Th« Weather
118th YEAH
THE PONTIAC PRESS
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PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 80, 1960—52 PAGES
OmrSD PRESS internatiorai.
Six Left Dead
Yearns Coldest as Storm Fades
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Stormy weather that lashed the Midwest abated W day but the season’s coldest weather gripped wide areas from the Rockies into the Northeast and southward to the central Oulf.
The storm center reached Quebec during the night •	^	*but the effects of the severe
Winters Chords Begin
Waves Punisli Grounded Ship
Wind, High Seas Block Rescue of 16 Aboard in Lake Michigan
TRAVERSE CITY (iS-Towenna waves, ladled by winds running up to SO miles an hour, battered a grounded and leaking Liberian freighter with l6 persons alxMuri today in Upper Michigan.
Ar * It
The Francisco Morazan was driven aground in a blinding, gale-driven snowstorm last night off tl]e windward shore of South Manitou Island.
Capt. Eduardo Trishas reported water up to tVt feet deep In
Waves running up to 23 feet in height lifted the freighter and banged her back relentlessly on the rocks on which she grounded. CONOmON WORSENS Her condition was reported worsening as the day wore on, but she was in no lpneaate daagei of keeling over.
Aboard are the raptain's wlf^ and R crew of 14. Winds and seas warn tea high to attempt aa
weather still were felt in much of the Northeast quarter of the country.
Strong winds and snow flurries were reported from the Great Lakes region eastw^. Snow of one inch or roan fell in some areas of Pennsylvania and New York.
A freak bliziard. uith gale winds ihat piled snow up to S', feet, nearly halted traffic In the Buffalo. N. ¥., area. Police In Amherst, north of Buffalo, reported IS inches of snow and said drifts measured S'/j feet.
The season’s first snowstorm Tuesday night caused a mammoth traffip jam in Buffalo, with hundreds of stalled 9ars, trucks and busep. The Thruway’s Niagara’s; section, which rims the west side { of Buffalo, was limited to one-«^y | traffic.
.MORNING WOES — Oh, for those warm s^mer mornings when one could merely get into his car and drive off to work. For the next four or five months, you can expect to be doing quite often what Lee ’Thompson, 24. of 8524 Cas-
i Snow, Ice and a Low of 221 Adams Files j^
was limited to one-«^y |	^ ^ II II	Petition for
...-Winters Really Here
Winds which force In hccUwm of the Midwest diminhiiied and heavy snow ended. The storm, which dumped up to a (o«t of snow In some places, was blamed for at least six deulhs.
It was below zero from northeast Montana southeastward into South Dakota and western Minnesota and the freezing line extended aouthward into Kentucky. Tennessee end parts of Georgia’. One of the coldest spots was Bismarck. N. D., with a -12 reading.
'City Receives il8 Extra Months to Add Facilities
Judge Will Sign Writ Forcing the Expansion of Sewage Treatment
Circuit Judge Stanton O. Dondero announced today that he would sign a court order forcing Pontiac to expand its sewage treatment facilities to curb pollution of the Clinton River.
The announcement came after a brief hearing during which the city admitted the pollution and offered no defense, but gained an 18-month extension to the deadline set down by the State Water Resources Commission 15 months ago.
’The decree to be signed by Judge Dondero will stipulate;
I. ’That the city have construe-n contracts let by June I, INI.
!. That the expanded facilities operation by June l, IMS. Harold A. Kelley, an engineer jwho helped prepare plans for the ■ Q	, m j proposed expansion, testified the
ii0COUnt< 1 OO•’y
*	- y	I contract-letting time.
rssllae Preii Pk«U
cade St., Union Lake, is doing here. Although only three-quarters of an inch of snow fpU yes^ terday in the Pontiac area, it was enough to make streets slick and coat cars and sidewalks.
Three Coast Guard cutters which rushed to the M»ne Were standing by, but Capt. 'Trizizas vetoed any attempt to pull his ship free until divers can assess damage to ★ ★ ★
He feared it might sink if pulled from the 14-loot depth where she grounded.
All pumps aboard the Francisco Mormtan were attempting to keep up with the Incomiug water, amt Capt. Trisitas asked the eatters to attempt to puss him additional pumps.
Two helicopters hovered as best they could in the high winds, prepaid if necessary to' attempt to take off the crew and the cap-tafrTgwile.
BOUND FOR ATLANTIC 'The ship is carrying a general cargo and was headed out the St. Lawrence Seaway for the Atlantic Ocean from Lower Lake Michigan when she grounded.
’The scene is SO miles southeast of Gull Islan^, where the big Carl D. Bradley broke apart in a Lake Michigan Storm Nov. 18, 195$, and plunged to the bottom with 33 of her 35-man crew.
FLORIDA NEXT*
Temperatures in the Northeast, at unseasonable levels for several days, dropped sharply as the cold air swept in from the Midwest. The Icy air was expected to dip into the Southeast and into tral Florida.
Gale warnings continued on the Great Lakes and in Lake Michi-Liberian freighter ran aground off the shore of South Manitou Island. Galelike winds and high waves battered the 246-foot, ocean-going Francisco Morazan.
A new blanket of snow fell on Pontiac today on the heels of yesterday’s prewinter storm which crippled transportation in parts of Michigan.
As snow fell for a second straight day, Pontiac state ^police warned that ail state
Dynamite Rocks
In an effort to protect his winning margin of 694 votes against a possible reversal in a recount. Probate Judge-Elect Donald E. Adams today filed a counter petition'calling far recounting an additional U voting precincts.
Labor Leader's Home in Detroit
From Our News Wires DETOOrr — A dynamite bomb ripped a gaping hole in the rear of a labor Itqder's East Side Detroit home ’Tuesday night but his H'ife and two young daughters escaped injury.
Marion A. Macioce, business manager of Sheet Metal Workers Local 281 and president of the Detroit Building Trades Council, was at a union meeting when the lx>mb, made of three sticks of dynamite powder, tore a two-by-three-foot hole in the $30,000 home.
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His wife Irene and daughters Kathy, 8, and Cecilia, 10, Avere upstairs when the bomb explod-
coating of Ice. Temperatures stayed well below I freezing in all areas.
last night the mercury in Pon-: Mac dropped to a cold W. The I I’. S. Weather Barrau forecast ! raider for tonight but said a warmlag trMid would set in bv Friday.
Sen. L. Harvey Lodge, who W«-terford Township Justice of Peace Adami^fdged ouTTn the Nov. 8 balloting for the new probate judge post in Oakland County, filed .Monday lor a recount in M of the count’s 3li precincts.
The board of canvassers begin the recount of the M pre-
Today it’ll stay cold, with oc-l ,‘Tt'Tir casional snow flurries. A low of	Oxford.
20 is forecast for tonight.	! ’”rhen after w#rc done with
At least two deaths on the high- them we’ll move into those request-
All 369 Pupils Escape Gaylord School Fire
GAYLORD UB-With wind-fannod flames lickii« about them, pupils were wacuafed
Gaylord and State Qmservs-Uoa Departmeat Are fighters were uaable to briag the blase ander eontrol aa hoar after it
the two-stofy buUdiag aright be
Fire was discovered between the lira floor and basement by an eighth grade teacher, Father Golas, who at first suspected one ol his pupils mig^t be smoking in class.
When he discovered the fire, the teacher rushed upstairs inune-diately and mdered pupils there outside into the freezing ^winds. Then the first floor was evacuated, systematically and 'orderly, although flames were through the first floor as the last —third graders—left.
Dog Trails Included in U.S. System of Roads
DETROIT (UPI) — Among the more than three million miles of federal, state and county roads in the UnitrtI States are miles of dog team trails naarked by the Alaska Division of (Highways.
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This information was contained in a report presented today by the division’s chief engineer, T. D. Shepard, at the convention of the American Association of State Highway officials (AASHO) meeting here.
Macioce has been feuding with a rebel group within his local. Seven persons have charged in federal court that Macioce has kept them out of their duly elected offices.
Lying Down on the Job
MIAMI BEACni. Fla. (UP!) -The U.S. population numbers 180 million persons. But an official of Alfred Politz Research Co. told the National Association al Bedding Manufacturers here Tuesday that a survey by his firm showed 181 million mattresses in the nation.
ways were blamed on the snowfall.
William Gentenaar, 14. of Richland in the Kalamazoo area, struck and killed by a car on his way home from school in the snow storm.
Mrs. Pearl Darin,, 67, of Sawyer, was fatally Injured in a car-truck ooUlston on Icy MM near NUes. A car driven by her hus-ban Anthony skidded on the Ice. The collision followed. Mrs. Dsrin died later In a Ailes bod-piUl. Her husband and the truck driver escaped injury.
Kalamazoo reported a snowfall of five to six inches. Drifts contributed to a traffic tie-up.
Conditions were severe _________
and Mason Counties of Western Michigan as snow continued coming down.
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In the Upper Peninsula, Houghton and Marquette had a blowing snow. Houghton’s 17 degrees was the lowest reported in tKfc state.
Power was cut off for ^o hours in the city of Marquette today. ’The entire city was reported affected.
The storm caught the last ol Michigan’s de«r hunters 'in the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4»
ed by Adams,” said Clerk-Re^ster Daniel T. Murphy Jr., clerk of the canvassing board.
Checking the 90 precincts is ex-| pected to take five days. Muiphy said.
Faces Death as Spy
Ar rhsuiti
ARRESTED BY FBI — Dr Robert Soble. 60-year-old psychiatrist arrives at Federal Cdurt in New York Tuesday where he ww arraigned on charges ol spying on the United States for the Soviet government for 20 years. Soble, whose legal nanoe is Soblen, is the brother of convicted Red spy Jack Soble who is now serving a seven-year prison term. Bail was set at $75,000 and a hearing will be held Dec. 'JO.
Hearing Set Dec, 20
Charge Espionage to Soble Brother
Nation’s Biggest Teeder^ Airline
Detroit Welfare Chief Is Sorry
Oakland Director Burt Has Evidence Showing One Charge Not True
Construction costs have ri.sen, steadily since plans were first read-i^ three yean ago, said Kelley.
OMto were estimated at 6S mll-Uon When Pontiac ritlsens first voted down a bond Issue to finance construction.
They were set at $3.3 million the last time, one year ago.
CITES N'EW OBSTACLE Kelley is an engineer with firm of Jones, Henry and Williaa)s of Toledo, Poiitlart ttltfiWertHY consultants.
The only witness called by Clly Attorney William A. Ewart during the straight-forward, half-hour hearing, Kelley sidd the State Highway Department has proposed a new obstacle to plans tor added facilities on the site the city owas at Auburn Avenue and Opdyke Rond.
Kelley testified that plans to swing an extension to Auburn (M59» through the city-owned site apparently would eat up land that
NEW YORK (;PI — A New York psychiatrist arrested i 20-year Soviet spy never tried to escape his shadowers during a long, “hot surveillance’I by FBI agents, says his attorney.
On the contrary, the doctor even stopped his car so that trailing agwits^--------------------------------
Peronista Uprising Stilled in Argentina
BUENO.S AIRES, ArgenUna (AP) — Peronists attempted to seize the military barracks In Rosario today and were beaten back by troops. The army said the uprising was quickly crushed.
could catch up with him, the lawyer said.
psychiatrist. Dr, Robert Soble,.60, WM held in $75,000 bail tar a taderal court heartag Bee. 20. Soble, whose legal name i< Soblen, is a brother of confessed Soviet spy Jack Soble, 57, serving a seven-year prison term for espionage.
The government charged that the brothers were Involved In separate espionazr rings that sought national defense secrets tor transmission to the itovlet Union. Both brothers were naturalized In 1847.
at present is earmarked for future doctor suffers from a serious ill-
After brief gunfire, civilian ad-leients of former dictator Juan Peion overpowered sentries of the r, c .,	,	.	, . hilt Infantry Regiment at Rosacto
Dr. Soble, if com icted, c(^d	forces with a number
receive Uu> death penalty. The
New Routes Boost NCA
The company that will bring Pon-I Other'citles where North Central,aton, FUnl Sagiaaw Bav Citv
Uac iU first regularly scheduled wdU be operating for the firri-tlmeLj	'
commercial airline lervice tomor- are Traveroe City. Muskegon. Pell-'
row is the nation’s largest ’’feed-' > r” airline.	~
In 12 years time. North Central Airlines (NCA) has mushroomed an operation that embraces 6,900 route miles serving 90 cities In 10 states and one Canadian province.
The Minneapolis, Minn., firm got Its biggest booot In the nwve Hwt added Pontlae to Its service.
Along with Pontiac came 11 other Michigan cities, plus Cleveland, and Port Arthur, Ontario.
The additional service granted by the Civil Aeronautics Board .represented a 30 per cent expansion for North Central, according to Hal N.
Carr, president.
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Regular service is also startiiR tomorrow at Port Huron, Alpena.
Cadillac and Reed aty. Manistee and Ludington will get service in about two ntonths, when airport develoLpment is oompteted.	HAL M. fawa
[SERVES OTHER CITIES 'The company already serves Detroit (Willow Run), Jackson, BatUe Creek, Kalamazoo, Lansing, Grand Rapids, Benton Harbor; St. Joseph, Escanaba. Menominee, Iron Mountain. Ironwood, Marquette, Houghton, Hancock and Sault Ste. Marie.
Besides Mkshlgan, Nsrth Central operates la Wlsesaski, M|a-Bcsola, North tm4 SsMh Dakota, as wefi as a foar eMso la Nebraska. Iswa. an« Ulnsls plas Soafi. Bead la bdtaaa aad Cleve-land la OMs. The Oevetaad oerv-toe Is hraad new and hasn't been Inaagarntod yet.
It took about four years oL^red tape before North Central made its original flight in 1948. operating under its initial name. Wis-corriin Central Airtines.
ONCE PRIVATE The company grew out of a private flying service operated dur-(Continued on PSfe 2, CW. 2)
After accusing county welfare officials here of illegally inducing clients to move to Detroit, that dty’s welfare director has apologized to Oakland County Director George H. Burt for any inconvenience be may have caused.
W A b At the same time, Burt dug up information to show that a case worker in his office had not encouraged the Jack Harris family of eight to move out of Royal Oak Township into Detroit last June.
Daniel J. Ryan, general snper-Intendent of the Detroit Writare Department, said Monday be had asked Wayne County Prosecutor 8nmuH H. Olsen to took Into the ponsIbUlty of chnrgtag Oakland County with violation of the law which prohibits one county from Inducing clients to move Into another.
This. Ryan said, add to the load of Detroit's already overburdened welfare department. He cited but two cases, stressing the practice he alleged was not "wholesome.”
A meeting between the two departments, along with representatives of the prosecutor offices of both counties, has been set for Pontiac Dec. 7.
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Burt received a letter from Ryan yesterday in which be said "I sorry for any inconvenience which you have been put on I matter.” He said he hul gone to Olaen’s office only to check.the law in the event the practice of shuffling clients contlmied.
approving
vote of the people.
'The commission will be able to do this, Ewart said, by reason of the court decree which J u d g' Dondero was expected to sign this Afternoon.
’This could hsVe been hai^led Ih a simple phone call instead all this prosecution stuff,’ said.
UBPBBiaD At letter John A Macdonald, chairman of iCbntlnued on Page 2. Od. SI
expansion of the new plant.
AAA
"It will take time to negotiate a route with the state that will be satisfactory' to everyone." Kelly told Judge Dondero In the successful bid for a deadline exten-
bond tosue floated In three
Victor Meier, assistant attorney general, represented the Water Resources Commission. He said the decree would be ready for signature within a few hours after the hearing’s end.
ness, hi.s attorney said.
Soble was ariTsted al noon Tuesday at Rockland State Hospital. in suburban Orangeburg, where he has served as supervising psychiatrist.
The Indlrtnient by a federal grand jury also named 18 co-ranspiralorH, none of whom are defendants. They Include several Soviet offlrials and four Americans.
took the government three years to coliect evidence for an indictment against Dr. Soble.
arguing for low bail, his attorney, Richard C. Green, told the court that Soble would hot flee,
•STOPPED FOR Mil’
He has been under w ide-open hoi surveiilanee by federal agents and never tried to nin away, to a point whei-e he even stopped his car on highways the agents trailing him, so they; Aleier offered no objections to the could catch up to him deadline extensions.
him. He asked Judge Wllltani B. Hrriands if he could say goodby to "the FBI gentlemen."
First reports said one of the invaders was killed and a lieutenant and an enlisted man wounded.
AAA
The army command at Rosario, located about 175 miles up the Parana River northwest of Bue^ nos Aires, said moat of the civilians involved in the uprising fled as the garrison regained control of the sentry post.
Ewart had been ashed by the CHy Commission to draw Into the hearing the poUntton which the township bat been accused of conlributlng to Crystal Lake, which Is part of the Clinton system.
But it was decided during a conference preceding the hearing that only Pontiac pollution could be dis-cuased in court. Judge Dondero explained afterward that the law did not permit him to review the Wa-(Oontinued on Page 2. Col. 6)
In Today's Press
Comtes .................. 46
Coaaty Newt ..............V
EdHortato	8
Markets	48
Obituaries	tS
Pet Doctor ............... 6
Hporto ............... 41 a
TlMiaters ................ M
TV * Radio Programs	61
WUno. Earl .............. 61
Women’s Pages ......... 16-n
Pros isnisUM M WMb iTtfr Atoai-
Herlands smiled and gave his permission. The doctor bowed from the waist and waved to the FBI agents. ’’TTiank you very much, gentlemen," he said. ' The government said the Soblei brothers were born in Lithuania' and during the 1930s roamed Eu-| rope as Communist agents tor the Soriet secret police.
The indictment charged that in! 1940 Jack Soble met the late Lavrenti P. Berio, head ci the Soviet secret police under Stalin. In ex-ge for permittihg nearly all the families of both brothers to' go to the United States, the brown agreed to act as spies here. Eventually, said the government, the entire family — about 15 persons — left Lithuania. Most of them settled in the New York area and in Canada.
Extend Seaway Season
MASSENA. N. Y. (APl-lTie :. Lawrence - Seaway, supposed to dose today for the season, will remain open through midnight Thursday. The Seaway Authority granted the one-day extenston because of mild weather.
Sewing Column Introduced Today
The Womeu’s Seettoa sf The PmUsc PreM has s aew to-tormsUve feataro to add to your resdtag ptoaaare today. Our new c • I u m a, “8(w Simple.’’ win appear weekly to amwsr your
The Indtetmrat said that Dr. SoMe received moathly reports dttriag World War — from loeal headqnarteni la Rarkefelter Plata of the superaecret Uflice a( Sttotegte Servirea.
Documents, writings and photographs and notes allegedly were ceflected and sent to the Soviet Union.
Written by Enaiee Parmer.
teacher of custom tot-lortag, the eotama to In clear language that evea the begta-
The little troahtes you ea-oonnter when aewtog ara shared by many women. Mrs. Farmer sharea her helptal ad-vtee aad practical aaggesttaaa
Invites yon to submit yoar
Iota as hp enjoytag this caF ■B. Whether yan Hke to ntoke
sr sew sUpeavers aad draperies lor year heme, yea’ll
' ? ;
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30. 1960
pesire Fast OK of Sales Tax Hike
Ifiliiams Urges l)ay Session
^wainson Backs Call » AgrMs to Bid for Full *!; Cent Increase
LANSING liv-Michigan'8 sal«s tax.wijl be Increased to lour per cent in a quk* snap-of-the-fingers spedai session of the State Legis-l^tiue, if Gov. Williams has his
.
WiUiams and Gov.-EIect John B. Sjv$inson agreed Tuesday to call a special session to consider rais-in^jUie sales tax by one per cent.
.Tv •pprowd by the voters Nov. 8. date was specified for the
there wss sOfl a good possibiUty that M woaM eome Dec. 8, the day the voter-approved consU-tsthmal ameadmeat goes Into ' efCeet.
Williams told a »int news conference that the date depended w'hen an agreement can be worked out with legislative leaders to ap-' prove a fuU one-cent increase, Mflier than a bill calling for some action of that amount.
. •	d ★	★
w^e’ve decided that there should to a special session, and I'll call on#.’’ he said. "But I feel strongly t(5it It should not be a debating nWtph. We don't have time for thal."
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Williams said he and Swainson *would be contacting legislative leaders of both parties as soon possible to work out the agree-lawnt under which the measure ^«m!d pass in a one-day session.
New Routes Boost NCA
Judge Will Force City Pollution Curb
(Continued From Page One) ter Resources Commission’s findings.
Any action against Waterford would hhve to be separate from the action the state has taken against Ponttac, he said.
Ewa^ blamed the unfovtoaUe
Th^ Day in Binningham
Dec. 19 Vote on Sewers to Decide Job Financing
„ Hills voters are asked Dec. in a special election if they „_nt an internal sewer system
_____________________________________they will, in irffect, be deciding
votes against coostructioa bond the financing of the Improvement.
U the proposal is turned down on the gl.5 million system, the city will eventually be forced into building the sewer by court action, according to Mayor Henry Wool-fenden.
, •‘The city h pfaurf and it has a sMe,’' he told the oeart. "Bat we have not
BIRMINGHAM - When awn-
OONVAIB SM — This is the Oonvair 340 that North Central Airlines will use in lU Detnrft-to-Sault Ste. Marie route which will serve Pontiac starting tomorrov.'. The iargest plane in the Nrnth
Central fleet, it seats 44 passengers ahd 1 pressurised cabins. Hie Gonvair cruises at 248 miles an h
"There is no defense fo^ the city now, nor is there any question that the stream is being polluted, seriously affecting the people downstream from Pontiac." | Ewart agreed in court that the question of pollution from soorpes outdde of Pontiac "b not pertinent in this case."
The suit was filed aftn Pontiac, for want of financing, failed to meet the Water Resources Corn-ion daadUae of July 1 of dik year for the letting of construction
The SUte Wafer Resources
(Continued From Page One) ing the 1940s by a aintonvUle, Vns.. manufacturing company. Other companies kept badgering the FWD Corp. for so many rides on its planes that FWD officials figured they could start a commercial airlines.
The original application was filed 1th the CAB in 1944. Four years later, but only after the CAB had ordered FWD to sell its own interest in the proposed airlines, Wisconsin Central started out.
figures to illustrate the growth that I From 112 employes in 1948, ths has made their airlines the biggest company has grown to 2,100 em-of the nation's 12 local airlines, ployes, including 300 pilots and 183 The alrUnes, for Instance, wlH,	^	^
probahly carry well over a mH-	r—.
lion-----------thi« «Mr	to the future. North Cen-
lion pssnengers this year. tral has asked the CAB to let it
service cities as far west as Sheridan, Wyo. Other expanskq) is North Central aircraft carried i planned within Nebraska, the Da-4,856,740 pounds of mail last year, kotas, Iowa and Kansas.
In June 1959, the confflany l^an North Central has asked ap-carrying air freight and hauled ajproval of nearly 1,100 miles of total 2,112,960 pounds by the end.helicopter routes to 37 points on of the year.	iu system.
Asked whether no advance agreement would mean no special session. Williams replied:
"It comes close to that—I said 'Iflose to that. ”
—r,.	♦	*	♦
Swainson opposed the suggested ^b^Ws tax Increase during the cam-•ptlgn. while Republican candidates "t^herally supported the amendment.
But Swainson said Tuesday:
♦ ★ *
"I believe the results of the Nov. 8 election have demonstrated that a majority of citixens, recognizing the need for additional state revenues, have expressed their desire to meet that need through a (>n(j||^t Increase^ in the tax.
^ accept the majority will and '*lftisrelore agree that the legisla-fur* should to convened In spe-rial session to ronsider carrying *«nt that voter determination as soon ns possible.”
Swainson added that increasing .iho sales tax should be viewed as 1m emergency measure.
♦ ★ ★
"We all should still strive for the comprehensive tax reforms which all fi.scal experts agree are needed.” he said. .Swainson estimated that a one-cent boost in the sales tax would bring in between ^115 million and $129 million nually to the stale’s d<-pleted treasury.
WWW 'Before the news conference broke up. Republican leader, Hojise Speaker Don R. Pears of Buwanan. had heartily endorsed the special session with a mimeographed statement of his own.
Detroit Welfare Chief Apologizes to County
(Cbntinued From Page Om) the Oakland Social Welfare Board, said Ryan’s charges were "perfectly ridiculous." '
Both MkodoaaM and Bart were surprised by Ryan’s letter of ex-
A feeder service is one which fills in the gaps between the giant hops flown by the trunk airlines.
Big problems during the early years of expansion was the lack of improved runways and instrument controls.
WWW
During the first three years, more than $8 million was spent on airport development and improvement in cities served by Wiscon-In Central.
WWW
The airli^s itself provided elec-^ tronic equipment at most of the intermediate stops at a cost ofj around $1(W.0(X). Today it operates what it believes is the longest privately owned instrument network n the country,
By l»5S, the system was developing westward and the company moved to Minneapolis with the new name, North Central.
The company had turned to larger Douglas DC3 aircraft in
Students Battling Army in Caracas
CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Leftist students fought a guntat-tie with troops today in defiance of President Romulo Betancourt.
The stubborn challenge to the authority of the moderate Socialist president made the situation
Firing from high school buildings on Avenue Roosevelt has continued soradically since Monday night. It is part of ‘ ‘ rioting in the capital that has killed 6 persons and injured at least 105 in an attempt to touch off a revolution and establish a Castro-style government.
Tough military crackdowns, sup-
In 1959 the switch began to big, 44-passenger (Tonvalr 340s, twin-engine airliners with pressur-l Ized cabins. The radar-equipped Convairs cruise at 248 miles an* hour, compared to 160 for the DC3s.
WWW Convairs now service 18 per cent of the North Central system and will to used on the Detroit-.Sault Marie route that has Pontiac as a stopover.
North Central officials cite
ported by a suspension of chdl guarantees, have snuffed out moat I of the rioting which began last i Friday. However, for a time Tues-|day night it spread from the slum
Lawrence
^'	I
v»'A Bloomfield Township house-1
2le was found dead last night the garage of her home at 69191 ^Jtodbank Drive.
'^BJoomfield Township police said thpt Mrs. Robert C. Mack was found in the family automobile ' with the motor running by a neighbor. Polic-e said Mrs. Mack <^took her own life.
The Weather
in County Jail
Murder Charge Hangs Over Berkley Woman Judged Sane Nov. 21
districts of western Caracas the fashionable eastern end. NEAR LWVEBRITY The main battle was centered at Miguel Caro High School in western Caracas. The -school is adjacent to Caracas University, which officials said appeared to be the demonstrators’ chief stronghold.
WWW Police have not attempted to enter the university grounds, where Social Christian party students backing Betancourt fought their way into classrooms to break a Communist student strike.
One leftist gfoup att^pted to storm the police station nearby but were driven back by tear gas and armored cars of the presidential guard.
Another gang of youths tried to burn a bus in the aouthern suburb of Chaguaramos, despite or-to the army to shoot such firebrands on sight. The bus was saved by firemen.
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Troops took up positions Puente Trinidad Street, where several newspapers are published. The papers have advocated a tough line in suppressing Com-minist activities, ^tancourf has charged the (foiilmunists are behind the rioters.
Mrs. Sarah Sue Lawrence was' returned to the Oakland CountJ'i Jail yesterday, possibly to stand trial for murder.
RICHARD D. KUHN
Eyes JP Post in Waterford
^chard Kuhn Reveal.
rsU IJ.S. WeetU.-------
rONTUC AND VICINITT
iII!i»k»"Vr*"Ts«eSi7*yrSIJithe slaying of Mrs. David Cren-..-yfe! j «haw. 33, of 6230 Snow Aople Dr., •to*	•^'««|ciarkston. on May 22. 1959.
Mrs. Lawrence was judged criminally insane following the slaying. Hhe was released from Ionia State Hospital yesterday and trannferred to the Oakland County Jail.
Her attorney. James Renfrew, has filed a motion in Circuit Court here to quash the still outstanding first-degree murder charge.
f Tsaar IS rsBiiM L^rtet teapersture precedlof I s.a.
At I SB.: Wind Ttlocitr IS a.p.h Dlnetlaa: Northwest.	•
, ,.aun wis Wsdneadsr ot |:tl pjn.
‘ .a«n rises Thursdsr at 7:41
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Prosecutor George F. Taylor, who holds the warrant, said he will decide whether to proceed with charges after a Dec. 5 court hearing on Renfrew’s motion.
Mrs. Lawrence was ruled now ■ane by loula CtrcuU Jndg^ Morris K. Davis Nov. SI following a habeas corpus hearing.
Mrs. Crenshaw was shot during a scuffle at her home.
« » sSsw To^ ss isj Mrs. Lawre^ told sheriffs dep-
••	1R a asWtaaa aak.A knot OWMUA AWaOM	fhatr
>. rraoelses M , a: Marts *7
sess-i s s raw sstssi: ss
uties she had gone there to pay blackmail demanded by Mrs. Cren-shaA and her husband under threat of losing custody of her then 9-yearotd son.
OeTishaw nras the former boy (riend of the accused, deputies said
Candidacy in Primary Race on GOP Ticket
Pontiac attorney Richard 1 Kuhn has announced he trill be a candidate for Waterford Township justice of the peace on the Republican ticket in the February primary election.
A * A Kuhn, 31, ia a graduate of Michigan State University with a degree in political acience. He was awarded his law degree front the Detroit College of Law.
Kuhn is married and has one ion.
He Is a member sf the West Poatlac KIwaals Chib, PsaUac Area Chamber ot Omnmerce and
He is alao a member of the Oakland County Bar Association. Michigan Bar Aaaociatktn and the Amer-iran Bar Aaaoclation.
AAA If contested, Kuhn promises a vigorous campaign. One of the two toTVTiship Justices, Donald E-Adams, wbb elected Oakland County's aeoood probate judge Nov. I.
Snow, Ice and Low of 22 in Pontiac Area
(Continued From Page One) woods. Today Tvas the fla day of the oeasou.
Michigan had two other traffic fatalities during the stormy period but neither Tras attributed to the areather.
Donald M. Dury, 23, of Pioneer, Ohio, was killed today when his car hit a tree 10 miles south ot HUladale on Hillsdale Road: State police said Duiy apparently fell asleep at the wheel.
Perry E. Williamson,
Brethren, lost his life Tuesday in a two-car collision on U.S. 31 three miles north of Manistee.
Northwesterly morning winds at 20-30 miles per hour in the Pon-tihe area. Trill become westerly and slowly diminish tonight and Thursday.
The thermometer in doTvntown Pontiac registered 26 at 2 p.m.
This deadline, idus another of Dec. 31, 1961 for completion of the expansion, aras set in the summer of 1959, after engineers testified that Pontiac pollution was killing plant and fiA life In the
The engineers testified thal
Pontiac's existing treatment facU-	_________
ities were inadequate to hamjle ^Ugafion*~b o n (1 s arrangement,
the load. They, said untrmtcti sewage was entering the river.
bad given him "a lot of donble talk" when he threatened legal action In an Ang. If letter concerning the Harris case.
Burt said he would present affidavits at the Dec. 7 meeting showing case workers did not suggest the clients In question move to Detroit. ,
A:	A A
Although he said he had statistics to show that Detroit clients had moved into Oakland, the veteran welfare director said he didn't plan to bring them up. "We’re not going to accuse anybody of anything. We don’t play that sray," Burt said.
Burt said Jack and Peart Harris, formerly of tl4M Dowling St., R»^ Oak TomMMp. moved to DetroH Jnne 17 iriUi their six children after the toTvnahip had refased the department’s offers to pay bach Kent.
The toTvnship, Burt exidained, had refused because Harris’ lx»ne in a low-rent housing project was rnady for razing as part of s& itnii renewal project there.
Harris made the move to Detroit 1 his own and vrithout encouragement from Oakland case workers or officials, Burt said.
Over 3S,0(X) franchised new car dealers in the U.S. offer prospective buyers a choice of 18 makes, 96 models, and hundreds of styles produced by U.S. manufacturers.
In Oakland Ooanty arcalt Court to stop the Hty from poUnttog the Rouge River.
If the plan is approv«id, the city will to In the position general obligation bonds project, a method found to to mort economical to the taypayer, the mayor ex|dained.
If the proposal fails and the dfy is forced Into Installing the sewer system, tto city has no alternative but to finance the program through special assessment
DeCaulle Will Visit Algeria, Talk Policy
PARIS (UPI) — President CJuirles de Gaulle decided today to visit Algeria despite warnings from his generals and ministers that such a trip would be danger-
u.
The French leader told his weekly cabinet meeting he would leave Paris Dec. 9 tor Algeria to explain hit policy to French officers and the Algerian people. .
De Gaulle called a special cabinet meeting tor the eve of his departure to fix the date for the referendum he has called to get France’s approval for his plan to set up a provirional administration in Algeria.
... So How Did His Front Yard Look Afterward?
WACO, Tex. (UPI) - Patiwl-men Russell Martin and Ken Berry investigated, and it’s part ot the poUee blotter today.
It reads like this:
“10:20A ... A man . . . called to report Fidel Casti* has a battleship with Communist troops pniUng up Into his front yard.
‘*11:MA . . . Investigation by Patrolmen Martin and Berry In the Immediate vicinity tailed to locate battleship or Castro,’’
HIGHER PAYMENTS With tto ^ial assessment method the system would have to be paid off in a much shorter period resulting in higher annual payments to the taxpayers thy those proposed'under the general
Uam Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak. after a shMl Utoeas.
AAA
She Vas^ member of the FM Preibyterian Church of Hirmtng-ham, Omiciion Sorority, AAUW ct Blnnlnghain. the Oakland County Chapter ot the Mkh-igaa Society for Mental Health and the Birmingham Musleale.
AAA
Surviving besides her husband are trro bmjs. Ted of ftu? Francisco, CUif., and Donald of Birmingham; a brother:	and two
grandchildren.
Levies $100 Fine on Clarkston Golf Club Operators
Originally charged with the illegal sale of intoxicants, operators of tto aarkatOQ GoU ClQb, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Frechette, yea-today ideaded guilty in Independence Tormship Justice Court to a reduced count ot diaoiderly conduct.
Justice of the Peace Helmar G. -Stanaback ordered them tq pay J25 fines and |2S court cosU each.
Woolfenden said.
He stated reveaue bond flaaBC-lag would mesa a higher charge to residents for use ot the sewer to insure payment of the Isoue by building up a reserve fund. With general obllgaUon bonds. Woolfenden said, the cost to residents would be redu^ annually as the valuation of the dty increases with new construction.
Currently the plan for financing the sewer system, if It Is approved, is based on issuit^ the general obligation bonds over a 30-year period.
It has been estimated that the coat to residents the first year TTOuld be about $7.31 for each 81,-, W of assessed valuation.
AAA
Tlie estimate is based on the project being handled all at once. However, city engineers Hubbell, Roth and Clark have suggested the project be undertaken in two
Mr. and Mrs. Frechette were charged Sept. 17 follovring a raid of the golf club house at 9241 Kston Road in Independence Township by sheriff’s deputies.
AAA
Sheriff Frank Irons, who led the raid, said they found Mrs. Frechette serving liquor to two cus-tomers Trithout a license. Mrs. Frechette contended that the liquor belonged to the club members and she was not selling It to them.
This plan would see only thej develop^ areas of the city getting! the sewer and only $1.33 miUioa cdl the bonds issued, reducing the first | year's tax to about $6.30 per $1,000. of assessed valuation.
The remaining $170,000 in bonds' Tvould be sold at a later date for the improvement in undeveloped] areas.	|
Mrs. Edurard H., Laird Service for Mrs. Edward H. (Dorothy F.) Laird, 57, of 1220 Redding Road, will be at 2 p m.| Friday at the Manley Bailey Funer-' al Home. Burial will be in Green-j wood Cemetery.
Mrs. Laird died today at WU-'

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Headline Erred About Account in Check Story
The Pontiac Press vrishes to correct any mistaken interpretation of a story it published concerning a check cashed by Robert D. Roas, 27, formerly of 123 Norton St., that was returned due to fanufflcwit ' nds.
Tto headline over the story mistakenly stated that Rom didn’ have an account vrith his bank a the time he cashed his check. The bank says he did have an account but a' the time dkin’t have suffl-ds to cover the check. Wh« the insufficiency wu dls-covrird, the chet^ was made good.
AAA
The Pndt regrets any emto^
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Quitt State GOP » li Studying Work Conditiong
UN8ING Ift-Tte State OentraJ Committee hai announced the reaignatioo ol Don Wivner jr^ of Port Huron fran its organization itaff to ento* private builneBs in Port Huron. Wia-mer Joined the GOP staff early this year.
^ su<
Robert Raikes of Gloucester, England, founder of the modem Sunday school,^ founded the first such school in 1781.
Joint Steel Committee Fails to Meet Dead-line
PITTSBURGH (UPI) ~ Th eistrike, has failed to meet its dead-Unitod Steelworkos and the ma- Une.	^
Jor steel companies disclosed Tues-	1®*"' statement, USW
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prealdent of U.S. Steel Carp., aald the committee, which wu to have reprtled Ita recommendations today under terms of the strike settlement, "has not yet completed its exploration of these matters.’ The sUtemeat said that although under terms at the atrihe settlement the committee’s Hfe expires today. It will eoattoue
The Nov. 30 date for the committee's report on local working conditions was one of two important deadlines set for this week. On Dec. 1, the 500,000 basic steel workers will get an yage increase, which the union timates will average 9.4 cents per hour per worker.
The Cooper-McDonald statement said that the local working conditions committee "has been meeting in carrying out its functions under the agreements.’’
But the naloB and management representatives admitted that the committee has failed to determine “the area of study ia which a third party might be helpful.” The strike settlement directed that the members of the Joint committee select a neutral chairman by "mutual agreement.” None has b^n named.
Tuesday's "Since mutual understanding the aim of the parties, it was felt the efforts of the committee would be directed toward achieving such understanding between the parties rather than involving third party.”
Zeppelin Captain Dies in Germany
FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) Max Pruss, captain of Germany' famed Graf Zeppelin and Hinden-burg airships, died of pneumonia in a hospital here Monday. He
"He had been fighting lor the revival of the seppeltaa his last day,” his widow oald la
Pruss captained the Hindenburg when it exploded at Lakehurst, N.J., May 6, 1937, kUling 36 persons.
The skipper was injured seriously in the blast. But he never would believe that it ended chapter of history.
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FOUR
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVE^tBER 30, 1960
Heport Citeg Domestic Goab
U,S. Must Grow Economically, i Warns Presidential Commission
iwnor** MoUi A Iwftlw itodT br prtildmUal euainlMloo bu Mt up
---* artlcltt b» •Urlint
K OrMU,	AP wrtur ou teo-
' mic tftalri. Sub««uati>t artlclM II dMi with forptgn atfairt and
; By sterung f. green IWASHINGTON (AP)-Several hundred goals for the 1960s were sej before Americans this week b)i a White House commission. Yet one sim^e, overriding, all-e^ntial word told the story growth.
‘ Growth to provide at least 13.5 I mfllkm new jobs, growth to avoid j higher taxes, growth to support ! new multimillion-doilar outlays for I re^arch and education, growth to* rebuild decayed downtowns, gi^rwth to arm more strongly against “grave danger."
Without economic growth, at a raje apparently not less than one-sixth faster than American pio-di^tion has increased over the " years, the
tied directly to economic policy— breaking down racial and religious bias, reducing juvenile delinquency, and reorganizing the government, to name a few.
But the central theme was the United States must make a greater investment—of both private and public money—in its own future, or it will risk the ioss both of world leadership and its own cherished freedonu.
The growth goal was sUted mainly in terms of jobs. The target, said the commission, should be the fastest poasiUe rate which is "consistent with primary dependence upon free enterprise and the avoidance of marked inflation."
* * *
What will that rate be? The commiaalon waa uncertain, careful study, it said, su__ that the total output of goods and services can be boosted by 3.4 per cent a year—if unemployment is held con^istenfly below 4 per cent and if a climate favorable to investment and research is main-
srfvs some of.the nation's vital oti^ctives will be lost, its secu-rify and leadership endangered. * * *
in such a case, said the Presl-detit's Commission on National Goals, Americans are going to h^e to sacrifice—perhaps by tax increases, loss of leisure time, p slower rise of living standards, aifd unaccustomed controls.
The commission said it this wAy: “If the growth rate is lower, it [will impel consideration of higher taxes, lncrea.sed quantity of la-b((r and the greater Individual effort and sacrifice exemplified by fotced savings and reduced consumption"
This was the essence of the re-p(^ filed with President Eisenhower by 11 distinguished Ameri-cfUis after 10 months of study, rje White House rcieased it Sunday.
FACE PROBLEMS
bn the home front, the commission dealt with many matters not
Yet equally careful studies indicate that a 5 per cent growth can achieved "without extraordinary stimulating measures," said the report.
The average increase in gross national product recorded since 1939 has been 2.9 per cent. NEED MORE JOBS The first task is to reduce job-issness from the October rate of 6.4 per cent to the commission's goal—below 4 per cent.
Then, over the decade, economy must provide about 13.5 million more jobs than now exist to accommodate new entries into the labor force—mostly youngsters born during the postwar boom, now arriving at working
tomation and advancing technoi-ocy must be retrained or relocated—partly at public exp«ise, commission presumed.
The commission’s proposals for insuring growth included many that will be cited in Congress next session when the hot issues of recent years are rekindled. They include federal aid to education, aid to depressed areas, medical care for the aged, tax revision, and civil rights.
SPECIFIC TARGETS Here are some of the specific targets:
EDUCA-nON-Yearly U. S. outlays must be doubled by 1970, to $40 billion. "The federal role must 9w be expatxied."
The commission hewed to the ne that education b "primarily a responsibility of the itates” and ta3 goals GAL 3 eesa/yy ar30 shied away from an outright doraement of federal aid school construction. But it said that since 1787 the federal government has participated in the support of education “without destroying local initiative and responsibility."
TAXES—An “overhaul tax system” is necessary, whether tax rites go op or down, to
Pistol-Packing Housewife Sends Salesman Flying
ONTARIO. Calif. (AP)-Answer-ing the doorbell, a housewife tripped over her son’s toy gun and picked it up.
*
The salesman she confronted turned pale and ran, vaulting a 3-foot fence.
Mrs. Bernard Pennine _______ . _
Another batch of 1.5 million^lice Tuesday she then discovered Americana — the farmers wholher son, Jimmie, 15, had put
won’t be able to make a decent living on the soil—must be absorbed in nonfarm jobs.
Aind an unestimated number of factory workers, displaced by au-
the front door a sign reading: ★ ★ ★
"We shoot every third sales-an, and the second one just left."
improve the climate for new busi-ne« investment. The changes, said the commiask», should include noore liberal depreciation dsductions on business and industrial equipment to encourage modernization and tovestment.
AUTOMATIC - Tedmological change should be encouraged with careful advance planning to avoid hardship to those displaced by new machines and processes.
Where whole areas are left in distreu, both state and federal govenunents should help provide loans and grants to assist the communities in attracting new industries and in retraining and relocating workers.
* ★ * AGRICULTURE - Supply and ’demand must be brought into balance so that the'market—instead, presumably, of federal subsidies—' will provide fanners a fair return.
There should be "much increased retirement of farm land, with emphasis on whole farms." But fedml farm programs, including price supports, will be| necessary for some time to come., CITlE^Slum conditions must, be remedied and the process ofj decay in big cities arrested, the; commission said. It called for more urban renewal programs "costing as much as $4 billion a year."
★ ★ .*
HEIALTH—Among a dozen recommendations in this field, commission called for further efforts to reduce the burden of the cost of medical care.
Extension of medical insurance! is necessary, through both public and private agencies. ” it said.
It also called for higher stand-aids of unemployment compensation, without endorsing the effort of many Democrats in Congress to win passage of legislation fixing federal standards.
The commission said the government should "encourage the states to meet a minimum standard" and should, in addition, es-i tablish a federal reinsurance pro-i gram for states with temporary acute employment problems.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, XOVEMBER 30. 1960
FIVE
Q. Will you *lv«« ntp
Information on tlio faro of a two and one kalf year old IModler PaHletUarly Ha enra. Mra. M. Toland, N.Y.C.
• A. A request for "generar’ li mation ii a large order in allotted apace. Your pet's beautiful hair coat lends Itself to many styles to suit your fancy, but the veterinarian would prefer the hair to be short araund the ears and in the ear canals to prevent infection.
*	★	★
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After reading them. If you still have any particular question, 1’^ be happy to'advise you.
Bees Busy Making More Honey in 1960
WASHINGTON Iff-It’s been a busy year for the beos, reports the Department d Agriculture.
The 1960 honey crop is estHnated at 347,523.000 pounds, 2 per cent More than last year’s, and 6 per cent above the average annual production of the last six years.
Honey production was up in all sections of the country except the North Central, where th4 yield last year was higk
’The Iff leading honey producing states this year, in order of production, were Minnesota, California. Florida, Wisconsin, New York, Texas, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and Iowa. They accounted for 59 per cent of the nation's honey. |
AAohowk Airlines Sea Merger oi Possible Evil
WASHINGTON (AP) - Mohawk Airlines said today that a merger of Capital Airlines into United Air I "could be harmful to Mohawk but does not have to be. ■k It it
Mohaaic told the Gvil Aeronautics Board, In a bHef, that the merger is approved. United should be denied the dormant authority of Capital to operate, between Detroit and Buffalo, N. Y.
Mohawk said this is a shixt-haul market \^ich Capital hUs not been serving, and it properly belongs t local service airline.
About 15 ynillion motot- vehicles se the Holland under water tunnel each year. The tute. first be built, was opfned 33 years ago.
Constructs El^tric Tiny Motor
PASADENA, Calif. Iff-Last December a California Institute of Technology theoretical physicist, during a talk on the importance of miniaturization of electrixa' gadgets, said;
“I want to offer a prise of •1.M to the first guy who makeo
In wires.”
Monday, a young engineer collected the 31,000 from Dr. Richard Feynman.
William McGeRan, who worked for a local electronic firm, had toj display his motor under a 40-power -miscroscope. To the naked eye appears hardly larger than a speck of dust.
He said it took him 24 months to build, on his own time, only six one-thousandths of an Inch in diameter—no larger than the period at the end of this sentence.
Yrt It roatalna four colls of wire with It luma per coil, a quarts bearing, a Hny rotor—1.1 parts in ail. it has an output of a millionth of a horsepower. McGellan acknowledges that he hds no immediate use for it.
But he'n have no trouble finding a use (or Dr. Feynman's 31,000 personal check.
"That," says McGellan, "goes toward the education of my daughters.”
Bockeieller Tree to Recover OK From Fractures
NEW YORK (UPI) - A big spruce from Pennsylvania arrived Tuesday to be the symbol <rf the Yuletide season as Rockefeller Center’s famed Christmas tree.
The 65-foot tree, which suffered .a number of branch fractures, arrived aboard a tractor-trailer logging truck with its lower limbs in splints and bandages.
But a Rockefeller spokesman said the burlap wrappings and wooden splints would save the limbs and that the Z'/i-ton tree would “look Just fine.”
"It looks a little ragged down at the end,” said Candy Clark, 16, who passed by on her way to school with her sisters Penny, 15, and Megan. 14.
"I think It’s • lovely.” Megan ■aid. "I like spectaculars."
"I think it’s going to be great, I really do,” Candy agreed.
There are 23 railroads in Pennsylvania sharing in the )ob of moving coal, from the iftines to the markets.
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Dliuiei'ojia:
Warlle's Ceamtiics . . . Street Fleor
/
THE PONTIAC PRESS
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30. 1960
tornu W. Fitmbau,
uu
kdTtntiliig
Lyndon’s Paris Speech Emphasizes U^. Unity
vice President-Elect Johnson’s speech to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) parliamentarians In Paris gave assurance that the new Democratic Administration ^ would continue firm U.S. support for the 15 nation organization.
★ ★ ★
A NATO ministerial conference is scheduled to meet in mid December in the same city to take up three questions of fundamental importance; (1) Extension of NATO into political and economic fields. (2) Modernization of defenses including the giving of nuclear weapons to members for defense in the event of Soviet aggression. (3) Easing U.S. financial burdens with respect to NATO.
★ ★ ★
The most controversial of these is Gen. Lauris Norstad’s proposal to create a basic pool of atomic weapohs with all NATO nations having an equal voice in its control. The argument for this arrangement is that European nations would be more -willing to build their own defenses; that France would no longer be interested in going ahead *with its own b(xnb tests nor would Germany feel the urge to keep pace with France.
★	-A -A
On the other hand, however, a.s the greatest military power in NATO the U.S. could wield overwhelming veto power. Nothing can stop France and (Germany from building up atomic power if only for prestige purposes. Tran.s-fer of nuclear weapons would mean more fingers on the trigger and increased danger that bombs would be used accidentally if not on purpose.
★	★ ★
The Administration has reached no decision on this serious question. Vice President-Elect Johnson’s address, therefore, could stress only the fact that this country is united in its determination to back NATO and to expand its rhilitary work into cultural and economic fields.
Stresses Responsibility of Newspapers Today
Speaking out against government secrecy, Associated Press Managing Editors Association President John
Colburn also called for newspapers to renew their vows of responsibility to the public.
★	-A ★
“Responsibility has become a significant part of our thinking ■ and editing,” Colburn said, “but it has not dulled the attacks on our free press heritage.” Such at^ tacks have been accompanied by an even tighter curtain of secrecy on aspects of government that have no relation to national security. but which are of vital concern to the public.
★	A A
Colburn, managing editor of the Richmond (Va.) Times-Dispatch, said that a Freedcmi of Information convention before the United Nations now would give international recognition to standards for curbing the flow of news.
“If governments such as that in the Congo, are to interpret under a U.N. cemvention, what is 'accurate, objective and ccxnprehenslve information,’ then the AP report is bound to suffer," he said.
★	★	A
“One of the biggest jobs we have to do is to educate the public to the fact that a responsible free press is the public’s best insurance for the continuance of sound, responsible government,” Colburn stated.
★	★	A
In concluding, Colburn asked the newspapers to meet the challengeb of the day by—
1—Rcdcdkathig ourselves to
the concepts of freedom, responsibility and understanding for which our forefathers fought and died;
2—Rededicating oumelves to the precept that an enlightened public can guide its own destiny;
;i—Rededicating ourselves to the concept that freedom of expression must be guided by a wsense of responsibility, and that we, as editors, must be vigilant to protect it as a cherished right of the people;
4—Rededicating ourselvesi to the principles that led men to fight for principle rather than to compromi.se with expediency.
It is wondered if the married man who is reading this is brave enough to show it to his wife; In Spanish “esposas” has two meanings, namely, “wives” and “handcuffs.”
Voice of the People
. Dissatisfied With Sdup at Will Ro,gers Sclwol
Why doesn’t the committee diecWng complainti st WW Rogers talk with the parents who have taken their ohUiken town there in the past few years? Our objection was not only Iwtt cards, but curricidum’; homework, disdplUie. and schotH poUcy.
AAA
a great deal more was expected of her than at WUl Sogers, bat with a goad deal M hard work she caaght np with her elsH aad staee that ttane has been a happy, eager, Inwor studeat.	«
AAA
No one. likes to Irritate their friends by voicing their opinion or being referred to as a "disgruntled parent,” but the issue it important enough to take the risk. If the majority feel )>rogrestlve e^tucation should stay, it will have to be accepted, but I sytnp*|hize with those who feel as I do and are not able to send their children to a private school.
Disgruntled. Psieat No. S
Another Inquiry Concerning Jobless
'Early Decorations Dampens Spirit’

Innocent Bystanding Can Be Hazardous
Answeriiv the timely letter of Christmas is being commercial-"One of the Widows” regarding ized too much. Stores started dec-unequal sioead of available work, orating for Christinas on Hallo-apparently the pendulum has '„,een and by the time Thaakaglving swung again to opp^te extreme, ^ ^ ^	thought It
‘Ihere was a time when men were Christmas, hired in as needed and tte ^read-	^
ing out of pay checks helped the	_ you lose all the apirit
entire cwnmunity.	Christmas.
*	*	*	A Christmas Believer
Now a lew men, my huirfiaiid	---- *
inc^, aw pushed far beyo^ ^Elcction Promises
their strength to put in the six	_	,
and seven days s week required .AFCII t .N6C6SS&ry of them. The reason? If the big
David Lawrence Says;
Many of the average person’s so-called convictions were handed to him on a propaganda platter.
Verbal Orchids to-
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Crawford of 66 Pingree 8t.; Mat wedding annlver: »kry.
Mrs. Pearl Burrington of Keego Harbor; 82nd birthday.
Arthur Amesworth of Waterford; 83rd birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. Johnson McRath of Walled Lake; 53rd wedding anniver-•ary.
Give U.S. Full Story of Infiltration
I can see no reason for the innumerable promises made by and expected from presidential, gubernatorial, etc. candidates disregarding the fact that few of these „	. ,	.	j _ promises are ever kept after elec-
If new help must be hired, men {'.
rompanies hire extra help means M weeks of anem^oy-meat pay when they are laid off. This cuts Into the big profit.
The Man About Town
First to Make ’Em
Worked on the Early Cars Manufactured in Pontiac
Chivalry; In Pontiac buses, often a standing Joke.
A survivor of Pontiac’s pioneer automobile makers is
George H. Reissman
of 86 S. Tasmania Ave. He may hold top place on that list.
He was 16 years of age. and employed at the Taylor buggy plant 54 years ago, when they were experimenting with the •new Oakland car in the rear of the buggy shop.
, He went with the new firm, and his first duty was to syphon the gas remaining in the tanks before they were loaded on railway freight cars for shipment. This wa.s not done until they were found able to climb a local hill in high gear.
Mr. Reissman learned his machinist trade at the Welch plant, when the manufacture of that car was started here. As a publicity stunt, he drove a Welch car from Pontiac city hall to the Detroit city hall and back every day for several daysj Just to prove to a skeptical and dubious public that such a thing could be done.
He drove an Oakland car to Chicagq in the unprecedented time of four days, but the roads were so bad that it was in such poor condition that it was necessary to ship it back in a railway freight car.
He also worked at the Cartercar plant here, then going to Detroit auto plants where he was employed for 30 odd years. At 69, he now Is only semi-retlred, putting in good hours in connection with local motels.
Forsythla blossoms on a bush in the yard of
Mr. and Mrs. Roy N. Long of 76 Oneida Road, seem quite defiant of the season.
Some advance scuttle butt tells me rtiat a plan is under way for Lansing and Pontiac to get chURunler. According to our local Executive Secretary
John Vf. Hirliqger,
the Chambers of Commerce of the two cities may charter a Oreat Lakes steamship for a jqjnt cruise early in June.
A few Canadian geese^ those ever wily honkers, who’ve been sojourning in a cove near the Cass Lake home of
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Early, decided to take no more chances on Michigan weather, and took off for the South Tuesday.
Getting much enjoyment,out of a pet cricket Is the family of
Mr. and Mrs. Lanoey Jasper of Lake Orion. It U housed in a large cardboard box, with plenty of room for exercise, and is kept supplied with water on a saucer, and food. In the shape of green leaves. It chirps lustily, but only when the house Is otherwise quiet. Largely nocturnal In Its habits, it la no cure for Insomnia.
WASHINGTON - When are the American people going to be given the full story of Communist infiltration inside the United States?
Just because the late Sen. Mc-
zeal and his passionate devotion to the antl-Com-munist cause— the tendency now is to belittle the Communist men-
by the staff of the Senate subctmi-mittee on internal aecurity in an exhaustive study entitled “Mob Vk>l«ice as an Instrument of Red Diplonnacy”:
“In some Latin Ainnrican ooun-tries, and. in Japan, Communist Carthy went to parties controlling an insignificant extremea-due to nilnority of the total vo(es cast. "“ **«*•■ “ *“ve respite^, to the policy of manipulating and inciting mobs to accomplish political and diplomatic objectives in the interest of Soviet foreign policy.
TO HUMIUATE SPOKESMEN
_______________ "These operations are directed
ace alTo^gethep Prin»rily against the American or to brush off government, to defeat iU objec-tives and humiliate its spokesmen and representatives.
“Latin American Commaalstt
Amertoaa they
Rickard M. Nlxoa and Us < to a BMMt hamlllatlag experience.
“Attfcks are concentrated upon American property and personnel. . . .
"The (United States) resort to international financial aid, no matter how generous, has not of itself furnished an adequate preventive against anti-American, Communist-Inspired nsob violence.
on short layoffs from other local plants are hired. This helps both companies cut down on unemployment pay.
Only publicity of this sad practice can help. I. too, would like to know what people can do about it
Concerned
s just a "hysteri-
cal” manifestation of “McCarthy-ism’’ in a misguided era.
This same trend has been notice- ‘ able in Britain and France, where
many writers continuously refer Dr. William BradV SeVS I
to "McCarthyism” as a means of ■	-----------
pooh-poohing Communist infiltration today.
♦ ★ *
The Communists, on the other hand, benefiting by indifference and complacency In Westeht countries, have been making hay, particularly in the United States.
The newspapers generally, for instance, printed brief stories of the student demonstrations at Han Francisco when the House Committee on Un-American Ac-tlvftlps was meeting there h few months ago, but this correspond-m a half-hmir
The Almanac
By United Press International T^ay is Wednesday, Nov. 30th, the 335th day of the year with 31 more in 1960.
The moon is approaching its full “Despite the numerous examples Phase, of worldwide Communist imperial- ^h* ism and brutality, there have been few cases of mob violence against	"
It appears that as long as most citizens have enough money to get drunk, buy cigarettes, tranquOtz-'ers and to live beyond their meant or are able to get such funds from various agencies or giveaway programs, they should be satiated and have no need for nv>re advantages.
Obaervani
Portraits
or agen-
Digitalis Can't Save Heart From Normal Work Load
The evening stars are Jupiter. Venus and i^turn.'^
On this day in history: in 1782, preliminary peace articles ending the revolutionary war between the United States and Great Britain were signed in Paris. In 1804, for the first time in history, a justice of the
By JOHN C. METCALFE There to a bus named “Nogall-tos’’ . . . Along St. Mary’s Street . . . That daily races past my window ... And all the cars can beat ... I long have known of •enchiladas ” ... And those with onion glow ... But what could mean this "Nogalltos” . .v. I simply do not know ... I love my hot "tfflriillas suaves” . . . And “fritos’’ causing thirst . . . But who will give me satisfaction ... Of “Nogalitos’’ first? . . . Each time I only hear "manana” . . At mentioning the name . • . And
preme Court, Samuel Chase, went	^ ••Nogalitos”
know whether you will must be frequently repeated.
which I quoted Would tweezing the hairs, as girls Minister Sir Winston Churchill their eyebrows, stimulate bom.
of news photo staff men covering the tragic event, which reveals tbst It was far more sensational than the news dispatches Indicated.
It shows the brazen behavior of persons, known to have been active in Communist party affairs, who boldly sought by mob action to interfere with the committee’s public se.ssions.
CONGRFilHMEN COMMENT The movie contains comments by Democrats and Republicans in the more about such things than I do to explain to me how it is possible to do more work without
I don'
recall an article the statement of a famous medical authority (we needn't name him now): ••Therapeu-j tically, it’’ (digitalis) “enables the damaged heart to do more work with the same expenditure] of energy.”
Now I’m wizard, but the physics I db. BRADY learned in high school wag not a lot of hooey, neither digitalis nor anything else can enable a heart to do more work without the expenditure of more energy.
I invited physicians, physiologists and physicists who know
trial in impeachmfjnt proceedings.
In 1^, Samuel Langhorne Gem-ens, better known as Mark Twain, was bom.
In 1874, former British Prime
Or secret of its fame . the bus named "Nogalitos” . . Befm^e the day Is out ... I hope to finally discover. . . What it is all about.
COPYRIGHT, 1MB
heavier growth? (Mrs. R.L.S
In 1922, Sarah Bernhardt made
Ana.—No more than shaving or her final stage appearance in Tur-
electrolysis.
Slsnad icttart. not mor* thin ont — — — -rordt lone pertnlnlnf to ' *nd byctooo, not dt>-r trootmeot. wlU bo , Wtlllba BnuSy. It ■ lf.oddrooicd onrtlopo io Mot Ike Prtu. roDtlnc, MIchlion. (Ospyrlght IBM)
in. Italy.
In 1949. Chinese Communists captured (Chungking. China.
A thought for today; English novelist and poet George Meredith Girist are a substitution for the said; “Kissing don’t last; cookery endless punishment of all who truly do.”	believe on Him. - Wllliajn Adanis.
THOUGHTS FOR TODAY
But that you may know that the Son of Man hM suthority on earth to forgive sins.—Mark Z:1B.
The sufferings and death of Jesus
Case Records of a Psychologist:
Defeatism Complex Strikes Athlete
U.S. House of Representatives. The reeis hsve become avail-
private groups, aad Informattoii conrernlag them lo obtainable at the offlees of the HtMioe Commit-lee on Un-Amerioan Aethitfeo.
This is the movie which a so-called “liberal" group of Harvard students booed when it was shown to pther students a few days ago.
★ A ★
It seems incredible that such a demonstration as occurred in San Francisco could be organized inside the United States, but it to not surprising to those who have been pointing out that the (Communists have not for a moment relaxed their cold war efforts.
The only way to fight this kind of Insldtons warfare to to bring It out In the open. In nneh n movemeat, the peopto aatarally
expending more energy. Only one expert, a high school physics teacher, undertook to enlighten me about it. But I couldn’t follow him at all, at all.
In a prean retoaae, George W. Speyer, ooieaoe editor of Arth-rlHo and^Rhenmatlom Fonnds-
ary relief tram pala la the .
affected by m.............
“otlmulateo the circulation by Increnolng the blood flow lo muocico to that they ran perform more work with leas energy.”
Bill Veeck, Frank Lane and other basebaU tycoons, please paste Bill’s case on your bulletin boards. For all the players in major league baseball COULD become .300 hitters. And any embryonic Roger Hornsby could bat .SOO with the proper psychology. Why does a no-hit pitcher get knocked out of the box maybe his next game? It is NOT ■ sore muscles.
By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE
CASE G-439: Bill X.. aged 29. is a stellar baseball player.
"Dr Crane.” bis wife began last
visit, I showed him that he was divert their minds from their form-
of Congress.
Here, for insunce. are some of the conclusions recently presented
The Coiintry Parson
This reminds me of one the Sage of Battle (Creek pulled off. Writing about “alimentary toxemia” (auto-lnt(pcication), he said; "It to impossible to have constipation without Intestinal autointoxication. The ______ ______________
fact that the symptoms do not complek' His occur in every case to no evidence team mates dap] that they are not present."
Obviously a student of medicine should have a flexible mind.
summer, slump.
“He used fo be a .300 hitter but is now down to .125 and he gets poorer every game.
“For he to a victim of a severe
is in a batting
becoming a slave to doubt instead of being master of his own muscles.
And to prove the disastrous effect of such slavery to fear, I cited the handgrip experiment on a group of soldiers.
During their waking state, they competed to find which one was Btraiqest. Their average handgrip wa« in lbs.
, Then they were hypnotized and told they^ were weak, sickly, anemic, etc.
Under this negative (vr fearsome idea, their handgrip averaged only 69 lbs.
Before they were wakened from their hypnotic trance, they were also given the POSITIVE thought, namely, that they were
r phobias.
As*
■•Bill,*’ I added, "the reason you pop up so often is the fact you are undercutting the ball.
”Ck) out there this afternoon and just swing your bat % inch HIGHER than you think you should.
“And remember, too, that you have the same pewer and reac-
I bet smoking will cause ulcers, my husband bets it will not . . .
(Mrs. W. R)
Ans.—I don’t know whether sazy?" smoking to a contribuUng cause imuatE COUE
him on the back' and I try to be DR. CRANE the cheer leader type of wife you recommend, but nobody seems able to snap BUI out of it.
"0)uld you possibly see him and maybe
Hke, etc.
Now their average handgrip was recorded at 140 lbs., more than double their 69 Ib. grip when under the influence of fear.
BILL’S AUTO HYPNOSIS
Then I reminded Bill that he had the very same eyes, arms and brain that used to produce a .300 batting average.
He had simply slumped until he let doubt begin to haunt his sub-
Well, I pep talkied him, ..«ven without putting him under deep hypnosis. So Bill was in a waking stage of auto-hypnosis.
That afternoon he hit two singles and a trlpto In four official times at bat. And hli slump’waa over.
of peptic ulcer or not. I beUeve it may be.
A French psychologtot came to America « generatloa ago and uifed the use of podUve iMnk-
hls^^idSS ®’ “	»* Amerfetoto to radto
his bed-wetting . .	(— D.D.) _
Ans.—As I recollect, I wasn’t distressed by my bed-wetting when I was six. Perhaps my'parents were, but if to. God bless 'em, they never said m.
Send stamped, self-addressed envelope tor my free pamphlet. “The Bcd-Wettii« Habit.'
each moralag:
“Day by day la every way, 1
Aad Osae’s advice to sonad, (of we Applied Psyohotogtoto Icach
Ro whea he went to the plate-he was spHtgag Us atteatlon be-tweea the pitcher and this lii-VlUble Mr. Doebt, who lurked in tke beckgroaad.
As a result, where he formerly paid 100 per cent attention to the pitcher, he was now diverting maybe 25 per cent to Mr. Doubt.
That’s why the pitcher fired a fast ban right past Mm or slip-
Alwsys
MIcMfsn!
«eU-sddrs_________
to PsDUtc Ptms. PonUse, sloilBi s lost 4e sUmpsd. tnvtlaps tod SOe to eortr
to amouous rrm a nti
----utitsir io tM UN tor root
ostloA of lU la«tl Mvt printed thU oesupopur u otU so sn AP newt dliDatcbw.
Dr. Peale and other stirring clergymen Ukewtoe advise the use Niece, 22, has superfluous hair, of more positive thliidng. on upper lip. Electnlj-sis to paln-O
which be urauld dhnply toh as an easy popwp to the taifleU.
But patients usually need a tangible prescription as a means.

inconvenient, expensive and So I intervfewad Bill. During our of helping focus th^ attention and
B OsllsBd. Ow*tm. Lloias-BconB. Umw Bod Waob-
—COB to Um ObIM sum sn .M a nsr. All eBlI labNitpUm psysblo
y-
“-fT-
THE POXTUC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1960
ONE COLOR
SEVEN
Opens 1T omor row. *. Thursday!
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2203 S. TELEGRAPH RD., MIRACLE MILE 16 W. HURON ST., Convenient Downtown
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OF SILVER
to everyone who makes a purchase at either one of our stores during this big 3 day event, Thursday, Friday or Saturday, December 1st - 2nd or 3rd. Come in and be surprised. Jt will be a pleasure to serve you int>ur new store.

We are happy to make this announcement and we hope you are happy, too. Over a period of years, it has always been our endeavor to serve > you the best we can. Here you will find All , Famous Names... In China: LENOX, CASTLETON, FLINTRIDGE, SYRACUSE, CAREFREE ... In Sterling or Silverplate: REED & BARTON, GORHAM, WALLACE, .TOWLE, HEIRLOOM, INTERNATIONAL, LUNT, KIRK and STIEFF, 1847 ROGERS, 1881 ROGERS t . . In' Watches: HAMILTON, MOVADA, BULOVA, BULOVA ACCUTRON, GIRARD PERREGAUX, CROTON, UNIVERSAL GENEVE ... and inany dlhers ... In Diamonds: ARTCARVED, JABEL, ORANGE BLOSSOM, GRANAT and others. Also a most beautiful selection of Wall Clocks by Syrocco—Over 30 styles.
Your Charge Account or Lay-• away plan will be honored at both stores ...
So: if you are downtown STOP IN ... or if you like Miracle Mile, stop in our new store. We will be more than pleased to see you...
Norman L. Pattison.*
Door Prizes
r Miracle Mile Store only
3 Grand prizes ... a Beautiful Diamond ring — a 7 i^ece International auver Tea or Ckiffee Set with Kettle, and a Lady’s 2 diamond Wrist Watch. All you have to do Is register at our new store. Nothing to buy. nothing to write only your name and address. Yog ko not have to be present to win. Just visit our new store. ■

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ErCHT
f- -
THE PONTIAC PRESS. IVEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1960
NATO Supply Bases Suggested for Spain
PARIS (AP)-A report prepared ter the Western European Union Assembly meeting here suggeetl that the Atlantic Alliance establish military supply bases Spain.	^	^
The suggestion recalled storm of protest—mainly from
Britain—following reports earlier this year that West Germany was seeking bases in Spain. The protests were aroused largely cause of Nazi Germany’s ties with Generalissimo Francisco Franco.
The report.' unanimouily approved by the assembly's committee on defense and armaments, led into the Spanish base idea aft-discussing West Germany’s
Want His Son to Be President? Jack Not Saying
WA8HINOTON (UPI) - A startled Sen. doha F. Kennedy said ’Taesday he had given no
Wyoming has 83 different varieties of fish, of which 2l are' classed as game fish by state law.
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Open Mondoy ond Fridoy Nights 'til 9
CEORGE'S
74 N. SAGINAW ST. — Free Holden's Stamps
qnesttoa: Do yon want yoar non
Kennedy seem when the queetlon was pot to him after be ^had paid a 35-minute visit to' his wife In the afternoon at Georgetown Hos-ptUI.
The the president elerI smiled and said. *‘I haven't thought about it. I JnsI want for him to be all right."
* ♦ ★
Dorlorit reported fhal the five-day-old Kennedy baby was In fset doing Just fine. Pediatrician'' Dr. Edward B. Broorks saM John f. Kennedy Jr. was "breathing normaUy and eating nioo-ly," although still In the Incubator where he was placed after Mrth Friday morning.
Russia Ready to Wade Into Dag Over Congo
UNITED NA'nONS. N. Y. (APL —The Soviet Union whetted its ax today for a full scale assault on Secretary General Dag Hammai^ skjold and his role in the strife-torn Congo.
The Soviets made clear they will try to make Hammarskjold the scapegoat for the U. N.’s financial plight, as debate on the cost of the U. N. Congo operation into its second day before the budgetary committee.
Qxigo question comes before the General Assembly.
They have attempted to depict him as a tool of the Belgians and the United States and have charged that he acted as a West-agent in the Congo crisis without consulting the rest of the U N members.
Rivets and Harbors
Kennedy^Asking About Topper for Inauguration
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presl-deot-Elect John F. Kenttedy put It up to his IrMUgural committee Tuesday whether he will wear a high silk hat to his oath-taking in January.
T dm’t know," Kennedy said, after a conference with Edward H. Foley, itutugural cornmlttee chairman and former undersecretary of the treasury.
"We’ll do whatever Is custo-mary and traditional," Foley chimed In. "We want to look lolo whether a top-hat Inaugural In traditional."
Kennedy,, standing beside. Foley in the doorway of the president-
an end' to the vast opi^rntion tUniTAsks Spending
the Congo, deciaring that Ham-|
tnarskjold brought the United Na-j WASHINGTON (UPII—Officials!^***''* Georgetown home, said tioas tft the brink of bankruptcyircprc.sentirar the National Ri»>Pr«r 9**'^	by to inform him
in order to pay for it.	P'*"* tor me to do. ’
The Communist-bloc nations a^	^ ..	* INH&HC) poley’i version was tha
School Postpones Minstrel Benefit
WHITEHALL (UPI>-The Whitehall High School Band and Chorus Parents Organization iJbs decided to put off staging a benefit minstrel show this year because of protests that the use of blackface acts and dialect in such shows Is degrading to Negroes.
At a special meeting Monday night It was decided the show would be postponed. Mrs. Julius Glrocco Jr., presIdenT of the organisation, said the rancellallon was voted “to hind of. clear the air (or a .vear.”
Earlier this month when the organiaztion has scheduled tryouts for its 13th annual minstrel show, which would have been staged in February, a group of Negroes turned out to make the protest. The Negroes were from Lakewood, which is in the Whitehall School district.
*	★ A
Mrs. Girocco earlier had received protests from members of the Muskegon Urban League about tile minstrel shows.
|gue that the United States and Jts I Western Allies put the Congo in its present state Of chaos. The (Communists flatly refuse to pay any part of the million needed to carry on the U. N. operation through this year.
Hammarskjold has warned that the whole Congo operation may have to be scrapped unless Uk General Assembly gets the mem-
er states to foot the bill quickly.
Hie United States announced it will help tide the United Nations through by contributing $14 mil-e than its normal share of the (Congo operation. It appealed to other U. N. members to shoulder their share of the burden.
The Soviets insist that the payments are not mandatory because of the Congo operation is not included in the regular U.N. budget.
They have been trying to abol-; ish • the Congo operation on grounds it was illegal from the! ! start and that Hammarskjold lading as agent for the Western ! powers.
! They insist that he take steps at once to put a stop to "uncon-iStitutional Congo expenses."
' The Soviets have little chance I of blocking Hammarskjold’s pro-i iposal that the Congo operation bc| imadb part of the regular budget. iBut the tack they have been taking may serve as the base forj their expected assault on ^retary general when the entire
have asked the government to spend at least $1.5 billion on public works water resource projects in the next fiscal year.
The moaey wotild be epent la the year aUrttng next July 1 on tSl indivtdwii pabUe woits projects and score* of projects Inclnded In the comprehensive MissouriRiver baabi program.
Funds would go to projects already under way, new jobs, and maintenance and rehabilitation.
A delegation headed by Henry H. Buckman of Jacksonville, Fla., president of the NRAHC, presented the request to the budget bureau Tuesday.
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to get Kennedy's ideas in order to "personalize the inaugur-
"How do you personalize an inaugural?’’ a reporter asked. Kennedy grinned and replied: "You do what’a traditkxial."
120 Countries for Rotary,
EVANSTON, ni. 4UPI) - Ro-| taiy International today announced admission of a rotary club in Libre-! ville. capital city of Gabon in Equa-I torlal Africa, to bring total coun-| tries represented in the worldwide service organization to 120. ^
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, I960
NINE
G0LUMBU9, Oil 4,90Mtl OMotttt in the «
Ohio Voter Hit Record Nov. 8
Turnout “ -1Sr»*1.'S2r Pianist Plays in Dark When Power Fails
— A ret M
the hr newly
The count became official upon completion of the official canvaae le office of Secretary of State Ted W. Brown.
Hie official cotiflcation ^ve
Ridiard M. Nixon John F. Kennedy
TRAVERSE CITY (UPI) -anhd Charles Rosen played for a half hour in the dark Monday 2,217,611 night during a concert at Trt-1,944,246 verse aty Junior High School
The faUure came as,Roeen was arthlg the second half of concert, llie audience of about 800 stayed in its seats while Rosen "CamavaL’
TELLS OF ROBBERY - Francisco Salvido, 100, appears in a Los Angelas court Tuesday to testify against two men accused of robbing him'. He said the men got his money and several ancient guns only because , they docto^ his whisky with knockout drops. He holds one of the guns he claims to have used as a lieutenant with Pancho Villa. •
Focus on Health
Phony Drugs Cut Down on High Blood Pressure
By The Associated Press | To a greater or lesser extent. Doctors this week report on si-!practically everyone has some lent heart attacks, empty injec-1 chronic ailment, says Dr. Paul tions tor high blood pressure. andiChodotf of Washington. D. C. I what makes a leader.	I After age 40, practically every-
PHONT DRUti	{one has some minor-toaerious
* a #	I ailment which he will carry to
Injections of a placebo-a solu-j'l^* K^^^e. But so, also, do the mil-tion havii^ utterly no drug ac- under that age. tion—have reduced blood pressure	★	♦	★
for three years in a number .of| How the ••well" people regard patients, and worked about as|UM obviously chronically sick or well as shots of a real drug given | unfit affects attitudes and behav-to others.	lior of the disabled, he adds. The
Oddly, placebos taken by presumably healthy ones can look mouth did not reduce blood pres- upon the obviously ill people with sure. University of Mississippi re-'disdain, with indifference, cruelty, searchers report.	'too much sympathy, with prying
It was the first time he ever! gave a performance in total dnrk-| neat, ROaen said.
New Zealand sheep number aboutj 16 head per eapita.
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* ★ *
A survey of middle-aged men living in cities finds 10 to 15 per cent of mild heart attacks can happen with no symptoms of pain or distress. Later, electrical readings of the heart gave the due these men must have hhd a blockage of coronary arteries. Regular electrocardiogram check-ups might detect a significant number of such silent heart attacks, and the victims m|ght benefit from treatments designed to pre^ vent further attacks, a Chicago research team suggests.
curiosity, or with pseudo-helpful-w'hich prevents the disabled! from doing as much for them-; selves as they might otherwise do. i
Too Few Yenkees Cause Cuban Club's Closing
SANTIAOO, Cuba (AP) — Santiago Golf and Cooatiy anb cloaed Tueaday, the economic victim of maao exodas of Amer-
thls second largest dty In Cuba.
A club spoketmsa tsM not enough members were left to
staff the club.

