Edition Years MIAMI, Fla. Ml—A> | Capt. Julian Harvey/slaughtered the passengers of the ketch Bluebelle ha/ been told to the Coast Guard by the lone survivor/Terry Jo Duperrault, 11, of Green Bay, Wis. ★ ★ ★ Well before/the Bluebelle went down In Bahamas | By United Press international waters Nov: 11 with the. loss of five lives, Terry Jo saldj President Kennedy today she saw th/ bodies of her mother and brother on the floor" of tfye main cabin and saw blood all over the cabin and the,main deck. / ★ ★1 ★ Hai/ey, who killed himself last Friday after learning that flTerry Jo had survived, took the ships dinghy and main life raft and Jumped overboard, leaving her strand* ed/bn the deck, she said. Terry’s stdry was disclosed by the Coast Guard at a hews conference today. ★ ★ ft The girl was Interviewed Sunday by FBI agents and Coast Guard investigators Vetoes BROTHERS EMBRACE — Forty-two years is a long time for two brothers to be separated and Neckleh (left) and Louis Kadder of Pontiac made the most of their reunion when they were ""ramitidj^ his brother to the United States from their native Palestine—where they had bid eacp other goodby in 1&19. After 42 Years Apart Brothers Are Reuiiited Forty-two years was long enough, but Jhose last five hours were |ke eternity to Louis Kadder. " Kadder and his wife Lathla waited inside the Greyhound btis station on Perry street Saturday. The hands on the big clock couldn’t go around fast enough for them. Louis hadn't seen since 1919 when Louis Kadder left Palestine and set out for the newf country. Ten- ‘SITTtNG ON FIRE’ Eight-thirty. Nine-thirty, thirty. ' "I felt just like I was sitting top of d\fire,” said I&dder.'ol 110 S. Jessie! St. He paced nervously like ah expectant father. The bus pulled Into the station at 1:30. The waiting — for years and hours — came to an They. recognized each other immediately. Both wept with tears of happiness while they embraced outside the bus. The 49-year-old Neckleh left his wife and six children behind In Off the bus stepped Kadder's younger brother Neckleh, whom Griffin He May Run for Governor as chief cook for a government hospital, to head for the United States to see what his brother first saw 42 years ago. / “1 like what IVe'seen,’’ Nechleh said. * y ' Louis Kadder, 64, a dry goods traveling salesman, and his wife, who used to operate a restaurant in Pontiac and Drayton Plains, filed papers with the government two years ago in hopes of having the brother come to this country. His TRAVERSE CITY (UPI) - Rep. Robert P. Griffin, co-author of the controversial Landrum-Griffln Labor Bill, said today he Is "giving serious consideration" to a sible bid for governor in 1962. Griffin, a Republican, said he was Hof in a position to make announcement regarding his plans at this time. He said he had a "lot of problems’* to solve before ing into the race against Gov. John Swainson. .“war lack of ft mary clear” when making decisions. Another problem facing the 38-year-old lawyer, although Griffin did not go into the matter, is possible candidacy of American Motors Corp. President George Romney. Romney is helng boomed a: GGP candidate in some although he has remained silent bn the matter. Children Warned to Avoid Strangers "Look out for strangers,” is the warning to Pontiac area school children Issued by the Crime Prevention Bureau of the Pontiac Police Department. ■< * f Unfortunately, tie bureau warns, Innocent youngsters unless adequately wanted, may fall prey to child attackers who have diseased minds. In cooperation with the bureau, The Pontiac Press today presents a photo article on page 13 outlining the precautions children should take to Avoid becoming victims of serf morons. The#. article is patterned after a similar page published by Chicago’s American. ie latest ____./finally appeared immigration quota list frofn Palestine- BUS DELAYED An Italian liner brought Kadder to New York. A bus was from New York to Pontiae. It was due at 8:30 a.m. Saturday but was delayed in Cleveland, causing Louis Kadder the extra five anxious hours of waiting. “We’re hoping he’ll get work here and then bring his family over to stay,” Mrs. Kadder said. Already the new arrival has been introduced to relatives of LOuis Kadder living in Detroit. But a big family reunion will be postponed until other relatives can gather lrom Flint. This is okay with Louis and Neckleh. They have plenty to talk about by themselves. Alter allforty-two years is a ksrii" tfffiie. Wild Night of Murder Mill Hunt bon of Rockefeller Told By Terry Jo, 11 \/error-filled.story indicating that LOSI III UUlMv/Q Dutch Navy Explores South Pacific Coastal Area; Boy's Friend OK in a hospital room where Michael was last seen try- she is recovering from an ordeal of ZV» days on a tiny raft bouncing through troubled seas. Ex-Governor Rejects Bid by Supporters to Seek Seat in Congress DETROIT (UPI) -< Assistant Secretary of State G. Mennen Williams, former six-term Democratic governor of Michigan, said Sunday that he had been asked to for Congress but would not do officer in charge vestigations, said* the standard procedure would be to refer the ■base to the Justice Department but since "the criminal negligence lies with a deceased person,” it is not now known what will be done. Supporters pf Williams have asked him to seek the 14th district seat vacated'last week ..by the death of Rep. Louis-C.- Rabatilt,’ also a Democrat. Williams said he was “honored” by'file request but he-ieM Ms “obligation to my present Job takes precedent oyer any other consideration at this time.” However, a source close to Williams said he was interested in getting back into Michigan politics to prove that he has not lost his personal charm with^lchigan voters. Williams presently is assistant secretary.of state for African affairs. . Rabaut served the 14th district for nearly 25 years in the U.S. House of Representatives. The districtoovere Itotredfsfareaststde and the Grosse Pointe area. Germany's Grand Old Man offered U.S. aid in the search v for Michael Rockefeller" youngest son of the New York governor, who vanished from a disabled boat while exploring the South Pacific wilderness of New Guinea. A hunt already was being pressed by the Dutch Navy. One of its ships today rescued Rockefeller’s companion* who reported that ing to swim ashore off the lonky New Guinea Coast. Qjpt_A.-E-- -Barber,.district disclosed only Friday. tbaLhe. fleer In charge of marine in-]his wife wereV>dlng their marriage, left At once to join the Asked If the Coast Guard had drawn a definite conclusion that llarvey killed the passengers and sank the ship, Barber said aneh watt until Terry Jo's parents, Dr. and Mrs. Arthur Duperrault; heir brother, Brian, 14; and the captain's wife, Mary Harvey, apparently west down with the ship. The body of Terry Jo’s sister, Renee, 7, was found in the dinghy in which Harvey escaped. TELLS HIS STORY The tall, powerfully-built skipper, 45, a former Air Force officer, toid the Coast Guard, after a passing freighter picked him up and brought him to Miami, that the ship's mast broke and tore a hole in the bottom. The child denied that the yacht’s mast broke or that there (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Who Will Be Floor Leader? House Democrat Fight May Decide Successor to McCormack's Post? WASHINGTON (AP) - As an aftermath o( Speaker Sam Rayburn's death. House Democrats may be caught up in contest over who wilt become floor leader. The possibility of a fight was the disclosure Bolling of Mis-the post left open Rep. John W. McCormack of Massachusetts steps up, i expected, to the speakership. While Bolling himself was not available for comment, it learned on the best authority he will challenge Rep. Carl Albert of Oklahoma for the floor leadership. Bolling had been the only name mentioned as a likely opponent of McCormack for the speakership. decision to ran for Ibe No. t post In the House high command made It almost certain McCormack would succeed Rayburn. At PlMtstat OBJECT OF SEAftCH -Michael Rockefeller, 23. youngest son of the New York governor is pictured paddling a native canoe in New Guinea in a photo taken last sumrrier. /fhe young Rockefeller was last seen floating on two cans off the south coast of New Guinea. Gov. Rockefeller and Michael's twin sister. Mrs. Mary Rockefeller Strawbridge, took off from San Francisco this morning to assist in the search for the missing young explorer. Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, who search. He and a party of experts left San Francisco en route to New Guinea during tiie morning. Michael, 23, bad gone to New Guinea with a Harvard University team and remained to search for rare native art objects. Officials at Hoflandia, Dutch New Guinea, radioed a terse re-"****' ” iporj to the, defense ministry at toe Investigation » Hague, The Netherlands, saying that Rockefeller’s companion, Dutch Ethnologist R. S. Wassink. 34, had been picked up'Safely. Rockefeller was informed of the possible family tragedy Sunday night, barely 48 hours after he and his wife announced they were ending their 31-year-marriage with separation and divorce. No cause vasglven. Michael was one of five grown children of the couple. His twin sister, Mrs. Mary Rockefeller Straw bridge, accompanied the governor on his flight. The tear New York. They reached San Francisco' early this morning on the 10,000-mile flight to the South Pacific. BOAT LOST POWER Ip New Guinea, Wassink was re ported to have told his rescueri that he and young Rockefeller exploring the remote and crocodile-infested south coast of Dutch New Guinea when their native boat lost its power and started drifting out to sea near the mouth of the EUanden River. The boat, called i prahu. Is made of two small Malayan canoes lashed together catamaran style. Normally, It Is powered with sails and oars, and engine — as was 1 , ar nwMii ON WAY TO SEARCH — New York’s Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, and his daigthlef Mrs. Mary Rockefeller Strawbridge, are shown on their arrival (n San Francisco early this morning en route to New Guinea to aid1 in the search for Rockefeller'* son Michael, 23, who ha* been reported missing while working on an expedition, Mrs. Strawbridge is the missing David’s twin sister. Trujillo Groupof Huddles in Florida The engine fell off and the small,, shallow-draft boat started driftlngj out into the Aarafura Sea. The. craft was sighted by search planes' Saturday, fait darkness closed In before help could come. Wassink said he stayed with the (Continued on Page 2. Col. 1) Crisp and Cloudy to Whet Appetites on Thanksgiving FROM OUR NEWS WIRES FT. LAUNDERDALE, Fla. — Twenty-nine members and friends of the powerful Trujillo family flew to the United States today leaving their Dominican republic In the hands of President Joaquin Balaguer. They said they would return when things cooled off. Bowing to a U. S. show of force and opposition from Young Dominican air force generals, the Trujillo clan today appeared to h a v e* abandoned an attempt to ernment. He has the sympathy of . the armed forces and the people, set up a new dictatorship ,n Norto,ki Va„ Atlantic fleet in this Caribbean republic, headquarters said Sunday night ^ ^ ^ [warships were deployed off the President Balaguer, pledged toko«*t of . .. . , Sunday as a precautionary move set the nation, on the road to|t„ democracy, extended his control asi the Trujillo officials slipped out of the country, aboard a chartered' ADENAUER GREETED-Dean Rusk greets West Konrad Ademuer with a hi he arrives at Andrews Air Force Base near Washington. The German visitor raises a ! holding his gloves, to remcve JtUa JwL He is in Washington to mef 'with President Kennedy on the Western approach to solving the Berlin crisis. Mostly cloudy skies and little change in temperature with occasional light snow flurries during the next five days means crisp rather to whet Thanksgiving din-McCormack became acting]ner aPP^le*. ^ speaker when cancer forced Rayburn to leave the capitol last August. airliner. A four-engine Pan American World Airways Constellation brought them out of (ludad Trujillo at midnight, landing them at Ft. Lauderdale’s Broward International Airport at 4:10 a.m. ENT. nlty has Competition Albert was designated acting Temperatures vylil average near the normal high 34 to 38 and the normal low 19 to 25 through Friday. The tow tonight will be (jnm’g Spaak Speaks Out lor Confab With Reds floor leader by McCormack his formal election had oeen taken for granted until Bolling decided to make it a contest. Albert made his - own entrance official Sunday night, when he formally announced at bis McAleater. Qkla., home that he would seek tile post. ^ From Our News Wires WASHINGTON—Belgian Foreign Minister Paul Henri Spaak said today there should be high-level discussions with the Soviet Union n the Berlin situation. t Spaak] former, secretary' general the North Atlantic Treaty Alliance (NATO), mad* 'the statement at the White House after a TO- minute meeting with Kennedy. A caucus *of House Democrats wiU select the new speaker and floor leader shortly before the 10. Unless Bofling or Albert withdraws before then, the caucus could develop into s knockdown, party-splitting affair that could jeopardise President.Kennedy’s legisla- tive program.1 already In' trouble ini the House. A heavy them and had a fleet of u Jng to-take them to a Miami Beach. Aside from the chance of oeca* stonal very light snow Hurries and a high of 40 through Tuea-day, minor day-to-day changes la temperature with gradual Precipitation will average one-tenth of an Inch in light snow, mostly Thursday. Variable winds at « to 12 miles will continue throughout today. The lowest temperature preced-tog 8 o ’ctock today was 25 de-grees at 3:30 a.m. By 2 p.m, the mercury had climbed to a cool Among....the passengers were Hector and Jose Arismendi Trujillo, brothers of Generalissimo Rafael Trujillo Sr., the man who ruled the Dominican, republic for years until his assassination last May 30. SON WITH PARTY 'Also bn board was the generalissimo’s younger sen Neti, 29, and nephew, Gen. Garcia Trujillo, just replaced as chief of staff of the Dominican army. Hector said he was “very glad” to he In the United States hut Insisted “I can go back to the DomtHteaa republic whenever I wish.” He said Ciudad TriujiUo was calm, when he left and Balaguer "‘is to command of -the gw-1 In Today's Press On Welfare First Is administered —■ PAGE 4. Illegal Laws? State constitution may be unconstitutional to two sections - PAGE 3S. Fallout You’ll need oxygen in shelter In case of firestorm — PAGE Iff. Ask Socrates Teaching machine good only so far — PAGE 41. Markets ............... 49 Obituaries ......... Sports ..............31-49 Theaters .............. H TV * Radio Programs 47 unison. Suit ...........41 Women’s Pages ....... 19-19 JB 'MM THK PONTtAC PRESS. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 20, mi Reids Strengthen Wall in Berlin Hope for Better Turnout at Special School/Election Arthur Daniel Hodges, Lake Angelus Policeman Victim of HeartAttack BERLIN (AP) — The Communists today strengthened the wall dividing Berlin with tank traps - and barriers as if .they -were digging to repel an invasion. Big propaganda signs wefle tacked up on the reinforced barricades in front of the Brandenburg Gate reading: "Anyone who : attacks us will be annihilated.” Jn 1957, a 86.8-million bond issu< for new construction was author ized. Polls will be open until 8 p. m today. Hie Detroit Country Day School will present its 12th annual "Evening of Music" tomorrow with noted conductor Valter Poole directing members of the Wayne State Arthur Daniel Hodges, 84, of 2315 Mann Rid., scout commissioner of Clinton Valley CouncU of. Boy “ g ” * * heart attack Scouts, died of while hunting Saturday in Crawford County. A policeman in the Lake Angelus area, Mr. Hodges worked for the Chamber of Commerce in Missaukee County as recreation director of Lake City-State Park. voters In the school district. Approval of the tax question would only mean an increase of S2.60 for each 81,000 of state equalized valuation, according to school officials. ' He formerly was employed with Pontiac Motor plant protection prior to his Job on the police force. He was with Boy Scout Troop No. 105, Clinton Valley. The Countr^Day School octette "The Yellowjackets” also will offer several vocal selections. Keep Flags at Half-Mast to Saturday for Rayburn FATHER AND SON—New York Gov. Nelson ------------------ * Ar. r**t*»»* Rockefeller is pictured here with his son Michael, Cambridge, Mass., in June 1960, as Michael was 23. who is missing in New Guinea. They are graduated. Michael was.' on an anthropological shown at Harvard University commencement in expedition in New Guinea. Save Rockefeller's Pa/Girl Describes Night a of Terror on Yacht f Continued-From Page One) s jirahu, and young Rockefeller decided to fry for shore to get help. „ , Michael lashed two empty gasoline cans together and started swimming toward the swampy and jungle-choked coastline more than 15 miles awpy, Tising the buoyancy. Herbert Parker lets Wafer Post -To Be Superintendent of Pontiac Department ~ Stai1fHg Dic. T*" Asst, city Manager Robert A. Stierer today announced the appointment of Herbert G. Parker, assistant city water department superintendent, to the position of city water superintendent, j Parker, 85, will take over the fS.lOO-a-year Job Dec. 1. He succeeds retiring water superintendent, Joseph W. Gable. He Has’ been assistant superintendent since coming to Pontiac in July 1955. Parker, 12490 Big Lake Road, Davisburg, is married and has four children. ~ A native of Royal Oak, Hnsuked In the Royal Oak water •department seven years before ; coming to Pontiac. - Parker attended public schools ^in Royal Oak. He is a graduate of ■•Lawrence Institute of Technology *srith a bachelor of science degree Hn; civil engineering. vT He is a veteran or World War II. The appointment was officially made by retiring City Manager Walter K. Will man, who began his {Grminal leave Saturday. Echo Due at 5:02 Tonight If it’s dark enough and clear enough tonight at 5:02, you’ll be •able to see the showpiece of the Hlellites, Echo I, way up high in the north, moving toward the northeast. BOOKS PAS8AGE Hurrying to the scene, the governor booked passage on two flights — a Pan American World Airways flight leaving at 9 a PST (12 noon Pontiac time) and a Qantas Airlines flight leaving at 8:30 p, m. PST (11:30 p. m. Pontiac time). Robert McManus, the governor’s press secretary, said the party very likely would take the earlier flight. slbns on the basis of these reports from The Hague," Me- The PAA flight trill take the governor's party to Tokyo, from they will fly south aboard a Chartered plane. I doubt if 1 can help in the actual search," the governor Jpld newsmen when he reached San Francisco. ‘'But we hope to find jr son well and healthy." By telephone, Johan van Beuge, director for administrative, political and International affairs for New Guinea, gave the New York Joumal-American Wassink’s story of the young millionaire’s disappearance. "I saw Mike swimming In the ocean toward the New Guinea shore yesterday (Saturday NeW York Time),” Van Beuge said. Wasslnk told his rescuers. "I don’t know It he. made It. 1 , hswgn’tjBcrn him since. "He was pushing two empty gasoline cans ahead of him.” Van Beuge to)d the Joumal-American Wassink was clinging (o the prahu, which by then had capsized, when he was rescued. "The canoe was sighted Saturday drifting south toward the sea.’’ Van Beuge said, "Immediate action was taken by airplanes and patrol vessels, but the patrol sets could not reach the ares fore darkness set in. At 9 a.m. Sunday morning, the vessels re-searched the area and found Wassink dinging to the ca-He was in good condition.” ened by screaming and stamping and running noises on the deck. She recognized some of the screams as coming from Brian. Running toward the cotnpanion-way stairs, she passed the central cfjbin and saw her mother and Brian lying on the floor and blood all over; Up on the deck, she saw more blood and Harvey coming at her through the darkness, with something in his hand she thought to be a pail or bucket. ‘Get down there," he growled a deep voice., t He struck her and pushed her back down the stairs. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report , PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Mostly cloudy little change in temperature with chance of occasional very light snow flurries through “Tuesday. Low tonight 30. High- Tuesday 48, wind* variable 6 to 12 miles. Waterford Twp. Sets Hearings on .Street Lights > (Continued From Page One) was fire aboard the vessel, < Harvey had reported. During Harvey's interrogation Thursday, Barber said, the word came that Terry Jo had been saved and Harvey expressed surprise. He Wit hurriedly. He was found the''next day to a motel xim with his veins slashed. Barber said Terry Jo told this story of her ordeal on the Blue-belief HEARS SCREAMING About 9 p.m., Nov. 12, she went to bed in the after port stateroom. SOTneirme^aVerr me was“”awal{-' Two public hearings for additional street lights* will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. at tonight’s Waterford Township Board meeting. Residents to the Oakwood Manor subdivision have petitioned for nine more lights which would Cost the 78 assessments $9 each annually. sion. If approved, the new rate of assessment would be $4.22 to property owfcers of 232 lots. Clerk James ,E. Seeterlin will present discussion material for the establishment of capital improvement charges for water system extensions, primarily for the new Pontiac Shopping MalL «n -Tele-graph Road. He will also ask for recommendations on ft Are line standby rate for the various sprinkling systems installed to the shopping center’! new stores. HEARS SMASHING NOISE As the frightened blonde child went back into her. room, she heard water slosing on the deck and wondered if the captain was washing off the blood. Harvey came into the room holding something she believed to be a rifle, stared at her, then left without saying Anything and went back up on deck. She heard hammering noises on the deck. Water began to rise in her room and when it reached her mattress she again climbed up to the deck ~ saw the ship's dinghy and rubber—life-—raft had : been launched. "Is the boat sinking?” she asked. "Yes,”- Harvey said. Then he Jumped overboard, climbed into the dinghy and disappeared in the darkness of a moonless night. A small cork raft was tied atbp the main cabin and Terry managed to get it loose and climb board with the main deck awhsh. Her story disputed in every detail Harvey’s ftocount of the sinking. He said that.alter the main mast broke, tearing holes In the deck and bottom of the ship, fire broke out and he was unable to to the' others through the flames. Asked if the mother and brother vere dead when Terry Jo saw !hem on the cabin floor, Barber mid the Investigators* did not ask he child to go into any gruesome details. She never saw her father, sister I lor Mary Harvey during t 9 horror-filled night, Barber said, rvey took out a $20,000 double | jj, indemnity life insurance policyI w Mary, who was his fourth or fifth J wife, two weeks before the Blue-* belle sailed from Fort Lauderdale, "for the Bahamas. AT Fhjlof., NATIONAL WEATHER - Snow Is expected tonight on the (Pacific Coast from Central California north andeastward through Rockies as wtfl as to Western Pennsylvania, ffew York and •"'parts of New England. It will, be cooler to the snow areas and ip the Plains states. Health Officers Ask Rabies Quarantine Oakland County health officials today urged the Farmington Township Board of Trustees to request a rabies quarantine on the township at its regular meeting tomorrow night. Dr. John D. Monroe, director of the county health department, The move was suggested when It as found a skunk that bit Mark McKenzie. 4. son of Mr. and Mrs. John McKenzie of 24025 Middle-belt Road, was rabid. About 2-000 workers, under the watchful eyes of 2,000 armed guards, labored feverishly, during the night erecting massive fortifications thar look mere and mere permanent. Deputy Mayor Franz Amrehn of West. Berlin said with bitter emotion: “That's a wall for a thousand years." THICKER AND HIGHER Streetcar tracks were tom up to make tank traps and -the wall was made thicker and higher in Only two more lights have been requested by people in the The operation began at 6 p.m. Sunday, shortly before West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer arHved to Washington to discuss Western strategy to get the wall down. - The wofk began as thousands of West Berliners were returning from cemeteries where they had placed wreaths to memory of soldiers and civilians who died to Germany’s past wars. There was no observance of the day—the equivalent of America's Memorial Day—in the Communist zone. .v U.S. AsksU.N for Congo Move Afraid Oriental, Province Might Secede; Wants Stronger Resolution UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) —The United States, fearful that Antoine Gizenga might withdraw Oriental Province from the Congo, sought today to have the U.N. Security Council call for- an end to all secessionist activities in the turbulent country. delegates scheduled a meeting with delegates ofv Ceylon, Liberia and the, United Arab Republic to urge them to write such general antisecession provision la. a resolution they introduced last Wednesday. The resolution calls for an end to secession-activities only to Katanga Province. The U-nation council was to meet this afternoon. The three-nation resolution lacked the votes pass in its original form and ran the risk of a Soviet veto if -hanged to suit the United States. Acting Secretary General U Thant was prepared to tell the council after the vote what he planned to do in the Congo. He told his .Conga advisory committee Friday that previous resolutions gave him all the authority he needed, but he was expected to welcome any new powers council might grant. LEOPOLDVILLE? The Congo (UPI) Supporters of Congolese leftist leader Antoine Gizenga were reported today to have opened up a second front of agitation in Kivu Province, the area where 13 Italians were slain nine ays ago. Kbportu r caching here said soldiers and officers loyal to Gl-scans , have been trying for the week to stir up the local garrison at Bukavu (Costormans-vllle) against provincial President Jean Mlniha. Reports of similar agitation came out of the Kivu Province town of Kindu two weeks ago just before drunken and mutinous Congolese soldiers shot the Italians — airmen on- a U.N. mercy mission — and hacked their bodies. There was no immediate indication Just what effect the agitation was ^having at Bukavu, which is relatively modem Congolese city on the Rmnda-Urundl border. length. At the Brandenburg Gate ble concrete wall went up, each part to 4 feet thick, about 6)4 feet high and only a few inches apart. 'A tank would have to blast its way through with guns," said a British officer. At the Potodamer Ptatr, once a major crossing point between East and West Berflti, the Communists detaforced the wall with a double row of steel tank barriers. They were shielded by a camouflage net a block long. In the distance, newsmen could see what looked like an, antitank ditch. 'ACTION FOR PEACE’ Sheepish grins or sullen silence greeted most queries to those the East Berlin side. Then one spoke up: "It’s an action for peace.”" ~ ’ Sheets of fiberboard were erect* edto screen the workers, guards priced' peepholes to look west. A Western reporter who put his eye to one of the holes found himself looking down the muzzle gun. He was curtly warned by the Communist guard to . get, back or be shot. A member of Nairnrene Church, Mr. Hodges was also In toe Pontiac. DAV and, toe American Legion groups. Surviving besides his widow Bessie are three brothers Forrest of Roscommln, Burr of Hesperia and Max of Muskegon and one sister, Ethel Shivley of Lake Mary, Fla. > Mr. Hodges’ body will' be at Steuemol F'nneral Home in Roscommon until Wednesday morning when it will be taken to the Young Funeral Horde to Lake City for ce at 1:30 p.m. Burial will be held at Lake City Cemetery under the auspices of the American Legion. Se«k. Missing Plane ERIEAU, Ont.’ Iff) - Police searched Lake Erie off Erieau Sunday night for traces of a small plane believed to have exploded oft shore. A check at Detroit revealed a plane that had left there earlier was overdue at Syracuse, N.Y. Six of the 11 mills being requested would bfe an extension of a current levy and the remaining five mills would be .split with the levying of-82,60 in new taxes and a ‘ of $2.40 for each 81,000 of valuation from the district’s retirement service fund to the general operating budget. — The request tor 11 mills ls/|e-qulred on toe ballot becajMks'of a law which states that the full 5-YEAR PERIOD ■ These new schools andl additions The Birmingham alumnae chapter* of Alpha XTDelta Sorority will meet at 8 p.m. today at the home of Mrs. Sigurd Rue, 1772 Villa Road. Cohostesses will be Mrs.. Richard England and Mrs. Arthur Leslie. __ Elaine Nagel of a Birmingham book staff will review some of the newest fiction, with special attention to children's books for Christ- would be built oyer a fivfe-year period. The last mlllage increase was requested and approved In June 1980. At that time taxes were increased 81.00 for each 81,000. Two months earlier a similar AH flags should be flown at half-, staff daily through Saturday to mourning of -the late Speaker Of Ithe House Sam Rayburn who died Thursday. The flag display at half-staff is provided by federal law setting a mourning period of ten days since the date of death for the speaker of the House of Representatives. Kennedy.Adertauer to Hash Over Berlin The President returned from a four-day western speaking tour less than two hours before meeting with Spaak. Kennedy motored from Andrews Air Force Base, Md., to the White House. STUDENTS PICKET As customary, he entered the grounds through a side gate and did not see a group of midwestern college students picketing -’for DEATH ON HIGHWAY—Earl N. Pate, 49, Flint, his wife Maycella, 40, son Gregory^ 12, and daughter Gall, 13 months, were killed'* Sunday night to a two-car head-on collision two miles north of Clio at the CUo Road-Dixie Highway intersection. Two other daughters were listed tr Photofax In serious condition. The driver of the other car, Timothy O. Morse, 21, of Birch Run and a passenger, Joseph Kenny of Mount Morris were in serious condition at Flint’s Hurley Hospital. State Roads Claim 9 Otherg on Weekend Head-OnCrash Kills 4 in Flint Family CLIO . and you polish at the sqm# time. u. 3-Shelf STEEL Utility Table WHh ELECTRIC OUTLET 38 $5.00 Value l5,*20x30«inehteWe'wimYd«i»fet electrical socket. Heavy-gauge steel with baked enamel finishes in red, white or yellow. Smooth rolling Freshest cakes, chock lull of tasty fruits, flavoring otc. In handy metal tin container. Fresh MIXED NUTS C BUY ELECTRIC APPLIANCES for CHRISTMAS GIFTS-Use Layaway Over 2,000 in Stock—Latest Titles VIEWMASTER 3-D Color Heels 12* OFF, ri!uTttrj»a 98 N. Saginaw Cosmetic Dept. Partial Listing Below: * HUCKLEBIRRYHOUND • RED RIDING HOOD • TOM AND JERRY • POPEYE * TOM SAWYER e RUGS BUNNY • CINDERELLA ' • RUDOLPH REINDEER YOGI BEAR • WOODY WOODPECKER • DONALD DUCK-e LASlsIl AND TIMMY e WtULMM-mt^ W!ZARDl)F OZ Jt /50«RO"-’«r"CAPTAl N~KANGAROO e HEIDI e DISNEYLAND • BAMBI, • SECRET FROM SP, It Grills—Broils—Toasts Electric Broilette S3 As shown—’Roto Broilotte’ Infra red oven-toaster is an ideal unit for home, travels, otc. Built-in cord. $1 holds, ••oeoooeeeemeooooooeooaiaeeeoeoeoeejy eteeee It Barbecues, Roasts, Broils, Fries, Toasts Infra-Red ROTISSERIE Regular $49.95 Value is shown — all chroma Wistaria with built-in motor and automatic timer. It cooks all foods fotf*r and bettor. Only S3 holds in free layaway. Instant Forced Air Electric Heatar Portable heater with safety tip-over twitch to guord against accidents. Instant hoot element. Only $1 holds. ommim .’til 10 Here Are Today’s 7-IURKEY WHHIESS^ ‘ W.SehiefdS 428 East-Rochester Helen Vernot 2441 Wllltomt Dr. - IVwtlla* J. R. Stonbery 111 W. Cornell - Pontioc Chadee Bernard 279 Cedardoie ~ Pontiac -Bob White 2214 Hartford—toohoc lort EngeUman 41 (.Strathmore-Pontiac John Noonan 3385 Bathurst—Auburn Hgh. If your homo is in the above listing, just come into Simms for your certificate which you may present at any Wrigtey Market for your Turkey. SIMMS BASEMENT DISCOUNTS Sale of HOPE LUXURY SHEETS m Ml© || MUSLIN Sheets j PERCALE Sheets 551 twin 179 Slim TWIN Size 155 : TWIN 1 S s,“ I DOUBLE BED........ 1.65 e DOUBLE BID 1.99 130 tlneod count sheet*. Son- g Fine 180 thread count, longer fori/ed, non shrink type. Gleam*.wearing percale in gleaming Pillowcases - Pr. .... 