINB (A Lew-Oslaito Doseert) 1 envdope (or taUespoon) un-fiavored gelatin \ cup sherry 1 l-p«nd can SmEmdCABT cake — valentine’s Day brinp family and friends together in an aura of affectkin. Show your feelings to those nearest you I delectable foods and serving them attrartively for this gayest of holidays. In the upper leftJuuid comer is a Valentine Chetry Mold. Warm Dessert V' , Sweet and Tart CheTiies Moved Westward With Early Settlers Oatmeal and Nuts Blend Together in Crumb Topping When great-grandma Journeyed west in a covered wagon, chances are she took a few young cherry Reminiscent of the old stone cream pitcher and iron kitchen stove is this home-spun Cherry Crisp desant. It’s as old fashioned and deeply delicious as in the dd days, but this Cherry Crisp recipe is up to date and easy to It blends the crunchy goodnese of wahmta, oats and n iMgar with the tart, clean flavor N plump red cherries. H«n«-8psBi Cherry 1 No. 303 can water c«u> sugar 1 cup quick-cooking rolled oats >4 cup brown sugar % cup enririied flour H teawnon salt 14 cup butter pr margarine % cup broken walnuts Heat cherries and sugar gether. Pour into a 10x6;^14-lnch baking dish Combine^ts, sugar, flour and salt; cut in butter. Add walnuts. Sprinkle over chenies. Bake in a moderate oven (3S0 degrees) for 35 minutes. S warm with plain or whipped cream. Makes 6 to 8 servings. Low Calorie Cheesecake Crowned With Cherries backyard. The fact is, cherries were almost as Important in the "push to the Ppcific” as great-giandpa’s rifle. ■■ sooner did a cherry tree begin to grow when a tew more cabins were settled within couple miles of his. Great-grandpa would holler something about a lack of elbow-room, pack up and move the family farther west-leaviiv a string of cherry trees to mark his progress. Back East, relatives probably iayed at home to tend cherry r c h a r d s—which wasn’t the easiest Job in the work). The story goes that mischievous fellow named George cut down a cherry tree from his father’s prised orchard. perfect for ptes, tarts, cobblers. But, rest assured the cherry treats you prepare will be made 1 an abu^nra of bright, ip cherries your ancestors could only dream about. You can broil orange halves Just as you do grapefruit hatvesf’ Nice to serve with ham or poultry. Count your blessings while you unt your calories ... for here delightfully flavored, Uhbaked ' serf, beautlKil ' behold, delicious to eat, easy to make, and surprialnidy knv in calories. The addition of gelatin makes it possible to mold this dessert into any desired shape. It might even be turned into a pie shell. The gelatin, skim milk and cottage cheese all help to keep calories to a minimum, but most important is tbe use of the noncaloric sweetener, Sucaryl, to replace sugar. This sweetener saves all of sugar’s calories, yet gives delightful natural-tasting sweet-neu. And look at the calorie savings! Cbeny Cheesecake 2 tablespoons (or envelopes) un-flavored gelatin H cup cold water 2 cups skim milk 3 tablespoons Sucaryl solution 4 cups akim-milk cottage cheese, sieved 2 tablespoons lemon Juice 2 teaspoons almond extract 1/3 cup nonfat milk 1^'cup ice water To make topping: Drain cher ries; add Sucaryl to the cherry liquid. Gnuhiolly stir cherry liquid into comstardi; cook over 11-pound can water-pack sour cherries 2 teaspoons Sucaryl solution 2 tablespoons cornstarch Soften gelatta ks cold water: dlaoolve ovw boUhig water. Add to milk aad Swsaryl, eomblned. Add sieved cottage speed of mixer until of eon-slstoacy of whipped cream. Fold into gclatto mlxtase. Spoon Info a S-toch spring isvm pan. ChUI clear and fiiick. (^fidly stir in cherries. Spoon cherry sauce over . • - Makes 12 servings. Each serving contains 127 calories; 19 grams protein; 0.5 gram fat; U grams carbohydrate. I' sugar, each serving would contain 245 calories. ComUne sugar and oohwtarch; M cherries and cook until thick. Add food coloring and lemon Juice. Pour into a 814x2-lnoh baking dish. Cdmbbie biscuit ndx and sugar. jt into measuring ctqi and beat slightly with « fork. Add light cream to. make % cup. Add biscuit mix and stir'to imdsten flour. over hot fruit. Sprinkle Baked Stuffed Potatoes Next time you’re preparing baked stuffed potatoes, mash the potato pulp with sour cream, butter and minced parsley; top Cheddar cheese and reheat until piping hot through and the tops lightly browned. crown «f chsntes.. Chkarias! this dasseit hi made with Sw to the :a smooth dioene h a. scarlet ) many as yon^WdnU, thMt; the siibstaitoe that sWueciMs it's Old but New It's a Cobbler Tart, red cherries, now plentiful Ither canned or frooen, have a festive place In your winter meal idans. Spotlight them in a cherry dessert on the unusual side, Cheny rittera with Chewy Sauce. A valentine to your family for a February 14 dessert, or an traordniory conclusioo to any r ter meal, the Cherry Fritters made with whole bran cereal. Clierries fiU both the tiny golden fritters, fried quickly In deep fat, nd the sauce which tops them. Cherry Fritters, in addition to their suitability as a dessert also be served as a tasty Here’s a recipe for on oldtime favorite with a new twist. OM-Fashtened Owny Cobbler 2 No. 308 cans red cherries 114 Cups sugar 3 tabtespdons cornstarch 6 to 8 drops red food qplorlng if decired 2 teaspoons lemon Juice 114 cups prepared biscuit mix 1 egg Light tf hit (400 degrees) » to 80 mtoates. Makes 8 serv- (Npte: If sweetened cherries are used decrease sugaC to 1 ciq> and cornstarch to 2 '* Hot Rolls Hold Cherry Topping Good for Any Meal George's Pie Hides a Surprise Inside Cherry Fritters WHh Cherry ganee 214 cups (1 lb. 4-oz. can) pitted 1)4 cups sifted flour gives A new version of You can’t call it Pie A U Mode, s ice oeam is insklc. It's a surprise kind e unparalleled anywhere in thorough planning and forealght. The plan’s pro- If there la an attack warning of two-and-a-half boura or more, Van-derVen aald, the achooto will uae regular achool buaes manned by rWOVOMONAL ACTION then to toaa than two«adHi> pdf houn and more thw 46 min-sly thoal stia than three milas All ethera wU bo atowd to go bame on toot, exoepf thaoe whaoe pareata have arranged ollMr plaeoa to go or who laatot toeir ehUdrea bo kept In aehiil. Each achool, VanderVen report* o4, haa a two-day laupply of food right now.^wllh the eaceptlon ol Avon Etomentary gohool where toad to prepared at If there to letot than 46 minutea’ atning,' students tom go to as-(l signed abelters h| sdiool buikUnga. Only tiisae who walk home in leao«than 41 minutes will be sent *«ne. ★ to A survey will be . made .by each ' to aeto whether parents wal|t fNclr dren fp ^ chased Uie South BliUord Rood property and bUUt the 1100,000 bam and Dooktail lovnoe bred horaos all over the place except in the pensive hobby with beautiful oodrtail kHmfe which to part of Oak Frank Nuccio. right, KnoU’s deluxe bam new Mlltord. Owner Rudy Ann Nichols. ■lOH STEPPER ^ Rudy Speerachneider Is ehown (totving one of his thoroughbred hamoss horaes on htt (tok KnoB farm near MUfoid. Itte Ug stallion, "MounUoye Magic Moment." has walktot ^off with more ribbons and trophies than any of the other 21 show hones in ths li Speerachneider tarn. The 4-year-old horse h held the honor of grand champion in fine to ness horse competition In the Michigan Hor Show Aaaoclatlon and continues to be a w|nn Started To#n With 25 Acres in ’28 Gingelt Family Dmioped Gingellville the help of his manager and riding instructor Gene Nominating Caucus Today in Ortonville ORTONVnjX-Voters here wlU select their candidates (or seven village offices today at a 7 p.m. nominating caucus in the Ortote vllle Fire HaU, 396 Mill ». Incumbem coundlmen terms will expire March U are Charles Sherman, Lavem Boutell and Ronald Richards. Their offices are tor two years. The terms of Raymond Barrick, preaidmit; LaVeme Borst, derk; Weber Ware, awemor; and Jennie Saunders, treasurer, nlao toiU expire in March. Their terms are Orion Twp. PTA Unit to See Wildlife Film ORION TOWNSHIP-Howard Shelley, wUdlito photographer for the "Michigan Outdoors" television show, will present a film of his re* cent trip to New Mexico for members of the Blanche Sims Parent-Teacher Association at 8 p.m. today. The movie, showing scenes of the 127,000-acre Phibnent Scout Range, wild west rodeo shows, Pueblo Indians and wildlife, will (Ulow a I meeting. The pro- Growers Can Sign for Feed Grain Plan The ranch boasts more than 1 ribbons mid .1ni|MM accumutoti by Uposrsrhitrtder's horse Among them "Mountjoy't Magic Moment," who was Michigan's dual champton In IMO. (Champion In Hand and Champion Junior Pine Harness Horsy), . “Oak tolf Firefly" truly lives „ ^ up to hftame. This T-yearoU^R®” mare, bdfn on the Speerachneider •*“ *»">' fymlng. farm (Oak Knoll), is as quick and to to * rpn hertoeet as •■fikttog 4toe4 PcMtoy Etta Clngell. WeVtanKJ! “Quick to leant, too," savs'i ............... . . ^ Speerschnetder. GmGE14.VlLLE-One hundred Id hvehtyfeven M<^«w^tod on a ptoee of good 'fArmtoiftoif' what to now Maybeo Roarf. ml far ‘away. gram has been planned especially Growers planted barley can sign up now to take part In the 1982 Feed Grain Pragran, Robert H. Long, chairman, Oakland County Agricultural StebiUzatton and Conservation Committee, amwunoed today. The togn-ep period wtO ext throt«h Mardi M, UM, Operation of the program, the diainnan explained, will be lim-ilar to the 1961 Feed Grain Pro-Lttcewtoe ito objectives are oe (1) to Increase farm in-(2) to further reduce the feed grain stocks; < reduce government costs of programs; (4) to reduce tbo risk of serious overproduction poultry and dairy products and (5) to assure consumers of (sir and stable prices tor these products. All producers of corn and spring barley that have grown these crops in 1958 or 1960 are eligible to take part in the feed grain program, which calls for the diversion of acreage formeriy planted to one or more of these crops into an approved soil-conaervlng use. The program to voluntary, but by fanners Ue for price support on their feed grain crops, Including oats and Leng said that tor eon, dwre e( W per eeW from the hum’s Mary Jo Parker Weds Carl Robert Ruebelman LAKE ORION~8t. Mary’s-bi-tbe-Hills. Episcopal Church was the of Muy Jo Parker antoCari Robert Ruebelman who exchanged their vows before an altar banked with white carnations, baby chrys-anthAmums and stock. Rev. Wilbur ^ Schutze read the service, to to to Parents of the bride are Mr. and Mrs. Martin L. Parker of 400 Nakomls Drive. The bridegroom Is die son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl G. Reubelman of 390 Cayuga Road. Hie ricirt was bell-ahaped and ended to a chapel train. Her ilnislon veil waa held by a douUe crown of Jeweled tace, and die carried a small white topped' with white rotas ATTEND BRIDE '' The Bible talonged to the bride’s grandmother, the late Mrs, Howard HUhnan, and also was carried by the bride’s mother at her wed-fing. Unda flasoex of Detroit was the hiMe’s only attetotant The bridegroom’s father assisted him as bast man. Dnvid Paricer, brother of the bride, and Roger Bock, were ushers. Flower girl was Debra Claire Parker, 2^year-0ld sister of the 'rkte. . The weddiag tmaktlHit was held at Indianwood Golf and Country dub toamediatriy foBowtog die otaemony ■ The newlyweds an tog At 1534 Spartan ViBage, Mldi-Igm State Uidverstty East Lan-• For bariey there must be a linimum reduction, of 3D per oent to the farm’s average 1966R0 barley farm’s com base. Oakland Cbipity formers can sign up at the County A8C8 Office, 63 Oakland Ave.. Room 3. Pontiac. Monday through Friday each week through March 30, between 8:30 a. m. to 5 p. m. Frank Nuccio is Oak Knoll’ genial manager. He works with it stnictor Gene Anh Nichols I training riders how to look well in the saddle. And the high spirited horses are taught to BE go^ when they are carrying riders. language Classes Start at Rochester ROCHEFTER — Two beginning language ooursea for adults will start this sreek at Rochester High Avondale PTAs to Hold Dinner Special Program Set Will Honor Guest at Founders' Day Meeting The Avondale Area Parent-Teacher Association Council will sponsor a potluck dinner. and a special program honoring a district member at its Founders’ Day meeting’'tomorrow at the Avondale High School. to to to A 6:30 p.m. dinner will be held in the school cafeteria. Avondale area PTA members have been asked to bring a qiedal food item to supplement the meat court furnished by the council and tbeUr own family table service. tfoa to edmatfon aita I » to the ohINbw ef t Schools Si^. Leroy R. Matt wffi Mrs. Lowis Krug, a viaitog teacher and guidance oQuasekv. give a taief resume of ihe special guest's career. Under thq direction of Mrs. Wii-Itom Bishop, Founders’ Day chairman, a qu^et of local artists will ring a medley of fofic tunes. A abort history otPTA will be outlined by Mrs. William U.' Porter, district director of the.. Michigan Congress (rf Puyirts and Teachers. p.m. beginning today for the next 10 weeks to Room 144. A similar 10-week courae in basic conversa-tkxiai German will meet to Rohm 132 starting Thursday. Both courses will require a i lum of 10 studento if th^ are to continue. The registration lee may be paid at flnt meetings. granddaughter and the^Vife Gingeli’s grandson. Is Ihe matriarch of a clan which almost alone has named and developed sprawling little town. She and her husband Frank and sons Francis and Harold starts the QtogeliviUe ball roiling to 1928 next year Rev. MfifuA ^pheof, tfatm at the Firri(||ittot ot Pontiac, came "iM to Gtofftll-vffle to start a branch of his During the war building and were working the Maybee Road farm. Mrs. QIngell donated land to the branch church, then meeting at the Proper School, and the present building started to grow. beanly and barber shops and tbe BubdlVlriaa. The groeery 1953 the brothers finished hardware store. The next yenr a new gas station sprouted. Orion Township built a spanking ^*hxlay Mrs. Gingell estlm«tes that there are from 586 to 800 people within the original 184uare subdiviaion. Her only regret to that lost (d the people are young. “Thera aren’t amr old people here to Gincellvlllp,'* she lakL Church Founder to Talk at Event Gingellville Baptist Sets Silver Anniversary; Rev. Schoof Is Speaker The plans are expected to be distributed to each school wlthto two weeks. The emergency drivers will be trained by the achool transportation department. By spring, VanderVen hopH, ~ 11 be ready tor the first tori. Church Honors 1 Area Scouts God-Country A Wards Go to Clarkston Youths at 1st Mothodist Service (HJIRKSTON r- Seven boy XNits from Troop 136 wwre pn-lented (tod nnd Gtunfiy swards yesterday Boy Scout Sunday, at the 11;16 h.ni. wurridp servtos at First Methodist Chui^ here. The first ctoas scouts who re-ceived awards were Lany Duncan, Williain Ellsworth. Kent and Rex Rhoads, John (tottei, Hugh Row and Kent Itowril. re made by Itev. William J. Rlcbards, pastor ol tbe ebart* wbtefc ipsasora Ibe troop, geoatmaster Htk Frost sad Everett Batten lay leader of the ehareh. Rev. RIcharda, an official mema her of the Boy Scout movement God and (Witiy award to S3 Boouta atnee IMS to the various churches he has served. During tbe past year he personally trained the aeven boys in 'Bibie study, Christian living, prayer. The Melhodtot Church has ob-erved Boy Scout Sunday tor many .oan and tbo denomination report e Bchoolhoure 60 feet kng, the boys Uie community began to spread college and founder of the GtogeU-and Mr. GtogeU set up a combined — grocery store. tqwN’ obows Umo they went to work la IMS Mrs. OtageU’s Mr. GtogeU died in 1936 and There are at least a dozen stores nd businesses to tbe ( area which spreads out to each dirertion along Baldwin HomI. The UIngellville Commaalty Oeater, halll to IBM by people from the eommunlty, to famous tbe first fittiMtoy of every month. vUle Baptist Church, wiU speak at the church's silver snniverfary dlD-ner Wednesday. Members and friends of church have been invited to the 6:30 p.m. dinner and a special musical program to follow. * * ♦ The chun-h met until 1942 to the Proper School under its first tor. Rev. WiUiam P. Miles, now pastor of the First Baptist Churph of Capoc. The student winning the scholarship may select tbe college of his choice which has an accredited curriculum in dairy technology. Last year Michael LIndquirii a student at Michigan State Uhlverrity. won this schotars.'ilp. d to a fi to Dr. M. D. Bonner, Krim-Ko Corp., 28 N. Garden St., Benaen-vlUe, ni., (or appUeatlon and additional information. Filing deadline is Maroh 15. LaJf summer the congregation added a new wing. The land waa origtoaUy donated in 1942 by Mrs. Ella Glngell and her sons Francto and Harold. lent church pastor Rev. Sydney A. Hawthorne wUl hold special comqiemoraUve meetings nightly exce^ Feb. 19, beginning Wednesday and laating until Feb. 26. ■Speaker for these meetings will be Rev. Herbert Noe, pastor of the Galilean Baptist Oiurch of Livonia. At 3 p.m. spiedal service wiU be rid this Sunday with Rev. Miles as special guest speaker. OlNfiEIXVlLLB’S MOTHER -r, Mn. Ella GtogeU, 79, Is the matriarch of thi dan which ter of a century ago riie donated a piece of bqttt GingeUviUe. She and her sons Francis ' land for the GingeUvUle Baptist Church on bind Harold have develsped, almost alone, Uie Baldwin Road which edebrate 'its 25tii an-lirea's housing and burin^ since 1928. A quar- nlVeraary Wednesday. ,, Girl Reigns Over Ice Carnival in Avondale Thirteen-yearvold Citrol Guy Frl-dayreigned over the second annual Ice OrnivN at Avondale Junior High School. An eighth grader, Carol title over 15 othen^drls in balloting by the entire studeAt body. She la the daughter of Mr. and Mm. James H. Guy, 2869 Simpson Drive, Avon Townshlp-Flnt-plaM wtanerf to eaeh grade to the tee skating oompeli-ttoa m the School rink were; Sixth Grade — June Stockman, Margaret Farquhar, Roger Davis and BUI Gayner. Seventh Grade —June Metzjer, Sue Newby Theresa Tremooli and Bob CUritmado. Eighth Grade — Gail Metzler and David Marchewka. ROYAL OAK TOWNMIIP -Newly appointed township police Capt. Edward L. Watktos has received the backing of the township board in' his battle with trustee Ernest WUaon. WlUrin. who bad called a qiecial meeting of the board for the purpose of ousting Watkins, waa told at the sessfon fiiat the board saw “no cause whatsoever to take any action with Regard to firing Watktos.” 'Hw bseri received a letter Board'Backs Police Captain Royal Oak Twp. Unit Gives Nod to Watkins in Feud With Trustee totorfertog In Walkteto bandtoqi..^ sdnd tbe board to fire Watkins because of “towbordina-tton and incompetence." Accord-tog to a township oftldal, WUaon had been against Watkto’s anioint-ment in tbe first place.- • ★ ★ ♦ ' During the Job dispute, OaUand (3ton^Sh»« Frank W. Iram had been called In to take over cohtroi of th force until a a reached,^ He was also ariM to investigate WUaon’s ordering of police Sgt Aimtoli Rotfi to rt^Bco Watktos as cUef. " \ ' 'Ji .t f.h;iitkkn THE PONTIAC P^SS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY W, 1968 Summit Request Is Latest Twist in K's Power Dance My SMJta MAMMXm itaM ProM NcMi AmI iSHlNGTON-Ptw r la like ■ watchmaker . He haa exeel-bat too much twiat. -* * twM la In the report eign allalra like a TV Weatenai where tvt|ryaiie la either a good gay or a bad oae. Sometlmaa he acta Uka a bad gtiy. Ihen he trtea to maha up lor It ^ * ^ * He waa very much the bad lloy womumB NOV when he aoddenly dear teattni. He fM bad noticea arooad the world and haa been laying nice moat ol the time Ovw the woekanfhe put on the good gox'a hat again by ralaaitng American apy. US filer lYnn- it wu Juat Bwapping hud that Ranaady, hav(i« tahaa the poattioa there riiould be no IMO, got 1# yaara. Nrtther man. alter tl publicity in each oaae, w anyUdag to the country him. Hw US flighta ai nd Abel ia waahad up a * * * But Khruahehev nt a Moaoow did notijiiMIcIty out of it and d US7, waa . PeweA, la May 1. rsiHS"^ ■ ABBL SWAP — Thia la the GUeniefce the ewap at i US pilot Frahcia Gary ! in the Berlin auburb of Waaaoe where Powora and 8i Rudolf Abel took place. Orivtr Finds Hit Car Doosn't Lik« It Doublt COPENHAGEN, Danmark (AP) *-A motoriat drove into a garage hanging on to the rear bumper. It had caught on when the motor-lat maneuvered out of a partdng The attendant found another car Arinna'a firet aettlement waa at Tueaon and It am eetabUahed in ITM. Since 1889 me atate capital haa been deaignate^ aa Phoe- With profound sorrow we announce the passing of JOHN F. STEWART Co-foniidir of^Kb Compaasr STEWART^LENN Co/wiU Be Qoged ^ All Diy Tuesday, N,., . February 13 STEWART GLENN CO. 1680 Soeth Tekgrapli Road Respond to Billy Glbham Plea LIMA, Peru (AP)' ham preached to 15,i in a bull rii« Sund . _ afterward hundreda cam^forward r to Ml call to mi claiona lor Chriat. Tha American ferrod to the current election campaign and had aenaad aoroe ot the Latin-Aroarictn enthuiiaam for politlca. ★ ★ ★ "Why not give the tame enthuiiaam to n nnewil ot faith in Oirtatr he aaked. “No one knowa when Chriat will return, but one thing te aure; the laat word on thia world wUI be ipoken l^\Chriat and not man. The mayor of Qraham'a home town, Stanford Brookahire of Charlotte, N.C., attended the aerv-let with a delegation of 3S buai-neaa leaders and ofticiala who art on a good-will Juliet Prowse Denies Split With Sinatra HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Winter Discount SM.BI SAVE 10% M.ke your Mlactton now for . delivery this spring prior to I Mempriel Oey, Mey 30th. A COMPim DISPLAY IN OUR INSIM SNOWROOM Inch Memoriolt# Inc. Ovoe 47 Yam at OuMandtap Sonriee i FE S-S931 864 lOtrry Sf. linger lYank Sinatra. ^ dr A _____ lan’t at the airport iriim Mlaa Prowae arrived Saturday night from her home In JohannHban. South Africa. Her anager, Ed Goldatone, told "FYank waan't there they had arranged to leet later." A A ♦ ; They dW, and had dinner together. Ex*Edi1or*Hittorian Diti ASHEVILLE, N-C. (AP)-Gaorga W. Mrikiy, 61, fwnar cdiler ot the ArtwvUla aUaen and CStiam-Umee and an authority on woriam North CbroUna hlatory, good guy bet by propealng the negotiationa co tcating 36 montha mora tvklaiwl at I they have ao i would ahnoat oertainly aay no. H WASBBRinr Kann«|y waa uad hum aoma at hki adviaara. taatlng^..4nilM ha faaia wv fiiB now manauvered hla twiala. Iha Ruaatane a bad Bpot hopa auneoMha wodd I of thia gaaa to riww l ■omethlng to watch. AAA AD the disarmament talks since 'orld Jgar 11 have gotten no-here>HM have talka an andoor tmlfa« between the United States, Inty nt an. He mid 11 he agreed to aa liMpactlM syatem, the West wm ogam le lsMi« RuaOa have a vata. hi othar wards: na faiapae- ii« to taat. When they ware ready, on Aug. >SL Un, XhnadMhev ouddaMy an-’ nouncad in the nildat of tha the teets would atari. They he next day. The talks cd-lapaed Sapt. t. AAA There had been two big atom-ting blocks; the West wanfad an inspection lyatenv—which the Russians called spying — to prevent cheating and tha Ruaaiana kept Imt ban talks ahouid ha part of general diaaniiament bon tafka thrown in wttb tba dla-annnment talks, even tbou|h that is what he had mid he wanted March 14 in Oenawa. The United Stataa and BMtnto than bnhe off the test ban talks 36. Preaaure at home on ograe to a Imparted teal baa. The am na. Ha said tha mala thing is gm-t, not lust a test at powers resumed their I talla. Now the West of- r.E pari of general ____Lilt waefc ha seemed « vorgo of a goAboad. AAA len, hoping for something to e out ot the disarmament _______ to Khrmhehev that tha foreign miniaten of the IS m-tkim, not fmt their ip ■hould do the . negotiating. bet on tht pnbUdty he got from riliaiteg Powero, practically called the foreign nflnisteri nobodies and auggeota that only the Stoat CoMliprilN dNn‘‘A8iii|ColM'’ i£m SSSmSA ANMai irC'SSTifsrs'st «N aaSiBCnelhmM wiMMlatt tae arana aotf^ aThaStaa lew- iivw. am esw Ooeotw pnui ^^lirSoLmS^^iaM tee ta^ lios at ary, barSeiieO waw tot eaw nniaueiebwitmaciioa. (liacu amir as ibe asm leOWHS Um MMwtoM the *n—awweai"ofyoaflem eetoa CouwuDietwtoeewBeaimieeee-ettpeUoeowmgat; his Hath N wee IJolUARDjounfon'f Valentine Special StiU Time to Win $100 CASH in Wrigley’s Exciting Spell C-A-S-H Game! Mm iM^ha Ihro Tiwidiy, hk II. Ufa roiaraa tbo rlfftt to IWf rntffrfii. 45 ts Tulufra|ih A Opee Mip f P4S. 1468 ML Itain—I W,. Ma. Tm. W. U < — tria Dn< W • Wrigl^ Specially Selected, Young, Tender, Corn Fed Pork - ilua Aibben Foitns WYWWM CtoWarBloda Chuck Cuts Pork Loin Bonat Tsndsrleln End Portion m Prmaka Oltndsto, Tandsr MichioanGmdsI a^;y*- Poffr Chopa pMlUlAta Bonsisw PonRsody *^88* •- 691 )tock lJp and Save! rod Whole Kernel or Cream Style GoMon Kipe, Fonqr Bananas 10* Ciyiord Purt Creamery BuHor Slokely'«.''Ping" Drink S%£8V Stokely's Cut Wax Beans 5^1* Slokely’s Tomato Catsup 5 ev Stokely's Cut Green BeansS * 1" SAVE 8c Mb. Print Stokely's Tomato Juice 4 T Stokely's Wh. Kernel Corns 89* |09 2lk Cm With Coupon Below HHIs Bros. CoHse Delcrest Pre-Oround Coffee Etna Dependable Coffee 2 97* CakTillixM I VALUABU WMBLEY COUPON I Top Frost Frozen Sliced Strawberries SAVE 25c 5'8? 99* Ft WIXM OOl O FIFLL. OIFX &T/kfSAF=»^ it THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, fEBRtfARY U, 1962 Nl'yETKKN Ike Pushing Younger ~ “*®«**^ «* Pem«*ylvw»k. HejE. Woodride of thf SUte'ddpetttr PrMd«nt iSiight D. Elonriioirar ii rqwrtcd to have told Repubit-etiu he hw no Intention of cam-poignlnc lor 'a«ha«rer. who la 71, waa rapreaentod, ah preaaiiiK party mrmbm to woric for the nomination of young randtdataa for gov- ought to make hlmhrif available for the party nomination for gav-Tnor. Scott reported that Eiaaobower aald he could aupport activtiy a ticket on which Scott waa a mem- Court would run for governor and Rep. Jamea E- Van Zandt would oppoae Sen. Joaeph 8. Claik, a Democrat for*- the Senate aaat. SoBMhow the word got ant that Eiaenhower , coneMaaad thil a I ticket OP which Judge ipaim for |e Robert tlMNight the Woodaida-Van Zandt Run for High Posts youthful candidatea go-hlm in aeveral atatec. w * lidn't have to urge Gov. A. Rocfcatoiler, who la SI. : re-election in New York, encouraged Ft«d A. I hit former aacretary , to aaehrthp ‘ of thoae who helped cdmdnee fonner Vice Praaidcnt Richard M. Nlmn, who ia «, that he ought to run Mr the Republican gofhmor in OUl rwer alao had i on the dedaion of George Romney, ^merloan Mo-tora preaident. to run for the GQP nomination for governor^ |n Michigan. Romney la 5i aaying ha wanted no *‘groy-hidrod Si.Ti.Sfff.iySf.”* * * A Thia aerve-the-youth movement apparently led the former preei-dent into aoiae difticultiea in hia EAGLE NOW! "MISTY" "JUNGLE CAT" ITUES. mmm , &mUk mmmmi PoUtldM generally think that Nixon, ^lomney and Soott might . figure in the UM acramble for ■Ihe Republican preaktentlal nom-inatkav—pfovlded they can get elected to atate office, along with Rockefeller and Sen. Barry Goid-water of Artiom, who ia SS. ,♦ A. A Nixon ia conaidered a draft poaeiMllty. Romney ia regarded aa^ a potential dark horae. Soott would preacnt an evm darker hue in the latter catagptY, but would not be cdunted out becauae of hla extenaive Ksquaintanoe with -the party orgahixatloo aa a former chairman and former courdel of the Repubtichn NatiomI Committee. „ ^ZTSKEEGO mam DOUeiAS ^ TowiS wimouT wry PLANE mUBCEAOE — This N the wreckage of a light plane in which two women were killed and two othera crtUcally injured In a ctaNi aouth of the De» Motnea Municipal Airport Dead on arrival at the hoapital was Mrs. AT rUAtate* Alice PfantU. 4S. of Dee Moinea, veteran of four Powder Putt Dertv dr raoaa. Her pilot, Mrs. Marilyn Williams, 38. alao died toUowtng the craMi. Hoarded U.S. Materials Must Be Dumped Slowly St Patrick Hit With Scientific Shillelagh CHICAGO (UPl) - The luck ol the IrlNi that rid Erin of anakea came from the Ice Age and not St. Blue Star BAReAIN COIN HIF HASH WITH ONI QCaC POACHID KO cmu-lir 8St OarfT-Oal i«r»t»***** Ml PE S-1575 Bhe SUr Dri?e-h Opdyfce aad Nntiec Raedcfl WASHINQTQN (AP)-Tho gov-emment'a cxceaa hoard of strategic niateriala will have to be aold ■lowly perhapa over '10 yean— to avoid a stunning ■*»«»* to the economy, aay aamton who hawf three-year one contributes to the |«*T\iSay. d concurred in currently by Kenne* -dy-to cut the strati reqnlie-e met from a five-year eupply to a ao at an Academy e( 8 The question of disposal Ukeiy wiU be one of the major proUems a Semte aubcommitlee Im to act on PresidriU y» order for an inquiry Intp stockpiling. And the stockplle'e two gtanta-ill get moat of the attention. Informed eemtors noted that a The more of aluminum and million Iona of be aold (or a prrdil at preaent prices, providing a way would be W8“*^ ' out tor gradual dispasal WOVU> I If auefa heavy of ahuni- mala originated and how they ‘ I be where they are today. 