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THE POXTIAC i»RESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 80, 1960
Whb Knows? Maybe She*s Another Casey Jones
Mom Should Join fhe Men in the Model Railroad Line
Tlwre'i no reason why the OirM-mas electrfc train need have a •'tor men Only” tag on it.
Mother can get in on the ton, too.
♦ ♦ ★
At the first opportunity she ouid>t to grab the instructions that come with the set and get started reading them right away. With a head start on the expert advice, she will be able to offer helpful suggestions when the "men go to work on assembling the tracks.
There Is more to running a railroad than ronpling the ram. And there are certain facets of the operation that mother Is more qualified to handle than the men in the family.
Scenery setting, for instance. A nnodel railroad line that is worthy of the name before long will have its tracks running through miniature towns and cities, over bridges, through the countryside. Mother can — and should — direct the scene setting.
ha*
Mother can also endear herself to the boys by becoming a source of information on railroading lore and technical facts about the equip-1 in the train aet.
POP AND THE BOYS HAVE PAL - Ttey isuially hog the toy railroad, but Mom should get into the act, too. She can help set the scenery, and if she carefully reads all (he literature that comes with the train set, she might be given tom at the switch.
This year electric trains run the gamut from a replica of the famed Civil War wood-burner, “nie General,” to trains of tomorrow whidi include cars that launch missiles, a rocket or a helicopter.
Hefei
hi, she wttt be Invited to take her • turn at the switch. Who kaowsT may even be site operate the train.
What's more, she may get to like the idea of playing with the electric trains as mu^ as the male contingent does. If that happens, watch out, boys!
You might find the dinner hour gefhng later and later while Mom plays "Casey Jones.”
Oh Rubbish! They Have to Carry Out Garbage
BONN. Germany (AP) -President Elaenhewer's e omy campaign Tneadny bronght notice tbnt resMenta at the V.8. Embassy housing project here mast now earry out their gar-
federal^

dept stores
iristmas
Workers to Have More Say-So
Draff New Constifufion for Tifo in Yugoslavia
BELGRADE. Yugoslavia, UP communist party experts are draft Ing a new constitution for Yugoslavia.
President 'nto says it is Intended eventually to modify the directing role of the national govemmeql in the country's economy.
♦ A A
Yugoslav Marxists say this will be a step toward the purported goal of Marxist communism; the withering away of the state apparatus.
But Yugoslav ventures along these lines have aroused the wrath of the Kremlin and the drafting of such a constitution seems likely to widen the .Soviet-Yiagoslav cleavage over party theory.
President Tllo announced
in INt after dls<-uaaloa of the draft. He said It will be based on ‘The starting point of the In-‘ dlildual.aa producer and manager, with the atate appearing as a factor of roordinalion only." This indicated, Marxist specialists said, not more freedom to the
individual in the Western sense, but more power to workers' councils and local communes in the economic field.
It does not mean, they said, that the power of fhe Yugoslav Communist party will be reduced. It will be shifted to lower levels.
The Sdviet Communists have denounced the Yugoslav system of worker councils and loeal commune* as one of a number of theoretical deviation*
The conaUtutiOn promises little really new. It seems intended to combine two basic features Yugoslav-type communism: worker councils serving as managing bodies of factories, and local self-government through communes. 'The state will serve as the coordinating agency.
Communes, as the Yugoslavs seem to intend them, are looked upon as a means of decentralizing state authority, and thus are far
removed from the sort of “people'] communes” established by Communist d^a as a means ol heightening central government control. The Red Chinese, In fact, are loudest of all in the denunciation of Tito'a alleged devlatiaiia.
Suez Cana! Counts 94, Most Ships in One Day
PORT SAID. Egypt (AP) - Authorities reported 94 ships . through the Suez Canal Tuesday. The largest number to use the canal in a single day since it was opened nearly 100 years ago.
The record traffic was due to a 36-hour tieup when the 21,125-ton French tanker Berenice ran aground.
995
He lessons, na practice. Even II you can't read a note, you can sit down It this now Lowray Chord Orqan and play the fsnilHar mtlodioi you lovo'. And you won't outgrow this now Lowrey bocauso It's rosily two organs in one-dtsigned to meet ths musical needs of the whole family.
. ir Lowrey es a regular f-keyboard organ. Youngsters, loo, can loam to play It... ahher way,
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVE»*BER 30. 1960
THWpOJfTlAC PRESS, WgipimSDAY, NOVEMBER 80, 1960
'CitiM Hov» Probl•fRS^ Mutt B« Reco{^niz«cl^
^fEW YORK m -o Wbat ii the enemy of America’s betto' cities?
"Oor own capacity to develop enqogb flnt-nite political leaders and to keep their attention Ibcused on the problems of government in
whole.”
So answered Harlan Qeveland, dean of the Maxtvell graduation school at S^cuse University, in a speech Monday to delegates attending the opening session of the 3Tth annual congress of the American Municipal Association.
Heart Attack Claims Negro Author at 52
PARIS (AP) -r Negro author Richard Wright died of a heart attack Monday night. He was 52.
The Misslsslppl-bom writer, a loi«time Paris resident, is best known for hte noveis such ar “Biack Boy” and "The OuUider' dealing with the problem of the Negro in American society.
Maple tree sap has from 2 to 7 per cM>t sugar.
Ana Wonti Annmxcition to Grand Rapids Suburb
GRAND RAPIDS (AP) - P«h tttkas askiiig a vote on tion of two square mOei dustrially rfdi Paris Townriilp territory to the Grand Rapids suburb of Wyoming were filed Tuesday with the Kent County clerk.
The area tatdudes it least five malar industries and the present kent County Airport. It brings to 10 the nunriier of petitions askfag votes on annexation jof Paris
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Red Chinese Releagc *Em
War Criminals ^Repent^
TOKYO (UPI) - OommuniM China gave ample evidence today that the SO Chineee "war cilm-it released Monday were ao thoroughly brainwashed they no longer are cooaldered a threat to the Red regime.
New China news agency said Red Chinese President Liu Shao Chi
_______the rrerlease because they
had "really repented.'’
P’orty'live farmer Natlonai CUseoe army offleers, lachMUag at least IS lieatenaat geaeralt or ma)or generals, got their freedom. Tky had hem held for Boore thab 10 years.
Also released was Aisin Ghiorroh Pu-chieh, younger brother of Henri Pu-yi, wh<Hn the Japanese in stalled as puppet emperor ot Manchuria in 1934.
Pu-yi was among 33 prisoners who got out of prison last Decem-
Tbat means a woric camp and brainwaahing.
It said fiiat ‘‘guided by revMu-tkmary humanitarianism, patient education and refonnatloo” were carried out among the priaonas by the Red govenpnent.
The fact that these war criminals who had committed serious crimes have repented their ctlmea and turned over a new leaf proves once again the strength and'eor-rectness of the policy of the Communist party and the peoples government of reforming criminals,” NCNA said.
‘That rrieaae apparently was an qierimciR by the Communists to. determine if rehaUlitated prisoners would toe the mark once they were released or whether they would engage in what the Rads call "anti-party activities.’
♦ ♦ ★
The experiment must have been a success. New China said it "has greatly encouraged the war criminals still in priJK>n to continue to speed up their reformation.
The Communists describe their prison policy this way;
“Combining paidahnienl with leafenry and reform throogh labor with Meologtcal edneatioa In dealing wHh crbnlnaU.”
According to the news agency, lie prisoners had learned their
remoulding their ideology, change their outlook and contribute their diare to the huUdlng of sodalisra.'’ *	* dr
There was a good chance that If fiiey did not "remould their ideology’’ or "change their outlook," they would end up back in prison.
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Committee to Probe Indiana District Race
WASHINGTOM (UPI) - A Spec-
Chairman diftord Davis, Tenn., said the five-man committee thought the campaigns were too long and believed the public this view.
The committee scheduled public hearings (or Dec. 15-16 to gH the views of party and campaign leaders on the subject. Davis said he hoped to submit recommendations to the next Congress.
A NEW PLAN DESIGNED TO BE THE FAIREST YET TO REWARD THE CAREFUL DRIVER
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The Allstate Plan lets accident-free drivers earn savings over Allstate’s already low base rates, and charges higher rates for bad drivers.
The Allstate Plan doesn’t penalize you for traffic violations.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDXESDAY, NOVEMBER 80, 1960
Third, Already Set, May Add $100,000 to the California Tax Bill
LOS ANGEI^ (UPl) — It <XMt Lot Angeles County taxpayers 1169,797 for the two murder trlali of Dr. R. Bernard Finch and Carole lYegoff.
Pontiac Postmaster Busy on Flight Cache
With the Chrisdnat rush stating In the face, the Pontiac Post Office wA meeting a new task this week r— autographing letters.
Tomorrow, if all goes according to schedule,-the Post Office wfll mark lu first "first flight cache'
' > 1928 with dm advent at air mail service from Pontiac Municipal Airport to points north and
They say that the last first fli^t cache was back in 1928 adien, a short time, air mail service was available here.
The depresskm stopped that service.
ip eolleoton la every part et dM eoaatiy are eeadteg their
WEDNESDAY NIGHT-THURSDAY SPECIALSI
Neither trial resulted in a verdict and a third trial alieady has been sat for Jan. 3- That hearing might cost as much as an additional $100,000.
The first trial lasted SI days at a cost of |7S,sn and the see-end ran N days and cost 9S4.M7. Both trials ended in hung Jnrlee. The figures were made public by County Manager Lindon S. lihger at the request of county supervisors.
★	★ dr He said they included oidy direct
costs of the trials such as salaries and Juror expenses. Indirect costs such as lighting, maintenance and overhead could bring the estimate up to around $200,000, he said.
. The figureo did not tneind $i.M0 expenses eansed by keeping Finch, 48, and Miss Tregoff, 88, in Jafi.
"It should be noted that the district attorney is of the (pinion that his statutory responsibilities require the prosecution to seek the | necessary third trial regardless of: the cost."
★	A ★
The couple is charged with the I
fatal shooting July 18, 1959, of the' surgeon’s wife, Barbara Jean' Finch. 33, outside her $65,000 home j in suburban West Covina.
Start Renewal Plan in Royal Oak Twp.
ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP -Ground has been broken for the first single-family house in Royal I Oak Township under the area’s urban renewal program.
★	♦	★
( Completion	of	the	24	by	36-foot,
one-story, brick front house is expected about Jan. 1. It is being built by Apex Development Co., Detroit, at 8221 Groveview St., between Bcthlawn and ReimanvUle {streets.
★	★	★
Hie	house	will have	three	bed-
rooms, living room, bathroom, kitchen, dining area and a full I basement. It will be used as < model for similar houses planned’ jfor the township.
I GIFT BOXED FREE
InflBX ef several hoadred fetters
the special caaceUatiiw niarks.
Many of the collectm also request that the postmaster sign Jheir stamped envelopes.
So Postmaster William W. Donaldson complies as do postmasters in other dtles where air mail is being inaugurated.
Post OBloe officials here can-
X"
"They’re still coming in. It’s, possible we could have 300 byj tomorrow,” he explained.
W	♦	★
Monday I spent about 30 nutes just autographing the letters requesting it.”
W	■k	★
Tomorrow’s cancellation marks
on air mail letten will be dWemt any time thereafter. They will	that the stam
canceled on the date at Bnt tBtibt from Pontiac.
* * *
The first flight marks are a valuable addition to stamp eol-lections. Donaldson’s signature ki-their value even more.
N-Test Suspensions Cut World's Fallout
LONDON (UPI) - A team of British scientists said today the Big Three's suspendon of nuclear teet exidosians is paying dhridends in a decrease of radioactive fallout.
k *	♦
A report by Britain’s atomic research and testing unit at Hadwell said the peak in world fallout wv reached last year.
Of the 174 iron mines in the 1	.
I are in Minnesota, 41 are in Michigan and Wisconsin, 31
Hope Fad« for life of Missing Coed
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP)-Hope slowly , faded for the JUe Bctr-eriy Ann Allan, 19, a Waahiagton State University sophomore from Port	Townsend, Wgsh.,	who	disappeared	,	while on	a	Saturday
ni^t date with Larry Ralph Peyton, 19, a Portland State College student
★	★	k
Police said they were going on the theory that at least two men attacked the young coufde me they were parked in an isolated forest area in the hills northwest of Portland.
k k	k
Peyton’s body was found there Sunday night, crumpled in the front seat of his car. His skull had been fractured and he had been .stabbed 23 times.
Notiont Sign Trade Pact
mCTD (APWapan and •nmla today signed a trade and
THlKyEEN
UtemUMMatl
Now Mmy Wear
FALSE TEETH
WHkUHhWarry
to le million in the Japan already trade agreements with the Soviet Unkm, Poland and ' Czechodo-vakia.
identun braathi. Oet f%rmm el drug MunMn twtrywban. ■
Police said they had found no located in a number of sqittered trace of the girl in two days of combing the woods in that i
two DOCTORS ON DUTY
ASSURE YOU
IMMEDIATE SERVICE
EYE EXAMINATIONS
FILLING PRESCRIPTIONS
EYE GLASS REPAIRS
PONTIAC OPTICAL CENTER
103 N. Saginaw (across from Simms)	FE 2-0291
Hrs. 9:30-5:30 Daily Mon. and FrI. Eva. by Apmt.
A. A. Milas, O.D.	P. C Fainbarp, O.D.
%.95
Satin-gleaming nylon tricot laden with lace flicks out of the suds without a care in the world—cosmetic colors and ail! Sizes S2 to 42.
Colors: Candelglow. Dawn | Pink, Heaven Blue, Serene Sky Blue, Black and White.
Vanity FUr	DOR
HALF SLIP......
Vanity Fair	;
WALTZ GOWNS ..
Vanity Fair	 %50
PANTIB ........... 1^^
fast Scy ‘'Ckarga It'
f Holiday 8V2-II
seamless NYLONS by HANES
150
fast for "Ckorgo It
Buy tha box and uva! Luscious huas in misty-shaar hosa, beautifully gift packaged.
^	1^ SAAIfof AtA# ftV	*
SHOP FOR YOUR FAVORITE BRANDS AT YOUR FAVORITE STORE

for the male animal
uloin the safari of happy Christmas hunters who want to bag the best in smart sportswear for all the men in their lives. Listed here are just a few of the famous names you’ll find at Osman’s ... the store where he prefers to shop himself. Our shelves have never had a handsomer collection ... So we respectfully suggest that you drop in soon at either the Downtown or Tel-Huron Shopping Center store and avoid that last minute rush.
Jackets and Suburban Coats	Wonderfully washable Ban-	
by McGregor . f^om 81945	Ion Knit Shirts	
Sportshirts by McGregor	by Vargeo 		.88.95
and Donegal ..from |5.84	Rich Boutique Print Shirts		
Imported bulky pullovers	by Damon — from	88.85
by Robert Bruce from 818-8#	“Always Virgin Wom"	
HMdsome Strapster Slaeka by Esquire .... from I1S4S	Sportshirts by Pendelton 118.95	
Good-Looking Cardigans	Pur-BIended Leather Palm	
by Towne A King	gloves by Osborne	
from 818 J5	from	88.95
Both Stores Open Every Evening ’fU 9 P. M,
74 N. fAOINAW ST.
74 N. SAOINAW ST.
Layawfty NOW for Christmas
Charge accounts available
r ■ ■ t
iyOURTEEN
THE PON^hAC PRESS, WEDNg^PAY, NOVEMBER 80, 1960
E |_-H U RON
OPEN6DAYS-9:30a.n.to9M-
Hov« your ch«i» X-Roy by Hm Ooklond County HoolHi Doportmont Mondoy, Doc. 5th to 9 th
Pre.Clir|stina8 Sale!
"CORDANA" Pratty Solid Colon
The new oil cotton with rib that looks like corduroy — but has no nop! Easy to sew, lovely to make ' into shirts, full skirts, robes for JfQOYi. ' Christmas giving. In full pieces tj gf up to
Short Lengths on Sole.... 37c yd.
Soo o«r t#rf« vorioty of «w ^wing ki»« in nlco CMki, ii from $1.49 ug.
■ kailitH — from 9Sc and og. j ding tmaH ihtan, rhraad, gricoa |
THE PONTIAC PRESS
■4.
^VEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 80, 1960
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN.
FIFTEEN
as Show's as Exotic as an Oriental Bazaar
By MADQJONE DOEREN The Pontiac Branch, Woman's National Farm and Garden Association, staged its second Oiristmas show, “Holiday Entertainbtg” Tuesday at Pontiac Federal Savings and Loan Building.
Two gold and maroon sari cloths from Malaya woven together covered a Christmas buffet luncheon table arranged by Mrs. aUford Ekelund and Mrs. Vernon Abbott. A gold Madonna figurine from Rpthen-
burg, Germany,, centered an arrangement of gold-sprayed tulip tree buds from the Refund gardens.
A brass carafe and tray were brought from Kashmir, India.
Candles of stacked blocks flanked a gay table tree for Mrs. Paul Connolly’s “Children's Table" covered’^with red- . net over red satin. Tiny gnomes stood guard at each place set with holiday china.
For "Chrislmas Open
House.” Mrs. Walter WlUman and Mrs. Louis Schimmel used a red cloth printed In black and ^Id scenes, white certunic are and a chubby Santa Claus
A^re and Wnog a
An early American brass hurricane lamp and red carnations centered a round dinner-table setting by Mrs. Benjamin Jerome Jr. and Mrs. John Donaldson. Silver-bordered pale chartreuse china was plac^ on a sage-green linen cloth.
Mrs. Edward M. Buckley ^ Orchard Lake, president, Pontiac Branch, Woman's National Farm and Garden Association, pours tea for State President Mrs. F. Gordon Davis and National Extension Chair-
PMttac Prn. rh*ui
man Mrs. William McCollum, both of Bi/‘mingham. at the second annual Christmas show Tuesday in the Pontiac Federal Savings and Loan Building.
Symphony Weathers a Hard Test
By MAIUORIE EICHEB Wsmen’s Editor The PonUae Preas The Pontiac Symphony Orchestra tackled a difficult and technically demanding work with vigor and valor Tuesday evening at Pontiac Northern High School.
* Brahm's "Concerto in A ’Minor" for violin, cello and orchestra (the so-called “Dou-,ble Concerto”) was preSbnted the major work with John and Melinda Dailey as soloists. A sizable number including many students—was on band to hear this work that is seldom played.
♦ ★ ★
An adaptation by Brahms of the concerto-grosso form, the concerto places the solo instruments sometimes in conjunction with the orchestra, sometimes in contrast with it. It requires duality of the artist-strength and solo statement on
the one hand in the primary solo passages and sublimation and attentiveness to ensemble on the other. Both young people possess this duality in great
FABRIC OF MELODY
John Dailey, the more mature and experienced artist, wove an almost visible gossamer fabric of melody in the violin passages. His pure tone was nonetheless virile, meeting the demands of the first movement, yet ecfual to the sweetness of the second movement.
Melinda, still in her teens, executed the difficult opening passages -^or 'unaccompanied cello with grace and precision. This cadenza at the Outset is one of the most exposed 'moments a cellist must face. Hei precise and clean attack in the left hand was matched by her consistently smooth bowing.
Handicapped by a spotlight
glare that threw her music stand in shadow, and unfortunately placed so that she could noV see the conductor, she nevertheless performed with maturity, poise and innate musicianship that observers say should serve her in good stead whatever the concert. EXCELLENT ENSEMBLE
Both instrumentalists played fa' excellent ensemble In the ^ical second movup^.
'Their double-stop pwhges in the lively third Movement made them seem, on occasion, to be a quartet.
Director Francesco Di Blasi produced what some observers called his finest beat in this taxing number.
The orchestra outdid itself in rising to the demands of the composer. A trifle heavy in spots (the timbre of the solo cello requires exquisite modulation of the accompaniment I. the orchestra was not wholly at fault in this respect. The acoustics in the auditorium seem to vary with the size of ‘ the audience and the backdrop materia] employed.
Fulfilling its finest function
of permitting young artists to be heard in infrequently played classics, the'Pontiac Symphony Orchestra has Indeed grown in stature and wears well the accolade of fine civic orchestra.
BRAVTRA MOZART In addition to/the Brahms, the dramatic overture to Mozart’s "The Abduction from the Seraglid" was executed .with skill an^cert^ty by the •orchestra.	F
The flowing legato, sometimes florid mood of Puccini's "Intermezzo” from "Manon Lescaut" was laced with lovely harp passages.
, The percussive rhythms and s’peeds of "Malaguena ’ and the catchy vignettes of familiar tunes in Anderson's "Irish Suite" Were thoroughly enjoyed by the audience. With seemingly endless variations on folksong themes, the “Irish Suite" had some spirited pic-. cok) passages. The strings performed with color and charm.
In keeping-with the season, the encore demanded by the audience proved to be Leroy Anderson’s “Sleigh Ride."
Listening to the music box in the base of a revolving epergne from Nuernberg are Mrs. L. C. Sheffield of Motorway Drive, and Mts. J. A. Hubbard of Woodivard Avenue. They cov-
Ham Dinner Is Plionned
Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints will sponsor a ham dinner and hoiaar Friday at the Veterans of Foreign Wars Hall on Walton Boulevard.
Dinner will be served from 5 through 7:30 p.m. Fish also will be on the menu.
To T6Ik at Zonta
Dr. Lowell R. Eklund, director of continuing education at Michigan State University Oakland, will sneak to the Pontiac Zonta Club Thursday at Hotel Waldron. Subject tor discus.'don will be “Tht Pursuit of Excellence.’’
ered their table with forest-green felt festooned with plastic chain caught by green velvet bows. The tureen and mugs are of old English ironstone.
Wome.ns Section
Guest Was Rude: Abby
He Showed Poor Grace
By ABIGAIL VAN BLREN DEAR ABBY: Recently while dining at the home of friends, the host said “grace." I tliought
JOHN MD MEUHDA DALLEY
Musicians Hold Clinic
A clinic for string players was conducted Tuesday after-hoon tor some 150 grade school aiid junior and senior high school Instrumentalists by John and Melinda Dailey, guest artists at Tuesday evening’s sym-
Demonstrations of soIq and duet numbers in a broad repertoire were given by the soloists. Ranging ftrom Haydn through Sdunnaim and Schubert, the plecet were chosen
for illustrations of specific techniques.
An open question period of more than 30 minutes brought forth a variety of problems irom the young string players. Of particular interest wu the Lupot violin, a pricelm instrument, which Mr. Dall^ played.
Refreshments were served to the rapt young audience who held the gracious artists and their accompanist, Frances Farrar of Ann Arbor, more than an hour and a half.
you do it." was so upset I could hardly eat my dinner. Should he have answered me in that way, and what should I have done?
GRACTOUS DEAR GRAaOUS:	He
shouldn't have answered you in that way, and you should have made up a simple "grace." Understandably, you were caught off guard, but “We thank Thee. Lord, for this food," would have saved the day.
*	* w
DI^AR ABBY: I am 15 years old and I ne^ a bra, but my —**— makes me wear my’ i underthlri. I am so 11 say I don’t led weU to get out qf taking gym.
Now my gym teacher knows that something is wrong because I have missed so many gym classes. I can't tell her the realon I hate to take gym and my mother won't listen to me. Can you give nie some advice?
sign me JUQY (not my real name)
March Recital Plans Mapped by Music Guild
Amy Hogle and Charles Wilson (dayed two Rachmtfninoff selections for the Pontiac Music Guild Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Lester Snell on Auburn Avenue.
After discussion of plans for a March ;«cltal by Dr. Roy Underwood of Michigan State University,' members appointed Mrs. Lester Quye and Mrs. Carl CUlford to serve on the state coordinating council of the Michigan Music Teachers Assadation.
Mrs. William Hritsch. president. amwuncad the nuU meeting will be Dec. 37 gt ^ Berk-sMra Road bsne of Mrs/ Evwrtte Hfrrit.	^
Brunch was served by (be
DEAR "JUDY": Tell your gym teacher the truth. I’U bet she will be more understanding and helpful than you thought she’d be. Whan you arc hqnest with teachers, they cun petiorm "miracles/’
DEAR ABBY: We are the parents of (our wonderful adopted children. One of the boys is part Indian. He Is bright and lovable, but his skin is dariier tilan the rest.
When we take our family places, tbouglUlesa strangers gawk aJ us like we were (ram outer space. I don't mind that so much, but I'vs had people stop me in restaurants and on the street and ask. "Are they ALL adopted? Is the dark one Konunr Are they REALLY brothers hnd sisters? Where did you get theni?’’
Of course, when you adopt a child of a minority race you expect some problenu, but I hope some of your readers will . think twice before asking cruel questions.
PROUD PARENTS
DEAR ABBY: When b 17-year-(>ld giri goes riding with an IS-year-old boy, and he is driving the car, how close should she sit to him?
WANTING TO NOW
DEAR WANTING: Close enough to talk — but not close enough to be (diked about.
‘	.-4 ii,,.
A samovar brought from Russia in the early 30s ' highlights the old Russian table setting arranged by Mrs. William B\ Hartman of Watkins Lake, Pontiac Branch vice president, who adjusts a fruit centerpiece. Service plates bear the date of the reigning monarch, and wine glasses (not shown) hear the royal crest.
BPW Gets Reatdy for a Brunch
.Plans tor t Christmas brunch Dec. 11 were made by Pontiac Business and Professional Women's Club members Tuesday at a meeting in Hotel Waldron.
Following dinner. Marguerite Buckley, legislation chairman, presented a report on the National Legislative Platform BaUot which will form the plgt-lorm for the club at the national convention at Chiqi«o in July.	'
Mrs. Henry CampbeO, chairman of District 10 of the stale BPtV, was guest spehkor. 8he urged the Pontiac club td' belect nominees (or distriet office.	,
Eight Pag9$ Today in Wdmon's Soction
Fashioneties Award Pin to 'Idealist'
Mrs. WUliam Woodruff was the winner for losing the most weight for the week when the Fashionette Chib met Tuesday evening in Adah Shelly U-brary. Mrs. Matthew Fother-ingham was the winner last week.
Mrs. Virgil Lewis was awarded a pin lor reaching her Ideal weight.
* A A
Guest speaker was William Chase, local sales represqnta-tlve, who spoke on scales.
Flowing the meeting ir«m-her* visited the Michigan Ball Telephone Oo., where Charles J. Bi^qulUet presented movisa on "S^plrit of Christmas.”' A question and answer period followed Refreshments were . senfed b> the company’s Cafe-terip.
The nominating committee for the December election will be chosen at the meeting next
A pyramidal toothpick tree spraj^ with snow held tiny silver balls on a red “Merry Christmas” doth tor a dinner table by Mrs. WiUiam Rogers and Mn. Robnt OssteU. White ■ Wedgewood china and silver candelabra completed the aet-. ting.
^orful silk napkins brought from Thailand and place mats of vivid blue silk woven toi Bangkok were featured on Mn. Frederick Gaensbauer’s luncheon table. Flatware of bronze and buffalo horn contrasted with hand-blown blue glassware from Cairo.
It * it
Hand-decorated candles and Della Robbia wreaths of cones and miniature artificial fruits were displayed by WaterftHPd branch members'.
Small teakwood tables from Hong Kong were loaned by Mrs. Jack Habel and Mrs. D.
B. Fames tor individual arrangements.
A pyramid of gilded brussels sprouts in a black ceramic (MD-tainer was shown by Mrs. Le-Roy Small who also „u s e d sprayed white pine in a Japanese arrangement.
DRIED MATERULS
Dried materials in an .olive green ceramic bowl were arranged by Mrs. W. Ross Thompson. Peppermint - stripe red and white carnations trimmed Mrs. Robert Dunlay’s small living spruce tree in a stark white clay pot.
Angel hair in pale pink «v-ered a small tree trimmed with bells suggested by Mrs. C. G. Burke for a powder room.
Sleek red reindeer pulled green ceramic sleighs filled with Santa’s helpers tor the table setting suggested by the Lake Angelus branch.
Mrs. F. A. Voekler made ornaments of contact satin ribbon to go with Italian filigree for Mrs. C. R. Galley's es-paliered Christmas tree.
Gilded wreaths of raw macaroni made by Mrs. Ray Lan-ham, and Mrs. James C. Clarke's boxwood wreaths with, blue and gold balls vied for attention, as did swags and decorations by Mrs. Arthur Selden, Mrs. 0. H. Lundbeck, Mrs. A. R. Young and Mrs. Flo.vd Blakcslee.
The new look in gift wrappings was shown by Mrs, John Patterson, Mrs. Robert Oliver and Mrs. Robert Isgrigg.
Alternating at the tea table ICQ an-anged by Mrs. Harold Bjg 1,' Euler were past presidents oW the Pontiac Branch Mrs. Clif-^ ford T. Ekelund. Michigan Division Civic Improvement ^ Chairman and Mrs. Arthur W. Scldcn.
* -a *
Others were Mrs. Edward M. Buckley of On-hard Lake, Pontiac branch president:	Mrs.
William B. Hartman, first vice president; Mrs. Harold E. Howlett, second vice president; Mrs. William D. Thomas Jr., and Mrs. John H. Patterson, secretaries; end Mrs. James Nye of Sylvan Shores, treas-
Y Mothers Set Public Bazaar
The Mothers' Club of the Young Men's Christian Association will stage a public Christmas bazaar from 5:30 to 9 p.m. Satyntay at the YMCA on ML Oemens Street.
Special attractions will include Santa Claus, a photographer and a family style pancake supper.
Mrs. Darwin Spaysky is general chairman. Mrs. Lenworth Miner is In charge of publicity.
Committee chairmen arc Mrs. Kermlt Helms, baked goods; Mrs. Pearl Watkins, needle work; Mrs. Ray Stlger, rummage; Mrs. James Templeton, talent'show; Mrs. Miner, country store; Mrs. Leonard Cotter, make up; Mrs. Paul Storrle and Mrs. Neil Stranahan, white elephaiRs;
.Mrs. WiUlam Martin, fish pond; Mra. Mdvtn Yedlin. Mrs. Robert Wisdom, Mo. Donald Schroeder, Mrs. Ocil Rles and Mrs. Ray Ellsworth, pan cake supper.
James Bank will show movies. Teen Help chairmen will be Barbara McClure and
M|S. Jack Zahn and Mrs. Ellsworth will supervise the hand craft booth.
Proceeds will benefit the T’s program of activities for Pontiac area youth.
Sleep in Culottes
(NEA) — Culottes have now turned up in nightgown form. The top has a nightgown cut * and the culottes are so MU look like a skirt. Ntge
/
SIXTEEN

THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER SO, 1««0

MIRACLE MILE
It’s
Gift
Time ...
USE A LION CHARGE
Jean Elizabeth Slavin Is Wed to Gary L Day
Ladies*
Bulk^ Sweaters
and
Wonderful Orion bulky knit sweaters, plain or^holiday trimmed. White, black or pastel colors.
A Koeption in the home at the {M A SleTins of Woodbine Drive. Waterford Township, fbliowed die marriage of their daughter Jean‘ jElixabeth to Gary L. Day Saturday inoming in St. Benedict Oiurch.
I The Rev. Fergus A Burke solemnized the vows before an aitar decked with white carnations and
Silk illusion veiling attached to a crown of seed pearls and rhinestones fell to elbow length over the bridal gown of Chantilly lace and taffeta. The fitted bodice, styled with round neckline, and long tapered sleeves, extended into a ballerina^ength skirt.
Parents af the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. Lawrcaee Day vt Drive, -
White roses were arranged in a oolanial bouquet for the bride.
aa maM of h leaa Moo veil
pleeo tt velvet leaves. She ear-rted a casoade of yrilew daisy
On the esquire side were the bride’s brother Richard as best ^ man, with another brother, Donald, and DarreU Konkle seating some ‘ 100 guests.
MRS. GARY L. DAY
aocesaorles and a corsage of yoHow Pink roses accented olive green silk crepe sheath dress For her daughter's wedding and for the mother of ^ Md^zoom. reoeptfon Mrs. Slavin wore a dress I Her bat was- of white fur felt.
The New
VefJa
WaH
Permanent
Created by Andre
Special Purchase Ladies*
Wool Blazer Jackets
$||00
The gift she will want, at a special price. All wool, lined, in white, charcoal and red.
A SOFT, LASTING COLD WAVE
Complete with Cnttlnf and StyUnr
Open Friday ’til 9 P.M.
Vo Appoinlmoai Voodod —fmmediaie Serrico—
Beauty Salon
2nd Floor, Pontiac State Bldg.
Date Takes Girl Home, of Course
After the party was over, my son insisted that it was his duty to take her home. I think it was perfectly rkUculous as the friend with whom she came was going her way and could have taken her ri^ to her door. Was it necessary for him personally to see her home?
Answer; You do not say whether the friend offered to take the girl home. If he didn’t it most certainly was the duty of your son to do so.
Question: Will you be kind enough to settle an argument between my brother-in-law and myself: He says that it is not good manners for a man to shake hands with a woman when they are introduced. I disagree with him and have always been under the impression that it was perfectly all right to do so.
Answer; CMrectly, she should offer him her hand first, but it is no great error should he offer his.
Buy Smaller Shoe
(NEA) — When you’re buying a soft-shell pump (which means it has no boxing, only a soft leather lining), buy it a half-size smaller than your regular shoe size. Otherwise, when it loosens, it will be too large.
Special Punchase
Ladies*
Winter
Coats
$4|oo
•	CLUTCH STYLES
•	BUTTON STYLES
•	DRESSY BLACKS
•	TWEEDS
•	REVERSIBLES
•	NOVELTIES
The best value of the season in the most wanted styles and fabrics. Don’t miss this wonderful buy on coats.
Appropriate Worid Bibles for til ages, betutifuDy boand and printed co Worid Indo-Tcxt. lovdfeat at Imto papers... a gin to honor the joyous tradition «f Christmas.
A FOR FKR80NAL VSK— with study aids. White or black O. THB RAINBOW BIBIB ---------------------- Wndin^aoma zippeiad-Wjw with MI^oIoc pkaorial covai;
Hsriam Biblea, slender, compact, tupotbv booaA Newly act trps, steipUflM retacooa syrtem. Con-
OT	C. FOR THE FAMILY—RMim boya and giria. M-BOi wkb
cofdanea. rr.eO to •10.00.	«« Bibles, Coocotdanca Biblea, zipp«»3.sa
B. FOR YOUNG FOLKS AND many Ohistratioas, reader
STUDENTS—Cokwfbily Ulus- Words of Ouist in rsd. Fine E-FOR OLDER FOLKS-Larga tiated, ctiy-(o-iead print Maqy genuine leather or morocco bim^ print gmcioutly spaced. Leather iggs. •0.00 to •10.00.	00JBO; Lcathcrtex 00.00.
Op«n Every Night Until 9 P. M.
Christian Literature Sales
Oakland Ave.
FE 4-9591
Wed at Central Methodist
Pontiac Pair Married
Goad Tnate Today Question; WUl you pleaae aettle a family diaagreement as to what would have been the correct tiling to do in the following situation; Recently one si8ta<-ik-Iaw visiting another was very inaulted be
mairiage to LaMarr A Gneri Saturday evening in Centzal Methodist Church. The ceremony was per-formbd by Dr. Milton H. Bank ba-foce an altar banked with white dnyaanthemums. potopons and
move the ihoea she was wearing since they had steel lifts and would mark the new linoleum and recently scraped
Carl M. Skelley of WoodUnd Avenue is the brlde’i father. Parents of the bridegroom are BIr. and Mrs. Charles S. Green of Beach
She was given a pair of slippers to wear during her visit. Is such a thing permissible, or should riie have said nothing and lust accepted the marked fioorl
Answer; A abter-in-l a w should not have felt Insulted at being treated as a member erf the Immediate family, and asked to qoopen^ in pro-tectlng the new linoldum.
An Empire waistline, modified Sabrina neckline and long tapered sleeves of rosepoint lace enhanced the bodice of the bridal gown. The chapel sweep train featured an in-tert of lace from waist to floor. A crown of sequins and pearls secured the (aide’s fingertip veil of pure silk iUusksi. Her flowers •ere white roses and liUes of the
Questioo: My son had a house party and invited a giri who lives quite a distance from our bouse, os his date. He made arrangements with a friend of bis and his date who were also attending the party, torpick her up and drive her
Cora Jane Skelfey wore a prin-
Tho bride’s stater Jeoa was nald •( hsoor. Beverly Oreea,
8oe Dahlgra were brideomaMs. Hie attendants were gowned ilike In peacock bhw vtiveteeai sheath dresses, fashioned with Empire waistynes trimmed with satin. Each held a semi cascade of yellow /pompons, butterscotdi da^ pompons and Talisman roses. The same variety of flowers formed their bead pieces.
MRS. LaMARR A GREEN
Ichurch parlors, the bride changed to a lilac suit with black accessories for traveling. Pinned to her jacket was a corsage from her bouquet.
The couple will reside on Murphy Avenue.
Jeroma- Wood was the bridegroom’s best man. Ui Ronald (keen, Ernest Green, John, Skeliey and Charles Mrs. Qreea ehese
and were a eonage of yeOew
Following a receptkm in the
Use Rules
Washing
Garments
EAST LANSING — Many man-made fibers are wash-abfe, but you can’t assume they will remain washable whra woven into garments.
Bemetta Kahabka, clothing specialist at Michi^ State University, notes that new fibers have been coming to market too fast for most consumers to keep track of them.
A fiber manufacturer may claim special performance qualities for his product. Q»-sumers often accept these claims and apply them to all items wovtti from the fiber.
These same consumers may forget that the transfer of a fiber to a finished product can take it out of the laundry class. Dyes, linings, thread and trimmings, and even the construction of <lhe garment, often make dry cleaning necessary.
Miss Kahabka suggests consumers rely on labels to provide care instructions for each garment they purchase.
Profcssionol PERMANENTS Styled as YOU Like It!
IMPERIAL BEAUTY SALON
219 Auburn Ave.
FE 4-2878
Vo Appoint scrni 8T
H 8TSNSON. Owntr
Low, Low Prices on
Cislon Dninrin
tim yardstick
MIRACLE MILE
lHadau*s
for Juniors
Sites 5 to IS Miracle Mile SheppiMf C«
imi
101 3-28011
F rigidoirt mSET ELECTBIC
4S20 Dixie Hwy., Draytoe
Children'sShop
Mirada Mile SiMppiee Center
B. Tclccraak at Saaara Laka BS. n t-*St1 Oeea DaUj 'tU * F. M.
Pauli’s Shoe Store.
FLAY SANTA TO YOUR f AVORITI NURSII
HErilllCSHOE
L Uxmuac Uc tuviu
Olva har Cllaia..
CRaka are ioMar...i«reapar... eaerterl Ivy kar a peW taday.
NAG to M2J6
Pauli’s
Open FrUey ivet. 'Hi 9
SHOE STORE is N*. Sefinew St.
'■f
NTIAC
l^HE POyTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 30, 1960
SEVfeNTBgy
A June weddii^ it : planked by Carol Ann Merx,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William C. Merx of Waterford, and David R. Lynch, son of Mr. and Mrs. David J.
Lynch of Stvartx Creek.
New Baby Book to Be for Sale Dec. 15
flnt attempt at mintec ot|tl|M 1990a at Unity, potaah in Canada waa mada tn'mitea
Haalthy Babim, Happy Pars’’—an authoritative guide to baby care during die iiitant’a firat 12 months—which will be yiMtfhn by the BlaMstan divlalon at die McGraw-HiU Book Co. an Dee. 19. anawera the many queadona every mother has at one time or anothei asked herselt about her baby:
★	★ k
Q. When my baby is hungry, vtill it hurt him to wait for his leedingT
A. It certainly won’t hurt your baby to wait 5 or 10 minutes for a feeding. It doesn’t usually make sense, however, to keep him waiting half an hour just because it isn’t yet four hours by the clock since hia last feeding.
or third year, it depends on the development of the brain and not upon training.
* * *
IlNee and many other quastlans asked by inquiring parents are aa-' in “Healthy Bobk
t" by three dlst___________
Pwhatric authorities: Henry K. Stiver, MJ)., professor of pedi-
atries, University of Colorado School of Medicine; C. Henry Kempe, MJ)., professor and bead of the department of pediatrics, Unlvmsity of Oolorndo School of ; and Ruth S. Kempe, M.D., formerly chief of the dlvi-aion of mental hygiene, department of public health of the dty and oo(^ of San Frandsco.
CAROL ANN MERZ
Line fingertips of rubber work I ages to keep them from being gloves with small adhesive band-]punctured by fingernails.
Q. U I take a cocktafl, wiU it affect my baby while I am nursing?
A. One or two cocktails are harmless to him.
★ * ★ ♦
Q. When can my baby truly smile?
A. Sometimes between 4 to 6 weeks after birth your baby will be able to smile because be wants to, when he sees you or bears you talk to him.
Add 'Midas Touch' to Tiny Bathroom
’The budget may not stretch far enough for the pink marble bathtub you’ve always dreamed of, but eveiia tiny bathroom can be made infinitely more glamorous by adding just one or two "Midsis
For example, a gold-plated dish in a (luted shell design gives look of real luxury without fracturing the budget. A gleaming clothes hook in matching motif is utilitariah as it is decorative, I a handsome gold double towd ring will encourage even the kids replace their towels after washing!
The book was awarded the Seal (dApprovalofthe Physicians ICornidl for Information on (
ed wtth lively Hue drawfegs by Marty Uaks, Is divided Into two seettoos. The first seottoa fellows a montk by noonth question
eare-deals la detail with the many vital subjeofa saggestod by
The wide soqie of the material I illustrated by the following sample chapter headings: “The Physical Facts About Your Newborn Baby," “Your Feelit«s as a New Mother," “Health Care for Your Baby,” “Development and Learning,” “Weaning,” “Teeth, “Toilet Training,” “Common Problems of the Normal Healthy ChUd.” “Caring for the Sick Baby,” “Accident Prevention” and “First AM.”
Peg-Board Walls Ideal for Closets
If you’re buildii« a utility closet to hold housecleaning gadgets, remember peg-board.
Peg-board walls have a maze of little holes for holding hooks or| pegs. These make it possible to! hang much cleanliness equipment on limited wall space — mops, brushes, cloths, sponges, dustpans, brooms, and so forth. This assuresl a neater, more efficient closet—] and peg-board itself is sudsable.
Fine
Imported
China
53 Pc. Set
98 Pc. Set
$3995
DIXIE POTTERY
5281 Dixie Hwy.. Waterford	OR 3-1894
Consider the Cost i
Machine-made buttonholes are! sometimes best for sheer fabrics and for fabrics which fray easily.!
k ♦	★	j
Home economists at Michigan State University suggest you choose a pattern with no buttonholes when working on a fabric] which ravels a great deal.
Parisian Beauty Shop
Specializing in
Tinting —Dyeing Permanents
OSCAR BLOMQUIST
7 West Lawrence—2nd Floor
CHRISTMAS STORE HOURS START FRIDAY NIGHT!
COAT SALE!
BIG SAVINGS FUR TRIMS
OUR LOWEST PRICE OF THE REASON

Originally $110 to $129.98
‘93
A collection in luxurious woolens, regally crowned with fur. All your favorite styles in beige, blue, taupe, topoi, red or block. Choose your favorite fur of Mink or Beaver. Many styles hove removable collars to give added versatility! Custom sizes, petite sizes, misses' and women's sizes.
Magnificent Mink Trim
Originally $129.98 to $149.98
$
113
A coot just isn't a coot this year unless it's lavished with Mink. Arthur's brings you the cream of the fur trim crop. All ore famous moke mink trim coots reduced from our regular stock. Button and clutch styles, fabrics Include worsted faille, wool and fur blend novelty coatings. Misses' and petite sizes.
Orig. $35
ZIP-OUT LINING LEATHER JACKETS
Our Lowest Price of tha Season
The wonderful orlon* ond ■ acrylic and dynel that look like real fur. Oyster white, block and brown material. Sizes 6 to )6.
$28
Soft suple leather with removable zippar orlon lining. Toffy, sond, green. Sizes 10 to 18.
rr,
f EIGHTEEN
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 80, 1960
Garden Unit ]M«ries Jam«» o. to Entertain
'	Gnubrook
BraMh, Woman'! National Farm and Gai4in Asaociatkm, will bring their favorite foods to the group's first dinner for their husbi Sunday at tbe West Cranbrook «ltoad home of Mrs. George H. Glover.
r.1	♦	*	♦
Mrs. Henry C. Botsford of Bir-' mlngiiam. ways and means chair-aian, will be assisted with party plans by Mrs. Oscar Metey. Mrs. RubmII Norris. Mrs. James Tenney and Mrs. George McCbrmick Jr.
to be aacttoaed win be a unaU tmveilng bag of 18U vintage de-•ated by Mra. Ueyd Sherwood. Sequinned white elephant name cards will be worn by'all and table centerplrces will harmontee with the pink and white decor.
The annual Christmas luncheon at 1 p.m. on Monday will be at ' home of Mrs. Charles W. Taylor of West Valley Road. Bloomfield HiUs. Tbe photography committee will present a program “Club Activities Captured in Color.'’ Asaistlng hostesse.s will be Mrs. Bcrcy H- Hamly, Mrs. Laurence Herman and Mrs. Robert Holbrook.
Proceeds Will AM Hosptel Oiiiic
Nancy Lee Turnbull Wed
Honeymooning in New York City are James 0. Maas of Utica and his bride the former Nancy Lee Turnbull who exchanged wedding vows Saturday evening in Grace Lutheran Church.
White gladioli, roses and carnations on the altar formed a background for candlellghi rites read by the Rev. Richard C. .Stuck meyer.
Seeaivlag some sN guests pro-
MRS. JAMRS O. MAAS
WERE MAD!
BUT-
not quit* os mad as we were! Our customers ore all griping about the way their parking wos orbi-trorily token away. However—the response to our SALE is little short of fontostic!
FOR REAL VALUES—SEE HARWOOD
la the PmMsc Country Club were the Herbert Turabnlls of North Caos Uike Road. Waterford Township, with Mr. sad Mrs. Otto Mass of Utica, parents af the brMegroom.
Tbe bouffant floor-length bridal gown of white silk taffeta was styled with fitted bodice, wrist-point sleeves and bustle back. Seed pearl applique accented tbe scoop collar and bodice panel.
A butterfly veil of pure silk illusion was attached to a crown of seed pearl filigree. The bridal cas-cade of white carnations surrounded a t-orsage of white butterfly rosebuds.
Mrs. Donald Parsley altendfd tba brkto as honor matron with Janet Mack aad tbe bridegroom’s sister OsrsI of Utk-a and Desse-lee Abrlgbt of Dearborn, serving ns bridesmaids.
Colonial bouquets of white carnations complemented their waltz-length dresses of red* chiffon worn with matching hats and shoes and wrist-length white gloves.
The bridegroom had Donald Hagan of Utica for best man. Gerald Mack and Albert Newmier. also of Utica, and Donald Purtley cd Pontiac seated the guests.
The new Mrs. Maas chose champagne sheer wool with black coot and accessories for traveling. She is a graduate of Eastern Michigan University and was affiliated with Tri Sigma Sorority. Tbe couple will live in a new home in Utica.
A hat of gold leaves and corsage of bronze carnations accented Mrs. Turnbull’s dress of beige and brown Italian silk print. Pink buds eomplementeid the two-piece pearl gray brocade suit for Mrs. Maas, worn with green hat and accessories.
St. Joseph Women s Auxiliary Sets Bazaar
Slates Event for Dec. 8 in the Lobby
Memben of the Women’s Atbdl-tory of St. Joseph Mmy HoMnital will present their arnniel puNtc bazaar beginning at 6:30 ajn. Dec.
will benefit tbe hoqittal’s cUMc.
Biggeet affair of the year for the auxiliary, the bazaar wU fea-
The clinic at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital will benefit when the auxiliary holds its big annual Bazaar Dec. 8 in the hospital lobby. Active committee members
(from left) are Mrs. Clifford F. Dick of Birmingham, Mrs. Austin Sansone of Marlborough Road and Mrs. Joseph Spadafore of West Iroquois Road.
So She Can Sew
can make doll clothes, pothohlers, aprons, and after a bit of practice (UPI)-A new sewing machine -something to wear. The machine is designed for use by giris between!i» weighted so that it won’t move the ages of eight and 12. Thelon the table during operation. The machine is not a toy, but a mini- threading device also is a airapU-ature on which a c|iUd actually! fled mechanism.
Better Each Yeor
(NEA) — Those jumbo beads get bigger. lighter and prettier each season. This year, they come in any color and length you might want. Plum is one of the newest shades.
$14.95 Wool Slacks	Now $11.95
TOPCOATS SALE PRICED
Voluos Up to $69.50
NOW *52®°
$2.00 Men's Ties
Now $1.59
SPORT COATS SALE PRICED
Voluos Up to $49.50
NOW ^32^®
Inst in Time toi Ckiiitmii!
Present the mon in your life with o 'Horwood Gift Certificate' in ony omount-Then he con select o gift of his own choice; whether it is in furnishings, reody-mode garments or a fine Harwood Custom-Tailored gorment-Wc'll guarontM his foith in Sonto Claus!
PONTIAC'S LEADING ^TUXEDO RENTAL SERVICE FOR ALL OCCASIONS
H
RANDOLPH
ARWOOD
cvma TJUMis ui ciOTBim
'Teatlae's Fseisit Ofswlsg fters fw Man’*
901 wen HUION it TELECUni FE 2-2300
Choose His Favorite Brand from His Favorite Store . . . Osmunds
Pendleton'
for Christmas
The kind of gifts a man picks for himself
This name ‘'Pendleton" has special meaning fo^active men. They know it like they know the names oif the best guns, ffie best fishing equipment. For as long as they can remember, Pendleton has stood for pure virgin wool ... dyed, spun, woven and tailored in the beet tradition of Ongoa aefto< manahip. What’s more, the man who alreMy haa one bivariaUy wants aiMther. That’s why you’re giving a man hid kind of gift whenyou ghreao* with the Pendleton label on it. Our holiday stock is in...make yoor Pendleton eelections early.*
Wives Want First Floor Laundry Room [JSioSwS.
Recent trends Indicate that to time and labor-saving equipment, a convaient tor the laundry is desired homemaken. In fact, laundry room on the fpt floor is preferred.
enis. Gifts from Italy, Qroeoe ani Portugal also will be an disptay.
In colorfol array on another table will be aprons (some from Portugal), Hnens and numerous other bazaar items.
A new specialty this year will be % baby booth which will carry everything from rattles to diapers. i The "sweet tables,’’ <tooorated in ' goM tinsel, will feature fudge, cakes, cookies, ro bread and pies.
Toys, dolls, books, Chrisi deeoratioM and Christmas will be sold, and at a perfume, cologne, dusting bath oil and other beauty/ will be available.
nialrniMi tor are Mrs. Pbiieal Mrs. Roheri Heading comhiitteea Clifford Dick qf Birmingham, Mrs. C. A. Wrigljt: Mrs. D. L. Dacy. Mrs. Austfo Sansone, Mrs. Peter Davidson,/Mn. Verne Drew and Mrs. Jpd^ Spadafore.
Others are Mrs. H. M. Simpson, Mrs./Edwin Dobsld, Mrs. E. L. McManus, Elizabeth Halfoenny,
---- ^	j. j
! This stands to ^ason, because it permits th^ homemaker ! accomplish ott^r tasks while Jier ; efficient aoapS, detergents, washer, and dryer do their work “un-aupervised.’’
White Shrine Sets ^ Fair anci Dinner
The sixth annual Christmas fair and chicken dinner of Pontiac White Shrine No. 22 is slated from 2 to 6 p.m. Saturday in Roosevelt Masonic Temple.
Dinner wiD be served from 5 to 7:30. Fair attractions will include booths with hand work, homemade jellies, pickles, baked goods and Christmas gifts.
answer to youT toughest gift Droblei
Evans
w# carry s complsts selsctioa of the finest slippars made ... Evans . . , crafted by men who have the iaslde stsry on softness and comfoit. Como in and sec all ear Evans Slip-
JadtetllTSO • Madtine-Washable Sport Shirt $13.96 (AU S-M-L-XL) .
Robe 136.09
Luy’Awwy Now tor Christmas
MMy-Away no
DOWNTOWN POl^TIAC 51 N. Saginaw TEL-HURON CENTER Huron at Telegraph Beth Btone Open Evasy Ivaalat tflautotoms
SHOE STORE
“SAoej for the Entire Family'
20 W. Huron Street	FE 2-3821
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 80. 1960
NINETEEN
SEW SIMPLE
By Eunice Farmer
"Deiir Mrs. Farmer: Ail thciuroy, the nap should run UP. To guys in our fraternity have, the'test the direction of the nap, hoid
troubie. We all tike khakis and cords tapered at the bottom of the legs, but all the pants we can buy are too wide. There's a sewing machine at our house and we will try to fix these ourselves if you will tell us how.
The Kappa Sigs
the fabric op to your body. When you run your fingers from shoulder down, the fabric should feel rougher to the touch than it does when you run yiwr fingers up. The color will be much deeper nd/richer looking when cut correctly. You also will notice that .the nap will not flatten out and
that you4 boys are
as the back of your skirt.
Girls Hold Initiation
Marilee Cross was hostess to the Ganuna Zeta Mu Forum of Pioneer Girls at her home'in Rochceter lor the formal initiation Tuesday. Mrs. Walter Rawldd. mm ef
Just to
(aware of a column such as mine flatters me so much T am almost ready to fix them mj^lf. You will be happy to know that It won't take more than a fe^ minutes to taper these slacks.
Stand-by High School Plays Passe Say Morn's
office wouh] he elect* Twenty-five yeue old .In 19*1. ^OOd I Sn
Fit for Public
caadiellglit' eerei^y for new w	^ven Shakespeare,
s Owen Hovis, Pat	^
EAST LANSING - “WUlie’.SiCome by First Dress Suit" and other high^ed. Unfortunately, it usually turned school plays of its ilk are' rapniout to be someone as diaiiiterested idly going into mothballs. Don'^tjas the chemistry teacher." be surprised if you’re asked to Now universities are graduating, .	_
^ a ticket to tlto senior Pr^«c- ,nd schools hiring, teachers spe- ’
tion of a recent Broadway hit - ,	. ________.	. ..sons connected with_ the produc
AETA has grown from 91 members in 1936 to more than 4,000 today. One of its publications alone, "High School Theater News-
1.	Turn the sla< and place a pin a^he point where the top of the xniff comes. This should be done .dn both the in-seam and the side ^am of each leg.
2.	Rip th/ hem that forms the cuU. /
3.	Decide how much smaller you wan tl^lower end of the slacks to he apd mark each seam at the place where you placed the pin.
t Take a yard stick and mark a straight. line from this mark you have just made, up to the pocket on the side seam, and the crotch at the in-seam. See illustration.
5. The seam from the placed the pin, down to the end of the pants, must be straight. If
‘Dear* Mrs. Farmer: l sent your leaflet with instructiona bound buttonholes and must teil you thdt I^iave never had them turn out so nice before. I’m showing all my friends how you make them. Is there any place I would not use this type of buttonhole?” Your Fan
If everyone has the same kind of luck with them that you have, will have overcome one (rf the haxards of "that homemade look.'
fhis type of buttonhole for^ anything you are making for boys or men, such as vests, sport jackets, sport shirts, etc. If you using small buttons on blouses talkH^ dresses such as shirt-! waist dresses, you probably will iuse a machine-made buttonhole. It Inside Old I would be safe to use them on any-..j.	man-tailored.
KiMwIes, Linda Mollralh, Mercer, Aiiee Peterson, Mary Thompson, Jaa Watts sad the hostess.
Serving as officers for the year ire Kathi Yeager, president; Sharon Vasi, vice president; Marilee Cross, secretaiy; Gwen Hovis, treasurer; Nancy Elam, historian; and Charlene Kennedy, world observer.
Leaders Mrs. John Stepleton, Ire. Marvin Compton, Dene Barker and pals of each giri were
As the current headquarters for Fsr example, a Michigan Stale the American Educational Thea- University Speech Department tre Association, the Michigan Stete graduate has made University Speech Department is both hinlselT and the Michigan in close 4puch with developments high school Iq which he teaches of this sort. Dr. John A. Walker by Inaugurating a school proof the MSU staff is AETA execu-| gram that Includes a television five secretary-treasurer.
formance of Shakespeare each duclnc better-Wjrttten play, these I	**
days, but they’re giving them I	one-act plays.
tion of high school plays.
# * ♦
Special divisions have gaiUzed for chiOren's theater and secondary theater and another ' been established dn a provisional basis for community theater, considered adult education by AETA.
DENVER fUPIl -’The Denver Board of Health and Hospitals was thinking twice today about whether mom’s cooking la fit for public consumption.
On Monday the board rent letters to church and school organizations, pointing out that a city ordinance prohibits sale to the general public of food prepared in kitchens not subject to sanitary inspection.
>st of the growth In the « ployment of wives and mothers i would ii has come about during the last! two decades;	I
tenget ea«M eantrtlwte hame-dtabqs to bnkn
The dear Implicatioo in the law is that mother's cooking may not be fit to eat.
★	*	*
On Tuesday the board sent out another letter, withdrawing the first letter while the question is reoonsideilMl.
*	*	w
"We certainly do not wish to deprive any schcxil or church group from raising funds through this customary and established means," Dr. Francis M. Chndlin, chairman of the health board, said.
According to population experts, less than seven per cent of American women never marry.
"Time was,." says Dr. Walker, "when the principal would be wondering who’d direct the senior! play this year. Ihe first man to
If you would like to have Eunice Farmer's free leaflet. "Bound Buttonholes" send a stamped, self-j addressed envelope with your request to Eunice Farmer in care| of The Pontiac Press.	j
Players Slate Tryouts for New Production
Tryouts for the Waterford Town-j ship Lakeland Players’ new pro-If	"Lh«Ues in Retirement,"|
ywllon^ make'^lTstn^^	^	j™™	®	^
cuff will not turn up right. |^ti^«y and ^m 2 to 4 p.m. 6 When turning the hem upiS»?^ "* Community Center.'
again, it may be machine stitched. ^ The machine stitching will not show because it will be slightly under the finished cuff.
7. Turn up the cuff on the old crease marks, press and task the cuff slightly at each seam. Good luck!
The play, under the direction of| it Jim Starnes, is a suspense drama! y and will be presented Feb. 3 and 4.{ Duward (Duke) Chaffee is the,pro-| d ducer and president of the Lake-e land Players.
Pontiac area residents have been invited to try out for parts whether or not they are members of the; "Dear Mrs. Farmer: Now that'group, according to Starnes.
the season tor velvets and cordu-|	--------- ---------
royw is here again, would you' i i r 1 ■ ■ please tell us about the nap?" LCX)K TOf Lining
Mrs. L. J. (NEAi — If your rlolhes ' *	*	*	must last a long time, look
First, and most important, eve^j for lined skirts and dresses : piece of your pattern must be laid, when you go to shop. These in the same direction when using hold their shape far longer napped fabric.	|	j and look better. Hiey cost a
With velvet, velveteen and cord-1 bit more but they are worth it.
for a lifetime of proud possession
OMEGA

IK VtLVOW •<
HERE is one of tha most distinctive gentleman's watches sre've seen. The 14K case is thin u a coin and the round dial with its elegant, thin-stroke markers is smartly accented by the square-comers of the case. Within is the world-famous Omega 17-jewel movement
REDMOND’S
/•weJers—Optometrists
II N. SagiMm St,	Ft 2-3612
Authorizfi Omtt* Afferv... Oficial Vaich of tht Olympk Gtmri, Rom$
Look Your Best for the HOLIDAYS!
All beauUfuUy cleaned through
GRESHAM’S
expert cleaning processes
6()5 Oakland A\t'
FE 4-2579
Sole at Both Storea—BIRMINGHAM—PONTIAC
NOW
CLEARANCE
of Our
Famous Make
Cashmere Sweoters Skirts, Blouses

OFF
Discontinued styles and colors-Buy them for yourself or Christmas gifts
"Christmos Gifts'
and different for the many friends on your "Gift List"
that ore unusual
hop
BIRMINGHAM
tcM
UnJwmuL
yum. oitA/mllju

We have a wonderful collection of unusual
gifts at tiny prices. Lrghtheorfed gifts like our feather duster—useful gifts like our bog and gloves sets—delightful gifts like our imported ski boot lighters or grapes mode of soap—We invite you to corne in
while our collection is complete.

QjuuSTnioL.
'Men's Night"
Thurs(day, December 1st from 7 to ]0 p. m.
at the
Bloomfield Fashion Shop
Telegraph Rood Store
Shop leisurely for the gifts she will love" . . They will be very beautifully wrapped for you .	,
MODELS ... and REFRESHMENTS will be served . . . reserve the dote to be here.
____plaid
Boa o/fuL dtvtaul ^*io.qsr*
TWENTY
JL
THE PONTIAC. PRESS. WEDNESljAy.-ltpVEMBER 80, I860
HOUDAYS AHEAD
To make the best “headway” into the coming festive season, let our stylists create a smart new coiffure for you . . . Come in now.
BUDGET DEPARTMENT
PERMANENTS
$6.50
$8.00
TONY’S fC
Main Floor	35 W. Huron	FE 3-7186
STYLE SHOP PRICES START AT IMJS
Twicky' Tweeds
Tweeds are tricky. Home economists, at Michigan SUte University note' that tweeds may be woven of tiny bits of bright color, yet the overall effect may be gray when the fabric is viewed from a distance, Whether you shop for a new tweed skirt or a new tweed upholstered chair, step back and check the general color effect.
Make 'Clouds' for Your Yule Guests
Ww 1
attn oa ** "douda"
YORK (UP!) - Mini-^	It float on
‘douds" make instinctive table favors for holiday. guesU, and they’re as easy to prepare as a packaged pie.
Oomhine two or three cups of soap flakes or detergent with a little water. Beat with a
PARAMOUNT BEAUH SCHOOL
FHONE FEDERAL 4.2E52
haiHi or electric mixer until thi suds have the consistency of meringue. Drop a tahleapoen of suds on waxed paper, foil or cookie sheet, and imbed a three-inch candle hi the center. Sprinkle each doud with gold or silver glitter. If place cards are needed, inaert one in front of each candle.
Let the douds dry at least a day, then lift them carefully from the paper with a spatula and pot on the table
Be Kind to Face
Imagination la the Answer
Get Out of Clothing Rut!
(NEA) •
s Uulve ! U clea
I
Since skin blem-oily skin, be cleanse off aU your make-up thoroughly before going to bed. Make-up contains oil and must be removed to permit the pores to "breathe.”
MAKE CHRISTMAS WISHES COME TRUE WITH WONDERFUL GIFTS FROM
MONOGRAMMED
GLASSWARE
the pcrHonalized gift of distinction and elegance!
WIGGS
3 Initial Script Monogram Glassware
Hand-applied raised enamel monogram in choice of black or white
SET of 8	*10 DOZEN *15
An ever-welcome gift, monogranuned glassware reflects the thoughtfulness and good taste of the giver. And this fine collection is distinctive for its unusual inter-twinning script. Hand-applied in either black or white, the raised enamel letters are fired on,for chip-proof beauty. Choice of 5, 7, 10 or IJ ounce drink glasses and 8" diameter Hors IXouvre plate. Allow 3 weeks delivery.
Fine GJosswore with Hond-Cuf 3-lnitiol Monogro^n
SET OP • $395 OOZIN *4”
Sparkling clear gla.ssware with deep-etched hand-cut monogram in diamond pattern. Glasses available in all popular sizes. Choice of rounded or square sham bottom. Buy for gift giving— or for your own holiday entertaining I AUow 3 weeks delivery.
Glasses also available In plain shell bottom and stemware. Matching pitchers In several styles.
Single Inifiol Monogram Glasses
In Queen’s Lusterware
SET of 8
$495
Graceful, largo script initial and wide band of rich-toned Queen’s Lusterware decorate these heavy crystal glassee. A truly elegant gift for anym;ie on your Christmas list. Almost every letter in stock for Immediate delivery.
See our complete Miectien of gUiiwsre — deteni ef EtylcE end detigni from which to choeie!
FESTIVE
HOLIDAY
CANDLES
Many slzr.s, shapes kinds . . U) add the beauty of candlelight holiday festivities!
Imported Italian
CHRISTMAS TREE LIGHTS
$195,oS395
Genuine imported lulian llghu I . . fully guaranteed! If one bums out. the rest sUy Ut.| Choose from the popular “tiny lltes" and several beautiful ’•flower" designs.
Of radiant solid brass, these chimes play a merry tune when the candles are lltl Imported from Sweden, chimes come compactly boxed for easy mailing and are quickly assembled. A delightful gift (or youngsters on your Christmas listl
OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL CHRISTMAS!
LAMP TABLE by ETHAN ALLEI4
In Solid Vermont Rock Maple
special
$10
$14.95 Value
You'll appreciate the truly fine quality and lovely hand-rubbed finish of this Ethan Allen Uble ... and it’s such an extra qieclal value at just 810! Use it as an end table, lamp table, at the bedside, or as a*telephone stand.

CHIP V DIP in Buenilum and Crystol
Christmas Gift sure to please a Hostess!
$395
This handsome chip ‘n dip server is of Buenilum — a special meUl alloy that is buffed and pqlished by hand to give the pearance of gleaming silver. Will not tarnish.
FINE ENGLISH DINNERWARE
by Johnson Brothers
50-PIECE SERVICE (or 8
$2495
24 WEST HURON ST.
Pattern shown is STRAWBERRY PAIR - a wide bonier design of strawbsrrles m a lusekitts deep-pink tone tn permanent under-glaae colors. Service for • IncluOM 8 each of dlnnar platee. bread and butters, salad platea. frulU, cups and taucsrs — plua vsge-uble dish and platter. We also have three other famous Johnson Brothers dinnerware jiattems in stock: THanrest Time Sown,” "Rose ChinU”, and "nien^ Vinagt.’’ ,
9
OPEN STOCK PIECES AVAILABLE
FREE PARKING on ony downtown lot. Wo will stomp your ticket.
By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN We get into such ruts! I was Just
fun it would add to life if we weuld live a little more Imaginatively, if we would express our individual tastee with less fear and timidity. We are apt to'drees alike, to furnish and decorate, our homes in much the same manner, to read the same books and do the same things.
Yet tboae women who are known fw their flair use a secret ingredient which is available to everyone. According to opera star Patrice Munael, this secret is imagination. Mias Munael, known as a woman who has the ability to make the unique work for her, says:
Add a flattering, eye-catching hat to a simple outfit which is much like everyone else's, and in a flash you have created something unique for yourself.
Skip These Presents if You'd Please Dad
By RUTH MnXETT Usually at this time of year fill a column with gifts r don’ want to find under my Christmas tree. But this year the most senseless. silly gifts are being suggested for men instead of women. (Maybe with the mink-trimmed toothbrush, manufacturers ran out of ‘‘cute’’ gift ideas for women.)
80 for loyal men readers of this column I’ll make a list of gifto I hope no man will find under his Christmas trer^sch and every one taken Iron an honest-to-goodneos advertisement ta Just one girt catalog.
First on the list is the "personal holiday ringing bell shorts." guaranteed to make a wonderful "conversation piece." The ad for these frankly admits they aren't completely practical — what with hav-ig a handpainted Santa on them. But the implication is "Who cares?’’ so long as the I
's cap rings with every step its wearer takes—a conversational ice breaker in any circle.
Next on the list of what not to give a man for Christmas is a beatnik, badly in nee«i of a .shave.
bearing the receiver's name. This stubble-bum is not only to hold used razor blades but to prod its owner into shaving often enough not to look like a bum himself.
And then there's a dental plate repair kit — for the do-it-yourself addict. This little gift goes from the extreme of the utterly useless to being just a shade too practical, don't you think?
And let’s not forget balry Harry for the mao who loa’t having much luck growing hair on his own head. Ceramic Harry comes bald, but fill him with winter and he sprouts green hair all over his head.
The list of what-not-to-give-a-nan wouldn't be complete without mentioning the "crazy mixed-up insult tie"—42 inches of printed insults that are guaranteed to make 'Dad fall over in fiU of laughter." Unfortunately there was no warning in the advertisement for this funny, funny necktie that might use it to strangle anyone who put it under his Christmas tree.
W Jacobsen':

Jacobsen's
FLOWERS
cordially invite you to attend our Annual
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY
December 4th, 1 to 8 P. M. ,
At Our Lake Orion Garden Town ond Greenhouses*
CHRISTMAS
FANTASY
Ideas for Holiday Arrongements Poinsettos
Unique Candle Designs	Unusual Gifts
A Foirylond of Flowers Bring the Kiddies
SANTA Will Be There!
JACOBSEN'S
r aelf-expreaaloa aad highlights your personality. Foi* Instaaoe, everyone has a plain and simple p^t that It a Joy to wear, but looka veiy mneh like everyone elae’s simple anit.
I add n flnttertag. eye-cntchfaig hat, ahd volla, that outfit Is mine nhme.’’
In the area of clothing nothing excites Misa Munael as much as hats. She owns every shape and kind from tailored cloches to plumed evening hats and uses them constantly as the personality touch of her costumes.
I think that many women have forgotten that a hat can dramatlw and personalize the simplest outfit I also can add an extrenaely flattering touch with line and
Patrice Munsel even has a reverslUe hat. a doebg that can be turned inside out—paliley for ddytime and on the reverse, white mink for evening.
TUs mneh traveled, tainted
herselL One la a resert wardrobe of B pleeea, all ef thens red. pink or white cotton or organdy.
By interchanging the different parts she can create outfits for every occasion and hour. For Instance, mw beachrobe, by reversing its side, can be worn as an evening skirt. And all of this fits into one suitcase!
★ W ★
Patrice Munsel is equally imaginative in the decor of her home. She has taken unpainted furniture (or stripped the finish fronj old furniture) and applied decorative designs of her own ■fancy, or antiqued the older pieces with varioua spray paints (gold, white, grey etc.) and then outlined the carved designs wKh srt 'brtish to create shadow effects.
She believes In strong colors In clotbeo and decor. She said. "Most women have the Imagtna-tton to dieoB tiMtaoelveo and their honiea with lof
timid to follow their owns Incllna-
It whether it's wearing a charming hat or doing the living room in a startling color, imagination pays off in compliments and in self-satistactlon.’'
.. also pays off because It scratches the creative itch we all have and adds color, novelty rnd variety to daily living.
★ ★ ★
If you like to have my levflet ’Hobbies’’ send a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request for leaflet No. 86. Address Josephine Lowman in care of The Pontiac Press.
Cape Is Plastic
That popular fashion, the cape, now appears as an easy-to4lip4Mi raiheape, made of polyethylene plastic — full enough to wear over suits and coats, and with a hood to protect milad/s hat and hairdo.
To remove rainspots and other soil. Just sponge the plastic surface clean with warm eoep or detergent suds and rinses — or give it a audsy "bath" in the tub.
Allow nail polish remover to soak for a few minutes on hardened paint spots on floors. Then rub off with a cloth and wash warm suds.
ATTENTIONI
Ladies—
ARCHIE BARNETT
Give “Him” a New Suit or Ceat for Christmas!
If H« Hoi Bought Hit Clothot Hort During fho Potf 5 Yoon
WE HAVE HIS^ MEASUREMENTS!
Or Bring in His Suit Coot or Odd Ponto-Wo^ll Know His Size!
iur II Mow — charqf U — Pay A/lar Christmas
IBamett's
150 NORTH SAGINAW ST.

THE"PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 30. I960
ONE COLOR
TWENTY.QNE
Nylon Brush Is Better Choice for Thick Hair
' (NEA) — With the 'frowiiy popuUritr of nyloa hair-bruahM, a oortroverey haa developed over the relaUve mer-Ita of the nylon and natural briatle bruahea. Actual^, you may aalely uae either.
★	★	★
For coarae or unruly hair, the nyldh bruah la far better. Juat be aure that in picking a nylon bruah. you buy a good one. Run your hand ovW the briatlfea. They should be neither aquared	off	nor	shani.	But
there’s no need to worry about this in a good nyltm brush made by a dependable maker. ★	★	★
If your hair is	soft and	fine,
you’ll probaUy prefer a nat-ural bristle bruah. On checking aome of this country's top hairdressers. I found th^ were divided about 50-50 on the subject. Some clung to the notion of the natural bristles, others wouldn’t use anything but the nylon. And some had compromised by having bruahea made up especially for their salons with bristles that were a mixture of the natural bristle and the nylon.
Here's How to Brighten Your Eyes
Beautifying your eyes with maka> up can be an exciting and beneficial art. Makemp can make your eyes look larger, your lashes longer, and you can even <;|iange the shape and slant of your eyes with a tingle stroke of color.
, * ♦ ★
An important phase of eye bMU-tification is the art of properly lining the eyes to give them shape and definition.
IV foUowtng tips, as suggested by beauty authority Max Fae-
First, nuke the upper eyelid taut by gently pulling the outer comer toward the temple.
Use either an eyebrow pencil or fluid eyeliner and draw an even, predsion-Uke line along the lid next to the eyelash roots. Begin at the inner comer of the eye and extend the ctior beyond the outer comer in the desir^ shape.
Remember to start with a fine line and gradualb' widen the line to about 14 of an inch.
Also, as you draw the line, allow some of the color to touch the' eyelash roots so that there will be demarcation between the roots and the line itself.
Christmas shopping problems arel Among young people looking to-simpUfied for the young nuui look- ward a future together, the cedar lag lor something special for his chest is a welcome and dseful gift favocite girl.	litem.
ot SibUys Miraclt Milt Shopping Ctnttr Soft loothorsssond
light as a feather!
^(UUlA&tSSIIU
[Comfy Slippers
Over 30 Other Daniel Oreen styles and colors available at Sibley's for Christmas giving.
MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER
8. Telegraph at Square Lake Rr. 0»mi Mm., ihra Ssi. IS SJI. 'Ul t P.M.
SHOES	USE TOUR SECURITT OR
oaa.vrajij»	INTERNATIONAL CHARGE
Cedar Chests Are Popular Witb the Gals
la tact, staltstica ahow that • per oenl of all cedar oheata sd aa glfla tor young n if and M yean ef
Let Mechanics Keep Your Car in Top Shape
NEW YORK (UPI) - Wlwt goes on under the hood of a car is strictly man’s business —but more and more it’s woman’s work when the family auto needs to be gassed, oiled and serviced.
’The nation’s 30 million female drivers really needn't be master mechanics to keep their cars in tip-top condition.
E. W. Kelley, supervisor of the laboratory garage at Weaver Manufacturing Division, Dura Corp., Springfield, 111., said so. He suggested that the typical female driver learn to depend on the help offered by a reliable garage man.
How well or how poorly an auto is maintained can make the difference of hundreds of dollars both in repair bills and in the car’s eventual trade-in value. But there’s more than economics to proper car maintenance.
"It can also determine whether the car is going to be safe to drive or a death trap on wheels.” Kelley said.
HERE ARE TIPS
To help the housewife get the best possible return on her car maintenance dollar, the expert made the following suggestions:
—Become familiar with the normal operation of your car. Pay attention to how it rides.
he sweet,	snappy..
You can slim down or stay as trim as you are with Pioneer or Bigr Chief sugar. You see only sugar satisfies your appetite so fast with so few calories. Just 18 calories in a level teaspoonful. Take home Big Chief or Pioneer sugar next time you shop.

