Th§ W0oth§r THE PONTIAC iome I Edition voy 119 NO. an ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1902 -28 pXgES Kennedy Presses Congress to OK School Aid ★ ★ ★ Oakland Gets $25-Million Airport Plans* Patientiy Waiting for Spring Site North of Pontiac Would Rival Metro By DICE HANSON Plans to build a $25-mllllon-plu8 major international airport a mile north of Pontiac were presented today to the Oakland County Board of Supervisors. ^ Unfolding the plans, chairman.«f ttw Avlallori Com-_ mitteo Mayor Philip 1. Itowston declared that Jet alr-Itoer service from here to major cities of the w*orld can be realized within the next few years. The board has 10 days to decide whether to appropriate $360,000 from coimty ■TILL AFLOAT - Therp's *UII a little open water left in the county lor theae gracelul awim-men. Whether againat a background of ke and led with myaterioua bbik blooma, the aylphlike r«rito« Pnn Fbato awan is a picture of beauty gliding over the ailent surface of a pond. These majestic creatures were photographed during a quiet repoae, waiting for spriiw, on a pond behind Bloomfield Hills Country Gub. Rightists Raid Newspaper Ship Bombed in Algeria Fiem 0«r News Wires ALGIEIUU Aiem« bombed a shipt, shot a high French official and raided a leading Algerian aewspiper nsfis Mday violent dgnywe, pt. President Charles de QauUe's threat to wipe out the outlawed flecret Army Organization (OASl. Tlie blast came just as the ship was About to sail for ftferscilles. Police aourcea sahf the hbmb nraa planted In a car loaded In oiie of subetftUle II page eight, .................. After the preaaes roiled, trucks carted away the ‘‘special the ftrward holds. OFFICIAL (UHrr A bomb planted in an automobile exploded on the ateanier Ville de Bot^ux in the port ol ~ this afternoon, killing (our persons and wounding a number of others. The vessel was carrying a company of riot squad p^lce back to metropolitan France. One el 'X^eer i Gunmen sprayed the car of Jean Oudinot, dityctor for Algeria of the sUte-op^teM French radio and television .service, as it was driven, throtvh the heart of Algiers thip, morning. Oudinot wounded seriously and bis Moslem c^ufleur killed by the submachine gun fire. The attack froin ihortly after aa estimated SO er I of the Ifieho d’eraa la city e( Oraa and forced Ms em-ployeo to print S0.000 eopies of a special edilion.” The raid was timed like a news- Senators Talk to McNamara Secretary Meets With Investigating Solons in 'Closed-Door' Session WASHINGTON » - SecreUry of Defense Robert S. McNamara met with investigating senators behind closed doors today In a new discus, Sion of his stand that they are entitled to know who censored w speeches by military and civilian Iradci’s, ' Sen. John Stennis. D-Miss., NEW DELHI. India M - The first evil efiect of the jdanetary conjunction has fallen oi trologers and soothsayers who predicted the weekend’s celestial phe-' nomenon would bring horrible calamities to the world. A crowd of women in Jaipur chased four Hindu priests and beat of them for being scajre-mongers. 'AstrologerB ridiculed by Del- subcommittee inquiring into charges that Defense and State Department censors have' muzried the military against anti-Communist statements, told newsmen he l&d asked McNamara to meet with the 8en. Strom nmraiond, D-8.C., oewMi* most be IdentUM so they ean be asked to explain they made la epeediee. Thurmond insists that Pentagon employes should be dtod for contend of Congress if Miey, obeying McNamara’s orders, refused ' give testimony on specific censor-shin .lobs. Contempt is punishable by up to n vcp*" In Jail and $1,000 fine. M- M-mara was accompanied by rv "s H. Vance, top Defense De--rw-ient lawyer. Stonnis said he astaW McNamara to appear "so all members of the (subi comipitted could Near his statemriftt and question him If they a hcarii^,’’ Steimis Astrologers Feel Effects of Forecasts paper deadline. The right-wing extremists brought their own pl^te and forced the cowed workers OAS edition.'’ CARRIIM KFF.I0CH in It readers would find om whole page carrying a three-column picture of OAS leader Raoul Salan and tlte balance filled with the text ol a speech by former Gen. Edmond Jouhaud, one of the leaden of the 1961 revolt in Algiers. The raid followed only by hours De Gaulle’s address to France in which he sedrned the Secret Army 'aubvenive and criminal’’ in the way of his plans for Algerian-peace and independence. De Oaiide’s speech hnoyed Al- and optimism. Altlanuch he did met eay agreement had been reached with the rebel piovlrion- el the 7li-year-old rebellion nenr at haad.v"Thls time pence Is really around the corner,” said The speech aroused new bitlcr-•88 and hatred among the North African territory’s Europeans. The Secret Army wasted no time in demonstrating anew Us defiance of De Gaulle. Banner Sales for Pontiac, 6M Reports Indicate Auto Industry May Enjoy Another Year Like '55 Sales reports from Pontiac Mo-.jr and General Motors Truck A Coach Divlaions. and other firms, indicate the industry may be headed toward another banner year like 19S5. M. Estes, GMC vice president and General manager of the Pontiac division, reported that sales for the first four months of the 1962 model run total lS6,nO, a record for the. division and 8,-065 more than for the same period in 1955, a banner year. At the same lime, Jtotos said the diviston experienced a M.t per eeat apsorge la dellverlM to dealers darlag the fiaal Ifday partod af teat manlh oaniparad reserve funds this year to initiate development of the airport, which would rival Detroit-Metropolitan if approved. Detail^ plans for location of the new aiiport in a general area bounded by Joalyn Avenue, Wal-don Road, M24 and the 1-75 (Chrysler) Freeway route conclude exhaustive’ studies by a nationally known firm and the Oakland County Planning Oommiasion. Approval by the board of sa-pervlsMs 4s deemed the final bwdle la making the tetorna-llonal Jet airfield a eealMy. Through federal and state support. the county would be acquiring the multlmiUion dollar airport for only a quarter of its actual SITE OF PKOPOSKU AIRPORT IK IN BLACK WOULD PAY HALF The federal govenunent would pay half the coat and the state quarter under existing agre ments. Goonly oftirtals whs have tor several yean aoted Sales for the month of January •re 35J81, a 30 per cent increase over the 25,718 Pontiacs sold dur-ing the same 1961 period. The Truck and Cbach division Itnesaed a 22.2 per cent pickup for deliveries between the two January!. This set a six-year high for the month. There were 6,343 new trucks delivered last month, according to Calvin J. Werner, corporation vice president and general manager of the division. BEST SINCE ’SS ‘We had the best final Ifiriay period in any January since 1963 with deliveries totaling 2,437, AmericdH Motors Oorp. said U73S7 a Chrysler C&rp. Said Dodge and truck retail sales were up in third 10 days of January over the same period a year ago. Ford Diviahxi said i^ January sales of 134,000 cars and trucks (Continued on Page 2, Gol. 8) ’The chosen site is by far *the best, and we are lucky to have an area still relatively undeveloped and .vet easily accessible,” said Swanson. Another prime factor in favor >f a major airport within the 1,000-square acre tract is the altitude of the land, be added. St newspapers, the ImHsn Ex- 'Cassandras belied but can still argue,’’ the Hindustan Times said. Some of the doomsday boys kept up a last-ditch battle. "The Western countries are in for trouble the next 30 months,” Swam! Madhavacharya persisted. Hie rieaa-sliaven pandH told a aewp ooBteranee the moon had left the eoajnnctloa but Saturn “Saturn is black in color and therefore It ia bad for the whites’ he aigued. The awami said congregational pcaym, mainly tor the welfare of the Western nations, will conthnie until Feb. 26 outside the 17th 'century gate. Poona was rocked with two eartl. tremoM of slight Inte^ty Sunday but metebrologiria hurried to deny any connection with the planetary conjunction. Postpone Tiros Shot ^APE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -Technical troubles with the booster rocket forced j^ostpone-ment today of an attempt to launch an improved Tijos wealh- l^T|y V Will Honor Dondero at Lincoln Banquet George A. Dondero, for 24 years Oakland' County’s voice in Congress, will be honored next Tuesday in Pontiac when county Repijblicans hold their 72nd annual Lincoln Day Banquet at the Elks Temple. One of the country’s outstanding authorities on Abraham Lincoln, the 78-year-old Royal Oak practicing attorney will be saluted for his contributions to the county and be presented with a memoir of ttie country’s 16th president. Keynote address at the county’s biggest GOP gathering of the year will be U.S. Rep. Gerald R. Ford Jr., R-Grand Rapids, present dean the Michigan GOP delegation in Washington. Ford, the state’s favorite son candidate for vice president at kick off the IMt election Campaign In Oakland County, lie will be introduced by State Sen. William G, Milliken, R-Trav-erw* City. ■I Ticket chairman Boris Sellers said 400 tickets have been sold to date aijd that the Lincoln Cl|(b hopes to sell setter 300 befoire Formal application was ted for approval by the Federal Aviation Agency Friday. The Michigan Department Aeronautics already has sent letter supporting (he county officials in (heir site choice to the FAA In Washington. Leftists Break Up Speech by Bob Kennedy in Tokyo Promoters of the airport plans I the county have been Delos Hamlin, cliairman of the board of supervisors, Pontiac Mayor Philip E. Rowfton as chairman of Its Aviation Committee and J. Robert F. Swanson, chairman of the county planning commission. ■eleetton of the rite — deemed excellent for a large airfield, sa-perior even to Detrrit-Metro|>oll-tan Airport reonlted from la-tonrive sorveys by the ptaaiihif commlsrion of the entire oonnty, Macomb Oonaty, aad as tor aorth as FHnt. I^SING UB - The Romney-for-govemor bandwagon had new people pushing and pulling today. Said Sen. Frank D. Beadle, list. Clair, after George Romney met With Senate Republicans Monday night: ' "I think every Republlran In the Senate la ooHdly b«>blnd hla candidacy for governor.” ajority sonatA's DISTINCT ADVANTAGE With an average altitude of 400 feet above sea level, the proposed site is relatively free of fog. This gives It a distinct advantage over many existing international Also, the freeway will provide qiilek and easy acceM from north and south. MiiBt of fhe area is devoted to agricultural and gravel interests ui existing, small private airport'. There are, however, 300 acres containing homes and a new Basilian seminary within the Most of the honies — those I the west fringe of the area — may or may not have to go in the face of aeronauUcal progress, Swanson noted. The decision will be made by (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) City Temperature Back to Norrnal Miserably Low Winter’s icy temperature yesterday gripped the Pontine area after brief respite over the weekend. TOKYO ^ — Thousands of s t u d en t s.at Waseda University^ gave Robert F. Kennedy a roaring, cheering weicome today, but shouting. Jeering leftists broke up A speech by the U.S, attorney general. It was the first hostility Kennedy has met on his visit to Japan. It was esttlBttibd the hecklers totaled fewer than 100. U.S. Ambassador Edwin O. Relschauer said they were "a small group of hard-core Communists and I don’t be- GOP Senators Backing Romney Stresses Need for $5./ Billion YrarProgram- Parochial Institution! Excluded by JFK; TelU of 'Crisis in Education' WASHINGTON President Kennedy told Congress today a crisis In American schooling makes it imperative that a five-year $5.7 billion aid to education program be enacted this year. Hr asked no help for church and private elementary and hi^b year la a But Kennedy, a Roman Ontholl#, HHid again today in a special mesaage that Mi program offeii "the maximum scope permitted by our Constitution.” GOES THE UMIT He contends federal outlays fi$* church schools would violate thS conatltutional concept of aepardt tion of church and state. Kennedy’s program of fodar^ ana, grants and acholarshlpa every level of learning would co« I1.B ^nn5h7W me i««*r Millay would bC -As If to refute reports that his administration would be willlnl to forego funds for aiding publto school construction and highd teachers’ pay, the President piR that contested measure at tNS top of his list. Next came aid for college construction and scholarships, whlcJl are given a better chance of bo-coming law. Third was an array of "spn, port for science and engineer^ medical and dental tralMnf, and broad attack on adult illiteracy. Majority Leader Say Some May Oppose AMC Chief's Tax Stand Tm just sorry we re of a chance to exchange ideas. I’d like to go back. Thousands of students swarmed about Kennedy’s car as he drove into the univecsity grounds to cheers of "Kennedy! Kennedy! ‘ of "Shnke my hand,” LANSING Ue - A bolltag-niad Rep. Gilbert L. Wales, D-Slam-baugh, demanded an apology from George Romney Mm.day night for what he said was the nntoir eritiriam ol The American visitor was literally carried up the steps of the building. Police and university security officials finally manag^ to get the disheveled Kennedy In-' but he turned and wav^ out the door, shouting "thank you! thunderous ehror went up froi • students. The Upper Peninsula Deinn- might quarrel with the way Romney would achieve his objectives. Main objection was his championing of a state income \tax for Michigan. WOUD BACK HIM Despite this dissent, unanimous that the Republican senators felt they could back the American Motors Corp. president he makes his bid. BOOBoe his decision at a press oontorence on Saturday (9:90 a.m.) In the Veterans Memorial "I will then announce my decision on whether or not I shall become a gubernatorial candidate, make no comment on the decision until that time," he said. Beadle reported nearly all of the high of 13 a^midnight to 10/above at 8 a. m. today. Tonight’s low will drop to a frigid 6 above but Wediiesday wllTbe a litHe.warmer. the high climbing to 20. ; Snow flurries and cold Is the outlook (or Thursday. At 2 p.m. the mercuTj!. reading 22 Republicans in the Senate* at tended the huddle with Romney— a half hour talk and a-^ueation-and-answer period followed by steak sandwiched. Even the traditional watchdog of the Statd Trtamjry. Sen. Elmer R. E^r, R-Blissfield, *1i(lmltted he Ileve they were from Wr‘ seda.' Kennedy and his wife, Ethel, stood calmly on the university stage despite the pandemonium, then left the auditorium building through a rear door. Mrs. Kennedy was hit in the stomach by a gesticulating cheerleader trying hecklers, she quickly recovered her com- NOT MUCH CHANCE Few give the bill much chance; even If revive. But Kennedy It strongly for vigoroua government help. In the past year ’’our crucial needs have intensified. and our deficiencies have giWn more critical.” he said. "I think the vast majority of The message gave few figures. Those were outlined in Kennedy’s budget message. It showed that the requested three-year program classroom constructiw and grants to increase teachers' sal-Idf cost $2.1 billion oven- all. TRY 'TO CLIMB HTAGE The . auditorium was packed with about 6.Q00 students. As Ken-dy waited to begin his speech, disturbance broke out in the nt rows and t several youths ed to climb on the stage. Small knots of strateglealfy located youiq; people set up cries "Kennedy go home. Kennedy off the platform. Cuba. Okinawa." the aludenis kept and the attorney general speech, reviewing his brother's pollctos. When he arid he would dlsenos the “reopoariblUties of J In n demomtio nntton," strong applause broke ont, but A college cheerieader jumped ta the stage and got students to sing the jiniverslty apng. The leftists collected in the back of the hall, and the Communist in-ternatlonalp mingled with school song. 'Yes, Dear,' They Said Whether today’s urgent plea would give the stalled teacher salary and construction bill a fresh start was doubtful. "It Is Imperative that i The country must provide facilities for 14 mlllian more elo- ’ mentary, secondary and college students by 1970, the message or an Increase of.30 per cent. College enrollments alone will nearly:.double. The proghuft for aiding higher education would require $332 million annually over five years— r loans jo build academic toeiU-fContinuod on Page 2, Ool. 3) PHILADELPHIA - John Worthington, 91, and his wife, celebrate their 67th wedding anniversary today. Worthing observed: "We’ve got a good life. I don’t have any secrets tor otfo happy marriage, ft JS4' In Today's Press Peace for Laos? East, West join efforts to halt Iheavy fighting — PAGE 23. Army Error Jlelease reservists . called up by mistake — PAGE 18. HowDoYouDol JFK likes idea of tomily goodwill tripa — PAGE 9. ~ Defeat Seen Cbllege aid backers busy today — PAGE L Area News ...-...... It ComIca ....... ....'14 Editorials .......... 9 Markets .............. 19 Sports .......... 19-lT OMtasries .....^. 19 Thealers ......i 9 TV A Radio Pntgtwnu .. 93 WltotMt Earl ......... 33 Womea’a Pagea ....19-11 ' T , f-* TWO / ^ / THE PONTIAC PBESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6. 1962 Con-Con Voice ^6te Retains Taxes The Day in Birniingham Gas Levy for Highways, Sales for Schools Kept' LANSING — Mlohlgan'* con- feci that we are drawing a con- Plan tor Improvements Presented to Commission atltutloiMl convention haa voted to retain the earmarking of gai and weight taxes for highway purposes and indicated H will do the same r taxes lor schoois jipd By an overwhelming voice vote, the convention deckled to keep virtually Intact a constitutional pro-\1slon that all taxes imposed “directly or indirectly upon gasdine and like fuels sold or used to propel motor vehicles" be used fdr highways. The aetlea, taken In ‘'commit-toe-of-Uw whale,” must be reaffirmed In two later votes — stitution that will be worth keeping, and are not unmindful of tact that it will not be kept •unles.s the voters approve it." - ^ A The committee also pointed out lat so far as the two per cent for the schools was concerned, such earmarking placed no particular burden on the state because for the past four years the legislature has appropriated substantially more than that "and Is certain to do so In the foresee-future. delegatee would change their By an 83-43 vote, delegates voted At. >1. 1 1 . down an amendment to the »m- emment, the convention beat down everal amendments aimed liminating such earmarking. Six other amendments were pending when the convention adjourned Monday night after enl hours of debate. AS OF NOW tinder the present constitution, two per cent of the current four par oenl tax Is set aside for schoof ricU, whUe ai^r ( ‘ " cent is retunM to townships and villages on a population tesis. immediately and dropped the one-half per cent diversion to lochl governments within five years. m be malntolaed ■ Is not the best way to nm But it added: "The nujorlty'of the committee reasoned that upon this subject the people had spoken — and had donb so recently — and that when the people speak they are the ‘vox’ (volce>. "The members of the committee Frigid Weather Envelops Most of the Midwest By The Associated Prew Frigid air from Canada, powered oy stiff northerly winds, ,en-vekmed Jbraad areas of the nation s midsection today and the stlnto|Of tpr t^lato into sections o Most of the eastern h«lf of the nation was in the path of' tm Arctic blasts, which ended a brief spell of mild weather. fined to Minnesota, with temperatures dropping nearly 30 degrees below aero In International Falls. Miim.. on the Canadian border. Monday's high in the northern border town was 10 below, and " was -27 this morning. It was ■ in Minneapolis and -17 In Dulut Min. Sault Ste. Marld. Mich., reported -IS. AAA Below zero readings also were reported in parts of Michigan, s Dakotas. Iowa, •1 in Chicago, which had spring-like reading of SO Sunday. came after the oonventton already had approved the continuation of highway fund earmarking. Coleman Young. D-Detr^t, said Owt if the convention adopted the amendment it would go down in history as having voted to build four-lane superhighways, complete with clover-leaves, ri^t up to the little red school house — and^torn down the school. Proponents “of the plan to drop earmarking argued that the legislature should be given a free hand to carry out its responsibilities In the appropriation of slate funds and the handling of a tax pro- jgram^____________________________ The amendment, filed In the form of a committee minority report, was sponsored by three Kepublicans -- Charles J. Davis of Onondaga, Don F. ge.vlerth of Muskegon, and David F. lepton of 8t. ddseph. In other, developments, convention President Stephen S. Nlsbet, R-Fremont, said he hoped to reach some agreement among leaders of both parties on the amount of lime to be devoted to debate 1 controversial subjects. AAA Nisbet said the three subiects most likely to need a time limit were legislative reapportionment, vs. election of the administrative board, and f^al governhuAd. A A A The convention has set March 31 as the deadline lor adjournment. If the convention winds up Its work by then, the proposed new constitution will go on the ballot next November. Otherwise, according to an at-toiney general’s ruling, the peo-ld» cannot voto on 4t untUv the sfxlng 1963 election. MSUO Building to Be Dedicated Echo Expected Twice The Echo I satellite is schedulM tor two appearances tonigt the Pontiac area A A A Its first appearance is scheduled for 7:12 p.m., from the north, 68 to 71 degrees above the horizon, moving northeast. It will return at 9:15 p.m., again in the north sky, at 79 to 84 degrees above the horizon, heading to the southeast. The leather FnU V. S. Weather Bureau Report PON'nAC AND VICINITY — Occasional sunshine and cold today, high 16. Fair and cold tonight. Low 6. Wednesday fair and not so cold, high 28. Northwesterly winds 15 to 85 miles todv diminishing tonight and Wednesday. HlfkMt uS LewMt Ttwmn Tklt Dkte ia tk Tears Dtrmloo: Hait)icrlr. Sua *tU Tufttfkjr at S M p m. Saa rlMi WaSiMMtor at 7.M a.a Maaday't Tcmparalart Chart aipriia 31 -1 Fort Worth M « Uaaa aau Ttwaday at ■;» p.m. Maaa riui Wtdaaaday at t 21 a.n>. navatoma TaaaparatarM Sa.a. IS U a.m is 1 a.a IS 1} a .. U ■ aja It 1 p.m. l« Eicanaba St 1 Jackieorllla 74 tt Or. RapKU S» 10 Kapnaa aty SS 14 HoughUm IS -S LoaAaaalM^ fS SS Unilng SS S MlamlBaacb 7| tf Uuikaton It IS Mllwaukta 3t -S PallatoB S3 -IS NawOrWaoi 7S 4S rrar aty J4 jl Oi^a^ SI ^ “ w establlsbed value, or, If fails, through condemnation. The eommlttoe has agreed turn over the options at the | price to tbe eonnty If (he bo ef snpervinore agreee to | Oakland County an s prime location. , The Landrum-Brown Report foretells 939,640 passengers departing annually from here by 1970 as compared with 3.7 million leaving from Driirit-MetoopoUtan. On this basis, the report indicates that a $35-mUliOTi-plUB focU-Ity win be needed fo the couriy within 11^ next 10 years. Aa tbe population continuea to sweU it ia conceivable that the airport will have to be increased to a $40-milllon operation eventually, Hamlin said. no co^unittment to me commt 'It was to tbe best interests of the public to proceed (through an intermediary) without disclosing the intended use of tbe land," Hamlinuifaid. He began laying the groun^ork for the new airport five years ago. David Levinson assured the board that the neeei ceed now are available in the county reservt ___ Part of these funds had been ■ought by tbe county Road Commission for bridge construction this year. OMMrty.” be added, “elBee H consulting first The Len^m-Brown report justifies the continued existence of Pontiac Municipal Airport secondary airfield handling treiglit eeronautica officials as to feasibility of proceeding. One of tbe flyri steps token was to retain Landrum-Brown, the state and short flights as it does now. Location of Pontiac Municipal in a more congested area, with lakes and highways, prevents increasing its size to sccommodate a lot of air traffic and jet aircraft, both Mayor RowMon be roorinirted Immedtalaly. "It h aecessary to proceed aow'so ihat the land wU) be’ available' as the aeed artees,’* he said. The proposal was pn^ted to he board by the aviation oonuiiit-ee headed by Rmvrion, with the support of the Ways and Megns Robbins was approached by Bfayor Rowstbn in October regarding picking up the land options, with the understendlag^bat— any«in)orterr^«eiiirnot be re--cr7--rr~Tumbutaed without the consent of the board of supervisors. Of the sum sought by the commission $138,000 was intended to replace a bridge over the Clinton River in Avon Township and straighten the approaches at Uv-ernois and Avon roads. CAN WAIT A TEAR "This and Mher, smaller bridges edn wilt und! next year, ' Road Co m Ri i s a i 0n er Thaicher..But he assured that the year as part of the regular county budget. .. The $ll-mlllioa worth of road conaty fikis year sriU ari ia aay smy be affeetri^by ghiag np tbe $mim for bridgMir aaU Ttetofc- A A Robbins said he was tenmediate-ly sold on tiie idea, certain that the airport was in the best interests of the communtty. He formed committee, thb others being Merritt HiU, Frixl Motor Cb. vice president in charge of the Tiractolrt and Implements Division In Birmingham; Peter J. Monaghan, of Monaghan, Monaghan k Oawmer law firm in Detroit; Cornelius Ray III, general manager of Ray Industries inOxfortJ; Milton K. Smith, president of MUsmith Industries, Inc., Msdiadn Heighta; William 'A. Terhes, president of Ternes Steel Cb., RoaeviUe; and John Wall, yeslden^ at Permyient Mold Die THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1962 OIL FROM rac OCEAN-Partbest ollahgc* oil driUlng iraUl* Ution it thii pltttorm TO inllM off LMitUna in the GuU ot Mexico. Built by CATC (a group of four oil companira), it riiea 239 feet above the water, which la UO feet deep at thla point. The tender akmgalde the rig holda the pipe and other drilling gear and pro-videa eating and aleeplng quartera lor the crew. Platform at aft end ia for hellcoptera. cleantht RESTORES COLOR AS tT CLEANS FADED UPHOLSTERY, FABRICS, RUGS ing polling piaioea are expected to have reported. The aupreme elec^ tion tribunal will then proclaim 0^ lich the victor. OVKB « PCS CENT I yote ran well over the TO cent required by the conatltu-tioh in a midticandidata race. OrIM bad mjil votea. Cal- f^o-OS Party Sweeps Election Franctico Orlich Lsadi Libroration Candidate to Win in Cofta Rica RAN JOSE, Oaata lUca m^Tm-ciaro J. Orlich haa led hla pro-Al-llanoe for Progreae National Liberation party to a gweep of Ooata Rlca’a national elecUona. * * a In the preaidentlal race Oitlch bad a S6,000-vofe margtai tulay r Republican Rafael Calderon, cloaeat contender, with all but 331 of the 2.M5 polling placea reporting. party eaadidato OtWa Ulato M,- Ottmgea Valverde EPn. The reeulU from Sundfiy a ballot ilao repreaented a victory for ex-Preaident Jeee Plguerea ■trongly badted Orlich. Preaident Mario Echandl. who remained neutral in the election, winds up hla four- Editor Says Man Must Be Good to Operate a Farm ^tNHATTAN, Kan. (ft - It takea an uncommon man to farm theae days in the opinion of a Mid-weitem farm editor. a- ♦ ★ Rod Turnbull, farm editor of the, Kansas Oty Star, spoke her cently liitii« capitid. akiU modern-day farmer. Gting records of the 3TO farm-era in the Northeast Kaniai Farm Management Aaaociation, TUmbulI said the top 60 farmeri in group have been making pa much the last lew yanra as in the t ~ me war pei^. But the lower-61, lie said, going in the hole eupry year. OPENS IN APRIL _ New branch of Firat Federal Savings of betrolt at Maple and Cron-brook Roadi, Bloomfield Townahip, is bring roofed this weeh and will be finished and opened in April. The roof, of day shingle tile, la the same type architect^ uat^ In designing restorations of early American buildings in Cuionisl WlUlamsbufk. Va. PART OF EXPANSION - Above Is'hn architect's rendering of the new branch office of First Fedreal Savings ot Detroit at Farmington and Slocum Roads, Farmington. Construction Is scheduled to start early this year arid to be completed .before the end of the year. The building is part of First Federal’s multimillion-dollar expansion program. New Offices Planned in Oakland First Federat to Open 2 Branches Two new branch offices, both Oakland County, will be finiihed opened this year by First Federal Slavingi of Detroit. Announcing these major projects in the firm's 1962 expansion program, Hans Gehike Jr., First FedenU president, said the new branch at Maple ahd CrUibcook roads, Bloomfield Township, would be opened in April. TIM wther Oakland eennty the eiM of Iftt. Thesd wUl be No. 14 and 15 in First FederaJ’s branch setup in the Oir^eKMunty area of Wayne, There will be many unusual i Growing Cattle Feed on Trays in Bam NEW YORK IP - cow pastures of the future may grow on steel instead of aiAl, according to "Steel FSets,” publicatian of the American Irion and Steel Institute. The soil less agriculture is achieved by using hydroponics, a meth of using water, nutrient chemicals, proper light, temperature and humidity. A farmer in Ohio is growing supplemental feed for his cattle on steel trays stocked in a steel building. He harvests part of hii crop each day—it grows about an inch ^nBUng vwilua ■fiar-your Kltallmir t That'a CHdamobiU’a Dynamic 88! Ita famous Rocket V-8 with pew high-compression Firo-Swirl combustkm chamber equeeaas extra “go’* out of every galkmt Add smart looks, smdbth ride, stylish interiors ... and it’s no wonder the Dynamic 88 ia Uto outstanding buy in its claaal ag.aBMaBU^£ / -S6I YOUR LOCM AUTH6RIZID OIDSMORILI QUALITY DiALiR " JEROMI MOTOR SALES CO., 280 S. Saginaw St., Fontioe, Mich. ' niM M lV«Tin Ufli OlDMUOtM'wiltKH TTOWI««« MOOM »OW, TUBBAr MBKn. WIVI---------. _------'Ij ... ' ---------------f------—-------- tures in the Bloomfield building, according to a spokeaman for Aloya Frank Herman and Howard Thos. Simons, the architects, who described the nearly completed as "a true bit of Gepr-giain-American architecture.” The extertor, of face brick with etomi trim, ie eharscieiiatie of the etordy. yet refined, detoO that prevailed In IStli reatory Windows, dormers, cornices and cupola are white pine, the covered with clay shingle tile. This type of roofing wae ueed extensively in the reetoratlon and rebuilding of Colonial Williamsburg In Virginia. A * ★ Restorations there called eod shingles ot the type used by eariy Americans on their homes and other buildings. When fire hazard wm considered, WlUlamsburg restoration interests deveioppd a clay tile shingle that would look like the original shakes which were used on most colonial buildings. ♦ A * The WUllamsburg-type clay tile shingles are now being placed on the new First Federal branch in Bloomfield. Lassiter's Daughter Is Granted Divorce Circuit Judge Clark J. Adams yesterday granted an uncontested divtmee to Mrs. Zonyla Lassiter Stankov, 20, daughter of Mrs. Nelle Lassiter of Beverly Hills. Mrs. Stankov chiuifed her hus-bcuid Thomas with not supporting her' and their IH-year-old son Steven. Mrs. Lawlter once was charged with her husband’s 1959 murder but charges were later dismissed. Divorces P*rer from S!vtn|oUi» WUUi 1U... . --- fteodore V. B 7ubm P. Hi BtTorlir M.’lfom nofinald R. Ilippbfrze miuboUi J. from Donald C. Hatch Carl P. from Barbara C. Ballcrc Robert T. from Armlnia H. Oatner DoroUir i. from Jacato J. J«n Ereljin from Rarmond Muhanm Sll’fiiS S““dr"V.!?m'«L. Vandccar Dorothy E. from Oarald R. Nlchol^ Bodra L. from Oordoo J. Turner RrqRptMMlinMil SINUS CONGESTION TROMACTAOlEtS MttRilnlE.C.RIliliki*Malm mlmlNSInsliii.