3IOaS.mig«APNM. Opa««cM-llM r PM. AtNp E*tn Chmrg» ELECTRIC IN-CAR HEAHRS It's WitKbwt o Doubt Tho GrsKitait Comady of tho Yoor rrs A WALL TO WALL WOW! It’s the Merriest Mixings Since Girls Discovered toieiinimKMi emiS’CEiEsniiiiM _ AND. FUGHTM Divorces KHUild frea C»rol« A. Rn^t 'Btrldk U. trem LAvrmc* C. jHlUvu iweniMra ■. Iroa OuBO A. niilpkA OollA r Inm nariT W. Uiwhb URoy trM AnlU CaMtinflua iftito a. rnHB cd* a. er. Aw Jhm X. Htrb down pricea. This woald hold troa for other stockpile mat. quick sale alao might < dustriea which supply teriala. The amount the government Dr. Alfred E. Emerson of the plans ipAny Sdende loc- Waterford to Talk New Sewer Rate Discussion of a proposed .lewer rate based on actual water con-flat rate 'St. Patrick wi 1,500 years ago," Emerson will tell the audience. "The loe Age froae out Ireland'B snakes maybe 100.000 years before that." is a apeciailst in aoo- _________ * the acMnce that M* tempts to reconstruct where ani- cra why Auatralla bae ao many poached animala and why Africa ' devoid of tigen. U. of M. Enroiiment at 24,567 for Spring Nu a. froa ANN ARBdR III — The Univer-ttty of Michigan today reported H987 enrolled, a record lor the Su* fna OanoT B«U*r v-waa fixed by at nMre thaa 88 billion. The Btockpiie has on hand more than L5 million tens of zino— than eight timea what Is spnng temewer. needed. AAA The Btocknile-which has piled Edward G. Groeobaek, re up everythii« from opium and aaid the flgure repreaenta diamonds to feathen-ia iliQrt on creoaa of 1.388 over a year ago. ____ Mns. Iodine and asheatoa Of the total, 2S,7W students are en- are below quote. There is only a rolled at the Ann Arbor campus, slight excess of coppei ‘ oil, abaca and sperm oil AP PSMW»ti DBEBV CASVALTIEg — Mrs. Alice PlanU (lert) of Das Moines was killed Sunday when a light plane ernshed about a mile from the Des Moines Airport shortly after takeoff. Mrs. Ptantz' lister la Mrs. Thomas J. Schultz of 6633 28-MUe Road, Washington Township. At right is Mrs. Marilyn Williams. 38, who was also killed. ’This picture '>vas taken in Jdne 1980 when the two Des Moines women were entered in the Powder Putt Derby that year. Mrs. Pfantz was an instructor at the Des Moinee FTyli« Servtoe. She is 45. take place at tonight's regular meeting of the Waterford Td^ ship Board acbeduled for 7 p.m. The flat rate eharga by the City If Poattee hae heea la effect alaee itM, and stoee there are JaeqaHfes la Ihie plaa, ac-eenUag to a receat mrvey, the beard has eheaea to explore the peeMMIIty of a rate based on eenoapipdon whtob wonid per-oAl a ■Wder charge of W per Mat of the water UM. Other Menu up for conaideration at tonight's meeting are a raqueat tor a new SDM licenae at 3340 Dixie Highway, site of the former Side-O-Shore grocery store and a recommendation of the Electrical ★ OPEN^ FRIDAY SAT.-SUN. Board that Waldron Keaaey be reappointed as contractor member of the Waterford Township Electrical Board. Freshmen Failing to Take Engineering WASHINGTON IP ^ Secretary ol Wellare Abraham Rlbicoff reported today that fewer coWc freshmen enrolled in engineering last fall than two years ago. "This is further evidence," Ribi coff said, "that the balance ol brainpower may tip—and tip dan-gerou^—against us if the nation does not awaken to the importance of education to the freedom of the Western world. . . . "Our adversaries in the struggle r power have realised that the education and training of their youth otter the key to their power igth. But we have not AIMtVH gTiHMiirS II Alii Storts at llUlf 7:10 and 9;10 FRIDAY: "2nd TIME AROUND" ocarEii it NOW FLAYING it Shews: I it 9-1:50-6:25-8:00 .EwsjiiEK BROADWAY'S JOYOUS ! MUSICAL LOVe STORY! RODGERS 1, HAMMERSTEIN'S ;-~NANCYKWAN TV' dtoVACTNOM* ; JAMES SHIGETA MIYDSHIUMEKI ABRAHAM UNCOLN BOSS FkBRUAIir », isst. This month wa poy tributo to Lincoln, our 16th PnMidont, tho guiding foico in tho Amoricon way of llfo. to ‘^Honetl Abe” Would Sajr: ‘Tear FUEL OIL Is Onlf as Deiimdabls ~~ at YOUR FOB OIL NSTRIBOTOR!” Thg d«p«ndobility of your fool oil distributor it tho ossonco in COMPLETE HEATING SATISFACTION. Tho most important part of hdoting satisfaction it having tho fuol oil of your choico ovoilablo whon you nood it... Thio ii whoro tho dopOndobility of Goo roolly counts... Goo'f automatic sorvico atiurot you of always having plonty of bottor quality fuol oil rogordloss of tho woqthor, os wo koop track of yoor fool oil noods through our/nodorn "Dogroo boy" mothod and boforo yoor prosont supply is oxhoustod your fuol oil tank is rofillod with tho bbttor quality fuol oil that has modo Goo ono of tho foromost distributors in this droa . . . Thoro is no substituto for quality . . . quality in tho product . .. quality in tho sorvico. GET COAAPLETE HEATING SATISFAqiON .. ■ SWITCH TO GEE NO MATTER WHERE YOU LIVE... Goo's Root of now, modom GMC trucks, motor oqvippad for accuracy and radio dispotchod to giva you battar sarviea, distributo battar guolity fuol oil in Pontiac, Drayton Plains, Wotorfoid, Clorkston, Orion, Auburn Haightt, Bloomfiald Hills, Koogo Harbor and tho surrounding orao. SAFiTY, WARAATH, COMFORT AND HEATING ECONOMY IS AS CLOSE AS YOUR PHONE-DIAL FE 5-6181. SEE "If YOU DON'T KNOW FUEL-KNOW YOUR fUa DEALER!" CHERRIES 49* [ART ■e» 19t ^VALEMTIIIl'^ SKOIAL^ V LintR 1-44 DRESSES 99i 13 CASHMERE 49^ rvunmnil tPEOIAL SHEER SEAMLESS NTLOSS .2SS*j, uein’ItaallMem^ Slacks-Blouses L8dits’NyfoiiS24< SLIPS 199 Oiris' I to 14 BLOUSES ^00 bOIRLS’ tnilTS . ^VALIimilEl SPECIAL BOYS' SPORTS SHIRTS fJ59 .UENTIIir SRCIAL Infanto' Ooi^rwy^ CRAWLERS $|00 "4I.M All-Waal Topooats \ MEN’S SUITS ^9881 rVAUNTtNI^ SPieiAL MtiVtVahittteAll PANTS-SHIRTS ^|88 TA V i ME PONTIAC PRESS. ijlONDAY, FKBRtrkKY 12, 1062 ' fr BACK DOOI^ BATTLE- DcMt toaU« Hank In gvAe at Olympia Sunday night. The young Basaen geta turned around In the net and nelninder pooled hla 2nd Autout In lour atarU, watchee play aa Norm Willman (7) du^ bottle S4). with George Amiatrong ilOl of Toronto late Wings 'Satisfy' Abel by Blanking foronto DETROIT tfl - Coach Sid Abri called It the Detroit Red Wtnga’ "I wanted to dlah It out to thooe guya aomewhere along the line,” aaid Abel, with d apaxtling grin, after the Red Winn blanked the Tonnto Maple Leala laat night three Ural-period godia and two more in the aecond, but there waa no let up aa Detroit battled to protect Hank Baaaei................. In tour gamea. Tba Wli«B I aaade Mg alalma aboat how MMy*i« gatog to fMMh Ihcat So B waa a Blao oM to wta,** Abel aald. In their prevkwo two meetfiga, the Winp Jumped into an early FIrat place In the Natloaal bckey League la Juat a icmote hope now tor the ataggering Leala. They have only a tie In their ‘ tour games aiid to pun out a victory and a tie. A W ★ ' Last night, the Wings acorad MIAACageRace Si Wide Open ^ Hop* TakM 1st PlocB With 78^7 Win Ov«r Kalamazoo The Canadiens nipped the Chicago Black Hawks 4-S on late goals by jean Bellveau and Don Manhall. The Red Wings’ triumph Ikept leih two points behind New York In the bristling scramble lor tourth place and a spot In the playotls. The Rangers roared iTOm behind lor a 5-3 verdict over Boston last light. * . Three of Detrstt’s goals were oeored while a Toronto player was In the penally box. Norm IJUmaa, Ales- DelveccUo and Pnriwr MaeDonald staked the Wlags to a S-a load la the first otaaML Rookie Larry deffray, rushed la from the Edmontna A wide open battle still goes on tor the MIAA basketball crowm Hope saw to that In weekend action by aurgiac Into first place at the expense of the farmer occupant, Kalamaaoo, with a 7S47 vtc-tory over the Hornets. Hope leads with a 7-3 record compared to aecond-plach Kalama-aoo’a S-3. Others are dose enough to keep the race lively. A The weekend also was marked by a new achool scortag record by Detroit's great Dave DdBusschere. Debuaachcre accumulated 44 points as the Titans maided Dayton f7-75. Debuaschere’s in supplants the a record set by Guy SpaiTow agalnat John Carroll In IKS. Itope was a rdatlvely eaay w)n- flrst place fight. Jim Vender topped Hopes with K points. Oaick Wood scored Z1 tor Kalanuaeo. Larry Pratt, scoring 37 poin led Albion to Ha rant, over Adri (!-«). * ♦ k Despite Dick Groch's 31 points. Olivet bowed to Hilladdlr*1lK thoi^h making a light ol the game katgoaL totored TM peedii^wei^ Red and an assist to pace Mlchl#U» to a 7-5 win at Cokarado College Sat-uiday while Michigan Tech flipping Michigan Tech, 3-3 in over-Elov Seger’s 2nd goal gave Tech 10 straight. Berenson now has S3 goals. ■eary HaU. 71, of Earmlag-ton, sailed more than a”»koot tar aaek year of Ms llta yootas^ day when ha aniled 71 tool at Jeffrey made a hasty overnight trip here after Bruce MacGregor attained his knee In Saturday’s 2-3 tie at Boston. back to the minors when i manager Jack Adams. Baasen didn’t have a tougdi time In his shutout bid until the final He made 15 of his 31 saves In the last 30 ndnutes. Belleveau’s second goal brougM the Canadiens into a 3-3 tie betorf MaraahU won It with a Tally sU mtantes before tbe end at Chicago. Murray Balfour, Stan MOdta and Bobby HuUv - Dean Prentice scored twioe tor the Rangers with D^ Harvey, Andy Bathgate and Andy HelMntan notchlag the other goals. Boeton’s tallies were by Johnny Bucyk, Don MdCenney and Ted Green. Bathgate also had two assists' three-point night and Buckeyes Seek Big 10 Record Tonight OSU Five a| in Quest of 24l Straight Victory Ohio EqtAilt Old AAark Saturday isy Clobbering Minn«soto, 91-66 By Ike A record nearly a old Is Ohio State’s bhjcctlve to-nlght when the top-raidnd Buck-eyea Journey to Michigan tai quest of a third straight Big Ten baiiRt-lU championship. if Ohio Slate equidled the marfcl^t 33 straight conferenca vicloites set by Wisconsin in 1913 when the Buckeyee smashed Mlnneeota, 91-Saturday night. R waa OSU’s victapr tkis son ^ Wit BeaHy Runs 3:58.9 Indoors a Jeny Lness hi the Buekeyas’ In the thick of the race with n TITS triumph over MlcUgan State. Forty-one yachts were in the 184-mile Miami to Naaaau sailing raccT which started today. Leading boats in the San Diego to Acapulco, Mexico race were within 48 hours of their goal this morning. en’s I ft Patton Pool In Detroit Ellen gptok. 9. and Kathy Ebbert. 14. of FOB atae eoBspetod. * A ★ Marimont Baptist Church defeat-id United Missionary 48-14 last week to win tbe area Christian Dtedilnger, almost a dncK to rs-p^ as' All-America, Is not far from the four-year mark compiled by Indiana’s Don Scfalundt through 1965 when freshmen were sllow^ to play. Schlundt’a total waa 1,307 points and Diachlng^ b cellent chance of Bso breaking the mark. Diachinger, meanwhile regained the conference scoring lead from Indiana's Jimmy Rayl who was held to 18 points. Tom Bcdyard led the Hooslert with 30 points. sM of Muimont posted a 9-1 record. Williams, Hank Stage 'Rubber' Match Tonight SAN FRANCISCO (UPD-Henry Hank, fiftb-rankiiig middleweigbt contender, wlU face A1 mger) ims of Lm Angdes far the ____time when Oie pair clash In a 10-ronnd bout tonight at Kesar PavtUon. A Each boxer has outpointed the ther with Casey's win In a rematch giving him temporary poa-aeasion of the California state mW-dlawdght crown. Thla now betongs to Johnny Smith and promoter Lon Urn with the Caaey^B CMey. an ehislve boxer who usually keeps his chin weU protected. holds two wins over Henry Hank and has lost a split decision to Dick Tiger. Williams recently returned from before dropping its 12th of 14 stretched his leadership .over Howe Honolulu where 1« was outpointed I in the overall Two teams with impressive records met in the FeniKSoo Tech daMi with Ferris the srinner 8I-T8. Ferris now is 14-1 and Soo Tsdi IM. . A strong second half perfonm to aeven points in the NHL scoiinglby Ctrl (Bobo) Olson, former race. IworU middleweitN kiiig. Win SportB Car Races Mweitgwit a ind erohto Tl-O vktory over lOami in a Mid-A game. BOl Street hit 23 pointa tor Titles for Moss, Gurney _ n iron from Alma K46 Northern Michigan defeated Central Mkfaigan 8M8. Sharp Putter Helps Ferree Win Panama PANAMA cmr, Panama (AP) —-Jtaa Ferree. n bespectacfed pro-featonal from Crystal River, Fta., credited his pn^, behaving hettff than It hat in a year, with M oomebadt victory in die Panama Open Golf Tournament. *'My puttCT hasn’t been tUs hot flhwe Jamaica.” Ferree said after DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) —Qulck-thlpklng Dan Gurney and lead-footod Stirling Moaa are the srianers of the first Daytona Continental three^Kwr race tor sports and grand touring can. And Ferrari of Italy, body's surprise. Is off to a fast start In the 1962 competition for world's autmnobile ilrd in n Chaparral sports car. Gurney sped 313.a miles during the 34»urs. Most traveled 304.K ailes. The Californian had i flat 4-oile lead when hto engine died n a turn approaching the flnfeh ine. Here, fast thinking and a thorou^ knowledge of racing Gurney won tbe 821.800 ral event Sunday with a ' of lOfJOl miles an haur ______Eh he had to nudge his red Lotus sports car acroak tbe finish line with the starter after the en-glM died in the final stretch. > MOes, driving a Ferrari Betlin-etta grand tooring car, made a magnUBorot rinwing In competl-Uon against the taster prototype machine, croasing the Une to thAfr^ and^at to Hh refertnee waa to his 1961 trl-omph to tbe Jamaica Open. Ferree fltddied with a 734iole total of 277, U-under-par. BUy DaBaa, Tex. the end of tiaee ne stroke back. Don .rings, -CMlf., had a 2» and (kw Fineterwald 281 IMIasvIitg Ftosterwnid. aU at 313, were Jacky Oipit. Dougi LOS ANGEUS (AP) Beatty, the worU’e llrat Indm mtoiite miler, triU ran to Ne^ Yotk the next two weeks. And because he’ll be away from p home, the dark-haired 37-yearHild n the »yard Mgh hardtoe. Fraa WasMagtaa af Oaata Oaro " of 63-10 , 1% O'zbrien's standard. record of 3:91.1. A A with II led from gun to tape as ha I to a 3:M.O. IJ aaceods Ernie Omliffe’s former door sUmdoid. past tbe 880-yard toy Ysuth VHIage was seesad. --ftaioer ^ ott a - erilmatedby Judges dt 66-10. And Runninfc e nd^lwl Gary Gubner, the massiva 19-year-old New York abotputter, bettered Parry O’Brien’s with an effort qf 63 feet 6 inchea. But Gubnsr, has a " Haas of Oecidsntal ran hiatfliy's third-fastast tadoor SOO —;96.i. And Jack Terman, fbrm-er California qusrter-mller, upv set Jamaicaa George Kerr in t 1:10J 600-yard run. mates from the Lot Ant Trade Qub, Beatty broke Ron De-lany’s S-year-oU mark of 4:01.4 Satuniaiy to the Lot Angeles Timas Indoor (tomes. Bentty has ran S:96J) outdoors. shock. But Inter he admitted: “Being hereto 1a« Angelas and LI miiira VWW ^ .. . a m., I It gam lha Btolgen a 6-1 Big Ton nols boosted Its record to 5-3 with a 91-81 victory over Iowa. lis was tfrs only team to win away from home Saturday. Terry DfeeMnger set aasthsr Dosing leeari by punsplag to 47 sinis to leadli« Pardee to a IM-I vfetory ever Iget's tbree-yi I new Is Weife wMpped In U pototo to The Buckeyes will b favorites to win at Michigan but Wisconsin will be a decided underdog at Indiana. In other games, Northwestei^ will be at Ultoefe and Iowa at Purdue. lUinoia could cUmb into a aecond place tie by whipping Northwestern if Wisconsin hiees at Indiana. Dave Downey scored 8| pstoti In BOnsto* vielery ever lews while Basfkeye nee Don Neleoe wMpped In n. The vietasy wee mnato’ Uth to U games bat eoacb Harry Oombee was not m out to capture a ahare of the caa-»d but win find the going rough against the streaktog WUd-onta, who have won 16 stndght eoanthig Batarday rdgtos State la 18-1 and 7-1 after beating Tennessee 91-87 Saturday. 8S.7 There's no different routine. . _ get out of bed and there’s nothing different going on. •When I go out of town It’s eiv tirely different. You’re This week, he’ll go to the New York A.C. Gaines, then a week later will run in the National AAU meet, also In New York. He’ll run the mile to both. AOOOROINO TO PLAN Beatty, only S4oot-6 and lil pounds, cUckto off quartar«illas of :96.1, :«5. :6U and :57.7. as be sped alfliig the 189-yard board track. He used Lasrio Tabori and Jim Greele for pacesetters during the first three-quarters. right aocoidtog to plan.’’ perform- Clay Gets Up, Defeats Banks Spartans, 'M' Shine onJrack But WMttrn Michigan Thindads Cop Honors in MSU Relays EAFT LANSING (AP) - Mlcto ignn State track coaCh Frank DH-trich figures the Big Ten title race this year will be decided by his BfSU Spsrtans and Michigan ina and Ohio strong dark- The Michigan State relays here Saturday night proved the tradi- They also showed ft’s a good 1 for both teams that Western Micb-i^ in’t to the ng Tbn. Annnofflelal paM ei NEW YORK (AP) -Clay must be developing an to-ferfertty complex. He admita he’s For (toastos the Great 4TV4- Poadwa agreed It waa a-fair ealiinaw of team strength. Western did it moatly on great team depth. The Broncos placed to 14 of 18 events, although they had one first Tlie undefeated, 39-year«ld Loo-laville heavyweight, uabeatan sinee wfan^ die 18K Of^npicl light heavyweight crown, has, lor from Jaekssn,' been hollering f«r heavyweighti -ebamphn Fl^ Patterson, leap af S Iasi 7% toeheo. Tta Mgh of 6 toot InebM wei by Berate Allard af Notre D la 186S. Ctoiden. Again Moore Wins > 1-2 S Owyn iiM'irl°®SpareAce Chiindltr t 0-1 ‘ - ‘ ' ' "OX - 0 S»S ToteU S4 12 ToU^t 27 n-n n ----------------- Johanaaon, and any of tbe other top-ranking big bo!^. Last Saturday night Caaalus suf-tned tbe embarraesmont of being dropped on hia panto by un-known Sonny Banks of Detroit before be stopped tbe 31-yeai>«id onderdog in 28 eeconda of the ftmrth round at Madlaoa Square out Midiigan State heUbeck Her^ Michigan’s Betmie McRae waS the only individual double winner. The Wolverine football etar won boto tha 75-yard high. and tow terbSM M I-i ■ 1____ ... - K!V. ^ iissr- t |rJ :r__ \ a li j &st lUrril 7 t-S IS VSIk 1 0-t S i Esl. Ml ii Or-Bwald S H * ™>lw f I-f 1 ABdfVWi si-4 2 Lattow i 0-S S ^ S S-S S rtaSMB I It sisk: t a Monroe Moore of PonHac oan-tinued Ms dominance of tbe “Make That .^Mie" televlsitai program Saturday Mght by defeating na-ttonal Star Ray Blutb, 754K). A ■ A ★ He won 81.009 to increase hla linings on the show to 8>1,009, nt miand the K.OOO Jackpot Mwt and also an fkten 8LOOO apnre oosn- Johnaon by a (sater start off tha Mocks. Mdtaa'a time in the Mgh hurdles wu :08.9, tyii« the meet and fleldbouae record set fry the great Gleim Davis of Ohio State to 1958. A Michigan also won the twonrile relay and the distance medley relay. A pair of sophomorea provided two Michigan State firsts. Tootball scatback Sherman Lauia won the 309-yard dash to ;33.8 and John Parka: took the broad Jump with a leap of 23 feet 11 todies. ahead In the shuttle hurdles rday but was of a win a freak urday for Ms 8th \^ipearance against Osri Rlcl^aids. Ha also ax-pects to bo to the Akron, OMo pro tournament starting Thursday. OORD — Jim Beatty of Lot Angeles Track CBib breaks the tape la the mile with .a time of l:afiS to shatter the indoor record at the LA Sports Arena, Saturday idgM. He is tbe 1st to go bekro four minutes taaide. Palmer Takes a Rest After 12-Stroke Win PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP)-GoirslPhoenix Utle with a TSJwle sear No. 1 miracle • maker, Arno)d|of |89, Just am etroke off the Palmer, Is gMng to play only am course reooifi. Hto nearest ( townament to the next five weeks, much to the pleasure of Ms fellow pros. The long-driving Palmer b said for aome tima ha needs performance in the 835,000 Phoenix Open many rivals Red Sox Sign Carroll Hardy He'i Figured to Take Jensen's Position in Bolton Outfield over a student manager eetttog i Cltlw SMI. rmae iT-Sl tt SS-IS, fit worth IS-U U be ooaited acroas the line before the checkered flag fell, marking the end of the 3-hour race, he would be requlrad to ran another top, aa obvious fanpoasi-. MUty wifii a dead engine. Gurney braked to a sUg> U) feet om the line, used ap moat of Ms-lead watt^ tor the 111^ to faS, tfaeii nudged the car across ■tarter to win by 48 Gutiiey, from Goeta Mesa, (tollf. eamad 87,500 and Moss earned eight pointf for Ferrari to tha factory competllton which now is limited to grand touring models. Second ptaoe to the over-nil finish Went to Ricardo Rodriguez of Mexlcq C3D’ to a Ferrari sports car wMra had been driven during the first half of the race by Phil Hill, world road racing eta rom Santa Monica. Chlif. Jim Hall of *Midtond, Tex., I finally decided that Gumeyfe aefien was legal and Ms number went up cn tbe ■ooreboard as winner. Dick Rathnuum of Chicago waa fth to a (3iaparral sporta car. (Xbert to the top 10 were George Oonstanttoe Of Southbridge, Masa., to a Ferrari sporta car: Bob Hubert of WaniiMton, Pa., to a ■ports; John Fulp of An- _______ S. C, to a Ferrari sports; Chudt Chssell ai Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; in a Pondie worts, and Herb Swan dC <3avdand OMo, to ByAa TlieBeatm U^-MtUfig but highly regarded Carroll Halribr. a prime candidate to fill the vacancy created by tbe reMremeiit of dagger Jackie Jen- SlgMtog along with/^ardy ______ catcher Jtei PagUaroni, first baseman Don Caies and pitchers Chet Nichols, Galea Cleoo, Dave Busby, Hal Koistad and Stew MacDonald. The New York Yankees signed pitchers Jim Coates and Roland Sheldon but vren unable to come to terms vMth borne run king Roger Marls. General manager Roy Harney said '^e’le still far apart” after a 35-mtaote aeSstoii with Maris, addng for 875,000 as a reward for Ms 61 homers. A A A rile Chicago WMte Sox outfielder Jim Landis and pitchers Herb Score and Lee Featberstone. Pitchers Chuck Estrada and Wes Stock of Baltimore, catcher Smoky and pitcher WUmer (Vinegar Bend) Mi»U of Ptttsburgh, pitcher Moe Drabowdd of Ctacto- RAOC «INNERB-4>an Gurney, left, at Csfi-fornia and E^iglmid’s Stirttag Maas post with Mfes UMvom, Marfene SidunUt of Garmany, after winning Mg races at tbe Daytona Con^ nental ahow yedentay, Gurney took the throe-hour battle ^ Moaa woo ,tbe grand louring The Lot Angeles Dodgers signed tour players - catchCn Norm Sherry and Bfike Brumtoy and pitchers Wfilaid Nmmr amj Thad TUtofeon vtoOe tbe New York Bfoto olgned five catcher Hobie lOTMhritb, outfielders NeU Chrisley mag Bobby €Mne gmito aiii pitch- , -------------- era JiSTHoMc and Ken McKenzie, and ^ after two. petttors were 12 i pace. The victory margin waa also dw largeat ever for a P(Lt rent. “My drlviiig WM by ter the _mitert reanm for tbe Mg mar-gto,’’ Palmer oaid ae he pocketed K.309 top money. “Tboee tong "But now I need n rest,” he fihed. The rest can’t hurt him financially dther. Tbe S3-yeapold golden boy is gotfdom’s tMrd Mnest money-winner with total earnings of 8275,75176. He is only >7.200 short of Gary MkhOecoffs career total and 89,000 behind Doug Fad. Palmer {dans to play next in the Bat3; A^innMpolifl on Too MINNEAPOLIS ito->MiiinewoIli ad0d Muakeg(m 4-3 tool Mght to take undisputed poasesdon of first place to the Interatolonai Hockey League. ^ the MiUen now have 88 points, St PaM 67 and Muskegon 66. Ptoyer eoweh KMh YSekd of MiimmoUs kcored the deciding, goal ^ a breAkaway at >3 peconds of the third period. It was ttodl-1 after one portod r \ tf II THE PQNTIA'C PEKSS. M0N*DAY, FEBRUARY.12. 1962 TWENTY-ONg State Glrlg Place In Big Event 1st Slalom Oiganhei Hits Ski Amateui^m CHAMONR, rrwx (AP) la top«Biik ■»!« hM t to aa mmL Brltaln’f Sr Arnold Uumi, who otgaiitnd.tha warkl’t tint ■talom rac* at Mitnrea. JJwtturiaiid In m. kaa bluat vtom on what he eaqp the prataaaa o< to ladi cvMiia aa ThaflntatthaliCiDld «aa wan to the waasaa'a giant rfalom lonlay by Anttla'i yaarold Marlaane Jahn. . Joan Haanab of ______ _. N. R, North American giant laaa than a guarter at a aaoond reniei, Mfch., waa fUlh, followed by Jean Saabert, Lakeviehr, M|ch., alxth. Both ttoUied the SO-come ten itom a half MM after the wlaner. Linda Meyne. *Tm M It wothad ont,” American e way Coach ■ ha3 City Cage Calendar ' cmr aagumau. araM db»Hw laMOe cm *H - pertataa baaa Improviag an aaaaon long, and this ihowa the/ra stlU ha tawtag. That's what we'n work lag for.” The men’s vecial slalam be held Tuesday. Poor Antericans haadad by Bud Weniar, Steam boat Springs, Odo., were among ‘ ao who quaUtled. Werner will t In sfaith; Chock Ferries, Stowe, Vt., ISth and Jimmy Heu-Thhoe aty, GallL. SMi. calted the lack of amatsurlMn In lUtag, said, “there Is no loi«er any pooteblllty of naalniainlng gea-utoe aaiateur standards' amoi« dkten hi the CMymple Gamn or world cbamptonahlpo. All such recap teiould be open to amateure bp enforced In countries, and It Is aliqpBt equally "Uficult to enforce in the rest of le world,” he said. He said the exploitation of big at propaganda purposn are partly responsible for the death of .araateurian ampng the worlds Michigan Skiers Win 2 Events in Jump Meet EAU CLADtE, Wla. (AP) -Michigan rtders won ^ honors 1 a In • iSk Chib’s annual aU )ompti« up hn.t petals on Jumps of 1 rowB. Cy Hin of Uwemliig wond with US.0 potats. Itelph Btetlla of lafapnmliig pited took Claas B honors with leaps of no and la feet for U6J points. Dan HUUer of lahpeming with m.« potats. Bbb Wedta of Iron Mountain fin-lahed to a three-way tie for place In Claas A. Wedta tied with ag Mahdk of Chicago and Lai Johnson of Iflnneapolis at 3U. points. Wedta had Jumps of 171 and ITT feet. Larry Bergh of Eu Claire won the event with Jmips of 182 and in feet for 223.7 points. New Champion Setting Sights on Davis Cup NEW YORK (AP)-Cbuck Me-Klnley, the new National Indoor king, thinks the United _____ has a good chance of bouncing back in the Davis (fop team can get by MdOnley emerged as Unde Sam’s top Davis Clip hope by beatlmr Whitney Reed of Ala-‘I. Oslit, the nation's ad amateur, in the Indoor SEE Hi« NEW WMt Track PonHac HAUPT saIes and sirvici MA S-SMd Wilbemdon champion Red Laver ~ Australia the day before. hi a tenae, dramatic whidi kept a sellout crowd 4,000 glued to Its seats, McKinley fought off one match point and finally prevailed, 44, ^ 4S, b-T, fOA. The match lasted more than 3 hours. Hill Record Set in Kandahar Jump PBEP W|NNEB - Kris Pochelon of Bloomfield HiUs High School took the honors in winning the girls' title in the Southeast Mkrh- PaMto* Pi igan Interscholastic meet at Mt. Holly Saturday. She led her team to the girls’ team title. She had a combined time of 1:16.3 Bloomfield Hills’ Girls Take Honors Walled Lake Wins Prep Ski Meet What is called the Southeast Pontiac Central finished 5th in the boys’ diviaioo wUeb had 11 should vely well b* called the Oakland Ctamty ski touraamant, as county schools and individual sU-ars walked off with the -------- field falted to ptem. SIgbt of the 11 boys' teams were from Oaktand County. Royal Oak Kimball Waited Lake puOed a surprise » win the team Htle by virtue Dave Currie's final slalom In the girts team and ftalabed seo-ond behind Walled Lake with the boys team. la 8A* to Ms seesad lua-allsr a hi t behind BfoomfieU mOB In the gills' team by Walled Southfield. TTie PCH glrlB team failed to plaop omut' Tdaua: aievsituie nun irisSL WslwtSrS (3:IS.I|, WklM Uk* Uktrlew <«;» (). aowtb- tUld Btrkin I4;1T), WmI BkwmrUM (4:413*. TtianlM j---------- Tfianifa jl:l4.ll. I (l:14i). PtBUse _Jrmiwh C0OtnF- BOTW 040_______________ Uk* (Ml); auUh BIrai fMd mu* (l:M.4); Otw >.•«•, kju-kall (l:ie.lj; Osrir Ktram. Bdi*! Pord (IrSlii; aouth. AleomfMM ouuis’'nraimDUaL; Krll PochdM, BloomfMd mu* (1:111); Pua Wu- Bumt. Bloomttold BUI* (1:31.1); oA urra*. Wkltod Ldi* (1:M.T): DUn* Bubcrl. Btoomfltld BlIU (IJlf): J»M Tripp, Wdterlard (1:33.3) »aflM.ab tiaaa, ptas that of Mm gteaUtag wUh l:MJ gave Wted Uka tka tttto wita a >:IU tet^ llie HilU team ItntsIlMl with 1:02.1 ted by Butch BbtHofold’i 1:00.5 and Lynn tanlth’s k;01S.' Kris Pochelon and Pam Waggoner of Bloomfiaid HiUs took fnt and aecond Individually to eady John Grames of Pontiac, Jumping for Grampian Mt. was run-nerup to Beach in class B ^visian Pochelon had a ccsiafcined time of :]8.3 and Miae Waggn :21J. Jr. High Swimmers Defeat Utica, 44-39 t|ac dunked their lAlce counto^ parts 44A8 Saturday la the Pim-ttac Northern pool. Don Chamb^ Rick J« and Osrl Hiller of Pontiae wc the so and lOO-yard free sfylm and Johnaon was first to the 90-yard butterfly and todlvidual medley. HUler took the divtag and btUMb I LOOK FOR THIS SIGN A Symbol o( Qual'ty Sa>in;;s SUPER DISCOUNT PRICES Ponitac swimmer won all but the freestyle relay. Tonr 0*r*T to). (P), S Al TUBELESS or WHITEWALLS Tub* Typn 12 60 6.70-15 sad / 7.50-14 d.SOxll *13» ? *19811 .'iwiis *1160 $1660 tiotels $1600 11600 PLDS TAX AMD SMcnANOS K£!t*IB8“ *196« sn /warn aascK ssa-A aia-u ft.95 10.95 10.95 12.95 11.95 13.95 . a.sa-14 ass-u 14:$5 77 West Haraa 93taat IS fr*«*tTl* IS butterflr — 1. Jotuum PtoUr ^(P). 