YOtTRS WIGHT TO UBS UORB
MICHIGAN MADE PURE SUGAR
^ grewa ud procMMd ia Michigu by Micbqwa pwpto.	'I
nCM head the Utl ot buyers. Now called a sweetheart dieat, this cedar-lined storage unit makes a holiday hit with all young girls as an engagement or pre-engagement gift.
The new -iwwtheart chests feature units with long and low lines perfect for a bench at the foot of a bed. They are also attractive as window seats or wall accents tor any room of the home.
Styled to please any itooorattve preference, the cheets are de-
elgned In French Prevtnelal, trs-dlttounl, Ortontal and modern moods, nU In a wide rouge ef flue weeds.
'Ilte deep cedar interior protects clothing and the lineAs and woolens being saved for a future home. Some chests have felt-lined base drawers perfect for a silver, collection.	•
★ d ★
Sliding or self-rising trays beneath the lids of other sweetheart chests allow a separate storage area for small items such as gloves jewelry and scarves. Some new models have drawers or doon adjacent to the cedar-lined compartment. UplxMered tops are handsome accents on several chests.
the first furniture item • young couple shares, the sweetheart chest — the symixd of A happy future — is the gift that starts the home.
, ' # # ★
So the young man with a favorite girl, is the young man who can solve the dilemma ot her Christmas gift wiUi ease.
Health Fells Adbnauer?
BWN (UPI) - Chancellor Konrad Adenauer may be too ill to go to Paris this weekend. Adenauer, who will be 85 in January, is confined to his home with a cold and his doctors have warned against air travel.
Y)AD’8 A MAN of distinctioo in his new Christnuui robe ot polyester and cotton. It will launder beautifuUy, too, and needs little or no ironing. Mas patch pockets.
IDEAL GIFT — It could be a sweetheart chest. This low bench chest with deep cedar-lined interior is perfect at the toot of a bed. It’s bone white with gold trim.
accelerates, stops and vibrates. Listen to your car. Learn how it sounds under different operating conditions. Most car tr(\ubles cause strange sounds. Investigate all abnormal noises.
—Make sure your repairman knows what you are talking about when you take your car in for servjpe. A surprising ampunt of money is wasted every year because owners give ser^cemen fdggy explanations.
—It is almost always dollai-.saving to have minor difficulties corrected before they turn into major ones.
—Have routine maintenance performed at the mileage recommended by the manufacturer of your car.
—If most of your driving is in the city, don't wait for the stipulated mileage to show up on your speedometer before having your car serviced. This is vital in winter, when excess gas, wasted during engine warm-up accumulates in the crankcase.
—Develop the habit of checking your car’s brakes and signal lights daily. When you start out in the morning, depress the brake pedal before you back out of your garage. If it goes down too far or will not pump back up, have the brakes checked.
from the
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DREAM TOUCH... from the makers of famous Jergens Lotion


WEXTY-TWO
THE^ PONTIAC PRESS, VVEDXESDAV. XOV EMBER 00, 19tW
f -
4: »
T"
' a naUwiwide study by Ameri.]15,660 of the M.337 mo^l r~n»*|Color's ImpOrtOnt,
can Motel Magazine shows thaticounted currenUy have TV ^s^ I	>
--------------------------m V~w3	**** ’*''*"8 ''®®”*
’	<v ^ -w ^	j	, ...	3 walls is important in planning the
HAIR FASHIONS .. . designed for holidays 1 lighting of the room. Home ecoho-roQuire a Professional Permanent di mists note that dark colored walls
_____________. wTr»«T	djean be lighted satisfactorily, but
CALXiIE’S BEAUTY SHOP luipay be easier and more econom-
..asst	walls, ceiling and floors are
,»!lldone In light colors.
II« North Perry
SPRAGUE & CARLETON MAPLE
and find true beauty there. This is beauty we recommend for a lifetime . . becau.se it’s finished in Spragrue & Carleton’s exclusive MAPLELUX*, a process that strongly resists sUins, scratches, bums — protects the lovely maple grain and tone forever. So come to the most beautiful and practical cupboard of all. And while you're here, see our entire Sprague & Carleton collection... for living rooms, dining rooms, and bod rooms.
You will be pleased with the reasonable prices.
•MAPLELUX is tha trademark of Spragne A Carleton Mapla
CLAYTON’S
THE "QUALITY'' FURNITURE STORE
3065 Orchard Lake Rd.
Keega Harbor
FE 5-9474
Open Meador nod Ftidar Ereniapi 'til 9 p.m.
90 DAYS SAME AS CASH ... UP TO 24 hlONTHS TO PAY
ITake Brief
Frequent, short rest periods be-
rr«jumi« souii	geissav***
fore you get tired can make your houiework easier. These brief
nouseworK easier.
stope are better than one long rest
period after you become tired.
UAn«A AdVMWbmicta mSffCSt yOU
Home eoonomiiU sugsest you stretch out on a couch, in a lounge chair wi^h a footstool, or on some firm surface so Oiat all parts of your body can relaN completely.
Beauty Clinic
by Edythe McCulloch
Holidiy Hand Cut
winter weather all the time. 3ut rough hands may b* avoided if You are willing to work at it. Leom to use ber gloves lor your household chores. Use warm sudsy water (or hand washing and gently push back your culide each time. Follow this with hand lotion each time. Special core at night with more hand lotion will work wonders while you sleep. Now, add to this a weekly hall hour lor a moni-
R you possibly con . . . make it a- special holiday treat to yourteii to hqve professional manicures with your hair appointment *weekly from now uqlil the first ol the ;(ear Phone Edythe McCulloch Beauty Shoppe. FE 2-7431 SOS Pontiac Slate Bank
renUec Pr«M Pkete
Macl)ou>ell Male Chorus members and Pontiac Women's Chorus are preparinf, for the annual Community Christmas Concert at the gymnasium of Pontiac Central High School Dec. 11 at 3 p.m. Sharing
the initial announcement of the traditional affair are chorus members (from left) Robert Lathrup of Rbyal Oak, Earl Crawford of Oaknoll Street and Winifred Chissus of Keego Harbor.
Hosts WCTU Meeting College Personals
Mrs. George Perkins, federation led devotions \
president, was hostess at her home in Royal Oak for the 18th District all-day board meeting of officers and directors of Women’s Christian Temperance Union Monday.
James K Boulevard Jan. 20 tor workshop and cooperative din-r. The program will begin at 10 a.m.
.	, ,	,	j ZD, nmi, ai me r irsi DiHHisi »,nurai
Appointments lor 1961 include ^rs. George Cook in charge Mrs. Ray Shell, character 4)uild-!„»
ing; Mrs. Joseph Green, Christian Mrs. A. D. Stimer. par-
of luncheon arrangements.
STAPP^S • • . liuie all sizes and all .%ylc.< of .
I'liamentarian; Mrs. William Carls. I Th** meeting closed with prayer (membership promotion; Mrs. Nel-!'>>’ Mrs. Monroe,
lie Monroe. visuaLeducation; Mrs.;-------------------------------
Robert Siggins, youth toen club; The first patent ever issued byi
Allen Dickason, a senior majoring in electrical engineering, has been elected by the faculty and staff of John Brown University at Siloam Springs, Ark., to "Who's Who in American Universities and Oolleges."
He Js the son of the A. Dale Dick-asona of 'Diayer Road. Ortonville.
James Comforth. son o( the John . Conforths of Inglewood Ave-' nue. recently wa.s elected
Patricia Guibord. daughter of the Francis Guibords of Littletell Street, West Bloomfield Township, has been named to a committee to organize a Madonna College par-Mits’ club. Pat is senior class president of the Livonia school.
Highlight 6f Sunday’s open house for parents in the social lounge was a reading based on "Woman Through the Ages” and a song festival sponsored by the college girls.
_______________. .1* b I set-
k n«tlw4 tor Mk otiiM ro<uc-tioo—M ls« ¥ oiwrp,,^ sUrwS
Tom Marsh of Pontiac will sing
and Mi-8. Edward Luscomh. pub- the United States wa.s for an im-	^ m "Cosi Fan Tutti" (Women Are
licitv.	,	p<-ovemrnt in making an in-rodi-®'Uke That), one of four famous
The Rev. Mrs Lola Marion w ho e.tt of soap.	opera.s to be presented by the East-
_	—	.	—	raRo	,	.	. em New Mexico University Play-
^ ^	a, /Os	'* senior In health and ^
fi	gsss'
lx,	__ si team, ar
'M f AVAWAV	/vi’k of Inten
I campus this weekend at
education, a three-year Irtterm^n of Iho varsity swimming	★	♦	#
and a member of the Board	^,,e Robe.1
Thoms of west surrey Road. Fox-
NATURAL HEALTH FOODS
8 Mt. CIcmani Sf.
FE 4-4601
FAMILY SHOE STORE
559 ORCHARD lAKt FE 2 0127
928 W Huron at TtlsgrSph lOpsn FrI, and Sa*. to 9t
TWO DAIIY MUVEKIiS TO OITROIT AND . MTfRMIOIATl FOMTS	.
-	•- v_/
..........t..- . . "

16 Dead After Tragedy at Track*
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESPAr. XOVEMBER 80. I960
TtVENTY-THRKE ^ 1
School Bm Toll May Rise to 20
Paid Claims Way Up for Life Insurance
■n untUBnled crquingJ Sixteen children—13 . my reach 30. aiBclals feared to-jctrla—were MHed Tueaih
30K;ar freight unaahed
^-I'
Ischool bua carrying 43 children to
dcy Bight that Bf the SI lajBred at leBat M were in leitaBa eea-etion aad aeveral were la “very I critleid eeadltlM.’'
dx ★	♦
He said he feared the death toll would go higher.
8BKNED ALL RIGHT Mrs. Stefuro said she saw the bus stop at the tracks. 3he jaw the train approaching and th everything was ail right.
'Then I saw him (Frank Bml-ney, the 38>year-old bus driver) driving onto the tracks. Then in sn instant everything seemed to Hy up—books and bodies—like pop
Only one occupant of the Uus, 16-year-old Johnny Whuuck, escaped fnjury in the diatteiing crash that occurred just 300 yards from the safety of the school.
MANIj^ HEAE CRASH The crash was heard by n)any of the town’s 652 inhabitants and brought them to the scene on the
Dasens •! woraen, maay of them mothers of the viottmi, cried hyatertcaUy while pelire aad rescue teams worked for two hoars to remove the depd and injured from the yellow liM
He said he found himself crying after helping to remove the bodies from the bus.
“I blame myself," Nychko said. *I blame myaelf and I blame tlie townspeople of Lament for crash. The crossing should have been protected by hghts.
"Those i screamed a this have to happen'
0 c e n t children, womap. "Why did
‘"niey (the children) were the orcam of the crop. We raised them, educated them and now this. Maybe it wlU smarten up some of the people."
Nychko was credited with pull-ig six of the injured children from the wreckage.
WHKRE THEY DIED - The gnarled wreckage of part of the ill-fated school bus is shown still in front of the freight train which rammed
AF rhsuri
the vehicle Tuesday, killing at least 16. The libbed ^Hien bus was just 300 yards from the school when it met the 30-car train.
Boos and Bomb Scares Shake Carnegie Hall
NEW YC«K (AP) - Carnegie Hall was turned into an ideological battleground for a while Tuesday night.
Boos and bomb scares, catcalls and fistfights greeted a Yugoslav chorus making its first concert appearance here, before a nearcapacity crowd of 2,500.
"Down with Tito," cried a group of hissing', cat-calling demonstrators. "Down with communism."
"Shush," said, other members of the audience. 'The hecklers persisted. The chorus ww startled but didn't waver.
Soon 12 to 15 men were grap • pling in a free-for-all.
fisticuffs
Then, abruptly, t stopped. Later
out the music. Soon at least 30 persons were mixing it
Dem Advisers Hope for Upturn
The choristers launched into the praises of the "new Yugoslavia,' with shouto of encouragement from some of the audience.
Nine policemen, summoned hy le manager, took four demonstrators to the lobby where they were told to leave or face charges of disturbing the peace. They left.
Earlier, telephone calls had warned that a bomb had been platfod in the hall. No bomb was
The singers are known as the Branko Krsmanovich Chorus, students from Belgrade University. They visited 53 cities in the United States and
ing their tour here.
New Machine Plots Pilot's Air Location
TETElilBORO, N.J. (UPI) - A device that automatically tells a ^ot his aircraft’s location during every moment of flight was demonstrated today at International Telephone and Telegraph (forp. Laboratories in Nutley, N.J.
The instrument continuously plots the aircraft’s position o of the area over which plane is flying.
As many as 20 maps rover lag the pilot’s flight route raa be stored in the 13-pound unit.
Known as the Vortac Pictorial Display, the device is designed to help pilots avoid busy air tra(fic lanes and reduce attention required to solve navigational problems.
Scientists at the ITT Laboratories said the instrument would contribute greatly to air safety by enabling pilots and copilots to concentrate naore fully on other
flight problems.
Mrs. Peter Stefaro, a teacher
at the consolidated high i and public school, said she \ driving three chMdrea to sek In her nutomobile.
AF rksUUi LOCATING (EA8H The map pinpoints Lamont, Alta., where the schoerf bus carrying 42 children met disaster at an unprotected railroad crossing Tuesday. At impact, books and bodies flew up "like popcorn."
insurance payoMlnts during the first nine months of 1380, up from 197,675.000 in the same period last year, the Institute of Lifo Insuri
In the first three Wrters. the ■dMe repotted, some 5i900 poUctes became clahna hi Micbi-gpo, compared with 51,040 in die same ptrtod of 1980.	'I
One of the first meo at the soeae, Panl Nychko, said be ex-pailenoed'the mixed emotions of horror, pity aad flwa aager.
Harry Lucas, janitor of (lie school, was standing in the school doorway when the accident hap-pened.
Lucas said he saw the train coming, taw the bus on the tracks and then “1 aaw the bus folded around the front of the engine.’’
Keith Tompkins. 12. youngest student in the bdi, said: "I heard a crash, and flew right out of the bus. When I landed I did not have any shoes or socks on."
Keith was only slightly injured and made his way back to the wreckage to help free his two brothers.
lATIIER RKSIDK TKACK8 Along the tracks people gathered and surveyed the cra^ scene.
Youngsters slopped beside blood-spattered school books, brok-n lunch buckets, pencils and pieces steel. Tears welled in the eyes.
The bns normally carried 41 children but two youngNlers, Robert Motiuk 10, and Horence flioboda. 11, mimed it Tuesday.
The secretary-treasurer of the schoolJgoard. M. Woycenko, the bus driver was a regular and had been approved by the board.
The driver was among the seriously injured.
YANKEE'S BIG WINTER
BOOT SALE!
Wh«t«var yo«r itf«d may b# in • Wintar loot—^Ynnkot's hoa it for ioto! Horo oro 10 food rooooM why you oh ' buy oii your fumily feotwoor noudo at YunliM^t low, prkot!
4-Biekle Arctics
T
Mon'o Huovy 4-luckio
WORK ARCTIC
sioot
7 to 12 "T
run laocu
Rubber Boot
N».i—
stylo
YOU CAN lEALLT SAVE ON THESE YANKEE lABCAINS
Men’s Zipper Boots^
lizes 7 to
3*8
Mon's Heovy Duty
WORK RUBBER
Mon's ond Boys' Ridibors 99 Si.00 2 to 6,
6i/x to 12
Giris' and Lodics'
Oara-Nyia Saow Bools
SNOW BOOTS
$290 -
Fleece lined for extra warmth. Black or grey. 12 to I. 4 to 10.
51 S. SAGINAW ST. - Next to Wrigley's - OPEN TIL 9 P.M.
Expect Budget Deficit in. 1961 as Result ofj Present Recession
BOSTON (UPI) - One of Pres-j ident-Elect John F. Kepnedy’st economic adviaeri believes thej new administratkin will contain; .the current recession and bring about an upturn of business by the second half of 1961.
Prof. Paul A. Safliuleson of Massachusetts Institute of Te<A-nology discussed the situation in Business Scope, a fortnightly newsletter of business published in Boston. He stressed that he spoke a.s an "academic economust" rather than as an adviser to Kennedy.
"’AS reault of the recessioa, he
cil dnrhig Hi first year.
While a deficit that is merely a sign of undisciplined spending would be a bad thing, he said, a deficit under recession conditions is proper and reasonable.
However, he lakt the administration faces two tougher problems than that posed by the recesi inflation and balance of payments.
"The essence of the inflationary problem that would be troublesome to us is one in which there is the tendency of rising costs to lead to higher prices and so the ‘cost-push’ effect, as called,” said Samuelson.
"The likelihood Is not that we will expeitoUM a nuuwajr la-flattoa, but rather the sort el priee-creep with whioh wo have
He said the balance of payments problem stoma from tfw fact that if the prices of our goods rise, the value of our exports may fsll, and the balance (d payments difficulty becomes worse.
He said the problem might be solved by devaluatioo of the doUar, but he said he felt sure Kennedy would not use this device.
Dutch Seize Indonesian Ship Off New Guinea
THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) —A Royal Dutch Navy patrol ves-ael has seized sn Indonesian ship carrying arms for infiltrators off the coast of Dutch .New Guinea, the home ministry announced Tuesday.
V. The liktoaMlaa ship aad erew are betag detaiaed.
It's wonderful to feel cared for
said a gang of fonte donesians tried to infiltrate the Island territory, which Indonesia
after a claWi with local police.
Behind those doors ... Air ium just com to lift. It’i a boy. What’ll he be? Doctor? Lawyer? Merchant? Chief? It doesn't matter right now. The important thii^ is he’s a lusty, healthy youngster and his mother’s doing just fine. It’s a wonderful feeling. And at a time like this it's especially comforting to know you are provkHhg the Ixat hospital ■ and mejiical care available for |rour wife and that new boy. You can be sure of this, you know, J[ y^u have Blue Ooss-Blue Shield.
«
A'
MICHIOAN ILUli CROSS SLUB SHIMLD YOUR COMiiuNITY PLANS
r


BLUE CROSS l*AYS YOUR HOSPITAL . . . SLUE SHIELD PAYS YOUR OOCTOH
WENTY-FOUR
THE POXTIAg PRBSl WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 80. 1960

J BACK TO WORK - These old friends of the 1960 State Legislature will be Gov.-Elect John {wairuwn's leaders In the 1961 session. At a luddle .during a conference of between 50 and ^ Democralic senators and representatives in
Plans to Meet Nixon Friday
AP PlMiefat
Detroit Monday are (from left» Joseph J. Kowal-s- Democratic leader: State Senator Harold M. Ryan, Senate Democratic leader, and LI. Gov.-lJect T. John Lesinski.
Kennedy's Popular Vote Margin Now 180,180
WASHINGTON (APl-AHhough Republicans were chailencing the Nov. 8 el^ion results in «
(. President-Elect John Kennedy held a margin of 180.180 votes today over Vice President Richard M. Nixon.
★	♦	★
Only 181 precincts, scattered among six states, remained unreported in thoae figures, based on official returns from 31 states and unofficial tabulations in the other 19.
★	♦	★
The totals at this point gave Kennedy 34.120,496 votes and Nixon 33,940,316. The total for the two alr^y surpassed 68 million votes, to I set a new recond.
Republicans were charging that In some prednds in Texas and lUlnoia, njore votes were tabulated than the number of registered
einet comideted gave Ninm 10 more votee than he had received
Ahother Chicago precinct counted 84 votee cast although only 38 registered voters Uved'lp the precinct.
Meade Alcorn, general counsel for die Republican National Com-OUttee, .said only three votes in the deputed precinct were counted foC Nixon, who ran far behind Kennedy Ih the Chicago area but h»t Illinois’ 27 electoral votes by
A fomi.1 conteri noUce filed In Texas charged among other thlnge *	•
....In many boxes the returns
nore votee counted for president and vice president than there were voters l^ed
actual voter list.
In Chicago, both a grand jury investigation of alleged election fraud and a recount of the vote some precincts were under way. The recount officially concerns only a Cook County race, but an unofficial check of presi-ballots in the first pre-
Says Jewish StudonH pn Increase in College
NEW YORK (B - Dr. William Haber of Ahn Arbor. Mich., forecasts that 400,000 Jewish studenU will be enrolled in American colleges And universities by 19T0.
Haber, nation chairman of B'nai B’rith Hillel Foundations, said the figure would be twice as many in 1955.



MIRACLE MILE
WE FOUND IT!
BOOTSanOBBERS
Rockefeller Wants Re-Election in '62 lo New York Slate Governor’s Chair
NEW
IDEAL
COAL
Children's Insulated Boots
: Red, Brown or White. Children’s sizes 5 to S, Women’s 4 to 10.
From Our .\pwt wires ’follow a session Thursday night on an equal plane with Nixon In'
AI.BANY. N.Y. - Nelson A. i >“ders discussing the past'party affairs.
Rockefeller announced Tuesday he,Pr«‘*mial tampai^_	|	,.j	italus,”l
would bid for the Republican nomination for President in 1964.
At the same time. Rockefeller refused to say whether he thought the Republicans should nominate Vice President Richard M. Nixon . for president again in 1964.
The governor said he eoesid
"tremendously important part” in strengthening the Republican party, in the wake of its defeat thii year.
But the governor declined to recognise Nixon as the party's active and actnni leader. Rockefeller said he felt that a party without a president in office lacked an actual head, except, perhaps. for its national chairman. On that score. Rockefeller said he had given no thought as to whether COP Chairman Morton should continue in that In his first fry for public office in 1958, Rockefeller carried Newj York by 570,000 votes. But the' nation's most populous state gave^ its electoral votes to Democratic President-Elect John K. Kennedy by a 400,000 vote plurality this * w *	Nov, 8.
Rockefeller said he will meet ot Sen. Thnjsfon B. Morion of Ken-| The governor said he considered with Nixon, at a breakfast session tucky as Republican national chair-charges that he had not caip-
Idential elertlon premature. Rockefeller's comments made at a news conference, indicated his intention to keep himself in a strong position to seek the presidential nomination, provided he won re-election as governor in 1962.
TO WORK WITH NIXON Rockefeller said he planned to work closely with Nixon, who lost the presidential race this month to OemocTat John K Kennedy.
WE SEARCHED THE HILLS TO FIND A HIGHER QUALITY LOW PRICED COAL AND
WE FOUND IT!
•	LONGER LASTING THAN MANY HIGHER PRICED COALS
•	LOW ASH-^LESS THAN TWO BUSHEL PER TON
•	FRESH MINED, FORKED CLEAN, NO CLINKERS
•	TRY A TON AND LET OUR IDEAL SELL ITSELF •
•	SOLD UNDER A POSITIVE MONEY BACK GUARANTEE •
.\EL80.\ ROCKEFIXLKR
Friday in Washington.
The meeting with Nixon wdll
nan.	paigned as foi-cefully as some;
u J ^	. ^Titles thought he should have fori
«OP presidential ticket had^ 'iSiv "T. .h	answered sufficiently by^
^^kefene	L. Judsoj.
KOCK^MI^r RRMii II0
peclid to work for strength and ‘	, , „
unity of the partv in cooperation R^-kefeller also turned aside with the rice president.	suggestions that he was bid-|
ding *0 lead a "liberal wing” ofi The governor said his own role the Republican party in a contest i fi the national scene would be as for leadership with Sen. Barry j _ -	, ^	say (loldwater of Arizfma, an arch con-1
Oeteated Candidate for "bether he would consider himself servative, or Nixon.	i
Governor Notes Debt in Expense Statement
Bagwell Spent S111,069 in Loss
LA.NSING (I Pn - Paul D. Bag-I t Veil said Tue.sday he spent,$111,( in his second unsuccessful bid to become governor of Michigan.
.Some $10,000 of the debt is still outstanding hut will be turned over to the Republican State Central (' inimitP'c he said.
Ragwell said hU campaign < <iiiiniitl«-c had received IM.MW from the stale central, and M»,-tIS had been spent lhat was raised hy the Ragwcll for (iov-ernor Mnance ('ummlltre. which was hirmulalrd to iiipplrnirnt p«rt> funds In Ihr cani|Mlgn. Ragwcll said there was a small haiaiic- III the campaign bank accounts I hat would be turned over; to 'he Stale Central Committee ahmg wph the debt.
liis fmaiirial statements listing confnhutions ,ind expenditures was filed witii (he Ingham county clerk in .Mavfni
Committee lo Study Shorter Campaigns
\VA.SilINt;TO.N It PI, . The House Siieciai committee to inves-hgate campaign .sfiending agreed Tuesday to inve.xtigafe the election In Indiana's 5th District,
According lo the unofficial (ount Kepiiblican George O. Chambers 'd Anderwjn defeated Democratic Rep. J. tdward Roush, Hunling-lon. by five votes out of approximately 215,000 votes cast Roush submitted an affidavit in which be alleged that In Preciiict 1 of Jefferson Township In Grant County. ;ti absentee ballots were counted but that only ]7 actually werr? cast. The count showed nine for Roiish and for Oiambera.
Venturo Shoppers Get Early Christmas Gift
VI-rs’TURA. Calif (APi-Down-town shoppers get a Christmas gift—no parking meter fees— starling Dec. 7.
Decorative bags rcovering meters will explain there's still a two-hour paridng Dmil.
Merchants suggested the idea, to which the city agreed, though noting it win lone about S2,750 In meter revenues.
SIRLOIN TIPS ONLY
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THE PON'I^IAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 80, 1960

TWENTY-FIVE
W.Gennany Favors A-Arms for NATO
PARIS (AP) - WMt Gm^.
out TucKtay In mipport ol Am Nontad plu tor nuking the North Atlantic Treaty Organization atomic poww.
horn made dear at a tneel^ at the lYrndr Diptomatk Pnaa A» aociation that he wac reflecting the views of Chancellor Konrad Adenauer as he said:
"Ftor psychological as well as military reasons, the Eurepean members of the ^orth Atiaaflc Treaty Organization (NATO) should participate more fully in the alliance’s strategic plarnitrig particularly in the capital issue of the use of atomic weapons.
“The alliance as such* si__________
have its own atomic arsenal, and all members should participate equally in any decision to employ
Sports Cantor Named Grand Hovan Ski Bowl
GRAfto HAVEN (AP) - Gland Haven Sid Bowl is the official name of West Michigan’s newest winter q»rts center, a community project being rushed to completion by volunteered equipment,-labor and funds. ’The area includes three ski runs.
Second Lady Lady Biid Must Get Bigger House
AT rUtofu
KI;|XER cuts CAiUB-4C. T. KeUer, retired board chairman m Chryakr Oorp., cuts a cake at a 75th birthday party given for him Monday In Detroit Friends and former competitors In the automotive industry honored him. One of the highlights of the party was the announcement of the establishment of the K. T. Keller Memorial Fund by the Detroit Museum of Art Founders Society.
An Awkward, Awkward Name
Mention M(£oimack IS Jack's Successor
Only 28 AAillionaires ' List^ in India's Hordes
NEW DELHI, bdU (AP) — A report to parttanHit today aald
there are wly 2S mUlionaalres oat of India’s 4U mllllaa pie and of these I|l are prii
plaoed India’s pw capita I oome as SN rapees (fU) a yei
Just returned from a “i ly thrilling*’ week in Parik, Johnson aerved as a delegate to the NATO parliament, Lady Krd tidd this correivondent:
"11m liine has oome when, It Pm ever gehig to do onytUig abont It, I aSost look lor a Mg* ger honoo In WaoUngtoa. Ve’vo beow taUdag aboat It fw twa yean, bat whea Lyadoa and I walked in hero with ear six salt-
want Canadian Club for the Holidays!*^
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Pre-Holidays Furniture Sale
As Pictured
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By Bins MONTOOMERT
WASHINGTON - One M the problems poaed by the iacoming administration will be learning to say "Second Lady Lady Bird John-aoo,"
The sparkling, brunette wife of the. newiy elected vice president has been called "Lady Bird’’ by her husband and friends sbice her father nickiiamed (3audia Taylor that as a dainty montot L>wlon even lists his wife as Lady Bird in his official congressional biography.
About the time that Jacqueltaw Kennedy assumes the title of First Lady and moves to the White House, the new second lady ex-pecto to Se shopping lor a more
her family’s Increased responsi*
tor vice president.*
Penny - wise - pound - poor Unde Sam has continued through the years to find plenty of billions to lavUi on spendthrift Allies, but refuses to take tifle to a free house because of the expenee of upkeep.
’Hw latest of such sbowplam de-dined by the government was Tregsroo. the beautiful in-town ee> tate of the late Joseph 1!. (Mission v) Davies, which had its own nine-hole golf course and easily protected private grounds.
set them down, I kadw that I really masi '
It.’*
A millionaire in her own right through her ownership of a string of Texas radio and tdeviaian sta-ttons, Mrs. Johnson has been worried less about the eig^enditure than the practicality.
apartment and a Texas ranch.
Cites Change in Cold War
General Says Struggle Between Free and Red World Is Technological
BOSTCW (AP) - The relattvely quiet cold war between commu-and the free world has d into a technological war, an Air Force general sakl today.
W ★	★
Lt. (3en. B. A. Schriever, chief of the UA. Air Force Air Re; ■earcfa and Devdopment Coro-mand, said: "The relative positions of these two technoli^es can be as important to the future of our wuid as the relative positions of armed forces in a ■ ing war."
"We must never forget,’’ he de-dared at an annual science and engineering symposium, "that people constitute our prime strategic resource. It is brainpower— tiHHightfully nurtured in tiils free land—that will give us the final decision in the technological
added: "Now that It appeato we’ll have a Job^ In WSahii«ton for at least four more yean, I guem up take the step belore we spill out mto our doorstep.’’
Hw problem ef asevkig weeM be a relatively simple one tor Lady Bird Johaaon, Jast\ ae It wooM have been eight yean ago tor second lady Pat Niam, If Uncle Sara had aooepted one ofthe ..........................
BOgrrorfUPD—:
Atty. Gen. Edward J. McOormack Jr., a nephew o( U5. House Majority Floor leader John W. Me-
whleh have been oMssed free to the wills of bygone mnld-mli-

leseor to Presidnat-Elect Kennedy in the Senate.
★ ♦ ★
Gov. Footer fiiroolo saM ha had added McOonnack’s name to a long list of candidates tor a two year appointment to Kennedy’s expired term.
The gevemor wU make f final eholM bntlM aald he w
McCormack wai expected have strong backing from his uncle, who was flow manager fOr Kenpedy at tiw Demoeratic National Convention last July. The congressman is a dose friend of House Speaker Sam Rayburn and President-Qect Lyndon B. Johnson ao well aa Kennedy.
n — red, green, yellow and black — appear tte new stamps issued in Accra to mark the third anniversary of the new country’s independence.
ANNOUN*
Winfer Term Opening December 5
(Day and Night School)
GET A BETTER JOB AND MORE PAY
Good salarlM snd attraetlve working oondttkmo await youni men and glrli who decide now to piepaie for exciting poutioni in business offices.
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'No matter how sophisticated our machines become.’’ he said, ‘they lack one essential endowment of the human mind. It is the creative faculty—a uniquely human force, generating imineas-urable power.’’
"Breakthroughs arc major victories in the techmdogical war on which tile ultimate success of ouf cause depends,” Schriever said.
He urg^ that "steps be taken, immediately to improve the prospects of our military and civilian personnel in research and development."
; h h ★
He asserted that deterioration of the position of technical personnel has now reached dangerous levels.
Chou Accuses Tito ol Diverting Albania
TOKYO (AP) - Red Chlna’i premier Oiou En-lal accused President Tito' of Yugoslavia Tuesday of obstructing what he termed the "Sodalist construction’’ of Albania, a Oommunist neighbor of YivoaUvia.
it	-k	*
"The Yugoslav Tito cliqw! has never tor a day stepped its subversive	and	disruptive activities
against	Albania,"	Chou charged
in a statement broadcast by Radio Peiping.
w	★	*
His statement was reported to have been made at a reception hdd in Peiping ip celebration of the 16th annivershry of Albania’s
n«fi«uil day.
nan., m.. aat. um. a r
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 30. 1H86O
TWENTYSEVEN
’ ^^---------:--—----^....
Area Good fellows to Sell Papers for Needy
Springfield Supervisor a Spiy 72
Carey Can't Find Time to Retire
Bjr DON F^atMOYLE j Carey approachei present day SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP — government from a historical point John L. Carey, who defeated the view, but he also is Interested colorful Orville Hubbar^ while|i° progress. He maintains his inserving three terms as mayor	airplanes, county govern-
Dearborn, just can't seem to retire! »ent and his township, from public life.
flight Instructor for the U.S. Army Air Force and the Royal Air Force in Britain.
Although h^ has ofOcially "retired” four times. Carey, a spry 72-year-old, now finds himself serving his sixth year as Spring-field Township supervisor.
la addttlea. he also Is ekalr-maa of study e«
of tke powerful ways and n^eaas committee oa the Oakland Ooua-ty Board of SnpervlserB. ’
Carey’s intention when be moved out here 10 years ago was to spend bis time tending to his antique gun collection, reading historical works and visiting museums.
★ * ★
But tfiien some people from the township came to visit him in 1954.
They a^ed him to take over as township supervisor and he’s been serving in that position ever since.
It was always the same story wtth Carey, a successful aviatioa engineering executive In his own right and a friend of such automotive pioneers as K. T. Kelleg and Henry Ford.
"Actually it was Mr. Ford ^ho persuaded me to run for mayor in Dearborn," Carey reflected. "I was on the Dearborn Board of Education at the time and became* mayor in 1935."
BEAT HUBBARD S TIMES A measure of Carey's popularity is shown by his victory in 1935 and in his next two successful campaigns in the Wayne County city.
His opponent In each election was Hubbard. Carey won derisive victories every time. He retired as mayor In IMl and Hubbard has been re-eiecicd In every mayoral race since then*
Carey, president and general' manager of Wings, Inc., in Dear-|_ . i	«
bom. ciostd his engineering Arm f 0r©Cf DGC. 8 at the start of World War II when
most of the a v i a t i o n industry CLARKSTON-Charter members moved to California.	pgg, presidenU of'the Wom-|
I’s Society of Christian Service of i
Today Carey is as active as ever and doesn’t give too much thought "	’	*	of "retiring” again. He just doesn’t
During World War I, he was a have time lor it.
Offer Ponfiac Press on Weekend fo Gain Funds
Ooodfellow editions of The Pontiac Press will be sold In five Oakland County areas this weekend to raise funds to help the needy at Chrtstmastlmc.
Several of the communities will stage holiday parties for underprivileged youngsters, and all will distribute food basket to desliitute^^ families before Dec. 25.
UTTLE TIME FtiB HOBBIES - John L. Carey, who reUred as mayor of Dearborn in hopes of leading a quiet life In Spring-field Tdwnship, has been busy ever since he moved there. He is serv'ing his sixth year as township supervisor and often doesn't get as much time as he likes to add to his antique gun coUcetion. He is shown with the gavel he used as mayor* and a pistol which once was owned by the Confederate secretary of tl^ navy during the Civil War.
20th Anniversary olWSCStoBe
115 Protesting Assessments
Following is a list of the paper sale locations and the projects being supported with the ceeds:	(
« AVfDfDALE A Christmas party for underprivileged children Dec. 17 Is of the, major projects. finanoM igh the sale Goodfellow editioM of The Pontiae ness hi|^ die Avondale area.
Retired from business and local o
Walled Lake Couircil to Get Petitions Tuesday —Action Promised
pursuits of a retired man.	® luncheon at{
„ ,	. ,	• , , .12:30. Dec. 8 to commemorate thh'
But agam be was pers^d^to,o^i^,i„„., annIVWsary. ” take a place on the Dearborn,	,	,1 WALLED LAKE — PeUtions
Board of Education after the death	*	*	*	signed by property owners object-
of its president.	After the luncheon, a brief busi- ing to unequal tax assessments
SHORT RETIREMENT	| ness session will be conducted by S*ll presented to the City
He finally decided to move to'P™s*<*ent Mrs. Richard Christian-Tuesday.
Springfield Township In 1950. Al-|se"-
ways a student of history, he hoped vice president In charge
MetrapoUtaa aub hopes to raise 91.9N fat tbe sale, wliicb win start at 4 Friday aad at aooa Satufday. Goodfellow editions may be purchased on Auburn Road at Adams Road, Crooks Road and Rochester Road and at South Boulevard and Adams Road.
* ★
Metropolitan Club members will remain at their comers until all sold out both Friday and Saturday.
Besides the Oiristmas party, the sale of The PontUc Press tieodfeUow editions also will help provide food baskets for the needy wliich will be distributed Dec. 14.
Goodfellow chairman E r w i r Sheldon, a volunteer fireman, said anyone knowing of needy families should contact the Rochester police department.
ROCHESTER
The Rochester Goodfellows, formerly the Ben Jones Goodfel-loyrs, have set a goal of $2,000 to be raised by special newspaper sales this weekend, according to Fire Chief George Ross, sale chairman.
The money will be used stage the annu party for needy children from 1:S0 lo 4:.10 p.m. Dec. 17 at the junior high school.
A turkey dinner will be served, special entertainment will bA pro-j vided and Santa Claus will be on^ hand to distribute presents.
Theater for a night to raise funds for their annual holiday project. A ★	♦
benefit at the dilve-ln Ii October netteij the Goodfellows approximately I960. The goal this season is $2,500 and the rest of the money will have fo be ralaed thnxgh the newqwpri* sale, according to Goodfrilow president Robert C. White, a volunteer fireman.
White said the naderprivlleged children In the area will be transported in school buses to a department store Dec. 18 where they will, receive their new riothes and gifts from Santa Claus.
The Troy's Mom Qub will make Chl-istmas stockings filled with toys to be put in the food baskets which are to be distributed by the Goodfellows Dec. 24.
White asked that anyone knowing of needy families in the city contact the Troy Police Department by telephone or postcanl, SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP Without benefit of traffic lights in the township to stop or slow down vehicles the Springfield Goodfellows will move into neighboring areas Saturday to sell newspapers to raise funds for the needy at Christmas.
Four years later he was back In public aflicc and he Is admittedly proud ot his work as supervisor. He doesn't believe that townships should operate like big cities and hires no full time employes.
The township office is not open full time, but Carey is always available to citizens in his modest home at 9474 Dbde Highway, which was formerly owned by Henry Ford's brother-in-law, Fred Bryant.
programs, .Mrs. Kenneth Johnson. will present Mrs. Carl BInkle of Birmingham, a teacher and world traveler, who will condwt a pictorial trip through the Mediterranean and the Holy Land.
Mrs. Paul Eliason will present a cello solo, accompanied by Mrs. Jack Skarritt at the piano. it It • it
All community women have been invited.
The executive committee will meet at 11 a.m. Thursday.
Ortonville Church to Host Conference
ORTONVILLE — The new Ortonville Baptist Church, which was dedicated formally Sunday, will be the setting for the quarterly meeting Friday of the Eastern Michigan Association of B a pi i s t Churdws.
a a a
Conference sessions will begin at 10:30 a.m. and continue throughout the day and evening.
Speakers will include tke Rev. Dwln Msttlson of Romeo, the Rev. Keanelh Ohrstrom of Hasel Park sad tho Rev. Jack Hyleo
Music for the day will be uijder the direction of the Rev. Kenneth Corbet (rf Lapeer.
a a .a
The theme adopted for this meeting has marked it as ,''Soul Winners Day.”
Luncheon and aupper will be served by the women of the local church. They also served refresh ments after Sunday's dedication program and tours of the new
Broken line Gives Students a Holiday |
SOUTHFIELD — Students at Southfield High School had an unexpected day off today.
There were no classes for the school's 1.300 10th. 11th and I2th grade students because of a broken fuel line to the building's oil heating plant.
it * t
Repaira on the oil line were expected to take up most ot day. a IchJlly operator at the school switch-I board said.
' Classes are t<
REV. EDGAR A. LUCAS
BT, REV. ROBERT L. DeWITT
Institute Rector Sunday
State's Suffragan Bishop Will Officiate at Rochester
ROCHESTER — The Rt. Rev. serve as rector of St Andrew's Robert L. DeWitt, Suffragan Bis-,Church, Algonac
hop of Michigan, will be in Rochester Sunday at 7:30 p.m. to institute the Rev. Edgar A. Luca.s as rector of St. Philip's Episcopal Church.
The Rev. Lucas came to the Diocese of Michigan in 1930 serve on the staffs of the Old Mariner's Church and the Episcopal City Mission in Detroit.
During his IS years of service there he was chtplabi of Klolse Hospital, Valle.v Rest Home for Girls, Wayne County Juvenile Court, other detention homes aad the county jail.
Oiarles Rahn, president of tbe local Goodfellows, said the township haa Do major slop intersections where Ihe papers can be sold.
Consequently, members will have to sell copies of The Pontiac Press at the intersection of the Dixie Highway and M15 in Independence township and Dixie
He became the first full-time Protestant chaplain of the Juvenile Court, and during, his service there founded the first Brother Movement in Michigan and became its executive secretary.
SERVED IN ALGONAC In 1945, he left court work to
Highway and Andersonville Road in Waterford Township.
Twenty families in Springfield Township received baskets of food and clothing last year as a result of the local Goodfellow paper sale.
ADDISON TOWNSHIP iQt^ellow editions of The Pontiac PfeiH will be sold at three locations in Addison Township Friday and Satutxlay by the town-shi's 18-man volunteer fire de-partmebt.
Protesting inequities in the city's assessment structure are more than 115 home ow ners from Mindon Knolls, Carroll Acres, Moorecrest and Hill and Dale subdivisions.
The property owners are seeking reassesNmrnts of their land values to reflect a recent ruling of Ihe Michigan Slate Tax Commission which resulted In re- | duced property taxes for two j area men.	|
The two who received lower as- ufirnwon in Rochester.
Also, according to custom, the remainder of the proceeds whi be used to fill Christmas baskets for distribution to destitute families	^
be,.™ ,be b<bb,.y.	|	„
Persons knowing of needy fani- I the majti Intersections In I-eon-liles may give thrir names to 1 ard an/ukevllle and at Camp-Rochester Police Chief Samuel •	—-v
Howlett. he said lU such faini-' lies were given baskets last
I year in the Rochester area ...	,	...
I thmogh the use of funds fmm	w,U con-
the paper sales, local service I clubs and indlvlduuls.
The GoodfeUow Edition of The Pniceeds will be used to supply Pontiac Press wUl be sold Friday ^askeU for needy families,
The Goodfellows hope to
itinue until 8 p.m. Saturday.
sessment relief from the state are ayde A. Mottor of 1722 Bolton SI and Richard J. Watkins of 1641 A.shton St.
it it it
After receiving the lower rates the two proper^ owners in the Carrr’l Acres subdivision decided that others should vote; their dv satisfaction with property rssiss-ments and began circulating the petitions.
City Manager George Khnw and Ma.vor WaMo Proctor have already agreed that assessments on many properties are out of line and Indicated that reappraisals will have to be made.
TBOV
Troy's 80 policemen and volunteer firemen will be stationed at every major intersection city Friday for the annual sale of the Goodfellow edition 'of The Pontiac Press..
Proceeds from the sale will be used to supply food buskela to some 118 needy famines and to outfit underprlvtleged children In new clothing for ChrisImaB.
Besides the newspaper sale, the Goodfellows here also are given of the Troy Drive-In
gifts for underprivileged children ;and a Christmas party for nil youngsters in the township.
Goodfellow Cochairman Robv'rt McCallum. township clerk and assistant fire chief, said the newspaper sale helped about 17 families and over 30 underprivileged childrfn last year. Ite said about 200 youngsters attended the annual party.
Names of deserving Tamilies are submitted by churches and schools area, according to
McCallum.
directed by Howard Burt, who furnished tbe music for the occasion.
♦	*	*	Both blamed the errors in assess- !	_
Others were the Rev. Andrew! ments on an Ohio firm hired in!ll6Cc UCG* S
Goodfellows to Sell Papers in Commerce
Two yearn later he became aaritlant ndninler at Ht. John's (liureh. Royal Oak, and vlear at 8t. Margaret’s fliureb, Hasel Park.
It was in 1949 that he received the call to Rochester to be vicar of the little mission at Fourth Street and Walnut Boulevard, moving to the present church on Romeo Road and Main Street W'hen it was finished in 1951,
The church became a parish four years ago, and the educational building was added last year.
i’. Lucas, the waidens and vestry invite members of the parish and friends to the special service and reception that will follow in the church’s undercroft of the church.
I Pays Fine for Sellinf Meat illegally in Troy
UlOY—A Detroit man was found guilty and paid a $100 fine here .Yesterday for selling food without the name of the product or manufacturer on the package.
♦	*	♦
Found guilty of "misbranding" by Justice of the Peace Charles H. Losey was John Stabnick, who sold hamburger illegally at Roye's Grocery. 2067 E. Maple Road.
*	*	it
Stabnick was arrested by James McCallum, state inspector for the Department ot Agriculture. It was Stabnick’s second violation of this type.
Lunch, Greens Market Planned in Milford
MILFORD — A Businessman's luncheon and greens market will be presented here Thursday by the Milford Branch of the National Farm and Garden Association from U:^ a.m. to 7 p.m.
♦ ♦ »
The event, which will Include a demonstration of do - it - yourself Christmas decorating, will be held at the First Methodist Church, 212 I Union St.
Married by Candlelight
Nancy Lee Lowery Wed
AVON TOWNSHIP - Now honeymooning in St. Louis. Mo..
I Mr. and Mrs. Bill D. Vancil who COMMERCE TOWNSHIP — The,were married in a candlelight Commerce Township Community	recently at the Auburn
Goodfellow, a newspaper compiled |	^ *[_^ * *	Presbylerian
by members of the Commerce
Goodfellows to raise funds tor the needy at Christmas, will be on at all main intersections in the towTwhip Saturday.
Selling the one-day special edition with the local Goodfellow* will be nienibers of the Wolverine Lake Pollee Department nnd Ihe Walled Lake and Commerce township lire departments.
The 15-page paper, to be sold beginning at 6 a.m., will include of local churdies,. schools and bittinesses, along with notes of local interest.
Last year 97 area families benefited from the sale of 3.000 copies of the local paper, according to club president Ralph Richardson.
puirch.
Officiating at the nuptials was the Rev. William Palmer. | The bride, the former Nancy' Lee Lowery, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Lowery of 3102 Devondale Road. The bridegroom's parents are Mr. and Mrs, Paul Vancil of 739 Squirrel' Road.
For her wedding the bride chose a floor-length gown of Mlipper Mttn fashioned with a basque waistline and bouffant aklrt and featuring a Sabrina - neckline, fitted bodice, and long tapered sleeves of Chantilly lace.
A tiara crown of seed pearls held the fingertip veil of Imported silk illusion. A cultured pearl necklace and matching earrings were gifts from the bridegroom.
* * ★
I Maid of honor tor her cousin 'was Judv Dunham of Drayton l^i Plains. Ellen Tervo of Trenton, card party at 8 p.m. Friday kt the''^''*-	Neumann of Lincoln
school. John R and Lcmg Lhite^®*'''‘’'■‘‘’‘‘^room's sister, roads.	[Sue Vancil, were bridesmaids.
Roth of Roaerille, William • rasey of Pontiac and James Calvert of Flint. The brlde’a brother, Robert I-owery, was Junior usher.
A reception was held in the^ church parlors following the Saturday evening rites. The newlyweds will reside in Dearborn after their honeymoon. *
PTA Slates Card Party
TROY — The Coleraln Parent-Teachers Assodation’i first si^ial
MR8. BILL D. VANCIL
Pratt of Holly, the Rev. Lawrence Taylor of Fenton, the Rev. Robert Eldredge of Lake Odessa and tho Rev. Arnold Olsen of Lapeer.
★ ♦ ♦ Representing the new church were aaude Croup, board chairman, and the Rev. Roy F. Bot-ruff, church pastor.
★ ★ ♦
Dr. Wilbert Welch of Grand Rapids gave the dedicatory dress.
Hw reeealiy eonpMed house of worship,is lU feet loi« sad
capacity tor nearly SM persons
eas.
It contains 29 additional Sunday School rooms, a nursery and cry room, and was erected at a coat of $79,300. There is an existing Sunday school buUdlag nearby wWeb has aboiR 12 rooms.
♦ * ♦
Taking pare in the program ot dedicathni were Mrs. Duane Porter and tite Ortonviye Baptist Choir
BEV. JACBHITLBB
1937 to evaluate all city
The city officials said the appraising firm was called back the following year to make but mistakes in assessments still are being realized and revisions have been made yearly.
Will Tell r ITLiLSirheir Story
unents still
Mottor and Watkins' took their compleiint of too high assessments the state after unsuccessfully appealing to the city for relief.
In winning their appeal before the state Mottor received a 174 per cent assessment reduction, and Watkins, 134 per cent decrease.
Board of Education to Select Member
FARMtNCnON TOWNSHIP ~ The aarenceviUe Board of Education will meet in a^fcial session tomorrow to nanle a successor to board member James E. Bowers who has resigned.
Bowers, a member of the board since he was elected in June, resigned hia post after accepting a iob in Masaachuaens.
W *	*
The appointment will ex|tire at the end tk the fiscal year in June. Voters in the achool district will then elect someone to sowe the na of Bower's unexpIred
. The Hi Losers Chapter of TOPSr (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) in the! Highland and White Lake area wUl | sor a program tomorrow toj acquaint area residents with thei organiation and the problems of overweight.
♦	*	*	j
The public meeting will be held at the Highland Townahin Hall.! 103 N. John St., at 7:30 p.m, Barbara Unglej-. Oakland Couaty health ceminitant, will be
seat a film entitled “Winning To i Leee."
It will be followed by a question and answer period and distribution of literature on the overweight problem.
it it *
The purpose of TOPS, according, to Mrs. limmas Turner, president of the newly organized dub. la to hrip persons sincerely Interested; Ilf losing pounds sensibly.
The club program is baaed on' the principle of group therapy^ the, tedd. gettiqg together poople who!
CHRISTMAS WRAPPING
of being Ji
«VIUUH£ATTKSE$iaB
-m.
yWENTY-ElGHT
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 80, 1060
Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas
{ EDWiUlD PRUITT
*	Service tor Edward Pruitt,
^ 565 Nevada St.. wiU be held at i p.m. Erlday at Macedonia Bap-^ Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Hta body is at the Frank ^Camithen Funeral Hothe.
*	He wai Ml employe of Pontiac iMotor Division and a member of •Macedonia Baptist Church.
*	Surviving are his wife, Helen; fls mother. Mrs. Will Pruitt; and v-hildren, Winda, Edward Jr., Jerry Xee and Cheryl, all at home; and •two Imothers.
J Mr. Pruitt died Sunday at Uni-^rsity Hospital, Ann Arbor, .after •an illness of two years.
I	AI jrRRD O. ROSK
t Service lor Allred Rose. 43, of J24 Cross St., will be held at *i:30 p.m. Thursday at Voorhees-JSiple Chapel with burial in Perry (Mount Park Cemetery.
.An employe of Darin-Armstrong Construction Co., he is survived by his wife, Joyce; his father, George Rose of East Tawas; a son, Alfred Q. of Coming, Ark.; two daughters, Millicent and De-, both of Coming; and two brothers, George M. Jr. of Pontiac and Hartdd of Davisburg.
Mr. Rose died Mmday at Pontiac Osteopathic Hosirital after an illness of three months.
nelson singleton
Nelson Singleton, 66. of 142 Rutgers St., suffered a heart attack and was dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital early today.
He was a retired ^guard at Community National Bank
Surviving are his wife, Ula; two daughters, Mrs. Robert Vance of Pontiac and Mrs. Donald Davis of Owoaao; two sons. Wayne of Kenny-dale. Wash, and Dennis of Pon-
tiac; eight grandchildren; two great-grandchildren; a sister, Mrs. Edith Wilkinson of Pontiac; and brother Grant in Missouri.
Mr. Singletoh's body is a( the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home.
OEORGB TWBIT George' TweU. 53, of 656 Ihird Ave., died unexpectedly ci a heart ailment at St. Joseph Mercy Hos- * pital yesterday.
' was a member of the St. John Lutheran Church and an cmidoye of General Motors Truck R Coach Division.
Surytving besides his wife, Alice, re a daughter, Susan at home; a sister, Mrs. Elmer Levitt of Pontiac; and brothers Adolph of Pon-

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MBS. JAMES C. WHITE Mrs. James C. (Beaale) White I 2144 Pompey St., Waterfbrd Township, suffer^ a heart attack and was dead on arrival yesterday at Pontiac General Hoa^tal. She had been in ill health about a year.
Mrs. White. 67, leaves her hus-ind; five sons, Carl Warner of Lancaster, Pa.. Israel A. of TVoy, Janies F. of Cheboygan, Ford E. of Pontiac and Jack R. of Waterford; and 11 grandchildren.
Also surviving are brothers Bud Warner of Waterford and Mathew of Rochester; and five sisters.
Service' will be held at 1 p.m. Friday at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in Hough Cemetery at Almont.
MRS. HOWARD GREER NOVI — Service for Mrs. Howard (Hanna) Greer, 71, of 46871 W. Grand River Ave., will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Casterline Funeral Home, Northvllle. Burial will be in Rural Hill Cemetery. Northville.
Mrs^ Greer died Monday in St. MaryWHospital, Livonia, after a long illness.
Surviving besides her husband are a daughter, Mrs. Carl Sarver; a brother William TeSch; and a granddaughter, all of Northville.
MRS. HERMAN WOELKE HIGHLAND - Service for Mrs. Herman (Carrie W) Woelke, 68. of 3787 Highland Blvd., wiU be at 1 p.m. Friday In the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Bur-ial will be in Woodmere Cemetery, Detroit.
Mrs. Woelke, a member of Cedar CTest Lutheran Church. White died yesterday at her, residence after an illness of 12 years.
Surviving besides her husband are three sons, Lester Butzke and Edwin Butzke. both of Highland, and Frederick Butizke of Detroit and four daughters. Mrs. John Klecha of Garden City, Mrs. Elmer Burkhardt. of St. Qair and Mrs. Raymond Mager and Mrs. Harry Patterson Jr., both of High-■ md.
Also surviving are 17 grandchildren, 12 great-grandchildren and three brothers, Fred Lbwan of Highland, Edward Lewanduske of Dearborn and William Lewanduske Detroit.
Service for George J. Schlamp, former Pontiac police chief who died Monday fen Detroit, will be 11 ajn. tonnoiTow at Verheyden Funeral Home, 16300 Mack Ave., DetroH.
♦ A ★
Mr. Schlamp. 72. of Alpena, head* ed the Pontiac department fim March 1937 to April 1938 afteF a long career on the Detroit police force.
He was cmdllrd < of a model tiamc ordinance daring Ms oervlee In Pontiae. tad was aedaimed by dty officials lor deanlng up and reorgaaltiag
Ex-Police Chief Schlamp Dies
Cit/s A^el Traffic Ordinanc* Passed in His 13-Month Term
Says Jack Eyes . Virginia Estate as Wife's Hideaway
WASHINGTCW (UPI)' dent-Elect John F. Kennedy is oon-aidering renting an estate in the Virginia hunt country as a presidential hideaway and horse riding area, for bis wife, the Washington Pont and Times Herald s^ today, k ★	★
Hw newspaper said Kennedy was rqiortedly lodcing for an estate tat Fauquier or Loudoun counties across the Potomac River near Waahlagton.
Mrs. Keaoady’a molker aad oteptotlwr Mr. and Mrs. Hugh
tale in McLean. Va. Ksanadya hnfhnr RabAl ahn Um la Ma-Lean.
The president-elect now « three-story red-brick home In the historic Georgetown aectlsn Washington.
k * k
-This was reported to be up for
sale-
SEC Member Is Dead
HOLLYWOOD. Fla. (»-Harold C. Patterson, 63, a member of the Seourlties and Exchange Oommia-skm rince 19», died Tuesday a heart atUck. Patterson, of lington, Va., was' attending convention of the Investment Bankers Asaociation of America. He was bom in Newport, R.I
Schlamp began his career in Detroit in 19H as a bicycle officer and roae through the ranks to become an Inspector in 1939.
As inspector, he seiVed as head f Deti^'s traffic violations bureau and then as chief of the Traffic Court police detail.
He rettnid at 4S la ltS7 from the Detroit force to bead the Poatlac department.
After his stay here, he retired o his home on Long Lake, north of Alpena.
-a -a «
Surviving are a daughter Mrs. Matie Fox, three sisters and four grandchildren.
Burial wUl be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery.
County Business Out for Board Members
LANSING iB—A member of ai county board of supervisors is prohibited from selling merchandise to the county, according to Atty. Gen. Paul L. Adams.
The opinion came Tuesday in response to a question from State Rep. John T. Bowrman. D-Roseville.
Adams cited a state law which said no supervisor board member shall be interested directly or indirectly in any business transaction vrith his county during his I time in office ■ or for one year I thereafter.
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In vibrant chords of green and brown, for bridge and ana$ta.Double-Deck17.95. Comt see our complett selection of patterns infamous Kem Plastic Playii^ Cards.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, ivEDNilsDAY, NOVEMBER 80, 1960 /
TWEXTY-Nljyy
Watch Out for Pep Pill Motorists
WASHINGTON (NEA) — A hopped-up highway menace threatens to make this year’s Christmas-New Year's traffic rush more dangerous than usual. It’s a nationwide boom in the bott^pgging pep pills to drivers.
Officials of the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration say a grav-* ugslas
ing blackmarket in these drugs i made them easier to buy. Thus, chances of colliding with doped-up drivers have become greater.
Doctors call -the pills amplic-tamlnM. To.the layman, they’re usually known as “bennies,” “goof balls” and “co-pUots.” They’ro extremely valuable In the treatment of (Arsity and mental depreoslon. Iliey can be sold legally only by preocriptlan.
Unscrupulous peddlers, however, are capitalizing on the dnigs' stimulating powers by selling them to driven who use them to stay awake. Their biggest customers are long-haul truck drivers.
I today, peddlers have switched to pushing pep pills. They have switch^ in a b^ way, too.
FDA undercover agents recently found aoo motels, gasoline stations and truck stops that were selling the pills. FDA Chief Gemge P. Larrick says that ao far hia men have only “Kratched the surface.” In the round-up of peddlers, FDA agents cau^t oUe whole-
What motorists don’t realize, FDA experts say, is that the pills give them a false feeling of alert-,nm 9tayhv awake whm you’re fatigued can cause poor Judgment and loss of comdination.
OOIXJ8ION AFTERMATH — A new holiday road menace.
The pUls* Uggeat hasard is
tions. A driver under their influence may see a mirage of an oncoming vehicle and swerve off the road or Into another car. The
Gold Hoarding Ban Broadly Extended
Two Insurance Firms Ready to Talk Merger
WASHINGTON UH - President Eisenhower Tuesday extended the ban on the hoarding of gold to Hawaii, the Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, Guam and the Canal Zone.
He signed'an executive order authorizing the secretary of the treasury to extend 1933 gold regulations to Hawaii and to possessions of the United States and the Canal Zone.
SAN FRANaSCO (*-Negotiations are under way for a possible mergt^ between Firensen’a Fund Insurance Co. of San Francisco and Standard Accidental Insurance Co. of Detroit.
Stock of Fireman’s Fund would! be exchanged for the outstanding capital stock of Standard Accidental, according to ftlans.
The ameodment will make possible the applicatton of the gold regulation on the same terms
James F. Crafts, president of Fireman’s Fund, and Lester K. Kirk, president of Standard Accidental, said their directors had authorized merger talks.
White House Press Secretary James C. Hagerty said the action was unrelated to the drain on the nation's gold reserves. He said its sole purpose was to put all American citizens on a basis of equality.
Ihe regulation prohibits American citizens from holding gold, gold certificates or gold bullion within the United States and its posiiessions. It makes an exception for rare coins and Jewelry.
Alaska already had bwn included in the regulation as part of the Continental United State's.
The average teen-age girl spends IG9.25 a year purchasing 8.07 pairs of shoes of all types.
pills also may cause motorists to black out.
FDA agents believe the upsurge Id the pep pill blackmarket is due to their crackdown on illegal sales!
barbiturates. These high-powered sleeping pills formerly were the top bootleg drug money-maker.
Because of the difficulty in obtaining large supplies of these
rested la Oharieston, Mo., had roucealed I71,0M ampfieMmlaes In Us car.
Profits that can be made from' the pill blacknurket are tremendous.
An FDA official says ampheta-’ mine tablets can be manufactured for as little as SO cents per thou-j sand. Their price on the black-1 market, however, ranges from 10 to SO cents a pieM.	i
One peddler told undercover agenU that he could make a thousand dollars a week If be were willing to quit his regular Job to push pills full time.
FDA effloials explain that their hardest problem Involved batting the IllegU pUI sales Is finding out how the pills get on the blackmaikel. Being able to ohut off sources of supply would soon enable them to drive peddlers out of business, agents say.
Standard Accidental is about one-third the size of Fireman’s! Fund. Standard's 19S9 assets* totaled $141 million.
Gas Mask Inventor Dies in Pittsburgh
PITTSBURGH (AP)-Dr. James Bert Gamer of nearby Bethel Park inventor of the gas mask during World War I, died Monday at Shadyside Hospital. He was 90.
A chemical engineer and metals lurgist, he was a fellow and professor at Mellon In.stitute of Industrial Research from 1914 until his retirement in 1957.
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THE POXTrAC PRESS. WEDXESDAT^ NOVEMBER 80, 1960
Reporter Accompanies Cleric, Daughter Into Frantz School
Heres Wbaf It's Like to Walk Through a Wall of Hate
_ »d a«y n~d t. b, be.r4|lhbb t|W broke », H. ^k« »( So™.	«•
Bt DAVID ZINMAN NEW ORLEANS (D-InsMe in-tf^rated William Frante School, past the cttjwds and the wail of cAtcalls, there la a veil of silence.
Four white children sat Tuesday with their parents on a wooden'bench alongside a wall in the spacious basement hall.
It was the first inside look at the school by a newsman since It was integrated Nov. H.
TEACHERS ENTER A fw teachers started coming' i; into the basement hall, talking to-, gether. TVy disappeared for a moment into a classroom with brihtly colored ,pictures on the . wall, a clean blackboard and row || on row of empty seaU.
"I think Jhe crowd of women „	„	sme there because they’re
A lonely poUceman paced up andj bored, becanoe they have nothing down twi'rUng his night stick, wait- else to do." one mother said, ing for the school bell to ring. A| "Theyve caUed at my hoase. cold morning sun slanted through. They've threatened to see that the windows into empty class-
•Well, he told me. if I have to loee my Job because of this, then 't worth having In the first
waid the door, kind of braced his,ted him as soon as he took his that Wd out of tl«t nigger school.
s and stepped out ii
, They yelled:	[Nigger blood. He’s
lover. White trash. | blood."_______
‘‘They have a right to believe the way they do — that crowd out there," a darh-halred mother hi her tOs said. "But I have a right to ray beliefs, loo. And they have no right to atop me.”
The parenU stood together and talked. The children wiggled off the bench and began playing together. When a child shouted, his voice seemed to echo In the barren basement hall.
The one Negro first grade girl had not yet arrived. She usually shows up after school starts — escorted by U.S. deputy marshals. ★ * ♦
"I can't help but think the people out there don't represent this city." the Rev. Lloyd Foreman said. He had dark hair, brown, eyes, even features.
The S4 year-old Methodist minister — bom In Crowley, La., — had walked the block and a half from hla house to school with his i-ycar-old daughter Pamela. Some dosen women tried to Nock his path, one latching onto his coat Jacket and screaming, "Don’t send her to that nigger achool."
"Take your hands off said as the yelling women closed around him. Policemen rushed to clear a path.	|
* ★ *
'■'*We’re not alone in our feelings about the situation," he said to the other parents, "but fear has kept so many people away. The voices that need to be heard have been
The bell sounded, and the teachers appeared. One graydtaired teacher came over to the Rev. Foreman's daughter and took her hand. Foreman quietly said good-by to his daughter.
★ ♦ ♦
Pamela and the teacher were alone together in the classroom Monday — the start of the second week when only two white children showed up. But at the starting of school Tuesday, Pamela had one classmate, a little boy.
The bey took the other hand of the teacher and she led the two chIMrea away, past the pe-Hoemaa twlrilag hh nightstick, past the empty classrooms, until they came to the empty kindergarten room.
Foreman Ulked with the other parents a few nwre minutes and
More Sit-Ins is in Three States
PONTIAC
Hurry - Hurryl 3 MORE DAYS
To Saa This Moat Unusual Pictural
Negro Leader Predicts Victory Over Southern Segregation
By United Frees IntematlonsI Negro youths staged brief sit-in 'demonstrations at stores in Geor-I git, Florida and Arkansas Tuesday, and a Negro leader predicted 'victory for hla race over segrega-jtlon practices because "the Negro ihas beaten fear."
a ♦	♦
I "The raw, dirty, vicious infight-itng of the mop-up action" still 'remains for Negro demonstrators !ln the South, divinity student Kaneaster Hodges Jr. of Southern Methodist University told a church conference at Nashville. Tenn.
I He made hla forecast amid these developments:
Fourteen Negro college students staged an hour-long dem-onatratlon at a departmont store lunch counter In Little Bock, Ark.
' Thirteen Negro youths sat at a segregated variety store lunch counter in Jacksonville, Fla., for 40 minutes.
A small group of Negroes tried to take seats In a drug store In Atlanta, but were blocked by a rope.
* ♦
Negroes In Atlanta distributed handbills urging shoppers to boycott downtown stores during the Christmas shopping season and "give freedom cards instead of gifts this Christmas."
The Jacksonville lumh counter which was the target of demonstrators before an outburst ol racial violence last summer was closed when the Negroes appeared.
* ★ ♦
The manager of the store in Little Rock closed his lum'h counter but said he would not notify police so long as there was trouble.
New Atlas Missile Fails Second Time
i CAPK CANAVKHAI.. Ha (API I—The Air Force has failed for the I second straight time to launch a Imore powei-ful model of the Atlas' I Intercontinental range missile.
* ♦ *
i A new Allas "E" rocket flisled in flight Tuesday night about three minutes after M launched. The main sustainer engine burned out prematurely and the 85-foot missile plunged into the Atlantic several miles offshore. far short of its 5,000-mile goal.
♦ ♦
A similar malfunction Oct. 11 ruined the initial flight of the "E" Atlas which is powered by three engines generating 39Q.000 pounds of thrust. This is 30,000 pounds greater than the thrust of the present operational "D" model.
r-
"DIVILS DISCIPLE/' at 8:50
Our Man In Havana
^AlecOainness hi.'ii«ii Burl IvesMaureen (yHarrErnie Kovacs Nod Coward lUdph BlchanlaoD‘JbM(ETw
Doggone 7f— Somebody Fix That Sonic Boom
LIBERAL, Kan. (API-Liberal was Jarred the other nii^t .hy a ■onl^ boom—caused by a Jat
Police dispatcher Wayne Spencer got doxena of calla. including^ sleepy citizen who[
Physics Research on Upswing in Soviet
WASHINGT(»4 O - The U.S. wemment said Tueaday Soviet reaearch in the area of pIptaicB roost doaely aaaodated with elec-troniea is excellent and growing raphfly.
★	★ a
Hie commerce department pub- one from a lished a study which said Russian asked; "What was that?' research in solid state physicfl Is Increasing at such a pace thatj the Soviets within five to ten years probably will be iasuing more publications in thii Held than the United States.
This evaluation waa made by ; aa unldeatUled federal agency, j presnmably the Central latent- | gmee Agency.	i
"The moat prominent feature of the Soviets' work in solid state phyrict la th(5lr excellent theoretical reaearch," the report says.
"The best workers are extremely prolific and versatile and seem unburdened by administrative and teaching dutite-"
Solid jrtate physics involves the electronic physical processes that occiB* in semiconductors and other solids. It includes low-temperature physics, microwave physics, electronics, optics and magnetics.
"Well, you'd better get it fixed. It nearly knocked me out of bed," said the- caller.
UIVITi»
SHIRT
niSTRIBUTOBS
EAGLE;
LAST TIMES TONIGHT
"PAY OR Dll"
_	_ "WH OF EVIDENCE"
IT^RTING THURSDAY--------
hid put her living in the tofflbr ‘-Poe
Plus "MAN ON A STRINO"-
. ThHIIcr!
DEFY BLOCKADEBS — The Rev. Uoyd Foreman (left) approaches integrated William Franti^hool In New Orleans Tuesday with his 5-year-oid^dawghter Pamela just before being blocked by Jeering mothers whose children are boycotting the school where one Negro girl attends. Blockading mothers swept down upon two white parents who had brought their chil-
AF Ph*l«t»i
dren into the school. "They should beat her tUl she can't stand up," shouted one woman during the arm-waving argument that ensued. Police dispersed the blockadcrs. With the minister in this picture is Associated Press reporter Dave Zinman, on assignment to walk to school with the pair.
	FE 2-1000 ittt
! STARTS 1 TQNIOHT ; ALL COLOR	
	
PIEIiaE SnWIIC OAKL,Nir COUNTY	
HELD OVER! 2nd
Contiauetts Sho wings! iromltiMA.M.
IIG
WEEK
EXCLUSIVE FIRST-RUN!
IMPORTANT NOTICE . . .
"MIDNIGHT UCE" IS ANOTHER SHOCKING
SUSPENSE-DRAMA
YOU MUST SEE IT FROM THE BEGINNING!
FEATURES AT	11;13 - 1;15 - 3:20 - 5:22 - 7:27 - 9:30
THE WOIMIAN IN TME MIONKHIT LACE... T/1ROET POa TEMP17mOlSI...Oa TIsRROa?
THE SHOCKJNQ MIDNIOMT THREATS^
HAD SUE INVENTED THEM...ORWAS SHE ILVINOIWO uvES...wmiour KNObifiNair?
DORIS DAY-REX HARRISON X)HN GAVIN _
MYRNALOY'RODDYMcDOWALL
TMMMIL-MTAIMMIIV
EASTMAN COLOR!
Egtral “WOODT'S OXAU LAIT*
A ROSS HUNIIR ARWIN PJfOOUClION I -
Midnight I
]
A MOTION PICTURE TO LIFT UP YOUR HEART AND LIGHT UP THE ENTERTAINMENT WORLD FOREVER!
It began with a sunrise at Campobello - - -
that could move mountains... a faith that could
shake the earth .. . and a laughter of children that was a miracle of its own!
THE MOST DEEPLY PERSONAL, RICHLY HUMAN, COMPLETELY OVERWHELMING ENTERTAINMENT EXPERIENCE OF ALL!
A story of love, a story of happiness. It is marriage and childrep. It is laughter through tears. It is drama. ’ It is devotion. It is courage. It is an entertainment experience like no other since the very first time you went to a Motion Picture...
RALPH BELLAMY GREER GARSON
A SCHARV PNOOUCTION
Running Time: "Sunrise at Compobtllo"
7:00 and 10:10 pjik
> ADDED EXTRA-
TNmLLt, SPILLS with Raal CowboyaJ
Comm ON hi your car my-Hmo . . . RaUi comaloRoly In Ihriag room comfort . . . With
NEWEST —FINEST
ELECTRIC
IN-CAR
HEATERS
AT NO
EXTRA CHARGE TO YOU
TftE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. XOVEj^fBER 30. 1990
THIR'h'-OXE
October Brings $400-Million Decline in Inventories; Sales, Orders Dip, loo
mated htcreaae of 300,000 to 4D0.-000 in the number of Onemployed compared with October, when the official totai was 3,519,000.
WASHINGTON (AP>-Manulac-]of rera’ inventories deciined other $400 million doliars during October^ and sales and new orders also dropped off. the Commerce Department said.
Manufacturers' sales dropped $700 million during October and new orders declined $1.1
Coupled with indications of a November rise in unemployment, the figures added ammunition to those pushing for a strong govern-menT antirecession program when Congress reconvenes next month.
$300-miilion drop in Septem-ifits is shown in Labor Department figures.
The November drop was attributed both to a seasonal cutback in outdoor activities and slackened activity in many plants and Induf-trise.
Reject Griffith's Offer
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (APl-TTie' American Association relcctd^ Tuewlay a $90,000 offer from Oat Griffith for damages claimed after Griffith’s Minesota '^ins invaded the Mioneapoils-Paul area.	,
from the previous month's figures as adiust^ to take seasonal factors into account.
4 MII.I>IO>' JOBLR8S Jobless benefit payments indi
cated, meanwhile, that unemployment may have increased to about four million in November. That Tuesday's report showed that would be a record for the month jduring October manufacturers in-!since the start of World War II. I creased their inventories of goods! Official figures on unemploy-I ready for sale to buyers, but cut 'ment will not be ready for an-back on stocks of raw materials' nouncement until about Dec. 10. and partly finished goods. The net j but a rise of .lOO.OOO in the number $400-million decline came on toplof persons drawing jobless bene-
That would represent
esti-j
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(Advert uemeati	(AaveruDcmeoi $
NOTICE
TO THE MANY THOUSANDS OF FEOFLE HERE IN MICHIOAN WHO USE 0-JII-WA lirriRS EVERT FALL, ITS THAT TIME AOAIN, AND YOU CAN'T BUY A BEHER HERB MEDICINE.
TO THOSE WHO HAVEN'T YET TRIED THIS FAMOUS MEDICINE. ASK TOUR FRIENDS AND RELATIVES WHAT IT HAS DONE FOR THEM.
AVAIUILI AT ALL DRUG STORES
WHAT* BREWING l'l*RTAIRS? - This huge antenna "ear " is listening to the nation's weatherman. Tiros II, as the satellite sends down pictures of what the world's weather looks like from 400 miles high. On each pass over San Nicholas Island, where the ear is located,
AP Ph*ur«x
jotl the coast of California, the weather satellite transmits pictures it has taken and stored during the current orbit. Within two hours, the pictures are in the hands of Navy, Air Force and civilian weather foreca.stcrs thousands of miles away. The antenna is 60 feet in. diameter.
Sixty Feet in Diameter
We Cup Giant Ear to the Skies
By RALPH DIOHTO.N SAN NICOLAS ISLAND. Calif. (API—On this barren, gullied clod of earth 55 miles off the California coast man has cupped a giant ear to the heavens.
Today this ear. a dish-shaped antenna 60 feet in diameter, listening to a satellite 400 miles high which photographs the world’s weather and measures the heat the earth receives from the
Sometime next year it will begin listening to another kind of satellite—one with a man in it. This antenna and others in the network around the globe will keep ground scientists informed around the clock when America's astronauts venture into orbit Newsmen got their first look
weather man, Tiros II.. made its 92nd circuit of the globe.
At the sound of an alarm an operator seated himself at a con-s^e of flashing lights and dials | with nervous needles. Centered oni a small panel was a lollipop-sized I 'joy stick."
Grasping this control lever he swung the 11-ton dish around like a toy, picking up the satellite's signals as it whizzed up over the northern horizon.
At the push of a button the 290-pound satellite began radioing j pictures it had taken and stored during its previous orbit. This finished. it began chattering into the giant ear what it had leanwd about the w.ay the e.-irih absorbs and radiates the sun's heat ray.s.
Fourteen minutes later it was
weather forecasters thousands of miles away.
Fantastic as all this may seem, j Tiros II actually has not accomplished much so far because one iof its two TV cameras—the one which was supposed to cover an area of 50,000 square miles—isn't working properly.
Eventually after many of these satellites have been launched] weathermen will knpw what's brewing upstairs all around the] world. This will mean safer trav-; el, quicker storm warnings and > I better odds that you need never! I be caught in the rain without a [slicker.
and heretofoie secret all over. The satellite had roshed tracking facility of the National;»n beyond the southern horizon. Aeronautics and Space Adminis-; Fifty-five mile.s away, in the (ration Tuesday as the robot headquartei^ of the Pacific Mi.s-|.sile Range at Point Mogu, (he| pictures and the infrared data had
Florida State University to Pay $20,000 Salary
Op«a
KUHN AUTO WASH
.Acrau tnm rini
I recei\ed by microwave dio and were being proce.s.sed and studied.
Within two hours, the photo-;graphs of clouds snapped by the satellite would be in the hands of I Nav-y. Air Force and civilian
I TALLAHA.SEE. Fia. (f» - Dr. R. L. Wilder. University of Michigan mathemaUcs research professor, will be paid $'20,000 next year as a member of the faculty of Florida State University.
The salary, authorized Tuc.sday by the state cabinet, is the highest ever paid a professor at Florida State. Dr. Wilder will be employed for one year during which he wall be on leave from the U. of M.'
THANKS ... to the thousands of guests who enjoyed our dinners over the past week. We would like you to know that we have private room accommodations for your parties and banquets, serving full course dinners for $2.50.
Luncheons, from 85f up	ALSO URGE SELEaiON OF
’ N ^	SANDWICHES MADE WITH
SALADS OUR SPECIALTY	"HOME MADE BRUD”
ENJOY YOUR DINNER
THE OLD MILL WAY
IN WATERFORD
SERV ED DAILY FROM 11 A. M. u» 10 P. M.
Broiled Live Maine Lobster—Drawn Rutter ^ Broiled Choice Boneless 10*oz. UJS. Sirloin Steak X i
13*oz. Brook Trout—Sauce Almandine 3 Fresh Chesapeake Bay Soft Shell Crabs Fried in Pure Vegetable Compound .. . Delicious

INCLUDED WITH THESE DINNERS WE SERVE YOU .
CHOICE OF SOUP OR CHILLED JUICE
T COMPARTMENT SMORGASBORD RELISH TRAV BASKET OF ROLLS. GARLIC TOAST HOT VEGETABLE CHEF'S SALAD WITH CHOICE OF DRESSING VIANE8E SALT STICKS CHOICE OF POTATOES	OLD MILL PIES	ICE CREAM	SHERBET
COFFEE TEA MILK
WE ARE NOW SERVING “SHELTER ISLAND” BLUE POINTS ON THE HALF SHELL WITH COCKTAIL SAUCE AND WE ALWAYS 8EBVE OUR FULL MENU!
•1.25
PLEASE MAKE RESERVATIONS FOR A BIG TIME AT THE OLD MILL NEW YEAR’S EVE!
DANaNC TO HARPO'S DANCE BAND IN THE DINING ROOM IRENE BADER AND JOE BENSON IN THE GRILL
$3.00 PER COUPLE	TICKETS TO COUPLES ONLY
OLD MILL TAVERM
Phone 01}^ 3-1907 For 35 Yeor. Waterford on U.S. 10
’round the house...
’round the clock..
folks all go for Hi Ho...
the all-’round round cracker!
With simple snacks...party fixings... or all by themselves... Hi Ho crackers are 80 flavorful, so distinctive, you'll taste the dilference instantly f
Better baked by Sunshine!
Also-
A NEW SIZE! with 3 INNER PAKSt
•	easy to open!
•	easy to reclose!
•	insures freshness!
T
THIRTY.TW6
^	f	^	..'	\
\ iUE PONTIAC PRESS, WEPyESDAY, NOVEMBER 80, 1960
J. V.:--
GO EXTRA vl% STAMPS
WITH THIl COUPON AND PUDCHASI OT I I lU. 01 MODI
GROUND BEEF |
"GiTEXTRr,£,iTA¥pr|
WITH THIl COUPON AND PURCHAII OP | 1 PKOL OORTONI PISH RALU OR
GORTON'S FISH CAKES |
srr, niR*^j
WITH THIl COUPON AND PURCHAII OP I ANY PACKAOl	.
PORK STEAK	I
naaTsTyiii stamps”]
WITH THU COUPON AND PURCHAH OP I ONI 4-OZ. CAN
KROGER BLACK PEPPER |
Chicken Necks. .	. . . 10'-	Chicken Wings . .	. . 29'-
HYGRADE POINT CUT Corned Beef . . . .	. . . 59*-	FRESH FROZEN Veal Steak . . .	. . 89'-
FRESH OR SMOKED Liver Sausage . . .	. .39*-	LARGE Chunk Bologna . .	. . 39'-
FAIRMONT
COTTAGE
CHEESE
35«

U. S. NO. 1 MICHIGAN - WASHED AND CLEANED

,1
JUMIO
30-OZ.
CARTON
LB.
BAG

5QiA».F|«9

*1
I OP I
I VALUl «
WITH THIl COUPON AND PURCHAII 0 ONI 1A«Z. LOAP
RAISIN BREAD |
»«M «f Kr*«M I* 0«»r»H •*P iMtam , MIcMtaa Hint l«t^ Dm. 1, IPM. P I
r^EXTBrylitSTAFps]
WITH THIl COUPON AND PURCHAII OP | ONI PACKAOl OR DOX
HILLCREST CHOCOLATES |
LCmmu mM at Krafat la Daftall aal lattara , MMiltaa Hint lat.. Om. I. 1PM. 6 I
n»EXTRry]iiCTAMPs']
WITH THIl COUPON AND PURCHAII OP | ONI PACKAH
JELLY ROLLS |
LCaaia"	aP baaar hi DaHaH aa4 laMani ,
hkteMfaa	Oaa. I. 1PM. H J
MORTON'S Froth Frozon
DINNERS
Boef — Chicken — Turkey Ham or Salisbury Staak
3)oHai" Sale!
SAVE 18c ON 8—KROGER GOLDEN DELICIOUS
Applesauce .
/
PACKER'S LABEL
fonia#oes.“".“:'.8*»l**
DAWN'S FREESTONE
Peaches rrr‘.. A&*V*
SAVE 12c ON 8-KROGER EVAPORATED
Canned Milk. S's?*!**
VLASIC	pi
SAUERKRAUT...........7	^
SAVE 8e ON S—SWANEE—WHITE - YELLOW - PINK ' ^j
FACIAL TISSUE.......
SAVE 16c ON 4—CAVERN PIECES AND STEMS
MUSHROOMS .....4c‘fiSnoo S
/..eVerv
DEL MONTE DELICIOUS
SAVE lie ON A PACKER'S LABEL MCTIONS
Fruit Cocktail *wi** 4 cans Grapefruit
KROGER NUTRITIOUS
Tomato Juice .“.’i J- 4 ftSi ’1®® Green Beans_7 <aj, *1®
KROGER DELICIOUS
39

