Th« Weather 118tb YEAR THE PONTIAC PRE Hom» Edltton ■ ftlT I960 THANKSGIVING To permit this day to be a feost-ivol insteod of a festival, is to make a travesty of Thanksgiving. After George Washington had listed the possessions of America, he wrote in 1789 urging his fellow-citizens to unite in offering prayers . . . "to enable us all, whether in private or public situations" to be punctual in both gratitude and responsi* bility. , In 1960 this is still the challenge to this bounteous lend, to share our resources with intelligent compassion. Possession is a responsibility. One man saw the huddled refugees in Asia and East Zone Europe, and prayed "Forgive me my daily bread." Thomas Oirlyle announced that we could win the allegiances of men "not by flattering their appetites, but by awakening in them the heroic." In any time, whether it is of tribulation or pro^ perity, life must be met with reverence ond the awesome awareness that we con be free. Men have b(»n enslaved by prosperity os they can be chained by their hungers. We are meant to be liberated from all of this slavery. For this free land and for this opportunity to be of service to mankind, we give our thanks. Only the truly graceful are truly strong. Ralph W.Lotw,DJ>. TWO THE PONTIAC PRKSa WKPyKSDAY. NOVEMBER 28. ROCHESTER - The Rochester Area Development Corp. (RAOCO) took giant stepl forward laat night in its program to oo ' and retain industry and iU environs. Initially, the Bharehdders adopted bylaws which will govern operation of the new corporation and provide the authority to issue 10,000 nonassessable shares common stock at $5 per share. Requests Jury for His Trial • Leaun W. Harrelton * Facet Attault* Battery I Count in Justice Court "Charged, with assault and battery, Leaun W. Harrelson, 25-year-old.son ol Pontiac Teamsters Local 614 President Leaun Harrelson, yesterday re IS-U Ml Cm prt km. kfM Isr lifkl ss4 nrlskU kr t*sl«kl T*4sr ls~P*Bll*« Xsvrit trmpsrslurs preesuint I s I seat f ' step Wrdnrulsr St l:M p m. Thursdsr si T II s m I WrdnrMtsr St IS pm !• Thuridsf SI II M p.n It T*s# a«s la PssUs* loitMi's bid for of the way. OI'l*«NKNT}i STAL Opponents of Kasavubu tried repeatedly to atall a decision by demands to adjourn the debate or defer any action on the credentials committee’s recommendation to seat Kasavubu. All attempts were voted down. The ballot climaxed two weeks of debate highlighted by bitter clashes between the United States 4) land the Soviet Union, The two ■ JJ! powers accused each other of j making a cold war lasue out of the Cbngo’s plight and exploiting I the African nation to promote Ml their own Intereats. 'The U.S.S R. has firmly backpd leftiat-leanlng Patrice Lumumba, depoaed Cbngo premier, who alao Djaent a delegation to the United Cameroon, Chad, Congo (Brazzaville), Dahomey, Gabon, Ivory Coast, Malagasy, Niger and Senegal. Six African stales voted against. They were United Arab Republic, Ghana, Guinea. Mali, Monxco and Togo. Seven others—Central Africun Republic, .Somalia. Sudan, Tunisia, Ethiopia, Liberia, and Libya — abstained. Nigerki and ■ pper Volta did not vote, u k k The decision to seat Kasavubu received added impact when the 15-natlon Aslan-Afrlcnn conciliation mission decided just before la ISII TstM Alpena Milmort Kmarck iraantirlUe Cnieaao Clnclonsti Kasavubu issued t la isssjpxiiniaati^ satisfaction over the r'a TMsmiat* chaH_ iasembly’s decision to seat him. « 5 iiuaurtu* «s J? H' rxP«’*»rti hope that his dele-« « « 8 MtTvsukw M M retaryOnersI Dag Hammar- 8 s « s and th 8 8 onTaha"* « M Commlttae ta try 8 M rrtutOT ,11 js the warring factions togeiher in !his chaotic stale. “ a sta’MsS " "SS; 8 « and the U.N. CoiMo Ad- IT"* ?! J! visory Commtttae ta try to bring K... II Or-iupuii M » j! The vote highlighfed the wide- " l£<«!k*aoBviii* w 3, Trar citr u >« opcn' split in the African bloc on S 8 Congo. ' Mali, one of the African states opposing Kasavubu, .served notice after the vote that it was out of the conciliation Guinea served notice earlier that it would do the same. TV mission switched Its plans after Kasavubu sent a letter to llammarKkjold objecting to sending the roncMiatlon group to the Congo at this time. Delegates predicted, however, that Kasavu^ would probably relax his position now that he haa seated at head of his delegation. lite was in orMt. A NASA statement said: tial calculations show a perigee of 415 statute mllei and ag of 435 miles. The orMtal pi 1 98 minutes ” This is very cipse lo the oi4>lt sought. it it it The variation of only 30 miles between the near point and far point of the orbit indicated that the satellite te in the moat nearly circular orbit of any satellite yet launched. Hw remarkably regular orbit alM would Indicate a relatively long Hie for the oaMHIe. Two television cameras in the itelUte were expected to start ling back photos of cloud cov-about 1:30 a.m. Weathermen uae them in preparation of actual forecasts. lag to be seat ta aeedy people sons, Robert and Richard; and' eight grandchildren. Her body wiU be at the William Vasu Funeral Home, Royal Oak, until 9:30 p.m. tomorrow. Raise Carver School Taxes May Challenge Legality of Action by Oak Park Board of Education Mildred G, Ritter, associate organist ol the church, will be organist tor the service. The United Omreh Women of Birmingham will meet at 9:45 s.m. Dec. 3 at die First Methodist Church to elect officers lor ttte coming yesr. Special emphasia will be given at the meeting to fellowibip of prayer, in anticipation of the 75th anniversary ot the United Chureh Parishioners M Our Lady of the Ukes Catholic Church. Waterford Town.ship, Will celebrate Mass at 9 a.m. b A ♦ The Rev. Alexander T. Stewart will preach at the service ot prbyer at 10 a.m. in AH 5laints Episcopal Church. ★ ♦ ♦ A member of the staff at AH Saints, the Rev. Mr. Stewart rector at the newly organized Church of the Resurrection Ctarkston. ★ * ♦ Holy Communion will be celebrated at 10 a.m. st Christ Cliurch Cranbrook. the World Day of Prayer Feb. 17. 1961. Conductii« this part of the program will be Mrs. R. C. Scott, of the First Presbytertan Church. Mrs. NeweU Allen of the hort church, wlU speak on “United Church Women — Who We Are And What We Do.” Mrs. Maaley A. Carter Service for Mrs. Stanley (Mildred) A. Carter. 63, of 1585 Lone Pine Road, Bloomfield Hills, wiU be 10 a.m. Friday at Kirk In the Hills. Burial will be in Woodlawn Cemetery. Mrs. Carter died yesterday In William Beaumont Hospital. Royal Oak, after a short illness. Mrs. carter was active In the Starr Commonwealth, the United Foundation and a member of the board of Pontiac General Hospital. She la survived by her husband, two daughteri. Mrs. John Cannon and Mrs. Robert Hawkins; two Although the legality of its ar- . tion may be challenged, the Oak Park Board of Education last night decided to raise taxes in the recently dissolved Carver School District. Property owners in the Carver diaftrict. which was annexed to the Oak Park School District Nov. 10. win be required to pay a 6.83-mill debt retirement levy. Aaat School Supt. Dr. Law-renen i. Valade oaM today the tax la levied to pay off p debt of 819JU,aM for new school hnUdtago constrnclcd in Oak Park aince INI. Oak Park |«x>perty owners pay the tax and since the two districts were merged, the board decided that taxes should be handled as if it were one district, Valade said. The board of education has no opinion concerning the legality of the tax since there hasn’t been a ruling by the State Attorney General's office on the merger en-by the Oakland County Board of Education. Valade said the Oak Park Army Mak«s St. Laurent Sicker Than Realized PARIS (AP) — Yves Matthieu Saint-Laurent, the Dior fashion designer who suffered a nervous cullapac after his recent military induction, has left the anny and it in a private clinic, a Dior spokesman said today. His illness Is more serious has been realized, the Dior sp man Mid. The money was owed for tuition payments for Carver students who attended Detroit high schools. Ciuver students were left without a high school to'attend when Detroit would not admit them this Attachment of the Carver district to Oak Park was the county board of education’s solution to the problem. * A * The millage for debt retirement, if levied, yould bring school taxes in the Carver district to 32.25 mills for each Jl.OOO of assessed valu- pay M.8t mills for operattaK cwto while Oak Park lertes 18.28 per IIJN for operation. Total lax rate in Oak Park is 35.70 mills per $1,000 of assessed The deadline for notification of tax levies was Sept. 1. but the Oak Park Board says it is justified in making notification before Dec. 1 since the merger was not made until November. Just one shave with a NEW Schick 3 Speed and you’ll never be satisfied with any other razor! 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(DataUi ra rtn t) Hon»~ r Edition 118th YEAR ir ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1960—20 PAGES Claims State f Has Favorable [ Industry Climate Development Leaders of Area Hear Michigan Boosted by Econ. Head By PETE LOCHBILER ROMEO—Michigan has a good climate for industry, a group of community development leaders were told here yesterday at a iimrkshop sponsored by the Michigan Economic Development Department (MEDD). "Our state has a tremendous wealth of advantages for indastry, but our peope don't talk about them enoggh,’’ said Don Weeks, MEDD director. Speaking before nearly 100 representatives from the Thumb, North Oakland County and Pontiac, ^ Weeks scorned pessimism in the ^ face of the adverse publicity about Michigan business conditions the past two years. He listed these factors as the igaa’s Industrial future: 1. The state's big concentration of markets for industrial and consumer goods. 2. An easily trainable and highly productive supply of labor. 3. Abundant sources of raw and semifinished materials. 4. Abundant fresh water. 5. "An unmatched supply of production know-how, in both management and labor ranks." 6. Production service facilities such as tool and die makers, machine repair shops, metal treating and finishing operations. IM PLANTS EXPAND "Manufacturers now located in Michigan realize what this means in their own business and this explains why more than 200 plants have expanded their facilities in Michigan so far this yehr,” Weeks said. "It explains why General Motors Corp. plans to spend more than a half-billion dollars in Michigan next year.” The day-long session followed the pattern of workshops sponsored throughout the state for the past three years, said Weeks. It was the first one held near the Detroit Metropolitan Area. HUDDLE OVER FIOURES-Representatives of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce huddle over industrial figures at yesterday’s workshop sponsored by the Michigan Economic Development Department in Romeo. Seated are Edward L.. Karkau (left) and Mark Harper. Standing are James P. Dickerson (left), chairman of the cham^)er’8 sub-committee on industrial development, and James F. Spence. Area Churches to Pause in Spirit of Thanksgiving Speakers described the various kinds of industrial development confmrtttees and corporations which have been set up in much bf Northern Michigan. The aim of these organizations is to attract new industry and aid existing Industry. "The basic purpose of the whole program is to create jobs,” said Weeks. A delegation from the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commereo, beaded by James Dlckersoa, chairman of the subcommittee on Industrial development, was In attendance, stud^ag the possl-Wnty of an Industrial develop-mcat corporation here. Organization and financing of various types of profit and nonprofit corporations was discussed, as well as various methods by which such organizations could OUTLINE SERVICES Several speakers outlined financial and advisory services available on state and federal levels. Other speakers, besides Weeks, were: Kenneth R. Houck, district representative of the MEDD; Benjamin F. aark, the itate's industrial agent in ttae Chicago, ni. area; Harris K. Miller, assMant chief of the MEDD's industry service division. , WIIHam F. Jewell, regtdaal area davelopment specialist at the UJS. Departmcfit at Cam-meree; Paul M. ReM, executlva direriar of the Detroit Metro- riaa; Robert Lebmaa, chief at the Inveatment dIvlaioH of the Detroit reglaaal office of t h e Harold T. Smith, president of the Michigan Equity Corp.; GcMge Ctllln, director of the area develop ment division of the Detroit Edison Cd.; and Richard Warfel, Detrott manager of the MEDD, mbiun BMIM lasUUsUaa. Cut baW i m u -MirVaiiair CO, n s-Mta By MARY ANGLE.MIER Church Editor, The Pontiac Press Pontiac residents will follow the pattern of our pilgrim fathers in observing Thanksgiving Day by gathering in churches and chapels ,to offer prayers of praise and sing hymns of gratitude. 10 a.m. tomorrow at First Methodist Church, South Saginaw and Judson streets. The annual service of Thanksgiving sponsored by the Pontiac Pastors’ Association will be held Preaiding and leading the responsive reading will be Rev. F. William Palmer of Auburn Heights United Presbyterian Church. TTie Rev. Lyal H. Howision of First Free Methodist (Hiurch will This Thanksgiving Chore Is Siricily ior ihe Birds By HAL BOTLE NEW YORK (AP)—Cooking the Thanksgiving turkey Is Carving It—as everyone knows—is the real art. When the family has a turkey dinner In a restaurant, everything goes according to Hoyle. Everyone takes the portion dished out to him without complaint, and no one questions the chef’s Impartiality, judgment or skill. if it ir But when the family has a turkey dinner at home, chaos and rebellion—murmured or shouted-reign from the moment the bird arrives on the table. The one who reluctantly agrees to do the carving becomes the loneliest human being in the world. He Is one who stands In crisis, ringed by critics. He knows he Is in a situation which he' can't win. DON’T GIVE HER THAT WING! He la bound to give somebody too much light meat or too little dark meat. He endows with a section of drumstick one who passionately yearned for a wing. The wonder Is that anyone can bo found to do the Job. But there Is always a victim, willing or unwilling. Here are' some types of turkey carvers you’ve probably seen yourself at family Thanksgiving Day dinners: 1. The Poor Workman—He always begins hy blaming his tools. "This knife Isn’t sharp enough,’’ be says, "and this knife has too long a blafle. This knife doesn’t have enough tensile strength. ITiis knife doesnt—.’’ 2. The Brusque Matriarch—"Oh, give me that knife before you cut yourself,” she says as her hapless husband makes a first tentative thrust. She slices and serves with bold confidence, knowlQg the guests cannot, cavil too loudly at the cook. t. The Unwary Volunteer—He offers to do the carving, but when he rises and sees the big steaming brown turkey surrounded by hungry. Impatient critics he gets buck fever. The knife slips from his fingers, and the hostess has to rush in a replacement. if it it 4.^ The Artful Host—He InvltM a brain surgeon as guest, piles him with three quick martinis, then, when the turkey Is ready, extends the knife and says, "Okay, doc, the patient Is ready." In any case, whoever he Is, the carver Is the real hero of any family Thanksgiving feast. He Is ths one who always gets tbs bird. PRESIDENT'^ PROCLAMATION The Rfv. Harry Schlosscr of Northeast Community Church will give the President's proclamation and the Rev. Charles Colberg of St. John Lutheran Church will read the Scripture lesson. Offering the pastoral prayer will be the Rev. Amoa Johnson of New Bethel BapHst Church. The Rev. Paul T. Hart of the boat church will pronounce the benediction. LaVeme Cox will be organist, with Merlin Asplin directing the choir. Neighborhood services sponsored by the association include prayer and preaching by the Rev. Richard Stuckmeyer at Grace Lutheran Oiurch, 10 a.m.; services with sermon by the Rev, Frank Brannon of Aldersgate Methodist Church at 10 a.m. in Covert Methodist Church; and at 11 a.m. worship hour at Trinity Baptist Church with the Rev. Thomas Holt Jr. of New Hope Baptist Church preaching. At 7:4S tonight, the Rev. Arihnr Baider of the Incarnate Word Lutheran Church will preach at the annual Thanks-giring Service In Auburn Heighta United Presbyterian Church. Participating In the service will be the Rev. Henry Powell of Elmwood Methodikt, the Rev. George Kibbe of White Shepherd Church, the Rev. Theo Mosiea of Leach Road Community Church and the Rev. A. E. Potbury, re-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) It's Day Off for Most in Pontiac Tomorrow Most of Pontiac will be observing Thanksgiving as a^ holiday tomorrow. Banks, stores and governmental agencies win be closed tor the day. Pontiac Motor Division will give most workers the day off, hut they’ll be reporting back Friday aa At OMC Truck * Conch Dlvl-rion a four-day hoUday la In alore ft»r many prodnetkm workers. Cooefc production wiU reoumo Friday, however. Banks and governmental agencies will be observing normal bouri Friday. Moat downtown stores will bt open until 9 p.m. Friday pnd Saturday and every day exc^ Sim-day until Chriatmaa. Statement a Slap at Red China Russians Still for Coexistence Willman Hopes Tax Hike Won't MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet UnioB, in a tough rejoinder to its critics within the Chmmunist camp, today declared peaceful coexistence still a controlling principle in its policies. The declaration in Pravda indicated very hard bargaining on Communist world tactics is still going on in the Red summit meeting here that ha.s been in prog-for two weeks, though some Only two days ago the offirlal Propto'i Dally of Peiping, In an evident ntinrk on Soviet Premier Khrushchev’s theories of peaceful coexistence and the possibility that World War HI may not be Inevitable, declared it was an Illusion to think communism can get along with Imperialism. lodge. 'Giving Thought' to Recount on Judgeship Peiping, in the role of atandpat revolutionism, called for all-out Communist backing for revedu-tionary movements in underdeveloped countries. It urged, however in a seeming mood for compromise, that Communists "turn to the possibility of averting world war into a reality. " AGAINST A ARMS The Pravda. article also de. ■lared that banishing of nuclear weapons still was a controlling principle in Soviet policy. In a separate interview with Khrushchev on disarmament, it quoted him ns saying the Soviet Union would accept any type of controls if an agreement ii reached for general and complete disarmament. He denounced Weotero Ideas Sen. L. Harvey Lodge, defeated by a margin of 694 votes for probate judge, said he was “giving some thought” to a recount following completion of the countywide canvass by the board of canvassers yesterday. Lodge, who gave up a chance for re-election as state senator to run for the new two-year probate judgeship term, has until 5 p.m, day to make up his mind, according to Clerk - Register Daniel T. Murphy Jr. The two-week canvass by, the three-member board produced no reversals from the unofficial re-turns released by Murphy following the Nov. 8 election. But some of the margins were narrowed and, some cases, widened. Today was the deadline for counties to submit their official canvassed returns to the state. Oakland canvassers Carlos G. Richardson, Mrs. William S. Dixon and Mrs. Paul Gorman wrapped up hours of poring over thousands of figures late yesterday afternoon. It was the first canvass for Mrs. Dixon of Royal Oak, and Mrs. Gorman of Pontiac, recent appointees to the board. Richardson, the board chairman ?rvcd six years. In the closest race. Lodge trailed Waterford Township Justice of the Peace Donald E. Adams 75,556 to 76,350, The unofficial returns showed the margin at 178. "I'm going to talk to some people and then decide," Lodge said. About $1,55&—$5 for each of the 1 precincts — would have to be raised should Lodge request the recount. State law provides six days in which to demand one. In the second closest race, that between Rep. S. James Clarkson, D-Southfield, and Raymond L. Baker for the District 4 state representative seat, the margin remained the same at 1,315 as reported the day following the election. Baker unseated incumbent Clark- "I have never considered and will not now consider a recount, Clarkson said. FOUR ERRORS Murphy explained that "a big part" of the narrowing of the Lodge - Adams margin resulted from errors in two City of Pontiac precincts, one in Pontiac Township and one in Royal Oak city. The official canvass gives Republican Candida!:^, from Vice President Richard M, Nixon and Henry ttnbot Ix>dfe on down, more votes than they received In the county count on election night. Murphy attributed the difference, more than 1.000 in most instances, to the failure to record the Repub-licdh tallies for one entire town-ship or city on the tabulating machine designated for the GOP column in the courthouse. The canvass detected the oversight. he said. The final tally for Sen. John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson 1.35.531 and for the Nixon-Lodge ticket it was 162.026. The unofficial showed 135.5T7 to 159,890, or 2,136 more for the Republican candidates. Surgery for Hoot Gibson LAS VEGAS. Nev. (UPD-Cow-iMy actor Hoot Gibson, 66, today undergoes his second operation In 12 days for an abdominal obstruction at -Southern Nevada Memorial Hospital. Holiday Edition So that itii employei may obBerve the Thanka-giving holiday with their families. The Press will publish a ainglc, early edition tomorrow. -Normal edition t i m e ■ will be resumed Friday. Nice Weather to Stay Around Little Longer If his proposals on general and complete disarmament were accepted, he -said, he was ready to trust even the "wildest haters of communism and socialism" to work out control methods. He attacked the Western attitude toward putting neutral slates on Ihe lO-nation disarmament negotiations committee. Thanksgiving Day will be somewhat cloudy with temperatures again in the 50s, the weatherman says. For the next five days temperatures will average 4 to 6 degrees above the normal high of 41 degrees. Precipitation will total less than one-tenth of an inch with brief showers Saturday night and probably again Monday. TTiirty was the lowest recording in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a m. At 2 p.m. the reading was 48. To Close Shipping DETROIT '(UPD—The Bradley Transportation Line and the plants of Michigan Lime.stone Division of United States Steel will close (li! 1960 shipping sea.son this week. In Today's Press Comics ....................IS Editorials ................6 Markets ..................14 Obituaries.................14 Pet Doctor ................7 Sports ................10-12 Theaters ............... 4-5 TV and Radio Programs—19 Wilson, Earl ..............If Women’s Pages ............8-9 Be Necessary before the U.N. political committee, ho»vever, saying theae proposed controls, not dtsarma- Record budget proposals totaling $6,612,342 for 1961 were under study by the City Commission today. The spending program would require about a one-mill tax increase if the city’s 1961 assessed valuation faHs to rise significantly. --Buu mty Manager Walter K. Willman foresaw the poasibility of an increase in values becauw of home and industrial expansion this year. Submitting hig budget nioMB- The 1961 proposals are $435,124 higher than those in the 1960 budget. Pay raises account for about $300,000 of the increase, Willman "They are afraid,” he said, that the representatives of neutral nations will see with their own eyes who is for diaarmament The statement on coexistence was in an editorial which spoke for the -Soviet delegation at the summit meeting here. But in keeping with past pra< tices there was no mention of the fact such a conference is in prog- "niese are the increases you authorized when adopting the new pay plan In September.” Willman told the commission. "I have added no pay increases of my own in these proposals." It would take about a 1.1 mill levy on PonHac’s I960 asaeased valuation Just to raise the $300,-000. The valuation this year was 1381.153,300. The Soviet Union ha.s been under fire from the Chinese Communists and certain other Communist organizations for seeking workable living arrangements with the Western powers. Nevertheless Pravda’s statement, coining on Ihe heels of the article In Ihe Peiping People* Dally. Indicated that the debate is still continuing and on a very tough basts. "One of the questions agitating the whole of mankind today." said Pravda. "is the question of preserving and ronsolidating peace, the question of preventing a new war. • 'The entire course of developments in recent years has confirmed the proposition of the declaration of 1957 and the peace manifesto that the forces of peace have grown so much in our time that it is quite possible to prevent war." The Hard Way ANTtERS AWAY — Mliaourl Humane Society Supt. Jack Norris (center) directs the rgmoval of a statriy buck from St. Louis’ Chain-of-Rocks waterworks Tuesday. 'TIm animal wu hoisted over the fence surroundtng the park by a makeshift sling rigged on a crane. After rewnie the deer loped off toward the Mississippi River. )( \ A $435,125 Rise Is Duo Mostly to Approved Increases in Pay noted that pay raises accounted for almost three-quarters of the Offsetting this is the fact that the city has been granting about $100,000 In cost-of-living raises in previoas years, during which it has been able to maintain the current 13.27 mill tax rate. RAISES ABSORBED Cost-of-living raises plus normal increases In operating expenditures mounting, on the average, to around $100,000 to 5150,000 a year have been absorbed the past four years under the 13.27 rate. This Is because I valuation has risen surflcientl.y lo bring In the needed tax revenues without upping the rale. But the propo.sed increa.se in spending next year ,s about S?©.-over the usiwl huds?t hikes. To support his spending plan. Willman said $4,054,300 woujd haw to be raised in property taxes, about $335,705 more than this year. Included in the proposed lax levy Is 31,015,690 for capital Improvements, 1310,901 tor waste collection and 3171,173 tor the retirement of Pomiae Cteneral The 1960 budget, as amendied, totaled $6,177,218. An extra $52,000 mu adde . j j * placed last year by coffee and tea Railroads carried f^^r passen-j|;^^,,^^ NEW YORK (AP)—The Cunard|8f’^ ***“ i"jsumers of the pleasures and bene- liner Britannic sails on her last 1895. Ifits of their products. 1 transatlantic voyage on Friday. "I can't tell you how sorry I am she has to go. She's the greatest ship in the world,” said John Dacey. 69. a refrigerator oiler aboard the Britannic since her maiden voyage to New York in Tht^ ship, last of the old British White Star liners, is heading for Cobh, Ireland, and her last port of call—Liverpool, where she wiU be wrecked. Dacey. wearing grimy work Watch for BImM WUdiy. Gnia Ncatral Spiriu. M Pnof. SetMaWy Diitillwt Ca, N.Y.& your wings UNDER FOUR DOLLARS (and great) Pontiac America's leading local airline starts serving your city DBCBMBBIt 1st North Central Airlines is heading your way — with fast, daily scheduled service. Your community is part of the expanded Route of the Northliners in Michigan, Ohio and Uanada, increaaing our route system to 6,896 miles over 10 Midwest states and across the Canadian border — 90 cities in all. We look forward to bringing you a service which has made North C^tral America’s leading local airline — first in its class in passengers, mail and cargo. b I NORTH CENTRAL ^ . AIRLINES _ *» HI MimiMota • North C lllind* • Indian! • • South DakoU • Nabraska • )Viicofl«in > Michigan • Ohio and Ontario, Canada. ■J NOW IN MICHIGAN: Red Satin by Schenley -the most remarkable buy in whisky today! \-' I {*3.93^5 quart. *2A8 pint. • • LAST TIMES TONIGHT • • Lono Turner ^’PORTRAIT IN BLACK" Avo Gordner 'THE NAKED MAJA" Starts THURS. Fint SlMW 11A.M. EXCLUSIVE! FIRST RUN! e e SHOWING e e THE UNTOUCHABLE ERNEST COP” Borgnine you’re trapped in its tangled terror! Surging Item the peges nf 4 I CRONIN S J Nwl ol PASSION end PORSlilV .■ ... .. I THE PONTIAC PRESS, WKDX»iSPAV..yOVKMBKR 23. I960 FIVKv^ Court Date Set Dec. 6 lor Former WAF Examination in Detroit Federal Contt has Jjecn set for Dec. 6 for Mrs. Sandra Hisaw, accused by the Federal Qureau of Investigation of stealing $2,400 from the Travis Air Force Base near San Francisco. The 23-year-old woman was arrested by the FBI Monday at the Waterford Township home of her mother. She appeared yesterday before Federal Judge John Feikens to answer to the charge in a federal warrant that shb took the money while serving as bookkeeper at the base. She is a former WAF who served at the base for two years. Thief Will Find Out Crime Doesn't Pay Hie victim of a local thief told sheriff's' deputies yesterday that the criminal will pay for his crime ■on Thanksgiving. ★ ★ ★ In fact, Albert Franks. 1397 Auburn Road, Pontiac Township, believes the theft will completely ruin the thief's holiday for him-* ♦ ★ ITie thief made off with two geese from a pen at the rear of his home. ★ ★ ★ Both are five years old, and th« holiday meal will be a "bit tough’ to down, Franks explained td deputies, Area Regidentg View Sight Find Sky Object Only Tin Foil A huge luminous si^t sky over much of the Midwest between 6 and 6:30 a.m. today was a shower of tin foil dropped by Jet planes in a radar reception test. It took a lot of sifting of contro-dictory mports and theories, but weather and aviation experts finally agreed on the tin foil explanation shortly before noon today. For awhile this morning, exeil-ed Pontiac area resldenls kept poll<-e switchboards bMsy. "The calls were coming in so fast I couldn't take care of them," said Corp. John Benzer of the I Pontiac Stated Police Post. Flying saucers are not. within (when most'of the sightings were' theirealm of study at the obseiva-^made, the Tiros satellite was overi tory, jthe sea. | Kresge Wins Award j PHILADELPHIA (JB-Staniey S.l Kresge, president of the Kresge { Foundation at Detroit, was pre-| aented a St. George Award herej {TueiMiay fair distinguished service > the Methodist Church. __________ that time that could|by Kalamazoo, Mich.; Des Moines, have accouqted for the reportedjlowa; St. Louis, and Dayton, Ohio. y, luly's longest river; the Po, 'We know of no natural astro-j Reports of the object came from *’^^”*** miles, activity or phenomenon .Ohio to Iowa, in an area bounded at thi ......... objects," said the spokesman. ★ ★ ★ As soon as reports began pouring in over a four-state area, aviation and weather experts as well as scientific sources started coming up with explanations. The tin toM theory was oaly of several explanatic The object was seen as tar east Geveland. The glow was described variously as a comet, flare, satellite with h tail, rocket, a full moon with a tail, and a flying saucer. Kennedy Sells Home , Therc’werc’ot'hirob'j^s in the Smart Georgetown I sky to attract the attention of WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi-Mrs. aay Blair of 451M W. Wal-jO*>-*«‘>'''P«- dent-Elect John F. Kennedy's ton Blvd.. Waterford Township, ^ weather balloon was in m,. fashionable George- saw the objects at about 6:18. launched at 4:50 a.m. EST from| town section of Wa.shington today "I watched it for about eight Falls. S. D., and a Tirps III was reported sold to an unidenti-minutes. It was white and didn't wared southeast-1 ,led purchaser, have much of a tail at first. Then Atlantic from Cape! a spokesman for the real estate the tail swept way out and anoth-*^™''®‘'al ** a.m., about the'firm which handled the sale de- er object appeared, ' she said. !**me the foil drop was seen. |dined to give details of the trans,u Her reac^ was typical of most.' The balloon was in Western Iowa action. i She called state police to report! ti^KEEGO BMGRonr GWN npw mmmKi HIGH TIME PLUS Exciting 2nd Feature SPECIAL MATINEE THANKSGIVING DAY DOORS OPEN 1:30 THANK^^GIVING SPECIALS FULL COURSE DINNERS Turkey .................... $2.25 : Ham ...................... $2.00 : Chicken Family Style $2.25 : Regular Chicken Dinner $1.50 'something in the skj." Pontlar PoHce Lt. Harry Nyo | actually saw the whole show, and , had the presence of mind to oh- | serve It thmngh Mnoculnrs. When asked if he had heard any reports of a flying object he re-j plied, "Heard them! I saw them, and there wasn't one, there were two." ! went out to warm up my car at about 6:15 and saw this white glow in the sky so I went back into the house and get my binoculars "Hirough the eye glasses it looked like a big white ball with a sheet of flame coming off it and (vapor trailing behind. The tail I wasn't straight. It was cone shaped land bent," said Nye. A spokesman at the McMalh-Hntbeit Observatory, a reliable j source of sclenttftr expinnniion I at Lake Angelus, could give no I natural cause lor the objects. WOW! EXCLUSIVE FIRST SHOWING FE 2-1000 ittt liM__________ S. Ttkgraph at Sqwort Ukt Rd. MICHIGJUf'S MOST FABULOUS TEAB-BOUNO DBIVE-IN THEATEB FOR YOUR COMFORT WE HAVE THE MOST ADVANCED AND HOTTEST FREE! - ELECTRIC In-Car HEATERS - FREE! GUARANTEED TO KEEP YOUR CAR WARM IN ALL KINDS OF WEATHER IF EVER A MOTION PICTURE BLURTED OUT THE PRIVATE TRUTHS THAT LIE IN THE DARK BETWEEN MAN and WOMAN- ___________ . MCfUUIISBUEY , SHIKUYIIMGNT mtlilEEKHlSOlVnie-PHINEYPAmi . ' MsskkfHuSlitMr • luH m IM play by RH.LIAU INGE . Pri4soi4 M Rm Mift br SAMT-SUSeER as4 ELM KAZAN by MCMAEL eAMlSON • Dirictsd by DELBERT MANN ' TECHNICOLOf^ A^hEstj reWoF ItHEOUTUW’ A DAY rocru WfV« fOHOiTli __ basn^Pj-^ ^ Tlw Most FMtRd MMrs Who Em Took Om a Town-AiM Hs WoumnI NOW! EXCLUSIVE FIRST RUN! Sutpqnsa Promo! TODAY! The Turkey Chase Has to Be Called Off! I Todoy we received word from The Humane Society fhof our plona I for the Turkey Chose tonight were not consistont with their | policies , . . ond they asked us to "Coil It Off." -We Will Givo the Tnrkoys Aiyay as Ooor Prizes! BIG 8AM AND HIS SEATTLE PLEASURE PALACE DOLLI He was bringing"Angei”as a gift for his partner, George...but somewhere between Seattle and Nome, Big Sam fell for her... and that's when the fun-fillod adventure begins... and it’s a riotous comedy I IMPORT AM NOTICE!: The Management urges you to see “MIDNIGHT LACE" from the beginning to fully enjoy this suspense dromol Please don't reveal the shocking surprise ending . . . Features ot 1:10 -3:14- 5:16-7:22-9:30. NOW, FEAR POSSESSED HER AS LOVE OSCE HAD! I .SlEWART iRXHTO _________________________ LEE MAHINMARTIN RACKINCLAUOE BINVON •ASeOON THC MLAV-amTHOAVSirrSV lamzlo podow pmom an ioka mv john aapka 1 , * >iO»TMTO»L»8Ka - ALSO - . . . FIRST PONTIAC SHOWING! MiillAMSOONNIi6A|-GnilRUSMNNiNfiEI*IICIIM^ / / T “ /' FREE!IN-CAR HEATERS T DORIS DAY-REX HARRISON JOHN GAVIN IN A nO*« MUNTRU-ARWIN PMOOUCTION MYRNA LOY - RODDY McDOWALL HERBERT MARSHALL • NATASHA PARRY JOHN WILLIAMS w.IN HERRMNE lAODELEY HEXMOMi GET THE KIDS OUT OF THI HOUSE^ WHILE YOU AM PREPAKING THAT WONDERFUL THANKSGIVING DINNER SEND THEM TO OUR SPECIAL— THAmiWV MORlIlNG CAMDON COMEDy fiESTiKV. Fovorie* Cartoon CkorocNrs ALL IN COLOR pockod io Me bif 2 boor frofroM TOMORROvJ^OWMING ot tho STRAND THEATER Ar 10:00 A.M—Omts Opaa 9:10 A.M. ^ AULKlDSlBJ Rf''jbiAR MaTinu Ao'ymssioh Pri:e foR Aol/ltS T THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 Wot Huron Street WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 23. 1960 lAKOLD A. nTZOIKALO •MNtMy Md Miter Adrtrtlilai Dinetor Inn U Tiutwiu. OaOMI C. IMMW. Convention Locations Compete for Business Naturally, this newspaper is sympathetic with Detroit’s attempt to capture a liberal share of the convention business of the country. . We favor our neighbors. That’s normal. ★ ★ ★ At the same time, having .seen Chicago’s new McCormick Place and then having read of the squabbles and deficiencies in the Detroit setup, we warn our good friends and neighbors that they’re up against a well organized, smooth • running aggregation of veterans. This Windy City group is really "in the know.” They were national champions when Detroit hardly knew what conventioas were. Organization men over there say they’re about 80% taken for the next 18 month.s. ★ ★ ★ Exhibitors in Detroit have squawkbd to the high heavens about exorbitant labor prices. No one is getting gouged in Chicago. Also, the American Legion turned Detroit c(rfd because of insufficient hotel capacity. This costs $8 million. That isn’t hay. ★ ★ ★ Chicago has probably never lost a convention for either one of these reasons. Our hearts and sympathy are with our Michigan neighbors. But they haVe a long, stern row ahead. New York has the drop on the whole North American continent, convention-wise. Gotham is the glamour city. She packs the big punch. The rest of them have to pick up where she . leaves off. That makes it especially tough for the rest of the cities accktng the convention trade. ★ ★ ★ Detroit’s Cobo Hall is actually bigger than Chicago’s McCormick Place. But McCormick Place is away to a flying start with a firm list of dates that can Incite envy and admiration. Cobo Hall may well be the grandest building of them all, but the ancient theory about the best mouse trap in the depths of the forest has been ex ploded for decades. of this aid would be in the form of loans it 5 per cent interest but there also would be interest free loans and grants. Rates on loans would be geared to the borrower’s ability to pay. ★ ★ ) ★ To help stabilize the West’s economy, Bonn’s central bank has moved to discourage the flow of Investment dollars and gold from the United States and other countries to Germany. Following the lead of Britain and Belgium the bank has reduced its Interest rate from five per cent to four per cent. The higher rate drew too much money from abroad. President Eisenhower’s order bringing home families of servicemen in Germany and elsewhere will also stem the flow of U.S. money and narrow the dollar gap. Our total military expense in Germany alone i.s about $600 million annually. ★ ★ ★ It is unlikely that Undersecretary of State Dillon and Secretary of the Treasury Anderson will face insurmountable difficulties. Dr. Aden-Aun’s loyalty and support of the Western alliance guarantees that. West Germany Moves to Aid World Economy At the urging of the United States. West Germany has worked out a plan whereby Bonn wQuld increase Its foreign aid contributions. The program will be discussed in that city with Secretary of the Treasury Anderson and Undersecretary of State Dillon on their Nov. 21 visit! Germany has made a miraculous recovery since the war due to the victors’ renunciation of reparations and occupation charges as well as the industry of the people themselves. The Allies also made grants and loans to help rebuild the country. ★ ★ ★ ■ Now that prosperity has been achieved with a favorable trade balance running around two billion dollars a year and accumulated reserves of gold totaling more ^ than seven billion dollars, it’s time Germany coqtributed her a h a r e to help Underdeveloped countries. In the meantime Ammrica's balance of trade has declined to an annual deficit of four billion dollars and gold reserves arc dwindling steadily. ★ ★ ★ In the past Germany’s modest foreign aid program has been largely tied to German exports but with Increasing prosperity, Dr. Ludwig Erhard, minister of economy, now advocates loans to be used to buy goods in any part of the world. The West German Republic propoecB to expand its sksrc ef the Waat’s burden to on# biUion doi-a lara over a ^ivc year period. Part .Voice of the People ^Children Should Realize Importance of ReUgwn' lA regards to Bible mading and payer to start classroom acdvitles In schools. It would seem that a decision of dispensing with thU enUrely "t , U trampling underfoot the very principles which this great country was foiBKied. How harmful is it to InstiU in the youth of today the importance of these principles that have been the life's blood of America? ★ ★ ★ God has (down throogh BiUe of their devotloB aad dependeaee crvoial Umeo the Ualted Staleo that la tl aeedo Ood'o help aad galdaaoe If adults of today cannot see the importance of Gk)d and His divinely inspired word as our greatest source of strength and principles and instill it in our youth, then we had better stop singing "God Bless America" and hope He’ll have mercy on us when the Ix^bs start falling. PhylHs HIrks Bloomfirld Hill.s It’ll Take a Bit of Doing David Lawrence Says: Big Cities Control U.S. Election The Man About Town Pontiac on Line of Underground Railway in Days of ^uthern Slavery Comics; Cigarette and beer claims on radio and TV. After an exhaustive study, and as a Civil War centennial, Mrs. Blanch B. Coggan of East Lansing is putting together a history of the "underground railway” through Michigan, by which slaves from the Southern states were smuggled into Canada. It had developed Into an elaborate system, both before and after Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation. Pontiac’s early history shows that our city was one of the stops, others being at Battle Creek and Port Huron. The Pontiac refuge was'in the basement of a home on Williams St., where they were bunked and fed. 4- Proof that our winters are slower In arriving is furnished by that Inveterate keeper of the facts. Harman L. Johannes of Pontiac Trail, who remembers that in the early part of the century we usually had skating for Thanksgiving. Remember that Verbal Orchids are restricted to golden weddings or more and 80th birthdays or The old days of the movie serial will always stir recollections for Mn. Alfred Smithling Sr., of 5i330 Mlddlebelt Road. FOrty-slx years ago one was running at the old RlAlto Theater in Pontiac, and Mrs. Smlthling's mother gave birth to her one hour after seeing the final episode. In a forthcoming book, that former newspaperman who either slipped back or was promoted, Jack King tells of his experience as an expert poker player. He points out that the usual play-el- is a chump, and often the victim of professional sharks, all of whom can be beaten by his system. Wonder can he tell any Pontiac player anything? I expect to soon have a copy of the book for loaning. 