3. Jtrnr Rattols m. traMtrl* - 1. ChMkktrt (P). S •Mt* Kau (D). 3. CMcr lU). IIm* yiM 1: tmm n. bim m ---U«de* II. WnmkifTd ■A IS. HwdWSliDinga* 74 PAB WBSV K NthrMkA SI ^ vr. Mtatau SI ifc SUU to. Bngbwii T«l Northtra liteb. toTCcBtrdl Mlsb. W Albloo SO Jldrtdii b Mop* 7t, Kdwaidioo ST Wuurn mcblm 71. Mtewl (Oblo) P*r^^Uti^^ m ^ T*cb 71 Dftrolt IT. bsTtob 71 iDdtuw T*eh 101 Utntt Tfdta It MiABii (Oblo) jslkrftrtom wm. s MMUtoa IIhIoIiIo bum 4tMi low* IS, mcblfOD 11^ iUeblSOb BUM 14. Oblo SUU 14 (tlo) WoiUra inebUonMlTotro Oouo 4S ObU SUM iOUebltoa SUU 41 11 lowo 11 ^ lileblgoB SUU 11 I Mleblfoo SUU 14, 7 DetrJt 14, 0. of Chl_.. .. Detroit IS, Motro Domo II lUoblfW Toeb I, MIehlinD SUU I liIcbIsoD 7. ColorodO C^e 4 North DokoU 1. mnn*M>U 4 (ot) Win CUSSA Crowns TRAVERSE CITY (AP) rttt Oook of Chicago Won the class ' boy's downhill event In 23.1 sec-ids yiasterday in the finale (d the two^Kgion 3 Ontral United States Ski Association junior Alpine championships here. Kelly Woodbury of Glen Arbor, who won the class 1 girl’s slalom Saturday, won the girl’s downhill yesterday in :25.2. Big Discount Dave Merrill and James Huckle, both of Traverse Qty, tied for the dan 2 boy’s downhill at i23.6. Jim Rennie of Traverse City took class 3 to :M1 and Bruce ^rt. ^ Thundcrbirds SweCD of Traverse City, took Class 4 in * rs • i • j MVEonAII KRAFT SHENT SAFETY Val Hayes won the class 2 girl’s dowphiU in :25.0, The Traverse City girl won the girl’s slalom Saturday. Kathy Rauch of (foeboy-gan took..the class 3 downhill to :aS.2, and Kathy Paulos of Traverse aty got clan 4 in :27.9. mi TREADS as little a* ic Psr Wsek per tire ED WILLIAMS WHFFL alignment BALANCING BRAKES MUFFLERS SOUTH .V AT QAtBURN PONTIAC 26.6. Sally Erwin of Traverse Oty won the class 1 girl’s giant alalcnn and Ken Lindsey and Kent Box tied for the claas 1 boy's giant slalom. (ThunderUrds. Two Jumpers Ride 121 Feet in Annual Meet Earl Hill 4>f Briar Hill Wins in Sonior Clan of 9th Tourney One pair of skte turned out to be lucky for two akt Jumpers In the Toumament yesterday at the Orr road site. Earl Hill, a Detroiter who akls fpr the Briar Hill ski club, won tiw SepiorB’ class with Jumps ot 114 and 121 feet for 213 potats. Hill, who had hii^ump stotrn while eiflhg dinner at a nearby restuarant, Saturday night, had to use the Jumping skis of aint Beach for the meet. The akls were good for Beach also, as he won the class B division with Jumps->of 11M16 tor 200.7 potats. The 116 loot mark held by Wa-‘rford's Dave Freeman, was sur-assed by HUl and also Jan Simon-Kn. Simonaen, i960 state champion from Flint, who also skis tor Briar Hill, had Jumpa of US and 121 feet but finished third In points with 179.5. Berger Ericksen Flint and Briar HUl was aw; with 192.3 points In jumps of 106 and 107, Simonaen also had the h _ landing free Jump of the day at 119 feet. KANDAHAR MARK - Earl Hill of Brlaf HUl sM club sW a hlU recoitl of 121 feet in the 9th annual Kandahar jumping toumament held yesterday at tha site on Oip road. HUl has been state jumping champion several times. Deapite haavy snowB, a large field ot jumpers and a targe crowd were on hand Sunday. SNOW SLOWS RUN The record would pcobably have ttauous snowfall slowed the runs. In practice the day before, jump-rere hitting marks of 135 feet. Walt Hyiy af Berkley, saocses Mfy detoiMed Ms vetoraa's title, ■e Iwd Jarape «f lU-Ul feat fwr was seoead aad Lea OnNsqalat of with jumps of 106 and lOS feet tor 109.2 potats. Ralph Guthrie, also of Grampian was third and Hank Juntunen of Kamtaiiar waa fourth. (fori Saul, menober ef the Briar HUl ski club, from Detroit was claas winner. He has jumps ot 101 and 96 feet for 172 Jack Chambers wor honors while two. wnmen tied in the women’s dhislon at the championship rolloff of Uic March of Dimes tournament held Sunday at Lakewood Lanes. Members of Pontiac Elks Lodge no took over several high piaces at the state tourney in Lansing, there were no changes among the leaders here at the Elks Ladles Invitational and a Detratt team became unofficial Isadar at the Huron VaUcy team con teat In MU-totd on another big wericend for area bowlers. ______jrs fired 879 to win a portable 'television, Tom Baytlsa A total of 3l jumpers took part in the meet and deapite Uw areath-er nearly 1,000 apectai the area to «*atch the PraantsItoD sf tiwphtas • tha Eagles aaert toeteded Ed DravedaM af Detroit. Ed Neronaa af DetralL Bin HyvaaeD of FerodUa aad OcM Btaasham of Uvearia, The Kandahar Ski Gub wUI now wve to arait before deriding adiether a TOth annual jump should "in 1963. Tlie State Con- buy 179 acres atijacent tiae Laka Recreotten area and this Includes the site of the ski club. The club is making a proposal to the state for the opentlon of alto as a public aU srsa. Molterer Captures Professional Crown ASPEN, Cbto. (AP) - Anderi Molterer, 30, Aspen ski Instructor, is driving a new automobile today his reward for winning the first rid’s Professional SM Championship here over the weekend. Molterer's combined time on two slalom runs Friday and two natautes, 16.2 seconds. Ernst Htaterseer, Mammoth Mountain, (folif., has ttie next best total time of 4:17.7, whUe Idaho skier Christian Pravda had 4:21.6 clocMng. Othmar Schneider of Boyne Mountain, Mich., wan |540 Swday for a sixUi place. Bowling Doubleheadtr FORT WORTH, Tex. (AP)-The Detroit Thunderbolts swept a Na-fional BowUng League double-header fr«Mn the Fort Worth Panthers Sunday, winning 30-tt and 15-13. Bob Crawford posted game and a 068 three-game series to lead Detroit’s first victory, and George Howard had a high game of 3M and a high three game series of 689 in the second for the (HI M 5| 8 W. Huron Stroot yVeor General Hdepital , ' H 4-4669 , wont paopla to saa you? As you ora ... or , ot you wara? You owa It ' to your friands and ot-sociotas ... to your family ... to hova your portrait tokon today by PHatoRrapiiar EVENING ^AEEOmTMmTS Elkg Star at State Chambers Dimes Champ; Two Women Deadlock playar and Gerald WUliams 654 tor a transistor radio. Mary Ann Christoff and Frances Gross matched 625s. They wiU roU-off thlB week. Jean WUkens is assured 3rd at 621. Prizes arci ' same as the men's. The top three In each claas are to compete in state actloa Feb. M for trips to NaaiMu. t:!. Real Eateto SA71 aad by aarty laaday slgM. Dcm Stoll and Bbb Mcikte iit 1,310 for 3rd and OmiIsb FoBte and Andy Fonter 1J09 In doublbs. Pontiac men (foarles Bakar and Early Lynn held the load foon two vreekB ago at 1,835. Joo far reil of Pontiac vrent ahead to bath atagtes divisions with 694-754. Say Deary rolled 6B8. * * ★ At the Elks Ladles maet, BatD Chariter and, Wanda Stpte of ^ ttec grabbed 3r^ta doublaa with IJll and Hetew Fkter, Pontiac. I 6th in singles at 633 There waa no team action over Uie weekend. ' G. E. No. 1 bit 3,394 for tor ranMitg at Faiiilrounda. Anothei Motor Gty entry is 2nd at 3.195. B A M of Waited LMm dropped to 3rd with Knapp’s of’New Hudami and HllaTid Variety of Higblano Trith 3,182. Ed Blair, Clancy Aulwea and Jor Btachl of Detroit all sharo high -967. Btachl had a 682 seriea. Mike Sasnardiija and Las Rothbiulh fired 640 and 633, rt- NBA Standings S£»2lili51i^ County Skaters Now Champions B/TMUM K«« York m. lmua OllUfB ABl Standings ALPENA - ni from Oakland County won tltlas here Simday In the Michigan State Speedskatii^ Championshipa. ?*^n.r. ;8f Vi strong performance Sunday, second day of competition. NHL Standings S/SCo. li ri»!3iS Westminster Show Opens in New York NEW YORk (AP)-The ancient 'estiftinster Kennel Oub Dog Show opened a twtMiay session in Madison Square Garden today but going to show up was a tight secret. "We’ll have 62 best-of-breed winners back from last year," said a Westminster official cau-)usly. "But that’s all I can say." How about the finalists? "(fon’t reveal then).” Frank and Katherine Wheatley oi AUen Park, Mich., have a strong contender In Ch. (fonifer’s Lanca, a 5-year«ld Iririi setter. Lance won the big Giicago International last ■year. Two From Birmingham, Southfiald Sp««dst«r Win Stat* Crowns Paul Mehl, 13, (d Southfield (van cupped the Midget Glrle dMafon aad Jamie Yofug swept tha 'Tad- Jeanne Omelechuk, the Detsiott schoolteacher, won all five races to easily add the senior wsinan's crown to the North American and Women's National champtonsUpa von the two previous vreete- Veteran lyim Augustitus of Detroit Twm four of a posrible seven first places to ooUect 36 paints and the senior men’s crown. Jim Johnstaji of Detroit copped the Sealor Mea’a Oaaa B crown aiM Kathy SulUvan af Oiehoygan oaptnred the Jaalor Girls champlodiaklp. She Is rated were Karen Waiden, Ro^l < third in Intermediate Giria: Bill Freeman, Farmington, aecond to Junior Boys; George Chapman Drayton PlalM, third in Midget Boys. Christine Walden, Rsyal Oak third in Midget GirU; Rofiei Youi«, Birmingham, fourtk it Pony Boys. AnENTION YOUNG MEN Your fulore is in electronics ; . . the fastest growing industry in the world lodoy) Plan for thol future by tokihg the firtatt troiping available., Eixroli now for our next "Electronic EngH nearing Training" program. ^ M*s c«»e«e «f c*si«cCi»sia4 "Elsdiraiiies InsWula ST5:25(«—w ' . _ , , SS(*cUHm|YorkT2i-i and sparked the Chiefs to their! 10th victory in U games. Sopho-lthe nod against Nofthern. This inorc A1 KM returned toom a brief front line averagaa t-3 and wUl stay with the Junior varsity to sfart give dw Chiefs a definite Ugt against the Wolves, under the boards. Paul Brown. Otto Kennedy and * * * Rudy Ransom probably will getl Dave Shields and the Hayw^ Syracuse Giant Leads Victory Over Pistons SYRACUSE IB - It might have, WUUe NauUa topped New Yvk been a reenactment of . Jack the with 31 points. Giantkilier except.thst this Ume the giant ______ The I|6rolt Pistons took the part of Jack. The giant wu Swede Hal-brook, the 7-lOot-3 center for the SyracuM Nats. The Nats, paced by Halbrook'i In other NBA games yrsterdsy, Boston whipped Chicago 14S-115, “ Louis The Oeltioi, gunning for their sixth consecutive Esslern Division title, snapped a three-game losing streak at the expenae of Chicago. Tommy Heiraohn's 43-point output sparked the Celts. Giff Hagan erupted for 56 polnta as St. Louis broke a six-game losing string. Oscar Robertaoo headed the Gncy soprers with JS points. 0 r 1 Si: wsssKftMTM v.sisA.ca»a# gw— j j j 5 j 8 Stopped Cincinnati 12S- SSSiTu i i i hSUm , iA 1 Philadelphia clipped New « s i ' ■......... 41II lit M II 111 ONE WEEK ONLY! SPECIAL mly U Duun lAUTO paintinqj Halbrook'broke Ioom in the aec-| I ond period and the Platons oouUn' tin him as bs lobbed In U| (points to' boost SyracuM to a 61-57 lead that stood up the rest of tbe| way. Oddly OM the last half sad played ntaulee la the flrsf. Ha with jN potato toy bto ear M a pro. Don Ohl and Gene Shue kept] Detroit in the game with their outside shooting but they couldn’t I make up the difference. The cloa-lest the Pistons ever came in Uw| second half was they launched a fourth-period rally with Jackie Moreland leading thej charge. Moreland dropped points in this last big push but itl IMr«a irrMBM Ohl led all scorers with 24 points, J while Itol Greer* paced SyracuM I with 23. Deirsit now has a U-SI rooord and. In 14Vi games beMM West-era DIvIstoa leading Lm Angetaa. TV Warriors' victory over New York was their fifth in Wilt Chamberlain once again led the way with 42 polnta and twins. Gary and Larry, stand aboQt S-1. Ed Wbsik appears to havt ra- hhn a rira-haaisd playar agnl The looor of the Avondslt Madison game can sxpact to May a step ahead of laat place Lake Orion. The Dragons have the task of invading Oakland A front run- Avondale and Madiaon are dead* locked for fifth place. The Yellow Jackets have pUj«d food ball sinca coach Dick Bye made some lineup changes and oould spoil things^ A asssisi Rangers Win 3rd Straight Crown Prep Cage Calendar The "little" Mountain View Rangers had no trouble winning their 3rd consecutive city National League hockey championship Saturday at Northside Park. With Dave Parker firing three goals to toad the way, the Raag-7-1 victory over llaolo of the i Other Mountain View goals were ■cored by Nick Anderson, Bob Van-over, ,Bob Schaffer and Larry Lewis. The unbeaten Rangers tallied twice in the 1st period. In the 2nd and four times in the flnale. Union Lake's Rick Krelachmar clicked with only five minutes left In the game to ruin Ranger goalie Rick King's bid for a shutout. Victory completed a tourney sweep for Mountain View teams. The Mnlor Rangers won the American loop title last Wednesday. Lake Orion Is a definli dog agslast the Spartans, dawsea goM to Oak Park in tbs other league gsme. Troy is idle. Lakers Mr Mid la tha W-O by wtaotaif. Holly eaa puH itoelf bs-deadlock by Royal Oak Kimball teste first . ~ place East Detroit in ,0is AhU)- ^ rock’s J|Jr. in wn fiuiteni Mlchl-gan-league contest. Ferndsle goes to Hazel Park in the other loop game. Other action Tuesday has South Lyon at Howell, Msyville at North Branch, North Farmington a Country Day, Faimingtan OLS at Ifttca St. Lawrtnes and Warran Ltawoln St Utica. St. Benedict, cthduunploo of the dost to Vialtstlon In the openli« tiusrtcr. But the eventual winiMra turned on the points and won going sway. fVIsitotlon hdd a 3g-lf halftima lead. Bud Strange topped St. Buna-diet with 19 pohiM. Ramsey Will Coach Pittsburgh Defenses PITTSBURGH (API - Gtnutl (Buatcr) RSmaey, formar head coach of the Buffalo Bttla of the American Football Leagua, has been hired as a defonsivs .coach by Pituburgh of the National FootbaU League, the Steelei nounced today. ♦ * A Ramsey was firad at Buffalo irlier this year after the Bills finished last in 6te AFL's Eastern The Stealers said RaitiMy i Chuck i.!r™ t Detroit in 1961 and served under Buddy Parker, prea-ent coach of the Steelera. sonr SuHm. iSS: H.B.lD0UBL[im£in!! Wed., Feb. 14tb PliTONfvs raiUHLPRU tiOor.M. Chicago vs Cincinnati 700 PM. C O N V t N T I O N ARENA NORTHERN RBBOUNDER Center Dave'ShiMs d vs: tiae Northern wiU have his work cut out for him Tucaday When the Husldas take on Osntral, The Chtofs will have a deflnito height advantagac for the contest in ths PNH gym. Shisida turnsd In a top performance In Northern’s win over Waterford Friday. WANTED! ' MEN-WOMEN from sots 18 to 52. Prspars caaas or||y ana out of Nvt psss. now for U. S. Civil Ssrvico |ob Uncoln ^Ica hslps thousands openings in this sfsa during prspars for thtst lasts svsry ths noMt 12 months. yssr. It Is ons of ths largsst Covemmsnt petitions psy st and fattest growlno privstaly high as $44d.00 a month to owned ichoelt ef its kind end ifart. They provide much it not eormectod with the laov-greator security man private ammant. amploymsnt and aaosllent op- For FREE kitormetlen on Cev-Mrtunity fer advenesment. emment |obt, Indudirto list ef AAany poritlont reqwira littia or pooltions and telarloe, fUl out no ipociallsad education or ax- coupon and mall at ortoo—TO* porlance. DAY. You will also got fufl But to get one of thoto fobs, details on how you con uuoNfy you mutt poM a tost. The com- yourtolf to pan those tntt. petition it keen and in tome Don't doiay---Act NOW! LINCOLN SUVICI. Dm. 21 raste, niiaiii •r V.S**3n«niM la Sura It's Earl Scheib VC . , sr ruaicfits ALUGFEXT, -> Linesman Ron Hicks skates toward New York Ranger Dirk Balon (back to camera) and Boston's Andre Prono-during fight in 1st period on Bcuin ire last night. Both were sent to the penalty box. MSCOUNTj AUTOPAmS ' CliKk, a4|utt. ttit krikti * ntpack tront arktal btiringt * Chock, alizn front ind * Adjust tl»»rin,r BRAKE SPECIAL $|19 USED TIRE SALE YOUR CHOICE 4™ 8 RETREADS YOU NIAY BE ASTONISHED at the value that the nation’s leading industries place on daily newspapers as an a(fvertisiiri^i:!iSU j“Si.“V«iai5r8Si« c«ica5!*iC£*ii‘JwI{^^ •- ••• >■ S»5®»re. SftSra*3J2a.‘a:}»S:^ n.M: laaaiaM ariaaS isod anS Wnte* “iim^affaSeM””*■**■ *** Stocks of Local Inforost neoiaa attar SMUBal paiBU am stsatiH | KdaS^tosat-B^ Baejfaat laf S' KS^MTama^ ». P^Kf n early settlement f beneficial effect •i of the atocfc. I the American Stock e were irregularly higher | r trading. Higher by more point were Oak Manu-Wood chkfary and DaJay atorea. Anken b C^wnlcal gained about a point at Q Amarican Stock Exch. SSL^JZ ; SSi!^ ; drk Stock Exchange 'inuaiis* laatlS!!| Am TIaeaaat IS li Aahi od i.sa ta iM i AIcklaaa IJia M tnf 1 jRSliT"- I. JIT:' a S 8-"ill U SH 1% fV- >> sgii'ggij fs:r SffL' Ifei “ ^ 'Vi t __JW IW S MS I iraan tan laa «iias ii — ga^r ---- ^ SI USa S ftSSSSr% •arl^-m mtollaoa do aat aa» «taal tranaaattaai M Udda ta taa aparoil- ..........Jj j Chaekar : atlaaal U ^E::E::S^ Sa 00..“' •" „ rta Ala". tS a^.“ -—'f cp “ - Carrlar Cp lAt - , — Caaa. JI IT IS IS Calar Traa 1 U «S «S 4 - “ II ns MS 1 U MS M 1 KIrctrooIca iBtai rnto Co....... SiSi'AlB'. TraaflOOBtlBWUl Om np« U tf-J *]. VflrBon Otofv Alt ........ Wrandatta ...a « Amuaud nuBd......... Cheanool rund ........ ConnaowtaHh Staal ... Kayatana laeoma *-l .. Kayatoaa Orovta K-A . di mraPaa Oii Pnaa T IJ Chmiar I err maa im ! fsar. : h S:Sg ..1I.TS I ..tijs I : gSrii ; hl'i I. l^S .a#i ga.’sSi ’iairr^Ss«a, —.D— Ml SI? m i & as.®*; I MS MS Wsa. ' Si — Si 8;$ W.I DU d laai iJia < Negotiation Plans Still Unsettled in Lear Strike —GRAND RAPnwar— _ tkn piana atfll were unsettled to- jSS i day in a strike at Lear. Inc., ^ where 1,®0 hourly wage mcDdiers iTSIkara iJi L™ of United Auto Workera Local 330 —F— have been oft the Job since Feb. 3. A new contract is at stake with the firm, seepnd largest empktyaf in Grand Rapids. * ' ir -r nr JI w « an PM. LIS 1 11 n I M .Ml M us » . „ j Hoi I.U u uni UW Kaiyaar Bath .US I MS I mm !Li *! 'JPu. JJjia -&I5V- JFis& 3ij8is^ 'aTSs-®“.j ;-s:^5£.a-T S UTV-lS 18%: V US4. s rl MOM I U 1 IJ sF^rra ■si I P fi S I 11% ws- ______________' hoped output would be at better a eo^ar-anhour by Tueaday. Egbert didn't say how long would be required to get all 6,400 workers back at their Jobs. Death Notices RimsELL M. HARnnr AVON TOWNSHIP-Servlce lor Russell M. Harvey, 73. of 3681 Orchard View Road, will be 3:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Ptxley Funeral Home, Rochester. Burial be in White Chapel Memorial Om-etery, Troy. Mr. Har^ died yesterday morning following an extended Ulneaa. He was a member of Rocheeter Lodge No. Si FfaAM. and of Oar^ penteria Union. Local No. 666. Surriring bMidea Ml wifa Edna M., an a son, Rusadl M. Jr., of Rocheetac; two daughters. Mra Dama Jotanatm of Rochester and rt of Clawaon; ________Jchildrenfi a a slater. iBLOtn E. NELSON Mn. Deloris E. Nelson, 3L Of 136 Whlttamore St., died Sunday at a St. Joseph Mercy Hospital follow ,: Ing a brief Ulneaa. a She had been employed at Poo-» tiae Motor Division. Survivon include her moUier, i Mrs. iniliam E. Scott of Pontiac : and a daughter, Kathleen Rae of ^ Pontiac. Service -wUl bp held Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. from the Huntoon Funeral Home. Burial will be In Perry Mount Park Cenwtery. MSA. best SATEBUN PONTIAC TOWNSHIP — Set for Mrs. Bert (Edna) Rathbun, 60, of 61 Hillfirid St.. wlU be 10:30 a.m. tomorrow at the Moor Chapel of the SparkaGriffln Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. Burial wUl be at St. John. Mrs. Rathbun died Friday at St Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac, loUowing an illness of several months. She was a member ofjhe Auburn Heights United Presbyterian Onuch and of Unit No. 2, MOMS of America Lodge No. She is survived by two grand*, children and three great-grandchiJ- J Woman Claim fo Hoar Opening of Lily Buds DES MOINES, Iowa ll» - Early ne morning, two Dee Moines omen were walking along the shcoe of a lake when they heard New-Type Loader hr Tractors Is Revealed by Ford A new l.OOO-pound capacity load-r with unusual sling-boom design Baeanse of the Ipader's casyen-aaay-off feature, the uaeria tractor can oasUy be fi^ tor other oper- n a aia i i » air ^ I > 8g|8Sat« _ 5« a OM ca lAi m nvk n ’ ssWji. s s’^aj^svts .j WlMlmi JS t ISH : ss^snutji. -irMa JU ! wSSlr u *f S* JT S i ' S MK irtA 1TM> I 7 « a% silS... —W— ' I rifc TH T> rim B «• lAi 1 M Baaean 1 « tend to prove anytltoig^ii' thnC laws may chance, but men don't** AAA “ And the mtMical to lMayii« iS t" audiences in a smalt In Manhattan's East 1li(^ TtVEXTY-FOUB THE POXTIAG PRgSS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1962 Take B^U by^ the Horns By Pr. Mr UrttU Cookt and PliU Evtw A Dull Course Can Be Made Interesting Vjr jfMaoN, mi. d. ViivwiMjr «l lilfcini QUM **Wky did I aver ilgn op tor this ooune? 1 don't Ukn It ' don't otudy. I IM poor pndeo.' How nuny tlntea hnw I houd It hnd tht rigl|t humher of imtU. taUnc tt. Or II ted Ite ?~ra»: Ucity Indicated la of tte oonatnietive type. Tendency to * be controlled. Tate It calm and eaoy . . . mate clalma which you can bock up, verify. Ihlnki VnOO (Aug. 33 to Sept. 33): tion In third nectar of your Sedar chart Thia meana you abould care in trateUng . . . in wri _ Be diplomatic with relathnsa. Reread even little notea. UBBA (Sept. 3S to Oct. 23): Much working In your favor. You may be unaware of It, but there are thoae yon hMped In paat . . who now tty to repay .toVor. At ----.-------1, gpppi SOOBPId (Oct 33 to Nov. &): be brought Into play. But be aura you attract peraona GOOD toe you . . . otberwiae, you diaatpate energy, talenta. Could mate wrong SAOriTARIIlB (Nov. 23 to Doe. 31): Remember aaylag a Rome .. .1 It WM tet test ta day. Georgia 'Hunt* Rounds Up 131 Rattlers WHIGHAM, Ga. From dawn until late aftemoo’n Sunday inake hunters tracked through the woods of this soutla*«iPgta area. When the counting was done, there were 131 rattlers, a lew coachwhipa and other non-varieties. There were pclaes for the Uggset anakes, and prizes tor the moat Snake experts " ' show how tt's W Tte toundnp, deoisnad to reduce the area’s snake population, was inaugurated last year after a teenager suffered a severe a ' ‘" A commercial firm . the snakes for |3 each for extraction of venom for use In an anti: dote for I Births The foUowing la a list of recent Pontiac area births as raordoad at the Oakland County derk’s Office (by name of Father): Preeent eatimated coal reserves in (teiada amonot to a total of n and child in tte Domteou. THE pbXTlAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 12. ioo2 TWENTY.fi VE Kennedy Lands in Indonesia AnH.U.S. Sigitt Torn From Wdit by Solditn Bofort Hit Arrivol JAKARTA. InteMl* UP) -VS. Atty. Qm. Rabtit F. K«b-nedy arrlvad b Imfamato today for a rix-day liaU, Baton hb akMf Ua iwta Into tba capital. The aMlntr that bramfit Kao-Mdy and bb wife, Bthal. louelwd down at the Jakarta airport houn late. Indonesian Atty Gan. Gunawaa, who had tanritad Keo> nedy ta vbM the Socblbl * * * Kaonsdy aad Ms wife I I they ossd seetac drive aboot^ the BiitM Bayta( "Kannody |o home" aad "Unllad Siatea no, Indonaaia yes' on waDs and bafldtnca. They also handed o«t poatars and leaflets. TMd of tba sivw durltif hii at fltatajMn. Ksmody said Ingly, "iVe seen them baloi causa the Unitsd fliktes permltlad chartarad Dutch atrUnars wbh unltormed traops aboard to nAial on \JS. larrtloiy an route to West I fUfhts but slrilnerB Ob the ava of KauBady's arrival the Tndnnebsii army ssat jungle Ahten to aaslani danesis. apparently ta start tnfll- Wreckage, Bodies Found Near Saigon bad bsaa sosB faRM All the Americans aboard wen penonnal of U J. Army and Air Force. At bast sas was Do Forget Me, Says Fred Pryor, oi Ann Arbor ANH ARBOR. Mleh. UP)-"Umbs Is an oportunity tp make a lot of chaap propaganda slam-mbf BMt Cawnaiw-daB’t do H in Bflr eass,’* said TMhrle L. Ptyor. n. tadsy an bta rsiiBa ' I rebass team a had plokad Mm up as an nags suspect In Best Berlin last Aug. 2& Hb mother aad fstiMr, who bamad of hb datentlen three of thdr thna sinoe In Berlin. 2 Mor» Bok«ri«t Hik« Detroit Brood Prieos DEiRorr. _ _____ to be hiked a oant-adoat today by two more Datrott bakarias. Mar' lag to I eries which had raised prices In a General Baking Oo. sod Awrcy cup. Wondaihrsad. Ward aad Tny- Wi Stas bakarias in the prtoa tapreaao., ‘ Lapder Girl, 6, Struck by Auto in Front of Home LAPEER - A e-yaarold giri b listed in aatbfactory oonditian at lapaer Qsunty General Hospital today with taluriea suffered yesterday when she wu struck by a car In front of her home about ' sir mllet east of haib. * * * Julie M. Morey. daugi|ter of Mrs. EUsabeth Pchmidt of SSI Bowen Rood, has pooMbb nsl Injurtea and a poasi^ I dMHildor, boapHal authorltln Un ROPE - U. 8. Atty. Gan. Robert Kmmedy inoa Ms hand at skipping rope whUe on a tour of the Wong Tal Sb refuges noetUsmsot aree In Kowloon, Hong Kong. In tbo background b one of tba large apartmont houtee being City's Main Public Librsy Inaeases Book Collection FOBtbe PPMic Library "Nareagba Folk Tales"; AUan. **Cbtria M Waba; American Hort-tags, Ttrappun *»d Mountain Men"; Aihnov. "SateUlleo in 0^ flpnoa"; Oentawnrth, "Indian oounlen"; Davb, "Memagaa From 8paeo": Farjeon, "Hw New Book of Days"; Kuskin. "Iho Bear Who Saw Ike Spring": Fedenon, Almka Uatveat"^ Stob, "BaUb« be Tiger": Summers, "Gift Hecti"; Thun. "Ihe Magic Jew-el"; Weaver, "A Poppy in tbs Corn"; Wlbberioy, "Zehubn Pike: Soldier and Ibplorer": Wea«, ramboto"; Mobeig, "1W Uat Loo- “Duck^ Gaoao and Swans." ta eolbetlan of booka. acoerdliig to Ftiyllb Pope, bead Hr Wtoam ~ Bnnnan. "The Owl Hoou Twice at Catflah Bond"; Ckansray, ‘TInd the Boy": Ounp-“ : Coffin. "Not to the Swift"; Olcfcens, "The Hoart of Loadon"; Dodge. "Ga- tor Home": O’Ctomor. "Ita Bds* di: ■ ■. “ .' ^ a Itatthbd tand": Stofadwok, "Ita I": Tta- r. "Saaaoa of Mbto.'' Mnrmtr ~ mob. "The Cem ef the SappMre Brooch"; (taaasy, "The Killii« Stitta": Eberiuut, "The Oip. the Bbde or the Gun"; _ ____. - - 2. E_____________ Itamas, ‘Tlylan Thomae, 15 af Thomas' Best Posms Rend by RIefaaM Barton"; Warier, "Over- BlOQBAray - AAright. "Focus on InflnMy”; CtiUen. "Old Davey. "Kafswa of Japan"; Marx, "Happo................. "BuA: A KhM's Minbttr"; Urns. "Jane Ad-dame of HuU Hooee IMUIft"; WflUanM. "Bbhep'a Wife - but StUI MyeeM** Deeert Genwab"; b. "Tta Aft of^ItaiS?: MUk •nta IVvin CHIob"; Buickhardt "Sbnai Tta Cfty <( the_ytagfai" S5C Certeb Youth, 14, Hooking Candy; Admits Break-Ins A awaet tooth appnreally was the downfhB of a youag burglary aua-poet who admittod four rteaat MBaklBB yrstarday after beiag caught huMe the Interstate Trucking Co., U7 B. Brush St laro, "Suptrvisors to Actien.” Hampiond. "Oigaabtag tor Defense; The American Military Establishment in the Twentieth Cen-: Hay, "Naturs's Year: The Seasons of GipaCod"; Jones. "The Hawaii Book: Story of Our Paradtoo”; Lacbouguo, "The Aitot-omy of Glory: NapMeon aad Hb Lofto, Five Poenw": Pumptaey, "The Heritago of American Social Woit”; Ridenour, "Mental Hoolth to the United Statoa": Sdl. "BunV tog with Csmera and Blnoeular." Mden, "Ehjoy Japan"; Sorad. "Tta Convict and the Stninad Glam *. "Die Art of Statby. , "At- RoconMdoratlons: A Study of Hb-tory"; Witty, "How to Booome a "Popular Domino Gan^ for One the number of bak-to Sbt Players"; Duncan, "Ftod n Caroer in Agrlculturs": Frisch, "Atomic Phyota Today"; Nleka^ 100, "Whan tbo Heart b Ready"; "Watt tor Me, Michael": •, Gift of Rome." — Abjorason. Donbitti. "Loeb di Laaunannaor"; FOUa. "O Sombrero do Ties Plcoe". Handel, "COnoertl Gimsi, From Op. f. No. 4, N& 5 and No.6"; Mabbr. "Symphony No. 9 D Flat pju. ysstoriay, peftea toriitlgat-ai nad band s lO-ysarwId |u-veafta lasUe. Nothtag waa taken from the Arm. but the boy appersntty took tlmo to« opsn a carton of candy and acme Jelly in the warehouae. A radio taken in a-break-in at ThooMa Economy Furniture Company waa found In the bey’s poB Mston. He admitted two burglaries at the turaituro store and two earlier braaMns at tbo trucking eom-pony. Turnad over to Juvenile an-thoritiea was Jamet T. Milb, 2U) £. Wibon St. Prince Chsries Okay After Appendectomy LONDON, (UPI) - Prince Ctarbs, heir to the British throne, was nisbed 9B miles ly ambulance to a London.... emargoncy operMon to remove hb appendix. U-yearwU sen of <)Beea pseataaeed la BUILDERS! ^Itao ml — - IBm RatatMl ptiwi wakoBiM IngBl^ tor Iba re-Sewliptoita «f U iBiariwi roiidenllgl toh. lelo m IicbMI Ib • ttiftw roiMoirtM greg, wMoll b gd|gtigt lg tog Diumlgani ggtl- CMc Cggtif• Liter thb motntog the hoepital said he spent a "comfortable'' nirtt. Queen EUzabath kept In touch the hoenital bv teteohone from L ACT NOWt PLANNINC » URIl^ RINIWAL MPT. Cky Hofl. SI S. PMfce SBOtor Pearieo. MIohigan ... at Cal PI S^ytll. ts», 219 .................... TVVEyTY-SIX THE PONTIAC PRISSS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1962 « ---mm »-_» «■---------— jk UMrUB*nU. bMt. bat want •!