Grape Juice u,. h. 34nm’l®® Cream Corn . .. . 7 ai M®®
ENRICHED ALL PURPOSE-25c OFF UBEL-SAVE 30e
KROGER FLOUR .. .25"*1"
IIKI
Hrc^ei^
LOLLl-PUPS
Mod# by Orlaent for your ptti
We reserve the right to limit quontities. Prices effective at Kroger i n Pontiac, Drayton Plains and Utica, Mich, thru Saturday, Dec. 3,1960
...: 7-oz. pkg. I9c LUX FLAKES large size pkg. 34c AJAX CLEANSER . 2 14-oz. cans 33c COpFEE ................................
For boby elothw ond dalicata thino*
Kmps tlnkf Of tubs ihlny ond bright
Mb', can 73c
Fomout Moxwtll Houm Brand
PAHI-PAK STEAKS 1 \/2-\h. pkg. $ 1.09	LUX SOAP
Frotan itaokt for o quick mtol ti
Toiltt soap in regular ilza ban
3 bars 33c Downy Flake WAFFLES 3 5-oz. pkgs. 35c MAXWELL HOUSE ... 2-lb. can $ 1.43
Froztn. "Top 'an with let Crtom"
Rt^lor ond Drip Grind Cofftt
AMMONIA..................qt. Ml. 23c LUX SOAP......................2 b.rs 31 e POHEO MEAT .... 2 cans 29e Va DETERSENT.......................... I S^jz. pkq. 34e
Llttl# Bo PMp BfOnd	mImmI kntk •>«« katm	»__I	a aa	.....	t ^
Pottol oolorRd both sizt bar*
AII,purpoM hointhold dttargtnt
KRISPY CRACKERS I-lb. picg. 29c AU DETERSENT 24-oi. pkg. 39c POTTED MEAT .... 2 5lA<r. cans 39e OXYDOL........................................req. size okq 34e
Fomout Sunthlnt Brand	c.-i ».l.. ■—.	--.	.	_ . .	“	K M*
For whlttr, brighttr woVwt
Libby Brond ot Krogtr low low prict
For tht whltost wothet tver
UNIT STARCH	12-oz. pkg. 18c ALL DETERGENT 3-lb. pkg. 79c BEEF STEW .............................24-oz. can 49c FAB DETERGENT . giant size okq. 79c
Tha aorfact itarch for veur lourufrv	Hondy Economicot llz#	'	u>. 1.1... 1 u.l..	r_.  ............ ■	r 7*
R'l modt by Ubby
For whiftr, brlghltr clothat
Z" ^ Tht ptrftct iterch for your loundry
^ INSTANTFELS 22'/2-oz. pkg. 34c FELS SOAP .................................. 2 bars 21c CORNSTARCH . Mb. pkg. I9c ARGO GLOSS STARCH l-lb.pkq 18c
Soop bor for your loundry	Ftmeui Argo brwtd	*--- ' r tJ-
I ■	^
JHE PONTIAC PRESS. WEl>]frESDAY, I^OVE5fBER 80, 1960
/
THIRTY-THBEE
Chemicals Absolutely Essential to Keep Us Fed
Tonight, you will eat chemicals for dinner.
That’s putting it bluntly, . course, but accurately. Any food you eat is a chemical. You yourself are made of chemicals, and the process of digestion' chemical reaction. '
But on top o( Oils, chemicals help to grow your food. They fertilize the soil, kill weeds and Insects, fight plant and animal "
toodi — enable homemakers to vend more time with thgir families and cwnmunitles. Such foods are. the direct result of chemical additives and new methods for employing them.
A A W	^
Chemicals add other factors, too. John R. Matchett, <a the Department of Agriculture, has said: "The quality factors that consum-
ers donand in our processed foods generally are color; fla>^, texture, and nutritive value. Each must be acceptable in a new product if It is to find a large maritet. Each is determined by the presence and propmlion of definite chemical substances.’'
Finally, additives
I from food poisoning in the
Chemicals are added to your food to increase its nutritive value. Chemicals keep your food fresh and Impart color, taste and convenience.
Can man-made chemieal sd-dltlves do say harm? Are they, after all. neeessaryT You are sale from any danger from food additives, and if it weren’t for chemicals, you probably wouldn't be having dinner tonight at all. Go out in your kitchen and do some reading. On the bread wran>cr you might find these words: "Calcium propionate added to retard spoilage.’’ Elsewhere, on othec food packages you might find "mopylene glycol," "sodium benzoate," or "B-vitamin thiamine."
What are these niyiferious, tongue-twisting ingredients, uncalled f(zr by the recipe book?
They are examples of the hsa-dreds of chemical food additives in use today. One or more of them has played a part la the preparatloa of your food from the time it tras raised on a farm until n reached your Uleheu. Remember your iast Christmas dinner? You may have grumbled bit at the grocery bill. But that dinner cost you less — far, far less — than it would have without food additives. And even if you could have afforded to buy fo(^ without additives, that food would have spoiled long before it reached you.
Additives are responsible for the great abundance, freshness, economy, convenience, variety, quality, and safety of your food. If they were not used, your standard of living would sink to that of a medieval peasant — if you could find] enough food to keep on living.
In our culture, the searrh for food lakes up little of our time. The output^ the country’s agricultural plant continues to out-race the population explosion, rhenomeiial Increases in yield per acre have enabled eaeh farm worker to produce Miough food for himself aad about two doaen other people.
How has this come about? According to 0. V. Wells, Administrator of the Agricultural Marketing Service. Department of Agriculture, “Mechanization has been an important influence . . . but farm productivity is also increasingly responsive to chemical and biological development. Fertilizer and insecticide^increase crop! yields.”	I
Jewels of Fruit Glimmer in Pie
DEM1TA88E CAKES — Delightful refnrehments for the holiday season are these yuletide fruit cupcakes. Though the tiny cakes are well fruited and crunchy with nuts, dairy egg nog helps keep them moist and tender. Glaze and decorate the miniature fruit cakes just as you do the larger traditional cakes.
Tiny Fruitcakes Will Appeal
Giblet Gravy Smooth Deal for Turkey
United States. These deaths an the direct or indirect result of im-piyper preservation and storage of food.'^ In other words, the lack of
health, not the presence of them.
Treat the family to "Lemon Jewel Pie" some evening soon; they’ll love it and ask for more Quickly and easily made, lemon mix and canned fruit cocktaU combine to make the luscious ing. Swirl a meringue over the top, then /bake until f‘ ' ‘ browned. Oool and serve pride.
★	♦ A
Keep a supply of canned fndt cocktail on hand. Use it to spark ice cream and pudding sauces; combine it with other fruits in salads; send it, neatly-packed, school in the lunch boxes.
----can fruit eockUU
paekasa lemon pit fllUac II luaar
unto fndt cocktail tyrup
90 waier 3 MS yolki
1 teaipoon Srated lemon rind % tableepooDs butter or margarine I (S-inchT baked pit eheU
l^t miniature fruit cakes answer your holiday baking plans if you find the laiger ones are Just too much tor your family, nils way you can have the traditional homemade cake at Christmastime but not nece^rily lor weeks and! giblets and neck. Piace in a sauce-
Drain canned fruit cocktail re-
Nothing makes a lordly turkey|_______	____
happier than to have perfect giblet j serving aH syrup. Cfomb'ineleimin gravy as a running mate. Smooth, ipje filling with 2 tablespoons su-rich, savory. Here’s a good one. igar. Measure fruit cocktail syrup To Cook Giblets: Cook giblets adding enough water to make 2M while turiiey roasts and have aticups Uquid. Stir into pie flUing
hand for gravy. Clean and wash
’months following.
*
The batter is baked in two and one-half inch paper cup lined muffin pans. When cool, the little cakes are glazed and trimmed with pieces of 'fruit and nuts. You’ll find these are Just about the right size to provide a couple of crundty
they do not need aging to develop mellow fruit flavor, you may bake the little fruit cupcakes just a few days before servii Yuletide Fniit Cupeaketi pound ckndlcd miMd fnittc :up coarecly broken »»lnut>
:uni tlfUd all-purpocc flour i^o^nutmcg
-----i^u^r.,firmly pecked
3 egg yolkc.
1 cap egg n»a 3 Uoepw^ rum nevorlng
^i*feupoon creem of Urur Glaze;
' < cup white corn syrup 3 isbiespoons water 1 tiblespoon pineapple juice
Combine mixed fruits and \
pan with about 1 quart water and 1 teaspoon salt. Cook until giblets are fiM'k-tender. Cool; remove meat from neck. Cut meat into small pieces. Reserve for gravy. Consider need for gravy with second servings, extra stufifng and for with hot turkey sandwiches the following day. Recipe may be increased in the same proportions.
Giblet Gravy 4 tableapooni turkey drippir 4 cupi turkey atock Potato or onion water cup corn itarcb
mixture. Add slightly beaten egg yolks. Cook slowly, stirring until thickened. Blend in lemon rind and butter; cool slightly.	Fold in
canned fruit cocktail. Pile lightly into pie shell.
A * A
Beat egg whites to stiff peaks; gradually beat in ^ cup sugar and vanilla. Pile meringue high on completely sealing to crust. Bake iir a hot ov< degrees F.) 8 to 10 minutes, or until golden. Cool thoroughly before cutting. Makes 1 (9-inch) pie.
Nevertheless, opposition chemical additives is heard every side. Some of these diss ers are food faddiMs. But most of them are sincere pe^de who simply do not know the facts about chemicals in food. You yourself may be able to quell some of these and answer some of the arguments.	^
The most extreme position you are likely to meet Is this: *‘A food is good If it (Xtatains no chemicals at all."
It a man seriously holds this position, he probably won’t be persuaded by anything you might say. He simply isn’t thinking. He fails to understand that any food is it sell a chemical.
The next position may be this: "A food is good If it contains no ^ded chemicals."
The most effective rebuttal Is
smoked his n
the smoke. Farmers have used fertilisers for many years, and the Pilgrims found the Peqnot Indians planting fish with their seeds. Smudge-pots as insect!-
Sugar and vinegar have for generations been used to preserve pickles.
Hie use of other processing additives is also firmly established: dyes lor color, spices for flavor, gelatin for texture, not to mention baking soda, vinegar other common chemicals used in every kitchen. 'And (fon’t forget grandmother’s insistence on the value of adding sulfur to molasses as a tonic for spr^ fever.
Faced with (he prevalence of familiar additives, your companion may stipulate that “A food is good if its additives are not synthetic.”
our drugs are synthetic chemicals, yon might mentioa that po-
chemical widely used In table salt, helps to prevent simple endemic goiter. In fact, there Is
Raisin Currant Sauce
This tasty raisin sauce is good tor the goose and the gander as well as for ham. Boil l cup raisins with two-thirds cup water about ' minutes or until water is almost
absorbol. Stir in 1 teaspoon dry mustard, 1 tablespoon grated orange peel and 1 cup currant jelly. Blend well and heat thor-ou^ly.
Ever serve apple fritters with roast pork or ham?
Stir in catsitp mixture, dissse, B and % cup corn flake crumbs. Turn into pattry-linsd pun. Tbp with tomato slices.
A A ♦
Combine remaining corn flake crumbs with butter; mix thoroughly. Sprinkle evenly over tomato slices. Bake in modmtely hot oven (400 degrees), about 20 minutes, or until crust is browned. Oit into wedges; serve immediately. Yield: 6 a
Scraps of Pastry Becomo Appetizers
Why be a pastry waster when 's so easy to use the scraps left over fi-om making those holiday mincemeat and pumpkin pies?
Wrap the dough in waxed paper and store it in the refrigerator and you'il have the makings for these elegant pastry appetizers whenever yuletide guests drop in. To make delicious cbeese-fla-or&d appetizers. Just roll the dough out on a lii^tly floured board to about-^ inch thickness. Cut into 2H-bxdi squares. Put a teaspoon of finely crumbled American blue cheese in the center of each square. Bring pastry corners together over the cheese and pinch tightly. Bake at 425 degrees about 15 minutes.
Served warm, these flaky, nippy flavored appetizers taste wonderful with hot punch or your wassail bowl.
FOR FRESHEST
MEATS
AT UWEST PRICES
WINNERS
I N. Sagtaav DawaUwa FMiMaa
SALE
Balt (If ntaded) Pepper (If daaircdl Turkey glbleta, ctwpp
IRflSHNESS
If chemicals increase the availability of food, they perform anjnuts- Sift together flour and nut-oqually important job by keeping i "ipS- Then mix *4 cup flour with it fresh. Flvshncss may even be!fra*t mixture. Cream buffer and the first qualify we look (or in sugar until light and fluffy. Add ■	egg yolks; beat until.well mixed.
Combine egg nog and rum flavoring. Add alternately with re-
shells. Perishable vegetables, which used to be' plentiful for only a .short time during the local har-vest. now are shipped perhaps two thousand miles or more to our markets.
“The good eating qualities of such Items,” says Dr, Victor R. Boswell of Uie Agrlcalliiral Re-
maining flour to creamed mixture. Fold in fruit mixture; mix well.
Beat egg whiles natil frothy; add cream of tartar. Beat natil egg whites stand In stiff peaks. Fold into batter. Place S'/i Inrii paper btUUng cups in mutfla pans. Fill full with batter.
Bake at .lOO' degrees for 50® minutes. Cool. Brush glaze lightly over cakes. Decorate with died fruit and toasted whole al-nonds.
To make glaze, combine com
The pan drippings are important to good gravy. They add color, flavor and richness. Pour the drippings from the roasting pan into a measuring cop leaving the browned particles in the pan.
Meaaare the amount of fat needed for the gravy and pour back Into the roasting pan. Reserve extra drippings for later use. Add the Ihpild, Stock or vegetable water and chopped giblets. Stir with a wooiien spoon over medium heat, scraping pan with edge of spoon to loosen the brown meat Juices. Mix com starch and cold water In a small bowl.
Remove roasting pan from heat; ind pour starch-water mixture slowly into hot broth mixture. Return to heat; continue stirring con-stanfly until gravy thickens and| boils. Taste; correct seasonings. Let gravy simmer a few minutes to blend flavors. Serve piping bot.
preserved better by proper processing than by the usual longdistance shipping and wholesale-retail marketing procedures.”
Convenience foods — cake and
cookie mixes, canned and frozen syrup, water and pineapple Juice., prepared dishes, and canned baby*Brii« to a boil and boil 1 minute, should look white.
Caramel Peaches
Delight the youngsters with this quick dessert. Arrange canned ding peach halves in shallow baking dish. Fill each peach cup with 2 or 3'soft carmels. Heat in slow oven until candies meU. Top each, ists with a grain of salt peach with whipped cream and serve warm.
tween a chetalcal that Is manmade and one that is made by the process of nature.
With the worlds of science and government working in his behalf, no consumer has Just cause to be worried about food additives. Armed with the (acts, you yourself can defend the use of chemicals in food, or you can simfdy forget about them and enjoy your dinner. In any event, you can proceed to take the complaints of the alann-ists with a grain of salt — good old salt, symbol: NaG, name; sodium Ichloritlp, use: food additive.
-MSCOnT PIICES-lUSTIC KEBWTIOIIS!_______
nx BP YOUR HOME FOR THE HOUDAYS
sniE
FUSTIC
WALL
TILE
<Eack
1
Wl CIVC FRII
iSTIHATES AND LOAN YOU THI TOOU
INLAID
TILE
9u9
JLiu.
PAINT	ASPHALT
Intorior or	TILE
Exterior	9x9
$^69	
	Id		ss.
VINYL
WALL
C0VEBIN6
29'
simi'i m ouRET
257 S. SifiMW FE 2-7755
MANY MANY , MORI lARGAINS, STOP IN . AND SAVI I
736 W. Huoi FE 4-4266
VINYL
ASBESTOS
TILE
<Ea.
9
af Plaarg and Walls (
Fresh Dressed-Pan-Reody
FRYERS
Fill Your Froour at Thii Low Pricol
2 to 3 Lb. Avg.
25
Grade A Coiton
EGGS
Small Size—Fineif Quality
Otcor Moyer Sugar Cured
Sliced Bacon
Extra Leon—Lb. Pkg.
If you want to broil pork chops make sure they are done all the way through: when a small slit is made near the bone, the meat
TOM'S
NORTHWOOD MARKETS
888 Orehard Lake Ave.
W« RmrYU The Right To Limit Quontitio•
'Save Or All Tev Grocery Needs"
Tender, Juicy Blade Cut
BEEF
Contor Cut Chuck RoosH	49c	Lb.
Round Bono Chuck Roosts	59c	Lb.
Stewing Boot.................B9c	Lb.
TOM'S-Fomous QuoKty-Fresh
Ground Beef
CALIPORNIA YiLLOW CLING
Halt’s Peaches
25'
LARK
N0.BVk
CAN
•IICH - NUT	DOMINO	MODKlrf WVAUTT CMBKO	Vn,VIT BRAND
COFFEE	SUGAR	BUTTER	lea OroiM
cJf 49*	’.If 39*	'tii 59*	^39*
WITH COUPON, 1 Ossiisn Per Family	WITH COUPON 1 Par PamNy	WITH COUPON, 1 Caspan Par FspiWy	WITH COUPON. 1 Cswo— Par FaaiNy
PET MILK
£1*1
WITH COUPON
8
SIRLOIN
CLUB
T-BONE
Finest Quolity Steer Beef Sole ROUND SWISS
STEAK	CQc
-PRIME BONELESS	3oib
RIR ei RUMP BOAST ^ ^
CRAIiy.FED WHITE FACE BKF.F SALE!
FILL YOUR -FREEZER THE E-Z WAY - NO MONEY DOWN - 12 PAYMENTS
HIND	FORE	FULL	AK***
QUARTER	QUARTER	SIDE
SUPER SPECIAL—FINEST QUALITY STEER BEEF
TRIMMED BEEF LOIN____________________ ..
0«hr Sfc Lb^-15-45 U. A»g. Cut. W»pp«i uui	tn,
FREE - 6 FRYERS ... Cut and Wrapped with Eoch Quarter - This Week Only!
HOnMAN'S OAKLAND PACKING HABKET
716 GLENWOOp	(Acrota from Posliac Motor Offiem)	Pheira FE 2-9114
RETAIL MARKET OPEN THURSDAY, FRIDAY ond SATURDAY ONLY-7 A. M to 5 F. M.
LOW PRICES p/oi Mi 'U green STAMPS
Always, Just A Little Bit Better! FOOD FAIR’S "Top-O'-the-Grade"
U.S. CHOICE


USDAi
CHOICE
'• •ee»pt*d bv FnnrT c • I* /	•♦•"'P
"TopO’-fh.^^,M “''•"9^ Th** J« why W0 proudly eoM it
SAVi 10c ON 4—AMERICAN BEAUTT	303
SOLID PACK TOMATOES ... c.n |2
SAVI Ac—HUNT'S TOMATO PASTE OR	^
TOMATO SAUCE	3	c-29
SAVI lie—BUTTERFIELD EXTRA RICH	^ 4^.Qg
TOMATO JUICE ..........4 c.™ 89
u S. CHOICE BEEF
POT
boast
SIRLOIN STEAK......
T-BONE OR RIB STEAK CUBE STEAK
• U.S. ChoicA 89 Lb.
' • U.S. ChoicA 99" Lb.
OR TOP ROUND
• • • U.S. ChoicA
99'
Lb.
Blade Cut
CHUCK STEAK
SAVE UP TO 20ei BEECH-NUT OR FOOD FAIR FlHAsf Qvality. Vacuum Poekad
Coffee
49<
With CeepM lelew
SAVI 10c—PLAIN OR ALMONCV—Nettle or
HERSHEY BARS	10 t" b-9 2V
SAVI lie ON 3 CANS!	3OO	I
HUNT'S FRUIT COCKTAIL .. c.„	I9
CALIFORNIA WHOLE UNPEELED	3OO	|A|t
HUNT'S APRICOTS........ c.n	|9

69*.
SAVE 20c — REALLY FRESH

1-Lb.
Con
CAiittr
Cut
Chuck
55!
Beef Roast
U.S. CHOICE BEEF	#CC
Round Bone Roasf...........Lb. 65
Standing Rib Roast..........Lb. 79
U.S. CHOICE BEEF—SIRLOIN TIP OR	OftC
Boneless Rump Roast________Lb. 99
The Meat of Mony Uses!
$|»
Without Coupon, 49c Lb.. 3 Lb. Pock $1.39
SAVE 16c — BANQUET FROZEN
Salisbury, ChickAN, Botf. or Turkty
39!
DEL MONTE
Sweet Peas
303
Cans
100
Complete Dinners
Tuna Fish	Pies	6 f-99*
Treesweet	Frozen Orange Juice 5 Cam 99*
Dole Frozen Juices	6c^-99*
Birds Eye	Peas	5	95
»ATI lie—CHUNK LI&H1	M
FOOD FAIR TUNA.................4 c-89
FOOD FAIR PURE, FINEST QUALITY	^ Lb
VEG. SHORTENING..............3 c.. 59
SAVE 17c—FOOD FAIR, oA Fineit Quelify	^ 24 Ot SlOfl
PRUNE JUICE.........3 BoHi.;*r
SAVE 7e—FOOD FAIR, Our Fin#|f Qualify	I 00 ft |-> «-i j-
HEAVY WAX PAPER.............2 t.iu:39
FOOD FAIR—Our Fintif Qualify	r'erl/.n -   -
BOOK MATCHES................ fso |2*
SAVI 14—Wkifa. Aqua, Yallqw, er Pink	' . A. .. O . AA
KLEENEX TISSUES..............4.’«i*r
^L"."BV1im'lllJ.|||J.I!U..,'
CIH GRANULATED PURE ^
Cane Sugar
90C with # cour
rrrrnrrrrmrirnTM i r
SAVE 56c—Deluxe American or Pimento
Cr
^ «OCOANOT
29^
Kraft Cheese Slices... 4
SWEET CREAM—LIGHTLY SALTED	a QuartBr a
LAND O' LAKES BUTTER................i;°b.c,n.69
FULL-FLAVORED
PINCONNING MILD CHEESE .. ib. 49
-yumftivM
; VACUUM PACKED—Baaeh-Nuf «r
Food Fair Coffto
Choice of one	»N»
1-Lb. Can “ # coupon
at any Fnod Fair TAu Sat, Dae. Ml Umlt: Ona COuponFAAutU Onlyl P
'pBmuniJ.lllJ.wrrr
* FOOD FAIR'S FamAue Rmallw PaAtk O
[[ FOOD FAIR'S Famoui Raally Fraih
Ground Botf
$]19
All-Purpose Potatoes Michigan 25i‘.79’ Yellow Cooking Onions Mickigen 3 I." 19* Salad Favorites	Radiihai—pkg,,	0
Graan Onion*—bunch ^ ~or ^
CRISP ICEBERG HEAD
Lettuce a. .10!

Shop and Save at FOOD FAIR in the
MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER ^
TELEGRAPH AT SQUARE LAKE ROAD	^
THE yONTIAC ^R^lSS.^WgDyESDAV. !^>OVEMBER 30. i960
■^r.-
THIRTY»F1VE
Cookbooks Make Excellent Christmas Gifts
^ll^ETODKU.
PMfiM Frrm Hoom Edl^r If you ara thioiiliig of gtvliig lomeone i cookbook for Cbrtet* mas. we heve e ’couple, of new ones to suggest. Both heve been published this tall and both are npagazine cookbooks.
w ★	★ .
The first one we received wu ‘ Woman's Day Collector's Cook Book” (E. P. Dutton k Go.. Inc. New York. JJ.95). This compact book is literally loaded with recipes tor exciting
written an introduction to each
B easy te lad what yoa are lag tor hi tUs beak. Fbr
separate chapters oa Mala Dtoh
Maybe you will what to tty
1 plmlcntM. choppes 1 »tn. ptU SMtoB S UbIetpaSM hstUr
Mix cheese and cream. Add next'
has mouth-watering colored pks s. It was published In many, many requests from readers of the magazine.
Carol Truax edited the book, choosing the recipes from more than 10,000 available. At the end of each chapter suggestions are
\
game hMs, vaatoen aittl rabbit YoaV be ploaaod that eoarai-taaea tseda an used la lagred-isats tor a aaasker aC the nclpeo. TonV Ilka the variatw ealarla
gpdqkle with a.nixtiin d 1 tea-
Although there are enough gou^ met-type roc^ to oatisty the exac^ cook, Oie book Is i baste
garnishes to	make good eating right
■toast aaewvend. la a mad-
Bacon Stuffing Is Flavorful
Drain off tat in pan i
experienced cooks.
This pork roast cooked fat cider
or water to wxtMid the gravy. Add 1 teaspoon salt and 14 teaspoon pepper. Serve with fried apples. Eight servings.
auA ^aewmm mnu vtvmxi. aw iicae
4 ii«redients: mix weU. Ihld in *o with the dishes, eggs. Pour into buttered lH-quart| We like to read any cookbook. |
.	„	casserole and dot with butter. I We get excited over many. Some
You’ll like the tins seatiereH *" 35(Wegree oven 1 hour, I few send us immediately into the ‘ th. iwvj,.	/n ^	^	®- ikitch«». This book briongs to the
__________________________ throughout the book; one may teU	^	^ ^	,,„t category. Yea, we know	i
Interesting colored illustrations	^ ^p ^ another ^	^	>„‘,1 NEVBK get around to	.h.cs« br.thwstsr Lv^ It mTy bTJStd with Ilou?!
by Joseph Uw and appropriate givea the history of the tomato;,,he “Ladies’ Home Jo^al Cook- "« *“	Score the fat on the porit and salt and pepper. A mixture of
quotations about food break up while a third will explain the dil-|book.” (Doubleday k Co. Garden	Istud with cloves, one to each melted butter and hot water may
the reci^s. James Beard hasiferent klnda of rice.__________________ lOty, New York, $5.95). Thia one Yen’U like the chapters en Isquare of fat. as you do with ham. I be used for basting.
Coat the Turkey
Give the holiday bird a savory aver Uft this year and try Bacon Stuffing.” Unusually tea-aoned with inatam minced onion.
a bit of celery aeed atong with sage, it really ian't difficult to put together. You’ll like convenient, versatile Instant minced onion; use it to flavor aoups, add zest to entrees and salads. And you have no spoilage problem.
. % tsswssa MMi
iSasTsw-
Cook bacon until crisp; drain. Pour bacon fat from aklUet. la
until batter wd- enunbs, tosalng to blend. Add oriery and mix lightly. Pack lightly into fowl for roasting, or turn into buttered casserole, cover and bake in moderate oven (350 tgreqa F.) about 1 hour.
Makes about Vk quarts stuffing. Bacon dripplngi may be sub-
1% poune bseea S cup batMr “ ^ cup broth S Ublci
butlor or mortorlar*
iHe sauce to go over cooked vegetablea is benefited 1^ thk addition of egg yolk. This way you achieve silky texture and sunny color.
WE RE LOOKING OVER OUR CUSTOMER'S SHOULDER

Banquet frozen
DINNERS
TO MAKE SHOPPING A DELIGHT WITH QUALITY AND VALUES JUST RIGHT!
Maxwell House
COFFEE
IGA Enriched
FLOUR
douar
DAYS/
KLEENEX TKSUE 4-1
Dtl Monta
Tuna Fish..
Htrghty'g
Choc.Syrup, w
D«1 Mratt Piauapplt M
Grapefr’t Drink 4
1400 Moriant
•1
Margarine..
6
t|(M	US Col ShiIwHI «	A
I	Macaroni ..	.v
1400	Solod	Q
I	Dressing ..	.0
SIM
Pk|t.
1'
l<|00
T
1400
Musselman's	^
HmESAIKE 7:1
nORVHERn TISSUE
Wtlifa or ossortad
Mora proof that you nova mora of IGA
Save 18^
TableRite (Blade Cut) Chuck
ROUST
Pound
Michigan
CARROTS
CADBAQE
J.19*
ib5«
POTATOES
25 LB. BAG ONLY
69
In MfrfcigMI Ifi...
MICH
Fftof Udy
...rkaPodtos AeCwt/
We Reserve Quantity Rights
PONTIAC
Poul't IGA Poedlintr
1910 Aiibara Road OPUN PAILY t.» PM SUNDAY ^0-7 P.M.
1/
LAKE ORION
Wait*'! IGA Morkrt
OXFORD
Pkipp'i IGA Foodlintr
OPM DAILY g.« P.DL MN4DAY 9-7 PM
fHIRTt-SIX
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 80, 1960
Holiday Joy!
One-Stop, Christmas-Shopping Convenience..
“Th« Chief” will have his own toy fire department , . . complete with fire trucks. Chief’s helmet, hoses, many pieces. Hours of fun,
A99
Little "Milt Feihion” holds her own fashion parade with a wardrobe of 4 ensembles. Miss Fashion has rooted half, jointed limbs; unbreakable.
Pretty “Barbara Jo” Doll As prptty as her name. Barbara Jo will provide hours of entertainment for the little girls in your home and heart.
Junior Samsonite Card Table Set . . . “just like momma’s.” Same durable construction, same attractive finish. Kids love ’em. 18.95 value

EXCLUSIVE ... at Wrigley! ,, Beautiful Santa Trees, a ipecial l^breed of Scotch Pine . . . full and thick with short French needles. Eight years old and tenderly raised . . . trimmed and sprayed annually to insure a perfectly-shaped, long-lasting beauty.
^11®*
“Cuntmoka” Two-Pioeo Holster Set
298
★ Tea-Set. 27-pc„ Early American Style.
ig98
Plastic, resembles milk glass. J if Genuine Bittell Toy Sweeper.
^98
It really sweeps!-,*---^
if Bissell “Little Queen” Housekeeper
549
if Assorted Toy Tracks, Cars, Planes.
Friction-run, individual box 79*
Trees
•*»»fSupermorkef/.,ic„
Door S|>rays Holly Wreaths Glitter Ruscus
For irKkx}r or outdoor decorating schemes
Decorate your doors with this holiday favorite
•	Green ......y..	1«49
•	Silver .....i.... lo59
•	White ....	2.39
•	Blue ........ 2.49
GIFXS R/VSXER WIXH GOLD BELL GIFX SX/\IVlF>i-
TEtE PoiimAC PRESS, WEPNgSDAY, NOVgMBER k JMO
TmETY-SEVEN
I • TEL-HURON CENTR • S9f AUlURN
•	53« M. RiRRY • 59 S. SAGINAW
• $060 DIXIE HWY., DRAYTON RUINS
•	NORTH HILL PU2A, ROCHESTER
TENDER, SNO WHITE
Shoulder Roast
Specially Selected Milk Fed
Knuckle lono	_________
_	'lb.
Lo^O-Veal Roast
Rtmovtd 49t
CHUCK ROASTS . . . . .45*“ FRESH GROUND	BEEF ;_____49* “
3 Lb. Budget Pok 1.39
ROUND STEAK ..................89*	“
BONELESS BEEF	STEW______69* “
Get Finer Gifts Faster with Gold Bell Gift Stamps
—...
VBSSlUj
Govt. Inspected, % Completely Cleaned Grade 'A' Oven Ready
SAVE
W TO
16c
SAVE 21c .
SAVE
19c
Peas or Tomatoes 8 ^
World Famous
Heinz Ketchup	4'^79*
Gaylord — Halves or Sliced
Cling Peaches	4^1^
FRYERS
29
e
•
o
o
• o o o o o o o o o •
tplif Broilers £:! Prosh Boasters
FRYING
• ^ CHICKEN WINGS
Broil or Bm-B-Q	3TV
3-4-lb. Avg. Wt.	3n
19*	a.'

e Gold Medal e Pillsbury o Robin Hood • Food Club
Flour
25-LB. BAG
With Coupon Bolow
|49
Blue Ribbon Farms Naturally Tender
Rib Roosts 69
New Liquid "alt' Lifebuoy Soap
Si,« /J
3	35'
Chickan Noodia, Vagatobla Batf, Mu»hroom Heinz Soups	6	Toll 100 Cent I	Finaoppla-Gropafruit Del Monte Drink	3 49'	Fluffo Shortening	de Off 3-lb. zze Lobal Con 00
Chunk Styla for Solods			Economical. Oapandobla		Lifebuoy Soap	2 33'
Star-Kist Tuna	4	Plot noo Cons 1	Book Matches	;i. io‘	Comet Cleanser	2'£SJ33'
Whola Unptalad		2Vi 3 00 Cent 1	Fina, Madium, Wide, X-Wida		Ivory Mild Soap	2t'ir35‘
Gaylord Apricots	4		Prince Noodles	5c Off ’-*b. r\Cc Lobal Pkp. ZD	Dreft Mild Soap	Gient QIC Siaa 01
ZMty, Tongy Food Club Catsup 4	U-oi Btls.	■69‘	Vagatorion or with Pork Heinz Beans	Q I-lb. 3 00 O Com 1	Cheer Detergent	ir.'79'
Extra Lean, New Troy Pole
Momll Prfd.
Sliced Bacon
49*
Mcrrcit Frida
BACON
Limit On* With Coupon I Cmpmi Mm N* CmM Val^ OIm H CmUMi aMara Ska ChaakTVaor OrOaf
frket effectfva fbre Seferdey, 0tc i. Ws raianrt tba rl§kt t$ IlmH yeoaflfitf.
Maxwell House or Hills Bros. — Special Label
Coffee
2-LB. CAN
With Coupon Botow
1“
Florida New Crop Full-o-Juice
Oranges
• Chicken • Beef • Turkey
Banquet Pies
c
Home Brand Crapefrail Juka
KRAFT'S Philodelphio
Cream Chpese
10*
MEL-O-CRUST Sliced
White BiMd
WRIGLEY
3-Oi.
Pkf.
20.ea.
Leavee I
50 EXTRA
Gold Bell Stamps
With Thu Coupon —
With Purchase of 55.00 or MORE (cenf Beer. Wine or Tobacco Produefs
Pinconning Mild Cheese	lb.	49*	Duz White Soap	r7y
Waxtex Wax Paper	100-ft. Roll	23^	New Premium Duz	’i? 59“
Oxydol Detergent	Glont SiM	81‘	Northern Tinue	4>um33'
y~

IS IXTU GOID BEL STAMK
WMt FwdMw of Ono Q<Nwt tiw
tiSYM(Hm»MHU(UtlME
•r\	™
.....'M
Caopaw r Satwreay, na aaah
1M IXTU SOID BSl STAMPS
FomImm of Om tae^t. Me-
TETLEY TEA BAG$
:aa>aa raainiinan aarty......
aatMOay. OiMmOar S.
M caih aahM. LMiH a

par awlewar.	^ no aaa
IS mu fOlD BOL HAMK
WM FonImw of Om 1-*. Ota.
FOOD (UB MB6UME
M aata vataa. UmM om par aaalaiMi. i
if	Tma -----  „	...
r	Tkrawph SataiOay, Oat. S	t
21 BeM MedsL FMihuvY	^
2l	aaOto Hood. PaH CM ..j.	eJA	Ef
I	FLOUR	K	r’	S
tal	Limit On# Bofl With Coupon	_U
a •Jiir-dKrm’TJiLrTjretfir.^^
TtMa Caupan eoae Otay at Wt»l>r» ^ rva^ Sptarepy, Oat. I MmmB Np«m0 or NMa Brat. All
COFFEE	a
Um» On. Cot WMi CAg
cSsrJ!s.t:'&sftjnA.,

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WM Fw*w. W Om IM. n. N...C
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MtaairLlmn eaw^p#r*ew8tti!E^ /
(J.EEX RIMER GiFXS RASXEFt WI~rM GOl_P BELL GI FIT S“T/\IVlFt
I ■ );
/
tHIRTY-EIGHT
THE PONTtAC HIESS,
iNESPAY, NOVEMBER 80, I960
■■ /
Fill Toast Cups With Creamd Ham
To milce wIm uae of your time end eneruy when baking ham. dwoee a larger bam than you need lor one meal and plan to eerve In-tereatlng meat ditto from the ex-
Tlry 'dlls unusual recipe tor craamed ham in toast cups. Cut the cooked ham In 1-inch cubes. Toe every 2 cups of ham used, prepare 1 cup of medium white
eeaaon the eauce with a
sprinkle o{ combine ham and sauce and cook over low tot untU ham U toted throui*. Just before servlnK..tttr in a tablespoan of cooking sherry.
While the ham is beiihg reheated, remove crusts from bread slices and arrange the bread in cups of a muffin pan. Proas bread against bottom and sides of cup. Bake in a moderate oven 8 minutes or until toasted.
Spoon the ham-sauce Into toast cups and sprinkle with chopped parsley.
0rdinary)4eniis Get lift From Cheese
American bhM cheem has long been a faithful flavoring friend for dips and dunks, but la recent
my, Uiw4Barblod ehetae eonw to the reme. Becanm afV^lWCOJaie Its distinctive flavor, a little of It goes a long way wl bled on top o( any hot. cooked vegetable or blended Inl '
learned to pungent cheese In literally taun-dreds of other dlsto, too. During the holiday
you war tertime
COME SEE...YOUU SAVE!
You don’t have to be a sleuth to find out where you get more good food for your money! The “clues” to big savings are along every shelf—all those low, low prices at AfcPl For extra-good value, track down quality-famous AtoP Exclusives: grand tasting Jane Parker Baked Foods, Ann Page Fine Foods, and A&P premium-quality Coffee.
y
None Better at any Rice!
For cooking, and baking, for beverages, for infant feeding, there’s no finer evaporated milk at any price. A great buy now!
SULTANA BRAND
Peanut Butter 4 s *129
Tasty, nourishing and an exceptionally thrifty buy now at AaP! Its fresh flavor and easy-spreading consistency make it truly enjoyable!
Specially Priced I
Marvel Brand
Ice Cream
Vanilla, Neapolitan, Chocolate-Marble or Buttericotch-Marble
HALF
GALLON
CAITON
49
SUCBD PROCISS CHEESE
Mel-O-Bit »t‘39c
‘ SUNNYBROOK—NISH, ORAOi -A”
large Eggs. ..........«» 65°
AATe PIN! QUALITY
Sihrerbrook Butter e e e PkINT 67c
AAP BRAND—OUR FINEST QUALITY
Tomato Juice 4 c^i 89c
1 to “WikMip'’ vegetablee.
let thli
\ Is Bite Size (
Tor u taste4einptlqg Amerieem
14 cup blue dieeee with 14 cup Krfl butter and 14 cup dairy aour cream. Stir in H cim flndy aihr-
I Cake
pewder and aalt Beat egg add augur, milk and ‘ tot to comtoe. Add
and Buto. iir eNy
Nice to make ahead. Cheealato CUp Leaf
ixssztsr
ilSsf

New Way to Cook ■^Hamburger Rolls
l dry In-
Tum	Into	buttend loaf	pan
(aboot S by 5 by 3 Incto). Bake In moderate	(3SB degreea)	oven
1 hour or until eake teeter into center oomee out dean. Tun out at onet on wire rack;
Leaf	dices	beet if stored to
ih5isid”i.eiii“*	efleut.	tightly	coysTSd container	ovei^
si^^'toSSS? STflour.	baking	night. ^
Delicious crisp underpinning for ground beef sandwiches!
1 pou^ leu troanil beet
jgwrjssjuBr—
directions; cut in h
Meanwhile mix beef, c
and salf; a
ewnitoc <
very diallow pen to hot (400 degrees) oven 12 mteutos. Serve at Dce. Mato 4 servlBga.
NOTBt Tha dub rolls used in testing werb- about 4 inches long ‘ 2% Inches wide. U ready-baked roUa are used, cut to half lengthwise, add beef and baka as
buttered cemts

Wk wy. •• .	.	w .W •	•• ;
For That Fresh Touch of Good Taste...
JANE PARKER
OVER H FRUIT Ml NUTS ^
(LIGHT CAKE)
3.5-OZ. SLICE OCc
aiGHT CAKE)
DARK
1-LR.
89<
DARK
UM.
JANE PARKER LARGE
CAKE -------IPT"	CAKE
This traditional favorite is so chock-full of luscious fruits and nuts that there’s just enough cake to hold it together. Give it a place of honor on }rour list for the Holiday Season ... land enjoy tiie fruitiest fruit cake ever. A perfect gift!
REG. 49c JANE PARKER ENRIGfED
MADE WrTH BUHERMILK
169
Angel Food mng 39 Bread
SAVE 16c JANE PARKER
Pineapple Pie.....39<
21V44B. OCc
LOAVES
> ''
11

i'
NEW COFFEE BREAK TREAT—JANE PARKER
Frosted Donuts.....	25c
MILD AND MaLOW
EIGHT O’CUKK
CDflRe
FOR QUALITY AND ECONOMY-JUST CANT BEAT...
Delicious AM PAGE Fine Foods!
3-lb. Bog 1.65
Tastes Fresher, Better-Because Itfs CUSTOM GROUND!
Only Coffee that’s ground right tastes right... and AaP premium-quality Coffee is kept in tiie nature* sealed bean until the moment you buy. Then it’s custom ground exactly right for your ooffeemaker. What a difference that makes. You enjoy superbly fresh, fragrant coffee ... every time. Try it!
RICH AND FULL-BODIED
Red Circle ^61* hjj
VIGOROUS AND WINEY
Bekor 65* ^ijt
ANN PAGE
Blended Syrup
ANN PAGE ^ LARGE FAMILY SIZE
Tomato Ketchup 2ssi45*
ANN PAGE
Tomato Soup
10*
lOYi^Z. 1
Elbow Macaroni MOI a • • 3 FK<>. 49c Strawberry Preserves tl& 2 it. 65c Grape Jelly . . . . 2	45c
Red Kidney Beans ANN FAGR IS-OZ. 10*
$o*» at AiF	tor Wolli on4 Woodwark	All VotaioWa	Mild and GonHIa	Smu at laavNM Womm	lav* at AftF	OANT	*$OH
Ivory Soap	Spic and Span	Crisco	Ivory Snow	Camoy Soop	Liquid Joy 12^ 93c 22-oil. SiM . . . «St	Cheer	Flyffo ShortQning
3 S 32c	'S;.'29c ’hS"91t	3 S; 79c	?tr 77t	2 ££ 29e		Te OH Ljbii 69c	3 & 66c
why Do You Always Fry french Toast?
By	wmommmB	«m i a» % enp ^ l	moMdm quiddy ki an a|f«*
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WfePN^SbAY, NOVEMBER 80, 1960	‘
THIRTV-Ni.
Mayba you tLau^ iwmn wrt :hangea about FroMli toaatf You dip lUces ol bread in an egg and milk mixture, tMen tty until golden brown.
Yes, tfaat’i the bade formula. But my, bow many wayt cooki have dreamed up to vary it.
Did you know you oould make French toait In yourrovent You
ttWy, uea i #■ v-v ■■**«»■ • taMeapoon ngar and a da* o< . Bait for the dip^ nfcitute, tfieii areangt the sUcee of <Mpp^ breed
■ weu Dunereo coone enoei. . Bake the toaat in a hot (4S0 de-greea) oven about 10 mfaiutea; flip ovbr and continue baking to brown

iHyealIke.Or
aandwidiaa quiddy ki an agg-wr adlk mixture, then fty ai umaL fet a little batter in a akiUet.
Before eerving the eweet aand-wichea you may aprinUe them wlifa
Have the filling eweet! Thii way we like tomateW wuidwiAead^ raepbeiw Janitor thick apricot	^	^
aervea, « ol a mixture of choppedi**^
datea and. walnuta.	Ibere aie alee trieka wi(h plahi
But no matter what the fiUbig, fried rrenoh toaat Ibo flavor el the procedure la the aame. Dip the! the baale dipping mixture may be
Sugar alao goea ttilo tbde dlpptai mixfive, aa it did lor the oven Fiend) toaat Why? Became it helpa brown the bread qtiiddy and
varied by addag vanilla, la fiio foUowtag redpe BBtaieg la added
scan ndea for making French toaat, you'll find there la a grbat vailw don in the amount of mlDc eaUed fir in proportlaa to egg. Ibia rao-Ipe ia for tboae oooka who favor k>ta of egg.
Different typea of breadfaoak up varying aroounta of the dipping miidure. SUoei of home-bakecMype firm whtte bread uaually take up less than slices from a spongy puUy kaf.
* * ★ n you are a redpe sleuth and
4	to ( •llool brood
5	Ubloapooai (obmi 1 or t rtpo boo too.
Asal* or ptaMRSlo jproMTM Beat eggs enough to eanhine
n^. h a fid contalner.jB^ Whipped
offttd lo miituTi lUnniic owf I
a few timae with a apatnla if Next ttano you wWp up crean^ : nacemaiy; all thg dippii« Ugnld (» S>*tfy favoitte deeeirt<'< beul4.be bed.	• teaapoon of fhaat germ p«
Fry In hot butter, adding It te J	^
needed, in aWllet untU toast la gdd-	^	^
ea brawn on both «tdes. Cover hot	^
tnaat With thinly sliced banana and • colorBapktag. aeive with idly or preserves.
Makes 3 to 3 seivinga.	This good European salad should
■	■ —	be better known among American..^
Next time you make cinnamon oooks: cooked diced potatoes, car- . toast, sprinkle k teaspoon of wheat rots and beets pins green peu germ over each cinnamon - but- mixed with homemade mayoo-
Completely Cleaned, Government Inspected, Top Quality
H FRYERS
WHOLE
FRYERS
MICHIGAN, U. S. No. 1 GRADE
Yellow Onions
Spinach--------19c
SMHiSS, MAISH OR RUIY RED
Grapefruit • • . 5 tab 49c
OCEAN IPRAT, HUSH
Cranberries... iio 25c
"SUPER-RIGHT" 4 TO 6-POUND, SHORT SHANK
Smoked Picnics
"SUPER-RIGHF' Sf MICHIGAN U. S. No. 1 GRADE, AU PURPOSE	■■MMGf
POTATOES
25^79*
50“^'*® 1.49
PURPOSE U. I. Ne. 1 GRADE
Potatoes. . .. 25 £lb 99c
Butt Portion Hosn..................... 66e
Center Ham Slices...................u- 99e
"SUPER-RIOHr
IAMB
SALE
LEG <y LAMB . . . t* 69c Shoulder Roost ... to- 55c
Rib Chops..........ta 1.09
Loin Chops ..... le. 1.19 Shoulder Chops . . . ii. 65c
ALLOOOD
Sliced Bacon 43c
Fancy Sliced Bocon "supER-RKwr. .	49c
Thick-Sliced Bacon "supsR^ioHr . . ^ 97c
Yellow Cling Peaches Star-KIst Tuna ..
Kroift Dinner
A&P BRAND Sliced or Helves
4
3
290Z.
CANS
9V2-OZ.
CANS
Boby Food SSSSt . .. d'jiS^dSc BAM Baked Boons. ..	29c
Argo Com Stordi • a a 2 PmS. 35c
Northern Tissue
12 '°"89c
MACARONI AND CHEESE
7W-OZ.
PKOS.
99c
|.00
49<
BritPs SpaniA Rico a a a 2 0^1 37c Snowdrift Shortening3<£.67c Heinz Baby Food VAiiinm 4^‘ 43c Swift's Prom ........ 'JSf 48c
Solodo Too
Prune Juke iady ietty . . . ,	. . 39c	Libby's Chili withiuni . . .	
Freshlike Peas «»En and tindor	4 79c	Scotties ClEANMNO TItIUM , ,	. 2,5%,49c
Freshlike Green Beons	4 SS 79e	Apple Pie Riling thank you rrano 31 c	
Freshlike Cem whole kernm	2 39c	Cleonsing TissuesfotT	2J?®^4Sc
Cot Food ninelives ......	2 CM> 29c	Netcnfe *« ow uisi . . ^ .	w 99c
Armour's Chopped Beef. . .	. 49c	Morton's^Snlt or iodizid	. 2 liiSM3c
dMpitMl PrMsad Horn mmouii 'IS!' 59<		Pie Crust Mix nttv crock*	.. ■JS'^ 39c
Sold MMlal now	25 &, 179		•SbOi. Soup Pndt a a a . .	
W6x Poper cut-rite, . , , j ,	. .’i^’26c	Filter Qgnrtttei carton r.4»	SINOU AW. a a PACK iX
Spry Shortening ,	3 &, 69c	Dog Feud rw hiart ., .,	. 1 '£% 99c
All prkae in thb ad offoctivo thru Soriurdoy, Dac. Srd in ail Eoetorn Michigan AAP Super Markote
THE GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIFIC TEA C0A4PANY. INC.
KACK	H4I. 79|»
lie OPP lAia a a 0 PKG. i Ay
Halibut Steok 39c
Fresh Herring cuanid u. 33c Mediuqi Shrhnp...» 69c Sea Scollops a .
u 55c
luro OWN PURI VEOTAIIE OIL
Wnlaf Sehanar	Sava at ASP	DWnfactanf	iNoue^diold dnetnur	lava at AAP	Dry Btaab	OflaaM HatM Maat	WaMay PavaHN
Nu Soft .	Dry Trond	lywl	Folt Napfho	BMdi O' SlMch	Lotfart	Dog food	. Doth Dolorgont
45c	tsr 47c	*ff^s9c ia:99c	65c	^ 69c	10 49c	2 45c	2.29
FORTY

WU 3i (horned to i^eef, ^liere J ^one ll^etter
lan
Natioiuirs II. S. 'Choice" Corn Fed Beef
U.S. "Choiw"
Round
Steak
SAVE 26c WHb This Coupon
"Be Off" Label
Maxwell House COFFEE
2ib. $|09
Con I f(«9- $
$1.35
C««pe« fipIrM Sat. Dae. 3 Uailt Oaa Caapaa Par Family
U.S. "Choice"
T-Bone or Cubed Steak
)USDA(
(choice
Lb.
• • • •
l.Ui
Ualfarm iCZ' SIleai
99*
39-
U.S. "Choice"
USDA
(choice)
Steak
89
Wt. GreM U. S. "Choice" leef
FREEIiR SAU Sidesof Boof •S.VT u 49< Hindquarlors ’S.’mi’ u. 59< Ferof|uarton u. 43*
mi or CNAIOI—W« wM tel, trhe, fnawr vtee en4 Mel
Swift's Skiniou Link
Hafnio Imported
LUNCHEON MEAT
SAVE
17e
2 'Ll.-$^00
Hilltide — Hickory Smoked
Sliced Bacon
Fresh Picnic Cut
. Pork Roast.................... 29*
NotSonal'i Fresh Ground (Beef • Veel - Perk)	Young, Tender, Sliced
m Meat Loaf . .	“ 49' Beef Liver....“ 39' Pork Sausage55'
Netce Creamy or Crunchy _
Peanut Butter
Make Biuuits Oeick with
Bisquick..............

-	r
Orchard Preih Seetiann of
Buy New for Ckriitmai ot This Low Price
SHEER NYLONS
e 0 e e e
60 Gauflo, 15 Denier Betty Notco Deluxe
2 v« 99‘
Lady Betty Seamiest
2 Vir *1"
Grapefruit
Scotties White or Plak
Facial Tissue ...
"4c Off' Label White or Colored Batbraom TlSwe
Northern Tissue
4 t$|29
39* 4'^”69* 4 ^*^99* 4 29*
Fairmont
Cottage Cheese
39*
SAVI
10c Ctn.
Top Tatfe'FroMR Beef, Chicken er Tnrhey
Meat Pies
SAVI
23c
^ 99*
3 Lb. Bug of Michigan YELLOW ONIONS
29cVo/uo With the Purchase of a 25-Lb. Bag of U.S. No. 1 — Cloanod and Wathtd
MICHieAN
POTATOES
25'89'
U. S. No. I—Michigen Handpicked
Macintosh Apples.,4	49'
Swaat end Juicy, Large Siza
Florida Oranges	59'
Florida, Crisp and Green SRcars
Cucumbers..................2	19'
100% Pure, Florida—in Ic# Box Decanter
Orange Juice...............»• 49'
California, Large Clusters
Red Grapes.................“■ 19'
Cleaned and Washed
Fresh Spinach ..... 'S^ 19'
Washington's Rneit	^
D'Anjou Pears .	.	. . “ 25'
Large White, Seedless, Florida
Grapefruit.............10	69'
SERVING YOU BfTTEP
SAVING YOU MORE NATIONAL SERVING YOU BETTER "national,' SAVING YOU MORE
X
THE HONTIAC PRES^ WEDNESDAY^ XOVJEMBER 30, 1960
Edsel Ford Has, Enough of Pontiac Central
FORTYONB
ChiefsCnish Dearborn Five Easily-71-55
Douglas Loads Central in Season Opener l?y Hitting for 23
By BRUNO U KEARNS HpoHn Editor, Pontiar Prow DEARBORN — Six attempU in trying to beat Pontiac Central ii enough for Dearborn Edael Ford.
The Thunderbirds surprised even themselves in the first six minutes but could not keep up the pace as they were completely outclassed by the Chiefs. 71-55.
soiMMiia. Thh Is not because Osatral has dominated the series, hiving won all six games played, but beennae PCH will have a fnU
Valley In the future: ■Tfs Jdst ns weli," said Edsel Ford coach Bill Kilpatrick, "it looks like Pontiac will have an-oto great team this year and wc-certainly have littlfe chance of ewer beating them in the very
Jjie T-birds hit on their first five field goals to start the game and held leads of 11-9. 14-11 and 17-lS.
OlareBoe Douglas then hit on three stmIgM buckets. His basket at l:tt to play In the first quarter made the score lh-17 and PCm never lost the lead after that.
In the second quarter PCH scored 21 points while Edsel Fbrd got only seven and the halftime misrgin stood at 44-26.
* ★ *
With big George Fed sitting out the game with a broken finger, Bradell Pritchett (6-4) and Otto Kennedy (6-6) took over the boards.
Pritchett got 13 of his 15 points in the first half and he grabbed off 14 rebourtds tor the night.
In the third period the margin increased to St points, SI-SS and with t:SS to play, coach Art Van Rvsin started to clean the bench. The period ended S5-4S.
The starting unit performed well, but the bench showed a weakness with careless floor play in the fourth quarter. For the first six minutes of the final stanza, the
PmUS* Frtn FImU
BIG CHIEF TRAPPED-Bradell Pritchett, Pontiac Central’s 6-4 center, finds himself surrounded by Edsel Ford Thunderbtrds after taking a pass in the pivot spot. Doug Miller geU his hand to stop Pritchett while (14) Bob Schantz moves to help. The Chiefs whipped Edsel Ford in their opener, 71-^.
Pistons Return Home After Poor Road Trip
DETROIT (B—After a winless jaunt into the east, the Detroit Pistons return to Olympia Stadium tonight to face the Boston Cbitics.
The Detroit-Boston contest is the nightcap of a National Basketball Association twin bill which also features a clash between the Louis Hawks and the Syracuse Nationals.	I Sf. l^ouis led Boston by 17
™ . j -j .1- I -.i-j ! P«l"t» at halftime, but Tom Hein-The Piston, dropped the r third |	3,,,
straight game last night to -New ^
Rod Hundley tallied 30 points and Jerry Wesf 24 to keep Los Angeles in the thick of the battle. Jim Krebs of the Lakers failed on a jump shot in the final seconds. Paul Arizin chipped in with 30 points for Philadelphia.
York 118-107 In an NBA double-header at Madison Square Garden. The Philadelphia Warriors defeated the 1am Angeles I.akers m-12l In the other game.
Local Quintets
Gain Victories
Suburban Catholic League title hopefuls St. Frbderidc and Or-chiird Lake St. Mary both started with victories on the opening date of the new prep basketball season buR night.
BloomBald HQIs and Brigbton. rivals in the Wayne-Oakland, nnd South Central Conference power I^ay aty were other victors. All were non-loop'games.
It tdok a sevea-putat spree by veteran gnnr^ Mike Reed to produce a «-« victory lor St Fred at Utica St. Lawrenee. The underdog hoot team had knotted the count at 42-42 in the closing minutes before the little guy took personal charge.
Reed finished with 2Q for tlie night—13 in the last half.
Rams gut off to an impressive 12-5 1st quarter lead but were rugged from then on- Dick Goike tallied | 14 and Gary Zapezynski 14 1 Utica.
★ ♦ ♦
Maiv coasted to a 54-40 roir over St. Stanislaus after taking 17-4 lead in the 1st eight minutes. It was 31-16 at halftime.
ST. raEOBRICK ST. LAWEENCE I
Glen Haas paced the Eaglet it-tack with n potats followed by Larry Slsnm with 14 and Tom Temassewaki’s 11.
Orchard Laki craalies head-on with local rival St. Michael as tac Rams go to Royal Oak St. Mary in SCL games Friday.
AW*
New coach 3d WIchert had a successful debut as Bloomfield Hills CKumphed at Oak Park, 57-50.
The Barons led 22-28 at halftime after trailing bat held the edge the last two periods In a rough contest as evidenced by the M free throws taken by the annual foes.
Art Tregenza sparked Bloomfield with 18, Fred Jeynes added 13 and Bruce Billings 11. Steve Carpman topped the Parkers with 16.
Brighton had no trouble blasting Howell 45-27 with a balanced offense featuring 13 points for Randy Marx and 12 by Dave Hill. The BUlldog.s. who matched their bigger opponents on rebounds, qad it easy after zooming In front 2l-9 at halftime.
A * A Bloomfield and Brighton start W-0 play Friday. The Barons Ctariadon while Brighton is host to Clarenccvllie.
Imlay City had its difficulties playing on a small court but won out 58-55 at Yale. Roger Lomer-rung up 21 and D^ Perkins for the victors. Dei Hail swished 22 lor the losers who rallied in the final minutes in a futile efloit to force an overtime. Imlay goes on the road again Friday. with another pro-league tilt at Marlette.
two Edsel Fbrd players, Doug Miller and Ron Miller battle fbr a rebound after Paul Seligman (lower right) took \ shot from the comer in the PCH opener last night at Edsel Ford. The Chiefs loflL this rebound but still won the game, 71-53.
Tonight Is Deadline
substitutes failed to score a point I {^e third period when^the and Edsel Ford narrowed the mar-	launched a red hot
gin to 65-50 with 2:18 to play. 'scoring attack.
AAA	I The Pistons scored only 16 points
Paul Brown broke the scoring [in the final period while the Knicks drought with a field goal and two Iran up 36.
free throws to shatter the Thundar-;	♦	♦ A	/
bird dreams of closing the gap. | Kenny Sears collected 26 points Van RysUi was well pleased fhe New Yorkers/and Bailey
rlick and the t'eltles lop 85-81 after three quarters.
Tbe Hawks lost their first home game after winning nine. Hein-sohn scored 35 polats. For SI. 1st Vital Louis Bob Pettit tnlliad 31 points. ' — ' sd„ye. r^ppodp. points as Syracuse led the Royals 74-44 at halftihie. Jack Twyman was high for Cincinnati with 31;
with the opening game performance. “We made a lot of defensive mistaken and some of the boys were nersoan, but tbal’s ty^cal of opening game*,’’ be •aid.
Douglas, a junior, led the night’s scoring with 23 points with 10 field goals in 16 attempts. Little Bob Smith was the third Chief, besides Pritchett, in the double figures. He bad 12.
Hie €hiefs used 13 players and hit an 30 of 69 shots for 43 per renl. Edsel Ford with Chris GnxI-
Howell had 25 to pace the Pistons.
The loss was the Detroiters’ sixth In seven games and left them with a 7-11 record. II was the Knicks’ third straight victory.
The Warriors still remained only one game behind the Boston Celtics in the Eastern Division race today. But they probably a rugged Los Angeles schedule and the flu bug which kept the Lakers’ Elign Baylor on the bench for a big break.
A
Wi'h th(* hiih-scoring Baylor out.
zicirt getting 11 points found thejihe Warriors edged l.fls Angeles.I average on ‘20 of 66 shod for 30 As usual. Wilt CThamberiaini per cent.	.sparked the Philadelphia attack, j
Coach Kilpatrick reitentted his-----------------------------—-
pre-game remark that "Pontiac Central is the best team we will play this year. Lucky for us Fed was unable to play. They sure will
tough when he gets back 1 the I
_ lineup."
The reserves also scored a romp by taking a 72-31 victory from the junior T-Birds.
The Celtle* stopped the St. I.nubi Hawks — Western Division I^en — 112-112 at St. Louis. It was Boston’s eighth straight victory.
Syracuse downed the Cincinnati Royals 129-105 in the other half of
•______________ „ „ __ the St. Louis doubleheader.
^	?•?	atugman	1	»-j	jj	For l/w Angeles, it was the
_______B	s-i	■*	orSii-u	«	i*i
Brows	3	«-3	>	O Miller	1	{-«
Douki	IS	3-3	»	aimi 1. M.
Koscb	I	a-3	*	Smith
Csontr	I	l-S	J	Phimil
Dlshm	j	■ *	*	“
LEADS RAMS - Mike Reed pulled the game out of the fire for St. Fred last night as the Rams defeated Utica St. Lawrence in their opening basketball game. 49-42. With the game tied, he icored'lhs last seven points and finished with 20 for the night.
T « 3-1
r I
I CUrk
14 U-M I
I6uu M is-n 71 Touu
Boorw ta Qssrtoro „	.
i8l Ford'".'.."'.’.Tl	14 15—M
Aoatls« OMtrsl ll. EdMl
-NBA Standings
P^SSrlpt
. ,5 M '3Z3 Vk
«M LoM F*i. a«kM
. I U .375 . (Ih
By ED LUBANBKI 12H BMrier-af-aw-Year Does the proprietor of the bowling center wince every time you deliver the ball becausf you're bouncing it on the lane instead of laying it down smoothly?
If you'd like him to smile #nd add pins to your acore, too. bend the left knee deeply during the final step.
Hariem Stars in Benefit^ GamW at Romeo Sunday
A Romeo High School faculty basketball team end Goose Tatum's famous Harlem All-Stars will play a benefit game Sunday afternoon at 3 o’clock in the Romeo
from the eidiibitian coirteit win go toward a new scoreboard for the hMtball field.
Admission charge is 61 anL dren under S years of age wii admitted five if accompanisd by their parents. Doors wtO open lit 1 ip.m.
It stands to reason that if you do everything else correctly, but forget to bend the knee, you’ll tiriiig the ball forward and release it at about knee level. The ball will put a dent in the maple lane and have all of the working spin removed from it.
Bend the knee and the ball will glide out on the lane like an airplane coming in.
Brown, Plum Retain Leads
Cleveland Pair Tops NFL in Ground and Aerial Statistics
NEW YORK - Jimmy Brown and Milt Plum, the, Qeveland Browns 1,2 gqxind and air attack, continued to lead the top individu-offensive departments in the National Football League today. Brown has gained 912 yards ishing in nine games for the Browns, who are tied for second place with New York in the East-eni Conference. He has carried the ball 164 times for a 5.6 aver-V-
Plum's accuracy is further demonstrated in three departments— per cen* completed, per ceni intercepted and average gain.
The former Penn State star ha.s completed 115 of 170 for 1,705 and 13 touchdowns for a 67.6 mark. He has yet to have a pass pilfered and has ayeraged 10.03 per toss.
A couple of tough customers are pressing thO Browns' duo. John David Crow of St. Louis is second in rushing with 773 yards in 142 attempts for 5.4 per try. Baltimore's Johnny Unitas has gained 2.400 yards passing for the defending world champions to rank rond in that department.
LEAOINO GBOl'NP OS IN ESS
SLANTING SITUATION - Things are sort of slanted for Oorge Lee of the Detroit Pistons (10) who leans over and fouls Dave Budd of thq New
York Knicks last night in Madison Square Garten. The Pistons blew a 20 point lead and lost to the Knieks, 118-107.
Opening Round oTBowlerama Set for Howe's
S^quads and Starting Times to Be Printed in Friday's Press
Have you entered the Pontiac Pr^ Bowlerama yet? The first deadline is only hours away now.
All bowlers who want to take part in Sunday's qualifying round at Howe’s Lanes must be entered by midnight tonight.
This can be done by turning In an entry blank to any Oakland County keg establisbinenl. Application blanks are available at all county alley* or at the Press. It is important that all particb pants realize that only ((lose who fail to quali^ at Howe’s will have an opportunity to tiy again to reach the finals.
AAA
Dec. 11 will be the last qualifying day so there will be no second chance for anyone entered for only
1. Crow. St. L. ..	14S	77S	54
S. Tsrior. O. a.	IS3	751	It
4.	Smltk. BP.	mm	41
5.	Pl4t-nstc. Ott.	lU	557	51
4. Tracy. Pm.	157	553	IS
T. Haruant, 0.1.	117	415	31
a SUtcbcU, CIc.	IS	4Sf	54
I. CsMm. CM.	131	475	35
M. risks. PMIa.	. SI	445	44
UUB046 PASsaas
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3.	V.BVk ml	333	il4	l.n4	IS	S 71
4.	Laync. PUL	ISI	ft	l.SSS	11	S.53
I. Wada, L A.	U3	73	SM	4	411
t. Ouf'rM.WMril.	IT4	41	IJM	7	7.31
’ “oacn. at. L.	ist	71	l.lll	14	7.74
law. iT r.	131	44	1.114	4	4.14
nawakl.bat.	SIS	131	1.S4S	1	5JI
iBarcM. Dal.	ISI	74	1.374	I	7.S3
LaaMsa rasa aaenvaBa
TSi. Oala m
5^
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MtUmaa
MfisMi
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Piston Statistics
opt"*"
3 3 7 Brava 3 I f taSS*
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Results
MICBIOAN HIGH SCHOOL SCOPES
Battle creek PennOeM S3.
Athene S4 (ot*
Bloomfield Rule 57. Oak Park 54 BrlfbtOD 45, Hawaii 37 Center Lina Bt. Clement 47.
Detroit at. Ambroee 37 Dot. Redoemir 55. V. of D. Rlsh 53 Det. St. Rita 44. Det. MaUrlty 31 DIL auetin 54, Wy’dotta St. Pat^ck 43 Oroeae Pta. St. Paul If. Lake Shore 43 Harper Woode Notre Dame 14.
Detroit SerrIU 44	^
Hamtramck 5S. It. Ladlelauc 41 imlav City 14. Tale 55 Muekefon Hu. 74. Or Rapidt Union 4| Muaketon 11. Muekeson Cath. Cent 51 OL 8t. Mary 53. m. Stantetaue 44 Pontiac Oastral 71. Edeal Purd II Pool St. Prod 41. Otlca S(. Lawrooeo 44 RO at MAry ll, DetroR SL Lie 4S.
Notre Dame Mall Situation 'Status Quo'
Hopefuls 4t1U bo IB BcUoB at both SylvBB Laaeo niid MoBtralm Centre that aecond week. Many of them will be men who reentered. Approxlnutely one ot every seven eonteatants at each "konae” will ndvance to the rbaniplonship battle slated lor Itakewood Itanes on Dec. 18.
Such big guaranteed prizes a.s |S500. S250, SlSO, S125 and SlOO will head a long list of awards to be SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPl) - Joel With a simple explanation that!P'"'®«’‘«‘ following the title show-i^harich. whose 19(>0 Notre Da me "the situation is status quo. I’m nxitball team equalled the worst coaching Notre Dame. " he ended
gridiron record in 72 years of com-'speculation that he would quit to petition by (he fighting Ijlsh, al-'retum to pro football, ready has begun work to prepare ^ for tae 1961 campaign.
i960 All-Valley Football Squad
Due Tomorrow
%
The best performers in the KagtaHMO VaH^ Coniemice during the 12S8 football oeason wlH be revealed, llMrsdny vrAM The Pontiac INess and dlHy newspapers la Hiree otlm> 8VC Htie* AP-VaBey
(Bk«k tke spoHn naetioa af
leaHi arko waa Jndgai fopa la tlM leagae this year by Valley esacben and srrttork The hoaar sqaad will eoaslnt •( lat aad
Mrashers af the 42Si alt-star
B vtiemmf
MksUgan Ahnml dab.
Maple Tankers Dunk Champs'
Birmingham Scaholm started its swimming season with a ^ S6-48 vlctary over defending atate’elHUn-pkm Grouse Pointe last night Ifi ■|e Pointers' pool.
The Maples took six firsts led by AU-Amerira Jim EUiott's :18.2 in die 10 yard frCe ityle. £lHott also posted a time of :53.6 (n the _ secondplacc behind Ndl Bauer of Gnwae S>olnte whose time was :53 flat.
Jim Leahy won the 100 in a pool record of 4:M.4 and Larry Severy took the backstixilte >:(BX. Sopomore Don Spencer won (he buttiu^y In 1:09.1 in ' fint competitive race.
Bob Kennedy won (he breast ■troke in 1:10.6 and Don Mqrris took diving honors in ;52.8. Flty^geruld started its dual sea n Monday night hi beathi« lled-(brd Union. 5S-52. FltEgWald winners were Keith Brockman, yard (:24.6). Larry Dygowsld. backstroke (IttD.l), Brodonfoi, 199 treestyte (.56.1), Jack BtMhalk. m frtertyle (J:1T.D and tree-Btyte relay (1:53.8).
The Rev. kklinund P. Jeyce, pxeruttve >|cr prrwMent of tbe university and i-hairman of the tsi ulty board in control ot athletics, nliHi ended )i|>eculallon lhal Kuharich would be dlwctaarged with the stateiilent that ".Notre Dame has no Intention o( di»-mbotng Kuharich.’’
Kuharich said that Notre D»me has betweep 300 and 400 prOA pects to serren for 1961. "We’re already, screening the list (o find the boys of pur caliber." he AAA "I have no plans to leave Notre Dame, " he said. "I've got two years to go on my rontraet.,nnd 1 ahvaya live up to contracts." | AAA	'
"I have no doubt Joe will "be back." father Joyce said. “Football has its ups and downs and we’re sort of down now. Kuharich had a lot of rough breaks, but in all the gaades «e hurt, I think Mhyed quite well."
AAA Rev. Joyce and Kuharich agreed that Notoe Dame's academic standards were no unusual problem In recruiting of football players.
A big actual tourney, featuring the area's top performers, will be held in conjunction with the finals at Lakewood with trophies going to the top scorers.
Everyone who make* the ijike-wood duel will be sure of finish Ing In Ibe money. The lop quail-(tar at eneb establishment will have earned a trophy going hito the (Inala.
AO aanctioned Oakland County bowiqra are eligible to be in the 4th annual handicap tourney.
aquad Hat for Sunday at Howe'^wiH be published in the Friday ration of Tbe Press.
- itHfoUAT'e-MGeia at Dm AuMtataS Pr*M
Oent Oreihtm.
Jayvee Scores
at. rr*S 3^ U«e« at L**r«ic« 17 Oak Fart 47. Bteornttrld B1U> 41 OL St. lUry SI. Bt. SttsUtans 33 ansktoB 4S. HowcU 47 tovmiawi rmUsc CsotrsI 73, BdMl For* ll
Cranbrook Hald to 3-3 Tl® in Hockey Opener
CYanbrook's hockey team and letoptt Benedictine battled to a 3 deMlock Tuesday on Cranbrook loe ita tbe Oranes' openhig game of the seaaon. A goal by Benedictine’s Boh Tamboromlni In the final 30 iiiolufo fomdthe Cnraarto settle for a tie.
John Biltaodon scored Cra» hpaok's 1st gbal in tbe 2nd period to knot the count at 1-1. Jack McCarthy connected turioe la the 3rd period to give the CTauec’ a 34 lead before Tamboraalid clichad.
FORTY-TWO
THE POl»JTlAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 80, 1960
Coon Hunting Souion '
Hm IMi annaal iMetliig and dinner of the Pioneer Coon Hunt-1 ere Am. wOl be Dee. 10 it T:S0 pjn. at BiOd Hall bi Orton-vflle.
Tickeli IK iviOable from Jack Himntan. OrtonvUle; Oaii Kin-nadiy, Oakwood; Fkeenuui Peace,
Holly; Joha PeMman and---------
FavK, Lake Orion; and J< Borden, Harold Smith and Lewfi
MUD AND SNOW TIRE DISCOUNTS
TJOkU*
$10.95 $10.95
Ufrftdj'rirtlMM
Veteran Hunter Speaks
Lucky To See a Track During 1916 Deer Hunt
Deer honten retomlng ft
Party-five yean ago have been lucky to a flat llaihing throuih the tag the entirc aeaaoo. B( when A. Floyd Blakeal r. Iroquoia Rd. went ( If for the firat time, Jetrlct In the Lower contained deer — the
treea dor-in 1U6 of se
attonMy lor aboat the
raa^ to retire Ua deer rifle or
STOP WITH
ATLAS
Astuii mAmmatI a
ATLAS MUFRERS
FOR LONOIST USIi
iMTAUii mi	db ACf
guakantudi $Q95
- .	___e^i M 'u • 'll mieaiT'ii-H
^ Mwif WUW MO CHMOI OUTM HONMIO Daily • fe 7 — Saterday la «
ATLAS BONDED BRAKES
121 WAYNE ST.
Bflhind Fodoral's — FE 3-7855
S. C. ROGERS
.KRFia CNRISTMAS sms
LADIES' and MEN'S
ICE SUIES
•395
Boyt' and Girb'
ICE SKATES T*
BOXING GLOVES
1/Set of 4........»4M
Striking Bogs .... $4.95
TABLE TENNIS Seb
4 Paddlot, Net $ * Peat, Bolla	■
>95
t
For The HUNTEB
Compass .....5(k
Hunting KnHo $1 JO up Rifle Flarm 3 for $2.95 $2.95 Gun Case	$2-95
For The FISHERMAN
TKkla Sm . Sl95	lUal .$4^5
^i!2 .^395
24 L LIWBDICE
sNimiiii'Eaoas
FE 2-2319
He made thia obaervatlon while aealed behind hla law office de* in downtown Pontiac;
•The firat three yean we hunted around Turtle Lake. Thia the only district in the Lower Peninsula with any deer. If we a track, we thought we had a thrill.’’
* A *
After those Initial years, BlSkes-Iqe and his companions went to the Upper Peninsula. ’They found deer jmds and browM plentiful and a large number of whitetafli.
early in the	It aaddoaly
began te nraabreoa. ta the mld-taaas niakeslee was smoi« a group of Pentiae haators who formed Oainp M la Aleeaa Osoih ty, west al Habbard Labs.
"Tboae were the peak yean for deer in Alcona County,” he said. ”There was plenty of browse and the deer could live in swamps without artificial aid.
But the non-buck herd creased so fast that it ate much of the winter food. Thfc hurt the fawns, too. They had trouble finding browse, and when they did, these yotmg deer hac'
Blakeslee said be had many a^ .amenta with Do Bartlett, Con-nrvation Department deer expert, over allowing does to be taken.
•Vew I can fee that he la rigM,” said the veteraa hunter. “The herd ahould have beea
years to sa^
Blakeslee has successfully downed a buck “about 75 per cent’’ of the yean be has hunted. ’This would put his total well over 30.
Two houn after the opening hour this season, he felled a six-pcdnter.
He pointed out that many hnn-ten in the area where he oon-nected “did not see as many deei this season."
•1 flrink the deer were ka
peeted la Had them. Ae weather was very poor the first week and tUs butt the hantlag.
“The situation at the Oakland Hint Gub waa a mystery. The acorn crop was the in yean, but the memben didn’t see as f deer. It’s one of those things that can’t be eoqilained.”
the Out499f ytail
the aquirrel, made a bolt for this big nuraa soon as he saw it at Oconomowoc. Wla. Buf something went wrong, and the priae turned out to be a big' eggplant. Hi la a household pet.	'
Seapon Ends Today
New Deer Contest Leader
Bald Mountain Area Excluded
Need Parks Admission Stickers
admltttag bis car and its oeeo-panta to aU state parki and too-reattan areas ftir the year.
Motorista abort of tiinda will fct a three-day fliaee period to produce evkteney that the fee has een paid.
A ★	★
Eariy In Daoember, ^ome 00,000
LMfSING (AP) ~ Stirt^ next month, _
sticken will start sprouting on car windshields in Michigan.
Starting Jan. 1, motorists must idisplay them or pay a SO cent daily charge, to gain admlasion to 56 of the 63 state parks and ree-reatiaa areas during 1961.
★ * ★
After several running legislative battles and a cou|de of vetoes by Gov. WUliama, the state’s first parks admissloa |rian was enactat^ to the diarge to cover handltafl ■ year. It will atirt a badly —•“
ba mailed to IJOO bunting and flabtafl Uoene* doaleis across the state. Fifieen'cents will be added
needed expansion and bnprove-menti program once the legiala-ture end(»set a $3 million boodtag program abeady approved by the itate (Conservation (Commission.
Year'a Day. Sigu informing parka vlalton of the admlsaloB charge will be poated at ca-
A violation notice will be left on any car displaying no stticker. It will give the owner the option of buyine a S(k%nt sticker as he imacKinac, croas-over poini ror|“ ^	or the S2 sUcker
This nmns thit John Harcourt, hvinten southbound from tho Upper'__________ ______________________________
1410 Stephen St.. Gawaon, ia only [Peninsula, reported declinea.
»«tay	the oaik or the K
Eacanaba, Fort (plater recreatlan area near Betde (Creek, Port Oeo-cent atate pork in fiw ’nmmb, MuakaUoi«e state park north of Newberry and C^boygan itate park.
k *	*
fri IS other parks and recKattaa real, fees will be charged only in heavily uaed eeetkMiB.
ut bad spilag af parks vial-
Eighty vending mactataee aleo
Tbt plan is expected to yield upward of n million a year.
"Wa den't expeet aalwtaallal
Had alarih« ba May wkan we gel N per oeet ef the parka vMtora,” aaki Harold 0. MacSwala, asals-taat ddef at the Oaoservation Department's parks dlvlsloa.
Areas n^ere no admissloa will be chargra indude;
Bald Moimtaln Recreadon area near Pontiac, Benzie Itate Park, D. H. Day state park near ’Traverse Gty, Fayette state park
About 10,000 families were turned away for lack of facilitlea.
♦ k ★
’Die orlglilal bonding program will .be used almost entirely to ejqpand and Im^ove existing parks.
SOIVacre park along Lake Michigan near the Ottawa-Muskegon County line. Jt will reUeve con^ gesdon at Holland atn Grand Ha^ state parka, whi<ji annually accommodate more than one million visitors each.
two days away from being award-! ed first place in ’The Pontiac Press: heaviest deer contest.	I
Harcourt entered a 205-pound|
Game men dted these factors
u	[Discussion Date
_________________ .	. I	on Rule Changes
McCoy of Pontiac whose 195-pound,	^	|
8-polnt had held the top spot for *1. The mid-week opening which LANSING - Pro^^es a«l three dayt	fewer hunters in the woods regulations for state le^ ofter
Wday than last year when a big ^
Kb«tn.«■»	mad. « tb.	SXgTj rrt
TS'top to to. number
m-ywoM to^. whj(*i«iilly pgrtM,. nifcjj'wwe mno\.d mjke up nra-totoa. ul to. budC|i„„	repUMtou,
The leading buck has a large, Wll.	esriler this year to minimize pub-
8-potat rack. Harcourt shot the Of course some will blame the|jjp confi*ion and Imiwove admin-deer near Republic in the Upper i'any deer’ seasons of past years irtration of all itate-owned lands. Peninsula on opening day.	{which allow a harvest of does andl
State conservation officials read-: fawns,” said the conservation de-lly acknowledged that the kUl Isjpartmcnt game man. "Game man-down from last year, when hunters agement policies are always the took home 115,000 deer, the second first scapegoat wten the season la highest total on record. Pre^eaaonja disappointment." estimates of a kill approaching
Michigan Tdtalg Disputed
last year's have been cut back.
v’61
See II ..
TEMPEST
. Drive It. . . Buy It
JACK W. HACRC
rOSTUC SUES
Clarlufon
A tough winter in 1958 was the chief cause in the decline of IM-year-old bucks, game men said, good many does starved and numy of those that survived produced stillborn fawns or others unable to
d mothers.
Election Set by Inter-Lake Sailing Group
Commodore Theodore '
Bar-
As tentatively apimved by Om
WASHINGTON OA-A total 321,425,402 in federal funds has been apportioned to the states for their fish and game restoratton programs for this fiscal year, Secretary of the Interior Fred Seattm announced today.
This indudes a partial apportionment of 312,800,000 made available on July 1.
The fends are derived from federal excise taxes ooUected
aniy two ohaages In the aet of ralea and regola-ttona presently govendng stale
One would add "camping e<iuip-ment, or other property” to a provision which limits storing or leav-
_________________ _______________tag boats and fish shanties on state
get ejiohgh nourishment from ffl-llandi to 20 days without written ' -	permission from the Conservation
Department.
’The other change would make it inlawful for persons to post, {dace, or erect signs of any type on state lands without writtoi penniaaion from the Department. Land users are currently allowed to put iqt
FoUcwing n
t month’s hearing.
bier of Detreit will preside at the Inter-Lake Yachting Association’s
fall business and election meeting	^
Saturday at Detroit’s Pick-Fort	^or approval.
; Perry Lions Plan
Shelby Hotel.
Delegates representing the association’s 80 member clubs will
Rabbit Bow Hunt
LYA’s 68th annual regatta, one of the nation’s largest.
A. A. Mastics, past commodore of Geveland Yacht Gub, was picked by the nominating committee to head the association as its commodore dtiring 1961. The committee recommended Harry
The annual Perry Lions Gub bow and arrow rabbit hunt will be held Saturday begtantag at 10 a.m., (^airman Bob Watkins announoed today.
The shoot will take place on the Evanoff farm, located northwest of
MacFarlane of Detroit for the vice! Perry. Hjere will be a lunch break commodoreship.	| at noon with hunting getting under
The only apparent contest will way again at 1 p.m. The shoot be for the post of rear commodore.
I-LYA’s code of regulations requires that two men be nominated
for that office. Neville C. Foster of Geveland will be pitted against George C. Llewellyn of Lorain.
ends at 3.
FToceeds from the hunt are usedL	i i... i
to ti» d|to to itt .™k rtto to,	^
blind and contributions to the Leader Dog Scho(d at Rochester.
Choose ‘His’
Her*'
Golf Equipment
Michigan Featured
Bow hunting tor bobcats in Northern Midiigan ti described by Les Line of Midland in the December Issue of Outdoor Life magazine. Also in this edition is • story on the bounty payment systems in the United States and Canada by Ben East of Holly.
Federal Funds Released
Seek Earlier Bass Opening
An earlier opening of the blade bass season is one of several key ^posals whidi wOl be sent to the legislature in 1961 as the result of recent Crmservatlon (Commission action.
A June 1 opening of the bass season is recommended waters except Lake St. (Clair and the Detroit and St. Galr riven. Canadian fishermen must wait until July 1 to fish for bass to these waters. The exception is to defer-oice to the Ontario neighbors.
Other profMsals to be sent to the legislature would: (1) remove cred limits on perch taken by book and line; (2) drop the ban on using treble hooks; <3) make mink hunting and trapping seasons ooncur-rent; (4) extend the raccoon trapping season to conform with muskrat and mink trapping seasons; (5) outlaw use of the large CConi-bear trap and other traps of its size and shape.
(6) Make the small game license
Federal aid moqey is matched by state funds on tiie basis of not to exceed 33 federal to 31 state, although according to law the states carry out all projects with their own resources and are reimbursed for ito to 75 i>er cent of the cost.
★ A , ★
This year, the maximum amount which can be received by any state for game restmwtian is 3735,100 and the minimum 373,510. For fish restoration, the maxi-lom amount o4 3272,750 went te Texas, (California and Alaska. The minimum figure' of 354,560 went to (Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Vermont and West Vir>.. ginia.
Mlcl^an’s apporttonment Is beoaaae at a dis-e( paid
game aad
Federal officials object to tHls because they fed many small game licenM buyers also purchase deer tags. If the license sales mv totaled together, they claim, Mich-igan would receive more money even though the actual number at hunters is much less than the licenses sold.
★ A A
Tbere Is a similar dispute over Minnesota’s totals.
State by state apportionments for the programs for the year ending June 30, 1961 included:
match the period covered by the bear huntii^ stamp; (7) permit early special hunting seasons on eoqierlmental areas authorized law to aid in gome re sear studies; (8) delete the option permitting hunters to break down their firearms to cars in lieu of encasing theib or carrying them in the trunk o( their cart; and (9) make
PnmiTiTuiUi
X—PortloB 0_______________
■um of ttU.tn.SS temporarllr i
poBdlof receipt of-----—.-i-
Uon of poM huntlr
Saddle Club Meeting at Lake Orion Center
The Lake Orion Saddle Gub will have Dr. D. L. Lbewlth, noted speaker, at its month-
ly meeting Dec. 6 at 8 p.m.
Or. Loewith will ape^ on the feeding and proper care of horses. A question and answer sessifXi will be held after his talk.
The meeting will be at the Lake shining for game illegal while [Orion community center, Orion any firearm or bow in and Kern Road. The public is in-can.	Ivlted.
Do Your Gkrislaias Shappiag Early
■USE OUl UYAWAT NAN
Poitiae Country Clib
4335 Eliubtlli Likfl U R S4939
B.F.Goodrich <