'Tlve line forms at the right—and don’t trample on anybody. ‘Tn that edliortal about turkey raising," phones Preston Talford of Clarkston. “you didn’t mention that a bell often was attached to the king gobbler's oeck, to assist In locating the flock should they not return at sundown." Mr. Talford, who recently moved here from lUlnois, says he was a turkey tender over 80 years ago. Verbal Orchids to- Mn. Ida Johnsen of 741 Owego Drive; 05th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. B. Henry Wallaee of 0058 Pine Knob Road; ipiden wedding Edward C. Tanner of M Blaine 8t.; 8Snd birthday. Mr. and Mrs. OIncy FeJdscanip of Bloomfield Hiils; 52nd wedding anniversary. Mn. Margaret Travis of Metamora, 83rd birthday. ^ I ^ WASHINGTON -^"Americas "prestige” as the champion of "fair and free elections" may have gotten a black eye as a result of the charges and countercharges being made about how the T-ecent presidential election was conducted. Thr-ee states— Illinois, New! Jersey and Texas! —with a total ofl 67 electoral votes! now credited to* Kennedy would. LAWRENCE if switched to Nixon, give the latter 290 electoral votes, which is more than enough to win. In all three states the Republican state chairmen have ask^ lor an investigation and a recount. * # * The charge is that illegal ballots were counted or that some pilots weren't counted at all. The Department of Justice has received many complaints of alleged voting' fraud and has ordered the FBI to make Investigations. Indeed, it may even be impossible to get a complete recount before the electoral votes are cast Dec. 19. CONCENTRATIO.N OF POWER But there is something else in the election worth studying entirely apart from counting the ballots themselves. It Is Hie roneentrallon ef power In the cities and metropolitan areas where the raachlneo and the bosses bold sway—elmoal all ot them In the Democratic parly. It so happens that the margin of victory in electoral votes for Kennedy was provided by less than a dozen big cities in America. Here the political machines are effective, anid the popular vote in those metropolitan areas wa.sn't close at all. The nation as a whole, (or Instance, gave Kennedy slightly more than 60 per ceni of the two-l>arty vole and NUon slightly DIFFERENT 8TORV But when the bigerc‘eniage for Kennedy is 65.4. and the actual majority in them for the Democratic presidential nominee totals around three mlltion. The Kennedy mai-gin for the country as a whole was about 300,000. George Bloom. Republican state chairman of Pennsylvania, made, a speech the other day citing the way the big dtlei swung the election this year. He said; ‘It RepnbUcaaa are to eieet a prooMeat, aad oead majorttieo to and dedication we diopiay to fighting to central e canaty courthoese which represrats a lew thousaad voleo. "The siluatkm calls for us to strike at the heart of our problem in every major city iii America." ■ STATER PLt'S MUmi Perhape it isn't geperally realized how the big cities can win This year only nine states, with a total of IN eleetoral votes, were needed to win the Kennedy victory when added to the SI electoral votes he received faiythe South, for a total of T7t. ” 1 to do the job. This In Itself Is considered law-lan't always clear Tho.se nine state.s are dominated by less than a dozen big-city areas. The political m a c h i ready access to the voters through to undertake. whether some (ormo of economic coercion aren’t being noed, too, along with the promise or dlstri-bolion of polittcal favors. The rural districts, on the other hand, are widely scattered and not so accessible, and similar organiza-have tion work is expensive and difficult precinct captains and other work- (Copyright I! Dr. William Brady Says: ‘Mofce Mine It Bears Repeating "Your column, I regiet to say, (he bowling green, let me say that Is not printed as regularly or as H of* can't or doesn’t take the fully as it should be — We do hope daily ration of calcium as milk. ‘Many Overworjted— Some DolV^ithout’ What is wrong with our industrial civilization when men are dropping off like flies with heart attacks because they are being I asked to work six and seven days a week, while some of the little children in our city are going hungry because their daddy can find no place in the shops? Unions and management should wake up and take heed to these filcts. It's like a disease in our country that should be treated. I would like some views on what we the people might be able to do about iL One ef the Widowi ‘Wayne County Lost Election for GOP The folowiing editorial from The Ingham County News sums up what we the people of Michigan are having to put up with; "Michigan has 83 counties. Leaving out one of them, Republicans were out in front by between 250.000 and 300.000 votes. But Wayne gave the election to the Democrats. ♦ ♦ * “Perhaps a good way to see the difference in (he \oters would he (or outstote Republican leaders and workers to park tfceir cars at the Wayne comfy line and spend a half-day riding bases. They would rub elbows wiik thousands of people who can be reached oaly by becoming personally acqnaiated with ey over a long period — not Just (or the few weeks before Section. Yet unless the task is undertaken and carried out successfuDy, few Republicans will cvct attain a state office." ' Walled Lake. ‘Report Cards Better Than Conferences’ The so-called "progressive system" has never been presented to a school district for a vote of informed citizens. It has been thrown out of some districts by informed citizens, and with school principals to boot. The one readily detectable feature of its approach Is the disappearance of report cards and the substitution of "conferences. " ★ A * Another feature of this system is the way H saeaks In fkrough the cracks ajsd under trenched before the peeple kaow If Is on the way. Its preeeaoe Is defended by all the vtolenee of personal atUek and huHendo that can be mustered, and tow people care to (ace sneh meas- At k.time when government. business, college and university authorities are calling for higher standards in education, this "progressive system" is destroying the passibilites of such a program in our public schools. WUliam J. Hanley 2338 Genes Drive you are not planning to devote all of your time to the bowling green. Through the years we have followed y o u r teachings with uniform benefit. physically and mentally, and your medicine is always pleasant to take. DR. BRADY "Recently, your answer to the report of W.M. was so good that we beg you to print it again — perhaps a good many readers skipped it, readers who should read and ponder what you said about milk and aspirin, s^a-tives, tranquilizers and alcohol . . (W.D.R.) All right, here's what W.M. reported: ".Since drinking lots of milk, I don't have the headache so much and most of my aches and pains arc going and I feel bctler all over . . . " (W.M.) And here’s my rambling answer: Whole milk or skim milk (sep aralnr milk) Is the best food source of ralrium. Most Americans suffer from calcium deficiency. Ph.rsiologlcally calcium Is a natural analgesic and Iran- other good food sources of ‘calcium may maintain good nutrition — notably cheese of any and every kind, peas, beans, lentils, nuts, peanuts, cabbage, lettuce, greens. I have not mentioned such narcotics as morphine, opium, heroin, but I may say here that for a good many persoas with nutritional deficiency it is an easy step from aspirin to barbiturate and from barbiturate to morphine or heroin. Slgosd lettcn. not IV br."wiuism Bmdy, If *s ilf-sddrsiMd csTtlop* U lent "These people are under continuous political pressure to vote according to the dictates of labor leaders. They are forced to pay dues to finance the Labor-Democratic combine. On election day they are herded to the polls to cast their ballots as they have been instructed. “A day N|>em among them «(ia«ld ptobaMy reveal that a lot who are pushed anwnd don’t like It. Many thousands of these people ml^t be anxions to throw off their polltiral shackles if some Republican would help heat the forge. ★ ★ * "To win election in Michigan the Republicans must organize Detroit. It will prove a difficult task. It will take hard work and the expenditure of time and mon- Portraits By JOHN C. METCALFE EalArSay, my dear. I long shall cherish . . . Each hour spent with you . . . And though there really were quite many ... It seems there were so few . . . Each night, niy dear, will be forever ... Imprinted on my heart . . . Until the time we need no longer ... To remain apart . . Each dawn, my dear, will be recalling . . . The moments that we had . . • And every precious second of them . . Will always keep me sad . . . Each du.sk. my dear. I shall be haunted . .. Anew with restless dreams . . Of velvet shadows in the evening . . . And gold moonbeams ... But as each season slowly posses . . Across the lonely year ... At least it brings the knowledge . • That I am nearer, dear. Case Records of a Psychologist: Psychology Could Help Our Ni^tion *r. It' Every growing child needs not lew than a quart, every adult not lew than !ben ■s)M IB Osktoou. Oepeiee, ijnsf-ttaa. MscosiS. 'Upser tad Wi3- pleew IB the nalted BUtoe |tl 41 S St the iDd cleee rate at toatMM. UlchtsoB Member- ef ABC. THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 28, I960 ' SEVEN there are about 25,000 dUfar«nt kinds at fish. (Ad*trtlMiDMt) . HfiwToHoM FALSE TEETH Mor« Rrmly \» Ploe* Tony Has Pain In Neck U3ND04 (UPI)-Prlncest Margaret's husband Antopiy Annatnng-Jones underwent treatment by two orthopedte surgeons Tuesday lor neck and shoulder pains behaved to stem from a polio attack in his ^ktSAThts aUa^iM (Mo-actdi m noMa Ms* MStS moe* armlj tnd DM* aamforUDlr. No eununr, brMUl). Oot rABTxrra teav m Adidts who suffer from over weight are found t« be twice as susceptible to high blood pressure afflictions as persons of normal weight. Rnd Owners of Dynamite 5tuclsnf -' Cfttmgtl.HaIa wtirwwtf wWffvft I fVII# Leads to Two Boys at Williamston Scho^ WILUAMSTON State and local police have turned up the owners of two stacks of dynamite discovered at the WUliamston High School with the help of the school’s Student Council. ★ Sr ♦ Chief Ellis Nemer of the WUliamston Police Department said the dynamite, discovered in his locker by a 14-year-old student Monday had been there two weeks. The student took the esplo-Mveo. wrapped In waxed paper and nlumlaani Ml, to sehool antborittes. Student Council members helped police end a two-day search Tuesday. when they learned th had been hidden in the upper partment of the locker by a pair of freshmen who were afraid of getting caught carrying it. amia) two weeks The two freshmen told police and school authorities later that they never found the locker open again, and couldn’t get the explosives back. 11m student who discovered the dynamite, said be had not opened the upper compnrtment of kla locker to two weeks. One of the guilty students said he found the dj^amite in the garage of his parents' new home, and brought it to school to give to his buddy as an "addition to his gun collection." w * ★ Neither of the students, whose names have been withheld, will be prosecuted, Nemer said, but they have been lectured by pcdice, and wiU bd punished by school authori- Nemer was enlhsslastic about Sacred Symbols Urged as Part of Christmas Decor Christmastime in downtown Pontiac slimdd be highlighted by' ' sacred s)^bob as wefi isa SMU^ according to City Commissioner MUton R. Henry. There should be some crosses other holy symbols, he thlnl among the big; plastic Santa Qauses, candy canes and gift-filled shoM that city crews have Just finished installing on Saginaw and Huron Street streetlights. ’’Let’s sot forget that dirist- mas h a ndh.................. Heary toM city last night. Since the city lielps in insialla- ’’Within three hours after asked for the Student Council’s help, they bad the answer for us, he said. • Lenfsr Isstine thsa msnir kiflwr priced cosh • Lew esh—lets then twe bethel per ten • Preth Mined, ferked cleM, ne clinkers • Try a Tsn and Let Oer Ideal SeH Itself • • SeM Under a PetMve Meney lack Ceerantae • Callt Lump Sizf $17.60 Ton FE4-1518 WE GIVE GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS ing the Christmas retail season p,n| next year, said Henry. ' ^ ^ A. Usually, this habit begins in Henry mistakenly said the Pon-|«“ P“PPy ^ tiac Area Chamber of Commerce owns the Christmas decorations. - or other substances in puppybood that he instinctively sought to cm^ rect. U. S. Attache Gets Extra 24 Hours to Get Out oi Russia MOSCOW lAP)—MaJ. Irving T. McDonald Jr. got back to Mot-taw fisday 16 find HMMifTlw center of the Soviet Union’s latest espionage storm. But he said it waa no surprise. * i ’’I heard it on the radio on the train," said the assistant Air attache of the U. S. Elmbassy here. McDonald, 34, of Provincetown, Mass., was touring the Ural Mountains when the Soviet Union ordered him to leave the country within 48 hours on chaiies at engaging In intelligence activities. 'The embassy could not reach him to tell him. I The time limit ended today but Q. Whal rauses our McDonald got an extra 24 houn Americans spent f record fl-i iDUon last year in the nation’s 54.000 drug stores ~ sn Increase over 1S68 of 1,3 per cent. Druggists know the best way to reach their prospects. That’s why they spend about 73 per cent of theta-advertising budgets in newspapers. w. vfnai rauipvTii viir a*jT Turney .1 WUhm jeave Thanksgiving Day by plane for Copenhagen, Denmark. VN1TE0 SHIBT DISTRIBUTORS B ghepplat Canter TWO DOCTORS ON DUTY ASSURE YOU IMMEDIATE SERVICE on EYE EXAMINATIONS FILLING- PRESCRIPTIONS EYE GLASS REPAIRS PONTIAC OPTICAL CENTER 103 N. Saginaw (across from Simmil , fE 2-0291 "Mrs. 9:30-5 30 Daily Mon. arni Fri. Eve. by Aprwt. P. C- fisinberg, O.D. but chamber officials corrected' him today. | The Downtown Merchants Association owns them, they said. | --------------- f Delay Crops Up on Fire Station Commission Will Take Two Weeks to Decide on Architects Dispute over the choice of archi- *11118 habit cah also be acquired later by the female dog^ who is pregnant or nursing her litter. If continued. It can cause serious in-' testinal trouUe. If you can’t stop your pet from I eating dirt, be sure -fo supplement hisfbalanc^ commercial diet with a good vitamin - mineral mixture. If this addition to the diet doesn’t stop the piTictIce, you niay have to muzzle the dog. Last year 19 per cent of car-, owning families had two cars. The tects last night led to a two-week ,, probably higher now delay in approval of a new head- because of the advent of compacU. Automobile manufacturers rely a great deal on daily newspapers to familiarize buyers with the luxury, convenience and economy their producta offar. Last year they invested S96H million In national newspaper advertising. quarters fire station as Pontiac’s next big public building project. When the dispute is resolved, it appeared that the City Commission Vrauld settle on a 3375.000 price ceiling in ctmtracts to be let for spring construction. Six commisateuers Pilot Gives X15 Full Throttle: 'Oh, Baby EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AP) - Test |»llot Scott Crossfield opened wide the throttle of the United States nriost powerful aircraft engine—and whiqtered: “Oh, baby.’’ / it a a It,was the first time the X15 rocket ship's 57,000-pound thrust ilgine had been given its head. Crosafield kept the craft wide open for about four seconds before he eased back to half throttle. He had bolted to 1,800 m.p.h. ★ * , * Crosafield also stopped the engine in mid-air for the first time and restarted it. North American Aviation officials said there were no hitches. The flight Tuesday lasted nine minutes after the K15 was launched from its B5S ship at 45.000 feet. Pope Salutes British os Macmillan Arrives VATICAN CITY (AP) - F . John XXIII today expressed ’’ccr-and fervent" wishes Queen Elizabeth II and saluted "the noble British people." The 78-year-old pontiff of the Roman Chtholic Oiurch expressed these thoughts in receiving British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan. Macmillan was accompanied to the private audience faiy Lord Home, Britain’s foreign secretary. The audience lasted 35 minutes. whe designed tlM new PonOnc PnbUe Ubrary BnlUHng te within « few tbMunnd doOnrs at the city’s inIm ceiling. But Commissioner Milton R. Henry, who was not present when the i choice of architects was given a ; final informal going-over Thursday ;night, contended that n Pontiac firm should be given the nod. Henry said he had no complaints about the Birmingham firm, nor any particular Pontiac firm in it maintained the city should have a "firm policy” of giving Pontiac businesses a preference. WWW Mayor Philip El Rowston said I that in informal discussions con-| sideration had been given to Pontiac’s architects, as well as to oth-| era in Oakland County and'De-! tmit. * , He said he was swayed by the! “outstanding" job done on tlw library and the fact that the Bir-min^m firm kept to the price celling. O'Dell, Hewlett ft Luckenbach is the first non-Pontiac architectural firm employed by the city since' the Ovlc Center program began. The fire station is to be located on a site across East Pike Street from the Public Safety Building. It is to be financed on a pay-as-you-go basis out of the capiul improvement levy, about half the funds to come out of, the 1961 levy. Seek Irreguloriti^ in Chicago Ballot Count CHICAGO (UPD-The Demo-crafic-domlnated Chicago Board of Election Commissionera today began questioning election Judget about Republican complaints ol irregularitiei’’ in the Nov. 8 presidential balloting. CHRISTMAS WRAPPING nmmikimsLm KIGIIT THE POXTIAC PRESS. WKPyESDAY, NOVEMBER g8, 1960 Cmadian Players . Due Jan. 13 Mrs. Vfrnon Abbott opened her niinois Avenue home to a b u I i n e s I meeting: of the Pontiac-Oakland Town Hall Monday afternoon. Plans were completed for the Jan. 13 appearance of the Canadian Players at Pontiac Northern High School. The second appearance of the famed Shakespearean company in the Pontiac area, it is sponsored by Town Hall and open to the public. Proceeds will benefit the scholarship fund of MSUO. * * * It was announced with regret that due to contract restrictions. the players will be unable to present an afternoon performance for students. When originally engaged, the company was to have played at the Oakland Theater. With 500 fewer seats available at N«1h-em, it will be necessary to offer all scats on a reserved basis and at one price, according to Mrs. Maxwell Shadley. Tickets are $3.50 and may be obtained from Mrs. J. A. Rammes of Rosedale Street with checks payable to Pontiac-Oakland Town Hall, Inc. The performance is set for 8:.30 p.m. with all patrons in their seats by 8:». Area representatives present included Mrs. Dark Adams. Mrs. Keith Uake of Oarkston, Mrs. Howard Bond and Mrs. Ross Plewes of Farmington, Mrs. John R. Slavsky and Mrs. G. E. Bowles of Orchard Lake, Mrs. Donald Seed of R«ichestcr and Mrs. William Weightman and Mrs. Donald Hogue of FYanklin. Representing Pontiac were Mrs. Paul Kern, Mrs. J. C. Walker. Mrs. Maxwell Doerr. Mrs. Horace Hall, Mrs. Cecil McCallum, Mrs. George Shearer, Mrs. Jack Habel, Mrs. Shadley. Mrs. Rammes, Mrs. Louis Schimmel, Mrs. C. H. Purdy, Mrs. J. L. Bennett and Mrs. Charles Uligian. Mrs. Leake, presided at the tea table. Let Hubby Tell Folks About Mai I By EMILY POST Question; I was married six months ago to a man in the service and I am living in a small town near the army camp at the present time. As we have no permanent address, a good deal of our mail is sent to us in care of his parents at their house and it is then forwarded to us. I have noticed that very often the mail is opened before it ia sent on. Some of this mail is rather personal and 1 resent very much having it opened and read by someone else. Will you please tell me how to put an end to this without hurting anyone’s feelings? Answer; It would be ^st for your husband to take this up with his parents as he is the only one who can do so without hurting their feelings. If he does not want to speak about this, you will have to have your mail sent to some other address, possibly ‘’General Delivery” at the post office of the town you are living in, or to your husband’s army address. Question: Will you please tell me what is proper in the following situation: When dining in someone's house and a particle of food accidentally slides off the plate onto the floor, does one pick it up and put it back on the plate or leave it where it is?. Answer: If the floor is a hard one that will not be spotted by the food, you may leave it where it is. If, on the other hand, the food falls on a carpet you should pick it up yourself, or if your hostess has a maid, tell her about it so that the maid may remove it before anybody steps on it and grinds it into the carpet. * * * Question: I ani a wklower in the mid-forties and have a 10-year-old daughter. Recently. I have been seeing a good deal of a woman whom I should say is in her late thirties. I would like to know what would be the proper name to teach my daughter to call her. To have the child call her "Jane ” sounds disrespectful, and on the other hand. "Miss Jones ” sounds very stiff. What do you think of ‘ MiBs Jane?" Would this be uitable? Answer; “Aunt Jane” is most usual and would be best. 8 Win at Bridge ' The Pontiac Bonneville Duplicate Bridge Club mmbers ntet Saturday evening in the Hotel Waldron. Winners were Mrs. Emert Guy anl Mrs. Charles Da'/u; Ernest Guy and David Utley: Mr. and Mrs. Ira Ben^gmin; IL F. Canaday and B. £. Billings, j Special joy this Thanksgiving at the 6-weekrold Kim Marie. Marveling at James Maddox Jr. household on South the* perfection of her tiny hand is Marshall Street is the presence of proud big brother Craig, 3. Bob and Barb are thankful for a relaxed, and casual culture that permits good teen-age frienris of the opposite .sex to express their affection Abby Says; But Do It Later openly. The couple is Kobert Aubert of Pine Lake Road and Barbara Alton of West Iroquois Road. Both are 17. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY; I drive a trailer truck for long-distance hauling. I came in off the road after a 2,200-mlle trip and the first thing my wife said w a s, ”l>et’s go for a ride." 1 I r l e d to explain that I wasn’t in the mood but she said In’t care ABBY hadn’t been out of the house for nine days and she wanted to get out a little. Do you think I should have taken her for a rid^f TEED OFF DEAR TEED; You should have. But not then. A * ★ DEAR ABBY; I am writing to you with the desperate hope that you can help us with our daughter, who ia 11. She is a petft mal epileptic and fairly well controlled by medicine. She is menuliy and physically mature beyond her years and is exceptionally talked mu-stcaUy. But she is on the verge of being' expelled from public school because she te abdent almost evepf other day. She fakes illness and comes home eonslantly. We know she'does this because she fears the humiliation of having an epileptic seizure before her classmates. although this has never happened. We can’t help her at home. Abby. Is there a place we can send her for treatment. Marriage Rite Is Performed Dr. Joseph I. Cliapman officiated at the marriage of Mrs. Guy E. Parks ^o Eldon P. Fuller of Clio Saturday afternoon in Bethany Baptist Church. ♦ AW For the ceremony performed before the immediate families, the bride wore powder blue silk organza over taffeta, with matching hat and Made accessories. Pink and white carnations comprised her corsage. Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Parka of Milford, son and daughter-in-law of the bride, attended the couple. The couple left on a motor trip In Canada and New York State after a dinner and small home reception. The new Mrs. Fuller teaches at Crofoot School and her husband has retired as principal of Saginaw Coifnly Schools. Just a Simple Handclasp' -in Thanksgiving for Love Hands will be clasped in prayer In countless Pontiac area homos this Thanksgiving. A family-centered community, Pontiac marks the holiday traditionally trlth homecomings for all ages. if it it Thanksgiving weekend house-guest of Mr. and Mrs. Paul 8. Kants of Mohawk Road will be Mra. Thomas Kants of Ann Arbor. Mrs. Mary Sue Preston and son John who make their home with the Kantses will join them for the holiday dinner. » ★ ★ ★ Guests of the Willard Kennedys of Ormsby Street, Waterford Township, will be her brother and slater-ln-law, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Haskins, with Robert and Nanette of Walnut Lake. Another sister and brother-in-law, the Robert Packs of James K Boulevard with their children Sandra, Robert, Billy and Richard, will join them, also Mr. and Mrs. Harold C. Haskins of Walnut Lake Road. Mrs. Clayton Rourke aunt of the hostess and son Stanley of Highland are also exjtocted. Anticipating a jolly good time with their cousins are the Kennedy youngsters, Rodney, Jimmie, Billy, Kathy and Peggy. ★ ★ Dlifner guests of the Robert E. Quinns of Oneida Road on the holiday will be Mrs. A,,T. Buckner of Rosshlre Court. Mr. and Mrs. William Nlcholle'of Sashabaw Road. Drayton Plains, and Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Norris of Orlxdale Drive, EUsabeth Lake Estates. ★ ★ ★ Mr. and Mrs. Frank Peeples of Cass Lake will enter- tain Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Pay of UUca Road and the junior Arthur V. Handrens of Beverly Hills, at dinner Thursday. ★ ★ ★ Driving to Columbus. Ohio to spend the weekend with Dr. and Mrs. Stanley Anderson will be the Ralph Norvells of Wenonah Drive and their children Virginia. Carol and Bruce. Mrs. Anderson and Mrs. Norvell are sisters. ★ ★ ★ Among dinner guests of Dr. and Mrs. Edward Oates of Ortonvllle will be his father. Dr. Nathaniel Oates of Detroit: hla sister and brother-in-law Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Salvey of Birmingham and their daughter* Amy and Mary. ★ ★ ★ Also expected are Dr. Oates’ nephew Charles Oates and his fiancee Karen Merrill of Flint; and Dr. and Mrs. Arnold Brown and children Deborah, Eileen and Christopher who live at Wards’ Points Drive. Orchard Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Michael Smith of Drayton Plains will come with daughter Mary, who Is home from St. Mary’s Academy at Monroe for the weekend, and William, Ann Elizabeth. Edward Jr„ and Margaret An^. if if if Bound for Syracuse, N.Y. to spend the holiday Interlude with his parents, the Herbert Rlegehnans are Mr. and Mrs. Herbert A. Rlegelman of Northlawn Boulevard, Birmingham. Their children Penny. Tom, Peter and Sarah will be with them. if it it Dr. and Mrs. B. M. MltcheU of Inverness Road, Sylvan Lake, will join Mr. and Mrs. Donald Bos for dinner Thursday at their home on West Iroquois Road. ★ ★ ★ Mr. and Mrs. David A. Reas of Overton Road. Waterford Township. Mrs. Reas’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Manke of Highland, and Korlne Reas of Detroit will be dinner guests of the newlywed Mr. and Mrs. Warren E. Chambers (Audrey June Reas* for theR first Thanksgiving in their new home at Elizabeth Lake. ★ ★ ★ Mr. and Mrs. Sam Joan of Woodbine Drive, Waterford,. Township, will have as their ’Thanksgiving Day dinner guests. Dr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Hackett of Owego Drive. UJ8A.F. Capt. and Mrs. Michael H. Hackett. returned from three years In Japan, and Mrs. Amos Kline, of Williams Lake Road. Completing the family scene will be Richard S. Joan home from Michigan State University. East Lansing, and his brother David. Mrs. Michael Hackett Is the former Dorothy Joan. Thr children Joan Marie and Mitchael. born In Japan, are meeting their grandparents for the first time. An open house Thanksgiving Day from 2 to B p.m. at their Lowell Street home will mark the 60th wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. James S. Hicks. The two, who have nine children, 28 grandchildren and 25 great-grandchildren, hold a mutual fount of memories expressed here in their gaze and handclasp. No Rest for the Weary! Fascination Means Money education and rehabilitation with experts in this field? We aren’t rich but we would mortgage everything we own to help her. DESPERATE MOTHER DEAR MOTHER; Write to the Federal Aasoctation for EpUepsy, 1729 F Street N. W., Washington, D. C. The Association sponsors the National Children’s Rehabilitation Center for epileptics who, ter one reason or another, cannot be educated in public schools. The Center admits children from 7 to 16 years of age. The fee for your child will be based on your husband's Income and family obligations. ♦ ★ ♦ DEAR ABBY; Why did you tell that woman she shouldn’t shake her dust mop out the window? If It saves her walking down a flight of stairs and going out to the‘back yard, I can’t see what’s wrong with if. If she were my neighbor. I'd say, "Shake it my way. Dearie." Tm lor anythink that saves work. "PRACTICAL" Doncers to Meet Square Set Dance Club will meet Saturday at 9 p.m. in Herrington Sctodl. Jim Thompaon will conduct a workshop for advancM dandng between 8:30 and 9. dub mem-ben wUl caU. Announce Child Art Gives Her a Career of Daughter Mr. and Mn. Lyle Monroe of Patch Grove, Wia, announce the engagement of their daughter Karen Marie to William H. Beasley, son of the pevll Beasleys of Pontiac Lake Road, Waterford Township. ♦ ♦ ♦ Her fiance completes four years’ service with the Air Force this week. He has been stationed at Truax Field. A Dec. 31 wedding in St. John Catholic Church in Patch Grove is planned. Club HeorsTolk on Better Lighting The lesson ‘’Better Lighting tor Better living'’ was given by project leaders Mrs. Harold Wert and Mrs. Leon Stnick-man at a meeting of Lake Sborea Ebetenston dub Monday. Mrs. Wert was hostess at her home on liberty Street, aaalat-ed by Mrs. Jack ’Thompaon. The talk covered correct positions for lamps, adored light sources, wall and window ligM-ing for work and living areaa. PORT CHESTER, N.Y. (UPI) —Mrs. Evelyn Phillips has made an unusual career out of preserving for posterity — and for proud parents and other relatives — art by children. One of her clients was Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower, who a.sked her to reproduce on a tile ash tray a drawing of a horse and the words "I Like Ike" as done by grandson David. The tray was a (Hvsent from David to "Grandpa’’ when the President was hospitalized in 1955 with a heart attack. "Children’s drawings fascinate me," said the attractive 41-year-old mother of three. "I collect primitive art, so maybe that’s why. FREE DRAWINGS BEST "The things children do best are the free drawings ... not the ones produced when a par-. ent parka a child at a table with crayon and paper and supervises." This is the rush season for Mrs. Phillips, who operates "Young Rembrandts" from a studio near her home in this suburhaq town. Most of the art comes from the kImBrgarten, first and second gieders, ,|he said—"They seem so conscious of things around them." "They're usually the best ar-tisU because the^ the leMt inhibited, ” i ‘ She laughed as she added, ’’Some of their work is pretty graphic . . you'd be amazed at the drawings we get of mommy or daddy without a stitch of clolhes on." Mrs. Phillips, a native of New York City, is the daughter of a fashion designer and studied art and design at the Traphagen School of fashion and the Fashion Institute of Technology. DAUGHTER STAR-TED IT She was a resident dress buyer for department stores and specialty shops before she went into ceramics 10 years . ago. Drawings by her oldest diild, Priscilla, now 14, started her in her unusual career. She hit on the of reproducing Priscilla's nursery school art on tile, took some couraes in ceramics at the 'YWCA, and plaaed an ad in a New York publicathm saying that "Young Rembrandts" was in busineaa. The first advertiaonent brought 70 orders and it wasn’t long until tiles and kiln forced the family — ste la lAarricd'* to Rkhard Phiuips, a photoengraving executive — to migrate from a city apartment to their present spacious home and studio in Port Chester. / She and her st^l of artists and ceramists are buiw reproducing children's drawings on ash trays, bon bon dishes, cigarette txNces, cigar humidors, trivets, and memo pads — drawings sent in mostly by mothers who want personalized gifts for dads, grandparents or other relatives. During the Christmas aea.son, the firm . reproduces approximately 2,500 pictures shipped to all parts of the country — some ak far as Hawaii and Alaska. JESUS PLAY FOOTBALL? "We got one child's drawing ot Jesus at the age of 12— J(fSug was in a football uniform,” she said."To the child, Christ was a contemporary." "Horses are the favorite animal. We get some children doing rockets and satelliie launchers. When Davy Crockett was popular, we reproduced hundr^ of coonskin caps." Mrs. Phillips said clients had included Bob Hope, Djnah Shore. Ralph Bundle and several members of the Vanderbilt family. One wealthy Weston, Coiin., woman ordered 250 square tiles reproducing drawings by her five children. "We’ve done tiles for fl»-place borders, for coffee table fops and for wall hangings," said Mrs, Phillips. "But this woman had the most novel idea yet — she used them to panel the chti-dren’s bathroom." r ri TITE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, XOVEMBER 28. 1960 NINE Professional PERMANENTS Styled os YOU Like It! IMPERIAL-, BEAUTY SALON 219 Auburn Ave. FE 4-2878 Have You Tried This? Makt Tmr Oraiw KMCtnltoM N*w WIST INOIIS CRUISIS Ut Uf_h»lp you Dion your Wut iBdiM CrulM lor this wtnUr. Com-pT«u Tr»»#l MrTtc*. BIRMINGHAM TRAVIL SIRVICI OKACI FLUMIUB UaLT - Sweet Crusty Topping Qt l^st^n“Pannpkm ,f^e liiyi BoHi for 12" laty Tarmt Georges-Newports hw4trr 0«pi. 74 NMth ShImw S». By JANET ODELL «tlu PraM HauM Edit Last week we gave you a redpe for conventional pumpkin pie. Today we’re giving you a glamorous version of the same kind of pie. it it it This recipe comes from Mrs. W. H. Purdy of Milfoi^. We had a pleasant conversation with her over the phone, but she didn’t volunteer much information about herself. She does like to cook. PECAN PUMPKIN PIE By Mrs. W. H. Pardy 1 tut sUtiHly bMten W cup luftr ^ cup firmly psckcd brown •“TL ^ Uupoon putSMt >Vb cups iMIk bsstad Beat eggs slightly and blend in all Ingredients except milk. Heat milk and add gradually. Turn into pastry-lined pan. Bake .in 450 degree oven for 10 - Remove from oven and cower with pecan topping. Return to 35(klegree oven and bake about 40 minutes more, or until silver knife comes out clean when inaerted in OlliDg. TOPPINO I Combine and spread evenly over pumpkin filling. * By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN Daily cleanaing and daily lubrication are the two most important ri in skin care. • However, there are other treatments which give the complexion a big lift in beauty. Today I am thinking of the facial or the mask. ITie mask stirs up circulation and is tlve to large pores which often mar the skin. it * it There are all sorts of masks the market, but you can mix good one right at home. Some of tl^ old stand-bys are the almond meal mask, the clay pack and the cornmeal mask. A clay park Is made by mixing equal parts of peroxide and The Lawrence J. Cosgroves To Mark 50th Year Mr. and Mrs. Lawi^ce J. Cbagrove ot.Lakeview Street will celebrate their SOth wedding anniversary Thank^:iviiig Day at 9 a.m. High Mats in St. Benedict’s Church. The Ctw- A New Permanent Busy days ahead . . . Get set now with an easy-care, flattering permanent. You’ll love ours the very first day. Come in noik. BUDGET DEPARTMENT PERMANENTS $6.50 $8.00 TONY’S str Main Floor 35 W. Huron FE 3-7186 STYLE SHOP PUCES START AT tlt-M Mrs. Warren Oosgroae, the couple’s daughter-in-law, will sing tbe Mass. Eric Hoover, grandson, ahd Stephen Ritter, nephew, will be altar boys. ■ The Whittemore Street home of the Coagrove’s son Cecil J. will be opened for an open house from 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Cos^ve who were married Nov. 23, 1910 at Holy Rosary Church, Minneapolis, Minn., have two other sons, John and Paul, and two daughters, Mrs. Robcat Gagel and Mrs. T. E. Hoover. They have 23 grandchildren. LAYAWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS We respectfully suggest that you select your Christmas gifts now while the selections are plentiful and time will afford you to select exactly the right gift for all the men In your life. Osmun's Invites you to transfer your layaway to a charge account at your convenience. Downtown Pontiae Oo«B Mn.. rn. ^011 r. k. Trl-Hnron Center “Stores for Men” ®»*"s.’;.*"u’i ’ PONTIAC'S FAVORITI lAIINDSY 6RESHAM CLEANERS Your entire Holiday Season ■will take on a new brightness when you hove your family's wardrobe beautifully cleaned through Greshamv speedy, proficient Icnmdering- processes. 