«*• N«kt «lo«a 1 rooiBi tnd tetb 'if^^Wi____________ 3-BBDROOta UPPER.' ONTO*-Bl.bMl. W Spobont. PE 6-itW. 3 APARTbdCNn - ONE BA^ .on* WMl tldt, Poottec.' PE «-T«M. 3 ihUt Vtb* Al^ARiyirirri: . b*dnMMU. MitomaUc heat, $M moalb. 1 north aide apartment, 3 bedroom upper, Idd mootta, FB 036«. After t FET-im. ) ROOM CLEAN. PTLVAN LaKI pne, IT4PS InVernen. PE MTM. 3 >001ta and bath. REPRift-erator and itoee lum. PE PdWet. 1 ROOMS and RATH. 6aLL it .. AU re^aeorated — . .. eitrai. CaU PR ••dWl oner 1 P.~ Modem 5 Room APARTMENT btote and reprioerator FURNURED, IM PER UONTH. APPLY AT l»t BLOOMPIELD ---lACE. NEXT TO> 8T. JO- Orchtrd Court Apartments * I and I nedrooBi MODER^gS?"BET- *! r|sairioo^flrwirciS50 MODERN J-BEDROOII HOME -f- bath niM kHehen. Ample .enn-boorde. Plreplooe, epdelwe lond-■rooed (rounde. M mlnuUe Irem Ltncoln plant EM 141B.____ 3 ROOkt Houni AND EATE, OaB beat. Inamre 13 My— *-Sf£^.?RS?y l-t BEDROOM, PERRY PARE 1 BEDROOM, tM per mo. PB «-OTI0. I-BBDROOM »-ROOM ROUSB AT Union Lake. Newlr decorated. kM!!.” INSUHANCE DENIED? PmANCUL REBPONIUHUTYt TOO YODNO OR TOO OLD» ColUeioo. — Comprebenelee Ivow Kates — EZ Term* Ciuss Insurance Ageni in.W. Euro - BEBtriLT MOTORS No Oion«]r dovn^M moi. td pS) t.l M433 BOAT - TRUCE - ATITOMOBILB EAR-UPE“iATTER?"oa iMEty Shapi to Chamberlain laata—AcMiMrfN IF TOO DEMAND THE BEST ________1 MOTORS iRUNSWICE BOATS ___ UROMMAN a OLOTOWN CANOES ALUMINUM AND WOOD OOCO ■n^NEE TRAILERS Your Beinnde Dealer Harrington Boat Work* MODERNISATION. BIDINO, — — dormm. ib#n Mid ftlUei. OH FHA Urmt. OR .’iwo Eve»r dd3-3TM._____ X i ADDITION*. PALLOOT MIt ten, Honee Ralilni. Oaragee, Ow Crete Work. Notblne Down, PAUL URATES COln'RACTtNO Free Eitlmotei ' COMPLETE eerelce. ~ eL. iKasr^ on PE ailii "^sShSSs: ^ffiejsra ReioUl An* CABlNET^SaoS^ 131* Opdyke Road, PE A43*«. CABINET WORE. Rtcfi^EUNa, carpontry, Proe get. PE 3-T3I*. CARPEI^ftol WORE OP ANT kind. Reoe, PE Aet3f efter t CARPENTER WORE—PAIN TIn6. Complete Job Iniured. OR 3-ieiT Carpst CWmwv^ HOCEINO 8TOEER COAL *17 43 A TON OLOA STOEER A FURNACE COAL Kentuc^ Lunm, eeg end ctoker. BLATLOCE tXMU- * SUPPLY CO. 31 Orchard Loke Are. PE 3-71*1 OIJn ACRN NURSINO ROME Yactorr for man or eromon 1331 W. Bllrerbell PB 4-3IM ________"34 HOUR CARE"____________ l^*MiEUE||k Tdlari^^ IONS. ALL OARMEIfl It Droiooe OR ATH3. Pry WeI EXPERTLY DONE. WILL IN- gsSt.*gK.*iaj?a$sy^ __ ____ SANDDtO THORMAW WITT PE 1-3733 ------- WATEBLOE — WAX .. O. SNYDEB PLOOE LATriNO, ood IkeleblBf. Ph. PE fM oil PEOPLI OR 3-3*4! YOUR HOME OR MINI “if., . RALPIt B. I NOTARY PUBLIC FE *.7**3______ m I lESErEEM Sarvica AUDE mplete ] ^r"°,S5'o^r?*"?5^.«. ^ALL paper STEAMERS —ata. powBR SAWS .TiR PE ilv^er Steame Homt, norait, cohlnete, PHA Urme. PE 4d*«l. . . I riR BOARDB, 3IM UN. ] Vbl^*|£'‘*ib "wins’ ■ "■ ■ M ft S£."h. 1 13 lltbo iln. R. P^wosd, all eliaf on eole. tk4 No. 1 fir lAl* R. *•• Bn. R. 3Vb TD eoiliia ...... *70 Un. R. 3y* TD b*oo ......... **o Iln. R. - 3 U. ft. MWh ... . 4*« OR Waterford Lumber AlTpSt*IM?"" °**^OR »71** COMPLETE STOCK Building^ Material* SURPLUS LUMBER AND MATBOUAL BAUCS CO. 34* Highland Rd (M3HOB 3-7*** TALBOTT LUMBER Comnidto Building auD|M*i *33 OAELAHD ATE. n 4-4» PLYWOOD DISTRIBUTOR --- PE 3-*433 POPULAR OROANUT No* hooking receptlone — I %?j^Vl^iy.ff£.: “*lftll^Eiy tCCORDIOH OR |T'criiS?K.'“ 33MB3*. ^ ACCORDION OROAN. PIANO. —----------homo. Approved by •i iniUtuU. 1---- PIANO IHBTRUOTION t Nm» «Ml UlBd TV .srai??' I *. Coee_____ - -------- OH H>rtlE| ttBtyBIBEt~ PROPBanONAL PBOTOORAPBT »« oM. Wr""‘— ------- — nlvonorlce. Woddlngt. hoiMiuete. ■ „. . _ Mtt Vr^'ftlin. " ------KstoiNiEiSc--------- THIS SPACE RBSBRTBD FOR YOUR BDUHESB DIAL PE SdMl •moeffr^C^raffm"^^^ OniBDUTB SBRVICB Wiegand Music Center MflitBriEi Sarvica A-l PLABTERINO AND REPAIRS Real. Pot Lee. PB HW*.____ FEAtTERINO PRBB ESTIMATbI D. Me -....... Rebuilt Pumps Jet — Piston — Sump Rebuilt Motors and Pump Part* All types ot plumbing. Servloe oi *“ ^UloftBST PLDMBWqj-. ^ 1*03 Highlond Rd. ffl-dlll Wallpai, Floor eandert. ^----- •andere. furnace vacc— ------- ert. Oakland Fuel A Paint. 43* Oreherd Leki *“ —*•““ JeS^Sue^lBS: Auburn Avenue. 2-BEDROOM DUPLEX •■ROOM TBBBAC* 13 RAkbNA Ct. Newly decorated. OL 1-I**I. ^MCmLL__________________ ' "" $S) P^ MWfH A redecorated *-room home iwer Dodge Perk, large lot. Iinmadl^ poaceulon. Valuet Realty. 34* beklond, PB 4-Wl. 13* N. TELBORAPII NEAR 1 Lake Rd. Lower rm, heat, ^era^e. fenced hock lOCieie nroevre, rm _ room, new. PB 3-3(7(, It to t. RENT Or Will Sell. PONTIAC AREA ■POTUTE BUILDINO CO. JEFFERSON TERRACE ' I roome end bath, newly decoi ed Floon landed. Auto, tni f nece, earage, children welcome. t*3 per----- MONTCALM-BALDinN AREA -Mew 3-bedroom. |W mq^. Car- ^ i---------- — PONTIAC-PERRT PARE AREA. New 3-bedroom, til month. peted. Rent—option to buy. able coon. PE Md7«. Bullderi. 13 to t_________ RAMONA TERRACE, 3' 8E6- TO' RENT -beiement. < era High I T^Rdoarmi It Second near North-» e month. Ft *-i04*. SacratEiriBl S«n^ TROT SECRETARUL SERVICE Typing. Mil----'•----“ 1*73 Uvemole I NICARAOOA LIST , Johnson s Radio & TV Oood need TV*. Buy-BcU-Trnd*. 43 E; Walton ______ ^ 3-43** MICKEY STRAKA TV SERVICE DAT OR EVBB, PB MM* ACE TREE BERTICB STUMP REMOVAL Tt44 trjmi^j^ Ott Generar Tree Service TnickiRi HAUUNO AND RUBBUH. NAME ffAdiiNo^'Alm kOBBMlH, » lood. nnytlmo. PE 4-03*4.____ UOHT AND HEAVY TllOtElllltir RttbblJh. flit dirt.. gredlng Md gravel end front end loading. PB 1-*«M. TnKh KBEtaj Trucks to Rent '^^“dKSi5,’_TR»R.‘^" AND EQUIPMENT Damp Tmcke—Oeml-Trellere Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tracto.r Oo. 733 8. woodward PB «4*1 PB 4-1441 _ Open belj^ THOMAS UPHOLSTTOiniO :i7 NORTH PERRY ET. FE 5 8888 BAKLI-S cun^ UPHOLfl^ t^^»174 Cooley Lake Hood. EM Vecmeei SBrvkB OFFICIAL HOOTER SERVICE' ** BARNES^A'hAROR^** 743 W. Huron “■ ^ 3 WEtar Hft Swrvkt HAVE . EQUIPMENT out froMo woUr liai THESE HOMES ARE FOB RENT $55 MO. OR WILL SELL New 3 Bedroom* Carpeted Gas Heat Dining Room All Areas 873 Kettering. FE t-3(7l 8. B. a. B01U3EB* bam WARinCE HAS 3-BEDROOM —- *- Bylven Lnk# Onr- OE CLEAN BLEEPDia LARdk CLEAN !rOOM P6r OEN----- -----------, ^ EXCEPnONALLT CWl EOCLLENT POOD" Wl—. •WfSRSSWt^-Ajr® 1^ OWw SfECE 41 BIRMUfOHAM — 1.3M IQUARE feet tea doylladil an I eUae, and *41 equore Met dayUght an t •Me. In the Hunter Boulc BuUdUu. WO N. Hunter B verd, UMludee full eenrlew. conditioned. Ample (tWato nark-lag. AvaUable Immediately. Meal lor onglneorlng, doilga commercial oHuto. etc, L ooiTT Midwest 4a**». TIZZY tr Kata Onaa MOtgtHAkmTWSwyRPm; ‘Tntlirr lald ynu ^ FOR storage R SHALL BUSI- PBEDROOH HOME. OFF BALD- i **’'**"* **'’"**• PULL RASB-meni. i acre or land. Would eoneldor 3 bedroom houu to ho movod. «i.M* caih or *7.*** oa ‘!S“BT tsf^riiua: tI(.dS0. M* Romeo. Roobeetor. OL l-illl after i:3» *.m, -BEDROOM BRICE. WO* DOWN. Afttuma n.l morlwaat. Cull OR 3-BEDROOM~ - ROUND LAiU moee, I Me. W, falter Lake Print. 3 bedroome,. fcael?*»l3.W*" with’ *11^ tie a month. Adame ReeRy, iYw3, PE A3*e3. ________ 3 BEDROOW, OARAOE. PAMILT m with nrepleoe. leraa teneed lot tea4*3. *3. d, 3 BATHS. _ race. Ur*e Anchor feneod wd. 3* ^Irirove «•»•>{» ^ mortgage or M.WO with WW dn, MO per mo. Including I Iniurnnce. H 3-3113 alt -auburn nice a-bedrooUi. mmwhi •purtmeot, ftinftU bouse i£r%Vw“jrsar« w-rnSe^....... ‘et'^^3- $9J00 3-hedroom, full bat— lloori. gee boat, eepper We erreaga nneaclng. “Young-Bilt Home*" „EALLT lUAI Rueeell Yodns I Bxrni^BU $9,500 •-OR J-»0to iw'MeNAB Attention, J.cOt Owner* mu baud on your lot wMh eol. Su“S.*SlrM""Sj;i'S: 5ft.'" dryw*U,lor onw w.«lo. soe plated modal. Immadlato nc- Dorothy Snyder Lavender BEING TRANSFERRED HO* (or our equity, eiiume PHA mortgogo—3 bedroom bungalow, perm-o-etone ond alum, aiding. lUe'^rlffljMge*. Call OB 4-1174 BY OWNEk 3-room bouee. Fully Insulated, ■torme and eereene. Pull bar ----- —-----‘vllegei. OR • •" BEDROOM...... FE 3-WM oftor *. . _______ IN SYLVAN Inge. 3 bad— —------- Shi.'!*! My qqulty. CoU W1 . ______ SV otkMin - TiriLL trade ok rent 4 bodroom ranch, 3 intni, 3 ear garage. OL 1-dWl. DRAYTON WOODS Now vneant, lovely 0-reom ranch. Carpeted ttung room. Hardwood (More, eoramie bath, nleo to both In wnlk-ont bniement, with tn-closod porch. Attached garage, large htndeeaped lot. *U.IM eoeh to mortgogo. . Clarence C. Ridgeway PE »-TWl COLORED 3-BEDROOM HOMES $iod6wn 635 FRANKLIN ROAD 5 1 loeallona loR . “tI^oltor7 pm. — WN REALTY I'^^oome. neod doeoc-^ C. SCHUETT 4 ROOMS — $4,150 a Mindod eorwor. Large stone (Iro-ploe*. full bMb, antomaUc oil hot water heater and ilageod porch bnolnou .and naed* the caih quick —»I4,I|B U a ta«HAee prlee. R’g vocbul — Soe R todayi PARTRIDGE E*V"Sgr"-“^&t»w. Hbeui DLORM BUgDia>> INTER - RACIAL. 3 -________ FULL PRICE $6,950 boSUf."to*“wSS!?’to"lUd to Uaton I^e. 1 bedroom i fttoojnon^ sue and *wi ross etorme. RaAor. Ml Unlcn Im&e Rood. LAEB OAELARO: Ntarly now thraahodfoom mseh- Sbome with garago and erork-I altochod. A weltptonnad and -malntolnad home In , a fine reoldentlal eeotlon wHh toke privL legsi. This could he wha? —' lor. Prfted W »grr ucMUtoLE 'Bills loca-All the requlromenta of a good Inmily homo. Living room with l-ftoMILT I____ Owner movtng to CnUfOruto *(-(ere their lovely money mokor to tko kmky poreon. Two apte. on the flnl floor. One apt. up. Prl- •eU. ^ ” JOHN K. IRWIN TRIPP Brick Ranch 4 largt bodrooms — soe po-- !n*diibwa^ tofom^^ehen. Ovcrilu oimi^ Ibreuftsut. PuU y^jSE|MADE INTO OOOD IM- TRADE NEAT CUTE 4 ROW MODERN BUNOALOW - AUTO HEAT -CLOSE TO BintRTTHir— WILL TRADE FOR I TRAILER - EQUrTr - WRIGHT 3*3 OAELAHD COLORED .with^tassjifft M"p5'ra.-'?a |oa Boot, oastom (in-r chetet at BOla* —■ . J0 down to TeU. poyment to other many other very nice homei to ebooie from In ell scetlor-town. Irom ue low M *13* d 1 ood 4 bodrooms. Cell tods "We Trade —We Build” ARRO DICLU8IVB AREA — BceotUUIl lendueped ynrd. barhectM pit o« potto, l-t^ brisk Ip ondlent sssgli^i^-ajftftj^ioi and gain**. OWy *11,W*. __________*!Sndy ki^n? a decoratod. gsrege. 'wall I ecei^, loneed yard, potter Val-U-Way We Ttode On Any Roma 1J4 ACRES DRAYTON AREA I reema. .Oventaed Mmed bg^hwee _______________ - Large to* with (nw treea < berrlei. WUl take equity end r FHA.BARGAIN . j;s‘irh.*iftrftijga‘to5s: R. J. (Dick) VALUET Realtor FE 4-3531 34* OAELAHD ATX. « to • M*. *•!»••• low down payment. EAST SIDE. 1 .kedrowne. largo eomer tot. only WO*, down. •• yw"' eMI *B. 4-MlM otfm NICHOLIE CLARESTQN OAROBNB hath. MtoSSJt. ftidSf slyisa TJft taiMaad^tnraDeo. AU Juet M-orotod With automoUc hast. Why rant wlten you osa own year own hqw* •» “■— *Suw5i»diS!n**r*?neh home w SSSieme nU «n ^ ■ I SCHRAM faking A Date To Inspect this 1-hedroom bungalow with 11x17 UvUu room. JOill kltebon. llkU nttiky room I^I^ M Croohi Rond eontb votorug — elogl^ oeeto ea IVAN W. SCHRAM Realtor FE 5-9471 •43 JOSLYH COR. MANSPOEID WEST SUBURBAN 4-room bungalow a** far ft Jftr.«{ftd“Jo«S»J porch with swalast- PHcod i7,«W — Torme. $500 DOWN from this 4-reom bwolowwtoS forced elr beat, toadatod woUe and caUing. Sereeaa, itorm wln- fiTmJX'ftsyiiSS'Tsrwi: HURON GARDENS BmeU home lor wldowg or ttraae. Ooe ioieod air haat, h «*»•«•. iSff B ’ SMITH WIDEMAN ill WEST HURON ST. OPEN EVES. FE 4-4526 I ACRBE seednoom home. jrULL BASEMENT. EXTRA LOE. SS^!SJ5*S?.Wi REAGAN Syiv(3h Village' SB LIST WITH Humphries West Suburban Acreage ---------Ph^ _____-m tJSftim'' CASTut^RD, RtlUor Econ-O-Tri 3-BeJroom Tri-Level $8,995 — $995 DQWN WILL BUI^ ON^OUB LOT TO MODEL rBkwheth Lake Ed. to Union Lake Bd. Sonth to Penuwoilh. Rl*ht to pi***>-IM. i Northern High Area — —iTt**! r— - WESf SUBURBAN' iTAfnivfi!AND IIW Ceei Uko Bond M-lMd O'NOL UXftnPLB UEItMO 0BT1CB hw ntom -rmayKr ______ BATE FOUE aOor. U'e voeent. ••DO n YOUBEBtP-'pnd rir^sa/'rrS romMng homo, krooeewey nod 3-iar gengo aitoehod, eltuatod an an *ere d gronnd. weeded and. Ml leaead. You eon almoat name y*nr own unee. pro- WHY MBIfTT WbM MM WbVM you loM K MVlf MMSeera. pleatqred weui' G.t.'s No Money Down BPAOBIII BPACEIM SPACEII Eight faU M M*ft7Wier^ r«r-neriR.Yt: ■tod yea dM. RAY O’NEIL, Realtor BATEMAN 'Trading 1* Oar Rusinest, Lake Front »-ay-Pv:r LET* TRADE ftd- ftft“ to“a*». fac roaoe brtok raaab. tuB baeo-mant end leaead yard. Eange, •van S ether tentorea^Sal LET’S TRADE lie 7 room brick reach cloae I ahepplpg aeator. CarpmSf. ir aondlltoaar, paved atraaU $75 Ttalt 3 bedromn_nMdali an Ce 2iftk.tL-9to2r“Uy---^ OPEN U «0 • DAILT BPOTLtTE EUILDPIO OO. MILLER ^^.raajffia^'sr Oerpettos. tiled hath dwt Mam'e •lormi end acrcena. Ooebeet, *- JUST BRANDED AND COB-RALED S-bedroon eingle -— West auburboa ctoee 1- * 'H. Hardwood Roori, ■r*B« ________I, plemered wBui. mu baeomont, oU famr— 73i3W n. lot. end aft no traffic boaord - Meal for i draa. «U.*t* — is.SW down. NO MONET a( saedioem William Miller Realtor FE 2-0263 *7* W. H»r«n_____Open r CLARK’ Trade'oVeaU.'Bii% SwP li SSJSft '!SSS?ilS.er*^'' WMM^b^ fter.**^ OR oanalimoiho to--------- UAlto LAEBrAttraeUve saed-reombungotow, tUed bath, — _ -------- lorneoe. 1' . SILMO. t KAMPSEN REALTOR - BUILDER Let's Trade Houses Drayton Plains RSt. ,'SriR«."» iSi -’•y-'gii.r.f West Strathmore i ss'a.rs.^Tm.- ran in. Saerlflea Prtae Of tU.WI. and only 1* per cent down an new LETS TRADE \ Mr. Handyman tsnjt srxi’:s!}st.ia'£t your prtMot or BIO bMOOBirr fur mm M mimIm VVe Love to Trade BKALTOII PE WeTI.. Low Down Payment paved atraatTkam kwoUeT^ gee &. ft3ht“ftft\r'ft'‘d«5i: paymentl Only itAW* Compare This tetive 3 badraom home. wHh W.ry^?B*«d‘*3 Imto ot thtg eool Only *1,- WE CAN Convert Your Home INTO A "Home of Your Choke” Home Bank Exchange THEBE are No Realtor Discounts Bass & Whitcomb KENT BiUblUbud la UU %^««tEE MMwaivv vrJiTB — mmp^ IIORTR BURBURBAN - HlgO .2Jr4t5‘j25Si..'“ft*..n.r?: **.«ot with «l.i* *down. ATTWimOH MBCRANIO-eioad Total prtoa W,M*. forme. Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor WEBSTER Muiue ucret vltB ven On S^hX'ltoftS/rAa THE P0yXI4lC P^88, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1962 TWEXTY-SEVBy Waterford Brick Ranch Rolfe H. SinitiK Realtor HOYT ANNBIT $750 Down, Near Wiener fSrryjrvBa St. Michaeri, Vacant 2-Famny on Bue Line iM«r«Sae“ Kirk-in-HiUe I mmtf le la« 41 BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY BORrSw fo $500 ciMmilVAL By Dtek Tmm Me I u» W, WfW Tijjaro MWWQ aCrlof* DORRIS ' ntH^Ksaci^ urai. 95 Scenic Acree ANNETT INC. Realtors orm JfmSim^SITJmUr M FE.AQ466 GILES 83 ACRES arift .r» no ACRES 25 ACRES Bwa *ys hM« Ml K ■ CRAWFORD AGENCY iiet 125 to 1 on TOOB Signature "pricSiE^iiSB OAKLAND Loin Comr^ny'' »,f*w« w $25 to S500 on Your SIGNATURE M»r. qpWWBIIEWT II l» fMT Home & Auto Loan Co. Tra^nriswr" See Seaboard Phone FE 3-7617 1185 N. Perry St. Seaboard FinaoCT^. ’e.'iSKIKS'SSS.Pf llidtlj f^ioIpAiaic s toB PRACTICE ORGAN MkrMMM vttk AapUllir ,.>U > MORRIS MUSIC M a. Tii« • ~ ■ n Mtll. MooteklB teSlUi FIX UP tel w ittMire teMterite . ri M af'«Sr, ::::?| Burmeister LUMBER COMPANY MM CD&tej LUi Id. I^Min adding MACHINES Ml*, u^ a»Mm-’w»i" 4a«nif-Prtc»—airrt«i Miaj-lMn Id $Uf“ Pontiac Cash Register 07 a. ■MiBDw ra MS* niW liiyi>ggi^~owgCT~HE MD M^ni tWi mmrr-" ~ *•' —II. iohn’s Party Store » baldww Atnnua yi^LiJcr 1 raDte dm m *"*i5d** »STs^irjs 3LSH|@ *“asK“fls^”7a LEAVING STATE ■dMM fWDDI D«W Id DDB iDDDir tsff*^aiEgjsrtTtiir? C. PANGUS, Realtor —romruxa I_______w • h^ $f WKa£>«5~ NEWINGHAM «______JUt_ta» CUE FIN, 202 S. MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO MWMtemMaaanaMa "We've been cxpcctliig you to visit lor a long time, Aunt Gladys! All week Horn and roe having been polishing up and silver and my mannen! ’* I. DUO boUitiibi. lot- - r;irfoi*1?rAi«!?%rr: _____L m OribDid MkD—1. tidBiAir w A f fc g WiTBikii: --- --‘IDUO. nborf- ■— U*gSW. ^"^ETl53r9* AOOBPT Ml ■Dsr — imk- -------------- no STOra SAHD, OSAT-ten Howprd. KM SAWI. _ r Biu™ SANP^dmMO. Peterson Real EsUte MY 3-1681 Homes-Farms ^^.srssssxt DDMU INDID. DaDDADe |D- r.iawSlt GAYLORD LAEM FBOVT VAOAirr. IMf U D TDTT aiDD kDMD vsb lep^iri L53?'TW8S^KT5r» a ddQddt W|»DCI|D. I dm u lU n t SRSTfivT AdddomdA add BDDI dm M DlDDiDW. ft>«D Ml. Ttna toDDD. SU.m lUSDSDn Id iw pm m MDasDsi. se-rtaH^”' g^ti.ruc.'vs: DDDh. Write te MMd U. UwU. D« Srte«r TdM aMteu Bod M. uSPi^Ut&iliS^ ^Swuiwr. ers^isSTajr.iiD.'^: M|p MT MOl dm sdI terttor **■ Lawrence W. Gaylord EUU'tIUKi DftAYTON plains > SdStddm trViDTDi. m balkt. **H. R. HAGSTROM iwiybiDM***'”* ^ yffli <* Him liDr S - Southlield Township MU roar M« roMh boMo « Ra,-gssa*i?.nDSi.‘ Brewer Real Estate STOUTS Best Buys Texiay BUXMOmO KAIIcmM-SD„ Met. tDJ ■crcDDDd flDDDDd MuiD«r porch, Dtt srosnii.«“J!r'ss: MB iUDSiDte PODDDDDUe. Warren Stout. Realtor It te jpgPi.. M. yiL rm mwi "BUD' SUMi SUS «D*A. M ACMBi-bDlVDM I DM BODbODlDr. UdoI botiDB SU.Mt. iDcait. SI AOW-tdcdM. boreoro rlvor, em'SDwa. Mdbp oUter DDrDD«D,MUlDC dSdd - taDO or UrgD -MM Id MM por Dcrt. CDOB or rONTIAC - %■ sMNaATianAL VAtim - wm S5Dr*ba£rL.^^:s WSUri. Odd boDl. Ibfl boDNiMl } ateo bceroDDn. iMrciiDi. tvc. Sj.rai.'jrsrV*^ AMIor Mr. Bltwa. arMbfi DAll OA ams. 8&.sr»»38-n.: PSS >--------------- ■BIX on TBADB - LirfD I KaraDDl iBpdDra boDM k Dnyt" CLAItanON AKEA - Bfltk rDMbcr wHh 3 bodrooM*. iDcbed IVD-esr (orDSt' Odd AhuBbMm ftorac. Scro-- dh^edf*"%!?* BE*fi~„ , ■ „‘^swfisr-.‘n3,i5i __j. MD E PSID M. FE *AW KOWALSKI SAUi>AGE ooianmiTT matiosal sank Por Bddm Ownoriblp DM SS7*tIku|! MiTi _ Sl.lTsS.hfr.'SSyW; StnderDW_______________ $600 tu$2,00D OB OdUdM OdMU bDMDD. MS Vois^ Blickner^nc. $2jtx6 CASH LOANS I Famil^^Acceptance Corp. W*berSS*"or irado. Otm* m arm s to s vE!y “ mt opaMiDD ad, EM Mill, TBAOB OAS fcAMOB #Oa ELEC. IrtD rMD. a. B. Mwid EUcIrte t)Hd (tectrie roat* II 52ifS»;’2av*'" a Crump Electric, Inc. ffM Aabarr unuoifT sriru dMOND wiak 1 IM tt. Dad. no. 1 »r- - ______“*fwt*uSi fSii. _ luiir PUMrs-souk-nitrAaTO _ c»Bc-» a«DtDi. X M sTEkL boQWut risE .......... icHiNs sn :iu“i3J5rb ygg( m. OM ite»i. sH IBWtlAfW MUM mHK b» ^rtte^ho^M porjjk. ^ sabv oBAiftr^rrFgr.-gM woa MICHIGAN cAi PC rnn SALES CORPORATION a iSaSwwMblS”*’ tiribJ MT1-------- ajas.&rV'K biW A witeiwr MS. n riH-iAjBsyauu u CASH Pon OdEO TVi., “ MAREVr WITH '' tODid. Oa ua. S3. Ed-, ovaar'i abad- 'tiiia"' Berry Gar^ Door FactoiV Seconds AvDltaUa M*riaaaklo dlteoaat MS cate firoDA BiniliiMaa m^tsvsmss. rSiijai ^ WYMAN'S USED TIUnatH DEPT. . .Jifaor Apt. got iteTC . . |(l h M~ Odd dUtd ....... Mf.M Oaar. Elao. aatrU..|3IM Ouar^Wrlnfor «aib«r . SMS NEW, N^:w. NEW! "Pint TIB* Id Hlabitaa" WlWiMAl« MBATB aho oroceribs -pan apifB oeuvert- AO luiteaA^ advtriuad broM* daa 'iDDd. vocoMbteA Iran! Br-^ssnusr.'srpS'pSi food*. Rot Dae*uarf to dwd ( fraoDar. CaU lor Ir** colalot aai DiDCirIcal •uppllt- ---- • Bock U baU^DB aiBterlDU. _ SALVATIOR ARMT Fsis- MiiiilB| 1^ 1962 CREES "AB» now OM OMPtAT" Truck Csropers and Travel Coaches I . . STOP OUT tOOAP Hoify Marine & Coaeh ms ■6u._T.RT ---------- Oxford Trailer Salea and Court ^ AMil^I ^BUJgRlDdMD. ^ TRAVEL TRAILERS , ~ Wintar Rates >7-F. E. Howland, Renfsis stt nai* HUbvar OR auM JAgdiMhi riffliER SAliS Good bap* oa dUUsp BOdoU. aorrlDD dM Mil*. Whiter arl*** oa raateU. HM WUUdbd Xoka. Droptea r*-- --- pi lll^•D‘“liii pn*o. anaa or vMlovona. ED WILLIAMS jKli lr.i!J!!i 3' A 00*0 „n ^ BMte MMH oor «Nkr*uJ^ MOTORS. Uaeala - Morearp • CiMD^ Moteor, MS a Soetaav. ------------- i€£r Sate* a jorrlM, PE — Pofbaa pnouac • omea mup- » pip. Wo olio bap. 1 wnrrigi tlODCd L... _ ■earlatte BIko I M E. Lowrooc* S‘*8*Si.-«Sw r-^.^siTSF s WYMAN'S ULB DATS oar atom di-^ WSo^btfi! “Softs? •.‘S‘'‘;JSKr»!S. "iS SiDlb St- Roebefr. OL Sdt77. f ALL MUSICAL tNSTRUidiliTS ' JUJ ROW - ARD lAVE oioM* Jtera* Stock i LUURAL TRAOirALLOWARCB > ;XTAWAT OR PATMBRT PUAR . Wo !toS?PertoilDd Ei^Ua* BOWARDS__________U a. Sotliio STATIONS FOR LEASE GOOD POTERTUL. Ploooo oaU b*-ivoan t o at. oM S p. at. SM«M4 or altor I p. at. MS^. PURE i oa. COMPARY_________ lUROCO PORTUC AREA -Mako* Biara prolU “"W Icn- daolor tralalBf coator. tcbool ■taru Fob It Rcqalrcr ‘ ‘ sssr^u^sAu^ _____ CAR, ecBtract eg Ihl* «S'i'itor**tia^ro5!oo-^ Rssr..:n:^3fnx[^ rm Q.7MI *r PE tdlM,__ ris CMUil __________M "dn?1«“3& it ooAt lilli. iC obMn.'sM. Uap MiTU I ai.Kt.fiiwv'as: lactorp cipcit. ...... ELECTRIC OUITAR WITH , ■ ............................. ATTEHTIOR TV STUOBIITS, RCA ^ work, OcolDo. - Mcpbcrd puppte*. M kSfil. SpECTaC - VAUtihTHE PHicii “ $r.uh,li^bo^:8^ •• THOROUaUBRED sofiSTTYiT 'll ,-OOUBia Sa.'prtoto7!cdh, arltih. $71. MM3._____________ " AuctiM Sstos” ^ oroaUa... Jhgg;------------------------- llcM HUU. ^ Lc AR lUMBDUTE SALE FOR TOUR |- Lond Contracts Experienced Appliances r^^artABtoaialte .........JW toa Oai Dtpor blaatlw _________ .. MSI Johnson R^o & TV > DRUM OUTPrr. I . clOtWM. PE J omW fur drcu«i aad MoaHtpon — S-3451. &AT, tk UiidW. ! S>*«3s-iri.rs2.i!;; «& aUaebad twotear garM* - ‘ SSSb.*^.*^’2?« ' i fun bOAT, L IS-U. EdcoIIobI c ' "fi3cniic~S0Vir"Mir" —— UBT in RcaitoBa jaciM r up — aM baro U I M oaltowDa vork- .... MsKlph----- ^Opaa r-lM. t L. H. BROWN, Realtor •• miMboto Lab. ; tSlCE PRIVILE!_____ WolraitH ItokA ^ aoat S bod- ^r«%X’i£[“8:!»:S POTOAO aSAUT oo.^ 0, ouiaiii* jw Mwiaa aw s.'^ras'““ ----TiJ9,“! bWibift*----------- f X la POAU BA^ KUOS k.^REN CARPET ““ °“%ry&, puto,” «‘“ A BEAUTIPOir aiROER A.._ waUo ili-aM.dlal oantrol **w-lat^ aaebla*. Da*o laacp d*- raaia*. MM aad .ap. aorcral ilC ®W^3w'ttJ-lT7l. kri*. ifMJ^^r'SU.'TMtod’^' ^mted u**d oa* U ppar slop*r ••Vine C*at^ IM M. Sar-------- or can 333-7MI. HU* to th* aatborlicd Katcr d*Ar i : "sssafdsa^iffSB I miihAmiog^TO A^MATO MAt-A-SWltlf 2i3 oLiT P.T alada gaaraato* aM dcllrcrp. GRINNELL’S 37 a. BAOIHAW rm S-71M grinNelL Mahogany Console *d la (ood eoMltton wtih b*ni UD*d a«d d*Uv*r*d SMI. MORRIS MUSIC 3* a. T*i*trafli Rd. ' (Acrdte Irom T*l-Huroa> ORGAN SALE rwo itMla B**d Coaa aphtet ______.DcaffilM y*SS^nL^^lSbaa i MI <-M0S_ Piano Sale ».s.«»"?»s'ss«.";a *ptn*t, piano*. Ro"down“l>*yBteM rMDired Mu* low**l nnance charpo* araltoW*. lew BETTERLT^UaiC 00. Gallagher's B&B lucnoR I l fRlDAT j • f AaAaid'WHA 'wiiHt~«irr • IT D*w wbiafla* t»akaa|. Wlud-■htol^ itocrlnr Irgat DM rear apbel^ip, Bi^ vmL aoa**ctl- ‘l^ahi* Mlp'wi :|B&1? I**!igr»l - TRAILBRB '62s ON display Century BielllBi, a*« ir SuH sum ir anosTu — ir RAvm Owens IT SPORT PBHERMAH M' auFP Expans Skee Craft ir SEBRIRO VOLVO ir naaxRMAR outboard Evinrude Motors REW BUSOTRIO PUSH BUTTOMS Mazurek Marine Sales lailMV at S. Bird. PE »MW c:heck ouk deals BEFORE you BUY! to 7S a.f. a>oara*ptor •aflBM to IN kjp^^p ooo—Aar*—and pM pAj^HD*^AMm istsck IS ___Bh«tland pony. I.- _____ aioicE aii^. uuARTiiS. HALF, --------. —.. oamitj. RABBRS AND OAhEB POR BAUB. Do*, back*. Irycr* aM buaal**. RA VSSM. IM B. OlBte Road, or-karUto. “ ‘ •* FOULTRT. «HM. APPUEi. VEO-atobtoo, flower* and plant{jMO~ bakadropd*. OAELAND CtWR MARKET. S3M PoaUaa UkO I FOR JOHN DEERE AND NEW ‘ Iden *pr*ad*r* •** OovU Ma-eblncry Co. OrUnrlllo. oloo Loko__MAla nil snr.iKS!’ 'SfflV'TUilBa™ PINTER'S Marine Sales mS^, toeod roar^rd. C tt ^ laaoo aad fiuaraaoo. $5*500 Cash Soroa (7» reaw faaUIy bmo. atom. I bcdroooi*, aM bath rated^pat^. iwaiadlalo fow "Bud" NkhoUe, Realtor *S;T®r After .REAdAN A MQNEY MAKER ^nrsnrux Brewer Real Estate ACTION mVICB AND LOW Pu- I® EDIATfe ACfl6N Oa aay pood laM acatraet*. Row or HMCiMd'. Tour oaota opoa *at- jg-Mk 33N (Sobard LkTr- * orator* aU atooiSU up. l^or# alyotrln maor Mt. “but* —.-a %aw ---1. «S bidhard lako A»o. F» ayiaU^* ; MsasytsLiM 41 WHEN YOU NEED $25 TO $500 sfATE'^piNi&C]? S5. -•'TETi5^“" I kareiTcarpet DIM* Rwy. OR S-tirt d.:a M" RCA ............ SU M UxoM M" TV* .... .. IM.il ap MMjtoQtLi •BWWO M fe, Hiswisr-™. BIG Sale IWTIAC FLTWOOD ( 14M Baldala Ar*. PI ^giiTOHi~ai~AXtilo Aih-L wppiy touM lOsblkB Fia*r**e«M, N3 Or- cxrifci.-'ra MW. Wolton, PE 3-IWe “WAVoiilTSJr i7r-Ef.‘^Ew“’a..fl0^ QHAIR SAWB IMI.M Wt BAVl CHAIR SAW RKNTAU KING BRO.S. ........Tofirti.™ , SUM. lip ftp OAhtp- ____ Jart’( /topflaaeoa, MSI , Ratohory Rd. ORtllM. cUm* boro b**a eboebod W Mr Mfltory braaob *M Bar* * aSw bimBIm laaraal**. naMrolu sr.,«S.i«assF^ _aSJ?Si -TOBE dTARDliiq^ Mb* Lov wtlta in Kami*** *to«i *iaki I SAVE PLU^ . Ili.M /!iS ■) I7I.M ___ ■ mM I - »U)W. a wall lur- Everything Must Go! 1«W[iUBrr*y Spin*! orpaa* ^ Mu**d Homaiood* Iiooi . . .^.^ S4M [ U(*d Ector cbopel organ ... V SulbrOBcM ]tt*t Ilk* now, B-I1.7H BOV Bar* MM. GOING OUT FOR BUSINESS SALE Wanted Gnitar Students Music Center 9:00 - 9:00 Every Day % 268 N. SAGINAW GASOW WutBd Curs-TnKks 141 "ALWATB B^tHtP' ^ MJUHK CARB --PRBB TOWM EXPERT MOBILE HOME REPiUR - .........$25 MORE^ ;'S.fcf«ss^ A MESSAGE " _J UB TO TOU ilch w* l*«l wUr bo M prool *r**t and laportaac*. Now tor gmEOIT *--- ::“!_KWtoVasid‘*M's:i •d?r^*r'S’'S»*r!5*lSrplJl Bob Hutchinson Mobile Home . Sales. Inc. «a«n.T.. war* Averill's FOR "tXEAR" UBED CAES GLENN'S _• {mswoMBmob^_ TWENTY-EIGHT THE PONTIAC PEE8S, MONDAY ioT^Kio Ellsworth AUTO SALES •.ULSahJBL. ‘Wd Need Cars , .AMr m k»v« «Im«M prteM. .MMl rw ka** what rtf want lar rav aar, taa aa nr that TOP bOLLAR M ... 'll A-Si AUSTIN a^door Mdan "Your AuthorUed BMC Dealer" Automobile Jmport Co. Ill S SAOINAW FE »W«S VOLKBWAOEN. ia»7 Bffi'AiirRA: VOLKSWAC.ENSI WARD-McELROY. INC. NEW MM W. Huron TRUCES Or 4MM________OR I-IOI New md Usad Cars 104 THIS WEEK SPECIAL 1960 VALIANT 4 door watoo. radio and heater. I owner, low aalleaie. Thia la an ecoooBi car. A good bui at $1495 1958 PLYMOUTH “‘$795* R&R MOTORS I belort you deal. isTCin ~ wblSn'i alItT d: BIG CLEARANCE • SALES Lucky Auto Sales Itl a. taglBaw___PE AMM IMS CHEVROLET *61 Chevrolet Monsa One Year Guarantee! JEROME "Bright Spot" FORD LO 1960 THUNDERBIRD BDOOR HARDTOP. Law Mllaada. 1-ownar. Ilka naw. 4-way power. Beautiful aky-Mua. RADIO. HEATER CredU Mgr.. Mr. 4.7tM. Hat^ '«’»»--■•-----_ isM^HEvyo^ nrai^i^.ipqiti N. Aaanaai mi- r. Ml imar. Perd. SgTSSf -uSir- USIr,” John McAuIiffe, Ford os OAELARD AVB. FE 5-4101 •59 CHEVROLET A Pina BEL-AI CyllDdar “■= BEL-An I I ar an^ ai atla ‘nanaab _____r. wbnawaUa, _________ - tcriort IpoUata latarlor. Eieallanl bily at SLIT BIRMINGHAM Chrysler - Plymouth ncicxBNT ttft < Air l-door. radio, h a7i“ai’. ati’ana*’fjg's-syr* W CHEVY WAOON. t-CTUN-dar. stkk ahlft. runa good. dSTO FE S-1444. ------1N4 dnvitbtJhr Full prtoo »NI SURPLUS MOTORS a %ood b 1959 CHEVROLET iTATION WAOOH. Efnakvood ^ ‘ .d.;""SJJbd.‘5' J«lr.-W _ n‘.iu?“Tbr:"a $1395 Suburban-Olds USED CARS 555 S. Woodward MI 4-4485 B’ham im CHEThtOLdT fll^ALA '66n- blo. VI aagtno with atlek Rodto and baour.. Sharp 1714*LLOYD ^!STaU."L£oota. Mercu^. Con^ i!****'' *** *’ 1959 CHEVROLET DIPALAS. I-doori. ..4..doora. fuU^ rSTral $1495 TRY JIBCHER buice ii 4-4IH 7M 8. Woodi IMI BUICK 3-DOOR HARDTOpT Red with black top. In wonderfvil condition. Abulutrly no money ----*".ume payi—*•" 1 CnnCi Blrmlnghnm.' MI 4-44H. ’iT Bbl% buMr. kkiw kAf- ' tory. Oood tires. IlN. UL S-I7M. 1U7 BUICK CO^VkRTTBLl. brakes nnd poa REAL BHARPIEf .... ______ Ml. LLOYD MOTORB. Uncoln- OU¥ER BUICK 0^'E FULL YEAR GUARANTEE ’61 BUICK .. UBabro 4 Done B Trnaaaalaahia. I ..$2595 Automatic Heater. '61 BUICK........$1995 7UL 4«R. SEDAN. AR- '56 CHEVROLET $695 BEL-A» 4 DOOE SEDAN. WHb AtamuUe Traimwtaalnn. Hadlo. OUVER BUICK insSir i Suburban-Olds USED CARS 5.^iLS. Woodward B’ham $2495 Suburban-Olds USED CARS 555 S. Woodward MI 4-4485 B’ham Vltik •UIQB^ ll_ montti'w^^O MON^iSoi^'. Birmingham RamMor. m $. Woodward --lyw* ’57 FORD HARDTOP a-DOOR VI fMbif, PorfO-Matla tranamlaatoo, radio, mtor. pod-dad dash and elaerti REAL MICE CARl BEATTIE ^ ' Bimheatar Ford imaUr^ OL 1-im LOW-OOBT BAKE LOAN — — nr pandonr. aaa fcanirPE 4-Mll. ... PORD VI, ddXXMl BTATION HO MOHVr DOWN. Aawma pay aunte at IS.1I par am. Cal. PUBLIC NOTICE JUT. aa OrtnuTtna. Bara. Pl^a y 7-I7M. IHi Miib #AuiUi«fe i566R; VI aanlna with pord-O-MaUo traoanaU^, radio aod baatar. 2L"’5‘TMb?3Sii:'“LSi,S!l. ««, ’a’cToKSc” THiNfia SION AND WHITEWALL TnuS D 0 W H. Auuma pnymanla i •M.n par me. Call Mfi ”I 4-7Mli Harm BIRMINGHAM ■Your PORD DSALER B^ im" U PORD S-DOOR, RADIO AND baatar, Paid-O-Satir wbltawall tires. 1-ownar. M.IM down and Mr A m~‘ li.^LLOT Warcury. PE Mill. rluHBiJSlM^ RO MONET bOWH. *4*ttma Credit Mir^Mr. ‘parkf'at Ml 4-7M0, Harold Turner, INER dlo tmnamUilpn. power eteartne A real black, beauty witb n epor-kllng red UiMrlor. Pull price only II.IN. LLOYD MOTORS, •■-coin. Mercury. Cornel H-r. lA r Bailnaw. PE lAI UM^PORD OOB men& of'lLli per t5A‘{.