70c 2 Pillowcases - Pr. .....90c Sale of Towels Heavy Hand Towels g/£4>-1" Striped Bath Towels £4for|«' Chenille Bedspreads •V Regular \ $3.49 Value l 99 Washable, pre-shrunk and colorlatl spreads withi'2Vh-incb fringe. Choice ajf white and-colors. ■ • 72x90” RAYON-NYLON Blankets 99 ML Ur's of MU $3.49 ^ Value V 90% rayon and 10% nylon 1 blanket with 3-inch satin binding. Warm, fleecy in coral color only. All Cotton Room Rugs 3x5 199 Raady-to-Hang * 6-FOOT Rayon Drapes : Rug Rmwrs $3.95 Value -PAIR $2.98 Value Populor fk>rol prints in variety of • thibberlied or team backing, woihd&ie beoultful panernt end color*, targe J cotton pile rue*, for any room ip |he n, ready to hang * home. Variety Of solid color! to chaote : psf. mm iAt THX POHTIAC PRESS. MOXSAY, NOVEMBER 20, IMI Texas Holds Welfare Aid Below U. S. railroads pse mare than a!earth btfllraii Oti, enqrigh to ctrcle tfaclwalk. % n - *1!? .tif,*," commissioner of public welfare \ , for 18 years. - - "Ours is a pretty Hmlted pro- e much more liberal than Texas.” y ^ '“I The Texas Constitution puts a $47 million ceiling on funds that can be paid by the state to natch x Tcxm. follows. I , ' By'CARLTON WILSON i ..... -----------H J|i - M........ AUSTIN. Tex. (UPI) - A tight- *«& fisted policy In Texas keeps welfare mis at a minimum and otontoly checks lower than the national average. Payments may bis forced still lower next year because of a unique state constitutional limit, according to John iH. Winters, (Advertisement) ■ tf You Are Under 80 . < . . . let us tell you how you con still apply for a 11,000 Ufa insurance policy (tor people up to age 80) so that you can help taka oare of final expenses without burdening your family. You handle the entire transaction by mall with OLD AMERICAN of KANSAS CITY. No obligation. No one will call on you I Tear out this ad and mall it today with your name, address ant year of birth to Old American Insurance Oq.. 4800 Oak, Dept. LQ31A, Kansas City, Missouri. and dependent children. There is a |1.S million state fund limit on aid to the disabled. Pending constitutional amendments would raise those ceilings to 853 million and 83 million, Winters added. 8ANDEE8 PROGRAM The state assumes .all administrative responsibility for the four major welfare programs. Texas maintains 350 welfgpe offices to process claims. Its 738 case workers have an average work load of 353 cases, double the national average. Some 221,000 Texans over . Davenport, 000 Central. Harvey Davie Jr., 100 Oemun. John R. XUett, 435 Rivard. Donald J. Her, 317 Oneida. Paul D. Wilton. 6737 Oravee. Carl O. Barker, 3067 Oenet. Melvin J. Boothby, 4 East Howard. Jamea X. McMIchael, 47 Perklne. Terrance M. Warren, 3344 .Din!# Hwy. Doyal O. Creamer, 137W Coleman. Henry Dent, 310)4 Xlm. Freeman outlay, 306 Hughea. Charles F, Smith, 4047 Cau EHiabetb. Ignacio t. Alfaro, 320 RumcIJ. ' Raymond Burton Jr., 3W Ofchan ^Walter H. McCauley. 6772 Sutherland. Charles Redmond, 201 Nebraska, William L. Porsyth. JM6_ Keuerlrtg. 'Orchard . 113 ' Harvey J. Van Metar. James C. Allen, 1104 N. (twine). Rudolph X. Dudas, ““ j j . Columbia. _________Ridge. 0033 Farm. Forrest R. Cavenee, Charles A. Daldone, 22110 Hawthorne. Raymond B. Xtapa, 34M7 Wistaria. Kenneth P. 0,Keefe. 2034# Hewberry. Billy O. Byrd, 10401 W. 11 Mile. Lester D. Logsdon, 34400 Hathaway. >rBeauford^f*Welch, 4455 Oakvieta. Walter S. Richley. 3163 lndlanvlew Daniel W. Hall Jr.. 3160 Prembcs. Merlin J. Donnelly. 30T7 Dill. Robert A. Puller. 1110 Signet. James W. Stratton. 4334 Xlmdale John L. Tippett. 3320 Signet. William J. Postle, 2307 Crane. Lawrence B. Caverly. 0100 Jameson. irs a "CINCH” TO SHOP WISELY ON CREDIT Novor. buy more than you can pay back out of in-como. When something comot up and you can't make a payment, let the credit sales manager know the reasons and you can work out a mutually favorable plan. It's as simple as that! Guard Your Credit as You Guard .....Your Good No mo ... To Maintain a Good Credit Record Buy Wisely—Pay Promptly PONTIAC CREDIT BUREAU, Inc. 333 N. Perry St. Pontiac 16, Mich. manentiy -disabled; and S3 out every $5 over that amount. ; FROM THE U.8. Aid to dependent children rome* "almo»t >ntfroiy tTOHrlha g federal treasury. The estate pays only $3 lor the first Si? and 40 per ctoit over that in each check. Most states pay such aid up to age 18, bUt Texas cuts off checks care for children at age 14. (wum to be “bedfast, chairfast or ueed close and constant supervision.” ‘This i& a very restrictive pro- pi in! “We can pay no more ' than $1.5 million In state funds a year and will have to cut payments as more persons qualify for aid.”? s Texas also refuses to pay toward support of r child unless at least one pareRt Is dead, continually absent from the home, or physically or mentally Incapacitated. Winters said only 12,000 of 131,-133 children registered at birth as illegitimate during toe last 13 years are on Texas welfare rolls. It is perhaps harder to qualify for aid to the disabled in Texas than any other state, Winters continued. ment for receiving welfare checks for toe aged and blind. A person's income is subtracted cm a subsistence-level cost of living by welfare workers before cMtig how mudi pay. Typical budgets allow $34 w month for fool for a penfon living It Is also difficult fo qualify «Jr aid to the aged, although Texas is lenient In not requiring ihildren to support parents or aklng a tela on property of dd* iters. To receive old age assistance, a person must be over 65, have no more than $300 in liquid asset! $1,000 in paid up insuraace as part of a limit of $1,500 in pergonal property, Automobiles but not bouses are included in the total property limit. Residence in Texas tor five of ie nine previous years, including law requires a disabled the last year, Is another require- But Winters adds tout local # emments make available small welfare funds to persons either can’t qualify or7 don't get enough aid from .toe state pro- (AdvgrUMmgM) Worry of FALSE TEETH Slipping or Irritating? ■ Don'tr § -— -------*• of sdded oomfort and oacurltj by holding plataa mor* fs.agjgr ----------------- ■ GRAND OPENING / or OUR NEW DINING ROOM TliaiiksgiviMgDay Thursday — Ffiday*-- Saturday and Sunday All thn Turkey and Trimming You Can Eat! ONLY *2.00 Children Under 12 Year* $1.25 Thsra will be sCrsek pastry and otktr ralishts Come One Come All and see our new ./ Mining Room For ReterVotion Cell 887-4950 NICK’S Fine Foods 2630 E. Highland ltd., ana Mock Woot of Pmk lake M. Wouldn’t your little girl or boy love to get a real letter from Santa Claus? Choose one from our selection, FREE at Pontiac State Bank, address it to your child, then mail it in the special mailbox in any Pontiac State Bank office and well have it sent to your youngster . • • by mail . . • direct from Santa’s home tow (Santa Claus, Ind.)! PONTIAC STATE BANK Itfain Office: Saginaw gt| Lawrence -r Auburn Heights — Baldwin at Yale — Drayton Plains — Miracle Mile — M-59 Plana « 9 te 6 Service, 4 East Lawrence \ - Member F.D.I.C. JHE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAV/ XOVEMB ER 20. 1061 ■ FI-VB Reciprocal Landings, Traffic Righto Stir Controversy v /./V Italians Are Getting Tough With U. S~,BritishAfrlines { | The British line wil\ be that ItjCgfi'f Escape blit . , . ! may be better to talk to Khnub - ■ >’ Jchev not that he has dropped thej WAygTTE. Ind, Arch.toet tyeSr^rMine tor n By PHIL N1£W80M UPI Foreign New* Analyst Notes from the Foreign News ' Cables: 'A*'.- EQUAL RIGHTS: The Italians are getting tough w}tb U S. and British airlines over the matter at reciprocal landing and traffic rights. Talks, with the United States on Alitalia’s fpr permission to land at Pacific Coast cities have broken down. • The United States has refused, until Italy turns over traffic statistics, .which Alitalia so far has declined to do. - In return, Italy-is threatening 'to refuse Rome landing rights either t6 TWA or Pan American. peace treaty with Communist East 'Germany titan to do so under •?:' . ■>■ '■::■ • ..[crisis conditions and a possible Washington, Paris; and London.iCharles De Gaulle will meet Inland Macmillan Is expected to urgejlatter ftrophis opposition to talks new and more, dangerous Soviet cme of his first visitors undoubtedly)London within the next.few days,l»tronidy ttpon Pe Gaulle that the.witfa Mnsoow. ,t _ Ithroat. will be Soviet Ambassador Andrei .v ; "'T'*"1- T * •'.. y________________________;__________________]___________ Smirnov. “ Khrushchev is reported to have instructed Smirnov to ask for an ’ early meeting with. Adenauer. Just what Khrushchev has in mind is uncertain, but according to Soviet diplomatic sources* here, Khrushchev would. like to meet with Adenauer In person* prefer* ably,.in Bonn.. iter around the new Tippecanoe County jail he had designed •‘JDon’t tell anybody," he whispered. "I can't get out,' but 1 have found a way to sneak in." INSURANCE DEFENSE: West German Army officers be-1 lieve the West's readinessfto cope I with possible Soviet tank attack, is’ inadequate, and, as result, ] NATO antitank tactics may come: under review. Russia has more than 10,000 first Agprmsh delegation is now m line tanks gOToHMTirERSr Ger-Rome trying to renegotiate BEA,|mamy four time8 more than the] 2^Xr~tanks--HRler used to defeat | BOAC and Alltalift -services tween -the two countries. Aviation sources say the talks so far are having rough going. INFLUENCING PEOPLE: Communist China is reported eyeing the independent Asian kingdom of Nepal as part of a cericen-trated drive to gain allies among independent Asian nations. Peiping, according to reports reaching Western Europe, recently WSftd “some 300 square miles of bonder .territory to Nepal in a , "good Willi, gesture. Red China also made Nepal a present of three' airplanes. France in his blitz campaign of] 1940. Soviet tanks' are known to j vastly outnumber the West's armor and to be of excellent I quality. The West’s major antitank defense now is Western tanks and guided missiles Of a 1 French design. The French' missiles are effec-: tive only at distances of more than 500 yeards. In Western European terrain, combat against tanks at such distance .wiU be rare. officers predict. They think NATO troops must be able to crack tanks at any distance between 10 and 200 yards. EAST TO WEST: 71. ---r- ’’ ’ / When West German Chang/llor I BETTER TO TAIJt: Konrad Adenauer returns to Bonn] British Prime Minister Harold in early December from trips to'Macmillan apdFrench President This Year, Good Taste Calls for Calvert Reserve You know it at once. Here is a decanter of extraordinary beauty- Outstanding! So is the whiskey iMido-*gOOT*taifihg Calvert, the right whiskey^ for today’s taste. When it’s Calvert, whiskey is delicious. So give Calvert Reserve, • the gift they’ll remember with pleasure. Itieeflfw' »ift wrap makes festive the re*ul«r Calvert Reserve pint dufine this holiday season. •MUSE OF CAIVIST, lOUiSVUU. SY,»(Dll M tWOf' SHOP-TONIGHT TILL 9... AND EVERY NIGHT, THANKSGIVING Ml CHRISTMAS! Chai^e ly^iyifiing Chi Yqur Waite’s Flexible CCC Charge Account! WAITE’S HOLIDAY APRON BAR 5 IS NOW OPEN! Frilly aprons, practical aprons, big aprons and small, $1.00 to 3.98 Percale, chintz, pique, waffle weaves. . . sheers v .and nylons. 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I.Mii«»- f.eiel KWHtY <«*•«*« Kir mtnmi THE PONTIAC PRESS Former MillwotkEmploye Praises Downs? Courage Adlai Gives Frank Talk at United Nations tion of the United Party ot the Socialist Revolution Ja~meve-"wMCfi wifriroiaTcly proclaim the absolute dbrilrbl Of Cuba by*international Adlai Stevenson delivered ft forthright declaration at the United Nations when he outlined our 'own position on nuclear bombs and war activities. ★ ★ He asserted: “We do what we say. - - .•'illre Russians vote it and then boh it*" ★ ★ ★ The United States delegate is so everlastingly correct. We do precisely what we say and the whole world knows it. The Russians do precisely what they please at the moment, irrespective of what they have said, before or what is best for the wonjd ■ ★ if [ ★ International relations on the present scale are new and comparatively untried. Similar relations in the past never carried the fearful off-stage threat that is imminent in everything today because of the devastating power of the leading nations. ★ ★ ★ And in this current setup, the Russian nation has clearly established itself as the greatest international liar of all time. Other nations follow the U.S. pattern and follow out their own ticated “Nimbus'’ weather satellite will be ready. ★ ★ it......."7" So far as we kfiow, the Russians have never launched a weather satellite of it® own. When and if it does, it will be interesting to see if the information is treated as a matter for worldwide distribution or as an Instrument of "meteorological warfare.” The Man About Tom 15,000 of Them Turkeys Raised This Year at Our Largest Such Farm tild: The only thing more annoying than Its \ My hat is off to Bill Downes. ' ; ★ ★ ★ In this present world tension when people are building fallout shelters and worrying about anatomic attack, It Is very gratifying to stoa man who has the courage to build again otter suffering such I loss In the fire at Ms plant. : ‘ ' , . dr • • ★ dr ,. -, I worked in Ms plant several years ago and I know he could have , retired than and rested. " Bill Downes, f salute you. ‘Red Control of Cuba ‘Pharmacy Quacks to Be Proclaimed’ Invading Area* The Communist hammer c a m e An ad in the press, listing highly down hard on the head of Fidel advertised prescription drugs, Castro last week. Castro will speak made me believe the Quacks of on Nov. 24/to announce the crea-—Pharmacy are In this'area, luese ‘Toy Guns Can Have Harmful Effect* The power of suggestion was * never more fully demonstrated than in an article in the Los Angeles Examiner. * aye the riigommterff. iff percenters, club prombters, mall order houses, and now die blind leader boys. The “prescrlptoin only” drugs were written up In women’s magazines and newspapers. Stores advertise much talked about products at, * very low price. However, I believe that whenever such an item is sold, the loss is made up on a lesser known product. A Mighty Oak Has Fallen ★ *r ★ One of the most regrettable features in the whole matter is the fact that the Russian people—we mean the 210 million who form the nation —are .blissfully unaware that their leaders are two-tongued, double-crossing tramps. They’re completely irresponsible and are rather smug over the fact to boot. They have their own people so completely bottled up that the Russians only learn what the head Reds decide thex should. ★ ★ ★ Adlai Stevenson reiterates facts that are established. We have aajd it before. We will probably Have to say it again. The U.S. delegate did a particularly good job this time and we applaud him for his presentation. Oakland County’s largest turkey farm Is producing “only" IS,000 of these highly temperamental birds this year. It Is the Travis Farm, at 1400 Mack Road In Addison Township, about 32 miles northeast Of Pontiac, and owned by % Paid H. Travis, who has been In the business 23 years, 18 years at this location. This number is slightly less than last year, but still In an abundance of succulent white meat, drumsticks, and numerous other palate tickling temptations. They have changed the turkey from a mere Thanksgiving delicacy to a year ’round delight. Surely knowing his turkeys from the gobble to the frt fim»t li.....