^ nNhIm aayiMMMmleTOIewmd Am Hdib- aem rnmiomWmm usasMrJi M N. Baginaw M. —Mela Floor WIONiSDAY—2 IB laO p.«. REMINGTON Elactric Shaver RECONDITIONED na SBRVICB-RemlllBton fa f rtprecenUUre «U1 bo In c ra oyanr Wedooeday ot tea WlfiiTAiPJBiBfl Etoctrle SbarMs —Main Float THREE ' People Tell Us "SIAAAAS Is the Busiest Store In Town" ... Do YOU' Know Why? Bacauta SIMMS IS ALWAYS GIVING BIG6EST DISCOUNTS ... wod that's a foct —day in pnd day out you'll find more diKounted,,A ilemi hero at Simms by Occident thoif you do in most stores on purpose ... for further proof, just check Ike items listed below. On Sale ' ** tomorrow, Wednesdoy from 9 o.m to 6 p m. •i>» WEDNESDAY ONLY DISCOUNT BONUS Heavy ‘MIRRO’ ALUMINUM ^ Baking Wares V-we 'is O A Choice ol hmvy gouge ‘Bcody Mni Font' in 3 oftoddd .Sizes phis a itond^ leaf pqn. Slylet ns shown. MIRRO mode lor extra yeort of service. ?nd Floor " WEDNESDAY ONLY DISCOUNT BONUS Tubular Staal Handia—Cuthionod 16-oz. Claw Hammer Regulor $ 1.69 Volue - ilyled ot shown, full pound weight, steel Imncfle with cushion grip, limit 2 per peraon. —2nd Floor WEDNESDAY ONLY DISCOUNT BONUS Mnch Tubular STEEL Frame. Step stools At Showi 2 StyUt 99 3 One style os showtr, other stylo« hos solid bock ... seot height ,>s 1' 24 inches off ground,-seirt is 17x17 inches. Steps hove rubber is platforms, fold into choir when not in use. —2nd Floor O WEDNESDAY ONLY DISCOUNT BONUS Pun BUM WRPamHE Reg. $1.69 GALLON For ihinnmg points, cleoning brushes, woPdwork, furniture,, ett. Full gollon. Limit 2 per person. —2nd Floor WEDNESDAY ONLY DISCOUNT BONUS Door Closers For aluminum or wood storm door> —eoty fo install yourself. Makes storm doors slam proof. Limit 2 per person. — 2nd Floor H YOU Must See These BLANKETS Because Words! ^ and Pictures CanT Fully Describe Them! Very SPECIAL PURCHASE Brings SPECIAL DISCOUNTS Wash Them All You Like ... They’ll SUy WARM and SOFT-Famous BEACON and CHATHAM Blankets Actual $6.98 Sellers Discounted At Simms to 3 47 i®. FULL 72 X 90 INCH SIZES , Choice of Chalhom 'McAlister Ploid blonkel. in 94% Rayon ond 6% Nylon woven in rich Dlofds, brushed to soifness, bound in 6W Duraloom oceiote satin. Folly washablo-S'A-lbs. weight, red only. Beoconj reversible blanket hos smorl plaid on one-side ond rich solid color oH other . ,. 94% Rayon ond 6% Nylvn.bpund in 6" acetate soiin; choice of beige or turquoise colors. Woth beouiifullv. 98 North Saginaw -BASEMENT L V FOtIR THE PONTIAC TinESDArr FgBBUARY-q.^tm^ Mrs. Boosevelt Wires Nikita of Peace Hope MOSCOW (fl - Mn. El*«»r RoomwfII hu toM Pri KhniaiMltrv, “The world would be niled With joy if relatione between the United StaUW and the U^^.R. were imbued with a treat spirit ot cooperation.” . w, ♦ w The Soviet news agency Thai made the message public today. It was in reply to gne sent by Khrushchev last week on the occasion of the SOth anniversary of Prrtident Roosevelt's birth. "I greatly value your telegram. whWi 1 received oa my hpabaiMl's MHir anniversary. I am deeply grateful tor ttie kind words aksut ny hnabaiRI. and 1 am Bare that he entertained kindly feellngN toward the people of Raaata. “Ihe rriadons ..between.. Ihe United Stales and the Soviet Unifsi have the most important significance for world peace. The need to find ways of cooperation ia greater today than ever before. Inasmuch as both our countries well know what power of deStrtKjlun------------'‘hraRT BKATB—LIT UP larea of the Federation of "^he West Indies Is more than 8,000 square miles, with population of 3.1U.000. With a nrw monitoriiy is possible now to rheefc a patient's heart action visual^ and hudi-bly. Here, patient Jackie Walker's left arm la wired to the Indicator which registers heart beats either by beeps o^ a blinking while light. Should the heart atop, s red. light comes on and a loud buzzer sumnums. help. Rusk Cites Reasons We Buy U.N. Bonds JKASHINGTON (P-Socretary of State Dean Rusk said today national Interests “allow us no choice” except to buy United Nations bonds. Testifying before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Rusk led off the Kennedy administration's drive for authorization to buy up to $100 million of the $200-million UJf. bond Issue. The bonds are designed to help the ITnIted Naftoas out of a finnn rial hole deepened by the U.N.'s (Xmgo operation and Hoviel re-I to pay Bussis's share of 'In our Judgment," Rusk J. “the U.N. bond Issue la the at rational and businesslike way In which to provide the U.N. with the necessary loans to cai+y on ito peace and security busi- tbe c Rusk made it plain he sees the -''UUHtM .JNations as a necessary manhda'y of U3;'‘ifwei|^ policy in the yean ahead. ~ -“We are discussing the financial viability of the United Nations in the . rapacity to serve as an effective instntmanf for pance and world order." he said "ffe nactssaiily are discus.sing the hind of world we shall be living hi. The proposal to Invest In harmed by financial difficulties and unexpeclad condiUons that have developed since Its birth In mi. heart of our fore^n pplicy..-"The Issue before us can he put simply; *Ns the Uoltod ftlales prepared to M the U.N. up to gIM of the nwoey It needs to restorr Busy Premier Off to NY City Congo's Adoula Talks to JFK the ItiwsMllato totare la a rially responstole mannerl “A great deal depends upon that answer. "Tt seems to me overwhelmingly plain that our national Interests allow us no choice." Rusk cited what he said were these dollars-and-^nts why the United States should boy $100 mUUon of bonds; BEA80NR 1. Bather than letting the paying U.N. members, like Russia get off the hook, the bond issue would pot presiROT on them to pk^y up less they lose their vote in the U.N. 2. Store bond repayn to become part of the U.N.'s regular budget. Ihls would drop the U.S. contribution to Congo costs from 47.5 per cent to 32.02 per cent and Congress would not have to appropriate new money for Congo opcratlona next year. WASHINGTON W - Congo Premier Crtllle Adoula completes his >rlef Washington visit today with a call on World Bank president, Eugene Black. Iben returns to New York and possibly anolhsr meet-Ing with Russia's U.N. delegate. The premier met with Russian delegate Valerian Zorin over the weekend and aides said Zorin had requested another meeting before ! Adoula returns to the Congo. OENBUTOB — This it the latest acceaaoty lor a fallout shelter. By pedaltog the cycle totennittentiy, a storage battery is kept chai«ad to create an independent soivee'of power for ii^ and other needs, Catty Sul-livsn demonstrates in New ~YStir.— Macmillan Vows Backing for U.N., Shuns Critics LONDON m — Prime Minister Harold Macmillan Monday night overrode a, Laborite motion of of his govenv-menl's gloomy outlook toward the future of the United Nations. TV 67-year-old prime mlnisler, roundly eheered by Sir Winston Churehill and other Conservatives, pmmi.s<>d continued support to the U.N. but said his government rreognizes the peacemaking role has b < Two Women Jailed in Atlanta Sit-In ATLANTA Oft — Two sit-in dem-onstratoix protesting racial i gallon at a restaurant here Jailed Monday on a charge of violating the city's snUtrespassing ordinance. Booked at the city Jail RBtabeth lllrsehlleld, M, wMte. of Fsmklln, MIeJi.; and BertI (iober, to, Negio, of Atlanta. Police Capt. J. L. Mosley said he and Lt. W. K. Perry oflei^ the women citations, instead of taking JaU. but they refused. Mosley said he explained that e restaurant involved already was Involved in a test case to the I they still refused to accept the citations. Tokyo Hit by Asian Flu TOKYO (API - Aslan flu has hM Tokyo again, and adioois have been dosed. Ornctals say it Is a milder version than the virus which killed 683 persons here in 1956. No fatalities from the disease have been reported I thus far. Dqits Support Cabinet Post « But Ditlik* Rock*f«ll«r for Quostioning AAotivoi on'Urban Proposal WAflHlNGTMf IB- today and attacked Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York for questioning their motives. * a a After the party chiefs' weekly hrafkkfast with Kennedy White House. Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana read Businesswomen Attend Session of Legislature LANSING (UPl) - An erthnatod 290 members ol Aisineas and Pm-iraslitns' Woman's Qubs from the metngnUlan Detroit area, todud-h« acveral from Oakland Opunty, watched the Isgiatallve process Members from Wayne, OaUand. to their legUators before and after the brief aeaska in ' ^ ing empioynient of « A spokesman lor the Business _jid Proteaskmal Woman's cIWm. BTwBieh Ml*. Itoiw M k mrmber. said the purpom at the journey here was to acquaint mambers with their eleeted repreaentattves. Other duba were expected to aend representativeB here Feb. U | tor a commlltee bearing oa Mrs. waa created In 1IS3. Republican critics of Kennedy's prap^ have accused the Prrsi-dent of playing politics by nounctog that he will app Robert C Weaver, a^ Negro, secretary of urban affairs if and when that department is estab- TURNIIJkBUC DOriNO — U Ronde, Honolulu's newest taurant, -perdMs atop the 23rd floor of the Ala Moana building, the ctt/B newest sad tallest office budding. The dining room, seating 162 penons, makes one ooqtplete rrvohitkm every hour, pr>-vMing diners with a panoramic vtota. Housing and Home Finance Agency. Rockefeller and the Democrats tost week of "polltleal fakeiy” In Weaver ahead af IhDf. Rockefeller, implying Kennedy really intended to defeat his own prop^ and cteate a political advantage, said Democrats were afraid to let the urban affairs plan stand on Its merits and “broughf In the completely unrriated issue" through the designation of Weaver. Mansfield, saying Rockefeller waa Mrs. Hobby's chief deputy when the welfare department was Driver, 20, Found Guilty in Traffic Death of Girl A Circuit Oourt Jury of six women and tour men deliberated 29 minutes this morning before finding James W. Lynch, 20. of Bloom-ifeid Township, guilty of negligent homicide. center Bae of Oommeree Road U. His car struck aaolher carry- la the dtath of OBC of thom, Barbara J. Aho, IS. of Shelby on Florida Roundtrip POftT WASHINGTON. WIs. (B-The car driven by William Thels purred fine all the way to florida and back—almost. The auto stopped 10 feet from the family garage as Thels and his wife relumed from a Southern vacation. No amount of coaxing Urould make it go again. Thels caRed a fow truck to poll the auto the final 10 feet. Circuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem set sentencing for Feb. 2$ and allowed Lydch, who was alw injured in the accident to remato free on $500 bond. The verdict was returned by only 10 jurors as two were excused dur-_ the course of the one-day trial when they realized they knew some of hte Major Jones Joins Air Reserve Unit Major Ernest C. Jonae, Grant St., has joined the Pontiac Air Reserve squadron. It nounced' today by Lt. OdI. John L. Underwood, commander. Major Jones, who completes 20 yean of military service in Ubv, Oevi eight bomber missions during World War n in the Padlk thea leC. He waa prevloualy aastgned to the 9691 Air Reserve squadron in Fort Harrison, Ind. He moved to Pontiac recently and la treasurer and dirsetor of the Nu EHi Ctarp. located In Rochester. He is married and bais one chiU. Margaret Lucinda, 12. Wandoring^ Dog Rofurns With a Nbw License GLENS TALUS. NY. (AP)-Rayf Fuller's dog. Buff, wandered away from home wearing a 1981 dog license. When Buff returned three days New York Farmer Soys Someone Stole Bridge RANSOMVILLE. N.Y. IB . -omeone has stolen James E. Foster's bridge. Foster say* the bridge stated of foor IMoot steel be I pounds each. He bridge — which „ mall stream on tarn — at $40. Reduce Request on Dei^ Limit Quick, Proliminaiy OK Given JFK Appeal for Immediate $2 MNon WASHINGTON (AP) - Prasl- I lacntaiy of the Thsaaury Dllioa fiiid the grosB he 11 be bade batore Janr 20 aeak-............pUmhinthe ttva BtalRluaa M, woold rates the debt lult to $m WUm aad. Dilha adk eoahto the Trearary to meet Ns ahlfgaHaas ewagh ~ Kennedy bad askad for a $U>- July L There wen Indlcationt Googreas might balk at such an locreaae In a ..atogle steji, and the administration decided ik> dWidr fts rsqueri in two, keying the first one to the actual preocBt condition of the Dillon told the committee in written testimony, "a $3p0-blllion I afford us a margin of only $800 mllUon In June and $2.1 billon In March, both of which maigins are canddenbiy below the $3-bllllon frgure which la desirable and tar accord with past practice.'.' Rilb,hin'tm)fp(iikndJoir "“DANT 0» Smi WBIHIT *4“ oatra; «sN Foreign Hrlattora Committee. His meeting with Kennedy was reported by the WMte House to have covered the secessionist Katanga Province and the Congo's 'economic Uls. WMte House Press Secretary Pierre Salinger declined to say whether any agreement had been reached on further U.S. aid. But reports were that the United Slates will announce in about an increase in financial to be channeled through the United Nations. AOOUIJl CONFIDENT During a < losem-bara Monday. Reacuera dug out dx of them alive. The aeventh wai LANSING HI-Gov. Swainton haa named alx additional pointeea to the Michigan Induatrial Ambaaaadop Corpa, whoae aim U to attract new Industry to Mlchh They are Burton C. Pater- aon of Calumet and John F. Tveey Jr., Peter B. Oarfc, Walter L. .C Oouae, H. A. Sanders and G. R. fy Peterson, all of Detroit. ----------^--------, .o The national death rate in 1154 dropped to 9.2 per, l,000,of populw-tlon. marking an all-time low. the nbn la rewsaad to the be-gtaudag ef the fade. TMrdt the (ellewlag scene la faded la by gradually opening the variable Checking my reaultl, I dl ered It's a mistake to soom the ! camera while It la hand hek^> It ■ usually Isn’t held steady enough to prevent eye-stralning wobble. I corrected the mistake easily by using a tripod. I found later a special Bolex trigger handle is a great help In steadying the cornea when a tiipod or unIpod Isn't handy. ^ CURIOUS bird gets the lowdown from Phyllis Desfor, 14, on an Snun zoom reflex njbvie flve-toone lens ] camera with professional features. The bird’s eyevlew dlaclooes: through-tbe-lens viewing and electric eye syitenr; a ibillty; a variable shutter By IRVING DESFOR . AP Newafeataree I’va been Mr. Averaca .Honp Movie Maker ever since my grosrh children were infants. I’ve record ad their progress from crib to crawling to young maturity through ftnm lamily moviss. In that time I've nude my fahr Miara of mistakes In handling movie cameras and Judging ex-poauTM but we still have a creditable library of nostalgic films to enliven a rainy evening or a fam-Uy gathering. Convicted of Trying to Hog Phone Line STOCKTON, Oalif. (li-Virginla iTflpe Plumb, 44, was convicted Monday of attempting to hog telephone line during an cm< gency last July. Mrs. Plumb was charged< with refusing to relinquish her rural l(iarty Une to Mrs. Ora Smith who was attempting to summon aid for her baby, whom she believed critically Ul. TV dMenae contended that no real emergency existed since the haby was dead at the time of Mrs. Smith's attempted call. The prosecution held Mrs. Plumb should be Judged gullly of an attempt to commit the crime. Judge William Dozier set sentencing for Feb. 20. Speak^s Fail to Coordinate Convention Talks ROANOKE, _Va.^(AP) - You ' couldn’t blanto^''detogates to the Virginia Farm EquipniiehU Association convention If the^ Monday's session a Ut co^i a- a * Oiw speaker issued a call “neWv dedication to old-fashlo thinknig and salesmanship.” The very next speaker advised the delegates t»t to use "the tame methods of selling ss In the day of the one-room schoolhouse.” The next speaker's topic was "Today's problems.” Leas than TOO motor treuks were registered in the U.S. In 1904. let's get the kinks out of the kids! It's a shocking fact that many of our youngsters nowadays are' so fhr under par that they can't MSS simple physical fitness tests. Th^’re in danger of becoming tomotrow's "soft Americans.” This danger is so real that Pretident Kennedy has called for more emphasis on physical education. program of vigorous daily exerdae lecom* mended for all scljools by the Prsiident’s Council on Youth Fitness will get the kinks out of the kids. That’s been proven in msnyschools. See to it that your child gets proper exercise, every'day, in his schod. Urge yqpr school bOald to~ adopt jsnd carry out-a vigorous program for physical devmpotont. ^ If ft ifln’t doing so, fiOd out why. AM at your next PTA meetihgl Tb that record 1 leoeMly added a new experience: that ef profearional caOber. To do It. 1 borrewed a Bolex JEoom Reflex S movie eamera for toellag. The primary advantage of a reflex camera is Its through-the-iens In the viewfinder Is what you get^on the film frame. It eliminates parallax errors and permita you to focus predaely with ita spllt-bnage Dilcovtrs Liv« Gr»nada While Plastering Home NEW YORK (APl-Joaeph Mar-n found a potentially explorive situation In hia home Monday : from 314 feet to infinity. Its bright ilpage Is independent of the lena opening. You can let and foe sharply stop^ down 10^1^- a The camera's Pail, CInor M.9 zoom lens Is its leoipd notable feature. This has a I zooming ratio. This meiil^ a person or object can looi laiRer from Its wlde^mgft^ pbal-t an area can be t or rriluced 35 diameleid by i ing In or out. This range, from a « 8mm to a totopholc t the gnotori avaUabto for any 8mm camera. The Martin, who had Juat moved into hia Bronx apartment, was plastering a cloael when he came a a five hand grenade and a live bazooka ifiell. Police deactivated the devices. rie maker, at seen In the vtow-Bnder. The oamera’a third impotant feature la iti inner Oompumatic 11 g h t-measuring s y a t e m. Ita electric eye sees only the light' which has passed through tte. ,a s^ack of rent receipts.. ..or a home of your own? -TKoSf .who wish tht home should comp in now and bpUc it ovpr. Swings Md Loss msstMy PtyDMt WOWIOAIVS Builflirtg Capitol Savings & Loan Assn. Eiiabluhed 1890 is W. Huron St., Pontioc FE 4-0561 ^TOMEl PAIHN6 IN lEU OF BUIUHN6 1. CadiUoct an beautiful. 2. They on eaay to drive and park. WHh the featherlight touch of ita ateering md its instinctive aense of the road, the car gives a lady a unique fnniing of confidence and mastery at the wheel. 5. TImy are eaey to eet in and out of. The doors an wide and Ugh—and they open all the e^. 4. CodOfaica on puief. The car la so meticulously crafted thPt, even et the full legal limit, a lady can qwak in a whisper and be beard. 6. CadiUaee an roomy and comfortaiNe. 6, They go a long wc^ wititout stopping for gae. 7. They an safe and dependable. Evwy Cadillac ntutorgniw 1400 inspections during its manufactun. 8. They heid Oieir value. A Cadillac historically retuma ita owner a greater ahan of ita original coat than any other car in the land. ^ 9. CadiUaee an so personal. When she chooeea from 13 modeb, colon, 139 interior combinations and a host of acoeaaoriea. a lady haa a chr that is “liniquelyliBr own. 10. CadiUaee an eaey to find. The car is so die; tinctively styled that it ia inatahtly recogniuble in even the largest parking lot. • • • Confidentially, then an many other nepona why ladies love Cadillacs. Your deUer will be happy ^ help you discover them at any time. THi **^*‘'^'*" ■ I., 'x; VISIT YOVR LOCAL AVTHOHIIED CADILLAC DEALER JEROME MOTOR SALES COMPANY 116-UO S. SAGINAW STREET ^ • PONTIAC, MICHIGAN ——— FOB SIXTY YEABB THE 8TANOABD OF^HB WOBtO - Use a Waite'a FLEXIBLE CCC CHARGE hf SALE WEDNESDAY ONLY Starts at 9:45 Sharp, Ends at 5:30... or Phoho FEdoral 4*2511 Tomorrowl Nurtory ■ Chair *2.99 Rn 3.W rlordwood chair ' tray and chaitibei. Ouiltod Nurtory Pads ",2 2-99* 18” iquar* podl hov* many uml Purehau OQ Double braosr or pi on. Size* 6 mo. to yoorz. Training Pants "X 4-99* 3PIk. Torry Sots Special QQe Towol and W'cloth Sot a *iA9 DOUBLE DROP SIDE CRIB ploihc loelhing roili, dainty dacol trim, caiiert, odjuiloble ipnogi,. WOK birth llnith and double drop ’6f89 folding white baitmel with hondlei. 7-Yr.Crlh Mattross X *6.99 Woterprool, otid re-tiilanl. Innerforing. large 30x40” zite; pozlel priniz. Flannel. Printod Crib Blanicot Ree. M Oil. 4M ,WeV9 Orion acrylic-roybn. Poiteli and white. Cotton Knit Gowns R*e. age 1.19 00 Zip dozing. Long zieevez. Poztelz. 88* 4 -79* Dozen, Not'l brand. Slight imperfections. Intulatod Oiapor Bag X *3A9 Double zipper. Boxedj_' Several colorL ' Cordurby ■ Crdwlor Sots Rn- $9 im 3.98 £»99 Orion Knit Shawls X *3A9 Orion ocrylic in pozlelt Orion Knit Swootor Sots X *3A9 Infants' Toppor Sots X *2M Bbyz' i or gi«;lz'. with ztretch Jxint or pantieL Blankot Sloopbrs *3.99 Evonflo Nursing Unit X 5-*1 4 or S-ounM zize. With coJ>, nipple. WAITE'S INFANTS' WEAR . , . SECOND FLOOR THE PONTIAC PRESS « W«M Huroo Street TISSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1982 BMOLD A. PTROBIULD rnSwt aad ruUSSu tip W. itltMMU, V)M rrMtdwt m4 MMor^ rti> Tuourmm, OirtaUUM M«a««OT O. Mumuu JMMM, iisi.w’***' Republicans Seeking: a New Image \ So often the opposltkn^ polMlcal party la charged with being negatlff, rather than constructive. Since Republicans in recent times have been In the minority both In the United States Congress and the State of Michigan more than have the Democrats, they have heard this song pretty steadily. ★ ir ★ Right now they are getting it again, not only from the Demo-rrata and independents, but from some of their own number. and desist any further actions In Angola. ★ ★ ★ What the vote actually means was that ^rtugal should give up Angola.' it seems to us that this Is an Internal Rffalr between Portugal and the An* golans. It is our opinion that it is not U-N. business. ★ ★ ★ The original purpose of the UJSn as we understaind it, was to Just recently at a national Young Republicans’ Convention, Sen. Tmtus-TON Morton of Kentucky, former OOP National' chairman, Joined the small but steady chorus of Republicans who say their party has a tiega-tlve image and must somehow shake it off. ★ ★ ★ tions. Jkis la far from the case iit Angola. They have been a part of Portugal for many years. What buKiness have the 99 members of the U.N. telling Portugal how to handle,the Angolan affair? As a leader in the U.N. we should have the tenacity and bkekbone to stand firm on the real purpose of the organization rather than letting it be used to trespass in someone else’s affair. Voice of the People: Agrees U.S. CouM Use Another Teddy RooseveU I fully Agree with OfiuiM Msson. I haye slwiye believed In the Republkan Psrty. We do need more Teddy RoeeeveKi hi ptace of t(ie week-kneed men in oMde. I believe a mAn of Teddy's chAieeter could AhAke hie flit lurt AS hAid AS Khrushchev. Perhape JFK Is doing the best he knows how. \ My fAtber whs a CSvU Wat vetenn And l gAve my oldast ton. U. In World Wat I. Now, 1 have a grandaon In Kprea to tht Air Force. I have lived thieugh four wars and I don’t want to know of any more ueeleia itougMer o( good people. Prem Ii Defended r'JjS; 2* iftS f .aAAaw Anthem er refuaing to wad his on vrirl 8 LiOttOr , student band tecauaa of reUgloua lUa la an I > to Carole her engagement picture In The Fontlae Frees. Doee Miss Uugbea fancy heraalf aa a faabtan modelt I, also bad my picture in The Pontiac Praia a^ “ The man la not a mbversive or ha would be a moat ardest patriot on tha surface, eo why net 1st the man practice according to tha dlc-tates of his o Mt. Clement . .to put tt In. Iticy. don't have to. friends go, 1 dsnt have may, but Umm who saw my ptrtaro, called to wteh me weU. True, my pictnre dida’t make me leek Hke a ravtag beaaty, bet, Ihea agala, I’m realtoUc emieih le Children Riding Bui Still Favorite My thanks to The Pontiac Press and Mlsa Hughes should remember she put her picture InThe Some of these parrhts who are so horrified at Uw thought of their “little dears” faring a real hike to school shouici be Interested In the followlp^ from Sports Illustrated: / “Qnd ef ear editorial aamber I slather to a reb No Top to This Beanstalk Osnl er. he aet forth to keep Being constructive in the fullest sense; that is, offering solid, detailed alternative proposals to set against the opposition is some-thing the Republicans have The Man About' Town David Lawrence Insists: .e • ^Muzzling' Has a Simple Solution Weather Notes Perhaps Mr. Oiorgk Romniy with •his new Image can change aU this. Submitted by Our Friends Make Interesting Reading WASHINGTON-There ! nothing very wrong about the “muzzling” of military ollicera that a little itin AmericiahrWaiir (^ew Way of Life Fehnary: Tha shortest iMnth, In iplte of what K nnially aaems. • ^ South American affairs are dls-\ iSeussed editorially in The Nashville I fanner after a visit below the border I Jiy Harvik Branscomb, Chancellor of { VaildefbUt University. II Editor jAMia O. Stahlman, one of ;the authorities on Latin America, Most ewirybody win'll wrth-that-old weather watcher, Garfield Hayes of Pontiac Trail, who phones that the recent thaw was a blessing lu a manner far beyond a relief from the low temperatures. It gradually took off much of the Ice and snow In a manner that dispelled danger of a flood which many of us had feared. , pxst quotes the university official I ^d then follows with comments of ; ^ own: Lm “ ‘Tl\ere is a great vast maas of peo-{ Me who are dlmtisfled and Want a ) ndical change. They don’t want Back from p llorlda trip, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Norman of Lake Orion, report that Its tourist facilities a# frost bitten. Hotels and motels have plenty of vacancies. This even apjblles to'ths^Miynf'iiAt For the cause of much of the controversy Is that,old. old defect’in governmental bureaucracy which can w trp»cria«4i only as incompetence and inefficiency. Everybody believes in free speech except LAWRENCE some minor officials who, weighed down by their Imaginary responsibilities, fancy themselves aa on a par with the secretary'of state or the secretary of defense and censor speeches accordingly. This has happened under preceding administrations, too. personal e x p r e s s I tut of the speaker.” If a niUKary man, Ijowever, makes a speech criticizing hts superiors for the way they operate the Defense Depar^ent or casts any asperaions upon 4hem, this bt-oomes a matter for internal discipline, as in any department. There is no rule which says a member of the team who disagrees w|th the way the team is being run has to caity his case to the public. ■ r ■ - He ran always manage to have himiaeir aammonad to a heariag before a congreaalonal committee, with the niiderataBdlng that hla teaUmony wUI bo takea la execuUve aeaaioii and kept ooall- In this way, he performs a duty to his country—he tells hts story to the Congress, which has the obligation to keri> posted on the way the lawa are anforced. If then’s anything wrong, the Congraea tan than move to correct the mistakes by legislation or causa the removal of Incompetent or misguided officials in any department of the government. Sometimes the departments themaelves like to have certain things aired. If they wish to dis-olalm rawonsibUity lor such state-moots and yet permit them to be delivered, the cause of free speech is sustalhed, efficiency of governmental operationa Is safeguarded, and the urge which sometimes seizes public ofliciaU to crusade lor the betterment of man Is rearbly satisfied. (Copyright MCt) am quite sure The Pontiac MS was definitely Impressed h the “work of art,” accom-ihed by Ihe “Cincinnati Enquir-' and submitted by Miss Carole ghes. But, I do doubt seriously, It srill affect the subacrlption c of Tho Press to us Old Tlm-. Possibly she hasn't realized baU. relay raring aad ■ a word a( waridag ti “He discovered that only halt cobid run around the block without stopping for breath. Two asked to be excused fram aqy strenuous exercise because it ‘gave them headaches.' One wouldn't play touch football bacauw, as he put it, ‘I stink.’ Thrae bora had to have a boost before mey could shinny up-• tide. again, have yonr marriage photo priated otoy la IlM “ClariBaali Eaqalrer,’’ thereby leaving the Votee of toe People eotama open boys wera developing otoor, Hon of toe a Alter you are married, your mental strain wUl be centered on maintaining a home, the health of your children, and the rate of ever-lncreasIng utility bills. Mrs. N. d. Neff Utica Wen.’ •'I. L," thne c eiything. Don't you think H's rilly to sh in a ararm house and put little tots and big toU out la sera weather? Let’a be modem and let the school board do what they think is best. The onrront row got momen- Dr. William Brady Says: • \ radical change. They « oommunlsnl specifically, but some } it as the only radical alternative f of long standing social imbalance.’ ..............if '....--------★ .....-.... » ‘'Coupled with this, the Chan- • ccUor notes the existence of a I masslyc Inferiority complex « among the people of Latin Amer- ! ica which often manifesta itself 1 in criticism of the United States. I 'A'* ★ ★ • “Undoubtedly the widespread po-» litical upheaval and a seemingly In- • bom antl-U. 8. trait has led Dr. 1 Branscomb to believe that Vanokr-; tn-T should make an even greater ef-» fort In the field of Latin American I affairs. { "A ★ ★ ; “Historically, the colleges and j universities of South America 1 been the spawning grounds • of unrest and U. S. students couid f be placed in unpleasant situations [ as Chancellor Branscomb cx- ,* plained. In short. South America I is no place to send immature I youth. r -A ★ ★ [ “The overriding question is wheth-' I er social changes can be brought • about fast enough for the people / through democratic and non-violent I processes before the Communists can . force a showdown. j -A A- A- I '“Dr. Branscomb’s educated and ; aente observations of t^toach-^ ; and respect with those who arc willing { to face the facts of life iiif this J area. This is borne out By the J diluted antl-Castro resolution I . adopted in Punta del Este, Uru-\ gnay, at the Organisation of Am«rlean States conference.