*Y“*NrM»l5^ Ring Auto Solos. JJ74 W, at EUanbath Uks Ri Continental Mark III ISiF' p^er**^ ‘ararr!^?I Air eondltonlng. ’gl trade In wlib low down paymontl Ono ytnr JEROME "Bright Spot" MARMADUKB r Andcmrat A (.awnliic How could we possibly have used $40 worth of fuel last month? Nm» Hiid Um4 Can “i:*....... 14l MERCURY CONVERT- tX5a.*S5l A«4*‘^‘ ^ !lJf f^lflnKfcT'd"?. S U &UTBLY NO MO NET ..... a-wir. HnroM ..r..., r..., — ICURT station WAOdh .■« dn^r-d-iw Motoor. ta 8. Bogbinw, PE ±!1JI___________ . BUY YOUR NEVV OLDSMOBILE p^a of ll,M. LLOT?'MO- Rare Beauty! aad Brad Can 1958 OLDS dlo, hooter, power ataariag and ------brakaa. banuttfui rose win t^. In A-l aanditlon. ' in itm. pr, Blrml $1195 Suburban-Olds USED CARS 555 S. Woodward Ml 4-4485 hJiam 1961 OLDS 4-OOOR HARDTOP. Fully «d. OM InotorF tUI-—- $2795 Suburban-Olds USED CARS 555 S. Wo^ward Ml 4-4485 B’ham HASKINS Sharp Cars COMETS DOORS. 4 DOOR! WAOONI BLACiT BLUE. WHitE. OREEN. You Name It — wa bsea ll to salact from aod at low na |1.4N. BOB BORST LINCOLN-HBRCURY One Block 8^ of » Mile op Ul It ilRMlNOHAk HO AMM U MERCURY. IlM. U DOWK Mt^TORB*' JpT’'oA{afAND*Av5*! PI 1-4070 $2095 WILSON PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward BIRMINOHAM______MI4-I010 REPOBBEasro ciha NO CASH NIBDED low OMa Dynamla M H STpimYr'HlSlSlJ* rSS*'b Lika naw. Salld white tIoliJ INO CbaTroisi Bel Air ‘ HASKINS Mra aad Bwi Cara SPECTAL R4C ISMBLER 1959 OLDS a»b*Ks,,iS!. $1695 Suburban-Olds USED CARS 555 S. Woodward MI 4-4485 B’ham forELT*'No' MONET . im. EAroli* — "srHYMi A Pins BELVEDERE 4 Dapr EarlL low mlloogol Pino Vnlno M t BIRMINGHAM OiryBler - Plymouth — Sl>ccial — 1958 PLYMOUTH y lar YOU to $1295 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 59 PLYMOUTH nth 0 cybodor power ateerlof. ilulon. Radio, tlrotl M2Sf ttr^m. AutomoUo Trnou ----r. •IMUenl mn^aIu BIRMINGHAM Chrysler - Plymouth fin.wogranrt_______kfirau NO CASH NECESSARY UM Cboey Re| Air. *<«» ■ I Ford SUUob Wtgon. sharp im Pnlaan wtm Autamntla JuaTtikTTrar-=yi«la "*• lat payment dna llnrcb |Mh IIM PONTIAC HARDTW ’ll CHEVROLET HA&D^' I , la.n a lOM FORD , J^iiM FORDcoNVERTOi&"‘ ChevroletOlds INd PODOE 1-DDOR US-M at M-ll Mane More U. CheoM From **** LAEEBIOE UOTOWi** , Clarkrtan*^”*"*** ^A^VlMd l.lduiDATION LOT Iia W Monlealm SM-71M ‘ ^_____ - . IM S- ImUmw . FE M( ^ IMI Chary. »og i ^ IIM Chary, Inlaor i IH7 Ford t-doer lid Mo f .M Mo. Nm aad Brad Cm ■666b WkAiiligi: 1961 PONTIAC $1795 . Siiburban-Old! USED CARS * 555 S. Woodward MI 4-4485 B'ham n MokH-mb ' Mnor,. CRAKE MOTOR Sale* i%n‘2^ 1961 PONTIAC $2595 Suburban-Olds USED CARS 555 S. Woodward MI 4-4485 B’ham PontIaO. >Ai^ iR>H|tT bIM ■"JSSS^SiSnS'WUl IJIS^ ’59 Rambler Wagon with mdbt. b^r, aMomofia Irnna-mlaalaa. iMIawaBa and rnak an $1295 John McAuIiffe. Ford M OAELARD AVB FE 5-4101 1960 RAMBLER 5 to Chooie From All Classic 4-Doors AUTOMATIC. BCTUNDBR RADIOa AND BEATERa WnnWAU. TIRES > All Very Ijo'w Milehge FROM $1195 BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER $wtfWradCra» 1959 VOLKSWAGEN $1295 SuburbonOlds USED CARS 555 S. Woodwird MI 4-4485 B’ham -------------5B»: $99-DOWN 7M°aiT°aaf 19tt-PontiBr^JVinpeK Bddsr «Ub MM wnaBara 1962 Rambler American SMmt wMR baalar aad mMBara WAGON SALE swTsairsra. •“ MM Larb. Bora •• arofF ^ raw drira. Rad ala* a«l sMf .r 2S32f •MM. mm Fold Wigan. VI aaMM^ttcb shlH. rarp aica aad anpr |fM. sraa. Used Car Bargains gt^iR'srBr.io-. yOUR CHOICE....$145 666 S. Woodward Avc. Ml 6^Doer ..with .foyw^oa?? ^ truuwtMMSs rMW. DVftttr, vuttwaus mq ptMUc covers. Qiiftf* laUed only Mllot. Xf yott ena'i «o a n«w ono thla ta salt 1959 THUNDERBIRD RanHop w» power end ben .$2395 1960 BUICK .$2295 Loinbrs ConvarUblo NilUi power eteerlng, power brakes. Oynaflow traasmlssloo. radio, heater and whRawails Rich brown with white lop. Locally owned tad a naw car trada-ln. 1955 PONTIAC ..$495 an witb Hydramatli ual mllas. Baa tbi . Batter burryi radio, banter and whltewallt. Only 1961 PONTIAC I aesiy I.IM mllas. Qanraatead to' lM in cradM. You batter harry tor tbs buy of n ‘1795 TO9 BUICK ...................$1595 4-Oeor Sedan with Dynaflow, radio, boater and whltewaU Urea. A true blue baanty- Locally ownad and sharp. 1957 FORD ...................$650 1955 STUDEBAKER ... .$ 495 PRBBIOBirr 4-OOOR 0DAH With V-l Mglaa. ataadard Iraa dan ^ ^ar atearbw. Locally ownad aad mna4 be aaaa i 1958 BUICK ......................$1295 MclOT 4Daar Hardtop. Power ateertag and krnkas. raiH l^nsnow. whitewalls. A pink and Irary beauty. Wowl 1958 BUICK ..................:.$1195 S-Daor Badan waO^Uras. B< 1959 BUICK .... $1595 fiSp’SB^wir imlialoB, radio, boater aad 1959 PONTIAC . $1695 1960 PONTIAC . .......$2495 HoBaaellla S-Deor HardIdR irHh power matte tiaaamlaalca, radio, boater aad rod Interior. Lika now all tho way. dteoriag aad brakaa, Hydra-wbitewalla. Bottd rad with 1959 PONTIAC..........$1995 Bonnarllls S-Door HaMlop with, powsf stocrbifr, power brnkas, Hy-dmmaHs tmnsmlaalaa, radio, btoter and Whltowalla. BoauUtul tiialbor Mm and Uko naw. 1960 VAUXHALL..........$1195 ssi-isr 1961 PONTIAC...........$2795 1953 PONTIAC ..................$295 4DOOT Badan -with iM^rd trdnsmisalan, ra^ aad boater, nua la wba* ws eaU a BRIa jewel. Baa low miles aad U fioal row NEW CAR PRICES START HERE: TEMPEST $2186. PONTIAC $2725. BUICK SPEQAL $2304. L?SABRE $3091. V ■ PONTIAC BUICK 223 MAIN ST. ROCHESTER OLive 1-8133 Used Cor Lot^Across Fpm New Car Sales - Closed Wed.-Fri.-Sat. at 6 P. M. i-/" - >- THE PONTIAC PtlESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 12, .1962 xU^EXTYNiyK --Today's Television Programs- I mmrn MU to tiw O) Movto (OM) (4)1VyMBw» (T) Amumti (doot.) (U POipm(OM) (H)KMnM •M (4) WwtiMr miWMltoJMkmiSli tin (3> Utmt (4)1 Ycm AM4IH- R (H) FMntotaPiM 1t»(0 DHprMn (4)aMfflon«TOl(ODit.) (T) Oi#—I (O Mm# ~ “M Hff«. Pii vote Hanraw.” (1844) Puck private #idallM in tawpb-t#te. Buif «n M bp M«^ •? OsoM ItMd, Keenan Wynn. (80 WayofLtto ft# (3) PWi and Gladys (4) Natkoal Velvet (T) Cbeyenaa (Omt.) (I) Movie (Qnt.) (M) l:M (3) ratberKnoaroBest (4) (Ootar) Price Is MpM (I) Movie (ONdJ ti# (1) Danny Tliaaiaa (4) nthPNctect (7) Suilridef (t) DonMooMr’sJidillee (SI) Cm# Traveler •i# (3) AndyOrUOth (4)iraiPradM(Ctet.) (T) MMief (Coat) (wr • (3) UiW (3) Uee el Ufa (4) (Colar) Year PM Im- (4) (7) BenOipey (I) Jubtlee (Oont.) M!W (1) IVe Got a Secret . (4) ThriUer (Coni) (T) Ben Gaaey (Ctat.) (I) Festival (Q«t.) lit# (3) Hews U) News (7) News (9) News UiU (7) News. S UtU (3) Weather (4) 9 (7) C (Ol . (80 What's NswT Ut# (9) News UiM (3) a (4) 1__________ (7) Make a Face (9) Susie Ml# (SOSpanisb Lesson lit# (3) Guldinf ligM UtM (4) Ni (80 It# (3) (4) (7) ‘■WhlstUnf tai the World Turns mdo Are rntnqr" How to Marry a MUlton- ■tdar Arctic lee OfSufh Nortb-wast Paseafs (ran Attentio Ocean to Padfle. QMto Oaatris ft ‘ a iniptoln, nan (Don Khotts) voluntoen to be , 10 p. m. (4). Ghost neat superstltlotts mountaineers haunts M# ODsoi-a#i Whsstor (Audrey p ‘ - has killed her tetber-l ■tarrlnt Sean MoC3ory. ■ENHESEY, 10 p. m. (3). (Stick (Jackie Cooper) acquires leak about pso|de after rasetinf pan sincer Patti Maxwell (Jays P. Morgan). BEN CAinr, 10 p. m. (3). Dr. Cbaey (Vtocaot Bdwaods) breads Dr. Batoar (Attad Rydar) toeom. patent and Is snsd lor ahndar by IsM (3) MedKatlom liW (3) On tbs Perm Fhint a:» (3) Oollcfa ol the Air ((3olor) It# (3) B*Wana Don (4) Today (7) ~ l;tt (4) News 9:19 (3) House Party (4) Loretta Young (7) Seven Keys (SO !:« (3) 8ui ftanclscn Beat (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Quean tor a Day (9) News •:U (9) Movie: "Between Two Women’’ gi« (3) Verdtet b Yours (4) Gur riva Daughters (7) Whs Do You Trastr 9:11 (3) News St# (3) Brighter Day (4) Make Room Ibr Daddy (7) American Baittotand (80 CbIMe News Cbnier enoe 4iU (3) Secret Storm St# (3) Edge of Night (4) Hetw’s Hdlywood } 7i# (7) Johnny Ginger Si# (3) Captain Kangaroo (80 IVsndt for Teache it# (7) Jaek LaLamte 9t# (3) Movie; "Lost Squadron’’ (4) Ed Allen (7) Movie; ‘ Clgarctta Giri’’ (80 Spanish Lemon •in (4) Gateway to aianwar (80 (brsota 91# (4) Dohbla Drwba tot# (4) Say When (M) Our Scientific Work) la:# (7) Tips and Tricks I (7) News (9) BOboaid Mt# (3) I Love Lucy (4) (CMer) Play Your Hundi a) Life el Riley (9) Oies Helene (U) ll«liob V Ur# (9) Namery School Thna Ut# (3) Video Village (4) (Color) Pries b Right (7) Texan (9) 1 (M) UtU (M) C Ut# (3) December Bride St# (4) News •i# (3) Movie; Diary" (4) (Odor) George Pierrot (7) Johnny Ginger (9) Popeye and Pab (SO What’s New? gi# (7) Aquanauts ' ' (80 Americans at Work •t# (0 Rocky and His Friends Last Reubens, Paihted in 1601, Will Be Sold LONDON (AP) — Senior mei bets o( Sotbefay’s ouctkai house will go to Spain May 4 to sell Rubens’ porti^ o( the Duke of Sotheby’s expects it wil be joM tor at least S770#0, the |«‘ paid tor Rubens’ ‘‘Adoration the Magr In June 1969. If the btQter plans to take it out of Spain the price U the patoUng automat-* ally Increasas 30 per cett. Peter Wilson, chairman of Sotheby’s. says Spanish bw reqaireo that the painting be sold in Spain. A ★ ★ 'A toreiga purchaaer could get Uoenae to export it if he pays to the Spanish government a tax amounting to 30 per cent of the purchaae price," he explained. Wilson said the portrait on a canvaa measuring 9H x 6 tort is the last great Rubens stUl la private hands. Painted In 1601 wlien Rjubens was 34, it shows the duko horseback with soldiers In the background. Its owner, a descendant of the dbke, died recently and the portrait is part of Ms estate. Mishap ProvM Fotal DETROIT BMIaricell Stanley, 38, of Trenton, died early today of Injuries sulfersd bat Tueadey Kovacs Nained Best Director WHb AocBpti Award in Bohalf of Lat49 Comic for '61 TV Production telcvisloa director of 19tl for Ms "Eriib Kovnee apedal." * A * Kovaes, who was kUlsd Jan. U b an autoraobils acMdsnt, wm rad poatliuinemty Saturday i at the Dhwctars Guild of Americs'a annual awards dkmer held here and In New York. otaL deeeilhed aa a etady In sgsuBS, itoes "Itoyto Ogulust toe Boum," "Tha Daany Kaye ■ww." "The Psww and the Olsfy," wMsh Kovacs* widow, commedienne Edie Adams, escorted by actor Edward G. Robinson, acospted the award for her blf-- * ' An audience'of about 1,000 persons, including such film notables as Gregory Peck, Shirley Jones, Ksely Smith, June Haver, and IVed MacMurray. ■‘I think Ernie would like to thank the crew,’* she said referring to Kovacs’ assistants on the 'tow. *‘I know Ernie sppy shout this aa I I John Besttfoit, former drams sd film critic of the Christian Science kfenftor, was gWan Guild Crifici Award. DEMONSTRATION - V. S. William F. Vsthel, Palo Vmdet,. two Vistnauieis roarinea in the use of a Ibime- nersLoeweSibw a 60-Minute Delight By CYNTHIA LOWBY NEW YORK (AP) - *rake product of a song-writing » Big Porty Will Honor Greok A^yor of Gary GARY, Ind. (AP) - Quito a birthday party la Invstor* F Mayor Qs^e Chaoharia today. Aides have echedulad a !#«- who was 54 Sunday. A e was bom tai Tliebes, Greece. City OontroDer John Vlacloeky lid more than 3JI00 tlcketa have been sold wMch wUl bring the nuyor at least 850,0#. ar rh«MM JUKUT Din — Lord Birkett, 78, one Great Britain’s mote dlstingutehed attorneys and i Ju#e at (he Nuernberg trials of Nazi war criminals, died bte Sunday at a London dlnic. More than I# riven and etyoime (ASTsrusmMS) WesisB Tortsrol lvAgoiiaq(ITCli LBJ Hits Prejudice WRife Noting Week I tatant like Julie Let a dlractor of taste and Imagination puU it all together. AAA The reault is a Joy end a delight. And that is Just what Sunday ■ s. "The Broauiway Of Lemer 60 Teen-Age Girls Tell Macmillan Posters Too Sexy BLACKBURN. ElRjaiid (UPD-Slxfy teen-age girls here have protested to Prime Minister Harold Macmillan thte many movi houae posteri are "too sexy.” Posters that Lppeartd outside Nudes in tha Houae," "The Youib Have No Morals" and "The House ol Sin." Monica Stalker, leader of the group, which also la eonductlng i boycott, wrote the prime mintater: "We are not prudea but we thlM theae posters go too far." 13th Nucloor Explosion'^ Announcod by AmBflea WASH1NGTCM4 - The United Statca conducted another ira-dear test underground In Nevada. The Atomic Energy COmmlaslon described Friday's blast as low yield, meaniiB Ito explosive toece was leas than the equivalent of io.on tons of TNT. The test was the 1 by the commlraion since the Unit-ed ‘ ----------- and the second in two days. --Toda)WJR, BsiIbM WWX, SludDU* M*«S WSVV, Al*v Drtw CKI.W. Bad DstM WPON. M«w*. A Or*OT* WCAR. BiMMdSB’f Hid* SilS-Wn. Bssesil l;S0-irMt. Vto* *tesk« " • stu-wa, tasssis Ts» . ‘tfftrfiUBt."* »asa*ija2 WXYS. BtoMUSn lliia-wa a. nsirasMs SiSS-WJn. Bm. Wsmr WWJ. Miw*. MartoM WXfB. rtul BtrtW. W#« CKtW, Mtvt. David WJBK, Nw*. Awrr wcAa. Mew*, ifartirn wroN. Mvvi, LMTU ease t:ss-WJIL Jack Marru CKLW. M*nr Morsta IS;SS-WJIl, Karl Uavt (A Mmf”rtd Ulss-wja. Mswt, I ^XLW. Mm. votr nai WPOH. Mm, tovia a tjM>«XVA Nava. Wall maw. r*va euik. Nava, avarr JkPa ."/5* vm?*** .WWJ. Nm, wave, r CKLW, ( WWJ. Nava, Ttas etary Itla-WXTX. McNatItT. Nm •sxrrihrsjsr"^ •iStj’U’Ar' wSt nIvTu# Nm^*»M«ad •«?Tjrft,EKrwp.r ^W. BM Davtrt 15SS: WXTX, Suxor---- Comedian Dreams Up a JFK 'Command Act' By EABL WILSON NEW YORK — Presldant Kennedy la “ripe for satire,’ clkltna Charlie Manna, the Astronaut comedian who wouldn't go Into apace without hla crkjrona.-’’because he lovea ahow buaineaa and has shows at the White House." ’So,” says Manna, “let’s Imagine the White House having a booking agent to hire acts." Now Stvhle Tucker, who did White House parties for President McKinley when It was called Loew’s White House, and who be-I known aa the Wat of the White House cmnes up for consideration by the isooklng agent ... he says. “Oreat at Orosslnger’s, tha Waldorf and Miami Beach but the WHITE HOUSE? If She didn't wear a French gown to pleate Jackie and drlKk mUk while taking lettlng-up exercises to please | Jaek, she tnlghk bomb thi JelntI” Manna, now at the Cepaeabana, thinks JFK would lova being satirised in that way. Manha’s devising a satirical TV show hoping It can be as brilliant as Sid Caesar’s ar Jackie Gleason’s. I asked Manna how he gets along with Copaeabana Prop. Jules PodeU, Who’s not notorionsly a satira-addict. "Do you talk?” I asked him. •rraik! certainlysaid Manna. “He says ’Walter!’ and I say •Yes SIR!’" # dr THE MIDNIGHT EARL ,.. Daimy Kaye and producer David Merrick are discussing Broadway musical comedy .. . Dlahann Carroll will be on the cover of the final Show Business lUustrated . . . Jerry Uwls, who’d been battUnk with Paramount, settled the hassle and begins “It's Only Money” next week ... Peter Dnchln’s orchestra le btens cooaldared tor the plush Americana 4Iotel's cafe. . . . Luaky Loelaae’a efbodygukrd, BIU Blaasuao, haa turned down puMlahen’ Mde for a blo of the dead gangster. ★ A ★ BABL’S PBABLB: Just about the Ume a woman thinks her work Is finally done, her husband asks her to help him with the dlshee. TODAYK BESY LAUG8: With the sexy,pictures on today’s record album covers, a lot of music fans come out of the es whistling instea4 of hiunming. WISH FD SAID T^T: An'egomaniac is a guy who’s quite a bit to the center of aelf-center. The Dept of Motor Yehlelei estimates there’ll be 114,000,000 etn on the road by 1*87. "In other Vfords,’^ notes Mary Allen, "If^ want to oroM the street—better do It now!” That’s ea^ (Copyilflit 1008) once got into (he dull dreary trap of "And then we wrote — " suriee Oievalier did ________JUS "Thahk Heaven for Uttls Girls” and Stanley ItoUo-way, his "Get Ms to the Church on Tims.** mote of the time the I with dotM great, wh^ tbiy were not Chwaitei^-vdio WM 1 .ertul-teok on ’Tve Gtwb Ac-enstomed to Her Face.” Biulon haU-lalkad "Oit Andraws bsi« "With a Uttle „ of Luck,’’ originally Holto-way’a private domain. Dems Present Show of Unity 700 Turn Out to Honor Swainson ond WoyiM County Congrakiwomon DETROIT #-There wu a big ■how af unity by Wayne County Democrats over the weekend, leas than 34 hours after Industrialist Oorie Roi R^bUcan SPECML PRICE With Tfiis Ad on FURNACE CLEANING - f7»o MICHIGAN HEATING CO, SS Newberry St. HS-6621 NEW YORK (UPI)-Vlce President Lyndon Johnoon, noting that ^ ^ j Brotherhood Week opens next Sun- /2 Hecks West of Tclestepb) Msatosy Psattot Ckssibsr sf Cesnes|ra_ Sa4sm4 by ■T' THIRTY THE PONTIAC rtlESS, MONPAY. FEBRUARY 12, 196^ U. S. and Soviet Spy Systems Have Much in Common lEdttofs Note ^ The ex- \ of Ut pilot Francis I Jtt iry Powers for Soviet spp ^ If Abel has focused at- Calories Don’t Count • 14« N. SAGINAW IN Doumtown Ponliar • SOUTH TELIORAPH ROAD Cam«r N ed Huron • 4S9S DIXIE HIGHWAY ol W'Uliamf l.akr Hoad First to ^ring You the (it^at New Aid to\ Weiebt Control Eot 3 full mwalt o day ... let* waight th« aafaof way with tlia fabulous now ... Safflower Oil Capsules WITH VITAMIN B6 Diatory Supplamant High in Polyuniaturofao. • Eat 3 full maals a day and lot* waight tha oofast way. • Navar loovt tha tabla hungry and still ba otandar. • Eat hoortily whila thosa axtra inchas disoppoar. • This marvalous naw way of looipg waight is linkad with a low cholastarol count, battar skin condition and rosistanca to colds. Great Haws for Everyone With Exeesshre Wei|ht Problem UNBELIEVABLE - but Irual You neod to oot fat if you ore to bo slim. It isn't how many colorias you con-sumo thot moHors-but whal kind of colorias. Tha inclusion of POLYUNSATURATED FATTY ACIDS in your diot is the ossontiol stop toward loosonlno tha body's leng-storod fat. It is m key to your losing only rxress fat rothor than vital BOTTLE OF 100 CAPSULES If You Cannot Com* In . THRIFTY DRUG STORE . 14B N. Saginaw St. I Pontiac, Michigan I omI to wvighi cwtlrol. EiisI«m4 I« II .99, 2^ g mod handling chorgot. (Total $2.24). I I NAME.................................. I I Mail This Coupon mmmmmmmmmay I CITY. ■ aaeoiasoiwmawaaaaSMWwaiJ — ... the ... stntggle going on beneath the surface of the cold war. In the first of three dispatches, VPl correspondent Louis Cassels reports on the cost of spying and the information agents seek to ferret ouU By liODU CASABU WASHINGTON (UPI) - Espl-mage la a venerable activity which all nations have publicly deplored and privately practiced ■ t the dawn at hletory. Sr * ■»-— a Bible records that spies into the promised land out how much military the children at Israel coiild expect when they moved in. of Ha defenders. They retaraed with a repoH that "aO the ia-haMtaata et the oeaatry da falaP because el as.” The basic purpose of espionaiie is the same today that it was in the days ol MpfM and Joehua: To appraise the athnigth-of ot^j enemy or potential enemy, make sure he does not spr^ any surprises on you. •A vrrAL NECEBsrry’ If this was important thousands of years ago, when armies ad-van^ on toot to fight with swords and spears, it has become, in former President Elsenhower's words, a "vital necessity” in this age of nuclear bombs and continent-spanning missiles. systems is the heavy reUapoe that both place on simply gathoring 19 information which is publicly KASaV OBTAINBD'l There Is no point in setuUiig a spy out to taiie surreptitious photographs of a city's waterworks if you can obtain a set. gratis from the local chamber of com-mercc. A fonaer Bovtet ageoS who defected to the west taM Aha PH that /alUtary attaches of too an able te obtahi aheol N per eeot of the tsdesinatlea they scad to Meecew through pahBe Hw eXA, hi tush, sMaMs about n per cent of what M aoeiety. widia Baseia la a poUee Past of the pr^ a tm aoeiety gtirs for keeping Hs own .cltiaeps ' ^ ■ la that It makes it some- ibsid time tables, ports of Soviet _ tries, and the texts 'Missions' &ow Up, Bishop Explains AProtftrtant ae laager prsisiidMMa, ha aatd. apoes In meeting producUou quo* ...------- — ------------------ fse de cwiylng out the goala of tala data about V. S. part fae«-Ove year plans. Tha Mghstr pesobatage sf ta- They'found they cotdd obtRln all “ the data naked — In a aarles of hooka prepared hy the U. 8. Aimy aold by the U. 8. government printing office tor leas than ISO. A third resemblance of U. 8. and Soviet intelligenoe la that both ' use of modern technol- $0 gaOMf epealy skaply nOeats ST. LOUIS (UPI) _ , bishop said Sunday Amerlc*^ can no longer expect Chrisflans in “ other lands to accept the>'Westeni concept at the church./ Bishop Reuben H. Mtieller ol the Evangelical United/Brethran Church. Indians^ioUs, said the "colonial theory of church expoiv sioa is no kmg^ valid.” Bishop Mueiirt* said the inOu-hsve bcc. .pytag oa each ether youngjrt- Ouiettan chure^ ^ owinoa. ^ “•**«■ >*«>• *• gradually chang- 1^* Chrtotlafi faith and practice, t»ureh«« of the Weetera worlfi cia Gary Powers aad OoL Ra-dolt t. Abel were only two of thoueaade of mea cagaged la pluiNc of the eold war, which will reaeaa to fear one anot How Russia spies on the United States, and how the United Statsa apiet on Russia, will be oover*! In more detail in subsequent dispatches. This dispatch will ' concerned with some feafuraa which their intelligence operations have in common. / First, they are expensive. Official U. S. sources eatknat# Russia's outlay on espionS|^ and sub-veralve activities st approximately 13 bUUon a year./ The amouat af/ntooey available ta Amerlea^B prtaetpal spy 00tm — the Central laMlIlgeaoe Ageaey (ClA) — t| U seeret which Is carelully guarded by dtotrtbuting CIA fooda tbroagh- But congressional sources say the CIA gets upward of $400 million a year, -and lonie guesses run as high as $1 billion. Police End^ Twist in Aisle tit Theater ROCHESTER. N.Y. (AP)-Po-were called to a downtown movie theater Sunday when teenagers began twisting in the sisies during a showing ot "Twist Around the Clock.' Two fights broke out and a man and a teen-age girl injured, police said. so a world Chrhdiaa eommartty. Tie said moat membera of local :lkurcbea hfve not seen the significance of this new development, "but American churches are going to have to recognised the right of the younger churches to be d)ur^B in thelir own right, dr * * "The younger churches arp not merely mlsalon fielda," the bisliOp lid. Bishop Mueller made his marks as the annual convention ol the Natioiial Council ot Churchw' divlaion of Christian education prepared to atart today. Patrolmen eacorted a few teenagers from the theater but no arrest! were made. Plans R*d R*volf Pllm BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) — French film producer Raoul Levy plans a movie on John Reeds book "Ten Days Which School the World.” The work de- iutkai On Every Dollar of Yoor Savinp. Enjoy fast growing savinp and the peace of mind and se> carity tliat an insured savinp account brings. THERE IS NOTHING QUITE LIKE A FAST GROWING SAVINGS ^ACCOUNT AT FIRST FEDERAL! .7«i W. HURON ST. • DOWNTOWN • ROCHESTER • DRAYTfmPLAlNB • WALLED LAU • im.F0KU of tha Ohrtatlaa Unification of P r 01 e a t a hurchoa will be discusaed at this week's meetings. Tblrtyacven Protestant dsnomi-by 3A00 whqt ea^ for foreign intelligence opevatWaa to do their work. an startlad to leara how simple It can be to gain certain typea of in-tOrmatioB la the United Statea. How Powers' pUuw wm djssbied is atUl a mystory.“He Rurtiai* aay they hit it with a rookrt. U. S. otOcials beileva the Jet engine Buffered an accidental flameout. if d * That Russian spies also use id-tnHmodani techniques was made clear at Oil. Abal's triaL in 196T. PoBii« as a Brooklyn photognt-nkM- "Emil R. GoldfUS,' trained Soviet agent eluded detection for nine years while servjag to toe Uggest Rua-spy rii« tvsr WMOvered to the United States. ' A A *. Testimony at hla triai showed that he used such devices sis bol-lowe<$out ootas, cuff-Hnks and bolts to transfer microfilmed mes- U3’s made regular flights over Russia for nearly four years before the Powers incident created international furore that made it necessary to call them off. 'PR1CEUG8B DATA’ , Ttey brought ba^k millions of aerial photographs which gave the CIA priceless information about what the Soviet Union waa doing in almost every field of activity from mackerel tiahtog to miaailo- Hm I Sleep Like Log Shf KhmcB Im I Haas Fistv fiiMMwWOVtiai INN ItU-ASS I* j* welrillw 1* eitoi lUOieS MW* la wt ohMiTH owr htotM Ogntlfi MMi. M SCLL-AUt totagTiwito ImImI tmm fUW. SS4 e Sniimi. loU IWUI to BCLL-ASS. StapSwiXv. tor UtorU liw wtoN. WHITE Sqwing Machine Siaca im »59« ONLY :«2-s wHiTis FINEST QUALITY Fuliy Guoront**^ Froo Hmm PtaumtfsHoa WIlMa 2S-Mlla Ratoag Nfw 7-Foof Vociium Cltonor Hom Br*Mod CI*Hi. All R*bBar fao plastic or rimrH FULLY GUARANTIED* Atfockm*nts InclHdMl $1.25 W**k fm Hbm DtoMSHtTAtidp 01 4-1101 WMiin 25 Milr Radius CURTS APRUAMCES rMtorr Astknton Wkito Btotor NBW location «4fl HATCHMY ROAD Ot 4.IIBI Wtot oa U-M to Alrgort U4.. I Ton w«i t aCoiM so a Ogoa Maoiar m4 rnoar -msT.ss. PLEASE OILII FRETTfR OM of Dofroi*'* originol ditcownftrt SPECIAL OFFER THIS WEEK ONLY Complata and oppfovod homa outdoor ontonno kit with tho purchosa of ony TV sot oxcopt NEVER UNDERESTIMATE MY DISCOUNT PRICEI! Wo uy this wrth prido and it's nothing moro thon o iriondly iniormol romindor to chock our prices i< you 019 planning to buy a new appliance, television or Hi-Fi soon. So mony folks tell us, "I didn't think you could sell it lor thot prk^.^ Yes, mony people ore surprised ond pleased when they get Fretter'i price. FLOOR MODEL SALEH ■ INITALUTIQN OFTIONAL... IIMI AM-FM Ijnuaeast Radi*... t1II.N tl-lMli Partahia Now in Oratoa.......... 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I.WnllMr Bum* rwMta* Mmlly ClMMly VoL. i:iO NO. 4 THE PONTIAC PREm ONE COLOR it it it it Hr ^’ONTIAC, MJCHIGAN, MQNDAY.\ FKBHITARY 12, 1UW2—80 PAGES AaBOCIATBD P1IBM DNiTBO rniaa international K Wants 18-Nation Summit in March Welcome to Pontiac, Mn Adams! OP ' MMero Leftist Strikes in France Only Small Success PARIS (iJPI) •— A series of leftist-led token strikes called to protest the deaths of eight persons in riotous clashes with police last week were only partially! successfii) in Paris today. WUh moiT ihun^JO.OOO urmpd / TMlte* PrtM Pk*U NKW MANAUER — Max AdSma (left) la pment rhambn- manager John W. HirllnKcr greeted at the door 61 Pontiac Area timber March 1., Hlrllnger recently reaigned the pout, of Commerce headfluartera by CafI l>! Rogera. ^ Adama will leave hia poailion aa, manager of new chainber preaident. The rhamb^'t board the Michigan Slate Employes Credit Union in of directora today named Adama to aucceed Lansing. L, , , , Name Lansing Man nuodreds riee r/oods chamber Managet in Idaho, Wyoming a noon meeting today, the I^tlac Area Chamber Of Commerce Board of Directors fianied BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS « l-«naing man. Max Adama. to Warm temperatures and unusually heavy rain turned ^ *^^****" some mountain snowpacks—the West’s water storAge vaults^lnto flood waters over the weekend, routing hundreds from their homes in Idaho and Wyoming. Oov. Robert E. Smylie of Idalho declared a state of --------- ----------*emergency and National Ouatd, Red Cross and civil Romney Quils Top AMC Posts Cross New Chairman, Abernathy Is Presidfetit, 0|i^ating Chief Adama, 4ft. will aucrt-cd John W. Hlrllnger, who announced hia reaig-f nation from the position last De-, cemlxT. The new manager has a li^h-‘ ana Civu rxperlenfN> In Mas- B called Ut Mml mmS Bmfikxm i^||agi Stale Department Sunday morning. HOME AOAIN - Mr. and J1,ra. Millard II. Pryor flash smiles aa lh«7 escort their «on Frederic from plane after arrival at Willow Run Alrjiort Sunday. Pryor was relen.scd 'Saturday But, as the Socialist party deficii government ban on demonatra-ina and summoned its fon-es to the vast Place de la Republlque this evening (about 12:31) p.m. Pontiac time). Iherrf was .a pros-pe(i of more trouble ahead. RKNUME TALKS Amid this growing tension, .’S'X t N«w u With His Barbara gerian rebel leaders have resumed secret talks and may- be nearing cease fire agreement. In fhe li'ller Khrushchev piiv posed that the iH-natlon dlsarma- The W-year-old Pryor was released In an exchange which swappid Amerlcim U'J pilcl Francis f’owcra for .Soviet spy Rudolf -AiH'l. Analysis on Page 18 by >ji8l German Communists after spending tlie Pryor today is home with his gnreni Iasi five and one-half months as a prisancr, Arlwr. .See story on page 2. I Ann meni conference—si heduled to be-Murch 14 in Geneva-rotart work at the summit level. One report said Ike meeting nsui taking plare nr wonid take plae* at lU. Jullim, in Kranrr clone to Ike Hwiss border. Powers Faces Questions WASHINGTON (API - Amer-In this morning's series of little ^2 spy P“«.Gary strikes, ti-affic halted for 30 min- Powers faces detailed grilling utes on three Paris subway lines Irom U.S. mteUigence agents but continued on others. Buses, when ho completes a secret nued to runlrendervoui with hit wife. normally..