SNOW TIRES
Gwarantood Now Treads
2 fbi *2221
6.70.15 » 7.50.14
flat Tas m4 R«lrot4sU« CMisf. Tabs 1 Tiibolen •lackwsll Os}y.
. WHEELS ALIGNED
Bfistoi Mart Safety Centei
12M23 L BbileilB R 3-784S-R 3-TMf" «"i.*snoa
NONROE-MATIC
SHOCKS
• SWoaMflooap ■niofi oW ootno* OMtai a oowkor V WOM.)	'Srr 3075 Csatpluli laWriM ^ 1,
^*5^ ss	
‘8”
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 3ff, 1960
FORTY-THREE
ANGRY AT AP — A dummy of the Associated Press swung today from the flagpole at the University of Mississippi campus. The angry Rebel students feel their unbeaten team deserved the mythical national championship rather than second place behind Minnesota.
'Frosty' Ferzacca Named Stale Coacti-of-llie-Year
DETROIT tP - F. L. (FrostyY Ferzacca, who gave up a lucrative Job in the professional ranks for long-range athletic building program at Northern Michigan College, and accomplished the job ' Just four seasons, today was named Michigan's college football coadi-<rf-the-year.
Associated Press member sports writers and broadcasters, and the coaches in state college ranks, voted Ferzacca the honor in a close race with Sam Ketchman of Ferris Institute.
The 49-year-old Ferzacca will be honored at a luncheon of writers, coaches, players and college officials at Marshall on Dec. 13.
‘Tve been around this game a long dme.” said Fersacca when Informed of the award, “but this is the nleest thing that has happened to me. I'm very grateful.”
Northern’s Wildcats became the
NEW SEASON PRICIS!
CAR $
WASH
Men.. Tw».. W»S.. Than. 0«lr
Dowatomi Car Wash
SI Ssath rmr	n s-ssts
*1.25
UMPORnO CARS of OAKUND COUNH
fw iBserUS Can'
W. Mapit a Orchard Lk. Rd. MA 6-2401
strongest team in state college ranks just four years after Ferzacca gave up scouting and imo-motional work with the Green Bay Packers. His team, playing a tougher schedule than any of the other smaller college teams, roU^ up eight victories against one defeat this year. The loss was administered by 'Youngstown of Ohk>.
Northern tied Hillsdale for the best record in the state, and the blgghst prestige victory among Northern’s eight was a 2M verdict over Hillsdale.
This Is the fifth simnal Associated Press award. Previous winners were Lloyd Eaton of Northern Michigan, Fruik (Mnddy) Waters of Hillsdale, Henry Paul of Olivet and Bill Kelly of Ge» trsl Michigan.
Ferzacca, a native of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, was brought to Northern Michigan college in 1957 by Dr. Edgar Hardin, president.
’I was working for the Packers,” Ferzacca recalled, ’’and one day I got a call from Dr. Hardin. He s4d the schod had moved ahead well in other phases and that he wanted to bring the athletic program up. I wasn’t too ent'
it at first, but the longer we talked, and the more 1 learned what a great building program this man . was starting, I decided I wanted to be a part of it.”
A much tougher schedule and many more victories have accompanied Northern’s expansion program.
Ferzacca was born at Iron Mountain, where he excelled as an ath-hlgh school. He went on to Lake Forest College and became the school’s only 13-letter winner. Ferzacca was a varsity star in football, baseball, basketball and track.
Three National League Clubs Want Bolling
Training Camp It Set
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)—Ed Doherty, manager of the new Washin^on club in the American League, said ’Tuesday night it is practically set for the club to have its spring training headquarters at Pompano Beach. Fla.
Much more than
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After all, luck alone can’t provide aervioas such as: touring information and aid, emergency road service, group life-accident benefits, the opportunity to purchase low-cost auto insurance at the Exchange and tha countless other advantages of Auto Club and AAA membership.
Call or visit your nearest Club office and study the benefits of belonging . . . then, apply for membership!
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Tigers Reject DeWItt's Offer fo Trade Bell .
Braves, Giants Jjppe to Deaf for Detrc^ Second Baseman
LOUISVILLE, Ky, - At least three National League duba are bidding for Detroit ’Tiger second baseman Frank Bolling.
Milwaukee, Qncinnati end San Francisco have approached Tiger manager Bob Scheffing at the minor league convention here. Their object—to hire the veteran BoUing to their dubs.
MUwaakee, which has sought Bolling for two years. Is etfering pitcher Jaan Piiaaro, first baseman Fmnke Toree nad aeooad bnaemnn Chuck Cottier na trading mntorlal.
Bill DeWitt, general manager of Cincinnati, first offered Billy Martin, then outfielder Gus Bell. Scheffing rejected both, saying; ”I think Bdl is a good hitter but I wouldn’t take him even up for BoUing.
’If DeWitt wants to talk about Vada Pinson or Frank Robinson, then we’U listen . . . very care-luUy.”
1an Francisco Gianta, thwarted in their efforts to trade Johnny AntoneUi, their one-time pitching ace, to the New York Yankees for catdier Johnny Blanchard, appeared to be dow to a deal that would send the veteran lefthander to the Cleveland Indians for infielder Johnny Temple and pitcher Dick Stigman.
HokUag up the deal. wMch would be the first made at the aaunal meetings, to Ctovetoad Oeneisl Manager FVaak Laae, wldeniiig the scope of the traas-actton to Include Giant outfielder Winie Kirkland or FeRpe Alon nad Indian outfleider ’Tito Fma-cona.
Lane acknowledged these names were discussed but dedined to reveal the exact nature of the deal nor would he say how close the two teams were to consummating a deal. He did say that another talk was scheduled for today and hoped an agreement could reached.
Along with everybody else. Lane blamed the rule which forbids the trading of 120 American League players who were thrown into the hopper earlier this month to stock the new teams for the lack of deals, up to now.
This rule will be in effect until Dec. 13 when the new team, or teams, will select seven pl^vrs from each established miuor league dub at $75,000 per player, the inter-league trading period, currently in effect, expires Dec. 15.
Eddie Yost, veteran third base-man of the Detroit Tigers, is expected to be purchased by the Senators on Dec. 13 when the frozen list is. made available to the new teams. Yost is on the list dt the 15 Tlgera who may be purchased for $75,000.
ClMt-Oit M IMO
Heisman Trophy Goes to Bellino
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP)-Per-sonal note to Sen. John F. Kennedy, president-elect and aome-time touch football player:
Navy halfback Joe Bellino would like to have lunch with you. He laurel it would be the perfect end to gn unbelievable football
MR. FOOTBALL — Joe Bellino added another trophy fo his big collection. He was named winner of the Heisman Award today after leading Navy to a 9-1 record and an Change Bowl date with Missouri, Jan. 2. He was alao winner of the Maxwell award.
Bellino Tuesday won the Heia-man ’Trophy as the nation’s standing college football player of 1960, outpoUiitg Minnesota guard ’Tom Brown, Mississippi quarterback Jake Gibbs and Auburn fullback Ed Dyas in national balloting.
♦ ★ ★
The day before he had won the Maxwell Trophy, given for the same honor.
He also is making a host of post-season honor teams as a result of scoring 110 points, lead--ting Navy to a 9-1 season record,
from the Boston suburb of Winchester, Maas., in something of a spin. But he said there to Just one more thing that would make his seaaon complete.
★ ★ ★
‘Td like to be Invited to have lunch with another Boston, resident who also has had • good year-Presldent-Elect Kennedy.” Bellino told newsmen. He said It with a smile but also with a confidence that with ail the acclaim he’s had this past week it might come tnie.
He capped an outstanding season by starring in Navy’s 17-12 victory over Army last Saturday. Later, In New York for a TV appearance with the coaches’ All-America team, the stocky midshipman was surprised to find people recognized him on the
PCH, Skippers Clash on Mat
Local Rivals launch '60 Wrestling Season Tomorrow Night
A big local battle at the Waterford High gymnasium tomorrow night at 7:30 will launch the 1960-L area prep wrestling season. The Skippers, under new coach Jim Tolfa, will be host to Pontiacj Central for the 1st of two meetings between the schools.
* * *
Tolfa has been working hard, with a group of experienced hands' and may come up with Water-' ford’s best team in its short mat career.
This is-a rebuilding year at PCH| as 10 of 12 lettermen departed. Only small juniors Del Sanborn and Art Fowlkes are back fori Chiefs from last year's varsity.
It will be the only wrestling action until Dec. 5 when South-field opens. Walled Lake, Cran-brook. Farmington, Northville and most of the other area schools also start next week.
Pontiac Northern has until Dec. 13 to get ready.
The flood of hon(»-s has Bellino, the son of a Sicilian Immigrant
Joe was still riding his pink coud Tuesday when he got out of class and received a note to report in his dress Uues to the office of Rear Adm. Jphn F. Davidson, Academy superintendent.
The admiral was waiting to notify him of his selection as the Heisman Trophy winner and pictures were to be taken.
it it	It
The	26th annual	award	by	the
Downtown Athletic Qub of New York will be presented at a diimer there Dec. 8. Bellino is the first Navy player ever to win it. It was won last year by Billy Canno of LSU.
* *	*
Bellino	received a	total	of	1,793
points—including 436 first place votes—In tbe balloting by 1,130 selectors throughout the nation. He received a majority of votes in every section of tbe country and his total was more than 1,000 points over Brown, the runner-up.
The 5-9, 177-pound dervish, who has smashed four Naval Acad«ny scoring and running records this seaaon, credits his success to two factors: a lack of injuries, such as those which plagued him two previous seasons, and enthusiastic support from the brigade of mid-ahipmen which fired up the entire football team.
San Uf to |IM WIlira Rato Saloi, Im.
lONMi ns.. nteUMe BM s-iita	Tko t-rm
REBUILT MOTORS

TRA Throws Bouquets to Bowl of Flowers
NEW YORK (AP) - Bowl of Flowers, from Mrs. Isabel Dodge Sloane’e Brookmeade Stable, was the unanimous choice of the Thoroughbred Racing Associations’ board of selectors today as champion 2-yearold filly of 1960.
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650x14		_	2610	2115	31.95	2619
650x15		<4.	20.50	1US	25.10	223$
670x15	1695	Ills	2L75	1615	2660	23.M
7.10x15	2130	1UI	23J0	21.H	29.15	21M
7.60x15	2330	21J9	2610	23J5	31.95	2I.M
600x15	2660	23JI			3655	3235
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FORTY-TOUR
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 80, 1060
Lincoln Counties in Tennessee, I Revolutionary War i Kentucky, Missouri, Georgia and jamin Unootai — not North OsroUna are named torjiisiooki. |
ijRed China’s Wish to Enter Atom Club May Be Point in Dispute With Russia
Kennedy Ponders chiysl«r Gtts $2^^15 Televised News ^	^
Conferences
Contract for PO Trucb
DETROIT (AP)-Cliryslsr 0*p-
WASHINGTIW (AP) - The p sibiUty of holding some psvsidenl
riven a
315 contract by the Post Office Da> payment for L«0 Dodge trucks.
Production of the diree-quarter-toB parori delivcty models wtl begin in lata January at die Dodge tmek plant in Warrea.
Bodies .will be bulM by Alf-Her-man Cdrp. ol St. Louis and Boy-ectosm Body Co.. Boyortown, Pa.
By WILUAM L. RYAN
We'll Be
[OPEN
Every
SUNDAY
,12 Nooi ’til 6 P.M. U>til Christmas
For some time now the Oom-mnnlst Chineas have been badl)M spread propaganda that tBey expect soon to have a nuclear' weapon. One object seems to have been to apply pressure on the Soviet Communist party and government to cough up sufficient help to get Red China into the nuclear weapons chib.
Viet help the Chinese would find it difficult to achieve speedy berridp.
wn sntoNO Enough
equabbie. or even wtth the poMi- ^
denlb annoyed, might .atii ■ometiliim diMgreeahiy an agmble. R would not be dy drat
I Is under conrideration IdeptrElect John F. Ken-
bowevor, the Red OUnese are in no position to purii such quarrels to a showdown as matters to be tough with the Odneie Rw. now stand. Tliey would have have strong siqiport from inside the Soviet Ct
A report firmed “ Kennedy's
ThU may be one of a number of points of friction between Pel-and Mokmw. The chances are that the Kremlin
from happy about
CONSUMERS
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Red Chinese mem bership thst dangerous dub.
The Chine jseem to have |pressing the issue hard. Even when d o u bl e t a I k publi.shed by ti Comiiiiinlsts about their alleged unbreakable unity on ail matters, Peiping's leaders seem more than little anaoyed at the Soviet attitude. ■
THREAT WOULD SUFFICE In a sense, Red (3iinese membership in the nudear weapons club could put Soviet policy at Peiping's mercy. The threat ot reckless use of such weapons would J>e enough to give Khru-
Momow has given brosri hlnte to the Chinese that it is getting rather tired of Peiping's nagging. It is nre for The official Soviet Communist newspaper, Pruvda, to break into print with en Ideo-l^cal argument of the sort that usually is confined to the Communist family’s chambers.
What it may mean is that the Russiaiu are letting Mao Tm-tung know Moscow may feel it-seH moved to take some correc-action it the Red Oiiireae leadership persists the Kremlin's carefully calculated political and economic campaigns on the world stage.
MAO NO FOOL Mao is likely to be fully aware that he could hardly hope to win out in a showdown with the Kremlin. Even inside the Red Chinese party there likely are many who support the Soviet view of how world revolution should carried out.
It may be significant, also, that in recent weeks the name of Lo Jhi-ching has appeared in Chinese press with the tag army chief of staff." Chinese
!. power la their country.
to that effect was
.>eday by Pierre SalL______
press eceretery, but he details or indloutions of be decided.
IhieeJuiaM and thirty-iiine newspapers in 380 markets in the U. S. end Ctnada pien to partid-pate in the newspaper industry's second "Make Your Home Hap^ WMh A New Appliance” promotion.
ler consideration.'' was r would Mqr.	.
I Eiaenhowor's regular!
iped and the practice hai release them tor TV later, after review.
local drives will be appliance eis, gas and riectric comparias. banks, department riores —"
Parakeets eat almost constandy. nd cannot live veiy long without
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FONTIAC. MICH.
PEdtrol S-4161
Plan to Attend rresident's Inauguration? There Are a Few Problems to Be Faced
;the pontiAc press, wedi/esday, November 30, loeo
FORTY-FIVK
By IxNi Fine
WASHINGTON (AP) - Are you planning to attend the preaiden-,.Ual inauguration fat Januaiyr 'JC. Thouaanda of othen ,are, too,
-	and the headacbea they are creating for Congreaa menibera and .'party officials ahlne through this
-	compoiite of the letters piling up Mn Washington.
★ * ♦ ,
"As you know, my faipliy and worked awfully hard tor the .^dtet during the campaign, ^naturally we want in on the inaugural fun.	'
"Please send us five tickets for ihe inaugural ceremonies and six
-	for the inaugural ball, as my 'Idaugbter will want a dancing part-_ner, idid passes for other big doings,
"We don’t know Washington so will depend on you to get us three hotel rooms, preferably along the parade route so we ci Jhm the uHndows if the weather Is bad.
'"Incidentally, we may use , office as a sort of ‘headquarters' on Jan. 20 until the inaugural gets going. I remember you said to fa^ my hat there whenever I'm In Washington.
■"Sorry we couldn’t carry our prdicinct for you and the ticket. But, to coin a phrase, You can’l win ’em all!”
HERE ARE REASONS If- your letter brings a disappointing answer you might like to know some of the reasons.
•In the first place the inaugural Cergmonies have two phases;
Watch That Bootleg Booze
Revenue Agents Plan to Warn of Dangers of Whisky With Posters
WASHINGTON (UPl) - It isn't the alcohol in bootleg whisky that gets you, federal revenue agents said Tuesday. It’s the lead.
The internal revenue service issued the warning as it announced plans for a nationwide poster campaign to alert possible imbibers to the danger of illegal whisky.
Hiere is the solemn oath-taking in the specially built court before the recently reconatructed east side of the Ca|dtoI. This is under the Jurisdiction of a Joint Senate-House committee. Seats are free, but at least 50,000 requests are pected for the 18,314 spaces available.
Then there are the attendant spectaculars, such as the two-hour parade from the Capitol to the White House, the inaugural ball, the pre-inaugural dinner, the governors’ reception and Constitution Hall concert, and the Ul These are under direction of citizens’ inaugural committee. TTiey coat money, but even money won’t bay space that’s already filled.
Seats in the inaugural stands at the Capitol are reserved for invited guests only.
For his personal and official family your senator will be allotted 12 guest Hekets and your representative only 8. leaving precious few for distribution to insistent constituents/
REEK SPARE TICKETS
Already, members from Massachusetts and Texas, home sUtes of president-elect John F. Kennedy and Vice President-fleet Lyndon B. Johnson, arc circularizing colleagues from .distant and less concerned states for spare tickets.
It’s true, this congressional distribution will not fill the Capitol stands, but think of the other dO-mands. About 4,500 places are assigned to the preu, radio and TV personnel who must narrate and significant event for
the world.
lies of governors: state party leaders, etc.
Well, you say, if we can’t see
ir leaders sworn in at least we can find a place along the two miles of parade route and cheer them as they pass. Standing room, if you can find it, is free. Seats also will be available, for a fee.
Contracts have been let for semipermanent—wooden, that —spectator stands for 15,000 persons at a cost of $164,016. In a^i-tion, 25,000 bleacher-type seats will be put up with another 23."' to be held in reserve for quick erection if seat sales Varrant them.
merchants and associations who hope to get their money hade tideet sales. If th«r as there wu in 1957, underwriters take it If there is profit it goes to charity.
In 1957, parade route seats, depending upon location, priced from 13.50 to $18.75, the latter near the presidential pavilion and reviewing stand in front o\the White House. This year the committee hopes to break even at least by filling the stands at lower prices—but what the prices will be has not yet been decided.
BAIX BY INVlTA'nON So what about the
This fotmal affair also to by Invitation. And your name must have been on the pre-inaugural committee invitation list since about Oct. 12 when members of Congress weiie asked to submit names — "with priorities noted.'
Hcket prices haven’t been fixed for this year. Four years ago they coupHe. or $500 for an eight-person box.
In 1967 there were four simultaneous balls at which the principals and their attendants appeared briefly. Because the cret Service had such difficulties moving their charges
THE GIRLS
through the traffic and crowds from one ball to another, there pix>bBbly will be Just one ball this year—making tickets even harder tq get/
*
There are a few other events you might get in on if you are special category. By invitation only there is the pre-inaugural dimier dn Jan. 18, the governors’ reception and governors’ concert on Jan. 19, and various state society functions*— but not what you would call wide open affairs.
What about a place to stay’
For»several weeks, members of Congress and their staffs have been pestering hotels, rooming houses and what-have-you to reserve accommodations insistent constituents.
la time for the hoik Cfarlstmas is a big • nMonKhlne as well as legal varieties of whisky.
The re\’enue service warned th"i it doesn't take much lead to kill a person and a bottle of illegal spirits may have just enough.
Most of the lead-tainted shine has been found in the South. But the problem is not confined to Dixie alone, accordit^ to Thomas F. Casey, assistant chief of alcohol and totocco tax enforcement of the revenue service.
♦ ★ ♦
Quantities of illegal liquor are shipped from the South to such *	as Washington, Baltimore,
New York, Jersey City, Philadel-pttto, Detroit, Pittsburgh and Chicago.
Casey said that ia many parts of the country moonshiners cook mash and dlstUI spirits la ways likely to leave lead salts In the final product.
Revenue agents believe a prime aource of lead in moonshine is spider used to fasten together pieces of homemade stills. An-othtff aource of the poison Is auto MdJUtors. a favorite makeshift eoiiidcnscr. The radiators, stripped from old cars, often are patched with solder to plug leaks.
If the lead doesn't kill a drinker It can cause paralysis, blindness, severe abdominal ailments and mental disorders.
London Stocks Rise Alter Severe Drop
LONDON (UPI) - The London stock market bounced back Tues-diy in the wake of Monday’s severe price drop that plunged the industrial stocks index down to a new low for 1960.
Uie prices regained an upward iMve and held their best levels of the day at the final beU,
Buyers moved in, recent per-. siatent selling dried up. and the reooVeiv spread to most secticos of the industrial list.
dome, of Monday’s hardest hit listings, such as stores, scored substantial gains. Steel stocks joined the rally and autos perked up.
Actreis Gets Bigger Cut of Paul Douglas Estate
LOS ANGELES (UPD-Actress Virginia Field has been awarded ch0d support payments totaling $M monthly from the estate left by her former husband, the late ac^ur Paul Douglas.
fiuperior Judge Frank Balfhis approved the actress’ petition for an, Increase of $150 monthly. She h^ been receiving $250 monthly for support of her 18-year-old dUKhter born during her marriage to Oougtos-
. Ifac factor died Sept. U, 19G9. -and left hto widow, actreii iU: Sterling, 37, an estate at $241,000.
I
FORTY-SIX-^
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 80. 1960

im 1
rOBUC MUI
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Grain Futures Slip on Board of Trade
POBLIC BALI
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NOTICE
EFFECTIVE DECEMBER 31, I960 the GRAND TRUNK WESTERN freight agency work for CLARK8TON, Michigan, will be performed by the GRAND TRUNK WESTERN FREIGHT AGENT, MR. A. F. WEIL at WATERFORD, Michigan, telephone number ORlando 3-7426, and who will accept collect telephone calls from ehlpperi or recelwere of railroad freight at WATERFORD, Michigan. Persons desiring to be placed on the Grand Trunk Western’s Credit List, for the receipt of collect shipments, pjease obtain application forms from the freight agent at WATERFORD.
Persons desiring further information please write or telephone Superintendent T. D. Ash, Grand Trunk Western Railroad Company, 7830 Orlekns, Detroit II, Michigan, telephone WO 2-2200, ext. 381.
GHAND THUNK WESTEBN RAILBOAD COMPANY
CHICAGO l»-The grain futures general weak-
MARKETS Mart Dips Under the 600 Level
in all commodities exc^t com in eariy activity on the boaid of utule todayi Soybeans lost major fractions ! a cent on alt contracts during the first dealings but the grains generally ahlfted only alightly from previous cloacs. Nearby rye months, usually broad swingers, declined about a cent.
The follewing are top p covering ealet of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholeeale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, i Monday.
Detroit Produce
ravns
Applet. DtUehraa. ta. .....
Trade volume 'was small.
Dealers said there appeared to be little commercial business and that speculatt^ especially were awaiting posting of initial tenders on	rtppid"is.
December contracts.	_
Wheat had rallied somewhat	*
near the end of the first hour while	a,
oats, rye and soybeans continued omoM, w wlta.
VnOBTABLES
BMta. dm. bob...........
CAbbti*. Cnrljr, ta....
tebtap*. a«l. ta........
Grain Prices
CHICAOO.To?‘???Sr-< inin prlmt:	_
•	D«c.....
inv« Mar.
.	May ....
*“ ..........

NEW YORK UP - Small losers predominated in a generally lower stock market early this aftenwon. * * *
A number of advances checked [ the over-all slide, however, and I changes again were almost all held I to fractions. Trading moved along I wen, although ydume in the first two hours trailed tbit of Tuesday I rooming.
The Dow Janea average ef M iadastrtals at aeaa slipped ander


I. bSt.
•; m i
ir
:\T
i:il»4 Urd (drumal—
Ex-High Court Judge E. R. Boyles Dies
CHARLOTTE » — Emerson R. Boyles, 79, a state Supreme Court Justice from 1940 until his retirement in 19S6, died at his home here this morning. He had been in falling health tor the past two years.
Boylea held a variety of pah-He offlcee daring Me career as SB sttomey, which covered s span of more than a half cm-tary.
A native of Carmel Township. Eaton County, he was graduated from the University of Michigaa school of law In 1903.
Boyles was a Justice of the peace at Charlotte, an Eaton County prosecutor from 1912 to 1916 and county probate Jiidge from 1921 1926. He later became a state assistant attorney general.
Bo.vles was appointed legal aide by the late Oov. Frank D. Fitzgerald when he was elected to a fierond term In lS3t.
The late Gov. Luren D. Dickin-- ' rn.lined-Boyles In the post when he succeeded Fitzgerald. Boyles was often termed the "vice governor” since the aging chief executive relied heavily on advice.
Dickinson appointed Boyles to I the supreme Cburt bench to fill a i vacancy in 1940 and he subsequent-|ly became the first state Supreme Court Justice to b« elected on a nonpartiaan ballot under a new
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Turnlpa. bu.
Poultry and Eggs
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11-	10: Barrad Hockt U-M: duakUaft 31: turkaya, bana 31. lama M-30; gaaat M.
falliag 8.U to mM.
Analysts oontiaued to talk of tax [ selling as a dominant factor, along ) with replacement pucdiases con-[naetad with them sales. Those I with one eye on the calendar also I talked hopefully of the "traditional
1	year-end rally.’’
★	e	*
The business news mitigated
} such a development in 1960, how-{ * ever, with manufacturing firms’| |o sales and new orders dropping and the number of workers collecting a unemployment compensation S the way up.
★	♦	♦
Trading interest atiU seemed to
»be concentrated in eoniumer-
2	centered issues while the old itand-« byi slipped and slid.
NAFL with boating InterMts, was Bp Morly I of sm ttms aad held a goto •( better thaa a peiat. Broaswiek, a e 11 v a In bowling, forged a email gala, ae did He
PRESENTS FOR CAROLINE — Two cousins bearing gifts for Caroline Kennedy, daughter of President-Elect John F. Kennedy, arrive at the Kennedy home in Washington Tuesday for a belated birthday party. Caroline was 3 Sunday. • The cousins are Courtney Kennedy, 4. and Stephen Smith Jr., 3. Courtney is the daughter
AP Ptatofbi
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kennedy. Twelve young friends and her grandfather Joseph P. Kennedy helped Caroline eat a four-layer pink cake. Joseph took a piece of the cake to Carolyn’s mother, recovering in Cicorgefown University Hospital from the birth of her first son. '

Livestock
Im ftMri liW-rl.W: nfluty d mind ottMlas* If.t0-S4.M; I	U.M;
idtr 34# 14S Ibu. r Miiai
und (b
utmty __________________ .
cunncri und cutturi 13.0#-ll.tS.
---- - -iblu 3M. Butehm w
------------hUb«r: wulihU orer
•tMdy: wvi SI mdU lowur; tt
lot* mlMd tJa. Na. I and t an. _______ .
304-330 Ibt. U.4#-II.W: mUad No. 3 und
1 IM-tM Ml. 11.75-14.31: Mo. I nod t_____________
130-30# Ibi. 1# 3I-17.M; Ha. 1, I aad 3 Air Radue 100-40# lb. fovi 14.01-ilJI: Be. 3 und 3 Allltd “ IM-eoo Ibu. 137I-13J#.	Allied
Teulere—salubla ft. OMhAOf#d: prUna ' M.OO-43.1)#: food und ehalua f».l#-3I.M:
•tundurd Id^^M-l#.##: aull sod UtUlty 14 00-34 A#.
Shaap—aalublt 30#. No aurly aulae.
a ateck apUt.
Meanwhile, three market wheel-horses—Jersey Standard, Bethlehem Steel and Chrysler—touched lows. Bethlehem recov-l ered later and was changed.
★ e ★
Other steels steadied,
American Motors bolstered an otheiwise weak auto gnxip ivith a fractional advance. £ a s t m a Kodak and Allied stayed ahead in the chemical group, but Unim Carbide was down another point or so and DuPont nearly as much.
Woman Injured as Car Skids
Lake Orion Driver Is Thrown Out on Impact With 2nd Auto
New York Stocks
Plfurt nAar declnti
It klmb Ok . n Xraa#a. S6
■ H i •
A 48-year-old Lake Orion woman as seriously injured today sriien she apparently lost control fit hm* car on slippery North Perry Street and skidiM into a car coming t>m the opposite direction.
The woman, Mrs. Marie T. Anderson. 817 N. Long Lake Drive, was taken to Pontiac General Hospital.
Officers said Mrs. Andeitaw was traveling south on Perry when her car apoa aroond.
with an auto driven by John K. Irwin, M, MtS Delrnoe fit.. Bloomfield TonwaUp.
She was thrown from the car at Perry and Pontiac Rd., place of the collision.
★ ♦ ★
r car stopped along the median 260 feet south on Perry Street.
Irwin was not injured ip the accident which occured at 10:40
Mobile Unit Here 2 Weeks
Free Chest X Rays in City
Free chest X rays are being offered to those 18 or older In Pontiac this week by the Oakland County Department of Health.
The mobile X ray unit will be stationed alongside the Oakland county Courthouse on West Huron Street at North Saginaw Street through Friday.
★ ♦ ★
Hours when X rays will- be taken today and Friday are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday’s hours are noon to 8 p.m. .
Next week the mobile unit will be stationed at the Tel-Huron Shopping Center, Huron and Telegraph Road, Monday through Friday. Monday's hours will be 2 to 8 m. On Tuesday and Thursday the trailer will be open from noon to 8 p.m. and Wednesday and Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
★ ★ ♦
Purpose of the X ray survey is to find tuberculosii and lung cancer cases in their early stages.
Chest X ray is the only practical means of doing this becauK there are no early symptoms of these
By the time the average tubers cufiNis caae ia discovered by other means, the victim has infected an average of four other persons,’
said Dr. John D. Monroe, county health director.
The X ray unit is operated by the Southeastern Michigan TV Detection Project. Persons bdng X rayed will be informed later cf the X ray results.
Gla^s Company Observing SOth Anniversary
One of Pontiac’s oldest busineu firms is observing its SOth anniversary this week.
The Pontiac Glass Co.. 23 W LawiVnee St., the city’s original glass firm, was founded by Simon* H. Reynolds in 1900.
Reynolds was a ptoiwer glazier In IMS part of the state aad In-steHed glass In many earty tac-torlee, schooli aad other public buHdlags l» Poatlac.
Original location of the con^pany under the name of Reynolds A Reynolds was on North Saginaw Street between Huron and Lawrence.
The company has been at its present location since 1922. It is now oTvned by the founder’^ son Earner, and grandson Gordon.
News in Brief
Corel ArneH, Ml WUttenwre 81.. reported to PontlaC poUce yestee-day 4taat bmilars took two Jewelry boxes, a set of •snrtngs and a necklace from her apartment. Total value of the Items was |15.
_jrstoB Wallaeo, M, 8U6 WaMto-gan St, AtfiMim Halifita, waa found guilty of drunk driving yeaterday before Municipal Judge OcU Me-
Lorae d. Hartaell, W. of 46n Oak-uoU St., ideaded guilty to drunk driving yeaterday before Municipai Judge ‘Cecil McCaUum. He owa fined 1100 and sentenced to two days in the Oakland County Jail.
Carrie Flakes, IM Wasson M.. reported to Poqtisa police yeater-that burgtors stole clothing valued at 175 from her home.
Betty Jeoa StovsiM, 178 Nertoa Ave., reported to Pontiac* polk* yesterday that someone entered her unlocked apartment and stole clothing valued at tS6.
The theft of a portable lelevlatoB set from Neianer Bros^ 42 N. Saginaw St., was reported to Pontiac police yesterday.
__MBMge Sato rtljVM. ML *
am. Owninunity. AcUyl^. ing. WllUams Lake Rd. WateiTort. Sponsored by ths lastem Stw. Olarkaton.	—Aoir.
Roounaae Sale ef Tojrs, M-1 pjM. Fri.. Dec. y St. Andrem Bplaeopal Church, 5301 Hatchety Rd., Drayton Plains.	—Adv.
Striking Windsor Drivort Turo Down Proposal
WINDSOR, Ont. » - Windsor bus drivers unanimously rejected a management proposal Tueaday and voted to continue their strike.
Managemeat of ths aaadw1<A.
Tvay Ca. pripei#6 arUtraftoa of all lsa«eo by a bnsineoainaa ap-petaled by the Oataito gwena-
TTie bus line has insisted it must cut wages 10 per cent to stay in business. Hie union orants a 15 cent per hour wage increase.
Federal Judges Uphold Integration in Louisiana
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Three federal Judges — ignoring catcalling demonstrations for segregation —today swept aside every state-raised barrier to school integration and enjoined nearly all Louisiana officials from interfering.
'The conclusion,’’ read the opinion, "is clear that interpositian is not a constitutional doctrine."
Interposition is a fiieory by which a state puts its sovereignty 1 the federal govemn ; people of the state.
*	★	♦
And, later added: "Without support of the interposition act, the rest of the segregation ’package’ passed by the Legislature falls of its own weight.”
' 4r ♦
Further, the tribunal k n o c k ed out what it called "a series of measures whidi purport to abolbrii the Orleans Parish School Board.’’ ★	#	★
State Rep. John Garrett of Clai-bome Parish in the Lottisiana Delta country In northeast Louisiana where segregation sentiment runs high, said the Legislature nwuld continue to fight despite the decision.
Gov. Jimmie H. Davis declined immediate comment.
•I DON’T KNOW*
State Sen. Freneh Jordan Gretna, across Riirer from New Orleans
'I don’t know what we art fixing to do, but to do aomething and I’m going to be for it. Our nrorfc is cut out «• us."
Atty. Gen. Jack Gremlllion left the state capital hurriedly for New
two integrated schools, William | Frantz Elementary.
The women Jeered and yelled but the Rev. Lloyd Foreman already had spiriM his daughter into her kindergarten clou by the back door.
Foreman nros target of similar demonatratians ’Tbesday when he took his daughter to school by the front door.
★ ★ ♦
The three Judges had been asked to rule on two motions; One by the Orleans Parish School Board asking suspension of integration unfit differences between and federal governments had been
mothers thronged outsl^ the henne of a ndiite Metbadlst mliiMer 7#boM fivc-yaarcid daughter oon-timire to attend one of the cHy’a
Death Notices
PHOITT, NOV. 37, 1544. XDWARD, 145 NtrsdA at.: tn 5# b«l0T«d hiubuiA ot HttoD Pruitt: bfloTcd •on ot Lm«I* Pruitt: dear (*th«r of Winds. Bdvsrd Jr., Jtrry Los snd Chtrjl Pruitt: dtsr brothsr ef DolswrsnM snd Arthur Pruitt. Punrrsl urvlM will b« held Prl-dty. Doc. 3. It I pm. from tbo Mscrdonls Bsptlit Church vttti fUv L. R. Minor offlclstln# In-ttrmont In Osk HIU CODirtorT. Mr Pruitt mil IK In tUte at Ale Prank Cnrmthari Funeral Nomo
after 7 p m. today_________________
Root, NOVr M. 1»M, ALPRBD O . Croaa Bt.: age 43: bolorod '	'	" ■	~ beloved
r fpther
3 Thuredsy. l>e«. i at i »o from Voorheei-SIple Chapel h Dr. Tom Mslona offlclatlnf.
------ 1.	---- “-ctlon.
Mr : the
4in5l*ton. Nov~j4~l5«o mn^
•on 143 W. Rutgert: ae^e gg bc-levrd huiband ef Ola Blncleten: dear father of Uri. Robert Vanes. Mrs Donald Davli, Wayne snd Dannie SIngleten: dear brnthee of Mra Edith	-
Singleton:
h WIlklntOD s
I Ornat
•mrr. Nov. 35. 1554. qboroi
"Olav," 555 Third: age 53: beloved husband of Allet Tnait;
vm be s >n PunersI
be announced by i
WHITE, n6V. », 1554. BUSJZ. 4144 Pempey it., Waterford Townihip; age <7: beioved buebsnd ot Jaass C. White; dear mother of Cart Warner, larael A. Jamei p.. Ford a. and Jaek a. TAilU: dear alatar of Bud sad Mathew Warner. 5lra. Mildred Byani, Mrt. Nina Creg-—	Eay. Mrt. Hsisl
Helen Ledford:
d^by U^grand^hlldnBB.
the state asked f all integration
Another by abandonment i permanently.
The Judges said: "Though «« be persuaded of the school board’s good faith, there can be no question of detaying stiil further the enjoyment of a oonstifiitional right which waa aolemnly pronounced by the Supreme (Jpurt of the United States nux« than six years
Sitting on the tribunal Oiief Judge Richard T. Rives of the Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals; U.S. Dist. Judge Herbert W. Cbristenberry, snd U S. Dist. Judge J. Skelly Wright.
Judge Wright issued the original integration order and set Nov. 4 as the final effective date to comply with it.
* ♦ *
In its sweeping decision, the Judges issued temporary injunctions against Gov. Davis, .a number of state officials and the State Legislature to prevent them from shying integration.
These IndivldualB bad Wn under a similar temporary rastrain-li^ order.
Death Notice
Former Pontiac resjdent Jack Crtnka, 65, died yesterday at his home in Tampa, Fla. after a tong lUnem.
He had worked here Michigan Conservation Department in the I^aItiac and Cass Lake arees.
Surviving are his nrife. ,Pevl; a daughter Mrs. Elivbeth Bead of ’Tampa; and a granddaughtbr.
Mr. Crooka' body will be brought to the Saw)^ Funeral Home in Beridey tor aervlce and burial
U. of M. to Dedicate Pharmacy Building
ANN ARBOR (UPI) - The University of Michigan Thursday will open its 81.25 millioh Pharmacy Research Building, the largest uni-fcratty building in the nation de-
President Harlan H. Hatcher will speak at a dedication luncheon fd-lowtng opening cerenMmiea at fiie Rackham Amphitheatre.
The reaeereb boUdiag is foor storlea site is leootod at the ssmh-eost career ef the Boat MeMeal
by the <»Uege of pharmacy as sp4m as other deparfmeati isaa be moved Inta the U. trf M. medical omlcr a qaarter-mile aarajr.
XTom D. Rowe, Bean of the I of pharmacy, said the new researdi building nrfll permit ac-oeptanoe of many more gratae pharmacy atudents.
OmVlaon-JoiiBt Punerkl R o rmT lotermeat in Hough Cfm*t»ry, Almont. MIeh. Mri White vili IK In •tnte kt tiu Dontbon-Jobai
Punfr»l Homt. _____ _______
WOELKE, Novell. 1544, CARRSI W.^ 3757^BI|hl»Dd Blvtl. jHftbj
RtrmnD WotUi*; #**r mother of
lr*a nnd 13 trakt-irtndehll-I. Ptmersl wrylM WI be hAl •y. ^c. 3. kt 1 pm. frokk lardkOD-BIrd Punerkl Home, rd. with Rkv. Howard CIST-) officiating. Intkrment ^ nura Ckmetary. D e t r e iT
Tba Fantias Fresa FOR WANT ADS DIAL FE 2-8181
Frea# I ajBL to • pm
5KSr**Sir*V!!i."!8SS

•Ucn, baa ^baen. rgj

RoUMraiStoi sssKwra.
COATS
Donelson-Johns
_____ !ify rw»tf«u-
Voorhees-Siple



" At II tJB. Today thero were repflei at The Preaa •tnoe In the loUow|a(
1, I, I. K 17. 18, II, tt. n, n, M, N, N, as.
_L
Hilp Wanti^^ 6

irw"
m Hk1f

mwmrm-
m^T tnt frmmt work, t
"*	*pW «7
A	ol IdciTOfd
. SSSSSHi^T HlWZ
PItkM caU ' In’ «ppolintm»pt!* AMhTbW" kAn. iuAbIIB; «UUm to work for kdroacomont Is liloo flow. Pou umo, por-msnoot ^ttoo, iotkrr. eommlt-•oloB booM. aolN or •imllor Vcporimoo ormtUI. Trouporta-tlM (ursl^. Apply In ponon •£tor t p.SllBnr aowls« Uo-ebtso OOBpsnyTin Nort? Oot-
attention
M P»y ChHki
a. Aro vlmiMi u work.
4.	orir S yotri
■IPOBOO poU troInlotfflOBy cot penyWeflU. CoU T* t
i-Srt*aire.SSfM7.*‘S.«
OR 34011, I o.B to I p.a.
hAVl iAAlUSRIO '
X tto«. Phono: rx l-mt.
EXPANSION
or oWBBOny orootoo oponln« tor 1 onlnrtod bob. Will triln quoUflod oppUcnnU to Bik« Ininroneo ond sertoonl InrooUiotlooi In Ooklond County. Miut bt oyoi 11 to II. hOTO high Kbool dUpomo, oor nnd bo kbit lo typt. Paid toco-, UOB and Otbtr btooflta. Call Hr. Hallor, rt MHI.
^OR HZN OR WOMUl WITH cart lo fill ractnelot. Pull or
UAW TO WORE IM AUTO PARTS •tort u p«nt eltrk. Iluft be rxporlOBCM. KoUerbtck't Auto Paru. 171 Baldwin. Mmo PR 4-1041. g_______________________
REACH CASH CUSTOMERS through Classified Ads. Call FE 2-8181.
Hllp Wwrtii Mala 6
THE I^OXTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 80, 1960

FORTY-^EVEV
OPENING FOR 3 MEN
A now factory -	■ ■
--- naoda i
PART TIME
!UajUT.s“i a
fc'sSs iuj
^ rolJEa'^ar ro|S^r*loS. »Sr
w**
p^'s^^y":^ai,L".!s,?.na^:

147 W. Huron.____________
RRal nrrATC salbshar. part

OlWOLiy^	MAM ITOR
watta. Pfe 44m ”
WANTED
lan wtth hl|» tebool_
r boMor loloarn droula-
dtilrt
Uto modal ear and a real dti to Iran and adrapeo la Iho —
K3Sr*iirRW”|!,K
Bo* No. It.
Inata sdat Oorporntton. U73 So
Young Man Trainee
Mtloa open a* adjuator la Pea.
11.,	------, opportunity In
tnlaatlon tor a
ab'lut'? to
Awb^moMai
^rpwn^oa. 411 N. Sacl-
. _ Hi^ Wantid Female 7
„ %IUI

Curb Waitresses
Ttd't bare iBBCdlate

TED'S
Woodward at Bquare Lk. Rd.
DnmfciAN-cAy*TlRu"iiiutAaR To auparrlta 1 acbool eafaUrlat and paraonaol. Plan Bonnt, order tuppllaa, prapara raeordt and reporu. aU. Poaltlu la 10 monthi par year, aalory to fit qualification*. Phono R. Mttar - HUlbony 1-llM^ at for fiitonrlow
DOWNTOWN OPPICB RaB AN Immedlatq openln* for a cirl or woman for (tneral oTflce work.
Prtrlouf eiper------	. ..
not naettaafy.
‘-r...........
Mutt be able to the public. 44 hr. bonetita. Ap. _	. red Tbompaon
Dept. The PenUac
cz^Runi^ WAiTRBiK iii R aoilnaw
BZlBRIINci. __________
twltcbboard. U«ht typini.
y operator wanted I
HODSEKEEPKR AND AIDE POR convaleaeont man> LIto In. I la family. Oood pay. Write Box 4.
Help Wanted Female
Ec^iraMKr LADanr


STOCK MARKER
BW^tchool ftodui^. Pormanont
Bloomfield Fashion Shop
ortieo tor porBonont poalUoa Muat bt proficient In Iralnf i abortband. No prorleu tow olf~. exptricMo required. OaU Pstur-aon a Pattaraon a Barrartt, PE
WAITRiie M-40 POR PIBNT elaat. counter typo ooftoo ibep. Midnifht ^ Ihut. Bitra wAt
lann for (roe
Wo0£d tSiii'-iMX VS "diSB
------------------«M r- •
acbool^boy. Wo work land li Ny^^otoopor. no booty
'ANTKD BBAbrr oPiSu._____
with oxporlonca end followl^ In Dro^^ and Waterford area. OR
WANTID'lABTSrmR. 1 U
- ---lyn and *lCu£*'6tll'after
4 p.B. Pi 44301_________
■7WIT1D WOUAN~TOnLP CARS for 4 chlldran, more tor boBo
than wttet	•—  ----
OR 3-^.
Help Wanted
LM. OPBNINO or lanUoraan. eon Watkini
aupply tor fc. soorly 7.montb
Wki' "• "•
.	^ ^ COUPLE. Pull time
for both, poraonont. roforenooi.
j?rdisf°aay*
wonted to
wiui irea rani ono uiiuuaa in ekOhailMO. Write to Pontlao Preaa Box ST, atntlnf oca and (trtni raitaraneaa.____________________________
In earotoklnf of apt houae. meat. WrtU Ponttoe Preaa
BfaLLtloaWd - *x6A¥ATXNd
TRENCRlNa — TRUeZINO aaptle Tank and Tlla Jhn WlaBchnk ______EM 3411
BARGAIN
Oarataa. addlttona, poiehot, ree-PE 44111.
CUSTOM ROMB8. BUILT TO SUIT
Employment Agencies 9
Labe ltd.. Eaexe Rarber.
Office
Oantral office pocltlon ovoltobla for woman aiod 14-40 with typ-Inx and bookkeepini. Oood itnit-‘— latory. 4-day weak. Htdwaal --------* 404 Pontiac atat4

— A BIO DEAL —
PRES INOULAnON JOB Ith Even ALUMINUM BIDINO IHBTALLATION
ALTERATIONS AND MODERN-
anfU'VW-J'fcctlVw.
-eroRHa — and - AWNOfoe — N»-naoocy down, 14 mo. and up Daai DIroet with Owner and Bare SOB VALLELT '*Thc Old Bcllablc Plcncor*-
Plaite^g Syvjce
PLABTBRINO. PREB BBTIHi--
P, Mcycro________ BM 14143
Plnnibera.Siippnee
Plumbing Service p^tSsfL^MBiSoe
f(n?»
Sand, Qravel and Dirt
Automobile Repaira
L^/d MOTORS, Uncoln-Mtr eury-OoBot 131	8. Baflnaw
Phone PB 14131.
•CRAI
Carpet Cleaners
A-l RUO AND PURMITURB Cleaner-	””
aim.
Saw and Mower Service
Mock bortoi. head »a. waive cenrlce, valve e nur1tito«. WOHLPBil^DBE.
4 B. Telegraph. PB 3-4007.
Auto WeA. ft PolUh.
CBNTRAL AUTO WA8B-14 WBBT
Alley. Blue Corel, ---------—
Tenoh Upc, PB 4-7434.
Boat and Motors Repair and Service
lUBT ABRIVBD
TOO ARB mvniCD TO IBB TRB *41 JWT ITRBAM BVINRU13E - All Model* on DltpUy
Harrington Boat Works
LAROON^ANO CUTTBR BOATS MW B. Toteiroph Bd PB >4483
Bort jSlorage ft Rontala
MY 3-IWl. Lake Orion.
Body aad Feeder Repair
eueroM Biwntp_ PAnrnwo
Uerd Uo___
LDfCOLH-UERCURT-
’■OOMBT PB MU
kBLLTW BUMP enop U4 ORCBARD LZ.	“ *
ComploU Body A P____
BmaU Dante to Total i Rndtotor a Rooter Tn Oqrrtetod Ll|hu Rm RaearoBed Bumperi 1
Doll Repah-
Floor Sandfaif
A-l PLOOR BANDINO-WnT TRB PLQPR SANDER — PE 1-3733 PABULOH. WATBRLOZ . BRUCE
/^umaca Paaleri
rRw a UBED EQUIP. M MOUK Serv. jOka Honllni. PB 4WU
Janitor Service
reS^m^'U^^U^or
3-lS pro. fiaMi M,. rotoeto aa. ».m
gj Ssa ft-S
U4 rw Boiarte '^ M *“
i-ir A3*?G!^**I^. ■ ■ ■ *^^3*4.
PONTIAC LUMBER CO.
CMUm CABRJ^
Sporting OoodB
New and Used Guns
ARCHBRT EQUIPMENT 30% pjSCOUirr - CRB8TLXNZ AND £0NB star boats AND
ALL EQUIPUBNT
KELLY HARDWARE
Steem Cleaiibig.

:au clbanino
TeleviBion, Radio a Hi-Fi Service
Trucks to Rent
%-Ton Ptekupa 1%-Ton Stakqa trucu - TRACToae AND EQUIPMENT ip Tiaekt-acBt-Trallo
Instructiras
«ANOm^
Work Wanted Male 11
, By Fraidc Adams

CABOWr UAXBR AND CARFEN-if lilt ********* *	TU

carpentbb work . or ant
yg.p5*H5g**'*-	*

^ 4^	*** ***

ITS,-
Work Wanted Female 12
*p«L_________________
WAifSf ijoBT kodfk
and baValttlny. FB 1-1341.
IHONlNOa OR C HI L D CARE
PE t-3«7l.
DAT jRoiJI
wantad. Ttl-Huron vicinity.
day wort. PE 4-----------------
l^S^OED WISHES BASYirt-^ Una on afternoon ibift. PB 4-13(7.
rvtarial _ _____________
jKj^AWMO — RiohT'
____doUvery. OR 4-4174.
lAB^cn^uro	pick-
Buildfaig Service 13
A-l BRICK BLOCK AN] work. Alee Ilraptoaoi. i.,,, «.»»». A-l RBStDENTUL, "ebUBfeRCUI and Indnetrlal Unooa and i*n
BodeUnf. >ohn-W. Caploi. MT
3-lW
. Tara*. Ueenaod.
e A*my“l
Ctorkaton on 1(14. Open wtekenda or by nppolntmenti. Call Carr. Cooat. Co. OR-------
1 dealgnlni.
__________Stalwart. _ _____,__
ELECTRICAL SBRV-PRRR E8T.
PARTWEY Electric. FE 44434. EXCAVATINO AND TreRCRINO tor lepUc tanka, drain, f '
'—“— —d Ugnt doclng.
FREE RsTUiATSR ON All WIR-Ini. wUl finnne* It. B. Muon
ROOF REPAIRS
EAVESTBOUOHliro PE 44440 . O, SNYDER PLOOR UTDia tandln* and tlnlablnt. Phont PB 44443.

POR BALE.
Business Service 15
BLOOMPDDLD WALL CLEANERS.
£**i.j!8f. '
MA 4
BILL HOOdf" ‘—aU^ and
DEER HUNTER§~
Lat ut akin, eat, wrap and fratx* yeur deer. Storate if daalred. Royal Oak Proien Pooda, IMl Croeka Rond. LI 1-S444.____
XECTRIC motor service RE-
Kg.**v>o*£g	*
RRatino. PURNACtU’iSLlAidb nnd larviced. C. L. Nelaea. n 4-17(4.
PE (4411.
5fLiT~LEACTT lySAOU
Booideeaping ft Tsxee 16
ALTERATIONS ON ALL TTPES OP ■armanto locladtai knitted drtaaea ^.una ^ wprkBMtoklp.
»nr»Moo». mu%, wwcn, rm >NA WARNER________________PE t-lK
*^gggr,p”a.*gs.ffg:
;y»s**^?aii*j?*“»%**ib7S!**”
Meiviaf and Tmddn| 21
1-A, Reduced Rates
-jeal er tool dtotome Bwetow. SMITR MpyiRO CO FE MSN

"I Still don’t see what harm it would do to let him walk B tar M the comer with you.”
Moving and Trucking 22 O’DELL cXrTAGE
Locnl ^ len^^ljtB^ movln|.
UOHT AND HEAVY TRUCDNO. Rubbtah. fill dirt, (radini, and (raral and front end londlnf. PE
Painting ft Dacerating 23
iiT-cLAas rkonwa and pa-
Rft^a****...........—
liT	INT AND EXT. RaINT-
la*. R»ai Pea Back. OL 1-1141. IBT CLASa DECOBATINO, PAINT-
t pjji^HATWo I. ri
Pra*a' aatlaaS*/ Piiw' UL S-iltS. LAD7
free eitlmalev. OR 3
EXP. paintiNo, interior. wiN-ter ratei. Prat aallmat**, all irantaad. PE 443*1 or
work jmarai OP 3-71(0.
interior and exterior
PAINTINO,waU waahlnf. Prae
aaUmatai. »E (4171.________
PAInTINO ' PAftRlNO, RSUOV-
al. Wavhinx. PE 3-Mll.____
PAPERRANOINO, PAINTINO AND I plaatar rap. Btophan Navarra. UL 1-17(3.______________________
Television Service 24
Lost and Found
LOST:	ENOL18H BETTER.
Pleaae call PE (-W(._
■flrsnr«Si Bs.*a
_3-S(J0 after 4.______
LOST:
LOSt - MALE BOSTON BULL. Anyone knowln* hit wbereabouli
__pleaae call PE 4-3(71.
LOST: ( MONTHS BNOtikH SZT-
Boehetter. Reward. OL ---
LOST—LiDfBB BRoNtE OLASSlS Raward. PE (4SU.______________
LOST SAT IN IMLAY CITY. COCK, er spaniel, whit* with light brown. CaU eoUtel, Ubarty (^17, ra-
: t EHOLISR SPRINGERS.
„ loalyn, PE 444S7.	__
idlSBINO SINCB SUNDAfT^lf®^
ty of Colonir.....-
black —-
A BETTER WAY TO
Pay Your Bills
HOMEX SERVICES'
(M NaUonal Bank Bids.. Raehaaler OUvt 14144 and OUvt 14104
Wtd. Childrei^^Board 28
CHILD CAQB RflULB, TOU
>RE RfRILB, TOU WQRI
-- ____licensed hqae. Tel-Rur
_oo »ren^PE_ 4-7441________
LICINSEO ROk(B, OAT OR WOD
RmMI^ MT^CAii. LtcRNBBD
Wtd. Household Goods 29
1 PC. OB A HOUSE PULL WTD Quiek cash for luralture. TV's, s^llaneee, Rnrialh Route. FE
for used TV. turnttnro and (p-pUanett. Olob* Purntture. PE
Rent Apte. Furnished 37
I. uTnume puRNisnm
_____________________T dimwr
4»d Cottoi*. 17 Hotm. PE M(MS.
iToiiMs. (rrtuTiiii7T^iiir-
■Itbad
ntMU: Mdttr~mimiB^.
elm Jo. Ml Waaklnston. lat Bta aaly'!
^MjfVAj*;
i feo^AWb^’—. -
Ttry ctotn. Exeallant
?y............
xaRob r66mA. near RoWn:
■ 4*lroto*r.-SrpnX-.rV-
i AND 1 Redroom aptk. pbk-
Mah^	”
4 ROOUi. NBWLY fikCORATKj.
utimlet furnithtd. Coupl* only-IS3 Maehante, PE $~tm.__
8^'
SwM°py4-
,‘SJiA’SS

b. main floor. 7(‘ciarb.
.. RMS. cSlffOfRLT ,HHtN.
PWeoblnr^jrti
OLORU APTS.
AUBURN RRIORtS
'( ROOMS. PVT. BATH AND ENT..
(14 a week. PI I-SH7._____
3 ROOM. miVATB BNT. AND
applianoRs purMtiIrF________
TV’s ky the piece ft bouteful. Immediate service. Ooug't. PB 1-71M.
rjtTUs WV IT 6r slLi rr'pOR TOO OXFORD* OOUMUNITT AUCTION. OA S-SMl.___________
MW, rndVAAs Bni. airu
___	. Fi	114 m. CiMMDt.
Wanted MisccIleaeouB 30
W^gfEOT^P^^MLUiF'^^
WANTED: 8KU7~1 PT. t IM. SU boote, tlie ( or 10. Besaonable. Call OBlando 3^1 after 3 p.m.
Money Wanted 31
Wanted to Rent 32
I itk* pnvUegat.
Wanted Traneportatkm 34
RmE WANTED PROM DRAYTON
Plaint to PonUac ----- *"-— -
a return. Day shL.. .
OR 3-7444 after 4:39 p.______
RIDE TO DETROIT. CALL AFTER 7 p.m. OR 3-r —
Wtd. Contracts, Mtgt. 35
PE 4-0344. RcUreraeat Aiturance
3 ROOM PURN APT. 1 Cl ____________OR J-13SS
ufiLtHae. ft
44131 _________^	_________
ROOMSTljdtlPIjj "oRLT'dA-raxe before 4:3b p.m. 144 Beo-
_a 'weekr'ric'-i^w'ra^Mb^
rent Adulte.
ROOMS
» ■
III
» OR 4 ROOMST'lXiAN." MtH rate batb and entrance, new furniture, waablnt faelllttoe, ga-ri||c. ^jdulte only, n Matiiiwi.
_______________t-14dS._____
4 ROOMS AND BATH, UPPER,
Srlvate entrance, oouple only 34 amec Stfeet. UL I-1D43.
i:prYHrr«rM9Rw;triim
“‘*•>1' lurnUbed.
__344 a. Broadway. Lake Orion.
4 RMS. PVT ENT. B BAniTTl
Clark St. Apply Apt. 7.___
4 ROOMS. J^ATE~fir»aici _and bath. PB 1-3141.
4 NiCB ROOMS ALSO 3 NICE room* and utllltlei. PE 4-44S4.
r unfurnltbad. Lowar Apt. 4(4.
ABILITY
. equfy or'^ortguq at pottihl* dltoount. Mort-
PE 4-4437.________________
4-r66m heated, pur'nished
or unfurnltbad f* '------- — '
bath, gai baat. and loettlon Adi
TED, PURNI8RED d aat. ilargqi. Tiled tt. beauUful grouse Adi^^rafarrml.^,
furnlehtd carpeted. |
immediAt:
On any good tond contratto. Naw w iateoaed. Your catb upon aat-
.^.!SnTU-r£ZS:
K. L. Templeton, Realtor
Lake Road PE 4-4*43
LAND CONTRACTS t6 BUT M
to (^ Ea^oarrolx. JSt S-M Wanted Reid Eetate ~36
PE 34M(, Leon T. I
CASH
(S EOURa FOR TO EQUITT on LAND I
TIM WRIGHT,-
tour some ~ contract. Realtor
KNAPP SHOES
PREP HERMAN __OH 3-l(((
aR'E you ~
WORRIED OVER
DEBTS?
CONSOLIDATE ALL TOUR BI^ AND LET n CITE YOU ONE PLACE TO PAT.
BUDGET SERVICE
It W. HPROM	------
Menominee. Mri.
fi'AVll5i>ARf«s: 'PE Vt3U~ 7T( seatt Uka Road. __________
ijBPiNO Hand Rand oNUI
Church of Ood will accept any
---- of clothing or furaf-
ItmUy that loet their “ ‘ nri. ti 4-4841.
Open ’111 I r PE (-1441 a
apartments—furnlthad or unfuf-nlihed. Courtema af^nt terv-
LISTINGS WANTED
Buytri wa^p. taih for your oquHy oa hodtet or toad aoo-
WM. A.
KENNEDY-
IN DEBT? IF SO LET US
Give You 1 Place to Pay Ease Your Mind WE ARE NOT A LOAN COMPANY MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS K 7s^,po(rn^ "Tfuf
-----------Oeuatotorc
Asaoc. Credit Oownaowra
..ktORf SAkdif AN^ eeonomlcaUy with newly rolaatad
Dax-A-Dlat toblttg, N canto at
tAjMtoROr-
***(IMU0 fhmaStroqnlled'**'
Backenitosc Book Store
M Eaer uwrxbor ps s-t4i4
Rasltor
____3141 W. Huron St. _____
CASH POR YOUR EQUITY PE 44MI: Eva. PE 44313
dPEcuLitlETRlAW 'kxRvia:
C^l Louis Bortt, Raattor, PE
l*t each for you.
H. C. NEVVINGHAM
^RmmcnOOKBAND^UB«N
Rent Apto. Funitalied 37
l-ROOU, KfTCRlWpTR. BAOn-ntob^ Cto*y in. WM^Stri.
SAVE ENERGY, USE WANT ADS I To find a job, place to live or a good used car, see Qaiti-fied NOWI
btnstlen freater fc refngcrslor. Oarage. No children. Pbone PE i-OgP after 4 r APARTkOPrr. I
bus atsltoa. ela___
Mople. No cate, dogs ei [44 n: Perry. P* t-|H3.
----PUBNl ----------
Rent Apto. Unfumiaiied 38
lOKMM OPPIE PRIV. HNTBAM-
Cfcwl^l
imwiioygiH^. mn wr
Newly de^ated^p^lftoM wtM
iussr.r'prii2?^fia«;^
COURT
Oreote Bedueed"
....MfOmONBD -
- 1 AND 3 BEDROOM -
“^ToTjtTfmY**!?**
FE 8^18
MANAOE* U	ST.. APT. S
O^n Dally fc iun.^l a m. • S p m.
iipout And oaraoe. AUiuRM
RslghU. PE 3-7(44 Mtof 4.
Spe^h. surni.
ply upstair*, left front apartment. OOLORBD-^I BEDROOM. KAHD¥ to bua itore, aad tbnrahee, PE
Efficiency Apartments
Living room. kIMhea. b^ioom -7 N. Padieek, PE (4444.

jsnjz
LAKE VISTA APTS.
*'*
baSf 'itava romi-I numiN tayntalMd.
MODERN 4-ROOM APARTMENT.
a’icSS .5?l;li*7lr.---------
TSaa^anTO'-prlWStilM.!
wtU heated, stove aad refrlieva-tor furotsbad. Pkon* PB 4-t7tt.
•DJUJLS

TSTHRir
West aid* leoatiaiM. Sptksaa-Llb-arty arts, t badroomi, 441 mo. North aide - Whltflsld St.. I bod-room upper — ( bedroom umr— - bedroom lower. PE 4-BHl er E 4-1173 afUr 4 p.m._____________
SLATER Art’S.
41 N^ARKB ST.
rpE’
"WeIST APTS.
160 AUBURN AVE.
I apt. newly deeorated. I refrlg. and utlllUea
furniahad. and plenty of elaeet
Rent Houses Furnished 39
I BEDROOM. COCY. ^AN. BUS Uno, uUUUM furn. ft S4tM.
rB'Bdio6M“iRi(C~>^
terrace, eompletely rtdeeoraUd, nicely furaicbed, HI per month, utllltlec aad oil heal extra. Call
in 3-HM. evenlait._______
rbBbRbOMTsidAtX WM PenUae. Pull bath ^ h^ wiler. 417 wkly. In^ hect Btl 3-OM. 3 BEDROOM. PURHISHEDIsU-Sl«*. v»ry roaionable. H (-IS7I. 1 BEDROOki, TR. ARdlTN^rt blocb off lake. Madera fur--*-■— *“ »<0 «•*«>•
4 exc(
BBDROOM _____________________
•on Parb. Ill*, rtltrtncei. OR
1-3(31 after 4

Monday tbrouth Friday._
txRNIBHKD APABTMEBT R^-
JSi* HrtStedrW VSm'^
^n.^avallabl* Bat. (4<i par
Airport Adi^.*"6B ilisiiT
Ni	_____
lor coupi* or alngto por-All utimica Included at (7( ^r mo MApIo 4-3313 bet. I nnd
3 BBDROOil jlAMCR ROUE. OIL
a.*i :.*&«.'-g*i'i .*.**•»
Rent Apte. Unfumialwd 38 iw^r*amI
Pootlac^^ adulto only. OL H(7(.
___tifi LAiCft
MnfiUr- IIA
Rent Houaos Unfurn. 40
1 bbautipul rancu. n lakr fcr—
rsraso__
j^*"""
3 itDRMiM iVNSaXTBB
‘ fenoSl^HARGER
FE 2-7273
utiiSr-Iat^


PE 3-7113 ________Ray OWcIl RwaRy
Rent Houbbb Umtupu, 40
Oountry CInb.
_________isr oAra^
--- tuburban. Rafcraaccc rw-
qulred. PE 34TJ3,_________
iTRdoM'dte rbAtboTOnOauRw
trlgarator furalsbad. 1
altar tiMp.ro^___________
Troom MbbSllN~lll0llE,"o& hast. North of CUrkitoe. (H per y»|»U>' AU for AI or Dick, PB
uirm ,	„ ,_______
................A.:
"Tsgr"
TSOWIte I Molar.
Attractive Deal!
iJl W. TALE OP---------
turryl Oaty 3 I
option to buy c
■a* heat. Isrit lot, pavad atm
(BROM*/ S?ILDINO^'.
FE 44433	PE MIH
COMMERCE UKS AREA. TA" —*, Just Ilk* naw. HS par ms„ in Ltkt Road near oommarcb 1. I bedroom, oU furnaoo, Mr month. Earl Oarrtia 1*S&11 or nil lx4MM
coWportablb 4 room HdbRai
7M B. Pike Bt. Only 3 tonanu In 13 yra. PK 3-73H._____,
dORlexj bedroom. 6ai MtAi
basemeiR. 3M state H Johnson. .ST----— I-7I4S.
ehlldrtn walcema, 34 Cadlllaa etoaa to aehool. PE 3-3gl> altar g.
Ilm orion: 14 itoM~liVSS
PontiM._almott naw, aU^modern

modern s beorm 6n________
— PenaM^ baak yard. 144
Fici''aJXR~)-BB9pSf9r^9i(C
------.- baat, basamanteRim
... ._r^r*ad^r3.*3»J_. KScHirrBR APARnoS^Ts m 4-badroom. lariiaat. Ot S-Hib.
RENTAL SERVICE ;
LANDLORDS: If you bar* a
C. SCHUETT, Realtor ■
•maLL LARiPRONf kOMK oai
t%‘7»tor^tofurr'*S'tod:^ N4
prf*. 4W. OR 34334_________•
iAM WAM'M RAB l-WHIpoit

privil^. Mh’
Ssnaral Hetpli____
riuf BOE I tootu/t baI
1 badroom and bath dowi bedraama and baHw. Nau furnaaa-lUfUlaMTtwE* leas*.
aOT.H*‘w^RjJj.*iU:
Ottawa nillt, nr. Tal-Euron M
plat Orator. J raomi brtok bon-(alow. (US. Chll Psrtrlds* fc Aa-Ueiatas. IIH W. Raroa - PB 4-JMI
fcLBAk ‘ BLEiPUia BOdHT: at* entraaae. 3S Nartan.
99114. dicE 1
xipfNb ROOM xnt* Rnt^
ro^^lv. Nrar PIshtr Plant. PB
Rooms with Board 43
cio>n mooTO nomt. rm 9«wjio witboat horn* eookins. P-M. WUt
eookihs. 1
y—...,.. .-S-33M.
looid fc BOARD wnn~fL.--------
ow. 131% Oakland Are. PE 4-UH
Convalescent Hornet 44
LOVBLT HOME PC«
!ismi
WBX ubtaTBD.
madern bolldini
landing with approxl-
■happind Cantor. Plenty tl tm -istomei parkins. XdaaUy a-*— >r any typ* ^bnilniai. i
fcTat ruT***** *’
Resit Office Spuce 47
Wall Paper Steamer
laadaix paUahar*. ftm Lake At*. PB S^.