5 SHIRTS 1.13 CASH end CARRY Call Us Soon- Youni Be Glad You Did! vi Stnrkt I RtqvMt \ GRESHAM \ CLEANERS \ SHIRT LAUNDRY 605 Ooklond Ave. FE 4-2579 State's Water Resources Are Topic of Talk The Sylvan Lake Branch of Woman’s National J’arm and Garden Association scheduled an open meeting Thursday at the Oakland County Boat Oub to hear Nicholas Olds of Lansing speak on Michigan’s water resources. In his work as msistant attorney general in charge of ronaervatioo. Mr. Olds said "Water carries tbe greatest tonnage and is tbe cheapest form of transpbrtation. Civilizations have risen because of It and have died for lack of it." A resume of the Chicago water diviension controversy and its effect on the Great Lakes shorelines, damage to shipping firms and lake port facilities and the danger of greater diversion was given. Mrs. C. W. DoeiT and Mrs. W. J, Sanderson will accept gifU lor the Pontiac SUte Hospital Christmas pnrty through Dec. 5. Hostesses for the evening were Mrs. Carl Dahlgren, Mrs. Willis M. Brewee, Mrs. F. A. Moon, Mrs. R. H. Howard and Mrs. Earl Bartlett. Presiding at the coffee service were Mrs. G. Richard Jarvis and Mrs. Ralph W. Beebe. Give Lift to Complexion Facial Masks Help Face pound of Pnllern Earth to the liquid. Use enough liquid to make the mixture smooth aad easy to apply to the face mad aerk. As in the case of all packs or masks leave the mixture on the face and neck until it dries. Then wash it off with warm water rinse with cold water. Before applying a mask be sure that your skin Is absolutely clean. EPSOM SALTS FACIAL There is an epsom salts facial which is very refreshing and whips up the circulation. The prescription is-two tablespoons of ej ■alts to one pint of water. Race tyro bowls in front of you. In one bowl put one pint of hot water. In the other one pint of Icewater (with some Ice in It, too). To each of these bowls add two tablespoons of epwm salts. When the salts Have dissolved wriag a towel oat In the hot water and bold the towel to your fnee and neck. Do this several UmM or nnHI your skin Is hot. Next wriag the towel out in the cold water and hoU to the face Turkey Dinner at Boys' Club Men of the Sun.set Club served turkey dinner for 83 members and guests at the Pontiac Boys □ub Thursday. Cards, dancing and shuffleboard were afternoon activiti^. Ouests wer«> Mrs. Maude Kia-ney, Mrs. Clarence Kilpatrick, Mrs. Margaret Thompson and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Neilsen, all of Pontiac. Others were Mrs. Fred Strong of Walled Lake. Mrs. Esther Pqlne of Oxford and Mr. and Mrs. George Dietrich and Mr., and Mrs. Henry Becker of Waterford. Navy Mothers Pick Yule Party Leaders Pontiac Navy Mothers Club has appointed Mrs. Alma Cowley and Mrs. Mark Kinney chairmen for the group’s annual Christmas party Dec. 9. Members will complete arrangements for a e with your request for leaflet 49 to Josephine Lowman in care of this newspaper. MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM BUETHE The 65th wedding annivenary of Mr. and Mrs. William Buethe was celebrated at a Saturday open house during which they reread their vows before the Rev. Myron Everett. Parents of four daughters, incfudirig Mrs. Ikdlas Roberson of Auburn Avenue with whom they reside, die Buethes were married in Lake Geneva, III. They have eight grandchildren and 16 great-grandchildren. Active and in good health, Mr. and Mrs. Buethe are 89 and 82 respectively. Initiation, Installation you wtti •iM Lb wonderful sight! ut glasses! 'ess' 'jt^es ‘'Them do not touch the eyes” We’re So Sure You’ll Enjoy Them, You May Try Them on Our TRIAL WEARING PLAN FIRST-Professionil CONTACT-LESS LENS speciilisli txsmint your syts usin| mwmI scientific instrument! NEXT—tht proper visual prescription is prepared in your lenso! THEN-C0NTACT>LESS lenses are precisely fitted so they will not touch the eye, but rest securely on a layer of natural tear. FI N ALLY—You actually NEAR your lenses to see youtseU as you raslly ere—, without |lisse»-there’s no obligition to buy. budget ffrms up to e year to pay FE 4-7071 O cOme m J DR. B. R. BERMAN CO. Or. B. r. Brill. O. 0. 17 N. Saflnaw Sf. Pontiac SrMML ^UPON TODAY Hold Joint Ceremonies The Junior Auxiliary and Sons of the American Legion. Chief Pontiac Post 377, held a joint installation of officers and initiation of members Thursday at the post home on Oakland Lake, Waterford Township. ★ ♦ ★ Daniel Curtis, Michael Harrington, William Reed, WUliam Rapi-part and Randy Parden .were initiated into the SAL. They are Terry Marom, rap-tala; Denis MeLanchlln, first iieuteaani; Gary Shelton, second lieutenant; Daniel Curds, adjutant; Kirk MrLaurhUn, finance offlrer; iJiry Charter, sergeant at arms; Jerry Charter, chaplain; and Ronald Charter, historian. Mrs. Vemer Macom, senior counselor for the Junior Auxiliary led the girls in their initiation of Kathleen Curtis, Lee Ann Tunning-ley. Lonna', Cheryl and Gayle Parden. ★ * * Auxiliary officers installed Dianna Walker, junior chairman; Pamela Myers, vice chairman; Pamela Guide, secretary; Nancy Mahon, treasurer; Paula Macom, chaplain: Vtckt Mym. historian and JacquAline Challw, sergeant at arms. ' Pantiac Club Puts 13 Tables irf Play Pontiac Dupl irate Bridge Club met at Elks Temple Monday evening with 13 tables In play. Mrs. Norma Keller and Dr. Robert Segula. Joseph Nouse and A1 Wallare were winners. * * e Others were Dr. Douglas Campbell and Robert Larson. Mrs. Rotert Kircher and Mrs. Joseph McNerney, Mr. and Mrs. David Buegeleisen, Ronald Fiscus and Donald Bowen, William Brock and James Mar- HAIR FASHIONS ... desigfned for holidays require a Professional Permanent CALLIE’S BEAUTY SHOP 116 North Perry PE 2-6361 PARAMOUNT BlAUTY SCHOOL 11 h S. Saflnaw, lafla Thaator IMf., PlnHac, Mich. Baiollmonis Arailablo is Oey or Evaniuf Clussat Writ#. Phoua or Cult ia Psrson tor Ftoo Pamphlal PHONE FEDERAL 4-23S2 Yau'll Need Flaur far Salad Topping In the article Monday on the jTeeuwLssens’ Thanksgiving dinner an ingredient wa» omitted in the salad recipe. Add 2 heaping tablespoons of flour to the rest of the ingredients In the topping before cooking. • HEALTH • HAPPINESS • HEALING Con Be Yourf! Take this opportunity to learn some of the facu about this religion that ha» done so much to heal human Ills and free sufferers from human misery. Attend A Free Lecture "Christion Science: The Woy to Undorttonding, Hoppinett, ond Healing'' Member of the Brnri ef Lm-tareahlf of rjbe Nether Church, The Fket Chereh ef Chrlet. SetonHaL hi Beateo. Maaaeebaaetta. Mondoy, Nov. 28, 8 P. M. First Church of Christ, Scientist l«4 W. LAWRlNd rON-nAC. MfCHWAN fUUJ i' 101 3-26011 F rigidoiro j i TELECTUC :ie Hwy., Drayton 1 UASI 1 4620 Dll EARLY AMERICAN CHARM WITH DAMAGE-RESISTANT MAPLELUX* FINISH MAPLELUX*. exclusive Sprague A Cerleton flniehing process, snubs bums, stains, scratches ... lets you placa even warm plates directly on the burface srithout marring the beauty. See thie wiuing new maple finish today. You’ll find it on our entire Sprague 4k Carleton collection, for living rooms, dining rooms, and bedrooms. America’s moot beautiful maple ... priced to pleme your budget. *MAPLELUX to tha tndanaric of Ipragua A Carlaton Mania. The Quality _ Furniture Store Rn-r- .... 3065 Orchard Lake Rd.-^kcefo Harbor»Telephone FE 5-9474 OPBN MONDAT AND PBIDAT BVRNINOS ’1U S W Daja laaM as Cuhh— Up U U Maatha to Pay CLAYTON’S T- NOW AT HAMPTON'S -COLOR TV as you’ve never seen it before! RCA Victor color tv LOW miCED ^ AT ONLY ^ leeoWfutly tlytod, clettic Denlth Medem cabinetry. Y ReeiMNHnt 3-Speaker Nneramic PM Seaml. Tep peifermance foetoftt Include Impraved Mirror V Sharp Plctura, SlmpIMod C»ler Quick Tuning, Store# Jeck, One-Set Hne Tuning. • New picture clorifyl • New t • New celer reeiemi e New perfemowi'Ud *pei*heiy| • New prermne Md mete ef MwBl “OtIN IVIRY EVENING TIL 9 P. M.” ELECTRIC # COMPANY Use Your Trod«-ln for • Down Poymant No Poymtnft 'HI Morch •25 Woit Huron Shoot FE 4-252S I Minnesota vs. Washington in Rose Bow! Game ...±.-. Bowl Picture Still Has Holes Bv Thp AnnooJalpd Pr«i» Idelphla’s Liberty Bowl. The Nit-Mlniiesota made It. Oregon is In.ltany Lions (6-3) accepted Monday but the college football bowl pic-j and will defend the title they won ture today etUl had some gaping|a year ago against Alabama. holes as a dwindling list of eligi-j Citadel also accepted a bid to ^ay hies, headed by question-mark|Tennesaee Tech in the Tangerine Navy were being mote closelyiBowl at Orlando, Fla., Dec. 30. eyed for post season play. Those' are the only bowl? wh^ if it -k card is complete. Tlie Cotton, with The Rose Bowl didn’t even give Arkansas; Orange, with Missouri. Navy a chance to beat Army and land Gator, with Baylor are halfset up a possible rematch with i way home. The Sugar, Bluebonnet Washington's Big Five champions, j and Gotham arc still team-less, whom it beat 15-14 in October. In-j with the embryonic Gotham given stead, the Big Five tapped Mlnne- a better than even chance of fore-eota's Golden Gophers, currently I going competition this year, the nation's top-ranked team in n- The Associated Press poll. Duke. Mississippi Tennessee. i, i, It : Alabama, Texas, Georgia Tech, So the granddaddv of all bowls 1 Florida and Navy, if it beats has a solid attraction in Washing-Army, are still in the running, ton, the defending champion,! Navy. 8-1 going into its game meetinskthe rags-to-riches Golden .'Saturday with Army, is figured to — have the b€*st bet of opposing Ar- ures to be the logical choice if it beats Texas A&M Thursday. The Orange Bowl would also like to have the Middies but may have to settle for Atlantic COast Conference champion Duke (7-2), which finishes its season Dec. 2 against UCLA. ★ A ★ Who will play Mississippi in the Sugar Bowl seems to be the big question since it is almost a foregone conclusion that Ole Miss (8-0-1) will be back to defend the title it took a year ago from Louis-State. The Rebels close their season Saturday against M sippl State and a victory would Gophers, -who only a year ago were the doormat of the Big Ten. jkansas (8-2) in the Cotton Bowl. Washlneton Bie Five chaoipion, where the Middies last post-season featured a vie- iist of- opponents. ^d^ilf Minnesota, last in the toiy over Rice. Duke, Tennessee The Bluebonnet hopes to land Big Ten in 1959, was 8-1 and co-; (5-2-2), and Alabama (7-1-1) also . hampion of the conference with are prospers. ' Iowa. Minnesota's acceptance of a; * Rose Bowl bid dregipod lowg out: Florida (7-2) still has an invita-of the bowl picture since confer-tion-pending to go against Baylor cnce rules prohibit post-season in the Gator Bowl but is alM be-competition in any other bowl, ling considered for ttie Bluelxmnct * A Bowl. Dec. 17 in Houston, Tex. a bid toiThe Bluebonnet has not named a i"home" club but Texas (6-3) fig- Oregon (7-2-1) accepted a play Penn State Dec. 17 in Phila-1' One Win Will Better Lions '59 Mark pophersfam Bid as No. I Football Team DETROIT (It—The Detroit Llqns need one more victory to prove that what they’ve been saying all along — that they are better than I 1959 - is true. In the next two weeks, the Lions ■in at least help decide which team will w^ the Western Division title in the National Football League. They will meet the hopeful Green Bay Packem on Thanksgiving day In Ibetrolt’s annual holiday claaslc. The contest will be televised nationally, atarting at noon. The Packers are favored by six points. The Lions, who are 3-5, lost their .season opener to the Packers 28-9 after leading 9-7 at the half. AAA ^ Packers trail the Western Division leaders, the Baltimore Colts, by one game. A 33-31 to the Los Angeles Rams last Sunday while the Colts were idle cost the Packers a chance for a first place tie. The Packers figure to be smarting from that defeat. Just as the lions are after their t8-7 Ions to the Chicago Bears. Bat after facing the Packers, the De-Irollers tun head on into the OolU. Ten days ago, the Lions were talking about "going all the way.’ They had lost three in a row. Then also give them the Southeastern Conference title, making them almost a shoo-in to the big New Orleans Classic. ♦ A A A Rice (7-2). a possible .Southwest Cimference co-champion with Arkansas if it beats Baylor, tops the Alabama, Georgia Tech (5-4), Flo* rida or Navy (or its second game, after CHemson won the inadgural over Texas Christian a year ago. The Gotham is still holding its breath hoping that Navy will forsake all the others and come to New York where it would probably draw Tennessee or Alabama for an 0 they beat the Colts, lost a wild one to the Rams, and downed the San Francisdo 49ers. A cheer went up from the Lions’ quarters that "we’re on our way.’’ ’The team was unimpressive in _ 12-10 verdict over the Rams, and Sunday’s loss to the Bears diipmed the Lions’ hopes once more. Coach George Wilson still feels his club best spoiler in the league. The Packers announced (hat Bart Starr will be the aUrting mark In the Green Bay Camp Is whether fullback 41m Taylor’s leg Injury will permit him to play. Taylor has been bothered by a putjed leg muscle. A crowd of about 50,0(X) is expected to see the action in Briggs stadium. The traditional Thanksgiving Day game in "DeffOtrs Briggs Stadium will (je the only one tomorrow the NFL's docket. Gophers Hit Heights After 19 Long Years PRESS BOX Sports fans will get tripleheader treat at (he Detroit Olympia tonight. An exhibition game between the Harlem Ambassadors and New York Skyscrapers at 7 MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - An odd, incredible circle of football fate closed today around Minnesota’s Rose Bowl-bound Gophers. Their comeback from Ignominy, begun on a September day when they vowed that a team which finished last in the Big Ten a year ago would be No. 1 in 1960, is complete. while the announcement p.m„ a tennis match b«*tween Al-jthat they had been selected to thea Gibson and Karol Fageros, pjgy Washington in the Rose Bopd will take place at 8 p.m. and the|pxhilerated Minnesota’s No. 1 game between the Pistons and I ranked Gophers, it did not over-■ Syracuse hjjits starts at 9 p.m. i whelm them. AAA i They had been shooting (or it 20-vearold yrar—“(or three years’’—said Coach Murray Warmath, shooting for it at a time when skeptics George Mans, end from Trenton, Michigan, will captain the University of Michigan fonihall team next season, .aaccecdlng center Jerry Smith. were forecasting more defeat (or the team and sharpening the axe for its coach. “We made our pact before the .season and we renewed our faith in it every week,” said Warmath. "And we’ve done it.’’ For 19 years Minnesota had struggled to regain the football pinnacle it once held. Its humiliation at times over those two decades was almost unbearable Halfback Ray Hoag of Lowell,[for Minnesota followers who reguard Dale Springer of l.ansing membered the golden days when and Mike Kricg of Grosse Pointe Minnesota last won a title in 1941. were elected. | Minnesota won eight of nine Gordie Howe will be shooting for his 1,000th point in regular sea-, son play when the Red Wings meet the Montreal Canadians at the Olympia Thanksgiving night. this year and shared the Big Ten title with Iowa on the strength of a powerful, proud and punishing line that turned opponents’ errors into a stream of Gopher touch-)wns. The Gophers are not fancy on offense or even impressive. They play the percentages — position football, Warmath calls It —and they wait (or their defense to hammer the other fellow into selfexecuting mistakes. Warmath got the news ’Tuesday night shortly after he and his team had dined at an annual athletic function in St. Paul. His first move today was to lay lit a training plan—“they just extended the season six weeks on and to chedt with some of his coaching friends on how to get team ready in'California. The season has been one thrill after another for a great team and, (or that reason, for myself," he said. “We thought we deserved No. 1 and we think we desetve the bowl.’’ So did some 2,0(X) university students who paraded through the campus Tuesday night, proclaiming “we’re No. 1' and we’re going to the bowl." A year ago they had said it was impossible. SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-Rags-to-riches Minnesota aims to avenge Big Ten honor when the Gophers battle Washington’s Huskies in the 47th Rose Bowl football game at Pasadena on Jan. 2. Cellar dwellers In the conference last year, with Coach Murray Warmath hung in effigy, the Maroon and Gold came back as CO - champions winning Tuesday night’s bid to oppose the Huskies who whipped Wisconsin 44-8 last New Year’s Day. AAA Yet it appeared only speculation that another contract binding the Big Ten and the Rose Bowl would be negotiated. From 1947 until last Jan. 1, the Big Ten by pact sent a representative to the bowl. ’This time Minnesota was chosen from at-large. Minnesota's faculty - controlled senate approved the bowl opportunity this time but said it was _ .... , V instructing its athletic committee The rest of the clubs - exc^ ^ g .j. the Rams who have a bye — will . ^ play Sunday. / Other gamfes pit Dallas at Chicago, San Francisco at Baltimore, Cleveland/at St. Louis and Washington at' Pittsburgh. FAMILY HONOR—Tommy Wilson (left) MSU quarterback is joined by his mother Mrs. Wilson and brother Pat (right) at the Lnnsing Downtown Coaches club where the family was honored. Coach Duffy Daugherty (left) standing and ath- sr pii*uf*x letic director Biggie Munn presented Mrs. Wilson with a blanket listing the names of the thiee Wilson boys who played at MSU, John, Pat and Tom. John was unable to be present. Giants Threaten Retaliation Eagles Might Have Rough Contest NEW YORK (UPI) - Coach Jim Lee Howell of the New York Giants warned the Philadelphia Eagles today of possible retaliation against star quarterback Norm Van Brock-Un if they rough up place-kicker Pat Summerall in next Sunday's AAA ling to intimidate Summerall," he|end and Alex Webster probably Howell's remark was the latest explained. “I asked Pat if he want-jWill play halfback'in place of Gif- _...... .......... ...^ In a series of verbal exchanges ed me to station a ‘policeman’ out ford, Charley Conerly, 39-year-old j^n. 2 classic, following last Sunday’s 17-lQ Eagle!there to protect him. but he said,|"old pro'’ Giant quarterback, willj AAA victory during which halfback j'I’m a big boy and I can get out work out today to determine wheth-| They win be halfback Don Mc-Frank Gifford and end Jim Kat-iof the way.’ ’’ ler his injured left knee is m shape,g^y McKasson. cavage of the Giants were side-| The Giants are games behind]to permit him to play. Oofgej ggjected by ........... the Eagles in the Eastern division .Shaw, former Baltimore quarter-;,^ Washington coaching staff i race of the National Football j back, will run the Giants , T if team’s lineman of the year. League and must win next Sunday Conerly can’t play. lined for the sea.son. Tl they want to waste three cSl/KHe VODKA blockers to get our place-kicker It’s periectly legal although not too amart,’’ said Howell, who rialmed the Eagles sent two and three men downfleld to block Summerall last Sunday. “But," Howell added pointedly, "They must remember that Van Brocklin kicks, too." Howril again cleared Eagle linebacker Chuck Bednarik of any illegal “head hunting” on the tackle which stretched out Gifford but called on his own players “to be tougher." “We don’t want any vendetta but we’re not going to be had,” FINEST any way look at it Enjoy Bubtle, smooth, light Arrowr Vodka in a Martini.. . Screw Driver . . . Bloody Mary . . . Collina ... Gimlet. .. with Tdnic . . . Over-the-Rocka or atraight. Any Mwy you look at it, clear, pleasant Arrow Vodka ia a well-mannered mixer you and your guests will welcome with any drink ... Ask for it today. 100 PROOF $437 4/5 QUART Cods No. 6078 100 PROOF 1276 PINT Cods No. 6079 ARROW U0UI0R8 CORP, OnROIT, RIICH., M AND IM PROOF, OIJTIlltO FROR 6RAHl i to retain any logical hope of winning the crown. "We’re in not too good a spot,” Howell conceded. “We've got to play good football Sunday or we’re out of business” Howell said that Tom Scott “It's plain the Eagles were try-|replace Katcavage at defensive to let the Eagles eat up our ball players.” Howell said the Giant players “know what's going on and I don’t have to tell them to retal- Appearance Will B« First for Minnesota In Pasadena Huskies Pleased It's Minnesota We Wanted to Play the Best, Says Owens of Washington SEATTLE, Wash. (AP) -asked the conference that we be permitted to play the best," Washington football coach Jim Owens said Tuesday night. “And I’m happy to Announce that we’ll be playing the University of Minnesota.” Owens' quietly-voiced announcement of the Huskies’ Rose Bowl opponent came at the end of the team's awards banquet. Broad smiles creased the faces of Huskies sitting at the head table but none acted surprised. Owens apparently knew of Minnesota’s selection long before it was announced both in Minneaoo-] lis, and in San Francisco, headquarters of the Big Five Conference. But he held it bade until the final moment, then named the co- AFL Boss Denies Teams Have Signed New Players No one voiced the probability the Huskies might go against Minnesota as an underdog. Washington had the same role last Jan. 1 when they knocked off another Big 10 opponent, Wisconsin, by a score of 44-8. DALLAS. Tex. (AP) — Commissioner Joe Foss of the American Football League said today none of his clubs had indicated they already had signed players. This was in reply to a statement by Commissioner Pete Rozelle of the National Football League that said, "It just doesn’t make sense'the AFL had signed two players By l)l('K WERKK BPAA DMiblcN ^liamiiion If you happen to be one of those fellows who draws oohs and aahs because of a sweeping hook bail, but can’t average more than 130 then listen! The way lanes are finished today (slick and smooth as glass 1 a big curve is a highly inconsistent scoring ball. Professionals roll line ball that breaks across only from five to eight boards. We do this by making certain . lat our thumbs come out of hall in a. position equivalent to 10 or 11 o’clock on a watch dial. The big curve results from letting the thumb slip from its hole down around 9 o’clock. Move it up an hour or two .ind begin getting results. the weekpnd. The AFL has been holding its draft here. Rozelle warned the AFL not to tamper with any of the draftees until the NFL draft, scheduled lor Dec. 27. is concluded. A A A Rozelle said the players, whom he declined to name, were volved in bowl games. Foss noted that several players are eligible to- sign now since they have completed their season and won’t play I a bowl game. But Foss esald that none of clubs had indicated they haa signed any players. Rozelle in New York urged the nation’s top senior college talent to withhold signing pro contracts until after the NFL draft. Rozelle declared that the NFL always held off until a man's class has graduated before /ligziing him to a contract "but it’s a definite gamble on our part and if the AFL ma’,d before he completes his college eligibility. Thu Mg earn Is Uglily hKowbtnt Name Sauth Caachei far Blue-Gray Game MONTGOMERY, 4«o hine-lam majiin with inter-league play-^appeared a atrong possibility fbr 1981 today with a new Washington team the ninth member in the American and Houston added to the National. The revt^utionary proposal was unanimously voted upon by the American League at its day-long meeting Tuesday and needs only 14 is 41 « 2 14 5 0 10 7111002“ o r T 5 5 IS oSrmtker t 5 20 Oraen IS t 22 OiMTln 10 4 ImhoM e 14 30 McNeill 0 0 0 NauUs 3 2 t Palmer 13 34 120 ^*alo 1st Prep Hoop Game Tonight at Clarenceville Although there is still one prep football game remaining, 1960-61 high school basketball season opens tonight at Livonia as aarenceville plays host to South Lyon. Jack Wren, who rung up 340 points last season. Dave Obreno-vich and Stan Tapp will lead the big Lion quintet. Coach Bob Meeth had an impressive 15-5 record year ago. Dave Schaefer will be making his debut as hoop boss at Oarence-ville. Tony Giacobazzi is the only returning starter. AL Offers New Expansion Plan the approval of the NaUbnalto be- at reject the plan, the America-i definitely intends to pursue its original plan of 10 teams, including Los Angeles next year. ★ ♦ * If the |dan goes through, it will be for one year tmly. In 19G2, each league would go to 10 teams, with Los Angeles Joining the American and New York the National.' The senior circuit, already committed tOl0^~tPan» in'1962 with franchises in Houston and New York, will give answer American during its annual winter meeting in St. Louis, Dec. 5. Should the reply be in the afflrma-tivo. each league would then adopt a 166-game schedule, an increase of 12 games. 'Hiia would encompass 112 intra-league games—14 against each inter-lcague games-O against *»i tha-bal^ ot'l9fi0. Louis A- WHEELS IN MOnON-Hank Greenberg Heft), Chuck Comiskey and BUI Veeck, officials of the Chicago White Sox, were happy at the moment during the American League expansion talks in Ar Phstot*x New York. Veeck and Greenberg offered to buy out Comiskey's holdings in the club, but he turned them down. It is reported Comiskey might want to buy into a West Cbast venture. Figures Army Will Defeat Navy With Passing Power M«nlo Pwfc. 5 LOS ANOELES-Alfredo Eicobir. 131. Lot AngelH. uopped Johnnjf Slibw, 131. " Angelei, 2. UTILITY JEEP-4-SPEED Hydro Plows at... *299 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY YOUR CHOICE OF COLORS TkU Sola Expirti Dtc. 1, 1960-MortlitH R#m, Jaap Caasaltaiit OLIVER MOTOR SALES 210 OidMid Ukb At4. FE 2-0101 Anru WK! nmunpaw ii 4 .733 1 BMton • 3 .727 1 5Kr*Ttat 2 13 !im 1 WESTEBN DIVISION OPEN m DAUfl IHA St. Loulx 10 4 .714 hot AngelM g 7 .533 Detroit g g ,42t Cincinnati g 11 .421 niESDAT’S BE8ULTS Loi Aanlex U3. Clnclnnxtt IIS M. Lo^ 1% New York IM WRDNCSDAY'S schedule New York at Boiton dOIiUNu ^ SgraeuM at Detroit NHL Standings THANKSenniG day HOCEET AT A GLANCE TUESDAY'S RESULTS AMERICAN LEAGUE Preettfeoce 5. Quebec 1 EASTERN LEAGUE 11 A.M. ’til 1 A.M. RaddonfleM 7. Oreensboro 1 intbonational league Omaha 5, Milwaukee 4 Tbledo 4. Fort Wayne 1 Minneapntlx 5. Muekegon 3 WEDNESDAY'S SCHEDULE Give the family a treat. .. Take them bowling where bowling is always fun . . . Bolton at New York AMKarcA^ LEAGUE Oeeelaad at Sprlngneld EASTERN LEAGUE Oreenxboro »i. Clinton at Ulica HaddonflaM at tahnxtown New Tifk at Hew Raven Charlotta at nuiadalpbla By DON WEIS.S NEW YORK (AP)-Wheres the guy who said this picking business was so tough? * ★ Thanks to another gent, the one who invented the two-point conversion and the four-leaf clover, last we«4<'s nonsense turned up a 37-8-3 record for an .822 pace that boosted Coach ClaaOsen's season mathematics to 355-126, a hefty .738 per cent. * * ★ Well, the law of averages is just itchin' to catch up after all those blind stabs, so let's start from the top: Army over Navy—Cadets’ Blan-da and Eckert can pass; favored Middies’ Bellino can run. That makes it 2 to 1. Victory in air power in this nationally televised Saturday sizzler from Philadelphia. Texas over Texas A&M — TTie week’s other TV offering, Thanksgiving in Texas. The Longhorns are no turkeys. ★ ★ * Alabama over Auburn — 'hie Bear (Bryant) is primed for Tiger Saturday. No Ed Dyas, no Auburn offense. Florida over Miami — This one usually winds upTO-7. Florida the state champ after Saturday night. ★ ★ ★ Notre Dame over Southern California-Even Irishmen have tempers, e 8 p e c i a I I-y after eight OokM-bdo Tuluic. New Mexic Force. ArUonb State uemson over Furman, Col- ---- Pacirio over Frexno State. Georgia Tech over Georgia. Holy Crou ------- ^ er TexVt Julor over Rice, South Caro-Wakb Forest. Texas Chrtatian .. Jhem Methodist. UCLA Utah. Tennessee ever VanderbUI. ________ Carolina over Virginia. Oklahoma ever Oklahoma State. Houston over Tv' FRIDAT. DEC. 2 Miami (Fit) over Air Force. San lata over HtwaU. SATTEDAT. DEC. 2 UCLA over Duke, South Carolina Virginia. Six Directors Are Gone As Tiger Board Convenes NBA Standings at the House of Total Completeness HURON BOWL 2S2S lUiikelk lake U. FES-2525 straight losses. They’ll show urday. Mississippi over Mississippi State—Last-ditch Rebel bid for No. 1 ranking. it it it Over the rest In s hurry: THUBSDAT Denver over Colorado State U. Pei 'Muddy' Clouds Mineral Water Bowl Contest Hillsdale (45 - There was a tempest In the Mineral Water Bowl last night, but it turned out to be only n tempest In a teapot. Conch Frank (Muddy) Waters said Hillsdale, which has used the two-platoon system most of this season, would not play it It couldn’t use free substitution In Saturday's game at excelsior Springs, Mo. Waters said he would rather back out of the game with Iowa State Teachers If his team had to be restricted by regular NCAA rules that don’t permit free substitution. When a spokesman for the bowl said, however, that the game would he played under NCAA rules with free substHu-tlnn addixl, Waters indicated that Hillsdale would appear as scheduled. team ip ita own league—and 54 Carey Elfcted Proxy of Oakland Hills CC Joeeph H. Carey has been elected president of Oakland Hills Country Qub for the 1961 season DETROIT (H — The Detroit Tigers’ official family has been reorganized from an 11-member board of directors to a five-member board and three vice presidents. * w * John E. Fetzer, president and principal stockhedder, will head the organization. Other directors named at the annual stockholders’ meeting here yesterday were Osrl E. Lee, Harry M. Sisson, Fred A. Knorr and William H. McOoy. Sisson is executive vice president and Rick Ferrell and James Campbell vice presidents. Ferrell has been assistant to the president. it it it Sisson will handle finances and business operations, Ferrell will direct major league personnel and Campbell will be in charge of minor league operations and scouting. ♦ ★ ★ Ralph E. Snyder was named assistant director of minor league Rangers Lose Cullen NEW YORK (ft - Center Brian Cullen of the New York Rangers suffered a fractured fourth metocarpal bone on his left hand in practice Tuesday and will be to the National Hockey League team for aix to i ' TEMPEST . Drive It. . . Buy It JACK W. HACPT rOSTUC S2US N. Mrtu St. Clerluton MA 5-5566 operatioas with Edward G. Kata-linas continuing a.s chief scout. Marv Owen, third baseman on the Tigers’ pennant-winning 1934 team, is rejoining the club’s scouting staff. Owen, 52, will direct scouting activity in Southern California. each team in the rival league. ★ * * .Commissioner Ford Frick, who has insisted on a "fair and equita-settlement, has expressed favor with the plan. ‘It Isn’t the best idea in the world,” he said, "but it is a solution to their problem. If the two leagues can get together on it, will approve it.” Walter O’Malley, head of the Dodgers and the American League biggest stumbling block. Is enthusiastic over the idea. It O’Malley’s steadfast refusal oermit a rival in his territory that forced the American League forego its decision to expand to 10 teams in 1961. At a meeting earli-' this month, the American permitted Cal Griffith to Washington club to Mlnneapolla-St Paul and voted to grant franchises to a new Washington club and I»s Angeles for 1961. * * * ‘This appears to me to be moat sensiUe idea,” he said, have been endorsing this idea tor a long time. I proposed such ( plan five years ago but couldn’ get the neceeaary vote. Had w? adopted it then, we’d never be in this I “I don't know whether our league will accept it even now, but I think it would be tremendously popular with the press and the public.'' Del Webb, (XHiwner of the New York Yankees and a prime factor in the American’s drive for a Los Angles franchise, acknowledged the plan's sensibility. * * We recognized we would have a problem moving thia fast into Los Angeles,” he said, "regarding ticket selling, playing facilities, proper promotion and getting suitable playing dates. We feel we to move in an or deriy way." American League President Joe Cronin said the sudden change-observers called It a compromise —was made out of deference Frick. ‘I wouldn't call this a compromise,” he said, “but rather a wil. ingness to cooperate with the commissioner’s suggestion to work out a more amicable way. We did it for the good of baseball." it it it Newsmen construed the latest thinking as a victory for O’Malley and a salve for Webb, the strong men of their respective leagues. O'Malley not only won his big point—no American League team Los Angeles—but gained an ally in his long time dream of inter-league play. Webb, unable to exact a promise from Frick to consent to the American League' entry into Los Angeles, at least knows the same rule applies to the National League trying to return to New York. O’Malley said he did not know which city—New York or Houston —would be added in 1961, but he indicated the Texas City might be th^ choice. Because of the latest developments, Cronin postponed the stocking of the new club—or clubs— from this Friday to Dec, 13. He also altei^ the procedure. If the league goes to nine teams, the Washington club will be required to purchase at least three players—no more than four-from each established club. The price is $75,000 per player. The same list of 15 players from each dub still prevails. If the league goes to 10 clubs, the old system of seven players from each team prevails. MONEY BACK Checks, thousands of them, are being issued every month by our Insurance Exchange. These checks are paying back safety savings to the insured members of the Automobile Club of Michigan who have earned, as a group, these savings by their careful driving. This safety eavings return has been ^ addition to the original low ratesi Are you a careful driver? Then call the office i)iearest you to discuss these safety satringk on your automobile insurance. Detroit Aatoaieblle iHter-lHaHraaee EKchaago at Aataaialille Clab of MIebigaa VISIT OR raONi Y04IR MIARtn OOSKI A. |. BOGUI —Mff. 78 WILUAMS ST. —ri S-4I9I r. L MgM, CB S4IM tors for next year arc Judge W. Bearden, Chester A. Cahn. Clarence Hatch Jr.. L. W. Smead and Harrison W. Wilder. Bauer was named vice president, C. Norman Fry secretary and C. Boyd Stockmeyer treasurer. Completing the club’s Board ot Dlrec-| iIMPORnD CARS of OAKUND COUNTY tar iBRcrtoS Cart’ W. Mifb A OrdMNl Lk. RA MA 6-2491 SEAGRAM’S IMPORTED known by the company itLjkeeps lueuH'i v.o. isrsmp ii tee iiim fios ctuoii. cistoui wsim-t lElECriQ WKIUIEt. HI YEIIS OIL U.l PIOOF. tEm«S-0ltTIUEII CONHIT. i.Y.O. HAWKINSON WINTER TREADS Plus Tex and recoppable tires on fires processed in our own ihop. - FAST SERVICE - Ar Pull through snow Ar Grip fafaly on wot pavomont 'A No annoying rood hum it Low^ low prict All Siiat Going at B-l-G Savings to You I Export 8-Hour Sorvico St« Ui !•! tiii Bill DmI •I Wiiltr Ting is Tfwi Convanfoat Tormt Avoilablo ED WILLIAMS 451 S. SogiiiMw ot Rotbum I ■ TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 23. 19»0 Press Deer Contest Still Waiting for 'Big Entry' Pontiac Hunter in Lead With 195-Pound Buck Fewer Entries Made; Deer Kill Continues to Be Slow By DON VOOIX Outdoor Writer, Ponttor Pimis If everything goes according to past performances, an Oakland County hunter will shoot a king-sised buck somewhere in Michigan during the remaining days of the This big deer, if be is downed, should weigh over 230 pounds and will probably be heavy enough to win first place in The Pontiac Press Deer Contest. A SISO U.S. Savings Bond will be awarded to the Oakland County hunter bagging the heaviest buck. Coyote Makes Mistake Three Rifles Needed to Down Black Bear Three members of a 'Pontiac family claim credit for shooting a black bear near Atlanta last week. James Bayley, 713 E. Walton, and his sons, James Jr. and Jack, were Ing on the edge ot a big swamp. Also on hand, but without i firearms were another son, Jay,| and a daughter, Barbara. was Just standing when this bear came out of the swamp," said I the father. ‘T knocked it down with ■hot, but the bear got up and ran into the swamp. Ilm and Jack beard the shot standing. Then they started Into the swamp along a runway the bear used after I fired. Just in- "The coyote came from the same (Urectian, only at a slightly difler-|ent angle than the buck,” said Krause. "It was a one-shot setup because he was really moving." The coyote, a dog, was larger than average. Although not too numerous in the Northern Lower Peninsula, ntany coyotes are taken each deer season. The action took place on inoper-ty owned by the Borway Hunt Qub. bear and I ol. The bear GOOD 8HOOTINO - Eldore Klcndore. 7021 Williams Lake Rd., went hunting in the Porcupine Mountains with five^ other area hunters. They saw only 12 deer in four days. Klendore was the only hunter to connect. He bagged the buck and bear shown above. Conservation Expert Says Deer 'Slightly Down' LAN.SING (UPI) — How much'just aren't seeing them, and there-smaller was Michigan's deer herd fore believe there are fewer ani-1 the beginning ot this hunting !mals. season than last' Conservation Department officials say they don't know. But the be.st information they can gather indicates the deer population was "down slightly." Ho H. Bartlett, in charge of deer investigations for the department, said the deer kill this year will be slightly lower, too. The talk around Michigan deer camps Is that there are far fewer deer than last year. Many hunters place much of the Marne on special seasons for anterless deer In re- Bartlett said the hard winter and late spring almost certainly decimated the herd to some de gree. “But the hottom didn’t drop out or anything like that," he said. "We knew the deer herd was down from counts taken mer foliage was heavier i year and It was hard to see deer, we couldn't tell Just 1 The season ends Nov. M and hunters have until noon Dec. t to make their entries. This allows travel lime from dei;r hunting ramps. C. B. McCoy. 392 W. Iroquois Rd., Pontiac, holds first place with a 195-pound buck shot last Wednesday near L’Ansc in the Upper Peninsula. He needed one shot from a 348 Winchester to drop the 6-polnter. Since opening day, live new leaders have born rworded. Several hunters have phoned The Press to report killing deer over 200 pounds but m weight s'ins for these whitetails have anpeared. Entries are lagging behind last year at th's time. Hunters report seeing fewer d?er and this is one of the big reasons. The cold front scheduled to move in this weekend could help. The eariy leader was Robert Sparkman, 4100 Airport Rd., ^ Waterford with a 107-pounder. Then Calvin Holmes of Auburn Heights eiftered a 170-ponnd . buck with near-perfect 8 points. LEADER — C. B. McCoy is shown with his 195-pound, 6-point buck that is leading The Pontiac Press Deer Contest. He shot the deer in the Upper Peninsula. 'So, all three of us were in on the kill because we aU hit it." j The bear weighed about 200 pounds, field dressed. Although the {Bayleys had "antlerless deer" permits, they didn’t "ev«i see a doe," laccording to the father. I A coyote made the mistake of using a deer runway south of Turtle Lake in the northeast comer of Oscoda County and paid with its! life. Lee Gentges, 37 N. Francis St., Pontiac, took a brief lead with a 176-pound buck shot on Whitefish Point in the Upper Peninsula. Bob Martin of Holly downed a 185-pounder near his homer Walter Krause, Ml Mewmlnee Urges Crash Program To Wildlife Lands PiOFESSIONAl Wrestling WED., NOV. 23 ot Pentisc NsHwisI Cusid Armory, S.iO P.M. SATTLI BOTAI, S«T» MCB la Ihc rtac at ttt uau tlaw! InctaSlag Lali Martian — "Tke Mighty" Thar — -raarUu" SkIcMs — EaS Daaaraa — SUva SaM — Uala raplaaaa aaS JIa "Tha ■ aUalaalaS !