** with these Intermittent thaws and fresM-apa, all akatera are warned about boneyeombed lea on our lakea. A spoil of near Mro ' woaQuM' Is noeessary to again In West Oesmany where they could get date to help them' veto M one side of oeHeIn demeetle Taking Cdlciufn Differs From ^Eating’ Nutrient It is regrettable that such an Important occasion u an engagement annooncement should be spoiled for Mias Hughes by an un-ilattoring picture. However. | feel that she is placing too much iril-n a picture US W. Mansfield Does the person who wrote on schools have children In school? He wouldn't send chikben out and wondto if they were iptfeitolp reach their destinatlau aaMy? Tills person should seek a bus-driving iob for schools A correspondent told me that when abe mentioned one of my yean and. to dale at oalaraets. hMktog she to aad as Ire IMu fsika whe UsTt ksjsw her, deea A phone call from Oeraid Udry of Waterford states that a pair of wild rabbits sought a nesting place with hts pigs on aero nights.' There’s a delinquent ground hog In the hills just north of Rochester, as Blanchard Barrington, who Uvea there, and has been watching things, says that Its snoozing place has been snowed In, and the animal did not burrow out until Sunday—when It wa« cloudy. We're In full agreement with Mrs. Blanche Fordney of Drayton Plains, who writes about the gorgeous sunrises this winter, you also syill find them worth rising that early. Phoning that he was fai the audience at the State Fair Coliseum when the two aerlalists were killed, Frank Kasa oI» Birmingham aaya that many of the spectators were slow to realize that it was not a part of the regular act, and then a^ panic waa averted by the clevemesa of one of the clovpis. In Imploring them to be At the Same time he did not tell them the name of the‘library and the exact shelves therein where they could find the pther side of thtoe controversies on economic ana political issues. , -But it is questionable whether a soldier with Gen. Walker’s war, record should have been removed from his command when a simple reprimand and warning not to continue some of his practices would have suffloed. THE WHOLE QVBgnON Now, as a reault, a Senate aub-committee of the armed kervicei committee is studying the whole questym of “censorship” of speeches. However, there Is a way out of Jhc whole difficulty In handling the speeches of military men and other officials, ft’s a rather simple device but, perhaps because it is SO obvious, it has been overlooked. The Defehae Departmeni’s experts In dlptomaoy aad la eves- ever you please to call ’em, a lady (eh?) in the group lauriwd oubdght. I Imagine a g^ many credulous customers think I’m a yokel because I call chronic joint disability rheumatiz. Now, a California' reader says . be has had lum-jMgo on and off lao^buttoen, tor; I’m Jaat a g with a M of queer m " yean. Although he la now 85, tT trotfUe baa been ^ greatly reduced since be started , eating calcium. He doesn’t sayf eating calcium. I He says taking itil This implies thati __ he regards cald- BRADY um a's medicine. Penonaly, I have found every member of The Pontiac Prem A . mature adult subject to him- staff with whom I: have eame In bago, chronic or recurring Jtock contact to be moot couricous, ache or low back pain, siMuld hel(^ and grarious. 1 stnocfely leara something about the physl- appreciate the eervicee extended ology of calcium In the body. It Is to the people of the Pontiac area a great plfy that eo many aemf- by The PonUac Preee^ Invalids know so many things . |, ^ p. about calcium that ain’t ao .__ thldp taught by doctors whore * tojowledg. Of nutritlo. I. virtually ^ SchOOlteachtr mtmo umn. M nt. u»a m. FoMow Consdence* Thlal. In reganfs to the publicity wmiMi Bndr, Us oo the echooltencber In Utica, re-mcLsu. guiding Ml sUSid against saluting Taxpayer Admires Coleman's Decision Amazing! A teacher who dares ' to speak out and say what be believes Is best for the taxpayers of Walerford. Mr. Coleman, I admire you. I stayed gagged for 30 years. party wWrii' brntots and eriU-etaea and Mm' M ^Meaf every prepeeii>l IntMdnecd'hy sp-pMenlB, whrttow H %s feed or bed. U’B whaPa g«id tor toe party-nef whaPs gred'qH> ear oNstry. Appriutments fe efllee ^Continued on Page 7, Ool. 3) Calelani/la ooe form < Kennedy Confident Despite Population Rise: Is Bot wlthla the prevliioe ef a kralto eotamu. Suflloe H to mew tow ttat aa lajeotom of Explains ABCs of JFK Farm Plan seated. The fight between Flint and Grand Rapids for second Mty In MLoli^xnn In npepUaiUm kjta reached the state anpreme ehnrt which has been askqd ta wf n>Me a lower court Injunction barring Grand Rapids from a territory an- The speechmakers themselves shouldn't Ito obliged to accept these, though there are many occasions when such changes could and would readily be made. But If a speaker should choose not to delete the portions deemed questionable from a policy standpoint, the Department of Defense could alinply require that the reeech carry a footnote to the public which would say: “This addreas nas not been cleared by the Department of Defense and does not necessarily reflect the views of fte department. It must be regarded solely as the A heavy inquiry comes In a letter from Graham Flaxner of Rochester, who feels that, since the televlslmx companies regard the quls scanflida as only a alap on the wrist, what would they consider a solar plexus. '' The Country Parson P(H’tugal-Angola Affair Isn’t U.N.’s Business Verbal Orchids to- ; - Once again little Portugal is be-* ‘ friended by the Ujiited States. This is second thne in the last 12 months, t ■ In the 99 to 2 vote in the United t - NatMHiB General AsBembly vre [ went aJong with the majority which eaUfd on Portugal tir rmiii! Mr. and Mra Fred Tomrell of 28 Michigan Ave.; 5Sth wedding anni-Iversary. Charlea G. Parks of Blbnlngham; 91st birthday. ^ Mr. and Mrs. Fred Thomaa of Flint; formerly of Brown City;- goldeq wedding. h Little Lesson X, “The Calcium Shertage” (35 cents and stamped, self-addresaed envelope), I mention a dozen common com-plainU that are manifestations of calcium deficiency, and tell you what form of calcium, of course with vitamin D,-to eat as a supplement to your everyday diet, to prevent or relieve such cumplaintK If I recollect, I f Idn’t mention lumbago as a m|mi^tation,of calcium deficiency, not under that name. But if I may use other terms fmr lumbago — such as chronic or recurring backache, low back pain — I’ll say here that high calcium diet supidemented with an adequate daily ration of Ca & D wUl bring more relief hi many such cases than the California reader says be obtained from “taking” calcium. THEBE n A DIFFERENCE An Important differ«H6e between using ^cium as> medicine and eating calcium to prevent malnu-trttkm or improve nutarltlBn is that, tor the latter puipoee. the high calchun i^rt. aiid/or eod vitamin D supplement must be followed, not for days or weeks, BY PETER BD80N WASHINGTCHf (NEA) - TIm most arresting statement in Pres! deiit Kennedy’s omnibus farm message to Oongrees to that, “In spite of a SSmillioa increase in population by I960, our farms will be able to produce all we need with 50 million fewer acres thar we have in cropland today." TUs aseuinea that toe Antort Agriculture Secretary Orville L. FreenuirwHl -be out beating the bushes to aell hto program to Uie fanarrs during most of Febiuary . and as long diereafter as ngees-'suy. The package he to presenting there and to Gongress to back u| the INwsident’s message to a S^page boriclet of tret and charts labeled, “flood and Agricultip’e— a Program for the ’OOs." , * * faitnen to oonvert torir laa for enjoyment of toe peapto. The “development” In the program means the development of human resources in farm families through better educatom and by bringing new Industries into marginal farm land areas, tb provide aretH yean at t|e same rates as to the last N years. The conclusions drawn^ from this assumption are that t|ie exist- -li« 99 bilUon word! of fanh shiv pluses will have to be reduced tp reasonable .year-to-year catry-c^ers, and Hiat land in cultivation will have to be reduced in acreage so that It (sroduces no more than can be consumed. Ob the cover is a flat, dia:. meod-ohaped seal‘tor the pro- ' instead M drlrimif dtoni into cl^s. SPEOFioi OF PROORAM Tile speciflbs of iheae prograins This is what the new administration farm plan propooes to accomplish by drastic measures. The nature of the reforms pro-poeed to indicated by the goal of increasing farm income by 25 per cent within the next five years , The Idea' behind the “abund-anpe’* part of the program to that mtW Is being product by efficient American agricultura than can be consumed. New legislation to therefore recommen^ to enable the United $tates to’share its abundance with needy foreign countries through liberalized sales and grants, and wi^ file needy ----------------1.-------- sent how fo any ' M summary they call tor -new wheat, feed grain and dairy programs to be approved Kjectid by fanners' through voting In nattonal fef- id the PresMref also anothef/toMasage jsn ilecko will toll -of fltand Blnnc; littiMrttidMr. “Net an the good do good, nor fenners or ^Ices dudged consumers. \It Will bb «r neat trick If they can do M. With United - States 'population iticreasiiig 0ie way it is, there is no pnoM 'that Itopartment of Agriculture appropriations will decrease: But It is implied that tax dollars will be channeled into more productive haes than paying stor-a/^g coets OH surpluses. ★ A The “balance" part of the program to Intended to cot production of cQinmodittoa now In serious oversupply and bring them into line with what is needed and what can be consumed. The .conservation goal' is to achieve a more efficient use of land re^rces. Grain production would be cut The dairy program would be-eome effective as soon da It can be enacted and ratified. Others woidd be made effective for the In 196. areas. Leaaf would be gh^ to -3s.r»%'rAsaK' :A; ’ II , 1 ^ ■ -• ■ ' ' ' • ' * . I THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. PEBRUARY 6, 1962 SEVEN Hanning to i^st? Ho>/to choose a stock broker ^ • you plan to invoot In Alnorkao buiinw. tho nnt J<«p !• to choow a atoek brokar. An important atop? Vary impor^t, baeauaa you will (Uaeuaa your flaanoaa wtth him. , ^ W* to to caraM»aa in aalactinc • doctor or lawyar. Ona good way to make a aaiactioo ia to tolapluma or go into tha oflleo of a Mambar Firm of tha Now York Stock Eiehanga. It'h mvaniant. of eouiaa, to viait your naaraat brokar. (You might want to vWt aaoaral Anna, to makt a odamarioop.) You can got tba adviea of a tniotad friand. Your lawyer or bankor might raconunand a brokar to you. Mmkm Itaa aia Itoad to tto Yalow Pi«m of tto titopbona directory. Look in tha Stock Brokar aaction undar "Now York Stock Exchanga.*' TImb ait down with a Partner or Ragiatarad Rapro-aaotativa aad got acquainted. He can’t guarantaa hia iudgroant, of eouraa. but you can ba aaaurod that ha baa mat tha Exchangt'a raquiromanta for knowiadga of tha DaUntoaawiihhiatolphow much you can invaet after proriding for biUa and amerganciaa. Than, axplora your goak. If you hopa for added income daring tha year, in* vaotigata tha reeorda of otocka which have paid dividarida with eooaiataacy. lf|roaaoak ineraaaad invaatmant value through tha yaaia^ you might want toeonoidar companiaa which appear to hayo giwth poaaibilitiao. Talk about bonda if aafaty of income and principal ia your aim. Baaaamhrr that aacarMaa go down in price Jpat aa they go up; that eqmpaniaa may not cootinua to pay dividendo or intaroat. Aak tha RagMorod Rapraaaatativa about tha groat companiaa liatad on tba Now York Stock Exchange. Than it’a up to you. Our froa booUat, “Divmnm ovn thb team," racorda ooina MN) atocka that have paid a caab dividend every year >for 26 yaara or more. It ax^ainatba Monthly Invaatmant Plan, whioh lata you invaot with aa littia aa |40 every thfoamontha. Togat your copy, juet mail tho coupon. Own four ahara of Amvlem bmfnaaa Members New\bric Stock Exchange cam MB ma Boonav. Man to aMwabw nna •! tha ItawTwfe atoch iMhMMa.«to the Now York atoek BidMaot. Dopt. »A. rjO. Bm lOTOk Now Terk t, N. T. PiMoe wad mo, free. “MviBaNn ovaa tbb Yaua, • boUe ciMo Dr. SfcinUy W. Block Optometrist 3513 lltoaborii Uka Rd. , Ceniar of Com Laka Rd. EterUngM by Appointment niMMK2-23«2 OaMdWaa. Rules on the Hiring oi State Teachers LANSING (AP) • aid, Atty. Gen. fVank J. Kelley thoae InotrucUnc kin-drraarlen through the I3th gradee, Kelley eaU ia an opliif by Dr. lym M. Bartlett, etate ■upertmendent of public ' However, Kelley added, (nuteee of community a" under the dietrict plan muet hire only teacbere who meet standarde Oini nANKB — Ptobattonary patrolman ^ " ekotw.* Karmoff (left) geU the heartfelt thanks atored eigne of Ule to Mrs. Jordan after a pats- of Mrs. Matjocle Jordan, 22. and her bueband Ing doctor could find no auch aigna. ‘The Jor Frank, in New York'a yiuahing Hospital Mon- dans were thrown from a parked cab which day. Kannan’s mooth-to-mouth breathing re- was struck from behind by another car. Voice of the People Autolite Studies Plan to Retrain Workers (Continued from Page 0) aa a' iwaaid tar par^ al«l Mob to the real if tala evU. * A A When I see my friends, who iMld high poUtkal offtoes, travel mltoa to aUeod tUO a plate dia- and will continue If a place is provided. In Canadian towns 1300 to 6000 people, they have an for their young people. It’a cheaper to build an arena than to ' addtttana on the Jails for the delln- For the past lour years I, with the help of lathers ih the neighborhood. have* provided a rink on the lake with boards and lights. And all the Uds in this subdivision have turned ‘into fine youngsters. dent and promote the geao « « i,^ the Ibds have good clean fUn. teaa in honor of potitical grandeaa. Ice, K mates me siek. Why don’t the RepubUcam stop Two Hockey Fain Tell Need for Rink I unite in raganl kttbe artldc From the Press Boa," lead for an artificial rink in Pontiac. It sras Ctated that from 1987 through 19S2 Pontiac has depended on natural ice. A city the stse'of- Pontiac could Altafd to have an artificial rink for open skating as well as hockey. Hockey to a growing sport. There arc lots of boys that participate and I am sure that wMh t' eaentlal of an artiflctal rink there to play a game, depending on the eather. Lef(s get the ball rolling for an I commend Bruno Xeams for article oh the need tor an artificial rink. Hockey Is a growing spoii TOLEDO. OWo (AP) - A plan to establish a HOO.000 fund to retrain workers whoae jobs are bi* ing eliminated Is untler study of the Electric Autolite Co. The company announced recently that is was closing Its Toledo l^nt, eliminating some 900 Jobs. The plant manufactures starting motors and generators. However, he added, the plan go into effect "alter the completion of current production schedules,” which is expected to take between two and tlttse months. wertb*’ ef the M ageaelee la the Vailed thadt What heller way to there for the Peattao area to Bsake saeh a study thaa askfag people to give to latavtdaal i^ieaolee so JWt they eaa de-glve or wMh- Hooray for the Mhrch of 6hnes. t stands on its own feet. TWH, Unite* Statai Mail boM mate daily deliveries oyer a 66-mile route on Late Winnlpesaukee in New Hampshire. The U.S. Patent Office not onlyi The 2tal verse of the seventh is seU-iupporttag but dtoo usudlly chapter of Esrn in the BBile ^ m an aimual profit as wan. 1 tains every letter af the alphabet. Hw togtalaturo, KeBey said, Um- he fllfopbto tar a teacher's re rtf- CATHOLICS GET LOW COST HOSPITAL PLAN |eV$OTi ADit hoapital tnmrai from our lO-year-old aon-pR Soelety-lht Oatholto blidito St. Oeotge. Hero's an oxamp _ for only |1JI a month men under 61 can roeclve 180.a week hospitaltoef ' dent or nokness insunutot. Pr— 1160 a week — — Ctotholtoi of adroneed age o 1 at addltl^ cost. aa you wish—tor hospital bills, dMtor bills, or expenses at hoeoe. Oboose from a wide variety of plans to bring your present In-itoe un -Jo date or get com- ____pretacuon. With bos|^ ooeto up l>T5% since 1M6 Aero Send (or comptote information insuranee plans. There Is no _^. jsUon — so mall the coupon today . - - insurance. You spend ----------««« ”»« OILIGATION----------------------^ IS- I! CATHOLIC KNIGHTS OF ST. Q10R6E ” « 1106 PenobKOt Building Detroit 26, Michigan. WO 2-9793 l>tMM rush free fscti on inturarwo plan ,for Catholics. Nsnf»o..................................Ant. Local Con-Con Men Plan Saturday Quiz Two ol Oakland County's 'constitutional convention delegates will hold "dutch treat" breakfasts Saturday to explain the progresa oif the conventim, and answer ques-. tions from their constituents. A A A Delegate Rlrhani C. Vaa Da- A Heckey Ooaeh Criticizes Editorial on March of Dimes Why did The Pontiac Press mak^ In addition, Autolite plana to ea-e of the March of tabUsh an employment service to fund drive? It was help dlsplaeed workpn find new . and unneceasarUy M Toledo area, Davies Whe to the “Poatfac AfW" aad 16-MUe Bead, at 6 mM. At the Howard Johnson's laurant at 13-Mlle Road and Woodward Avenue in Royal Oak, Delegate Arthur C. Elliott Jr., R-Pleas-ant Ridge, will appear at the aame time. . Cify .. Phone.. . .County. . . .State. . Occupation.......... ••••••••aeaaaeaeaaaaaaaaaaA****************4 NEWSPAPERS WANTED HIGHEST PRICES PAID WE PICK IIP CHURCHES and SCHCXDLS FE 2-0209 Incense Causes Blaze KUALA LUMPUR. Malaya (AP) -Chinese New Year Jon stldu burning in a temple are bp^ieved to have caused a fire which raged through a wooden aquattor area here Monday, leaving r than l6p persons bometoas. Then hrere no casu^tiiea. Approve Smith as Judge WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate confirmed by voice vote Mon-datf President Kennedy’s nomination of Talhot Smith W M'U.S: judge for the Eastern District of NEW BEAUTY, QUALITY, VERSATILITY...BUDGET PRICED! ,X OPEN FRIDAY *711 9 e. M. EIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 6, 1962 Like to Take a Trip by Ship? We do everything except pack your bags! have the talent, the Btperience and the ataff 'tf help yon plan, arrange lud book unforgettable !^uth Pacific, European >|d World cruises. Call to-y and turn over yoijir uise dreams into excll-.i4g reality. JntlT Located PHONI; ri 5-4151 Oir Policy msUIES OMl INSURES mi INSURES aai INSURES Mi INSURES : Mi INSURES asi INSURES aad INSURES ^ aai INSURES Mi INSURES Mi INSURES Mi INSURES Mi INSURES Tkalchei. tad W«n«t Pealiac'i OMmI luBranc* Senate Saapping Today on Aid to Colleges Bill WASHINGTON (UPI) - So Bupportera at Prealdent Kflnnedy'a they had the votes to defeat aa attempt to Include pubUc grade and high schoole in the WU. A roll call vote waa act lor this Son. Pat McNamara, D-Mtch., to add 1325 million In aid over two years for elementary and eecon- ___ _ an amendment by GOP Sera. Norris CMton. N. H., and Jack Miller. Iowa, to give states two cenU of the eight-cent per pack federal cigarette tax to BACKS SON’S DBCI8ION - Even though he faces loH of his Job as a toll oollector on tl^e Blue Water Bridge between Port Huron and Sarnia, Ont., John A. C. Swalnson of Port Huron, father of Michigan Governor John B. Swainson. thinks his son's decision to lift the sr raMWss 25 seeing Helen HayM perform the Twist. * * * The view is fas-] c i n a t i n g, but lot ao sure she should be doing what she's Ding. That was myj reaction to watch-{ ing Miss Wood prepare for her role as America’s famous^ stripteuse. Gypsy Rose Lee. Thf young actress is playing the title role in "Gypsy." * Now that I have stated my reservatiOM, I can report Miss Wood does a good Job, as always. Though she is perhaps the purity since Lillian Gish, Hie does TIME 8PANNINO NUMBEB^ She was rehearsing the "Let Me Entertain You” number, a time-spanning nwntage which Shows her developing from a shy, hesi-lahl peeler to The strulU^g, ffiifiiu-stlng Gypsy, confident of each THOMAS Nor are bumpa and grinds permitted on the screen, hut that doesn't Inhibit her. 'From all I can gather, Gypay Rose Lee didn't do the bump-and-grlnd kind of stii|i," said the BC-Hers was more a tongue-in-cheek kind of a routin DID BE8EARCH did some researctuai a Sunset Strip strip Joint the other night, viewing the talents of such attractions as Mtes Hollywood, Kim, Ava and Simone. It was educational, and she refuted my suggestion that she was small to portray a stripper. * ★ * "I admit I'm not a big girl.'’ (Adr.rtlMBmt) “0ldn40,50,60?” -Mm, Vw’re Cnn \vs«wsjssasszi£A tm*mm htlhn dw wMf W k^i Ml «> kM Twk m’ • I* (***** ''dUMi 1 should add that at no time did she wear anything lea than skin-tight black leotard. "In the picture I'll end up in a bikini-like outfit," she exirisined. Hollywood’s censors are not yet ready to permit nudity. TO HIDE NAVEL Matter of fact, the censors have not seen fit to recognise the navel. How will Natalie solve that prob-lemt 'A diamond, I presume," The service stresses that courses offered, except those in real estate, may be taken for credit never suffered as a young performei^-perhaps because never a star. Shopping Trip Fun for Ethel Kennedy TOKYO (UP1> - Mrs. Ethel Kennedy shopped In one of Japan’s ___Tokyo subway today, drawing nearly as large a following husband. Robert. “It waa great fun and 1 enjoyed it,” said the smiling mother of seven afterward. She spant niwt ol her shepplBg ttme la the toy deparlmeat ea the loarth floor of the MUmIumM le jMvo heea oMored a sea c She did aent^ in iriolw.- sue stood and talked to a Japaneae man who was seated in a comer and Miss Inukai interpreted. for Sweethearts, Friends, Relations, for Sweethearts. Friends, Relations, Children i2?NwHiStginiwSl “I wsnt that lor Michael,” she said as she pointed to « moving locomotive with a whlatle. Her son, Michael, will be 4 years old Feb. 27. With her on the tour were Mrs. Mstsukata Reischauer, wife of U.S. Ambassador Edwin 0, Rel-schaueri Mrs. Donald Wilson, wile of the deputy director of the U.S. Informatiw Agency and Miu Mi-chlko Inukai, granddaughter of former Prime Minister Tsyyoshl Inu-ai. Photographers, newsmen, Japanese officials and shoppers crowded in behind as Mrs. Kennedy made her purchases and the crowd followed her right down to basement and into the subway. woman AWED As the attractive Mrs. Kennedy passed by one group a aged Japanese woman was heard remarking to a companion in an ^we-fiUed voice, "and she’s the mother of six or seven children. Mrs. Kennedy waved to salesgirls as she passed by booths where ’'suhi” (rice cakes) ore made. la the subway, whtoh took tho group hack to the «.B. Embaisy, The man, Hachlnlsuke Tsukago-lii, 41, at first did not know who she waa but when he foui ' said he waa delighted to hear about the electkm at Preside^ Kennedy, her brotherln-law, because "he Is such a young ,man.” w ★ ★ Mrs. Kennedy asked him about his Job, hit working hours, if be married and how many children he had. Tsukagoahi said he worked for the Miyakozome Kai-sha firm and that he has two children, ages 7 and 2. Mrs. Kennedy told him that two of her children SALE ONE WEEK ONLY ENDS SUNDAY 4 P. M. 30 Students at MSU Protest Action in Iran Y3tsr TANSINe^^ Mi^ than 30 Iranian students attending Michigan State University and the University of Michigan marched around MSU's Campus Monday protesting the recent dosing of the University of Tehran in Iran. The students also carried plsc> ards calling for release at 200 demanattatkxi in Iran last montli- meat of Irma aai wero proteM-li« what they eaOei the Mprro-«loa of free sp^iech ■* ** Mrs. Abdul Mashialeky, secretary of the MSU Iran Student aub, said that Irahlara studying In the United Rtates^are told not to rptum I to tt|lr^ Mra. Benaedy nmariuid that It Urges Placement of Healing Arts Under One Board DETROIT (UPI) - The Mldd-an Medical Society has urged lat all the healing arts be placed under a ringle state licensing board, that a third state medical schod be created and Wayne State Univeraity Medical School he ex- These recommendations made aa ofHciala of the society appeared before the governor’s com-misskn on prepaid hospital and medical care plans. Appearing for the'society were Dr. Otto K. Ekigelke, Ann Arbor, president; Dr. OUver B. McGiUi-^dy, Lansing, society council chairman; Dr. Harold F. Falls, Ann Arbor, chairman of the Medi-cal-Socio-Bcon0000 a bn to toetode asofafa to toe B sk%s a belli bUk The House passed and steered to the Senate a bin to give trustees of county tubemdoals aana-toriums up to <15 a day far their age for their cars. Qnrentiy, they ON fWPICIAL BimNESg Eisenhower in his first year Kennedy traveled even more in his first 13 months: to Canada, Bermuda, England, France, Austria (to see Khrushchev), Cblonr- Elsenhower did much more traveling later In his presidency. Kennedy Is a cinch to do more In his first year Eisenhower Sfd hi{ family in foreign affairs, sending his brother. Dr. Milton Eisenhower, to Latin America on a fact-finding mission. Also In 1993 he sent Vice Pre^ dent Richard M. Nixon on a goodwill visit to Ai^. I Kennedy in his first year Vtoe President Lyndon B. John- Now the president’s brother. Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy, is making a 39-day goodwill trip through ■ S» rMahl OBERg OtmOOLEUE PBEMIEB -> President Kennedy meets Congoleoe Premier Cyrille Adoula at the White House north portico door Blonday as he weicomea him for a luncheon to I at the presidential guest bouse. Youth Job Measure Pushed by Goldberg NEW YORK lAP) of Labor Arthur J. Goldberg says the Kennedy administration is de-1ned to do something for the million Americans a^ 19-23 who are both Jobless and out of GMdbetg spoke Monday at w national conference on pifaUc work programs for urban young people, sponsored by the National Sodal Welfare Association and the National Committee on Employment youlta._______ ____--------------- He said a “modest am te’’ beginidg would be the administration's youth employment opportunities act now before Con-i he urged support of Wins VFW Contest LANSING (D-Wmikm M. Jeremiah, a University of Detroit High School senior, has been named winner of the state Voice of Democracy contest .sponsored by the Veterans of Foreign Wars. The award is for his five-minufo taped radio broadcast on the bene- President Tiuman, except «t of It ought to cover a lot of bi- was a stay-at-home except tor Roosevelt. It was the extrayertod Khrushchev who put the personal touch by personal visit into flo-viet for^ affairs. Maybe -* til 1965. ’Then he made 1 UP n>BA with today’s Jet Kennedy and Khrushchev have ssd their press relations men to work out some pretty important he thought of it Mmaelf. But he became quite a traveler, although he didn’t start moving aroondtUB- Last June M Pierre SaHngrr, pearad on a TV debate In York with Adchubel and Mikhail Kharlamov, press officer of the “uvlet Foreign Mtailstry, “ V the role of the press. AH three then came to Washington and for a couple of days Out of I given Interviews to three American newsmen in Russia, came the idea for Adzhubei's Interview with Kennedy in November, the text of which was printed In Ru with AlUed I Recently on one of these trips to( - .........Mi with* AH this, at course, had -Khrushchev’s approval. Ibere can hardly be any doubt he picked his son-in-law, who is also a member of Paris he Kportedly talked wlth| Kharlamov about having Keanedy, and Khrushchev make TV films| would be shown h «ch- been Invited to visit Russia later! this year. He’ll go. with Ken-; EDWARD, AUO This month the President’s youngest brother, Edward M. Kennedy, is to go to Poland. But Earlier last year the Preskiait sent both brothers, Edward and Robert, to Africa on separate missions. His brother-in-law, Sargent Shriver, visited South America in behalf of the Peace (forps Sisters Jean Smith and Eunice Shriver took a vacation bridnd the Iron Curtain but managed to have tea srith the wife of Yugo^ slavla’s President Tito. The Kennedy family is a le and before the President’s term is Up the various members aUTHNA Tb% ORMUr MM* bTMthllM fMt. *0 wirtliw: UiM ST—otM waa^ a« (M jnNDAOO at SraesWU. OiMr Hovt BIG BEAR BuiM You . . . GIANT ROOM ADDITION Rough Only ■ V Finished with id Doors Exterior Completely Finished with Windows and Doors For m Little as Ho Money Down No Faywieiits Till ^rinf • Family Room • Kifehon • Utility Room • Dining Room , • Extra Storago FE 3-7833 nut br]|1F= BOlHiUCTIOM CO. DIU DEafln 92 WEST HtnoN when people like a car...they show it! Olnioiisly, a whole lot of people like Pontiac a whole lot. So many, in fact, thatwe^re on | ov way to a real hnndinner of a year. But we’re not gnrprigei Darned few people can resist Wide-Track and that snperb styling and smnptnons comfort all rolled up in one wonderfiil automobile. So naturally g yon see a lot of Pontiaca. Yon think maybe all these Pontiac-knrers have a hint for yon? Check in at yonr Pontiac dealer’s for a look and a drive. You’ll get the idea. (We cannot tell a He: our picture was prearranged. Pontiac people don’t like traic jams any more than yon do.) SEE YOUR PONTIAC DEALER IN METROPOLITAN PONTIAC FOR A WIDE CHOICE OF WIDE-TRACKS AND GOOD USED CARS, TOCy r VPORTliC MOTOI MRSIOR I^EH STORE CsnsMl Mofors Corp., <5 Mt. Clsmsnt, Pootjsc V5, Mkh. lUSS lOHRSOR MOTOR SILES 89 M-24, Ukt Orion, Mich, lACl W. HIUPT PONTIAC SALES aiA SERVICE N. Main Strstt. qatkston, Mich. HOMn HI6HT MOTORS. IN& 160 S. Wsshkigton, Oxford. AAlch. Wide-Track Pontiac! ------ LES fu^ SEl Lsks Ksej F0ime-B1 EEE60 SALES fu^ SEIVICE. INC. J080 Orchard Laks Kacfo Karbor, Mic SHELTON F0ime.B!nCK. INC. '' 223 Main Stry^, Rochastar, Mkh. > i TEN THE PONTIAC PREfIS. TUESDAY. FEBRUARY e, 19W Hostess Must Take' Smoking Q: How COB out l •m ioMiik Uretf vt havtag tht cooking a party dinner spoUad becauw ol the rudanaoa tt our guaita. Nelthar my hua-band nor 1 tmoka but do not object to amoUng, except at the,dinner table. U I purpoaeiy leave aH^ tray* ott the table, tbeae friend* go and get Utem with-. permuted. I have no objection to dgarettea at the end of them to throw a amoke acreen around other gueata while food la being aerved. aw - Intoier- table other than removing certain friend*' name* from our gueat Hat? A; When rigarettea, aah tray* and lighter* are not included In the table aetting, table and, until a tew yoara ago. no lady or gentleman would have even thought of doing ao. But today ao many do amoke at table that there 1* really nothing a do about It. William L. Belaney*s winning hand of bridge mokes suspicious smile* from his companions (from left) Wayne L. Pyke, Spokane Villa; Mrs: Belaney, Chippewa Road; and Mrs. Pyke, u the foursome gathers for a practice session in anticipation of Friday’s PorUiac City Panhellenic benefit card party in FirU f ederal Savings and Loan Association of Oakland** building. Q; We have a i Panhellenic Benefit Friday A: In loving memory at John Pontiac CMy Panhellenic'a benefit card party ia acheduled for i p.m. Friday at Flrat Fed- a Saving* and Loan of Oakbuilding, Weat Huron T' * * * Ticketa may be obtained at Aaaiating cochairman / •Ruaaell Jacobaon and/ Wayne Pyke are Mra/E. McGovern