FORTY-EIGHT
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. yOVEMBER 30, 1960
Sate Hou«e» 2-BEDROOM
r«n kucBcM. }-««r (Ukc* L«nt eontr M, Ntv turaut. IStM Ttrai.
JOHN J. VERMETT
R«»| B*UU *M lD*uraw«
^Mlrul* MUt MigkptBc CcaUr
For Sol* Hoiiom 49
For S4t Lofc* Pr*P*rty M
t-UDitooM aons on oom-' nm* Lak* (or lA or nat option to buy.
»JWn.«2ra«"5Si:
dock. roll. lit or I ckUdron «tB (K la tUo Ifo. oobWoil^ boa*#. Pall booit.. oo« P.A, Ibr-Booo. If you can cUaa thli. if roa eaa roll up your »la«»»A J®! Bard Work, Ui« pric# of b a r«al tay. nU bomo *h«n flkod up win oaotly bo vortb In of	Vary nlot Urmi
riffit p(—-
REALTY IQR ♦0O« EPILDBRA LAEETSn. Il.tM. iW DK.. IM mo. Parod wlndlnf Mi., ib-mln. ‘	----- PE 4-d5«».
. dichwi
_______ ____j, baiement._______
rauo Bulldint MiiP. lot lltxltl For only
Peterson Real Estate MY 3-1681
d-BED^M BRICE AND FRAME roloiual ( montlu old. 3-car attached laraif. I'd batbc. Plre-
Aetumo the mortja(e of I1I.7M yllh ILSaojoan Jfhone 0I^1-1}«1 I ROOMa AND BATH. POLL bOFemeoT. 1 cor tarait. lou “ each tidt of houoe tlt.dOd •eUJoU_tej>orote^ PEJM740 UM DOWN W. BEVERLY LARGE redecoroted modern •	----
•ilPgiliKAMPSENi
CKXID t roomo. IS bathe, baee- | ment. I acrea of land Alao. 1-room houae on property that reou !
(or M per month Owner C lornia bound. Baerlftce at >
T ldt. Takea <1.100 down
REALTY
) DOWN. EABt" or 'CRbOKS d.. uewljr dfcor*t#d. J-b rick bunfftlow oa Urg«
I lot n vm4. __________
$200Down L '
it H per month. Includlnr taxe*
Id Inaurance. Small ranch, only I yeara old, new neighborhood ontlae Trail Call oaner Harrv '
NEAR PONTIAC
E bbaboard'^ance CO
I multiple LISTINO SERVICE
, 5 ACRES
ledroom. completely mod. need home Bit barn A other oulbuldllnta, tarage.
new alum atorma k acreena! Extra acreage avaHable Located on Ormond Rd Call
PONTIAC WATKINS
XOTIII.NO DOWN
STOUTS laSS??!
Best Buys Today
----	fenced yard, barbecue FOR OOT PER M6NTH. IHCLUDINO TAXES AND INSURANCE. you can Uve comfort-
II only |l.«a< down. .
$299 DOWN
Full price 14300 130 Mo I wed apecinl - I large bed kiuben A breaklaat nook.
Ivlnj
MY
$9,500
Auburn Heights
ledroom larkt Hying rooi rplftee. full bftsemeot. corftibd. Oftrden spot. |T.
East Pike
112.500
"newt $7.S MONTH
LOCATED ON CANAL with direct entrance Into Caia Lake. Lovely brick bungalow Nice living room with natural burning fireplace Large kitchen with ample eating apace Beautiful cloaed In porch Pull price M.3W with tdOO down and only M3 monthly paymenta.
110.300
i NEW RANCH HOMES-See tracUva 3-‘
floor to ceilint cloaeta' baaCment > Big lot - attractive bungalpi. with gat forced air heat, many i garage — lake prlvUeget - Wa-other deluxe (eaturea Prices start terford area Juat the home (or only 011.000 with easy FHA ■ small family at a ei----------
---- " "I. betAr
plumbtnt. alumiBurn atorma and screena. Pavad driveway and garacf. Price reduced
1 range,‘^.^btej^i^^^^ j $500 DOWll . . .
- Wllllami
for resale. Priced
, living room. bUllly. fuU baacment ! » ear attached gsrace. cement I drive, welt laodecaped. 07.030.
3 bedroom,ranch atyle CRAWFORD AGENCY v..|| batemr-*---------------	---------
wl^ t
M.030.
LIST WITH
I i Humphries
t floort
I bath. I

b trda OR 3-7030.
RUBS McNAt	ART MEYER
- ASSdeiATE brokers — inveatmenl Co.. Inc PE 0-NS3 «ljOR«IARp LAKE AVENUE_ A OOOO BUY FOR YOU ETTRA
home no longer needed. 4-------
1-bedroom,. Walton-Opd^ke
exirat 114 030. 01 e Ol III mo ro
l!AR(i.\IN
LAKIVILLB. NEAR 03U>0RD. 0300 down, new 3-bodraom on 3 acres ’ privHegu. Interior almost >d^ win aupply for finish.
Ill Elisabeth Lk Rd Ph PE 4-0031 Evei Cell OR 3-3301
LISTINGS WA.NTKD
I <3 N. Teleiraph
let water. Newly redece-and remodeled. Vecont (or
tcraph
FE 2-9:
MY OOI^L______________________
E A V 1 N O CITY 3-BBDROOM	S' *'*** ORION,
brkk rftoeh, cbrpetlnc. dr»pe». ' ^4.*"*
b.e.410 Om. ..M	5,^	| FOI
WEBSTER miller
Cell dtya Mon. Ihrouih PrI PE 3-1333
MOVE TOMORROW
LAKE HOME b	________
lly. fenced yard. : recreation room with picture wln-rrlooklng lake 3 bedrma , I. full haaement. oil fur- I w 1 car careoe. every-: eicellent coiidflion oil.- !
HAMMOND LAKE ESTATES — Charm.^peraomallty^ei^ comfort
brick and frame'ranch Home over 1.000 »q feet of living apace
DOOS. HORSES end KIDS. Plenty ; of room (or everyone on thie 30 ' acre little (arm. Big 7-room I house with 3 bedroomt. And It I has a basement coal furnace. |
ANNETT
$6,800. Immed. Posses’n
Close la. (Ood nelthborbood. *	-1 bath all Itc
DORRIS
4 BEDROOM BRICK AND FRAME ^ Brand new and only OU.MO easy terms -Two complete baths, new carneUnt. one bath with double vanity, a wonderful (tmlli style O.B. kitchen. -- large lot, nice eur-
Modem kitchen with
I. and be Dl^y I. OA8
a Immaculate <-room home

, WATKINS LAKEPRONT rimm roiitrmporsiy fe
bungalow, t bedrma..
egps illiornla sroia.. tile, I3xlt. full
FE 3
Dodge stale Park. 1
BY OWNER 3 BEDRMS HOME j
with'	keeYo’ iiartar: OOOio"’’ '''. ,
JACK LOXELAND
,, IW attached garye. oa« »>M C»«_Lake Rd PE 3-4011 , ROCHESTER
Warren Stout. Realtor
17 N	®u 1001 ” »-»ldi
D DOWN
• all you need to move In ively 3 bedroom brlckfront hi lak (loori Oas heat Puli t lent l>, bathi PHA terms
Rig Famili
We ll cootlder y NEW HOME “4
gerege. gait * II i«*n PR 2-M62 ^
Troubles?
tha. 3 light and >ma extra flreplai foot family room 1 kitchen. --
Hill - 7 It Iful view -cheery t
t 131 Al-
x:
d“2o.r
>me with ev harmony

Near New School
Paved wlndlnc atreeta. well kept lawns. Brick ranch with car port, ptetura window from floor to celllno In	nj;. 3 Mrma..
BLWOOO REALTY
aa down payment	1
R I WICKERSHAM	!
710.1 W_Maple MAylalr kOSin
cDLOKlh) HAKtiAlN ^
dlllon Newly decorated and out Oil P/A n... tcreened-ln front c closed back porch '
IM Only 01 MO dc

William Miller -Realtor	FI', 2-026.?
In cloaeta In	Completely ft
terns. '	haat 013.700.
PE 3-3041: .'sylvan .Shores
detlgned t ua (eellni
PHA terms. 3 exceptional *—‘-ooma out^n-“— ^—'
- With a
---------------at that ti
i Uvlna warth whUe.
_ raacEer with 3 carpatad bedrooms Built-in washer, dryer, oven and raate. m balha. Larit fireplace. Attached two cf- *—‘ ed tarage. Vary attractlvi well arranged floor plu ---------------
LIST WITH US—For feet_________
dent service. WE BUT. SELL k 7TRADE. M years eervint Pontiac and vIcliHly. Open 0-0.
L. H. BROWN. Realtor
OM BUaabeth Lake Road Ph PE 4-IOd4 or PE 3-4010 MULTIPLE LISTINO SERVICE
LAKEFRONT YEAR ’ROUND
Charming 0 room home, picture window with beautiful view. 1 ear garate. large lot. terraced down
CRESCENT LAKE
Privllegee go with Ihu tour 0 room bdme on M g IHM. Priced it 04.060 wHft gOM dn.. paymgnlt leat than rfnl at Odd per month. Here Instead of a handful of rent receipts reu can he paying (or your own home I
Partridge
OOM DOWN M.OOO HOME. Modem a In loot, all heat, •bawer. aak ft walU. lat 001303
03.000 DOWN. Oll.lf
COUNTRY nd vacant, hutli 4-pc. bath Witt
gamge. c
I with it
Solace t
Men or Bargi^'llui only. Reduce^ price.
PE 3-7WS	- RES PE 4-M13
CLARK REAL ESTATE
TO BUY. BELL A TRADE 304 W. Huron.	Open 0 tc

^Ic Resort Propert:)^52
1000 FT RIVER PRONTAOI ON Blsck River In Cheboygan Coun-u. beat (tahlag In Uie state. Property Is 300-(t. deep, frontage on f hifhvaya with 40-foot drlvc-
roV«F'‘,;rTO‘U‘’i.Mt“isii
all la one parcal and will sacrifice (or 010.000. Write Cbaflee Morrow. Route 3. mboyian. Michigan or call Cbeboygaa. MAdleen 7-M03.__________
SuburbEn Property S3
aOUARB LAKE -WOODWARD AREA * eld Twp. 3 bedroom, by-
*katbe'*t' flrSplaeM'o Va-
{o^-ec-iratrXl
PACE
Val-U-Way
FOR GOOD BUYS AND TRADES
REALTY OR 40410 BUILDERS
___ For Sale Lots 54
Srr For Yourself CHEROKEE HILLS!
You'll like li t wooded. roUIng lot ft. altee — cootrelled to protect better boaea - aad Its closc-ln

(limlehed. Only 03M
$275 Down
3 bedroom ranch, located on layie North suburban lot. Completely Tcdecorated. gas beat. Immcdleta
Bara (or 3 {
is and Inaurance. We h
Rd. turn right 3 blocks to Lacota.
Carl W. Bird. Realtor
93 Community HetT Bank BlSg.
________Erei. PEjjofe
CLARK8TON AREA. I1.4M.	010
013 me. 13-mla. to Poattac. ererythlni, PE 4-4000.
Waterford Hills Estate
A few choice Iota left. Average too X 3M. OoOd drainage. Ideal , location.
Herbert C. Davis, Rltr.
n &:r"hr
MODEL
•KENNEDY
blka'*t '***h	* *
lleg'es.^arpeted' Hring'*and ' dining area	Completely |
Choice Building Sites;
Many excellent locaUooaoo pSved , W.1.1UK iwvu*. iwii	i	^ kt 10 acres. .
ath aad full basement Located	Draytm Plains	I 3t3
n 3 landscaped loU.. Only <400	«1*40
’	laOvlU	avail rin
addlUonal bedroom Plus
(or^he I
l« all you warn to spend
W Third 81 will plea Pull basement, oil PA .... Large 11x13 bedroom upatali Priced xt 013.0M
C8 REALTY
^iWILLIAMS
II Main St. Rochealer. Michigan
l-Oin____	_ _ LI I-HOM
sylvan LAKE
m* terms’
Tm^\TkK,HT. Realtor ’
COLORED
jreatlon rbom llre-^unda^_3*-'4 p m'*Prl*a
BIDR mb'.
8!?;
000 PE 4-3000 SYLVAN VILLAOl'
HAGSTROM
A REAL BARGAIN FOR CASH bedroom home with priv on Mxr don Lake. Includes lurnlBhliigi Urge utility, fenced yard. Pul
Loaded with many modem leaturea|
ONLY $10 DOWN
NO MORTOAOE COSTS
Open Dally and Bun I to 0 P M WESTOWN REALTY 371 B SIvd LI 3-1331 after 7pm MODEL rz g-ngy
I'., I’.looiiifield llighlamh , A ^ regl ^bargain (or ^«ulrk atle mem. ml ( u r n g c e. (Ireplari . double tarage 300x330 lot 010 300 cish Murigage can be ob
'V>avnA\''RH.\ I :\\
1.;7 Baldwin	., PF ^-*97
I'Vir^-Sale i>r 'j'rade
*aCKI F.R KK.M/,1 V
I S YLVAN LAKI'V FRONT ‘-7bM‘^So^ oi5eV“*^”'"
•1.500 down, on thU cute lot. jpe-**-- --- ^
yetr around hom« Oat heat.
I face beach. Oood-alMd kitchen.
I larte bedroom. Florida room, llv-I ing room and full bath. lii.MO full price.
PROPER REALTY
I-— Commtrct Rd. EM 3-4110
___Erenlnga call PE 0-3303
STfLVAH VnXAOB. 0 ROOkU
city of
... ........... .,1 newly
--------Close to downtown.
H. R. HAGSTROM
REALTOR
4040 Highland Road (MUI PONTIAC	OR 44330
PE .4-7000 after 0 ______LISTINOB WANTED
<37 Monrovia off Airport Road bedroom homt with full base
irie' (amtiv kitchen.
DON McDonald
LICENSED BUILDER OB 3-3031___
MULTIPLE USTINO SERVICE
IRWIN
nice kitchen and dining room. Has ftnlahed family room with bullt-ln bar. Oai heat, water aoftenfr. en-cloaed patio and situated on blacktop street. Pull price 010,000 with $3,300 down.
NORTH END
3-hedroom home with basement Automatic oil heat.
circle drive
SCHRAM
LEBARON SCHOOL	4
3-bedroom bungalow with carpeted living room, eating space In kitch-
ilh. Large 3-car garage. Only
I.akcfront
Panoramic ____ ...
Lake, sand beach.
Brick ranch.
----with 3-
actlvitles
! VERY NICE e lot. It-, 'onderful
! R. J, (Dick) VALUKT I REALTOR FF. 4-3.S31
I 343 OAKLAND AVENUE ■ 3 bedroom home Open o *	*— " ■
atfooSlnt'
a
.STEELE RFIAI.TV (Main Office)
fireplace.
3 iM. bfarniB. wii-n t wnllft. birch kitchen '
L “LV.	’‘Orth MIKord Road Betwceo
t nietue. _m.	Highland nnd MUford
3-30^	or	MU 4-3043 ^ AVO^TWP.
It lake ,l400 Dn --	. Tow down payment
__________ ___________ LADD’S. INC.
oora. "___ ___________I Comer of Lapeer Rd. k gllverbell.
HAYDEN
i If
fetlurw. 13-ft picture win- , '
N ADAMS RD Mtov
fOOMS AND '	« -w	uowD peyment.
ra ^aVi j GAYLORD i*"3''“mi“’'?uii
r_	------- .. .—,, porch.
kitchen
PACE
REALTY OR 4-043d BUILDERS
Suburban Living'
At Its Best	;
Your future home Is the	'
(CONVERTIBLE 24) i
3 A 4 bedroom*. bethi i
W. W. ROSS HOMES
' _____ OR ywi_____
.Sylvan Village Model
3140 PONTlAC DR
TOTAL PRICE <3 OM ‘
SIX ROOM HOME
POOR
only _______
lot 12x12 dining
BEDROOMS and Ektra large
HOW ABOUT YOU : .
Read
This
Classified Column . .
Region
Dealers
And Individuals . . .
Keep this column (real daily llaUngt of your I model aad maka at com)
IF YOU ARE IN THE MARKET NOW
or soon to be
CONSULT Classification 106 TODAY!
ALBERT M CATTELL^BLDR
' tri-levi:i7starti;r
NO MONEY DOWN ' Build a home to be proud of Your lot or ours Have modsl _0 Plattley._Buil^r._EM 3-0403 I "TO BUY OR SELL BEE
.« CLARKSTON i REAI. ESTATE. INC. I
0004 S. MAIn SI	I
Open Dally 0 to 0. Sunday 13 to 0 ;_______________________'
i	Utica	1
1470 Square laet.' New Wri,k ranch. 1 bedroom and 3
Large lot Total price III 000 Call MY 3-30SI.
OOOD OLDER HOME
Mo"*''fe?JJ
borne at <3 II MY 3-30
JMO Soml
OEOROE R IRWIN, REALTOR 398 W Welton	PE 3-7lk3
lebue r
TRIPP
6-R(Kjin Ranch
I with Lake Privileges on Mareda Lake. 3 bedroomsi larga llvin :	room and dining area UtlM
room Larga lot. iVw down.
73 Weat Huron Street PI 0-0101 or PE 4-437S
: GILES
I Northern High
high	buement.
Home In egcelleni condition ihroitfihaut^Can be bought
Near St. Mike’s
J dinette, maatcr bedroom 13 1 13_Oag forced air heat. Carport and laroe lot. Priced et <14.000 and termg can ba arranfed.
OREEN THUMB ARTIST
-------- “ly	the beat la good
llgtlnctlvely modem decorated. 3
ahed. 4 acrea of fand. Owner will coaalder trade up to glO.OOO. lake-front home. Shown by appointment only.
EAST SIDE 3 bedroomt wM larie kitchen i full baaement i gas heal gl.OOO
Roy .Annett, Inc.. Realtors
IS B. Huron St.
Open Ivenlnog and Sunday 1-4
FE 8-0466
BATEMAN
REALTY
MULTIPLE USTINO SERVICE
VETERANS
"BUD”
Your choice o
I\’AN W. SCHRAM
REALTOR FF 5-9471	-............
J06LYN COR MANSFIELD No. 1
.....	lWe.st	Side...
full bamt 70 a 154 i	city with 3 rooma. full ba
comer loi 2 car garefe. atorma “'em h"d garage. Only gS.SOl and screens. SI3.M0 full price.
FHA terms available.	\o.	2
PACE ' i *'’'*‘**' Auburn Heights
REALTY OR 4.0430 BUILDEIU I	,‘a“rL(LtW
' ~ ! 010.000.
KENT
: No. 3 i The VA.
West Suburban
H bath up. log b place, earmttng. i kitchen with dish basement, Ineinera.
, ».'t“oWi
Owner Will
Talk Turkey
On this 4-bedroom tri-level In tip-top location, featuring brick end frame etterlor. extra large carport, big lot. king-gice (tre-pleee. wafl-to-weU carpeting. 3<> baths, family room with bar. up to the minute kitchen with bullt-lna galore, rear petto. forcer hot water heat, many eatraa. Your wholt family will leva It, call now!
“Bud ” Nicholie, Realtor
40 Mt Clemeni St.
•FE 5-1201
After 6 p.m. FE 4-877.?
UtIm ...roo ic (Ircplaee, t mlc tile CO
baa oU*(umaoo. Brem'wiiy lii ... --------- _
OlKtSC. terms.
OPP JOB^TN. 4 btdrooms. Want to dealt Hoc-----------------
3-BEORM. HOME. Off Joalyn. Ei-callent condition, oak floora. wall-to-wall carpet, oU (nmace. ^SO down plua moiigata coet on IM.
k aale. Od.OOO. Low d
Howard T. Keating Co. OL 1-8159
i GAYLORD. Realtor
I3d3 W Huron St i ' __	3 Flint St__Lake Orton
51 .? BEDKM. CAPE COD' •! ONLY $8,500. TERMS
j Large kitchen 1 bedroom down I end 3 up Urge suburban lot. I TradeTYea t^anl*large rVnch'Yn
DRAYTON AREA
Yea. this heme has lakt | leaes and 4 bedrooms -I wHb ledgcrock
RlTVoom uttlity. 'ill b comer lot overlooking I Priced at S13.M
ie'SJl
; IJI^ft IronUgy. Pull price II4.0N
DIXIE LAKE AREA - Over 3'3 acres and this attractive modern Imme 33 ft living rm that baa Heatalator fireplace. Tiled bath. 3 car garage Tool bldg . lake prlv-Hegev. Now at OU.OdO with <3.000
Sfii?.
lewly ,
I. 3 blocks to St a can be bought down payment
North Side
0 rooma 3 bedroom brick rench home, with full basement and automatic oil furnace Newly redecorated Inside and out. Baekrard all fenced and is well landscaped See Uili belorc you
A SAFE INVESTMENT - Weat aide 3 (emily Hardwood (loore. oea heat Sleek top atreri Yearly renUla 03 340. Out of state owner.
Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor
»0« Dixie Hwy et Telegreph PE 1-0133 Open Eves
ma. living ; irgi mod- I
Pull baaement. i
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP
cerporl. Landscaped lot. paved atreeu. Alumlnem storms and screens Recently decorated Uw do«n pefmeni.
Me down|NOR1^H
WHITTEMORE STREET:	payment
Lovelr family home In eacel- I lent condition Urge living room ! gUBURBAN - -------- carpeted.•
Vacatlf l
GILES RF:AETY CO. I
PE o-tm 31| BALDWIN AVE I OPEN 0 A M -0 PM Mtn-T7PLE LmiM^	I
Mr. F?xecutive	I
Here's tbe answer to your home | problem Located In Weal Blooiri-Held Township tioae to achoola i Beautiful buff brick ranch home. I 7 spacious rooma Includl^ family ! room 3 car attached garage Marvelous basement 3 fireplaces.
1 complete baths Approi W acre . lot True value for only <33.H0
Coolfty Ukc Road
Low Monthlv Payments
Bum In' tow '3 hedrm . wlU
„	: Ivlizahcth Lake
iwsement mi heel coovenieni I Vacant Delightful 3 b to school Urge lot. easy terms brick home with breeaewi
seningi can Mrs Kimmel at |	Sm*?l^'
Waterford High
3 bedroom, utility and carport, oil furnace, large ISO- lot. <1000 down OdO per Ynoath. 4tb per ceni Interest.
Off Baldwin Ave.
3 bedroom, oak floora, newly decorated. Clote to bus and stores.
mortgage.
NTCHOLIE-HARGF.R
43‘/s WEST KURON gTREET
FE 5-8183
l^^heat. teke prIvOetea
! wTi.iTs M. brI'-wer
{JOSEPH P RBtSK SALES MOR 044d E (HURON ST	PE 4-0101
11.	.. After 0 So
PE R003}	PE t^T3t
NO MONEY DOWN Ranch type
RUSSELL YOUNG
REAL CRTATE A BUtLOBR PC 4-3000
• Johnson
33 YEARS OP SERVICE SPECIAL. NOTHING DOWN tor ***'• ?	kout*. Owner hat
completelv redecorated It like new with the modem look. Hie rooma At* latge with large wulk-ln cloa-eu. Very email cteatng tori WUI give yen Immodlate pooeeaclon ■“All ■ooUily puvmento. Why
wK S^w" iTy
SILVER LAKE PRIVILEGES -Mother will love tbit 3 bedroom brick raueb Uvlo. roam ^ s fireplace aad wallte wall carpeting Urge recreattoa room with brick fireplace aad bar 3 car aiuchad garage Urge lot omrteoklng golf cwnree. Only ggg.-
INCOME. STATE STREET - 41
KP'l^'tc.tr'Br par's;:
etUeat eaDdtUon Will (ell or trlde for amkll borne. OnH (er .further j
A. JOHNSON Sc SONS REALTOR FE 4-253.?
After 0 P“_cAn Mr Wnrdeu. I1M S. TELaoiUPK
MULTIPLE LISTINO SERVICE
ARRO
LOW DOWN PAYMENT On this 1-bedroom home, lari fenced let. total price only OO.Od RENT BEATER
3-bedroom home, only <3i0 down end monthl- paymenta of <30. LAKE PRIVILBOES ^ungmlow. fun bath, garage.
CANAL FRONT Neat 3-bedrooffl home, garage and covered boat-well. <13.300. Terms TED McCULLOUOH. REALTOR 0143-------------
M.N0 1
FE 4-4526
ST MIXI‘8 AMA
3-btdroom home with poa-alblHty of uddltloaal bM-rooma. Urge living room
—-■ ——-------oarpeted.
I kitehea.
---"softener. I**eemnt
slab porchaa, IW-car oa-
KSod*
MAKE US AN OFFER
ON THIS 0-bedroom, 0-room family home. PON-TUC OENBRAL AND STATI HOSPITAL AREA.
KXCBPnONAL VALUX “SA TERMS
City North. Well tendacaped coriter loL backyard tenead with barbocuc.. racraatlon room complete arith bar aad atoola. Brick fireplace and
Kia lot. ceramic tile bath, ouee In exMleiit eoadl-thmushMt ■ a,.gaa^orced J
SMITH
WIDEMAN
I w K<»S'N*^orw IV
X7...
PI 0-0441 3331 HIOHPIELD - DRAYTOlf 3 hedrm. ranch only f yeai old. large utility, tiled bath car garage, atorma and a M X 330 lot. OU.MO PHA
PACE
REA LTY OR 4-0430 BUILDERS
WILL TRADE CLARKSTON
Ranch home juaC newly built haa large Its x 300 R. lot. Pull price Just tt.MO with 0740 down ' on ucr month.
On land contract. ^
Huron Gardens
1 bedroom bungalow . completely furnish^—ful bear-ment — Ub car garage. 3 large lota - lust Ol.JOO down — terms arranged —
Elizabeth Lake Estates
Must sell this 3 bedroom home to aettlt estate. Thla home bae averythlng — Including large carpeted
0 ACRES IN ORION TWP. Located juet off Raldartn In tha Olnxlevllle area. Gently rolHiig, Ideal (or expoeed baaement home. 01.400 with excellent terme. Warren Stout Realtor. FI MIU.
WAUMEOAB LAKE - NORTH OP Clarkaton — 03 aerta with ovar 3.M	Ink* And canal front-
William Miller Realtor	FE 2-0263
070 Wort Wni'g Btreot
For Sale Farms 56
SIX-ROOM MODERN ROME IN-cludlnt 30 acrea of good (arm land on Black River Juet outside Cheboygan. Home hta nrw oil (urnaec. Mserneiu. two baths and sun room. 30xM utility building and 3<xd0 all new bam In-' rinded, ftill price Oil 500 Write screeos. qwner. Chaa Morrow. Rt 3 Cheboygan, Michigan or call _CheUygan._MAdlaon 7-3003.
27 ACRES
NEAR PONTIAC - Under priced
Lovri^ tergo family &W*d
irpcted llv-Inlng area.
Modem kitoben with plenty of
-----r epnec. Attaebed b——
. In a good locatton landacn^ yard and
Immediate Possession
Large 3 bedroom tri-Ievol with IH Ulod bathe. Long formal “ lag room with oatural (Irepli Separate (oruaal	iw
Modem kltobe- — cduntar
.
Brick 3-Bedroom
L deelgacd rnneb home with carpeted uvtaig rdom, dining area and modem fcileiMn with bnUt-bu. I large badreontt IVb Uled bathe. Attached 0 car garage. Many egtra featurue IneludM. tlfiW ae your let. OPEN SUNDAY.
LADD’S, INC.
Corner Upecr Rd h SHverbell
Income Property SO
OVER Mtt MONTHLY INOOMK. Oas beat, briak eonatruettan oa I leu. Commercial anned Pleber hady lacatlan. Only 07.000 down. 0170 month ImaaState poeeeaeten
R.J;(Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531
IM OAKLAND AVKNUK OPEN 0 TO I SUNDAY II TO 0
alomte shed Ideal ipet (dr grew-Ing family or retired folks. Oworr MO*wfth**te'maecrtflce. on.-
STATEWIDE
Real Estate Service a( Pontiac B, D_^ CHARLES. REALTOR 1717 S Telegraph_PE_4-0531
Sale JBy lneEt Property 57
*	PARUNO
» 3-l0'7O
M raET X MO m ORCHAM ^e^Road. Phone evenings. PE
11 X ItO FOOT CORNER LOT anned commercial. Aubnra Aee-
“r. TToick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531
___Mt OAKLAND ATBNUE
(ffEN 0 TO g SUNDAY 11 TO 4
Rent, L’ae But. Prop, 57A
Road. Eleo TD 3-OUS. ORODND_LEVEL BASEMtENT. M I to. Plraproof. For etomge or WjhUjJJklnaee. PE M411. lEvea.
MILFORD ^NTka OP T07*N LO-■■‘“Ing. Alr-coodl--------------- --------- directly
OPncEl AND ilTbRIi POTg
BKCEU^ ORAVEL DBOSTT l-klo““' "**' Clarketon. OA
.'?rv.crga.te'‘kY-‘r:«“^
10RE POB RBNT,~igX0t WOULD ETO^ OR opHce *un.Dnto
- In' tows -	.
I wfM Titl«frtpk on Hnmn
TELEGRAPH
At PrankUn Rd.. building eng primrty plenty of parkmi. n-Mllent hwalkm for bamw atim baatity parlar. MadacdM mS!' re^ caUtt. ttuuraaea ^ce m what have yen. Cna aariS' S ------ -^^i^eal cll«le.^eS

THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 80, I960
iFQRTY-NlNE
L*>< Pm. Proy. 57A
»«AT TazMO n___
______
BUSIfJfeSS AND RES.
lUnrilMt	far Imvn
Sale Land Cante>acta 60
•TBAa-OLO 'laLANCI
TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 S MAIN
214 E. ST. CIAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO
tOAM------
Partridge
PACKAGE LIQUOR, HIGGINS Lake
flrtplM*. neraattw raoa. B« diM aMM •Mh k MT«ma, rr«L.. BMlf la laiiBtr. Wandarfully
MJ«T Htt iS5t
!! NET $21,000 !!
Te«a «e Ttlttraph Road. Thli Uad (or o«r TRWm “llto
BttiOMM Ouldf .*'	»
Partridge
AND AHOaATXB
auaiNBaan tbrdoot utcH.
OROwno Ort cleakino boiUaaa fbr mm. AaerUlea un. CaM. ra MIX or
Need $25 to $500? See
Seaboard Phone FE 3-TO17 1185 N. Periy St.
r ARKtao MO mORtaM
Seaboard Finance, i^o. WHEN YOU I^EED $25 TO $500
state‘*i^'?Jai®co.
MM PMMIaa Mala Ba^ aide.
______FE 4-1^
BUCKNER
finance company-
WHCRK TOO CAN
borrow up to $500
OFflOBi IN
PooUae - OraytOB PUlna — OUea Walled lA., RlrmiitW. Plymorth
COIN OPBUTID DRT CLlANlNd It'i terel Approx. M.MW ataru
OAd ANDOnrOUTiuSoTORaRIP OUea • Raebaxter area*. Call DL MOaa, allar I p.ai.__
GIROUX
GROW MONEY
aaa aolS^taad^f* *°^l * I
!S*|i!m5 Mn. MMf%r
eaiMra. barbar 1000 or imaU taU boXnaai. SaalM nor
S«45!!-A
HAGSTROM
LOANS
K. LAwklntcg n mc
OR TOUB
Signature
OAKLAND
Loan Company
LOANS $25 TO $1
On Toar aitnatara or alk.. .. eurtty 24 Baolhi to rapay. Oar a^lea li Ibat. fHandly and hal^
HOME & auto LOAN CO.
Borrow with Confidence GET $25 TO $500 Household Finance
____	____ ana In Tawnihlp.
•aparata baaa pku 4 modern cablne an 4T1 It. Mgb«ay tronl-..........................
II far W.NI oa TATXBN in fnel trnvlat
Credit Adylaora 61A
BUDGET YOUR DEBTS
444.500 an Urmi.
H. R. HAGSTROM
REALTOR
m» BIMUaad Road iMUi PONTUC	-OR 4-03M
PE 4-70N tRar 4 ____LUTtNQS WANTED
Par Tour beet bet to let out of dabt, aaa
Financial Advisers. Inc.
Itb t, SAOINAW_______PE 3-7061
^ortgete Leans___62
>r quick Mle. RLfln^
______ on. COMPANY
If you ara mtareatad In b«i Shall B&tloa Operator anl
BID PROM D8 WILL SAVE “'“l mapey Call uq befart uUlnr
C 4.«ai. Rallrement Aaauranci
.....------------------------------------ Get Out of the Rut!
'PiiJ'.‘S.	“““'“I ConaoMdaU your «
IlM. 0:30 am. to 1:11 p.m. ori „ft your exUI
“LET’S TALK BUSINESS”
BINDIROFP BLOO * SUPPLY CO
Coney Island
Mllta of Hal Oo(i. EBay t( oparata. Too ebould maki li.lOt par month.
_______Sweps_________ M
'll OLDS FOR BALE CMt TRADl.
....X BQumr n______________________
without baaament to trada tor aider hauae wUh baaanBl. PR J-1311.___________________________
ii.soo. iqoiTY in i bedroom
MICHIGAN BUSINESS SALES CORPORATION
JOEM A. LANDMBMER.. Braktr IH3 Talatrapb Road PE 4-UM WART TO BU MT MpiTT IN
raataurant or trade for --------
mahu. or bouaa. Catt R B-Ml n 1:20 p.m. to lit p-m.
Sale Land Contracts ^
neV ' ff.H0jn!
I. OOP Ineludtnf
jalaoet $2,072 mortfoca 1
monthly paym..............,
taxaa and laauranca. Will trada for dump truck or trselar w""-hack baa or what hart you!
C. PANGUS. Realtor
^ ORTONTILLE 00 Beuth ttreet______NA T.2$H
X PER CENT DISCOUNT. 2 BED-
---- ..—I, ui city of Ponf--
inl It.ld at IM at to jiau 11.123.2$.
WILLIAMS
14$1 Baldwin
A BID PROM US I you manty. Call ua b n; SdStS RaUremai
lard C
BOYS OIRLS AND MATERNITY
clothea. Exc cend^I i-2JWi.__
CONET PUR COAT. BMAli, 8IZB.
ND CONTRACTS TO BUY OR « aelf. Carl OarraU. EM 3-Ull
Jt EM $-»$$$.________________
ts.$$6 DlBCODlir - W.OM TO RAN-
>. Monthly paymenta
inn tS per cent late__________
ehnae^l ^M^Pbntlne Mo-
TIM \VRIGHt“ Realtor
lU Oakland Ave. Open III $:K YE M44<	FE I.7I0I
Di'fTRICT ORIOntAL MUSKRAT I^et, perfect condition. MU
~ p^T #or~1alC
OIRLB SUIT. 8KIRT8. SlEC 13.
COOK
CLERK
... the help you need is quickly yours through THE PONTIAC PRESS WANT AD COLUMNS.
For the Want Ad Department just dial . . .
Just Dial FE 2-8181

.. what hart you2 Wrlta PanUac Preaa Box $1.
CABIN. NEAR BlLUIAN. MICE^
FOR BALE BY OWNER. I ACRil with wall, baaament atarted. 4 mllta north PonUae. No down payment naadad. AKC Brittany, mode'---------------
curb and cted home. Il trade tor
Sale HosMehold Goods 65
___________
Lake Ava.
9x12 Rugs.............$1.95
Vinyl Linoleum ., .yd. 59c Inlaid Tile...............5c
•■BUYLO'' UNCLAIMED TUB
III a BAOINAW_______PE t-2400
If' ADMIRAL. $$$.$$: 21“ MCfb-rola, SOt.lS; Apartmaat-aMa aloe-
condition. $20. 1122 pittMlard,
Wallad Lake. EM 2-4221.________
121 offAWA. PONffAC — —‘-blnaa. bouaahaM fodda to dally 'til aolC
1^ ELECT^MAOTI^
AifnQUf~UD WITH CUSTOM made box aprlnEt and mattraat, top draatr, $11$ after # A $-1—
irSuND'AT L~a'irBAUR.
A UtUa out of the way bnt a lot laaa to mt Rrdtara and anpll-^a of aU Undo. NEW A UODD.
I. 2 aerta of trae
MON. BAT. 2 TO $ ^PRl. 0 TO 2
^ u Montm to pat
4 mllaa E. of Pontiac or l ml E. at Auburn Ralftata an Aubun
brand NEW WROUOBT OtON bu^ bade eonaplala with apnaga M mattraaa. &.$$. Alaa ma% k^ and tnoidia badtr at Wg dlt-
Orobard Lake Aea. xunta Paaraon'a rammu BLOND OINDOO ROOM eET.
Sale Howietald Goods 65
NEW—NO MONEY DN.
Deluxe Ironer , I2X.M now |IN RafFg. II- cut. ft. IM naw $12$ Ranga M In. $2X1$ BOW $lg| 21 In TY raigota eontral 222$.1$
Uaad waahar, dryera and baatera Bchicka MY 2-3211 and FR 4-222$
MATfTAO WAS
“ojira.
gaa atoeaa, altetrtc atorat, draoa-era, bada, TVa all prlcad tar qalck sale. Wa buy, aaU and tra«a. Trade-In Deputnaant. Punraon'a, 02 Orabard^nLk. Ayanna. R
INE*LaPLe’ CHEST 22$. WiAb-‘ rd M and nIgM atand, titple
up TV antennaa. M
WALTON, TV
OU SPACE HEATER ANb TANK,
$40; Rafrlteratot. $2$; 3$" trie atoxa. EH:
Dayanpoi^ a^ Aalr, 221: Oaa ataee, $31; 21" .nrr$0$; OuiiM roonj^—	^
.. with chlnl. $$L' Studio and Sair, S3$;.^Mte ^IrgU HarrU, R $-221$.
Rora davenport, oood cor-dltlea, reaOonable. R 4-2M3. REFRIOERA'fbR. 1$ CU, FT. EOT.
{2t°*Ml'$02M.	'	'
REPRIOERAfbRB. 1040 MODBLS.
aiNOER nO-ZAO, UXE NEW. IN lovely wood caneale, mabaa de-algna, button holaa, aewa on but-tona eU. Aaauma 14.24 monttUy ------------■-----------rfig 4a.00 PE
-.	___________. 4a.oo
4-P402. Capitol Sewing Cantar. BEWINO MACHINES, IVIlOLlBAEi
Over 74 modela la cbooae t
tssir
Surplus Outlet
FOR
Detroit Chain Store
ALL REBUILT
YOUR CHOICE
OOOD HOUBEKEEPINO SHOP Of Po^c
1 W. HURON_________PE 4-1464
il^V2$$$!"°
BABY BED. MAXES INTO PLAT-
Cl. Wriuar waahar. I yaara old.
by tM&lit UUa, 2 tebit--
1 on burner. Overatuffed PE 4.240$

REPmp.^j^ICB
CORNER TABLE. BLONDE BOUO larmtca and table lama, buck trimmed In gold, $If for both. Cbll altar $ p.m. MA 4-22U.
CARPET. TWEED. NEVER 1
1 rubber pad. $40. PE
aervlee Bargain Hauae. FE 2A042.
COUCH. TRAOmONAL. W I N R pluab chair, upholatared, gold,
raaaeaaMa. R 3-rar_____________
come IN AND sue THE LATEST la Phllco for ----- " ' '
---- — ____________________^le 1?le.
virlona. Stereo HI'#!. Record pUyera waahara, dryera, rrfng-cratora and fraoaara. From 44.M on and LO'ff LOW aeekly pay-
Uvliu Room Bela
Bedroom OntmUng Co. 4T$2 DIxM Drayton Plalna	OR 3-$224
BTEARN8 AND POBTERe DOUBU
bad box
api^t and mattraaa. I. R>-$$24 afur 1:0$
SIEGLER ^ Gas and Oil Heaters
--- "I boat lor b - '
- jow. No mr . FE 4-t$20 C
UBLP TVS. $11.44 AND UP. COL-orad TV RCA, Mb Swaet'a Radio and Appl.. 49 it. Huron. PE 4-1133_____________________________
Used Trade-In Dept.
Lounge Chair ......... $ t.$4
FIRESTONE STORE	‘ Refrtmato^^ ^***'.L... /. $W $0
140 K. Sa^aw_________PE 4-2020 I S-Pc. Breakfaot aet . IM.40
DELUXE MODEL WESTINOHOUSE I ?Ange ............ ..... $42.40
electric range Call OL l-IOOO.	,	•*• »*
---------- ■ --------------I trouble dretaer. Cheat, and
Bookcaae Bed. new ... Igg.i
THOMAS ECONOMY
CARNIVAL
By Dick Turtier
Sale MuricRl Qo4Mle 7t
___ LsfS® _	^ __
'^eri; 10 Eaet Huren,'PE 4-0000. 2$ KEY ACCOROfAN ANDTcaSB, jae.^^. 014$. FE $.|IU altar
pletely aveibauled. terms. $ lagbere. M Bast Huran. PE OR ALL WIND INSfliUMENtB
Sbral TWADE ALLOWANR
accordion I
II S. BAOINAW
all I
IHAND NEW INI LOWRBT 06-■an. Oraateat value la the orgaa flald. Oompara with ertana aoat-ing muoh. muab more. Two II la. apaakara ParcuaalaB on both maa-uaU Many tonea W chooae tram. SoM axeluaUely ai OaUagbar'a. $sa In mataagaBy with bench. Olva a gift earlltlaata far Cbrlat-
GALLAGHER’S
1$ E. Huron it.
FOR BALB BOLOJDOECIRTO Pl-
GRINNELL’S
22 a. BbgUlbW___R IjTlM
BAND INSTRUMENT REPAIR. BY factory exwrt.
CALRI MUSIC CO IIP N SAOINAW___PE 4-229
Wood, Ceiri^ Fud n
IQREEN
nac'aar Dallvaraid'*H^*____
PlilEPLACiE CANNEL C'o A L -
SLAB WOOD (

For Sale Pets 79
--------- RRES OLD, FE-
malea FE 1-292 afUr 4 p.m.
A-1 ^DLE 'TRIMMINO. NY BAR-bara^ no aadaUvea uaad. FE
AOORABUC dOLliX PUFPtn,
AEC reg.. OR MIX.
AKC MIN. POOmR: AlSc ‘WttL-
Uat" (toy colUa). NA 2-MH.__
AKC COCKXR FUFTIE8. RASOH-
SugarUnd KenaaU. , EM
"Actually, my big profit coim
advance information on where the salt^s will be!”
For Sale Miscellaneous 67
ARFHALT TT^ aa........ 4tbe
VfilTL LINOLEUM yd...... Mc
1x12 Buae ........... $3.P$
------------— a BAOINAW
"BUYLO" TILE, I
ANCHOR FENCES
Be mangy down. PHA aprovad. FTlKElaiTlMA'nfca. R 4-2421
BARGAINS
4x4-'/« In. V-grooved mbta.,
---aheellng X per m.
--------- tapping. A
Panelyu counter
X gal bat watar beater. I42J0. 3 year warranty.
Praa aet ToUct lll.ll with trade.
- X B 0>A R D radiation AT ba^ln prices. tl.U per ft., O. A. Thompaob 2004 M44 West.
BATHROOM PIXTUREaToni AND gae furnaces bet water A aUam boiler. Automatic water baater. Hardware, elec. luppUes. croak A pipe and flttlnga. Lowe Bralbar PatDt Super Xamtaoa and Rnat-
RKIORT8 SUPPLY
XX Lapeer Rd._______PEJM431
BEAUTIFUL SCOTCH PINRTRRBS.
whoUgale. MA 1-1501.______
BLOND. iU-FI CONBOLE. 14-Pf.
_J^p^8*»tt motor^'PE 4-944._ BATHTUBS. SHIPPED |$0.M TAL-ue IX.50. ToUeU and Uvatorlea at terrific valuet Michigan FHior-ficent, 323 Orchara Lk. Ave.—17
For Sale MieceHaneous 67
ROOF LEAKS
Call your Advisor far a free aa-tlmate. Sava at the coal. PE
RANOB HOOD InD PAN, COP-
Mitona $24.40. Romax wire 3 cents per ft. HeaUr cable < cents. O A. TbompaoD. 2006 M-4
or pick up 44 monthly PE 4-0402. Coital Sewing Center.
SinraR PIPE AND PITTINOB nipeeal. Tylax. Wedgelock Jointe DRAIN TTLE-J" thru 24'
SRANOEBURr---------------
J. M. TRANI
A PITTINOS
Manhole Qorm. Oratci a
BLAYLOCK Oaal * Butldlng sappUCo.
21 Orchard LakiAva. fa 3-2101 ■AW AMD LAWHMORrER SHOP eamplataly agulppad and gparat-ing. Phono Mr. Meora, PE 2-2100. SINQER SICmNO MACHINE IN -------» ---------------
______,_____ 21 par month.
Unlvareal Co. PE 4-0404	_
TWIN MAPLE BXD. 424. wXLNUT chest, M. Bump pump, 424. PE __5-l01I,_______^____________
TALBOTT LUMBER
Now Is the time to gel ready for winter. Basement waterproofing. gUse Installed also wood aaab.

un
:X. Sun.
CASH WAY
STANLEY ALUIONUM WINDOWS I --- ------ 4J.Hj-
4xlxtb Prgboard 4xlxlb Pagboard Plyacore l-ft Rock Lath
f westF lawrtocb
•WEEPCR0 RSPAHtBD Bimea A Hargraves, FE 4-4101 742 W. Huron - Open Sun. used'W ATER tOPTENERS
n
DRYER. COUCH, aide ebairt. fu ataM. EM 3-2243.___
DETROff JEWEI
(TABLE‘TOPI
1^. ' 3«» a. Raglnaw
WRINGER WASHER
'arge 10 pound capacity, used 2 weeks Use new Save 404 on this deluxe machine. Pav only 41.34 week Goodyear Serviceatore.
ELECTRIC DRirtB, 4X. RBPIUO-aralor. $9. Eleetrle stove. 141. Washer. 49. Duncan Pbyfe table — "lira, Uka new. $14. * |M. Cablne4 sink
' TV. 440. VlrgU Harrta’. FE
- NOROE FREEZERS
'T.S

For Sale Clothing M
^gow^ Pl^4._
FREEZERS FLOOR MODEL
LITTLE'S FURNITURE A APPL. 4212 DIXIE HIGHWAY. DRAYTON OB WRiNQin-------'—
STOVE. S flARS jmjUnt condlttoa. IIX.
Sow cHoirr op biuwiRFAND
dreeaer. 415	--------
PI 4-1342.

.lie 44A0. PE 4-XM.
REPRIOERATORS. breaxfabt room set PE 2-7X4.	______
trir rangee,_ne^camL_240^
dinette 412.	-- —...
tteve., refrigerator., all atuai lU up ribrt «*»■•!«•	*
at”As*T»2n~:
i-SdruviEb- ttodk mm ‘STkttafien kM. b«$. ahblra.
HOSPITAL BED. SIDES A TABLE. Invalid, walker Elecirla blanket, used once MI 4-1X3. eal| Tuee.
eve, or Wed, mornlpg. _	_
HibE-A-AWAY BED AND MATCH-Ing chair, 0402 PentUc Lake
Ro. Apt. 4. After 4 p.m._
koiXYWqOD TWfH BED. COM-
M any emargeaoy, we can halp you.
BEE EEABOARD nKAMCW CO.
11» N. Perry Bt.____^Pi 1-2012
EROBHlER DAVe6M*T. RLUE;
»; gSTi-JiSoV--
LAZY-BOV CCMBINATIOR HAU-
L^
$X 04$ Joelyn.
_________» RbLIrAWAV
— and mattreu. $11. Car lug-jwrier. $*■ 24 S. Sbirlay.
WAifNK OAhBRT
nONRlTE IRONBRS. PULL SOB. Floor modaU Aamonatr-- —"
itort. IIM
youraalf that Irening
coiBiorv nwm ma	tor pu»-
^ a day. PE 40in. dump Etactrlr
LAROB ' CRIB and MATTREaS
SINOER SBW1NO MA------..g-aasgar aiahagaay cab-
Ualvaraal
UVINO "rOOW. DININO ROOIff and bitahen Tumltura. ft 42in_
per V ________________________
3$ ■ Co.., PentUc P^4A123 WATBUOAETtR WA'fm WNDI--------- ------ bSakwaUtlng.
WASHINO MACHINES CONVEN-tional. autamaUc pump. glX.M value. $W.$I Scratched No down payment. Michigan Phioraecent. X3 Orchard Lake A—
WYMAN’S
USED TRADE-IN DEPT.
Ouar. washer. .......... gX.U
3 Br. apt. ga. .tove .. gX.M
Bata bad A chair ...... $X.40
Davenport A chair . ... gX.M
3 Pc llv. rm (Ulta .... lll.M
Od(t Oec chMr. ......... $2 X
11 W PIKE
2$ DOWN
ANTIQUE SHOW AMD BALE December 4. I A $. It ani. to M p.m. Temple Beth JacS. X
Eltaabath U. Rd.____________
ART AND ANTiqUB BZBUIITION and tale Dec. 2. 3. St. Andrew. Church Hall, 331 Walnut. Roebe.-
HiFi. TV and Radios 66
OOOD SELECTION OP USED TV eaU Prlcad tor quick wle. Every
‘grYnnell’s-
9 B. Saginaw	PE 3-21M
__ .. -• —
^ Burrn©ist©r	used Trade-in Dept.
LUMBER COMPANY iSSMtampi.
O^n 0 a m to 0 p.m d Sunday 10 a m to 3 p
i Davenport i 3 Piece be-Reclining i
Refrlgeratai ..........
31" RCA Mahgg. TV
______ _______________THOMAS ECONOMY
OEMEirr STEPS. READY MADE. \ Ml 8._taglnaw_PE 2-0141
j Vil^L.LiNOLEUM_ yd \,»0c

\tj cftu Ponu*c 1 C« M W
Shetneid. PE inlaid tile 0X0
_________________________ - "BUYLO-- TILE IX B SAOINAW
CLO8IN0-0UT CHRISTMAS DSC-!--------Vri-WC^cWriv^iTi” ”
----- ------ Ceramic., tree j VERY SPECIAL
arnamenU, nd^IUta.
iteme diaiUet---- -
Uke Salea, 3
^HEATW»~
Knotty ptaa paneling
DUO therm' .. blower. FE 2-0020._______________
'^ccoraitog^problem^ Su^rta°5 i SURPLUS LUMBER & material sales CO.
colon to chooie from. Interior

relied Magic no-drIp
OAKLAND FUEL — PAINT IX Orchar-1 Lake ..ve FE 4-0160 CONSUL OH. HBAT^ DOUBLE
DOUBLE BINE COMPLETE, IX M With trap. A grade PE $-4213 Mootcalm supply IM W. Mont-
ehalra. Violin. Lamp
kT$« 0-309._________
IP 16 PER CENT TO
----on ChrUtmai cards.
Royal Pntara Mitablt typewrlten glM.N Bmitb-Coraoa electric adding A (ubtracltog machine. $1H Smith - Corona electric portable typewriter. $1U M. I orbe. PUot.J tag A Office supply. 4400 Dixli 5*2 i££? to roiSiM------------
kc State Bank.
after 4 p.m 2040 Hattaa Rd. PE 2-449._____________________
ChrittniHS 'Trees <7A
U T I F U L PLANTA'nON
ground. Treat abeared. d
---yad ananally. Alto
bough. -----------
eprayad ananally. t pint bought .Cedar ergratn Parni, X2* ~ _U8_^10 .MA $.|$9. COMl OUT

----- SEE OUR POLL
___ Chrtatmae tvargreena.
Cholea Chriatma. traai, avargraan roping, Chri.lmaa wraatM, grave blanketa. table dacoratioot and bought of cedar. baUm and piM.
1320 B. Highland Rd. <
ELECTRIC LIGHT FIXTURES -	1$N de.taM. pull down
•tar. iadream. til 44 irrat '
porch 0146 Iiragulari, Mtmple.. Price, only fa^ry can give Miehlgan Pluoreecaat, 93 Orchard
' AND WALLDfOTON DEEP
$120. FT 5-9$t.
YOU CAR ALWAYS largo .election----------
remota .paakere, |

e'JS"
■aunabla. OR
FREF STANDING TOILETS IIS.N . Double boWI .Ink	$ 4.M
■V In hard copper
1 20-ta. length.	...... I2e ft.
I 4<i-ln bard copper
.-------------------TTV I **-in. length. ...........37c ft.
water Softeners	66A A,-m k mu copper
EVERdRiCKN RO)>iNi(r~WkOLB-
lI^B CHRISTMAS TREES KH churche., aehooU and Owpbtag cantor.. Al«> bough.. IM 3-911. PICK YOUR TREE ON'TRB STUIfF
green.. Bring the k
Suftae'

I I AKC dachshunds FOR CHRIIT-mae-Termt. Jamofe. PE 0-219
BoorroN stud,' <bH. btoceT cuR-I tu« OH j-*m._____________
, Mjtck IJkBiiAOOIt FEMALE Flfr
3 FROMTALINI ACOOROION.
cellent condition.
plaa. 3 month, aid, AXC rtgla-larad. PE 3-2220.__________
■ ibxBRFort. ISEirKBSliron®'
PIANO TUNINO-OROAN REPAIR { ']
Wcigand Music tmter [
BAZAAR AREA MIRACLE MILE ' “ PEdi
EEAOLE HOUND. |9.
T:der»l_2-WL
OIBSON ELECTRIC HAWAIUN guitar with amplifier, n S^IO
boob used vm ‘tafk rbcor-
ere. (Treble and base control, timer. 2 epaed., volumt Indicator. only 1100.
GRINNELL’S
LESTER SPINET.~OARK MAHOO-nny Plane, 0400. Exc cood. FE
_ ^23_____________________
LESTER BETSY ROS6 SPINET Plano, FE 2-249	_________
ilAROOANT. ELECTRONIC OR-gan. Ilka new, and red and white pearl, 19-ba.s aecordlaa.
_	49 W. Huron__________
fHAkffiON SIRED, AEC REQU-UrM black poodlaa. U4 Auburn
• USED ORGAN SALE
OONH Orgun tSgbUy uaad. guaranteed like new.
HAMMOND Spinal and tpaakar cab-taet. 1 year old, Uke oew.
LOWREY sptagt organ, Uka naw
All organs guaranteed Dlua tree leuone with Ole Foereh, former etatf organist lor WWJ Radio and TV atatlon
LEW BETTERLT MUSIC CO. Acroae from Blrmtagham Theatre 4f| 4-0003	Prtitayi ’U1 0
MAEB Yours a musical home come '- ---------------------
Muilc, 34 S. Ti
degraph I el-Huran I
acrcee from
_ pliM Center._PI^ L0402.______
EW o5nN 'CAPRICE" OROANS
MprrU
Shopping Center FE 3-0002_
PIANO TUNIHOL-OSCAR SCHMiof
HAMSTiSRS. VilirrE MICE.
- ------------itam., PE 4-04M
LITi-LE BEAUnii; twbLM
Pet Shop, 44 Wini
-----E BEAUni_. _______________
Chrt.tmae, 424 up. PE 4-329.
for Cbrlit-
Parakeets, ouar to talk, Walkar'a Bird hwua. 30$
PBEDtORSl'PUI'PIBS. AXb REO-
PARAEEETB. OUARANTBED TO
talk. Canaftes. eagaa and .u^ nUaa. Crano’e Bird Itatchery. 34$$ Kburn. UL 2-2200____________________
PUPPIES. WONDERFUL BREED
lor peU a-- --- *’*
on 3-1X1._________________
i^OODLEC AlioEAELE “omilE
.. . male*. 2 weak. old. . Me Aye., call after $ p.i TOY POX TERRIER AT Weigh. 3 Ibe. OR ....
SOUTH AMERICAN WOOLLY
Sale Hqmm Triilars W
DETROITER PONTIAC CHIEF
HF *• $•• r a ir wm lent anmMe lor lem lham Iba Ml AO MobUa Bamt. art nrtaad claw Ota factory aattagUi and “. -*“• —‘ -p Iradadn aOuw-•Ml MMW kMM
rtJSdtss'Ksarr*
Bob Hutchinson Mobile Home Sales *irpa-£‘^» ^
Open 2 Day, a Weak____
A ft • # R E A M UOSrftWBIff Travel Trallar. Staaa 109. Oaar-a^ad tor lift. Saa taam and aat d damonatraita M Wamar Traflar
CLOSE-OUT
ON AIX HEW AMD DBED TEAVBL Coach Bdlpa. liait Bally IM..
BUYERS WAlfWO
PROM U' TO MT. HOLLY MA-RINK a COACH tALEa. 12210 HOLLY RD.. HOLLY. ME 0A221
Jacob-son’s Trailer Sties and Rentals
■pedal winter prtow au travel tratters. .uppUet and mre*'* ------------*
Oxford Trailer Sales
U unita to pItt Ir r — ir wwe. a si

„..... rrva?,?iSI5:
Ocnrral. lUmmer, Oardaar. Tour-A-Home and Stewart.	,
SOME DSED ON RENTAL BAm 1 ^a S. of Lake Orlaa an li-24. MT 2-0231.
Parkhurst Trailer Sales
- YTHE8T m M OBILE UTIMO -^aatarlnx N— *'—	-----
a Moon — Owaaao-
r balwtCB Orton
Located half way bat»___ ---
and Oxfon^eo M24. MY 2-911. BUOinj. MOBILE BOMn
__Tta k
saleI a_______
14 ... Oeif^Sr ft. Oem. $196 AlM> have r-“‘ ..

etaUed.
PE 4-0243	_______3m_W^HUron
VACATION TRAILER.S
rent BOW RUNTINO AND RIFLE BS1A80NB. ALSO PLORIOA VACATIONS. 14 FT. Trall-Blaaer. Apacha Campart Make ReMrva-tlon. now. F. E. HOWLAND. OR 3-144$.
VACXtION ‘niAILERS Pixie Trailer Sales and Eantal. 1M4 North Lapeer Rd., Ostord. OA $-32$3._________________
Rent Trailer Spec* 90
For Sale Tires
1014 Down 34 Manihe To Pay I LOOK' 240x14 BLACK TIRES, ALL HUNT'S PET SHOP PE 1-1113 I name brand.. Off new car. 111.40 WI«NANARM,R-^gpP.«g jju.^ tax^^ e^^. Stat.^a
Champton.hip .tack.
I 4-494! I
I NEW” TREAD 'HRM. 020X15.
_^1-5311
plu. t
PIANO. OOOD CONDITION. - IM I
OR 3 JOU____________ _____
SMALL USED PIANO. REABON-ably priced. Thl. taould move in a hurry. OaUtebar.. 14 Eait Hur- t on._PE _4to09.	I
SPECIAL!	i
E.tev chord oroan with expreuton I pMal. Volume and tone central. ; and vibrators 'Die only organ i available at 4348 40. 49 down, balance 113 per month
CALBI MUSIC CO	!
tit a. SAOINAW  _P* *to9l
tU NINO AND R'EPAIRINO. M hour service, all work guaran-teed by lactory trained men. CALBI MUSIC CO 114 S^AOlkAW	FE 4-039
USED OROAN T MANUAU. II
OOOD USED TIRES , KUHN AUTO SERVICE Nary'S 19 W. Huron______FE I-I314
DoRt Trained, Board^SO
BRITTANY PUPS.
Tallwagger Kennels, ooanung, i
' STANDARD BRAND Poodle etud wrvtce OL l44N. i Trade '	-
Hunting Dogs 8|
. K C REOISTBRED
TIRES.
n on uontni poivtV Tirt*. M per cent off. Bttck or illf.
Boflntir ftt Rerbura.
F.D WILLIAMS _
USED TIRES $3 AND UP. 2gi
trad's 'far' gua. OR 3-4200 j _Oakland”>___
cHoici'■'AKc'nMAixnMuffA	AutoServicE 93
“eae. om pel or I ....- . .	—....
Utica. RSpubllc CRANKSHAFT ORINDINO IN T

M THE ;k Ma-
Hay, Grain and Feed 82
a OP 1ST A IND CUT-wlll deliver OA t-212i.
INSfALLXb FREE
woes X3 t_________. It	FED BiEP TOR •ALE.'OA
Sale Office Equipment 721 i-ii2o_ ________
''	'	FIRST AND SECOND CUtflNO
alfalfa, clpver. carp OA 0-191.
a OAE DESKS. I LARGE MA-bogany datk. 1 hp. air condltlonar.
Bargain Schick.. FE 0-102$.___
AODINO MACHINES PROM 014 CASH REOI8TBR8, FROM 19
'PONTIAC CASH kEOISTER 332 8 SAOINAW	FE MfOl
REOmiRB. AbbfNO MA-typewriter., calculator, naw ana used: tales and- lervlce. Valley Bu:.lae.s Machine. 20 Au-

straWTTbale	..
»balet. 22$ 8c9t U. Road.
_ 4-439 or on 3-$m _	____
MI3CBb HAY AND ALFAIF'A.
strAwtimothy sbtonO cut-
ting alfalfa Phono MU 4-12M.
. PE 4-3102.
For Sale Livestock 83
or factory rabulh cash ragUtera. T2it Natloaal Caeh . Ragtetar Oa.. I$1 W Huron. Pontiac. >E 2-091. 23 8. Oratlol. Mt. Clemeng. HOw-
NEW AND USED OFFICE MA-cninei Typawrllars. 014.H up; adding machines. 93.M up; camp-tometars. 224 04 up; duplicator.. I9M up: photocopy maehlna.. tXN up; dletaUng maehtae. tlH SO up Orneral Printing S Office Supply. 12 West Lawrance Bt. Pontiac PE 3-019
a NICE TOUNO 8BBTLAND PO-nla». Raj. Arabs. NA 2-99. FOR SALS ONE HORil.
__________MApla 0-1412. ________
HORSES BOARDED. LAROS BOX ■talla, tor taformatlon call OA
BACRii
lent tor childran, . 3-4121 or EM l-boAl.
OO BY THIS iOldlag*. eical-m each. EM
Sale Farm Produce 86
IPPLEB. NORTIIERH SnEB.
i; Jonathan, and O
Sale Slore Equipment 73'
Dfxte Hwy j SPRUCE BALSAM AND 8O0TC! . ^Ine wholesala can bt srea i
Sale Sporting Goods 74
_JT 3-2241,
■coTCH pmaa.__________
Hama grown. MT 2-1221.
Christmas Gifts
67B
, 44c ft-19.24 I
For Sale Miscellaneous 67
i-WHEEr”^IL^^ wheel trailer. 49 PEM19.
ssr.'«:’s.E^K’'s;
4 Ice craam ahalrx. 6r 2-2X2.
' . 1 pulL in. troCx Aluaunum egmblnaUon door
Federal Modernization
____ 2«AL. K^. BEATBR |9.If.
m s
3$^|^
Wartok'i 2022 (^ImrSJLk. IM.
!^jg^ltWear”
IRON PIL-nBL PO£~WA'^ k. far 224. ^ 3-2MS. ■YfsSALLCjN FUEL OO. TANK. like new. PI 4Jlto2^_
21$s6 BferbUOTtBRlt Oli IttiSf'.
— wtOi clrculaUng (an. Uka,-
Aleo 224 gal --
29$ Marshall
'actory 3nds — Irregulare SAVE PLUMBINO SUPPLY
' M. A. BENSON
_____Ponuae. PE 4-2MI __
OARAOB DOOR, SM. '2T£HEVR0-let pick-up truck, make offer.
GARAGE DOOR^
Factory sccaodi. a 11 ttanda llae. la slock from o2S a~* • Eleetrle door operators.
BERRY^DOOR SALES
Opel tram . to 4 91 S Pa^k*"	SM
LARGE BEIOK SATIr U|^5l-

LAmaS BNOAOEMENT RINO. AP-praltad at 44$$ 494 caMi. Ale# _ *tddlM knnd n S-4S9 after 4.
PLYW^D SPECIACS
S In. 4sS A2 birch.|12.M
tb la. tal ,Y-imved mahof.	$ I.M
Pra-ftatabad >-fi«gva$ rndwe. SOX
'po^Ac*PLloroobjgo* *■**
- BaM!^Jlrr______pj 2
BLACK AN-
3 COMPLETE LIONEL TRAIN BErs on largo board with lau of ac-_«..orlaa FE 2-249. after 2 p.m 12 EAR AUTO HARP. LIEE NBWT 4l4^2X_Plooeer. PE 299. CUBTOid JVWELRT. PRI^. ueed (or Jewelry demoaetratlone, 2IX Uvemou. OL 1-NM. biRL'S NEW 20 "' ^UXB'BlSir _MA_4-«444._______________
oiRL-a nOURI BEyi^AW^eWL
ta^^rouere,
HAND WOVEN BOOS. PLACE u»areiaf*weaTfi9.*^' S.mi”** U^EL TRAIN WITH ACCESSO-
mountod. Children, pedal traator'. trailer and anawplaw. Also Sahwlaa X la. baye biba. FE
UOHBL t-OAOB^TRAOI. OVER ^0^ we^ at agnipmant; In.
Machinery
DRAIN TILB MACHII

WHAT TO DO WITH TWO?
Dial
The Pontiac Press , Want Ads
FE 2-8181
I LARGE SELECTION OP USED ■hotgune ind lifle. Ben's Loan 0((l»^4 Paltertta 81 PE 4-4141
CLOSKbUT^
On all hUBlini clothts. guns.
Miork
'HOLLErIaC^ AUTO PARTS _ 2^ BaMwIn ____ ____^FE_2-»422
independent $W KERYICE
Andy Csikl Oiragt. 222 Baldwin
tAFETY~8PECIAL~ PRdNftNU alignment. Front whtelg balanced. Rraket reltned A. low a. $4 per mo. Eddie Blaela Toro. Inc. 3200 Orchard Lake Rd . K«<-
Sale Motor Scooters 94
For Sale Motorcycles 95
TRIUMPH SALES b SERVICE »$ E. PIKE	PE 2-039
Mr. Montca]m______PE 0-391
For Sale BicyclM 96

Hobby ■ J-204J_
"■ La
Boats and Accessories 97
ntpbOT BOAT. 24-HP' EVIN: and trailer Uke new. 0I.4W. PE
PAUL A. YOUNT.
409 DIXIE HWr	OR 4-0411
_	__ lOn Loon Lake) _
OUHi AND ACCEBSOBH&I. NEW and used. Bur-Shell. 94 I Trie-greph _
BL:LM.\i\ HARDWAR I-.
349 ELIZABETH LK PE M22I OPEN DAILY "nL i; BUN 4-3 DEER PRfXnmiNcTYb Y b'U R i ■ Yeatore %Urktt. I

25% OFF
BOATS. MOTORS. TRAILERS
WINTER STORAGE
SCOTT MOTORS b SERVICE CRUI8E-OUT BOAT BALES 01 E Walton Open 0-7. FE 0-4403
____________ . , ......, BOAT EAULINO' AHD'OTORAOET
Ooodrlch on Hegel Ed. Open Complete boat and motor iwpatr, ... -	..... .'Lu I Inboard! aad eutboerds. New and
need boaU to 2V. Uud gaUboat If with new tall.. 49$. New 2V Speedllner orer-ntor. Ter-
----------- j Jllj,,
Sale Farm hquipment 87 R|j^^o«LyD	«*;
Fall Clearance Sale ! roa't inburahce i per dfcwf »
On new power mowess ' Jffoo3*'“*‘
tTHCtors End tillers	evTnbooe'motors
FE 1-0214__________FE 4-lItl |	boate. ae-
........ * “h7rd To find but
r. Oakland I t of btUford
KING BROS.
HdNTkR'l fVi^L CAliKNa
trailer compir---	---- ' "
bed. eta. Rei Auburn.
, eta. ReaionaMe Imiulra 33
ouNs - itiv;

SPORTSMAN’S
HEADQUARTERS
[INS b, ARCTERT BQUIPMEh ----	---- 7*ADK
buy' - SELL
MM AT DOUBLE mpUOHT LAEE ORION
OPEN 2 OATS A 2VEEK MT b9|l
WANfib: EAW luRs; Slim
ekine Market price, paid. Tree-land Pur Oa. 400 Pontiac Trail, WallaO Lake. PhoM MArkrt
Bah, Minwowa, Etc. 78
Sand, Gravel and Dirt 76
blace Diaf TOP eoiL. M and maaura Alto cgmalata laadacapino aad traa raatovaT aad Utmmllw 210 SeoM Laha Raad. FE 4-490 ay OR 3^10$	______
W^pqZjNb._DRAO^lLll6t and
■1 BLACK blRT/fOP iOlL. iFttX.
bSoaLtg.’i^^MSu.
[nd. dtuY-
PRK WAGON WITH NEW IDEA
, Picker. Uarit Mcby. Fh. NA 1	------------
Ortanvlll*.	IF YOU NX£p (
------------ ----------------- N--	----------
®n.
- homelite cmATn saws -Price. Start at 1IM.H
------1 and Repair All Make.
2 DAYB A WEEK
•?«pi!r2*i
IXT MARII
Rato-Hot. Taro b Jaii ai
fANS BQUIPMENT
We eaa help you
BBB RKABOARU PWARCB OO. 119, NTPerry M.	PE 2-1S12
NE\V JOHNSON
M. ^ TO-hompmitr. $034. da.
OWEN* MARINE eOPPUM 2M Orchard Taka Are.
__________PE 1-99	______
■ CUSTOM libN'
Auction Sales
iietely. Can ft-
_____	... . MtPIka. weefc-
dayr 2 to 4. FE 1-2441 _____
Tranaportat’i Offered 100
ORION AUCTION OPEN POR CON. I e^nmant daily MY_l-tUI______
iUE^lACH PHiOAT l>J4 lUh ,	_______________ _________
—'	"	•-*	»**	Barvlcc Inc. OH 2-l94^^
I ENOINI AIRUNER. LOR AN-gelei. Saa PrancUca. SOB Otoga. $00 Hawaii 49 er' ---------------

K?rtbSg!«g“gr,‘
at Scott Lake rd.________
WSfeSTbUR AO ON THUMOA?
» Dollar Paid (er your
OCX ObWE NbRfjl. iPAhT ..ad oRhar way. PE $99.__
^ttS^a DIUV^tWAT*^E*2-2t9
Wanted Used Cm 101
pofRirrAiL 1____
■ r. B AUCTION 409 Dlxla Ewy . Draytao
ITOP BUCK-^DNK CAE. TRUCK. I PONTIAC WASTE PK S99
areTou OEITIHO
Sak House Trailert 89
THE MOST
14-PQOT ALOMUniM SNILki I S. Riaehaator Road Ul 1-4M
POn TOUR CAR2
B~9^9rTRAVYL TRAUJiR A-1.
—UT 2-lSM.	_	!
19? MU'. NASHUA HOOtifTRAIL. | ■ condition FE S-02M.
~ WE BUY — — TRADE DOWN -~ TRADE UP -V
■it olnibr^R X'. ^ taSik-!
beta Lake jM. L9 ^______i
SStS-SSff^Vi.’^
LLOYD
ton. 0$r>-4»2.
FIFTY
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, XOVKMBER 30. 1960
Wanted Died Cara 101] For Sale Cars
Fdr Sale Cars
AVERILL’S
Rlj^dsinr for ihorp M
moll $ roR LATh itobki
niwortn a ny***
' ’“r r«*Ai?*«aar-
DtHo Hwy, Fh. oa I-IW
$$$
WK NIXD CUEAN
’57 AND '58 CARS
AS SOON AS POnnLE
JEROME
Just Make Payments ,
U BUICB 4 OR.. KM ' oniT sn ao. Du* Ok. Uth.
USI BUICK SPECIAL. 4-DOOR d«u 1 pyuT euf. Cun OA S-3
FISCHER
FOR
BUICK
444 a. WOODWARD ATE. BIRMlNOHASf
MI 4^144__________JO_4^
'	^	LAND COR-

•BRIOHT SPOT"
M543 _
144T BUICE. 3-OOOR HARDTOP.
V4 (iitoBKUc. Power (UeiiBi. i ft»f with red trim, oitr* *h*rp I c*r Stock No. irra. Onlr 44U! I E*>r term* NORTH CHEVRO-I LET CO.. 1000 8. WOODWARD ' AVE . BIRMINOHAM Ml 4-47M 'but. Bif#^E YOU BUT CHECK SUBURBAN OLDS. 404 8 Wood-word. Btnnlnghkin. MI 4-4444 ■»4 BUICK CENTURY HARDTOP
NO l/ONiT DOWN 1M4 Chevrolet. 47 weok. Luckjr Aato Soln, 143 S. Bugluaw. Pbon FI 4-M14 or PE 4-1000.
1441 QHBTROLBT, RADI6 AMD beater, whitewalu. V-E aUck.
overdrive. FB 0 4084._________
1444 CHEVROLET 8TATION WAO-ao. TA enfloe. Powcrgllde, power iteerlDf. radio beatK. whiuwalli. Extra nice. 8tocb No. 144. Only 41144 Eaay tom* NORTH CHEVROLET CO 1004 8. WOODWARD ATE BIRMINGHAM. Ml 4-4734. 14U CBETIE. RUNS BUT NERDS
tranemlMlop. 4W. PI S-UIO.____
■44 CHBVT BEL AIR. 4-DR. I.
_7 000 ml^LUe nw^PE SJOI8.______
tOIl'CHETROLET 1-DOOR. AUTO-natlc tranimlsatoD. V-8 eagipe. Reallf clean. 44 down, 0748 full price. Call Mr. Murphr. Credit Mgr.. PI l-nn. Eddie ateel*.
CA88 AT ORCHARD UC PE 4-0444; Dgnellow Radto S W» kUY AND TRADE ObOD| MAyf**r^4A74J*^' ^ ‘ ftJDAN CABS AND TRUCKS.
Ecooemy care_ __Ma^ClAL. 1 d(»r^
WE NEiro CARS	I Salei 440 Oa^nd.	tiSOO
That YOU Too Would iiom'buick station waooh. 4-. Br Proud to Drive	l Srn" b*"’r'.!“:t	sV 'ft
CUSTOMERS WAITING	4-44IT. aek for Bather _
TOR YOUR CLEAN CARS ' iiST CADlLIJtC COUPE DEVILLE - (rlenns Motor Sales ■ Pull power, air conditioning.
441 W Huron 81_ PEjMJTli ..... .
WANTED: JUNK CARS. ‘	'
““	MINOHAM. MI tl7J4
by eld lady ichool teacher and my wife cell between 1-1 and
1 .... ____________________________________
1400 CHEVROLET CORVAIR "70S' 4-door deluxe. Powerglld*. radio, heater, wtaltewalla. 1 to cbooee from. One la green and one la red. Both are real abarp ear* 11.444 Ea» terma. NORTH
For Sale Cars W
1404 PORD. 4 PAH. WAOON.
1447 FORD STTATIOR WAOON. Standard trunamtaaleii, radio, heater, elenn Inald* aad outVRo
1044 FORD. 4-DOOR PAIRLANB 400. radto and heotor. Crnlaaim-tlc drive, power alMrIng, new tire*, by owner. 4114 aad aaeum*
paymeaU. PN SHM.___________
•41 TOR^T-S^R.JIU^:^ KHT-
Uaa., Muirt *** to apprwtaU. 444 _w. Iroqu^.__________________
MATIC. ABSOLUTELV NO MONEY DOWN. Aaaum* pnymeota el 434 41 per mo. Call Credit Mgr. ■Mr. Parka'at MI V7400. HaraM
im CHF-VKOLET
WAOON tnk0 new coodltloti | throughout	!
$1905

itandard .........
liter 4:30 PE _4-1141;______
LOOK!
Ford. 3 door. Pull price 047.14 month Pirat pay-due Jnnunry 12, 1001. Lucky
..1— .M g	^
1047
rPE 4-lOOi
We Will Pav ;-44 cAorij^c coupe. ttUE,"..- —...............- —.	„
"TOP DOLL.MU' ! iS.n”K»^,o*y.rtK,r':l*;^' *	$895	—
TOR EXTRA CLEAN SHARP CARS ilOO'CADILLAC PRrVA'TB OWNER I	----------------------------
Quality Motor Sales	j l'<90 K.AtMBLF:R DEMO i Moilth End Sole
Just Make Payinenlfs
■44 OLDS 4 Dr 44N