■ aal tar tha -----------------M*alSi! lallla Baral Chaatglaaihlg. MaUhaukar — Bart Eaky ElagalSa It.SS — EaMrraS It.M Pontiac Dog Takes Two First Places Bartlett said he saw evidence ol many deer in areas he surveyed | just, before and just -af^er the Nov. 15 opening ol the season. Mid-sea.son spot checks, how- ever. indicated the kill was going to be down, he Said, Talks with hunters who had taken part in, organized deer drives to make 40 Court Dr., Pontiac, won the animals move showed good places in West Virginia success. I las* weekend. "This will probably be a fair' year for hunters," Bartlett said.l ‘he derby »^e and •Not as good as last year but certainly not what you’d call ter- The Prairie Breeze, a l^year-old female pointer owned by Dave Panel Meeting on Trout Set At Ann Arbor was at Parkersburg sponsorship oJ the Blenncrhaffet Field Trial Club. Petitions Circulated Not so, Bartlett said "We have reports from areas where there were special seasons arid areas where there were no| s[)ecial seasons,” he said. "There ] Is nothing to indicate the doe .sea j s have cut down the herd. It'S: Seek 'Any Deer' Repeal I Petitions are being circulated has been so great,” she said, been ju.st as hard to ace deerja,,)^;^^ statp legislature to re-|had to have more run off.” tvhere they had special seasons governing "anterless! * ★ ★ as where they didn f. jdeer" season in Michigan. I The Haywards spend about Bartletl offered one Interesting | jj,p Greater Michigan Conserve-months of the year at their cabin I possibility for the reports of a League of Gladwin is behind near Gladwin. Mrs. Hayward petitkfns. Members of the ports many does are being wanton-league are distributing them ly killed and then left to rot. around the state. ; in tke recent Michlgaa Pointer and Setter Clnb trials at Highland recreation area, Grubb’s U-months-old setter. The Unchained Melody, was third In the poppy atake. The Prairie Breeze has won lour straight firsts and will attempt to extend this string in the Greater Detroit Bird Dog Club’s field trial at Highland on Dec. 6-7. dnistically reduced deer crop. "The strongest factor so Isr Is the weslher," he said. "Last year we hsd tracking snow all Ihrmigh the season in almost all areas. Resides that. It was cold enough last year so hunters had to keep moving and by doing that they kept the deer moving. "Deer are harder to see when I hero U no snow and hunters have a greater tendency to sit still wtlen it’s warm, ” Bartlett said. ■This could mean that the deer are there in nearly as great numbers as la.st year but that hunters In addition to urging an end to the ('onser\'Bllon Depart-lUenl's baste deer iiianagemeni pmgrani, the petitions request that all future speidal deer seasons be determined by the In-dlvldaul township boards In ench county. Mrs. Forest Hayward, 73 E. “A mall carrier told me me alMiul seven liead does next to a rural road. I went to the place and found be was right. They hAl all been shot. I walked back through the area and eventually saw 18 dead d(3r« and fawns. National Watershed Policy Announced ■ p<-rmils. A policy statement designed to stimulate interest in enlarging opportunities for fish and wikHif" in the national watershed protection and flood prevention program under Public Law 566 hw been issued by the U. S. Soil Conservation Service. It makes clear that fish and wildlife developments are a legitimate part of the small shed work, and that the SCS .has a definite responsibility for participating in such developments and for stimulating interest in entire party shooting a doe and "‘'“"‘‘"“..J? those hunters with permits Management Institute, picking out the best ones and leaving th«< remainder. protertion and flood proven- niay be spent for two fish wildlife categories a* defined by the statement. These are miti-'temper or reduce damages to fish and Chicago St., Ponti^, is distributing "anterless deer’ the petitions in the Pontiac area. She is a memlier of the GMd., "The demand for the petitions overhearing hunters in n Wc.st Branch restaurant telling about each member in the NEAR PERFECT — Calvin Holmes of Auburn Heights shot this buck near Harrisvilie Friday. It weighed 170 pounds and was an early leader in the Pontiac Press Deer Contest. Note the near perfect antlers. East Lansing, or the University ofj Michigan Extension Service C'inference Department, 1610 Washtenaw Ave., Ann Arbor. The Winter Meeting of Trout, Unlimited at the University of Michigan Union at Ann Arbor, Saturday, Dec. 10, will feature a panel conference on trout fisher-erman as well as trout management under the title "Information Flow in Fish Management. It will be held under the auspices ol the Fisheries Division of the University’s School of Natural Resources with It’s head. Dr, Karl . Lagler, as moderator. The panel conference will start at 1 p.m. and be followed by the membership meeting at 3:30 p. The speaker at the membership meeting dinner starting at 6:30 p.m. will be Prof. Richard Meier, who will speak on "Bottlenecks and Floods in Communica-traoing the impact of the new developments in coftimunica-tions science all the way down to the fish. Toastmaster for the dinner will be Lee Smlts. former Michlgm Conservation Commissioner veteran outdoor writer and broadcaster. Interested trout fishermen are invited to attend the panel air.-ference, membership meeting and dinner and should make reservations through the Trout. Unlimited headquarters, P.O. Box 1. Dove Management Set dosed his camp when h^ found dead dcs-s on P™P^rty."i „ „,^asures. which she said. “He knew that it had “ to In' a hunter at his camp, but he didn't know who was guilty. he told them all to be gone by .Sunday noon." CHAMPION BETBIKVER - Mr and Mrs. Richard M. Hecker of Tticsoa, Ariz., ailmire thdr Labrador retriever, Dolobran's Smoke TVail, which won the championship stake of the National Retriever Trials at WeWon Springs, Mo.. Sunday. Sirioke Trail Is 9 yean old, rather old for a ciuunpion. Mr. Hecker became •be tint handier to win ria^ wildlife habitat" resulting from a proposed project and enhancement measures "that create, increase j fish and wildlife haM- violations are up this season. And the department has more officers 4ft the north woods than ever be-, in an attempt to clamp down [iw breakers. herd seenM to be gettlBg smaller. ttors Jast to gel the best one, it wen’t he hiag before there aren’t any deer." Many hunters returning from Northern Michigan report seeing fewer dcEn*. A gixxi percentage are placing the blame on the "any. If It's for Skiing We have It! NEW YORK CITY - President Carl W. Buchheister of the Na-i tional Audubon Society has rec-| led the federal government! embark cn a "crash program" to acquire and save marsh habitat for wildlife while it is still available. In an editorial appearing currently in "Audubon Magazine." th? society executive proposed ad-| vances, or loans, from the federal treasury to permit buying 44 million acres of wetlands during thej next ten years at an estimi cost of $150,000,000. I *11)0 loans would be repaid over the next 30 to 50 years with the $3 federal license, known as the Duck Stamp,” which is pur-l chased annually by some two mil-1 lion waterfowl hunters. I MUD AND SNOW TIRE DISCOUNTS wiir Bar a BaeaDt BraaS Nav 6.70x15 $10.95 7.50x14 $10.95 .hai Tai aaS Baaaaaaai. _ NO kdONIY DOWN Siart, iBsar*^^ ** New Saaa TIraa al Unittd Tirt Servke Cloft-Oit 01 1960 lAMBLERS—MEICUITS S«Tt Up to $900 Wilsoa Alto Soles. lac. M-M al MUtara B4.. HlfkUaS MD 4-11 Federal and state wildlife interests have agreed on a comprehensive program aimed at im-the management >f mourning doves, according to the Wildlife Management Institute. The program, largely developed 1^ a committee special of the International Association of Game Fish and Conservation Commissioners and subsequently accepted i by that organization, outlines the, activities that are needed and, assigns responsibilities for their | implementation. STOP WITH ATLAS rrrna niATI ACTION WITH HSM ATLAS MUFFLERS FOR LONGEST USE! ' lUTAUEl Fill II 1» IIIITFI. ^ GUARANTEED! $f|95 e8H..n.Meyt.’iS-u -----------JlCfl. II ’K AU 6RUIT eAlM AM MAIICt fUnt N9MAU rite? — SaHirJay to 6 ATLAS BONDED BRAKES 121 WAYNE ST. Behind Federoi's — FE 3-7855 2 ILOCKS N. of 14 MILE "rear Caaiplate f M Shop” . .....f-"' Knowledgeable people buy Imperial It’s a matter of taste (and value) IMPERIAL 83 95 8 T49 ;hiram walker j wliiskty by Hiram Walker •tINMO WHISKEY • 88 riOOf • 3» STIAKSHT WHISKtVS. 8 ViARS Ol MWt OlO OIAIN NtUTIAl SfieiTS • HKAM WAIKEIA IONS INC.. «OBA llUNOI$ A THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 23. 1960 THIRTEEN Directg, Stars in Productions WoTld Famous Ballerina Finds Home in Fort Worth .7^ AT PkcMai WOMAN DIES-Mn. R. E. Wallace, Woman ot the Year in 'Vlfta, CalU., lait year, died Monday in New York. She wai nationally known in the Camp Fire Girls movement for nearly 46 years. Vote Scheduled in New Zealand Labor Party Holds Bare Majority so" Its Fate Will Be Decided WELLINGTON. N. Z. (AP) New Zealand will decide in a general election Saturday whether to retain its .Socialist government. ★ * ★, The Labor party has held office for three years with the narrowest pMSible working majority. In a Parliament of 80 seats, Labor has 41 and its only effective opposition, the Private Enterprise National party, has 39. ★ ★ * New Zealand had 14 years of Socialism from 1935 to 19^. Then it bad a national government for eight years. At the last triennial election in 1957, Labor scraped home again. ★ ★ New Zealand's Labor party is similar to the British Socialists. In fact, it had its beginning among immigrants from the British Isles. Heading Labor's bid for return to office Saturday is a remarkable old man. Prime Jilinister Walter Nash. Now in his 79th year, Nash has made his mark as a world statesman. A native of Kidderminster, E>igland, Nash emigrated to New Zealand in 1909 and plunged straight into Socialist politics. He has been in Parliament 31 years. ★ A ★ Nash is opposed by the up-and-coming farmer and politician. Keithe J. Holyoake, 56, leader of the National party. Holyoake is no beginner. He entered Parliament at 28 and rose to become New Zealand's prime minister for 11 weeks prior to the last election in 1957. ■AAA Labor gained power in 1957 with an array of glittering promises, headed by an income tax rebate, cheap housing loans and a payment of J2.25 a week for every child under 16. Falling overseas markets and tiw cost of these laromises led to drastic burets in 1958 and 1959 and Labor’s popularity waned. A third party. Social Credit, will be contesting every seat. At the last election it won only 7 per cent of the total vote. But it could ..split th^„yote in a number of key districts. The Communists are putting up 19 candidates. It is a token ges-lyf for in 1957, Communists won onfy 0.15 per cent of the total NEW YORK (UPI) Slavenska, one of tl greatest ballerinas, ha her talents In Texas and finds it is paying off in a big, big Texas way. Since the faU of 1959 the Yugoslav-born dancer has made her home in Fort Worth where she is artistic director and star of the Ballet Arts Company and director of the Texas Academy of Ballet Arts. Now she is preparing to merge the dance company and the school into a cultural nonprofit organization, the Texas Ballet of Fort Worth. A A * 'You can’t imagine the of satisfaction I have felt in Fort Worth,” she said during a here. ’’The freshness and the enthusiasm are wonderful. I've kept my own youthful enthusiasm for ballet and I find it reflected back daily in Fort Worth.” The beautitttl 44-year-oid redhead has made Fort Worth one of the nation’s most up-and-coming ballet cities with the help of a number of young cultural leaders, Including Mrs. Charles Renand, prerident of Fort Worth Ballet Arts. It is a black-ink operation with an annual budget based on M per cent of the box office receipts. Miss Slavenska has known the best in ballet. She was a star of the Ballet RuSse de Monte Carlo and headed her own companies, including the scintillating Slavenska - Franklin Ballet. She also has been the prima ballerina of the Chicago Opera and Metropolitan Opera ballet companies. ”I think some of our productions in Fort Worth are worthy of any stage, and I have several dancers the company who are quite superb and ready to dance major companies,” she said. “Ten years ago people would have said it couldn’t be done — in Fort Worth or any other city outside New YoiU.” The dancer said the ballri bug really started biting Americans shortly alter World War II. National tours by great stars like Pavlova and companies like the Ballet Russe had prepared I way, and ballet schools began spring up in major cities even before the war. TV, which brought ballet into everybody’s living room, gave the art tremendous impetus. ’’The growth of interest in the ballet in the United SUtes was a natural process,” said Miss Sal-venska. ’’First we had museums, then symphony orheestras, then opera, then ballet. Ballet completes fi^troit Edison Buys Frontage on Seaway DETROIT (fi — President Walker Cisler told Detroit Edison stockholders the firm has acquired 642 acres fronting on the St. Clair River to be made available for lo-t»tk>ns of other industries. The tract adjoins Detroit E«-m’s 8t. Clair power plant and It midway between St. Clair and Marine aty. •Cisler described it as ’’the only available large site in Southeastern Michigan with the multiple advantage of St. Lawrence Seaway frOirtage, excellent rail and highway access, lutd proximity to a major steam-electric power station.” AAA Edisons acquisition, he ,<.said, ‘’fits Into Ae many other activities” qf the company aimed at area development. Dedicate Oi^gen Plant for Great Lakes Steel DETROIT (f» — Dedication ceremonies were held Monday for a new oxygen plant capable of producing 500 tons oi hi^purity oxygen daily for the steel mills of Great Lakes Steel Carp, in Ecorse. The plant, bulk by tbs Co., a divirion Union Chrbide Oorp., operates on a 24-hour basis, sending oxygen through a pipdine to the adjacent Great Lakes Steel. The plant sucks in air, then separates and purifies the oxygen. In addition to the Great Lakes, sharing frontiers with the United States, Canada has nine lakek tiRit eadi are more than 100 miles In length. the circle of the arts as they have been developed by Western civilization.” Qvic ballets have a history ot only about 13 years In America. Fort Worth piemeered the field in Texas and Sm Antonio, Dallas and Houston now have their own companies. Other leading civic ballets have homes in Atlanta, Birmingham, Louisville, Miami, and Washington where Miss Slavenska’s former partner, Frederic Franklin, is director. ’’Every city of any size will have a civic ballet in the not too distant future,” said Miss Slavenska. •'It’s just the normal thing for little girts to want to study ballet these days and It’s getting less and lew difficult to attract boys to the profession. And that Includes Texas boys. too. They’ve got such strength for the lifts.” Rae-Venslo March in Hudson Parade Pontiac will be represented in the J. L. Hudson Thanksgiving Day Parade tomorrow In Detiuft by the Rae-Vens All-Girt Drill Z$a Zsa in Hospital I for Medical Checkup NEW YORK (UPD—Actress Zsa Zsa Gabor is undergoing a medical checkup at Doctors Hospital, ” was disclosed Tuesday. The most widely publicized of the Gabor sisters entered the hospital Sunday. A spokesman said she is not ill. ADAM AMES By Ixm Fiw The drill team, under direction of Jackie Rae Voorhees of 255 Dk* Ave., is the sUte champion. A A A It will be followed in the parade line-up by a St. George and the Dragon float. The girls also will march in the annual Christmas parade in RoeSester, Dec. 10. 1 be tele- Hagerty Riot Loader Loses Japanese Election TOKYO un Toshio Tanaka, ) Socialist legislator who led the crowd that besieged presidential press secretary James C. Hager-ty’s car «1»en he arrived in Tokyo last spring, has been defeated in his bid for re-election. AAA Returns from Fukuoka showed he ran last in a Held of six and gave up his seat in Parliament to a candidate of the moderate Democratic Socialist party. AAA Voters in the district had sent him to Parliament in five previous elections. THE GIRL& By Franklin Folger “I thought we’d economize this year and make our own cards. BOARDING HOUSE PSTTER eev UP YOUR EMSIME fOR A flOlCK-VAKE-OFF, MA30R-- X tWlNlk MARTH/5^6 6ETT\Nfi $USPlGOUS/|FI Read tme 5MOk£ signals right, smeV DOESN'T KNO^YOU'RE- COWING HERE 1 INSTEAD OF GOING tO yJORK ' SHE'S READY-fODO SOME r By Ernie Bushmilier IMAGINE —NANCY GAVE ME THE AIR FOR ROLLO, THE RICH KID I REMEMBER V" THE-DAY SHE WROTE THAT Nancy loves ^lUGGO iJ a ps By Dick CavaUi BUT 7H«» owe CALL THA-rt<-DERNITEUV GOING DOWN IN MV MCMORV BOOK/ By Charles Kuhn FOURTEEN__________ Airline Offices Open at Airport North Central's Staff Awaits inaugural Flight to Pontiac Dec. 1 North Central Airlines'* tablished offices In the PontUu: Municipal Airport terminal build- ing. * * * A four-man force is setting ready lor the company’s first commercial airiine flights in Pontiac Dec. 1, said J. 0- Edwards. North Central station manager. Edwards. ». ol H OneMa Rd., has been a North Central agent at Lansing's CspHal CHy Airport since lISS. A native of Kansas City. h< joined the company in 1951 as ar agent in Chicago and later in Hancock. ON FTROT FLOOR Raymond Voelker, Arnold Rgpr and Dale Funkey have been assigned as agents on Edward's staff by North Central. The company’s offices nre on the first floor ol the terminal building, evertsoking the field. North central will operate the first floor ticket window at the western end of the The main lobby. Something new in home furnish Ings is the manufacture of juvenile replicas of adult-type furniture You’ll be able to learn more abou it from the advertising pages of your local newspaper, since furni ture stores usually invest 65 per cent of their advertising budgets In newspapers.________ th* viu-ioi or nrojjVfW'!? U tccMtiDs biat «• • IHl WeS-Oo u b* uMdb* uw Dwisrtnunt ol tlni Ikluk ••111 >w*Ur opcclfj THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 28. 1060 of CD Report Rep. Moss Says Hoegh Put Pressure on Army to Quiet Deficiencies _ Department of Publte work.. 3H Olensyy W Walled Lake. Mleh Ip. ‘V Blddlni **• “** “ * JESSIE K JOHNSON. VllUta Clei Noe. M. M. IM MWENTlsindlNT rOB BIM INO, fcl which piece end hour I will be publicly the edttetruclloe of • combined gei-w- Ind'XrH.II lb »:« .V'llaL® »i WoleerlDO Lake. The eona be of eonerett block with tnf. ToUl aroa of butidtnt matele SIN M. t*- Propooal n X wtiro coSalrbctlon and tl» neoe.-•are labor and maurlali for the »an-Tho rtf ht U reotreed to ro^t any all propoiau. walw any Informality the propoiali recolyed and to occ. I___kib dot. . ■'-incl. dot. hchs........... rteradlah.^ pk............ Onions, dry. M lbs. . Onlona, iroon, dot. bchi Partlay. Curly, dot. beba. Paralty. tool. bebt. .\... P-.ranlpt, dos. PaeU . . deaoe was In a latter aeat to Um Army last summer by Lea A. Hoegh. director of the Office of avU and Defease MobiUsatton. Moss said Hoegh, as "political face-saving,” had suppressed a re-______ port of a study made for the Army] by Johns Hopkins University. Moss'TuTiUpa. said the report alleged that: 1. The present national warning system is regarded as a basically unsound one. 2. The present national alerting communications network can involve serious transmission delays. 3. Reassessment of Coneirad indicates that it is no longer needed means of denying navigational aid to enemy carriers. The OCDM disputed these points. Radlshaa WhIU. dot. bek “ K Acorn, bu........... b, Bttttcrcnw M. b. Bnltamut bu. .. h hM Auaah. Hubbard, lb bn. TutbIm, doa. bcha........ ~imlpa, t-----' : 18 Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POtltTBT DETROIT. Nov. 33 (AP>—Prices per pound delivered Detroit for No t quality Ure poultry: heavy typo hona 30-31; heavy type roasters over 6 Ibe. 3S-36: brollera and fryars 3-4 Iba White. 13-30; Arred Rock 30-21. turkeys, hem Moss said that earlier this month Hoegh denied a charge that the! report had been suppressed by the' Army because of civil defense i pressure. There was no new comment from Hoegh. , •A ★ ♦ Dr. Theodore J. Wang was principal author of the report ordered by the Army. The Army contact for the Johns Hopkins group Li. Gen. A. G. Trudeau, Army chief of research and development. DBEUIT EQGS DETROIT. Nov 33 cAPi-Eaf pricea paid per daaen by first recalvera delivered to Detroit. Ioom In 30 doien cates, conaumer's gradt ilncludlng U S. Whlte--^rade A Jumbo 55-03: extri large 55-51: large 54'a-M: medium 45*4 50: •ma_jl lS-4j; browna-jrade_A II 35-3 Livestock NEW YORK (* - The stock market milled irregularly fairly active trading eariy this afternoon. Changes of most key stocks were narrow. A few exceptions stood out. The pretty brisk trading rate I the morning reflected desire of traders to clear the decks prior to what will be a long Thanksgiving Day weekend for many Wall Streeters. The market will be closed Thursday. Aut4M, alrcraft-mimiiles, drags, baihling matcrisis sad tobaoc4>s were a Mt Mgher. A lower tone prevailed among moat .iIIb. steels and chemkels. Electronics were mixed. The news background was uninspiring. The Commerce Denart-ment reported that incoming business of manufacturing firms continues to lag. The averages were depressed by a drop of around 2 points in DuPont, selling ex dividend. Tibreboard Paper Producte, which cut the ffuarterly dividend 25 cents from 35 cents, fell more than 2 points. ReyiMildB Tobacco was ahead more thaa 4 pohils after rtaiiig t polRts to tl^i on a block of 1.2M, shares. Bcicaasc s large amount of the stock is fsmlly-owniMl, the laMie Is thinly distributed. brokers said, and was apparently responding to favor- •bla 355. Tradt . on limited supply alaughtar st«ra sad hellers atMdy *-g. Bulk ol early supply cows: th e steady to .trong. A load of low e l.OW pound yearling iteers 37.N ..tall lot of average choice yenrllng steers 37.50. Standard to average good ~ N-3S75 Utility ateera and helferi 15 M-30 U A tmall lot of good helferi around TM pounds 34.35. UUIIly cows 14.M-15.55 eanners and cutters 11.55-14.N. Hogs—Salable 3M. Butchers opening 0 higher: sows steady, ua. Nr • 10 lb butcher. 1I.I5-15.N. Ml 3 lM-330 lb. butcheri l.£P“n_______________________________ 15 35-15 55 Mixed No 3 and J 330-3M lb. butcheri: I7.M-1I.M No 1 ' and 3 3N-4N lb. aowx 14 75-15 N 3 and 3 4N-5M lb. aowx 13.50-14 35. Vealerx lalable M. Unchanged aiw^ Mlable 3M. Unchanged Monday'! eatimaus — catile 3i calvex 3N: hogi I.5M: i a possible 2 for 1 split. Some other tobaccos, including American Tobacco and Liggett & Myers were narrowly on the plus side in response W defense-type buying. Martin po. was up about a point and General Dwamics more than that. Fraction^ gains were scored by United Aircraft and Boeing. Schering, ahead more than a point, st(^ out among drugs. \ Pfizer, Soulhem Railway, Consolidated Edison, Kennecoft, West-inghouse Electric, International Paper, Litton Industries, Csfter-pillar, Goodrich, Ford and U.&. Steel were fractional gainers. New York Stocks - (Early Morning QuotaUon.l RALPH WILSON Pyihians to Mark Know America Week With Talk Local observance of Know Your America Week will present Michigan's Grand Chancellor KnighU of Pythias Ralph Wilson of Hillsdale as keynote speaker when Lodge 19 meets at 8 p.m. Saturday. ♦ ■a A- Topic of his talk wijl be '‘Consider the Bles-sings of Freedom." in keeping with the week’s theme. Know Vour‘America Week Is spoaaored aamialiy by the AU-Ameriran Conference to Combat Communism, of which the Knights of Pythias Is an affiliate. Purpose of the week is to jal upon Americans to rededktie themselves to the preservation of the basic principles of liberty. Grand Chancellor Wilson will be assisted by a full line of grand officers in presenting first rank to several members at Lodge 19 here. Members from lodges throughout Southeastern Michigan are expected to attend as guests. p 1 5N Gunman Hobs HO Twp. Store of $600 Sum A lone Negro gunman, his right arm in a sling and a piece of adhesive tape over his mouth, eseaped with some J600 after holding up an A&P Supermarket in Royal Oak Township yesterday. Manager of the market at 1006 W. 8-Mile Road is Arthur E. Allani, 34. of 3118 Helmsford, Walled LaUc. Allard said the gunman entered the store about 6:30 p.m. and followed him to the cashier's rage. Allard reported the thug then brandished s revsiver and imlnlcd to a sign on a shopping bag he was carrying which sud; ' Put the money in the bag and i'Oj won't get hurt.” The manager seooped up the hills in the till and pul them in the bag. The man then calmly walked out Ihe front d ' BSLISoiTS^ Oommlool The City Commission is planning t 11-member committee to' help guide bus transportation in Pontiac. Mayor Philip E. Rowslon said last night that he would name five members of Ihe committee weeks, at the same time that the six other commissioners each name one. An oulgrowlh of the Mayor's TranM|Mirlallon OmimIMew ol this spring, the new cIIImui's hotly will serve until the end of the prenimt rommisslon term in April of lan. The committee’s job will be to study public transportation from long-range point of view, while making recommendations concerning any temporary operational proMems Involving Pontiac Transit Corp., the city-leased bus company of the past six months. * * * In the courae of studying the kxig bus strike eariy this year, mayor's committee recommended penhanent citizen's group be formed to help the city on policy matters. On recommendation of City Manager Walter K. Wlitman, a bid from M a ft y 111 e Manufacturing Carp, for ||]rchase of a chy-owned lol at Ragley and Rockwell streets was accepted. The mo bid IneliMied Ihe stipulation that righl-ol-wa,v for pomible Bsgley widening would be sold Ihe elly si a eoniparstlve price. The eompany Manta the propert.v for a proponed parking lol. in a special measure aimed at equity in assessments, property-owners on Second Street, Joslyn to Ivy, were granted 81 per front foot credit In assessments tor curbs and gutters installed this year. * * * Plans for grading and graveling on Lehigh Street, Highwood to the subdivision line, were dropped be-of neighborhood opposition. grading and graveUag of Howard McNaUI StreeL Gillespie to Warner resulted In the hearing on Dec. g The assessments covering costs for a sidewalk on Shirley Street, Lois to Fiddis, were confirmed In three annual paj^ents. Fllle Line, Inc.'s lease at Pontiac Municlpb^ Airport was extended at the company's request 15 years to 20.® nV Nat Cash R Dalrv Oypi Lead Central a Weal 534 33 1 Pac O a El ■ 55 ' « • Pan A W Air . 17.; ---. Param Plct . . . 33.4 Parka Da .... 63 3 Pennev. JC . 1.. 45 7 P, RR Pw 55.3 Pflxer ..... re^M? 4.V 4 Shell on 11 7- Binclair .... 3r3 Seu Pac .. 31 5 Sou Ry 54.3 Sperry Rd .. 14 3 atd Brand M atd Oil Cal . 13 3 Bid Oil Ind Std Oil 5 51 std ' BU4------- stud Pack 8UB C " Swift Oh M 4 Tran W Air so 4 Tranaamer . 1 t Twent Can . ]71 Underwood . ,?J.4 UB*Rub'‘'.‘. CT . . 33 4 jjpjohn Ray U 4 u„ Tel 2? _ R * Weatx A Bk cop® J* Wfxtf El .. . 13. .113 8:1 N • Younaat Bh*T 17.3 «« Zenith RnT ON CASS LAEB, J3 a rntfith. FE S-3S3I after ' 4-RdOM COTTAOB. MODB^. -----------City Halt. : i:ROOM'lHiA'rfD. niBNiSHlD OR unlurntabad apt. ilargei. Tiled bath, gaa heat, beautiful groundi and location. Adulta praferrad. |7S_per month^IM 3-4307, 10-Ft WIDB H008BTRAILIR FOR rent or aala. Or awpp for amaller trailer. FB 6-lOOV__________ AUBURN MANOR efficiency. 1 COUPLE AND baby' PRIVATE bath and entrance^ FE 4-3147 APARTMBNT. NICI LOCATION on ROOMS AND BATH. NEWLY i decorated, near Drayton Shop- | ~lng Center. Couple preferred. I ROOM'UPPBR. pvt ntTRANCi: : rt S pm ACE TREE SERVICE ' K I STUMP REMOVAL If Tree removal, trimming. Oel _I hid. FE Mtli or FE MW. - EM 3-3416. CUB'TOM HOMES. BUILT TO SUIT ' BULLDOZINO LAND SC A P view. your plan or oura. Model avail- ' Bloomfield Fashion Shop X)ONTER FDI80M FOR DRY ' SSjSIetl «"e‘wui Sim Vimi il' : ConaY. Co"dR 3dgM > pearanee, MI i-3713 fit E Ma- ' CARPENTER AND CEMENT A 1-HOUR PROGRAM I PI«. Birmingham. __________________work Odd Joba eapeclally PE la plannad for the purpoao of: CUtANERB DOWNTOWN OFFICE . — cboo^ a aelect few fortrain- bldg. Do not appU unleu you , FAIN'nNO INTERIOR k EZTER-Ing In mlea and talot managa- j ^op. Reply Pontiac Preaa ^lor. By ma or hour F« i-naai privilege!, utllltlea paid. >3 8. Tai^ CO' T "OES ' 4 L ‘ UTILITIES Weekly. 113 up. Tru Ruatlc Cab-Ina. 4« 6 Broadway. Lake Orion. MY 3-MM___________ LARGE LOVELY 3 AND BATH near Airport, adulta. OR 1-W43. LAKEFRONT. WARM AND FLEA------ ------ound. 1 or t peo- yaa urrnrv, rvi. aniiuvnv*. . fumlabod. FI I-3IM. After • :»_ _ _ 5 RMS., and'BATH, COR. WHltTE-mora_and Parke. FE * “*• i RMS . AND BATH.'I ly decorated, child w oil heat Ft 3-MW ________ t ROOMS. GROUND FLOOR. WEST _alde MulU only. FE_l-6634 l-IWM^APARTTMINT_ W Wtn ROOMR" FIREP Street. FE 4-6031 I ROOMS. FOR INFORMATION cell FB 4-1334 H36 Orcherd Lk. OROdfiF^Airo'dARAOir AOT^^ Height!. FE 3-7061 after 6. APARTMENTS ORCHARD COURT "Bent Now Oreetlv Reduced" - AIR CONDITIONED -I AND 3 BEDROOM -Modern In Every Detell - ADULTS ONLY - FE 8-6918 MANAOER It SALMER ST , APT 6 Op» Deify A Sun. 16 e.m. - I p.i^. \Oi:ORED APT. Phone FE 1-6601 . COLORED. 4 ROOMS AND BATH. 636 month I33’v 8. Saxtner *-plyupHair- —* __ MSlrou 4-mi. I 3-BEDROOM ~~LAKIFROHt. Isi A ! month OR 3-6604. I BRAUnFULLT FURNIBldD TRAlff j er. all_ullllUaa fumlaued. >0uaro _____________________ LAKE ORION. COZY 1 BEDROOM. 100 Height! Rd., MT 3-l3t4. LICABK - BEAUTIFUL 3 BBBl room dutch colonUI brick. Lako-front on Pontlec Laka. Oarage and boat houae. Taylor. OR 4B100. WALLED LAEE - _______________ tage, bcatad and furolabad - a 4-1460. ____________ 1-BEDROOM HOUSE NEAR FiSRER side 48. Wl_ . i-wall carpet- . Rent Houses Unfurn. 40 3-BBDROOM MODERN. I 3 BEDROOMS. BASEMENT "AND ---------- —. garage Neer Pontiac Airport. EM treverao drapea. FB i J-oilI. 3~lEDRdOM BRICK '•LAEe'’FRTV- CUT AND WRAP 1-A Reduced Rates _y____________________ No**co”* re’'4iw WUi. Children to Board 28 pie. 1 3-4100. WIVES ara aakad te attend. Re-freahmeota will be urved. Phone PI 0-0430 by 0 p.m. Friday If yeu wlab to attend. I DRESS SALESLADIES I Permanent poaltlona. good aelary, I commlaalon. vaeaUan pay. Inaur-anec, dlacounte *•' Dept. Store, 74 MOVING SERVICE ________________ -----------Rate! FE 6-34U RELIABLE DAY CARE. LICENSED 'n?0-W4’^** ; GENERAL THUCKINO DAY OR _home. PE 1-0340 ____ sf:™^ AND - ALuViiUM wtd. Household Good. 29 ling die proceaa muHir Follow up t—" Eitenalve pracLcal 4-3171 ! DEPENDABLE PERSON. I OB ( arrCT—BiaTHiliTr d.jn,^..ek May llv, m. LI light hauling FE EXPERIENCED SALESLADY WALL WABBUfb BY MAC HAULINO A RUBBISH. $3 LOAD editer - AnyUme FE 4^^__________ MA I HAULINO AND ItUBBISH. NAME ____I your price. Any Ume. FE «-Q0t6. ODELL CARTAGE Local aid long dlatance moving. ' Phone FE ---------- mirc. HIgheat dollar Qu.ck aerv Ice. Allea a_ FE 4-MJU______ PC OR A HOUSE PULL WTD Quick caah lor furniture TV’a. appaancey. Bargain House FE Orion. Couple ____ A RTI ALLY FURNISHED. 3 BOOM APT OOOD AREA. FE 6-»003 8INOLB MAN OR WORKING cauple._l48 month._Fl_5-3030. WA 1ERFORO' 3 ROOMS. ' BABY ■velcome 116 week OR 3-37M Rent Apts. Unfurnished 38 4-3W_ I'Tficiency .\p;irtments Living room. kit^enT bftihmm. Pnddock. FK 2 90$$ ___ L.\KE VfSTA APTS. OPEN DBC. 1 3 rooma and bath, stove, refrigerator and all utlllUea *■—■ PI 4-7S00. W illiam Miller Realtor EE 2-0263 070 West Huron Siraet Open I ti upbel^leanoZpS 1-0439' LIGHT AND HEAVT TRUCKING I VOUNO MAN'dESIREB work of ?ilVl'*and”front'md* toaSL PE • '*'0 600 'dollars”8POT”cA8H any kind. FE 6-H04 ______ !2I:‘ waoing. rg. ^ lurnlture and ap- Apply VOUNO MAN.,,AOE__iO ,WAH'T8 --------------'-------------------^ ^ nliaAea. nioha Furnltura rfc if any kind FE 4-0010. clal typa route. Also 1 1ST, »rk 16 23 N. Sacmaw St. Card of Thanks ILL__A ROUND STRUCTURAL aTEEL MAN. IXFBIUENCKD IN WILOINO. CUTTINO AND LAT-OUT. APPLY D4 'PERSON SAR-JAC STEEL 8UFFLT . Ill ................... . _ Painting & Decorating 23 appliances furniture and Work Wanted Female 12 tv • by uie piece or houaifui ------- IST-CLASa FAINTINO AND 1 WOMEN WANT WALl^,WASH-; ---------------------- h,uted.' PE'l'-ll'n ARE YOU SATISFIED , WITH YOUR PRESENT EARNINGS? If not wa havo an .opportunHy for you that la worth ihvestlgaUng — Men nre mmktng up te flf.lW and more yearly In commitaloaa. Car heMal. For Interview call FF 6-61M before 6 p.m.__ Immedieti ...... ...... _____ 6-7106 _ mrin3‘'hoiiteiMnlni'"FE’MMi^ . ^ ___________ _ F D R NIT U B E' BOUGHT AND URL TO MODEL HAIR STYLES BY THE WEEK OR BYTHE DAYT I IST CLASS FAINTINO AND PA- te give advanced trelning lo op- Topod references. FE 0-0007 after | JJ25 rrkiOM Utnt wt tre irtinlBg for . itjcin J*43ll __________YOU. OXFORD COMMUHTTY i"al'’a;!fani.‘*.iTe nfa^;; ' i ‘^^^^.“carh-^’orti^Sa^TllS- --17 iStehtT *i5iJKr‘“DSSn*lr..‘*'‘FE iR^iNOsToAY'virDHK AND BA- j 1ST CL^ ‘"TAND EXT PAiNr: ; Wanted Miscellane^t 30 - I ?** .Our Ad AnnouiNlng \ i p’^b'*."'MnUng* ____ ■*?« PSIXrtng FE 4-036V Bunnlv Ml g.Ml6 Dava 1 Large room afi refrio and jtevr Adulta only. FE J OMV l-BBDRM . kirCHEN. BATH, OTH. Priv. parking and antr. FB 1-7436. r AND l ' BEDROOM, PARTLY furn ^efront apU. OR 3-0106. iST FIR. ATTRACTIVE 4'RMS. bath, laundry, garage, stove, rc-frtg.. heat. N Shirley and Lola. Pontiac, adulta only. OL 1-1176. 3-ROOM APTS'. FRIO. AND STOVE and acceaaorles lum., 160 FE 3-1349 MS. Bdith _ _ 3-BBDRM. GROUND FLR PVf^ , ent. Near Blue Sky Theater. 160 ’ mo FB 4J036_______________ 3 ROOMS AND BATH HEAT. HOT ^ **^*‘^ Near'^*flaher^Body MO°mo' ' NEWLY decorated. 3 ROOMS NEW >4 DUPLEX BOMB. LAROi *"*®”^* ; 3-BEDROOM BUNOALOW. IN BYL-I van Lake, gas beat, stevt. refrigerator furn., IIM Uaao. FE { 1-1907 after 1:10 p.m._ 1- BBDRM. BRICK. OAR RXaE basement. Inq. 19 R B. Blvd. after 4 p.m.. ell day Bat. and Sunday. _ _ _ 1-BEDROOM BRICK. FULL BABE-meut. East side. 3 children welcome 99 j-ww. _ A-1 RESIDENTIAL COMkIEIiCIAL j^p -pAlNTiRO. INTERIOR, WIN- ------- —n eatlmatea. all work cuaranteed. FE 61361 or •Wanted to Rent 32 » entrance and bath. Heat hot water and ' ---- ‘urn FE 63033. _______ i 3-ROOM. CLEAN. UPMCR. COL-ortH. 363 W Wilton, TE 3-6793. 3 LAROE ' ROOMS WITH FVT .... txptrltnco If poatlbie,_______. preferably tome executive exper-lence, ----------------- — -------* ' thnnka te- tee Reverend Mur-, phy for hit comforting words. St. Jueoph Hoar"-' ' ney. Dr. Laraoo Oiiffln Funeral OFFICE GIRL For *7*<1*^ towciry store App Knggass Jewelry Co. 25 .\. Sapinaw St. motolteg~* John ti. Caplcs. MY ' o?S-fia0™' 3-1139______________________I tMfKf. A-1 BRICK BUJCK ARD OTMENT | PAINTING ■wlill work. Alao fireplaces OR 3-94S3. i esUmstes. FE 6-0376. A-1 CARPENTRY , PAmRANdUta PAIN'fDfa" RENTAL SERVICE now available. We have list of I over 78 qualified rentera. Ho re- i sulta-no cberte. Register your home. Ilet with ua now! | WE OET RESULTS FOR YOU | C. Schuett. FE 8-0458 I frig Couple only. No pets In-jlUire Apt 6. at 47 _CTarloUe. ROOMS AND BATH, CLEAN, •tova and refrigerator, all ullll-lUes furnlahed. MS per month Inquire 734 W Huron. 0 te 0:30 I 3 bedroom __ i FE 61173 after . ______ WEI ST APTS. 160 AUBURN AVE. 1 bedroom apt newly decorated, vtovc end refrlg end utllltlea furnished, and plenty of closet apace. See manager.______ You can always locate the parties interested in what vou no longer need. When you use the Pontiac Press “For Sale" Want Ads! ____ DECORATE $75 PER MONTH FE 4-7833 644 Beat Blvd N at Valancla 3 BEDROOM TERRACE lOg'MO OR 1-9749 after 4 3-bedro6m home'newly DBC- oratrd Inside end out 110 Water-Ir St 966 par month InquIrt 119 WaUrlv Bt |3 BEDROOM NTEST SIDE HOME. I near St BenedIcU. lull >—•——* I automatic beat and hoi I car garage. |71 per mi i> Cottage type home, near Stralta Lake, automatic neai^and hot water. 999 per *‘BUD" Nicholie, Realtor M Mt. aement St. FE 61191 6RdOM BOUSE, t>ARTLT PUI6 nlihed. 919 week M9 Ralghte Rd . Lake Orion. MT 64733_________ 3-BEDROOM BRICK RARCH. CAR-peted. Children welcome. M9 monte. MA 4-3433. ________ 3 ROOMS. BATH. CdUPLX, CALL _lj m 'tu 9 p m 3039 Joelyn 6BEbR'60M. dlL HEAT CLOSE to ecboola. bua and ahapplas center Adulta. 990 ? Df Larson and tea Sparks-j range for a _____________ ___ Tim fSml^M Mrt'sSrah Gold- »*AI» 3» ■rd M. FOR; PART TIME HOUSEKEEPER _ ______ __________ lug. ^ I dry cleaning route. Full lime. ; 1 people. >4 days. Monday through Jim Nlomchak EM ---—5--------------.------------ Write Pontlec Frets Box 14 stat- ' Friday. Must have own tranapor- ----------------U iivT In Memoriam 2' Ing rtferencee. ____ UUon. Maple Telegraph area Oc-: KAKOAIN —' ------ .................. Oarages, addltlona porchea ____________. UL 61.U. ' FAINTINO PAFERINO. REMOV^ • Washing FE l-l— IN LOVING MEMORY OF MY dear husband and our dtar father James Frbvan. who passed away 9 ytara ago. November 33. Forever In our hearta. Mrt. James Provan k daugtatera. Janet a IN Lovmo MEMORY OF JOHN Onnlel Odneal who paaeed ■'- Nov. n: -1161. Sadly mlaaed wife., aon, mother and litter. Fungal Directors COAT* -FUNERAL U DR AyfOR- PLAINS Donelson-Johns Voorhees-Siple •UNERAL ROME PE 3-S37I - Established Over » Years— Cemeterj^Lots 8 OAKLAND HILLS lUtMORlAL PARK—3 aecttona, 4 graves each. Call FE 4-1640 _______ PERRY MT. PARE CEMETERY' Beautiful 0 grave lot. Will divide. Wl, 4-06K_____________ Write Pontlec Preaa Box 14 te|_rtfercncet. ____ ___ _____ _ : UUon. Maple Tele«ei FLOOR TOE CONtRACroa“'rO IN-, m..i •tell about 1.300 feet of floor Ulo. A*J*“*/1 Ojneml M«t repelr preaent eoncrot. ; RrS'; R I. WICKERBHAM i Box 4. Blrmlngfaem. MIctegM 71t6 W Maple MAyfalr 0-1350 FART TIME WAniUSa. 10 OR POUR MEN OR WOMEN WITH Bu%er*'*llrtvl7ln'**06lo'^’wat«* Tortf Mtel *” “■ neighborhood. OR 3-6600 ' Television Service 24 Wanteil Traniportatlon 34 WOMAN WOULD LIKE RIDE « — - meek 1 p.m. and t:30 p.m I Wllllaini Street to Miracle ' r SERVICE ^ Licensed Upholstering 25 Wtd. Contracts, Mtgi. 35 -F'*"-Ol?ter; Am utv vacanclet. Pull i part Urns Opportunity to card teoome. 160 N. Perry. 0:30 OENERA'Tda AND STARTER RB^ builder, elto 0^1* waeb^ apply R. B. Auto floetrle, 4177 Catt- KUaabete Laka rd.______________ MIORT CLERK FOR MOTEL CALL Ml 61140. OPENING FOR 3 MEN A near raetory branch has opened da 3 men who are me- C WALLED LAKE d guaranteed remodeling Ir. Teara of exp"**"'* -. js to advlee you r remodeling you a 3°fe41 Cooley Lake Road EM ‘a." or 3 chlldran 0 and 3 vesrt old. i Gonoral housework^. Walnut Lake ' .... ___ " I CUSTOM BUILDINO, RESIDEN-i Lost and Found ARRO RBALTT — ~ _ 0143 Caat-Elltabelh_Rosa 26 I absolutely THE FASTEST A BECRETART NEEDED IN LAW affica tor permanent poalf — proficient te t^pU WOMEN. 16U. PART ume. 61. 1-6. and 60. Mon. thru. Prl. Dally telephona tequirtet from our offIcO. Short Uatetet ptrtod. Salary. Pw tetervltw, enu ra S-3614. momlngt « ‘ and coraraoretel Bemodolteg : LOST; 1 YOUNO BTIERS, ALL ( ___ designing. PE 60304.__________i brown, about 100 Ibt. each. VI- ' CEMENT AND BLOCK WORE. ' I Call Roster Par- { rt»5rthiid'Nd"pr;Vii5a;^^ j*£i;wT,rt''ra*6toEr“ ' Md”'etekiiT"F«k ‘rt:”'wiiiid etporiencs rtqulrad. Call Patter- noun o. nitowaix. ra wiaa, , Raward MA 4-1OT7 toT a Patterson k Inrrertt. PE ELECTRICAL SERV-PRElt E8T. , ^ ~ Vwi Jriotiiin- PARTNE? Kaetric, .PE_M43r -®9S5.«a°S^2i' EXCAVATINO AND TREltCiaNa for ftopUe Unkf. droln. floldt, foettBfa oBd UfM dotinf. UL ELECTRIC HEAT, INSULATION and wiring Raglln Eltctrlc, EM — MU 4-1113. 4-tl71. ttenv .f-^£oor&^'! IMMEDIATE ACTION asa Lakn Bond. MU 6H47. | On any good land contracts. New BROWN BaLFOLDlN | to isaaonad Your caah upon sa6 ’ of Truok etrvice, eon- tefnetpry Inspection of nrimrty I D., drtvtrt llcaaso and | «hd UUe Atk for Eon Tem^eten, ... ----- ------- — J,- Temjilcton. Realtor ???• Orchard Lake Road FE 64603 PART TIME Fart-timi evenlnga. Largo __ ufaeturar with Pontlae^^offlce, [ ae^n 69*03* WOMAN TOR FART TTMI BABT-•Ittteg and light housework, ovt- nlngi. Call after 4. Ft 6-1397_ WAltRESS. MUST HAVE EXPE--■-----Apply at 691 Oakland ■- .----- ------------------------I LOST: 1 BLACK CHIHUAHUA. I FREE E8TIMATEB ON ALL WIR- male. VIctoHy of It. Mika's. Re- I J*PX .r,, Ing. wui finance R. B Munre werd FE 44*73, ' Efectric Co. 1069 W. Huron ! fTjgrT-iv.iWf-ai-awarttTw-niin-nw. “ ™ 1««.................... ifiousE RAZiNo. HOUSE MOV-; word PE 9-9377 Wanted Real Estate 36 ‘ ''p* ‘•O”' BOUTTERRIER. FIMAlf. 5 IM ‘ MOftep, PE CASH POP YOUR EQUITY 4-3M1 Eve PE 4-9313_____ ' cwsir r A luminum - - A BIO deal -FREE INSULATION JOB With Evtry ALUMINUM SIDINO INSTALLATTOM Cut Heating Bill Up te 14 and Sava Patettex — InsUII Now. —STORMS - AND — AWNINOS-No money down. $1 me. end up Deni Direct with Owner end flevt JOC VALLELY • The Old Relleble Pioneer*’ Building Modemiiatlon t Coostmottoo Co. clal. Dali OB 3-96D ___________ ATTIC* AobiinoNi; recreation ROOMB, OARAOB8, AND Automobile Repairs Plastcrinf Service D Meyort PLARTTO Pliimbine Service O a O PLUMBUIO a HBATUia PB 4-3719 ________« l-llll dally busy with Chrtatmaa WAITRESS - FOR PART TIME HOME. OARAOE CABINETS. AD-1 atrip on forehead Latr taen Prion Naeda 9 men HOWI Lo- toSt ^ efficient, alto ditlona Licensed builder PHA day nixht vicinity Andy a ^lel, raaldenta pitate Must have I for part Umt. Amly Dunlap s Terms PE 69909 Uifton Laka Rd. Commerce ^m- „ 16 't. 36. Fhmte Ft : _ . Auto^jM^Eeat Blvd, hqU 8 E '-kTo-V Tn 0~-p^t tL*!"' Carpet Cleaners A-1 HUO AND FURNITURE Printing Doll Repair PART TIME •quipped, PE 4-1410 L. ------- . 8 PLASTERtlio AND BEPAIRS — - . Pat Lee. PE 3-7911 ' men a i . "wrrTON~op I' • . hat and ladles coat, lost 349 Oektend Ave, OP*". —lory Sunday nisht. FH 6S4 HOW ABOUT YOU. . . Arw yon ready fer Read This Classified Column . . Region Dealers And Individuals . Help Wanted ATTENTION—le BALI. OPENINO PLASTERTnO REPAIRS A SP& i B“““3 Vif'60309' 11 you are free 7-19. ere neat I {to I or 3 ladleo or getolemra claljy. Bough wallt^mado omooOi. ^ — —---7*~ j SPECTALIZBJ REALTY SERV^ appearini and have a car. you ' JuB of P«rt time Soil Watktea nratneas a mutt PE 6900. l Notices and Personals 27 ! OaU Loult Bortl. Raalter. PE may bt able te quaUly for a; tePtel^y yltMtea. oTmL' DuirATETC------- ‘ part time job teat would enable toy suppiF. M l»- Oel IM day KUUl' KhrAIKis you to earn $60 per weak and | lupply for le,_ nearly 7-monte EAVESTROUOHINO PE 60444 >0013 11 noon - 0 p.m^_ BOYS ANlTYtlRLS NEEDED AT wSil “ "“*““9 ™toia PK ■" ------ handle Cbrlatmea Wreath milling, valve tcrvice. valvi Juide nurllsmi WOHLPEIL-DII __?llJL__T*''|toF!! . ” A'?