^ m t>isl tiermahy West ■ Berlin bi-gins, a carefully contrived si’crecy has cloaked his movements. He will leave his iob i Iwlp. There was some flooding n'*”* r'llriove. credit Union in Lmviiog to roared down U.S. Hi^w^ 40 Adams had also ager of the Mictugafi Stale Em- jjgtaUPM l^;- II ----T-—!■■■■■, uwii Sltfe IR snolfma In a ^ I prison,'are: What really Post offices cloned during the ^ .' ' . , „ deliveriea the morning of May . . .. . J lonn Uihnfi h> uraa Hnunwl jir rOWKKH .IH HOME All the White House would say 'Istrike I GOP gubernatorial George Romney today relinquished the managerial reigns of American Motors Gorp. so that he may have a free ha^ to seek the political office. At a press conference in AMC offices in E>elrolt he announced that Richard E. Cross has been elected chairman of tl ‘ of directors and chief executive officer of the firm, and Roy Abernathy new pMident ^nd chief operating otfli^r. Romney was elected vice rhairmaa by Ike AMC hoard gency 4>elter. Temieraturen In the SSs and rain k^Mened an avalanche In a canyen east of Alton In went-em Wyoming and killed an Alton dentist. Or. Max H. Mock. M. who was looking over a potential new ski area. The Portneuf River In southeastern Idaho flooded on fhe southern Wge of Pocatello. The river washed out two bridges at the Lava Hot Springs resort south Pocatello. Idaho' National Guardsmen rescued 36 patients from a rest home and took them to hospitals in Pocatello. t run for governor. While Romney will continue as a director of the automotive flrm,_ he will receive no salary or bonus’ compensation, the board decided. Croas, si-ycar-old AMC legal counsel, also was elected chairman of the company’s policy ciwn-mittee, replacing Romney. Cross lives in Detroit where he maintains a legal flr|n in addition to being a director of AMC. . *- Abernathy, 55. of 3940 Oakland Drive, Bloomflrid Township, remains on the committee. He has lieen serving as executive vice preaident jmd general manager of the firhi. OTHERS ON COMMITTEK Other members of the policy committn are executive, vice presidents ftoF Chapman Jr. and Bernard A. Chapman, and vee president Edward E. Chsh-man. (Yeas has been legal sounNel for American Motors since the company was formed In UM. Abernathy was promoted to executive! vice president in charge of autontotive appliance distribution and marketiw in I960. Ite' was fleeted to'the board of dli-ec-lors TO |»me year, and named general rganager last November. In the press conference following a board of directors meeting Romney said he could not have resigned without knowing that the company would remain in "superb executive management, without a lag in the continuity of management.” ^ He said of Cross and Abernathy "These are brilliant and resourceful men who have played core In 1862, Lincoln Was S3, Leader of a Sad Nation parts in the building of American Potomac. And it . was on Lincoln's MotoA Corp. I am ttecpiy grateful for the supfloH they haye given me in the past” Heber fast Of Salt Lake City and rioaed the highway. I Rivera and creeks overflowed in the, Riverton-Lander area fromerly been public relations director for the credit union and manager of the Manistee Chamber of Commerce. Carl D, Rogers, newly elected chamber president, said Adams will start work liere Feb. 26 aJ-appoiptment becomes effective He Cheer Red Rock 'n' Roll MOSCOW (UPD — The Moiseyev dance troup won wild applause with its version of American rock and roll Sunday night while scenes depicting the Cuban revoluHon held at the huge Nlale-uwned Kenaull automobile plant In a Pari)i miburh. A Socialist parly spokesman ![promiaed this morning 'that the evening demonstration today would peaceful, with demonstrators making no attempt to break through police barriers. But the government was deeply disturbed that the Communists might use the occasion tor more Irouble-cnaking and violence. I ^wned .deep 19M, whefi he _________ _ _______ _____ inside the' Soviet Union? How much did he tell the Russians about his mission'.’ Represents Argentina were mildly received by an audi- it has ence which included the cream of|tlon Soviet society. BERN, Switzerland (AP) -Swiss government todaj^ announced iken over the tepresenta-Argentina’s interests ir ICuba. By DON OAKLEY On d because of M. The Lincolns went tlirough the motions of eWertalning their 500 guests, but their minds were bound (Continued on Page 2, Coi. 3) I’rdimlnar.v i|u.-Ntloning presumably began shortly after Hh-SZ-.vear-dd pilot crossed a Berlin bridge Into Amerlcaa hands Saturday In a fwo-for-ooe tr for Soviet spy Rudolf f. Abel. Official sources are not saying Powers is in military or government custody, but ever since he a white-line wherp Com- •nds and word still iinothcr American prisoned In the ^ivict Union may win his freedom Mnr\tn W. Maktncn, 2't a sla-deni from Ashburnhani, Mass, lomicriy of Uhass»*l, ARch-, is What stand the Unlte^ Stairs and its allies, and perhaps a num-lier of non-aligned countries, will lake In response to the Khrush-proposal will be determined*'’ in ui'gtml consultations expected to begin immediately. I Kiev on espionage xtbarges. home atpidnl and that he had bei-n reunited. , with members of his family. | Donovan said: "I/havc what far-flung game of hidt‘-and- Warmer Weather Expected in Area hr Next 5 Days The weatherman f o r e c a *loudy skies tonight and tomorrow with snow or ran likely tomorrow night. Hie low tonight Is expected be 20. Tomorrow’s high will reach 33, ;nted exchange arrived home inday. James Brill Donovan,'the New York lawyer who defended Abel in his 1957 espionage trial and then negotiated his deportation in a trade for Powers and student Frederie Pryor, brought For the next five days lemper-ures'will average 4 to 8 degrees above normal high of 31 to 36 and the normal low of 12,to 20. There will be a warming trend Tuesday through Thursday with not much change in temperature thereafter. Precipitation will average 2 or 3 tenths of an inch in snow or rain late Tuesday and Wednesday. light showers or snow flurries at other times. The lowest temperature in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.m. was 16. At 1 p.m. the mercury stood at 25, / Related Item I Man About Town on Page 6 Henry on the Tennessee River on the 6th. Ten days later he would capture^ Ft. Donelaim. #econd step in his long campaign down the MiasissipiA to cut the Confederacy But in the east, in the crowded, muddy, pestilence-riWen capital, the citizens still stood half in fear Df invasion by the seemingly unbeatable Rebels just acroM the tall, stooping shoulders that t h e hopes dad fears and grief Of an ■mtire people rested. seek dogged newsmen tried to find out for themselves whero Powers and his wife, Barbara, were holding their reunion. Various leads pointed to Marylund'» Eastern Shore, but fhe exact meeting place could nof Itc pinned down. The. White House declined what family members Powers saw but presumably h«“ met also with his parents, Mr., and M Oliver W. Powers, of Norton, Vi that if the ‘bnlemplaled by Id develop, the Soviet Union/would contemplate extending chd to be no llkcll-heting at a late slugh of the negotiations. The ^Geneva group -is to report to' Ihh- United ■,, Nations June 1 The new Soviet proposition re* , porledly was delivered when Mikhail N. Smirnovsky, ranking oMi-it the .Soviet Embassy, rtet .Sunday morning'with Secretary of Slate Dean Rusk at the Slate Department. Smirnovsky reportedly gnw Rusk a seven-page letter from Khrushchev addressed to Kennedy Nasty Weather Casts Doubt on Glenn Space Shot Rowston, 4.3, of 60 ■ Cherokee Road, uLso will have to ri'sign as a vice president of the Michigan I Municipal League, a po.sition he In Today's Press "1 Much in Common CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. (4V-The worst sea conditions of the winter in the Central Atlantic today east doubt on whether a.stro-naul John fl. Glenn Jr. w’ill make his seheduli'd round-the-world bttal flight on Wednesday. ‘lected to last fall. League officers* are limited to_mumeipal offkials. “Due to increaM>d demandN of Illy law prucllee It Is ne<'eM*iary limt I ilevide hII of Hiy efforts In lH-hal( Ilf llils responsibility." Kouston siiiil III a brief slale- But .sjiace Agency officials made ^) change in the. dote in hopes that the hud conditions might cleor by launching time. A weather- advisory reported -that winds of 35 knots were rolling up 10 foot waves today in an area between Bermuda and the fcentral Atlantic — whore Glenn’s space capsule would latid if the fliglit were terminated after one orbit. An official said acceptable conditions are seas of hp more than five feet and find.s of 15 lo J8 knots. . U. S’.. Red spy systems ex- ^ . nmined in first of series— *, I PAGE.to. Big Question . .‘Trial sei'ks $55-miUion an- f swer in two Electra crashes S Get Busy, Kids GOP needs young men, SJiys Ike-PAGE 19. Rowston indicated he would continue lo stive (he city in A less official iiilc. WANTS -n) SERVE "My hiici-esl in Pontiac and all civic activities is not diminished by this decision and it is my hope to serve in other capacities but tO: lesser degree in the coming' years," Rowston concluded. In DiH-enilN-r 1959, city eian-iniNNliinerN ap|Milnte A(St, Don't Suljc There are ways to make dull coui'se interesting — PAGE 24. Area News*,, n CoinieN « EklitorialM « Markets .23 OblliiarieK 7 Sports . 3*-W Theaters 19 TV and Radio Progn UM 29 Wilsun. Earl Women’s Pages . n-iii I TWO TtAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1962 3Af8aFrlenl,70ifiel5 Hurt As Lift Jumps Track , Thrtt Bloomfield Towihihipi U ('aid. 4t, ot SM Weatbounie neichbon plummeiwi IS feet to the grbund yestenlay when a ikl lift cable jerked out of Iti groove (it Cryital Mountain Lodge near Beulah. The two men and the wife of one of them are in aatiafactory condition today at Frankfort Hospital. Two Beulah ichool gidi alw were injured. ' HonpItalUed ertih broken rtbR were Robert Coutineau, 4T, of MARVIN MAKINRN Powefs Must Face Intense Grilling under a National Aetvnatillca and Space AdminlRlration contract when he waa downed in a high-altitude photographic miasion 1,240 mllea inaide the Soviet Union. It li generally n.asumed that the CIA directed the operation. There la atill much mystery: ' surrouiKling Powers’' flight, and military, diplomatic and Intelligence officials are expected to join In the queptlonlng. Only when this is conripleted, it is believed, will Powers be able to fully pick up the threads of his private life- St Patrick Hit With Scientific Shillelagh CHICAGO (UPI) - The luck ol the Irish that rid Erin ot snakes Came from the Ice Age and not Patrick. Dr. Allred £.' Emerson of the University ol Chicago, plans to Say-so at an Academy of Science lecture here Tuesday. “St. Patrick was bom about 1,500 years ago,*' Emerson will tell the audience. "The Ice Age froie out Ireland’s snakes maybe 100,000 years before that.” Emerson is a sper-iallst in zoogeography — thd science thnl attempts to reconstruct where animals originated and how they cante to be where they are today. Emerson also will tell his audience of Students and wlence teachers why Australia has so many Ipouched animals and why Africa |a devoid of Sigers. Cousineau's wife, Constance, 45, Injured her back. Oousineau la an executive with a . Toledo, Ohio, aviation firm. About 60 persons were on the lift when the cable jumped out of its groove. Three double chairs in which the victims were riding hurtled to the ground. Home 4S patrons were stranded. dangling precariously In midair, when the npemlor halted the lift. Nome- were M feel above ground. All were removed In two hours by a rescue squad using ladders and ropes. iniLDRKN TO BLAME? Keith Van Dulzen, manager of the lodge which . Is located about 12 miles southeast ol Beulah, said the accident might have been caused by youngsters on the UN Jiggling their chairs up and down causing (he cable to jump from the pulley. -a * ♦ On Dec. 31, a lift at Nubs Nob near Petoakey went out of control, killing Larry Oit, 32. of Ada, and Injuring two seriously. Another accident took place at the Mission Hill Ski Club near Saull Sle. Marie on Jan. 4 when a lift cable jumped from groove. No one was Injured. Former Editor at Press Hurt H. Guy Moats, Outdoor Writer, 1 of 3 Injured in Weekend City Traffic The former outdoor editor The Pontiac Prc.ss was one of three persons hospitalized today as the result ol weekend traffic accidents in Pontiac. H. Guy Moats. 115 Ntalc M.. is In satlsfaelory eondltlon today at Ponllar (icneral Hospital. Also in satisfactory condition at the same hospital are Mrs. Jessie M. Young, 46, 651 E. Tennyson Ave., and Karen West, 15. 450 Rivard .St. 'Moats, who retired from The Press in September i960, was drlv-Inv cast on Huron Street at Q:03 p.m. Saturday when, according to police, his car skidded on slippery pavement, Sklddwl Into the westbound lane and was struck by a car driven by William C. Hayes, 27, ot S. Marshall St. The West girl was a passenger In a oar driven by Beverly V. Edwards, It, iSSt Maryles-lon Read, Unhm Uke, which waa la a eolllslon ahoel •:M p.m. Halurday at Telegraph and Elisabeth ladle roads. Polled said her car was struck when she made a left tui-n In front of an auto driven by Hendrick L. Schonstra. .35, 4048 Lorn-ley SI., Drayton Plains. Mrs. Young was Injured about 3 p.m. Saturday when a trailer-mounted compressor^^it broke from a thick aiM struck the of her auto at lUst Walton Boulevard near Arlene Street. The Weather Full U.8. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY M(|atlv cloudy tomorrow,# snow or rain likely tomorrow nlgfiY. Low tonight 20. High tomorrow S3. iloon MU tucftfiV tt r9i a.m Moon rItM Monday at 13J3 p.m Os* Y*sr At* In rnsUi Hlchent WniMrsturc ......... LavMt temptrstur* .......... Illfhrit BS« L*w* Traptrnlsrrt Tkln tvirolt SI It St. U)ul> Duluth 34 33 8. Lake City...... Kort Worth 7* S5 B. Frnnrlnro »S U uktonvlll ' 63 3.1 8 8. WnthInstOB 36 IS AP PSelnlsk NATIONAL WEATHER — Rain Is expected tonight over the Central and North Padfle Coast, the Low» Missouri Valley and in the lower elevg^ipna of the Central Appalachians while scat-terad showers are lii^y in the Southern Plateau area. Snow is forecast from the Southern Rockies northward into the Pacific NorUiwest and through ^the Northern Plains and from the Great Lakes southward Into th\higher elevations ol the Ohio Valley. Sneaks Photos Out of Havana R«fug«« in Embassy, Took Picturts of Lift in tered Northwest Europe today and spread a trail ot wreckage acroa Britain with at least four C The meteorological office said a 123-tnile-an-hour gust recorded at Uwthcr Hill, 2,377 feet above sea level at Lanarkshire in Scotland, was probably the fastest gust ever recorded in the British Isles. 30; their son Kevta, sltttag i his mother's tap; i A passenger in the second car, Barbara Krass, 15, of 2224 N. Wll-oon St., Royal Oak, is in lair con-dittap in Beaumont Hospital, Also in talr condition is Hillaker with a possible skull fracture. USB IN ROUTHFIELD Mrs. Langereis wu killed in a second fatal accident in Southfield Saturday afterpion. a * it Mrs. Langereis was in driven by her husband. Theodore A., 52, who said he was going north on Southfield Road and waa making a left_turn into a driveway whtin he waa struck by a southbound car. He saM he theOgM he had eiMegh thne bat that he pidled In front of a ear drives by Nor rey d. KaNer, N. of INN OoMey Road, DetroH. Kanter’s car struck Langereta' •r in the right sidb where Mrs. they ahenld be dtotribnted to the werid end be BhoaM be Idenfl-ftad even It be beoenw a "lae-riftae,’* Gonzales Insisted he be Identl-fled, Cuban exile friends said, be cause he wanted to lend maximum authenticity to the plcturw, believed the firat to be made of the lot of political prtaoners under Cat-tro'B dlctatorlil regime. IS MONTHS IN CABANA The young rebel oHIcer spent IS monthe in Cabana dungeons to which he was sentenced ter bring too openly antl-Communtat to suit armed forces commander Maj-Raul Castro. The Day in Birminghatn Commission ^ets Limits for Widening of E. Maple BIRMINGHAM - The Oakland County Rpad Oommlaalon will undertake the aridenlng of East Maple Road along the entire stretch (ran Adams Road to Cool-idge Highway rather thui Just the section from Eaten Street to the city limits (OooUdge). The Eaton-COolidge widening at ils time had been proposed by the Birmingham City Commtaslon. The road oommlarion eoM wM-Mli« the oollre atrotoli at one time would be the only way la which tt would uodertake the only a complete project from The city weeks ago had pnpoaed three re-fiilnietion program, vtatons affectliR the prapoeod wld-of Maple Road. Thaae Included; THREE REVISIONS — Widening only that po rtion of Maple from Eaton to'OooUdgt at thla tlihc; 2 - A Width ot 40 feet between 3 - A width of M test briereen In a tatter to the city commta- beceaec of his lack ot knowledge ol photography. U.S. reporters who visited Cabana FortreN in the early days ot Castro’s successful revolution confirmed the authenticity of the backgroond in Gon^lez' pictures. The pictures werA>ffered to support what Gonsalez described u 'bestial treatment" of political Hold College Student on Bombing Chaige CHICAGO (UPI) - Authorities today investigated a "prank’ bombing at an Iowa college dtiring the weekend. Steven Prescott. 19, a at Buena Vista College, Storm Lake, Iowa, was arrested Sunday on charges of sending a homemade bomb to ^ dean of women, ben* wool oft ae the dean, Mtsa Efita Mentgemery. epeued It In a giris* realdcuce ball, where sb% also aervea as bouae melher. Miss Mtmtgomery and Ahm Caldwell, 20, ot Uttle Sioux, Iowa, suffered first and second degree bunu^hbout the face and arms. They were in fair condition in a hospital today. iUiother student, Bonnie Parrish, 18, Sioux Falls, Iowa, suffered minor burns. She treated and released. JAKARTA. Indonesia^ (API U.8. Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kdrp nedy arrived in Indonesia todah for a six-day visit. Before hi arrival soldiers scratched off antt-American slogant brudely painted along his route into the capital. The airliner that broi«ht Kennedy and his wife, Ethel, touched down at the Jakarta airport (hi|N hours late, fautonestan' Atty G^. Gimawtkn, who hud invited Kgb-nedy to visit th^ Socialist isbifKl republic, led the welcoming paity. Kennedy and hia wife had flown from Hriig Kong to ' _ . 1 their unexpected stopover there for a fast sightseeing drive about the British Oommonweelth island. Indonesian youths painted signs saying "Kennedy go homf" and "United States no. Indonesia yes' on walls and buildings. They also handed out posters and leaflets. Told of the signs during hit stop at Singapore. Kennedy nid anaU-‘ igly, "Ive seen them before." Indonesians were ^nnoyed be- Prince Charles Okay After Appendectomy LONDON, (UPI) - Prince Siaries, heir to the British throne, tvaa rushed 58 miles by ambulance to a London hospital where aur-geons early today performed an emergency operation to remove his appendix. The IS-year-old son of Queen ■attafartoiy condition after the Later this morning the hospital said he spent a' "comfortable” night. Queen Elizabeth kept in touch erith the hospital by telephone from Windsor Castle, 20 miles west of London and was driving to her son’s bedside today. 2 More Bakeries Hike Detroit Bread Prices DETROIT —Bread prices were to be hiked a cent-a-Iopf today by two' more Detroit bakeries, bringing to seven the number of bakeries which had raised prices in a Bakeries joined Schaefer, Silve^ cup, Wonderbread, Ward and Tay-stee bakeriea in the price increase. Kennedy Lands in Indonesia Anti • U. S. Signs Tom From. Wolls by Solditrs B«for« His Arrival for the Oakland Oounty Road Com* mliaian. Nbman T. Knapp, %ald; I Eatea to Coelhda ould aat be a praettoal ar breeeh le pi taledtelhe useveiMnl tt vekloa- r traflle. ‘In traveling east or west, between Hunter Blvd. and Coolidge, four usable lanes would be restricted to two-plus at an Intermediate m. 'UnlcN we Improve roads by tollQwlac a pattani of (xmtliiulty. we wIB not aobompltah tba pur-poN of an acoataratsd raod cob- Regardlng the other two city propo^, the road commission apptMni to be willing to make Bbana compromtaa on the width of the stroot In Iht two aaclions. fr * * The road commtaaton hM asked the city oommission to JNfct city ■ngteasrs to prepart bPIm and topographical surveys in this area M the Unee laid out by the road Tlta Oty Commission Is txpect-) le act on this request et tta p.m. meeting today ta the Municipal Building. Mie. ley r. Foal The Jay F. (Mabel E.) Pool, 831 W. Clei«ary Circle, died Sat-Yar a long llbMM. Sie wul2. A fr ♦ A graduate ot Liggett School In Detroit, Mrs. Pool WM an honorary member of the Adventurer's aub. the North Dmgregational Church of Detroit and the Highland Park Women’s Qub which she had served as pribldent. She also waa a charter mem her of the Dial Qub and Ihe Highland Park Playbrs. Suririring are a son; Dr. Ed-aon K. Pml of Birmingham; and Service is at 1 p.m. May at the Bell Chapel of Wllitam R. Hamll-Funeral CO., 802 E. Maple Ave. Burial iriU foUow la Wood-lawn Cemetery. Detroit. Owen W. tailh Sendee tor Owen-^W. Smith, 74. of 210 E. Highland Road, Bloomfield Township, will ba at 10 a.ro. tomorrow et St. Hugo of the Hills Church. Burial will be In Mount Hope Cemetery. An employe of the Pontiac Poet Office for 44 years until hit re-1963, Mr. Smith died Unlb Chartered Dutch elrUners uniformed troopo aboard on U.S. territory en route to West New Gulnes. Last week students stoned the U.S. embassy here in protest. The United Statee hai banned such flights but commet-del Dutch airliners carrying troops in dviltan clothet egn ItUl land on U.S. territory. Kennedy will have several meetings with President Sukomu —whom he has met before—and other government offictajs. In-cudlng antt-Gommunlst (Mn. Abdul Haris Nasutkm, the national security minister. On the eve of Kennedy’s arrival the Indonesian army sent 10,000 jungle fighters to eastern lib donesia, apparently to start Infiltration of West New Guinea. ■tee wewa VNdV-Oagna niwnber Of tbo fWee Couildl. IMghts of Columbus. A Parish Rosary will be reetted at 8:30 p. m. today at Donelson-Johns FtmeriJ vHome, Pontiac, followed by a K. of C. rosary at 8:45 pjn. . Edmund 0. and Wilfred both of Pontiac; a brother. John D. of Watkins Lake; and six grandchildren. Do Forget M6. Says Frod Pryor, of Ann Arbor ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP)-‘There is an oportunity to make a lot of cheap propaganda slamming East Germaiqr-don’t do It in my case," said Frederic Pryor, 28. Sunday on his return home after his release from a Soviet prison.' forget me," he said. His graying mother, Mrs, iVfil-■rd H. Pryor, beamed, "TMs ta, whet 1 have been welting for.^ She had been walltag live aad-a half months. The scene was nearby Willow Run Airort with a New York-Detroit airliner a backdrop. than 48. hours earlier Frederic had been released by East German Oommuntats who had picked him up as an es|do-noge suspect in East Berlin test General Baldfig Co. and Awrey >^ug. 25. Hta mother and lather, who learned of hta detention three weeks afterward, had spent nxMt of their Jtime since in Berlin. Rowston Not Running foiHisFouftliTenn (OonUnued From Page One) Dommtaslouor had beU the poei-Itan. He etUl boMe lie peal. Rodston, married and the father of tivo daughters, was flrst appointed to fill a vacancy on the city commission in 1956. He was elected to his first full term in 1958. In fhe fall of (hat year he ,was an unsuccessful candidate In the Democratic, primary for state repreoentafive from Pontiac. * * * WMle he (won’t be forced to give p hta post on the Board of Super-vtaors, Rowston wUl atuemattcally toilelt hta seat on the Oty Planning Commiaaion. As mayor, he ‘ IS been on the planning commta^ on since 1968. W A Rowston has aliw served on the Oakland Oounty Tax RBocation Boanl, Pontiac Real Estate Board. BB a member of the Downtown Pontiac Kleranis Qub and the boaid of deacons ol the Congregational Church. 4h- An attorney aince graduating from Detroit Law School in 1963, Rowston is a native M Pontiac and graduate of Pontiac Central (High SchQOl. Before entering latw school he worked in the accounllng department of GME Truck ^ Coach Division. “T- Ignore Red Attempts to Reserve Areas Allies Fly Corridors to West Berlin usual today despite earUsr Rus-tlah attempts, to reserve parts of two of them lor their o(wn use. deSemUtted net. ta retraut on mercial flights over East Gc^ many today reported no unusual Russian activity in the corridors. However, commercial planes usually fly higher than the altlMes the Russians had tried to restrict for their own fUi^ts. . , ♦ ★ ♦ The officials called the Communist demands the most serious challenge to date of Western rights ip B«iip, (riiidi lies peep inside EastOratany. But they said that any Western bacfctkxwn would only Idad to further demands, and re- Pkiy Nice L-o-^-ng Game STEPHENVILLE, ^Pex. (UPI)-Firemen here had j^en^ of time lor checkers recent^. The only call they received daring one Pwo- «»», r’*'" lil // 'r i :(: I F^OUR THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 1/ , 19B2 (AdTartteratnl) '> }Now Many Wtar ^ •FALSE TEETH : WHkMeraCeiifort NwjeSSTpewLrtSKl^^ *mort Ormiy.To Mt uut talk In mcr* Pair in Head-On Crash; She Dies, Husband Hurt -----------------\» • jtu* rA«- •TCmi land, died Saturday in Warsaw, the Polish Press Agency reported.1 In 343 JA corporations Michigan this fund campaign ends 21. Computers can grammed to solve problems the same way that children learn | to speak. , f *»« l»p-| »blems in within a_ {square contained 133,000 WomenPast21 WITH BLADDER IRRITATION rlUUoss sMmI I«Im ss sissy soibmi u EisiT mu jtsks yosUsM sad nsriBiii tao tTMiMst, bsnilns or ItiWst UonbolbdsyoBd^bl aoeoodorUf. you mu looo iloop oad oulltr from Hiod-oebrnTtoekoeho oad tool old. Ur«d, do-sroitod. In lueh Irrltollon. OTMIX stuoUy brinti toot, rolosins oomtort by ourblns IrrUolIni oormt In otrons. i^d srino ood by snoltoolo Mia roUnt. Got enrarax m dyvfsteio. tool kowor toot. FREE! • SPECIAL THIS WIIK ONL^r ’FREE ONE DOZ. GLAZED* DONUT CENTERS With Puyebasu of fpeh DOZEN GLAZED DONUTS At Regular Fricf I • Hot Lunch#* • SandwIchM • lea Crssm Sundays • Dsliciout Hot Coffso CLIP THE HEARTS AND SAVE AT BOTH YANKEES i ■' / > THE POS't'IAC PRESS. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 12, llKI,i Tii*«ston« fintlont NEW TREADS Complete Set of Tubeless Whitewalls OUARANTBI ANY SIZE 4 For 149 currant ct iinw o( 49 M tax «ii4 4 Tr«4«>ln ThM Just say "CHarge it" . . . buy on easy terms wh«r« your dollor buyi AAILES mor* 146 W. HURON FE 2.9251 NIGHT BRAKE SERVICE g A.M. P. M. Trial Seeks Answer to $5 S-Million Question By ROBERT i. SERUNG IIPI AvtatiM Editor WASHINGTON - Two U. S. corporate gianU collide in a Houston, Tex. courtroom today over a $55-milllon question: Who was respoasIMe lor the crashes of two prop-jet Electras la which n pf rsoM were UUed ~ 94 at Buffalo. Tex., SepL 99. IMP,, aad a at Tan Oty, lad.. March IT. IMOT The contestants are Lockheed, manufacturer of the huge airliner, and the Allison Division of Gem eral Motors, which makes thp plane's engines. Once the nacelle flutter reaches the same frequency as the wing flutter, wing, structural failure oc- gaa to wobble until the ^ SAYS SHAFTS BROKE Lockheed is claiming that whirl mode cannot result unless a shaft In the engine Itself breaks. Lockheed charges that breaks developed at both Buffalo and Tell City, and that the severance stemmed from rapid metal fatigue. It will present evidence that ths shaft damage found in the two ae> rldents resulted from cither pact damage or Allison engineers are not i convinced that whirl mode wm Involved In either accident. They probably wlU aHesnpl to ihow that the Eleetra’a wis« s of Ten ONy. aad aato- [nod to show that m part of ^ engines could haw played a role in the two acddeMi. A CAB opokewsan said The CAB Itself absolved the en- two It sakf^hlri mode developed •am some prior damage In the outbdani nacelle structure the exact location or cause of that damage. STUDIES TEST RESULTS AlUson has been pourli« data from recent tests into the CAB, 'As of now we're eonvlnoed that whlri mode caused the aocldqnU,” he said, “but It’s up to the courts to decide the responsibility for what caused the whirl a safety of the E3ectra as It is operating today. "We are positive that the mod-Iflcatipn program (|35 million waa spent to b^ up the Electra's wing and nacelle structures) has cured the plane’s weakness and that the EScctra Is as safe as any plane flying today,’’ he said. The CAB official emphasised that no matter what the Houston Jury decides, in effect H will be' Tbntcliar, •fi4 Warnat INSURANCE The trial itself, scheduled open today in the 113th State District' Court, Involves a single suit brought agalnpt Lockheed, Allison and Brantff International Airways — the latter operator of the plane that crashed at Buffalo. The plaintIfiB are the widow and five ehlidrea of om ot the victims, Charles Qalek HI of The Quicks are asking $500,000 in damages from the tferee defendants, but Braniff also is a cross plaintiff. The alrlipe sued Lockheed and Allison for the cost of the $2.3-miHion aincraft. surra HINOE ON RESULTS Suits filed against the two companies and airlines total about $55 million, but most of them may hinge on the results of this single trial. The Electra Hself has long been cleansed of the “bug" said to have caused the Buffalo and Ten City ’The Civil Aeronautics Board officially has blamed both accidents on whirl mode, which roughly can be compared to what happens 1 a gyroscopic top begins to wobble as it slows down. In the case of the Electras, wobbling apparently resulted I some weakness in, the structure that holds the outboard engines in their nacelles. Once weakened, the entire en- Couple Took Prisoner on Their First Dote AKRON, Ohio W — The first time Nancy Carter and Charles Bennett went out together, they took a prisoner to the Lima State Hospital for the Criminal Insane. Recently they were married. But they are continuing their Jobs — Nancy as a sheriff’s deputy on cases involving women and Juveniles and Charles as a deputy In the Summit County, sheriff’s Jail division. Minnesota Prof Dead ST. PAUL. Minn. (AP)—James B. Fitch, 73, professor emeritus and former head of the University of Minnesota dairy husbandry department. died Saturday. John L. Lewis Is 82 WASHINGTON (AP) - John L. I Lewis, once the nation's top labor union leader, celebrated his 82nd I birthday today. GRAND OPENING SPECIALS OPEN MON., THURS., FRI. ’TIL 9:00 P.M. VINYL ASBESTOS TILE Ut gualily SALE H You Don't Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! 1 075 W. Huron St. Phon« 334.9957 PENNEY’S GREAT Fabric All ready to be fubloned Into wonderful spring and summer ensembles. 100% cotton that Is easy care—wash and wear. Also crease resistant. Ideal for dresses, blpuws, skirts select bright new colors and patterns tbday. PENNEY'S-DOWNTOWN Open Every Mondoy and Friday 9:30 A. M. to 9:00 f. M. All Other Weekdays 9:30 A. M. to 5:30 P. M. PENNEY'S-MIRACLE MILE bpen Every Weekday—Mohdley Jthru Saturday 10.00 A.M. to P:00^.M. mmanvii FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. FEBRUAR^^ U, 10«2 JHeumode ____..draMorwQlUngihMnwHh nud* HmI and damMo* or hoal and , ll.lSapoIr J{emttatkJQxien/.Sh)pt 82 N. SAGINAW. PONTIAC FE 2 *25 to*500 CASH IN ONE DAY OR LESS YOUR CHOICE OF PAYMENT PUN MVll flat* Kv*rylkimg Rra4y for You When You Arrifo STATE FINANCE COMPANY “BU" NICHOUE hliciw • Firt • UokiRty • Aoto • larilary N.R. NICHOUE INSUAANCi AGfNCY CaU FE 3-7858 49 Mt. H. ■. NklMN*. Fww4w Marriage Vndersfanding' Ulfra Selfish Enterfoin dt Meeting of Church, Women NewiOeper I Dmu- Mn. U Since my huibwid'i lint ' Hie older one ^ a girl of 13 — It •apodally Jealous of me. Yet not a day . goes by that my hueband doesn't say It's my duty to opt* our home to. them. '' . I am only 27 years old myself. I did not marry on the understanding thht 1 had to raise another tAunan's children. Please write a column on the Injustice of what my husband wants me to do. Answer: Are you olMuee trying cmI to your mairiager For a person of 27 years you teem to know very little about the human oonsctence. It It not a complicated thing. It .works quite simply. It makes us hale anyone who forces us to do what we fpel It it wrong to do. The Crystallalres of Pontiac Northern High School presented a program before the Auguatana Lutheran Church Women of the Gloria Dei Lutheran Church at the February meeting Tuesday evening. talks and showed sUdea of somet from their native lands. sybllTe Sohlooser of Germany and Amw I sen Gaa re net room of Holland use tponaored by the Michigan Cbiai-cU of Churchea and Diana lUcIlle of New Zealand, by the AmerlGP Field Service. ■ Hostesses for the evening wVe Mrs. Oren aauaou, Mrs. John Englund, Mrs. John Wennaten aqd Three exctiange students gave Mrs. Philip Wargelln. Oearly your husband feels that Mom Turns Into Secretary By BVTB MILLBTT According to the latest flgores, Americana are talking on the telephone more ettry year. Tliat may be good newt for the teelphone company — but many a housewife could wish that the family telephone didn’t ring oulte so often. Especially could she do without those coy little calls where an unknown voice Informs her that she has ^n a free dance lesson, a sitting for a photograph, or that If ahe can name the first President of the Unltod States she will have won some other such "prise.” it it -k She could also do without the calls that try to sell her magaslne subscriptions, air conditioning, life insurance and so on. it it it supposed to be social secretary to : And while she Is llsUng her "druthers’’ she would "druther” not have take so many calls for the teen-age members of the household. The calls themselves wouldn’t be so much trouble If the sroman of the bouse weren’t as, "When Bill eomes In will yea tell htan to eall Jim at borne and If I’m net at home, to try Joe’s house and If we aren’t'at Joe’s we’ll probably be at Ed’s or Kred’s.” That . kind of message Is routine In any family where there are teen-agers. it it it \ Another kind of call the average h^uge- ^wlfe wouldn’t mind giving up Is the oho. , that wants her to solicit money for this drive or that one ... or the one urging her to vote (or a certain candidate ... or ^ the one from the voice taking a survey. I it it it ’The telephone is to the housewife both a convenience and an annoyance—and unfortunately It seems to become more of an annoyance‘the more It rings. tbe king's horses and all the king's men will not put your marriage together again if you force him to do Listen In on Ruth Mlllett's "Tips on Teen-agers.” Mall 25 cents to Ruth MlUett Reader Service, In care of The Pontiac Press, P. O. Box 489, Dept. A, Radio City SUtlon, New York 19, N. Y. If you do, his sense of loyalty to HI will begin to weaken. Though he may agree to your wish, the knowle^ that you have com-I him to do what he feels Is wrong will breed distrust of affection for you. Instead of wife he loves, he will begin to see you as his fellow-conspirator against the rights of his children —hod end by hating you (or making him hate himself. 8e I urge you both to com Gather to Plan Party tor Those Who Will Leave Three Honest Mirrors Promote Good Grooming roeantim< _ at ^r attitude toward time and change. Nobody on earth can promise you unchanging circumstances. As time has moved you from childhod to womanhood, changing your circumstances re-, gardless of your wishes, so it now your husband and his chil-changing their situation Les FlUes Club gathered at the South Tilden Avenue home of Cyn-Gowan to plan a -party for By RAY SHERWOOD Few accessories are of more members who will help in encouraging better leave the group upon enteHng sophomore year in high school. family honest mirror. Better than one honest mirror are three that tell the full story, in the round Any member of a family will be forced to take a more critical look at posture, hem lengths, clothing fit and general appearance if placed In line with the revealing glass. Karen Beebe will serve as presl-. dent of the club tor the new year. Asaiatiiv her are Kathy Kendrick os vice president. Nancy THpp. corresponding secretary; Suss Green, recording secretaiy; Nan Hsu, treasurer: Mary Jo Myers, historian, and Leora Geriinger and Gaynell Rice, parliamentarians. H. D. NiciMito. Owssr The Les FUles wiU hold its nex* meeting at the home of S Todd on Utica Road. Exquisitely Styled for' Valentine^s Day • WED. BUDGET ^ COLD WAVE INCLCDINO HAIRCUT BEAUTY SALON PHONE: ra t-ua Open Mon. and Fri. Evenings 'til 9 P.M. "Ask About Our • goonly fonnt" ALWAYS NECISSARY 48 N. SAGINAW ST. Our young girls, can spend hours scrutinizing her face and hair In a dressing table mirror but the examination stops at the neck. Would a longer mirror encourage a longer view and more attention to the petticoat showing or the hang of a coot on slumped shoulders? I'm willing to try but finding space for a three-way mirror in a bedroom with limited doset and wall space la difficult. CONSULT EXPE»T Such a mirror ranks almost as a necessity for a h(»ne sewer so I sought the advice of the best home sewer I know. Sure enough, Ludle had Open^, they give complete front and side views. The mirrors are attached to the pegboard and the side panels are fared with more d the pegboard. 8PACB POR HOOKS To tbe sewer the pegboard area around the mirrors dffers space tor hooks to hold fabric swatches, special threads, pictures of future projects. Group Holds Dinner Party Members of the Child Culture Club gathered for their at Michigan State University Oakland dining room Thursday evening. Following the dinner they revealed their secret pals by exchange of gifts at the Tal-lahassee Road home of Floyd Crump, Rochester. The group will again meet Feb. 22 at the home of Mrs. Dale Swanaon, Coolidge Road, Troy, with a- book review by one of the members highlighting tbe gathering. Is wrong to deny his home to silly and impractical one. Which, be able to help you woik < Daily 9-9; SoRday 10-7 Assortment o( Fine Chocolates PUSniHE through the death of the mother Regardless of their wishes. We are not Peter Pans, know. We do not live in a dock-leaa fairyland where^ time stands still, but in a real, human world where we all have to learn to mit to altering drcumstances. That ‘‘understanding” u | Sisterhood Plans Dames of Malta Anniversary Fete Corrinne Sisterhood, Dames Malta gathered at the Malta Temple Wednesday evening to make plans for their anniversary banquet Feb. 23. Mrs. Karl E3y will be honored With an honorary membership, to be followed by a gifts presentation by Queen Esther Mrs. Merle Cur-Gifts are^ from the sister-to all protectors, charter members and past commanders of Corinthian Commandery, Knights of Malta............. Serving ps. chairman of the banquet will be Mrs. Clarence Vid lund, assisted by Mrs. Albert Qai-k, program chairman. 'Die group also slated a card party for Feb. 17, with Mrs. George Kayga chairman of the sodal.. . rangement for her tiny sewing room. Her design utilizes the wall space between a closet door and the room door. Although the making of this unit Is not too difficult for a b«ne handyman, Ludle had a local carpenter makes hers tor speed's To avoid blocking in and out of the room, this three-way folds flat when not in use. Pegboard is used as the base and frame tor the minxH'. A sheet, About four feet wide by six feet long is mounted on a frame and braced solidly. The mirror consists of a center one about 24 inches wide by foUr feet long and two side panels, each about 12 Inches ,by four feet. The side panels are hinged to the sides of the center so they fold shut like a screen. Join the Hammond RENTAL *000*000000000000000000000001 playtime PJAN Here's a wonderful chance to learn to play the Hammond Organ Play-Time lessons are easy and fun. Coached by one of our experienced teachers, you'll learn by playing real songs!' 6 Organ Lessons • Organ of your choice In your home for 30 days Instruction Material FE 3-7168 Have You Tried This? Five Cans of.Beans Are Called for in Salad By JANET ODELL Today's recipe Is for a salad erator—that Is, if you have that keeps well in the refrlg-any left. It's a mixed bean salad that everyone seems to like. Mrs. Joseph Franz of Williams Lake is our cook today. She does church work and tots of volunteer work. Knitting and crocheting arc her hob- 1 con whole green beans 1 can lima beans 1 cqn kidney bean.s 1 can del beans 1-2 onions, chopped fine Salt and pepper 1V4 cups vinegar iuse % cup white vinegar and 1 cup cider vinegar) lii cups sugar Drain beans. Mix sugar and vinegar and bHng to a boU. Mix wHh beans and SPECIAL GIFT BOX REMEMBRANCE DIETETIC CANDIES^UGAR FREE, SALT FREE We pBckage and mail everywhere! AU PRICK RAJSGES Ro88^ Fine Quality Candie8 4842 Elisabeth Uke Road „ Phone: PE 2-25M did you know? (•Blasirsrarr •tylMt ChstM •! MST . . . that IFright custom builds new sofas and chairs just the way you want them ... YOU CHOOSE THt STYLE, SIZE, COLOR AND MATERIALS . .. AND tllM ^ save AT FACTOkY-TO-YOU PRICISI WIllMM WRIGHT farnltore Makon and Vphohioton 279 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 4-9958 Easy ladget Tsnm ar 90 Days Cash Serving Oakland^ounly Over 30 Teen Tha Paopla of Oakland County k i AT HOME IN SPARE TIME HIGH SCHOOL err invited to write tor FREE beoklet Tells hew yen c AMSaiCAN SCHOOL r. o. n«i IMS All«n Park. Mlebli» • r*kr PUB W-Pk|c Hlfh SehMl BMkIfI MIXED BEAN SALAD By Mrs. Joseph Front 1 can whole wax beans tag. Keep left oVer salad covered in the refrigerator. Good for buffets. PROFESSIONAL DRY CLEANING at FATHER & SON What It Means to YOU The benefit, of many years Of professional experience in handling deli- cate fabrics and fugitive colors ... BY TRaFnED PiRSONNEL. WE Pick Up aal DtlivM FE 2-6424 FATHER & SON CLEANERS 941^ Joslyn "Wkara Quality Counts'" Bg0>0o0o0»m0»0o0o0oto0o^o0o0 ALL PERMANEinS $•>75 ^0 Cut and ! Why Pay More? Hollywood’s One Price Flan Includes: Easy" to manage haircut, permanent by an experienced operator and styled set. Y HollywoodT RMiifv Shnn F. _ No Appointment Necessary Beauty Shop 78V4 North XT A K' • YoPr Permanent ■ Complete in m Two Hours FE 8-3560 " Over Baaley'B ----------hA- THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. yEBRUARY 12. mi Ike Pushing Younger Men to Run for High Posts WASHINGTON »AP) - Formw Prrtidcnt Dwight D. Elienhower U irportMl ,to have told Republican! be hail' no intention of campaigning (or "old men" in this year'! electiona. KI«enhower, who U 71, waa repri'sented aa preaalng party member! to work for the nomination of young candidate! (or governor and Senate and Houie aeata. Some confidante! quoted him aa aaying he wanted no "gmy-halred old men" running on the GOP ticket If It could lie helped. * A * Thi! aer\'e-lhe-youth movement apparently led the former piesi-denl Into some di(fic:ultle! in hla adopted atate of Pennaylvanla. He convinced Sen. Hugh Scott In a telephone conversation that Scott ought to make hlmaelf available (or the party nomination for governor. Stott n*portt>d that Eiae said he could support actively a ticket on which Scott was a member but could not campaign for a ticket on which Judge Robert E. Woodaide of the Stale Superior Court wpuld run (or governor and Rep. James E. Van Zandt would oppose Sen. Joseph S. Qark, a Dfemocrat tor the Senate seat Somehow the >yord got out that Elsenhower considered thli ‘miserable ticket." What was reported was that Elsenhower said privately that he thought the Woodside-Van Zandt ticket too old. Woodside Is 57; Scoft Is 61 but looks younger. ★ * A Subsequently Eisenhower fell constrained to say in a telegram to Van Zandt. who is 63, that what he had said was not "In any way Intended as pertjonally derogatory to you.” Whatever happens In Pennsylvania. Elsenhower has some com- paratively youthful candidates going for him in several states. AAA He didn't have to urge Gov. Nelson A-.Rockefeller,* who is 53, to seek re-election in New York. he encouraged Fred A. Seaton, 52, his former secretary of interior, to seek the Nebraska The former president was one those who helped convince former Vice President Richard M. Nixon, who Is 48, that he ought to run for the Republican nomination for governor in California. Eisenhqwer also had a potent Influence on the decision of George Romney. American Mo, tors president, to run (or the OOP nomination for governor In Michigan. Romney is 54. Politicians generally think that Nixon, Romney and Scott might figure In the 1964 scramble for the Republican presidential i inatlon-^rovided they can get elected to state office, along with Rockefeller and Sen. Bany Gold-water of Arizona, who Is U. A A A Nixon Is considered a draft possibility. Ronuiey Is regarded aa a potehtlal dark horse. Scott would present an even darker hue in the latter category, but would not be counted out because of his extensive acquaintance with party organization as a former chairman and former counsel of the Republican National Committee. ■ ^ZZaKEEGO “WAYNt _DOUOLAS ^ TOWN WITHOUT PITY KIRK OOUOLAS .mmwmjouTPnr mm Dauddlle riJtNE WKM'KAGK — This Is the wreckage of a light plane In which two women were killed and two others critically injured in .i crash south of the Des Moines Municipal Aii'-port.- Dead on arrival af the hospital was Mrs. Disney Shows $4.5 Million Profit AC PhcMki Alice Pfanttz. 45. of Des Moines, veteran of iir races. Her pilot.. , also died following (our Ftowder Puff Derby Mrs. Marilyn Williams, 31 the crash. lEra'iiiiiiiKoieY Stockholders Meeting Cheerful DERBY ('A8UAmK.S - Mrs. Alice Pfaniz (left) of' Des Moines was killed Sunday when a light plane crashed about a mile from the Dc« Moines Airport shortly after takeoff. Mrs. Pfaniz Is the slster'of Mrs. Thomas J. Schultz-of 6633 28-Mllc Road, Wa.shlngton Township. At right Is Mrs. Marilyn Williams. 38, who was also killed. This picture wajyUtken in June 1960 when the two Des Moiqes women, were Entered in the Powder Puff Derby that year. Mrs. Pfaniz is im in.structor at the Des Moines Flying Service. She is 45. jmTTTTTT Blue Star BARGAliV SUVED DAILY ANYTIMEI CORN BEEF HASH WITH ONI OC# POACHED EGG CHlLl-MAC 85< OI*BVg>BAM U Lark; aay«n! Carry-OBI S»rylr» CbII FE 8-1575 Bine Star Drive-In j Opdyks and Pnntisc Roads tiZZXZ3EZZXZZ3 WUiJcteMii: IRIVE-IN 3103 S. nUORAPH RD. ri 2-1000 Opan 6i30-Startt 7 P.M. •4l \o Kxirn ('.hargr ELECTRIC IN-CAR HEATERS It's Without a Doubt The Grootost Comody of tho Yoor irs A WALL TO WALL WOW! It's the Merriest Mixings Since Girls Discovered nie-RiM lERRYIHOMASCElESIEHOLM _AND_ By BOB THOMAH AP Movie 'TV Writer HOLLYWOOD - The annual stockholders meeting of Walt Disney Productions was called to order nt 2 p.m.,r as the notice' WHS not present; keep him working," brother. THOMAS Present in the I u d 1 o theater ere 200 stockholders. mostly middle-aged and middle - classed,; jbut with a sprin-i kling of juvenile-1 jcapilnlisls. |lnller remained silent during the meeting, except for one 12-yedt--old boy who seconded a motion. ■ A A .A ■ The meeting yraS called to or-[der by conipatiy counsel Gunther [Lessing,^ man who looked and sounded like Judge Hardy. He [suggested waiving the reading of [the minutes of (he last meeting well as the annual report. Is that salisfaclory?" he asked, askj-d. SHOWED I'KOKIT ■‘Very salisfaclory." said a voice from the stockholders. The che»'ifpl atmosphere may have been due to the firm's profits; HAVING GtMID YEAR •We had a very good year and we're on the way to another good year." Roy said reassuringly. He mentioned (hat "Pinocchio" million In improvements this year. Then Roy fielded some questions from the stockholders. BREAKING EVEN What about returns from “iv? We're stUI about breaking even," he said. "We don't make money directly from TV, but us it to exploit our product i theaters. TV is a difficult game you're limited by the sponsor' budget. You can't have a big pay-off." What a^ul selling old films to TV? "We re in shiow business," he answered. "Why sell your old •lothes to a competitor? After pay TV couldn't operate slde-by-■ide with commercial TV. But pay TV is years. down the road yet." Lessing drew chuckles with his denial that Nikita Khrushchev was In the employ of Disneyland as a press agent. "He tells that one every year," confided man in the next seat. The annual report was accepted and the directors elected, there being quorum of 88 per cent of outstanding shares—the Dlsneys swtr 750.000 of the 1,626,023 total. Stockholders were Invited to pick up two free tickets to the park and stay In the theater to sr* 'Moon Pilot.” Meeting adjourned at 3 p.m. {1,342,037 loss the years, we still own all our negatives. And I might add that all our (Urns would have no censorship problems on TV.” Pay 1W7 "We're watching It," Roy said. "We see no reason why President Roy Disney made his Ireport in down-to-earth Missourian tones. Production chief Walt Mountain Climber (illed on Small Cliff VALLEJO, Collf. t»-Winiam S. LKterick Jr. wak the most expe- Divorces from Normto L. Taylor m MIchBCI Oltuk ..om Frcdeiick tindscy ______C. from Cliorit White Elmer i. from Roie S. Courture Herrlett E. from rofreel L 1 Donald from Carole A. Hushes Mrlcla M. from Lawronco C. Sulllvaa OAendolyn i. from James A. Shripka Julia P. from Harry W. Laarson LaRoy from Anita Cunningham Merit R. from Edar. R. Lens Sr. Sally A. from John E. Hubert Fri^erlek I. from Olkdys ‘U. MeCoeh NeUlo L. from John W. Poarlor Walter Q. from June E. Herb Sharon from Jerry Dodds Phyllis J. from Raymond B. Yancey Nan B. from John E. Buckmastor Dome D. from Edw. B. OoeU Alex from Thtlma May Maxino from Harry F. Smith Valerie from Francis Broullletta Joyce from William J. Rouke Elaaaor M. from Howard K. Catberman "— T. from Prank W. Zemelk „„_r/rr»j"«*" rro^Cllfiord*j!*p!erc# J. from Jkmas H. Smith six members of Stanford' University's Alpine Club. Although there are no mountains within miles of here, the medical student frorh Keuka Park, N. Y. and his companions came to practice scaling a nearby, sheer 100-fool cliff at an abandoned quick-ailver Bilne. Nearing the top, Litterick drove llilon into an outcrop but the rock crumbled when he put his weight on It. His belaying man, George Pastor, 40, Palo Alto, kept Litterick from falling to the cliff's but the big rock Litterick had dislodged crashed down on him. He died soon after being lowered to the ground. Nations Eye TV Pact KUAIJV LUMPUR. Malaya (AP)—The peoples of Malaya and Thailand may gel to know each other belter through TV. The two governments are reported ready to sign an agreement next month to begin the groundwork (or a' multichannel link between countries. It's a A^sical Mirror MOSCOW (AP) — A soprano voice, flute, violin, guitar, organ and percussion Instruments blend unumial new ensemble by young Sovle' composer Andrei Volkonsky. It's called "The Mirror's Suite.” ^ I IWiiJiliMi if NOW PLAYING if Sliewi; 1:15-3:50-6:25-9:00 FIELDS BROADWAY'S JOYOUS : MUSICAL LOVE STORY I R0DGERS& HAMMERSTEIN'S Ex-Railroad VIP Dead VINCENNES, Ind. (AP)-Rufu.s C. Slocumb, 73, a retired vice president of the Baltimore ti Ohio Railroad, died Friday night. .rNANCYKWAN T' ■ smiiuKmio' : JAMES SHIGETA JUANITA HAU U MIYDSHIUMEKI As ^‘Honest Abe” Would Say: ‘‘Your FUEL OIL' Is Only as Depondable as YOUR FUEL OIL DISTRIBUTOR!” The dependability of your fuel oil distributor is the essence in COMPLETE HEATING SATISFACTION. The most important port of heating satisfaction is having the fuel oil of your choice available when you need it... This is where the dependability of Gee really counts... Gee's automatic service ossures you of always having plenty of better quality fuel oil regardless of the weather, as we kf ep track of your fuel oil needs through our modern "Degree Day" method and before your present supply is exhausted your fuel oil tank is refilled with the better quality fuel oil-thot has mode Gee one of the foremost distributors in this area . . . There is no substitute for quality . . . quality in the product . . . quality in the service. GET COAAPLETE HEATING SATISFAQION ... SWITCH TO GEE ABRAHAM UNCOLN BORN FEBRUASr 12,1N9 Thi! month wo pay tributo to Lincoln, our 16th Prosidont, tho guiding forco Hn tho Amoricon way of lifo. ^ NO MATTER WHERE YOU LIVE ... Goo't floot of now, modom GMC trucks, motor oquippod for accuracy and radio dispatchod to givo you bottor torvico, dittributo bottor quality Yuol oil in Pontiac, Drqyton Plaint, Wotorford, Claricston, Orion, Auburn Hoightt, Bloomfiold Hilli, Koogo Harbor and tho surrounding aroo. SAFETY, WARAATH, COAAFORT AND HIATING ECONOAAY IS AS CLOSE AS YOUR PHONE - DIAL FE 5-8181. SEl "IF YOU DON'T KNOW FUEL - KNOW YOUR FUEL DEALER!" UETCAFO FUEL on CHERRIES DRESSES CASHMERE RYLORS Ladies' Beautiful Gift Slacks-Blouses Ladies.’ Nylon 32-46 SLIPS BLOUSES fjoo AqIRLS' SKIRTS . kija BOYS’ SPORTS SHIRTS #|5|9 Infants’ Cordurey CRAWLERS fjoo 4l.a9 All-Wool T>|KM|> MEN’S SUITS i29«Bi Man’s Values tojLSS PANTS-SHIRTS ■ 88 p4 N SAGINAW ST. Ntor Huron • I i, I ■ , -y ^ THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONPAY. FEBRUARY 12. 1962 ss and Finance The foUowliiK u* la. . cfrerlng fdei of locally irown pfoduce by growm and add by them In wholeiale package lot» QaotatloM are fumlahed by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, ‘ Drlday. D«troit Product Changes Small Before Holiday day. After a short flurry of activity the tradiiy pace simmered down to semiholiday conditions expected by most Wall Streeters, panics aid other institutional investors iit IMiubkrb, HMbou**, hch. lUlubarb. ------- SeilbbB 1. B«UMh. ButUrnM . a«uuh. HaSSsra ........ ....... Tanupt, lospad, ku......... Poultry and Eggs Treasury Position 'MmNOTpN lATI - Tb* eaih pad- ......... r JslT 1 ...| II.«S.tU.Tn.N MS X........ .UiiSas. DSTKOir ^F|ib. jAPi -^PrU baJT-n" ."hi -- ^ -ft }m -...... "■ DETBOIT EOOB pa?«'^Jia,'?\i*D:A:.‘lVf.r;''“‘ ctiftri lUicliMllng U. B I WhlM»-Orbisadtrd( M; dUtU* N; cbtek«^lk LivMtock DETBOIT LITBETOCa DETaorr. r»k. ( 'AF» - (OHiai -T0db» » rmlpu caul* SM. edr" “ ceaparMl lad attk .ipara laUr alaadj; loatr gr^ ngra aad cuUara aMadr: kaUi i •'Uft. Edkd aad ^ d^t itg" irSk-M kr moat good haUart t> *S-S1M. SSrrd hdlora\aaOJl»4 aUWjr^M- rrt I4 0k-1IM. uuiltjr eova U.lk-Ikdk. It?oBgvdimi uuilla up to U M. ,ea^n aad * %‘?klaM‘‘^mrad iajt vaoa "^^.rs2ri.anr>taf^ The New York Stock Bidiange ^ • * iS ^ » aCA Ik SI MK MH MIk- U .TStk JStSuaib altari S aUUIr wi H«ma 100, Barroaa gim ang aowa 5SS*?l: W ? iSSg 128^ KTJ-rN ra aai''gUU CHICAOO UVESTOCa Artlaa* sSIdrli'S'kSStor: Ha Tj-1 ioo-% ISOO. Ho. 1-3-J MO-JOO Iba, IO.7i-n.IO. ...n; thi J1.W; few good tU«ri CMUt •••. CMivr* nvnm. ti-odd. it-ym I --------- • , *7.50: I y'aJwUrT'Vaa.irr lOdO-MSO. Stocks of Local Intkresf Flgunt attar dacimal poUiU ara alskUia, ’‘'’‘•^vS'^^ebimtsa btoSes The follovlag quotatlona do not nai ngrllT rtpraiant actual .tranaactlona aT« Intended^ aa a^gulda^to a trading ranga AMT Del roller Diamond —- , Elect rontea Capital 'r**liobi?e Cornea .. International . MeLoutb ateel Co. ....... Michigan Baamltaa Tube Ca....JJ.4 Plenear Finance .........a T^mt£2!>M?b.'ripe UilcR^^^ S.3 Vamors Olngcr Ala ...... 0.0 jl.4 Affmated Fund ...... Chemical Fund ........ CommoDVtalth Stock-.. . ik:i::lSS:‘Sra.V3 Wellington Bquitr WdUngton Fund Treasury Position WA8BINOTON (API—The caih pod-tIOD of the Treacury eempared with carreapondlng daU a ymr^ an. Balanea .........0 ?ois.Vd4l.41 Oenodta llccal yaar I •Total debt . Balance .............iO '!NI.4M.'NrM 40.0IMI7.I41..S Announce Dividend ’ The board of directors of Allied Supermarkets, Inc., announced today that the regular ^quarteriy dividend of 15 cents per share wUl be paid Miffch 28 to stockholders of record March 7, .1962. ^ Calcutta was the capital of all India from 1833 to 1912. " Death Notices RURUELL M. MARVKV AVON TOWNSHIP-Servlce tor Rusaell M. Harvey. 