“•Eia
Bled, nt Aubtira
LLOYD'S
Used Car
PLAZA
’58 PLYMOUTH 2-Dr. V8 with auto, trans., radio, heater, whitewalls. One Owner I
$795
232 S. SAGINAW
FE 2-9131
Birr ‘lUhOhE Vou sdT ciiDci SUBURBAN-OLDB. SOI S. Wood-ward. Blrmlnjham, Ml 4-440I.
•44 TOTMbirra BTA'nON WADON, Radio and Eaator. Bacellant ooa------------------down. 0104
.. King Anto 114 B. Bnadnnw Bt.
Just Make Payments
•40 PLY. 4 Dr. 4004 Poy only 410 mo. Due Dee Ulb Rite Auto. Hr. BeU, PE 0-4430 100 Eaat Blvd. at Auburn
1040 PLYMOUTH. RADIO AND Heater, BkceUent ComUttoo, jlo
Sedana. 0134. lor
«40 ORCHAftD LAKE PE 3-7041:-------- ------------------------i «,
U8^”A^to~P7Hr“l()2|IT’S SMART TO LEASE:
_	..... ! FALCONS TO. THUNOPJtBlRDB '
PbR SALE 1041 CAD. TRANS.' Tn\lW^*I°n^V bell hag. clutch and drive ahafi' lO.M .SULLIVAN .omolete Slto. or will kU com-( AUTHORIZED PORD DEALER
.1M ai.. a laaa yord |p,ntoo. Michigan__MAin 0-3354
!iK7 raETROUCt « mANDARO . trantmualoo. good coodltlon. OA
1	1-1107._____; _____
140 CHIVY 0. 3 DR POTriROLlbB
■43 'i TON CHEVY PANEL. 4174 I rral nlce^ FI 3-1104._ ______
'20 Ford pick-up. 1146. 436 South	END OP MONTH SALE
Windtog^after	_	_ ’44 Pontiac, very good	4340
111 • 6 D	I	'41	Bulck. apcctal.	bt	4376
lILKKi	.	j'67	Rambler. I owner	$446
IP>» PORD TON PANEL I'61 Mercury. Beat offer c lean.	34.000 mllra actual. 0004 '50	Fontltc. atarta	good	146
FE	4-3470	_	   '53	Chev, 3 door,	nice
'63 CHEVY. 1-TON PANEL. *176'	____I
lawyer* Colllalon. Keego Har- Stuart Conway_______i
bor______________________ 11047 CHCVtE BEL-AIR HARDTOP ,
1044'CHEV. U* TON FLARE BOD'Y i VS Poirargllde
— I.a. n^.^Wealad Vnotsk riB	I ' ****	B «
1958 METROPOLIT.VX
ECONOMY PLUS UKE NEW.
$795
Russ Johnson Motor Sales
AT
Shep'a
•44 PONTIAC. 3-dr.	43
■44 FORD, 4-dr.......12
44 CHEV Bel Air, ^dr. 04
44 CHEV DcIRay. 3-dr.41
■40 PLYMOUTH. 4-dr	II
•40 PONTIAC. 4-dr HT.44
40 BUICK, 4-dr MT....40
•45 CADILLAC Cpe . pwr	14
47 PONTIAC. 2-dr. HT.	44
Shell’s Motor Sales
“I got an F in algebra, too. Maybe We’d belter stop helping each other with our homework!”
a'rWood'winch. OB 3-tol6'.' _4dl>i •43 DODOr " >y-TON 'BTAKB. 76 CHEV Clark PI 3-4444.	’ '•"
TON. STEEL BO rxc. cond. '41 Int tan duel wnreU. '43 Ford. >.a I pickup -61 Chevy 1>* ton. Lo wheel baae kood tlree	i z-—,
rX^NOHIY CARS _32 AUTORNj ■40 PICK-UP •TRUClt. CHBVT, BK-!
.... —....... 0174. 310 Carr I
LAKE ORION
i.M\ 2j2871_ MY 2-238L TRAHSMismONT ■'ABSbLUlKLY
' 1I40 CHEVROLET BEL AIR. EX-' 1!.°
I client cmidltlon. by owner. OL |	Cal.
_______________; IiM • ciiivH6Lif~Mir~jb	4-7400. Harold Turner Ford._
CYL I40-3-DOOR. S^r like new I l^mUto purl >»»« VORD STATION WAOON --. .....j-good cond Stick I ?h!aK MW 1 yiarngo	Real beauty I 04t0, full price. $0 00
0400 Firm. MI 4-4143. i SStVSir" .h"	* iraa ■ i weekly CnU Cridit Mgr . Mr
-----------------------powergi.de. *Murjiy. PE M43g. Eddie SUele.
jj_____For Sale Cars 1061
[ ; lt44 FORD 4 DOOR. OOOD COND. j
I i 4334 MA 4-1033.	_________
I i 1*07 FORD CONVERTIBLE. RADIO I
I	AND HEATER. AUTOMATTC ) TRANSMISSION ABSCH-UTELY
II	NO MONEY DOWN. Aaeumejmy-
I; menu ol 413.31 per mo. Call (>rd- ! I It Mar. Mr. Parka at MI 4-7400 '
_Har<Jd Turner Ford.________!
CUSTOM 4-OOOR SEDAN. I-Cyl. i
ir 4. PE 4-4404.
mfa'i
Rd.	,	____________________
Ti44'l;HtVY~OfuiAT~l‘:D6bR; I RORp PAIRLklJE, BEAUTI-
BEATTIE
I 1400 roRg"ari*“i.dKr. demo | “nrv‘'?.?rPB?S43’'ig ’bSSS.^’
I 4-cyl Stondard Trnnamltalon ‘	VI 3-7443. H JUgglra
11004	'40 CHIVIB BEL AIR 3-DR.. 41,140. I
---— —— —	____PI 5-3470 be^e ijf .mfj_
’55 CHEVY V8 4-bR, I
A very clean, i owner. Bel Air. radio, heater, automatic ahift cepuonally nice Initd# and Odng t^ay lor 0404
PEOPLE g AUTO BALES
AT THE STOPLIGHT
.-iizi-—'-' — — — -- Waterford
•	_______________4iqo_DixtE Hvnr,____oi
’'?a".Jir . Kn. ^*.^^0 Jfff:ICHEVROLET. BILAm STORTS
and heater, egeellent condition. No money down, full price 4304. Aaaumc pnymeaM ol $14.34 per month CALL MR. WHITE. CREDIT MANAGER.
coupe. V4. power (
POTO, A4IBULANCB. LM8 3-n37___________________ ____
Ln,,„.,, CHEVROLET. BEL aTr, li _ like new. Superior Auto Salei. -	640 Oakland, PE 4-7400
1056 PORD PAIRLANE SEDAN Radio, heater, whIM Urea. 4300 ..... -.J.. — money down. Call Credit "
Murphy. . Ilddle
It Mgr.. 1 . Pord.
_a Colllalon. Keego H _
40 CHEV pIcE-UP. 050	1
5J333jfUr I p ro. _
FORD
New and Used Truck* Parts and .Sfrvicp
a at MI 4-7400 Harold
_heater. JM W Iroquoli.___________
Make Your Own Heal
4 Chfvya. 'Ol-'Ol-'OO	145 up
4 Pontlaca. '40-’41-'43-'M 005 up
I 3 Plckupa ',-4* and i ton.
4 Cadillac*. ’47-'40-'40-'43 8ta Wagoni '40 Pord. '54 Stude . rinanci^ ^arranged. 100 mher
ECONOMY VaRB AUBURN
"V Truck for I-'vprv loh’’;P“^VR6LET 2-Door. radio .X jrucA tor i.vrry joo	HEATER. TYHITEWALL
TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MON-
McAuliffe Ford;
630 OAKLAND AVE.
Ask for tlic Truck Dept.
•4« OS-TOH STAKE 0-CTLINDER good condition. 0430
l-POOT
bM'BOHRT'iNc”*’' **** ! LINCOLN 130_I Main. Milford .MU 4-1714 1455 TORD P-000 S-YAho DUMP w7 FB 4-0257._	_	$n I
1047 DODOE 700 ’TRACTOR FULLY
equipped, for road. Air brakes.'	.— -----------—
074 Bcottwood PE V4407.	jl44« CHEVY CLUB COUPE I
6 TON MACK 13 YARD DUllP,	ajK* vir'Jn* B.YJi
bok. EM_M47S___ _	____ I	Virgil Harri., . _ ,
'44 OMC '4 TON PICKUP. H'irDRA- —---------------------
matle. Powar brakes. Ilgmlrror. il»00 CHEVROLET IMPALA 4-DOOR
4AVK OH THIS!
JACK COLE. INC.
Maple at Pontiac Trail LAM	.......
Just Make Payments
'44 TORO. ^OR. 4304 Pay only 417 mo. Due Dec. 14tb RIU Auto. Mr. BeU. PE 4-4434 100 East Blvd at Auburn UBED CARS $4<»
------—iWn
TO' 4400
1044 FORD YICtORU. KXCBP-
Rd
.0- 44 PORDB-CHEVS; . l^vd Mtr. Sales. Inc . PB 3-I1II I 1100 FORD 3-DOOR RADIO AND beaur^ $00 down Finance. 41.300 Call Credit Mgr , Mr. Uurpby.
5-1434 0
! 1055 FORD. CROWN VICTORIA I radio and heater, whitewall tires ! Wa* 4704, now 4004. BILL SMITH
U.SED CARS. 140 8. SAOINAW LINCOLN ■ PF, 3-4603
1040 FORD. PAIRLANE 400. 4-door. 0 cylinder, radio and healer. automaUr tradamlaalon, was 41,104. now 4104. BILL SMITH USED CARS. 140 8. SAOINAW. PE 3-4603
TORO. Bt AOTIFUL'cSn"
----	.— —•—ge. Pordon "
d braOies. r
For Sale Cars ^ 106
LLOYD'S
Used Car
PLAZA
’57 MERCURY
Montclair Hardtop with auto, trans, radio, heater, w hitewalls. One .Owner!
$795
232 S. SAGINAW
FE 2-9131
•47 MERCURY TURNP^ CRUIS-er. 4-door hardtop. Power irln-dowa. steering and brakes. Coral aad white flnlah Stock No. 140 Only JW. Easy terma. NORTH CHEVROLET CO. 1000 t WOODWARD AVE BIRMINGHAM. Ml
1067 METROPOLITAN HO MON-ey down. Assume payments of m 40 per month. Call Mr. O BrIan
.Si'25H»'.‘i'-’'-’~>-^-
WOODWARD
Money Down, PuU Prtte oA. Assume payments of *•* — month CALL MR. WHITI IT MANAGER. PE 8448 ■lag Auto Bala* 114 8 1044 PLYMOUTH O-DOOR, RADIO AND HEATER, AUTOMAHC transmission • absoluAlt NO MONEY DOWN. Aaauma pay-
fn*V*»R	ttlAM ra^» muea i^ll
i-7IOO. Haroid Tuintr Ford._
Just Make Payments
■44 PLY 3 DR. 4174 Pay only 410 mo Due Dk. Uth
As*®	V* *•«»»
__IM	Blvd. fct Aubufa
PLYMOUTH l-CYLimSTiSvof: ««V*OL	«■»««
For Solo Cara
heater, iiwtr 'elMrW aad brakes. T>wo-toiM with w/weUa.
YOUR OLD CAR DOWN NO PAYMBMT TILL NBXT YEABI 100% Ouaraatot
■to PLYMOUTH 4-pOOR HARDTOP, A REAL BBADTIPUL OKUtl
POtlBH With V-l tuto.-----
power ■	•
100%
POtlBH With V-l
JACK COLE, INC.
1000 W. Mato at PoBtIa* Trail WALLED LAO	MA 4-4411
4M PLTMOUTH. BTORAOE charges CaU Mr. O'BrUn credit mcr at MI 0-3400 BIRMINOHAM-RAMBLER 000 S. WOODWARD.
0-0730, anytime.
'oT^LTiibb'™ OR oo'aTuofr 4144- fikty Auto Bnlei. PE
must mU 4140
Ju.st Make Payments
IU**mo.' °gue‘l)7c Uth
A^E. Birmingham	|	*K»d" «’
‘’"onvS‘'®g"gg?''i; 'heS :	t-DOOSTRADIO AND ,
iSwen Xow with White	HEATER. ABSOLUTELY NO
i^^SriffrarVL -Tp/r \
Clio uefttfr White sidew»Ut. 27.- ‘	1
-----MY 3.J77#. —^
MSRCURT . COVET aiRMlNOHAM 1 block 8. of Ubplo Rood>
Pmrki
ORAOE
CHEVROU
r Ford
mi B e' L
BIRMINOHAM
JO ft

its DODOE. •
ThU U It. Poll
AUTO. DRIVE. l cond R de H.
can caitomite? I uat aejl lor 1350* I
14310 W Holly Rd I
Radio and Heater.
See Us
FOR YOUH
Truck Needs
.‘5alcs & .Service
,GMC
Factory Branch
■pAKLAM) AT ( ASS -FF 5-9485
^ Truck Piirtt l(MA
TRUCK PARTS. 1040 CHIVY I
BIRMINOHAM.
414 per WHITE . vr: PE 44403 '! Kin. Auto Sates
bith matching top: i	TN 1
i MoTet*?^ 11961 Dodae
>WARD AVE. BIR- I * ^ ^	W
lOLET. U,,________
... i door HARDTOP
SHARP. JET BLACK WITH RED INTERIOR. tX)ADED . WITH ACCiBSBORIES. IN Cl.UDINO POWER PACK POWER STEERING AND BRAKES WHITE WALLS. RADIO AND HEATER AND OTHERS LOW MILEAGE. PHON E_ FE •-OM_EVE^_ 1^64 FORD CUSTOMLINE. RADIO i and heater. Pordomatic trans-mlaalon. beautiful maroon finish, no .money down, full price 4134 Assume payments of 4134 per week CALL MR WHITE CREDIT MANAOER PB 4-0402
" •	••• S. Saginaw
Just Make Payments
1057 FORD 3 DOOH. 4444 Pay only |31 a*. Due Dk. Ulb { I Rite Auto.. Mr BeU. PB 1-4430 '	100 East Bird at Auburn '
Mgr at MI g-3000 BIRMINOHAM. R^MB1.ER_060_B. WOODWARD lOM CHBVROUrr 3-do6r radio. ! heater. 1344 full price, no money : down call Mr Murphy. Credit 4tor. PI 3-3430. Iddls Blecic. <
LARKS
I'CONO.MY SPECLXL
NEW 60. 6 CTL. WON.. |1,H5 1 '59 ft-CYL. WON. SHARP. II.39S *59 6-CYL . 3-DR-. SHARP, tl.395 I MAZUREK MOTOR SALES
__8A0INAW_AT_S_BLVD^_I
195ft FORD RANCH WAOON. RA-{ DIO AND HEATER. ABSOLUTE- I LY NO MONEY DOWN Assume ' paymaots ol $30.75 per mo. CaU Credit Mgr Mr. Parks at MI * _4-7500. _Haro»4_Tu^r_ Ford._
LLOYD'S
Used Car
PLAZA
’54 FORD T Custom 2^Dr. \ 8 Stick with radio and lieater. One Owner!
$495
232 S. .SAGI.S’AW
FE 2-9131
LLOYD'S
Used Car
PLAZA
’56 PLYMOUTH
1040 OLDS. SUPER OO^AOCW, I
K»4t	I radio, heater, whitewalls.
7o44 oldsmobile. RADIO AND'	^15 ^"’ner!
------------------ $595
2.52 S. .S.AGI.NAW
Must Sell
We Are Still Taking Many (rood Trade-ins AND
We Are Overstocked 00 oiM. 18 aoL. coupe
•00 O|S0.'00 4 OR. 8BDAN •00 OL08. 00 HOLIDAY,
■00 OLDS. N COHVER'hBLE ■50 FORD 4 DR. RANCH WAOON ■40 OLD8. 81 CONVERT •00 CHEVY 3 DR., 8TICK ■48 CHEVY %. Toil STAKE ■48 CHETT 3 DR. 8TA. WON.
■47 CHEVY T-0 CONVERT ■47 OU3B. Ol CONTraUBLE ■47 PLYMOUTH BEL. HT CPE.
■47 DODOE V-O, 4 DR H.T.
■40 TORO CONVERTIBLE ■08 FORD 4 DR. CUSTOM ■U RAMBLER STATION WON
All Ready to Go and With Our Written Warranty
Houghten & Son
; FRIENDLY OLDBMI DEALER
_____Main, Rocheater. Ol
lOU PONTIAC. 0410 MAT BB Stfl: nt 14* W. Columbia after 4:10.
For SbI* Cara.
an.sfSWjfS’SS
WMomf to ohooM O’BrUa Credit	tJ**’
BIRMlNOmM-RAMBLER 000 8. WOODWARD.
mi
LER 000 8 woodward.
IIM RAMBLBR WAOOHrPWX
r 80S down. 0000 to flnnnK.
speoaC
Just Make Payments
■43 PONT, a DR. 004 Pay odly |0 mo. Du* Dec 14th Rite Auto, Mr. BeU. PK 0%43l
100 Beat Blvd. nt Anbnrn_
1044 PONTUC. RADIO AND BBAT-
drnmnUc. radio, hooter, low m
Just Make Payments
■44 PooUae, 0306 ky only 417 mo. Du* Dee. UUi Rite Auto Mr. BeU PE 4-4410
MEW PONTIAC8 AT, TREMEN-doua dtacount. Do not tnU to *** ua before you tuy —
Keego Sales & Service
■ _________Eeego Hnrhor _________
I 1044 PONTIAC 4-OOOR. NO MON-I *y down. Aaaumc payment* of I 433.40 per mo CnU Idr O BrIan credit mgr. at MI t-ltOO BlR-MINOHAM - KAMBLER OOg 8 WOODWARD
whltea tint alga^e. ell Ukc*. |l.aoa.4i tuU prie*. I100.40 down nnvment. lOO.lO per month. Big 8r.cSlnt on oil new-OO Rambler* left In etock. .
R & C RAMBLER Super Market ’
EM	MI40
IIM RAMBLER 4-bOOR. TKRY clean. No money down. Aieume paymeota of 010.40 per mo. (Ml Mr. O'Brian Credit Mgr. at MI O-nOO BIRMINORAM-ftAiaLBR gge 8 WOODWARD.
Bddte Steel*. Ford.____________
44 8TUDEBAKER. 303 CHE VIE
-----	.,..-.1. ungtbnge,
.Itch 4-door.
____	, Ford 3.door.
rune good 1100. 3414 Oerlnod.
aylvnn village, PE 4-7040.______
MLL OR TRADB 'M OOLDKR Hawk, good condlUon. 117 North
Ardmore, otter 3 p.m. __________
TAIOB (>VER ■ITO Pi.
1048 Studebnker Lark. <
VALIANT
New 1100 01700 CompletO
Clark St on Motor Sales
CHRTSLER-PLTMOUTH DEALER Main at. Clerkston MA 4-4141
IP TOD NEED 4400 for any emergency,
8KB BKABOJR^I^AMCB CO. 1100 H Perry Bt.____PI 3-701T
MR WHITE. AOER Bing Auto
(TtEDlT MAN.
’60 FORD
V-O. CrUlaeomnUc , radio 8 henter, paw-1 r steering and brakes end wtn-owo. while sidewalls. 1600 mile* n this factory official! car SoUd |
FE 2-9131
LOOK! ■
1147 PLYMOUTH. 3 DOOR. 4404 full price. No money dowo. $37.34
$2550
Larry J©rom© i b&'f "BEPTmi Too buy check
ROCHESTER P6rD DEALER I
1044 PONTIAC. 3-DOOR. NICE CAR. _|106^ PK 3-7443. Harry Riggins. ■M PONITAC^ R AND H 4417 ■44 and 'OO Plymouth .	4107 up
8 Porda '44 '44 '48 'U 0307 up ■M Lincoln; '40 and '47 Caddy 3 Packard*. 'M. '44, '4*
3 Nnah Rnmblert, '44, '43...144
- raEOaUM PRKX8 -FOR BIRMINOHAM CARS
Schutz Motors, inc.
013 8. woodward. B'HAM De80T(>PLTM0UTK DEALER
LLOYD'S
Used Car
PLAZA
’57 VOLKSWAGEN 2-Dr. with radio, heater, whitewalls.
Extra Nice One-Owner!
$895
232 S. SAGINAW
FE 2-9131
1000 PONTUC CATALINA. S-DOOR hardtop. 0400. FB 44230. PE
3-3140_________________________
U4C PONTIAC STAR <nOBP~K ddor Hardtop, radio and henter.
ER. A SHARP AUTO.
R & R MOTORS
O AI^ N 9AV®:_____
ilM OLDSMOBILE CLUB COUPeT RADIO AND HEATER. HTDRA-MA-nC. ABSOLUTELY NO MON ET DOWN. Ataume payments of 430.74 per mo. Call Credit Mgr. Mr. Perks at MI 4-7400. Herald
Turne r^ord.__________
■60 OLDS 00 4-DR . VERY CLBiW. .....	- ^	itod enSw
1047 PONTIAC. STAR CHIEF 4-dooi hardtop la caceUent coodl-1 bydramatlc power steering
Just Make Payments	j
jn RAMBLER 4 DR.. 1404	|
Pay only *31 mo. Du* Dec 15th ' lit* Auto. Mr. BeU. FE 1-4434 I 100 Enet Blvd. at Auburn :
and brakes, power pnk. duel ex-1 lOM LARK heuat dtluxs radio with 3 *penk- 1M7 {DIKVROLET owner. OR 4-030*. lOM CH^ROLET -------------------------' •— VOLUWAOCN
- SPECIAL-
1959 PONTIAC,
BonnevlUe Sport ONipe. Radio and Henter Hydrematle Trena-mission. Power Brakes and Steering.
............. $2395
INCLUDES HEATER. WASHERS. I SIGNAL LIGHTS, OIL FILTER. AIR FOAM. ETC ALL TAXES ' FREE LUBRICATION FOR 34,-, two MILES	I
t Plus I'ree Bonus
: r.a.mmi-i:r-dalla.s '
iMi N Main Rochester
OL 34III
» OODOE CHRYSLER-TRUCES i
1*6* EDSEI. CORSAIR
mileage I I. 01.7U.
i LINCOLN. NO RUST. OOOD iterlor. auto, trena.. new Urea.
1±PS__
i OAR PAYMInTS TOC ________
i some? Come In and see oa and let ua help yon adjust to a less cxpenalv* c*r.
DON’S USED CARS
77 M34	Lake Orion
namitslon. You
•r brekea. radio h
PL, PD AND MEDICAL For moit ceri		white Urea Bee thie beauty today at xmly 41.014.
No male driver under 36 . 430 lor 4 monlhi Wao cenrelf 1 and young driven rtlANK A ANDERSON AOBNCY 1*44 Jovlyn FE 4-3614	Crisyman	BOB FROST INC LINCOLN - MERCURY - COMET BIRMINGHAM >1 block 8. ol Maple Roadi MI 4-3300 JO 0-1*31
Fve» rU* **'* foreign and Spt. Cars 105	ROCHFSTF.R OPEN EVES TIL 4 OL 3-*72l ,	NO* MONEY “down
i46* CORVETTE, MODIFIKD 170. i .!mmarul*U_rt I-3U4	 |	1464 CHEVY - B18CAYNE7'RADi6 thlrt, white, eacrllent coodlUon i	1044 Ford. 2 door. 46 week, l.urky Auto selca. 143 8 Saalnew Phone FE 4 3314 or FE 4-1000
106*'FORD' l-boOR, CLEAN HO money down. Ataume payments
Ctedli iJtli ..	_______
MINOHAM RAMBLER «M 8
WOODWARD	__ __
'	~ DO YOU
Want .\ ( ioinI I'setLCar Worry-Free With a
COR VET, 3 speed' anuDisslan. 3 tops, whitewalls,: F 3-0463 *l*_8tfrllng Avc ' i CORVETTI. OOOD CONDI-
Just Make Payments
5* CHEV 3 OR 4406 y only *27 mo Due Dec. 16th le Auto Ur Bell. FE 1-463* JO* East Blvd at Auburn 14 CHEVROLET 4 TO CROOBK from From 43*4. Payments ns low na 13.4* weekly CaU Credit
«0r ' ..“r ;	- —------
M^rahy. PE 3-343*.
and~hT“ao-
.	• 6* TRIUMPH TR .J
Roadster. A black beauty! With'
.JACK COLL, INC. .-64 chivroijt.
u 3aouar_^ xk 130 COUP EX.; »r<7 /-nt Tfl t\t
j:!f*?fjn "**	5/ CHEVY
^_*8 HILi^-N ^Y. *7.,— bfx air 2-DOOK T ■» KARMANN^k !	''
,3 DOOR HARDTOP. CLEAN I
kOTOP,
Car i’^'t*_FE 3-79311
1*04 o»^ oiTidPiA 3-DdbiTwiTM l


MINOHAM Ml 4-3734.
$899
_________Mdtthews-
Up to 45 MPGiHargreavesi.,
’59 Morris Convert.
'58 Healy Sprite
Houghten 6c Son'
LLOYD'S
Isedt.ii
PLAZA
'57 I'Omi
Fairlatie ”5(X)" 2-Dr. i rtop tt itli auto, traii'i. radio and heater, wliitewalls, ]H»\ver steering and windows.
$895
232 S. SAGINAW
FE 2-9131
100% Guarant©©
A.SK FOR JOHNNY GARR
Jack Col©, Inc.
1000 W Maple nt Pontiac Trail
WALLED LAKE______MA_4-*4ll
FORD, BRITISH, CONSUL * TIRES Including snow Urea, new 13 volt battery. 4 door, a transportaUon ,
bargain a^$3i0 _PE_3-4344_,
1)64 pord'. STORAOE CHAROEB. call Mr. O'Brian credit mgr at MI 6-3000 BIRMINOHAM-RAMB- I
LER 0**^ WOODWARD  I
1947 FORD SEDiAN. RADIO AND
____ 14 down. ______ ___
.	-o.i, I Credit Mgr. Mr, Murphy. FB
.MMO^^BIR- 1	3-3430. Bddte Steele. Ford
DO YOU need:
HUMPING - PAINTING
"FREE ESTIMATES ”
ALL WORK guaranteed ON ALL MAKES OF CARS AND TRUCKS ONE DAY SERVICE
hardtop, automette transmlaelon. : power brakea and etcerlng. Beeu-tlful rose ttnlah. stock No. 1*43 Only *1.4*4. easy terms. NORTH ! CHEVROLBT CO. 1000 8. WCX)D- I WARD AVB.. BIRMNOMAM. MI I
Fallincj Snow
MEANS
Falling Prices
HASKINS
USED
CARS
SPECIALS
PIxl* Hwy.. near Saahabew
LLOYD'S
Used Car
PLAZA ,
’57 PONTIAC Si^er Chief 2-Dr. Hardtop with auto, trans., radio, heater, whitewalls, power steering and brakes. Extra Nice!
$1095
232 S. SAGINAW'
FE 2-9131
DEMO
SALE!
I960
CHEVROLET
AND
CORVAIRS
AS LOW AS
$1695
Ea.sy Terms
NORTH
CHEVROLET CO. 1000 S. Woodward Birmingham MI 4-2735
1958 CAbltLAC
*0 SPECTAL FLEETWOOD. WhR* with blue Interior. Loaded wtto eoceaeorleal Includlig elr-condl-Uonmg. Only 14.000 mllet. In thowroom condition. 03.0*4.
1960 PONTIAC
■TA'nON WAOON. * paseenger. 4-door. Power ateerlag and brakea. Radio end heater. Hydrametlc, whitewall Urea. A nice, clean car. Only 43.0*4.
1956 CADILLAC
LIMOUSINE 74. I paaaenger. A let beauty with only 34.000
JOHN J, SMITH
dodge. INC
311 8 SAOINAW
good condition^ MT 3-1000 __
'Xl 'MERCURY 'to'PONTIAC Chev. Choice 0*4. I2*g 8. Hospli Rond. Stuart Conway.
To Discriminate U.sed Car Bargains.
I THAN CAN
1*00 MERCURY 4 E MONTCLAIR Auh power ateerlng.
BOB FROST, INC LINCOLN - MERCURY , COMET
’.59 PONTl.XC ......$1745
4 Door Cataltne, Hardtop. Pwr.
’58 PLYMOUTH ..$ 845 j b*u«ve^
4 Doer Hardtop. V-O, AutomeUc. ,	_ _
'57 CHFX ROLET $ 9451 b^tound"a1»twhere7
310 4 1)001“, V-O, sundard.	OIVINO THESE
wirwic i ^**^8 AWAT. BUT ARE A8K-$1U95 INO A FAIR PRICE tOITH OUR r-a Auto “OK”	---- -------
r-«. jBuvw.
56 CHEVROLET $ 795'
31*. 3 Door. 8. AutomeUc.
OLIVER
Motor Sal©s
’59 Buick ..$1995
laaSABRE. Power ateerlng, powt ■—■-“. dynnHow,. radio, bestc
TAYLOR'S^
credit Mgr Steele, ftrd
’59 Buick .............$1995
KLBCrrRA hardtop with power ateerlng. power brakea. dyneHow. radio and beater. ReaUy a nice
'’59 Chevrolet .'.....$1795
IMPALA HARDTOP. Light blue flnlah. jMwtr ateerlng and brake*. ------radio and heater. A-1
lah. powt rergllde. iditloa.
**$tSl5
i 1*47 Chevrolet 3-dT. 310 * Stick. 1
YOUR FRANCHISED IMPORT DEALER
44* N M*ln^^_Rocbeater. OL l OIOl' XW^Ol^AOEN 'Tor DOWN Radio heater, white Urea Real 4barp! Ne dosrn payment 'tU neat, **"	"Of . Mr Uur-
F^-3430, Ed(f‘- - -----'
-----WAOEN ' 64
For Sale Cor*
OAKLAND COUNTY’. Largeat (%*vrolet Dealer til OA^Aim^AVENUB
'59Thevr6T:eT-
IMPALA 4 DOCMt HARDTOP CLEAN TT^UOHOUTI
I Van Camp (jhevrolet. Iiic.
' MU,TORD________MU	4-1034
1960 CHEVROLET
Race along the open highway zarefree and gay wMh thU lU-PALA HARDTOP 4-door of ■ eonrse This gllatenlng aelld tur-uoise Company (bar haa every-smg neceaasry for your every omlori Mid cenvenlenee V-l en-Ine. power ateerlng 8 brekea.
i*ny*eilli?* eitSr*‘"“oo“ **«»
•«ek- Luckr Aulo Sales, 163 ‘ V Yho&i PK 4-S3U or I
LOOK! BUY! S.WE!
■|* Pontiac Star Chief 4-Dr. .	00*6
■“	^ special 3-Dr.	*0*6
*...... 4-Dr.	16*6
4-Dr 033*4
k Special 4
O'SnBii Credit
Crisaman :
f o (j*n Mr -- - •■?.	!
gi ei m g-3*
AMBLER ggg
•H Bulc.
■m._________________
'«* Buick Convertible.
■I* Pontiac 4-Dr. H-top ■4* Buick 3 Dr DrneAow '41 Buick Special R-too ■*0 Buick Klectre 4-Dr ■$7 Chevy 4-Dr.. V-g engine ■I* Pard "tOV H-4n»
'4g Pord 4-Dr , V-g ■4g Mercury 4-Dr, H-TOp .
■47 KJd’'c5Brt'. sfiPtolfl •47 Pontiac Star Chief Convt 47 Butch 4-dr H-top
SHELTON
PONTIAC - BUICK Across from new car sales Rochrster OL 1-8133“
1467 PonUac atation Wegoni g'a end :	I'B. From $14*6 to	11*04
: INI Pontlec 1-dr Sedan Rydra-! mauc. Radto and heater I 444
{ 1444 Pontlec 3 dr eeden 1*1 ; 1*41 PonUac S-dr eeden	III
j 1*44 Chevrolet 3-dr. eeden 1*1 1*47 Pord 3-dr. Btratoht attek 4410
10*0 PonUac CaUUnn 4-dr. Herdlop. Power ateerlng 8 power brake*
t3W6 I	"oO'o ond h
I Buick Century Mr hardtop.
a**4 >0*7 Dodge 4-dr a
HOMER
HIGHT
MOTORS
Dargains
■go PLTMGUTH FURY Sport New Price $3,370 Now
PI-TltOUTH Betvederi 'dtop MWf------

17 DeSOTG FTREDGME 4-dr. *710 •5# CHEVROLET 31*. * CYL.
■I* CHRV----
*-ll<WT New Yorker
■H CHEVROLET. l-Door
1*1* CHEVROLET 4-DR. BTATION wagon, radio and haater. A lltUe gem ... It* down.
1M7 PONTIAC CLUB COUPE 1-tone. hydramaUe. radio, heater, whitewalu. Low down payment. ■
1M7 PONTIAC 4-OR. HARDTOP. 1-tone, hydramattc. radio, heater, whitewalu. A gem to drive. Long
heater, whitewalu. On* you c
end whitewalu.
ike*, rni . Bed «
BRAID
! Pl-YMOLTH-VALUNT Cass a West Pike St.
FE 2-0186
WM i INI Roirruc BOKKVYIUaB SA.
! {jr* <»«no Um thftfi 3.066 ml 63M	MU1PP04, color whlU Am*
pie ^lovftnct tor car Bank ratoa.
big and power brakea.
■00 CHEVROLET BEL AIR Sedan*, with V-l anto traa*. One aolld black. The other Is tUv< blue, both real elenn I
___47 FORD COUNTRY
SEDAN. SUtton Wagon. —“
HASKINS
CHEVROLET
S7U DlgleJU^^r nt M-14.
HAUPT
PONTIAC
LLOYD'S
Used Car
PLAZA
•57 MERCURY 14-Dr. Station Wagon with iauto. trans., radio, heater and whitewalls.
$795
232 S. SAGINAW
FE'2-91?1
’59 Forfi .............$1695
OALAZIK HARDTOP. A V-* door with power ateerlag brakes. Pordomatic and tu-t blue flnlah. Perfect autol
’59 Pontiac ....------$1895
‘BTA'nON WAOON. Radio and heater. Lew mUang*. A nice “'■
’56 Buick .............$695
4-DOOR HARDTOP. Red with white top. Dynaflow trnaemlMlon,
n* green fl mtiuon, M
r etoerlas and
■js:'
’56 Pontiac.....$ 795
BTAnOH WAOON. Rydnmatle. radi* and heater. A nic* onel
’57 Buicic .....$895
3-DOOR' HARDTOP. Dynaflow trjuml^l^^radte, haator. Aa-
OUVER
Motor Sales
__	310 Orchard Lake Av*.
OPEL JBP PBUOOtr I
1958 CADILLAC
SEDAN DEVILLC. A bkeuUful 3-
H)59 BONNEVILLE
CONVERTIBLE 'Whit* With whit* top. 1-tone all ybiyl Power ateerlng bnd br all the ncceasorles. *~ throughout. $1.0*4.
1957	CADILLAC
02 SEDAN. Buckskin In color with -matching interior. A low mileage ear ready to •*!! 41.1*4.
1959 PONTIAC
l-DOOR CATALINA, Beautiful emerald green. Power iteerlng. brakte nod a full Ho* of acceieo-rter^A nice clean, i owner cpr.
1958	PONTIAC
X>UPE. PIregald Power ateerlng, r Hydrametlc, wU. t benutylt 41,4*6.
1956	CADILLAC
COUPE DEVILLE. Pink with whit*
Uonbif and coatbienUl ut. A elenn onel I *1,1*0.
1957	PONTIAC
STARCHIEF SEDAN. Oreea with whit* top. Power eteerln*. radio, beeto^h^dremtlC' wbtlewelU. A
WILSON
PONTIAC-CADILLAC
Wocxiwarcl 1350 N.
PBUOOtr I BIRMTINOHAM
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WgDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 80, 1060
FIFTY-ONR
--Today's Television Programs--
I mM In tUa flotaniB an Mbjiel to ehaaga wUM mOm
0hUM( 4-WWJ-TV
OtouMi 7-WXTB-T?
TONIGHTS TV mOHUOITS i:M (2) Blovle (cont.)
(4) Trackdown (7) Newi and Weather (9) Popeye
(06)	General Cbemlatry ^ 6:16 (7) Sporta
6:U (7) Newi 6:66 (2) News Analysis (4) Weather 6:N (2) News (4) News
(7)	Circus Boy
(9) Woody Woodpecker ' 6:46 (2) Sports (4) ^rts (2) News (4) News ^
(06)	Mathematics (2) Aquanauts (4) Dangerous Robin
(7)	Award Theater
6:46
7:^ (2) Divorce Court (coat.)
(4) Wagon Train (7) Hong Kong (9) Movie: “Flaxy Martin* (1949). Virginia Mayo, Zachary Scott.
(06)	Invitetion to Art 6:66 (2) Best of Post
(4) Wagon Train (cont.)
(7)	Hong Kcmg (cont.)
(06)	Showcase
6:96 (2) Red Skelton (color)
(4) Price Is Right (color)
(7)	Ossie and Harriet (9) Movie (cont.)
(06)	Omversationa 6:66 (2) Red Skelton (cont.)
(4) Perry Comq;(odor)
(7)	Hawaiian
(9) Walter WlncheU FUe 6:96 (2) I’ve Got A Secret (4) Como (cont.)
(7) Hawaiian Eye (cont.)
(9) Waterfront 16:06 (2) Steel Hour
(4) Peter Loves Mary (7) Naked City (9) Harbor (^mmand 16:96 (2) Steel Hour (cont)
(4) U.S. iBrnder Patrol (7) Naked Qty (cont.)
(9) News 16:45 (9) Sports 16:60 (9) Weather U:60 (2) News (4) News (7) Decoy (9) News
11:16 (2) Weather «
(4) Weather (^) Telescope UAW 11:66 (2) Sporta (4) Sports
11:66 (2) Movie: “The Betrayal” (English, 1956). A man Minded by the Germans, hears traitor bargaining for his own life, a deal that cost tbe life M lour men. Philip Friend, Diana Decker.
(9) Movie: “A Kiss in the Dark" (1948). David Niven, Jane Wyman.
11:96 (4) Jack Paar
(7) Mr. and Mrs. North
6:66 (4) (color)
Classroom.
6:96 (7) Funews 6:96 (2) Meditations.
6:46 (2) On the Farm Front 6:46 (2) TV College.
7:66 (4) Today.
(7) Funews (2) Felix the Cat 8:00 (7) Johnny Ginger 6:16 (2) Capt Kangaroo.
6:90 ^ (7) Stage S 6:66 (2) Movie.
(4) f Married 2oan 6:96 (4) Exercise (7) Xbcerclse.
0:66 (4) Faye Elizabetfa 16:00 (4) Dotgh Re Mi (7) News 10:16 (7) Movie 16:96 (9) BUlboard.
(4) color) Play Your Hunch (7) Divorce Hearing (9) Ches Helene 11:00 (2) I Love Lucy
(4) (cMor) Price Is Right (7) Morning Court (9) Romper Room U;90 (2) XHear Horison.
(4) Concentration (7) Love That Bob
THURSDAY AFTFJINOON
19:00 (2) Love of Life
(4) Truth, Consequences.
(7) Texan (9) Susie U:96 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (coin-) It Cauld Be You (T) Beat the Dock.
(9) Tower Kitchen Time 19:60 (9) News.
19:56 (4) News.
(2) My UtQe Margie
(4) News
(7) About Faces -(9) Movie.
1:66 (4) Bold Jourmy.
(2) As Worlo Turns.
(7) Life of RSey.
9:66 (2)*Medic
(4) (color) Jan Murray.
(7) Day in Court 9:16 (2) Hwise Party.
(4) Loretta Yoqng.
9:66 (2) Our Mias Brooks (4) Young Dr. Malone.
(7) ()oeen for a Day (9) Movie 9:96 (2) Verdict la Yours.
(4) From These Roots.
(7) Who Do You Trust 4:66 (2) Brighter Day.
(4) Make Room for Daddy. (7) American Bandstand. 4:16 (2) Secret Storm.
(9) Adventure nme 4:96 (2) Edge of Night (4) Here’s Hollywood
S(9) Santa Oaus (2) Movie
(4) (color) George Pierrot (7) Johnny Ginger (9) Jingles.
5:96 (7) Rocky and His Friends. 5:56 (9, Jac Le (!k>fl.
TV
Features
Jack Schedules Busy Session
Minting Labor Loackir, Congressman, Adviser in AppoinMients Today
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Presl-dent-Elect John F. Kennedy aet
Negro congreuman and advisor
Kennedy arranged meetings at his Georgetown home with Joseph Keenan, president of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Woiicers; Rep. Adam Clayton Powell, D-N.Y., who wiU be chairman of the House Ubor and Education Committee, and James M. Landis of New York, who is conducting a study of regnlatoiy agencies for Kennedy.
By Ualtod Prewi InteraatloBal
WAGON TRAIN, 7:30 p.m. (4). Myma Fahey stars as a young woman who is accused of murdering the son of a town boss. Flint McCullough (Robert Horton) finds the real killer and saves the girl.
HONG KONG, 7:30 p.m< (7). An ingenious murder plot evolves out of a publicity stimt that is supposed to dired attention to a glamorous film star.
RED SKELTON, 8:30 p.m. (2). Special show presents Red with guests Dinah Shore, Frank Sinatra, George Ra^, Bobby Rydel and William Demerest.
PERRY COMO, 9 p.m. (4). The accent is on conoid as Bob Hope visits Perry. With comedian Milt Kamen, Anne Bancroft and choreographer Peter Gennaro. (color)
STEEL HOUR, 10 p.m. (2). “Tbe Yum Yum Girt’ stars Anne Francis and Robert Sterling in mantle comedy.
NAKED CITY, 10 p.m. (7). Ruth Roman, Zina Bethune and Jack Lord star. Walda Price (Miss Roman) is angered when her fiance starts dating her daughter.
JACK PAAR, 11:30 p.m. (4). Jack’s guests are Peter Ustinov, Hermione Gingold and Albert Dek-ker. Singer: Kay Armen. (cMor)
Says Kidnapers Big Bunglers
Left 'Mile-Wide' Trails in Snatching California Man for $200,000
SAN DIEGO, Cafif. (AP)-Kid-napers of rich sportsman Anthony Alessio were bunglers who “left trails a mile wide," a police of-
Five suspecta have been arrested. Federal agents believe one or two more members of the gang may stm be at large. About 283,-000 of the 2200,000 ransom paid for Alessio’s release has been re-
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Accuse Animal Tiainer ot Being a Chimpnaper
a labor Ibader, a
St. LOUIS, Mo. (UPD-Accused chimpnaper Robert Tomarchln returned to drcult Court today to defend Umaelf against diarges of stealing Mr. Moke, a ~ ‘ (kimpansea, from the 8t. Lnuls Zoo.
★ ★ ★
The 28-yeaiyild anlnu admitted he broke Into the ape house here Dec. 21 but defense attorney Norman London said in an opoi^ statement Tuaaday that Tomarchin thought be was buying, not stealing the simian.
TomareUa Is the anly expeet-
Ibe three, Kennedy breakfasted with Sea. George A. Bmathers, D-Fla., aa old ooagreasloaal
. Mr. Moke Is la Florida wHh a pritoisleaal inlmal trainer.
Tomardiin purchased Mr. Moke in Florida and sold the chimp to the 900 for 21.575. When Tomarchin later “Wt obligated" to retrieve file chimp, London said, his cUent attached a 21.000 check to the empty cage along with a note promising an additional 22,000. rroeeoater Robert D. Klags-
Alesslo, one of seven brothers prominent in Southern 'California business cindes, was kidnaped San Diego at gunpoint by two men on Nov. 22, released harmed more than 24 hours later after the ransom was paid. The initial arrests were made soon afterward.
ARRAIGNED TUESDAY
Three persons were arraigned here ’Tuesday on a state charge of kidnaping, which is punishable on conviction by life imprisonment with possible parole After 7H years because the victim was unharmed. Arraigned were James Robert Gikman, 29, escaped convict: his wife Ruby, 30, and Sel-Marrone, 25. Each was held in lieu of 9210.000 bail.
Two others were arrested Tuesday. They are Richard Lee Hoffman, 24, named by the FBI as one ot the gunmen who abducted Alessio from his driveway, and Frank Marrone, 3L a convicted Alaska murderer awaiting appeal.
★	♦ A
Police Chief A. K Jansen of San Diego said he believes Gorman was the “brains
Kennedy himself reportod that ■good progress" is being made in selecting t(V officials for his new administratioiL
’I have some more people t<^^ )," he told newsmen but Indicated that one or more o( his cabinet posts would be filled by the end of this week.
Otho* than visits to his wife and new eon, John F. Kennedy Jr., at (korgetown University iltal, Kennedy planned tc q>end his working day at home.
Marin Won't Serve Jack as Ambassador
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico lAV-Gov. Luis Munoz Marin says he definitely will not be available as a Latin American goodwill ambassador for the incoming John F. Ken-n^ administration.
Puerto Rioo Itself must be the goodwill ambassador and his own mIosloB Is to see that the U.8.
Sources clone to the governor had said, right after he was swept hade into office Nov. 8 for a fourth straight term, that President-Elect Kennedy wanted to use his popularity and administrative ability ------
in Western Hemisphere affairs, jlng at his grinning father.
hIM ban tor U years.
d tbe 900 did “agreement” to take special care of Mr. Moke. TCtnar-maintalns the diimp can srrite his name and say “mama' "no.”
Youth Admits 23 Burglaries
Polica Nab Farmington Township Suspect in Gat Station Thefts
of seoaad degree burglary. Oon-
Joseph Kennedy Finds Grandson Resembles Him
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Grandfather Kennedy needed two visits to the nursery but he finally decided his new grandson looks like
Multimillionaire JosejA P. Kennedy. father of the president-elect, got his first peek at the newest member of the Kennedy clan, John F. Jr., at (Seorgetown University Hospital TUeeday afternoon and rettned for anottter look through tte nursery window in tbe evening.
Tbs elder Kennedy, UB. ambassador to Britain under Presl-
"She’U be here in a Aiy or so,” he quipped. “We come in install lents."
After the second trip, President-Elect John F. Kennedy volunteered to reporters, “We decided he (the child) looks like Dad.”
"Who declded?”'the senator was
“Dad," Kennedy confessed, look-
Dooley Forced to Enter Hospital
Exhaust»d Doctor in Hong Kong and Soyi Ho's Loit 14 Pounds
HONG KONG (AP)-^Dr. Thdm-aa A. Dodey, cotounder of Medico, which operates hospitala in remote areas of Laos and other Southeast Asian nations, today _ St. Theresa’s here with what hospital records ■ted as “sheer exhaustion.” Dooley said by telephone from his hospital room that his hoe-pltaliatica was not directly at-
A 20-yearold Farmington Township youth has admitted 23 gas station burglaries in Oakland and Wayne counties since the first of the year, according to Livonia police. A IS-yeardd boy his admitted being an accomplice In 10 of the broek-ins, police said.
Jeaepb E. CbaiboMaa, 66. el
TnwiMklp was arralgaed hi U-vonla Maaidpal Court yaetor-duy, and examtoettou was set by Judge Robert Loiton for Dee. 6. The Juvenile has been turned over to Wayne County Juvenile authorities.
★ ★ ★
According to Detective Jerry Warner, Oiarboneau was arrested early Monday morning following a break-in at a gas station at Schoolcraft and Farming-ton Roa(b.
Arreettog offloers, Patrolinen
said Utoy foead Chai4»oneuH at-tetnpHag to hide aader Us ear
I lato aearby biuah
Vacationland May Find Home in Alaska Run
DETROIT UB-nie mighty Vae» onland, which piled between tqe Upper end Lower Pentnsulee at MiiAfgan in the days before the Maddnae Bridge, may find a new life in Aladca.
A ★	*
Tburmnn D. Sherard, director and chief engineer of Alaska’s di-' vision of highways, said today he has requested englneeilng specttl-cetions and details about the 365-foot ferry boat from the Michigan Hl^iway Department.
which he iiwtowent nrgety in 159.
A medical source said there
and Indicated Dooley wUl undergo tests.
Dooley said he does not expect to be able to return to his hospital in Lsm before ^. 15 at ^ earliest.
Aa for the diagnosis of exhana-ttod, Dooley said: “I would call It old age.” Dooley le 33.
He eaid he had lost 14 pounds In the last month, had an average of only about four hours ^eep a nl|d>t for six weeks and was veiy tired.
“The Vacationland might be the —jswer," Sherard said. "1 ran' across it by acddoit, iMit It looks
^'sberaid is in Detroit for the 46th annual meeting of tbs Aroer-icsn Association of State Hishway Offlcielt. Hort for tbe meeting to the MlcAlgan State Hiahway Department which Just reaequiied the Vacationland.
★ ★ ★
“We had it sold, once,” saM Commissioner J(An Maddc, “hut had to repossess it Nov. 15.”
Steelworkers Get 7-13c Pay Hike But Price Holds
Charboneau signed a statement at Livonia police headquarters in which he admitted staging 10 gas station burglaries in Oakland County during the past 11 months. He is believed to have netted about 21.000 in this area.
PITTSBURGH (AP)-Pay hikes ranging from seven to 13 cents an hour go into effect Tiursday for basic steelworkers. But there is no Indication steel price in-les will follow-at least for
Some 50,000 members of the United Steelworkers will be titled to wage raises. But the union estimates about 40,000 of these are currently unemployed and ttiousands more are working less than 40 hours a week.
Management spokesmen either
decline comment on the possibility of price changes, or simply point out no announcement has
Finds Poor Planning, No Graft in Viet Nam
WASHINGTON (AP)-Secretary of State Christian A. Herter says some waste has been found in foreign aid financing of a big highway program in Viet Nam, but no graft was involved.
★	♦	A
Herter said in a report Tuesday to Sen. Mike Mansfield, Mont., that an inspector general’s invertigation showed poor i9a»-ning caused long delays in building a radio netwstk for Viet Nam.
★	♦	★
But Herter	said	no evidenoe
was found ot any rigging ot Uds for purchase of radio eiiuipment.
★	★	★
Mansfield is chairman of ate Foreign Relations subcommittee which investigated charges of lax management and following a series of critical articles written by Albert Colegrove, a Scripps Howard reporter.
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Demands Mayor Oust Police Commissioner
By EARL WILSON
NEW YORK — (Jomedlan Joey Adams was leading Police C(»nmlasloner Kennedy by 16 Interrlews, eight radio orations and 27 jokes In the great Cabaret Plngenjrtnt War—and now, scd»nri"g Tlctory, Adams was opening demanding that Mayor Wagner fire his top cop. *Hring me up on chargee—eee where youTl get!” defUntly retorted the Com-• mIselOBer, whose term expiree next Feb.
21.
To Mayor Wagner’s protest that eome cafe suspensions, tor lack of employes’ cabaret cards, were serere, Kennedy replied they weren’t seyere enough.
Iliere’Te been	telephone battles	and	rt-
WILSON	celTer-slammlngs.	One Brosulway	gag
“Kennedy’s going to make Wagner get a Mayor’s license.”
To show how the wind's blowing, it was rerealed that behind the scenes the Mayor’s proposing to Adanu, as president of AOVA, a new cabaret card setup proTldlng one-time permanent photographing and fingerprinting In a llceneelng branch office In easy reach of Broadway cafe actors.
★ ★	★ •
A fellow at the Algonquin asked Monte Froseg-how soon be’U be opening the new Lanai PelynesUii reetonrant in the	Winter	Garden. Monte replied, “About	Inother
91H,906.”
With Perle Meeta haring backed Nixon (In anger at Lyndon Johnson for running with Sen. Kennedy), Comedian Marty Allen figures that for the next four years all her shindigs will be ‘Tnlnorlty parties” . . . Henry Morgan wae,leaTlnf a party with the Will OUckmans. He turned to the host who was saying goodbye, "I’U say It for you. I thought nerer go.”
★ ★ ★
THE MIDNIGHT EARL ...
• Is “Unslnkable” Tammy (Jrlmes back arlth ex-husband Christopher Plummer? ... Kim Nerak wouldn’t tell the name of her Latln-looklng esewt at the Harwyn . . . Atb Gardner and laea Gonxalea, who sounds SpanUb, anyway, closed up the Camelot where they went to hear Matt Dennis . . . Beb filepe gets around pretty good for a guy who’s supposed to be retting. Went tb PtilUy to catch Lnellle BaU In “WUdeat.”
tricked his buddy Sam Bldner Into going to the airport with him and chatting a while In the plane. Next thing Bldner knew, he grae on the' way to LA. Jerry and he talked about old tlmei, then BM-ner flew back home (he same day, to find a limousine walttof to take him to his home In Brooklyn ...
BABLV FBARLS: KMplng a husband In hot water doesnt make him tender.
TODATH^BBST LAUGH: President-Blect Kennedy wont be leaTlng the White Rouse much (figures H. Stamider)—too tough getting a baby-sitter.
WISH n> SAID THAT: “Unemployment’s rising,” Claimed a wit at Pillow Talk, tkimo N.T. oops only luve one lob.” Keep an open aelnd. eayi Hanny Toitnfman.-and you’ll get A lot of rnbMsh thrown In II... That’a oarL kniONr. (Oepyrlght. UM)
Baby Kennedy 'Definitely Will Go to Palm Beach
WASHINGTCm.^(UPI) - Mrs. John F. Kennedy will "definitely" take her infant eon with her to Palm Beaidi, Fla., when she goes there to recuperate from her Caesarian operation, her obstetrician reported today.
It It -k
Dr. John W. Walsh said Mrs. Kennedy is “very definite’ this “even if it means re Georgetown Hospital couple of extra days.”
Say Lumumba Flight a Success
Report Ex-Premier Is in Friendly Territory Safe From Col. Mobutu
as to whether the sIx-dsy-oM baby of the president-elect wonld be able to travel wtth Mra. Kennedy when toe leaveo the hos-pitnl In aboot IS days.
Jolm Jr. is being moved this afternoon to a private nursery across the hall from Ms mother but will remain in an incubator 'for warmth,” Dr. Edward B. Broodcs, the baby’s pediatrician, lid.
Both mother and son were reported doing fine.
LEOPOLDVILLE, Hie Congo Wl — Fugitive ex-Premier Patrice Lumumba today was repiarted to have leached friendly territory some 400 miles east of the capital, well out of Ool. Joseph Mobutu’s
Futurift Paintor.Dies
ROVERETO, Italy (AP) -Fortunato Depero, 68. painter who was a leader of the futurist school a half century ago, died Tueaday of a heart attack. Hia futurist paintings, exhibited in New York and to many European cities between 1910 and 1930, are in many private collections.
Whose Side You On?
DALLAS, Tex. (UPI) - Sign on a clothing rack in a Dallas store; “Guaranteed, while they last.”
sources dose to the Industry strongly believe pricer will hdd steady in the immediate future despite higher payroQ costa.
This bdief to based on the ciw-rent low state of steel business. As long as the slump continues, this thinking goes, steel firms will not boost prices.
BELOW 56 PER CENT For the past five months the idustry has been operating generally below 55 per cent of capacity. This week the rate is estimated at 69.3 per cent.
No significant upturn in produo-tJon ia expected file rest of the year. R is likely the slowdown will pmist well into 196L according to industry sources.
Iron Age, national weekly trade magazine, says of the outlook: 'Best guess now is a slight pidr-up in January over December, § mild upturn in mid year with a substantial buildup in tbe second
Some sources said he abondoned his plan to go first to Stanleyville heading instead toward another of his political strongholds, Luluabourg, capital of Kasai
Klkwit aad w aader s military gaard.
This report was not confirmed by any responsible source.
Friends of the Communist-leaning former premier said he was last definitely reported Idlota, a village in the Kwilu area of Eastern Leopoldville Province, and —’’acclaimed by the popu-vas continuing his overi land Journey toward Luluabourg. it It it
Miofa to 50 miles beyond Kikwit, in tbe heart of the Bambala tribal ot Leopoldville provincial president Geophas Kamitatu, one of Lumumba’s supporters. It is mere than halfway from Leopold-j vnie to Luluabourg.
The present composite bass price for finished steel, acoonlin( to Iron Age, is about 2124 a ton. Steel companies last hiked prices an average of 24-50 a ton in AtS' gust 1958.
it it it
Tbe wage increases, which vary according to Job classification, are provided in a 30-montb contract signed last January in the ’ aftermath of a 116-day strike.
The boosts will bring the average hoiHly rate to approximately 23.20. Next Oct. 1 wages will go up 7 to 10 cents an hour.
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W i -
The Weather
b'Jt. WMtkar B>tm« t*r*M*t
THE PONTIAC PRE
118th YEAR
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Faces Death as Spy
ARKESTED BV FBI -■ Dr. Robert SoUe. 60 •> "psychifttrlst arrives at Federal' Court in New York Tuesday where he was arraigned on charges of spying on the United Stated for the Soviet govemntent for 20 years. Soble, wbosb legal name is Sobien, is the brother of convicted Red spy Jack Soble who Is now serving a seven-year prison term. Bail was set at $75,000 and a hearing will be hrid Ow. 20.
Hearing Set Dec. 20
Charge Espionage to Soble Brother
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1960-52 PAGES
Will Force Pollutidn Curb
jJudgetoSign Expansion Order on Sewage
NEW YORK W — A New York psychiatrist arrested as a 20-year Soviet spy never tried to escape his shadowers during a long, “hot surveillance” by FBI agents, says his attorney.
On the contrary, the doctor even stopped his car ^so that trailing agents could catch up with him,
Labor Leader's Home Bombed
Wife, Two Doughlert Escape Injury in Blast on Detroifs East Side
Frum Our News B'lrm DferROIT — A dynamite Bomb ripped a gaping hole in the rear of a labor leader’s East Side Detroit home Tuesday night but his wife arid two young daughters escaped injury.
♦ ♦ ♦
Marion A. Macioce, business manager of Sheet Metal Workeii l/xal 281 and president of the De-' troit Building Trades Council, was at b union Meeting when the bomb, diade ol three sticks of dynamite powder, tore a two4>y-tfaree-foot hole in the $30,000 home.
Kathy. 8. and CecISa, II. were
the lawyer aid.
psychiatrist. Dr. Robert Soble. 60, was held in $75,000 baU a federal court hearing Dec. Soble, whose legal name ks Sobl^n, is a brother of confessed Soviet spy Jack Soble, 57, serv-iiV a seven-year prison term for e^iionage.
The gmerameat charged that the brothers were Involved in separate espionage riags that sought aatlonal defense secrets for transmisoion to the Soviet Union. Both brothers were naturalised la IM*. br. Soble, if cPnvicted, could receive the death penalty. The doctor suffers from a serious Illness, his attiHney said.
♦ * *
Soble was arrested at noon T\Ksday at Rockland State Hospital, in suburban Orangeburg, where be has served as supervising psychiatrist.
The indictment by a federal grand Jary also named IS oa-none of whom are They incinde oev-eral Soviet otflcials and tour
Fine Department Battalion Chief Charles Quinlan estimated damages at $6,000.
DELAYED IN TBAFnc The bomb went off at 9:34 p.m., miiiutes before the arrival home of Macioce, who is also a member of the Wayne County Board of JOWPiffl FOB FBI’
It took the government three years to Collect evidence for an indictment against Dr. Soble.
In arguing for low bail, his attorney. Richard C. Green, told the court that Soble would not flee.	'
by the tUppeiy streets. Other-
The bomb, placed under, a kitchen bay window, blasted ia three-foot hole in the basement wall and shattered the rear of Macioeb’s $30,000 home.
♦ *	*
Macioce said he	knew jot no	reason why anyone	woukj	want	ts
bomb bis home.	/
However, Macioce hag been feuding with a rebel groupi within his local. Seven persons have charged in federal court that Macioce has kept them out ol theiy duly elected offices.
Tastes Own Medicine
SAN FRANCISiCO (AP) - The U. S. Weather Bureau’s San Fran-ocisco office Tuesday night transmitted this advisory note on l“teprinter netwiqlrk; ’’Forecast delayed by had Weather.’*
Year's Coldest Weather Strikes as Storm Fades
Snow, Strong Winds Still Grip Great Lakes; Six Persons Dead
By the Asauclalcd Press
Stormy weathpr / that lashed the Midwest abated today but the season’s coldest weather gripped wide areas from the Rockies into the Northeast and southward to the central Gulf.
The storm center reached Quebec during the night but the effects of the severe weather still were felt in much of the Northeast quarter of the country.
strong winds and snow flurries were reported frofi the Great Lakes reigon eastward. Snow of one inch pr more fell in some areas of Pennsylvania and New York. ’
A freak bllsiard, with gale winds Ihat piled snow up to feet, nearly halted traffic in tte Buffalo, N.Y., area. P«dice in Amherst, uorth of Buffalo, reported U Inches of snow and said drifts measured S'/j feet.
The season’s first snowstorm ’Tuesday night caused a mammoth traffic jam in Buffalo, with hundreds of stalled’ cars, trucks and buses. The ’Thruway’s Niagara’ section, which rims the west side of Buffalo, was limited to one-way traffic.
Winds which > reached gale fotPo In sections of the Midwest diminished and henvy snow ended. The storm, whicb dumped up to a foot of snow in some places, was blained for at least alx deaths.
It was below sero from northeast Mriitana southeastward into South Dakota and westent Minnesota and the freezing line extended southward into Kentucky, Tennessee end parts of Georgia. One of the coldest spots was Bismarck, N. D„ with a —12 ing.
W	♦
Temperatum were in the teens and 20s in ~lhe Rockies and the central and southern Plains northeastward to the lower Great Lakes.
FLORIDA NEXT?
Temperatures in the Northeast, at unseasonable levels for several days, dropped sharply as the cold air swept in frotn the Midwest. The icy air was expected to dip into the Southeast and into tral Florida.
^Gale warnings continued on the Great Lakes and in Lake Michh gan a Liberian freighter ran aground off the shore of South Manitou Island. Galelike winds and high waves battered the 246-foqt, ocean-g(nng Francisco Mora-zan.
-V
Winters Chores Begin
... So How Did His Front Yard Look Afterward?
WACO, Tex. (UPI) - Patiwl-men BaspeU Marita m4 Ken 11Ps part
Storm Holds Up iSnow Is Beautiful Aid to Freighter ond Deadly as Well
-'•“Me-Jjas been under wide-open hot surveinaiice by federal agents and never tried to run away, to a polht where he even stopp«] his car bn highways if he lost the agents trailing him, so they could catch up to him."
Apparently, Sable made friends
him. He aaked Jtalge WUtam B. Hertands if he could say goodby to “the FBI geattomen/.’ Heriands smiled and gave his permission. The doctor bowed from the waist and wavdd to the FBI agents. “Thank you very much, gentlemen.’’ he said.
75-Mile Speed Limit Mackie's Xway Goal
DETROIT (UPD-State Highway Commissiooer John-C. Mackie says he will ask the next session of the legislature to establish i^eed limits of 75 miles an hour in the daytime and 65 miles at night fen-Michigan's new interstate highways.
Present top limits in Michigan are ^ daytime and 55 at idgM. ♦ ♦ *
Mackie also said he would pro-pooe a minimum Unfit ot 40 nfiies aa hour on intemtatc highitays. He said many of the accidents now Occuring on the new freewaya are rear«id coUisibos in which cara pfie up or swerve (fif the road
freighter, hard aground in .Lake iPeronista Uprising
, tSilfled in Argentfna
The 236-foot FVanci.sco Moraznn kaw to its perilous perch on the rocks a half-mile off shore of this island in Northern Lake Michigan, amhlst swirling snow and battered by six-foot, waves and 35-knot
Extend Seaway Season
MASSENA, N, Y. (AP)-The St. Lawrence Seaway, supposed to dose today for th^ season, will remain ' open through midnight Thursday. The Seaway Authority granted the one-day extension because of mUd weather.
MORNINa WOES — Oh, for those warm summer mornings when one could merely get into his car and drive off to work. For the next four «• five months, you canVxpect to be doing quite often what Lee Thompson, 24, of 8524 Cas-
cade St., Uniem Lake, is doing here. Although only three-quarters of an- inch of snow fell yesterday in the Pontiac area, it was enough to make streets slick and coat cars and sidewalks.
of the police Mutter today.
pulling up Into his trout yard.
* * *
. . . Investigation by PatroloMiu Martta and Rerry In the Immediate ridntty tailed to
Detroit Welfare Chief Is Sorry
Oakland Director Burt Has Evidence Showing One Charge Not True
Coast Guard Stands By Ship Perched on Rocks in Lake Michigan
Aboard the ship, carrying a general cargo bxnn Chicago to Rotterdam. were 15 crew members and the wile of'Capt. Eduardo IVivirazara.
Thay UMtotolaed radto eon-tact throaghout the night wiCb two Ouast Ouardmea at a Hgkt
waa la Bu ii
Four Coast Guard vessels dispatched from various Great Lake ports were unable to reach the stricken'Morazan by mldmoming. During the night aircraft from Traverse City twice attempted to reach ttw scene but were turned back by severe icing conditlonB.
One of two helicopters sent aloft after daybreffic hovered over the, groimded freighter but radioed that its visibility was sharply limited by the dense snow.
* ★
District Coast Guard headquarters in Geveland, Ohio, notified all ships passing the area to stand by to assist in the rescue operation, if necessary.
Coast Guard spokesmen said no attempt would be made to take the crew off the 2,000-ton vessel unless fiiere was danger of its breaking up or capsizing.
A new blanket of snow fell on Pontiac today on the heels of yesterday’s prewinter storm which crippled transportation in parts of Michigan.
As snow fell for a second straight day, Pontiac state ^police warned that all state highways were hazardous. Some had a coating of ice.
Temperatqie s^yed well belpw freuzlhg in all' ^as.
Last Bight the mercury in Pontiac dtoped to a coM $2. Hie V. 8. Weather Bureau lorecast eolder for tonight but liBid a warming trend would set In by Friday.
Today it’ll stay cold, with occasional snow flurries. A low of 20 is forecast for tonight.
At least two deaths on the highways were blamed on the snowfall.
William Gentenaar, 14. of Richland in the Kalamazoo area, was struck and killed by a car on his way home frhm school in the snow storm.
Mrs. Peart Darin, 67^ of Haw-.ver, was totally injured In a car-tmek eollltloa on icy MM near Niles. A car driven by her hns-baud, Anthony, skidded on the ice. The collision followed. Mrs. Darin died later In a Niles hospital. Her husband and the truck driver roenped injury;
After accusing county welfare officials here of illegally inducing clients to move to Detroit, that I city’s welfare director has apolo-' gized* to Oakland County Director George H. Burt for any inconvenience he may have cau^.
* * #
At the same time, Burt dug up information to show that a case worker in his office had not encouraged the Jack Harris famUy of eight to move out of Royal Oak Township into Detroit last June.
Daniel J. Ryan, general superintendent of the Detroit Welinre Department, snM Monday he had asked Wayne County Pnweeutor
BUENOS AIRES. Argentina tAP) -— PeronlsU attempted seize the military barracks Rosario today and were beaten back by troops. The army said the uprising was quickly crushed, w * a
After brief gunfire, civilian herents of former dictator Juan Peron overpowered sentries of the Ilth Infant^ Regiment at Rosario and joined forces with a number noncommissioned officers inside the barracks.
First reports said one of the Invaders was killed aitd. a lieuten-
[)t and an enlisted man wounded,
a * a
The army command at Rosario, located aimt .175 miles up the Parana River northwest ‘of Buenos Aires, said most of the civilians involved in the uprising fled as the garrison regained control of the sentry post.
Dog Trails Included in U.S. System of Rdd
DETROIT (UPI» - ’Among the more than three million miles of federal, state and county roads in “the United States are ISFihiles of dog team trails marked by the Alaska Division of Highways.
ladadag cUeato to move hto aa-other.
This, Ryan aaid, adds to Detrott’i load already overburdened wMfare department. He cited but two cases, stressing the practice he alii was not “wholesale.” meeting between the two departments, along with representatives (fi the prosecutor offices of both counties, has been set for Pontiac Dec. 7.
★ * *
Burt received a letter from Ryan yesterday in which be said “I am sorry for any inconvenience which you have been pht on i matter.” He aaid he bad gone to Olsen's office only to check the law in the event the practice of shuffling clienU continued.
■He knows the law as well as
Kalamazoo reported a snowfall of five to six inches. Drifts contributed to a traffic tlrap.
Conditions were severe’ in Lake and Mason Qounties of Western Michigan ak snow continued coming down.
In the Upper Peninsula, Houghton and Marquette had a blowing snow. Houghton’s 17 degrees was the lowest reported in the state.
PoWer was cut off for two hours in the City of Marquette today. The entire city was reported if-fected.
The storm eaught the last of
Nation’s Biggest ^Feeder* Airline
New Routes Boost NCA
The company thit will bring Pon-1 Other dUes where North Central .ston, Flint, Saginaw. Bay City tiac its first regularly achedoledjwill he operating for the first time Lnd Midland commercial airline servloe tomor- are Traverse Qty, Muskegon, Pell-
row is the nation’s targeit “teed-l r” pirllne.
In *12 years time. North Central Aiiibiea (NCA) has mushroomed into an operation that embraces 6,906 nkite miles serving 90 dtieg 10 states and one Canadian
The MtaaeaiMlto. Mtoa., i (ot Its Mfgest bMt la the n hat added Peattac to Ma t
Along with Pontiac came U ether Michigan dties, plus Cleveland, and Port Arthur, Ontario.
The additional aovicc nanted by the Civil Aeronautics Btfaid repre-per cent expansion ibr North Central, accoitUng to Hal N. Can*., ptwident.
^ k k k Regular service is also sUrfing MQonw at Port Huron, Ab>ena. Cadmac and Reed City. Manistee and Ludington will get service In about two months, when airpoal
to avoid dow-meving vehicles. ^ devehipnieiit is oomifieted.
A
lliis information was contained I a report presented today by the division's chief"' engineer, T. D.
Shepard, at the convention of the American Association of State i Mlcblgaa’s deer hunters In the Highway officiais (AASHO) meet- woods. Today was the ing here.	day ol the season.
------------------ Michigan had two other Iralfic
I futalitiea daring the Stormy period ;but neither was attributed to the weather.
Donald M. Duty, 23. of Pioneer, Ohio, was kUled today when His car hit a tree'10 miles south of HiUsdale on HiUadale Road. State police said Dury apparently fell asleep at the wheel.
Perry E. Williamson. 77, of Brethren, lost his life Tuesday in a two<ar collision on U.S. 31 thr^ miles north of Manistee, Northwesterly morning winds at 30-30 miles per hour in the Pontiac area, will become westerly and slowly diminish tonight and 'Thursday.
The thermometer in downtown
In Today's Press
ISERVlig OTHER C1TIK8.
The company already serves Detroit (Willow Run), Jackson, Battle Creek, Kalamazoo, Lansing, Grand Rapids, Benton Harbor, Si. Joseph,
Etacanaba_ Menominee. Iron Mountain. Ironwood, Marquette, Hough- ponttac registered 27 at 1 p.m. ton, Hancock and Sault Ste. Marie.
Bfwide* Michigan, Nartb Cea-fral aperatM In Wiscoasta. Mln-BCMOta, North and ttoutb Dakota, aa well as a few citlea In Niv bnuika. lawa. and Ulinola ptaa Santa Dead ta Indiana and Clave-land In Ohio. The Clavetand aarv-iaa la brand new and haaa*t beea lniu«nmtad yat.
It took about four years of red tape before North Gmtral made Ha original flight ta 1948, operating under its initial name, Wta-eonain Central Alriinet.
ONCiC PRIVATE The company grew out 6t a private flying service operated dur-(Continued on Page 3, 0»1. 2)
Edttariata .
TV * Radto Ptagranss
mpHa. Eari .....
I^anwaa* Fagea .;....
_______jUttoo Mb WIUi tnra aiaa-
taum SldlM laotallaUM. Cat htot Mta ua to MTVaitolr Oo.. n MS4L
Dondero Gives Pontiac 18 Extra Months to Act for Treatment Facilities
Circuit Judge Stanton G. Dondero announced today that he would sign a court order forcing Pontiac to expand its sewage treateirat facilities to curb poUuti(»i of the Clinton River.
The announcement cam« after a brief hearing during which the city admitted the pollutibn and offered no de? fense, but gained an tS-month extension to the deadline set down by the State Water Resource! Commission 15 months ago:
The decree to be signed by Juflgb Dondero will stipulate:	v
I. That the elty have esaatme-* tton raalraeto let by Aaw C USl.] t. That ta« expanded taeUittaa; M) In aperaltaa by June L 1*69-; Harold A Kelley, an engineer who helped prepare plans foe th«
cost may be near $3.5 million by contract-letting time.
k k' ,k
Construction costa have riaed steadily since plans ware first read^ led three years ago. said Kelleyi Csata were estimated at M mil-IImi when Poattac clUacaa firsts voted dana a band Issae to fl-;
poMibUlly at charging Oakland County with vtotatiou of the law
'This could have been handled h a simple plrone call Instead of all this proeecution stuff,’’ said.
SURPRISED AT LETTER John A. Macdonald, chairman of the Oakland Social Welfare Board, said Ryan’s charges were “perfectly ridiculous."
Bata MaodoaaM sad Burt wera surprised by Ryan’s letter of ex-planatton and apology. Earlier he
had given him “a lot of doable talk” when he threatened legal action In an Aug. 1* letter con-oeruing the Hants case.
Burt said he would present affi-davlta at the Dec. 7 meeting showing case workers did not suggest the clients In question move to Detroit,
k * S Although he .said he bad statis-j tics to show that Detroit clients had moved Into Oakland, the veteran welfare director said he didn’t (Cbntinued on Page 3. Col. 4)
The only wHneaa called by City Attorney William A Ewart daring the straight-forward, kaH-bsar heariag, Kelley said flw State Highway Oepartnwat has
the city owBB at Aubara Avaaua and Opdyke Road.
Kelley testified that plans lA swing an extension to Auburn (M59) through the city-owned site apparently would eat up land that at present is earmarked for future expansion of the new plant.
k k k ^
It will take time to negiotiate a route With the state that will be satlsfacory to eveiyona,’’ Kelley told Judge Dondero in the sne-cesiful bid for I
The engineer estimated that the aty rommissiod coald have a issae floated ta tarea
vote of tka people.
The commission will be able to do this, Ewart said,, by reason of the court decree which Judge Dondero was expected to sign this afternoon.
k k k
Victor Meier, assistant attorney general, represented the Water Resources Commission. He said the scree would be ready for. signs-(Continued on Page 2, (3ol. 6)
Adams Requests Recount in 55 County Districts
In an effort to protect his wiml ning margin ot 694 votes against "a possible reversal in a recount, Probate Judge-Elect Donald E. Adams today filed a counter petitioo calling for recounting an additional 55 voting precincts.
k k
Sen. L. Harvey Lodge, who Waterford Township Justice of the Pe^ Adams edged out in the Nov. 8 balloting for the new probate Judge post in Oakland Cpunty. filed Monday for a recount in 90 of the county's 311 precincts.
sibiy ta Oxtatd,
"Then after we’re done them we’n move into those requested by Aiiisnu,” said Cierk-Regtater Daifiel T. Murphy Jr., clerk ot the canvassing board.
Checking the 90 prectneta ta expected to take five days, MLarphy
Sewing Column Introduced Today
The Women’s Seettaa of Tha Pontiac Press hat a aew la-
Writtoa by Baalee Farmor,
p ootatoa ta la dear
IV Httte traables yea ea-rkea aewlag by
Ma m ta eaii^ Ms esF low. Wtaetaar yaa Oe ta ■ ^
They were set at $3.3 million the Mt time, one year ago. ornsa new obstacus
Kelley is an engineer with the firm at Joner Henry and WUItams ei Toledo, .Pontiac’s engineering