**’’ Auto Wash. & Polish. CENTRAL AUTO WASH-14 WET "MARYBELL'S DOLL HOSPITAL ' Now open for Doll Repairs UI^3-96|^ Floor Sanding Sand, Gravel and Dirt raARMAClST.^ RKO..'’ glTg WEEK-ly. steady. >or Flint area. Write Box 94 Fontif -- PERMAN^t”sALARY NaUonal firm will niri and train 1 men for w, rk te Oakland County lo mako Inauranco and personnel Ineeatignllona. Age 1619. must have high achool diploma. Be aur te type and have a car. fita Write full quallflcatlona. Ft Pratt Box 0 _ __ REAL B8TATB SAUaMBf '. Bgotricneo preferred but H. R; HACiSTROM ,, RBALTOR FONTrc“‘*““'‘*“%ri-3.. FB 6-0144 a- A BETTER WAY TO 1 Rent A>t». Furnithed 37 Keep Btia eotemn treah wlO) dnllT Uatliiga of Yhor favortte m^cl and aika at compeUtlva IF YOU ARE IN THE MARKET NOW CONSULT Classification 106 TODAY! qualify. Oi Materlato C Real Estate Salesmen ira tetareated te an te-Itat than $M,90 per •uw aoawer tele nd. If nnd tett Mg. nad H. R. HAGSTROM sn.m ■ Pk 6014 niter 6 lALtoUAN WANTBD-RO BStPIB- E V^w^* SraTRlFF”^ odiuN libdpira and Wdtef Co. a 14 year oM company la loaKiag far a man latercfted In tee future. We will irate you fer branch managership. Ne IneeiMent neceaatry. See Mr Knate laturday morning 9 te II or week days. 1:39 te M at M S. Cast Lake Rond. _ StNOLE MIObLKAOEO; Man'TOR odd Mbs. more lor borne than wages. FH 6Ans. orders. PE 64116. lOOK - HOUBEKEEPE'B - CARE TAKER — COUPLE. Pull Ume fer both, permanent, refereneea. ------------- " " . KaUy, Needed IMMEDIATELY MEN AND WOMEN SALESPEOPLE THE PUBLIC HAVE “GONE WILD" OVER THIS NEW INVENTION! Soon to ho announced In many’ naUonal magntteca. first tima offared te your city, lo a price bracket everyone can afrord. It baa recewed tramandoua reeep-tlon and will lOon awcep tea eounty.. High potential camlnn. every home la a proapect, and they wlU want on# ntUr they "— henrd about It. An Maal ---- ^ aaloapepMt who want w worm and maka tema rtal moMy an a tuU-tlnw or pu7> Umo WMal Thla la a 'Bonaatlml ItemI' Can oparnte. out ' - homo, kmad name, nddn numbor. 0a and If work part or ftUl-tlr Carlson Enterprises 1002 E. Isabella Ave. MUSKEGON. MICH. OnB FA S-3711 Ic Ui» flrat te your city te offer thla tremendpuaiavenuon. WATERPROOFING Work guarknteed Free otUmatea. FE 6«777 ____• VET BABBMENT? fkOKE mifA- REAL E.STATE CLASS NOW STARTING You can onrn while you art ■earning Uite mod profataten. U you are over JS and Hva wltto te mllet of Fentt0 phone » 4-9I17 now far Interview. VC. SCHUETT TW-ootnrnr RBALTOR, Bucinest Service 15 BLOOMPIELO WALL CLBANERB Wall and windows. Ronaoonble. FE 3 -1131. BILL ROdSB n 9-96 i reprioeratton service Sealed Unite Repair—Our Spoetelty | DEER HUNTERS Let lu ckla. eat, wrap and fraoit | '■ vout deer. Starve tf dealred Royal 6ak Proien Poodt, IMl : Cr^a Road. U 1-940.___ ] ELECTRIC Motor BERV1CT re- ^rtnj^aiid ^tewtedlng. Ill E : RETiTNO. PURNACn CLBANlXi ! [Pay Your Bills HOMEX SERVICES 16 NtUonal Bank BMg.. Racheater OUvt 1-9194 and OLIva 1-IIN . ri 'ConfMenttel AEROTREDS KNAPP SHOES OR 3110 ARE YOU WORRIED OVER DEBTS? I BKDaM DLX . KITCRENXTTE apU . pawly dac . lat fir . parking In front el door, gaa heat. nvt. anewar. PE 64J0. _________ I abOM KiTCHENETTi. ADULTC only. 10 N^Paddocy.JFH 6110 ,1 AND I'lEOROOM. PARTLY _fum. Lakefront epte. OB 3-910; 1-RGOM ’YflTCHBNnTB BACHB-lor apartment Everything f"* nlahcd CIcae te. no J PE 9-706. I 1 ROOMS AND'BATR. SMALL BABY welcoroa 136 Pleranca. ___ J *' ROOMS. UTiLTriXS FURinSREb 1 Private antranca, 14114 Oakland S AND I RM APT. BBT OBM'UN and Cottage. 17 Hever-pr^-,04t. 3 large ROOMSl NEAR DOWN-town. Alao ) rdom upper near Pontiac Motor, all pvt. ivuirt ti Boat and Motors Repair and Service JUST ARRIVED YOU ARE INVITED TO SEC THE 'll JET STREAM CVINRUr~ 'loters - All ModeU LAP-------------- PABULON - WATERLOE - BRUCE Furnace Dealera I LAS ! Hai l?*a -MON AND'CU'riTO''BbA'fs*’ larrington Boat Works > 8. Telegraph Rd PB_3:ira i Boat Storage & Rentals INSIDE WINTER STORAGE FOR PURNACES, ALL KINDS, BEST buys Akli Salea. MA 6lisi OAS HEA'HNQ' I OH the beat for lata. 1660 furnace and Ductwork. 116 ConverHooi W. W. Keller Heetteg ITM WlUowgreve '__ Troy. Mlcklgea 7Tlogao_6#}64_________U 6330 ' HEW k Uno EQUIP 34 HOUR ' —rv Jonka Htating, PE 636II | Landscaping Saw and Mower Service Sporting OoiMb mt TRADE NEW &■ USED GUNS ARCHERY EQUIPMENT 39'. DISCOUNT - CRBaTUHR tND LONE STAR BOATS AND ALL EQUIPMENT KELI-Y HARDWARE 39S4 AUBURN ROAD 3PEN. SUN 161 PE 6011 Steam Claaning Body and Fendei Repair ' Pra^^lndyrimmiiy^ ^iTiSi: ' heavy wSSSEifr Mrirtced. C. L. Nalaw PB | CONSMIpAn iEpool Bib rtpulr itrvice. i^kkaapinc 4 TExaa 16 ALL TAI Draaaitiaktag, Tdlorliig 17 ----------YOUR RILL AND LET US GIVE YOU ONE PLACE TO PAY BUDGET SERVICE 19 W, HURON_____FE IBH DAINTY MAID SUkHtEs - 73 IN DEBT? IF SO LET US AElliO. 14, Mra. __ _ _ ____ tAILOhtNO-AL^^A'fiONS Oreaa Making—Pur Nepalra EDNA WARNER 6-19te Oar^ Plowhif 18 PLOWING. GRADING OISCtNO 1 rooms:'NtcB cALL'APrah ¥1*: _FBJ-049^_____________ 1 ROOlU AND BATE. PtUVA'IE _entranea. ttl Oakland __ 1-llM. BACHBLOR A N D~ S-IUi' a^Cloaa In. eloan. H Otea- ITRM. APTS. PREFka NETTRim eoupla er ladlaa fer lower, ’fork-tea eoupit for upptr. CMn. worm, an uUlltlea rurnUbad. 6ara0. _0 Norton. FB 4-*419._ I aOf^. HICBLV FURNUaBD. 10 Waahtegton. Boo oaratekar. _PB 3-390. ___________________ 1 RMB.. FVT. bate ^ BN- Give You 1 Place to Pay Ease Your Mind WE ARE NOT A LOAN COMPANY MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS . . _ RU 70. FONTUC BTATB BANK I 3 BOOMB JUTO BATH. . BLDG . FE *016 i «•»'»•«. F* »-JH9. 47 Thorpe. Member j B*to Oeneral Eoep Cull after 4 *“to 3 R60. FHIV' BATH AND ENTR kUdUfSR Aaaoe. Credit --—' ——— _________^ __-----Call after 6J0. ---- t ANDTIMOROOM ATO., FDR-nlahtd. Chlldrea welcome, by week to month. OR_l-J391 I EObirAlto BATH, FVT. ENT ______FLORENCE __________ 1 ROOM*, i^rnas fau>. $6*: B Reward. FB 1-330. 3 LAROI BOO60 AND PATH. 7V; child welcome, off W. Columble ---------4-1 111 _ ^ lIWfT CUSTOM BUMFINO k FAINTINO - ALL MAKES -- FREE ESTIMATES DEDUCTIBLES FINANCE Lloyd Motors LINOOLN-MERCURV-COMET 331 S 0glnaw_ Fhonj^ FE J-llJll KELLY'S BUMP SHOP 164 ORCHARD LK PE 6130 Complete Body k Feodor Rrpelrlna •mall Dapta to Total Wracks Radiator h Heater Troubles Oorracted. Lighu Repaired Reohromed Bumpers Installed Ineurence EHImatet on all ____MUta of Aiitomobltea___ QCICX BUILDIRO AND RBMODBL-teg blda. Nalaon B10. pR_l-llll. AAA-1 BUILblNO skRflCE^ monty down.' I years to pay. , 2>i«troction^ot^ Doug Fli Fir Ite ft. le ' Ua ft. 6C I Rock Wool inaureUOT Rae Sc 4'a- S•• A1 Birch Fly ea. 113.44 PONTIAC LUMBER CO. CAIN AND CARRY Oakland Avt_____FE 6013 PRlntars * Decorators PAINnNO-PAFBRINO-WALL Clmte(____OR 3-701. Tnipor ACHBQDii£rrT OEnmitTi^ PalnUng, _pa0r r»ovaL wnU waahing. Fraa oM. UL 3-110. I W Hurea 0. __Pjas^lni __ PMTEEINO - WORK ODARAN-143 N anginal Raatenrant Pan Filter ctomilv Portable torvice K a T STEAM CLEANTNO ______^__FE 6430 _______ Television, Radio end Hi-Fi Swvice SSi,'^ OOjt BEBYl Truck Rental__ Trucks to Rent Dump TrtMka-0m6Trallto4 Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. Ajl.’li; .IM* SIXTEEN the PONTIAC PRESS. yVEDNESHAY. XOv£mBEK 28, I960 Rent Homes Unfurl 40 S^SDKOOU toMt RMKIMbU, LI » PtooM ROcn. la a mi — ..... - 6Mt Tubbt * l-FAMILT ncOMI. ISOO DOWN. on j* 5'ntlTD ^ ____ Carp«ilt«r krtde •tho*l lyn Ro»OOM. TILK bath. ^ in^ l-IIOOM HOXja WITH _ and refrlceraior. AdolU ec a moothM07 WaU St_______________ Buburbkn »r«» on blocktop rood Ml por month Rofertneot , For Sale Houset 49 hoop. Mil illiobotb Ulto ifoROOM HOMl. HO Mi---------- down. tM por month. Mtut toro 0 Southooot of nmorco. Phono BCntor J-1 ...I Bock Ro^. BoUovUlO;___ l-BDRM. HOMl. tAROl'UVDra Arlono Bt. Trodo ^“%‘j -BBOROOM AHD BATH. WIL-Ukdio Lokt prtTllotti. Plroploeo. QOrogo. OR J-J004._______________________ I BBOROOMB. PUU' BA8BMBNT. ^ o«.iUhlo after _ I-31M____ _ 1-BEDRM. MOOERH RANCH- - | Lorto lot. Loke Orion. R“>* " 3-BBlHUi TBRRACB.„dA8 HMT 066 Jl WhltfloW, Ponttoc MY r ROOIurAKD"OAi^ain^”"^ 3-BlcbRlk BRICK RANCH. 7 - Roc rm . itb-cor !•••< Poncorl yard Ili MO MOO doi raA No^r-.'^i^ PE HUM _ 3-BfeRdOM BRICK HOUSB. (orORO. r‘ '■■■■■ ----------- Huron Oordont. low down poy- raonr FB I-1I3I.________ 3-BBDR6oM ~ LAKBPRONT ROMB For Sale Houses 49 OPEN DAILY Open T dniri ■ «*«k t and 3 bedroom bomot In 'Bonart PArfc. Aft hO handlaap. On our loU lor M.ni. HH down ood fll nm. IjW gif . par oMotn. Oo poua lot. I DIRECTTONB; OH Dnton Lake Rd. near St. Patrick’i ' ' follow alfnt Alfo. liiot oH M-M OB KM doom Church and la HlchUnd. nknir lou. .... Smali down paym't. Schlck'a. MY 3-3711 _ __ _ _ ^BEDROOM. BRICK HOMS IN Muiord. fully IniUlatod. »torm« and acrocnt. tiled baaement. 111.-000 with M.006 down. MU 4-f003 FAMILY INCOME ON WEST STEECE REALTY (Main Office) 3« Noi^ MUlord Road Botweon Hlihland and MlUord CM 3-3031 or______MP 4-3011 PRICEb TO SELL A ouarto' acre londacaped lot. aurrouoded by beautiful oak treea and Jl^kt tnily exclualre. la the For Salo’Heusea Partridge THE “BIRD" TO HIGHI^AND COLONFAt nia 4 bodrooai ahnHaam i- doMdar iou hsok fromtbe- la the midat of *>A aorao o( rofreahlM troundo. The old farm charm haa haaa aohancad h* modem featuroa. The boot la that you can own thia fui « 03.000 down with roaaonablo mo paymenta. AI-ASKA OWNER SAYS SELL chalB-IInked fenced yard fo Children, 3 bedrooma CNI heal. Coeered patio and bar-Only M.NO. Juat a few yeai ----._____ It haa a large iiviup room with otnlof apace. 3 i bedrooma. bath and H. and u^ to i Partridge ra i-TOi^ galore Completely ihed l-ROOM. OAB BBAT. 1 BLOCU *-om Bt Mtte’a. M.SOO. PE ,30SS. after 3:30 p ford. 110 month. CRAWFORD AGENCY 6 ROOMS AND >1™ baaement. gaa heat. PB 4-M3I. I ROOMS aHD BAtH at 3000 Dexter Road “ ~ "-1I PE 0 ROOM. 3 BEDROOM TERRACE. Edith near Auburn coal or gaa heat, reaponalble partlea only, no . Inquire 130 8. Edith FI 4-3740 after f $29Q DOWN M.MO. ISO mo Ncwly- wad apeclal . ----------- _ kitchen and breakfaat nook. llTlng room and bath. Oxford area. MY 3-3731 $500 DOWN la city. Blacktop ; pete, b ledlate poaaeaalon M.760 _____________ PONTIAC REAI.TV mo CWldren welcome_^PB 4^3311 !737 Baldwin_____ STOUTS: \ Best Buys Today AUBURN HEIGHTS - Well located In village, cloae to chopping center. goM reatdontlal area. Cuta ... ..... ...._ i~RObMS ON CLARK ST., mo Children welcome_^PB 4 0 RMB.. AUTO. HEAT. ATT: ITS I nil 'or I 3 bedroom rage, 'vacanr' PB 3-Vlll.’' '' ' | _ IM FT LAKErttONT. 0 ROOMS 1 l?;?t‘r:c «i..r".nr*aV‘ni -“n* wJuld e<£w.*r ..u„. Ele^rlc range. Other extraa. EM^ CUCKLEli R1L\LTY I BEAUTY. BRICK RANCH. LAKE 344 N Saginaw FE 4-4011 region. Nr. MSUO. Ollphant. ' ■ -----------—----------- Suburban Living At Its Best large llaaaad aun porch, room, well iandai-----■ irsoi SltS*$l!M6*downT CLARKBTON TILLAOB — Attractive 4-year-old ranch-style home, only 3 blooka from downtown — Bhln^ on“ ---------------- ------ For SfUo Hoines 49 ANNETT Close In PogseaitoD nt anaa. jdnrty fsrn.s“r5-i.® 3nd noor, 3 badrma., and bat^. aU larga rooma. Base-GAB haat. garaia. Elizabeth, Ijikc Estates 1 loU. A S-badrn luUt a little bettc OMr foleta. extr lasulationa. w waUa. larga ti amlc ttle bath, mant. P A oil nva>. aTcaWit*??? isbi! NIBHKD at 114.300. tarmi. juat a block to city bni drug and grocary. 3 Moek to it. Benadlcta or Donat aim achool. Haa laka priv Uataa. apaeloua living and dining area, carpeted 3 bedrooma. bath, attractive kitchen. '---------* — — Auburn Heights Vic. COmplately radacoratad 3-bedroo bouie Large living room wl fireplace, luil baaement. lot tc.-. 140. Pull j^ce $7.ISO. Low down payment. East City Limits j ...-- a---------------jyi, I patch — ' 49 ' For^«le Houbcb^ 49; BATEMAN REAETY ' 3 bedroom, large living rooi parlor, approumatoly i ai Prrlt treea, atrawberry pa Larga gr--- ‘ MULTIPLE USTINO SERVICE LETS TRADE OttawaHilis 3-badrm. brick and frame, IVS-itory home la partact throughout. Including full-alie Anlng rm. Pull baae-mant. gaa haat. l-cur garage. tll.SOO. terrna. MULTIPLE LISTIRa SERVICB O'NEIL CRESCENT LAKE » TATES. Uikl for r»brad I houaa, large Uvlag ri h 1 wail paneled In •>' 7 I nicr AtrigbriucEan you win love working In. Riuiri?s‘» Mit you' win need approx. 13,347 down. 174 par month Hot Sale Houti 49 . GILES West Side I and ear game, larr church ^ ,abOHpM.( r Price reduced balpw mar- LET US SHOW YOU tlUa .....— vith laka a oD EUiabath U. I^rtli need?***'or"'moat famlllaa. Hardwood floora, P^***™* walla and ceramic Ulc bath. rv.^.r M faacad had alao a Pull price m-car gang $14,100. Termi PIONEER HIOHLAND -Brick 3-b#drp«m hom( good alae living roon Pleaaaot kltch#i,i^ dl^g itehco and dint lad PlnTahad rt restlon room In the baae-heat on nlee 1^ ment, gaa heat on mee ™ with Ift-ear garage 411.S00 LORRAINE MANOR Hem a a home that baa everrthlng you’ve been looking for — Large Uvlhg room with dining * ell. cirpeted wnll-to-wail. Oood alae bedwmc, tiled bath. 4 lovely kitchen with mahofony cabinet.. Separate laundry room with water aofteoer and Inelnara- or *4i7.8lo* caah^io *e*l»t *»• mortgage. 3-BEDROOM BRICK HOME only 1 year old, 3m foot t-BBOROOM HOUSE. I, PB 4-»443, 1 S9,500 I build 3 bedroom r (COaWERTIBLE 24) 7 ft < bedrooms, m oomi W, W. ROaSS HOMES _________OR 3-:_ “A $-1741. _ MILPORD. 3-BBDRObM BRICK ranch, oil heat, fenced backyard. full baaement. $00 month r'$$W*or'MI d'kilT MODBRN l-BBDR00M7'0iL HBAT oft Caaa Bllaabeth. $40 mo. PB EB)p‘l^^^ We "can help you SEE SEABOARD FINANCE CO. I1$S N P'-£ry St. _TK 1-7017 ANOTHER HOME NEED A LARGER HOME' LOOKING POR A HOMS ON , Templeton I located S miles west of Pontiac , gauTLY BRICK — completely remodeled home, 3; ’ ,Td, feitl" Alway bedrooms. TV room, library. • 3-car laract. 3 full eorumic tUe baths, fireplace, range and oven: even carp-"--and drapea. The price l. what you would egpect I Rav O'Neil. Realtor I OFF WALTON. Hear MBUO. Clean ra iItioI**"** °***OL *14$"s 3-B R. home. M.tSO. Terau or i will trade eiulty for larger 1 kitchen, baaement I Kcego Harhor t room modern, full basement. | fenced backyard. Oood location. . Full price " --- y $$.l$0. low down | prlnit fed lake, beautlfpi land-caped grounds I2I.S00 with erms. will consider trade for :lty property. I In tlp-s retiim • I W. BBVBRLT. Off Baldwin. 3-B LARGE FlBlS OF ■pROPBR^^ I i Is D 1. 1 71'n ^Pw'VaigS A number of homes with 3. 3. I K. L. leilipleton, Realtor I’’ •**i''** Ji;______” i ®i5sh ke^foot"* *»<* V,« * ®ri33» Orchard Laks Avs FE 4-4SS3 | SKYLINE BEAUTY - Waterford Hills Manor. Private beach and boat landing. Thla exquliiw 1 rm. brick ranch offers all of the lea- LET'S TRADE I Realtor FE 4-0528 ...GOLORED I )■ "i^H^^YDEN, Realtor : $$ B. Walton PI $-$441 *—I Bvea. Bun 10 to 3 Including a .ADD’S I*NC MODERN. BBMI-PURNUHIXI. 3- Corner of Upeer Rd. * Blirrrbell bedroom, large lot. on bua line,' 3 miles north of Pontiac near acboolt. north side. |7S FB $-$331 or after 7 p m.. OR 3-IUI ---- Call FB 4-0143 _;bT “owner, CONVENIENT. 5 .. . OR BELL BEE CLARK.STON REAL E.STATE, INC. ' Open Dally 3 ti) $: Sunday 13 to S MAple S^l will'SACRIFICE MY EOUITY IN S room bungalow for $l.r" Open Till $ p.m WATERFORD AREA C.OOD BUYS SHADY LOT -- 3 room, garage West suburban area Lak- — lleges. Only t$3M BUILT-IN KITCHEN - Lake prtv- smtly room Own- SS$0 OLYMPIC PARKWAY - ___ ■- ■ J-bedroom California rancher. ' baaoBont. garage. Delightful j In a new well reetricted de-1 I TOPS-As an Investmenl or good velopmonl, WIU eooaldtr trade. ' njrir s$$3 OLYMPIC PARKWAY--------------I I rooms, l‘s baths, gas haat. Lo- . ’ rr will consider trade for 4 room Wf SI lovely home KENT .•'Let’ Established lo lilt MTO - Owner i 473 Unda VUU. I bedrma.. brick ranch, full btmt. auto. heut. niouly landscaped. About 4800 arage. LAKE PRIVILEGES . ... -----home wli Only gis ts III take housetraller In tr IMMEDIATE POSSESSION On this 3-bedroom home ' Nice yard. Near MSUO Only 13.36$. Ttnnt SMALL DOWN PAYMENT 0 Ibis 3 bedroom bungalow aet-IlDg 4B lenetd lot ggxl3g' glao, lake prtvUeget Pull price only gS.SM TED McCULLOUOH. REALTOR 6143 Cuat-EUiabeth Road FE 5-1284 FE 4-3844 Open 9 a m. to 8:30 p.m. ________SUNDAY II- s_________ MODEL 7 Monrorla ofl Airport R i, lb b I base- NICX. CLEAN I RANCH HOSiB. , 3-MI. B. Walled Uk^S7^ rBasokablb to couple. 3-bedroom bmaix' lakbfroht home, oas heat, its mo. OR 3-$lS4.___ SMALL CLBAN HOUSE. WEST iAM'WARRICK HAS 3-WROOM brick home In Sylvkn Lake. Un-tlnuhed attic, carport. Uke prtvilegei tl64 lease FB 4-S#90. bMrm. plast ately SS.34Q. payments t E S-3I73. Ill W Tennyic ,t only gi.tSS / scaped. fl.tM. Cloelng eoeti a BY OWNER - $13,754 .. can Be yours for $U.3St. As. 4tg per cent loan at |7I month. 3 bedroom, gas’beat, t 3 bedroom, gas iftis PR 3-4463.________ BY OWNER. WESTRIDOE SUB large 3 bed-,. FuU price $13,S00' Tetmyion. THANK YOU , especially you. If we haVe the pleaaure of serving you i „ aown. through these few words we I msking your acquslntance. ; gWLL OR TRADE arc thankful and may you -------- i---- i... i,, t 1. . ■m.c lots iwith your dream house : f.Vhio'iSr.il;'»«'( on HI to be thankful for. _____ «crtnerprt^*e “d\7s.'fM^ BA.SS. REALTOR : OH 3 35M _ Builder ______________FX ^7J10 | ^OT* OF ROOM - J HOME i NOTHING DOWN—Two and 3-bed- I ■emeni : room homct. newly decorated. i I with and without baaement. In | i rre" AiTTou- n"eSl “I; i 'TO. Vcpa‘-r:fe=fu7na"e. T.1 ' ,sSo“Soiy'S“-"t^.’.7s‘«?i;?;n”‘v‘a‘- ! H°S5o'’doin* “ ' fi*"!- 1 * TAYLOR. AOENCY ! \\Z. la“?,?'m( *i'lfh"’' p'leS!rSi Hl.hland„R0.d_ Open room for children. Only $$.»" ' , 13 460 DOWN — West Suburbs E 4 BEDROOM - 3. IS. carpeted firing and d ns. bright breakfast nook. 443 ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE lot neatly land-;iose in With lake piivl- { lit U postUvely todaVi i' at $17,360. Seeing Is be- j. 8DRM Moenesier area, full 1______ hardwood floors, gas heat, nici family I car garage, lari ton Only $16.00 William Miller i Realtor F'E 2-0263; 410 West Huron Street MULTIPLE UBTINO SERVICE IRWIN ' ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES Hip Family Troubles? nbw''home"’'* r^7"Ei* . sijnoo ELWOOD RIALTY OR 4-0304 i^SeOidic. n. TRIPP a dlnlhx room combination. Oak ora. watk-ln closets, large tased-lD Iront porch. 3 car ga- LAKE OAELAND front homt. Beautiful srada this •wn 3 or 3 bodrmi i BROWN large family kitchen. DONMcDONALD LICENSED BUILDER :_______^OB J-3S37 _ ___ I H.P. HOLMES. INC. I BBAUTIFULLT remodeltd country I. flre- aee this lake- ...." NOTHINO 001 “.'.T* room ranchci yardii a 1 eondiaoi Now at $33,000. NORTHERN BIOH AREA ^ COLORED TRI-LEVEL, 3 toTbwiJrcemV’ori-oiSr'i why pay rent? UNFURNISRBD 4-ROOM HOUSE.! Own your OWN 3 3071 Stirling. ‘ --- ■ FB $-$133 "SiV «r"ete Delightful Setting I Park Captivating Cape Cod horn combining modern comfo with Colonial charm. Featun .parlous living room with fir place. 3 bedrooma and den. I baths separate dining roor wall-to-wall carpeting — WETT SIOE BRICK. I ROOMS. ‘ j I Loaded wit!) many modern leaturr ONLY $10 DOWN NO MORIGAaE COSTS otI Open Dally and Bun 1 to 6 P M. m.. W mo . ».k for Mr WE8TOWN REALTY Partridge at Partridge A Asso-I jyj g B|,g 3 BATHS. I ronm. tullv Insulated, alumlnun tis.«sb FE 3-741$ RES FB 4-44i: iU.ARK Ri:.\l. KSTAI 1’ TO BUY SELL AND TRADE , 634 W Huron Open 3 to,I ' H, P. HOLMES. INC. I LAKE ORION LAKEFRONT ------- ....K ----- Out , Term) ; CLOSE TO BUS This little home Is Less than I H.360 wlth'li.33t down. Floyd Kent Inc.. Realtor 33A0 Otile Hwy. at Telegraoh FE 3-013) - Open Eves. Free Parting home U only 4 yrs 3300 Closing CoaU It i dining room, den. Hi .......... place, pegged floors, attached garage. many other features, also stable for haraet, 4 acres land. . I bandy to Pontiac. Priced right. Lovtly 3-bud- good urnu. Call for delulla ------------- jjj OXPORD — 4-bedroom home. ..... ----------..... ‘■itchen, gas iiht r-- — $140 DOWN- Nice two bedroom bungalow with fuU baaemeift. OU furnace. Auto, hot water, alum, storms snd screens. Needs painting. Largs lot. Located near Lake little farm - Right In Drayton Plains. Lovely bungalow Juat Ilka — *- modem as cao be Large Beautifully ’—-• t Huron Street 0 W. Huron. Pontiac-1 Ottawa Hills nr. Tel* ping Osntci 3 roomi gslow 1100 C-" 4 3401 COLORED. 4 bsmt. carpetli... ... •7 400. 33M d^ dIsec 341 Osmun. FT ’ " BATHSi Venetian blinds. WALLED LAKE FAB'TLT FUR-nlshad 3-b^room bunjjalow. nopptat and schools eonvenlent. ■ot and cold water, reasonable. MArket o4m4._____________. 'WATERFRONT BRICK 3-bedroom, full ‘ « waterfront. Owner ) responsible people 1 Milif BA8EMENT.-OOOD LOCA- JIM WRIGHT. Realtor !3a Oakland Ave Open til 4:30 town owner. Only r EXCELLENT 4 bedri lull bath, basemi Oarage Frontage 5 R^mI, bftthf bAi«ment. t Ctlifornti niioo Tibet______________ 7N OXPORD Very lUrictt^ home with 4 bedrooms il Msin floor utility room Its Dandy ' Huy ________ oil MIA Approved Owner mov- ' 3-bedroom brick bungslow with sacrifice at full basement, recreation' :k KAMPSEN ri? REALTY 14't X 34 foot living room large bedroom, large kitchen i .... .. —I—lUsement i ^GAYLORD; NEST SIDE - Near Bt Benedlet't. Nice two'hedroom bungalow with hjll basement OU fired HW heat. Fireplace. VeiUbule entrance l^w car gsr Nice large lot. Only 13.- $1.60 IT ACRES with live atream. wiwuis Nice home, garnsie. si smaller home that i. ’ Owner leaving t ???c;d-i^, i Upwl For Sftlc Lake Property Si SEVEN HAR- m>ri. 3 K_______________________ _ 3 >ar garage, upstairs porch k tumoom on J rats. Beautifully landscaped Only gty.SOO. PONTIAC LAKE - ’ SlUL’nPLE LISTING SERVICE WATER FORD ' bedroom. Itk sU me. ekpanalon a“' .rage Mov 3631 8 Lapeer R4 baUi Willia Realtor <70 Wptt Hurm^Blreet For Rent Roonu , 'CLARKBTON, I-BEDRM BRICK r ranch fuliv mod nr school. I 2-C26.1 Church Btreet, ( SCHRAM Quick leges. let ua show COLORJ.D s key. h“S&'d. tomatic beat and fa larga rooms, combination i $275 DOWN ke privll odltion I Id friendly nelgh-)U1 price 113.160 S-OOlO, gee this LAKE FRONT SPECIAL — Largr prstenttous home In the pink ol condltlor Two baths. PuD base' ment RW best Fireplace. Estri kitchen in basement. Itk-car gar l-rjj, l.t OnlySmln nomlown . bedroom ................ carpeUng double In.ulatloi Inum siding A IH car ' Selling for $13,600 garage EXCLUSIVE 1s the word to describe thU h and surroundings. Lake-L_ home oo Indlanwood Lake. Brick home baa 3 bedrooms. HURRY 00 this one — redecorated 3 bedroom home. Stormi an^creena. Laka prIvUegea. This GAYLORD. Realtor 13S3 W. Huron Bt. 3 Flint Bt., Laks Orion m Oardens. I3.$00 down NICHOLIE I reliabie I NORTH SIDE 42 vatl Dec grlher Milford t-fll4 ROOM KITCHENETTE FUBN- , ,, v 11.- I ished Pvl rnl Close lu on Ml DIXIE L.\Kr. C'emrna FE 0-0473 _ __ ; 3-bedruom bungsloj IS B’rOPPINO AT DOOR, LOE rnnl *llPA^ti«» PfVl FV A>7US I i W ALLED LAKE ARl'.A tuov9)v 3 brdrooiQ modvrti Larg# | ^ 120 Ftr^placf^ Dining | Full ] auburn HEIUHTR room, kitchen 1 r liO.MO With o cloM In. ChrUtUi SINGLE OR “BoltBLE FRONT JJ ? ly deeomted. ready Rooms with Boird 43 JOHN], VERMETT Real Estate and Insurance Miracle Mile Shepplnf Center lelwern Commerce ANY SHIFT. OOOD FOOD NICE cleao bed living room. TV. close i in FB l-3ttS. II Matthews street IF YOU RE LOOKlNO FOR A' nice clean place Call PE 64071 , QUIET Roosa COUNTRY TYPE) home and cooking II Ml west i of Pontiac ' ______n ^ E^"“- "0 rntmey Sown NEW BRICK HOME. 3 BEDROOM, 1 lo veMrans Just movt In' sqd full boaemeni to 3 Ms. Clarkatoa I ttert maklnf psymenU 3 bod-Aroa. Must ssU with sacrtllce ' room boms Oil beat Fenced lo Call OR 3-4040 _ PONTIAC LAKE R0A£) 7366 --------T WITH----------- A DOLL HOUSE 00060 located on a beauutui wooded lei too I 160 with prlvl- , waU to wall carpeting, a R 1X60 DOWN O^LY MT60[ Ui3t Large Ugbl 'kllch. ulimy room real plastei -------- plomblng and electric fislures Will tale good lot or cf --down „ TIBI W. tuple I MAytair 4^' JIM s: WILLIAMS troliar I ROBBHIRE CT BRICK. TERRACE $7000 I p r ms Wonderful io c a 11 o n. two blocks from Tel Huron shop- home 0 torts nslk . Isrge rooms, automi Tretbly decorated 1 new. Eacallent coadttlon tl MAKE US AN OFFER ON This S bedroom. I room lamllr home. PONTIAC O E N B R A L AND STATE HOBPITAL AREA. KENNEDY n wide lot. Cloee lo Drayton Plains Low payments Vacant. Immsdlate poeaesalon. This Is a LAKE FRONT Excellent Beach. Love Trees. Oood I bedroi IS after $ caU Mr Hamasr, TOO POR gU.IOg. Terrna I A. JOHNSON & SONS Realtors FE 4-2533 HAGSTROM SMITH WIDEMAN • CAST TO PURCHASE - Before you buy be sure lo eee this neat i bedrn borne. Large living room r- baaemeot. Lot SisllO. PrIv. oj Sufden Lake Only IIIm. L— $500 Down . s. BIO tot - attrutlvc bungalow -garage — takrprtvlleget — Waterford oroo. Jaal the heme tor •mall lamlly at a canaervatlve K*D*Afl$^*“'^*TTERBEEIT $500 Down ... Mte DOW roach home - »•*! wrp! Attroetive exterior BARGAIN LAKEFRONT ROME - _____ Ihroudbmit BIO LTV- ROOM. wlSkUota- -------kHcbca. ballt-to or- PLUB EXTRA LOT as ; REAL EBTA’rB AND INSURANCE ' 1413 BaMwIo FE 4-0147 After $ pm CaU Joba ....... er! ^Tudben. _______ ecooomical place to J763 W. Hurao , Phone FE Tlgt? LAKEFRONT HOME - 3-1 ranch Large livtaa-kitcbeii tile bstli. attoche^tk^ar ■ LAKE - ____________ .52°** d rango. OU___________ FRiViUUES HBAJuFlm'm" ------TtttSSa. $$.$•$. fuD price. H K. HAGSTROM FIREPLACE ___________ MENT - CAR FORT -OOOD WEST BIDE LOCATION -- II.SIt&OWH. -TBRia ARRANOED TIM WRIGHT. Realtor M iPb Ooktoad Ave Open Ul 1:3$ FE $-$441 FE I-3M1 Humphries WANTED LAND CONTRACTS, equity for Uils cute 3-bedrm. home, carpeted llv. rm.. l*'k-oar garage. Bunroom. West Sub FE 3-$H3 NO MONEY DOWN Another 3 bedrm., oruted with full RUSSELL YOUNG REAL ■mra^BUILDER For Sale Lots 54 WE HAVE LOTS AND LOTS OF LOTS ! WILUAMB LAKE PRIVILEOEB — gtOO down. LAKE FRONT - Oaktond Lake. $0 ft. frontage $1,000 down SUBURBAN WEST - Oood bulltUbt im. I X 16$ - UPPER LOHO imd to one parooL $13$ down. SMITH WIDEMAN PE a-aaia W HURON BUiLDIM " I Roeboetor oi OPEN EVES '•^Ti. . ------BAI^ mot: j Wlixis M. BREWER ^r25 $ ______ Opob Evts. I •«-$$ a. Huron at. Ft 4-$ibi i clarebton area giTtOt $ii / - » _______ ^ ■ - THE Pdj^^ riA,C PRES^. __SKVRXTRKy Waterford Hfllj Estate I A lev «ha(M M* Mt. Av*r««* jW^if lgrOaoA SimliiM*. Id*^ Herbert G. Davis, Rlti^ _________rm i^u See For Yourself CHEROKEE HILLS! ¥m'» Uk« K-« «4bM «IUa« IM OtMXblOTT oaocnv - ft. iiu« — toatrelM to prota^ ood Wlm. BiUbUdiM but HAGSTROM tmOCERT. HEAT. 8.D.H.. Esetl- ................. EllMbatb U^o Bd. to Seott Loko RoTlaiti rtgEl I blooki to Looou. Carl W. Bird, Realtor For Sale Acreage 55 n ACRES - GOOD TILLABLE Und. OiUT I mllu Irom Poatloc. 113.MO OB ^OM. 11. C. OTWINGHAM SVi ACRES .rs47u.““ OlngoUTilla. BiooUcDt bull fits ACiun, mi t^Ms. io.om. Qwpor. P.O. Bo» W Roy»l-0»b. For Sale Farms 56 NEAR OH PROTINO GROUNDS — 5 oeru of load, * ' full boBomeot. forotd_ beoutlful BeUlat. Born for On'7 113,000 wlBi------ Baslneas Oppeitiailty 59 tsos JS-PT. HOOBSTRAlLBa. SM* daUnrr. ftoAnao. for boot or cor. PE 3-330S oftor 1:30. ' CASH POR US^ TTb.J^^^ fiSt*' OB reprioerator. o». double bodi. complete. 03 to OSS., 11 In. ”■ Werdrobo. 111! Eoey . . _ ... p, Only HOOO dovD. H. G. HAGSTROM - —. T--or let OB 56Y tT OR BELL IT J»OB F F •"■'i OEPOH0 ooMMURnr 310 Rhrord, Pontine. Hltb. ■ ‘ AOCTIOW OA O-SOOL___ WILL TRADE Wh«t DO YOU HAVE? Mt. Clemens—Mfg. 10 I UO frontnie. excellem cor-her pnreol. Trade or eell. BATEMAN REALTY 3H S. TELBORAPR-OPEN EVES FE 4-0528 ME MR TOM BATEMAN DiARCE C ____n 3 “LET’S TALK BUSINESS" Body Repair Well OilnbllBtied profitable buel-1 ne*a One of the beet In the country. BtaowD by appointment. i Produce Market and home widow muit tell. ! Small down payment. Bee It to- MICHIGAN BUSINESS I For Sate ^ 64 i IROH-RITB. EXCELLENT OONDI-tlon. till. Call between I A 1 p m PE taWQ.________________ IRONRTTE IRONSR. PROVE TO yourself that Ironlni time can be cot In half wUL ease and comfort. Ront an Ironrite for pen-nter a day PE 4-3IH Crump ^LES CORPORATION blace pkrbian paw jaceet, •OTM 8 LANDME8SER, Broker I .......... ““ ------- 113 Teletrapn Road PE t-ltU . P^R ,*T OPR PRONT | BEAUTIFUL PULL-(jniaTR LACi ---13-U, |M. Drive PE-0-MM. ____iPUL roil' wedding gown PEJ-t«0. matching ------ .— .— - 17.000 Sale Household tioods 65 ! dowo — wUl Uke contract, ^ ® 1 r'», rp A till r*> T'* v« w~> « /A P d ' ^ PRICK RKeIBCTB, BKAU' '.! STATEWIDE FE 4-0521 l timi llvlni room sultoe. out ^ ITAVERN - Oa Dixie Hwy. - 0110 “““• ” ------ • ----eeliat..Only • ACRE FARM - 1 erty fenced k able except small yard, laxra, circle drive. ------....____________Only I 01.000 down. A money maker, ' ________________________STATEWIDE VE 4-0^21 lUity off Fenton Rd. Nice, mod- grill - WeU known location neat I, large. 3 bedroom home. fuU Pontloc - Price Includes real lemenl. oil PA *uraace^ Pro^ estate - H.tOO down. Will accept T-fenced. liU- tend contract or borne In trade. STATEW IDE FE 4-0521 OROCERT ai3.5oa do WALLED LAEE-O-acre farm, nicely landioaiicd. House In good con- uusiue-- ueie. diuon wiXa bedrooms. 113,400. STATEWIDE FE 4-0521 STEELE REALTY i“3?Sit?TOKw-iJt?? < Main Office) | 1340 North Milford Road between: out the siet* Hlghlond and Milford 'REALTOR EM 3 3^ or MU 4 3046'-------------- U-.AC corner Like"EdT H-milo' to bibbs. MO- . ASbER k MATCHINO ^ 100. N In. gas * alec- : t. new eond. 050 up. - TV's 030. Refrigerators .os lop freeiers 161 ------- dinette 113. Waebers, stove.. refrigerators, all eiiee gll up Hard rock maple buffet k eomei hutch I30.M wa. Bedroom A living room aultci g31 up. Ev-erythlng In used furniture at bar- gain pncca. Alao new living rma. edrma.. dlnettca. bunk bedi. roll-aways A mattrcaaea. Paetory ace-ond-- About <6 price. E-Z termi. The Bargain Route. Buy - S c 11-Tradc 103 N. Coat at LafayetU. PE 3-0043_______________________- ;;pr: op modern coraL chain, brown acetlonal, brown lounge chair, mahog— log table and beoke maple drop TeOT labM caae. All good cond., 15 Thorpe 8t. Laundry Equipment We have a good aeleetloo of used automatic washen and dryort. All reconditioned and guaranteed by our aeMlce dept. All brand nnmea auch aPPrlglMln, OB. Wcatlng-houat. Wa alao bave on htuid niod range!, uaed refrigerators, used wringer washers and I3d0 Iloor samples. Hurry In. Sale Mwikal Goods 7\ .. jMntlM^m^e rnstw . Pormerlv I113t. PIANO TUNINO-OROAH BEPAIR Weieind Music Center PIA»B MODiEL °K£SSJ“°jS| ‘ and*lS*radto. Beautiful mahogany cnbtnot. 1311. . . GRINNELL’S 31 B. Bnginnw____PE S-ltSS OULBRANSEM MfMlBL B OEOAN. — -J0S3. __ COHDirfUn, *>■ OA S-^11.______ pro AKC OACHBHURDE POR CHRIBT-mas — Tormt. Jprnnr* FE S-3S3S. ibs^oR mrp, ca. etoce. curt- - I OR 3A300. BOBTON BULL bred. Wantlee. _- _ ____ BROWN FEMALE. I MOWthi. Daohehund. AEC rottatorod, elrod by Haleslones Chlp^r, all ehols. heueebroken, wonderful with chll-dren MT 3-tSM. 303 B Brood-stay BL, Loko btloit. Oatnoj leav-Iny eW 79 i ^Sale Hoimo TroMeri 59 VAQSTION TRAILERS CATIOME, U FT. Trail-Blaaor. Apoebo teapon Moko .%mrva-tlo^nww. F. B. ROWLAND. OR VACATION TRAiLBltB rsSNix'LoSJr/^te traitor Sleey 0, i RCTt Trailer Spece 90 HAIP“CbTi«nP1JPPlE8r0~'WKB' I OXFORD MOBILE^ MANOR FOT I _old. reoetmable. PE 1-0111.___j thoeo wta jrant the boiA OT^ ‘oTcIxfoff aa tiak^ bate control. | male. .“TO ' 1 BETiWEVER.'Plt — - NECCifl A0TO14ATIC ZIO ZAO sewing machine In wood cabinet. Will bind hems, make deelgiu, eew on buttons, etc Toke over payments of $0.31 per i--— " eume entire balance account. 000.70. PE _ Itol Bewtng Center.____ HEW EIRBT. EQUnr POE TAH-Ing over paymenti. Pbone PE 4-1133 after 4 p.m. OAK TRUNDLE Bl^ wns'^LAT springe, babyi wUte wardrobe chest, Oolde •"-** — Mill I projector. MI I 1 13116 TWEED RUO. BRAND-NEW. I Charcoal color. A bargain at 060. . Pearson’s Purnltare. 43 Orchard > Lake ^e^___________________' 3-PIBCB UVbfO ROOM BUTTE _______I _PI 4-0138. Sale Lend Contracts 601 t-piKi^i tabS_ and” 0 *chairi. 'MAyfair OVER M USED TV SETS FRO: »14,*8 up TV antemiax gS.r- WALTON TV 616 E. Walton _______■ FE 3-3361 KCA MOTOROLA O E EMERSON TVs ALL REBUILT GRINNFXL’S 31 E._Baglnaw_____ FI 3-1101 HAMMOND aFINET ^ S™**!!?* 1 yr. old. Like ajm. LIW BET-■nOlLT MUSIC CO. Ml 6-0003. Pridaye tU 3._______________ LtaLrB'3»-WATT WALNU^PE«-er cabinet. Like new. JEW BET-TBRLT 64Ueie CO . MI 0-0003. Fridays^ til 3_____ ________ LOWRT SPINET OROAN. LIKE new Bpeclally priced. BBTTER-LT MtSiC CO MI t-0003 Prl- Liki: NEW BALUmN ACR^NIC ?lano. iKorena finish. Csll PE -3336^;________________ MAHOGANY GRAND WA"0-,*F-eragr stie Exc. condition. 6300 Terms PE 4-0401______ , NEW CONN • CAPRICE ” OBOANg. Morn? Music, 34 8 Tejsifaph Road across from the 'Tciauron Shopping Center^^E t-06S1. PAN AMEBICAN cURINIT. EEC cond. Call MA 0-6130. ..... PIANO tuning-OSCAR SCHMIDT ___________PE_J-6317__________ PIANOS New and used Spinets Consoles ____ end Orandr. Priced from 1446. LEW BETTIBLY MUSIC CO For Sate Miscellaneous 67 For Sale Miscellaneous 671 ®^*”*rndeys 'tii i ------------- - ' ! bears' CROIU3 OROAN. MATCH- 30 OAL HIGH AQUARIAM. COM- I LAROB OIL WALL FURNACE. 316- I in. table 116. UL 1-1606 plate with filter sad pump Used | gal. tank, coet 0600. sell for {100. , —-apwriAL' " 1 week. WUl sacrtflce. fu OL ;. May see In operation^PE 8-3043, _ . ^ organ^h axpreteloa 1-0M3 ________________ _ LAVATORIES. COMPLETE 134.60 ncdal Volume and tone controU 30-bAL. ilBAfER, OLABB-LINED. value. 114.06: also bathtubs, tol-: vibrators The only organ 04|T6. I lets, shower stalls Irregulars. Ter- gvallaUe at 1800 60. 636 down. Wanek’t 3616 Orchard Lk. Rd. hflc valuee. Michigan Fluorescent balance 113 per month. ----------^ _ _ ----I 3$3 Orchard Lake Ave. -J CALBl MUSIC CO. LARGE CEDAR CLOSET. REA- 110 N Saginaw ______________PE 8-0313 _sonahle_JttL _________ILLBLiNO AND REPAIBINO. ------ f the laet tew spaces available! - OLD HURON TRAILUl PARE. PE • MA _M0U.____________________________ 92 'MALI BfivTO ORAY oiRMAN For Sale TIres shepherd, AEC registered 3030 U»l»n:_OR_ 3-604T^______^TUlBi. 03.10 ' PARAEEET8. OUAR TO TALE. buy. sell AIM whttewi 64 06. Walker's Bird house, 306 STATE--------- First St Rochester. OL 1-0313. ilM 8. Saginou -____ 'i*(X)DLES; IIO^DOVVN I *^5: HUNT’S PET SHOP FE_M113 -ly, tgg and tiehanfe. SUU “fere PART COCKER PUPPIES AND' Sales 603 8 Satlotw. PE 04007 I mother. PE 0-4400 ____ or FE 4-440S._____________________ i piXINaiSI PUPPIlSrHEb . VERT'new tread tires, 010X1E 10 ! raas. 3636 MUI Lk. Rd . I ml N , plus tax and ractpable Ura. of Walton off Baldwin _______09 USED TIREB ! wsiTawwarra nnARAMTCED TO,... *UTO g*R12£*. pllet. Ci Auburn. UL 3 STANDARD BRAND N wi---riMBTwTw—wniTW i Trade in on Oenerol Safoly Tlret. POODLES. ADORABLE WHiim Un to 10 DOT COM off Black or Toys 3 males. J. *«,k* «W. 1» i ,ft?taU. '^ , 451 S. Satlnaw at Ratbura. WE-CAN - PURCHASE-ANT DOO POR CHRISTMAS > prj It’It T TAMS lO--, Down 34 Moaths To Pay r.lJ k\ 1 l_.l.^l/\ivt.~> _ HUNTS PET SHOP PE 0-3113 WEIMARANBR F U F, 0 _ MM ’’When wp waited so impatiently for her first word, we never thought we'd be doing the same thing for her last!” ■ AEC, 634 I 93 Auto Service kshaft orindino in the Grinders reborod. Znck Ma- Dors Trained, Boarded 80! JlJjjg, B R I T T A R Y PUM, McNary’S ■ "7 INSTALliD PREE~~ Tillwtiier Eennois. boardlni. training, trimming BritUny and I?"', •"“®* Poodle^stud service. OL 14664 uVlut" rices at****^* * * Hunting Doge 8l; __ROLL|raWA'cK auto farts i 313 Baldwin AUTOMA’nC SPACE HEATER FI | money daw E EOT1MA7 20 ACRES Zoned Ught manulacturlM. 100-nx CENT LAND CONTRACT. i'SJj. ft. road frontage, located west I balance 01073 11 over 6 ner cent _! -------------— -.w. of city. Hae 0-room house and' mortxaar ' Balance 06 000.01 6 ROOM OAS SPACE HEATER. ; The^ unnawwe-e-wTwn eunw "*“1.000 jerm.._ Roy„.An_-; SSSEfy* p.y?enJs 0*0 mklSiL; | aleo houeehold geode. FE 04010, : 0<»D HOUSEEEEPI^ SHOP^^ uxes and fneurance. Will trade i g PC SILVER OBEY BEDROOM 51 w HURON PE 4-1465 for dump truck or tractor with outfit. Double dresser. Bookcase —iStfranTw-----—rifi back hoe or wbst have you? bod. Large cbeit. 3 vanity lamps. C. PANGUS. Realtor , *“ .V ORTONVILLE ! ‘ « O®®**®"* OOJJouth street______NA 14S16 ^ beet on ^erty. AltrecUve terms a BID PROM US WILL SAVE" 1 Uore’4.^1 JlU WILLIAMS you money Call us before you I ”, Ree' Estate b Insurance deal. PE 64300, Retirement As- 1 PC LIVING ROOM OTTPIT. 1463 Baldwin PE 4-0861| aurance Co________________: nett. Inc.. Rtaltora. 36 E. St, PE 6-046d.______ excellent LOCATION ON baarment. I 'moving 1 _ ' waaher. M-ci MEDICINE CABINETS LARGE 30 mirror. sllgbUy marrM. 63.06. Lee •election of cablneu with or without Ughts. eliding doori. Terrific buys. Michigan Fluorescent. 303 Oixherd Lk. Ave. — 3d. __ NEW SIEOLER HEA1ER AT BAR ‘ price Seillre at cost. Used I anced. Brakai. rellned Ai low as BEAOLE AND BRITTANY. AL-• !* FU„"!® m08t 3 yrart old FemaU. FE • 3-M15 6 Orchard ^akt Rd . K«-c* i chair. aw. 030.H. Curt! Appl. r make of payment . Univerial Co. of 00 per PE 4-0006 I Caatlr 7006 M50 V teed by factory iremed mi CALBl MUSIC CO Ilf N. Saginaw FR_-tt= VlbUN. 1 YEAR OLD, 080. OR 4-1014______ _ Sale Office Equipment 72 PONTIAC CASH RKOIBTER 331 8,_8A01NAW______PE O-OSOI NEW AND U8E^^ adding mMEines 163.60 _ Fqj JS»nle Mptorcyclef 95 TRIUMPH SALES k SERVICE b"o4!i6* Hay, Grain and Feed 82 » ,”OJ«Ea ^LEASED. PARklNO LAifh JUV OR | d“Mr’.lo“‘??n.‘ 100. Only 03 weekly | ■ Furniture, 43 Orchard 1. OBJj-IMO ^ __ ,” to *aeir.'Eiiri'Oorrel's, EM 3 60 FEET X 300. 40 ORCHARD; or EM 3-4000_______ _____ L.k.4RMd. Phone evenings. PE Loan 61 - Rent, L’le Bus. Prop. 57A AND THAfiUE FINANCE CO. joxu REVERSIBLE RUOS, 616 M SIEGLER Gas and Oil Heaters Tw'ce the heat for half the coa BARGAINS 4x0-< 4 in. V-grooved mah. $4 06 1x13 abeeUng 05 per m Panelyte coonter topping. 66e iq. ft 30 gal hot water heeler. 661.50. _____ _______ _ PrM*«?TmK‘"lIi iS with trade ' RC* COLOR TV," MAHOOANY DE' -------- rini^ n!i.* in V "*« "'<><'®'- o®®^* ”*» ®"'®' *“*>' Pontlec ___________ upen sun lo-x Also mahogany aecretqry nEW NATIONAL CASH REOtS- WOUXRINE EUMBiy^ ’ ~Ick^TEAiJs FE 0-3061 For Sate Bicycles 96 ' ALL TYPES OP 1ST k >RD CUT- ^ ig.fN PARKCYCLI 610, 10-IN I ting hay. wiu deliver. OA 0-3110 | duty tricycle. t6 In good cond . 1 SORN PEITbeep POR SALE, OA PZ Q-0d43_______________ _______^ _0-3110. ______________________; BOY’S 10-IN BIKE I HAY AND STRAW 1 BALE OR I.-1_______________FE 3-3140 _ .... JUD11C-—- photocopy 63U06 up; dlctetlnx raaeiui 0160 60 up. Oeneral Fiintlni h •* Lawrence Road. USED BICYCLE. I _ __ ! ‘•“‘®». •» “P ALFALFA I chooM from. Icarlel. _ ------ wvbp, A E Lawrence supply. 11 Weal I lac FE 3-OlM Natlona 330 s. Faddoek FE 3-0104 office. Modern building. _________.. . Utica, Mich. _______ 6-31^______________________________ tor' RENT STORE BOILDINO, tiae 10x40, Ideal for electrical shop, dry ^eenl^^or any small oboundTevel' basement, 30 X 00. Fireproof. Tot storage or: small boslntss. FE 3-3431. Evea. PE 14000^______________ 202 S. ^E\IN■ REHtT 214 E. ST. CLAIR .....ROCHESTER ROMEO LOANS 638 TO 6500 YUr*'” Per^ yoppuag C C POR RENT. 30X00 WOULD I lOd for hardware, res ------ a month FE 3-1001. ‘TRIENDLT SEBYICB” ■ Need $25 to $5W? See Seaboard IMione FE 3-7017 1185 N. Perrv St. PARKINO NO PB6bLEM Seaboard Finance Co. 9x12 .Rugs .........$3.95 Vinyl Linoleum ... yd. 59c Inlaid Tile ...........5c v;.- ’BDYLO" UNCLAI66ED TILE PL 34810 I 101 8. SAOINAW Surplus Outlet FOR Detroit Chain Store Living Room Self Bedroom Sets Chair, table. Umps Odd cheeta. dretaers. beds Box springs, mattresses HldaMds. bunk beds IBASEBOARO RADIATION Afi timate Sava >« of . bargain prices. 01 06 per ft'.. O. A ; 64066 _Tnompean 7006 M60 Wcst._- raN0e"h60D AND : BATHROOM FIXTURES. OIL AND j pertone 634 M. Ro pan' COP- gaa fv------ ---- boiler. Automatic i---- Hardware, elec, auppllcs. frock k —— vnd fttUnga. Lowe Brother j j Super Kemtone and Rust- | pp; oleum. HEIOHT8 SUPPLY 3006 U^er Rd i 16 CiD FT."TfSffeEB, 6-TEAR guarantee. Sacrifice. $3 weekly. i Peartons, PE 4-1661._ ____ • I Drayton I OR 34734 Motorola. 660.06. -----------. at WHEN YOU NEED $25 TO $500 STORE OR OFFICE BUILDING. 20x80 BuUt 5 >»•:• ago. plenty of parking.. On one of tne busiest streets In towi — block and We will be glad to help you. • .« of Telegraph on Huron SI ATT. FINANCE CO. Call Lskew vod Lane. El’'. 