73, of 3881 Oi^ 1 View Road, will be * " , . tomorrow at the Ptitley neral Home. Rochester. Burial will be In White Chapel Memori^ei etery, Troy. “ Mr. HarWy died yeaterday mom-li« following an extended illness. He was a member of Rochester Lodge No. 5. FAAM, and of Cki^ penter’a Union, Local No. 998, Berkley. Surviving besides Ms wife Edna M., are a son, Rusaell M. Jh, of Rochester; two daughters, Mrs. Donna Johnson of Rochester and Mrs. Pptricia Boisvert of Clawson; tour gnndchildren, a brother and a sister. MRS. DELOR18 E. NEUiON Mrs. Delorls E. Nelson, 31. of 159 Whittemore St., died Sunday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital follow ing a brief Illness. She had been employed at Pontiac Motor Division. Survivors Include her mother, Mrs. William E. Scott of PontUc and a daughter, KatMeen Rae of Pontiac. Service wUl be held Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. from the Huntoon Funeral Home. Burial will be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. MRS. BERT RAIMBUN PONTIAC TOWNSHIP - Seridet for Mri. Bert (Edna) Rathbun, 09. of n HlUfleid St., wlU be 10:30 a.m. tomorrow at the Moore (%apel of the SparkwGriffIn Funeral Home. Auburn HeighU. Burial Trill be at SL Johns. Mrs. Rathbun died Friday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac, following an lUneaa of several months. She was a member of the Auburn HeighU United Presbyterian Church and of Unit No. 2, MOMS of America and Rebecca Lodge No. 246. She is survived by two grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. MAXIMUM VI8IBILITV - Unusual construction of the sturdily-built Ford 722 loader Is shown here. Its single boom permits maximum vtsibiitty. and Its rigid design enables loads of 1,00^ pounds to be lifted and dumped with New-Type Loader hr Tractors Is Revealed by Ford A new 1,000-pound capacity loader with unusual aling-boom design tor easy mounting on tractors has been developed by Ford Motor Co,’s Trairtor and Implement Division, Birmingham, ag s means of reducing the «ost of materials handling operations tor farmers Because of the loader’s eaajHin-eaay-otf feature, th^ user’s tractor Ml easily be freed tor other op«^ itions. called the m Loader, It la-cDipanitee the BeM lestod deotga tealares of Ford’s lowoast 711 fonu loader, and addo an ho-np aad hy- Catch Youth, 14, Hooking Candy: Admits Break-Ins A iweet tooth apparently was the downfall of a young burglary pact Tvho admitted tour rec breakins yesterday after being caught Inside the Interstate ’Ituck-ing Co., 117 E. Brush St. After Bodag that the tracUag eompaay'o oMoe appeared to hove beea barglarlsed aboot S In announcing the new loader’s availablUty. L. E. Dearioorn, dlvi-Elonal general aales manager, predicted Immediate acceptance by landscapers, and sand, gravel and coal yard operators as well aa farmers because of its rugged construction. controllability, and design simplicity, which provides excellent visibility for the operator. A ’’bonus” feature. Dearborn ■aid, is the loader's easy instal latkm by one man In a lew min utes without special tools or use of a crane. a 14-yoar-old Ja- veidle lasMe. Nothing was taken from the firm, but the boy apparently took time to open' a carton of candy and some Jelly In the warehouse. ♦ ★ ♦ A radio taken In « break-ln at Thomas Economy Fundture Company was found in the boy’s pos-; session. He admitted two burglaries at the furniture store and two earlier break-ins at the tracking company. T\irned over to Juvenile au-thoritiM was James T. Mills, 210 E. Wilson St. Un AlrLIn .SObxd I* 37% 3SV4 34V.,— % Ontt 1 Id 7 47 44% 44%-I% 7>»«*d Cp .JSt 10 IV« i%+ % Fnift .» 14 70% MH lOH- •' lu Cp I.N 14 37% 77 77 - Mkkf I 7 73 7T4 77%- . OS Borax .44 3 3S>4 30% S0>4-1% os Frelclil 7 14 47% 47% 471^ *4 Si: nVidia S5s^p.p,!- OBIT MMrh 70 77% 77 “ II S0% SO 77%- 14 «% »% 5%T % —Y— T .»»% 70*4- ^ lAit (piArti^ or Mml-umual doctk£ “on. UnloM otberwlM nolod. •poelal -xtra dlTidoodx'nrt not tocIudodX ,k—Alio oxtr or oxbH. k-Aiinuol ri Mux itek dtvMmd. S-Doelarad or pi s—FnM loot row. b—Dociwod or F Sflor itook dMdonS or ipllt up. k-L. ciwtd w^pnM^j^^row. M^weunml^ra , dlrldond omlMed]*^Siemd or ^Fkrw^ fc rtwl ■ II f-trt In MD. SS!cSm mi-Bx Arkh dliMkuOon xr-Bx mbU. ----------- wwranu. wv—WUk wnrrantx. dMMkutnd. vt-Wbon Iwuod. sS-IM doUrarr. wt-WwranU. ^-uqdor County Girl, 6, Struck by Auto in Front, of Home LAPEER - A 6-yearold girl Is listed In satisfactary osndition at Lapeer (tounty Oneral Hospital today with InJuriei suffered yestei^ day when she was struck by a ear in front of her bome about tour miles east of here. ♦ ★ ★ Julie M. Morey, daughter of Mrs. EliEabeth Schmidt ol\^3258 Bowers Road, has possible internal injuries and a poisible broken shoulder, hospital authorities said. Lapeer Coanty SberlfTs deputies said the gtri was struck at lt:40 ^m. by a car drives by Richard L. Moatgomeiy, 17, sob of Mrs. Mildred M. Stargis of. SfftS Mellvlllo Road. Montgomery told deputies he was driving east along Bowers when the ^ri ran In front of Ms car. The road was slippery at the time and it was snowing, deputies rid. Neither Montgomery nor his sister, Marilyn I., 12, a passenger in his car, was injured. The Morey girl was thrown 36 feet by the impact, deputies said. Montgomery was not held. Kelvinator Repoits January Sales Up DETROIT m — American Motors’ Kelvlnator Division today reported lU January sales were 9 per cent above tales for January of last year. The AMC appliance division said it was the 10th successive monthly increase as compared to the year revioai. Homer L. Travis, vice president sales, said industry sales of major s were slowed throughout v«-.try by severe weather during the last 10 days of Janu- An average farm in New Jersey today consists of about 75 acres. rWENTV-’IxiUV^K B in seconds. The loader has un Integral hydraulic system and a pump which Is separate from ^he tractor’s hydraulic system. One man can attach or detach the loader In a few minutes without special tools. Approximately fIS In merohan-lie was taken by thieves who entered the Mina Market, 588 Franklin Road, it was reported to Pontiac police Saturday morning. Dargtors who broke Into Harri-aon's Restaurant at 21 N. Perry St. over the weekend took determined amount of change from the Juke box. it was reported to police yesterday. Ham Allen * Non. Inc., St Coa-_ress St., and Monaon Scrap Iron and Metal Co., 64 Wesren St. have earned safety achievement certificates from the Institute of Scrap Iron and Steel for acetdent-(ree records during a 1961 contest among the nation’s ferrous 'krap processors. New oMciers o( the OaUaad (tounty Chapter of the American Society of Tool and Manufacturing Engineers will be elected at ait 8 p.m. meeting Thursday at the Waldron Hotel. Dinner at 8 p.m. will precede the meeting. Waterford to Talk New Sewer Rate Discussion of a proposed sewer rate based on actual water consumption rather than a flat rate Trill take place at tonight's regular .meeting of the Watenord Township Board scheduled tor |i»p.m. The fUt rate charge by the CWy of Pontiac has been la of- ooidlag to a receat aarvey, the board has chosea to cxplora the posalbillty of a rate based on eoasamplloa which tmbM par-mil a oewer chanpe of 71 per coat Pt .tht water bill. Other Items up tor consideration at tonight’s meeting are a request tor a new SDM license at 3340 Dixie Highway, site bf the former Slde-O-Shore groceiy store and a recommendation of the Electrical Boaid that Waldron Keasey be reappointed as contractor member of the Waterford TownsMp Electrical Board. _____ was first used as an anaeithetic in surgery fai a Boston hospital and the date was Oct. 15, 1846. News in Brief Pontiac Motors Wins Award hr Ad Illustration Pontiac Motor Division has received the 1961 Award for Excellence presented each year by the Society of IHustrators at its annual national exMbition in Ne^ York City. The top award in the commel*-dal iUustratlona category was. presented to Pontiac by SI Presh dent Stevan Dohaitos after mot? than 3,000 entries Tvere revierved. ■ The winning illustration waa aa ndvertisement announcing the lil^ troduction of Pontiac’s new Grant Prix sports coupe last fall an| Tvas executed by two (tonnectlciO artists. A. M. Fitzpatrick anf Van Kaufman. Accepting the award wre John F. Malone, PoiF tiac advertising manager ant James E. McGuire, group ari director tor MacManus, John I Adams, Inc. Grain Prices OaU— .. 7.S7H Mir. .. 7.M% Mir . .. S.M% July .. 7.17% Sip. .. 7 17% Dm. I.........l.IMfc “luy Lodge Calendar Annual meetlnif of the ()uadran ow Twelve Oub Trill be held os Wednesday, February 14th at 8;tt p.m., at I^tlac Lodge Temple 18V4 E. Lawrence St. Propoaei change In by-laws, election of ol ficers and other Important busl ness. Signed, L. W. Burnes, Sec retary. Pontiac Shrine No. 22. W.S.J. Wednesday evening, Februai^ 14 Annual Memorial Service, 7:30 Stated Meeting, 8:00 o’clock. Marj' A. McCurdy, Scribe. 1} SMond I 79.71-O.t Drinks Free at Pool ers complained to towij ( that an enterprising concessionalis M I near a munidpal wading pool wij} 'charging the kids five cents i glass for drinking water. The of Hcials quickly installed a drinkiiti fountain — free. * . -.1 -Id f .S 17S.I 7n1 i in.! .7 17S.7------- . 774.S 171.1 1711 n.7 The signal corps of the U.S. Army was orgaMzed In 1800 and later became a part'of the weather bureau. It was reorganised in iWomen Claim to Hear ♦ Opening of Lily Buds l DES MOINES. Iowa W - Eari* one morning, two Des Moln« women were walking along tM , shore of a lake when they heaiS strange Httle sounds that kept <$ nd on. Thoy Insist that their own In vesUgatlon brought the answer: The water-lily buds were open ing. Banker Gets Business From Musical Comedy By SAM DAWSON AP Buslnesa Nears Analyst NEW YORK—The bright light of curiosity always plays around Your banker’s ethics, how much he prospers personally, the manner In which he operates and the rules that bind Mm, even Ms off-hour habits, have borne a bit more scrutiny frdm the neighbors perhaps thhn have the private lives of men in many other lines of endeavor. OETS THE JIBE And now. of all places, banking and bankers are getllng the onceover In a musical comedy. The scene is New York of 1837 and 1857. But the audience, rightly.or wrongly, seems to connect many of the farcical Jibes with "1962 The musical comedy is ’’The Banker’s Daughter.” It Is a free adaptation of a melodfama', ’’The Streets of New York,” Tvritten by Dton Boucicault, a prolific playwright of 100 years ago. The original show had a long run, thanks In part to t)iat ageleu curiosity about those who handle other people’s- money. PURE FARCE The opening s^i» of ’"The Banker’s Daughter” seems pure farce today. It Is laid In 1837. a quarter of a century before the passage of the National Banking Act and 76 years before the setting up of the Federal Reserve System. AAA In the first scene a bank president is busy stuffing the bank’s money into a valise and even putting some of it- into Ms baby daughter’s bassinet. He is in trouble and heading for Peru. His employes accept this as • do. But a sea captain arrives, turns /er his life’s savings for investment—and the banker doesn'l have to leave. He’s in business again. Instead, he shanghais the clerk who knows too much, and also the captain’s money. KEMEMBERSf EXCEPTIONS The audience laughs at all the shenanigan*—not because it thinks for a minute that’s a com-practice now, but becsiuse It remembers the exceptions: Those headUnes about the respectaMe lady embezzler* In Iowa and Vli^ glMa, and thd once high flyers In the financial workj who went to jail or took refuge overseRi. changed in the 20 years. Thi banker has prospered. He ii blackmailing his way into an ex elusive club, running for governoi In the accepted alliance of bust ness and pMitlcs, and buying i society husband tor Ms daughter who has been snubbed by thi Ladies Aid Society because hei money is too new. SAVED AGAIN Then the banker- is exposel again, ^though, he has ward^ of as abhorrent the idea any oih could examine his bo()ks. He i: packing his valise agaii\^th th« bank’s money, when on^ mon he is saved by the bell. A A A ■ It’s all farce, but the kind tha some persons think may go oi in the mysterious world of higl finance. The Jibes that the audience lov may be unfair to today’s bankini and investing system as a whole But Triiat the musical comed; adaptation seems to be saying-althOugh probably- it doesn’t in tend to prove anything—is tha laws may change, but men don’t A A- A And the musical is playing t laughing audiences in a smal theater in Manhatlart's Elast 70» a, fasMonable and expensive , j^re many 'ei today's banker Ilive. . ; THlf POXTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. VKtiliUARY 12, 1902 T" Handel, "Concerti Groisl, From Op. 6. No. 14, No. 5 and No.6' Mahler. "Symphony No. 9 D Flat Minor"; Rachmaninoff, Sergei, 'Symphony No. 2, E Minor"; Thomas, "Dylan Thomas, 15 of Best, F^ms Read by Richard Burton"; Wagner, "Over hire to Rienti." EPIC OK MAN — Qass "A" winner of Michigan Tech's 1962 snow statue contest for the annual Winter Cijrnlval was this scene "Epic of Man." sculptured by the Triumvirate, a group made up of residence hall students. Made up of four, scenes showing man's progress from the cave, through the Roman Empire, to rtwder.* warfare, "Epic" predicts a future of cave-likc existence in fallout shelters. Niles Man Guilty Says Ohio Jury Convicted in Extortion Try of Livonia Firm and Accepting $10,000 WARREN, Ohio (AP) - A jury of aeven women and five men has found Paul Lamonge, 48, of Niles, Michigan guilty of trying to extort V $200,000 by threatening a Michigan contractor. was one of seven pei> xi by a Grand Jury last fal Investigation of Warren’s $4. v^sewer project. Hunda.v: Threat to extort $200,1 Brady, vice presid^ of Boam Construction C^of Livonia, Mich., and acreptlnk $10,-000 on false pretenses. \ He was adjudged innocent of count a^litglng he tried to extort funds bycihreatening Al CIcchini, vice president of the Rocco Fer-i-era Construction Co., also of Livonia. 8E!VTENCf; DEFERRED Judge G. H. Birrcll deferred sentencing and continued Lft-monge’s $10,000 bopd pendirtg s motion by his attorneys for a new trial. Three former Warreil eonncll-men pleaded guilty to bribery ehatgra last Nov. $0 In connection with awarding of the sewer contracts, and'Uow are In prison. Last month. Frank A. Cickelll, Democratic chairman for Trum-Ijull County, was convicted bn bribery charges. He is free on bond pendihg appeal. The main Pontiac Public Library 1, on East Pike Street has recently I* Increased its collection of books, ■ according to Phyllis Pope, head li-“ brarian. The following is a selection of g titles frorn the books added to the n library’s shelves. FICTION — Burman, "The Owl Hoots Twice el Catfish Bend" Canaway, "Find the Boy”; Camp-It bell, "Across the. Water”; Coffin, "Not to the Swift”; Dickens, "The I- Heart of London"; Dodge, "Ca-rambola"; Moberg, "The Last Let-iter Home"; O’Connor. "The Edge A mass hi-fi technique which'of .Sadness"; Paton, "’Tales From makef tape recordings of heart a Troubled Land"; Steinbeck, ’"The Lamonge faces a possible 5-to-30 year sentence on the extortion charge and one to seven years for larceny by trick for accepting $10.-000 in false- pretenses. The jury deliberated for about ^ 10 hours .Saturday and held a two-hour session Sunday before returning a verdict. Cook Finds Umbtella Isn't a Parachute SYDNEY, Australia IB -OiIimm cook Bing Chbe Chu was running out of time to board his ship In Sydney Harbor. He was in a residential hotel in the city. It was late at night and the doors were locked. ’The cook had an Idea. He opened a window and tosafd his sullcasr SO feet to the street. He unfurled Ms new black and ■ed umbrella, held it over his head parachute style, and confidently stepped into space. Two policemen found him, with both ankles broken. Bing Chee'Chu ate somebody else’s cooking for awhile—in a hospital. Death Notices ‘•'O' Mr. M»r«. Sl^, I ___ «nd Jfirnr Splc.r tXmwsTMrriM «lll bo hrld WntoNday, rib. I«. • t I 30 p m ■( th. SparlM-Omnn Nmir.l Horn. iDtcrnwat la M smith .leer fether of Bdmuad o end Wlirtfd D Smith; door brethrr of John D. Smith: oleo *“ grondeUldren. S-l BRICK LATBSIS WANTED. __ A PART TIME JOB J. J."*' Home" -•'••hw Pnnotnl ACCOUNTANT POR ESIIMAilHO I metal parte and eoal aeeounUng. Sand aompleta wnrkTpay. qdu«»-Uoa and family teformaltoa la Huw.ri. alM nurriTM r* will b‘, 'i„id TuMdaV tab! 111 will Ur III luu at Iba b.T.a?T.-w-..•V«*a.?iT Prny Mount'Park I Upriiht will Ua la Donrlton-Johai >u- KILLED IN CRANH — .’Two of Nevada’s most prpminent businessmen. Newt Crumlee, 50 (left), president of the Holiday Hotel in Reno; and Banker E. J. Questa (right), 63. president .of the First National Bank of Nevada, were found dead Sunday UKthe wreckage of their light plane In a range of foothills 36 mil^northeast of Tonopah, Nev. The men had vanished Saturday njght on a flight from Palm Springs, Calif., to Elko. Nev. ity's Main Public Library Increases^k Collection K^p, t MacInV beats then ‘umpUfie^Rhe sound through high tfrq|#hcy deviires that provide a clean playback will be used in detecting heart disease in children. Winter of Our Discontent"; Tayjor, "A Journey to Mntecumbo"; ’Tracy, "Season of Mists.’’ MYSTERY — Bush. "’The Case of (he Sapphire Brooch”; Oeascy, BOBBY SKIPS ROPE - U. S. Ally. Gen. Robert Kennedy tries his hand at skipping rope while on a tour of the Wong Tai Sin refugee resettlement area in Kowloon, Hong Kong. In the background is one of the large apartment houses being used for housing the refugees. BUILDERS! Qty of Poiitioc throosh its Ftdorolly ossitted Urban Rontwfil program wolcomoi inqoirios fer the ro-dovolopwont of 26 improved residentioi iot$. Lots ore locotod in n stnbie roiidontini area, wbich is od|ocont to tbs Downtown and Qvic Contor. ACT NOW! Addrsta iaquiriet to; PLANNING Sr URBAN RINEWAL DEPT. City Hall. 35 $. Parka $trM Pewtiac, Michigan ... or Call „FE'3-7131, Ext. 215 V Killing Strike": Eberhart, Blade or the Gun": Assignment; Suspense. BIOQRA^ - Albright, on Infim^’; Cullen, "Old Times in the Fmdkner Country" Davey, "Kagawa ofsJapan”; Marx, ’ H a r p 0 SpeakslNJ Neumann, Bach: A Pictorial Biography”: Plumb. "Sir Robert Wall “ King’s Minister"; "Tims. "Jahe Ad-dams of Hull House 1860-1^’’; Williams, "Bishop’s Wife — ^ Still Myself." DENERAL gUBdETTH — Baker, ’Hemingway and His Critics"; Barnett, ’!The Desert Generals”; Bcrkner, "Science in Space”; Bowie, "The Art of ’Thailand”; Brink, ”The "Twin Cities": Burckhardt, Siena; "The City of the Virgin”: Burgess, “Retirement Villages”; Daffern, "Management Development in a Changing World"; Fam-ularo, "Supervisors in Action. Hammond, "Organizing fqr Defense; "The American Military Establishment in the "Twentieth Century"; Hay, "Nature’s Year: The Seasons of Cape Cod": Jones, ""The Hawaii Book: Story of Our Island Paradise": Lachdlique. "The Anatomy of Glory; Napoleon and His Guard"; Lee. "Safari Today: "The Modern safari Handbook"; Leger, 'Chronique”: MacNeice, "Eighty-Five Poems": Pumphrey, Heritage of American Social Work”: Ridenour. "Mental Health in the United States”; Sell, "Hunting with Camera and Binocular. Sheldon, "Enjoy Japan”; .Soraci, "The Convict and the Stained Glass Windows": Spachc, "The Art of Efficient Reading ’; SlOkley, oms to Galaxies; An Introduction to Modern Astronomy"-3 Toynbee, "Reconsiderations; A Study of History”: Witty, "How to Become Better Reader." YOITII R(N)M — Armanino, "Popular Domino Games for Onr to Six Players": Duncan. "Find a Career in Apiculture”; Frisch, 'Atomic Physics Today"; Nicker-on, "When the Heart Is Ready’ Stolz, "Walt for Me., Michael’ Wagner.“The Gift bf Rome.” CHILDREN’S - A b j o r n s e i "Norwegian Folk Tales"; Allan, "Catrin in Wales; American Heritage, Trappers and Mountain Men": Asimov, "Satellites in Outer Space”: Coatsworth. "Indian En counters”: Davis. “Messages From Space": Farjeon, "The New Book of Days"; Kuskin, "The Bear Who Saw the Spring"; Pederson "Alaska Harvest ”; Stolz. /’Belling he Tiger Summers,' "Gift Horse”: Thun, "The Magic Jew-Weaver, "A Poppy in the Corn”; Wibberley. "Zebulon Pike; Soldier and Explorer"; ' Wong, 'Ducks, Geese and Swans." phono-albums - Donizetti, ‘Lucia di Lammermoor”; Falla. El Sombrero de Tres PTcos "; c-i4i-u Fart of thf Bouthaait btflanUii bt point dtitani South 0* U' U” Bail MM.n tMt from Boot t« corotr. thonoo Wait SM.70 foot, thonco BonUi t* II Bait IM.U taot: thooce Biwt Ul.Jt thiBM n. 0* m' M" Wilt IM.Ot la.. „ R?a'S."'r/W' Pinoof iBtoroiiad an roa> iriniit. A copy of tho aonli lithor with lilt of thi propoMd ehanaia I on fllo In tho offloo of tho Townihip ;ierk and mar bo ixamlnod by thoM Intiroitid. BDWARD A. mOCTOn Chairman Townihip NOTICB OP PUBUC RBARINO Notleo li hinby (Iron of a icbidul public haarint to bo hold by tho Ponti Towni^ SonliM Board at Ihi Townih Hall. MM Opdvkc Road, on Mondi March Ith, IMi. at 7:M p.m. to co •Idir tho iollowinf appllealloni for i ,.M. ». .IMU It. I1M.$ ft. ^ . jt, ^ Bly and parallil to tho (Muth lino of laid Sac. 13. along the parallel — ............ —- —- •* along tr Bchool I parallil 13. 330 330 It....... .. |K)ln^ bilnj^M3. ^NTJAC- Caah Rwgiitwr FE 8-9801 Language Aid to Sick ROaiFSTER, N.Y. (UPI) - To help hospital patients who can’t speak English, the Unlveralty of Rochester Medical Center maintains a roster of volunteers who speak a total of 19 languages ranging from Arabic to Ukrainian. Moat of the Volunteer! are university employes. MOTICt OP PDBUC HBARINO in. •hip Plannins Commliilon at thi Bloomed. ira 9 thi‘Bliwm|tel*d T^wniilp^nlng'orV- anca. bilnf Ordinanci No. 11, to chango rom Riildintlal No. 3 to Comnorelal IM following digcrtbod proporly. looolod " .H?* »','•• ot ^loraph Road, )uat orth of Mapit Road: TIN RIOB. OteUon M 0316-13 Part of tho Bouthoail >• beginning al - dlitant B. 0* 31’ N" IgA.Il >om_Bait^^ _cornirj^ tbnM^Wai{ 11 and 17. INI To chnngi from R Beginning a _____ ______^_______d Sic 13, I eari line of raid Will Rogori ll.l ft. to a point: th Ely and 0 tha aoutb IUm of raid Soctlon V. to a point; th Bouthcaitirly ::l“f•^ iit'ore.’ riS ctlon 11 and 130 It. north IhM of raid 8ic. 13, raid Ing miaiurid parallel to To c^ngi from R-3 to c That part of the T' ' Boc. 11. ducrlbod a. __________ point on the louth line of B lool property: th oaitirly and parallel the eoath line of eald Sac. 11, ISO ft. a point: th eontheaiterly IN ft. more leu to a point, raid point btlng lOlS.l aoet of the woet line of Boc. IS. and ... ft. north of the ecuth line of laid Bcc. 13, eald dimeniiloni being parallel to the lOuth and wet. ___________ .. ..... ... ... .. .— ! point of it lino of 1 I on tho Hiuui wuteriT along tl -I. 11. lid It. moi .Tifra"l I to t preient A copy of_____. the propoeed cnangee le oiv file office of the Towolnlp Clerk and .. exemlned by those Interestfd,. CLAUDE iANirr.— Zoning Board Chairman ORXTA V. BLOCK Township Clerk Plb. 13 and N. 1SB3 Death Notices COOPER. PBB. II. IN3. LILLL DUBENBDRT. PU. 11. 1N3. EARL B.. 4t Elwood: age IS; daat father ury. Uri. A. R. Mn. Trueman ... R. jusenbury; ____by II irandchlldi greet-grandenUdren. ....Ice will be r-‘ . 14.. at 3:30 p Puneral Hqmi Botruff officii 1 lie li utTiuko. «e TsTbe- HUTTON, PBB. 1 '•67U Highland loved husband oi mmry nuvwu. dear eteplether of Mrs. Patricia Bexton: dear brother of Mrs. Maurice (Plonnie) Dandleon and — "■•tton. Funeral service I. Wednesday, Peb. 14, Clifton Hutton. Puneral service ... —(dneeday, Peb. •' the Huntoon ____ h Rev. Jerry I ofllcisting. Interment beloved daiighter of Mrs. Lorraine Scott: dear mother of Kathleen Rae Nelson. Funeral earvlee ,.r;*V&errgj wraKHirnr li. iisroboiiDif M.. 771 Marritt Roed, Lake Orion; nie 7S; dear iteplether of " Blva Ootfradeen. Mrs. Li Maa aM Mri UUUn A Mrs. Allat____ rie Hodges and ARE DEBTS WORRYING YOU? M M bf dabt Ob a plan yi -Bmplonr -Btratchaa : ARE YOD WORRIED OVER DEBTS? AND LIT TIB OtVB TOU ONR PLACE TO PAT BUDGET SERVICE^ I W. HURON PAY OFF YOUR BILLS witr6ut a loani Arrangt to pay aU your bUlt put diit or not with ona weakly payniant you can afford. AS LOW AS $10 WEEK __ lo$3___ N ftUMAtly ftdvtrtlftd ww .Mas... Pood rauu. ■xportonoe unnocu- isriagia=K£iirn OR Part uiiSmH fb LBABB FCHAI •bop at MSUO. Must have an iItfa'*B5r'lSV'bJtweeo^f'a!_. and g p.m. Mon. Ihroufb PrI. or OL l-lNg onyUme.____________ Need $1^-$150 Weekly loma. n^. 3 a •iporleoeed. Ploooo i Pus, OR 4B4M. STEADY WORK r..Nrat*opprai oaU rlTgj t-N3g lor op & C FOOD CO.. INC. misUg ir.it dAWdlM Prase PubUcoUott^^ SBMI. lime, full Umc or coni Coll look Boleer ot Music Oo.. U B. 1 ANTCb AT ONCB. MAR ----... .few OR CALL FOR A HOME APPOINTMENT CITY ADJUSTMENT SERVICE FE 5-9281 733 W. Huron Ponttoo, Mich. OPPOSITE MAIN POBT OPPICB Member of Pontlu FvNtnil UrtetBrs \ COATS \ FUNERAL HOMB DRAYTON I----- PLAINS OR 3-7T37 C. t. OOOlfAKbT D. E, Pursley rUNliRAL BOMB ^ ^*^31?” * Donelson-Iohns HUNTCX)N PONKRAL BOMB nring PontiM lor N Taklond Ate T schuTt PUNBKALB mOM 3 «N 311 Auburn Ave. PB 1-31 sparks-griiMn Voorhees-Siple PUNERAL HOMB , « ■-rrn*»‘y«V6,.Sf I, J47l Tlnewood Bt., Pontiac, l-Mll'aftfr *V.in.'^'or''ll'no an ewer call PB 3-1734. Contldanttol DAINTY MAID WOULD APPRBCTAr lf/v*irriS"oSltWlSil5S 1 Rev. Cadman ... InUrment In 1 Cemetery. Mre. RATHBUN. Hlllfleld. Ponttab Townihip; age M: lurvlved by two grandchildren and' three great-graadehUdren. Puneral service will be held Tuee-dey. Peb., 13. at 10:30 a m. at the Moore Chapel of Bparke-Ortffin Puneral ^Hom^ * — ——— _____Jig. Ini Mich. Mrs. state It the Mi Bparks-Orlffln ....— Helf"* r of PMiuurasriyr'be-.on of Mr. and Mrs. Oil Roddcwlg: dear brother bf James O. and Jerry V. Roddewlg. Funeral arransemente are pending at the Doneleon-Jehne Puneral H&me where Mr Roddewlg will Ut In etate after 7 p.m. Tueedoy. I. lUthbun 1 BOX REPLIES it IS B.BI. Todsy tbere ■e Kplles at The PraM in the foUowInc ACCOUNTAIITB-AT OBCB --------- ... all pbusa ot Indt------ ------tax rotama. Man ln'’parton M p.m. ____________________1?^ Control Oakland Oo. Boy an lima. Write immediately to Rowlelgn, Dept MCBdN301. Preeport, lU alteration lady Experienced cn beUer womcn’i opporel, mast be litter. Work li Birmingbam. Phono. Mlf S-7101 loi .lottrvlew. Bloomfirld Fashion Shop BlRMlNOHAf ,D CARE. UVE ... home Uion-- 0 OR l-374«. PART TIHB 1 ,to leU Uabl^3 dl Itlane ^urra. 1 [ provoB by moo rellgloM ricturei. Public acceptonoe provto w SJMufaoUrcr Write "o fcx S. EVELYN EDWARDS Bmi ihmn smu* Phone FE 4-0584 SECRETARY A^AL J• I piece M>’t PE 4-7gl YOU OXFORD COlUfUNlTY AU^ON OA s-ir- IriLL BUT ODD ■ turnllure lW6 oii iiure taaia, ate ai n. miow AucilpMar. ““ ♦ABN Of Holly, ME 73tN. _J3 WIDOW WOULD LIKB TO SHARE ^ao^^wiu. mmthor Udy WantSi odiL ¥15 BCHTi ^rtmoat. alter IM, 333 lif(BHii4^ ****** U yea nro Itovl^ etaU or oeed JSaSLfe -nnoforlm- 7M, •- BUILDER IRE bontU-br buyi I to i - ---■•.Jt L auiLDiko co. 1?;; anee rooord lari Tssr. OoN rel-Whaf*!rara*Vou to *olforfV^lo Pontlu Prera Bex 71 li BABTaiTTWd' -weekdxye. 1X3 Sondereen. HldH BCHOOL OIRL. IS, WANT* ar."/- c- Lake Rood. Phono gM37N. IRONINOS. OPENIN08 MONDAY Tuei. Superior quoUty. OR moNiNoa eervlee EM 3-»43 NEW BABY? VACATION! CAPA-ble. mature, experienced woman for^our^'l '^lehlS *r work. PE 4-lUL MfcHni S«vicii>S«99iiM 13 BUILDINO MODERNIZATION Homo Improvomont loans at low biS ra"; and iST- Pontlu atate Bank, FE 4-3NI. PREE B8TIMATE8 ON ALL WIR-I taf7 wlU tlnsnea. R B. Munro Eleetrle Co.. IDN W. Huron. - y equiwed. PERINO NEV CASH ■W HOURS LAND CONTBAC^- HOMES \^IGHT 113 Oakland Avb . CASH Nave buyer with coeh for homi »woN*Bqrity”*Sg3-34lg*"'****' ‘flajar*ssL,«*sssi DORRIS IP TOO ARE CONBIDERINO BELUNO OR TRAOINO. ca " I. Over 13 years ^ Real B ■ ProfetelM. DORRISaN HELP We need Houw TO SELL • PACi-: REALTY OR 4-043g LIST WITH ua We have leversl bayers. for good homes and load coalrnete. A. JOHNSON & SONS REALTOR-S FE 4-2533 I7N a TELEOBAPH usm4oa-4X>iiMtB> L. B. Middleton PE M3B3 Bwgt d|al on ACREAOB fN'3l.3M eneSTwlthla to mllee of Pontlu, or wbothova you? Bex 1. Pontlu Press. t BEDROOM D&UXE KITOBEN-ottn umrtment Newly dONfnted ge?t.‘%V88i?^4l!a3.«“ TROOTi~®HRiN5f AlbortO ApartmeoU _N._Poqdock PB S-lOl ROOMS. ba¥1. 6L661 ii .ower. Private. Cleon. OR 44)33 ROOMS POR BINOLE LAD' 10 week. 73 Edison, PE 4-706 lEDROOM AND lUTCBlW >0 person laainy. 343 (Kahei wOke Ave. 1 ROOMS AND BATH. AIX PRI vnu, $13 par weak. AduSo only Robins Mobile Vllloge. 33M EIU-obetb Lk. Rd. 1 ROOMS AND BATH. AOtoLTS only. No drlakere. 36 Monroe. IN B. HNPitol Rd. 3 AND BATH. DECURAfU, bV Plehtr Body/ 171. FE 3-13W. 3 LARGE BOOIIS. Fmsf~^ Flrcplue, poroh, witomsUe C^o only. $30 per mo. . ROOMS AND BATH. CHILDREN welcome. 313 per week, inqu' ~ ot 371 Baldwin Ave PE 6-lMl. 1-ROOM APAlfTMENT. PARTLY ELECTRIC MOTOR MRVICB a ,yr»isr: iMkknnping li DRE8SMAKINO AND AfTERA- alterxtlim.^ BximrUn^ed. OL 3-6303 LORINO. AL- CORTERni{li*TuWL?‘*STa. FB 4-tlM If no answer Ml 3-3183 INCOME TAX. BOOEEEEPlNd: — 3343 overage. ^PB 3-3373. jrLj"T!t ta.. J BATH, CLEAN 3. LAR^ R^. ¥hlftD Pio6k. private home. 1 or 3 adults. FE f-4381._____________ 3 c L s A N Rooicsr Private .......... 7S Nortff 0»W. »qiUb>, IB IWfYBIW._____ S ROOM - ibrcnN and bath jr&ML- COLORED—3 OR ROOktt, COU-lan. FE 3-tlM. beth Lk. Rd. PE 3-13M.____ ♦ .NICE BOOMB_ARP DTlLimM ROOia. NEaK TiO.-BURON Shopping Center. Bent and oil ntUlUes tumUhed. m. Call Ward E. Partrldga, lOM W. Bacon. PE 4-3511. ^ R E S U L T S TRY W A N T A D S FE 2 8 1 8