and Jo Ann Van /Mr. tht door or trpm member* of Taaael, door prlze*;/ Mr*. William Freyermuth/and Mra. Robert Crandall, thicket*; Mr*. Don E. Kennamer, Mr*. Fran- Mr*. R. L. Bronoel, Jane Mei^ lifleld and Sally Whltaon, refreshment*. Other committee* consist of Mr*. Raymond Wilhelm, Mrs. William Belancy and Betsy Camall, cards and tables; Mrs. Richard Kuhn and Rosamond Haeberle, pubUcity; and Sue Eckley, Mra. W. H. Ragsdale, Mra. Glen Dick and Mra. Howard Owen, clean up. fera readers booklets < riety of subject* concerning etiquette. If you would like the booklet entitled "The New Baby," send 10 cent* in coin, to cover coat of handling, and ci* Webster, Mrs. Stuart Jeske and Mra. Philip Stromberg, A fall Womens Section wedding is planned by Dorothy Abby Advises a College Grad: Ann Coleman, daughter of the Edwqrd H. Colemans of Opdyke Road and She'd Make a Good Mom; fle'd Make a Bad Mistake Fireman I.C. Gary C. Evans, U.SJ^., son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Evans of Willard Street. Her fiance is stationed DEAR ABBY; I’m a coUege graduate — my fiancee Isn't. I like the theater -> she falls asleep at plays. Art interests me —■ it seems ridic- Certain films DOROTHY ANN COLEMAN DEAR ABBY: I am writing this with the hope of seeing It in print a* a warning to other well-meaning mothers. We have a beautiful, 17-year- Abby, these two friends told their daughters, who spread it all ovpr school. Soon the whole town knew It. Our telephone started ring- her right and thought we were doing a fine Job, as she wu an obedient child, an honor student and a leader in church activities. a hunted animal. On the verge of a nervous breakdown, we sent her to a Hopm tor Un- We that she was In troubi* with a high school boy. In my grist I confided our New Play at Vanguard Opening Thursday for four aiM one-hall weel« al De-triil's Vanguard Playhouse is Disenchanted,’’ devel-odri as a play by Budd Schul-and Harvey SseWSfrnm ad original story by Schulberg. Male lead in the story of a tiled author (reportedly P. .S4btt Fitigeraldl will be taken by English actor Leon Shaw w|o is also a singer and ac-conpliahed comedian. His Baoadway roles, ranging from ’’The Devil’s yenr’s tour on the road with Yal Brynner and the original “King and I” cast. completed a major role In her first movie, “The Small Hours," will share star billing and remain with Vanguard as a member of the resident com-j^ny after this production. Cum laude graduate of the University of Minnesota’s theater depariment, she was featured in “She Stoops to Conquer” on Broadway. Among other resident company members in the show is John Gregory whose most recent role was the witch boy in Vanguard’s "Dark of the Yet, darn it, she’s a very human type with sound ideas about raising a family — the kind I’d like. When I get all set to tell her the wedding is off. I take one look and—lowie —I’m hooked again. Could I swallow some of my interests, marry her and be happy? FRED DEAR FRED: You could “swallow" some of your Interests, but hardly this long glng them not to repeat It. 1 told diem beet their prayers. How is the worid trsattaig you? Unload your problems on Abby, cars of The Pontiac Waterford PTAs Special Parent-Teacher Association .programs are planned ' this week and next 1^ four Waterford schools. Ust. tinn Mason who recently Ionesco’s hit Broadway comedy “Rhinoceros" will open March 14 at the resident Professional Theater. You are trying to say that this girl would make a wonderful mother but you are intellectually mismated. Unless you can educate her to your tastes, don’t say "I do" — because you won’t. Opportunities available to graduation will be presented by Watertord-Kettering HW> School’s guidance department at Wednesday’s 7:90 p.m. PTA meeting. Discussion will cen- tracing of Antoine Cadillac’* route from Montreal to Detroit. Photographed in northern Ontario, the movie shows arnb scarcely InhaMted since Cadillac’s time. Eugene Griffin, tether vice president, is chairman tor the Andre's Most Magnificent Permanents COMPLETE *T50 SPECUL OFFER A Combination of Serviee* Regularly meed at lUJI For • Superb Salon Permanent • Conditioning Shampoo COMPLETE $go5 Extra- *25 Permanent oHinary gra ^50 Special f No ApimiataieBt Needed—Open. Friday ’til 9 P. M. OUTSTANDING STAFF OF EXPERTS TO SERVE YOU BEAUTY SAION FE 5-9257 11N, SAGINAW Between Lawrimee and Pike St. (Acrem from strand Theater) munity or Junior coUegee, ihort-term coUege courses and the four-year collegiate pro- Eldon Rosegart, Waterford Townriilp Board ot Education president, will speak on tax Gueat speaker Paul Andrews of Wayne State University’s admissions office will be gu^ speaker. A question and an- giiuj«ll« «gHi ppKwmim ■ cum- ing election tor Sehoolcrnft I'TA at t pjn. Feb. 15. A quea-don and answer period win follow the public meeting. In keeping wMi the event’s Fathers’ Night theme nek-ard Allen. PTA tether vice prscident, conduct the pro- HAVILAND Larry Sonunerfeld, Detroit’s American Automobile Association travelogue photographer, win show the film “Trail of the Explorers’’ for Laura nbith HavUand School PTA’s annual founders’ day family dinner Thuradl^. Serving will be from 6 to 8 p.m. with tickets available at the door. Interested area residents have been invited to aee the film which dramatises tour contemporary adventurers’ re- A mock TV panel wttl be the basis of the PTA program for the Sashabaw Elementary School meeting beginning at 8 p. m. 'niursdmr. Hie adiool group is honoring Founders Day this month. . . Rev. Tom Dunn of the IVee Methodist Church of Drsytan Heights win be guest minister as is customary each month for the gathering. Refreshments wiU.Jbe aerved by kindergarten and first grade mothers. PERMANENTS Be Appeiataieat ffeesssory LOUIS $4 50 thnwfii Pri. V Cookies from rndny lands will grace die refreshment table for Wdbster School Parent-Teacher Association’s Thursday international tea udach will feature Detroit radio’s Bud Guest a* speaker. Getting an early start on their baking project are Mrs. Myroslaw Hrushka (leff) and Mts. Juho Hm, both of the Pontiac State Hospital. Grounds. PTAs in Action and 1 would like to donate one of th* paws as a memorial to my parento. Will you please teO me how thoir name should appear on the marker? lubjecto rnngiag from dvil quency to hrothorhood and tka gnat outdoors art only n fow examples of the topics Pontine Parent - Teacher Association In keapiiM wttk the year’s Unit at Tea " OORA-BAILEY Cora BaUey wUl hold Hs PTA gathering beglnnliig 7:10 p.m. Thursday in the school's dual Following a civil defense movie concerning fallout dan-gen and construction of shelters, Ralph Floria from the dvU defenee office will lead a diaciuaion period. Bookieto on the subject also will be avail* able. Mra. George Panona will aerve refreshments to the group after a bi with PTA", Margate* Scott will speak on "The Audiovisual Role" .In classroom teacUiv at McConnell Sdhaol’s regular-PTA masdng Thura- Machines and equipment used in teaching chlklren will be displayed at the 2:15 gathering. A playroom is provided for Hnsll children. tea for Thimday’s 7:10 p.m. meetli« In the ichooi gym- Bud Guest. Detroit mdio per-sonality, win be the group’s guest speaker. At the meeting’s dose PTA WUXH preside at the regular meeting of the Willis School PTA group 7:90 Thursday eve- /' ning in the multipurpose room.' Following presentations by the ninth gnide choir from made from redpeo of thoir native countries. Serving on the baUng committee are Mrs. Juho Hsu, Mr*. Roas Elliott. Mrs. John Antonian and Mra. s. Vohilg I. Jack LONGFELLOW Miey ia the taple hfn. Fern Parent, bead vtritlng tebdier for the board :AN sprain WILSON Conversations while buyli^ wnre like a visit to an loo cream parlor than a millinery Some women will order sherbet; others lime ice or creme cafe. Naturally, In these days of the Twiat, many will want to try peppermint. And many, many others will take even for posie-pouching ______ last year. Since, not only the fad and the flowero, but the chapeaux themaelves have grown to giant proportions. BONNETS BL4N)M On flamboyant flowers will wind around high rising crowns. finally brim over the face like These fussy, frilly toppers were created by American miUlners to flatter the fluffy, fluttery. feminine fashions which wUl dominate a style-conscious woman's wardrobe thU spring. Just as those cossack type furry hats have been able to conceal the wearer's uncoiffed locks this winter, this spring garden variety will do equally well at the task. Indeed, a person could be bald these days without anyone knowing or caring. SWEET TOOTH COLORS However, the big news in spring hats are not the huge flowers, or shapes, but the sweet tooth colors. Pale beige (described as creme cafe) or off white (va-nUla) are -the new. neutral, "wear - it - with- everything” hues. At least these millinery con-. fectiona are Jlhey are big and sugary, but lightheaded. Farm, Gorden Unit Hears Book Review Edwin Way Teale's "Journey Into Summer” waa reviewed by Mrs. Eugene aeiand before Waterford Branch, Woman's National Farm and Garden Association in the home of Mrs. WiUiam K. Baer on Wink-elman Drive. Mrs. Fred Helt-mand and Mrs. Harold Hadden assisted the hostess. Waterford Branch members will display terrariums and table settings and will serve as hostesses at the Detroit Flower Show, to be part of the city's annual Builder's Show, Feb. 22 to March 4. Mrs. Alton Banfield and Mrs. Dalton Ettinger are handling the advance ticket sale. Bridge." "Jane EJyre," and "Uncle DECIDED TO RETUU': Miss Griffles, a sprightly woman with her gray hair wound ii when her acting career reached its 70th year, in 1951, she and her husband, the British actor Edward Cooper, decided ' both retired. pl« ss loag In the theater.” Her retirement ended in 1954 when she returned to the^United States to tour with Ruth Gordon 'The Matchmaker." Her husband died in 1956 and ahCL Wnce. j Biic wiKi> Bminruii* could charge me with Cheating a ... that brief retirement." The going sa-M actress said "1 used to golf." she said, my husband and 1 were greal ■ era. Once we walked from on to the coast. Now I don' do so much walking. I spend my q«re time sewiag—I make many of my dresses. And f keep up with my friends." Did she'have any plans for another retirement? "No.” she said. “I shall looch on as things come my way . . . regretting once in a t some opportunity I missed, but satisfied that a career is well done, thankful to finish on the credit Guild Plans Hat Party . Vin- St. Eulalia's Gbild of mt De Paul Church will sponsor' a hat party Wednesday from 1 to p.m, at the "300” Banquet Room on South Cass Lake Road. WWW Itester hoaaets, flower top- a^ afl ptayied aftenisoa caps will be dto- for < be alike. Proceeds from the eevnt open to the public will go toward benefiting the Altar Society. Refreshments will be served, in addition to the door prises given away. Serving as chairman of the sale Is Mrs. Tom Fitzpatrick, assisted by Mrs.' Joseph Spadafore and members of the guild. Befor0 It Starts You Can Halt Pyorrhea well save you from pyorrhea and j loss of tetth. mry. Moot deallato wao< to saa Ibeir psilteato avary ria naaSba ar at tha vary feast tews a yaar. The role which nutrition plajf^ Iq Iteriodontal diaeaaa is s*^ queati» for controversy, but theta is ifljc There are other reasons for the periodic examination. Tartar collects on the teeth. This Is Irritgttng to the gums. Tartar consists of deposits of mineral salts. Hits ia safe at first, but latei* on ' qplte hard. This can be removed by your dentist before It does-.ae-. rinus harm if you give him the chance to do so. If yaa have problem teeth, every loar maatbs to not las'oftea anced diet to important since 1 -balanced diet builds 'healti|| When the body to healthy, all i Its tissues are better able to i| disease of any kind. 4 See-your dentist regularly! ^ The number of rept^men, mechanics and technicians has more than doubled In the U.S. In 10 years, the Department of Labor says. A trip to the dentist may not be your idea of o good time, but it may be the most important thing you ever dQ. If you catch that cavity now, you may save tite tooth and also avoid gum disease. front teeth with tha taogaa. year family doctor abaat By J08EI*H1NE LOWMAN Monday I told you that the most usual reason for loos of teeth alter the age of 35 to' pyorrhea, and that this usually can be prevented. How do you prevent pyorrhea? In the first place, parents should make every effort to send their Into maturity with healthy "I? ‘kins' am esientiaT. badly aligned, this should be co-< reeled by an orthodontist because *^\‘<> malocclusion lead s to stresses H"! appears, This 1* the way .. Rhlcl^ aie conducive to pyorrhea. |save teeth, and saving teeth For the adult, periodic I ALL HOijSEHOLD ITEMS • Blankets • Driperies * Slipcovers FOX Dry Clt«a«n 7 th West Huron SireSr 15% OFF (ADfftrUBftMMll •a. I loved feeding time with all my children. (Aod still do when I feed my adorable grandchildrea.) ^ M Somehow that's the lists whea you'rf in cl communici aastli hinisr I Ppading lime also gives you a welcome ‘‘breather” from the normal bectict of the day. Point to remember: if you're relaxed, baby will relax, and feeding will be BMtre fun for both of yon. baby has become accustomed to Dte feel and swallow of wild imomes a in the acceptance or rejection of foods. Fortunately Oerter makes so many good-tasting varieties of strained foods (over SO) you have plenty of alter- Hims couceno iv ms. wW auMs. mothu or i Frequent questkm that pops up in the warm and wonderful tollers I get from mothers; "Are you real, or just a makc-telicve personr Well. I'm happy to r^rt that Ifn a very much alive, proud mother of- five, and a lieveral-rimet grandmother, loo. We're a cIok and happy family and down to the last one of us. we think babies are the very nicest things that can happen to people. nutritive values to choose from. Ia Oerber's several food categories you will find enough variety to keep any baby happy-ond well-nourbhed. P. S. The nwre variety you offer baby, the more foods he will learn to like ... the more » terete hell show in hit meals. A chonga ef taste to important where cereal it concernad, too. By rotating Gerber Rica Cerenit Barley. Oatmeal, Mixed Cereal and High Protein Cereal, you hslp keep baby -interested in this tanl baby bask. Aad sriiy are i special cereals to important, from the infant age through the toddler Stole? Becaute they provide these needed nutrientt; calories for ea-ratte4eteini - baby style. Oaoc. ergy, iron for rosy cheeks, cakium for strong bones, B-vitamins for appetite and growth. Oerter Baby Foods, Fremont, Mkhigaa. Fiber^las Customized DRAPERIES t03 N. SAGINAW Gear, Jemon yellows are blended with a range of greens from Ume ice 1o spearmint. Pastels are frosted to look as cool as^ soda glasses. The sherbet hues — raspberry, straw-berry, orange and peach-well, thew are sell explanh-tory. . ^ Always GOOD COFFEE AT Whipped cream white will stUl be on the scene to com-|>ine with ice white suits and Coats tor spring. But it will be used qwringly. mostly as FfllHITAlli toPidwg with flowers, bands W ____ “aSTboWs _ In rnffily affiw ing the fariiion flavor. Fine Furniture is Elliotts speoiolty. Whether it be moderri; Eorly Americon, provirKiol, or iome unusuol piece, itJs np.prpyem for the experienced up^lsterers ot Elliotts. Over. 37 years in the business is*your ^uorontee of quality. Brand New Patterns LIVING ROOMS, BEDROOMS, KITCHENS Styles suitable for any room. BETTER Better than average in fabric and workmanship. ALL STYLES All stylet can be had in yard goods If you wish to make ,,11.88 ^M.88 18.88 ILM 14J8 1S.N 16.88 8 Widths 184.88 86.88 88J8 Prices Vary Slightly According to Pattern Open Monday and Friday yU9P,M. 5^-5400 Dixie Highway Open Friday and Monday Evenings FREE PARKING AT OUR DOOR 1666 S. Telegraph, Pontiac FE 4”0516 Quality Carpets and Draperijet Since 1941 BRING YOUR WINDOW MEASUREMENTS Approximately 2 Weeks Delivery /?h^S Stoi£ "“IjMNHNE by Kuppenheimer Magnificent fabrics . . .. subtle colorings . . . superb tailoring . . . all combined by Kuppenheimer with one^ thought in mind . . the Leon Line. .ro.*100 / m5rON at TELEGRAPH « VVflL\ E THK PONTIAC PRESS. i rESUAV. FK»Kl,AKV 0. 1062 Walled Lake Chamber Starts Large-Scale ‘Sales’Drive Hope to Bring ' New life to CHy Orion Twp. Voters Support Industry Rezoning Changes ORION TOW'NSHIP-Thref par-(>«ls of land on Indlanwtwd Road we IT made available yeeterday Ibr Indiutrlal expanalon in the town- .%0 (or the iMHxind and 515 to 307 Property owners voted in a ref-Mvndum to back the Township Board's three Sept. 19 rezonlng amoidments, allosilng the indlis-trial use of the sites. the third. Township Super\iaor John l^ssi-ter said today that the total lep-resented about a third of the eligible voters. by aeoM .MS md- Hm voters ■oilag by aearfy a t-1 majority, pf SS9 votes cast, the counts on the three questions were 536 for to 3M against for the first, 911 to propofty. the roiendfihim ends a battle which began last done Oorp. aaked that the three par eeto be resoaed. The parcels total about 92 acres situated near the Artco, Inc., plant at .'tOEiO Indlanwood Road. Eighty- two of the acres are behind the Arii M YEARS - Mr. and Mrs. William E.' ChHtick, 2715 Shimmons Road. Pontiac Township, will mark their golden wedding day at an anniversaty pally Saturday at 7:30 p.m. In the Americad Legion Hall, Holly. Married Feb. ,15. 1912, the Chitticks have a daughter. Mrs. PaUI Rciche of Pontiac, a son. Ernest of Holly, ai^ five grandchildren. ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP Circuit Court jury yesterday found 54-year-old former Township Fiie Chief Samuel D. Mitchell guilty Both drivers have...made statements to the Oakland County prosecutor's office. The Accident is being investigated. Mias Nicholas' body Is at the Sawyer - Kuhn Funeral Home, Berkley. Ex-Fire Chief Mitchell 'Guilty' of Embezzlement embezzling more than worth of county road materials ' for his Science Fair Slated at Rochester School •II, 20799 Mitchel-Idale St., on a I2.S00 bond pending sentence Feb. 20. ronvictlon of enibesslei^nt of more thaa $IM, one of Ihire posrible verdicts the jury coald have returned, cArrien a maximum penalty of is yearii to used about 20 tons of "cold patch " on his own driveway. In another court action yestpr-day. Involving the township, former Treasurer George Glenn stexxi mute at his arraignment change of embezzling 6200 from tax and water bill statements in the township. No trial date was ROaiHSTER - Central Junior High School will stage its third annual science fair March 1 and 2. Howland Fisk, chairman, announced today. Some BOO projects are expected. Participation in the science fair is a requirement for science stu- N6 over-all trophy will be awarded this year. Fisk said. Ribbons will be given to projects. Judged superior, very goi>d;^t#*wi)hhy t honorable mentkxi. Projects wUl be judged Ihe.eve-ning of March 1. The riiow will-be open to the public the next night. Mitchell, suspended from his township position last April, tpsii-flod that he used the black-lop material belonging tb the Oakland County Road Commission streets in a private housing development believing the streets part of the public street sys- tem. The prosecution also charged he Ex-Coed Adviser Dies SARASfOTA, Fla. (APJ -Gertrude S. Martin, advisoi' women at Cornell University during the early part of the century, died Sunday. She was 92. R.van faces Slate Rep. Robert E. Waldron Feb. 1.3 in a special elciion to {ill the seat ol the late Rep. Louis Rabuul, a Democrat. Democrats usually get more than 60 per cent of the vote in the district, but Bailey urged hard work to get out the vote. Zieling|d-Van Horn Vows Couple Weds in Utica Avon township Law- rfoee Catholic Church. Utica, waa the-aetting for the recent wedding of Sharon Van Horn and Michael J. Zielinski who exchanged their vows before Rev. John F. Cana- Mrs. Donald Shipman, of 74 Texas St. The bridegroom is the son oi Mr. and Mrs. Marion Zielinski, 8110 Devon Drive, Ulira. The bride’s white peaa de sole gswa featured a bodlee of Chan-laee fashioned with a seal The bouffant skirt ended In a chapel train. Her bubble veil of silk net wai fastened to a seed pearl and crystal tiara and rite pairied a cascade bouquet o{ Amazon lilies and stephanotis. Patricia Zielinski, sister of the maid of hemor. I^ridesmaids were another sister, Mary Zielinski, Cynthia Shipman, bride, and C Bailey Campaigns for Demin Detroit are owned by the Lake Orion to-veatment Co. Welter B. Schreiber, prealdeni of Artco, Inc., la an of-fioer Iq the inveatmeqt romp According to Weaiey B. Allen, vice preaident of the nonp Lake Orion Area Imhutrial Oe-velopniient Cbrp., the paroela were the only sites available for indua-try In tha townahlp with good road Thoae in favor of rgued that the area is not heavily populated and that new Industry will Improve the township's tax Chief opponents of the rezonIng, were members of the Northwest Ion Homeowners Associa They argued tlMl the rezfl wiHild lowr Iheir resldentiul pro|v erty values and would Increase iraffic and ulr pollution. Will Seek Okay on CD Proposal WALLED LAKE — A concerted effort to bring new Induatry into the city has been launched by the Walled Lake Chamber ot Cbm- MIX*» LAW Porter ol Milford has rriired from active tCork in the diug store business after 42 years on Alain .Street. He will start a life oi fishing, travTiIng Rochestar School Area Diiaiter PI a n to Be Offered dt Meeting * | Portcr*B Drug Store in Milford And just plain |Afing around his home. How-^eyer. occasloni'lly he'll help out the new ownei. Eddie Fostei. worked lot hun for more Ihait^six yours. / C. of 'C. Suggeitt Sites fos^ Firms; Role in Community Growth Told geveril choice plant sites al-nady have been proposed by the organization for thns firms th-vesHgatbiZ a poasibie move here, accoidifig to Settle PuTtoh, president ot the business group. ‘•MsMbm si fiw 0 Mrs. Parrish, owner of tks Parish Manufacturing Oo'.. explained lat merchants can learn how to cip the dty grow by attending a to be held by the chamber. Ways and means to assist present and future development of the Walled Labe area will be pns sented by a cross section ot c tlves. indusiriallsU and protoation al people." ehe said. la addHtoa to pusMag lor la-duririal developmeni aad nrwr A disaster plan foe the Rochester Community School District will be proposed at the regtilor meeting of the Northeast Oakland Courtly Civil Dcfeiuu* Couni'il .SaUirriiiy In Rochester. William Vander Ven, dir< come. lie — mostly friends — always felt free to call Bill any time ol Ihe day or night for ilome It they n^ed or had forgotten Another ifport to be glvwi is lul of Troy CD Direefor Clarence-F. Loi«. All parents, teachers, students and the general public are invited to the meeting In the Rochester Municipal Building. Council Approves the Widening of Southfield Road SOUTHFIELD - The City Council last nighi approved the widening of Soulh/leld Road from North-wealern Highway to 13-Mile Road. DETROIT )fi - John M. Bniley, Democ-ratic national chairman from Oonnectfeut, zipped through the 14th Congressional District Monday, trying to insure Ihe election of State Sen. Harold M. Ryan. Waldron, meanwhile, said "This a local election. The thinking Dier should not be swayed or influenced, by the visit of a Washington official."- Set Discussion on Annextrtion of Portion of Shelby UTICA — The possibility of annexing a portion* ot Shelby Township. to the city of Utica' will be discussed at an 8 p.m. miblic meeting today at the WileATEIemenfary School. Adminisirator Donald V. Smith and aty aerk Patrick Flannery were instructed to sign an agreement with the* Oakland Cbunty Road Commission for construction of Ihe project which is to start almost immediately. At the marble-covered friuitain. sAsapariilg not coffee—was the maki attraction of the day. This was lonF befbre the Coney Island hot dog, chili-burgar or double banana split had Mhe into being. Out front, Main Street was nothing more than a narrow dirt road. Horses were hitched out in front while customers browsed around among patent medicines or "sipped sodas through a straw." REMODELED ,1 TIMES Today, after three complete remodeling jobs down through Ihe years, the Porter Drug Store little resembles Its original edifice. Neon lights have replaced the old gas lamps. Electric clocks, a variety ot perfumes and cosmetics and hundreds of cards and magazines line the wall where the old soda fountain used to be. And Bill has many humorous. The estimated rest of the widening tu Ike city of SouthfieM will be tSS,7N. The nef mm to be paid by the elty In two equni Elected UF President in West Bloomfield The first Installmqpt Is to be paid upon the awarding ol the conr WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN .SHIP - Emmett DeConlck of 5847 Maple Road has been elected presidant of the West Bloomfield United Foundation for the 1962-63 tract for the project and the bal- 'fiscal year, ance on its completion. , Other officers named are ■ John * * * jCojeen. first vice presidShi; Ed Smith told the council that both wmf Sintz, second vice president; payments will probably come in 'Stanley Poag, secretary; and Mrs. Ihe 1962-63 budget year. • jcharles Vlaeminck, treasurer. NEWS " a program foe fbe aext two ym tbai Is lalroded to Mp reach the group's gaals. These include the appointment of j paid manager lor tht? C. of C.. a drive' for increased membership., . _______________ improvement of the area’s attrac- pharmacist's life forliivcness, contact of new residents as they come into the dty. and closer work with city officials. We must destroy Ihe image of (. Chamber yf Commerce being merchant's association and es-H as a true chamber of gd during Ihe regular ston- hours, i ^"That's ■ -------' 11." Ba BOW Ihe dngitat who has speat same M years la the Utile Iowa of MHford Is basytaklag Bill Porter is going to stay around tor a little while to show Eddie where the asafetida (an old nerve remedy), the Haarlem oil and Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription are—Just in case pomi timer comes in who doesn' believe in "these new-fangled can late Orion Unit Upholds Change in Street Names LAKE ORION - The Village Coundl last night stuck to Its Dec. ll decision to change the names of six .village streets despite the protesrg of a group of some residents who have complained utxHit the move. Members of the council have explained that they went along a request from the township to cooperate with the Oakland County Road ComirriBsion irt its effort to eliminate duplication of names throufdiout Ihe county. Aerordlag to VUIage Pmiident Irvine J. Unger, the towmihlp agreed to ekange tke name* of 41 Mtreeto. Tke cwtl of changing eaUmatod at The village was asked to change only six names, Unger said. The president appointed a committee to study the matted whh the T^n-sktR Board. On the neomineada-of the village group, the names were changed in an ordinance effective Dec. 12. STREETS AFFECTED The names of Orion, Hemingway, Bellevue and Sylvan streets. Area Girls Plan to Marry TBFl saion was called b.v the Shelby Manor Ovlc Association Council headed by Earl E. Schwartz. AcconUag to l/'ihm Mayor Fred Beck, the rouncll Is Inter-ented bi dty water aad poHee The area involved in the prp-posed annexation extends north from Hall Ro^ to Messmore along the city’s eastern boundary and Imdudes five subdivisions with ah roughly three-fourths the size Beghiel of Berkley. «‘ousin of the o,' the city; bride. * * * If annexation is favored by Hers'ing a* Ih-sI man was An-thfMi.v HamirtliMi of Ultcu. The NS guests were seated b.v Hpe<-. 4 r. F. tlary liorn of Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., brother oi the bride, and James Zerrmba of Utira. atjeuding tlie meeting, petitions w’li be circulated asking the Macomb County Boaid of Supervisors North to James Arthur. Roberts to set an election date, {lei-k said; is announced by her parents, Mr. today. , and Mrs. R. Brooks North, of 815 aging dsvelopmenf of tha am." Mia. r p.m. Fab. 14 at BmtJay's OrlU to elect now oOioeta for tht ysar The Waited Lake group has about 45 members. Rochester PTAs to See Film at Joint MSeting Central Avenue and Park Island Drive were changed^ Gerald CUrtisa ot 44 Hemingway I.. has acted as spokesman fori the group ot protesting residents. He asked that the coundl rescind its ordinance at Ihe loot meeting, Jan. 22. The request was made orlgi* nally hy pallee ROCHESTER — Parent-Teacher Association members her* will see a featurb-tengih French fllin, "Passion tor tif«." «t the F>ounders' Day meeting Feb. 37. Charles Stewart, prssktent ot the Community Co u n-c 11 of Parent-Teacher Associations, said the meeting wiU be held in the Student Center ot Michigan State Uidver-sity Oakland at 8 p.m. Traditionally, Individual PTA nits hold no meetings of their own in February So that their members can attend the joint an- Orion Fire Chief Jack Caylor said last night that the departtneht has lost several houses because they were given incomplete fusing addresses when fires were reported. " ' "Passion for Ufe,"< produced as commereial film, dramatizas the way a young teacher changed the life of a French village by his devotion to children and education. Equipped with English subtitles, the film has been widely shown to parent and teacher groups. ‘Four to five minutes may make the difference between saving or losing a home or a Ipv.ed one.' Candor said. "When people are excited they don't think to say Hemingway ‘Street’ or 'Road' — they say ‘Hemingway’ aixi it's up to us to find the fire." I* not described by its street name bat by Ns surveyed loea- Abstracts of titles could brought up to date to include the street name chiuige at the time of a sale or other changes In the document for small charge. Dr. Richard A. McNeil, councilman, sold. "We felt the name changing was the right thing to do." said Council-mw Robertilaugwell. "I wouldn’t care If my street’s na changed to . . . Podunk. "Hien you’d probably be dufdi-cating a name out in the county somewhere,’’ said Curtis. Announce Engagement WIXOM - A March 3 (imMing is planned by Janice D. Henderson and Joseph A. Smolek an-bride-elect's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Warren Henderson Jr. of 1995 Wixom.Road. The Plan Workshops on Equipment New Trends in Home Appliances Offered at Library Feb. 14, 21 New trends in major household equipment will be discussed at two workshops presented at no charge by the Oakland County Extension Service, Consumers Power Os. snd Detroit Edison Feb. 14 and 21 at the Pontiac Library. Marian Ryan, director of the Electric Uvtng Diviaion of Detroit Edison will dtecuss the selaction. care and seiyice of ranges, refrtg- at the first sesrion. Eeatared at'tbe Feb. SI meet- ing will be Velda FerUas, home •eoBomtot and taaadry speeiaHat of tbe FrigUalre €brp„ Dayton, of Mr*: Helea Wright she i demonstnto tedfalqnes of laun- County home economists partio ipatii« in both ■ Consumers Power Oo. in Pontiac, Birmingham office of Detroit Edison, and Mrs. Mary A. Hardy, home economist with thb CAROL JANE NORTH The engagement of Carol Jane of Howard City. A buffet-dinner d(uice.for 230 was held ai the Rochester E^s lodgs that evening. The newlyweds now are%ying in Utica. The Rolls-Royce "Flying Bed-lead," which made aviatibn history as the first Jet aircraft srith vertical take-off, is to be placed la a I>ondoB rouseunv« FRANCEg BEAL _ Announcement is made of the Pawhwki announce the bride- .......... - ----------------- PATRjriA KOZM)W8KI A July 7 wedding is planned prospective bridegroom Is the son'®®*'*®'** County Extension Service, of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony .Smolek* ^ P®***! discussion moderated by f^i^anne Baker, home manage-foent specialist of MSU Cooperi tive Extension Service will cover the problem of high service costs, and answer questions from the audience. • Prfigram and registration blanks aia avaitebte at the extension office. E. Ooiinty Center Drive, dak-land Coumy wrvice C tiaci Charlton Road, White Lake Ibwnahip. The prospective bridegroom Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James L Roberts, 304 W. Lafayette St., Milford:-lli.summer Wedding Is being .