4-1574 _ X AJIer ^ 4-7643 USED CAB LOT Wmi'omCEC 160 It. on Baldwin Located at 006 Business Op^rtunity 59 BUSINESS AND RES. BUCKNER I 17*45. 11-ln. Pbileo, 1 600 00. *• - •——'■ portable dishwater, I trie dryer. 060 06. Ch robes. 60.06. Late mo refrigerators and bedr For the flnest°fn use It's Olobc Pumlture, 1 ton. PE 5-0003. Open________ 30” USED HbfKMNT ELECITUC | ! TRADE-OAS RAnW FOR ELEC-IL b JtonRO ELECTRIC Co J gl® =*®®‘''*« ISIO^W. HURON FEJ-0431 ] _5- 113 SO YDS BLUI-OBAY COT- ' ' ‘iddlM'bnf,".Oy -o'™ 63m‘ Appi- w 'Huron. FE PECIAL I X 13 RUGS. 034.16. McLeod Carpet Woodwerd at Square Ted’s. PE 3-7701. TAKE OVER BALANCE Brand new l'40 OE television ordered epeolal for custpmer. moved out of city, leaving deposit Bave 160 Pay 61.03 per geek. Goodyear Service Store. jQ 8. (»S8 Fontlac FE 84133. THOR IRONER, LIKI NEW. 6N Brother bMaLL OIL B’TOVB AND USED OIL tank. UL 3-1096.______________: SEWER PIPE AND PITTINOS , 'rrr 4 sail Sllpseal. Tylox. Wedgelock JoInU | drain TILE-3 ” THRU 34” : ' ORANOEBURO pipe Ii FimNOS I rA The only factory authorised branch officer to Oakland and Macomb County where you can buy new or factory rebuilt cash registers The I tUonel Cash Reg Isti Co.. 6d3 W Huron. PonRec FE 3-0306 33 8 OraUot. Ml Clemens. HOweid 3-4333_____ Sale Store Equipment 73 JACKSON DISHWASHER. 4-OR. refrlg., coke-cooler, Ireeeer, grill, hood, coflee-msker. dishes, silverware, counters, stools, etc FE Sale Sporting Uo^s 74 l HEMINOTON^^R^I^rt^ | MAyfaIr 0-3303. r WILD CANAD led. 110 each Cooley Lk Rd ____________ I 'ft.“skis with bindings and poles. $30 SIse 11 bools. 16 OR 3 0030 ____________________ 4 LAROE SELECrfjN OF USED shotguns and rifles. Ben's Loan Office 4 Patterson 8l_ FE 4 6141 Cl-OSK OUT On all hunting clothes, guns, shells and etc. PAUI- A. YOUNG 1030 DIXIE HWY OR 4-0411 lOn L ■ ■ NEW . 100 to Bike and MApie a-eeai. _ _________i —~k. — rence FE STRAW, TIMOi%X„KfeOND CUT- i ----------------. tint alfalfa PHSEeButuai M7M Boats and Accetsories 97 For Sate Livestock J3 | „ aluminum boat u h p 30 t-WEEE-OLD PI08. IS CALL _”°*®? * aner_4 p m EM 3-3403 2.1% OFb WTD PONfES TO BOARD 3006 BOATS. MOTORS. TRAILERS _____ \VENTER STORAGE For Sate Poultry 85 scott motors b service - 1----------- CRUISEOCT BOAT SALES 50 TOUlio HEAVY ROOaTERB. M ’ «>P®® ^lewti^^heos 1031 Oregory Rd IP YOU NEED 3600 WHITE LEOHORN HENsTlliriACll ME 7-71» S*fefARCE C . Oakland Orchard!, PE 0-1063 alty_8. :. A-1 condlttoo. i r Market. 3400 Ellubeth Lake ■- £r. i* Ik Birmlneham Plymouth Furniture. 42 Orchard Lake Ave. 6-Pc Dining rm lUlte $48.06 17 yi®*.® VBotrr~ANTTHlNd You WAN’f 1 D®“W® Drtaaer, Cheat, and ■ Borrow with Confidence the™home’^°can be f'KT rn found at l k s bales THOMAS ECONOMY^ 0| ULI 1 I A utile out of the way but a M | 301 8. Saginaw PE g-3151 031 60 CITIZEN BAND TRANCEIVER 3 038 80 , — ...... OM 60 i 048.60 ' DRIVEH^ '•'mraUoo can eaill/ neijiTo.-ogn. FuU price onlj W.MO. Call PetflTOT Real Estate LAKE ORION MY 3-1681 FOR LEABS - 3-BAY MOBILE station - " ■ t Sashabaw OR 3-0033. Household Finance k 8.‘$sl?niSV LOANS 636 TO' 6600 BAXTER k LIVINOSTONE W. Lawrenw 8_t_FE 4-lSlt LOANS ! » TO 1500 - 036 1 COMMUNITY LOAI 30 E. LAWRENCE___ wPo^ut GIROUX OAKLAND to pay Furniture and sppll-.._es of ail kinds. NEW k UWD. Visit our trade dept, for real We buy. sea or trade. Come out and look around, 3 acres of free parking Pbona FE 6-0341. OPEN MON. SAT 3 TO 0 | PHI. I TO 3 I 34 MONTHS TO PAY | 4 mUaa E ot PonUac or 1 mile g of Auburn Relghta on Auburn. U8BO OEinRAL ELifCTRIC STOVE, pood condition, 636. FE 6-6341, WRINGER WASHER Norge It pound capacity, used 1 weeks like new Bave $86 on this deluxe maohlne Pay only 01.35 per week Goodyear service Store, 30 B. Case. Pontiac FE 8-8133. ____Pontiac FE t-0133. —- WYMAN’S USED TRADE-IN DEFT. I. Laav- Sofa b_____ . Davenport 0 3 Fc Uv. r« HUtcJl i with gl.600 down. I clraners, barber 1 Tla”n OENERAL REAL IQITATE 4308 Dixie Hwy. ”OR 3-0701! Open Hu 8 Bundey ’Ul 6_; | Partridge i 18 THE “BIRD” TO SEE j! LIQUOR l.oan Coinpain _202 Pontlec Stale Bank jSWf _ i:OANS“$2,5 TO $500 AUTO WASHER. frlgerator._plano, ing state. EM 3;83 SALE H H GOODS „ BLOND DININO TABLE. HC and 4 chairs First too tues 11. . OA g-3410. ______________________1$ W PIKE__________________ BRAND NEW WROUGHT IRON Wo6e RUO IS X 16. 6-PIBCE bunk beds complete with springs breakfast set. hideabed. dreeeer. and mattress 631.66 Also maple miec. 630 Auburn. Apt. 3 1 p.m bunk and trundle beds at bl| dls- to 6 p.m. __ ________ Cicuard Lake Ave WRINGER WASHUt. 1367 FB 4-1040 -ousts P^^on > furniture 61 46 E. Bhelfleld. “5wl? WHIRLPOOL ELECTRIC DRYER, stove xai tio nn WK aaxae , excell^t cotta klA 4-2MO. r exterior See 0 CONSOLE SINOER SEWING MA-chlne. Most dispose of at 6J6 60 or * ‘ on monthly----------- >5.10. PE 6-tf . Copitol 0 CAR PARTS FOR '40 TO '60 MOO-els Royal Auto Paru 1130 Ml. _Clei«ne^FooUac._________ DOUBLE SINE COMPLETE |38'6t7 with tap. A trade. FE 6-4713. Motacalm Supply. 460 W. Mont- DiLTaTjOINER. KXCEUJEHT dltlon FE 6-0003.____________ DISCOUNTS OF 16 PER CENT TO 36 P4r cent on Christmas cards. Royal Futura Mitahle ‘.ypewrlterx 0103.36 BmiUi-Corona electric adding k subtracting inaeblnes Hit. ^0053 _ SEECl.M.S i 4 x8 x>4-1N V-OROOVED MA-HOOANV 03.06. O’xO’xU-lR, V-OROOVED BRUCE PREFINIflH MAHOOANY. 04.06, 1-IN. BIRCH PLUSH DOORS, 03 GENUINE FORMICA. 86e BO. FT. PONTIAC PLYWOOD CO. 1400 BALDWIN AVE.____FE J-3541 TALBOTT LUMBER ! DEEB""PR'6cEi8iiiq, uni6'n"su- Now 1. the time to get ready per *.............a..-.-.. for wlotei. Baeement waterproof- I Rd , mg. liless mstelled also wood sash, hardware electrical, plumbing. rmt and lumber supply. Open a m till 6:30. Sun I to I 1036 Ooklsnd Ave. _ FB 4^6 THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE OoaT"/urmtu?c.*Api‘iunc«:' .... . r"VE 6-4771 no WEST LAWRlfNCE_______"iLJ JuN*!"” DEER PROCEBSINO TO YOUR I ^Clfltatmn at Nestors Market. - HUNTER’S '“BPEcTaL” CAMPDfO trailer coi^lete with stove, sink. * * te. Reasonsbie. Inquire 33 Inboarde a__________ .. used boats to W. Used saimoai It' with new sails. 6310 New 30’ Speedllner over-oUer. Commerce Rd ’■'Ul APPLES AT OLACKMORE OR-: I n'*’ oarlaND'' chard. 3110 E Stiver Bell Road ManoeTm" S. Open and 8un ______, |te APPLI8 - KC QUALITT ; i»M 3ft HORa*ifeVKir",jbHN^^ •n UMi. Freih iweet clderJ ---------- — ----- — Porter'* Orchard*, 'MWt ea*t of Ooodrlch on Hegel Rd. Open deily I to 0 Sun 1:10 to 8 PM C U 8 T O M CORN PICKING k shelling. ME 7-3750 after 4 M I Sale Farm Equipment «7 --- "! TIpelco Lake ~ "ttAIn 0-3170 Fall Clearance Sale NEW JOHNSON On new power mowers ; itt!J?rVd ”"*"*'“**"■ **”' tractors and tiller.s > oWbnb marine bcpFlibb PE 6-0734 PE 4-11131 **» KING BROS. l-iT-------- PONTIAC RD AT oPDYKE j TrEnsportst n Offereil lOO" FREE WAOON Wltn NEW IDEA'. Picker. Uavis Mchy ~ 7-33t3._Ortonvme,___ HOMELITE CHAIN 8 •HARD TO FIND BUT 'BULMAN HARDWARE Bernes k Hargraves. PE 5-6101 __743 W. Huron - Open Sun. USED WATER SOPTENERS ---------- 2-7104 w vj/T r asi' *** USED OIL BURNERS WITH maTRPCK 001N3 NORTH PART iMd elthe£_wsjr. PE 6-ttOO _ ENOINE AIRLlhER. LOS AN. lelea. Baa Frsncisco. Ban Diego. We Sharpen end Repair All Mekee ' 66O-I0 extra New# - OPEN 7 DATS A WEEK - ! M« Ferry Service Inc OR HOLLY ktARINB k COACH 8ALB8 ________________ ___ 6210 Roily Rd.. HoUy ME 4-tTM CARS TQ NKW TORE “ 'BONNIES DRIVEAWAY FE y»30 LEAVINb FOR ARIZONA NOV 20 Stopplne nights Want paseenger FE 2-66dt UTO cduCH.^CIUIR _ _ WRAP YOUR deer. Also grinding end wrap tor y-eeier^on request. 704 Cameron. V4 a HUNTINb ACCfDEHT IIWURWcE ------® i 1 ----- Lorn rataa. Hansen Agency. FE Used Trade-In Dept. _________ _ Buffet $14 00 GUNS - BUY. SELL. TRADE carpet simples If x 37 Ins . Many to select from Each 7Sc Davenport and chair ..... 036 60 3 Piece bedroom set ..... 63* 60 ' Reclining chair 040 60 Refrigerator j21” HC/ SPORTSMAN’S HEADQUARTERS NS k ARCilERY E^IFMEN THOMAS ECONOMY _ _ _ _ ___________________ ..1 8 Beglnaw FE MI8I LAKE OR] Coroiia _ electric portable : oSED OIL SFACTE HEATER WITH 9F*R SELL - ’TRADE M34 AT DOUBLE bTOPLlOHT . '".ION lir k*^Off*ce'*8upply blower ‘■‘®® Bait. MInnOWt, FlC. i-TO? |AUo“'al*mrt?mg^^^^ MINNOWS AU SIZES 2ic NOVEMBER SALl’: New and used tractors with snbw blades. Rome snow blowers. Roto, tillers and mowers EVANS EOUIFMENT 6607 Dixie Highway MA t int OR ^7t24 CLOSED FROM NOV 14 TO 31 Auction Sates «« ORION AUCTION OPEN FOR CON. siffMBtnt dally MY l-lftftl. , MLi- EACH PBIDATT P.M. ifW I and used furniture of all descriptions. Call us to pick up your consignment. PE S-ittC Binith Movtag Co.. Olxlo Klghwey I it 8»tl Lake_rd._;^_______ I WATCH bUB AD ON TRURSbAY Friday and Saturday *— ----- lip Dollar Paid ... .... Pumlture and Appliances OPER DAILY i to g FOR RETAIL BAI.ES 8 q B AUCTION 60ft pixje Hwy.. Droyton Sale House Trailers S9 Wanted Used Cars TOP BUCK JUNE ' 101 -- ____________ TRUCE PON-nAC WASTE PE 3-030* HIOH g FOR LATE MODEL Els worth k Beattie^ MA 6-I40* “ AVERILL'S" Need sharp lata modeal for Colit. TOP DOLLAR ____ 3030 Dlxlo Hwy Special FE 3-0071 FE O-tOO* *“• ' M MUCH AS 660 f6r jure' AND cheap cora FE 3-3000 days or ARE~T6u“drrffNo THE MOST , — 610 Ul. FE 3-0*63. i carveo~ma!Hooant desk, dav: enport. love seat, antique table, drop leaf table, reaa. MA 6-1131. ! CASH FOR USED TVS. FORNl- Mmlce la taat!''frtartaly*anS help- ' ----- ful Visit CUT office or phone CHROME DINETTE BETS. AS- ™ HOME AUTO loan .riuorfacent. 381 Orchard HiFi, TV and Radios 66 ATTENTION. HAMS AND 8WL’ corner from Turner Ford Dealer ! INLAID TILE. es. 6c ^ Ml 6 3810 j "BUYLO’^TILE, 101 8 SAOINAW _ VERY SPECIAL busy main artary nea._ Over 14,000 per month declared groae. Extra rant income fro~ roomi above. Newly oHered. EARLY AMERICAN Restaafsat aad borne netting ov< 67.000 with abemtec ownerahlp. Charming setting at mam highway Intersection where Toledo and Delpolt cuetomera drive ovst * enjoy the good couotry food. Ma utaetarmt and rich farm aro Asking off.100 down. If buyer o eratcd, down paymenl bock lltUo over a year. Bend for our FREE 'Mlchlsi Buslnees Guide ” Partridge and Associates Businesses tbruout Mich ““ W. Huron FE 4-1*1 MODERN SUPEit MARKET Doing 1300.000. annual irowth. Large ^rktajLlet. Choice looaUoa. Cr” ii."c'newingham CORNER CROOKS AND AUBURN $ OPPORTUNITY $ NO COMPETITION tl csnortaBoe required. 9uel-le ^ujijor iwu. WtU fw- Credit Advisors 6IA BUDGET YOUR DEBT.S CON80LUIATE BILL8-NO LOANS For Tour beet bet to get out ot debt, too Financial Advisers. Inc. Ita 8. SAOINAW PE 3-7063 Mortgage Loans 62 Swape •60 FORD TOR ELECTRIC DRY- er. _OR 3-817* _ __ ___ ’53 CHEV. BEDAN bniYKIlY FOR cor. EM 3-0081. Stuart Conway CAdMlfor U8ED tare and m.‘ - “ JOSEPH rURKlTDRE tOUITV IN 3 BSdBOOM F6*-nlsbed home, m bnUia. carnetad. got bent. Water eoftaaer. 3 car garofv. 13 ft. frontafc. Prnit trooe — nreploec. For ueo bousotrall-OT or eoU with low down pnyaoM. FE XW3________________________________ RESTAURANT. __ 5?*W;,«?5?tV.3e“’^uX? WSj some cash. Bad hCaltb foreta ta| toll. Write PonUac Praoe Boa 04., ULTRA-MODERN ULON W ^IL- fiSe" kau" Mu" *** WHAT TO DO WITH TWO? Di?l The Pontiac Press YVant Ads FE 2-8181 wool broadloom FE 5-7340. CASH FOR ANY HOUSEHOLD Items appliances and fum. Quick service Bargain House FE 3-0043 COME IN and BEE THE LATEST In Phllco lor 1181. 16 lacb portable and 33 inch Console 'Tele-vtrhms. Stereo Ut-FI. Record ploycri waehcr*. dryort, refrigerators and freeiers. From 16.00 Dll and LOW LOW ecikly pty-mbnu FIRESTONE STORE 160 N. Saginaw ___ _ K 6-3030 OORMEYER ELECTRIO MIXER with bow]s. 61* _Fb.^lRJ-3410. ELECTRIC FRtOIOAIRB S’fOYET 060. automatic------ I Priced for oulek sale. *GRYfTNELL’S FE 3-7180 soles, blood and mahogany. 30 sets to choose from. Lat______ Northern TV sales k Service. 8734 OUle. Clarkston. Mich. MA 6-6311 - TUBIB - TOTHT n free; tn your Mt. merce Rd. ct Union Lake Rd. tv 31 INCH. iCbMIRAL CONSOLE. blend, exc. cond, 106. FE 3-6377. YOU CAN ALWAYS' FIND A largo selection of late model, guar- ELECTRIC LIOHT FIXTURES, all rms . 1*60 deslgnt. pbU down. balloons, stars. Bcdr--- porch. $1.61. Irreguli Prices only factor] Michigan Tluorr-— chard Uke Ave. - ... ELECTRIC ROASTER. 66 CHRYS- ! ler radio, tank type veuum. Fire- i atone mower. Singer sewing ma- chine. Oil heater EM 3-dS0>____ | ELECTRIC WATER HEATER. 1 year oM. 0*6,_OB 3-0161 _______ | FREF sfANDINO TOILETS 616.66 | Double bowl sink 11.06 ! M tn hard copper 30-ld. lenxtho I7c ft : 4b-ln. hard copper { 30-in lengths 37e R. l^ln. E soft eoppdr St ft col 46C ft 3;pc both sets with trim NW Ot White or colored Factory 3nds — Irregulars SAVE PLUMBINO SUPPLY 173 8 S»|----- — ' * FOR season Troui Creek Ranch cor- i ner MM and Oreenshleld Sand, Gravel and Dirt 76 nfilng SURPLUS LUMBER & 1. MATERIAL SALES CO. *■ -' (M6II OR 3-78*3 1 TOP BOIL CRUSHED STONE , Sand, gravel. .III. 1 yie Conklin. FE 0-1113 or FE 3 0672 ' » BLAOt''bifiT TOP SOIL. FILL, i sand and gravel. Also bulldotMig FE 6-476* __ L’R BLACK DIRT ToP SOll. fill and manure. Also romplete ’ landscaping and ires removal and | Irlmmlng 776 Scott Lake Rd.. : Christmas Trees 67A - ....... BULLDOZINO DRAG LINE AND A-1 SCOTCH PINES AND SPRUCE. • _9“®6 .'»®®6 ---------- sheared and choice Ben Bosl. BLACK DIRT BROKEN CON- HoUy. Mich. MB 4-030*. i Crete, bulldoilng PE S-0641___ BEAimPVL PtJkRTATION OROWM : CHOICE FARM TOP SOIL OP ALL I trees, shaored. shaped, sprayen I kinds. 6l4 yards. Ill daUvered. < annually. Also cedar end pine I FE 6-OM* also loadina I boughs Cedtr Lane Bvergr Psrm^ 0*70 Dixta Hwy , DBIY i EM 3-33*4 EM 3;«I6 '64 CRBBTLINER. 37-PT, OOOD condition, ful’ bath, bought home, must sell. Raosonoble. Robbins I Mobile Vlllsge. Lot 34. A I R S T R C A M' LIOHTWEIORT Travel Trailer Since 1*33 Outr-antoed tor life See them and gel s demonstration at Warner Trsller Sales. 3931 _W. Huron. iPlan to Join one if Wally Byam’s esciimg 4 ALL N WE BUY -- TRADE IX)W.\ — - TRAD!’: UP — DON - MAKE ANT DEAL UNTIL YOU VE BEEN TO LLOYD MOTOR SALES *32 8 8agmcw_ _ __F* 2 *131 'always TOP DOLLAR long anilabicl Holly Marine k Ho?Iv^ *Sf*?ITIl**'* ' ''®'' *“1.** f'®*®* ®*'® ---- . R 3 VAN WELT 4640 Dixie Hwy Ph OR 2-1366 DETROmiR For lop doIlir-S, laler-modif V”i’u£ Se^ M & M Motor Sales Don’t lamble loT less thS the ' »»1 DfiUe Hwy OR 3.IS03 ,v. -------1 priced the factory sutSesled end till set tap trado-ln cllow- x« vcur present mob” ----- ssenoM fr— MI 6-1170 1600 N. Cronbrook i 3*30 Ellxabetb Lake Rd.. PE 4-4046 I WEBSTER---------- _ _ ,,. _ record player aad radio. 3-epced portable leather eacc, Ml 6ta3l3. ELECTRIC DBY'mi, |0i. REPRIO-eratar |3t. Electric stove Washer. |36. DUDcan Fbvfe —r, 6*6. OBEL TV ' Yd.. DUO-SONIC OR SALE - USED BATHTUBS i ®® e:..- ’ "oigj-isp; i YDS. DK- ^’tV^*6 . like nl I. Cablni For Sate Misceiianeous 67 llvered, 3-*373 ___________________ I PUlt!^e^^Ld#iSrw^ aCOTWII~F M6 E'~FLA*TA’n» ’^ifl^Jrav®'*'^''^ i-sS! ' ' : 0?1tU ‘"ll‘e„'’'a'r?w;‘ UoV ^ ^ dian Lake Road Oxford. MY wnw m>v no nswrw 6-6'6> _ ^ « ««Ejn^ MAI-rmoftaTl Hob Hutchiiibun Mobile Home Salei 4X1 Dixie Hwy Drayton Plains 4 ML N of FonUac OR 3-13*2 JUNK CARS ___FE 6-3400 __ $ $ $ WE NEED CLEAN ’.i7 AND ’.58 CARS AS aoON AS FOSSiaLE JEROME ’BRIOHT SPOT ” ----- EM 3-338*._____________ fSiEZERO - NOROE FREEZERS Chetl and Uprights t prtess. F Row only g33.M InatSad ftrteo'^l.M Federal Modernization 66X Plata Hwy______PE 3-1*33 4 INCH soa iwk. I ^fTio It 5 Ineh 8041 Flpo p it £tTE'%DMEna SDFFL^ ** * — --- FE Mist IIJO. OOF- AFFL j!S®T^E —.. —_—_ r. DOkAYTON j "BUtLO” TILB OB BTOVB AND nYINATOli KB- lT~w!llS5w~1Hft.ia~iH _frl|tein4or^ Pt 4-l5l. _ _ _ _; oU ti^ OE fsbO oomuixcojmTw.m > iitoAL-ituxC Ou t>AC«~awiT«.. .noon j C.e’ll.jrujwilu'TMJ» w scsiss’.sa-jssr.jif •“-tL ^r.yef. ftTft. .aaa* .0 ttk^abtk.^ f FLUORESCENT LIOHTS - IDEAL for kitchen cAbmets. under ral-anees. work beneboe, Ur|t *4” UxbU. 01 .N ealBc. Sl.tl tcratabed Michigan Fluorescent. ■*“ chard_Loko Avo. — 36. GARAGE DOORS Factory eoconds. a 11 ctandard elces in stock from $36 and up. Electn* door operatore. foMlig closet dqere end dtsappeorlaf Wi^jj^ve eettmotae on gortte re* BERRY DOOR SALES ^1 *rom_ *_ to 6 ____ FA’fER HE .— CNnaumers ________ _____ ealne. gXS* and 060.6* marred. *■ - electrta tU and bqltled — — naeraecf healore. Klehtaan naeraactl 303 Orchard Lrte Avo - IS INSULATION’ Sate Musical Goods 71 ! ACCORDION SALE. ALL BIZI • II ” FIRE CHOlCFTtLL sbiiMCR SEASON slab wood lor fireplaces and tnr-I naces DoUvered FE 4-OIM. FIRBFLACB CANNEL COAD-* Idling w-- Oakland FimI 1 FIRBFLACB CANNEL COAD-FOR- nace fireplaes- ---' ! speedv—' ' « Accordion loaned free .. ..... ners wllh loscons. FE 6-043g. AliriwrNb'' INSTROMElfif^ NEW AND USED AT TREMENDOUS SAVINGS fc”>atot' FbcncnrE' 64160. CHOOSE FROM LAROB STOCK ( arV- ~ grvnn—ruE LIBERAL T1UOE ALLOWANCE “■ LATAWAV OR PAYMENT FLAN OURlfdolS IS ”TOF8” ftASbitBb EDWARD s U S SAOINAW hardwood. |1 k 00 0 0017I 6ta- :tary ea^rt, SLAB ¥666 3S FBOFutci CALBl MDBIO 00 I wood 3 e«rd m del Albortt UFN. BAOINAW_________n 64333 ] Lumber MUto *T 04U1. ______ BHANb' Hi¥~tStl LOWRET OR- 8EAk0iliED“¥00D FiRBFlAC* aan Oreatesi value m ibe organ turnaeo and kUMUlnr TW BMU Held Oonpare with organs cool* Lake Rond FB t-MIS or OE "*iikiTi'‘ bSiiB|M^*U bw ^L'l ORE uolt Moor tones to choose from ^^geiiM^odds k endrO* 34S3I. a«ta ..cinaiegty m OnUndber’s I mahogany wilk wneb. ______ ____________ For Sate Pets 79 gift ceitifkata for Christ- | _ SC^oU riS*r ! ""GALLAGHER’S WE NEED maiLERB WE C-... _HOLLV_a^JIOLLr « 4jn^ ! Etonomy Cars |3 Anbu™ Jacobson> Trailer Sales That’^ on Tt,S‘wonld Be Proud to Drive CUSTOMERS WAITINO FOR YOUR CLEAN CARS ______ Glenn s Motor Sales Oxford Trailer Sales i «»3 nr Huron st.___fe o-i3h M nalta to pick from. IF - IT. WAWf^; JUNE CARS g’ - 10’ wide 3 story ctmpors. _ OR 3-30M rooters wc havo It 11 Yastabaod. ! wAirrarv~'ta~rm~ti~?w.nn—s. TOME USED ON RENTAL BASIS i liarJchurst Trailer Sales - FINEST IN MOBILE UVIHO - I-------------------— 2e*;S!r"?"-"M"S«iSRriKEr. Sate Used Trucks SStad halt way bciwoco Orica | .FOFP. WKEggcR BSqA _a^„0.f.rd_^._MT_MS.I jj^OOOOE^L^AJLEE EAUte ^ ****' Used Auta Parts 102 rMi’^srite'vsicfdirruLtf ehlae. Hronner. mclwsnoy cab- ifrfv rtidRb ORGAN WITH abta ausartaad Ktoaels bM4. Ilka sifw. Take oa pay-n#ach. OS bouom. bass, loU siu J meata M ff lS per moolb or full keys M” high - W’ deep -I AKC RBOiaTERED SCHIPFEKn —*- **3 It Universal ST’ wide Hit Fhooe U M134.1 and Norwelgn elkhound pup tM ' Royal Oak. ^ j^MtJ and IM J UM I pood KICMITKEX THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNEStMY. NOVEMBER 28. 1900 Sale Uaed Truck* 103 R>r Cara 1061______________Cara * TOW MACE IJ TARD OUMpIltU BUICK CERTURT AUTO-| »M7 CHEVROLET «-DR Tr»n»»lMiDii R»«ll* »nd v-* lUck >iid mrtrdrtvr We* HMter. ExMlltM coBdltloa. No ■OB*/ down, Auum* po/mcDU ol lit por a«^. CALL MR. WHITE. CREDIT MANAOER IE 1061 TIZZY I FORD PKE-DP. motlc Powtr Orokfi. BM ml $«» ExcELuarr condi ^ingTOHODT! MI <-l3M kround Elag Auto BbIm lit 8. 8o(ln*w IMIBDiCK. J-DOdin HARDTOP, •f W.II. b* I V,l outonotlc. ~- iLJSSLiyJ...»IU» T*d--L PE_J-46M pORP) I V y I I I V ' AVE . BIRMINOHAI X v-yx i-x-y hiMr'w i New ami I'scd Trucks Parts and Service Truck for Kvery Job" McAuliffe Ford I ISOIi:r J*™ OODWARD' «•“ CHEVn HARDTOP COOfif BlRMiNOHAM Ml 4 i . »«£?. ru1ck719^----------- -- Sp*cl*l 4-door >*01111. pow*r >t**r- : tn» and brak*> D*lui« *oulpm*nt , _ __________ CI*«P PE d-«48* 11161 CHEVROLET STATIOI Just Make Payments S» BUICE 4 DR.. $385 Ektrk nic* Stock No 1« Ool» ----- -------------- .... |ii»6 Ek.y l*rm« NORTH CHEV- -----CO urn 8 WOODWARD -........ MI 4 n3k ■ Auto. Mr Bell. PE »-4Slt bM) O.AKT,.A\n .WH. Ask for the Truck Dept. FK .^-4101 4 1100 •M Doboi PICKUP TRUCK. OB 3-74M__ _ _ M S-TOR STAKE rood condition. tSo m 8 Mam Milford MU 4-17i& jwa FORD >♦ TON PICKUP PER-fact eondlllon Nothlnc down. tS par w«ek Call Mr Aflen. Cradit BUT BEFORE YOU BUY OTECK BUB^URBAN^LM. S 53“BUiCK~PARTS or’ AS IS MAplf ft-3234 • -POOT ir&5 BUICK HARDTOP. DYNA^ Only t4»S. FLOW RADIO U HEATER. AB-' '** UTELV NO MONEY [K>WN :l Credit Mgr Parks 11 FORD PICK UP. EXCELLENT roadItlOD MArkt UTILITY CO. TRUCKS IIM BUICkT 4-D06r sedan. 14^ By Kate Ounn ,| For S«l« cir« 1061 For Sak Car* 10* For Sale Cars 106 For Sale C«rs^j_^106 1 LARKS 1 economy SPECIAL 1 a'U’*irR''*^ifHSf •credSS 1.. . ') / MEW *4. g CT&. WON., gl.iS* 1 MANAOER. FE Sd4«. NEW POHTIACB AT TREMBN-’ doua dUcouot. Do not fall to fo* ua before you luy — Keego Sales & Service Keigo Harbor 1144 RAMBLER- 4-DOOR. JMXL economy. Atalimt oayme^ 5t“ y«r 4.444 ilS]^,rart** CaU Mr. O'BrIao, Cradlt Mar. At Ml tdIM BIRMbjOHA^^^ 1,4 1 gd^i. WON^ SHARP. fliM 1 King AuU Uloe 114 S. Bnglnaw bViV “ MAZUllEE°M6TW*ftrLii‘ *• 1 Ltgg I>rYMODTH 4 DOOR. Vd, ■r TA hardlSb E*e„cond Take oyjt j n* S WOODWARD. MI S-34S0. 14 POHTUC STAR cailP CATA-Itaa ^ywu^^oeupa, orltinal own- RLER 1*4 S WOODWARD. ramblers! wagons and 4-"d" 'Sf'tS-'St. Paetary official* ^"Rdiy tutt priM^BU Mr. Cradlt AdYlior. PR 4-gi*i. IddI* Rtaal* Volum* Mart. hardtop. Power brakes and itear-tog. radio, baatei. whuayrall pra-mlum Ores, lew mllsatt. t3.NI. PI 4-SMl aftePI p.m. ■M PONTUO, 4-DOOR CATAtWA. hardtop, hydramatic. power itetr-' log and brakai and aoeaHortce. i Raw*”* * '** '1 '46 PLYMOUTTI ■/ \ ! |444 MERCURY MONTEREY. 3- 1 Itrv*lwiMn'yniL^T iH* 1 \r* 1/ door HSROTOP Radio and! RADIO AND HEATER, No money UMii 1 \ 7 JL ; Heater Eicellent Condition Nor ®® e.ae |H > \ V Aaaume Pnvmenu ol 47.34 per JACK COLL. INC. iJttI / 1 ^ month. CAtX MK. WKiTK I iao2 W klxDle At PodUac Troll mk J J ’ ■ ° ^ manaokr PE: wTlled likl iJa 4 «u SPECIAL ' whitea *'tuni**’allD*U. ill texea. tl.an.U lull prtee. •Rg'" payment. 444.U Prt, myth. Elf dlecount oo all naw SO Ramblera ““r"&c''rambler on. V4. radio, taeattr. nte«l 18S7 CHEVROLET >:< ?Ju Vuc;.*Tiu‘ - otfar ut t Allan, FB S'OMl, oflt^.,.JJL 1 Mart. ttSI. PLYMOUTH — fAkE OVER lUICK piVi WOODWARD AVE S*/,- BlRMiNOHAM .. ---- --- — 4424 18M CHEVY CLUB COUPE HARD- PREMIUM PRICES — FOR BlRMiNOHAM CARS Scliutz Motors, Inc. lU 8 WOODWARD. B'HAM DeSOTO-PLYMOUTH DEALER MI 71414 AdYtabr! 1 l»» PONTIAC «-DOOR. V4. BA-E d d 11 dlo. heater, etc. Thli U e lood ... _..h load tirci. M74. See ladte for yourielf. EM braket. power etaerlai, hydra, matte. ELM mllea. Exedlcnt eon-ditlon. ra t-SlSl, betweea t a m. 1440 MERCURY New i krt plui >up. Ydu : 1>»4 PLYMOUTH S-DOOR HARO-lop. V-l. automatic uaBamUaloa. I radio and haatar. 4SH lull prica. lad h*atar. whIU-.t apaakay. Nawport a.m. ra 4-Mss ■M PLYMOUTH. 1 OOORT'WSfS i walla. I cylinder, radio, heater, automatic tranamlaaion. $380. OL | hardtop, ^wa a.’ rear aei ____ I.SOO-ml. belora 4 p J>. '59 PONTIAC BEATTIE MOTOR SALES. INC _ ■47 Plymouth 4-door Button Waton i C.^TAUNA 2-DOOR radio and heater. aytomailc. I a __a .mk. ’8MARF" E STOPLIGHT Watertord 5744 DIXIE HWY Ol .. real aharp aadaa withradto. heater, hydramatic. power ateer-lot and power brakea. Solid India iTory eel oil by itaamlnt wblU waif Uerea. Immaculatat 44 POlfriAC ECONOMY CAR8_ 33 AUBURN , 41 CAD. 4-DOOR. BLACK. OVER- 41 OMC I'y I ch«vi» 1 t I OMC 1 ton I Cherrolel I Chrvrolal 1- 51 Ch>»l4 Did .....-phyroTrt $1205 Russ lohnson Motor Sales IP YOU NEED a'SOO •Deborah lets the boys think they're smarter than she is - which for her is easy!" for any emergency. BEE SEABOARD FINANCE CO USA N Perry 8t FI S-lfH 1955‘ mECRURY 3-D6oR ~ RADIO. 3 tone trei Very ^ c( mo MI t-sw ,1.0OK! 1447 PLYMOUTH. 3 DOOR. M$4 lull pnet. No money down. $37 34 $1595 COMMERCE ROAD POLL S?' Mr aane* hnfanee of MSS..^I M-Milphy. Credit Mir.. PE 3-3S3S. Iddlt Steele. Ford. _____ lift RAMBLBR WAOOH., Pt^ au*"Mr,Vurp!!rc;i-r!.Vr*; - Idle au • *i5*6n*s'used cars an M34 Lana Ortoe Joc‘s Car Lot FE 3-7931 VALIANT New 1M$ lITfO Complete Garkston Motor Sales i chRt^e^plj^oth I-1I41 Cfhyrr.... Kast.side .\iito ^^•^It^ IM E PniE ST 'FT 4-441 •.55 CHEVROLET CYL. STANDARD LAKE y\ \ 2-2871 )R10X MV 2-2.581 For Sale Cars 106 U45 FORD CONVER-nBLB. RA- For Sale Cars 4-*lSo4* TRANS, CLEAN! 1244 BOB FROST INC LINCOLN MERCURY - C OHET BlRMiNOHAM d block 8 of Maple Roadi MI 4 32Mi JO 4-3433 .__Van Camp-CbevToliLU-Lu i.h Stock No Itaa Onl> 41334 Eaay Term* NORTH CHEVROLET CO 1040 S WOODWARD AVE Birmingham MI 4.3735 i» OR '54 CHEVYT RdtH STIlE 4 1700 Hamilton Dr PI 4-0344 mrerlnt and brakaa. 1400. OR 3-1440 eveninaa _ 1349 FORD CUSTOM 300 RADIO. Credit Mar. Mr Murphy. 3-3430. Eddlt Steele, Ford. _ _ FORD FAIRLANE SEDAK tu, MERCURY TURNPIKE CRUIS- '54,P0N'nAC'C0NVERTlBUE W „Jlo. heater, whit* Urea 43H ,r. 4-door hardtop Power win- A^ulo Tran. R idlo at Het. . lull price no money down Call , lull price 4.000 miles guarantee BIR4I1NO HAMRAMBLeR. 44t 8 WOODWARD Ml 4-3000 _ ^ _ 1464 OLDSMOBILE CLUB COUPE, RADIO A HEATER. HYDRAMAT 1C ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN Asiume piymenta of 114 37 per mo Call Credit Mgr Ml Parks at Ml 4-7444 Harold 1447 Pontiac, xlaiton n this one. fairly priced Bob ,'^rost 1447 Pontiac a_____ _____ _____ . [ 4's Prom 41404 to 11404 I 1144 Chevrolet 3-dr Impuli. 4 c I LIES new 41404 see BOB 1 that "I'd r leellng. " at FORD COU NTR V 8 « U wagon with radio t beater, trans. Excrllent eundlUac money down. Call Mr. Credit Ml ' '43 er hitch Fairly priced lydra- 4 I 744 tt4l BUICK 1956 GMC naw. W7 d of $3f40 per mo U1 next year 6 000 Call Mr. O'Brian, C ...ai FOAM ETC ALL 1_________ FRJEE LUBRICATION FOR 35. 000 MILES I'lns Free Bonus 1958THUNDFRB1RD A beautllul ell White exterior Un-breath-taklng blue lote- Klng^uto^Bb B BkglnkW St Just Make Payments 1047 FORD 2 DOOR. 4445 » only 131 mo Due Dec 14th Auto., Mr Bell. FE 8-4434 104 Ear ---- ■ - • - - $895 1956 (;mc $895 1957 GMU burban^uon W.i TAYLOR'S N.\MMI.KK-l).M.I..\^ iOOl N MAIN ROCHESTER OL 21111 DODOE-CHRV8LER TRUCES 19A7 DESOTO 2 DOOR. HARDTOP. V$, nice SUPERIOR AUTO SALE 56 FORD 4-DR NO MONEY DN Lloyd Mtri 322 8af. FI 2-tni bi FORD. RADIO AND HEATBR food lire* and, motor. $25. FE 1/2553 i M FORD V$. 4 DR RADIO. HEAT- 1951 OLDSMOBILE U. 2 - I>OOR hardtop, automatic tranamlailon. power brakes and steerlnf. Boau-. tiful rose rintsh. Stock No 1243 Only $1,429, easy terms. NORTH CHEVROLIT CO . 1000 8. WOOD-WARD AVE.. BIRMNOHAM. Ml '■3736. Bob Frost INVICTA STATION WAOON Juit arrived' Full power and a real bargain Fairly Just Make Payments 54 OLDS 4 UR , $344 Pay omy 417 mo Due Dec. Just Make Payments '44 Pontiac. 4344 ■av only 117 mo Due Dee. 14U lilte Auto Mr. Bell FE 4-4431 104 East Blvd. at Auburn 1444 Buick a-dr. hardtop 144'i Dodie 4-dr i I Power brakea 104 Eaat Bell. FE 4-4434 1954 FORD F-104 Pickup . $.595 CHEVROLET. REAL GOOD Id EM 3-0480 after 4 p m CHEVROLET V-l STICK ft, radio, healer, very clean d noUitng down. 47 weekly il^FOHM CHEVS^j^O' LOOK! 0\I.V$2495 Crissman .8 FORD 3 DOOR yX)RDOMATIC ' RADIO A HEATER ABSOLUTE- .0 Sales. 193 S Saginaw ; 4-3214 or FF 4-1006 NO MONEY DOWN KOCilKSTHK :N EVES TIL 9 OL 3-2721 FORD SEDAN RADIO A .....iTtR. WHITEWALL TIRES, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY —- ■ ,PVr7 ■ “ DOWN 41 OLDS. 44. 4 DOOR RT. PULL r Like new. Owner must MY 3-37U.___________ BUT. BEFORE YOU BUY CHECK SUBURBAN-OLOa. 442 S Weod- f'7'4Si‘ H“.%”umer“S't.rd‘‘ ?™*i!;i»“'Vhr'o*u'gho'ur'‘iSSo. >57 FORD STRAIGHT SHIFT 4 , rvlinH#r M OdO &rtual miles No 1955 PACKARD, TAKB OVER " m'otiA'^owrAa'urlfi payment? ....... ol 4140 per wk No payments '111 Ca'f Mr "^0'Brl*n"cre*dll Mgr, At ... ., --- ----------- ---------------------- MI 4-3430 BIRMINOHAM-RAM- SALES. 550 OAKLAND, FE 4-7600. I pofCnAC. 1447 BLEH. IM S WCWpWARG___________55 PLYMOUTH STATION WAOON. | ---- ' " ’58 PONTIAC iry car claaa with low price Thle 4-door Star Chief Sedan •" power p ...•— inalde and out. Beautiful 1 HOMEP RIGHT MOTORS Ideal transporUtlon c that neceaiarv aecond Fairly priced at OLIVER Motor Sales Truly a Oiford Mich I. Phan* OAkland i ONLY $1595 Crissman t MI 4.7500. Harold fgjf poRb“feoOD CONDITION 19.56 GMC ^'““$79“ 19.V) FOLMi wide Side Pickup $1^)5 Just Make I’aynieiits .saalnaw Phone FE 4-22U or FE 1946 DODOE, EXC CONDITION, I49^L 7 6454 noixlE clean' 64 4-DR HARD- FORD WITH RADIO AND leater Excellent condition. No iioney down. Full price l«4 ; 135 per.week. Call Mr. While, .Tedlt Manager FE 1-0403. ' black waaon. p Radio and Heater. Excellent c< ion No h 0 n r ' ‘ .DR hardtop ™ .... ___ .Irta and brakka. Hydramatic Radio and heater II rnalntmned. -jirlvate. 9, Saginaw St. _ ' mi 7- I'i.V) GMC tC Rough but ru $225 rwalla OL 1-1340 V R 6 I. E T 4-DOOH FORD STATION WaOON FALCON RIO diuon like new Owned by Ford executive. 41.415. MAyfaIr 4-5183 S PORD. V-g. FORDOMATIC, 2-dr Falrlane. UL 3-1017 1%I •TO 4500. NO MONEY DOWN OUEEN AUTO 1 SALES. 17 S SAOINAW S'? FORD 4-DR HARDTOP. ALL | power will take trade-in a700. or I best offrr UL 3-4444 1454 FORD 3-Di King Auto 115 8 Saginaw St._ 7 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE dr. hardtop V-4. radio and hex SPEmL $1095 NORTH CHEVROLET f : GMC Factory Branch ami Sri viuf Make Vmir (,)\vn Deal 4 56-;53-'53 W $86^ up MERCURY COMET J PONTIAC Coover .7 CHEV HT ib PONTIAC HT j6 PLYMOUTH 4 o6 PONTIAC 4 « BUICK 4 d PONTIAC »V FORD 3 She])'.' HU Wagons '56 Ford 54 Atudr^ Financing ^ •rring^'d^^ ^00 olhi*r ■CONOMY CARS 22 AUBURN 960 CHEVROLET IMPAI.A 4-DOOR 9 FORD oALAXII RADIO. HBAT- OAKIes^M) A'l GAS FE .S-0485 )L.E1 rt> 1000 H WCK>DWARD ri<. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4 27J.v CHEVROLIT 2 DOOR RADIO, ater Full price $399 Nothing )u.si Make I*avments •5$ PLY 2 6r 1695 Pay only 431 mo. Due Dec 15th Rite Auto. Mr. Bell. PE 4-4434 109 East Blvd at Auburn___ 1947 PLYMOUTH SEDAN. RADIO ; AND HEATER. AUTOMATIC | TRANSMISSION ABSOLUTELY i NO MONEY DOWN. Assume pay- , ments of 434 03 per mo. Call Credit M|r Mr. Parks at MI 4-74M. H^Id Turner Ford.__________1 44, PLYMOUTH, RADl'b AND ! Healer. Excellent Condition. No Money Down, Full Price 43SI, | Assume payments of 414 per month CALI, MR. WHITE. CRED- . nibney d'oVTn Assume "paVmedl? just Make Payments 11044' 437 per mo. No payments til next I .5* pLy j oR. 4175 ^ 4 894; ‘a**® I P»> o»1t »»0 “0. Due Dec. -^lSth g yg* I Mr O Brian, credit Mgr. At MI I Mr Bell, FE 4-4634 1 544 4-3400. BIRMINGHAM, Rambler I East Blvd. at Auburn 4 444 _ -_0« 8 J5LOODWARD__ J > ^ 4 204 1955 FORD VICTORIA. EXCEP- baker «35 Sixty Auto Balef iF^ 4 150 tional condition. 440 down, pay- I g.gsio menta of 44 41 weekly. 0*11 M' • _ <.,1,.^ Murphy. Credit Mgr . FB 3-36; FE 4-4307 jjQ YOU need lU MIMNG- P.MNTl;*Nt -FREE ESTIMATES'^' ALL WORE GUARANTEED ON ALL MAKES OF CARS AND TRUCKS ONE DAY SERVICE 10M\ J. .SMITH DODOE. INC. Ill S SAOINAW FE 3-71 l')6p PO.\TI.^( Convertible, white. r*d heater, hydramatic. white wall . $2095 Down LLOYD MTR8 . 333 S. Sag- IMW. FE 3-4131__________________ IS PONTIAC. H-T. NEW PAINT. EM 3-0041, Stuart Conwny. ______ 044 PONTIAC.' 3-DOOR. BRARP. ------------------------ '63 PONTIAC. DOOR. STANDARD I 8mSh”s''''u s^e'd 1 1455^ FORD rre'dit Ad?*sor Fe" 4-0441, Edd"e ; ClIEVIE BISCAYNF MIER HARDTOP Auto Insurance CLEAN RECORD, rtverdrlvs. 91 2-266sV 956 rHEVKOLIT 2-DO<.>R RADIO. Jtoln’^\*4sn Mr SSu7ph"!* Credit i Larry lerome BOB FR08T. 1 HASKINS USED : CARS SPECIALS ‘56 CHBV. Bel A.. ■| CHEV. 2-Door )«er|llde . Many ot Quality (QK) Korners Dl.XIKUSF.nCARS Dixie Hwy., near Bnahabaw IMINOHAM I of Maple 8 Foreign and Spt. Cars 105 y ROCHESTER FORD DEALER 01, t-4711 94t FORD STA-nON WAGONS 4 1454 VOLKSWAGEN 444 DOWN Radio healer »hlU tire. Real infsaion. posltractlm rear end, ex*cenenl'I,ron?Hlloh Owwd while jiihl Make Pavmrnts 54 FORD 3-dr'. 4104 >ay onlv III mo. Due Dec 15th ..... ■' “ " PE 4-4634 LINCOLN MERCURY - COMET , BIRMINGHAM , .1 block 8 ol Maple Roadi fo Discriminate MI 4-2300 JO 4-3033 j L'scd Cat Bargains . .. \ KT “*VE A GROUP OF "Ol Y 1 \/\/ : ONE OWNER USED CARS i 1 GfU. VV QllL GOOD OR BETTER THAN CA $AVE WHILE THE BOSS IS HUNTING! 109 Cast _ !954 FORD STATION WAOON. 9300 r% 3-2as ‘ iDEAL CmRIiTIIAA Oirr' Cl lom made. ^ midget racer. H P hand brake, pneusnatlc tl Ol, I3H44 . ioSO'VoiESWACiON. 3 DOOR I .! '41 CHEVROLET! NEAT AND *1 .lean. 4105 MY 3-3093 11949 CHEVY 0 CYLINDER BIS Must Sell '$• KARMANN-CHIA 2 DOOR HARDTOP. CLEAN' SAVE Jof\ Car l.ot VV. J9M OPEL OLiilFlA 3-OOOR WITH aue roof. Radio, heater, no ruat •lock No 1942 B Only 2422 Ceay I* NORTH CHEVROLET CO 2. WOODWARD AVE BIR- Cadillacs \\ p lielipvp a low milragp ' l‘>6f) Cadillac is your lypst \\p Arv Still Taking -Many (jihxI 'Iraflr-ina W’p Arc Overstocked « OLDS I « OLDS I 0 OLDS I DEMO SALE! Bargains 17 PONTIAC ST Hardtop^Hjrir BE FOUND ANYWHERE 1 ! WE ARB NOT OIVINO THESE ' I CARS AWAY BUT ARE ASKING A FAIR PRICE WITH OUR ) Heater Wh e car Your 'I own payment. 0 Chevli sedan Powergllde Up to 45 MPG '59 Morris Convert. ’.58 Healy Sprite Houghten 6t Son all-around buy. WILSON I'ONTIAC-CADILI.AC 1350 N. Woodward I HOLIDAY I CONVERTIBLE I FORD 4 DR RANCH WAOON 4 OLDS 44 CONVERT I CHEVY 2 DR , STICK ( CHEVY •. TON STAKE • CHEVY 3 DR 8TA WON. 7 CHEVY V-4 CONVERT I OLDS 44 CONVERTIBLE l'i60 CHEVROLET Ibirminoham VOUt FHANCHUIE IMPORT DEALER ’ .V3S N. Mata. Roctaj^aUr. Ol, 1-47 VoQSS»AOEN '44 8EDAN74i.ll OR 3-3M4 StENAULT ■»’ SUNROOF, HEAT - - —-------S.BI74. I REACH CASji CUS-. h'OMERS tbrough Classified Ads. Call I I*: 2-9181. .Ml HTady to tio and \\ itii Our Written Warranty | Houghten ! & Son CORVAIRS AS l^w AB $1695 Radio Healer. Black accent the on* yew v* ween waiting for. ; '48 Boonevllle sport coupe Hydra-I m*tic Radio Healer. Power ateer- I s'lfver aBd\hlU**A lUtirie'wel. I*asv Terms NORTH ciikvrou*:t co. 1000 S. \ViK*dward > Kirmi^gliam Ml L27i5j**'“ i HAUPT ^ PONTIAC THESE ARE A FEW OF AN BX-CELLENT SECTION OP USED CARS THAT CAN BE PUR-CHASED WITH A LOW DOWN PAYMENT HASKINS CHEVROLET ri4 Ptkte^ywM *1 M-14|(. All Cars Winieriredl All Cars Ciuaranteed GLENN'S i Motor Sales IHOME OP TOP VALUE " CARS ] 443 W HURON ST. ‘ L'L' A 7371 Never Knowingly Undersold by - Quality Competition .\ctt car sales are increasing day by, day. so we ninst get our trade-ins on the road in order to make room for tho.se coming in. Name your price, no reasonable offer will be refused. l'»56 PONTIAC $ 895 star Chief 4-Door Hardtop Hydramatic. radio, beater. Blue 1959 CHEVY ...$1695 1956 HLTCK ....$895 Special 3-t>oor Hardtop. Dyna-flow, radio, heater and whlte-• ----- ■H.084 actud nr " - 1 braket. Merc- 1955 BUICK ....$595 Special 4-Door Hardtop. Dyna-flow, radio, banter and white-walla. BaauUful red and whIU 1959 PONTIAC $2095 star Chief 4-Door Sedan. Power ateertng and braket, radio, banter and whites " ^.. ' 19.59 PONTIAC $2295 Bonbcvtlle 4-Ooor Hardtop with power steering, brakes, wtmlows 1960 PONTIAC $2895 A Beautiful BooneviUe 4-Door Hardtop. Power ateariat and —%Uc. radio and Hydramatle. i PT, Solid white wun aft off by gleaming w BtrlcUy nice! malic, radlo,^ heater •59 PONTIAC $1995 »p. Power aUerlnc and brakea. ^fiydra-d whita Bidewall Urea. A real auper value I 1959 BUICK ....$1995 Convertible with power tUcrlng " “-'nanow. radio. I. Dyna white* 1958 CHEVY ...$1495 Impsda Hardtop. Power steering and brakts, Poworglld*. ra- 19.58 PONTIAC $1495 4-Door Hardtop. H/draraatlc, radio, heater and whitewall tires Blue and whit* beauty. 1957 CHRVSL’R $1395 New Torkcr Herdtop. Power steering and brakes. automeUc trusmlulon, radio, beater and whitewalls. 1957 CHEVY* ...$1095 ^Door 1959 BUICK ... .$1895 3-Door Sadan. Dynaflow, r "- Sffle.''**'"' ......... 1957 FORD............$ 995 Convertlbl* with standard shift, V-4 engine, radio and heater. WhIU finish with black top Extra aharp. 19.58 BUICK ....$1595 Special 4-Door Hardtop. Radio heater and Dynaflow. Bl*e and 1957 PONTI.A^: $1295 “whte.." 1959. FORD............$1695 ■404" Hardtop. Ferd-O-MaUc. Vd engine. iMlo. haaUr and whlUwalU. Oreen end Ivory 1957 BUICK ....$1195 ^elel i-Door Rerdtap. Radio, heater and Dynaflow. Rod and ivory flnlib. On* ownar. low SHELTON PONTIAC-BUrCK ROCHESTER OL 1-8133 Across from New (!!ar Sales OPEN TIL 9 P.M. OR LATER (Hosed VV’edne.sday and Saturday at 6 P.M. I •Tr THE POnViAC press. ^DNgSDAY, NOVE^IBER 28, 1960 “NINBfEEir --Today's Television Programs- ProgniM foniilMd bjr i OuMel »-WJilK TV Ohaual 4-WWi TV Ohuari 7~WXn TV OmbmI »-0(LW TV TONHHtrs TV moiiuoim coo (4) Tr«dtdown, (2) Movie (cont.) (7) Newt and Weather. (9) Popeye. (96) General Oiemlitry. (7) Sporta. (7) News. (2) News Analysis. (4) Weather. 6:30 6:10 6:16 6:35 (4) f 6:40 6:45 (7) arcus Boy. (9) Woody Woodpecker. (2) Sports. (4) Sports. (2) News. (4) f (96) Mathematics. (2) Aquanauts. (4) Dangerous Robin. (7) Award Theater. (9) Pioneers. (4) Wagon Train. (2) Aquanauts (cont.) (7) Hong Kong. (9) Movie. "The Bride Came C.O.D." (1941) A young man in need of money accepts Job that require him to bring a spoilt heiress back to her father. James Cagney, Bette Davis. (96) Invitation to Art. (2) Best of the Post. (4) Wagon Train (cont.) (7) Hong Kong (cont.) (9) Movie (cont.) (96) Showcase. (2) Wanted—Dead or AHvie. (4) (color) Price Is Right. (7) Ozzie and Harriet. (9) Movie (cont.) (56) Conversations. (2) My Sister Eileen. (4) (color) Perry Como. (7) Hawaiian Eye. (9) Waiter WibcheH File. ' (2) I’ve Got a Secret. (4) Perry Como (cont.) (7) Hawaiian l5ye (oont.) (9) First Person. (2) Circle Theater. (4) Peter Loves Mary. (7) Naked Gty. (9) Harixtr Command. (4) U.S. Border Patrol. (2) arcle Theater (con(.) (7) Naked City (cont.) (9) News. (9) Sports. (9) Weather. (2) News. (4) News. (7) Decoy. (9) News. (2) Weather. (4) Weather. (9) Telescope UAW. (2) Sports. (4) Sports. (2) Movie. “Skylark.*' (1941) On their fifth wedding nn-niversary, a wife finds that her husband is beginning to take their marriage fur granted. Gaudette Colbert, Ray Milland. (9) Movie. "The Glided Cage." (4) Jack Paar. (7) Mr. and Mrs. North. 9;li(4) (7) •:U (4) 16:66 (7) (2) 16:65 (9) 16:56 (9) (9) tl:S0 (2) THUH8DAY AFTERNOON 16:66 THURSDAY MORNING (4) (color) Continental Classroom. (7) Funews (2) Meditations. (2) On Hie Farm Front. (2) TV CoUege. (4) Today. (7) Breakfast Time (2) Felix Uie Cut (7) Johnny Ginger (2) Capt. Kangaroo. (7) Stage 3 (2) Movie. (4) Exercise. (color) Bozo the Clown. Exercise. Hudson Parade. (4) Parade Highlights. BUlboard. Ding Dung School, (color) Clutch Cargo. Divorcb Hearing, (color) Macy’s Parade. Pro Football. Romper Room Gear Horizon. (2) Movie. (4) Truth, Consequences. (9) Chez Helene. (9) Nursery Scix»I. (4) (color) It Could Be You. (7) Beat the Clock. (9) Tower Kitchen *nme (9) News. (4) News. (4) News. (9) Movie. (4) Bold Journey. (2) As Worln Turns. (7) Life of Riley. (7) Football Kickoff. (4) (color) Jan Murray. (7)V<;oUege Football. (2rHouae Party. (4) Loretta Young. (9) Movie. (2) Our Miss Brooks. (4) Young Dr. Malone. (2) Verdict Is Yours. (4) From These Roots. (2) Brighter Day. (4) Make Room for Daddy. (2) Secret Storm. (2) Edge of Night. (4) (color) George Pierrot. (9) Adventure Time. (2) Leonard Bernstein. (9) Jingles. (7) Rocky and His Friends. (4) (color) No Place Uke (9^ Jac Le (k>ff. --To(day's Raidio Programs-- WWJ (MM) WXTZ (!»