THE PONTIAC PRESS, Wl^DyrBSDAY. NOVEMBER 80. I960
weTnituK of Sales Tax Hike
Ifilliams Urges |Day Session
Swainson Backs Call, • Agrees to Bid for Foil 4 Cent Increase
•LANSING tf*-Michigan’» sales tax win be increased to four per cent in a «iujck snapot-the-fingen sp«dal session of the State Legis-latnre, if Gov. WiUiams has his
*
WUliams and Gov.-Elect John B. Swainson agreed Tuesday to call a.apecial session to owisider raising fhe sales tax by one per cent, approved by the voters Nov. 8. 2'’. No «ste was speeMed for the ^ssBsloB. bat observers believed
that tt would come Dec. S, the day the voter-approved consti-- T* Into
. wmiams told a Joint news conference that the date depended on when an agreement can be worked out with legislative leaders to approve a full one-cent Increase, rather than a bill calling for some (Mction of that ankxint.
. * ★ ♦
•"We’ve decided that ttjere should 1)0. a special session, and I'll call one,’- he said. "But I feel strongly it should not be a debating match. We don’t have time for tlft|t.’’
★ ♦ ♦
Williams said he and Swainson -.would be contacting legislative leaders of both parties as soon as possible to wm-k out the agree-,^ment under which the measure •would pass in a one-day session.
*T want a session that goes Hke that," he said, snapping his fingers..
Asked whether no advance agreement would mean no special session, Williams replied:
"It comes close to that—I said close to that.”
* ♦ * •'-•Swainson opposed the suggested aisles tax increase during the cam-#phlgn, while Republican candidates Kj^enerally supported the amend-
'inpnt
New Routes Boost 7VC4 Say Lumumba
Flight a Success
(Continued From Page One) ing the 1940s by a CUntonville. Wis., manufacturing company. Other companies kept badgering the FWD COrp. lor so many rides on iU planes that FWD officials figured they could start a conuner-cial airlines.
The original application was filed 1th the CAB in 1944. Four years later, but only after the CAB had ordered FWD to sell its own interest in the proposed airlines, Wisconsin Central started out.
Hiree small, idne - passenger lisekheed 19-A transports oper-
"I believe the results of the Nov. * election have demonstrated that a majority of citizens, recognizing the need for additional state revenues, have expressed their desire to meet that need through, i one-cent increase in the tax.
*T aeeept the majority will and VJSprtitorr agree
rial session to consider carrying
Swainson added that increasing _{he sales tax should be viewed emergency measure.
♦ ★ ★
"We all should still strive for the comprehensive tax reforms which all fiscal experts agree are needed.” he said. Swainson estimated that a one-cent boost in the sales tax would bring in between .$115 million and 1129 mUllon an-rmally to the sule’s depleted treasury.	\
* * *
Before the news conference 'TSt^e up. Republican leader. House Speaker Don R. Pears of Bjpehanan, had heartily endorsed the special session with a mimeographed statement of his~
Moomfield Twp. Woman ;j|[puncl Dead in Garage
!«wA Bloomfield Township house-
ffe was found dead last night the garage of her home at ®19[ ••eroodbank Drive.	I
Judge Will Force CHy Pollution Curb
(Oontiyd rram Page One) re wit^ a few hours after the m«'$ end.
Meier ottered no objectloas to the
The subject of Waterford Towa-vtp was not brought up in open court
Ewart had beea asked by the aty OsmmIssiBn to draw lata
OONVADK $4$ — This is the Oonvair 3<i0 that North Central Airlines will use in its Detroit-to-Sault Ste. Marie route which will serve Pontiac starting tomorrow. The largest plane in the North
Central fleet, it seats 44 pasaengers < pressurized cabins. The Oonvair cniii
d has twin engines and s aV248 miles an hour.
tile towBslilp has beea aeonsed of eoatributtag to Crystel Lake, which to part of the Clinton system.
But it was decided during a conference preceding the hearing that only Pontiac pollution could be discussed in court. Judge Dondero explained afterward that the law did not permit him to review the Water Resources Conunission’s findings.
Any action against Waterford would have to be separate frwn the action the stole has taken against Pontiac, he said.
Ewart blamed the unfavorable votes against construction bond ' nies.
•The city has constowetton
figures to illustrate the growth that has made their airlines the biggest of the nation’s 12 local airlines. The alritaes, tor tostonoe, will
year it carried N7,7S1 gers.
North Central aircraft carried 4,856,740 pounds of mail last year.
June 1969, the company began carrying air freight and hauled total 2.112,960 pounds by the end of the year.
From 112 employes in 1948, the company has grown to 2^1100 em-cluding 300 pilots and 165
Looking to the future, North Central has asked the CAB to let It service cities as far west as Sheridan, Wyo. Other expansion is planned within Nebraska, the Dakotas. Iowa and Kansas.
North Central has asked approval of nearly 1,100 miles of helicopter routes to 37 points ts system.
Report Ex-Premier \$ Friendly Territory Safe From Col. Mobytu
LEOPOLDVILLE, 'The Congo Iff) I Fugitive ex-Premier Patrice Lumumba today waa reported to have reached friendly territory aoaie 400 miles east of the capital, well out of Col. Joseph Mobutu's
A feeder service is one which fills in the gaps between the giant hopi flown by the trunk airlines.
Bi^ problems during the early years of expansion was the lack improved runways arid instrument controls.
*	*	*
During the first three years, more than $8 million was spent on airport development and improvement in cities served by Wisconsin Central.
★.. *	*
The alrlinei Itself provided electronic equipment at most of the intermediate stops at a cost of| around $100,000. Today it operate| what It believes is the longest privately owned instrument network in the country.
By IMZ, the system was developing westward and the company moved to Minneapolis with the new name, North Central. The company had turned to larger Douglas DC3 aircraft In 1950 and. now has 32, the largest DC3 fleet In the nation.
★	★	♦
In 1959 the switch began big, 44^pasaenger . Convair 340a, twln-englne alrlinen with pressurized cabins. The radar-equipped Convairs cruise at 248 miles an hour, compared to 160 for the DC3s.
♦	★	♦
Convairs now service 18 per cent of the North Central system and be used on the Detroit-Sault St. Marie route that has Pontiac i a stopover.
North Central officials cite other
Students Battling Army in Caracas
Mrs. Lawrence in County Jail
A^rder Charge Hangs
•wBioomfiew Township police said I Over Berkley Woman that Mrs. Robert C. Mack was	i j j e	ai	m
found in the family automobile Judged 5ane NOV. 21 with the motor running by Ofighbor. Police said Mrs. Mack took her own life.
The Weather
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Om Taar A«a ta Paaltae
Mrs. Sarah Sue Lawrence was returned to the Oakland County Jail yesterday, possibly to stand trial for miu^er.
* ♦ ★
TTie 34-yearH>ld former Berkley beauty operator is charged with the slaying of Mrs. David Crenshaw, 33. of 6230 Snow Apple Dr., Clarkston, on May 22, 1959.
Mra. Lawr«mc« was Judged rrlmisally imsiie foUowliig Ow slaying. Hke was retossed tram lonU HUIe Hcmpital yesterday sad transferred to the Oakland rk>imty Jail.
Her attorney, James Renfrew, has filed a motion in Circuit Court here to quash the still outstanding first^legree murder charge.
* * *
Prosecutor George F. Taylor, who holds the warrant, said he jwUl decide whether to proceed with the charges after a Dec, 5 court bearing on Renfrew’s motion.
Mrs. Inwrence was niled now sane by Ionia Clmill Judge Mor-rto K- Dovli Nov. 2i following a
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Mrs. Crenshaw was shot during a scuffle at her home.
Mrs. Lawrence told aherUra dep-ittiea ahe had tone there to pay MackmaQ dcmeBded by Mrs. Cren-
ykMdiBE custody of her then 9-
CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) -Leftist students fought a gunbet-tle with troops today in defiance ^ President Romulo Betancourt. The stubborn challenge to the authority of the moderate Socialist president made the situation increasingly critical for his gov-ernment.
★ ★ ★
Firing from high school buildings on Avenue Roosevelt has continued soradically since Monday night. It is part of widespread rioting in the capital that has killed 6 persons and injured at least 105 in an attempt to touch off a revolution and eatablish Castro-style government.
Tough military crackdowns, sup-ported by a suapension of ci4^ guarantees, have snuffed out most of the rioting which began last Friday. However, for a time Tuesday night it spread ffom the slum
RICHARD D. KUHN
Eyes JP Post in Waterford
Richard Kuhn Reveals Candidacy in Primary Race' on GOP Ticket
Pontiac attorney Richard D. KuhiT has announced he will be candidate for Waterford Town-ip Justice of the peace on the RepuUtcan ticket in the- February primary electlan.
* * ♦
Kuhn, 31. is a graduate of Michigan State Univenity with a degrae in political science. He was awarded his law degree from the Detroit College of Law.
Kuhn it married and hai one ion. 0
He to a member of the Weto Ponttoe Klwaols Chib'', Ponitoe Area Chamber of Oonuneroe aid the Waterford Oommndty Activi-ties. Inc.
He to also a member of the Oik-land County Bar AaMdation. Michigan Bar Aaaociation a^d the Amgr*
it * it U centaatod, Kuhn pmnlaea m vigorous campaign. One of the two towiwhip Juitiees, Donald B-Adams, was ctoctod OsMand County's aaoend probate Judge Nov. I.
districts of western Caracas to the fathionaUe eastern end. NEAR UNIVERSITY The main battle was centered at Miguel Caro High School in western Caracas. The school is adjacent to Caracas Unlveralty, which officials said appeared be the --clpmonstraon’ chief stronghold.
•a ★	*
Police have not attempted to enter the university grounds, where Social Christian party students backing Betancourt lo4ight their way into classrooms to break ai Communist student strike.
One leftist group attempted to storm the police station nearby but were driven back by tear gas and armored cars of the presidential guard.
it it it Another gang of youths tried to bum a bus in the southern suburb of Chaguaramos, despite'orders to the army to shoot such firebrands on sight. The bus was saved by firemen.
Troops took up positions in Puente Trinidad Street, where several newspapers are published. The pdpers have advocated tough line in suppressing Com-minist activities, ^toncourt has charged the Communists are behind the rioters.
Detroit Welfare Chief Apotogizes to County
(Continued From Page One) plan to bring them up. "We’re not going to accuse anybody of anything. We don’t play that way,” Burt said.
Burt said Tack and Peart Harris, tormeriy of U4W Dowling St, Royal Onk Township, moved to Detroit	with dmir six
oMIdren after the township had refused tiw ilepartinent’s offers to pay h»ek rent The township, Burt explained, had refused because Harris’ home in a low-rent housing project was ready for razing as part of urban renewal ixoject there.
Hairto made the move to Detroit n hit own and without encouragement from Oakland case workers or officials, Burt said.
Some sources said be abondoned his plan to go first to Stanleyville and was heading instead toward another of his political strongholds, Luluabourg, capital of Kasai Province.
Countless rumors swept through the capital conceintog Lumumbs’s drimatle eraos-rountry flight — including sue that he had been arrested after an automobile accident near Klkwif and was hoopltonsed nnder a military guard.
This report was not confirmed by any responsible source.
Friends of the Communistleaning former premier said Iw last definitely reported at Idiofa, a vUlage in the Kwilu area of Eastern Leopoldville Province, acclaimed by the population”—was continuing his overland journey toward Luluabourg. it it it
Idiofa it 50 milM beyond Kikwit. in the heart of the Bambala tribal area of Leopoldville provincial president Cleopbas Kamitatu. one of Lumumba’s supporters. It is more than halfway from Leopoldville to Luluabourg.
The Day in Birmingham
Dec. 19 Vote on Sewers to Decide Job Financing
BIRMINGHAM - When Soorn-eld Hills voters are aaind'^Dec. 19 in,a qiecial electk» if they
they will, in effect, be deddh« the financing of the improvement. If the propotod is turned down 1 the $1.5 miUkm system, the city will eventually be forced into ■ “ “ _ le sewer by court action, according to Mayor Henry Wooi-fenden.
The 8toto Water Reaeuroet Commission has already Bled salt la Oaktond Oounty areult Otort to stop toe cily from pcAatteg the gouge River.
It the plan la approved, the dty will be in the potion to iasiw general obligation bonds on the project, a method found to be moat economical to the taypayer, the mayor ex{dained.
If-the propoeal fails and the dty la lofced into installing the system, the dty has no alternative but to finance the program through
"There U no defense for the city now, nor is there any quratidii that the stream is being polluted, Seriously affecting the people downstream from Pontiac.” Ewart agreed in court that the question of pollution from sources outside of Pontiac ”i$«mot pertinent in this case.”
The suit was filed after Pontiac, tor want of financing, failed meet the Water Resources Commission deadline of July 1 of this year for the letting of construction
This deadline, plus another of Dec. 31, 1961 for completion of the expansion, was set in the summer of 1959, after engineers testified that Pontiac pollution killing plant and fito life in the stream.
The engineers testified that Pontiac’s existing treatment facilities were inadequate to handle the load. They said untreated sewage was entering the river.
DeGaulle Will Visit Algeria, Talk Policy
PARIS (UPI) - President Charles de Gaulle decided today to visit Algeria despite warnings from his generals and ministers that such a trip would be dangerous.
The French leader told his weekly cabinet meeting he would leave Paris Dec. 9 for Algeria to explain his policy to French officers and the Algerian people.
De Gaulle called a special cabinet meeting for the eve of his departure to fix the date for the referendum hf has called to get France’s approval for his plan to set up a provisional administration in Algeria.
HIGHER PAFMENTS With the special assessment method the system would have to be paid off in a much slwrter perM resulting in higher annual payments to the taxpayers than those proposed under the general obligation bonds arrangement, WooUenden said’
Heitolcd lag would naean a higher charge to rraldeBta for use of fhe sewer to insure puynaent of toe tosae by buHdlng up a reserve fund. With general obligation bonds, WooUenden said, the cost to residents would be reduced annually as the valuation of the city increases with new construction.
Currently the plan for financing the Mwer system, if it is approved, is based <m issuing the general obligation bonds over a 30-year eriod.
It has been estimated that the cost to residents the first year would be about $7.31 for each $1,-000 of assessed valuation.
■a ♦
The estimate it basqd on the project being handled all at once. However, city engineers Hubbell, Rotti and Clark have suggested the project be undertaken in two
Ham Beaumont Hoapttal, Royal Oak, after a abort illneta.
★	*	*
She was a member of the First Prasbyterian Chunii of Birmingham, Omicron Sorority, the AAyW of Birmingham, the Oakland County Chapter <U 'the Mich-, igan Society for Mental Health and the Birmii«ham Miiaicale. t	e	A
Surviving beaidea her husband are two aona, Ted of San Fran-daoo, Calil., and Donald of Birmingham; a brother; and two grandchildren.
Levies $100 Fine dn Clarkston Golf Club Opeiators
Originally charged with the II-teg^ lale of intoxicanto, operators Mr. and Mrs. Paul Frechette, yesterday pleaded guilty in ladep^-ence Townahip Justice Oeurt to a reduced eount of dtoorderly conduct.
★ ★ ★ •
Justicu et the Peace iJeliMr G. StansdMude ordered them 'lb pay $25 fines and $29 oouit costs each.
Berry aaid today "tt wae my feeUng that toe ease canid be bettorhandled as a mtodemeuBur because they had no prevtons
Mr. and Mrs. Frechette were charged Sept. 17 foUowii« a raid of the golf club bouse at 9241 Eaton Road in Independence Township by sheriffs deputies.
★ it it
Sheriff Frank Irons, who led the raid, said they found Mrs. Frechette aerying liquor to two cus-tomen without a license. Mrs. Frechette contended that the liquon belonged to the dub membera and she was 'not selling it to them.
This plan would see only the. develop^ areas of the city getting the sewer and only $1.33 million of the bonds issued, reducing the first year’s tax to about $6.30 per $1,000 of assessed valuation.
The remaining $170,000 in bonds would be sold at a later date for the improvement in undeveloped areas,
Mrs. Edward H. Laird
Service for Mrs. Edward H. (Dorothy F.) Laird, 57. of 1220 Redding Road, will be at 2 p m. Friday at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery.
Mrs. Laird died today at Wil-
NOW 2 STORES
to Serve You Better
PONTIAC DRAYTON
Ample Free Parking	Easy Credit Terms
THOMAS TM ECONOMY
r e-ffcNagaaaeir _________________ • •_________
Headline Erred About Account in Check Story
The Pontiac Preaa wlahea to correct any mtotoken interpretation uf a atoiy It puUithed concerning a check cartied by Robert D. Row, 27, formerly of 123 Norton St., that wu returned due to Insufficient funds.
it e it
The hea'Bline over the'itory nte-takenly stated that Reas dMn’t have an account with his bank at the time he cashed his check. Hie bank says be did have an aocouiit but at the time didh’t have autfl-cteut funds to cover the check.
WBSB me maunictencjr^was dto-oover^ tot check wu ftode taod. ★ * *
The Frees regrets any embar-lanBent the sionr nuy ‘
WIU HE FIND THE C? BLACK FEABL?°A
...ond will he be in time to save Christmas for boys end girl^?
Follow Iht adventures of Michael, the BOY FISH, in this newspaper starting
DECEMBER 5th
Bif Dgdl Dbcouts for CHllSTRIJU GIFTS
Why pay more than 5imms Discount Prices on Toys? Hera ere just a few examples!
riazible Steeiiog on
SLEDS
34^lnehm 288 38-Inches 45-lnchei 50-Inches 58-Inches
3.88
4.88
5.88
7.88
Sliding Saneers
14.95 Fall
36-inch ell steel coasters for fun in the snow. With plastic pull rope.
Sofa to VtaSUCrniC
Wood Biriiig Sal
S3JHI Yalta AAA
InUrehxngMbte tipi
TuDor ELECTRIC
FOOTIALL
lASEBALL UdnlCS
. S7.00 Seller.*
;i5
You’ra toe coach — you call too plays, auka fho touchdowns, hit to# homars, afe, -— bouts of fun for youths add man too!
n H. Sofiaow -told floor
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1960

ms
WEDNESDAY NIGHT-THURSDAY SPECIALSI
AT riMtofu UKES COMMON LIFK-Brit-ain's Lord Stansgate, wtx> aa plain Mr. Anthony Wedgwood Benn ia reaiatlng efforta to kick him npatairs from the Houae of Commona to the Houae of Lorda, returns to his London home Tuesday after a trip to Bristol. The new viscount, a Labor party member of the House of Commons for 10 years, inherited his title two weeks ago when his fathdr died. The new title makes n ineligible for Commons. He hopes to renounce the peerage, Jiowever, to continue his active political life.
Cosl$Ift797 for Finch Triak
Third, Already Set, May Add $100,000 to the California Tax Bill
LOS ANGELES (UPI) — It cost Los Angeles County taxpayers $169,797 for the two murder trials of Dr. R. Bernard Findi and Carole IVegotf.
Neither trial resulted in a verdict and a third tri^ already has been set for Jan. 3. hearing it cost as much as an additional $100,000.
The first trial lasted SI days a a cost of 97M66 and the see-»d raa M days and Coot 9M.M7. Soth trials ended in hung Jnriea The figures were made public by County Manager Lindon S. Hol-
linger at the request of county supervisors.
^ ★ ★ ★
He said they included only direct costs of the trtals^such as salaries and juror expenses. Indii sudi as lighting, maintenance and overhead could bring the estimate up to around $200,000, he said.
The figures did not laclade $S,S0a expenses caased by kpep-hM; Ptnok. «S. and Miss Tregoff, tS. in Jan.
“It should be noted that the district attorney is of the opinion that his statutory responsibilities require the prosecution to seek the necessary third trial regardless cd the cost.”
* fr H
The couple is charged with the fatel shooting Jul:^, 1959, of the surgeon’s wife, vlaihara Jean Finch, 33, outside her $65,000 home in suburban West Covina.
United Industrial Corp. Reveals Shift to Detroit
NEW YORK (AIP). United Industrial Corp. announo ties of Its American Ei _ DIviMoa wiU be shifted to BaM-id Detroit, ia realignment.
Ihe 187,000 square foot plant occupying 18^ acrea at Philadelphia, together with spme machinery and equipment, has been sold to Medallic Specialties Corp. of America for slightly less than $1 milUon.
B. F. Qlra. United Indsstrlal presIdeBt, saM key persoas among MO employea at the PMI-
Resldants of the U.S. consume more coffee each year than the rest of the world combined, much of the imports coming from Brazil
Proposes Income Tax for Wayne County
DETROIT (AP) — A comialttst of the Greater Detroit Board at Commerce has drawn up a tax program wbkh woidd include a countrywide personal income tax on individuals.
I If thay
The board had directed Hs committee on state and local taxatkm to “{atxiuce a tax program proposal which would improve Midd-gan's Job ppportunities while . viding sufficient revenue for necessary governmental purposes at boOi state ahd local levels.’’
American Engineering’s stoker business, Including patents, deidgns
ahd Inventories, wUl be transferred: ehaases. of a 1V4^ emt to the company’s Detroit Stoker SZ^rss^I^uJirterS.
______________ oally oa a owatywMe baris.
I- Nicholas Rini, manager of the CoIorado’B 15 national forests oc-[board of commerce’s taxation de-cupy one-fifth the state.	jpartmeht, said the report wu
drawn up "only as an hdDnate* tion piece from which a definite gesan • plan might be drawn.’’	FAuE
A ★ ★	WHhUftlB Worry
Rfail said the board has diacusaed . mtt, wia, isaigssassswmiasm the proposal but not acted town tt.
He said, "One of the committee saeub^T&piiimatpeJS^ ■ members may have taken a o to Lansing, but not w an offii prapoaal of the board.’’
TWO DOCTORS ON DUTY
ASSURE YOU
IMMEDIATE SERVICE
eVe examinations
FILLING PRESCRIPTIONS
EYE GLASS REPAIRS
PONTIAC OPTICAL CENTER
103 N. Saginaw (acrou from Simms)	FE 2-0291
Hrs. 9:30-5:30 Dally Mon. and Fri. Eva. by Apmt.
A A. Milas, O.D.	—	P. C. Felfa)aro, 6.D.

the PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 80, 1960 ^
SEW SIMPLE
By Eunice Farmer
Girls Hold lnitiat(ion
• Dear Mrs. Farmer: AH the|Uroy. the nap	_
Buyi In our Iratemity have, the test the direction of
We all like our the fabric up to your body. When
trouble. We all like our khakis and cords tapered at the bottom of the lees, but all the pants we can buy are too wide.
the fabric up to your you run your fingers from the Rhoulder down, the fabric should feel rougher to the touch, than It
Marilee Croas #as hostess to the Gamma Zeta Mu Forum of Fhoneer Girls at her home in Rocheater (or the formal Initiation THiesday. Mrs. Walter RalNeU. owe •( le elab’a galdea, roadvcted the
there's a sewing machine at our'does when you run your fingers^p.
« «5l W 1. «» lh»., TK ooter .111 1. »»* ourselves if you will tell us how.’ j
will leii u» I--J richer looking when The Kappa Sigs rectly. You also will notice that the nap will not flatten out and *	'	^become as shiny in such ptaces
Just to think that you boys are.^	^rt.
aware of a column such as mine|	♦	♦	*
flatters me so much I am	"Dear Mrs. Farmer: I sent for
readyto fix them mysrif. You	jeaflet with instructions on
be happy to know that it won't	buttonholes and must tall
more than a few minutes to »aP«r ,hat I have never had them ■	'	- ......0 nice before. I'm show-
these slacks.
First Dress Suit” and other high
school plays of its U)c an r»p- oat to be someone aa dlsblte^e■ted
Idly going into •mothMls. Don't be surprised If you’re asked to buy a ticket to. the senior produc-» of a recent Broadway hit — maybe even Shakespeare.
embers Gwen Ifovla. Pal
_______ Alice Peterson, Mary
Thumpeon, Jaa Walts and the
Serving as officers for the year are Kathi Yeager, president; Sharon Vasl. vice president: Marilee Croas. secretary: Gwen Hovls. treasurer; Nancy Elam, historian; and Charlene Kennedy, world ob-
IT'
Leaders Mrs. John Stepleton. Marvin dompton, Ilene.
ing all my friends how you makeiMrs.	^
W. Is there any place I wduld|Barker and pab of each girl wer? not use this type of buttonhole?” ialso present.
Your Fan]
NINEtEEN
Stand-by High School Flap Passe^V^^^'^
Food Isn't
EAST LANSING “Willie’s
ed. Unfortunately, it usually turned
as the chennistry teacher.”
Now universities are graduating, and schoob hiring, teachers specially trained in speech and tbea-tn- artf.
As the current headquarters for the American Educational Theatre Association, the Michigan SUte University Speech Denartment b in close touch with developmenU of thb sort. Dr. John A. Walker of the MSU staff is AETA executive secretary-treasurer.
High selMMla are net only producing belter-written plays Ihene days, but they’re giving them belter productlepa.
"Time was,” says Dr. Walker, 'when the principal would be wondering who'd direct the senior play this year. The first nu
If everyone has the same kindi iof luck with them that vou have.] we will have overcome one of the^ hazards of "that homemade look.”i Don’t use this type of buttonhole for anything you are making for] bovs or tnen. such as vests, sport | ja^ets, sport shirts, etc. If you! I a re using small buttons on blouses jor tailored dresses such as shirt-Iwaist dresses, you probably will] ‘u.se a machine-made buttonhole. Itj 1, Turh the slacks insiue out,would be safe to use them on any-' and place a pin at the point where I thing that isn't man-tailored. |

evff
shwld be done on both the in-seam I If you would like to have Eunice; and the side seam of each leg. Farmer's free leaflet. "Bou^ Bul-| •2 Rip the hem that forms the| loinholes” send a stamped, self-
addressed envelope with yoiir request to Eunice Farmer in The Pontiac Press.
cuff.
3.	Decide how much smaller you wan the lower end of the slacks to be and mark each seam at the place where you placed the pin.
4.	Take a yard stick and mark a straight line from this "»ark.»r
you have just'” made, up to the|i z/ LJufO iUl
Players Slate
pocket on the side scam, and	Prnrilictinn
crotch at the in-scam. See illustra- iV6W riOaULllUII
tion.
, I Tryouts for the Waterford Town-T .	^ Lakeland Players' new pro-
p ac^ the pin. down ^^ dui^tion. "Ladies in Retirement.” of the pants,	‘‘J"'?
you don t make thb straight, the	^ to 4 p.m,
cuff wUI not turn up nght_	^3, Community Center
S	will	S	“ ■ “’EJ"” .rf
Show because it wUl be slightly |«nd will be preseajed teb. 3 and 4. ui n'slid cuff	"iDuward (Duke. Chaffee is the p^;
7. Turn up the cuff on the old'^uw'' «nd president of the Uke-
crease marks, press and lack the >«nd Players. .	__
cuff slightly at each seam. Good Pontiac area residents have been j invited to try out for parts whether >	# W	|or not they are members of the
“Dear Mrs. Farmer: Now that group, according to Starnes, the season for velvets and cordu-] toys b here again, would, you! please tell us about the nap'
Mrs. L. J.
First, and most important, every! piciP of your pattern must be laid] in the same direction when using' napped fabric.
With velvet, velveteen and coid-l
Look for Lining
(NEA) T If your clothes must last a long time, look for lined skirts and dresses when you go to sliop. These hold their shape far longer and look belter. They cost a bit more but they are worth it.
e by his office would be elect- Twenty-five yean old b ijiai.
AETA has grown from H man-ben In U36 to moK than iOOO tbday. One of Ita publlcationa alone, "High School Thrater Newsletter.’ goes to 8.000 to 9,000 pei^ sons connected with the production high sdMMi plays.
both himself and the MIcMgaa
by Inaugaratlng a seheol pro-
year and a series o( stwdeat-dlrecled one-act plays.
Special divisions have been or-
been established on a imvlaional baoia for community theater, considered adult education by AETA.
of the growth in the em^ of wives and mothers has come about during the last two decades.
for a lifetime of proud possession
OMEGA
HERE II one of the n live gcntlcman'i wstchce we've ecen. The I4K eex ii thin at a coin and the round dial with its elegant, ihin-itroke markers it imsiily sc-cented by the iqukre-corners of the ciK. Within iVthe world-femcus Omega 17-1
REOMOIVD’S
lewelsrs—OpIesMlritls
II N. Saginaw St.	FE 2-3612
Amhoriui Omrse Affttry... Official Waich ol ihc Olympic Garnet, kern*
Look Your Best ior the
HOLIDAYS!
Fit for Public
The dear implicanonr the law is that mother’s cooking may not be (It to eat.	t
DENVER (UPI) - Tbg Denver
Board of Health and ^oopitali ____________
thiddng twice today about whether mom’s txioUng is 111 for public consumption.
On Monday the board sent letters to chiu^ and school organizations, pointing out that a dty ordinance prohibits sale general public of’food prepared in kitchens not sdiject to sanitary
On Tuesday the board sent out another letter, ^thdrawing the first letter while'the quddion is
Eaforeemeat M the ordlaaBee
'We certainly do not wish to deprive any school or church group from raising funds .through this customary and established means,” Dr. Francis M. Candlin, chairman of the health board, said.
According to population experts, less than seven per cent of,Ame^
Sola ot loHi Storos—BIRMINGHAM--P6NTIAC
NOW
CLEARANC
of Our
Famous Moke
Gishmere Sweaters Skirts, Blouses
'/3
OFF
Discontinued styles and colors-Buy them for yourself or Christmas gifts
''Christmas Gifts" that ore unusual
and different for the many friends on your "Gift List"
TmJiOmjuL

\ (ZComouni-
We hove a wonderful collection of unusual
gifts at tiny prices. Lighthearted gifts like our feother duster—useful gifts like our bog and gloves sets—delightful gifts like our imported ski boot lighters or gropes made of soap—We invite you to come in /	while our collection is complete..
tJfUKOeta,
CUnSOucL. *!tn
fashion s h (
#/
Men's Kight
Thursday, December 1st from 7 to 10 p. m. ,,
at the
Bloomfield Fashion Shop
Telegraph Rood Store
Shop leisurely for the gifts she will love ... They will be very beautifully wrapped for you ...
MODELS . . . and REFRESHMENTS will be served . . . reserve the date to be here.
S2V4A 1
'*ioj<itr-	L
J
■ItaLak.
mis. PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAV. XOVKMBKR 30. lOftO
TWENTY-THgM
16 Dead After Tmgedy at Tragta
School Bus *Toll May Rise to 20
. (UPl) Tbtltnin #t U| UBCuarded I coOiaion «t a may rta* ». ofBdata tetred If and a h#Rht|day.
I s>«twn chUdivB—13 of themlscbool bus carrying 42 children to Igtrla wcro hMled Tueaday whenlmosning classes and scattered la 30-car freight anushed into tbeJ' booka and bodies likif popoKii” along a half-mile section of track.
Dr. M. A. Yoang, admtaistra-ter ef the IW-bed Archer Me-
dcy Bight that s< the W tojmcd
erttlcal eondltton.”
Sr	★	★
He said he feared the death taU would go higher.
A	*	*
Only one occupant of the bus, 16-year-oM Johnny Wiimick. escaped injury in the shattering grash that occurred just 300 yards from the safety o(( the scM>ol. MANY HEAE CRASH The crash was heard by iftany of the town's 662 inhabitants and brought them to the scene on the
) yards be-] the bus when it approached ng," she said ALL RIGHT Mrs. Steftiro said she saw the bus stop at the tracks. She the train approaching and thought everything was all right.
* * *
"Then 1 saw him (Frank Butl-ney, the 38-year-old bus driver) driving onto the tracks. Then in an instant everything seemed to fly up-books and bodies—like pop-
them mothers of the vkstlnu.
aad lajBicd from the yellow UM model school has.
"Thoae • 1 n n o c p n t children,' screamed one woman. “Why did this have to happen?”
B THEY DIED The gnarled wreck-t of the Ul-fated schotA bus is shown nt (A the freight train which rammed
Sr T^Utmx
the vehicle Tuesday, killing at least 16. The bus was just 300 yards from the school when it met the 30<»r train.
Boos and Bomb Scares Shake Carnegie Hall
NEW YORK -(AP) - Carnegie Hall was'turned into an ideological battleground lor a while Tuesday night.
Boos and bomb scares, catcalls and fistfigbts greeted a Yugoslav chorus making its first concert appearance here before a neai^ capadty crowd of 2,500.
"Down with Tito,” cried group Of hissing, cat-calling demonstrators. "Down with communism."
"Shush, ” said other members of the audience. The hecklers persisted. The chorus wm startled but didn’t waver.
Soon 12 to 15 men were grappling in a free-for-all.
The choristers launched into the praises of the "new Yugoslavia.’ with shouts of encouragement from some of the audience.
* W	*
Then, abruptly, the fisticuffs stopped. Later shouts drowned out the music. Soon at least 20 persons were mixing it !>•
Nine policemen, summoned by the manager, took (our demonstrators to the lobby where they were told to leave or face charges of disturbing the peace. They left. Earlier, telephane calls had amed that a bomb had been placed in the hall. No bomb was
Dem Advisers Hope for Upturn
Expect Budget Deficit in 1961 as Result of Present Recession
BOSTON (UPl) - One of President - Elect John F. Kennedy’s economic advisers believes the. new administration will contain the current recession and bring about an upturn of business by the second half of 1961.
Prof. Paul A. Samuleson of Massachusetts Institute of Technology discussed the situation in Business Scope, a fortnightly newsletter of business published in &tston. He stressed that he spoke as an "ac^mic economist” rather than ^an adviser to Kennedy. r
As resaH of the reoessiaa. he
The singers are known as the Brahko Krsmanovich Chorus, stu-denU from Belgrade University. They visited S3 cities, in the United Statics and Canada before end-uig their tour here.
New Machine Plots Pilofs Air location
TETERBORO. N.J. (UPI) -device that automatically tells a pilot his aircraft’s location during every moment of flight was demonstrated today at International Telephone and Telegraph Corp. Laboratories in Nutley. N.J.
The instrument continuously plots the aircraft’s position i map of the area over which the plane is (lying.	*
As many as to maps covering the pilot’s flight route ran be stored In the IS-ponnd nnit.
Known as the Vortac Pictorial Display, the device is designed to help pilots avoid busy air traffic lanes and reduce attention required to solve navigational problems.
Scientists at the ITT Laboratories said the instrument would contribute greatly to air safiety by enabling pilots and copilots to concentrate more fully on otjter flight problems.
Mrs. Peter Shefaro, a teskche at llw consolidated high school
drlvl^ three ohUdren to school
AP pa*«*i«i LOCATING CRASH — The map pinpoints Lannont, Alta., where the school bus cai+ying 42 children met disaster at an unprotected railroad crossing Tuesday. At impact, books and bodies (lew up "like popcorn.”
horror, pity aad then anger.
He said he found himself crying after helping to rtfmove the bodies from the bus.
”f blame myself,” Nychko said. "I blame myself and I'blame the townspeople of Lamont lor the crash. The crossing should have been protected by lights.
★ ' ♦	w "They (the children) were the
cream of the crop. We raised them, educated them and now this. Maybe it will smarten up some of the people.” • Nychko was credited with pulling six of the injured children from the wreckage.
★	*	*
Harry Lucas, janitor of school, was standing in the school doorway when the accident hap->ened.
Lucas said be saw the trata coming, saw the bus on the tracks and (hen "I saw the bus folded around the front of the engine.”
Keith Tompkin-s, 12, youngest student in the bus, said: "I heard a crash, and flew right out of the bus. When I landed I did nnt have any shoes or socks on.”
Keith was only slightly injured and made his way back to the wreckage to help free his two brothers.
GATHER BESIDE TRACKS Along the tracks people gathered and surveyed the cra^ scene, an*
Youngsters stopped beside blood-spaftered school books, brokm lunch buckets, pencils and pieces of steel. Tears welled in their eyes.
The bus normally carried if children but (wo youngsters, Robert Motiuk U, and Florence Sloboda, 17, missed it Tuesday. The secretary-treasurer of the school board, M. Woycenko, said the bus driver was a regular had been approved by the board.
The driver was among the seri-busfy injured.
YANKEE'S BIG WINTER
BOOT SALE!
Whdtovtr yeiir RM4 may ba I* • Wintor loot—^Yonkoa'i has it for Ussl Hsra arc tO food roosoiu why yoa shoald buy oil your fomily footwoor noods of Yookoo'i low, low prktt!
M«n'$ — Boyt' Yoiiriis'
4-Bwkle Arctics
Mon's Hoovy 4-fueklo
WORK ARCTIC
Mon's 12 inch Full Lots
Rubber Boot
Style ■■
t5d^Sty..JJ44
TOU CAN mUT SAVE ON THESE YANKEE BARGAINS
Men's Zipper
Sixes 7 to 12
»088
Men's Htavy Duty
WORK RUBBER
Sigos 6 to 12
FAMILT!
Girls' and Lodiot'
Dira-Hyis Slow Bools
Fleece lined for extra warmth. Black or grey.
to S. 4 to IS. ^
Msn's and Boys' Rubbors Sisos 2 to 6/ 6>/i to 12
$|99
toys' md Girls' Thsrms {.imd
SNOW BOOTS
$290
51 S. SAGINAW ST. - Nnt to WrigUy'i - OPEN TIL 9 P.M.
probably will face a badge! deft-eM dai^ Ha Ural year.
While a deficit that is merely a sign of undisciplined spending would be a bad thing, he said, a deficit under recession conditions it proper and reasonable.
Hoaxer, he said the administration facet two tougher probiems than that poaed by the recession— inflatioh aiid balance of paynwnts.
’’The essence of the biflatidifiary problem that would be troublesome to us is one in which there is the tendency of rising costs to lead to higher prices and so on — the ‘cost-push’ effect, as it Is called,” said Saimielson.
“He HkeUboed Is ast that we
prtoe-creep «
He said the balance of payments problem stems from the fact that if the prices ef our goods rise, the vsUk of our exports nnay fall, amTthe bolMce of payments difficulty becomes wor He said the problem might be solved by devaluatkm of the dollar, but he said he felt I would not uae this de
Dutch Seize Indonesian Ship Off New Guinea
THE HAGUE. Netherlands (AP) —A Royal Dutch Navy patrol veW ael has seized an Indonesian carrying arms for hiflltrators oil the coast of Dutch New Guinea, the home mlnlatry announced Tues-
said 0 gang of soow donesfans tiled to Inffiteate flw
after a ctesh with tocal police.

It’s wonderful to feel cared for
Behind thoee doom ... his item just earn k lift. It’o • boy. VVhat'U he be? Doctor? Lawyer? Merchant? Qiief? It doean’t matter right now. The imporunt thing is he’s a lusty, healthy youngster and his mother's doing just fine. It's a wonderful feeiiiig. And at a time like this it’| especially comforting b know you are providing the beat hospital aod medical care available for your wife and that new boy., You can be sure of this, you know, if you have Blue Cross-Blue Shield.
f
■(t’
MICHIOAN ILUB CROSS SLUB SHIBLD YOU/t COMMUNITY PLANS

BLUE CE089 I^AYE YOUR HOSPITAL . . . BLUE SHIELD PAYS YQUR DOCTOR
r

THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 30. 1960
Physics Research
Here's What It's Like fo Walk Through a Wall of Hate |on Upswing in Soviet]
Bjr DAVID ZDfMAN NSW ORLEANS (f>—Inside integrated WiUiam Srantz School, past crowds and fte wail of catcalls, there is a veil of silence.
Four white children sat Tuesday with their parents on a wooden bench akm^e a in the spacious basement hall.
It was the first inside look at the echoed by a newsman since it was integrated Nov. l4.
* ♦ ★
A lonely policeman paced up and down twirling his night stick, waiting for the school bell to ring. A cold morning sun slanged through the windows into empty classrooms.
“Diey have a right to believe Hip way they do — that crowd out there.’* a dart-haired mother hi her Ms said. "Bnt I have a right to my beliefs, too. And they have no right to atop me.” The parents stood together and talked. The children wiggled off the bench and began playing together. When a child shouted, his voice seemed to echo in the barren basement hall.
The one Negro first grade girl had not yet arrived. She usually shows up after school starts — c-s(»rted by U.S. deputy marshals. ♦ ♦ ♦
"1 can't help but think the people out there don't represent city," the Rev. Lloyd Foreman ’said. He had dark hair, brown eyes, even features.
The S4-year-old MethodlBt minister — bom In Crowle|r, liS., — kad walked the block and a half from his house to school with his S-yeor-old daughter Piunela. Some dooen women tried Mock hto path, one latching onto hit root Jacket and screaming, "DM’t send her to that nigger Mhool.”
"Take your hands off me." hi said as the yelling women closed iround him. Policemen rushed over to dear a path.
*	* w
•'We're not alone in our feelings .ibout the situation." he’said to the other parents, "but fear h^ kept so many people away. The vdeet that need to be heard have been;
, i - .	.:k
silent — and they need to be heardlthen they 'broke up. He walkdd t»-j Some people in the crowd spot-iYou’ve got nfgger blood. Boo. Get now."	ward the door, khid of braced biS|ted him as som as he took his that kid out df that niggpr school.
'shoulders and stepped out into the first step. They yelled:	Nigger blood. He's got nigger
rold autumn air.	I "Nigger lover. White trash. iUood."
TEACHEK8 ENTER A few teachers started coming into the basement hall, talking together. .They disappeared lot a ORpment into a classroom with brightly colored pictures on Jhe wall, a clean Uadeboard and row row of empty seats.
"I think the citwrd of women me there because they’re they have nothing
"They’ve called at my house. They’ve threatened to oee that my huaband loses Ms Job.
"WeU, he told me, if I have to lose my job because of this, th^ it wasn’t worth having in the first place.”
The bell sounded, and the teachers appeared. One gray-haired teacher came over to the Rev. Foreman's daughter and took her hand. Foreman quietly said good-by to his daughter.
★ aw
Pamela and the teacher were alone together in the classroom Monday — the start of the second week when only two white children showed up. But at the starting (rf school Tuesday, Pamela had me classmate, a little boy.
The boy took the other hand of the teacher and she led the two cMMren awny, past the po-lioemna twlrftaig bto nightsHck, post the empty classrooms, until they eame to the empty kindergarten rooin.
Hurry - Hurry! t MORE DAYS
To San This Moat
Unuauol Pictural
More Sit-Ins in Three States
Negro Leader Predicts Victory Over Southern Segregation
B>- Untied Press InlemsHonal Negro youths staged brief sit-in demonstrations at stores In Georgia. Florida and Arkansas Tuesday, and a Negro leader predicted victory fpr his race over segregation practices because "the Negro has beaten fear. ”
"The raw, dirty, vicious infighl-tog of the mop-up action" still remains for Negro demonstrators South, divinity sti Kaneaster Hodges Jr. of Southern Methodist University told'¥'church conference at Nashville, Tenn.
He made his forecast jimid these developments;
Fourteen Negro college sin-dents staged an hour-long dem-onotmtkm nt a department store lunch counter In Little Rock, Ark.
Thirteen Negro youths sat at a segregated variety store lunch rounter in Jacksonville, Fla., for; 40 minutes.
A small group of Negroes tried to take seats In a drug store in Atlanta, but were blocked by rope.
★	★	★
Negroes In Atlanta distributed handbills urging shoppers to boycott downtown stores during the Christmas shopping season and "give freedom cards instead of gifts this Christmas.”
The Jacksonville lunch counter; which was the target of demonstrators before an outburst of racial- violence last summer was ■k)^ when the Negroes appeared. ★	*	*
The manager of the store in Little Rock closed hto luneh counter but said he would not notify police so lung as thei'e was trouble.
JEFFRiV
HUNTER
DAVID
JANSSEN
FATRICIA
DAMONE OWENS
■r;r gunsmoke
— in TUCSON
New Atlas Missile Fails Second Time
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (APt f—The Air Force has failed for the I second straight time to launch a Imore powerful model of the Atlas I intercontinental range missile.
★	*	★
I A new Atlas "E" rocket fizzled jto flight Tuesday night about throe mintites ikfter il was launched. The main sustatoer engine burned out prematurely and the K>-foot missile plunged into the Atlantic several miles offshore, far shon of its 5.000-mlle goal.
★	A	★
A similar malfonction Oct. IL ruined the initial flight of the "E"i Atlas which is powered by three engines generating 390,000 pounds of thrust: This is .30.000 pounds! greater than the thrust of the| present operational "D" model.
MniMf	IN HAVANA/' 7:00 & 10:00
nUHi	"DEVILS DISCIPLE." o» 8:50

Our Man In Havana
.^4lM0aiime88 ummm Bari Ives'lhlinenOlara-Eniie M	‘Biyi BichazxliM • *
HURON
Disapul
WASHINGTON Iff - The U.S. government said Tuesday Soviet research in the area^of physica most closely associated with electronics is excellent and growing rapidly.
★	* A
The commerce department published a study which said Ruskian to solid state physics is increasing at soeh a pace that the Soviets within five to toi years probably will be isstiing more publications to this field than the united States.
This evahwHon was made by aa aMdentlfled federal agency, preaamably the Ceatesl latolll-geaee Agency.
"The moot prominent feature of the Soviets' work to solid state physics is theiff excellent theoretical research," the report says. 'The best workers are extremely prolific and versatile an4 seem unburdened by administrative and teaching duties."
Solid state physics involves the electronic physical processes that occur to semiconductors and other aplids. It includes low-temperature physics, microwave physics, electronics, optics and magnetics.
Doggone It--Somebody Fix That Sonic Boom
LIBERAL, Kan. (AP)-Liberal Jarred the other night by a ‘ by a Jht
Police dispatcher Wayne £^wn-oer got dozens of calls, indu^
"A sonic v^boom, " ^lencer an-
wered.
# A A
"Well, you'd better get it fiaacL It nearly knocked me. out id bed,”, said the caller.
VMITED
1SHIRT
DISTRIBUTORS
Tei-Unrsa Shopping Center
LAST TIMES TONIGMT "EAY OR DIE" "WEt OF EVIDENCE"
FARTING THMRSDAY-—
Ve hid her lifing in the tombr-Poe
Plus "MAN ON A STtmC"-
DEFY BIAKKADER.S - The Rev. Lloyd Foreman tlefti approaches integrated William Frantz School to New Orleans Tuesday with hig 5-year-old daughter Pkmela ja'rt before being blocked by jeering mothers whose children are boycotting the school where one Negro girl attends. Blockading mothers swept down upon two white parents who had brought their chil-
dren Into the school. "They should beat her fill she can’t stand up," shouted one woman during the arm-waving argument that ensued. Police . dispersed the blockadcM's. With the minister in this picture is Associated Press reporter Dave Zinman, on assignment to walk to school with the pair.
Door* Open WeekdOTS 10:45 A.M.
Straitd
I
HEU OVER! ht
il STARTS :l TQNIQHT ; ALL COLOR	FE 2-1000
	Mi«i|THEATBti
	$. Takiraph « Sq««rg Uka RA
nniEiE SHMiie oaklaxIt count.	
BIG
WEEK!
EXCLUSIVE FIRST-RUE!
IMPORTANT NOTICE . , .
"MIDNIGHT LACE" IS ANOTHER SHOCKING
SUSPENSE-DRAK4A
YOU MUST SEE IT FROM THE BEGINNING!
FEATURES AT	11 ;131:15 - 3:20 ■■ 5:22 - 7;27-e 9:30
THE WOUVIAN IN TUB NIIDNlQlir LACE... TAROET POn TEMPirmON...OI^ HiRROft?
THE SHOCKfNa MlDNiaHMMRE58~
HM)SHE INVEMTED 1HEM...ORWAS SHEILVINOIWO
uvc8...wnHour
knowing irf
DORIS DAY-REX HARRISON JOHN GAVIN
MYRNA LOYRODDY McDOWALl ^
TMWSMUMTttMPMIT
EASTMAN COLOR!
Extiat “WOODT'S OZARK UM"
:	, HilNI'- ARAIN "IN ‘
Jifuiliugkt I
A MOTION PICTURE TO LIFT UP YOUR HEART AND LIGHT UP THE ENTERTAINMENT WORLD FOREVER!
It begon with a sunrise ot
Compobello .., and out of it rose a love that could move mountains ... a faith that could shake the earth . . . and a laughter of children that WPS g miracle of its own!
THE MOST DEEPLY PERSONAL, RICHLY HUMAN, COMPLETELY OVERWHELMING ENTERTAINMENT EXPERIENCE OF ALL!
■ ■	. I	'	■	■	■
-	V ,	^	f
THB POXTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 30. 1960
/
At AJa. ___________________ . _______
UU D(S^ 1 dr.. ScrUl Mumter U MSM, wtn b« i»M At pabUe AAlA ‘ tlN OrAtlot ArraiM. that Addraaa U lag vbar* thA TAbltla la itorad and may
rxjvua SALK
tn-iMUi. wiu I
U. of M. to Dedicate
»ST ChtrroM OennrtlUt, aarlal N«in-btr VCairttMM. «UI ba boU at pabUe uto at 11 UtUa. Berkleir- Harold'a Coi-lltlon, that addrcM baing «bcra tha vahlck la itarad and may ba Inapactad.
Maa. W. W, IM
POBUC aALK At t;0« A.m. on Daeambar T. ItdO, a 1H7 DaSato 1 Or., AdTanturar, Barlal • Munbar taanlM. wlU ba aoM at pabUe
PUaUC 8ALB
PtZBMm win b« aoM at pubUc cAla at SSliM Woedwbrd Aranue, that . draia being 'whara tha aehlela ta i and may ba Inapactad.
Mot. n. 30. ItM
-----J b*
a Rail Off llangary Rd.. WAUed Lake Ikua. g;0i e-elook p.m BM.T. Ooa. 11. •e at which plaea and hoar tbiay U ba publtely opaaad and raad. far a oonairucUon of a eombtead gar‘~* ------- ------- VUlaga
ANN ARBCm (UPI) - The Uni-venity of Michigan Thunday will open ite $1.25 million Pharmacy RcMarch Building, the largest university bnilding in the nation de-:lusively to pharmaceutical reseatch.
★ ★ ★
President Harlan H. Hatcher will speak at a dedication luncheon jbd-lowing opening cwmooies at the Rackham Amphitheatre.
- The lesearcli bnlMiag Is four stories and la located at the sovth-eost corner of the East Medical BnUding.-which wiU be eotnqiM by the college of pbamutey as
ba at eaocrata block with brick ug. Total area of building app mataly 1100 iq. ft. Propoaal mutt the enttra construction and tho a • atry labor and materlali for the i Tha rtgbt It raaeraad to ralect aa, .. nil prepotalt. walaa any Informality In .tha propoaalt reoclrad and to aooapt any proposal which tha VUlata Council daaou . to bo moct tarorahlo *-' Intarait of the VlUaga.
Plana and apacltlcatlona may
cured from the VUlagt'a otftea ____________
tboTt addrosa tor a dapoalt of 010.00 •tan MUart) which win bo refunded upon tha return af tl)t plans and apaetfl-cations In good order.
Tha succeaaful Mddar wlU ~-qulred to proaant satisfactory I eertitlestss. pertormancs, u.1 n-atartal malntsnaaoa a--*
NOTICE
EFFECTIVE DECEMBER 31, IMO the GRAND TRtJNK WESTERN freight agency work for CLARKSTON, Michigan, will be performed by tbe GRAND TRUNK WESTERN FREIGHT AGENT, MR. A. F. WEIL at WATERFORD, Michigan, telephone number ORlando 3-7428, and who will accept collect telephone calls from shippers or receivers of railroad freight at WATERFORD, Michigan. Persons desiring to be placed on the Grand Trunk Western’s Credit List, for the receipt of collect shipments, please obtain appUcatton forms from the freight agent at WATERFORD
Persons desiring further hi-formation please write or telephone Superintendent T. D. Ash, Grand Trunk Western Railroad Company, 7350 Orleans. Detroit 11, Michigan, telephone WO 2-2280, ext. 381.
6BNIID TBURK WESTEBN BAILBOAD COMPANT
The fdlowing are top pricet lyerlng sales of locally grown . rodnee by growwm and aold by them in wholes^ package lota. Quotations ace furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Monday.
be moved Into the V. ef M. medical oewter a qnarter-nUe away.
Pr. Tom D. Rowe, dean of ttie college of pharmacy, said the new research buUding will permit acceptance of many more graduate pharmacy students.
No Crank Case —There's a Ford in His Suit Sure
DETROIT (UPI) — There’s Ford in the future of this cast Charlotte Ford, the l$-yeaivold aughter of Henry Ford n. was aroed as defendant in a $3,000 damage suit filed in Common Pleas Court here Tuesday. So was the Ford Motor Co.
rait on behalf of his daughter Mrs. Patricia Armatroag Dolkie-wlca of dbbarbaa Harper Woods.
He claimed he was driving his Ford on the Edsel Ford Egress-way here May 18 when his auto was struck in the rear by Miss Ford’s car, causing severe injuries to Mrs. Dulkleodcz' bead, arms and legs.
The Ford 0>. was named because the firm owned the auto Miss F<»d was driving.
The make? Ford, of course.
MARKETS IStock Market Continues Slide
Lmki, Soa. behi............
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Panley, Curly, doi. h^i....
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Poultry and Eggs
N	PI
. iDEmorr.
mund .dellTC ’ iuuirc Paul IlgRnypa hi
---- (API—Pricfc per
.dellrercd Datralt far Me. I qutl-- poultry f ScOTy type beu Sa-11;
~T haul 13-11; haecy typa roait--.1 Ibi. M-SS; brolftri and try-1-4 Ihc. whitaa . 13-33; Barred Rocki
paid par IlTtred to
»—tag pnetc
-------------- ractiTtri de-
Detroit; looaa In M doicn
--- gradt (iBoIudlng UR.);
----* jMoibo tg-gl: catra
large l4-g|; large t4-gt; madlua 4g. M: am^ 4I-«; Browna—Orade A extra medium 4443;
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Livestock
NEW YORK If) - The stock market continued to aUtfe downward in lively early trading today.
Losses were confined to fractkaia T the most part and a few gainers were scattered through the list Trading continued to move' at a brisk pace. The tape caught up with transactions fairly quickly after clearing the normal overoighf order Jam.
Brokers awl Wall Street aaa-lysts expected tradliig to mala-tain the aettvtty for some tiine, principally beeaaae of oeUlag to MtabUob tax looses. This seaooa-al activity li expMited to be heavier fluui aoaai (his year beeaue the large aumber of Issues lower on the yetr.t Steels, motors, rubbers, utilities, group movements. Some chemicals, notably Allied and Eastman Kodak, rectaiped part of Tuesday’s losses, but others in the group continued to dnq>. Union Carbide was off about a point and DuPont slight fraction.
♦	* W
Some„. wiecialty stocka moved higher as they attracted trading interest. NAFI spurted nearly points and Brunswick ’’when issued” was higher in fairly active trading. Drugs ijrere firm with Merck and Pflser edging^ ahead.
Two blue chip Issues whlcb hit new'llW lows Tneoday (Bethlehem Steel and Chrysler) slipped
2^00 Jobs Possible in Adrian Plant Bid
ADIUAN (UPI) - A firm which could give this Southeastern Michigan copimunitjr of 30,000 up to 2,500 Jobs is expected to bid for the government-owned plant here. ★	★ w
The plant has been closed since last spring when Bridgeport Brass Co., employing 650 to 900 persons, closed its aircraft extrusion operation.
The firm expected to make the oiler at Thursday’s 4>id-letting in Chicago is the Harvey Aluminum Ch. of Torrance, Calif.
WWW
There have also beeh reports of two or three other bids lor the plant site.
j DETnorr ..vt. m lan — catti-_________
S*."*****'. ”t»aftr: cholM abMnt early; mixed lo^e good and choice steers 34 50-27 50 good to low choice stecre 14.50-37:00;
belfers 11.I0.
5Sht i»“to*3Li.
y<»i. datoblo MW Batebaro and sowi Sf	*1®- * mi-330 Iba. 10.15-10.lf;
10.15; mixed No. 3 and 1 110-311 Ibe 17.50-17.70; Mo. 3 and 3 m-300 Ibt 10S0.17S0; No. 1. S Md I	ft
tows 14J0-10.50: NO. S and 3 403-toO
----ll.33.h73; boakr^HN-aiV
-	W- .Fully, steady,
prime lf.ft-41.fl; good and ebolee
5®.M-M.30; •tandard*MRg-lg.|g;^S5
The island of Guam, a U-S. session in the Pacific, has a pi^U-latlon of 66,426.
U.S. Steel, General Motors, Sears Roebuck, Kennecott, General Electric and Santa Fe lost small fractions. Higher urere WoolTrorth, temational Harvester. Anaconda and American Tobacco.
New York Stocks
(Barly Memlng e aBer declmaT i
Admiral ..... 11 M
--------le .... 71 R____
8.1 5o9'*a
tl .... n.7 Lib Mcl
S; [^Sh*
Cuban Rebels
Mead CP ....
Merck ......
Merr Ch k ■
________	. .. MpU Hon ...I
Armour k Co . 14.4 Minn MkM .. i 33.3 Minn PkL ...
Bau k^:::: 8* steel .... 11.4
IS.TI-M.Sd; t«e ^oadi e dim Iambi Ma.l pelts *"1 ^rtms r—
• • S i >*»» D®'«V" SOTr .:	2TK ;;;
Ex-Rail Attorney Dies
NEW YORK (iB-Louls J. Car-ruthers, 82, retired general attorney of the Long Island and Pennsylvania Railroads died Monday. He waa president of the U5. Lawm Tennis Association in 1331-32.
CdnPae Capital Alrl Carrier Cp . Caae.Jl .... Cater Trac . Chrysler ....
JOHN McAuum ron, me
«30 Oaktowd Ava. roNttoc. Mick.
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SI Motorola ....
50.7 Murray Cp ... ... • M Nat Cash R .50.3
Bombings, Arson Fete 30th of November for Castro Enemies
HAVANA (UPI) - The anti-government "30th of November" underground observed its name-day today with an outburst bombings and arson regarded as its boldest stroke yet against Premier Fidel Castro.
■ w *	*
The organization set off 11 time bombs in Havana shortly after midnight, lour of them within a few blocks of secret police headquarters, and threw live phsspho^ us into mail drops at the central post office to bum the mail.
■ »♦ I
Nor Pac ..
Ohio on .
Owens Cnt .
Owens III Q Pac O k B Coca Coft" .... 71.3 SrjAJT *" 'loIgPalm . . . 31.0	■
8.5
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8S-P,"*	SI	Elf	81
SrUe ::: lil lUpnblUi BU.. 53.1 Here ...... M.5	5*’*®S_... !* *
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?oaX ....IM Safeway at ... 15.0
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>en n"e* :	M:4	Tes*<? gul	17.1
Oeneeoo ... 10.7	Toitron	31
Sfifif.' ^	i	R Beer	M.4

i-,hnT“2n™«*
Jonei k L iCeltey Ray
?a5v?i,
lW-3«m II A.M. ds. OMIS off 3.10
Groin Prices
_________No*. 30 (API — OpOBIng
iraln piieoi:
Hgl l ......Mat.
^\\ ........
PRESENTS FOB CAROLINE ~ Two cousins bearing gifts for Caroline Kennedy, daughter of President-Elect John F. Kennedy, arrive at the Kennedy home in Washington Tuesday for a belated birthday party. Caroline was 3 Sunday. The cousins are Courtney Kennedy, 4, and Stephen Smith Jr., 3. Courtney is the daughter
AP Pbetefss
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kennedy. 'Twelve young friends and her gnmdfather Joseph P. Kennedy helped Caroline eat a four-layer pink cake. Joseph took a piece of the cake to Carolyn's mother, recovering in Georgetown University Hospital from the birth of her first son.
Mobile Unit Here 2 Weeks
Free Chest X Rays in City
Reports from I said anti • Castra eBmpalgnen had set fire to It Acres of sBgar
ers were members of the Nw. M gnmp.
The underground has set off more bombs on other occasions— about 20 went off Friday nlght-but it had never before struck in downtown Havana. No one was injured by'the bombs, and damage was miiior.
PLENTY OF EXERaSE Troops, police and militiamen ■currieid back and forth through Greets as the bombs went off nWiat the Gailego (Spanish) ten one near the Payret movie ztCT opposite the national capir . one on the Atares wharves and one on the grounds of S' public
Free chest X rays are being offered to those 18 or older in Pontiac this week by the Oakland Dounty Department of Health.
The moh)le X ray unit will be stationed alongside the Oakland County X^rthouse on West Huron Street at North Saginaw Street through Friday.
w ★	*
llours when X rays will be taken today and Friday are 9 p.m. Thursday's hours are noon to 8 p.m.
Next week the mobile unjt will be stattoned at the Tel-Huron Shopping Center. Huron and Telegraph Road, Monday through Fhday. Monday's hours odU be 2 to 8 i.m. On Tuesday and Thursday the trailer will be open from noon to and Wednesday and Friday from 9 a.m. to S p.m.
♦	★ A
Purpose of the X ray survey is to find tuberculosis and lung cancer cases in their early stages.
Oiest X ray is the only practical means of doing this because there no early symptoms of these
"By the time the average tuber-culoals case la discovered by other means, the victlro has infected an
clotbesmeR believed to be gov-
be rod anlfomied poHcemen la-vestlgatlng tke blasts.
At least two of the bombs were planted under electric transform-era.
A ★ A _
They knocked out circuits powering neon lights near the bombed school, but did not affect street lighting except momentarily.
The tetk of November oigaai-satton oommemoratea the date of SB abortive npriolng la IIM against the government of ilneo-ousted President Pulgencto Ba-tlsta.
C^ro, arriving from Mexico with a boatload of gunmen, was to have landed during the revolt, but he oral several days late.
mi...... ^
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5S-1 ;■.... {mr	5K
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AT'
:l:!r
N-Test Suspensions Cut Worid's Fallout
LONDON (UPI). — A team of British scientists said today the Big Tiiree’s suspensian of nadear teat explosions is paying dMdanSp in a decreaae of radioactive .M-
Start Renewal Plan in Royal Oak Twp.
RDYAL oak TOWNSHIP -Ground has been broken for the first Bingle-family house in Royal Oak Township under the area’ urban renewal program.
AAA
Completion of the 24 by
A report by Britain’e atomic research and testing unit at Hadnell
reached last year.
36-topt, i la Ktr
pected about Jan. L It la built by Apex Devetopmeht Co.. Detrott, at 8231 Groveview gt, between Bethlaem and Rdmanvtae Streets.
News in Brief
te^Aroea. Ml WhMtoMesw M-,
boxes, a set of eatrtaigs ond a necklace from her apartmeiit Total value of the items was 815.
■Rrattoi WaOaoe. M, HU Wa«e-gaa St, Auburn Heights, wu found gufity of drunk driving yesterday before Munldpal Jtflge Oefl Mc-Callum, and fined 810a
Lone A HartseU. lA, ef im Oak-noli St, pleaded guilty to dnmk driving yesterday before Municipal Judge Cecil McCallum. He rras fined $100 and sentenced to taro days in the Oakland County JalL
Carrie Flakea, IM WesNe 9L, reported to Pontiac police yesterday that burgiari stole clothing valued at $75 from her home.
Betty temm Stovens, ITS Nertae Ave„ reported to Pontiac poliee yesterday that aomeone entered her unlocked apartment and stole clothing valued at 856.
The theft ef a portable tolevlatoa set from Nelsner Bror., 42 N. Saginaw St., was reported to Pontiec police yesterday.
_________gale Fit, Dee. Bad, 8
am. OMnmunity AcUviUcg Build-tng. WilUams Lake Rd. Waterford. Sponsored by the Baitero Mar. Clarkston.	—Adv.
Baxaar and Chleken Sappor, Baldwin E.UB. Church. 310 BUd-wln. Thurg. Dec. 1, 5 to $ pm.
—Adv.
_______Sale of Toys, 10-1 pm.
Prl.. Dec. 3. St. Andrews Bpiseopai Church. 5301 Hatcbmy Rd„ Dray-—kSw.
Striking Windsor Drivers Turn Dovrn Proposal
WINDSOR, Ont. (*» - Windsor bus drivers unanimouily rejected a management proposal f^ieaday
Management af the Saadwteh,
average of four other persons,” said Dr. John D. Monroe, ^ health director.
The X )Ay unit Is operated by the Southeastern Michigan TV Detection Project. Persons being X rayed will be informed later of the ray results.
Youth Admits
World faces Sticky Future
Prof at U. of M. Seas Adhesives in Place of Nails, Rivets, Thread
Police Nab ^gmiington Township Suspect in Gas Station Thefts
A 20-year4>ld Farmington Township youth has admitted 23 gas station burglaries in Oakland and Wayne counties since the first of the year, according to Livonia police. A 16-year-old boy has admitted betng an accomplice In 10 of the break-lna, police said.
Joseph E. Charboneaa, M. of MKM RandaU 8t.. Fatmliigton TowiMhIp was arralgiied la U-vonia Maaicipal Coart yesterday, and examlRatton *vas set by Jndge Robert Lorion for Dec. S.
The Juvenile has been turned
authorities.
AAA According to Detective Jerry Warner, Charboneau was arrested early Monday morning following break-in at a gas station at choolcraft and Farming->n Roads.
Arroofbif office ra, Patroimesi
ANN ARBOR (B-The future will be a time of gtick-to-it-lveness, the predictions of a University ol Michigan professor come true.
A A A
Alan A. Marra, an authority on wood technology, says hiodern science is developing adhesive materials that some day will replace nails, rivets and even thread ta means of putting things to-{ether.
Marra is chahtnaR of the eora-ndttoe on adhesives of the Amerieaa Society for Testtag Mateilali.
The group is studying. bonding X wood, metals, plastics, die, glass, paper, leather and other tub-stances to themselves and to eadi other.
OFFER 8TRENOTH. RIGIDITY
Marra said adhesives are rabidly becoming preferred means ol assembling and constructing thinqs
'Few realiM the performance (A such things as hello^er blades, safety gtaei. nylon cords In rob-bCT tires, auto brake aboes and the Atiantle cable B due to the <4d-
H» house will have three bed- "The incraasing substitutton of adhetovtia for nails, acrewl and ItitdieB, tffiilv nnk and a faU other fastenen will result In more baennent. It «riU be used u ajclflciait designs and production model lor similar houaes ptaaDedlmethods in many types of manu-foT the pwntitip.
way Oa. prspsaed arkUrattoa of all lasMeo by a buoiiymaa ap-pototed by the Ontario govera-
The bus line has insisted it must cut wages 10 per cent to sUy in business. The union wants a 15 cent per hour wage' increase.
Death Notices
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said they fooRd ChRitsBeSR st-temptiag to hide nsder his ear parked near the soeae. The Javenlte fled Into nearby brash and was apprehended later at hit home.
Charboneau Signed a statement at Livonia police headquarters in which he admitted stasing 10 gas station burglaries in Oakland Ownty during the past 11 months. He is believed to have netted about 81,000 in this area.
Glass Company Observing 60th Anniversary
One of Pontiac's oldest business firms is observing its 60th aimi-versary this week.
A A A
The Pontiac Glass Oo., 23 Lawrence St., the city’s original glasa firm, was founded by SImoa H. Rcymtids in 1900.
EsyaiHs was a pisaeer gtoator la thto part at tha stoto aad to-steBed glaaa to raaay eaiiy tea-tastoa, aehaah aad odtor pahbe baUdlRgs to PMtilac.
Original location of the company under the nune of Reynolds li Reynolds was on Norto Saginaw Street between Huron and Lasnence.
AAA
The company has been at its paeaent location since 1923. It la oanned fay the fouadar’a son
About 45 laiUiOB parson almost ona-quaiter of tiie poptito-tkm of the UE., either Uvt in or the IS laigeM dtiet, aco ■img to tahttlatiom of the
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JtoVEMBER 1960
- -Today's Television Programs- -
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TONIOirrS TV higiiliohts «;N (2) Movie (coot.)
(4) Trackdown
(7) News and Weather
(9) Popeye
(56) General ChemUtry •:l» (7) Sports •:M (7) News C:M (2) News Analysis (4) Weather •:M (2) News (4) News (7) Carcus Boy (9) Woody Woodpecker •:M (2) Sports (4) Sports •:4S (2/ News (4) News (56) Mathematics 7:00 (2) Aquanauts
(4) Dangerous Robin (7) Award Theater (9) Pioneers
7:30 (2) Divorce Court (cont.)
(4) Wagon Train (7) Hong Kong (9) Movie: “Flaxy Martin" (1949). Virginia Mayo, Zachary Scott.
(56) Invitation to Art S.-00 (2) Best of Post
' (4) Wagon Train (cant.)
(7) Hong Kong (cont.)
(56) Showcase
|:M (2) Red Skelton (color)
(4) Price Is Right (color)
(7) Oszle and Harriet (9) Movie (cont.)
(56) Conversations •;00 (2) Red Skelton (cont.)
(4) Perry Como (color)
(7) Hawaiian Eye (9) Walter Winchell File •:S0 (2) Tve Got A Secret (4) Como (cont.)
(7) Hawaiian Eye (cont.)
\9) Waterfront 10:M (2) Steel Hour
(4) Peter Loves Mary (7) Naked aty (9) Harbor Command II:M (2) Steel Hour (cont.)
(4) UA Border Patrol (7) Naked aty (cont.
THURSDAY MORNING
•:W (4) (color) Continental Classroom.
ItM (7) Funews •:U (2) Meditations.
1:40 (2) On the Farm Front.
I:4S (2) TV CoUege.
7:00 (4) Today.
(7) Funews (2) Felix the Cat.
1:00 (7) Johnny Ginger 0:U (2) Capt. Kangaroo.
0:M (7) Stage S 0:00 (2) Movm.
(4) I Married Joan (4) Exercise (7) Exercise.
(4) Faye Elizabeth 10:00 (4) Dough Re Ml (7) Nbws 10:10 (7) Movie 10:10 (9) billbuoad.
10:30 (4) color) Pliy Your Hunch (7) Divorce Hearing (9) Chet Helene 11:00 (2) I Love Lucy
(4) (color) Price Is Right (7) Morning Court (9) Romper Room 11:90 (2).aear Horbon.
(4) Concentration (7) Love That Bob
THtnWDAV AFTERNOON
13:00 (2) Love of Life
(4) Truth, Consequences.
(7) TexMB (9) Susie
(2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (color) It Could Be You (7) Beat the Gock.
(9) Tower Kitchen Time 13:00 (9) News.
13: U (4) News.
(2) My Uttle Margie
(9) h
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“J
11:0
(4) News (7) Decoy (9) News 11:16 (2) Weather (4) Weather (9) Telescope UAW 11:M (2) Spoils (4) Sports
11:36 (2) Movie: "The Betrayal" (English, 1956). A man blinded by the Germans, hears a traitor bargaining (or his’
(4) News (7) About Faces (9) Movie.
4:06 (4) Bold Journey.
1:30 (2) As Worla Turns.
(7) Life of RUey.
3:00 (2) Medic
(4) (color) Jan Murray.
(7) Day In Court fiM (2) House Party.
(4) Loretta Young.
(2) Our Miss Brooks (4) Youi^ Dr. Malone.
(7) Quern for a Day (9) Movie 3:30 (2) Verdict Is Yours.
(4) From These Roots.
(7) Who Dp You Trust 4:00 (2) Brigliter Day!
(4) Make Room (or Daddy. (7) American Bandstand. 4:11 (2) Secret Storm.
(9) Adventure Time l:30 (2) Edge of Night.
(4) Here’s Hollywood . 4:45 (9) Santa Claus 6:00 (2) Movie
(4) Scoter) George Pierrot (7) Johnny Ginger (9) Jingles.
6:30 (7) Rocky and His Friends. 6:60 (9, Jac Le Goff.
TV
Features
By United Press Inlematloaal WAGON TRAIN, 7:30 p.m. (4). Myrna Fahey stars as a young woman who Is accused of murdering the son Of a town boas. Flint McCullough (Robert Horton) finds (he real killer and saves the girl.
HONG KONG, 7:30 p.m. (7). An ingenious murder plot evolves out publicity stunt that is supposed to direct attention to a glam-rous film star.
RED MKELTON, 8:30 p.m. (2). Special show presents Red with
own Ufe. a deal that cost the life of four men. Philip
Friend, Diana Decker.
(9) Movie: "A Kiss in the Dark” (1948). David Nivc^ Jane Wyman.
11:30 (4) Jack Paar
(7) Mr. and Mrs. North
George Raft, Bobby Rydel and William ‘
PERRY COMO, 9 p.m. (4). The accent is on comedy as Bob Hope visits Perry. With comedian Milt Kamen, Anne Bancroft and choreographer Peter Gennaro. (color) KTEEI, HOUR, 10 p.m. (2). “The Yum Yum Girl" stars Anne Francis and Robert Sterling in a'romantic comedy.
NAKED CITV, 10 p.m. (7). Ruth -Romon. Zina Bethune and Jack Urd star. Walda Price (Miss Roman) is angered when her fiance starts dating her daughter.
JACK PAAR, 11:30 p.m. (4).' Jack's guests are Peter Ustinov, Hermlone Gingold and Albert Dek-ker. Singer: Kay Armen, (color)
Adolf Eichmann Feels No Regret
Nazi Says Better If AIL Jews on Himmler List Had Died	^
NEW YORK (UPD-Adolf Eichmann. the Nazi accused of sending millions of Jews to their death In World War II, was quoted Tuesday as saying he had absolutely no regrets.
"I must say that I regret nothing.” Eichmann said in a bylined article in the-current Life Maga-:ine.
“I will not humble myself or repent In any way. I conld do It too chea^y In today’s climate of opinion ... no, I must say tnithfully that If we had killed all the 10 million Jews that Himmler’s statisticians originally listed In 1333, I would say ‘Good, we have destroyed an enemy.’ ”
This quotation from Eichmann’s memoirs, which Life said he dictated to a Carman newsman before his capture by Israeli agents In Buenos Aires last May 12, is from the second and concluding Installment.
A A- A Eichmann also admitted that "to tench our opponents a lesson,’ he personally ordered the infamous death march of thousands of Jews from Budapest to the German border toward the end of World War II.
He said Allied bombings had torn up the Budapest-Vlenna raU-road track, and no trains carrying Jews for the annihilation camps a^ Anschwits could get
By FRED DANXIO NEW YORK (UPD-The scrambled pieces of one of the ooU war’s most complicated and dramatic Jig-saw puzdu, “The U2 Affair,"' were nimbly put together In the first edition of a slick “NBC White Paper” production Tuesday night.
On die serious aide, the effective one-hour recapitulation of the snafU2 episode served to (Ripnize a disorganized story. It die available facts in g atraight-from - die - shoulder, easy-to-grasp dhronological Kyle.
CHURCHILL’S BIRTHDAY CAKE — This is the 85-pound birthday cake which Sir M^inston Churchill receives today on his 86th birthday. The cake is deccn-ated with a contucopia—horn of plenty—from which tumble a multitude of miniatures, all emblems connected with his career. The cake was a surprise gift from his
AP PiMtofM
bakers who spent four weeks topping the conu-c(^a with pink and white sugar. The minlatum included his bow tie, d«by hat, gtdd-topped cane, bis bnKhes and palette, his Nobd Pt^n medal and insignia of the Order of the Garter, idus many others.
Old Law Might Close New Orleans Schools
NEW ORLEANS (AP)—A continuing boycott of two integrated public schools here posed the threat today they may be sh down under a 38-year-qld law.
Combined attendance at tl two elementary schools Tuesday was eight, including the (our Negro first-graders who broke the cblor barrier Nov. 14. Eiuoll-ments before desegregation totaled 1040.
A 1922 Louisiana law says no public school may be kept open with an average attendance of 10 or less.
At the William B. Frantz school angry white mothers jousted with police in an attempt to prevent white children from entering the building; but four white pupils attended classes with a lone Negro girl.
Twenty blocks away the boy- in the lower three grades at the cott was complete at McDonogh,
No. 19. Three Negro girls, escorted by U. S. marshals, were the only pupils.
The school board may decide that any schoed with attendance of 10 or (ewer may be kept open. However, the decision must be approved by state school officials, and Shelby Jackson, Louisiana education superintendent, militant segregationist.
Ihe school board and Jackson are under federal court orders not to interfere with integration. a<^ng of the schools could be interpreted as failure to comply ■ th^ directive.
The ' segregationists their drive tor funds today to start private sdKnIs lor .students
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Eichmann said he proposed the march in order to tell the Allies, Look, it does you no good when you bomb out our railroads,
• your allies, the Jews, have to endure the consequences.”
He disfiiissed the actual number of Jews who were forced the 10-day march as "so unimportant that I have forgotten it. In any case it was less than 20,-he added everything possible was done to make the march "hy-gonic and safe.”
U.S. Civil Defen$e Chief Uncertain About Future
WASHINGTON (AP) - Leo A. Hoegh, the nation’s civil defense chief In the outgoing Eisenhower administration, said Tuesday his plans are uncertain.
”I have made no final determination as to what I will do after Jan. 20.” the former governor of Iowa said.
That Is the date on which the Democratic administration of John F. Kennedy takes office.
The 52-year-old Hoegh has been CTiarilon City attorney and Iowa att<3mey general. He served one term as governor in 1955-56.
By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — (Comedian Joey Adsuns «?as leading Police Commissioner Kennedy by 16 Interviews, eight radio orations and 27 Jokes In the great Cabaret Fingerprint War—and now, scenting -victory, Adams was opening demanding that Mayor Wagner fire his top cop. "Bring me up on charget—«ee where you’ll get !V defiantly retorted the Com-misaioner, 'whose term expires next Feb. 21.
--To(day's Radio Programs--
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4:tS—WJR. Muile Hall WWJ. Nbwi, Lynkir WXYE. lluilc CKLW, iUwt. Ottitl WJBK, MOtll WCAR, Ntwt, ShtrldU ------Carrtkff Trtdw
Demands Mayor Oust Police Commissioner
To Mayor Wagner’s protest that some cafe suspensions, for lack of employes’ cabaret cards, were severe, Kennedy replied they weren’t severe ^ough.
Hiere’ve bera telephone battles and re-WIL80N celver-slammlngs. One Broadway gag is; Kennedy’s going to make Wagner get a Mayor’s license.”
To show how the wind’s blowing. It was revealed that behind the scenes the Mayor’s proposing to Adams, as president of AOVA, a new cabaret card setup providing one-tinie permanent photographing and fingerprinting Ip a licenseing branch office in easy reach of Broadway cafe actors.
★ ★ ★
A fellow at the Algonquin asked Monte Proser how soon he’ll be opening the new Lanai Polynesian restaurant In the Winter Garden. Monte replied, "About another $100,000."
. With Perle Mesta having backed Nixon (in anger at Lyndon Johnson for rutmlng with Sen. Kennedy), Comedian Marty Allen figures that for the next four years all her shindigs will be "minority parties" . . . Henry Morgan was leaving a party with the Will Gllckmans. He turned to the host who was saying goodbye, "I’ll say It for you. I thought we’d never go.”
★ ★ ★
THE MIDNIGHT EARL ...
Is "Unslnkable” Tammy Crimes back with ex>husband Christopher Plummer? ... Kim Novak wouldn’t tell the name of her Lattn-looking esewt at the Harwyn . . . Ava Gardner and Jose Gonzales, who sounds Spanish, anyway, closed up the Camelot where they went to hear Matt Dennis . . . Bob Hope gets around pretty good for a guy who’s supposed to be resting. Went to PhlUy to catch LuciUe BaU in "WUdeat."
Jerry Lewli tricked his buddy Sam Bidner Into going to the airport with him and chat-	TAMMY
ting a while In the plane. Next thing Bidner knew, he the way to LA. Jerry and he talked about old times, then flew back home the same day, to find a limousine waiting to take him to his home In Brooklyn . ..
★ ★ ★
EARL’S PEARLS: Keying ^husband In hot water doesn't make him tender.
TODAYS BEST LAUOHt Presldent-Klect Kennedy won’t be leaving the White Honee much (figures H. Btampltf)—too tough getting a babyrsltter.
WISH I’D SAID THAT: "Unemployment'i rising," claimed a wit at Pillow Talk, "Borne N.T. cope pnly havq one Job."
Keep an open mind, says Hsuiy Toongman, and ypa*U get a lot of rubbish thrown In It... That’s ekrt, brether.
, (Oepyrlght, IfN)
S
They got a boost Tuesday idght when members of the leglslshire contributed more than $6,500 private school cooperative fund. The lawmakeca were asked to give a day’s pay—they get a day for the spiral session now under wayr-and all of the legislators chipped in. •
The legislative contributiim should boost the amount donated to the Frantz Educational Cooperative, Inc., in the past week to over $15,000. Armand J. Duvlo, president of the co-op, formed to operate a private achool, eariier sidd about $9,000 bad been re-eived.
Biggest problem facing the coop now is transportation of fourth, fifth and sixth grade Franz and McDonogh to segregated public adraols in nearby "t. Bernard Parish.
The coop is presently chartering two buses—for $150 a day— to transport more. than 200 children. However, Duvio said the group has purchased a Used bus and has obtained the use of two other vehicles.
AT PBMMUI UPSETS OONVlCnONS — Judge J. Edward Lumbard wrote the opinion by which the Circuit Court of Appeals Monday upset the prison sentences of 20 delegates to the 1957 underworid convention at Apalachin, N.Y. The three-man court was unanimous. The Kennedy administration may decide to appeal the dismissal of the convictions.
SnafU2 ^how Pressed ' ih Enlightening Fashion
for the pngram magaSftoeatly
On the lighter side, by goUy, they managed to go through the whole hour .without using that bit of U2 gobbMegwA, the word fUght."
♦ ★ ★
It was, in short, a triumphant TV hour.
Producer A1 Wasserman and Executive Producer Irving GttUn set out to do something that TV doesn’t do often enough- That Is, they gathered together loose ends in a world-shaking'news story, the pros and cons, the known and the unanswered questions, and wrapped it all into a hard-hitting, stimulating story.
It Meau that the aHeraattve OB TV la to capcalise big news la weekead nNUMlaps mr ia year-ead wrap-B|«. la the Brat la-ataaee, perspMthre la asaally aacitfleed for immediacy.
In the else of yearend wrap-ups, too often details are brushed aside in the rush to cover more ground. Here, then, was a rare instance where TV asked us to hold everything and take a long look at nne important current hlstmy.
* ★ ★
The "White Paper” made use of film clips, old and new, domestic and imported, and interviews some of the men who lived with the story in those hectic days p( and June.
since my readers know I’m prejudiced in favor of Unlt(xi Press International — they’re still handing me a pay dieck each week —I’ll come right out and say that enjoyed seeing -several col leagues, and the shop, on TV.
(For those who taaed la late, the U3 story was merely ooe of many UPl news “(Irsts.) Bill F4MZ, UPl day ■ oabto editor.
Aircrafls.Woilh Looking Into
These Issues Likely to Outperform Rest of Maricet, Says Firm
NEW YORK (UPl) - Invastors Research Co. says there are tndl-cations of a substantial flow of capital into aircraft iharea cap-aUe ot qiringboarding a major advance in this group.
coaxial Bight cable.
Narrator Chet Huntley — aho looked awful-nevertheless kept the show humming as he filled in the verbal flourishes when film couldn’t. He summed up by noting the high-level lack of coordination that plegued Washington in the U2 incident and stating that the nation could not afford another such workout.
★ * ♦
Presidential press secretary James Hagerty—a future member of the TV industry—supplied tlie only chuckle in the show. Axked what the big lesson was in the U2 story, he reidied, "d«Mi’t get caught.”
I guess that’s the best policy exercises in espionage and manipulators (rf TV quiz ahowa, but I hope impressionable youngsters who might have seen the show don’t adopt a ’’don’t get caught” code of personal conduct.
THE CHANNEL SWIM: "The Great Holiday Massacre,” a filmed record of highway accidents that occurred last Labor Day wedceml, will be the "CBS Reports” offering for Monday, Dec. 26. Film crews recorded several police chases and accidents.)during a cross-country "stake-out” last September.
The next Jack Paar apecial.
day, Jaa. si on NBC-TV, la tea-tattvely titled. ‘The Sqwre World of Jack Paar.”
A half-hour documentary dealing with featherbedding in the railroad and construction indus-
be ABC-TV’i “Ooae-Up;’’ for Friday, Dee. 9 ... Harpo Mars andhisaaoBlllwillstarindi* natic roles in ‘‘Silent Panic,” th« 'June Allyaon Show" episode f<> Thursday, Dec. 22 on C8B-TV.
★ A
badielors: Advance ■coop (or NBC-TV’s daytlnae later "Here’s HoUywdbd” reports that nejd Wednesday, "TV star dint Eastwood explains whal he meant when he said, ‘Neva marry a woman wh6 lo^ good
Investors Research gives the _roups a “staperinr” rating and calls for Its major consideratk» in the early months of 196L
General Motow continues to offer good value at inrices which are well below the prevtous high, according to the Alexander Hamilkm Institute. The present $2 annual dividend seems conservative in relation to estimated earnings, it says. Also recommends Harris-bitertype, Garrett, International Harvester and Johns-Manville.
tam of the year foUowIng alde-
United Business Service says the yearend rally should carry a little further, though any very extensive rise in stocks wiO probably have to wait for evidence tihat the remalon in business has more nearly run its course.
Martin Gilbert of Van Alstyne, Noel & Co. says tiie recent recovery movement*tappears to be meeting somewhat stronger -resistance and that he wouldn’t be surprised if the market gave up more ground in an attempt to consolidate its position.
Residents of Malta take intense pride in the fact that the Apostle Paul took refuge there In the year GO A.D. when his ship, bound to R(xne, was wrecked.
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