— ■ »r Robert L. Smith, who has been manager of the enterprise fqr 21 years. He tells me that this year’s birds are the best he ever turned out. All are individually wrapped and ready for the oven. Prom killing time to delivery they always are under perfect refrigeration, even in the Travis trucks. While the advance Thanksgiving sale has been a large one, It Is expected that there wlU be plenty for Christmas, or for the every1'day consumption, which has shewn a big increase In recent years. David Lawrence Expounds: One Extremist Breeds His Opposite Three Long Beach teen-agers had hilled a liquor store owner in n holdup. The mother of one ot lhe ttoyo Was shown holding a picture of him In tuU cowboy regalia, guns and ail, when he was 4 years old. How many of you would answer the following physician's ad: Special price appendectomy— 875 with an additional 10 per cent to those holding the membership card, and Friday is double stamp day.” WASHINGTON — There is a lot of '.talk nowadays about “extremists " and President Kennedy on hls'trip to the Pacific Coast devoted a large part of his speeches to what he calls ’’‘extreme opposites.” The President spoke of "two groups of these frustrated cltl-, zens” who resem-ble.eaehotherhr that they believe that "we have only two choices— appeasement war, suicide surrender, humil-l iatlon or holo-| caust.” He implied there' r.aWHENCE is a middle ground —firmness without rigidity, flexibility In negotiations without advancing "any proposals which compromise the security of free Ger- HAPPEN8 AGAIN This happens, too, when rapists and' other criminals are released after repeated offenses as the claim is made that they cannot be punished because of some techni- soclety where controv || flourishes. It will not be eliminated merely by denunciation or excoriation. Extremists too often are begotten by extremists of the opposite side. It may behoove some of the technicallyminded In the judiciary, Pharmacy is a vital member ef the health team. Your visit to the doctor isn’t much good without the dispensing of the medication. Gerald Dunsmore, RPh Pharmaceutical Asm. callty, such as a prolonged delay fer lnstmcei t0 restudy the doc-in arraignment. Gun killings often involve teenagers whose parents -permitted !U[ them to play with toy guns. Some parents are so Ignorant pf the principles of cMld psychology. It never occurs to them that .these rfirtrftltS toys, coupled with suggestions im- * w MI110 planted in their children’s minds gy JOHN O. METCALFE by movies, comics and TV shows m j r ^ darling in which someone is always being ' - / > - - killed by gunfire, are creating po- We’re quite in agreement with a number of our readers who assort that tho weather bureau has ' done a lot of goofing in Its re* cent predictions. This reminds me that the Old Parmer's Almana^jmakes this prediction for tho Pontiac area this week: “Cold; then warm; then raw; Then worst storm you ever saw.” A tot Of education Is needed, of comac;~-ay*to"What'to’lil? II iff” a constitutional right. But even so, the cltlsen becomes bewildered ns he reads that a known Communist, against whom testimony from undercover agents of the FBI Is produced, simply takes the Fifth Amendment and gets aday with It, What is the average man to think when he reads that well-meaning citizens of prominence even want to abolish legislative committees of Congress which have been P_______H _ specially authorized to investigate .mans and West Berliners, or en- Communist activities in this coundanger their ties with the West." try? Unreasoned extremism some-The average man may not quite times results, understand the nuances of such words, and he is hardly to be condemned for saying that all he wantstor his own government to be reowmezuicril83rid"^‘prfiiclple', ....----—-—-— ™ and not to give the impression that . . TT o it is weak-kneed or wavering or Dr. Harold Hyman Says: begging tor mercy. It shall never be my fault trine of “a clear and present dan- SltocS jser," as qut ^JhQuaandiuot.-^ - , -- suddenly judge'Leamed Hand. In a famous opinion rendered in 1950 in a case against organizers of the Communist party in America, he wrote: ‘‘The question before us, and the only one, is how long a government, having discovered such a conspiracy, mttst wait. When does the conspiracy become a ‘present danger'? . . .” (Copyright, 1961) The Almanac By United Press International Today is Monday, Nov. 20, the 324th day of the year with 41 more to follow in 1961. Hie moon is approaching its full phase. The morning star is Venus. THOUGHTS for today Remember the former things I old; for I am God, and there none like me. — Isaiah 46:9. stars are Jupiter and Saturn. On this day In Mstory. TO BE DEPLORED Extremism is to be deplored, but It is a natural phenomenon in a God alone is true; God alone is great; God alone is God. — L&bou-laye. In 1868, the Grand Army of the Republic composed of veterans ot the Union Army Held Its first national encampment at In- halt . . For, you see, I am determined .... Love like this shall never end ! . . And that nowhere In fiie future ... We will part as friend from friend . . Thus, I pledge to you, my darling . . . Twice a lifetime filled with work . . And that as your faithful lover . . . Duties I shall never shirk . . .. And if wedding vows should join us ... I shall bring along our . way.... All the happiness' In marriage . . . You could dream of for each day ... So, my darling, I am hoping ... That because of our romance ... You will show no hesitation ... In acceptance of this chance. (Copyright, 1981) In 1914, the State Department said passports in the future would be issued only if . photographs were attached to the official papers. Smiles it of running down. U.S. Shares Findings on Weather Research Weather and the cold war go hand in hand with no secrets. At a meeting in Washington with 28 nations, including the Soviet Union, the United States is making available every facet of its weather satellite program. ★ ★ ★ No doubt this willingness- to share the plethora of information from one and a half years of intensive experimentation wi+i prove upsetting to those who see military significance in weather resehreh. Actually, we should not worry needlessly aboot giving up this information. For a number of years this country and Russia have exchanged information. ★ ★ ★ Further this country's ability to predict the fallout pattern of the current Soviet nuclear tests in the Arctic depends in part on daily weather reports and observations mnrin available by Russia. Qf course, the Soviet meteorologists will have the benefit of information that costs this Nation millions of dollars and thousands of man hours. Three “Tiros” weather satellites, equipped with TV cameras capable of transmitting cloud cover pictures back to earth, have been launched by the United States since April 1960. ★ ★ ★ i Results have exceeded all expectations and some data are no# being used in actual forecasting. Four more “Tiros” satellite* are scheduled for launching before , in id-1962 when the more sophfs- 'i . /; v ■*¥, ■; Only five entries now remain In our football contest. They picked Arlsona State to win Sat-urda.v’s fame with Detroit University, which Arisons won, 48-6. The four survivors who ptekod Detroit are eliminated. The five remaining contesanta divide their Many voices are heard on foreign policy. Conflicting statements by a variety of spokesmen In the West tend to confuse large numbers of Americana. But the really Important question Is: What cause* all this “extremism?” It’s Easy to Cut Down Costs of Medical Care Perhaps it Is easier to understand what provokes extremism ti b domestic f By II. T. HYMAN, M. D. Major items in many household budgets are the costs of medical care. At the moment, many thoughtful Individuals, committees nificant number of patients treated for obesity ever achieve permanent suppression of excessive caloric intake.” choice on the Thanksgiving fame: Detroit Lions, 3; Green Bay Packers, 2. about which the same complaint Is of public-spirited individuals and made aw carefully examined, governmental agencies are trying Thus, the other day Vice Preident to reduce these coots. Lyndon Johnson, In a speech at' r ot Dr. Hyman', leaflet ___________ Retirement,’* aend 10 cents i Dr. Hyman, cara. ot The Pontia- In 1945, the Nuremburg, Germany, war crimes tribunal began hearing evidence on 24 top German leaders of World War U. In 19M, Gen. John Hull tamed over command ot the UJ. and U.N. forces In the Far East to Gen. Maxwell Taylor. A thought for the dp: English novelist Anthony Trolope said: “Always remember that when you go Into an attorney’s office door, you will have to pay for it, first or One thing certain not to come" to those who wait is the time they lose. After, being broken, your word Is Just one of those things that Is not quit* as good as It was. Even a man can he envied if he has a nice figure—in government bonds. last." It’s the Irony of life that lets a justice of the peace marry a couple who spend the rest of their litas fighting. Oettlng somewhat facetious, Orson Kendrick of Pontiac Lake phones that a swarm of bees took up their habitation last summer in his fish house, and he wonders If they won’t make It hot for him when he moves It on the ice this winter. Detroit, said that “the Communists are going to wage a war of doubt and disunity" and that ‘‘the leaders of world communism know that in this Ugly business they find many unwitting allies within our own-society.” ..A sample of what modem transportation means is found Iri the case of Orlando Flanders of Lake Orion, and a number of others, who drive hom# each night after a day’s deer hunting in the woods above Stand-lsh, returning to the hunting grounds each morning. He spoke of those who are “urging the people to distrust their own elected leaders, their own long-cherished institutions,” and added that “these are the people who scream that the Judiciary is biased and that its decisions ought not to be obeyed.” It is quite a pioneer who remembers when our lakes w e i* * safe for Ice skating on Thanksgiving, but such was the case a majority of the time. Changing seasons!!! Going north a few days early to get the deer spotted for the opening, Anson Brearley of Clarkston writes home from Mio: “Good weather; everything fine In woods; lots of fresh tracks—but see no deer.” Whentbe average-American, however reads that the Supreme Court'Of the United State# again and again renders decisions whose effect is to help Communist parly members in this country to avoid jail, and when, after six years of litigation, the Department of Justice lawyers go into court, throw up their hands and declare they cannot hope to convict some known Communist because of technical toms, deficiencies In the law as Inter- * * * preted by the Supreme Court, it For example, scarcely a week is natural that resentment should goes by without notice of the Intro* be aroused. This way, they hope to .permit families In middle and lower Income brackets to get the benefits of modern medical care without being forced to practice economies in the purchase of essentials, or of making undue sacrifices in their purchases of nonessentials, If you are fike me fan that yon begin to grow Impatient with long drawn out investigations, you might consider doing a Utile, homework on the subject. To help you get started, here are a few general suggestions: The cost of advertised proprietaries far exceeds that of preparations of similar action purchased by IKelFttw or generic names. , You can self-medicate wlth drugs ’ tha) only relieve symptoms, such as appetite-killers, cough medicines, laxatives, iron tonics, vitamins, tranquilizers and sleeping medicines. Or you can insist that your doctor prescribe these for you. Either way Is wrong. You should not be treating your symp- * toms hut the causes of your symp- Case Records of a Psychologist: Wives: Lose That Waddling Figure By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE K-455: Helen M., aged 37, Is a plump housewife mentioned a few weeks ago In this column, w h q a e husband was growing indifferent to her. Six months had passed when Hel-cawtlnentered my office. But this she looked like coed, tor she lost 30 lbs. I your waddling torso? Get their mates when they also out "Dr. Cr Most wives are not very milch On the other hand, If you wives interested to sex . at least dislike erotic matters, one of the until they think they have lost their mates. Then they suddenly get frantic about, the subject and pour on strong perfume or adopt new hairdos in a belated attempt to excite their platonic motes. Verbal Orchids to- The Country Parson OYe ■„; > Pola Negri Reflects on ; !$ . ?' © fc Valentino Romance By BOB CONSIDINK , NEW YORK -r Remember Pol? Negri? My wife end I had dinner with the Sultry star of a bygone Hollywood the other night ih San Antonio, where she Uves with her friend Margo West, composer, art patron and operator of a 300,000-acre ranch. Polita, as her friends cal) the Polish-bom siren who caused dad’s heart to backfire like a 1926 Velie, is still a striking looking woman. The years have been clement. She sang "Paradise" for us after dinner, the song that1 became Iter .theme after starring in a hard-! breathing flicker with Adolphe Menjou. She sang If as well as she had birth* early days of talking pic-lures, she Is still emotionally . moved by It. Miss Negri was the last love of |i Rudolph Valentino, a star so farh beyond' 'Rtday^r-frwBB hoys of [Which time they were engaged to screen and TV as to beggar be married, Valentino; was spilt description. He had come to this feasthy hi* studio to prombte what country from Italy as a young man titled out to be his last "picture. and had miracufously found stardom alter worljpg as a gardener, a short-order cook and dance instructor. Polk went to the station in, Lob Angeles to bid him farewell. She was working on a picture for Paramount and could not join him in New York, tor their marriage, until she had completed it.’ She told us the other night that as the train pulled out of the L.A. station she had a sudden that ahe would never again. She ran She had come from Poland established European star, swept to unprecedented celluloid fame as "The Sheik.” She became a kind of stereotype of all that was tempting, forbidden and ex- | plosive. , j. the platform, weeping and trying Pola mad? Brigitte Bardot look!.to shout attove the clatter of the tike madam chairwoman at a DAR] place. But the doors had dosed. convention denouncing Sen. Barry. ,, . ,_. . Goldwntcr's liberalism ’ L Valen“™ h*d been «uffert>J* [from an, ulcer tor some time. He INKVITABI/K ■> itook a turn for the worse in New H. was inevitable that they would [York, but the news was withheld [ meet and match as they separately [from Pola — she told us in a Still d from one towering snecessi woebegone way. It-look three days greater peak. In 1927. bylto travel from L A. tO.N.Y. in 19271 as opposed’to (our and a half hours today, Even* If she went just to shake hhnd* with him it would have meant a week’s delay in sumlng her picture, ■v ,LVt ft* - ». Then, one morning af 6 a.m. as she was being made tip for her first scenes on the picture, Pola asked, ‘‘Do you have any statement to make about Rudy Valen-j i death?” fe were to fyave been married one week from that day," La Negri, now in her early 60s, remembered the other night. SOKNKS IN N.Y. The death of the world's great-; c«t film star at the age of 32 caused scenes that one would find hard’ to believe today. The crowds were so great at Campbell's, where lie was laid out in New Ybrk, (hat th$y broke through neighboring plate glass windows. Women wept and fainted dead away, Valentino, who had died of a perforated ulcer, lay )n magnificent state under glass for severe) days, while trains carried toe Wack-wardrobed Pola across the country. She claimed the body funeral service at St. Loyola and rode to the same train with It back to Hollywood. The “women In black’’ Who pay an annual visit to Ms grave there, Miss Negri said with a flash of old-time fire the other night, are phonies. ■ She told Us something of their I last illusion. life together, after they fell in love. It somebow did not quite jibe what I had always thought might be the way the two spent an evening together. I always liked to think of leopard skin, soft lights, incense, long cigaret holders, she in something slinky, he in his sheik’s robes or as the matador in “Blood and Sand.’’ i3|6sS # * "Rudolph loved to make spaghetti and meatballs,” Pola said. 