•) Wt'sa (CSS) WrON ()4W> #:)M-WJ1». NfWi WWJ, _______ CKLW. V»D Kur»n WCAR. Ntwii. ll;S»-WJR. Muile WWJ. Music WCAR. D. Coor»d WKW. News, Sports t-WJR, Quest House WWJ. Opinion t—WJR, Showcase WWJ. r. Zllsaheth »:SS—WJR, City T It:**—WJR. Concert WWJ. Melody Parade WXYZ. J. Sebastian l*:S»—WWJ. World News 11:**—WJR. News WPQN. Musle THtaSDAV MORNING *:S*—WJR. Music Hall WJBK. Morn, lap, Bible CKLW, lyw Opener 7:**—WJR. Newt. Musle WWJ, News. Roberts WXYZ, News, WoU CKLW, News. Toby David WCAR. News WXYZ, News. Wolf CKLW, News, David WJBK, Traffic-Copter WCAR, Newt, SherWan I:1W—WJR. Music Hall CKLW, Newt, David WJBK. Newt,' Urlmer WXYZ. Newt, Wolf lt;M-WJR. Karl Haas WWJ. Newt. Martens WXYZ, BraUfatt Club CKLW. Joe Van WJBK. Newt, C. Held WCAR, Newt WIDN. Bob Lark . WXYZ. McNeeley CKLW. Joe Vann WJBK. Newt. Reid WCAR. Newt. B. Martyn WPON, Bob Lark II:S»-WJR, Llont Prett Boa THURSDAY AFTERNOON WXYZ, McNeeley CKLW. Joe Van WJBK. Newt. Reid WCAR, Newt. Purse WPON, Newt. Lewis WCAR, Niwi, Purt* 1:M-CKLW. Joe Van WJBK, Newt, Reid WCAR, News, Purse WPON. Chuck Uwit !:*•—WWJ. Newt, Maawell t:M—WJR. CompotlU WXYZ, Winter WCAR. Newt. Sheridan WPON, Jerry Olten t:t*—WWJ. Maawell WXYZ, Newt, Music CKLW. Newt. Davies WinrZ. Muilc CKLW. News. Davlet WJBK. Music WCAR. News. Sheridan WPON. Carrlaf* Trad* |TV News and Reviewg Comedian Goes to the Top for His Impersonation By FRED DANZIG NEW YORK (UPD-Now I know,; who,won the mandate in that Nov. election. It's obviously, a comedian named Len Weinrib. Last seen during the summer on "The Spike Jones Show." Weinrib turned up as a guest on last night's CBS-TV 'Garry Moore Show " i famous TV first. SERVING HOG STYLE - Newly promoted Oiief Petty Officer Giarles E. Jackson (center) of the Pontiac Navy Recruiting Station is served a delicious- (?) concoction by fellow officers from a hog trough. The traditional Navy custom ‘ for new chiefs was observed last night in the Pontiac Qks Temple. Some 20 CPOs from the area and their wives attended the affair. As- Pbel* sisting Jackson witie his meal are (from left) Chief John Korak, head of Navy recruiting in Pontiac, and Chief Harold Talmadge of the Pontiac Navy Reserve unit. The concoction contained mashed potatoes, salad, oysters, dams, gravy, sugar, a variety of "cTimplimentary” sauces and a secret ingredient. Chief Jackson was "bqck on the job Today. TV Features By United Press International WAGON TRAIN, 7:30 p.m. (4 John Ford's first crack at directing a TV drama unfolds the story of an alcoholic doctor who is afraid to continue his medical practice. John Wayne plays a minor role, disguised behind a beard and the name of Michael Morris. PERRY COMO, 9 p.m. (4). Perry’s Thanksgiving show features Tommy Sands, the Lennon Sisters, the ODsby Brothers and comedian Frank Gorshin. (Color) CIRCLE THEATER, 10 p.m. (2). Follows the progress of youngsters at Chicago’s famed Orthogenic School, where a dedicated task force of counsellors, led by Dr. Bruno Bettelheim, have developed new techniques tor treating emotionally disturbed children. NAKED erry, lO p.m. (7). Gambler Nick Mori (Steve Cochran) pays off a debt by marrying a friend’s daughter in order to get her into America. PETER LOVES MARY, 10 p.m. (4). Peter (Lind Hayes) directs the school play and, in an effort to rescue his no-talent daughter, antagonizes the neighbors. With Mary Healy and Merry Martin. JACK PAAR, 11:30 p.m., (4). From Hollywood With singer Betty Johnson. Birth Control Pills Available Dec. 6 DETROIT (JB—Detroit area en desiring birth control pills may secure them from a Harper Hospital clinic starting Dec. 6. Thursday *rHANKSGIVING DAY PARADE 45 a.m. (4), J. L. Hudson parade; 10 a m. (2), highlights of three parades; 11 a.m. (4). Macy’s parade ■om New York City. PRO FOOTBALL, 11 a m. (7) Dallas Texans play the New York Titans at the Polo Grounds. COLLEGE FOOTBALL, 2:15 p.m. (7). Texas plays Texas A&M. Americans today own 73 million cars, trucks and buses, more than the rest of the wiwld combined. In 1950, manufac^rs of automo-tive products and accessories helped sell their wares with a national newspaper advertising expenditure of $178.4 million — an of 12.1 per cent over 1958. t:*t-WJR. Newe. Mutle WWJ. Newe. Lynker CKLW. SporU. Davlet WJBK. Newt. Trttfic WCAR. Newt. Bherldtn t:*S-WJR. Muilc Hell WXYZ. Newt. Muilc CKLW. Bporti. Divlet Solicited Law Cases; to Appeal Sentence FLINT im-A. Matthew Buder. an attorney and former Genesee County Republican committee chairman, was released from jail Tuesday pending an appeal of his 35-day sentence to the State Supreme Court. Buder, 38, and John N. Bogart, 37, were sentenced on a charge of soliciting law business. Buder was released on $1,000 bond after nerving four days. Bogart released. Buder and Bogart both were convicted by a Circuit Court jury last Friday on the soliciting charge. They both were sentenced to 35 days in jail, placed on probation for two years and ordered to pay court costs. Almost one family in five in the U.S. maintains a cat as a domestic pet. Church Schedules Service Tomorrow COMMERCE TOWNSHIP - A service of thanksgiving will be held at 10 a.m. tomorrow in the Commerce Methodist Church, 1155 Commerce Road. Nassau, Miami, Washington for Nixon Today As an Introit, the Rhythmic Cboir will present iU interpretation of "Oh Lord of Heaven and Earth and Sea.” The choir is composed of senior high school members of the, church and is directed by Mrs. John Kelly. The Rev. Floyd W. deliver a sermon entitled "On Receiving End.” will Both the primary and the chancel choirs will take part in the service. NASSAU, Bahamas (AP)-Vice President Richard M. Nixon planned to fly back to Miami this afternoon and was expected to go from there to Washington. Nixon kept out of public scrutiny while golfing, hshing and sun-bathing at Nassau. The only times he was seen downtown were when he dined twice at a restaurant—whose patrons and help gave him a standing ovation each time. By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — Tom Ewell’s a little sick of the fathers on TV always being dull. Inept slobs who aren’t half as bright as Mom and the kids. "My strong point has never been my abll Ity to keep my mouth closed,” Tom admits— so he spoke right out about it a few weeks ago to the writers of his own CBS TV show. ‘T don't believe in 1966 that father is a friendly dumb old dog who brings home the bone to the smart ones, nor do I believe that mother nowadays always knows all the answers,” Tom told them. So those writers packed up their typewriters and a new set headed by Billy Fried-WILSON berg took over. “Anyway, the Inept father and the brilliant mother Is a sltuaUon that’s already been had, ” Tom maintained. And so a slightly brighter father emerges. “You’re not an Inept husband then?” I asked Tom here. The average person spent $1,235 I America’s retail stores last year; about 6 per cent more than he spent in 1958. To reach this constantly growing market, retailers invest more than $6 million a day in newspaper advertising. r/ CAI GETS AWARD — The Watertord Township Community Activities, Inc., last night received an award from the National Recreation ' Association in recognition of iU program the past ' year. The award was presented at the CAI B^ud meMing. From left are Ridtert Bauer, CAI mani^ei'; Mrs. (3eorge Dean. CAI Board vice prnidenf; Mrs. Nbrioa Novess, representing the township recreation department, and Recreation Director Th^ai Belton. Tom Ewell's Opposing Bringing Down Father dug Dorothy Loudon’s rendition a loll: - - • " - _ . I y Irvin Berta ditty, "That Society Bear." Robin Rob-wispy "Careeiw Love" (that’s Miss Robin Roberts, folk silver, not Mr. Robin Roberts, baseball pitcher) and Mac Barnes' stomping out “Bill Bailey." It was kl* all-out Imprersona-Hon of President-Elect Keauedy, right down to the potattag linger. The sketch had Weinrib as carol Bumott’s domineering hnh-by who had things to say on such dometlic issues as rha-eha lessons and sloppy bathrooms, or bahthrooms. In the old film department, a highlight waa Vernon and Irena Caatle dancing the Turkey TYot. The film was acratchy, thin and stiff but oozed vitality and fun. The show, in general, was scratchy, thin and stiff. Period. When he spoke,. he would go behind a rostrum and use portions of Kennedy’s basic campaign speech In exhorting his wife to be more efficient and sacrificing. It was a gem of a job but, unfortunately, went on too long and drifted into an awkward er>d- ing. Mark my words. Twenty or years from now there will be nostalgic TV special called, '"Thoae Rock 'N' Roll YeariL" As the program host, composer Fats Domino will talk about the beginnings of rock 'n' roll and he’ll pay trib-lite to ji diK Jwkex namwl^ FVecd. Fats might e t his k n say, "he h Of the many musical numbers. THE CHANNEL SWIM: An original script based on the Laurel and Hardy story may become a "DuPont Show of the Month" comedy-drama for early 1961 on CBS-TV. A spokesman for producer David Snsskind says the production may depend upon a number of factors, Inclndtag the evalla-blUty of Jackie Gleason and Art Carney. ABC-TV will film 13 programa in France. Spain, Portugal, Denmark, Ireland and England, starting early in December for “One Step Beyond.” One episode it England’s Warwick Castle, where a ghost dating back to the time of Elzabeth I still “waks." Juliet Prowsc replaces Betty Grabhr as Perry Como’e gueet star on the Dec. 7 NBGTV hour. Miss Grable’s appearance hat been set back to Dec.'14. “No, sir! Oh, I’ve gone to the track and my wife’s won some money, and she’s decided to use it to buy a new dress. “And it’s cost mo more than if she’d lost because I have to pay for the bag and shoes to go with ft.” But that doesn’t show father Inept. Father knows the whole plot. SO Tom says. One money-saving gimmick Tom usds (on TV) is to have a pay phone in the living room which means all users’ll pay iDr their calls. I claimed that was just impossible,” Tom told me. "I mentioned Jthe Idea to Frank Oabrlelson, who wrote 'I Res' member Mama’ for TV, and he said, ‘I've got one! I've got telephontties and I love tS talkj long distance. They make you stop at three minute, you know,; unless you put in more money.” ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Mildred Stem, executive director of the Detroit chapter of the Planned Parenthood League, said that to secure the pill, known as Envoid, the woman would need doctor’s prescription and proval of their application by the league. Mrs. Stem Mid the pill was “a new method of contraception. For many it Is simpler then other methods and less difficult to use. It Is effective 68 per cent of the time." A Roman Catholic spokesman in Detroit said the use of the pill was ‘direct contraception and therefor* absolutely immoral.” He said he did not expect local church authorities to place any particular emphasis against use of the pill but that the historic stand of the (;hurch would prevail. Mrs. Stem said a month’s supply of the pill would cost in the neighborhood of $10. She said the pill was to be taken daily during a 2()Hay period. And Fats will talk a little about the great performers of that era — Elvis, Ricky Nelson, the Platters, Bobby Rydell. The scri^ will tic the “big beat” into various currents of popular culture such as motion pictures, musical comedy, TV, radio, night clubs, fashion, education, literature and congressional investigations, and we’ll all have a good cry. 7 Ministers to Join for Service Tonight TROY-The Rev. Albert Hartoog, pastor of Big Beaver Methodist Church, will give the sermon at an interdenominational Thanksgiving Eve service here today at 7:30 p.m. This projection is occasioned by Inst night’s "Project 20". special on NBC-TV, “Those Ragtime Years.” The hour attempted to trace the history of this syncopated musical form (c. 1897-1917) by means of old lithographs, series of photos, silent film and tapepegan. Harrelsoa waa picked ap by I Hally, the adopted bylaws which will govern operation of the new corporation and provide the auttiority to iasue. 10,W0 nonasaesoable sharea of ronimon stock at |5 per share. The tt astglaal iteekhaldari paid m far Rve shares eneh af the stoek. Other provisions give RADCO Preddent Thuriey E. Alien than customary authority, allowing to select commltt( board of director’s approval. NEEDN’T BE BTOOKBOLOEB8 stockholderB although the dialr^ man must be. the byhrors Ute. Tha eatparadae’s a lag waa aet far the I dhy RADOO nyengibers say they have already in the area and aelecUoa of aitea suitable for future industrial development. ‘V retaned here la vlatt hla He has a record of failure to in court. s s ★ 'iSTesterday he sent his lawyer, Ivan Forbes of Pontiac, to Justice Ckhirt to seek the Jury trial. It Am been set tenUtively for Dec. 13 by Justice of the Peace Elmer C. Dieterle.. '' Mrs. Dodd waa a relative af tbe late VMa M. Osan af Paa-,j|lsc whs died la IMS after beh« t ky a ear drivun by yauag Ina. ~ •vTle was convicted ot negHgent homicide in Circuit Court March S, 1954, and sentenced to two years' PS¥*>ation. W. Germany Agree on Aid Pay BONN, Germany (AP)—United States-West German financial talks have broken up without agreement being reached, a Joint communique diacloeed today. ★ a- But tbe communique said ar-rangementa have been made Ibr defending U. S- gold reaerves by having Germany contribute more to Western defense and foreign aid spending. a ♦ * The discuMions between West German leaders and U. S. Treaa-Ury .Secretary Robert B. Anderson and U. S. Undersecretary of C. Douglas Dillon deadlocked Tuesday night when the ^nn government said it could not BUtJip $600 million in 1961 as an immediate relief for U. S. balance q{. payment difficulties. pMdcally. ^ want to help tbe. tcoDoiny ol the Rochester eonp* muaNy by attract new industsy to cany the ever-incnaalM lax'load. Aka msaHsasd as bciM ef petaw etneera ta the aew esrpa raika k the asBssilly la aia-to m aeed foe "We want make potential industrial buyers aware of their welcome and then work for the right results," said L. R. Bebout, corporation secretary. TO PORESTALL PROTESTS He particularly stressed the need tor s program ot citizen educatiQn Sky Object Only Foil in Radar Test A huge luminous sight in the sky ever much of the Mldweot between S and 6:90 a.m. today was a ihower of tin foil dropped by Jet planei in a radar reception test. It took a lot of sifting ot conlro-dktoiy reports and theories, but weather and aviation experts ti-aally agreed on the tin foil explanation ehortly before noon today. "Hie calls wen coming in o fast I couldn’t take care of them, ■aid Corp. John Benzer of th Pontiac SUte Police Post. * ♦ ■ a Mrs. aay BUir ot 4584 W. Walton Blvd., Waterford Township, ■aw tbe objects at about 6:18. 'I watched it for about eigiit minutes. It was white and didn’t have much of a toil at first. Then the tail swept way out and another object appeared,’’ she Her reaction was typical of most. She called state police to report '’ioihethlng in the sky!" Major Portion oi Nation Enjoys pry Weather iii. There were some wet spots in the Far West and Eastern areas but generally dry weather waa the tale in the major part of the country today. An eastward moving cMd front aet off showers, light rain, fog and low cloudineaa from ArkaiDaas and the central Gulf aUtea northeast into the lower Great and western New York and Pennsylvania. 'In the Northwest, a cold front tint moved in from the Pacific spread occaaloaal rain and ahow-er*. with aoow a tioiw, into most Oregon and northern Idaho. ♦ * * The Weather nil D.a. Wasotw a»T«»» b«mi rONTUC Atm TICtMITV — Pdr UaliSt. Cillw MOV. aUA M ir;r, srS» tor^loa: Variable. . '1m Hte WaObaaSar at ■:** am aSwi rtN« Thuradar at l .n aai. Weoe MU wrdnaidar at to a.a. MfM rtMi Tburadair at iS:H p.M. Da»aia«a Taaaaaralaraa a?::-; H,:::;;;...................... Oxford Township Youth Injured in Cor Mishap A 19-year-old Oxford Township youth, hurt when his car hit a tree in Lake Orion Monday night, was reported in fair condition today at Pontiac Oneral Hospital. Injured was Clark Maaon of 1315 Indian Lake Road. Mason suffered a broken leg and face lacerations when he lost control of his car on curve, went off the road and hit tree on East Flint Street, cording to Lake Orion Police. To Be Sworn In New Year's Day Govornor Will Hovt His Inaugural Boll th« Night Before; Events Listed tCfontinued From Page One) 9d miidster of Free Methodiit Church. ♦ ★ The Rev. Mr. Palmer ia pastor of the host congregation. AT BALDWIN UR Tbe Rev. Theodore R. Allebach of Oakland Avenue United Preaby terlan Church will speak at tbe 7:45 service tonight Evangelical United LANSING ID-A New Year’s Eve inaugural ball and a Sunday swearing-in aro planned to start the term of Ckiv.-Elect John B. Jan. 1 falls on a Sunday. Swaln-■on aides said they checked find to determine If a Sunday swear-■bi would be legal and assured Swslnaon officially could take office that day. Members of the clergy also were checked first to see If they had objections before the ceremony was planned, aides said. » la the aew year aad Um The tentative Sunday program alls for: 7 a.m.—A church service at a Lanring area Protestant church, yet to be selected. m.—Breakfast for Swainson, members of the state administrative board and party supporters at the avic Center. ★ ♦ k Noon—Inaugural, either on capi-tol steps or inside the capitot, depending on the weather. 1:30 p.m.—Public reception In the governor’s office. 3 p.m.-Dlnner at the Qvic Center with a national speaker, yet to be elected. The Day in Birmingham Choir Will Gain Voices-tor 'Messiah' Service BIRMINGHAM - Soaae 30 high school studsnU will assist the Chan-cM Choir of the First Presbyterian Cborch in Ms fifth annual pn tatioo of the ‘ Messiah’’ service next month. ^ The young pagple, members of tha church's CUvla Oiotr. will augment the Ih-vatM Cbanoel Choir in portkin of tho oratorio by George ATTEND ROMEO CONFAB - Ovlc kodm from 24 municipalltieg in Soutbeaateni Mlddian attended a workshop on industrial developmant yesterday In Romeo. Among those present from the Oakland County were (from left) Thuriey £. Allen of Rochester. M. W. Muir of Imtoy Ofy. Tha paMk ewvlee wUI be pie-sMried Doe. 4 ot S pjn. la Uw ehnrah. MM «- Mwla Brad. The MO-voice choir will be under the dlracttan of L. Robert Sluaaer, mlniater of wuric. Tha aoioisk will be Ruth Killeen, tprano; Alice Engram, contralto; Dan Preasley, tenor; and Amasa TUtany, basi. With an authentic editiun of the Wcdqy B. Alien of Lak# Orton and NeU B. Hariwig, akio of Rocherier. They beard pointers ■IroiB experts on how to ratshMsh a sound and etfsetive bidualrisl deveiopment program in Give Thanks in Churches I ba Ma Rev. Paal Job Mcrning prayer and a are scheduled tor 10 a.m. at St Andrew Episcopal Ctaurcb, Onp ton Plains. As k tba eastwn. membera wU brii« gifk of toad wbk* win ba taken to St Petor’e Haaaa tar Beyi Is Datnit An all musical program will be jciiintod at 7:90 p.m. ( at Fbith Baptkt Oairdi. 9411 Ali^ poet Road. Waterford Township: Baptkt Ghurch, In Garden CHy The offeriAg received above services will be used for the new chapel at Pontiac Oneral Hospital ♦ ♦ ♦ Prayers will be offered at 6: a.m. and Man will be read at 8 and 9 a m. in St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church. Dnytoa Plates Uaited Pieaby- 'givlag seniee at 7:90 toaigbt wttfc Its minister, tbe Rev. Walter J. Teeuwlssea Jr. speak-htg sa “ThaaksgivlBc MedMa-tlaa.’’ "Keep Thanks in Thanksgiving’’ will be the topic of the Rev. Delayne Pauling’s sermon at 10 .m. at Croes of Chriat Li Edward Woolum, song ments will be served at the doae of tbe program, k WlLLfiOfO The amaial Thanksgiving Day servloe at Christ Luthon Qiurcb, Airport and WIlUams Lake Roada, k aet for 10 a.m. The service includes the reading of the President's Preefomation. It it it A combined choir of 160 vaicflo ill sing tradittonal hymns. The Rev. Arvid E Andemn n “If Our Thanks Sincere.’’ NEW CaOIR TO SING The newly organized youth chofr will sing under the direction of David Brien. A special Thanksgiving service win be held at 11 sjn. at First Chareh of Oulst, Seientlst, IM 8t. A portion of the service will be devoted to voluntary expressions of gratitude by members of the congregation for God’s goodness. * ♦ ♦ Mass will be said at 6:45, 8 and m -Partly sisiiey Oa« Twrairo to rseSsi ____- 8 M Trs» CHr „ _ MCitr u S4 WMtusstos u « M w Zt Tsiape (4 f) Kasavubu Wins in U.N. Giving Victory to West UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (AP) -The United Stoles and Ha Western allies scored a hard-won victory Tueaday night when General Assembly voted by wide margin to give the empty U.N. Congo seat ~ Joseph Kasavubu. The 53-24 vote with 19 abstentions marked a hitter defeat for the So^ bloc and many Asian-African nations who fought Kasa-vubu’s bid for a seat every Msp of the way. OPPONEBfTB 8TA1X Opponents of Kasavubu tried re- ^ eatedly to Mall s deciston by do-1 Nine African states voted seat tbe Congo presiednt. They were Cameroon. Chad, Congo (Brazzaville), Dahomey. Ivory Coast, Malagasy, Niger and "fnegal. Sbe African atott t voted againat. They were United Arab Republic. Guinea, Mali, Morocco and Togo. Seven otherp-Central African Republic, Somalia, Sudan, Ethiopia. Liberia, and Libya — abatained. Nigeria and Upper Volta did not vole. tion mkrion dKdded Jint I the ballot to delay its departure lor the violence-torn Congo. it it it Mali, one of the African states opposing Kaaavubu, served notice after the vote that it waa out of the conciliation mkrion, Guinea served notioa Cai it would do the aama. The mission switched its plans after Kasavubu sent a letter to Hammarskjold objecting to sending the concillatian group to the Congo at thk time. Delegates predicted, lat Kaaivubu would probebly relax hk posttkm now that he has ited as he«l of hk dela- gatlon. a.m. at St. Benedict CathMk Dr. WUHam Khthach. ptokoMir of phlkMopby at IflchlgaB Stole at tbe 16 ajk. Thanksgiving Day asraice el Orchard Lake Coro-muafty Church Presbyterian. Tha cboraler and chancel chotara 411 ring, with Uie Rev. Edward D. Auehard, pastor, preildlng. * * * The toon choir of Memorial aptiat Church will musicsl program at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow. Dhccton are Mrs. Della Justin and William Meyers. Nancy McKown and Diana leyers will sing solos and Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Brown a dueL Others preeeatiag'vtoal a hers and playtag the aaxophoae. (7.S. to Use Satellite as Weatherman Paikhlonen of Our Lady ot the Lakes CathoUc Church. WateriM Township, wlU celebrate Mass 9 a.m. * * * The Rev. Alexander T. Stewart ill preach at the si prayer at 10 a.m. in All SakRa Epkcopsl Qiurch. ♦ ★ * A member of the staff at All Saints, the Rev. Mr. Stewart ia rector at the newly organized (%urch of the Resurrection Clarkston. * ★ ♦ Holy Communion will be celebrated at 10 a.m. at Christ Church Cranbrook. sons, Robert and , RlchBrd:''eind eight grandchildren. Her body will be at the William Vasu Funeral Home, Royal Oak, until 9:30 p.m. tomoirow. verstons will be sung and one new chorus will be used 1^ the chrir. * o * Kent McDoaaid will appear a| guest pianist, and Nancy Karile^ lak, fiutkt, and Rkhard Lnngfleld, mentaUsto. Mikhred G. Ritter, aaaodate ganist ot the church, will be organist tor the service. The united Church Woman of Bir-nlnghara will moot at 9:46 am. Dec. 2 « the FM Mathodtat Church to elect.ofOcen tor the ■nliig year. Special emphaek will be givcB at the meeting to fellowriup of prayer, ta antidpatfon of the TRh annlveraaiy of the United Church Women, which will be oboerved at the World Day of Prayer Fab. 17, 1961. CUnduetiiR thk pari of tbe program wUl be Mrs. R. C. Scott, of tbe First Pre^tyterian Church. Mrs. NeweU Allan of the bsta church, will veak on "United Church WUmea — Who Wp Are And What We Do." Mra. Staaky A. Carter Service kr Mrs. Stanley (MU-dred) A. Carter. 69.'o( 1586 Lone Pine Road. Bloomfield Hilk. “ be 10 a.m. Friday at Kkrk to the HUls. Burial will be ta Woodtawn Cemcteiy. Mn. Cbrter died yesterday in WUUam Beaumont Hoopltal, Rival Oab, after a short iUncss. Mn. Ourter was active ta Starr Commonwealth, the United and a member of the board of Pontiac Genpral HosiHtal. She k survived by her two daughters, Mrs. John Onnoa and Mrs. Robert Hawkint: ■ two Army AAokts St. Louront Sickor TKon Roalizod ooUapsa after his recent military induction, bu Mt the army aad private clinic, a Dior spokesman said today. His illntut^is moi wn leidizsd. tl Raise Carver School Taxes May Challenge Legality of Action by Oak Pork Board of Education Although the legality of its action may be challenge, thq, Oak Pbrk Board of Education last decided to raise taxes in the recently dissolved Carver School Ustrict. Property owners in the CSirver Iririct, which was annexed to the Oak Park School District Nov. 10, will be required to pay a 6.83-mill debt retirernent levy. Asst Bcboal Sapt- Dr. Law-rwMs J. Vakde saM today the tax k levied to pay off a debt sf |18.aas,eN for aew school kriMtags coastracted in Oak Faik alnee INL Oak Park junperty owners pay be tax and since the two districts iiWK merged, the board decided that taxes should be handled as if it were one district, Valade said. The board of education has‘no opinion concerning the legality of tte tax since there hasn’t hero a niltag by the State Attorney Gen-office on the merger enforced by the Oakland County Board of Education. Valade saM tbe Oak Park' Braid attti han’t roaehed a de-ekkn an what to do abota a M6.M8 dabt owed by the de-taaet Carver dtotrtel to Detroit. The money was owed for tuition jayments for Ckr^er students who lltonded Detroit high schools. Carver students were left without a high school to attend when Detroit would not admit them this fall. Attachment of the Carver district to Oak Park was the county board of education’s solution to the pr^lem. it ' it ♦ The millage W debt retirement. If levied, would bring school taxes In the Carver district to 32.25 mills tor epch $1,000 of assessed valu- Ohrirer property owners now Mslaxahito Oak Park levies 18.28 per MiMt lor operattoo. Tolal tax rate in Oak Park is 25.70 jnilla per tl.OOC The deadline lor notification of tax levies was Sept. 1. but (he Oak Park Board says it is justified in making notification befoi-e Dec. 1 tince the merger was not until November. CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -The United Statea put into orbit today a camera-carrying Tlroa satellite draigned to be a working weatherman ta space. * * * The 280-pound satellite—Tiros II -roared away from this missile >st center at 6:13 a. m. in tiie nose ot a 92-foot Thor-Delta tratioB A NASA tial jraloutotions riww a perigaa of 415 statute mOra aad apegat of 435 mUes. Tha oitMal pwM is 98 minutes." This Is very cloae to the orbit sought. * * e Ibe variation of only 26 miles between the near potat aad the iar point of the oiblt Indlcatad that toe satellite k In the moat nearly circular orbit of any rat- He yet launched. Iba remaikaMy ngelar arWt In tbe satellite were etqiected ta start . back pbotaa of doHd cover about 8:30 a.m. Woothennen piaimod to uot than la prepara-tkn of actual forocasto. Dag ____ _ UJ6. viaory Committas to try to bring the warring factions together ta his chaotic state. The vote hiitoilchted the wide-open split in the African Mod on the Congo. NOW 2 STORES to Serve You Better PONTIAC Ample Froe Parking DRAYTON foiy Credit Terms THOMAS ej ECONOMY CHNi' Just one shave with a NEW Sckick 3 Speed Bid yeu'H never Im satisfied ivRh any ether razor! Ul-NEWlfflSCeiCXlSKED ■jghUwllfcwlKliiftlwwil WM Iwiilid Shift the meed - - - let the mighty heed... get the fealeat cloeeet aiiave of your iJf»-withoid ir^ Ife like shaving with a fresh blede every momii«. OneeyoutfyAyou*ll never be satisfied with any other naor. blade or electricl Handaomast carrying case of them all. toa Never before to much mor iteoleNiraiirieel NEW SCHICK GUSTOMiriC 1960 budget ahaving marvell Seme adjustable head es the famous 3 SpeedI Fite your partioular bevd and ikin... lets you shaNt as cloee aa you wMiMrllhoiit irritation. HendMmecuelDmdltted travel 1^95 CMb As absw*~ IU.se Uta .-NOW 1^ N N. SAGINAW STREET ELECTRIC RAZOR DEPT. —Ufain Floor— Tli« >y«ath«r VA Wmtktr murmm Vmaut THE PONTIAC PRE38KE OVER PAGB 118th YEAR PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WJ^DNESDAYy NOVEMBER ^8, 1960—20 PAGES T*AiSS8?TJS[Wr"“' City Studies '61 Budget: $6,612,342 Claims State Has Favorable Development Leaders of Area Hear Michigan Boosted by Econ. Head By FETE LOCHBILER ROMEO»—Michigan haa a good climate for Indus* try, a group of community development leaders were told here yesterday at a workshop sponsored by the Michigan Economic Devel* opment Department (MEDD). “Our rtate has a tremendous wealth of advantages for industry, but our peope don't talk about them enough.” said Don Weeks, MEDD director. Speaking before nearly 100 representatives from the Thumb, North Oakland County and Pontiac, Weeks scorned pessimism in the face of the adverse publicity about Michigan business conditions the past two years. Me listed these factors as the Igsa’s Industrial future: 1. The state’s big concentration of markets for industrial and consumer goods. 3. An easily trainable and highly productive supply pf labor. 3. Abundant sources Of raw and semifinished materials. 4. Abundant fresh water. f. "An unmatched supply of Statement a Slap at Red China ^ Russ Still for Coexistence MOSCOW (AP) - The Soviet Union, in a tough rljolnder to its critics within the Cd camp, today declared peacriul oo-noe stiU a controUing principle in its policies. The declaration in Pravda indicated very hard bargaining on Communist world tactics going on in the Red summit meeting here that has been in progress for two weeks, though some Lodge 'Giving Thought’ to Recount on Judgeship Sen. L. Harvey Lodge, defeated by a margin of 694 votes for probate judge, said he was “giving some thought” to a recoupt following completion of the countywide canvass by the board of canvassers yesterday. Lodge, who gave up a chance for re-election as state senator to run for the new two-year probate judgeship term, has until 6 p.m. Mon-*^ day to make up his mind, ac- HUDDLE 0\'ER FIOURES-Representatives of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Cbmmerce huddle over industrial figures at yesterday’s workshop sponsored by the Michigan Econcxnic Development Department in Romeo. Seated are FraiUc fnu Pkate Edward L. Karkau (left) and Mark Harper. Standing are James P. Dickerson (left), chairman of the chamber's sub-committee on industrial development, and James F. Spence. cording to Clerk - Register Daniel T. Murphy Jr. The two-week canvass by the three-member board produced no reversals from the unofficial returns released by Murphy following the Nov. 8 election. But some of the margins were narrowed and, in some cases, widened. Today was the deadline for counties to submit their official canvassed returns to the state. 6. Production service facilities such as tool and die makers, machine repair shops, metal treating and finishing operations. m PLANTS EXPAND “Manufacturers now located in Michigan realize what this means in their own business and this explains why more than 200 plants have expanded their facilities in Michigan ao far this year," Weeks said. “It explains why Genaral Motors Corp. plans to spend more than a half-billion dollars in Michigan next year.” The day-long aesslon followed the pattern of worfcshopo sponsored throughout the state for the past three years, said Weeks. It was the first one held near the Detroit Metfopolitan Area. Area Churches to Pause in Spirit of Thanksgiving By MARY ANGLEMIER Church Editor, The Pontiac Press Pontiac residents will follow the pattern of our pilgrim fathers observing Thanksgiving Day by gathering in churches and chapels to offer prayers of praise and sing hymns of gratitude. The' annual service of Thanksgiving sponsored by the Pontiac Pastors* Association will be ' Speakers described the various kinds of industrial development committees and corporations which have been set up in much of Noth-em Michigan. This Thanksgiving Chore Is Sfricllv Tor the Birds The aim ol these organizations is to attract new Industry and aid existing industry. “Th* basic purpose ol the whde program is to crea^f jobs.” said Weeks. A delegation from the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commeree, headed by James Dickerson, chairman of the onbcommittee on Indnstrlal development, was in attendance, stndytag the psssi-bUity of aa indnstrlal development corporation here. Organization and financing oi various types of profit and nonprofit corporationa was discussed, as well as various methods by which such organizations coUld promote new Industrial sites. OimjNE SERVICES Several speakers outlined financial and advisory services aval' abic on state and federal levels. Ofiwr speakers, besides Weeks, were: Kenneth R. Houck, district representative of the MEDD; Benjamin F, Caark, the state’s industrial agent in the Chicago, HI. area; Hurls K. Miller, assistant chief of the MEDD’t Industry service divisiim. WDBam F. JeweO, reghmal area devetopment spodaHst of ths UA Departmeat of Osm-meree; Paul M. Held, execativo director of the Detroit Metro-poUtoa Area PlaaaiBg Commis-stoa; Robert Lehman, eUet ef the laveetmeat dlvtatoB of the Detrett reglaaal office ef the 10 hfirt. tomorrow at First Method- preach on 1st (ihurch. South Saginaw and Judson streets. Presiding and leading the responsive reading will be the Rev. F. WUIlam Palmer oi ’Aabum Heights United Presbyterian Church. The Rev. Lyal H. Howison of First Free Methodist Church will ★ ★ "The Response of Thankful Heart.” PRESIDENT’S PROCLAMATION The Rev. Harry Schlosser Northeast Community CSiurch will give the President's proclomation and the Rev. Charles Colberg of 5t. John Lut'heran Church will read the Scripture lesson. Offering the pastoral prayer will be the Rev. Amoo Johnson of New Bethel Baptist Church. The Rev. Paul T. Hart of the hoot church will pronounce the benediction. LaVeme Cox w'ill be organist, with Merlin Asplin directing the choir. By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP)—Cooking the Thanksgiving turkey Is easy. Harold T.' Smith, president of the Michigan Equity (W.; George Catlin, director of the area devriop-ment division of the Detroit Edison 0>.; and Richard Warfel. Detroit manager of the MEDD. Carving It—as everyone knows—is the real art. When the family has a turkey dinner In a restaurant, everything goes according to Hoyle. Everyone takes the portion dished out to him without complains, and no one questions the chef’s impartiality, judgement or skill. ★ ★ ★ But when the family has a turkey dinner at home, chaos and rebellion—murmured or shouted—reign from the moment the bird arrives on the table. The one who reluctantly agrees to do the carving becomes the loneliest human being in the world. He is one who stands in crisis, ringed by critics. He knows he Is In a situation which he can’t win. DON’T GIVE HER THAT WING! He Is bound to give somebody too much light meat or too little dark meat. He endows with -a section of drumstick one wh# passionately yearned for a wing. The wonder Is that anyone can bo found to do the Job. But there is always s victim, willing or unwilling. Here are some types of turkey carvers you’ve probably seen yourself at family Thanksgiving Day dinners: 1. The Poor Workman-He always begins by blaming his tools. ’’This knife Isn’t sharp enough," he says, "and this knife has too long a blade. This knife doesn’t have enough tensile strength. This knife doesn—/ 2. The Bmaqne Matriareh- 'Oh, give me that knife before you cut yourself,” she says as her hapless husband makes a first tentative thrust. She slices and serves with bold cohfldence,*knowing the guests cannot cavil too loudly at the cook. The Unwary ’Volunteer—He offers to do the carving, but when he rises smd sees the big steaming brown turkey surrounded by hungry.. Impatient critics he gets buck fever. The knife slips frmn his fingers, and the hostess has to nuh In a replacement. A ★ ★ 4. The Artfal Host—He Invites a brain surgeon as guest, piles him with thri^ quick martinis, then, when the turkey is ready, extends the knife and says, "Okay, doc, the patient Is ready." In any case, whoever he is, the carver is the real hero of any family Thanksgiving fmt. He Is the one who idways gets the Mrd. Neighborhood services sponsored fay-the-aasocistieii- include prayer and preaching by the Rev. Richard Stuckmeyer at Grace Lutheran Church, 10 a.m.; services with sermon by the Rev. Frank Brannon of Aldersgate Methodist C!hurch, 10 a.m. in Covert Methodist Church; and at 11 a.m. worship hour at Trinity Baptist (!hurch with the Rev. Thomas Holt Jr. of New Ho|>e Baptist Church preaching. At 1:U tonight, the Rev. Artkar Bssler of the Incarmle Word Lutbenui Chnrch will preach st the aiuraal Thsnks-givtng snrvfoe In Anbnm Heights Participating in the seiVIce will • the Rev. Henry Powell Elmwood Methodist, the Rev. (Wge Kibbe of White Shepherd Church, the Rev. Theo Mosies of Leach Road Community Church and the Rev. A.E. Potbury, r (Continued on Page 2, C!ol. 4) It's Day Off for Most in Pontiac Tomorrow It of Pontiac will be observing Thanksgiving as a holiday tomorrow. Banks, stores and governmental agency win be closed for the day. Pontiac Motor Division wiU give most workers the day off, but tiiey'll be reporting back Friday as usual. At OMC Truck 4k Couk sloB a fMir-dny haMday Is la store reached eventually. Only twe days age the oMIetal Peepie’e Dally of Pelptag.^fo aa Khrushchev’s theories ef peace- net be lavltable, declared It Communist backing for revolutionary movements in underdeveloped countries. It urged, however in a seeming mood tor compromise, that Conununists “turn to the possibility of averting world war into a reality." (435,124 Hike' Could Require Tax Increase AGAINST A-ARMS The Pravda article also declared that banishing of nuclear weapons stiU was a controUing principle m Soviet policy. In a separate interview with Khrushchev on disarmament, quoted him as raying the SoviM Union would accept any type of controls if an agreement reached for general and complete disarmament. Nice Weaiher to Stay Around Little Longer Thanksgiving Day will be somewhat cloudy with temperatures again in the 50s, the weatherman rays. Oakland canvassers Carios G. Richardson, Mrs. William S. Dixon and Mrs. Paul Gorman wrapped up hours of poring over thousands of figures late yesterday afternoon. It was the first canvass for Mrs. Dixon of Royal Oak, and Mrs. Gorman of Pontiac, recent appointees to the board. Richardson, the board chairman served six years. la the oloant nif«, Lodxe trailed Waterford Township Jns-lice of the Pesco DonsM E. Adams 75.5M to 7I.U0. The nnof-fleisi returns showed the margin at 178. For the next live days temper-atnree will average 4 to 8 degrees above Hie aormel Ugh ef 41 degree#. Precipitation wiU total less than 9ne tenth of an inch with brief showers Saturday night and probably again Monday. Thirty was the lowest recording in downtown Pontiac preceding a.m. At 1 p.m. the reading was ( To Close Shipping DETROIT (UPD—The Bradley Transportation Line and the plants of Michigan Limestone Division of United States Steel will close the 1960 shipping season this week. 