>plsnned. --------- I elect's parents, Mt and Mrs. Henry Kozlowski of Warren. Parents of the prospective bridegroom are. Mr. and Mrs. Walter -Pawlojtid ot ISO Rochester Road, Dspective bridegroom u of I|r. ai ■ ■■ „ and Mrs. Bruce/D. Butler, 2145 Cole Road, Orion Tosynshlp. No date has been set lor the liinedding. survey of its 340-acre district shun clearance proj-vaa' announced today by the Urban Renewal Administration. i Carter, Pon- 11 -V THE PONTiAi- PH ESS. TUESDA Y. FEBRUARY 6, 1902 THIRTEEN Brothers Admit Murder ot Wmm Patrotman -t- Couple Spends Day Oii Looking for Rattlesnakes RACDIE. Wto. (UPI) - Two young Mfo^nidwra klUed a police M>i-gaaat baeauae they faarld capture by a *'«aan town cop/‘ they told authoritiaa Monday night. The law. WUion I* Brook. 21, and hla brother Max, 17, admitted iihootlnf police Igt. Anthony EH-m of. Buritngtan, Wla„ Monday and attempting to puih hla un-maited ii|iiad«car, containing hla body, into a deep, wate^tlUed quarry. I niarder and nd Chord Organ Wat $985.00. Now . Vocallion Raw! Organ with J •'***'‘* motor, Imitatlort *150 Hr itoargcd that wide varia-Moas to ssgpBir prises sa | I "aS JS^'tartW'27 S. Saginaw St. • Use your CHARGE, 4-PAY PLAN (90 days,some os cosh) or BUWET PLAN Revenue during October through December represented an increase of $4.2 million over the same period of the previous year, Mackie reported. Wayne Coqnty received the largest county payment. $3,206,941. Detroit led citiea and villages with S22.271.627. , NEW BREAKTHROUGH SINUS SUFFERERS Thedwf toking.6x^ 10 or 12 Ublsts a day to relieve sinus con- * gsstion? You don^t hgw io A mnsric^ls nsw brmkthrough for sinus suftoiers has bssn a«9ilsvsdl-A4«»r^ loogsd-actfcn tahlst. eallad 8YNA-CLBAR, givss up to • hours of relief from me tablet! TArse tableto piorid^n^ the-dock comfort You rieep through the whele niglA Wake up dear-headed, dmr-mtod. The aserst: h pow^ iww decongestant formula with exclusive “Hard-Core eencen-trates that work actively in the bloodstream over extended perioda of tin^. Don't spond anothar tenss, slMpto w .■miserable. Headachy day—ask your druggist for SYNA-CLEAR Dscongestant Tubtsto in the blua and white carton! Unconditionally guaranteed to give long-lasting relief from pain and pressurs of sinus congestion or your money refunded. And remember, SYNA-CLEAR relief lasts Ijongsr. fo it actually costs lem. * # Camar TsMaraph Rd. ■t W. ■arseUtNet a eg*f BtetoWghwsy Uisrfse Pishw (S.O.D. Usear Stan) Rustproofingf ? Rambler spills more than others use QUnit Kourge of automobikt is rust, which normally O stoiu bukk the body panek and girdere. To Mop that Kourge, Rambler goes to extra lengths that no other car manufacturer does. Far Nlora Ruftproofing Every Rambler body is Peep-Dipped—r7^ ! FOIJHTEKX THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1068 Income Tax Primer Must List Other Income fSdUor’t NoU — ThU is the fourth of eight articles in the Newspaper Snterprise Association Income Tax Pri-‘ mer, for readers who want more infbrmation than is supplied in the official instructions.) By Dr. I. M. Liivitt, Tow Coolie and Will j • * B> RiniAKI) A. MI IXKNK ' WrillM far NEA Income reporting for moft wage earners U simple. The Form W-2 i which your employer furnishes shortly after the flrsj. of the year) shows amounts which should 1^ ropied onto your lax return. The luliowing ia a list of receul Pbritlac area birtha as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Office (by name of father): Tins L. WUom.......... KelUi K. CooMr, Mil Ortonvl Cbaritt B. Drasberu. «1W ... Frick. IC«T Frenkwm Albert a. Lowers,___________ Vem L. Cemeen, Mil Drejrtoo Eldeo B. Uudee. Stfft Orlue BSwId K. Mctleee. MM Pine__________ Albert E. Rernoldi, Mil OMi Perk Albert D. Oeolt. MM Delmet ■r a. WaUoo, UM Heeth ------evUn. •)“ ”------ loen P. OevUn, Itit Peremue CiiArlea W. Hernee, Mil Bird Joeepb Eelly, 1o$J Saebebew : lohD n. Neleob, NM Ahen PhllUp W. JUeeei.------------ RolADd E. Bourke, II M. Eeit Clereoce R. DeiisbcrUr, ------ - ‘looihert, ITII rmrra •eorrlMO, 111 Whlu Lynn R. Meeb, MIS EucUd Perrti llorrlMo, Lynn R. Meeb, __________ Edw. R.-Solomon, 117 Third ------ ^ oolum uoeriM Cleybum Joeepb F. Welle., .. . Oecer WIbIcy, MM Henley Dele R. Moran, 111 Eaniiwortb Donald E. Buma, Mil Voorbela Arnold H. AUemann, Mil Maycreil Louie A. Milton Ir., in Orchard Clayton E. Rueiell, illl Teecae Robert H. Ronald C. _____________________ Lloyd M. Hufbea. IIM Nortbtield Floyd D. Lee. 1« McNelU Lloyd C. VI— I'raoclaco Acoeta, 111 Rayburn '”*■1, sms Commpni ..... M. lS?r Hlpollto Bernard, 111 Howard McNeill John C. Brower, Ml Camaran Robert J. Boyon, MM Orattoo WlUiam E. JuaUoa, 11 M. Wlndlni Carl 7, EanWorttay, III Jordan Wllllbm O. Perklna, 111 E, Madleo Larry E. Morrlaon, 111 W. Brook Dblfbt K. Huddleaton, IM Victory Leland W. Heldler, NM Hlfhlaiid Richard W. Tbompeoq, Nl Second John W, Molr, 11®**'--------- Kenneth L. Jarre David L. Oetrand Johnny H, Pack, -Jamea E. Perrlac EmlUo M, Rival f Donald P. Dale, MU Pontlae T wSmain*ll?¥taher,*ffil'’^Uac Yrall Thomaa J. Lapbam, MM PonUao Trail Cecil J. Haaei, im Sycamore Humbert A. Mularonl, SMI Shore Hill Charlea J. Oabrlau, IM Bailey Jamea P. Aniua, I Rkford Daryle PJFreaman. 1111 Mill Lake BUly E. Wllaon. M W. Shadbo" Bdael A. JeweA, m Atwater Martin J. Buahman, M Ellr-*-Bbermaa P. Dlckaon, Mil t Oiarlea W. Sweeney, H Hiram Maynard J. ^ler, MM H. Roebeater Rmtd k Stiebe, im Va'~ Richard J, Toncray Jr., Robert Edwarde, H10 Kobikr CTyde M. KlrkUn. till---- Altert M. Serra. MU Charlea B. Morrla,^._________ .....- * ' Carol from Earien B Stephenaan .torene A from Jaa. J. Poeter Marforei J. from Cbariea ^/Lawrence Oeoi^aV*‘^m*ErartjS!'^^ TH£ PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, l»62 FIFTEBN . ): Army Releasing Men Activated by Mistake^i^J^^^^ WASHINOTON (AP) - 11m Army reported today It to reteaa-ing an ondtocloaad numbar •r ol n-_ toKxfldn't have been called to active duty It aald It “I_______________________ field to adviae' thoee iiidtviduale Prepare lor the future. A o«ll- will lee you and your family Ihroudb ony tryutg period. Drop in, m1I be glad to dit-cuu ifte detoili. m -7- ^jjNSUQANCe\ Phono 3324)241 TRECO mitonterprelation of polley, were kept in the ready Reaerve when they ahould have been Iranafeired to the inactive Reaerve. NO NinMBEm GIVEN The Army laid It doe* not have any figure* on the number at' fected. Generally, they are among the more than 14,000 Amy re-aervliU ordered to duty apeclfical- Involved are men who, due to ly to nil up ranka of under- itrength, Reaerve and National Guard uhite mustered iiito active service last tall. One Liquor License for Township in Doubt Members of the Vatetiton] Ttown- of the Howard Jphnaon Restaurant, Loon Lake; Frank Syron, owner of the Pontiac Country Gub; and Samuel Hoffman, president of the Thrift Cburt Motel on Dixie High- to the pteaa or six indlvlduaU seek-taig the one remaining Claai C Ikjuor lloenae In the township and then voted to withhold a decision on the issuance of the license until the regular meeting of Feb. 19. Discussion of the liqUtar license consumed about half of the three and dne4ulf hour regular meetiog of the board. beard by two ether i present at the meeting Included Lake M. Little, president of Ted’s In the Pontiac Mall; Frank Tenuta and Paul Felice, UJ. 10 near the Edgewater Motel; - repreaenUtIve of DobsM’s Bar Cooley Lake Road which now has a rceort lloenae; Frank Bob Altm, new owner* of doe's Spaghetti Honoe, and PNd Oreen ' Silver Lake OoM Ohnh. Syron, who had been Issued the license nearly a year ago only to have It disallowed by the Liquor control commission because " would have been used within 500 feet of a school, requested issuance at a new location, reported a total investment of ap-pi^mately $300,000. Hoffman reported an Investment of approximately $150,000 In his motel, and Little of Ted’s Indicated his total investment tai the Pontiac Mall approximated $150,000. NEW CENTER ELECTRONICS, INC. Gives You the Most Liberal Trade-in Allowonce on Your Old TV! mOE-UP TO RCA VIIHOR COLOR ^■ROmiY Dohixo torlM SIS^-TSdi IM sq. 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During the mobilization, sorne protested they were callqd up unjustly. The Amy in effedt admitted this today, saying "during the build-up certain personnel- were called to active duty erroneously.!* ordered to acthro duty.” MMUNDiaUTOOD FOUOY It noted that men entering the Amy before enactment of the 1955 Reserve forces tow, ihcurrsd ' year ready Reserve obligation. "When they completed years of combined active duty and a ready Reserve service they were eligible for Irwnafer to the ndby RMsrve," th Amy said. Some Army Inataltotions mto-^J? Interpreted Army policy and carried. the men in the ready Re-- the entire eight years and did not transfer them to the standby Reaerve," the Army said. COULDN’T KAY WHEN "Oonaequently they were ro- Secretary of Defense Robert 8. McNamara told a" news oootoi-ildnt spy itf.000 Anny, NA^ and Air Fbrce reservists oslled up tost fall can plan to go home. ’At this time, in a period 'of . wion and crisis, we cannot give any vedtlc date,” McNa- Jopanesa Crown Prince Recovering From Cold TOKYO (AP) - The imperial household announced today that Crown Prince Aldhlto is recover- Ex-Dictator Given Okay to Visit NYC tradlte the fomer dicUtor and the U.S. government UT trying to get him to dtodose his flnanctoi ds. Peres Jlmtnez to rcvuvc- JACKSONVILLE, Fla. CAP)- _______________ ii« saUafactorily from tha cold u va/ tl- mg rauBucioniy awn me cwb ^ VeneiOeta has won Hord WOHclng TKievei court approval to go to New York ^ - - - (hat forced curtailment of hto foreign tour and that ture has dropped to normal. City to oonler with financial ad- TTie prince became 111 In Bali, where he and Crown Princeu Mi-chlko were on the final leg of an Indonesian visit. ’The royal couple canceled a visit to the Phllip-Iwhere he lives. I. I Venezuela to atteiDpUag to Take Railroad Trock But, federal Judge William A. McRae Jr. said Monday, in ... LOUIS (to-IUinois Terminal Railroad officials had bettct keep an eye on their locaraotives. Stolen receotly from the rail- NEVy/YORK (AP)-The Ameri-can Jewish Congress called on the New York City Board of Bduca-tion Monday to diaconllnue^Blble-ivading in public schools, a practice it said was widespread In the city school system. letter to the board praoi-dent. Max J. Rubio, the AJC called attention to the unanimous ruling of U.S. District Codrt in Phlladslphla to*t Thursday holding that daily reading of the Bible public schools Is unconstitutional. The AJC opposes Bible-reading in the achooto os a breach of the separation of church snd state. future Perez Jiminei ahould plaii road’s right -of way to conduct his business in Miami,'cross ties and six aectioas of track, each weighing between IJOO and ll,S00 pounda. I PRESCRIPnONS P RISeRIPTIONI ROFIItlONAUf ERFEOT ROPERLY PERRY DRUGS N5E.B1vd. IlSIBaldwig •» Nny at YptMafllt 333-7152 333-7W7 ' ------------ BAKER end HANSEN INSURANCE -ALL FORMS- / Bon oniim NCUGE roUCT BSKCUITT Mra* n 4-lUt 714 conmniRT XRTIORU im UK. rosTuc . don’t go out to pay Avoid the nuisance of paying your bills in person when you pay by personal checks. A checking account will proviiie safety, a budget record, and built-in receipts with cancelled checks. Open your account today. NOW^^ ON 12 MONTH PAYING SAVING CERTIFICATES for m)f money... it's PONTIAC BANK Saginaw at Lawrence Auburn Heights Baldwin at Yale Drayton Plains MiracleMiie M-59 Plaza 9 to 6,4 E. Lawrence member F.D.I.C. SIXTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY/FEBRUARY 6, 1962 jOSU Surging Toward All-Time Honors Inu/a Mn Matrh PRESS BOX Veterans Bob Turley an^ John Blanchard were in the gtou^ as the Yankees opened advanced spring training at a pew miHion-dollar stadium in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Mon^. They were greeted by 2,000 Ians. New York had trained at St. Petersburg for 2ii Meadowbroek County Club an- ner of the INI amate^'athlete award In MleMgan Is Detrpit quarterback Jerry Gross. He Will be honored Friday night at the club’s UMMal Sportsman's Night where Tom Hannon, ex-Michigan great. wlU be guest speaker. Spertsuptlera and announcers seleeted Gross. Tiger' pitcher "Fred Giact^ihg signed yesterday. Others were; three Washington rookies, NL ba' king Roberto Clemente of Pittsburgh, Howie Nunn and another New York Met hurler, fouf Phil-. Ua pitchers, tour Card rookies and \ Jim Davenport of the Giants. The World Ski (hamptonships, -vcheduM lor this weekend in France, will be run under a new title — The World Gaines of the International 8U Federation. Re- fusal to take^pai fiee \ca' W«iM\ I. e\ part by the Allied travel of-t \cansed the change. The WorUXlee Hookey Tournament Is still sc^hednled In March despite a similar problem. ♦ h All-timeWeat Bob Cousy admit ted yesterday he is giving ddme thought to Mirement but said he will not decide until after the current season. Vlt's getting a litle tougher to play,” he said. ; ^ Northern M^higan wallop Alma 74-52, St.\Norbert downed Michigan Tech SJ\T4. Southern Illinois blasted Central Michigan 81^52 and Hillsdale nlp^ Assumptfoh of Ontario S»«7 in iWetball day. Gary Silc scored 25 in Northern debut, Dick CveWros 20 for Tech and Charles Wprks 19 for Hillsdale. \ Howe Closing on Bathgate \ MONTREAL (AP)-Andy Bathgate of the New York Rangets snapped his slump last week bii^ still lost another point of hid (Rktional Hockey League scortiw lead to runner-up Gordie Howe of Detroit. Statistics from the league today show Bathgate lyith' 19 goals and a top toUl of ^'assists for 63 points. The Ranger ace, scoreless the previous week, scored one goal and assisted on ^hree others in New York's four games. Howe, five-time league scoring champion. still pulled to within three points of Bathgate, collecting one goal and four assists for 60 points. ★ ★ * The two young stars of the Ctti* cago Black Hawks, Bobby Hull and Stan Miklta, l)ad big weeks and moved into third place, each with ,.53 points. A W W The Korlns leadcre; Iowa No Match as Ohio State Winsby89€ Wolvttrines Pull by* Dumping Wisconfiri 81-74 in Big Ten By The Assoelaled Prem Irrepressible Ohio State, the pation’s .top-ranked team, conceivably could take Us place among collegiate basketImU’s all-time elite, The current band of the all-conquering Buckeyes is streaking along in devastating fashion with 17 straight victories. No. 17 came Monday night at home—an impressive 89-63 lacing of Iowa in a Big Ten game that gave the Bucks undisputed possession o( first place. Of -issicsc. Ju8j[. a year ago, Jerry Lucas Si Co. weft thing the same thing—winning at will. They had put together a tidy string of 32 triumphs in a row. Five of the conquests had been accomplished at the end of the 1960 campaign en route to the onal championship. The Bucks captured 27 straight last season and needed only win over Cincinnati in the NCAA final for a 28-0 undefeated slate 33-game skein. But the Bearcats had different ideas and upended Ohio State 70-65 in time. ★ ★ ★ Undaunted, coach Fred Taylor' 1. Howt. Dftrolt 1. (H«) BuU. ChlCMO . MIkIt*. cnieuo J (Tlw) PtoTU. Maotnal . . MkhoTlIeh, Tmole ..... 7. UlImkB. Detroit.......i« n ‘ i. IT1«) Dcvocehio, Detroit 17 M ■ Buerk. Boetoa .. 13 S3 - M. iTIe) Bockktrom, Montreol 22 3 ' Keen, Toronto 21 24 ■ McKeimer. Boktoo....... 20 23 ‘ ----------.'h'i-WlW DeMarco After Mone/ . BOSTON (AP)—Former champion Tony DeMpreo faces Stefan RedI tonigrt with a new outlook toward boiung-make big money or retire. way they're going they're going to be mighty hard to stop. The Buckeyes have a 7,-fl Big Ten record and have seven more games to play-vill league games. Ohio State's last regular sea- The Buckeyes built a 41-U bulge over Iowa with 5H minutes left in the half and coasted in. Ohio State led at halftime 52-26 and opened up an 82-50 margin with 6:30 left. Lucas was high for fhe winners with 24 points in 27 minutes of action but Iowa's Don Nelson topped all scorers with 29. Michigan broke Wisconsin' five-game Big Ten winning streak 81-74 and dropped the Badgers 1V4 games behind Ohio State as Tom Cole hit for 23 points. ** Mississippi State, ranked ninth in the current Assoeiatid Press poll and the only other top ten team in action Monday night, thrashed 'iSjIane 70-59 for its 17th victory in l8 outings. Leland Mitchell paced State with 29 points. \In other games, Colorado’s Big Bight leaders turned back Oklahoma 54-50 lor its lekgue triumph as Jim Davis iced the verdict with tour successful free throws in the stretch. Aritm State University ran its leag^ record to 6-0 and grabbed at least a share of the Border Confennee crown with a 94-70 decision \ over New Mexii;» State. Nick Werkman qf Seton Hall, the nation’s second leadinp; scorer with a i^point average, collected 40 points before fouling out spark .FUplda to a 92-83 win over Tennessee, Davidson stretched its viiftory string .to 12 in handing Richmond 55-52 Southern Conference versal. Dave Downey’s 28 points triggered Illinois to an 89-80, Big Ten triumph over Minnesota.' Auburn rallied in' the second half to trip Georgia Tech 48-39 in a SEC game. Oklahoma City outlasted West Texas State 129-106 behind Larry Jones’ 31-point outburst. Iwo-Man Scoring Race 7 4 TTlCo AP pa*Mii UK1VE6 CtUT — Doug Hemer of Michigan drives out of the pack with- a rebound during action against Wisconsin last night. Teammate John Oosterbaan makes room. Badgers are Jack Brens (54) and Mike O’Melia. The Wolverines staged a big upset. A^oore May Mi$s Baltimore Tourney By CHUCK ABAIR Monroe Moore, the Pontiac bowler who has made a big Jump in Income bracket ii weeks, does not expect to take part in the Professional Bowler* Association Baltimore Open tourney this weekend. * ♦ ii|e would like to drop out of suc-ceenihg ifieetB-at JUtaron and Cleveland Ohio but will likely comprte in them. The SN Bowl Instructor has been having a bout with a stiff neck. That oomblned with the grind, preaaore and travel problems of eompeting In two major events at once prompted rfslon on draping out of thto S. Nto YocS 1 Unanimous Ballot Cast for OSU Five pothito. • / . ♦ 4 A He won Jl.OlO in tourney appear-ani-es In Albpny, N.Y. and ^ila-delpliia finishing 8th and 25th, respectively./ A A '*A Bluth eliminated ^hfo" in I to-head competition at Albany so theiocal star may get a chance for By THE AdMKTATEp PRFJW Unbeaten Ohio State has done it again. Once more the weekly Associated Press poll of a committee of sports writers and sport-casters has cast a unanimous ballot for the Buckeyes. Coach Fred Taylor, used all of his 14 men Saturday as Ohio State ran its winning streak to 16 by thumping Northwestern 97-61. the poll covered only games through Saturday, Feb. 3, Monday night victory over lo’ was not included in the total. After Saturday’s game w Minnesota, Ohio State will have only six more to play in the reg- ular scSson, Including a big dale with Wisconsin March 3. Ohio Slate, upset in overtime in the NCAA final last year by Cincinnati for its only loss last yea|^ hever has gone all the way to perfect basketball season. The only change among the top ten teams In the new poll found Oregon State i (16-1) moving Into the select circle and Southern California (12-4) dropping out after Its defeat by UCLA. Next in line after Ohio State came the Kentucky Wildcats, who added to their record last week by knocking ott Georgia Tech, Georgia and Florida. Kentucky jjyfted a Wt;/Sflttthem Cal, which fifth a week ago, fel' CHICAGO - Jimmy Rayl of Indiana and Terry Dischinger of Purdue have narrowed the Big Ten all-games basketball scoring race Into a two-man affair. Rayl leads the league with a 27.7 Reed Ranked No. 1 for Indoor Tennis NEW YORK (AP) Reed of Alameda, Calif., the top-ranked men’s singles tennis play-the country, was. seeded No. 1 in the domestic rankings Monday' for the USLTA National Indoor Tennis Championships, starting Wednesday here. Chuck McKinley of St. Louis was seeded No. 2; Donald Dell of Bethesda, Md.. No. 3 and Frank Froehling of Coral Gables, Fla. No. 4. AAA Rod Laver of Australia, th( Wimbledon champion was top-seeded in the foreign draw and Manuel Santana of Spain was ranked second. The draw had been postponed from Friday night to enable the tournament committee lo try to obt&m the entries ,of two Davis Cup players from California, Dennis Ralston of Bakersfield and Jon Douglas of Palo Alto. Ralston has completed a six-months suspension imposed by the U.S. Lawn Tennis Association. IT’S WARM 80MEWHZ»E - The New York Yankees found sunny skies yeste|day when they opened advancwl spring triining at their new millioiKloItar Fort Lauderdale, Fla., camp. Included to ttie gnwp Ralph Houk, former great Joe DiMaggio, young proqiects Charley Keller ,and Jake Gibbs. Di-Maggio will aid the Jiitters. Keller is the son of ex-Bomber slugger. ■ average on 416 points in 15 games Dischinger lurks close behind with a 27.2 mark on 464 points in 17 games. Jerry Lucas of Ohio State and Don Nelson of Iowa appear to be of It. They carry Identical 22.7 averages with Lucas getting 387 points in 17 games and Nel^ 364 points in 16 games. The league standings; , .3 1 .333 311 ... 4 2 .3S7 312 433 i NorUiVMUrn .. \ A^O OhteBKto .../I7 0 1.300 lU S! iS “ Indlsno Purdue ......' MIcMoM .... Mlchlian atote NUnneioto North irieteni 4.! 12 4 .730 1314 II .13 3 .300 1101 II . I 7 '.M3 ll04 It.. .11 8 .347 13H 13H ..4 ll .237 1002 1111 1.5 .s*3 isi::: .170 1070 1133 Backfield Coach Quits V-D Job to Return East DETROIT (UPI) - Bob Hicks annouced his resignation yesterday as ctofenslve backtiold cbac-h-at the University of Detroit. Hicks submitted his resignation to John Idzlk, recently appointed head football coach at Detroit. Idzik had asked Hicks to stay on as an assistant coach. AAA But Hicks said he and his wife wanted to return to Eastern Pennsylvania. *^y are from the Lancaster, Pa., area. Hicks declined to say what Job he has accepted. Idzlk succeeded Jim Miller as head coach of the Titans last month when Miller accepted the head coaching post at Boston Col-IbRP. Hicks has been an assistant coach with Detroit for -three years. Southern Cal Dec. 4 to Its second game. Its next game is sissippi on Saturday. Cincinnati held tight to third place, right on Kentucky's heels, by boosting its season record to 17-2 by beating Drake, Houston and North Texas State. AAA Kansas State also remained in step, clinging to fouiTh place on a victory over Nebraska that sent iU record to 15-2. Stote plays Kansas Wednesday Saturday In Big l^ight action. After the first four, the had ti out of the/top ten and Duke, win-over i^th Carplina and North Carolina^ moved up a peg to fifth. Duke's schedule for the week eluded a Tuesday game at North Carolina State and a Saturday home date with Virginia. AAA Duquesne also moved jdace to sixth on victories over Villanova and St. Francis, N.Y. The Dukes have a rematch with Villanova Wednesday at Philadelphia. Bradley hopped two places lo seventh with triumphs over Tulsa and St. Louis. North Texas state (Thursday) and Louisville (Saturday) are next in line for Bradley. Bowling Green, winner over Miami, Ohio, remained in eighth position. It plays Toledo Wednesday and Marsl^l Saturday.' Mississippi slate advanced position to ninth by beating Delta State and LSU. Tltey played Tu-lane Monday night and face Tennessee Saturday. The new entry is Oregon State, winner of 15 straight after losing to Montana Dec. 2 in their second game. Oregon State swept both ends of a home and home series with Oregon last weekend. Next in line is a Saturday game ai Portland. A A A 17i« top ten with Ont plx* votei nnd lOMon recordi through Bnturf*— • n porenthooM: (PoInU Osui 9UU of 10. 1. 1, ote.) 1. Ohio SUte (41) (10-0) . 2. Kenlucky (13-1) ........ 3. mnelnnoK (17-2) ...... 3. ItiiiiM suit (IH) :. , 5. Duko (132) .................. tn 7. Bnidtey (133) .. ... 3. Bowling Orotn (U-1) . — 1. MluluIppI Stoto (U-1) 10. Oregon SUte (U-1) .............. „ Others roeelying votes, not necessnrily In order were: Southern CnlUomU, West Vlrilnln, WUeonsln, OCLA, ----------- WIehlU. Loyon of ---------- Dnyton . Arlsonn L™. orndo, nilnoU, Tsxso Tech. Moore told The Press he would like to stay off the tour until he Is elimtoated from the television show ‘‘Make That Spare” because it is getting increasingly dUflcult to be in both. He wants to concentrate on being sparemaster. AAA His tourney commitments were to end with the Qeveland competU tion but he would likely sign up nore U beaten out In spare duels which oeWfor eadi Satontoy njght to New York City. Moore irill hue another one of the country’s greatest pin-topplers Saturday nlgbi on the/ show In Ray Bluth. He has bedl-en Andy Rogosidea, AlUe Brhndt. Stan Gifford, Al Saves, DIek Hoover and Ron Gandern/kl $1,-MO clip and qdded 6)4,6M Saturday -for converting the Jackpot spare to become the 2nd Martin Named lo Denver Job Lions' Kicking Expert New Assistant Mentor for AFL Team flLMS SMILE — Monroe Moore of Pontiog wears |15,N9 smile after defeating 6th straight opponent for $1,000 and moklne Jackpot shot on national spare program recently. Ha won $100 earlier in the day in a pro tourney. Moore does not expect lo> compete in the Baltimore Open this weekend. Ihinclads Taking Sides' in Glass Pole Dispute DENVER, Colo. (UPD-Detrolt Lions’ linebacker and place kiefo tog spectanst Jim Martin, 37, was ap|»inted offensive line coach for the Denypr Broncos of the American Football League yesterday. AAA Martin’s hiring was announced after a meeting with Jack Faulfo ner,. Denver’s new head coacdi. He beemme the second anistant picked by Faulkner. Ihe other was defensive line coach Dale Dodrill, holdover from the staff of ex-coach Frank Filchock. Martin, a N(>tre Dame teammate of Broncos’ quarterback Frank Tripucka, haa played 12 seasons to the. National Football League and was an All America tackle In college. Faulkner said he hoped to hire 11 offensive end coach by Wednesday and to name bis defensive backfield coach Friday. 10-1) . oiKonu -. —............................. 3. Orieon Btete (13-1) .......... .. ,n (U-1) ........... ,------- ... .1, MlulMlpM Btete : 13. VlUsnor* 21; is. CoIivoao^IS; 14 (U Utah *nd Wcit Vlritnlo 13 MCh; 11, A •on* State U. 13: 17, Loyola (IU.) 11. at. Joha'a (N.t.) 4; 13 Stanford g; 33 (tie), Loyola (CaUf.). VCLA and Oteh Btate 3 each. (Hhers—Colorado Btate. I. Florida Stet* 71 Oeorfla 74, Mgrcer I ----Slat* 00. Iowa o”’ Mteiourl 73, Kantae 33, niliMle 11. Wneeota 33 Coorado M. ^Oklahoina M Nebraeka 57. OUaboma State M g^om* City in. west Texa* 181 Butler 10. Wabaih 07 Crelfhton 73. Uarqultt* 7Z. oyerthne --------"teWi Fotet, WU. 53 .FAB WEST .____ ., _V3*« Waatam 32 Arttona State U. M. Ml RasU 31. “— RatU 31. Mow M«lco R Northern Mlchlian 74, Alma 32 Hlllidale 33, Aieumptloa (Ont.) 17 Mlchlian 11, Wtecenate 74 at. Norbert 37. Michigan Tach 7( - ^ ----- lljcantfal Mlc VyWsg^?!sr MONDAYBRUCLTS [“S.’^Vo. I^ATA SanDVLR Xanau Ctty n. iaAaa at Baa DMua *an knmelao* vi. Ollvalaad M Samililkr. WBDMnBArs BCHEDCUI ' Dim iiTlinnijifilgT* 1°*”*"*^ NEW YORK (UPI) - Marine C^l. John Uelses, the world's first 16-foot pole vaulter, may have catapulted himself right out championship competition if International Amateur Athletic Federation finds grounds to ban his famed fiber glass track tool. Harxdd Abratiama, diairman of the federation's technical committee, indicated in London yesterday that the lAAF could clauify the fiber glass pole in the same category as the "built up” high shbe the Russians tried to introduce aeveral years ago. "We are havtag tbewe poles touted to wee to what exteiH they are catapult*,” Abruhanm said. If the federation outlaws tb flhar glass pole, Uelaes will be like Marine invading a beachhead without a landing boat. The German-born track star soared 16 feet, one^iuartcr inch«and 16 feet, three-quarter inch on successive nights last weekend—a (fat he oouidiCt u- nutchlrig In' prekknu efforts with the standard metal pole. _ A # A Meanwhile, those for and against Uie use of fiber glass poles sre rapidly taking sides. Don Bragg, who had held the world Indoor record el IM^, culled the pUabto pole a "gfos-ndek.’