'He had his own special recipe. I never tire of it, and I will never share with anyone else the secret of his meat-sauce. There was a slight sound in the handsome drawing room Antonio as she finished, .almost as if a bubble had burst. It may have been caused by the rupture of my RIDING FROM HUNTERS—With hunters running rampant In the/Colorado mountains, who can blame these three deer for seeking refuge behind the tombstones In a cemetery west of „ Ar Photofu Denver? The deer apparently hpd jumped a high chain-link fence to get into the cemetery. State game and fish department officers removed the deer and chased them back into the hills. Strife V6te Set at Studebaker Soufh Bend UAW Local May Walk Out if Pact Not Reached by Nov. 30 SOUTH BEND. Ind. (B - The 6.300-member local of the United Auto Workers Union at the Stude-baker-Packard Corp. here will conduct a strike vote Tuesday. Officials announced Sunday the members will decide by secret ballot whether they want to strike U negotiators fall to arrive al an agreement on a new contract hy (hv Nov. SO dead- Packard’s director of industrial re-1 latlona. has contended ”A strike atl this time would seriously affect >ur mutual'future." The company has claimed that union demands at the present rate of automobile produoflon would Inrcnaae Its labor coat* more than $10 million a year. Neither side would disclore tho key Issues. Studebaker reported tosses of about $10 million in the first three quarters of this year through automotive operations and has been trying to hold the line on labor costs until its financial situation improves. Current contract talks are toward an agreement which would replace a three-year contract which expires Nov. 30. Both man-ugcmenl and union have declined •al -the specific “We’re keeping on wttl gotiations with the company and| we want to avoid a strike if it is at| all possible." said Lester J. Fox.j vice president of UAW Local 5. i American boys of age 14 today! are 3.9 inches taller and 31.3 pounds heavier than 14-ycar-old boys in 1877. according lo a recent * ■ * * [comparison of physical measure-1 Macmillan, Studebaker-iments in schools. Gets in Jam Trying to Fix His Furnace DETROIT the furnace before he reached the valve. Shouts brought his wife Clio. [ who spent 45 minutes trying to > Tttvfitnr.-She couldr^t and called , police. Officers grabbed Darga’s legs, j turned him over and yanked him j out. Darga was treated f smoke inhalation and was i ported in satisfactory condition. I ■“Serve Vp» a Bigger Christmas NEXT YEAR With a Federal Savings CHRISTMAS CLUB CHECK JOIN OUR '62 Christmas SAVINGS CLUB » 761 W. Huron Street • Downtown *Dr*ytonPlatns » Rochester > Welled Lake » Milford fuM -JWB» STOR MIRACLE MILE •list Anniversary LAST WEEK Ladies9 Untrimmed Coats Regular to $50 >39 Ladies9 Bulky Orion Sweaters “ Regular to $8.98 ■ $444 Ladies9 Costume Jewelry Regular to $2.00 77' Girls’ Winter Coats Regular $24.98 $1799 The Colder the Weather.. .The Mora You’ll Appreciate Gee’s Dependable Service and Better Quality Fuel Oil! Gee, Pontiac's foremost fuel dealer for the past 37 years, ha* always1 insisted on the finest quality fuel for his cuitomeirs ... You may rest assured that when there is a better fuel oil to be had, Gee will have it. You depend on Gee, your fuel oil distributor for complete heating satisfaction, so this Winter join the thousands of families in Pontiac and Oakland County . . . Get clean, warm healthful heat . . . SWITCH TO GEE. Just on* call fo FE 5-81 81 will start you toward a Winter of warmth, comfort and *conomy as our automatic supply assures you of always having plenty of better quality fuel oil when you need it. . . delivered to your home in new, modern GMC trucks, meter equipped for accuracy. Start today , . . Get complete Heating Satisfaction . . . Dial FE 5-8181. NO MATTER WHERE YOU LIVE, YOU, TOO, CAlf ENJOY DEPENDABLE GEf SERVICE . . . Gee’s new modern GMC trucks (meter equipped for accuracy) distribute better quality fuel oil in Pontiac, Drayton Plains, Waterford, Clarkston, Orion, Auburn Haights, Bloomfield Hills, Keago Harbor and the surrounding area, so, no matter where you live, you too, can enjoy a winter of warmtij and comfort. GIT HOLDEN RED TRADING STAMPS AT NO EXTRA CHARGE. REDEEMABLE FOR VALUABLE PREMIUMS. m x. Meats Long Sleeve Ban-Lon Shirts Regular $8.95 $^41 Boys9 Tom Sawyer Flannel Shirts Regular $2.79 $141 mwjpiiiipiij Boys9 Parka Jackets Regular $13.98 m*1 Use a Lion Charge i i. THE POSmac PKl^ri^^ AP Photofu AFTER DALLAS FIRE—Firemen administer oxygen to Joy Buckbee, 19, an elevator operator, following her respue in the Mercantile National Bank Building in downtown Dallas. She was trapped more than an hour near 27th floor during fire that damaged the 27th and 28th floors of the building, one of the tallest In the downown area. Chrysler Local 2-1 in Favor of New Pact Missing Woman Still Batiks ; Police in East DETROIT OB — A substantial number of members in United Auto Workers union locals Chrysler Corp. plants have voted to ratify the new three-year UAW-Chrysler contract, UAW Vice President Norman Matthews nounced Sunday night. LINCOLN, Mass. (AP)-It will be four weeks Tuesday since Joan Risch, 31, vanished from her blood-flecked kitchen but there is still no explanation of her disappearance. Maflh'ews, dir&tor of the unidn* Chrysler department, said results thus far show contract ratification by more than a two to one' majority. A few locals still have not reported their vote, blit these would not mathematically change the final result, he indicated. Matthews termed the outcome of voting "very satisfactory." I Japanese Postal Union Slows Up Mail Delivery TOKYO (Ut»n — More than 280,000 undelivered pieces of mail were piled up in Japanese post offices today as the result of a slowdown by the 220,000-member Japanese Postal Workers Union. The union wants 40,000 temporary workers given permanent status. Jt was feared the slowdown would completely paralyze delivery of “ heavy year-end mails. fhVlh have come up With nothing,’’ said DisL Atty* jQh.n^ Droney. The missing woman's husband,’ Martin, commutes daily to his job at a Fitchburg paper company and spends spare time and weekends caring for his two children— Lillian, 4,' and Douglas, 2. The father says the children are "doing fine.” “They are healthy and appear happy," he said Sunday, “although I’m certain they miss their mother very much.” ■ As for himself Risch said, “I am living just one day at a time." Publisher, 75, Succumbs NORTHFIELD, Minn. (API-Herman Roe, 75, publisher of the Northfield News for 51 years, died Saturday of a heart attack. Roe was a former president of the National Editorial Association and .served the NEA as a field director ‘from 1928 to 1932. He was bom in Porters,. Mills, Wis. rca Victor ■MMKi TV is better than ever! Many OlMn ♦# Choose From SPECIALLY PRICED! 5 ■266TUM-H”,' *1 400 yards.. Batter ST'-AB” Drayary Fabrics 9 cotton . , . prints-_.. y>_l ids O textured damasks" Yd. Reduced I GIRLS’ CARDIGAN SWEATERS O orlon acrylic 9 four colors . 0* sizes 6-14 *2 240 pairs... 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MIRACLE MILE STORE or FOR MEN 10 MEN'S LUGGAGE 21" Companion case of durable vinyl reinforced with fiberglas. Plywood frame. Jet age styling. 30 HOODED SWEATSHIRTS 12 00 19 TWO-PANT SUITS Slim 3-button style, yeAr 'round weight. Shadings'of brown, grey, or blue. Broken 80 PAIR STRETCH SOCKS 48 SPORT SHIRTS 100% cotton short sleeve shirts, sanforized, various colorful plaids. 14 ALL-WEATHER COATS 100% nylon, full fashioned. Easy care with luxury touch. Small, medium, large. 29 BAN-L0N KNIT SHIRTS Cotton gabardine with zlp-irt orlon acrylic pile lining. Machine washable. 72 FLANNELETTE PAJAMAS 100% cotton, sanforized, proportioned fit, button shirt, elastic Waist band, small, medium, large. 4488 44* 1°° 1488 400 244 FORBOY3 12 TODDLER SN0WSUITS 90 CORDUROY PANTS 100% cotton corduroy, double knee for extra wear, elastic waist, washable, sizes 4 to 10. goo 222 FOR WOMEN 200 MATERNITY WEAR ITEMS 1 66 120 PAIR DRIVING GLOVES 50% wool, 50% rayon, leather palm, brown, .* grey, red, beige, sizes small, medium, large. 120 PAIR SUMLESS HOSE 400 needle thread, first quality, colors Pebble, Suntan, sizes 9 Vi and 10 only. J00 2^*1 56 FLANNELETTE GOWNS 24 BOUFFANT HALF SUPS ... ... 100% nylon, coral color. Reduced to | *° jj >00 dear, 3 or 6 layers of nylon net. 160 PAJAMAS AND GOWNS 100% cotton batiste baby doll pajamas and waltz length gowns, wash and wear, small, medium, large. 26 BETTER SKIRTS Wool and wool blends in sheath and pleated ▼ HI styles, broken sizes. Buy now end save. 99 COTTON DRESSES T88 Quality cottons In shirtwaist jmd. .sheath ---—‘ WOW*' Styles.-AssOfted-prlTm aMd'sond colors. 77 BETTER DRESSES Auortad Hvto* In wool knit, cotton knit, t# . $1 C Amel triacetate Jersey, silk, end nylon. Q | Broken ilzet. 33 JUNIOR SIZE WOOL SUITS 5 different models to choose from. Boxi# and fitted styles. Junior slzas 7' to 15. 120 CHRISTMAS CORSAGES Decorate your coat, sully ®r dr®** with a holiday corsage. Many styles to choose from._ 24M 100 FOR INFANTS 200 CUWUB0UTS ..100'%-cotton-corduroy .....Sizes. .'AJftXJJdteli... for the little one’s exploring. ] MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS Rag. $7.95-SM.9S value. $590 MIN'S HATS Rag. $11.50-$20 valuet . $990 MEN'S PAIAMAS Rag. $4.50 ta $5.95 values $290 MIN'S SHOES Rag. up ta $19.95 valuai $1Q90 LEISURE COATS Value* ta $19.95 $6«o MIN'S SUCKS Rag. S4.95-S5.95 value. $290 MIN'S JACKETS Rag. $S.9$-$12.9$ value* $390 ' MIN'S PAIAMAS Rag. $5.95 ta $7.95 value* $390 ALL HOSp fgJt|! Stretch, Nylon, Carton, Sport GG^ MEN'S SWEATERS Sleevelet*. Raq. $5.95 ta $1.95 values $3$o MEN'S SUCKS Ragl $S,95-$12.95 value. $490 MIN'S JACKETS Rag. $11,95 » $14.95 val. $B*o MIN'S VESTS Rag. $5 t* $7.95 value* .. $290 ALL BELTS RGj Re-grouped far "PHaa* 2" GW OPEN MONDAY and ' FRIDAY TIL 9 ALL SALES _____ ... ____ 18 N. SAGINAW FINAL a ALTERATIONS AT COST a CITY PERMIT NO. 2020 wwr»ih,n«nd'mow.■ OPEN I i :RI l.r B & MON . ’til 9 P.M. THE frONTIAd, MOfrPAy XOVjEMBEjR 20, 1961 ‘ KlKVIy;. 2 Blazes Cause $1,000 Damages, fity Firemen Say FumacelsBIamed for Blaze at Home . Damages were estimated nearly $1,000 in two Ores Sunday afternoon and evening, according to Pontiac* firemen. * A fire at 9 p.m. caused an estimated $800 damage to the build' fog and $200 to contents at die Some of Robert Moore, 563 S. Jessie St. the blase- was ‘caused by careless smoking. It !was confined, to an upstairs bed-•room of the two-iioryframe I An overfleated coal stove started a fire On a closed back porch at the home of Clarence Griffin, 29 Bagley Ave., at 3 p.m, *’ Damages were estimated at $275 to the building and contents, said firemen. Pontiac Area Deaths NEW HUDSQN — A faulty coal furnace is blamed for a tire yesterday that caused an estimated $4, 000 damage to a two-story frame home here at Pontiac Trail and Idartindale Road, Sooth Lyon Fire Chief F. J. Knapp said the blase spread from the fornaCe up an inside wall and into the attic of the large farav house. The occupants of the house, not yet identified, ware not at home when the fire was discovered at 5:30 p.m. ' HENRY L. BUNDY ' Henry L. Bundy of |94.\L*k»-wood prive died of a heart attack Saturday at his home following a brief illness! He was 75. Mr. Bundy wak a retired engineer, and former empioye of me Cadillac Motor Co. and a member Of the BPOE No. 810. Surviving besides his wi Margaret, is a son Palmer G. at Davisburg. Service will be 1:30 p. m. Tuesday at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Orient Peace Corpsmen DAR Es SALAAM, Tanganyika OHthirty-five American Peace Corps volunteers have completed orientation courses at the government's natural resources center at Tengeru. Doneison - Johns funeral service is available to oil families in the rural areas surrounding Pontiac. You may coll us from anywhere within many miles — with"' . assurance of prompt serv- . ice. MBA. JAMBS CLARK Mrs. James (Lottie May) Clark, 55, of 25565 Deborah Drive, Detroit, formerly of Pontiac, died Sunday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital foi-lowing“an"&eiii 6F several WjtbkC Mrs. Clark was a member of the American Field Service and the Detroit YWCA. Survivors include her husband, a son, James C., and a daughter, Janice 1., both at home; and a sister, Mrs. Kent Webb of Pontiac. Service will be 1:30 p., m. Wednesday at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Buriat will follow at Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. • JAMES GOODAR James Goodar, of 1342 Nokomis t„ Waterford Township, died of heart attack Saturday. He : Goodar was a retired self-employed carpenter; Surviving are his widow, Katie, three sons Charies and Vernon Sidelinker, both of Waterford Township, and Isaac Sidelinker of Hazel Park. Three daughters Mrs,. Robert Francis of Flint, Mrs. Ray Morrison and Mrs. Herman Lauer, both of Waterford Township also survive. Service will be 1 p.m. Tuesday at C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor, with burial Parkview Memorial Cemetery. MRS. GILMAN A. GREEN Mrs. Gilman A. (Rose B.) Green, of 50 Washington St. died Saturday at the age of 83. She had been ill three years. iSSPwSF'wtff'W'IIW p.mr’TuieS'" day at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial at Andersonville Cemetery. M.) Randall,.75, of 986 Boston Ave. will be 10 a. m. Tuesday at Donel-son-Johns Funeral Home. Burial will follow at Kingston cemetery, Kingston. Mrs, Randall was dead on arrival Friday at Pontiac General Hospital after suffering a heart attack. She had been ill several months. MBS. CAUL DAVIS . NEW HUDSON — Service for Mrs. Carl (Beryl L.) Davis, 72, of 29901 Lyon St.< will be S p.m. Wednesday at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Burial will be in New Hudson Cemetery. A member of the South Lyon Presbyterian Church, Mrs. Davis died at home yesterday after a year-long illness,------:........ Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Wayne Walker of New Hudson, and Mrs. Floyd Coppinger of Pontiac; two Sons, Bemud of New Hudson and Donald of Brighton; and 11 grandchildren. llome until THOMAS - Service for Ir» 1. Wbdnesdaft Seale, <9, of 3991 Thomas Rood, will be 1 pjn. Wednesday at^os-sardet & Reid Funeral Home, Oxford. Burial will be in Liberty Cemetery, Mexico, Mo. Mr. Seale died early today at his home following a long illness. He was president of foe Thomas Commuinty Association and a member of foe Thomas Methodist Church and the Methodist Men’s dub. > Surviving are bis wife Ruth; son, Gordon of Thomas; two daughters, Mrs. Elizabeth Reptz of Utica and Mrs. Lois Ryckman of Lake Orion; two brothers and fiite grandchildren. The family suggests that memorials be made to the Thomas Methodist Church Building Fund. COMMERCE TOWNSHIP - Wtl-I liam E. Coffman, vice president! of the Commerce Oil and Products! Co., died of a heart attack yes*! terday at his home, 746 Sherbrooke! MBS, AGNES SHEPEBD |St. He was 30 years old. | ■LAPEER — Service for Mrs. ★ ★ a Agnes Sheperd, 83. of 1123 W. Ore- Service will be 10 a.m, Wednes-gon St,, was to be held day at—8t. Williams.. Cafotite. MBS. JENNIE DRAVLING DRYDEN - Service for Mrs. Jennie Dravling, 90, of 4031 S. Mill will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at St John’s Episcopal Church. Burial will be in Thornville Cemetery. Mrs. Dravling died yesterday at Lapeer County General Hospital after a four-week illness. Her body M be at Muir Brother! Funeral Home, Unlay City,.until noon tomorrow. Surviving are several nieces and today at Muir Brothers Funeral Home with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery. Mrs. Sheperd died at the, home of her daughter, Mrs. / Gwinn, Saturday morning. Surviving besides her daughter are three grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. JUDITH A. KEENAN .WALLED LAKE — Service for Judith A. Keenan, 10-year-old daughter of Mr.' and Mri, George F. Keenan Of 77 Leota Drive will be 10 a.m. Wednesday at St. Patrick’s .Catholic Church, Union Cemetery, Pont A fifth grader at,St. Patrick’s School, Union Luke, Judith died today in Ann Arbor Hospital after a long illness. The Rosary will be said 8:30 ,m. Tuesday at the Coats Funeral Home, Drayton Plains. Surviving besides her parents Donna, Margaret, Mary Lou and Maureen', all at home; a brother, George, also at home; her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Keenan of GolumblavlUe and Mrs. Julia Kleb-ba of Oak Park. FRETTER’S GONE WILD Surviving besides arfe her husband are.a daughter, Mrs. Lucille Nagy of*mlay City; a son, WU-iard of Imlay City; three rioters, Mrs. Emma Lubahn of Imlay City, Mrs, Anna White of Almont and Mrs. Ida Trainzow of Diirand; two brothers, Herman and William; Whittkopf, both at imlay City; and grandchildren. Heart Attack Kills William Coffman,j Oil Co. Executive Church, Walled Lake. Burial will j be in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Southfield. MRS. CLAUDE WINSLOW IMLAY CITY — Service for Mrs. Claude (MkrthaL Winslow, 63, of 759 N. Van Dyke, will be‘at 2 p.m. Wednesday at St. Paul’s Lutheran Church. Burial will bfe In Imlay Township Cemetery. * Mrs. Winslow died yesterday at the Community Hospital near Almont after an extended illness. Her b< Mr. Coffman was a veteran of the Korean War and a mem-her of the Multi-Lake Conservation Club and of the Knights of Columbus. The Rosary will be said at 8 . .m. tomorrow at the Richardson-Bird’ Funeral Home. Wailed Lake. Surviving besides his wife, Rose-tin, are three daughters, Mary Paula A. and Rene M., anc son, Thomas W., all at home; his parents, .Mr. and Mrs. Charies E. Cbffman of Commerce Township; a grandmother, Mrs. Elizabeth Schneider of Ohio, and two Consumers 'V# CENTER Discount Dept. Store OPEN DAILY 9 to 9 P.M. AND SUNDAY 12 to 6 P M. NEWSPAPERS WANTED HIGHEST PRICES PAID WE PICK IIP CHURCHES and SCHOOLS FE 2-0209 $ 88,000 COLOR OLLIE FRETTER on* of Patroit's original discounter* TV SALE We purchased hundreds of |962 color TV sets just for this fqbulous sale. Included in this fresh inventory is all the famous brands such as Zenith, RCA, and Admiral. If you ate at all considering a new TV it certainly will pay you to stop in at Fretter* this week. NEW PORTABLE TV SETS Yei it’s true . . . Ollie Fretter will sell you a brand new 1962 Admiral Portable TV for only 50c with the purchase of any color TV this week. Offer ends November 25, 1961. Come In Todayl CARRY THEM AWAY HHhrtpoirdr ALL-PORCELAIN Automatic WASHER Fully Automatic Washing at a Budget Price 10-lb. tub capacity, automatic water' temperatures, > triple rinsing, water-saving partial load control, full-time underwater lint filter, dual g* automatic detergent and dry m * bleach, automatic sediment ™ swirl out, convenient fop loading. oad control, full-time 136 model LW125 30 Days Exchange ■ GENEROUS TRADE ■ FAST 24-H0UR ■ NO MONEY DOWN H Courteous, All If Nat Fully Satisfied | ALLOWANCE M PtLIVERY U ON ANY PURCHASE M the Sals Servi Discount Makes the* Big Difference - Prove it to Yourself - Service c FRETTER APPLIANCE MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER S. TELEGRAPH at SQUARE LAKE ROAD Ope.i Daily 10 A.M. "til 9 P.M. - FE 3-7051 - Sunday 10 A.M. 'til 7 P.M. there are only two kinds of'62 cars... those with Wide-Track and those without (and yon know who has Wide-Track!) SElE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED PONTIAC DEALER IN METROPOLITAN PONTIAC PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION RKTAIL STORE GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION <5 MT. CUMINS. PONTIAC. MICH. HOMER H1GMT MOTORS, INC. 160 S. WASHINGTON. OXFORD, MICH. SHILTON PONTIAC - RUICK * INC. 323 MAIN STRICT. ROCHESTER. MICH. PONTlA^Mi»”^,SfRVlCI ML MAIN STRUT, CLARKSTON. MICH. KEEGO SALE* end SERVfjtl INC. RUSS JOHNSON S090 ORCHARD LAKE RD., KEEGO HARBOR, MICH. MOTOR SALES •9 MM m m —I BROADWAY LAKE ORION, MICH. jp^ ’ mm 15/7:,, JJ HE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, NOVEMBER Turkey Not Really Tasty is coming, and there probably ik • a turkey in your future. Are your taste-buds a-tingle at the thd^t TU bet not. *■ ★ ★ It’s a curiously specialized bird, Turkey. Kids love it, because it represents celebrations and good times. But alter you get to the age of about 16, some of this, thrill is gone . . . one too many turkey patty, two too many turkey hash casseroles, three tod many turkey sandwiched probably, Gradually you come to realise that chicken is more moist, goose is more tasty, pheasant you gof on serving turkey lor Thanksgiving because it’s expected of you. And the leftovers get bigger and bigger, as the family gets older and older and wiser. CLEVER WOMAN My mother- is the cleverest woman I know. Twenty dr more years ago she took allergy tests and discovered, with some satisfaction, that she was allergic to turkey. Since then, at the groaning family board, she is always provided with'a steak. All the aunts and uncles express their sympathy. Mother accepts It with Just enough gentle martyrdom to make them feel better, as she dig* into the good red meat. She says it is a shame she cannot Join the rest of us in the culinary family spint, — but it seems rather significantthat, although it is well known, one often outgrows allergies, mother has not returned to the doctor lately for a new series of tests. Americans serve turkey at Thanksgiving because grandmother did it, and gradmother’s grandmother did it. Now where the dickens did grandmother’s grandmother ever get the idea? Certainly not from the Pilgrims, who founded Thanksgiving. The ...ancf you can /earn the story of how to survive in the event of nuclear war by reading Prof. Willard Libby's series on this all-important subject Here's How to Send for This Valuable Booklet: Send name and address with 50c Atomic Survival ' The Pontiac Press P.O. Box 1260, General Post Office New York, New York Pilgrims had for their first Thanksgiving feast, a real (by7 today’s standards) g o u r m e t menu: Deer, lobster, clams and good Sounds Succulent, doesn't It? Although I suppose deer is so dear in price, you'd be having deer hash’every Thursday for a yeaj:.' PERIOD FOR PEACE Americans commpnly think of Thanksgiving as. a day for count-jng theif blessings and not counting their calories. Ini reality, it was begun as a period of respite during which war should he forgotten, and peace become the order of the day’s thinking. It was 'the fashion editor of “Godey’s Lady's Magazine,” Sarah Josepha Hale, who plumped for the idea back in the early 19th century. Originally, she wanted a national feast day to celebrate the founding of America- by the Pilgrims — but for more than three decades no one in Congress was interested in To Put Speed Limits on Landing Planes ' WASHINGTON IIV— Speed lim-f its will be imposed on planes ap-| preaching airports beginning Dec. 118, the Federal Aviation Agency' 'has announced. | it * it The limit is 288 miles an hour I within 30 miles of the airport at j Altitudes of less thanTO,000 fee r * * p I The FA A last May. proposed that j 'speed limit within 50 miles of £ airport and at altitudes below, 14.-1 500 feet, but Administrator N. E. Halaby said further study.showed the requirements “could -be r less stringent without compromising the prime puipose” of improving air safely, pushing such a thing as Thanksgiving. ’ i She might not ever have clinched her crusade, if It had not been for Civil War. In IM1, Sarah finally shifted her emphasis .froth the Pilgrims to Peace. With national -dissension at boiling point, she had her excuaeTo visit the secretary of state and plead that “enmities and strife must' be laid aside for one day . . . Ninety-six hours later, Abraham Lincoln, hearing Of the idea she had vainly sought for 35 'years, proclaimed a day of national “Thanksgiving.”* Never underestimate the dog-gedness and opportunism oPa good woman intent on Improving the country. ★ dr Who says Thanksgivings “ain’t what they used to be?” The kids still get sick from excitement and over-stuffing. The old folks still doze off after dinner. Mother and Aunt Margaret still do the dishes. And still nobody eats the parsnips. I ........._ OF PUBLIC HEARING Th« Pontiac City planning Commission has scheduled a public healing for Wednesday, December 6, 1961, at 8:00 p.m. EST, in the Commission Room, City Hall, ’on the adoption of the revised Master Plan (same being a General Development Plan) for the City* This plan coverts—-Existing Land Use; Major Circulation Pattern; Future'Residential, Commercial, Industrial Areas; School and Park Plan; Public Facilities and Service Plan. * The outline of the Plan and maps are on file in the City Plan Office, City Hall, for . review. By order of the Planning Commission of the City or Pontiac. „ ' ______ November 17, 1961. HENRY C. SMITH, Secretary A SPECIAL RAM FOR lilt THANKSGIVING DIMER! RCA WHIRLPOOL S it HI mil RANGE FULL WIDTH OVEN Fast Heating 7 Heat Surface Units. Fully Automatic Timer, Full Width?Storage Drawer. BUT ONLY ■MM. ’NO MONEY DOWN: Kennedy to Get Shield as Masai Says Thanks NAIROBI, Kenya, tfft - The 8,-1000 primitive Masai tribesmen will send President Kennedy a tribal shield and spear as thanks for s ing them from starvation. The tribe has been kept alive ih ! drought-stricken preserve for three I months by U. S. famine r The com has helped to clothe ns well, as feed the tribesmen. Masai children wear dresses made :>f the corn sacks, which bear nessage: "Corn donatoed by the licoplc of the United States.” We have just received a close-out liiodel of w ni hi.™ . RCA WHIRLPOOL II Co. PI. HONE FREEZERS Holds 368 lbs. of Frozen foods, we just have this one shipment so, it's on it prior sale basis, but while they last — Model HC II-V — We were unable to picture them because we 4*1 not have limb to get a cut made. 810 DOWN. DON’T MISS THIS IF YOU ARE THINKING OF A HOME FREEZER They're sale priced at 11 ‘MM I'll . S A $ 10 SI»K< : IA1; (;h 1 ; TO,' nil-; 1 IRST % -J&j> l RCII AShRS He HOOVER CONSTELLATION Sharpest thing on four wheels... with Cutlass 185-h.p. action and foam-cushioned bucket seats... standard at no extra cost! TTntrmm SOMETHIN<3 EXTRA"about o»n Extra performance from a zippy 185-h.p. aluminum V-8 engine! The extra personal comfort of sporty foam-padded bucket seats! The extra eye-catching style of its rakish sports motif! And the extra quality and reliability that make the F-86 Cutlass-7-like every ’62 Oldsmobile—a car superiority! Make a date to put a new Cutlass through paces today,.. and discover what fun driving can be! L.DSMOBIL.E GENERAL ELECTRIC CLOCK 1 ■ RADIO -8«Sg THU '62 OLDSMOBILES . _____________ F-as CuWoiiCoup. . AT YOU* LOCAL AUTHORIZED OLOSMOBILB QUALITY OEALBR'8- COMF.INANDSF.EIT LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS JEROME MOTOR SALES CO., 280 S. Saginaw St., Pontiac, Mich. rfen miwr AMI FRMAY TIL 9 90 flays for cash or easy weekly'or monthly pay-. men Is... ..... ... GOOD HOUSEKEEPING of PONTIAC — TUNE IN EVERY TUESDAY) bON'T MISS “THE SARNY MOlW SHOW” • CSS-TV — " ‘A 51 West lluroij Sl. FE 4-1555 / • / "A T* ' vwU *' ' V, wills m e tm | rv \ . i • THIS RfVNTTAO PRFSS , / ■ V l ;MONDAY,NOYEMBER 20, 1901 ft PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THIRTEEN ' $ -ju.il iUtiu 'iww'wwwmsiwff iiwti jf 1 - • • . Schools are in session. Winter holidays are fast approaching. It's a happy time for youngsters. - it ' it ' ■ And unfortunately, a time when they can fall > victims to sex morons, child attackers with diseased minds. This page, patterned after a similar presenta- It Should serve as a warning to parents. Cajole, tion of CHICAGO’S AMERICAN, is featured by teach, warn.‘Get the message across to your chilr THE PONTIAC PRESS with cooperation by the dren any way you can. But be sure this informa-Crime Prevention Bureau of the Pontiac Police De- tlon sinks in. pafMnt in the sincere hope that It will hdp save * it it aghild. ' Chiefly, the child should be cautioned to never become friendly with a stranger, accept rides or | offers of gifts or candy. * it it it Have your child study this page. Study it your- i self. May your child finish his or her schooldays 1 healthy and emotionally secure. WARNING TO ALL BOYS AND GIRLS: Look Out for All Strang with strangers who stop talk. Always keep well from the car.' WRITE IT ANYWHERE — Always mark down the license number of any suspicious car. If you have no pencil, scratch It in the cement or dirt. Give the number to your parents, teachers or police. Parents Should Read This, Too! And remember-— 1 Always mark down the license number A of the stranger’s car. O Take a good look at the stranger. Re-“ member what he looks like. *> Look at the pictures on this -page care-” fully. Remember to do as they tell you. A Be sure your parents look at this page. Parents) It would be wise for you to learn these rales, too. v 1 Boys and girls! Ask your mother and father to read these rales with you and thfen see how many you oan remember. 1. Never take rides from strangers. on loot or in a ear near your sr places where yon play, get the license number of the car. a stick In the dirt or with a stone on the sidowaik If you don’t have pencil and paper. 5. Always try to remember what the stranger looked Uke. 6. —The policeman Is your friend; Go to him any time you arc in trouble. It boils down to this: . Don’t trust people you don't know, especially if yon are alone. Don’t believe strangers who say they win show you a puppy or a kitten or something else that seems' interesting. He may say that your parents sent him to get you, or that your parents are sick or injured. Don't believe him. He may even pose as a policeman with a uniform cap. Don’t believe him. Run to a neighbor's door right away, knock loudly, scream for help, and report the incident to whoever answers. I^hotosen this page were posed especially (or The Pontiac Press by Officer Thomas Hereford of the Crime Prevention Bureau, Pontiac Fouce Department, and children of Pontiac policemen. This is on open letter to all hoys and girls—front the tiniest tot to the teen-age group: 2 3 When a stranger tries to join in your Play.i ( When a stranger talks to you in the When a stranger tries to make you disobey any of the rules on this page. A serious problem exists in our country today. It is the molesting of small children. This ugly crime can happen anywhere and at any time. Your mother and father, your teachers 'and the police want to keep you safe. You can help them by being careful while you are playing and while you are going to and from school. The pictures on this page show how you should look for people who may want to hurt you. Always tell the police or your parents when any of these things happen: DON’T ACCEPT RIDES—When anyone naped by strangers. Many have been crlm-you don’t know, offers to'give you a ride, inally abused or even killed by never get into a car with him. Many chll- drivers, dren ignoring this rule have been Pontiac Press Photos by Ed Vanderworp GET tHE LICENSE NUMBER OF CAR! GET THE LICENSE% NUMBER OF CAR! DON’T LOITER — Never Play or stand- near public restrooms. Be careful d'HiOH TiMf" „ Pentecostal groups to JoijA tin council. , The additions bring the council to 196 denominations with more than 900 million members in about 60 countries. With the exception of the Roman Catholic Church, every major confession is now “strongly represented” said Dr. W. A. Vis-ser T’Hooft, the council general secretary^ -■■■• ■ 'Sr w ft \ Npver before, he said, has a “greater variety of expressions of the Christian faith been brought together in one movement” Church culminated more than 10 years* of negotiation. Dr. Viaser T’Hooft said council leaders became convinced that participation oT the Russian Church would serve “the cause of Christ." Starts TUESDAY FACTORY CLOSE-OUT 5-Pc. DINETTE SET A Regular $49.95 Vain* ^ g| n || Dr. Franklin Clark Fry of the United Lutheran Church in America, chairman of the council central committee, said that including the Russian Church “may DOWNTOWN PONTIAC STORK ONLY citing KRESGE’S ★ EH* Now! At 7s00 and 10«39 ^RBrMSED 't TECHNICOLOR; At 8)35 On TMp^WNGDAY AHtQ0-4t40-8:20 NEW DELHI, India (APl-Ihe Russian Orthodox Church was admitted toddy to the World Council of Churches amid misgivings and considerable acclaim. The step came as believers of nearly every kind and culture began the most widely inclusive Christian convocation'of the mod-m era.. Outside the meeting place at the Vigyan Bhawan Temple Learning a picket carried a i reading “Russian clergy are Communist agents, not -servants' Cod.” But among church envoys here for the council’s third general sembly, vigorous applause greeted action seating the lfcman Russian Church delegation. Each member denomination — Orthodox, Angli can and Old Catholic bodies—was entitled .to one vote. Two U.8. churches abstained — the Russian Orthodox Church in America and the Hungarian Reformed Church in America. FEARFUL OF POLITICS The Rt. Rev. Zoltan Beky of Trenton, N.J., bishop of the Hungarian Church, voiced the fear Russian churchmen would council “as a platform tor political purposes.” Archbishop John of San Francisco, head of the Russian Church in America which broke away from the mother church, ex pressed similar doubts but added: "We hope that the causes for those apprehensions will vanish in the near future by the providence of God.” Other churchmen from East and West said the entry of the Russian Church broadened the scope of the Christian unity movement and gave ancient Eastern denominations full representation in it. Sr * ft “R is a step forward in the ecumenical movement," said the Rev. Werner F. A. Kuppers of Bonn, West Germany, delegate of the Old Catholic church. “This kind of contact, above all difficulties and suspicions, ce blessing.’’ Limited S«ppiy AS n»Mu AFTER FIERY CRASH—This was the scene in section for a red light. A chain reaction resulted Bayshore, N.Y., during the.weekend after a fiery in a pile-up of five cars and fire broke out., The crash of five cars and a bus loaded with 40 stu- woman driver of the bus, Oma Tkacs, 46, of dents of the LaSalle Military Academy at nearby Bohemia, N.Y., was arrested on charges of driv- Oakdale. Police said the bus skidded into the ing while intoxicated^ One man was burned to TearOT'iwei'anMue sfefp^ at h'lflgl^ d(^K*and'^wymM ^ Twenty-two other church bodies /ere admitted, including the Bul-and Polish Or- Cosy Comfort All Winter ELECTRIC IN-CAR HKATERS NO EXTRA CHARGE S. Telegraph at Square Lake Road, FI 2*1000. Opan 6:30 HURRY—DON’T MISS IT! ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON'S "WRITTEN BY WIUIAM INGE M| ----- TICHNIC0L0R* WARNER BROSMP W** .COLOR -M STARTS ★ WEDNESDAY ★ Metro- GOlcVyn-Mayer BOBHOPe-LANa 7URN6R BacneLORin PARaDise story of • lov«-«xpert tiNlMAfiOONfedMmKOlM JANIS PAIGE ||L— JIM HUTTON BSBMi-PAUtA PRENTISS 5 Nabbed in Raid on Alleged Illegal Liquor Place Pontiac Police vice squad offi-■rs arrested seven persons, five l a raid on an alleged illegal liquor establishment at 200 Judaon St., late Saturday emd early Sunday. Charged with operating and maintaining an Illegal liquor., place war Barbara I. Stanley, *1, of 552 Midway St. Roderick A. Byrd, 25, of 982 Jackson St., was charged with tiding and abetting an illegal liquor place. Charged with loitering were Charles McCullers, 21, of 129 Bag-ley Ave., and Alfred E. Ray, 19, of 233 Rapid St- dr ft dr Also arrested in the raid at 200 Judson was Jacqueline Smith, 19, of 428 Bloomfield St. She was charged with soliciting. The raid took place shortly after midnight Saturday. Officers from the special investigations bureau arrested Charles Rutherford, 25, of *01 Wesson St., and Beverly Thomas, W, address unknown, a half hour earlier near Bagley and Wesson on chargee of soliciting. All were to be arraigned in municipal court today. Fighter-Bomber Fires by Accident TOKYO (UPI) — The United States Air Force reported thata-,0] B57 lighter-bomber accidentally f(01 fired 16 rounde of 20 miUimetef ammunition today into Nakamlnato \ City, about 60 milea north of Tokyo- The Air Force said four buildings were hit but there were no reports of caiualttea among the Banna He won keys to < the city! ★ NOW SHOWING * - A Heart-Stealing Story ■ WALT DISNETS g^BOBBY TBCHNIOObOir | V Shews! tiSO, 4tW. < TiOO, *«00 COMING SOON! Suwm Hayward "UCE SHUT** The plane, a two-engined craft, was banking into a bombing run over a nearby practice range when its pilot brushed against a pushbutton mechanism which triggered ie plane's four cannons. The Air Force said the triggering mechanism was on "double safety" but a "malfunctioning" caused the plane’s guns to ftre. The pilot of the bomber was identified as Oapt. Clarence Hughs. His home town was not Immediately available, the Air Force said. An investigation into the incident was begun immediately. Nakamlnato City is on the western coast of Japan's main island of Honshu. The air force practice bombing range is about 10 miles inland from the city- Picketers Go on Hunger Strike 13 Refuse Food After Arrest in Demonstration Against Segregation ANNAPOLIS*. Md..(API,- Thir: teen persons arrested during widespread picketing of restaurants which refuse to serve Negroes went on a hunger strike in advance of their scheduled appearance in court today, ft1 ft ft The six whites and seven Negroes were among a group of more than 400 who picketed some 100 restaurants in Baltimore and Annapolis Saturday, They picked up on trespass charges and taken to Anne Arundel County jail after Antoinette’s restaurant in Annapolis refused. to serve them. RELEASED ON BOND Two also were arrested In Bal-more on trespass charges but were released pn bond of 3103 The Maryland Conference of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People protested that an Annapolis policeman beat and kicked two male students as they were arrested. DEMAND SUSPENSION The NAACP asked Gov. J. Millard Tawes and other state officials in telegrams to suspend the | iliceman pending an Investigation. ft ft ft Warden Phillip L. Colbert of the county Jail in Annapolis said the demonstrators refuted a breakfast of eggs ahd bacon, a lunch of sandwiches and a dinner of chick-i potatoes, carrots, peaches and tea Sunday. ★ ft ft About 125 persons participating R the campaign traveled from Baltimore to Annapolis Saturday night and picketed at the Jail and in front 6! Gov. Tawes' residence. Elderly Couple in Goli Cart Run Down Auto NOVATO, Calif. (UPI) - An automobile and a golf cart, carrying a 92-year-old man and his 81-year-old wife, collided on U.S. 101 Sunday—and the driver of the auto was slightly injured. .... .ft.. ft , .ft Joseph McDermer and his wife Jessie were driving the golf cart to a supermarket for groceries, when McDermer attempted to drive the vehicle across the highway. They were thrown out when it was struck by the car. ft ft ft ' ' The elderly couple was not injured, but Rober Hughes of San Francisco suffered cuts and bruises as he swerved his auto in an attempt to miss the cart. Loy-Awoy Now or . . -"chargi tr at msecs — pay only once a month! so kind to your wash-and-wear garments... ■HxuniEtxm. GAS DRYER Katanga Official, Slain In 'Hunting Acdcfeht' ELISABETHVILLE, Katanga — Lukas Samalenge, Katanga’s 33-year-old minister of information, was found dead Sunday In the bush near Jadotville, radio Katanga announced. ' ft ft ft The broadcast said "The minister was shot accidentally during a hunting trip.” Usually reliable ■ OPEN 6t30—STARTS 7 PJL NOW! PeubktMee Lint Central SEE IT FIRST SHOWING ALL COLOR HIS GREATEST! THE KINGDOM OF KILLERS IS ON THE ^ SCREEN! ever, that foul play Is not to be excluded. Ends WEDNESDAY YSL3KEEGO Color hr TICHNICOLOR •towing ' i»lo UefeorlM*. • (tally Ferrat Wo Have ret Yew Coerfo* IN-CAR HEATERS ... ho sxtha cnaaoa PLUS ’The GREEN HEIHET" jucKc thrills! Leave If to Hamilton to recognize the growing importance of miracle fiber waih-end-weer clothe*—end to do somethlno about It I This Hamilton gives you Instant selection of proper drying time for any load, any fabric—shag rugs, wesh-end-weer articles, delicate things. Choice of, up to 130 minutes of drying time plus an automatic five-minute de-wrihkling period. The temperature guide lets you choose HIGH, MEDIUM, LOW or AlR according to the fabric you art drying. MEDIUM It especially good for wash-and-wepr clothes . . . never before have they looked so fresh and wrinkle-free as when fhey've been gently dried In a Hamilton, Stop In to Saa why Hamilton ,1s the nicest compliment you can pey your weshabtss. • 130-MINUTE R0TART TIMER WITH AUTOMATIC • ROTARY TEMPERATURE GUIDE SELECTOR • SATIN-SMOOTH • FULL ONE-YEAR WARRANTY ON i PARTS HAMILTON MODEL 22MII SHOWN ONLY UVB MODERN.. . FOR LESS ... CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY i FIFTEEN Take the Time to Read This Message! It Has Meaning for Everyone--- Your daily newspaper, The Pontiac Press, is your key7 to an enriched enjoyment of life. It's full of enjoyment, stimulation, Help, and just plain information. This world of ours is moving faster ^very day. You can't afford to be left behind. Read your Pontiac Press from cover to cover / V ' /. - ... ' every day to make sure you have All the NevyS of Your World! PONTIAC PRESS ADVERTISING THE PONTIAC 1RKSS. MON DAY, NOVEMBER 20, 19S1 P to |^ You ^ S Wo make your portrait between Nov. 14 and h You bring this ad with you If you are net an FRP member Your/order amounts to $25 Youmaka to C Photographer ? ^ • 518 W. Huron FE 4-3M9 k wmmm* K SEVENTEEN Yomay Members Celebrate at 30th Birthday Event If you have a slim foyer to funt-ifoam rubbpr cushion. It will ser ish, try an old-fashioned long as a handy spot to sit while j . piano bench topped by a two-inch I moving rubbers. | for 14 members of the Yomar Group of the First Presbyterian Church, celebrating its 30th birthday at a dinner Thursday in Devon Gables. live there to little likelihood that you will develop a real vitamin-deficiency disease. However, many people endure and take for granted a low level of health, and ’ are harassed by chronic fatigue and other minor disabilities because of a low vita-| min Intake. . i 'These folks may have very litOe I variety in their diets. They tpay overlook one or more of the/ important classifications of/food. Therff is as much difference be-tween an optimum diet/and one Arrangements were completed by Mrs. Ralph Mason. Donald Williams, program chairman, presented two po< I Thanksgiving." Mrs. .! Graybiel delivered tl , study. * | Mrs. Chester Varney extended a special welcome Jo Mrs. Sam Miller, Mrs. Ernest Severance, Mrs. George Sullivan apd Mrs. James-Spark, all of whom joined the group in 1961. Mrs. Glen Butler, a guest, was received into membership. way in whlch/they please should never Yon diet as though ’such thing as syn-tamins. Don't (tn planning you take vitanilff pills. y/amln supplements are splen-reinforcements to the food eat. Considering the loss of vitamins in storage and cooking and the fact that not'everyone utilizes vitamins in the same way, these can be of the greatest help. And, of course, they are needed in cases of illness or organic or systemic defects. I myself cat as scientifically as r can and take vitamins, too. Vitamin pills are wonderful-—but they are not magic potions. Though they are splendid as reinforcements to the food you eat, they do not take the place of a varied nutritious diet. Mizpah Temple No. 7 Honors Its Grand Chief Mizpah Temple No. 7, Pythian Sisters, honored Mrs. Alex Moore of Niles, grand chief of Pythian Sisters of the Grand Jurisprudence of Michigan, Thursday evening in Fellowship Lodge Hall, oh her first official visit here., you. If you would like to have my leaflet, “Vitamins in Your Diei," send a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request for leaflet No. 38. Address Josephine Low-man in care of The Pontiac Preas. Dorcas Glass Has Meeting Members of the Dorcas Class of the Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church met recently in the Putnam Avenue home of Mrs. Richard Kelly. Refreshments were served by Mrs. Ethel Powley and Mrs. David Wagner. Mrs. Peter Nteml. who presided in the absence of the president, led devotions Hnd the hostess offered prayer. Present to gfeet her^were Most Excellent Chief Mrs. Loren Kennedy from Arbor Temple, Ann Arbor; Mrs. Murray Wanly, past grand ch{ef, Pythian Sisters of Michigan, and Barbara Sny- hlghest percentage of ship attendance at meetings will be eligible each to choose one worthy girl from their reaper the K. of P.. of .Michigan Youth Camp aT fiurt Lake. Mrs. Jack-son Is state attendance contest chairman. der. From Huron Temple, Ypsilanli, ere Most Exceileht Chief Mrs. Edith Herbst, Mrs. Mabel Budd, Mrs. Marian McCasey, Mrs. Andrew Jackson, Mrs. James Beach, grand Junior fit Grand Temple of Michigan, and Andrew Jackson, past grand chancellor, Knights of Pythias of Michigan. Church Unit Holds Luncheon Meeting Mrs. -Russell Clark, grand protector, came from Olympia Temple, Detroit. Oxford Temple was represented by Mrs. William McTavish, Mrs. Erwin Roost and Mrs. Lee Clack. Mrs. Alfred Schalm, grand trustee of Liberty Temple, Clawson, also attended. Donations will he sent (o CARE and the SS HOPE and J a soholarshln fund will be es- Fi-om Fanny Thompkins Temple were Mrs. Harry Wlnkley, Mrs, Hugh Endries and Mrs. John j Foote. • In her address. Mrs. Moore stressed the membership contest I which doses next June. ! The 18 temple The' Mary Martha Circle of Ihe Oakland Park Methodist Church met lor luncheon recently inj|i the home of Mrs. James F. Smyth | m on East Montcalm Street. i Mrs. Irl Williams led devotions using “A Thanksgiving Service” as her theme. New member, Mrs. Robert Hagerman, welcomed. Fruit cakes may be c from Mrs. John Lamont. ^flfe December meeting will be a breakfast in the home of Mrs. J. L. Slaybaugh ol Glenwood Ave- r| thooing the ! nue. OPEN TONIGHT HU 9 P.M. THREE DAY SPECIAL SELLING SUIT SALE Special altering* during Mrs. Moore's official visits will finance the girls’ vacations at the recreation center. Hostesses for the social hour were Mrs. George Janes, Mrs. G|en Pittenger and Mrs. Fred Wheeler. Mo Use Telling Your Friends Yon Paid So Little ... They Won't Believe. You! Special Selling To-night! Tues. and Wed. 100% Imported Cashmere COATS Reg. $99 Einiger 24 K. r s»tt WO ssz. INI Go-cverywhera suit* with style and quality than price tag! You'll choose from subtle tweeds arid worsteds in our "Americano" suit with collarless caridgan jacket and sleek, film skirt. Excellently tailored and lined jacket and skirt seat. Rich colors, pastels and muted oat-meal. Slxa$8tol8. Spoftswaar — Mate floor Imagine a soft creamy Einiger 24 Karet Cashmere Coat for no more than you would pay for a wool coat. Two distinct styles in cloudiike lightness. MiliUm lined for three season wear. Each importantly hand detailed. 100% Pure Cashmere Coats, hand stitched and Milium lined. Two classic beauties you'll treasure year-round. Casual elegance in clutch or button-up high fashion coats. Com. in . . slip thorn on . . . fool their richnosa. Select yours in block, beige, bamboo, wild rice, rod orgretn. Sixes 6 to 16. Coot jSatoa — Second flow ? . ■PE 1 / K.I.M THE PONTIAC mim MONDAY,. NOVEMBER 20, 1961 EIGHTEEN HEALOIL BEAUTY SHOP Bethany Baptist Church Women's Groups Meet IgHgH MRS. SARAH TRAPP Gradual* of lb* David Prttlty School of Btauty You Will be pleasantly SOT prised how tiogsatly Mrt. THANKSGIVING SPE Trapp Will style your hair to |jo fsinfiiuti < match your looks and per- wjn, this ad * sonality. ................. 