'I’m going to tab to pie and then decide.” Lodge said. About S1.555-J5 for each of the 311 precincts—woul have to raised should Lodge request the recount. State law provides six days in which to demand one. In the second clorast race, that between Rep. S. James Clarkson, D-Southfield, and Raymond L. Baker for the District 4 state representative seat, the margin remained the same at 1,315 as reported the day following the election. Baker unseated incumbent Clark- In Today's Press I have never considered and will not now consider a recount,” Oarkson said. FOUR ERRORS Murphy explained that “a big part” of the narrowing of the Lodge - Adams margin resulted from errors in two City of Pontiac precincts, one In Pontiac Townahip and one in Royal Oak city. The official canvass gives Republican caadidstm, from Vice and Henry Chbot Lodge on down, more votes than they racUved In the county count on election night. Murphy attributed the difference, more than 1,000 In most Instances, to the failure to record the Republican tallies for one entire township or city on the tabulating machine designated for the GOP column in the courthouse. The canvass detected the oversight, he said. The final tally lor Sen. John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson was 135.531 and for the Nixon-Lodge ticket it was 162.026. The unofficial showed 135.577 to 159.890, 2,136 more lor the RepuUican Konnody Soils Homo in Smart Goorgotown Coach predaettoa Friday, Iwwever. Banka and governmental agencies will be observing normal hours Friday. Most downtown sfores will be pen yntll 9 p.m. Friday uday and every (ley except Sun- WASHINGTCW (AP) - President-Elect John F. Kennedy’s home in the fashionable Georgetown section of Washington lodiqf reported sold to an uniden^ fled purchaser. A spokesman for the real estate firm which handled the aale dined to give details of the trane-action’. If his proposals on general and comidete disarmament were cepted, he said, he was ready to trust even the “wildest haters of communism and sodallsm” work out control methods. He attacked the Western titude, toward putting neutral states on the 10-nation disarmament negotiations committee. before the U.N. polHIcal eonnmlt-tee, however, uytaig these pro-poeed cMtrols, net dtsarnia- But Wiiiman Foros««» a Rotfiblo Evaluotibih Incroase Covering fi.. Record budget propoeab totaling 16,612,342 for 1961 were under study by the City Commission to^y. The spending program would require about a one* mill tax increase if the city’s 1961 assessed valuation fails to rise significantly. But Oty Manager Walter K. Winmu foresaw the possibUlty qf an increase in values because 'c( home and industrial expansion this noted that pay raises aoeoantad for stanost' three-qaarters sf ths The 1961 propoaals are $435,124 higher than those in the lfl$R budget. Pay raises account for about “They are afraid,” 'that the representatives of neutral nations will see with their own eyes who is for disarmament and who hinders it.” The statement on co was in an editorial which spoke for the Soviet delegation at the summit meeting here. But in keeping with past practices there was no mention of the fact such a conference is in prog- ’"Riese are the Increases you authorized when adopting the iWto pay plan in September,” Willm’^n told the commission. “I have added no pay increases of my own Ja these proposals. - If would take abont a 1.1 mfll' levy on Poattac’a 1888 i 'The Soviet Union has been der fire from the Chinese Communists and certain other Communist organizations for seeking workable living arrangements with the Western powers. Nevertheless Pravda’s statement, romim on the heels of the article In the Pelptax People’* Dally, ladlcsted that the debate Is still rontinulag and on a very tough basts. “One of the questions agitating the whole of mankind today,” said Pravda, “is the question of preserving and consolidating peace, question of piwenting a new the city has been granting ___________ $100,000 in cost-of-living raises In previous years, during which it has been able to maintain the current 13.27 mill tax rat% Oost-of-liVing raises phis normal increases in operating expenditiqva around $100,000 to $150,000 a year have been absorbed the past four years under the 13.2T rate. /This Is becaaae the araeseed-valnatton has rtsea satfldeatly to bring In the needed tax rava- But the propoaed Increase in spending next year U about 000 over the usual budg.;t hikes. ’’The entire course of developments In recent years has confirmed the proposition of the declaration of 1957 and the peace manifesto that the forces of peace have grown so much in our that It is quite possible to war.” The Hard Way Surgory for Hoot Gibion LAS VEGAS, Ncv. (UPD-Cow-boy actor Hoot Gibson, 06, toiL^ undergoes his second operation in 12 days for an abdominal obstnic-ttoo at Southern |4evada Offwtting this is the tact ^ the To support his spending plan! Wiiiman said $4,054,300 would havu to be raised in property taxc^, about $335,705 more than this year. Inclnded In the prepeeed tax eellectlon ai relDeiiieuI • V\eo“^ !d $077,21 ’The bui^t, as amended, totaled $^.218. An extra $53,000 added to it in September in tax collections over the figure anttah pated when the budget was adoptad in January. . i. Except for the salary ii the propoaed budget bears a a resemblance to this year’s spenK ing plan. ■ think the proposals providefor the maintenance of current services and the conduct of a r able program of construetton o paraUe to the programa < in the put several yeara»v said Wiiiman. 'The budget hearing is s for Jan. 17. Holiday Treat -Press' 5th All-County II The Hh ara All-OaktaiVI Gouty faelboR heurtag the U bert piaywa Ik I eeunty legartUera a( < tsr Ota award, la addHtas, irau > »ida ta, ANTLBM AWAY -J- MisMMiri Hinnane Society Supt. Jack Norris (center) directs the removal of a stately bock from Sf. Louis’ cawin-of-Rocks waterworks Tuesday, 'hw animal wu. holsled over the fence surrounding the park by h makeshift aling rigged on a crane. After reacue tba dear k^OMd oft toward tfaa River. / the PONTIAC PRESS, WEI)X1>^DAV, XOVEMHEll 23. 1000 conwiMr. Roto Hike jg}] Yfluth fof Crying Testimony to Conclude _ , , LANSING lie-CroM-examin»rioii' FfdilCO IS 8 ifdltOr ot Coraumct Power Co. witticHses^ la Kheduled lo wind up today ini MADRID, Spain (APi — The the luUIity’a requeal ior a $3.5-:cry "Franco Is a traitor" rang mlHIon natural gas rate increase. I out during a solemn funeral Mass it It it {Tuesday in the Basilica of the The case before the State PuMicIValley of the Fallen. Disappointed, Yct«Happy Pat Nixon Finding Life Easier Kreige Wins Award PHILADLUPHIA W-^Stanlcy S. Kreage, pivsident of the Kresge! Foundation at Detroit, was presented a St. George Award here Tuesday for distinguished seivicc to the Methodist Qiuivh. WASHINGTON (UPD The case before the ioate t'UHic I valley oi tne rauen. nuK.ra m mav reeret but she is happy she is "beginning commission staff will present its recommendations. 24th anniversary of the death of i Falange party founder. Jose Uidiales. 22, a member of the Falange Youth Front, was Immediately arrested. Eyewitnes- to live again." Consumers suppHes natural gas the Falange Youth Front, was '*^!JU^nittal'^*tol^**wre to some 520.0W customers in 30 Immediately arrested. Eyewitnes- Southern Michigan counties. ses said Unliales was in a SS; * * * of Youth Front cadets, massed be- “ “ck in toum « p^iec- The utility is arguing it cannot'hind the main altar of the huge I*”® vacation and is taking it easy, realize a lair profit under present!underground basilica, 30 miles| Mrs. NIxoa retamod *---------------- taxes, set in 1952 and reduced twoj north of Madrid, which honors ' years later. 'dead of the Spanish avil War. Mrs. Nixon has declined to submit to interviews. * w ♦ "Everything has been written," she told a reporter with a trace of sadness in her face. "I know lyou will understand." Mrs. NIxoa’s campaign chares were espectsll^ heavy because «f the RepubUcaa Nattanal Committee’s "Pat lor First Lady” tato^, |nd pumpkin and mince! pie.' ♦ * The center ptece will be a China horn-of-plenty, which the children will fill with an aaaortm anges, applet, grapeu and bananas. VICTOR LYMM RESTAURANT ami CARRY OUT! Col. Sander's KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN 4667 Dixie Hwy.. Drayton OR .3-5811 THANKSGIVING SPECIALS FULL COURSE DINNERS Turkey $2.25 Ham $2.00 Chicken Family Style..... $2.25 Regular Chicken Dinner $1.50 CMU Drive Will Benefit 46 Orphans jn Korea ! Florida this week to pat her j^e campaign is over, daughters, TrMa, 14, and dalle, geems to want to be with her 1*. back in school, and (s get ehiMiren and enjoy her home life ready for Thanksgiving. again. The vice president went to, Her family wUI be logether| 4r ♦ * Nassau for a few extra days of again on Thanksgiving. The NixonSj -pijp Korean Orphuntige project lest. "re planning a simple celebration, headed by Neil Kirwan, a Boyne with their chfldren. iFall.s senior, 1 MOUNT PLEASANT* IP - A fund-collecting drive to assist 4(. Korean orphans has been launched | at Central .Michigan University. MiNfi M tiOSSIP Pat Nixon s new rela.x«i i«ice' ^ ^ .. Hnm«„.rsterf when she en- traditional roasted turkey with sage and celery dressing, cranberry sauce, fruit salad, peas in ! butter sauce, whipped mashed po- 1 demonstrated when she joyed a leisurely two-hour luncheon with a woman friend in a, downtown restaurant. It has been a long hine stnee Mrs. Mgoa could gossip i through a long lunch like any | suburban housewife who has the i afternoon free with her chll-I dren In school. Those who saw her said she looked more "relaxed" and "tranquil" than she has appeared in ! many months. A male reporter wh«j greeted her said "she looked, lovely." . j Mrs. Nixon wore a chocolate brown suit with a dark mink collar and a matching mink hat. ' Her face appeared thinner jhan ; asual. She wss recognized In the restaurant, but she was not be-I sieged by Ians or autograph 1 seekers. Tm beginning to live again," Mrs. Nixon smilingly told an old ;i friend who came up to .say hello. : REFUSES INTERVIEWS ;i Since her return to Washington, • Money raised by the grwip is sent to an orphanage about 40, miles north of Seoul. Korea. The funds are used to pay part of the, orphanage's operating expense. &¥i^KEEGO BNOUOr BiBUN PLUS Exciting 2ml Featur* SPECIAL MATINEE THANKSGIVING DAY DCX^RS OPEN 1:30 MOW! EXCLUSIVE FIRST SHOWING FE 2-1000 irtt. . BtWE-H - ------. S. Talegraph Ink* Rd. MICHIGAN'S MOST FABULOUS TEAR-BOUND DBIVE-IN THEATER FOR YOUR COMFORT WE HAVE THE MOST ADVANCED AND HOHEST FREE I - ELECTRIC IR-Car HEATERS - FREE! GUARANTEED TO KEEP YOUR CAR WARM IN ALL KINDS OF WEAtHER IF EVER A MOTION PICTURE BLURTED OUT THE PRIVATE TRUTHS THAT LIE IN THE DARK BETWEEN MAN and WOMAN- _ ‘^AYOF ITHEOUTLAW" M DAY fOU'U NIVfR FONOfTfl ThaMottFearRCKillrs WM Evw Took Owr $ Town-Aad Its Womaai , NOW EXaUSIVE FUST RUN! PONTI/LC Opan 6:10 PM. Show Starlt 7t00 P.M. ★ HERE IS FUN FOR EVERYONE! ★ EXTRA!—TONIGHT 9:15 P. M.—EXTRA! "A TURKEY CHASE'' We Are Going to Turn Loose o Flock of Turkeys YOU CATCH 'EM—YOU CAN HAVE 'EM BIG SAM AND HIS SEATTLE PLEASURE PALACE DOLLI He was bringing "Angel”as a gift for his partner, George...but somewhera between Seattle and Nome, Big Sam fell for her...and that’s when the fun-fillad adventure be||ins...and it's a riotous comedyl ^ >- i eou can’t stop your pet from atd% dirt, he sure to supplement his balanced commercial diet with a good vitamin - mineral mixture. If this addition to the diet doesn't stop the practice, you may have to mu2zie the dog. la tUs city whkk h headquar-srs of the Uaitod Natisas. for-dga phrasos are heard la fan department store n tains a directory of 300 of its' derks who are at least bi-lingual. They can be summoned to wait on customers in 29 languages, chiding Latvian and Maori. For extending cheer to ] iotematlonai friends here it me “Merry Christ-1 translations; 'Joyeux Noel." — "Froeliche Weih-‘ nachten." TWO DOCTORS ON DUTY ASSURE YOU IMMEDIATE SERVICE on EYE EXAMINATIONS FILLING PRESCRIPTIONS ^ * EYE GLASS REPAIRS PONTIAC OPTICAL CENTER 103 N. Saginaw tacrosi from Simms) FE 2-0291 Mon. and Fri. Eve by Apmt. P C. Feinberg, 0 D. saaaasssstsssawaasseessess ssaaaasssssssaaasssseea t a a a • • • s #• 0 a a a- — saaaaaaaaaaaa'~ a a a a a a a a a a -faaaaaaa-*^ aaaaaaa,-laaaaa-"* a a a • ' »aaa aaa -I a a ^ CORONET VSQ BRANDY saasssoaaaaaaessaaaaaas aaessseaaaaasaasaaaaaa a a a a a a • a a a a a a a a s ssaaaaaaa satsaaaaaae aaaaaaaa a a aa e the before and after dinner brandy Last year 19 per cent of car-1 owning families had two cars. Ihe, re is probably higher now, because of the advent of compacts.! Automobile manufacturers rely s| great deal on daily newspapers toi familiarize buyers with the luxury, convenience and economy their products offer. Last year they invested |96Vi million In national newspaper advertising. ■i^s a • ia a a a |\Va*. i aaa f .'aaa baa SR back, ralax, and an)oy Coronat VSQ Brandy... tha lightar mlldsr brandy. Discover the delightful difference when you make your next highball with Coronet Brandy. You'll love the change. And to add a gracious touch to your after-dinner hour, sip Coronat VSQ Brandy in a traditional snifter. BRANDY DISTILLERS CD., 350 FIFTH AVE.,N.Y. CALIF. GRAPE BRANDY • 84 PROOF He Has Customers ^olqg and Coming TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - A Tucson man had a two-way busi- Ceciro Rakestraw, 82, was 'contracted to haul farm to and from their jobs. He had purchased the liqifor for ludf that price. Jl Rakestraw was charged with jrI selling liquor without a permit. ' Maybe Husband Would | Like Hump Jo AAorrow LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Actress' Jo Morrow, ordered by her movie, studio to weigh no more than 132 pounds and by her doctor to weigh less. said. “Maybe I ougl give up the studio tor a husband who likes plump girls.” The 5-^-7 beauty picked up 83,300 in government bonds Monday in court because she became legal adult Nov. 1 when she turned 21. The bonds represented savings of a percentage of h actress' salary during her three years of working as a minor. Her contract with Columbia Studio bak a clause calling for the pact's cancellation if she gcin over the weight limit of 132. CHRISTMAS WRAPPING AVMLMtnTTffiSJtBB TZa »« Ever H*' ■ ^ ^ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBEB 28.1996 liMEW Professional PERMANENTS Styled os YOU Like It! ■AIR cumna-Tiirre num PARKIMO IMPERIAL BEAUTY SALON 219 Auburn Ate, FE 4-2878 No Appoin*w»nt Necmuary ■ KDttB m— — 'f Have You Tried Thi»T Sweet Crusty Topping at Best on Pumpkin Pie | By JANinr ODiXL It Sparkles Everywhere Variety Is Stimulating Make Tmv Cratae «MwnUN> N« WEST INDIES CRUISES Let ns help »o« plan T»»r We** Indlaa CruUe for tbU nlnur. Complete Travel aervica. BIRMINGHAM TRAVEL SERVICE GRACE PLUMMER RCILLT »7P Hamilton Blrmlaiham Last week we gave you a recipe for cCnventionRl pumpkin pie. Today we’re giving you a glamorous version of the same kind of pie. It * * This recipe comM from Mrs. W. H. Purdy of Milford. We had a pleasant converaa-tion with her over the phone, but she didn’t volunteer much information about herself. She does like to cook. PECAN PlIMPKIN PIE By Mrs. W. H. Purdy Heat milk and add griuluflly. Turn into pastry-Uned pan. Bake in 450 degree oven for Remove from oven and cover with pecan topping. Return to 350«PL 74 Nortii Ssginsw St. The Lawrence J. Cosgroves To Mark 50th Year Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence J. Cosgrove of Lakcview Street will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary Thanksgiving Day at 9 a m. High Mass in St. Benedict’s Church. The Cos- A New Permanent Busy days ahead . . . Get set now with an easy-care, flattering permanent. You’ll love ours the very first day. Come in now. BUDGET DEPARTMENT PERMANENTS TONY’S Beauty Shop Main Floor 35 W. Huron FE 3-7186 STYLE SHOP PRICES START AT I14.M LAYAWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS We respectfully suggest that you select your Christmas gifts now while the selections are plentiful and time will afford you to select exactly the right gift for all the men In your fife. Osmun’s invites you to transfer your layaway to a charge account at your convenience. DowntPwn Pontiac Tcl-Hnron Center p”iil. groves have been Pontiac residents tor 3l yean. it it it Mrs. Warren Cosgrove, the couple’s' daughter-in-law, wlU sing the Maw. Eric Hoover, grandson, and Stephen Ritter, nephew, win bg altar hoyi. ‘ The Whmemore Street home of the Cmgrove’s son OecU J. aiM he opened for an open house iftm S to S p.m. Sunday. Mr. and Mra. Coegrove who were nmrrled Nov. 23, 1910 at Ifoly Roeary Onirch, Minneapolis, Minn., have tw6 other sons, John and Paul, and two daughtera, Mra. Robert Cage! and Mrs. T. E. Hoover. ’They' have 23 grandchildren. State's Water Resources Are Topic of Talk The Sylvan Lake Branch of Woman a National Farm and Garden Aasociatkm scheduled an open meeting Thursday at the Oakland County Boat Club to hear Nicholas Olds of Lansing speak on Michigan's wa- in hia work as assistant attorney general in charge of conservation. Mr. Olda aaid ••Water carriei the greatest tonnage and Is the cheapest form of transportation. Civilizations have risen because of it and have died for lack of I'" its effect on the Great Lakes shorelines, damage to shipping firms and lake port facilities and the danger of greater diversion was given. Mrs. C. W. Doerr and Mrs. W. J. Sanderson will accept gifts for the Pontiac State Hospital Christmas patly through Dec. 5. Hostesses for the evening were Mrs. Cart Dahlgren, Mrs. Willis M. Brewer. Mrs. F. A. Moon, Mrs. R. H. Howard and Mrs. Earl Bartlett. Presiding at the coffee service were Mrs. G. Richard Jarvis and Mrs. Ralph W. Beebe, By MSEnONC LOBIUN Dally < By tbs* yaw Skin w« bt 1^- ii«. Apply a HBrbiMIBl ersMt and 1st It soak in fsr a few A day pack is siade by nMxli« • qaa pouad of Pallm Earth to Iko Htpdd. Vm oasagfc ilBdd to BWto Bw Mdxlan sniwlh aaf oaqr to apply to the faw aad aeek. As in the case of all packs « masks leave the mixture on the face and neck until It dries. Then wash it off with warm water and rinse with cold water. Before applying a mask be Bire that your sUn U absolutely clean. EPMMI salts facial There is an-epaom salts facial which is very refreshing and whtpa up the circulation. The presertp-is two toUespoons o< epoom salts to one pint of water. Place two howla la front of you. In bond put one pint of hot water. In the other one pint of icewMer (with aome ice in it, too). To eech ol theoe bowb add two taUeapoons Mom salts. wriBc a tewd sol la Ihe hat water and hoM the tswel to y«M> It wriMg the k I watet aad h Boys' Club Gets Q Turkey Dinner Men at the Sunset Chib served ttiricey dinner for S3 members and guests at the Pontiac Boys dub Thursday. Cards, dancing and shufflehoard Gaesta were Mrs. Maade Kto-aey, Mra. dareaee KBpaIrtafe. Mra. Margaret Ihanapaao aid Mr. aid Mrs. Earl Nellsea. aB of FOatlae. Others were Mrs. Fred Strong of Walled Lake. Mrs. Esther Paine of Oxford and Mr. and Mrs. George Dietrich and Mr. and Mra. Henry Becker of Waterford. leaflet "Reconditioidng which gives you stamped, setf-addreesed with your requeat tor ' 49 to Joaephine ii you Woukf like to lave muiof send a envalope leaflet Na MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM BUETHE The 65di wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. William Buethe was celebrated at a Saturday open house during ndsuJs they reread their vows before the Rev. Myrpn EvereU. Parents of four daughters, including Mrs. Dallas Roberson of Auburn Avenue with whom they reside, the Buethes were married in Lake Geneva, III. They have eight gra^ckildren and 16 great-granddMren. Active and in good health, Mr. and Mrs. Buethe are 89 and 82 respeUively. Initiatioiu Installation wiiiiifil sifkt! \ut glasses! ‘'Thom do not touch tho tya” WeTe So Sure You’ll Enjoy Them, You May Try Them on Our TRIAL WEARING PLAN nWT-PisNiiieoal (XHITACT-LESS LENS msdsMt nimiM yottf a»ei «*M toa«t rdanlille iniliansiRi. NKXT-the proper vital preicfipliw it prtpard is ytur IwtaL THM-CORTACT-ltSS lentet ire pre-dtely Mled to they toll irtteuch the eye, but red te-onlyeaeUyerelneteralleir.nNAaY-YMietMHy WEAR yew teoeto le la youreeH n you reilly ere-toUMt BtoH»-4kerf'i M eliiiieliM te toy. hadgdtttrms setoeyewloPW FE 4-7071 Hold Joint Ceremonies Navy Mothers Pick Yule Porty Leaders Pontiac Navy Mothers Club has Appointed Mrs. Alma Cowley and Mrs. Mark Kinney chairmen for the group’s anmial Oiristmas party Dec. 9. Members wUl com|8ete arrange-menU for a dinner tor the League tor the Blind at a business meeting Dec. 1 In Pontiac Naval Training Center when Mrs. Vinton Ball will appoint committees. The November meeting was at the home of Mrs. Reginald Kalb-flelsch op Sylvester Street. Prizes for games were won by Mra Ike J. Thurman. Mrs. Alma Cowley and Mrs. James Dando. The Junior Auxiliary and if the American Legion. ntiac Po stallatton tlon of members ‘Ilrarsdsy s home on Oaklan' Waterford Township. W * * Daniel Qirtia. Michael ton. wnuam Reed, William port and Randy Parden initiated Into the SAL SAL Chairman Uwrsnce Curtis led the instaUatioa of officers. They am-ttory MaMot, eap- Pamele Gukla. aecretaiy; Nancy Mahon, treasurer; Paula Maoom, chaplain; Vicki Myers, historian i and Jacqueline Charter, sergeant Smiths PONTIAC'S FAVOmn UUNMY eRESHAM CLEANERS Your entire Hollcicry Season will take on a new brightness when you have your family's wardrobe beautifully cleaned through Greshams speedy, proficient laundering processes. • 5 SHIRTS •1.13 Expertly Uemlereli Call Us Soon- Yoii’M Be Glad You Did! HBvr StrvicA •B RtquMt 605 Oakland Ate. FE 4-2579 Iteateeaat; BaaM Oarila, aApa-tant; EIrfc McLaacMta. ftoaaee otficer; lary Chatter. wrgMMrt at arms; Smry Ckaytcr, chap- Mrt. Vemer Macom. senior Kathleen Curtis, Lee Ann Tunning- na Walkar, junior chairman; Pamela Myers, vice chairman; Pontiac Club Puts 13 Tables in Ploy HAIR FASHIONS .. .tlesifned for hoUdtys require a Professional Permanent CALUE’S BEAUTY SHOP lie Nerth Parry Pf *-•»«» PARANOQNT BEAUTY SCHOOL llVk L Stetoww, lath Tksster Paatlae, MM. EueltoMis AvwitoMe la Day m gvMiag Clo^ Write Maae er Cell la Panoa far ftaa HmpkM PHONE FEDERAL 4-2352 Onb net at Elka Ihmple Moo-day evening with 13 tobies in play. Mrs. Norma Keller and Dr. Robert Segula. Joaepb Nouse and A1 Wallace wem winnerB. . * * * Otters were Dr. Douglas CampteU and Robert Larson. Mrs. Rabat Kircher sad Mrs. Joseph Mrove it." Walter O’Malley, head of the Dodgers and the American Leapw biggest stumbling block, is “**“ O’Malley’s steadfast refusal permit a rival in hia territory that forced the American League to forego its decision to expand to 10 teams in 1961. At a meeting earlier this month, the American permitted Ctal Griffith to move his Washington club to MinneapNis-St. Paul and voted to grant franchises to a new Washington club and L>s Angeles for 1961. ‘This appears to me to be most sensible Wes.” he saW. have been endorsing this Wes for _ long time. I proposed such i plan five years ago but couldn’ get the necessary vote. Had we adopted It then, we’d ne«r be to WHEELS IN MOTION-Hank Gre«iberg (left). Chuck Oomiskey and Bill Veeck, officials of the Chicago White Sox, were hapiv at the moment during the American League expansion talks in ar rb.MAi New York. Veeck and Greenberg offered to buy out Comiskey’s holdings to the club, but he turned them down. It is reported Comiskey might want to buy into a West Coast venture. Figures Army Will Defeat Navy WiHi Passing Power Muddy Clouds Mineral Water Bowl Contest By DON WEISS NEW YORK (AP)—Where's the guy who saW this picking busipess was so tough? straight losses. They'U show Saturday. Mississippi o V t r Mississippi Stote—Last-dKch Rebel tod for No. Hydro Plows at... $299 DELIVERY ' I • OF COLORS This Sail Ei#m Dsc 1, IHO-Manbal Rasa, Jaap Caasahaat OLIVER MOTOR SALCS 210 Oichard Lake Ave. FE 2-9101 version and the four-leaf clover, last wedk's nonsense turned up a 37-8-3 record for an .822 pace that boosted Coach Claaasen’i season mathematics to 355-126, a hefty .738 per cent. ______ _____ Colorado Stata O.. ------- orer ConeU. VUI OTcr VPI. MUalsalppI - — -------Chattanooda. WkhtU -— NaU. WUllam and : Mary Well, the law of averages is just itchin’ to catch up after all those blind stabs, so let's start from the Waat Taaas SUU. mrai’ Memnond. SATUMAT rer Air Poroc. Alrlarais StaU ___________^ Oemw a*ar Pamian, Ool- Ina o( Uia Paellle ovtr Prasno StaU. OaoTfU Tach over OeorfU. Holy Crou .... Bofton CoUcfe. Louialaoa StaU over ____la. Hew Mexico Slate oxer Texaa Weaum. ByUj Army over Navy—Cadets' Blan-da and Eckert can pass; lies' Bellino can run. That makes it 2 to 1. Victory in air power in this nationally televised Saturday sizzler from Philadelphia. Texas over Texas AAM — The week's other TV offering. Thanksgiving in Texas. The Longhorns are no turkeys. Six Directors Are Gone As Tiger Board Convenes over Auburn — The Bear (Bryant) is |»runed for Tiger Saturday. No Ed Dyas, no Auburn Florida over Miami — This one usually winds up 10-7, FiorWa the state champ after Saturday night. Notre Dame over Southern California-Even Irishmen have tampers, especially after eight OPEN BOWLING THANKSGinilG DAY 11 iM. ’til 1 AM. Give the family a treat. .. Take them bowling where bowling is always fufTT. . at the House of Total Completeness HUROH BOWL NBA Standings EASTERN DIVniON Wm LmI Pet. I PhlUdelphU II 4 .713 Bottoo ........A 1 .717 torMUM ........ e X we N«« York WESTS at. LouU ......- ...... Uw AngaUs ......• 7 .133 I'i Oxirolt ....... g 'I .433 m CMclnnall S II .431 4tx TVESDAfS RESULTS Log Aaceice 111. Cincinnati lU “ -wila 1% Raw York 111 WEDNRSDAY-S SCHEDULE Haw York at Boston Laa Antalaa at Cincinnati •---laa at Datylt ____ NHL Standings ■Omr AT A OLANCB nBSDAT-S RESULTS AMERICAN LEAGUE INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Onabs S. MUwaufcae 4 ToMo 4. Ptrt Wwna 1 Mlnnaspolle S. Mugassa I Wtednbsdat's scHimui NATIONAL LEAGUE Boaton at New York AMERICAN LEAGUE eastKi^ league Oramakoro xa. CUnloa at Otlo gsdaiainaM at Jgiutown Maw Tort s'----------- Oxer tlis rset I 8ATUBDAT. DEC. 1 — There was s the Mlnentl Water Bowl last night, but It turned odt to be only a tempest to Coach Praak (Mluddy) Waters said HIIMsIe, which has used the two-platooB system most of this season, would not play it It 4-ouldn’t use free substitution Saturday’s game Springs, Mo. Waters said he would rather back out of the game State Teachers if his team had to be restricted by regular NCAA nilea that don’t permit When a spokesman i game wronld be played under NCAA rules wHh free substitution added, W^ers Indicated DETROIT (B - The Detroit Tigers’ official family has been reorganized from an ll-mcmber board ot directors to a five-member board and three vice presidents. operations with Edward G. Kata-linas continuing as chief scout. Marv Owen, third baseman on the Tigers’ pennant-winning 1934 team, is rejoining the club’s scouting staff. Owen, 52, will direct John E. Fetzer, presidenL and principal stockholder, will head the organization. scouting activity In Southern Cal-1 seven players from each team ifornia. | prevails. Other lUrectors named at the here yesterday were Chrl E. Lee, Harry M. Sisson, Fred A. Kaerr ud WUllam H. McCoy. Sisson is executive vice president and Rick Ferrell and James Campbell vice presidents. Ferrell has been awistant to the pres- ident Sis|pn will handle finances and business operations, Ferrell will direct major lesgue personnel and CampbeU will be to charge of minor league operations and scouting- Ralph E. Snyder was named assistant director of minor league Rangers Lose Cullen NEW YORK Iff) - Center Brian Cullen of the New York Rang«« suffered a fractured fourth metacarpal bone on his left huid in practice Tuesday and will be loat to the National Hockey League team for six to eight Country Qlib tor the 1961 season and the balance of 1960. Louis A. Bauer was named vice president, C. Norman Fry secretary and C. Boyd Stockmeyer treasurer. Completing the club’s Board of Direc-| It this I mmm Cany of Oakland Hills CC Joseph H. Carey has been elect- Beardsn, Chester A. CUn. CUr-Hateh Jr., U W. S Hantoon W. Wilder. IMPORTED CARS of OAKLAND COUNR tax tarwM C»n- W. IM A Orckarri Ik. Mi. MA 4-2491 don’t know whether league will accept it even itow, but I think it would be tremendously popular with the press and the public.” Del Webb, co-owner of the New York Yankees and a prime factor in the American’s drive for a Los Angles franchise, acknowledged the {dsn's sensibiUty. ‘We recognized we would have _ problem moving this fast into Los Angeles," he said, "regarding ticket selling, playing facilities, proiier promotion and getting suitable playing dates. We feel we to* move to an or- derly way. American League President Joe Cronin said the sudden change-observers called it a compromise s made out of deference to Frick. ■I wouldn’t call this a compromise,” he said, "but rather a wil,-ingness to cooperate with the commissioner’s suggestion to work out a more amicable way. We did it tor the good of baseball." Newsmen construed the latest thinking as a victory for O'Malley and a salve tor Webb, the strong men of their respective leagues. O’Malley not only won his big point—no American League team to Los Angeles—but gained an ally to his long time dream of inter-league play. Webb, unable to exact a promise from Frick to consent to the American League's entry into Los Angeles, at least knows the game rule applies to the National League trying to return to New York. O’Malley said he did not know arhlch city—New York or Houston —would to added In 1961, but to indicated the Texas City might to the choice. Because of the latest develo{>-mente, Cronin postponed the stocking of the ntw club—or clubs— from this Friday to Dec. 13. He also altered the procedure. If the league goes to nine teams, the Washington club will be required to purchase at least three players—no more than four—from each established club. ITie price is $75,000 i>er player. The same list of 15 players from each club still prevails. If the league goes 10 clubs, the old system of 2S2f SliiiMi Uht M. n S-2S2S ’61 TEMPEST See it . . , Drive If . . . Buy If ^ JACK W. HACPT PONTUC SAUS H. Mai* St. MA 5-S5M MONEY BACK Chacks, thouMnda of them, are being iasued every month by our Insurance Ea* change. These checks are paying back safety savings to the insured members of the Automobile Club of Michigan who have earned, aa a group, these lavinga by their careful driving. This saTety savings return has been ^ addition to the original low rates! Are you a careful drivnr? Then call the office nearest you to diacuas these safety savings on your automobile insurance. Matrait Aataaialilla latar-lasHraMea Bnahaaga at Aataaiablla Clab at Mlahlgaa VISIT OR raONI YOUR NIARIfT OFfm A. |. lOdUl —M«r. 76 wiuiAMs rr.-.-ra s-4isi r. j. awsw. ca aiag Sm HxM wtt« *r iMgl Mmm kMBg tax tMtaM M SEAGRAM’S IMPORTED known by the company itEJkeeps HAWKINSON WINTER TREADS Flui Tax end recoppobie tires on tirti processed i - FAST SERVICE - ir Pull through snow ★ Grip safaly on wat povemenf^X^ ★ No annoying rood it Low, low price All SIzas Going at B-l-G Savings to You I Sn Ui fbi Uit Itsl DmI M WiBlti Tim iiTnri Convenienl Twrm ED WILLIAMS 451 S. Soginow ot Rotbum THE PONTIAC PRESS. WgPNgSDAY. NOVBIfBER lOtfO Open at Airport North -Control's Staff Awaits Inaugural Flight to Pontioc Dec 1 North Ontral Airlines hat ea-uUished ottlcet in the Pontiap Municipal Airport terminal build-^ ^ ^ Grain Prices STr "tw .... l.M« Dm . MARKETS [Gain Despite Downward Tilt A four-man lorce is getting ready for the ctwnpany’t first commercial airline flights in Pontiac Dec. said J. 0. Edwards, North Central station manager. Edwaida. *8. of M Oifcida Rd-has been a North Oentral agent 1 CnplUI Ctty Alr- A native qf Kansas Oty, jo^ the company in 1961 as an agent In Chicago and later in Hancock- of GD Report ON n|WT FUM>» Raymond Voelker, Arnold Reger and Dole Funkey have been a^ sigped as agents on Edward'r stall by North Central. Ihe company’s eMoes ere on the flrst 0«or of the terminal balldiBg, overleoklag the field. Nortti Oentral will operate the first floor ttdtet window, at the western end of the building off the main lobby. ijttfc Rr« Dm ........ . 1.11% Mar ...... l.MH May ........ .. M% DM .......... .. «% Jaa ......... nv. Mar The foflowiDg are top piloM ooveriag tales ol locally grown rioduee brought to the Farmer’t Market by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. OwMatiaBa are fumisbed by the Detroit Bureau ol Market!, ae oC Tueaday. DatroH Product DatMe«t.*S^'*T... Applaa. Oraanlac bu. Rep. Moss Soys Hoegh Put Pressure On Army to Quiet Deficiencies WASHINGTON «*-A House committee says it has evid hat the civil defense dhn pressured the Army to supi a scientific report on defidendes in the natkm's air raid warning system." Tony Has Pain in Neck LONDfMt (UPl)-Princess Mar-garet’t husband Antony Armstroog-jones underwent treatment by two orthopedic surgeons Tuesday loc neck and ehoulder pains believed to stem from a polio attack in his school days. ths vnxao* or 4e aasiaallne ^i^a an e IMI PICK*UP ke*uMd^ DtpertmeBt of PuBJIc SoedhoBUoBe: Sioodard I hwifiSe «D. oroBB* OBlori eight ?5l{ .i dlcates that it is no longer as a meant of denying navif VUlM Clsrk r. mTm. laeo ADVXRTUBMfirr POR RIIM ■esletf nte wlU bs recslTsd by tbs unde^sSasd^t lbs VlUofs Hsil Otfless. h” oiSKsry rSl Ws55 Lsks, Mich S.M1 MTo-ctosa pm I.8.T. Dos. It, •sss which pises sa4 boor Itay publicly opeusd snd resd. for -----» of s osmblned (srsie ____ JslI in the vms«s of Wslnrlss Lsks. Tbs coostructloo U S of^c^ btock with brick fsc- ---- sppresl- muat ce/ti lU be publicly It coBstni^M iMiely^lltoj^^rt.^^PTOp^ « >try isbor snd mslMl^ The rl»ht Is rsssresd to relsst sil propossU. wsire sny inform-- ths propossU reesfred snd ts sccept cured from ths VUUtee cboee sddrsss for s de^it of $10.00 lUs doUsrs* which wtt be rstunded upon tbs rstnm at ths ptsss sad ii biddtr Piu be ___It sstUfostory Inei - performssee. Ubor Noe. II. M. IPOO OmClAL OP SALS aeslcd bide for the. pirchsee of aehool DIatrIct Bonds to be iMued by Wslled Like ConaoHdated School DUtrIct. Osk------------- rersivsd by the un-"■ •• l_Lske • ■ l.TB“sirid’ecboo'r t Msrth Pontisc Idrsm: WsUsd I n Monday, t »M. St Whtcl nomlsstim^ot re?.: bersd eoneseuttvely la the ol their mstsrltlas tram 1 -----■- — —II bear I sa/SmsfM: w I snd May the snaasMiit Rep. J«hR E. I NEW YORK i* — The Mock maiket tilted to the downside in moderate early trading today. pisaea of most key Moeka were small. A* scattering frf fractional gainers bucked the downtrend. The martlet averagM were de-peeaned by the awight Ml M blue dead aad faJUag abfwt 4 pelats. The trend was lower for steels, oib, autos, chemicals and electric equlpmenta. Tobaccos, air-cialts and rubbers were mixed. Drugs posted some gains. After an active opening accom-.anied by a briefly late ticker tape, trading slowed and came to virtual standstill lor a while. Wall StreM eras ■ cas'd, lips. in. Poultry and Eggs CM Mr . mrwws— - BUBttty hMfy tjrpt hcM nssTT ijrps rossUrs over I Ihs. S$-M; boUtn uS trnn 1-4 IbS. whites ll-M; bsrrsd rack S6-$l: duckUacs M-It tur-ktrs. hens M-J$; terns M-«; hesyy d&s U-M: sssts »-M. emT'te' Moss said that earlier this month Hoegh denied a charge that the report had been suppressed by the Army because of civil defense pressure. There-was no new comment from Hoegh. M lAPi -_____________ ky first Kcelyen ds- Dstrett: loose in M -------- eseee ceoeumert trsd* ilhcladlna wblU — srede A' Jumbo U-dS; Urgo kd-dl: isrto $i^-d$: -------- M: smeU M-dl: brown urge $S-M: Ur«e M; souU M; cheeks U-M. Livestock Dr. Theodore J. Wang waa cipal author ol the report ordered by the Army. The Army contact for the Johns Hopkins group was Gen. A. G. Trudeau, Army chief of research and development. .... Jtesdy to^S hl(hsr: lever iradM steady: cove epenlet tier-*- *—*------------ .50 hither. 5 leads of to choice stoore; M.T5-IT.SS. Gunman Robs RO Twp. Store of $600 Sum S39 to. k her 4 ai it m: a A lone Negro gunman, his arm in a aling and a piece of adhesive tape over his mouth, srith some S600 after hoW-ing up an AAP Supermarket in Royal Oak Township yesterday. arnsed ---------- Interest rale far any bead shall be si ods rsis oww aou shsll bs represented by one coupon only. Accrued Interest to ifete of dellrery of such bonds must bs ptid by ths pur-chMM at^Uw^tlms of J**'^'2hy lui' the lif^*of "May* M*‘the ra<^ oseh of the years IM.tet la tiM year year IMt Both principal will be poysbU at —*- ___cempsny si ihsll bs t the orlsinsi purchaser el 'the bond! will to Mono of t I by Iho eloctort of t f atbtottc rhish >cheols!‘*snd'’tl!s y Khoolt In mM school rut. and arm to the (saeral obUfa-> of the ocheol dUtrlsl. which U Manager of the market at 1006 W. 8-Mile Road is Arthur E. Allard, 34. of 3118 Hclmaford, Walled UUe. Allard said the gunman entered the store about 6:30 p.m. and loi-lowed him to the cashier’s cage. Allard reportMi the thug then brandlahed a revolvar aad pointed to a sign on a ahopping bag he was earrylag ukleh said; "Put the money in the bag and «ij won’t get hurt." The manager scooped up the hills in' the till and put the ba^. The man then calmly walked out the front door. Customers and clerks In the store unawan* of the robbery. Allard told police that the [■■' was a big man over six feel tall who was about 35 years old. He said the gunman was wearingiJ’Qp SOUthHeldl Pythians to Mark Know America Week With Talk day’s TRaakagtviag holiday which wUl Btoaa a toog weeh-ead far Damay In the At the same time, business remained unencouraging. The Commerce Department reported that incoming businees of manufacturing firms is continuing to lag. U.S. Steel dropped about a point. Autoe were unchanged to easy. Oils edged off. Fractional losses were taken by General Electric and Weetlnghousc Electric. niar. General Dynamics, Boeing, Litton ladua-tries, Hiternatlonal Paper and A bit lower were U5. Kennecott, Lorlllard, U. S. Gypsum Union Carbide and Intema-tionid Nickel. DSTBOIT tTOCRS (C J. Nuphlur Co. I Plfurau altor dbclmal potaU X^lpaMBt “ - - - OrMtlakM Choait^ Ca. Mlchlfoo Soamtow Tuto Proi^t Co............. Rudy Manufaeturlaf Co -----Toroof OUm Cofp. _____RdUon Co Vornoru Olntor MBS- A p. *UN0 Former Pnatfsc rasHent Mrtt. : S. fRhoda) Bran^, of Ke-MlW. Wia., died yeMardey ry RALPH WO80N Mrs. Brand leaves eight aoeii, Robert Sandwich, lU., William Of Chicago. Albert of ¥ ' _ Henry ol Orlando. Fla., Jack, Joe and Frank, all of KenoMia; three daughters. Mrs. Adeline Stubbs of Aurori, m., Mrs. Mary DcGroot ol Chatsworth, Calif, and Mrs. Mai^ tha DeGrnot of Somers. WIs. Forty-one grandchildren and dO great-grandchildren also survive. Service will be held at 3:30 p.m. Friday at the Hansen Funeral Home in Kenosha. Local oteervance ol Know Your America Week will present I tgan’B Grand Chancellor of toe KnighU of PyUiias Ralph Wilson of Hillsdale as keynote speaker when Lodge 19 meets at 8 p.m. Saturday. JAMEfl C. nOLEMAN Prayers were offered this morning for James C. Holeman, Infant of Mr. and Mrs. Norman E. Hoieman of S864 Tubbs' Road, Waterford Township, at the Farm-erSnover Funeral Home. Burial was in Ottawa.Park Cemetery. The baby was dead at birth Monday at Pontiac General Hoa- Topic of his talk will be 'Toji-sider the Blessings erf Freedom," in keeping with the week’s theme. Know Your America Week in apoMored aamially by Hie AU-Afnericaa Conference to Combat Commanism, of which the Knights of Pythina to an aHIHalc. Purpose of the week is to mil upon Americans to redediette themselves to the preservation ol the basic principles of liberty. Grand Chancellor Wilson will be assisted by a full line ol grand M-ficers in presenting first rank to several members at Lodge 19 here. Members from lodges throughout Southeastern Michigan are pected to attend as guests. ^ Business Notes Itopilnal quoUttooi Dr. Paul C. Feinberg. Pontiac optometrist with olflces at 103 N. ISaginaw St., has returned from the fifth national contact lens con- State Employes' Raise Pondered gress in Chicago. 111. The congress was sponsored by le National Eye Research Foun-datian, a non-p^t organization. Reports ol new developmenU and research projects highlighted the meeting. r aad } IM- Hamilton Sentenced to life in Murder DETROIT (UP1> - Maurice Hamilton. 24. convicted twice in Arabian Nights" murder o( groper Aziz Hermiz in 1956, has again been sentenced to life in prison. Hamilton was sentenced lor the second time Tuesday by Recorder’s Judge Frank Setomanske. He took the aentence calmly; the life ■ automatic. m was granted a retrial on grounds that his first conviction was improperly obtained. At th^ retrail last month the jury arrived at the same first-degm verdict us at the first trial four years LANSING (UPI (-Plans for pay-raises to state employes ranging from about 1117 million to nearly $28 million were under consideration today by the Civil Service CommissiOT. No decision was expected oi matter until at least Dec. 20 when the commission holds its next formal meeting. Hamilton was accused of slaying Hermiz because of a love triangle invoiving the grocer’s wile Victoria, who waa adjudged in.aane at the first trial. dark clothes. Thiel Will Find Out Crime Doesn't Pay prlnclaar and Intcrnt and llM aatahUaliBMnt «i a ttorafor. For Um earaoM et avardlai tl tiM latarast owt of aach M4 „ compaUd Bp dcUrnUnlnt. at tha rate ar ratM apfctftod ttortfa. tto tMal dollar ralaa of all lalaraat on tha bonda ITol deducU&t tbtrvfrMB Mv -•srijf-rtfS-sri ---- ^rodneaa tba lowoat to- coat to tba acbatl dbtrict. He propoaal tor the avtahaat of Iraa than all of Uw bonda or at a prka Icaa khan tiKir par *alna. vUI to aoniddarM A urttflad or caabiar'i rhrek tn the amount of St.BM drawn upaa an la-corporsted bank or trait oompMp and > riff t.H\^S5ri;Drayton Man Wins Trip aaeh Md aa a kuaraauv of nood faith I , f5JfaS"uaSltoitod "dSUlto? U NYC in Salas Conttst idd to tmtirZ Ukt up ayMto^^^tto bonda. Ho to; Post Is Goal of Clarkson ’The victim of a local thief told sheriff's deputies yesterday that the criminal will pay for his crime —on Thanksgiving. In fact, Albert Franks. 1397 Auburn Road, Pontiac Township, believes the theft will completely ruin the thief’s holiday lor him.. The thief made off with ttw» Msc from a pen at the rear of is home. Both are five yaars oki, and the holiday meal will be a "bit tough" to down, Franks explained to depulies. Lame-duck State Rep. S. James aariuon, D-SouthfieM, said today he will be a candidate for mayor of Southfield next year. Defeated by 1,315 votes in his bid for a second term representing the 4th Oakland County legislative district on Nov. 8, Garkson, 35-year