* "The fiber glass pole has completely changed the science of pole vaulting and should be outlawed t listed in a separate category,” the 1960 Olympic champion said from his home in nearby Penns Grove. NJ. MAY HURT UA Bragg said the United States would lose its traditional world domination of pole vaulting new pole received offi(dai sanction. Uelses mastery of the fiber glass Tournament Victory Gives Palmer Boost DUNEDIN, Fla. (AP)-Arnold Palmer has crashed the PGA’ list of top money winners as : result of his victory in the Palm Springs Golf Gassic last weekend. The $5,300 first prize money boosted Palmer's 1962 winnings to $7,125 and moved him into fourth place among the top 10. ,One Littler increased his lead with his tie for second place In the Palnri Springs tourney. The $2,800 check boosted his winnings to $14,050. $525 at^alm Springs to make his $10,225. Tommy Jacobs to third place has won $7,674. Stagg Hospitalized With Knee Ailment STOCKTON, Calif. (AP)-Amos Alonzo Stagg, 99, the grand old the American sports would, was reported in satisfac-toiy condition today at Ckuneron Hospital here. The great football coach, legend to his own lifetime, is to the hospital because of ailment His physician streraed that toK waa not to serious condition but Iks pdnted out that at bis mF vancM age any ailment could be "Sure, the fiber glass pole bends morf than the metal pole,” Sober said, "but the metal pole beqds more than the eld bamboo poles. It’s unfortunate that Bragg got caught in the changeover in equipment. but that’s progress and can’t stop progress.” AAA Cornelius Warmer dam, the Yacht Skipper Moves Mountain to Pacific SAN DIEGO. Calif. (AP) -There was a bit of confusion to the San Diego to Acapulco, Mexico, yacht race'Monday when one of the entries reported its ixisi-tkm to the committee in charge. Offictols checked the position reported by Commodore Gaittck O’Brien, skipper of the class B Yacht, Mickey, then sent word back that If the observations were correct the boat must bc atop a mountain on the Hamilton Rimch A game rampalgaer. Comtd UwlUbsIha they outlaw fiber giaas," Wannerdm explained, "bettar ateei And wood probably would ha developed and Jumpers still will go higher—up to 17-18 feet. We aia have to change our thinking on what's a good Jump becaoaa of technical Improvements in Um Geotge Jlaviet, who Hinolfldally cracked the world mark when ha pole vaulted better than 15-10 to 1960, said he hai been using the glass pole since hU high schoH dayi. "Theae glass poles have bo^ around since 1952 and many va(|lF itoce, ” the udent said. 0 comment wae raised until rvord was broken.” Davies said he leaned toward Ufo dictionary definition of pole vaufo-ing—“getting over a cross bar the aid of a pole.” It doesn't say what the pole must be made Need More Athletes,: Fewer Fans-White PHILADELPHuf (AP)-BytoB (WhliMr) Whit^U.S. Deputy Attorney General, says America needs more Paul Honmngs sod Bob Ferguaona and fewer specto-tors to athieticB. AAA White addressed the 2Sth anraiid Maxwell Football Chib Monday night honoring Ifornung gf the National Football League champion Green Bay Packers vtf Ferguson of Ohio State as the professional and college footbpll players of the year. • A A A 'I am and have been a rabi^ I,” said White. “But I am concerned because athletics are mil reaching anywhere near the n»-jorlty of our young people. We*ve got to have more participanta." White, a former foootball star at Colorado, said a special physical fitness test given at Yale the hud 10 years had shown a decline to the abled-bodied. He said 5i per cent of those whp took it in 1951 pasted but M figure dropped to 43 per cent in 1956 and 38 per-cent last year, . ar Wte Aaaaalatea not* z Loa Antetei" Cincinnail ••W L.» S )M { Begins Tomorrow Skat^ Series to Start \ Having tnxible learning to use those new ice skates? ' Then you won’t want to miss SKATING IS SIMPLE, an lHuk^ trated series by Irving Jaffee, former CHympic speed skating ^bfuty-pion who has taufdit thousands of youngsters how to ice skate. JaffeCp winter spdrU director at .Grossto^en, N. Y., won the 10,000 meter speed test in the 1928 Olympics at St. Moritz, Switzerland.: ia 1932 he won the 5,000 and 10,000 meter events in the winter OlymnieB at Lake Pladd, N. Y. ^ m The series of four illustratipns starts h) this newspaper tomoMVw. Don’t them. . ' "Ifyou^can walk jfou^ can skate." says I^ing J^ee. Don’t mia -------:-------------------H-------------- 1 V THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY Q, 1962 SEVENTEKM Chiefs, Oi St Mary Home for Key Games PCHtoHosI Hint Central Unbeaten Lounge Cageis Race to Victory No. 11 in'MiisHilt Eagivts DutI Rams 01 Mikot yt. Loodort; Polcont at AvondoU fcjr COVOK ABAU kMaer “miM ' |une tor . ti4t Central and a crucial pair ot coMMla In the Suburiwi Catholic League will feature tonight'e prap The Chlefe will meet Flint Onv tral white Gnehacd Lake St. Mary battle St. Fred and St. Michael tehee on SCL leader Royal Oak St. Mary. w« ha n Mai at M tlMa laMv-lag aeea eeheeki ea the deekel. It will be one at the Mggeo Tueedaye or the eeaeon for leaguei with the Saginaw Valley, parochial conference and Eaetem Michigtei haying full elatee. Utica and Or-tonville wiU alao have loop out- will be a be Rodwater i “outalde” action PC« to _ flBM to Vafcr ptoy-------- that Sagfame wto iai pt toaat oaea. The Ohtato toive line The ChielB. tod by eteady acor era Rudy Ranaom and Clarence Dphglai, wfll be favored ib make ttelr record S-1 in the Valley and lltl over-all. They won by B In Gooch Art Van Ryiln'a crew .that big comeback victory over Flint Southweatem teat FHday. "epnatotton thaw toe fadtaai have wm I Flint will be miaiing itartlng penter A1 Snyder, who broke hto avriet Friday. Jim Merrtweather, S-&, replaced him aiiS hit 10 pointa. Jim Tolee and Bob Barnett are eteady Indian acoeere in a race- gan'a baaketball trontrunnero today, one month before the etart of the annual etate tournament. Only River Rouge (12-1). the Oaea B leader, suffered a ' ' k; its 29-game winning streak was snapped Saturday by Toledo Macotnber (Ohio). Saginaw should have no trouble at all takli« iU 9th straight Kbst to the toothleu Bay City , Wolves. Third piaoe Arthur i toffl likely have an easy on________ tey City Handy and Midland vs. Orchard Lake, idle for two weeks, will entertain slumping St. Frpd needM a victory and aoriM heto tram oOwr local schools to ke^ alive title hopes. ewer the Kanm. St Fred has dsoppod fear la a raw. ' Royal Oak St Mary can clinch a tie for the crown by beating St. ^ichael at the Northm gym but Slat may not he too easy. The Irish won by 10 in the season 'bpener but the Shamrocks have hM improving sparked by the Scoring of Charlie Daul. “We’re hoping tO knock ott Royal Oak to help Orchard Lake." coach Jim Niebauer of the Mike-men said today. His charges have won two in success after a dis- . St Mta va St. Benedict and St Jaasea goea -te St. Ctomeat ' In the EafL, Birmingham Sea-hobn will tiy to cook up Rast Detroit Port Huron Femdale clash and Hazel Park flays Mt. demens. Avondale may be ready to give Rochester trouble despite almost onxMite records. The Jackets are fresh from an impressive upset of Oak Park. Utica, apparently back in high gear again, has a Bi-Oounty tilt at Warren. , Ortonvllle wiV try to home against Genesee li ewbere, Lapeer travels so, Lamphm and Oran-E wlU da batUe, Country Day I hot Oroase Pointe Univer-School and North branch to get in a makeup game at n-Pigeon-Bay Port. Tlie Bron-s only dot in because at poetponemenfiT tkie i weather condlttone. >lgate Coach Resigns flw Winning Season lAMILTCW, N.y. (UPl) - Alva 11^^ resigned as head loot-1 Aach of Colgate University, Iras dlscloeed today. Wley, who steeredJi'thpr'Red iders to their first nrtnidng aea-1 in five years in 19M,- will Join Miffato Business concern ( ustrial engineer, an anno----- nt from Colgate preriSent Ev> lit Case said. ^ , lie team’s W record, last year luded wins over H*r''tord, inceton and Yale, siH»Ued big Wilt Nearing Scoring Mark NEW YORK (AP)-Wllt Cham-berlaln, Philadelphia’s point-a-minute scorer, ne^ only 54 points—one night's work for him set a National Baaketball Association scoring record for the third consecutive season. The 7-foot-l Warriors’ star, who has set NBA total point marks in each of the two years he has been in the loop, has 2,990 points in games through Saturday, and is certain to obliterate last year’s mark of 3,033. NBA statistics released today, show Chamberlalq with a game average of 49.7, compared to last season’s record of 38.3. He’s also within 79 field goal attempts of his 1961 record of 2,479 and within 65 ot breaking his record 1,251 field goals made. Bellamy leads in field goal percentage with 51.6; Dolph Schayes of Syracuse in frM throws made, 88.3; Chamberlain in rebounds with 1,531 for a 25.5 mark; Robertson In assists with 643 and an HA average. IF ser FOB BIO ONE - These Orchard Ukc St. Msiiy eaoaa, carrying hopes for, at least standing, left to right, John Rompel, John a tide share, horn A. Fied-Aonig^t in a big Stolnicki and A1 Miller. Seated, same order. Suburban Cbtholic gaine as leader Sawickl, Ernie Mazur and Larry St. Mary vs. St. Michael. The EaglM are, '' Saginaw, River Rouge, Perry Rated No. 1 Same Poll Leaders Saginaw, River Rouge, Perry (M). ^ wastora (M) to 4ha vato af spalls writors i Parry (12-6) held onto first peai-tion in Class C despite a four-point squeaker against Ovid. Champion (134). again was the leader in Class D. More Trouble for Hawks By THE ASSOCIATED PBUS Even when they have a day off, the hapless St. Louis Hawks The news from the Hawks’ team physician. Dr. Stan London, ging their sneakers In fourth place, have loot hulking Clyde Lovellette for the rest of the season with an injured Addbes tendon in his left leg. Rookie back-court man Ctoo HIU is out for a week or IQ days alter breaking a small bone In his right toot. Lovellette, who with BCb.Pet-t and Cliff Hagan gave the Hawks the top front line in the NBA in recent years, suffered Saturday night. He was Just back bi action after miasinK 16 games through an injury suffered Jan. > from NBA ac- Two games were played St. Louis’ successor as kingpin in the West, the Los Angeles Lakers, and the Hawks’ perennial tide playoff opponents, the Boston Celtics, fattened their division leads. The Lakers, with Jeny West treating the home folks at Mm^ gantown, W.Va., to 46 pointa, whipped Oncinnatl 134-128, opening an 11-game lead over the Royals in the Western Division. ‘The Celtics, with four players scoring 20 or more points, thumped the Chiengo Packers 127-111 in Chicago and moved eight games the Philadelphia ( MORE AWARDS — Paul Hornung, left, of GreeA Bay, poses with Ohio Stote star Bob Ferguson as they show off awards received from Maxwell FootbaU Club in Philadelphia last night. They were named the top idayers in pro and. cdlege ball. 300 LOUNGE Dining and Dancing Every Night EManaba Holy N>>ne (12-0) crawled into sec(^ place behind River Rouge in Class B and Holland Christian (11-1) dropped to Thitt was the only major reshuffling in the four dasses. In Claaa C, however, second-ranked Capac (IM) was tied by Rault Me. Marie Loretto (lt-1). place as hnlay CHy (U-I), third last week, dropped to fltth after tostag to Saginaw Bwaa VIsia. Groase Pointe 81. Pant (IM), de- , an advaace of one lU^ -_______i»-ii ............ *. Muikcfoo HcIghU (S-ti f. Hifhlaod Psrk FeNPto. .... »1 ■ault au. Mart* Lsratlo fll-l 4. Oroatt Psint* 8L Pasl (IM) 1. ImUy City lU-ll 1. Detroit aH RalBU (ll-li ' J .... M 1. Mum at. lisrr ill-ll .. . 1. Sebewalnc 113-1) .. ;:li 1. ah.pMrd Ill-ll 10. Wakellcld il-3l S DPI BATINOS CLASS A 1. Bafinav 3. Muiketon W L .'. r 0 ..II 11th victory of the aeaion in the City Baaketball League’! American division with an 88-42 rout ' cellar-dwelUng Newingham’s N day night at Pontiac Central Needs 54 Pointt Next Time Out to Eclipse Season Record Unbeaten 300 Lounge raced to Its thick of the National loop race by whipping Beardslee Trucka 64-51 behind the 34-point scoring spree of Roger Reynolds. Beardilee'i Gary Acker tallied 22. donblo agares, pared hy Pelte Brooks who tallied N potats. Newtagham’s Sam Sheehy task night’s most exciting action. Buckner Finance nosed out aarkiton 67-65. Buckner, trailing nt halftime by a 33-30 count, the decision on Ice with a 22-10 bulge In the third quarter. Buckner pul five cagers in double flgurea, headed by Jerry Hill who hit 18 points. Don Picroann maahed yi in defeat. A fourth-quarter rally enabled West Klwanis to nip New Hope 51-50 in a Oaas D contest at Lincoln. Klwanis trailed 35-29 entering the Onal period. New Hope’s Chuck Rollins was top scorer 18 points. cisrUtsn Steve Thompson fired 18 poInU to lead CIO Local 506 to a 79-57 'Iverdlct over the Southwest Tro-The losers' Sam Cole scond 17. Jerry Wllllama rifted » pointa and teammate John Dandy added S4 as Newman AME drabbed Lakeland Pharmaay of the Waterford League 0646 to an axhl-Mtlon game. Btn Tharell collected so tor the V 1 NtWlBghBIB N*Mbb*1 LwfB* W I colom*i t i %"«v**md. T A C » 1 Mich B*ll r*llc*Mkt. « } NBMr*B* MS Bowl 4 ] 1 I NtwHop* 1 1 Bomber* * * WBHIwbb- iT UNCOUf . -;I0 p.m AT Lnic^iT'i City Wrestlers Away, Skippers Visit Kettering t. nm, m. L. s. W**t, L.A. S. Ballkmir, Oil. 7. Ou*rlB. M.T. a Twjmian. CIb. U. Or**r. SrrB. CUD AOvAcB The two Pontiac achoola will be away and the two Waterforda will clash on p big wrestling schedule today and tonight. CiB. M m S3S S ! ITN tt.l Central Will have the hurculean task of Urying to upset p packed Hazel Park. Northern had an afternoon match at Cranbrook. Joe Joseph Heads Kettering will be playit« IwM to Waterford. Southfield will visit Royal Oak Dondero and Berkley goes to Fitzgerald in other action. free Clinic at Huron pp'tf' in Table Tennis League Joe Joseph, national bowling ■tar who made the 1961 All-America team, will head a free inatsde- Wedneaday from 1 to 4 p.m. at Other standouta from the Detroit 11 Star Classic will help give pointers to area keglers. Joseph, a former Huron Instructor. sparked Detroit Pfeiffer’ 1966 ABC team honors and was part of the.runnerup duo in douplds three years later. He has been a finalist five times in the BPAA All Star. The free school was held last eek at Airway Lanes. Prep Cage Calendar SSI SB*t D*troU at SlrmlBthBa ataholiB rort HurM Bt mndkl* Bsij^rk *1 lit. a*m{B< ___________ATOBdBl* I.‘ABa* Cr*a** Bt H«rp*r 0*BM** Bt OrtOBTllI* CrBBbrook Bt LsBiplMr* Ottaa Bt War— OlWM* PolBl N. araaea ' t*t»Bt Capitol a tlw Pm IBS iBtO tnU W*WB ■ BCHBD. ta th* top Bi*t«h l**t w**k. LoU I •r d*f*abd Pat Hsaa. It-lt, I -II. PTTA BTANDINOS Oapltol . « II Nutrltit* . .41 41 ■•Bmaa . « II C. Kll^ .14 M Crock*** .17 n Dctroll to* .31 It A * W ......II M Mldw**t Abi. II M ESa?'.: a SK“;. .: :: " Waterford Cage CLASS A W L P ap*BO*r Ploor* 7 1 BI***'* Mkl. .1 {^•laad'Pb. I 1 TIbi * B. aiiop 1 ■®* ' cLAsa a w t .. . k mtr Hert Roalt: Dob Nleboli Tooli^t'* 7;1i71«pi 1 0-N*ll BmltT . .1 3 a«Bn*tt’* BIk** I 4 Crarr Jf. Hlfh): ...... .... Town A Country stayed In the Three-Point Comeback Planned by Johaniion (KFrtcBORG, Sweden (AP) -Ingemar Jobansaon haa a three-part plan for hta comeback, providing he beato 'fonner Bcitiah champion Joe Bygraves in their 10-round heavyweight bout here f^ay night. w L 1. Challenge Dick Rkhardaon of Wales tor the European title. 2. Fight Sonny Liston in an outdoor bout here. 3. Take another crack at the worid UUe. 1 *M ACE — William E. Jark-aon ot Pontiac was the second Michigan golfer to score a hqle-tB4iir at Ptnehmrst N.C. Goomry aub. Plnehurat haa been a winter golf mecca for many are* goiters each year. Jackson, playing with Bob Multhaler and Bob Mallas, both of Detroit, laM weekend seed the 14th hole of the number four course with an eight Iron. .He la a mehiber of Indianwood Country Qub. REGISTRATION REGMS RR. 12 EVENINR DIVISION In ■**b*lBr sl a*l*B** BBSlB***lBt Bad bU T**a- ok LAWRENCE BENEnCIAL FINA.NCE CO. OF DETROIT FE 2-9249 OLL Graders Win Rallying from an early 11-3 deficit. Our Lady of the Lakes defeated St. Frederick 32-16 in a Sunday! grade acbool game paced by Mike Harrington’s 14 points. The losers scored only two points In the last half after leading 12-11 at balf-j time. * ■osrtott'i iBl; r*ff.]'^o^^'^H**Mtt'»^lVK l:M. yiE-;..,- Tliur*d*)r'* fBnia* >■> vrarji. i.i Psp^**. SPM>e*r‘i (Al; 1:31, MUM ”■ UAODra I^BSBai o pu. An ip*l .1 133 11.1 «k*lBBd..i ill l4. ft} .. Ruh Rbbb. NUMU* _____I 3. Bob PBvIdMHi. JS A ..I 1 3. BIU Crow, 0-M*U ....I ■ “7 T*?r‘k^W. ;J’ 3. Or*nd Rapid* SOBth ...........10 I I. kluik*ton Relsbt* I. BMt LSBllBg ........ 7. HlfbUsd Psrk ....... I. Bk*t Dttrolt ........ I. Pontiac Central .... 10. Detroit NoitlMMUm . CUIBS B "1. Bl»er Rous* ■ - ------d ChrUti I. HollBod ChrUtlBi 3. Xacansbd Roly M Harper Wood* . ^ .......... II. AU*t*n ................... CLASS O- 1. Capsc ..................... 1. Perry ..................... 3. aault ate. Ukrte Ixiretto . i. Jackion Bt. Msry .......... . (Tic I aebewalng ........ ImUy City ................. !• *1“ roinit at. psui .■ SsS/'“: LOOK WHAT'S HERE! 32 LANES TO SERVE YOU HURON BOWL 2525 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 5-2525 INPROVE YOUR GAIEI! Deals that you won't find often ore to be hod at Hoskins thk week on New and Used Cars alike. Don't miss out! HERE'S AN EXAMPLE: Breed New F*85 Olds Coupe ot Low os $2,365 Delivered, Tex end Plates Included HASKINS OLDSMOBILE Cernar «f M-15 ond US-10, Clarkstan SAVE $ ON TRANSMISSION THIS WEEKS SPECIAL rV ^_________ THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL 1956-1958 TORQUEFLITE M05” /m/y '— 7MHSIAISSI0HS srm e/!S/ " Music by j CHUBBY KEMP and HER TRIO | BUSINESS MEN’S LUNCH DAILY 100 South Cass Lake Rd.—Phone 338-7133 RELIABLE TRANSMISSION 41 N. Park St. PONTIAC FE 4 0701 PONTIAC 0o6n to Thi DETROIT NEWS Free InstnctioiiaMrliiritr' with ~ ‘ JOE JOSEPH THESE OTHER WELL KNOWN STARS From the Detroit All Star Classic DIVE SOOTU • MlIE UOBTS KENCHIBRETTE • DOK OUT Wed.y Feb. 7, 1:00 ta 4:00 P.M. KKJITKKN { THE PONTIAC VRES^,' TUBSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1962 f. J -X- MMfkets, business ai^ Finance MARKETS ^teelg Mixed Despite Output Rise Tlie following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them In wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as of Friday. • Detroit Produce raprr Applu. D*:.eloiM. PS. .......... Applu. JpnstlukB ............... Applet. MrlntMll Applet. Nerthera Spy Apple!. Cider. 4 t*>...... Apple!. Steele Ked ............. VeietoMee Tumipi. t^ped. bn. Poultry and Eggs t Detroit . uai: .............A lumbo 40-4S: «tri lette 31-43; lerge 34(i-41; medium 33‘if Whltti—Orede CHICAGO raODUCB CHICAGO. Peb 6 lUPIi — Produi Uve poultry: Bpeelel fed White I fryer! 13-22‘y; roe!ter! 2S-2*. m. Butter Bteedy: 13 !core MN; S3 U‘4. to !core SS'< n Kore 5S>.. E|g!: About iteedy; white lerac 3S; mixed lerie extra! 33: medium! jj eteoderd! 13tb: dirtic! 30: checSi 20. CHICAOO POVLTBT CHICAGO. Jen 31 (APi — lUBDAI Live poultry. Wholeeele buying prloei unchanged: epeclel fed White Rock fryer! 32: Plymouth Rock fryeri..... Iiya 27. Sfqck Mart Mills Irregularly NEW Y(^ (AP)-The stock market mill^ irregularly, holding about evert\ on balance early this afternoon, at the crest of five-day advance. Trading was moderately active, a * If wa.w natural for the list to take a breather after Ikst week's advance which continued^ against increasing resistance yesterday. Steels were mixed despite a rise in weekly steel production to the highest level in 2 months. Motors iCere mostly lower although the industry has bright reports on January ^es. The oils relapsed following the recent bupgeonlng of Investment demand for these Issiles. Most to-i So large was the accumulation baccos stayed narrowly on the of buy orilers for TXL that the upside. Chetnicals and nonferrous New York Stock Exchange was metals moved upward on balance, not able to open trading in that 8EUJNO VX DIVIDEND ‘‘“''‘"f the^nH^jing. A considerable number of key issues were selling ex dividend and this tended to dampen the popular market averages. Texaco dropped ih o r e point following overnight that It plans to merge with and liquidate TXL Oil. The proposal is to exchange seven shares of Texaco for 11 shares of TXL— giving the TXL stockholders a big premium on the basis of yesterday’s closing prices. Bonds Uneven at Opening NEW YORK (JD-Bond prices opened higher today in quiet trading, Over the rounter dealers In IT.S. government seouritiea posted some gains of 1/St In the tnlermedlate section. Most long Ralls and utilities edged up- ward in corporate trading on the New York Stock Exchange, dustrlals held steady. * A * Among the few movements of a point or more were Commonwealth Edison 3s of 1999. up 1 at 77 and Lopillard 4%s off 1 at 102^. Baltimqre Gas A Electric Convertible 4Us fell 214 at: IM, Standard Oil (New Jersey) and Standard of Indiana lost fractions while Royal Dutch eased. Amer ada spurted about 2 points in hope that this issue, too, would be involved in a "special situation" such as TXL's. ♦AAA Prices were mixed on the American Btock Ehfchange in rndHlpi^te tmding. Gulf & Western In-. duBtiies advanced more than a point. A similar gain was made by Electronic Ooimpunlcations. Mill Factors was up about a point. Fractional losses were taken by Webb ft Knapp. Roosevelt Field, Technicolor, All-StaU Properties and Scurry - Rainow Oil. GM Will Uphold Franchise Sales Executive Says Method of Distribution Vital to the Industry By BEN PHLBGAR A.P.'Bntomottve Writer ATLANTIC OTY, N.J.. - A top General Motors official said today franchise aelling is vital, to the automoUM buslneu and that GM is prepared to battle the federal court to prove It mbllcA kx Tb! AmmIxM Prxii » .13 If It It StU InS. UIU!. r«n. L.Yt. 3»t Chtnit — I _ ♦ .1 oon Tut!. 71.7 lft.8 lt.2 37.2 tl.3 Prtv. Oar Tt.t UO 3 tf .l t7.1 tl 3 ""Ik Alb 7t.7 IM.7 M l 174) SU _ lUi Atb 73.3, MIA IS 3 S3l 317 Tttr Ato TT.r IT.7 M t 34.2 M 4 IMI-M msH 73.7 iai.7 HA “ ‘ “ * IMI-tl horn 73.3 H.3 14.3’ .......... IIM Bls)l 71.3 M.3 17.3 H 4 lt.t Il6t Low 73.1 31.4 III “• “■ The New York Stock Exchange CIIICAGO LIVaSTOCK CHICAGO. Ftb. 3 (UPI(-U»i «*l|ht! i’ 'to'otiblliR**pric«r I. 17.S3-I7.73: top II. It 4.0M. ctlxt! l6o. 1 Livestock DSTaOIT LIVESTOCK DSTTROIT r»b. 3 lAPi CtUlt MX) aibulhtor iMt modtrxttly tcllre. tlctdr --— dtcUnt. Iwo toon loid! obolct ------- M-tt tO. two httd high cholot ytarllni 'ttotr! 27. hlfh toad tiid low cholct ttoct! 2t-2t.lO. mott food iteori 23-23: HUUty cobt 14 lb-13, !troM •* “ d4^cr! xnd ouUort 12-fI.IO. Host *00. BarroW! tod i-— --------- SIS lb. troiuid 23 ctnlx lower: hetvier wolihu tOd !0W! tUtdy; ttYtral loto oiunber^l^ and 2 and n"-’— • — lb.' ll.lbIfM: nunbtr lb. 11.73-13 23: number 3 I3.M: number I. 2 U| tov! 14-13.28; 3 end 3 ---- 15.13-1373. boor! 1183-1310 ” ■ rti ‘ C‘"t‘“‘ James M. Roche, vice president-distribution for GM, refeired to an indictment returned by a federal grand jury In Loa Angeles charging the auto company with inducing and persuading dealers to retrain from using discount houses as additional sales outlets. Roche maintained In a speech to the annual breakfast of the M Year Club of the Natloaal Auto system of i No date has been set for trial of the (Tallfonila case but Roche said when the trial cornea "We will vigorously defend not only the lawfulness of our. actions, but we will vigorously defend . the franchise system of distribution os being of vital Importance to customers, to dealers, to manufacturers and to the economy of our country." Roche said each auto manufacturer has ^ legal respiNmibllltles for the performanee and safety of his prtMhicts and mast be able to exercise some discretion In roeetliiK the rospoiMlblUty for wolfhU 1 Renn 2 4 \Ti«ktorTti7r; to if higher. odvoDco mottly on' _________ t VkIHommPsp i.xo . „ . „ „ .t VklRtvof Ind 3S< 3 13% M*4 33%t V4 Horc Pdr .33o S M U% 3S%- % H»rtx 1.20 1 70 3fH 70 ..... Htjrdon Npt 3 M'i MH 2fV,, H Halt Eloet 2 104% 104% 104% ♦ 1% Homo, ’ ’ * 23 27 % 27 rV4i VilHooko. — 4 4!'. 4!,. 44,__U-’lIniial 1.&D nd toedcr!:''iMd r !twni 2l.ar lo 1*1.? A 0 l.Toi ........................—3 lb! ------ 27 M: lood lou mixod kpod tnd ------------ 14.73-23.30: t«M lorwl* %30-24 73; two- h!llori“ 27"lfc‘; '"ciLeo" M.I&-2S.00.** io«l 13 33-24.73. Glut 1.12 ____nil II I Beckman In How .40 Stocks of Local Interest rifurtt tflcr doclmtl poinu are olfbUii I SupormarkoU ^ ... It.l tl.: —.-julp^rp. 33.0 34.: Arkantat Loulklana Gai Co, M.I 30 iaMwm-MoDt. Chem. Co. Pid. I3 13: ^rman Pbod Store! II P^eraT^Mof'^Bowor Boartnsi 37.0 31 Marxey Aluminum 23.2 13.' Hoover BaU A Beartnt 4. . 44 Leonard ReHnlns Prophei Co He said further that turer must place his dealers and diitribute hi» products in such a gay that every dealer has a chance’ To eiwi.u,.g^proflt. This, Roche said, is only through a sound franchise system. ^ Ihe 4&th annual convention of the M - %;Auto Dealers Association moved into its fourth day today. It ends Wednesday with a speech by Vice 1 ^ H PiTsldl^nt Lyndon B. Johnson. itElizab^ II Observes 1st Decade of Reign LONDON (AP) _ Ihe second decade of the new Elizabethan began today with artillery and flag salutes to Queen Eliza-3 H% 33% liv-^ toasts In the pubs to 37 M% » hafpwH’eWn ■ ........... •^“'-year-old monarch. Probing Manipulotion of Stock by Ad'Drives WASHINGTON -fAPl—The gov-,the possibility that publldiy cam- emment is Investigating the possible manipulation of stock map ket prices through publicity campaigns flnanoed by publicly owned lUs la one of two new elng studied Iv the Securities and Exchange Commission in its extensive inquiry Into the securities industry. OONDUCIINO STUDY It was learned today that SBC staff members also have been inleaders lb New York about the operations money lenders who finance stock transactkaiB. This was fteiievea to be the prshide (b a more slve study of lenders who arp exempt from the itock market credit restrictions imposed by the Federal Reaerve Board. AAA The miiuiipulation through publicity phase of the Inquiry is fo-cueing on the activities of a small group of Hnanctal public relations firms, most of them located in New York, The SEC wants whether any of these firms, in their effort to promote the poratioiM that hire them, circulated pr^ ^ prices. CHECXINO USAGE From what is known of the investigation, it seems apparent the SEC is checking newspaper usage of certain releases and subsequent changes in stock prices. AAA An area of special concern is Brill My™.2M 10 33% 34% 33 33 31% M% 23% 4 131% 131 >3> H A% 20 _ 42 41 4%-V! lm Minrr 20 1% 1% 1% Inl NIrk 1„ .............. I 424i 42% 42%- % Ini Pack OOa 2 12% 'IlAi 12% M 42% 47% 47% V % Inl Paper I.Mb 23 34 3.1% .tIJ.- 71 24>i 22% 24%+l% Inl TelATel 1 30 53% H I5%+ 1 7R SAlo &.1 K3U— thlrrV! Pkl Rpk } If 1ft 4 > —J— 3 11% 31% M%4 %^ “ ifc IRVING i. GORDON Named to Head Merchant Group at Tel-Huron ubeth V Buey 'srta^ BuiM Co .lOo llA 11.4 I >r^a? Co ' 33.0 24.2;j Booliwell StonSard .............. 30 30.3' Tolado Edlaon Co; 20.3 M.O ^ • ovaa TBE COVNTEE 8TOC|lB Icalrlw Cp I M Tbo lollowinc quotaUod do not not- cartor Pd 1' tuarily reproaont actual out c..— — nra Intended at a tuidt U mato trading raoga ol toe b '30 N% 30 H -1 1.40b » 30% 33% 33%- % Si *1 ni s5 sEis 3 23% 23% 2|^ % •I'M,.. -. - — __________________ —- ^35S 35^'b MH ■ 14 14% {S'™ M%+ u Ml ««!* '*|Texaco’“oii*^ 23 M% ^ M% 1% 21 24% 24% 24%- % | jtavierR^ 40a 14 23% 23% Tax O Prtd A 17 44% 42% 44% + l% 171 41% 44% 43 -1%'5»""';^‘ . *1 S> !jlTax G SUJ 1 0 11% 21% 21% r> .KemCUl 2.40xil 1 12% 23% 13% + % Tax bia 10 1M%----- —...... --- . 5*" " ‘1 PCAO 1.20xd 30 30% * . .!!!'* Hi,* !•*. J*s m a% 23 N M Mt|i- % 107 40% 40% 4(P< H I 30 H 30 - %' 14 12% 10% 19% ♦ %l II U% U% 13% 10 33*4 .11% 30% 4 % 4 24% 24% 4 % 1 .11 M% 02 H% 4 % Old oil NJ .... Old OU Oh .230 Blonq Pkg Stan Aar I... - ■■ Tl 1.20bxd 10 •ug l.ao JP I M ____- _ck Bunray 1.40 ■wUtACo l.M was expected to spend anniversary of her becoming 'tp^n quietly with her fatnlly. It wm a day of leave-taking for the monarch and her husband, Pnhqe PhiHp, who leaves by month tpur of Latin News'in Brief . Camb R Lk .23b . .. . .. . .. . Tcampb Soup 2.21 I 100% lot*, im*. -I.- AMT Corp. Aunt Jane’! Food Detroiter Mobde ilT 11.8 I Bleetronla! i fi?eT^‘,r, Cenco In 4ts Cen Hud O 104 C«n a SW I.Ot Icerro Cp 1 10b : Cert-teed .73b , % ,eh Port r I xd « r% »% Leh Vrt tod 7 1% 1% .’%'Leh Vbi RR I 0% 0% II 43 ' 43 43 -f % LOP Olati 1. 2 29>4 22% 22% 4 “■ 21 43% 4S% 41 4 % n 34% 34% S4lf- '.I 3 23% M% 2t%+ % ‘ ^ r McLouto Steel Co. .. -iiteWgaa Seemleee Tube-Go, AM-Fiooeer Plnance 21.4 Bute Pe Drilling Tranicontlnentol Oai Trrnor! Ologer Alt r !T: 13.1 24. It t ij’iCiliee'syT i'm S H% M%i % JS* J? Cley ai lU 2 4 (3% B »%+ % y! Icora Cola 2 42 2 28 24% 23 I iCola Palm 1.20a 1 10% — — ■' 'ColIlBa Bad ^ ^ I 4I%- % % S% S”!.! Trtn W Air iTranawmer .1 Trftnftitr % 20 21 >1% 22% 23%- % 1"% 1«% t*%- > ..li 1444+ \ J .V%4 ‘ 11% 13%- 1 84 14% 2 112% fin tod 3 52f n 117% li.i ■ I37%4 3% :kh Aire 120 40 81 42% ■* ‘ •W« Ibea 34 47% 4*’/. 40 S 1 24 22% 22% 5* ' liuken! Hi^.tOe •>'4 ‘ ' " *** ®“*^“ “ -M— 2X0x1 ... __ — Un Pae lHoa lO 32% ----Air Lin ,80b U 13% ..... Aire 2 34 42% United Cp .2lg 20 -t •• ’1 FruU X* ' et •«,-Gaa CP' and a cash register with a total value of *199 In a burglary between 3:30 and 4 a.m. today at the Pontiac Cash Register Sales and Service, 337 S. Saginaw cording to Pontiac police. The main floor and baaement of 20% 20'%- % Ponti^ Municipal Golf Course 20 114% 112% ii2iTf % were ransacked Sunday night or 5 S’* S% % ekrly yesterday, it was reported to " police yesterday morning, Nothing the Tel Haron CkUdrea’s SIn^. He has been a store owner at Tel-Huron Shopping Center nnd member of tlie nssoeintion for Ntyc yenr*. ThbxTiew president has been a Pontiac^rea merchant f ast seveAyears. a\a a Gordon succeeds Ray Smith, former minager center's S. S. Kresge^^ore, who was recently transferred: —U— I Borax I Prelgh udG^mum j US Hoff M 1 37% Keystone Growth K-2 MaeeachuxfU* Inyeitor! Growth invextor! Trust Futnam Growth 11.22 13.M Colum Gas 1 10 17.73 1010 Col Piet 7M 0.42 10 30 ComI Cred I N I N 0.40 ComI Solv 00b Comw Bd lb lOTI 11 1 13.21 10 I Treasuty Position m’ABHINGTON lAPi — The ca .......le Treasury compared w Contataier .20e Cent Can I N Cent to! 2.32b Coni Mol 40 Coni. 0 13% «%-, % MNm»Cop 313 Wtft l/,| 1 MftfnftVOX ..»7r IS 27^ 27% Stv;: % Marine Mid , Ib a fft tn\ I, Mftrauarat ft 914k MVa Marttr M .M 1.70 I 41% 453b oovr^ IS »% *2 N - % JJ*" I 71*1 71% 70%— % mom 2 24 «% ^ % Middle 8UI 15 «% 43% 45%- i'll 02% OS *2*.+ % Mpl! Hot 7 II 11% 11% 11%+ 27 57% 32 .17V 3 M » M *0 M% MV. M'< M fr*e MV* M-n— -J » 44Vk 44^ 44V.-5 ^ J}; gjywd 2 3 11% 11% w%-%'H5 I 33% ! 14 43% I 17 12% 12V. 12%- %' “ AI ......_ ?|Vanad Cp .40 ? Vartan At f'Va BIAI-ow l.M Wa 3 M% 27% M% 1 3% 3% 3% 7 M 12% 12% . 71 34% 34V. 34V.+ r ^ St: ' . 3 34% MV. MV.^ 23 77% 77% 77% + 3 3 13% 12% 12 V. + 1* 23% 23% 23V.— SOa 3 33% M% 33% .. 10 32 51% 51%- —V— 40xd 1 32% 22% 22% 2 23% 23% 23V.-■ ' 41% 41% 41'%- ___ , CudfthF Pk - .. . -- - -- - . I 10% 10% invi— % 0 17% 17 —!►— Batonce ...........0 0.20I.133.201 07 Dan Rlv M M 1 14% 1C DADOBttt DftCCft Dnj* I ftn 7 471 ^al Tear July 1 .. .0 Deere Withdrawal! tlMai year 3 Del A Total debt .......•3IN JM,331,33I.M Deni ” Gold ateeto . .. 3 13^^.^,037 14 — . 3 4^M.4ri.31L3t 5m _________________rts»,}n8E?M“r 5Sl5‘.2?i :: :: ^ not !ub- preM tod^ J r^s reported missing. PPi| Grain Futures Mart Is Generally Weak 1 8' 55 IsillT ‘nsfaliriv*"—— nl Sup la n A ROW 1 351. 1 lOVb 10% UVs IS 21% 21% t?%- % 2 17% 17 vi 17^ + .. . aiex I N 4 U% U% 12*b- % Outb Mar. .M X-I r% c**“» 111 O’ 2.50 i aIZ i t . Oxford. Ap 1 1% ll’%- ■' I Warn B Pic 34 22% 22% 33% . 1 10% !■% ISVe- 3 2»*i ft'k _______ . 12 N% H Nal Can 27r 77 13% ’5V. ______ Caah Beg 1.M 11113 Il7 111 .S***?" A. Co 1.N 2 34% 34 Nat Da'<-r> x «% e<»b gji.+%|Woolworto 2.50, 10 H% B tat DliUlI IN xd 80 21 21% 2^+ % WortolnotOT 2.10 3 H 84% tat Lewd 2.25e 21 M% 2l'b M%* ™to —Y— Nat Steel 2 1 M% N% N%- %Yi Nat Tbea A T 112 7% 7% 7%+ % Tl NfWBnt HI 1.12 11 25% 23'4 71'++ V. „ NT CtntA 11 I2V. 12 12V. .. —Z— NT CA A 8L ] 9 19^4 39H ZcnHIl R«d .SOt 16 674k 664k 6644 Nt» If Pw 1.66 U 46S 46% 46H- % ^ ^ u jTAm Ai*2 “ M *0714 NV^1%I KSi '5rdlyldlid4“to‘*toi for.