71H N. Saginaw OVER CONN’S CLOTHES El Four groups of the Woman’s So* ciety of the Bethany Baptist Church met on Thursday. ess to' the Dorcas Group, Mrs. Dan Veazey gave devotions on the Baptist Missionary work in the Phil- Mrs. Lawrence Taylor was host- FOR BUFFET DINING TABLE CENTERPIECE Colorful ceramic turkey'majestically in traditional pose, filled with bronze and yellow pompons and wheat. Turkey .is approximately seven and one-half inches high. Regularly $3.00 Value Rattan Cornucopia over-flowing with fresh fell colors of pompons. Attractively priced et only . .... . .. ...i Home 24 member* of the Martha Group met at the home of Mr*. Wealey f. McCulloch. Mrs. Fred Hauahalter gave devotion*. Members sewed earner dressing^ reviewed the study book planned to send greeting cards and. plants to shut-ins, Mis, -Maurice Baldwin luncheon hostess to' (he Naomi Group, with Mrs. Russell Kneale, assisting. Mrs. Baldwin gave devotions and Mrs. C. W. Mossey reviewed the hook "One Mark of Greatness;" Cancer sewing was resumed and Christmas baskets for Mrs. Howard Cate showed slides of her recent trip abroad to the Ruth Group Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Noble Smith. Mrs. Burton Smith was cohdstess. Mrs. Juho Hsu used the topic "Why I Became Christian” for her devotional topic. Merry Mixers Unit Works on Project Making Christmas wreaths w the project for the month when ■|tha..Mmy, JAtxerk of .tha.£oopera-tive Extension Service met last week at the Canterbury Drive home of Mrs. John Griesen. Before the meeting the group was escorted on a tour of the Christian Literature Sales store by Floyd Miles. *T-hts season every hairdo can become a perfect setting for an orpameftt,” says Julius Caruso, stylist for a well-known'home permanent company. Here, a demure little bow rests* securely in the dip of a big wave- Bands, bows Omd jewelry are enhancing fashionable coiffures. "What's interestihg^is the placement," reports hir. Caruso. Is, A decorative comb tucked into the starting point / of a rising airy crown emphasises a swept-back line ip this symmetrical-looking coif. Extra body is needed to hold the bouffant line of today's glamorous hair styles, and be jeweled, beguiling hair ornatnents are not just tucked in anywhere. Step Hard on Bossy Persons to Cure Them By MURIEL LAWRENCE Newspaper Enterprise Asm. Dear Mrs. Lawrence; , I looked after my nephew as a baby, and I am particularly devoted to him. He Is now a father and my heart aches for him. authority over Mi two boys, at* way* coming up with some reason why they cannot do ai he ■ays. Tjie othei; night he told them to go and wash their hands for supper and she said, "They’ll go when they’ve finished their game, won’t you* lray*9” Driving n»-home my newphew said that he was becoming an “Ask-your-mother" father and Bounded so bitter . ♦ ★ O’ ANSWER: Let’s hope he soon finds the love and gumption to roar at his 'wife on these occa- i, "Hold your tongue when am speaking to the children!’* For a bossy person lives under awful strain. Other people are just not real or Alive to him for reasons which he cannot help. He is literally possessed by distrust. TRUSTS herself Thus, a bossy person who is a wife and mother -will thrust herself between her husband and children not because she is consciously seeking to belittle the father or to monopolize the child but because her experience has taught her to trust no action herself. We can’t always recognise the dreadful tension In her because she hides it behind aggressive sarcasm, temper tantrums or moral reproaches that suggest So’Many Wonderful Christmas Gifts at WIQQ! you're sure to find the perfect gift for every person on your list! fairytale princesses were oosy compared to the cruel Isolation Imposed qn a bossy Methodist Group Hoicks Meeting Mrs. John Ostrander gave devotions on the subject "Jesus Christ, the Light of the World" at a recent meeting ^f Oakland Park Methodist Church’s Rebecca Cir-de:-Mr». W.Jam*r7»I«tt^ hprta Lane, Waterford Township, was hostess. \ , An article on the Tthuikagiv-Ing theme was read by\ Mrs. Lee Murphy. The circle will be responsible for calling on the church’s shut-ins during the next Mrs. Clayton Gillies was group's guest. The Dec. 20 meeting, will be at the home of Mrs. Floyd Paries In Clarkaton. Christmas gifts will be exchanged. woman by her own distrusttal-ness. A man who loves her rescues her. He rescues her by declaring hi* existence in such fordbUtterms that she has to admit it — and be rejoined to - life. ★ ★ * The sad thing Is, the husbands of bossy women won’t see'that they are yearning for rescue, Unlike the princess in tahytates, they won’t believe that a lonely, frightened girl is immured In her desolate tower of c' I can offer her nothing." Incidentally, from whom did this nephew of yours get the idea that a woman is so strong and self-sufficient? What was his mother like? Bossy? Men who have known an honest woman as children don’t put up with bossy wives, you know. They ; right in on that lonely tower with determined love. •n \ \ i / /1 \ THE PONTIAC, PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2 20, 1961 :'X- inHMH So lifelike is this doll with its silky hair and soft pliable body that even a little girl's mommy will want to cuddle it. Baby dolls have been popular with little girls since the first dbU to day "Mama” was made'in England in 1864. mmmmmmimmmmmmmmmsmmmmmi........ Have You Tried This? Mold Cranberry, Relish Into Orange Gelatin. . By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Home Editor You are probably thinking of your Thanksgiving menu at this time. Here is a recipe for a molded cranberry salad that you might enjoy. Mrs. Robert Russ says her mother-in-law gave her the 2 cups cranberries,' % cup celery, diced 1 large apple, diced 1 small can crushed pineapple, drained 114 cups sugar Mix above Ingredients and/ let stand 2 to 3 hours. 1 package orange gelatin ‘ water | Mrs. Russ is tied pretty dose-[ ly to home. She does partici-| pate in a handcraft dass. MOLDED CRANBERRY SALAD By Mrs. Robert Russ Add gelatin to hot water. Stir in cranberry mixture and nuts. Pour into mold and let chill 'Until set. Serve with salad dressing or whipped cream. Serves 6-8. College Girl Marries; Family and Then What! NEW YORK (UPD—The modern male wants his wife to have an up-to-date education. Then, when the couple settles into matrimony, he and the community expect her “to perform in the tradition of the old-fashioned housewife." This is the viewpoint of the nation's leading women educators, Mrs. Millicent Carey McIntosh. The conflict from this "transition" is one of the major problems facing today’s college rated woman, says Mrs. McIntosh, the president of Barnard College, who for 36 years has taught young women. “College boy meets college girl, they marry, and then he expects her to reproduce the home pattern set by his mother, or even grandmother," said Mrs. McIntosh. What will resolve this problem? “When men are all sons of college graduates, I suppore,” she smiled. "Now, pm not saying that the home is not a wife’s responsibility," continued this educator, mother ol five grown children. "If I had ever thought that continuing work would have hurt toy family, there would have been no question but what I would have stopped working. But I had a sympathetic husband, and exceptional health." Mrs. McIntosh, wife ot the physician, Rustln McIntosh, said there In no pat formula for the stage and work. ,“She has to figure out her own education," said Mrs. McIntosh. “The mistake often is made In thinking that what someone else !ias done, you can do too. I be-ieve 1 was a case of exceptional circumstances, “I do believe toe college woman should keep alive and grow . . . she should not let herself be overwhelmed with domesticity' and love." Mrs. McIntosh (she holds a doctorate from Johns Hopkins University but prefers the “Mrs." because "there already is one doctor An the family") has been president °f Bprnard, the women’s college of Columbia University, since 1952. She will retire ^ext June, ending a career of teaching woto-en which began in 1926 when she joined the faculty ,of Bryn Mawr College. .... She is a former dean at Bryn Mawr and for 17 years was headmistress of the Brearley School, a fashionable New York private school for girls. Mrs. McIntosh talked of sotoe of the changes she has noticed in the attitudes of women students through'those years. "When I was In college (she graduated from Bryn Mawr In 1980), toe women were career-minded, Then, there was that swing back strictly to Interest In domesticity. Now, most of the gliis seem to want to get married and hpld a job. “To me the difference in a career. and a job is easily defined. A career is something you stay with ... a job is something you can go back to,” “The way youth is marrying Increasingly early, a woman at too age of 30 already has her children in school. She's ready at a very young age to go back to that outside job,” Poor MarybeVs ailments are only make-believe but it's great fun to pretend she has aches and pains just like real little girls sometimes do. This doll with fashionable Jacqueline (at right) are among this season's cast of char- N^mryov can have thi ' on Christmas toy shelves. The doll is a descendant of dolls 1 originally by French dressmakers i early as 1391 to inform clients in /distant lands of fashion's foibles. Dolls Mean Same in Any Land Almost as long as there have sen girls and boys — dolls have amtised them. The endless varieties of material from which dolls have been made reveals the stages of development, the industries and customs of different people. . , For instance, in the Southwi United States the Indians JMhrJW%of. ytoto their ceremonials, these dolls are given t In Africa, the Congo .given tp every grown girl to keep for her1 first child, and in Syria a girl (d marriageable age hangs a doll/ln her window. 17 '* * * * In the United States, little girls faithfully copy different phases of their own and the grown-up life around them in their daily play with dolls. The carefully crafted and beautifully costumed, dolls cre-ated by Madame ATexandeFbring' beauty and imagination into such play. . * A W The costumes for each doll are specially designed by Madame1 Alexander in fabrics woven with Celanese contemporary fiberp. They combine simplicity with re- ' fined glitter find practicality with] the kind of colors that delight little girls. An interesting point about | these doll costumes Is the variety they encompass, both in fabric j (toll-loving mlsaes hive strongly- I defined tastes and like to display ! | their Individuality. | They love lush fabrics, for to'I ^stance, like satin and jersey. , W'H Give you a/better appearance and smoother focut by removing the objectionable dividing line Thi/ new bifocal has the look of jar glasses because the dividing is invisible. Now you can enjoy vision without annoying jump, blur or distortion . . . and you'll thrill to a younger looking you. BUDGET TERMS AVAILABLE 109 N. Saginaw Sf. E. STEINMAN, O.D. FI 2-2895 Open Osfly 9:30 to 5:30. Friday 9:30 to 6:)0 —diem's- The Home of' Exquisite Hair Styling FOR THE HOLIDAYS For Appointment—Call FE 8-8085 Rimfoj West 1672 S. Telegraph Road , Between Stewart-Glenn and Mollt HAIR STYLIST Ceramic Turkey Arranged for your 4 Thanksgivihg table With fresh cut bronze and yellow pompoms..................... $395 Reg. 85 Value Other Centerpiece* in Bowl Arrangement* .from $3.50 Our Own Home-Grown CHRYSANTHEMUM PLANTS Choice of Colors from SALE 20% OFF AU Fall and Winter Dried ArrangemejiUi CORNUCOPIA -■ Aa Shown. Bug, A* T pjb ’ ■. tP Two Shops to Serve You Pontiac and Lake Orion I Jacobsen’s flowers FINE ' GIFTS . Broadway in Lake Orton and 101 N. Saginaw Peltvurr twtee dufly to rnmu+mm.l ' FE 3-T1B6. MY 2-2681 Tailored Untrimmed $5i • $71 Clutch and button styles in solids and tweeds. A collection that Of firs tailored elegance in the finest of fabrics. 1 Lavish Fur Trim Imported and domestic fur fibres, worsted faille and tweed — oil lavishly trimmed with Mink, Beaver or Norwegian Fox. OF PONTIAC HURON at TELEGRAPH , Thun., Fri. 10 to 9 - Tuus., Wed., Sat 10 to 6 THE feiUC AsS,' MONDAY, NOVEMBER pmp* HOUDAY STORE HOURS OPEN TIL 9 P.M. MON. THRU WED., NOV. 20 to 22nd CLOSED THANKSGIVING DAY NOVEMBER 23rd 50 T.V. Stomps With Coupon - Frozen Morton's COUNTRY CLUB Pumpkin Pies Fresh Roll Butter FOR A WHITER, BRIGHTER WASH IVORY SNOW •MP FOR BABY CLOTHES AND DELICATE THINGS IVORY FLAKES TUP GINTLI DISHWASHING,DETERGENT „ IVORY liquid : FOR SFARKMNO SINKS AND TUBS COMET CLEANSER 2 ® FOR WALLS AND WOODWORK SPIC & SPAN ....... Wires YOUR AUTOMATIC WASHIRS CASCADE ............... ALL FURFOII SHORTENING CRISCO I. OFF.......... Via- KROGER EVERYDAY LOW FRICE GOLDEN FLUFFO ... ttt FROZEN SNIDER'S FARMS Cooked Squash SAVE 8 iipllliii ALL PURPOSE - HEAVY DUTY ^Reynold’s Aluminum %V . SAVE PA 25 FT LOOK FOR THE BLUE LABEL KARO SYRUP ARGO BRAND GLOSS STARCH < mm ..... FLAVORFUL KROGER Pie Pumpkin SAVE 5‘ |A( 303 ON 2 CANS CAN SAVE 10< Whipping Cream • Golden Whip JIFFY BRAND Pie Crust Mix PHILADELPHIA Cream Cheese loRDEN'S CRtAM* 225 FROZEN PACKER'S LABEL Strawberries . . . ■ OCEAN SFRAY Cranberry Cocktail KROGER GOLDEN QUALITY Sweet Potatoes . . QUART CARTON TASTY KROGER Small Peas CARTON Va GALLON KROGER EVERYDAY FRICE EASY MONDAY RINSE ALL PURPOSE KROGER Golden Shortening $WEET DEL MONTE Fruit Cocktail SAVE AA* large 6‘ aSsI 2,j CAN EASY MONDAY BRAND LIQUID STARCH QUART BOTTLI FROZEN CUT CORN SWEEt PEAS GREEN BEANS DUNCAN HINES BRAND 1,000 ISLAND DRESSING TVruz 39c HANDY AEROSOL SFRAY CAN FLORIENT DIODORANT ’cVm1 89c FOR A BEAUTIFUL COMPLEXION VEL BEAUTY BAR .A, 39c HOLLYWOOD BRAND CANDY BARS .............A, 19c SAVE 10* Ho lid tety Fixin's OCEAN SPRAY - WHOLE OR JELLIED Cranberry Sauce SAVE A 300 6 Z 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1961 TWENTY-ONE Oven-Ready Turkeys Hen Turkeys m 33 Beltsville '?»TYHW^r's "" . «n* Boiled Ham % 59c Ducks 50 T.V. STAMPS WITH COUPON—HYGRADE'S PLUMP OVEN-READY 30 SIZE CRISP CALIFORNIA U.s. NO. 1 LOUISIANA PUIRTO RICAN j&t 30 SIZE CRISP CALIFORNI Sweet Golden 11 Fresh Pascal Candy Yams ? Celery 3 29° § i2"“°35* ffl—M FOR YOUR HOUSEHOLD NEEDS KAISERFCML- — • Kss jammsxm Fresh Red! Cranberries 35* BAGS 23c FOR YOUR AUTOMATIC DISHWASHERS DISHWASHER ALL 49c KROGER EVERYDAY LOW PRICE FLUFFY ALL . 81c FOR A WHITER WASH ALL DETERGENT 79c ALL PURPOSE LIQUID DETERGENT HANDY ANDY . ........ H ‘DISHWASHING DETERGENT SWAN LIQUID ’in- ALL PURPOSE LIQUID DETERGENT LESTOIL 39c 63c 39c delicious smucker sbrand “ ICE CREAM TOPPING . BOYTLI 29c SMOOTM./DELICIOUS VELVET PEANUT BUTTER VI 59c ITALIAN GARLIC SHEDD DRESSING .. ttt 33c VAN CAMP BRAND .TAMALES 'V 33c BRISK, DkLICIOUS TETLEY TEA . .. '65c/ FAMOUS VAN CAM, IRANO / BEENEE WEENEES *"ar 23c MADE BY TIDY HOME HOUSEHOLD BAGS .. Sff* jU NINE LIVES RRAND PET FOOD , ..7 ! SSfc $1.00 TIDY HOME BRAND SANDWICH BAGS .. •i'SSj/IOc , SMUCKER'S HAND STRAWBERRY PRESERyES VI 39c i mSm. DOU BRAND PINEAPPLE JUICE W 10e BROADCAST BRAND CORNED BEEF HASH ... 43c BLUE RIBBON BRAND SPONGE MOPS ..........,ACM $1*39 50 Extra TOP VALUE STAMPS HANDY LITTLE PACKETS lestare bleach ’«■ MADE BY MURPHY'S OIL SOAP » MADE BY NABISCO WITH PEANUT CENTERS M&M CANDIES IN PASTIL COLORS NORTHERN TISSUE WAXTIX BRAND WAX PAPER . . .... . .....*ou *3e FOR YOUR HOUSRHOLD NESDS SNAP-OFF BAGS ................. 49c oriental brand SHOU-YOU SAUCE .................19« UNDERWOOD KANO jL DEVILED HAM................W FLANTiR'S COCKTAIL i SALTED PEANUTS FOR YOUR LAUNDRY NEEDS dry TREND FURR WHtTR TOWILS SCOTT TOWELS •• KROGW PLAIN, POPPYSEED OR SESAME SEED | Vienna Bread TO ,.L#. 4Q( LOAVES KROGER BAKED ■ Fresh Dinner ROLLS SAVE 7c ON 2 PACKAGES Brown 'n Serve £S2:»49 SAVE 1 A 9c Bounty >' " • fflJAIIIJ.MHfflg SO Extra VALUE Stamps ft with this coupon and the purchase op THREE—PROZIN 20*0*. MORTON’S • Pumpkin Pies JsraJr’S.'jjp s I SO Extra vSu. Stamps WITH THIS COUPON AMO THE PURCHASI OP Ktoem APPLE SPICE OR AMAOOW SILVER - Layer Cake 50 Extra vITu. Stamps: WITH THIS COUPON ANO THE PURCHASE OP j*g HTONADIS IRANO B Canned Ham 5^$399] oi Coupon VulM At Krng.r > Pontiac. DtatUn riAlno. [ W riMPVi RI*M to Li mil Quantities. ■ Fiicn ,