^ 8ly n8 Pae°123*'" U k% S% «%^ ^'liS'^.rNiWy ot NOT^Sta Fw 1.11 .♦ .n% iillSo. OnSrSSr^a^^ JSJ JKt: »r* “»• Jnelud^ ' ■** \ CHICAGO \jr -■ After of scattered firmness at the owning, the grain futures market slid into general weakness today on the board ol trade. Setbacks in early dealings ran to major fractions in a leiv spots with old crop under stiflest pressure. The surge of d e m a q^d which e m a n d Mij ii open^ up Tuesdajy’s 1^ rally 5 EiSr S^apparenHy had run its course in ail 4 37% 37%:^ % Other rommoditieS.! YaleATew Nr i' %'Mar. INI^- %.May Ii5'» . CHICAGO OBAtN CHICAGO. Peb. 2 (API — OpenlBi 2ralB prlcei; 2.03% July .... .i;iHMa"/r.. - “y ”■ % NiirwtehPb la xd 3 12% 11% INI 4,4 _______________ Mvldend omlttad. daterrad -------- ■ dlxliM mcatl ratrae. b—Annual rate H L d-Daetordd or paid dlTldend. e-Declarad, li xaar. I-Fayable la ttUmaled caah value | ..1.11% Sep...........l.W( ...1.11 Dm..............1.32 . 1.11% Lard (Drumxi ..1.11% Mar........ i.ri .. di% j{K ■'.■.'.i. io.'ojr 1 41% t •F— S«TAT1.N 1 ^ H ( M% I* w - % Pan AW Air .M 10 22% 22%'»% dlrldand. t-Payable In t t 2% 2% •% r»rke Da-u 47 X8% M% S.1%+ V. e.thnatod eaxn yMna m f ^ »% «%+ V. Peabody Coal .M M 14% M% 34%- % ex-dlftrlboUan dato. - I 11% 12VJ 2J%— V. Panney, JC I.IN N 43 47«b *7%+ % t'*'’**'- 1 B% "'4 51% Pb PwAU .22 l.M 33 M ' , e-^! to Ml. s 41 iT nu__«4 Pft RR .S9t 40 lOkfa 19^4 cld—Cftiled xd-%Bx M% P^adT lN 3 22 ‘ 52 a t % dUtrtbutlOT ------------------- • N «% 41%-1*JwSm .Na jl 42% 4»»’ •’ —........ 1 Nib S% S%7 +I Ubalpi 0 2 -1 g% «% « I up. k-Db- Brlllo M22 —— aeeumulatlye Buffalo Parse ... rlda^i to arroari. p-^%ld mtere BnrtMtr J,.---- — Lockh Aire . _ __ ___ KorfWkAWeet By d^^ 3 44 4 IN 3 Ml ■ MS ex-dleldOTd t 12 Hlfher srade raOt . ^ m. A. AA A t® Second gtadO ralle ..... ---------- ir—Bl' lifBti- 1%—wUholrttif InduUrtEls ' TftiTftnU wWr"-Wlth wwTMU. wd~Wh«it ""*”*‘*^'*“ . ,rt—WIwo IftftMd. " -------------- fUtttH NN+2.N n^sf 1 P.M AVKaAOBS r's.N 4 103^ 1^ ' iwi%+ %J rj—In bankruptcy or rccalrarihlp erllO RaUi 142.61 % 2^ G INb 14 (M 33% 43%—'• panles. , ' Volume to 9 p.m. l.OTO.ON. pared by Dr. G. D. ftalria of Ilalvenlty of Britloli ------- eavliagpo a nMrfcel of op lo t.N mllNoa borrelo daUy for Arctic oil by IIM. J. A. Armstrong, director and general panager of the producing department of Imperial OU Limited, slated in Edmonton the oU dels on western Canada by 1910 would require an additional expenditure of $50 million annually for explorations. Tel-Huron Merchants' lion has elected Irving J. Gordon of 320 Lorberta Lane, Waterford Township, president for the coming year. nond Hawaiian Gardens Changes Managers The Hawaiian Gardens restaurant in Holly Township has come uiider the management of the Sutton and Clements Corp., owners oi the Fox ft Hounds Inn of Bloomfield HUU. AAA The corporation, owners of Ihe Bloomfield Hills restaurant, two Detroit restaurants and several coffee shops, has an option to purchase Hawaiian Gardena in a year, according to Fred D. Barton, Its present owner and builder. AAA Barton, who opened the novel restaurant in an Hawaiian atmosphere on May 30, last year, laid he Is selling "so the restaurant can be w by people experienced In the business."-- palgns have helped generate public enthusiasm for certain recent "hot lames" - new stock ismes which have shown sharp price advances Immediately or soon after reaching the market. COUUI CRACK DOWN The SEC never has tried to use its anti-fraud powers against public relations organlzatiaiw. However officials said the powers could be used If a firm conspired Jiggle market prices by dis- JinregiUawa money lenders also have been a aourcc of concern lo the SEC for some time. The com-mlarion baa never before taveiU-gated their activities directly because of their exemption from the market credit restrictions. The credit curbs apply only to Privately, some members «i Urn commiisioa have exprsaaad dismay that the Federal Reserve Board has not seen fit to bring the unrestricted lenders wlthm the scope of lU regulaUone. AAA Through these lenders, specu-Utora can finance stock purchaam and avoid the Federal Reserve Board’s gncral requirement q;>toratioti and development over the+next two decades, but at coats which will enable Canadian oO. to remain competitive on world oiarioitB. AMC Announces 2-Door Models oi Ambassador American Motors today announced the addition of new two-door sedan models in the 1962 Rambler Ambassador V8 line-up, the firm’s luxury compact+car series. A A A The firat new model came' bfi the aaaembly line at the Ramider plant in Kenosha, Wls., yesterday, said V. E. Boyd, sales vice president. At the beginning of the 1962 model year, two door sedan models were added to the Rambler line. The sales popularity of these models prompted the addition of two-door sedans in the Rambler Ambassador V8 line, Boyd said. AAA The new models will have all the features of the other Ambassador models, he said, includirtg the 250-horsepower B8 engine with ean-optioiLpf 270 horsepower. Premier E. C. M a ea I a g ef Alberta has aanoBBeed that chaages la the proriaee’s eU aai gas laws oriU be latradaoied ol tbe next sesriss of Ibe leglsla-tare. ANbottgb Ibeae ebaages would be lasMIuted prbnaray as a meabB of iaereoatag provtaclal legislatloa. they wsald also give lareatlve to exploralioa aad do-velopmeat of oil reaerveo. One problem to be overcoitie in the development of Arctic oU exports would be that of transporta- Dr. Quirin has visualized a pipeline network with an outlet at Skagway, Alaska, to transport Yukon and porthweit territorlea oil to oftahore markets. of wHbstaadbig tbe batteriag of 2 Pontiac Motor Sales Executives Get Promotions 'The promotion of two Pontiac Motor Division sales executives to new posU In Kansas Dty and Oklahoma City has been announced by Frank V. Bridge, the division’s general sales manager. Bridge said William L. Smith, former sales manager of tbe Okla-lirana City zone for Pontiac Motor, has been assigned to a similar position in the Kansas Oty Kenneth L. Delashaw, former assistant zone manager in Chicago, has been named to the position in Oklahoma City vacated by Smith. AAA. Smith, who joined Ihe Pontiac Motor Division in 1940 as a service adjuster, has served as district manager, parts and accessories mantmCr and business management manager. Delshaw joined Pontiac in 1950 and has held jio-sltions as car distributor, office manafer, district manager and business management manager. NEW MfHIEI/—Two-door aedan models have been added to the 1962' Raml^er Ambassador VB , line. SU|^ted ^irfvertised^ldivered prices .^1 and $2,ffil for the 41)0 or 154 below comparable four-door sedans. Like all Ambassadors, the new models havc_ horsepower ratings of 250,, with a 27fl-horsepower option available. / ^ . THE PONTIAC PiqSSS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 0. 1902 NINETEEN Pontiac Area Deaths SenlM tor Harrle W. Bird, for-«mer Pontiac nwrchant, will be held at 10 a.Ri. Wedneaday at 8(, Hugo of the HlUi Catholic Church. Iw RoMry wlU be rKlted at 7:30 tonight at the William Vam Funeral Home, 4375 N. Woodward Ave. between 13- and 14-Mile roadi. Mr. Btrd at BioomOeld HiUa wai aaaoehrted with hte father in the 8. L. Bird * Sona aothii« Store for many yeara. The buaineM was where Oemun’a is now located. Survivors include his wife And; sons, Dr. H. Waldo of Ann Arbor, MaJ. John A. of Brooks Air Force Base, San Antonio, Tex., Robert of Farmington and Oeene ofjltila-ddlpMa; a daughter Tire. Cf. J Bunge of Madison Heights; a brother Charles of Bimlngham and 34 grandchildren. en months. He had worked in the SI department of Chrysler Ooip., Detroit, and a member, of Ernest F. Oldenburg American Legion Poef No. 216, JOHN NIVnON OAKLAND TOWNSHIP - Serv-hra for John Nivlson, 77, of 5680 Uvemois Road, will be 1 p.in. FHday at the WUIlam R. Poten Funeral Home, Rochester. Burial will be in Roaeland Park Cemetery, Berkley. Me. Nivlaon died early today in Henry Ford Hospital after a brief IBness. He was a nie member of the Masonic Lodge in Scotland, the East Orion Farm Bureau and Paint Creek Methodist Church and be made to the University Michigan Medical School Student Aid Fund In care of Dr. J. C. Tup-per. FRANK 8. MILWARD Service tor'Frank 8. Mllward, native of Pontiac and Ford dealer In the city tor 25 years before retirement in 1936, will be at 2 p. m. Thursday at All Sabits Epis-eepni Clmreh. Burial rlffln Funeral Home. Honorary pallbearers include Dr. L A. Famham, Verne Mark-lay. Hiland Thatcher. 0. Leo Beaudette, Frank Cobb, Stuart Austin, Gmld Gulnan, Dr. Reame Bailey and Henry Houston. Mr, Mllward, 79, a summer resident of Charlevoix, made his winter home fai Arizona. He suffered a heart attack at his api Sunday after returning church and dinner with his wife a daughter, Mrs. Alice Maness of Dallas, Texas; a brother and a grandchild. Rail Crossings % City Agenda Railroad cro^ngg will be back on the agenda*tor tonight’s Pontic City Commission meeting. MRS. HARRY A. TOWnTS Service for Mrs. Harry A. (Thelma M.) 'llbbetta. 50, of 5500 Rowley St., Waterford Township will be at 3 p.m. Wednesday at the First Assembly of God Church srtth burial in Perry Mount Park Ceinetery. Mrs. Tibbetts' body will be at the VoorheewChapel Funeral Home until Wednesday morning. Mrs. ‘nbbetU died yesterday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after a long Ulness. ERm T. MAR08E MILFORD -roWNSHIP-Servlee tar &vin T. Marose. 56. of 3274 Oak Park Court, will be 1 p. m. Thnnday m -the Mehardsen-BM (FOneral Home, Milford. Burial wUl be In Forest Lawn Cemetery, Detrott. A U. S. Army veteran of World War n, Mr. Marose died yesterday at Veteran’s Hospital, Ann Arbor, following an Ulnm of sev- -t:W A.M. to 12 NOON Stop in Saturday maming or any week day from 9:00am.»5pjn, for a friendly talk with a regb-tend rsprsasnutive and learn how we can assist you In your in- vestment goals. Eveninp bT appointment. • Ordtn axteuted on all tx-ehaHiti 0td avar-tha-eotmttr a Tax-Fna Uwilelpal Bonds a SysumaOe tmastmant Flan X Mutual Ftsnds a Ns^ SeeuHlUs Issusi Lerchen & Company 402 Pontiac Stau Bank Bldg:, Pontiac, Mich. FE 2-9275 Watling, State May Get New IRS Center An Oakland County official has promised his county’s cooperation in finding a site tor a new i mated Internal Revenue Service center in southeast Michigan. The facility will employ between 1,200 and 1,500 persons and will serve the U.79 milUon income tax accounts in Michigan, Illinois and Wisconsin. Board of Realtors. Surviving are his wife Mabel; IR8 District DIreHor R. L Nixon wrote to otflclals In Detroit sad Wayne, Oakland and Maeoinb eonntteo asking If Ibey had anything to offer for sneh a faeillty. Gov. Swainson said. "I hav< directed the Department of Economic Development to make an immediate investigation of available sites that meet the specifications of the IR.S ” Commission Will Hear Measure Urging PSC Study of Situation aty Attorney William A. Ewart ill present a resolution he was ordered to prepare re<|uesting a Michigan Public Service Commission study of various railroad grade crossings in Pontiac. Ewart will also report on a |6,0N lawsnH filed against the elty and Omnd Trank Weolera RaUraad by Andrew E. and Ellon Ponter of SN Vlaewood M.. The Forsters are suing for damages their son, Brian, allegedly suffered in an accident at a rail-soad citMsing on Rapid Street on March 27. 1961. They rharge the rily and rail road witti negUgenoe In not properly maintaining the eraoslng. Commissioners will also be asked to authorise City Manager Robert A. Stierer to put three protessiaiwl real esUte appraisers under contract to appraise property which the city w^ buy in the R44 urtwn renewal project. In other busii public hearings to construct tour combined sewers in the Kennett Gardens area a public bearing on a special assessment roll for grading on Locke Street east of Bay Street. Oakland, Macomb dnd Wayn« Officials Asked to .Recommend Sites NEW YORK - Here’s one comforting thought today world beset by problems; You are richer than you think The thought is put forth by a Chicago banker who is president of the Trust Division of the now holding its annual mkiwiler trust confersnoe here. He Is Thomas H. Beacom, a senior vioe plesklent of the First National RTART NRARmiNfl Detroit’s Mayor Cavanagh and Coundl President Ed Carey or-derM Industrial and planning agencies to start moving. “This waeld really give m aa Oarsy said. “The Delos Hamlin of Farmington, chairman of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors, said "I get to work on compiling available sites at once." Bernard A. Kalahar of Onter Line, chairman of the Macomb (tounty Board of Supervisors, also promiaed a quick survey. Chicago and Milwaukee also arc in the running. *Yoar Wealth Is More Than You Think It Is* By 8AM DAWSON He doubu if you really know how much you’re- worjh alive— how much you’d be worth dead. As a banker he, naturally. thipks you should find out right away. “Most people are so dose to what they own they fail to realize U off they are,” Beacom 'Many even are inclined their bank books are all there is to their estates.” He cites as aq example a man who niay have $3,005 in savtogs at the local bank or in U.S..Savings Bonds, and feel he’a worth very little indeed. But the man owns his own home, probably worth $15,000, life Insurance valued *ef$30jm,.« w that may bring $1,000 if sold. THAT’S NOT ALL That adds up to $39,000 right there. But Beacom says that isn’t F^irnilU^r, household at>pli-ances. Jewelry, objects d’art and even personal clothing should be Included—things that most people somehow rarely consider pdrr of their wealth. The moral? Because too lew ntotiM how much they're worth, too many die without leaving a wUl. Beacom adds that, worse yet. three out'of ten wills .in existence are outmoded or were drawn up without benefit of estate planning. Without a.will, the state steps in rd~Bttpt»e”td -Tiuur. perhaps in a way you wouldnT approve,. and certainly with legal lees and papers that eat Intr Royal Oak Township Police Job in Dispute Sheriff Frank W. Irons will be deed itr take'Over oantroi of the Rpyal Oak Township police force if a job dispute between a township trustee and the present police chief is not settled today. Edward L Watkins, who was appointed police chlel by the Township Board Dec; 23, said Trustee Ernest Wilson ordered Sgt.' Annlah Ruffin to assume control at the department today.- Watkins said this mondag he still eonsMered Mmaelf ehief of the poUoe deportment. “I will not relinquish my duties on command of one member of the Township Board,” said Watkins. T have talked to other members of the board and they have knowledge of Wilson’s action.” Wilson, a fomter patrolman on le township police force, was named, coordinator of the police department following his election to the Township Board last April. Wilson's position as coordinator, according to Watkins, does not give the power to fire the chief. Watkins said tlie trustee may act only in an advisory capacity and liaison man between the police department and the Township Board. Wilson was unavailable for comment today. Watkins said he has talked to representatives of the sheriff’s department and will call them in '* To Submit Clerics' letter Protesting Dancing. Play the situation is not straiiditened out today. Wilson’s order that Ruffin place Watkins os chief was contained in a letter posted on the bulletin board at police headquarters yesterday. Watkins said. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer, superintendent of Pontiac schools, today said a protest letter from area ministers involving social dandng, prolanity In English class readtogs and a recent high school stage play would go to the board of education Thursday night. proper to comment on its contents board members had expressed their views. After readlar the totter, WkK-mer sold, “TUs wUI be preeent-«d to the beard ef edpcatloa ter their eoasMaratlon at thrtr The letter was signed by the Greater Pontiac Evangelical Min-istera Fellowship, and ite i action committee—a group of 43 fundamentalist and conservative ministers who state they represent He refused further Comment until the board sees the letter. Whit-explained it was addressed to the board, and he didn’t Jeel it Slate Hearing in Pontiac on Economic Growth Pontiac will be one of the cities where a joint House-Senate committee on economic growth will hold hearings. Rep. Gilbert E. Bursley, R-Ann Arbor, said today. Bursley sold the committee will ^it up info two groups of six members each again late (his week to conduct hearings in dif^rtent sections of the stete. Bursley said the final meetings of the committee would be held Feb. 23-34 in the Upper Peninsula. No date has bero set for the Pontiac meeting. and several members sebedatod beartags to Bay aty and Midland Friday and to Saginaw and Alma Satnnto.v. Vice Chairman 5?en. John H. Slahlin, Belding Republican who last week annowced his catxiidary for the GO?* lieutenant governor nomination, was scheduled W take .other members to Holland and Horitegon Friday. Addlthnul bearings on economic growth pre scheduled next "When the hearings have been concluded we will have visited 50 cities in all parts of the state and heard the opinions of at least 1,000 people as to what Michigan needs to improve business and industry and lay the groundwork for more employment.” he said. ' ilurses Attacker Gets 5-10 Year Term iii Prison HiMTAOE Orcult Judge- Oark J. Adams today sentenced John E. Stinson to 5 to 10 years in prison ftn* the March 1961 attack on a nurse outside Pontiac General Hospital. TO SaVE WHEREVER THERfS A NEED Spca*ks-Griffin A funeral HOME •tHOUGHTFUL SFRVICE" 4* Willi AMS $T.. PHONE FI 2.5141 However,,they claimed teachers allegedly are ’’ridiculing student! when they ask for an excuse on the grounds of conviction.” The Pontiac Northern High School' production of "Lile With Father” came under fire as travesty on baptism” and a play ‘noted lor its usage of profane language.” Abner Wolf Co. ^ Announces New Personnel Moves Stinson, 21. of 55 Nebraska Si was found guilty last month by Circuit Court jury. The charge was assault with intent to do greatly bodily harm less than the crime of mu^er. His atfawney had sought to discharge the entire jury on grounds it was not representative of a crpBS section of the county. The nurse, Mrs. Myrtle Lou Galardi, 32. of 4816 Ross Drive, Waterford Township, was struck on the head with a cement trowel. Her screams frightened Stinson away. ComposBr Jacques Ibert PieHft fwiceLOtZL_ PARIS (B — Jacques Ibert, in-ternatianaUy known French composer, dtod Monday night at his Paris home, He was 71 and had been ill with influenza. such. They admitted that totters stadeoto bo ex-aadteadiag Mitoto books are aomptod by aohool admlalatratorB aa a matter of board policy. Cicorge Keil. vice president and general manager ot the Abner A. Wolf Co., wholesale grocery dis tributor and subsidiary of Allied Supermarkets, Inc., new company appointments. Ben Wetienstein of 23490 Clover-lawn St., Oak Park, former director of customer relations, will continue to coordinate this area well as the Personnrt and Office Accounting functions in his new position as vice president of administration. dent of health a eandy and nonfoods. He waa tenner head buyer ot i °*MalS into tito Drive, Southfield, moves into position from hla previous assignment as sales supervisor. Along with his new duties, Ite pony’s merchandising committee So check up now and see how much you’re reallf worth, Beacom advises. He says estates of $60,000 and more have increased In number 300 per wnt since 1944. And estates of that size are larg? enough to put you into the ■ the inheritance tax collector. [> here’s what the Chicago banker thinks you ought to do; « Ftbrakry II. IMl. »l 1*'M s.n. «> ■ MarsmoB, MS S. Aaburn. FonUae, hlaan. a INO Naih Rambirr. irriai zfms, vlU h« r -" - - ............ cMh to mjrlMtt poctod ot ftiove 'l?Btl^maUim' karlSl'W Jinno. «U1 ba told at public auc-for eaab to hlfhaat bidder. Car mar ----—. abort addrata. OSirSRAL MOTORS ACCSPTAVCB CORP First, make a household i lory, room by room. Services of proteselonal appraiser may be _ worthwhile Investment. Such list helps not only in making will, but also in estimating how much fire and casualty iimirance you should own or in offering quick evidence in case of loss or fire. HND NET WORTH Second, find out your net worth by measuring your assets against your liabilities. Assets Include everything you own, including the cash value of your life insurance. Liabilities include \he home mort-or other real estate mort- ______ or liens, car loan, money due on furniture and appliances, persona] loan balances and loans against life inauranre, open accounts and currenl bills unpaid. Subtract the liabilities from your total assets. The result is your worth, alive. Next, figure your worth dead. Subtract the cash value of your Insurance from your worth and then add tht-ftnaruihie of yixir policies. ei L&ad wBioNT SAmv aSd •conomloally wlUi niwlr niMMd Dm A-«M WbldU. M eenu al PAY 0?F■ YOUR BILLS WrmOOT A LOAN) Arrsaic to pay sU ro - ' psM due or not with a /AS $10 WEEK Acald tsniltencBt com«"w*JKw*^r'’cau. Poa A aOMB APPOINTMBier CITY ADJUS'l MENT SERVICE FK 5-9281 Member of Pontiac Cbambor of Commerce Faitoral Dlrtctors COATS PUNIRAL HOHI dratton plains or )-nii -----c-TT-------------- Kooeo Harbor D. E. Pursley FUNERAL HOME iDVftUd Cftr Btrvie* _____n 4-MU______ Donelson-Iohns HUNTOON ’ SCHUTt ' PUNRRAIR PROM SIM til Auburn Ato. _rU t-M Voorhees-Siple CaRwto»|^loti WHITE CHAPEL 4-4W4' BTXotITdl lot. perry Mount Park Cematcri. Call aAar _____alnaa. PS t-fiot_______ LIKE NEW CAittNATOR OAR". bait burner ' *"* ____OB 4-oIm. party would ueb the letI ter "B" from Ibt "Wrlfltr Con-taet." Will pat Its or trade other letter. PE Hitt oRer t II Death Notices Peb. I ind I. INt INI Pontiac 4-Door ----------Jno, Soiitl ko. riu bo told St poblle auction blfheil bidder. Cor 0107 be . eboee eddreet. ORNXRAL MOTORS ACCXPTANCB COW. 0 (or coeh to hlebeet I • inapected at aboee at.__ GENERAL MOTORS ACCEPTANCB CORP. Peb. I and I. IN 0.,bbr«.rrr.&t“tt‘.. .. au.. .. Ui Auburn St., FooiUc. Mlchlcta. u jSLa^ir Sp-eirMtiffetKi for eaah io liMbeet bidder. Car may Inepectad at abort addrret GENERAL MOTORS ACC^AMCE CORP PQBUO ■*».» ‘wtir ba*^5oId*ai*’pubfl?'au*; to hlthret bidder. Car may OBNERAL MOTORS cbanolN t-Door. Orrlalilo. I11I1P1I7II3, bo told at pubUc auction •— —*• Ifbeet bl-*-*— --------------*“ 'Cur may be Inipectcd OINEKAL MOTORS *“'~"“ICE CORP. kSWJi________ to car may il:M> er^i No!“Wr)WilA ibie auoltoa for nte Peb. I and I. INI PUBLIC BALE On Ptbruory 11. INt. at t0:W a m. at ..13 Auburn St., hontlac. Mich., a 1U7 Rambler Sport Sedan, Strlal No. PlHI, -Ml bo aold at pubUo auction for cote hitbut bidder. Cor may ba loepected MICHIOAN *111 be te^tod p.m.. C.a.T., March N. INt. to noam t ie, C*brUto**a._Obi^o 4, mattoa concemlni bidding documeote may be obtained from (a) Oentral Serv-toat Admlolatratloo, Rn^ * Oourtbouaa, Oblcofo 4. nit '••-'■'-dlan of tba butldlnt pi------ Pab. I, T and t, INI Urges Brand Placed on Drinking Drivers PJoreoCe Martin, mother ef minor child. Petition bArtag boon filed to tbU Court -e%pWffiUgr-DhiaA COD- ikd aUdjibUd^ Vfoutod a la* stituent of State Rep. Teriy Drilte " of Gallon thinia Drake shoidd in- ’ His beat known works Incinded Eacatea, Angellqite, Le Rol d’Yve-tot and Le Chevalier Errant. Before his last illness head had b^D at work on a lymitoony for Charli* Munch an^ the 76lh anniversary of the Poston SyntohiXHr. He also composed music »r a number of French films. traduce a measure to put a marif on drinking drivers. Or it' .★ ‘‘r-His suggestion it Ihot the car, truck or other vehicle of a person convicted tof drunken driving he painted wito alterrtate vertlcle black and white stripes five inches wide—from fiont to rear. Six to 10 skins go into.a!i aver-I age coat of genuine sealskin. The vehicle could not be sold, Wid tte driver would be examined by m sheriff lix roonfiis later to aee/if repainting ip pormal colon a^be IN THE P y of Ookli Tbo PonllAC Preu. i?oV:,Vbi-.' Ototoid E Adam*. Jndft of MM Cooft, to the aty «lfc of Mork R. PUbor; door motber of Icu P.. Dr. Robort R. ond Mork R. PHhtr Jr I crandchlidrto &>nclMn-Johoi Puncral nom* witb Dr Milton R. Bonk offlelotlng. totormont to Whito Choprl. Mr4. Pichcr *111 He In •tote ot the Dontlcon-Jobni Pu- torment to Poroet Uwn Cemetery. Detroit. Mr. Mornee *111 II* to ......] tti* Rlchordeon-Blrd Pu- Eiuoii, wn* uoToroo: oit ei; w- SSontej^d**V'?otSer of|B? old lOlorli) Brokonehit*. Mrc. Rome (Joellyni aoekeietlor. Ooort*. Donlel ond RIcbord Ml-fronto: dear brother of Mre. Albert (Lllllnoi Roeener. oleo eur-Tlyed by nine iroadchlldrtn. Pn-norol eerrlca *UI b* held Tbure-day. Pob. 4. - - -- -* -- Jr. offlelotlng. Interment 1*0 Pork. Mr. Mlcrante *111 lie to etot* at tb* Cooia Pu-bersl Home. Drayton idlWARDy ---; KKT SVV.MS .’fiffili ---'ll CBUrch. MORRISON, PIB. 4, iNI. FANNIE P. tl PIcoesnt at . Oxford; He -- dear mother of Mre. Chrlellne M Dettletf - ■— *— Lytle; ■ Mre Averin _________f of Mettle Dohl- ____ Mre. Oroce Toylor and MOe PrenHlln, oleo ......' —' -■ frondchlidren a d Ji yrnt-srud- _____ _____..1 lervlee *111 be d Thuredoy. Peb ncid tnureony. It the PtomerteU Pun«al Hoim. '5 Boatom Btar *111 mmduei gi^-alde aorvloa ot 1;N p m. ot we OrtoDVIll* Comotory. Mri. Morrl-lOB wUl lie to etoto ot toeriu-merfoH Funeral Homo, Oklord. Bjtni.ml, *ttn. A. INk. ELBRY O., MIR Coe*. Voeear. formerly of OrtanyUle; *1* II: beloved hue-bond of Blanche aodler; ^r Pab. 1. ot 1 p.m. at »h* C P-Sherman Funeral Home. Orton-vllle. *lth Rev, Eyle Elltott offi-cUtlDt- XoUrmtDi tn Perrjr Ml. Ctmeury. will boltf. boIovH dauthtor of Mr. end Mr*. John.Lourery^deif ^e e- id Bcherley Louery. Mr*. DMl* imm ond Mr*. Beeato Block. Pu-lorvlo* *m b* - Peb. t, at 2 Ptret i 1, at J p.m. M the .. ----imbly of God Church ...h Rev. AmoM Q. Hatoman of-fklfttlni. Interment In Perry Ml. Funeral ARE DE^S —^VORRYING^ YOU? Get ***** ®" ® * ebarfo for budfot anolyele writ* or phone for fro* booklet. MICHIGAN CREDIT CpUNCEI.LORS 7M ronUa^auto^Bonk BMl Pontiac'* I........ ft aMiftai Member: BOX BEPLIE8 At 16 BA. Today them ” ' Tbs Ftam toltowtiif c replies a M u Uu POUND LARGE WHITE DOO. PE I-4372. ________ Eoar OB BTRATED: miniature silver maf* poodle, vicinity Can Lake oud Ecefo Harbor Ana**ra I tlekod ftmal* Enslieb Sot-t mo* old. Tic. ot Loon Lake and Drayton Plato*. An- LOST: TOT COLUf, OHANOB and *blte, female. Waterford. OR REWARD Nalp WaiitMl NUilt pere Porm perleneud tn S. K'; ‘.■n A PART IIMB JOB ioewN^gir nn EknMA-riWG FLOUR INSPECTOR Por amell olricroft dualUy pre-cition \p*rte Muet hove topi*. Fold holiday*, tneuronc* ond va- MACHINE OR TOOI. DESIGNERS Eiperlonced on **ldtof ond mo-chinine flxtuiee and gtuw* tor lorf* heavy parte, minin(, drlll-iKf. reaming and bortnf. Lons program. Contoct ■ Paramount Bngtoeei atephenxm^*y. Ma MARRIED MAN Intereatlng poeltlon tor mechan-Icolly IneTlnotf, high echool grad- portunllr. From M to ttSO per *eek. Good cloon outelde *orkl For peraonal Intervie* call PE Mechanics wanted one (or foreign care — ona for Cadillacs. Plenty ot Job*. Muet have hand tool* ond good refertnees. Apply to parson. Andy Calkl Oo-rag*. 772 Bold*to. HAN <» illfOMAN IN WitiTk: Loke To*n»hlp to r—‘----‘— 2-3043. Need $120 - $150 Weekly _____ totorvle ____________AN POR NATION- :M.’"to 1 and bowKoIi. Age » to ». High school graduot*. Married. Storting aolonr IlM per *eck. Write PMtIac Free. Bo« II._____ BINOLB ^ MID^I^AOED^^ANDY-tractor, and general form *®r^ STEADY WORK 0 layolfi. high etmiiigs. 1 T--& c -F6a» -ca, ino SAJLBaM^ ARB caEAlMD. NOT .... rnMnn^j!f* oto^'pBoiSSr, TRUCKERS Immediate opening* tor ouallflod over-the-rood oiporlODOod somL drlvor*. Must b* *UUng t* teayat. TOP I’ARNINGS In to*' driytng profeasloa. W* con haiMI* year deal *n -a DAWbON TAYLOR CRETTROLET ULKOWAOEN NEFF U*e. ApnlleaUons 1 token to nil posltlmu______ ponding Soloi Doportmont. I **at Mon *h* nood to work, t *111 abo* you bo* to s^ * . pereonollty a________ sootlal. Daualoa aeanan, Rrood**rd. Birmingham. "AVON CALUNO" Polio* to* doorboU dhtote* *a TV tar oboe* oysrogt tornlngel — PboD* today PE 4-4NI or writ* P O Bok it DroytOB Plolne. BABYSlTTkR, OWN TRANSPOR-UUon. Coss-Ellaobotb Lak* * m-llil oner I p -CODE want Bllrmlnghom, COIWRTTIERE ..* bay* 0 full-tlm* * eorsottlor*. Immi * eorsottlor*. Immedlou dUeounl Kr*v&or*“E*ip£;"i25- fS. COUNTER HELP Per port tim* *ork. Apply oan-eoaslOB otoad Mlraol* kill* prlea-. to bot. I aad I p H. Aji lor EXPERIENCED Shoih OROiR cook. Apply 177 Auburn Ay*. Dignified Sales Positiuii tors ond aislstont monogor. Nsod cor. Books. je**lry. sliytr, *»■ porltnce helpful writ* ore* of-flee: Mrs Phyllis Wsrtbelmer. 3730 Chlppewb. DetrMt 21, MIeb. EXPERUBitCED DRUG. AND C meUc olork. refereo***.^ Sr'St H™»*bon?*fil oirL' WAlrtlG M4 DRVa iiNfi lountato- days. Ib-N yoori old. flume euperlene* preferred. 2NI Elleabotb Lake Road. _ IIOUSiXEEPER PULL CRAROi, i.on'*“'r In“V :“..k.*^5St ■ ■ - 11 am. ! WHO WORES «RNT> R^ rrly lady Light houa**ork. no mht. -Ryp-n. ■»••• •'»<““ «« I •v*ry «Vi«r 1 be arrangod. 2 to tamlly. CsU 332-N47, ^ ^ ~ ^ I to I in a eoryte* dopt. Piano-Organ Saleslady Apply to person. Most bay* ear o^ b* ebl* to play oom*. Ho phone totory|**s. MORRIS MUSIC 14 a. Tflisropb Rd. Aereeo trMB Til-Huroa REGISTERED CHIEF MEDICAL RECORD LIBRARIAN ........ real H¥ate SAiis LadV^-- Prefer one- «lth experlene* but «m consider tralnlni ritbt *om-tn. Must o*n go^ Mr and b* able to *ork full time. Strictly . commlaelon *ork but good coming neaurod plus profit tboilng |^ni£!'.i!:;.»iab'L.& WANTED: NVRSBa AIDES Alffi housekeepor. Mutt b*y* UMrl- WHITE WOMAN POR BAkt In plus *nd*e. OB 4-12N. PE 1 1343. I 30 a m. to 4r3ii p m. WAITRESS FOR EYENINO Dixie Hwy . irayton Plolne. Apply • ALL LEADS FURNISHEEL^ ^'Tart Time and Full Time ' >t neooeebrr. a uram la gleei X. ThunJoy ' and Frt4ay. b- wptoyimRt Atwdifc ' _ ♦ ^>4 EVELYN EDWARDS ^ E?!wa’°auvicB-- ^ CODNI Mte East------ Phone FE 4-0584 SECRETARY TWENTY Finish Hieh School N* «UkM«t,. aiife ■ehsol dtploas rr^^Sm MK"°D»tr5{“% i Miemtf. ______ MUSIC • CENTER Serving Pontiic Area j1 Years SPECIALIST musig-art:' Dramd-Dance Uome of the, 'new dynamic teaching system FE 4-4700 268 N. SAGINAW Watli Woiitad Mata 12 loWMin SortHca lofflas 12 A-i momnojmTiciL All ANOoiiir «r i8 W, a iTTWi proi. lAUry AW). FE HI IT OENBRAL CLEANINO. EXfURt-onccd. d«r wprk. FE ytin. oiRL* wahtb VABYsrmNd '6ii typint C«ll OR IliONINOS DONE IN MV ROUE. Auburn H»HhU «rM_UL 11M4. LADY WISHES DAY w6rE 6h bui lln». FE MMI _________ MINEOORAFHINd. TTPINO SEO-rrurlnl wrvlet. EM 3-M«a NEW BABYt VACATIONt CAFA-bit, mnturk. aiptrlenctd womnn will cnr* for your tMldroa la your bomt.. EM 3-lUO or FE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1962 TIZZY ^By KaU Qaanii ‘ ELECTRIC MOtOR BERVICE^ I» •MkkMpiNfl A loxM Poperlm FE MM3.________________ IRIFFI8 BROTREIU II^TElttdft iNcaNM Tax Stnric# I A.1 work. FE VI13I. ) IRONINOB. t3'BUBNEL. TWO wot w^ted' niiiid__________- VODNO HlOH aCndOL ORAbd-oto withto full llmt offlot work. FE __________ laiMNng Strvica-Sapplits 13 _moUt^ ______ _ D paintino and DECORATINO Hoooo iwproytaitr' ACCURATE EXPERIIjNCED f O R 3j _ 11 CABINET MAKER CARFEN_____ KItchtno 0 tptcloHy FE 4-MOO .ijANDYMAN WANIB WORE. imwt UL a-lSM no money oowo: iti novm r AT LOW WINTER RATES irlpplni wfndowt wllli olum. tldln* ind bokod tnomtl olum. tiorm looh down: let povm't tprlni — ■■“•JLy LoVfO 'form>yped^in tour 1 fNCOME TAX, BOOKK Notary S3-U oyorofo. V 5‘H Second TAXES Done by ESTABtiSHEb 1 0 0 o I oocountanU. Roooonoblo rotat. Tour home or ourt Etyj A Nocktrmon, FE B-t3ST, FE 33171. 3«3S N. Perry LONO FSRiSriTEMIZEl " Phone FE flTH pHlLl > otalioD • WALl?ApiR removed. REA-lonoble rotrt FE M3SS. bolore 3 Concol When Retulte Are O MOPERWlEATtOM , oeement loom ol TOW bonk rote, ond convenient terme. Pontloc Btote Bonk. FE 4-35»l. FREE ESTIMATES ON ALL WIR-Ini. will flnknre. R B Munro Electric Co, lOdO W Hurdn___ A V6uno house MOvTJra - home. >*■ Phone rm o-oioo. Mory Sue ta dowi CoRvataicsRt-NurtiNg 21 Shore e»pcnOT»"t)R ROOM FOB MAUE-ORTwIAW. Very chcerlul ond modern Dm-tor olwoyi on coll Orton?Illo Nurilng Home, 330 Shermon Cl. NAtlonol 7-40M._________ ir acancy for bed ridden mole poticnt Rroe 074-1443. ENGINE AIRLINER NON-STOP Loo Ankelej, Bon Froncli— dIc(o, iTO.Mi Hoooll. «i New York. |10 MiomI, 04 Bervtae Inc OR 3 1304.____ TRANSPORTATION TO AND from MOY part of Florida. Laav* tnn About Peb 34ttr yryoc-mentt to tutt you FE S-3003 _ ■ iAN WANfS RiDE FROM .........~Tl ______eipenwg. OR >4W3. WaRtad .CfcihjraE to Board 21 FOR SMALL CHILD. Afflbulonco Sorvico GENERAL AMBULANCE Btote Bt__ FE 4 ’ Appliaoco Sorvico Hotpotnt—Whirlpool - Ktomorf Wantarr repai- ---- n B. Mitpro core. We ftnonce nSURANCE DENIED? FINANCIAL RESPONtIBILlTYT TOO VOUNO OR TOO OLD? Colll.loo — Comprehenilve Low Rates—I'.Z Terms !a.“”fsu.“#t Isaac Crary School yUil _____ INCOME ^ A dandy MrnWwd year aroi^ taka troM bama Blue dupira fkla-tel type) uoroie etreet. I nnlta Mmtahed. I bednu!.. b^. Ml Mmuce. Icaeed 1100 mo. Tenanta fumtihed ulllttle!. Pr^y ground!, aultt ntlghbor^ Rent Office SpoM par . Batemen Really, aak lor Ta« Bataman. FE 44Hia 4 ROOMS AND BATH DUPLEX, 3133S week, 033 LaBalla. 3-0013. douplr.”l373 Scott Laka . _______________________1 3 ROOMS AND BATH. OR. HEAT. LOVFLY AFARTMKNT Cloce to downtown. uUlltlC! Mr-nt!hed. Clean, modern Pumlahed VtaS' **° ohlldren or LAKE FRONT-3 LARC and .bath. Nicely Mrn peted living room am Reaeonabic. OR 3-3718._ L-AKE OHJON -^^hou.^^^^ Ic Cabin!. 4S3 S. -------i. — Orton. MY 3-M33. i rjVjS ”f*^oom c”bta* ReW large 3 BOOM, BATH AND --- -j —0111011 “e7cc» I * «“jk. z _______ iENTRK AIR-0.-- RM*le ^H ‘“smith * iBmllor!** 3-7343 3 ROOMS .and BAm AbuLTS ' r. No drlnktr!. 33 Monroe. FE Ap^iMts- l-ROOM EPFICIBHCY Alberta Apartmanli_ I Paddock ” • '“* 1-BEDROOM LOWER, OAS HEAT, parking. 138 Chaadlcr. UN 4-3303. -1ST FLOOR, 3 utintlc!. tioac li). F® 3-7433._ in-BbOM UNFUBNISHnO apart-menu. 338 ond 400. 00 8 Edith. 3~r60MB and KITCHENETTE. clean, 300 N. Saginaw jitrec}. 3 BEDROOM BRICK TERRACE. Tllad bath. Full bimt. Oa» hwL Fenced yurd. Ourage. FI 0-4100: 3 LA ROE BOOMS NSnVLY DEO--ted. cloae lit, private entrance Bath. After 4 p m. FE 3-3313. 3-ROOM - KITCHEN AMD BATH Freahly dacorated — H#at fur-bed ~ Bfperale bedroom ~ undry fecllitlri -- Children «•!* SLATERS 3 R003U AND BAt6. HEFRiq-eretor and etove, fum. FB 4 ROOIU. BATH OFFER. SToVe and refrtg. Oarage FE 3-0403. 4-BOOM UPPER flat. RESPON-ilbla party. 330 month. Share utll-ity coat!. Aak lor Mr Praka*h. Call FE • . ROOMS AND BATH. NICE LO-eatloo. FE 3-3031.____________________ 1 JoMyn. ARCADIA Mhtn^alktng'’‘^dlaMnc^ „ _____town and all bua con- necUona. Alao cloae to achoota and churchea. All clean and weU decorated. Oood neighbor!. Children permitted. Fin# laundry fa-ollltlea. 340 per month K. O. Rempatead, Realtar. 103 X. Huron FE 4-0304, after 3 PTO. FE 1-700. COLOKED _________________ FOB COLORED. - 4 ROOMS ^D bath, lower Heat lurn. FE 3-0041. HALF rent with heat AND ALL uinitleii In return to managa 0 amall apta. Manager# apt. la nice k?t?hen **and office. 34ji per mo. — on M-SO at Pontla^ Lake. Can or aee Ward E. Part-— —...............- FK 4-3501. IDEAL apartment _FOR NEW- NEAR PON-nAc mall 3 rooms an^batb ujiper^^All utni- gtO month. For appt, ckll OB 3-71" Orchard Court Apts. 1 and 3 bedrooms Air conditioned MODERN IN EVERT DETAIL Adults ... FE 0-8011 Manager, It Balmer St., HEAT FURNISHED. 1 ROOMS 331 N. PERRY. FE Flaher Body.__________________ 3 ROOMS AND BATH - ME* decoratad. Separata entraneO. _ ------------------- oratad. newly ------- — new maoagamenl. Apply Apt. .70 Clark ft._____________ ROOMS. BATH and OARAGE. /FE 3,0630 or FE 4mit -OOM BAOEMENT APABTatHT - mtmiek. 4 Llhtrt^, 3S3. PE Modern 5 Room APARTMENT ) REFRIGERATOR _______lit PER MONTH ... J»LY AT 104 BLOOMFIELD neted Avaliabta icon 25M*c£.J!EEIJ!;S. L ,-ii I ■■ill ^ BB^PlBf RttmlA . 3-BBDROOM, MASONRY, OIL 3 ROOMS AND BATH. CIX)8X 'fo . Inquire U15 Bbarwell oft ass-Eltkabeth Lake Road — 1 3-BEDROOM RANCH WTTH OA- 2-BEDROOM DUPLEX Automatle bdal — Pulibaaemcnl 'WILL DECORATE ----------- ....... mooL ; IVOR BTORAOE OB SMALL BU8I- ---- Ilreproof. lOiOO, ground luaemant. weal aids, m^ back yard, garage, a ■ best. Ill N. Telegraph. F __ R^ O M 8 ANP SUNPORCH. uUlltles fumlahrd. OW aaooth. ______________ 100 a^ too month. Oaa or coal baat. 130 8. Edith or PE 4W37I. 3-ROOM TERRACE. 13 RAMOIM Theaa Romea Art For RENT Or Will Sell 3 Bedrooms e Carpeted Living Room and Hall lai^e Walk-in Qosets Formica Cabinets Family-Sized Kitchen ALSO Full Basement Models Oak Floors Vanity in Bath 3 Bedrcoina ^ 96vS Carlisle yanout paru ox uui area. OPEN DAILY 11 TO 8 gpoTijra^^ixi. 00. ■ 6 ROOMS. NEAR CAOI ELIZA* bath. Children — EAFIE., 3-BEDROOM, ^landacaped^ 30**o8?**^ CLEAN AN» IN GOOD H-. ditlon. 1-bedroom Weal Side bo— Oaa beat. 1 children Rclcdme. Least with option to buy. 8l West Suburban home. 343. Floyd Eent, Realtor FE 3-3106 COLUMBIA near BALDWIN, 033 mo. Carpeted, 1-bedroom, new. FE 5-3070. 13 to I. Avallablt lOon. B.B B. Builders^_ ____ CLOSE IK. DBAFE4, CARPETnNO ELIZABETH LAKE, 3 BEDROOM. aun porch, garage. OA S-300T. EXEtfUTtVE TV---------- and stove, call Detroit UN 3-0013 FOR COLORED Brand New ranch hnme. 3 rooms, full basement. __ 131 WILLARD________FE H307 OATEHOU8E, OAS HEAT. KEW-ly decoratad. grounds maintalnad. Ideal tor couple. MA 0-3330, LONG LAKE, CLOSE TO UNION NEAR THE ,SCHOOLS, , room In Pontiac. OR 8-3i»e. FONTMC-PkRRY ' PARK AREA. Haw 1-bedroom. IIS month. Carpeted. Rent-io^i^n ^JOuy. Andl- ROOM A^b B IE8E ROMES ARE FOR RENT $55 MO. OR VriLL SELL New 'T'Bedrooms Carpeted Gas Heat Dining Room All Areas Commerce Rd. ____I PLATTLEY BUlMMiR HEAR M34 IN PERRY ACHIE Buk. Hon 3-bedroom raMh homo plus Ifo btaroom or Ksd living room, beautiful nook with ------■* tiled ■ ^ IfTge — ____ terms. Move right H P. UOLMI ?3Ly!»L Eve# OA’ S-1143 SoliJIaasas 4f S-BEDROOM. BASEMEHT, Ol beat. alum, siding, btrdwoo flooring. IS W. Chleego m.. Pm ttae. IS.300.'SeU equity 33.110« Teke over payment 333 at I pa cent Call 334-0411 S-BEDROOM HOUSE IN WATKIML Pontiac sub, Nlea kiteh tpd .ta ROBS McNAB ART MEYTO A steAl down and roo up. tile bath. — ------ - larie lot. IMaM^fn d. 01^ 4 [mnqedlate Ta^, Bi possession. Call altor. OB 4-0300. 10. All t > aiding. drywaurior amly M.ofc. Me egni: plated model. Immedtote action. Dorothy Snyder Lavender BY OWNER Brick and alum., hot water non, no steps, beetad attached 3 ear garage, eonerete drive and patio, alldinc glass doers, wan to wall carpeting, l year old, terms ar-ranged. Joe Quinn. FE 6-3133. AT ROUND LAKE! CLOSE TO UN-lon Laka. Will skortflce 31.100 equity for fl.OOO eash. RoT atr beat Carpeted. 3 bedrooms. Lake privileges, a-esr attached garage. Bal. owed on contract, 33,300. EM 3-7318.__________’ _ mediate poaeeaelon, 6 rooms and bath, full basam^ Ml heat. low down pay m^, no eioa^ costs, Xy*owneh^ym,L riuDm or CUIX l^BEDROOM Bl-LEVEL O wooded IM..Family room with firoplaee. Lsrga kitchen with bullt-lns. Gas boi water heat. Walk-In basament. 1-car larage. 313,100. MApta 0-3333 after 8 p.m. COtOKED 3-BEDKOOM HOMES - $10D(5\VN 635 FRANKLIN ROAD B on targe 100 ___ .. real nlea bouec real nice area ft. deep IM. In a real -■ to ^ Lfcrs TRADE i She Particul.'tr ? IF SHE IS. THIS IS IT El iharp 3-bedrm. bungalow i garage and fenced yard. Wall-to-wall eaipaUog, akpatata have been Woking tor at Jus 311.700 with 3l,3fb down pint costa. Hnrry and Wa’U pave yot settled before spring. It's Jus around tna comer. LETS TRADE Relax LOOK NO MORE: 3 badrma. garage, Urge Anchor fenced lo. wllh lake prIvUages. Clarketoo fcrea.( Only sU jrra. old owner muet move to ett*. 010,300 with approx[0t.3l» < „ to Ol mo'rtg. and low m« paymenta. Will trade, aquit] property In city. Trading Is Our Business buiU-lxk EAs/ mDE*(Mi'fem tramr with 3 bedi------------- cloeet apace. baths, carpatlim In living and Mnlng room, full WE CAh , Convert Your Home . INTO A “Home pf Your Choice’ TTHROUGH TRE No Realtor Disf^unts Bass & Whitcomb ssuiJiAjsi^ ‘ Northern High Area S.j'fsir^'SLiiS'.ss nad 3 ear garaga. Ol tarma. West Suburban feSSSliS Homes - Farms 5i.?t;iir75a‘iKJd.‘‘,.dT» ll2,Vr« STr'aga-IJtt Carbaoua. IFI.SIt. . ““,j55Sisn)sa”“ 4Vh P*> etnl. LAKE FIU>irr ACREAGE •pa^al at MM por ROLUNG acreage Bordertot River — AWo RlgB Scenic Pronartr at SIM per acre. UNDERWOOD REAL ^Aj^ LAKE OAKLAND nearly new ttarta. iC Mu'chif !k--?;u-ita«iiid line J«ldenllal*VM5Jon'^ leba aC"&"‘lir‘“T??w'ariSy 31I.IM. 3-PAMILT INCOME __________ Uia lueky parra. Two »PG- «“ S!.ar-r”sffi:'3ia'’a lU.MS. Ol or FHA Wrms. CROIOR LOCATIOH IH .PO^*0 a larie den or etudy. Hae a fuU baiament with a aew gae Brad bMler. The let Is e«re largo and eyeWoa Itncad. Garaga If nearly new. CaU for furthar da- JOHN K. IRWIN $8,995 - $995 DOWN WILL build ON^OUR LOT TO MODEL; EUsaM lake RjL to Union Laka Rd. South M faraaworth. RIsM to modal. OPEN sat and Bu 3 to I p m. •r?-ws»srsr*^« IS E. Walton________ Clarkston Main Street Stolely lamlly homo In eieelM eoodlUan. loeated^oo luge walar- j'tafge'*ba(S55£l. I^w eamJlIGj; Tastefully dreomtod. Fries ra- playroom, esrpetod I heal, p-*" ___mtlful e----- Walerlord CToee t ctaurcbes. FHA Mrta>. Rolfc H. .Smith, Realtor ______.H« ■ T*iMILA^^ 4 BEDROOilS sa s*»wn.:»,st a-vriL.'i.sra'ss etoodlng buy. Slt.OM. with terme. 1 ACRE AND A t BOOM BRICE, plus S 30 k 48 out building, this pr» arty la localad on rommerelU property. Wonderful place fw a deg kennel or oUier small bust terms. CRAWFORD agency g i tta?“ g tiia GLES range. Owners original .home eame property tbM reoto for 343 a month. 3 BEDROOMB. Oak floors, plastered wells, wan to wall carpeting In living room and dining room, hall and etoirs. new ree-reation room la basement with ta battc tile floors, panejtd walls. Gas furnace and water htaUr. No down payment on Ol. GILES REALTY CO. FE 18111 331 Baldwin Ava. MU^WJ LwiT3KI*a£tVt:CE GALOW.,Mtea 3 room on 3 ^ag'.*^oarA«T^lSi■. Webster LAKE ORIOR — 03n>DR0 1, bedroom and bath boms ovtr-iMUig Laka Orton. Nlea kiteb-an, dinette spaea.' F-*"'-to enclosed poreh, nl VaBiWaY- Beautiful Trade 3-bedroom born# la Drayton Arta, largt living room, family ctaa berriae. Will taka your equity and . dosra paymant. FHA—$300 Down Unusiially att—*— -largt comtr l« '5mS •aM.5 Colored—$450 Down Large S-room radaeoraled home SMoratM * IntMa __, -..^e'lbta* part”"!^ down payment. Offlea opm Banda? IS W 4 R. J. (Dick) VALUE! Realtor FE 4-3531. 34S OAELAND AVE, THE PONTIAC pilESS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY e, 1962 TWENTY-Oyg KENT ^■3£r.saar l^nuL DHAiTVM mmmm •• ipim^ ^ SS«S-Ssr« with (ItM ttnpl*M Md WM« l«r «Mk ak«p. 6iM(« tmt ntr* sra ss: ML »taMaH. MU Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor mt ptxW Rwr at Ttitiraph UQOKIMO von TALUV-dM W( InBamdal* 1 Mrm Amm. HIITER Nun iMpran lau m >• inf tSew. vMMl. ■■snftysrssisTS DORRIS roan OMrfte OalaoiAl. i ULvaR tiAKa non ._____ isa ai.'vsjsa *r .Si N.W wrpMInt |M kj^jMW fnaxi?' iuburban bungalow. tT.I •nL Mid MW funiM., Wot KSr TRADE OABAOB, wear SUBURBAN RARdAIN KSSSSf****’ a TEARS or BUTICE ORTONTILLE WRIGHT issrajs.-^ ti II M down mu ITvpbi REAGAN MILLER •!a*is e.rp^ (..Mrins 3 ae. Mdfoomt. H*. Mid dlahiK room*, ■harp B,w ktlcticn. caraMIc tile bath, fan baatiaent wtOi ree. room, new Riraaao. Located to NoiMem Nish area, and la^ey^^eoMt.OiUp 11.400 BRICS S^AMLT be MM*. 4 rooaia ao wHh carpatlBf and drapaa7 wood flaore. Ml baMmaol. alww-er add antra ataal. Mar saeai* Ooad loaallaa aw iha woftli aide. 52. ;«.* William Miller Realtor FE 2-0263 m W. Harop OpoB 0 BRICK S-VAMILT Wad oonetraetod’ sad aia «mt Mbially avartaaaat booeo la azaaU^ rantal araa In tbo Mar Mrthwaat alda of roatlac. Kir 3-raoM apla.. aM MaaM apt.. Blue two axtra rental roome. Aead parUat area Iot tao^. iMlSaa fwia^Mi. Win Riew ■aod ratara aw fuO prfca of $23.-000 OW tarma. PARTRIDGE KAMPSEN RE.^LTOR - BUILDER Let’s Trade Houses Colored GI Nothing Down Two-famllr iBcome, 0 and bath down, o r— ■ “ Sfa.r.IrSS:'" Northern High Area Bytaid r — -------■----■- OnlT Near Pontiac Motor •bto money by walkinf to Work tbta hva-room buBfa-low. Baeomoi^ sae beat, E Si3T,V A■“ CLARK 01 BFEOUL. JiMt Uitad dnoM nodara 1-nsor bama, nawly Mad, ffa. ™ Bewe**”' TRADE OR BELL., tlao, laka artw t----- — STOUTS, Best Buys Tcxi(i[y OOD-BraBd s'SiTjS ANNEH St. Michael’s Area £-281 mwS Weft l^de tncoflie sr.wnsi^ «?• csaS-sifss: "Young-Bift Homes” “-“tU"-------- Sylvan Shores Brick « bedroom roMh wMb I'b Eia-vr3»iE: Sylvan Lake Front GAYLQBD-^ ns R. M wnnM hoaooa. Cat) datalle. Thit la a saaT itaaa aO KT BOOSl. »T AUBURN ATE, la Aabara HatfbM. Ttry nlaa eia-eaaM brnwa wNh Ihrta fcadraapaa. Eaeamaat. 2djLi*‘%it^^W atajM Md Kn.SSiiS'LS.^ Call iw aaa M- FE 8-0466 Lawrence W. Gaj^rd 0 E. Vika BL _ n iwadway and VMwt MT S-M81 JOHNSON 17 Acres $2,500 Down ^^!TLSr^ warm aaay ‘ - Biodam bai IRTONTILLE _ Lako tnmUf an BaM Bacla Lake. Vrt^awl f0.f00 be a(^ Ihal we may leli thle O-OaaiUy lipma I flMr haf 2 bedroaMi. JtiSiaB. taO haOi. numy ^ Baiement hai 2 bedroomi. klicb-en batb alUlly raoM,T^ fa-rafe, larfa M. U ya« Bba coim- as.Tv.rj;" “ "• ”■ INDIAN VILLAGE North End Sffrw.^-r^ar*^r^^^M;l5 aiSomatle baat aad hat water, aluminvm etorse and Mreene. fetneed rear yard. Caek la 4Vk per cent OI mortfate with monthly -----. ^ ineludUn U»oe 2J* enjot veacb and 'js?*.sr“R.Wpi‘: , obmU down vaymiBt. Ercntasa aRor Whaalan A. JOHNSON & SONS “'vjr.'TSiSiiasf”* FE 4-25.33 $800 Down . . 5hmlSns ao «bla naat > badrama - Sdute rtSSksBiom Lake Front ., . Oaad baaak. beawMIal M. 24 R. 2fnr^Ts:5ifflsv.?s 01.200 DOWN I 2 Family ... - OLlOO dawm 0 roome LIST WITH Humphries ”"~-VT2<>23r“ COLORED CM beat. A nice yard %Ub tev* era! fruit aad ahade treea. Tbe * • complete pacbace^ win mo« you fn. NO DOWN PATlOUfr. WE gATIB tionid. Borne are "MA ^a With heeeme*. CV-*— ooh’ arOBBd 0300. rm. inuar Eaaltl. rw W. Hurojl SCHRAM You Can’t Take It With You This Is It I ledperook fife- oenee^^fe^h bat------- -.. ear atUetaed ivafe. lar lenetd lot. lake prlvUeiei on LUe Oakland, a»any other lea-tures. Priced at only 111.MO. Immedtete poaaafcloi^. IVAN W. SCHRAM Realtor - /FEAWJ “Wr Trade ~W«BaiId" ARRO Its suti. PHONE 682-2211 3 badrm. ranch cleat to abonplnc ctnUr. BtauUfully DfU . »»^5Sf e . dhitBd oU. oloat bodrau. IW Via baihi. family rm. ITalt. Ilreplaca VB woltraor ANNETT INC. Realtors Opoa BeUavaaf jaday 1-4 "BUD" lela, l« CotpUwT^^« *!P XrmtTBJSrowwor tr.Ml.^.d. Deo ee.ww. wwb-w» tr—rfbedroom hnaialew. LI a I dtninc area. tHchaa^and --------- Newly decordted. •mall IN a!Sd OUT aaiance at leii. uian ISf’a^rn'cntiT SEVERAL TO choose FROM ■“ OP TOWN. nmEE-BEDROOK VUNOAWW «5liJJSg.i'tfHV‘2..W CLAEK8T0N,AREA -- kambllM . aftttVaVm breeaeway .."’SKiSTa marat,ymi la. NEAR PI PLAINK can FE M3I3 ^_N.gTOUB.HARO,^,_.l^ Close to St. Fred’s ooma. 3 kedroomt down i MIh. ^tod floorj 4 bedrpo Watkins Lake _____ ... email family. raam, mw bm furnace. Rent lake From Upper Will lartment Will Your Payments ,ma down and 4 up. 1 and kitchen up and do' S3“SJK ’a.-. SMITH WIDEMAN WaST RUEOH BT. EVES. FE 4-4526 Ol>E*^ I Loalto R. TRIPP Brick 1 punelrd. bedrooms. dhllnc roem eaa usiasAf „i. Andireon wtodowi thru-Uany extra# Including car-I. flreplaee. diahwather. wa-■oRenar, -etc. Larst corner lanced. Attliebod furage. g34,.- hHctrSStami^, 2g; mmUy rmm. V S¥lsl."‘iw“tli-t?:si *» Ii4.i$a BRICE wnQAUjm j bedrooma and full W tlto. auk SSr^ M^ItalM lot^.ar W only 31$.»$i- I lUT WXTR U® ““ ®UT, SELL AMD **’ MOL55%J$***iSjnN6 SERVICE L H. BROWN, Realtor ,.»-wgtigg‘.V‘VE”gai,^ HOYT •Tor that voraonal Uilereif* | r50 10 12.000 CASH LOANS M ftalM hoflM MuiiteiL hom« hirnUbinft nmd •kUfpmtM. H to ~ February; Specials — BAST BFUfNim. REBUILT TTi, mabuUt._M^ptt tubaa Wrlafer|waehere^ Rabulll* ^5^ Good HhMahaapmg hhay . raluee-$l4I.M. while Iber laet. MloUgap FMoraeaaal. 3U Or- >RgipAly,.#tRW CLASS COH- 47 Bill oabiMt. BalBBaa ae blaMe^Qrld extaatlaa. 'Eur - SBLL - tradb ICE SKATES Ramee I lOOU F •Uam boUar. Aulamalla water beaUr Hardware, rappUaa. crock aad jdaa and RMtaea. Lawa Brothara Palat, BnarBamtaM ■•^'“iajSfrlOVFLT Ig moolba tarma 3raup all y Family 'Accepiance COTB. in National Blda. ^vijsrbCiar OOMMUNITT NATIONAL BANE - --- Ovaarthig —- H«T.y«.“-^«Mm GOOD LOCATION Eaat Walton. gdx34l. oaat of i_ nrjtlar ^y. Near grada tehool PONTIAC. JiJiAtTf 1-HlLL VILIAGE r'aad OMi^ aT^iturt x: alSriiiS'5 wtadlag patod roadt. EiceUaat frasn^nra.’------------- LADDS INI JIM Lapaar Bd. IF .% Htn or OR 3-13________ Mlt. 4 ACRBB. L. COFFIN. I$ld KOCHE.STER 4 Mrat oa WaoklM mad BbtA-room ramsh Ca^Mod lie lag sssuxis^aarxi; SSa.‘S3y-^SlMr?miT"-^ Clarence C Ridgeway FB 3-TMl ”°STW WALtUB ROCHESTER AREA mOH BOBNIC LOT. 3 MILB watt of Boobaalor, area of ti elutlea hoanaa. bandy to MJ.U.C ,sr “ MJifir n N I «r«ij THERE'S A L6T TOD'LL LICE AT CHEROKEE HILLS I CARL W. BIRD, Realtor 33 Aertf wHb tear ggP if ram trony«4. Oady 4 mllaifroai cRybmlU. Oumar tayt, "BELL" O^ IS.SSS. tarma Peterson Real Estate MY 3-1681 ror oatj pjv.mmv wins fM, Nteu rtiuodtted furte h "C r^giTs. Realtor 433 mu Btraat_________— . SaU iBilgiis PiapBily 'Jr Sta7J?23Ss?Aassf to laeatimtnt. Ownar ra- NEWINGHAM r ____ UL 3-33IS —=r»raatT»5g chaaga aa lU^way 34. U tHe for matal, IwwttBg allay „ manr other huataeeaee. Frtaed at oaly aj3.oao. L. R Bream Boaltor. Igg illaabalh Laka Road. Pbooe rt 3-4310. Largo di lag. Jvkii bto doom, baaey wtrlag. Comer lot. Terma. FE ______ IT oMRat. of botlaeaeea. DORRU a 343$ Ptale Hwy. of your own. Meebaaleal kMwI-adga a dMlalta aaaet. ^y M peraon oaly, Baoawaiy OU Ca., Htl DIxio Rwy., FuaBao. IMTintif^ IN A wort aad Deaf Wa haeo M atatloo wllb Uelag Ideal lor elderly --- ________1 hieea*--- ■“ Call OR 3-I3M, BOTTLE GAS Flaat^ Net araflt far l$$t eear tll.oah. $4i,$M taqulrad. MICHIGAN BUSINESS SALES CORPORATION 4ksTRlBm ____________ irikitrMb y^a Oakland-Maeomh conaUee ly aa-tlonally ' knowa mkaafaeturer of upward aeUag daon and etaolrta apomlota. RM^ FmMm^ou FOR SALE , Julie’s Grill ft Pizzeria Established Business 930 MT. CLEMENS Home Improvement Business TRADE OR SELL. Roal Oitat*. ‘wTlMM ........... Bulldinr ' A ” *.**SRw*YM! «8f* or equity K$Y«r' FB 4-atl3 •torage A..-, — -“-n taeeral year*, i area aet aaaual r free aod clear TfirP55tii5~TrMr--ragte MALL CLEANINO FLANT DOINO gl.M jBomhly^ pL * a****^1 --------->LSff. STATIONS FOR LEASE OIL OOllFANT VARIETY BTMIB la lake froot home In Oaklaad County. Main Ba^iraSSaphtaetaok. PARTRIDGE $J*iri5J5r Land Contracts d RaaMer 7T N. BaglMW B. WBBft^ (tertructs-Mn. 4M ABBOLUTBLT IBB FASTBBT A» — oa your bad ocalraM. Caeb 1 M ooBlraeta/Naw ___________Tear oaNi uuda eat- tafactory laapaelieB of prantrtf and tltlo. Aik for Eon TompMon. *“““ 3333 Orchard Lk Rd. frade^*8Te**yigfXw. “Cate ^lon* cAwt itoeof hwcSiToR •TcETlfAT^ aei a iMrirarm. '143 W. Ww” MN 'di MERCURY COHVBiT- oOKir--------... - — ■ t'K:-tow*^l2&..WtokT ....... „r«i------------ Rr balb 6r TI ......... LAEE TRADE for kulldoaor ar M$#. $»»*«« .. HB#. CARFBTED sHidRBoB 'tma. WM irada Mythhis far r3T^vf.*?fS Sab Otlfehiy EALUtRINA LBNOTH WBDDmo ChanilUy*1aeo’ Mer*eJ& _...E FBRB lengUi 1 bargain amour; odd bedb. draiaait. cheela, apriata, mirrara, radio#. diMUaa and aawfas ma- S.'?SfSSiap ALao'sElf Uelas raoma, badreoma. dlaeltaa. ruga aad mattraitoa. ^tary tteaadi. abaul tb prtaa. •rylbtai I 'nbiP U*1 rltaa, rug tary aaaa JSXW'ga.I atta. VB 3^ Opta 'tU nday and Friday.___ IM N. Caaa. 3 sa«rU”*a2K L“srwiLr.«sjSa rug $14. Bottlad gaa iwea Knee-taela daik $14. 3 Mac# I room aot $33. Odd boda. cha dreaaera and aprlBga. BUT - SELL - TRADB PEARSON'S FURNITURE Orchard LUa A«« FE 4-'BSI T FIECB UVINO ROOM SUITES, ^5^TL*llNOiBUM ' , .**45 yd! ELASTIC WALL TILE le ta. ■hO TILE OUTLET IWI W. Huron •EIJ__ MOHAWK ^MINSm HDOB kareiTcarpet 4$3I Dlala Hwy. _OB 3 310$ la MIchlsaa. Earl CarralA ______r, $$n Oemiaaraa Read. Orehard Laka. BMpIra 34$U ar Maaty ta Lau - lUexmwdJM)^ $25 to $500 on Your SIGNATURE Home ft Auto Loan Co. 7 N. Ferry St, Sd’^'iwk ,$0 otbar aota to ehooat from lift ^ Jw^yp rfin§9. FrtfTdftlr# %-too vindov Ml ^33T. BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WHERE TOU CAR BORROW UP TO $500 POUND AT L 1 Signature Viokl'Tfel-aS- OAKLAND Wt hay, aoll or tmda. Coma oi OPEN ^N.Vr, $^ TO $ 09 tm «nrf *. of FobM— t-Mlte JL. AUTOMATIC DIAL - OfSTROL ^ar aawlag mae^ m^am eoBaaM m axcanaal^. ^ glUon. Saw# w^buttj^^. hll^ SoS£l‘«”e.5'pR5 Wi- — — 31 Pontiac itata Z mtK^'-*ftvlSo88« I Ponttao statf Bank Buildli FE 4-1538-9 a"of^.SoI ' WHEN YOU NEED $25 TO $500 sf^E^F^AN^I So. Djr irtomt. omi. va wm. am •It. ft d«ep-fr«tM. Ml. tU« Axa»hUitar .ifuse.. |J$.M, 3x13 .iwi FE 4-1574 Need $25 to $5()0? See Seaboar4 Phone FE 3/^7617 1185 N. PeriV St. PAREINO NO PROaLBU Seaboard Fibance Co. midi, 33 L ___ ___ KAiiaoNi^ aimi*^ ^ BIGl VVr* \ ji' BUNilJB***fSlDAR CLOSlS UNER.^ $I.M PONtUO FLTWOOD OD, ^ . I4M Baldwin Aea. _FE *-3343 - ________ CIRCLE FLDORieikntNT liOHTS, Factbry Kcainditioncd I ww* faeiX m»Ved '- RI'.FRIGEKATOUS : ^'a'S'L^kr-"--*- aTEM ««» MA03 YOUR CHOICE excellent cok- Baababaw. gl4-11$S. LIQUIDATING P*tim rocktra.^ lampa and Ublaa. odd "BTORoeM <&rnpSwmo « dlsTnuia Drayton Flalna iMEDOAl- - $-4411 aHar 4 p.u.._____ CaRoM' dffS and UATTRlWl, ■tof*ehair'blonii ~aak ' 333-^. riCPOaSESED ELBCTROLUE. Wa-------- beet been rhbekad *- atore, $3$; 21" TV. Jaod a^ . gl^a^sjUtL'is: ^ maShtneb. Ubwino paaiaaaad"“ O^er”'It^modMi to olraoaa from. PHom alar4 Btotar mTuai. ____________________ sssv.'j.erssKi Crump F.lectric, Tnc. 34M Auburn Rd. FK 4-3$IJ iAcbuli cLIameh 1111111? ana al' - unm Centor. Call W 4 M4S. Vtrill WYMAN'S USED TRADE-IN DEFT. ^ haraar Aat. tar -*— I" Oaa atoea rir L* jUN 1$ W. Ftta_______B-X Termi WALNUT PINE T T# BUtTE, tobto. • NEW, NEW, NEW! "Flrtt Tima In Michigan" WNOLEBALE IgEATS AND OROCERIES -FREE HOMB DBLIVEBY-All llftfieBsUy p-*——to-mm*$ BtoP Co , $gW. Walion, PE 3Mg. DUO therm mAlNACE - rl51- MA i-1401 FRECIBldk OR parai. PRBB BTANDINO TOtLEIR tUA$ ----... ..... iilip wol alnk ...... $ii.$a 5 ISTw- IB, .tt:5 M^oppor. BO' aoll ----SAGINAW ________Floor Her—... Simple Inexpenalee Bolce Builder Supply FB i-$lil Formica. PLVMRiNSrFUQTT. ciotod ■iRiuM^-Wa Buad^ ■ PE hdItJ. Moatoalm supply. IM W. Uontcftim. y FIX UP ■ staadard maiaaMa . gl M H" Crixa- . .;: gil « P*3«- . 1^ 44" plyaeora ta' Ur plywm ’^aa Raab**Wool. bag $"•• 4x1 V O. mogogtay pTyxtood S4M Burmfeister LUMBER COMPANY ga40 Cooley Lake Rd. BM 3-4111 Opra S a- “ "W-.3 S4» to eleotrto, 041 and Flaoraictal, 133 Ofehatd Laka Jto!*Xwar dSili.,^ irrwlara. Mis^LLANBous F t> R NirdaB areaport. I eaeuum cltaatn. Ironing board OL I-IOM.' _ MBOICINB CABlNirrS LAROB.ir mirror, allghtly marred, $3.M --Largo aelactlon of oaklnala wllb or without llghto. alldlaadoura. TerrllU buya. Michigan Fluoeia- FB A-mi. dolla MM. antlqna lruah~yt china rabloat $M M. With ■nfomaaoB. TSM MM Wa4L. TAINLESig STEEL D0U&.E gss‘T'£S.rMi& ALL BHOwEiM. couHjert with lauoato aod aurtalaa. $M.M ralua. I3i.$a. Laeaiorlaa. com- flr$3;^--TstSigX«JS: __cent, 3gj> Orchard l*ke --M. BimiNo 4 aartaga up to 4$ pai battor, caka 1— -------------- - WYMAN'S PBBRURRT bale DATS Betry Item In oar atoraa dma-tleany roduead. Saelaga up ta 40 and 40 par cent now peotble on eur entire aloek Of carpeting, ap-pllanpoi. lirtng room and bed- iiTre"* '-F. T-’to.i •• W. Flke St. EZ Tarma FE 2-3140 USED rW. $l$.M AND UP. SWEETS RADIO AND APPL. 422 W. Huron. FE 4-1123 Hi-n, TV • I IT - RCA. I2S. FEARBON'S. 42 OR chnrd Lake. MAOHAVOX BitREO. 2 FULI "SERVICE CHECKED " , dial. Teure for U It of gTi aSor take 1 gTII mootM --------- CUdlol -total TALBOTT LUMBER tbM salvation army ^Eis?^w«3Sfa USED KELVINATOR CHBST-TTpi freeier, 11 eu.' R. Ouarantoeda lit Ham^ Electrla PE 4-2$2$. dXfiia. taix'isj "1. floor taka, eMtaM TANDEM TRAn.BR. V A CD DM brake. $440. $3$i Commama Rd. 71 ALL MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS BUT MOW — AND SATE “ ---- Large stock Alumaace ‘'*^1 We etoch 1 EDWARDS iM 5wp>>*e Ig B. Saginaw USED 1MM$ RTU OIL 3 toRioolal farasee. $1». I n.M0 BETUfgae llrad oc_______ flow furaaee. $14$. Aoo HoaUng .R XIoaUai. Co. 113$ WlUlamt Lake Road aTHii: OR yaaw.-------- ACCORDION SALE. Accordiom lObHVd flww W apw^aaw-nrra wllb loieone. FE $44M. BAND INSTRUMENT REPAIR - '“c-a-lWIBS&o 00. lit N 8AOINAW CT $-$«* CHICKEltlNa ORANO F IA H tk ESTBT OROAH ...;.... $JM HAMMOND CBOR0 OROAkf $4M FOAM BA« RUOS k.mk¥ THEATER I'RACnCli ORdAN' Oolhronora wtlb AmpUttor llOt MORRIS MUSIC )q S trlrirouta Rood (ocmt fTom Tol-Hutoot___ UiL TOUR PIANO TO OAU.A-qhor't. Wf poy conh PE «-0aM. OPRIOHT PIANO IN O^D CON- dUloa, EM. no UlfhvUw. Ltkt Orton. ^^Iq^pmeRt 72 ADDING MACIIINRS —Smleo •‘Hort today-boro to lUy.'’ Pontiac Lash Register - PE 0-080I W g SaEli MIMEOORA wra AND USED OPFICE MAI 7.,,° chinrt. Typrwrileri. Adding ma- i- — —---------. -----dupltcatorr,- * Sffi, NEW HAI^NAL CASH REOI8- VyiLMMnacVlMa'l^om*IM'uV'"T^^ eiuy lactory antborirvd branch In Oakland and Macomb SrTaWVoUrt- cSb" ?cVut"c:: Tba National Caih RcgUirr Co.. M W^Hdron. Pontiac.. PE 3-0J«5. II S. Oratlot. Ml. rlcmcni. HOn- ard S-4H3________________ Bred adding machines. i»h EBSTADRANT EQUIPMENT LIKE jlow DIu. prlcm Oil Cbrriit-■an Bt., Drayton Plalna. M ' 74 BULMAN HARDWARE BROWNING OON8 USED GUNS ^ Ndl^BUaabeth Lake Rd pE 8-OPEN DAILY TIL I: SMN _________j, jit S. Tolcgraph. Bartseiis and bindings.‘iilr. OM g««-0flM after 8 KKLLY .HARDWARE Nc.w and Used Guns Complete line of hunting tquipmenl. Myeri Pumpi. WOO Auburn at Adami UL 1-144 Open Dally " "— '* 76 t9 MARMADUKE By Anderw... .6 Uemin? Nmv md UsmI Cirs 106 1100. OOglO CMAUPION, 1 BEIV j^..y,bnanc.4g,47nt. A MESSAGE mieb Wa ftel will be of |i iatereet aad taapartOnce Now the flret Urnc.^Tk po^bU DETROIT MOBII. a complately ‘"'“•■ E HOI I 0108 t lent**'u»e(f^^obi duced prfcee. St finance plan I the wide flelu o buyinjf. Invettlgati equalled li •tallment 1______ ________.. day I Oeer M different floor plane *■ —*Toin. -Alio, many er“' ‘moMie bomea at Sm. ' ■'^olv Hutchinson Mobile Horiie Sales, Inc. UOI Dllle Hwy. OR S-INS OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK______ 1080 ELCAR MOBILE HOME. IE I 83'. 3 Bedroom, email down pymt .Call AU-3308 MUford. , ‘1 CONDITION liSi - .170 *^?Torlto OM 6 p.m . rg____________ * I H 8 T R E A M LIGHTWEIGHT Triv«l Trailer Slnct 1133 Ouar* anteed lor tile See them and gel demonelrellon al Warner Trail- _____Waiiv . cameanal. _____________ EXPERtIxOBILE HOME HEI 4301 Dllle Hwy . Ton I tiENT Parkhurst Trailer Sales -PINEST IN MOBILE LIVIHO-Peaturlng New Monn-Owoeeo— Venture — Buddy Quality Mobile liwaled half-way between Orion add Oxford on M34 MY 3-4611 SHORTS MOBILE HOMES Good, uied home type tral 10 PER CENT DOWN, Oem t el trailer! Wolverine truck ce PE 4-Q343 TRAVEI. TRAILERS — Winter Rates — P. 'Rrt+mvlamJ, Rentals 3348 Dixie Highway %.t«M JACOBSON TRAILER SALES Onod buv! on ‘diet lay modrlt. Service and parte. Winter phcee on renleli. Sl8» Wlllleme Lake. Drayton Plalna. OB 3-8g81_ OXFORD" rrailer Sales Ft 4-Ti3t' ..... ' ~ Tii'vrm VOBO FORD PICKUP. 0 CYLINDER, ■■ 100 PE 4-0000. 'WANTED'. -Ok’Ol CARS. 10' wld-n. ond eites. Pricee and terme to ellewi^ona trav>lore, I eleee. 16'-... - -------- VelloWetone AUTO SALES 0837 Dixie Hwy. MA 8 1400 TOP BUCK-JUNK CARv T^DCi; WA““ -------------- _________l^E PE >1 ___ WANTED; '» OR- 'WlfOI^WAO--- ----xbly. OR I-**"* Wo«d-CMl-CokB-Fdtl 77 DEAL DURINO A-A-A BLAB WOOD DELIVERED or you pink ap. Off Baldwin on Mtn Uke Road Dial OL 1-0731. Alberta t-un^r Ml»«_______ iic WrOOD, FURNACE, FIR E-place and elab wood. Low price. Any kind, any place, any time. 071-0170 or FE 8-3376. Oxford Trailer Sales line S. of Lake Orion on 8 TELEPHONE MY 3-0731 WANTED; PRIVATi PARtV lx good ueed trervel trailer. it Lake Road' RBNt Trailtr Space wood, Oa 00 Thomi Oakland Fuel BTOKBR COAL A FI BLAYLOCK COAL C Puel I FE 0 7replace I Paint. FURNACE COAL “ FE 1-7101 -----T9 Tires—Auta-Tnick 1 FOX TERRIER. WIREHAIR, boueebroken. Poodlee. NA'7 3»3I e kALK BEAdl.ES. GOOD tiSED TIRES KHHN AUTO SERVICE 140 W. Huron______ PE SO- USED TlREi REOULar-MDI> ---------- 03 08. Motor Mi ‘ »u'*t38'^wh.‘‘‘MY *3-6834 _________ISE CATsi 838 each; Call UL 3-1404 after ^________ JUCC PEKiNOESE PUPPIES. FE-malei. FE ■ li E. MonteaU_________ STANDARD BRAND N^W TIRES Trade In qn Oeneral Safely TIrei Ice. “ilack or* wh'llewalie* AKC REO^TERED AIREDALE I. Q80. FE 3-3000._____ PQICER PUPPIES 10.MONTHS TO I weoke Champion tired. AKC reg. SS7-4730________________ AKC DACHSHUND PUPS. 110 > down. Jahelm'e. FE 0-3MA____ .iRrtTANY AKC FBMALE. I38- •EAOLE PUPS. 8 WEEKS OLD AKC 073-0683 .______; , , *EAUTIFUL PUREBRED ENO IliA Pointer, female. 1 monthe Wormed__and --- wmabla FE n-A CUTE F0PPIE8. 03.00 _____ FE 4-8183.______________ COCKER PUPPIES, 810. 3401 OAK-baach. Drsyton Plalne, ~*~ ' START's TAILWAOOER K E I neli. boarding. ——-■ ■ OL 1-0004. >OMERANIAN PUPPIES. LITTLE . , beautlae and toy poodle pupple~ black Call FE KWI. .footiLEs qualTiT silver AK( Parakeets guaranteed 70 talk. 04 05 Walker'e Bird Houie * 306 lit St,. Rocheeter. OL 1-0373. BuPPIES - RABBrn AM, PET Shop, 80 Wlllleme FE 4-0433__ f^iOAL - VALENTINE PRICM ‘ Hatchery. 14W Auburn UL 3-33( VaHTED -“boOD HOME FOR - -'ll kitten. MA 4-3001 B6cB lUCnOE SALES ZVERY FRIDAY 7;10 pi EVERY SATURDAY 7:16 p i ^"•'"Y SUNDAY » For A Really Gofxl Buy See'' Us Today! v rop upiiar FOR WIAHP - LATE MODELS M (S M BRAND NJQrW SPACES PONTIAC ED WILLIAMS Cyllndere reborvd Zuck Ma-e Shop. S3 Hood. Pbont FE 94 USED CUSHMAN AND ...... Seootrre E-Z terme An- dereon Balee «i service, FE 3-8300 96 Bicycles FOR "CLEAn ' UDEU (. ANO GLENN'S Ellsworth MOTOR SALKS 3837 DIXIE HIGHWAY 4-0300______OR 4^1300 WE NEED 100 CARS ALL MAKES all MODELS "TOI* DOLI.AR” BRING TITLE .See Mill or Nick Suburban-Olds Used Cars WOODWARD MI 4-448.S ’60 MUICK COUI’F: PULL POWER. RADIO./Heater, white with whltewalle. / $2295/ Down I MAR VI pay oir bal-A8BOLUTE- TRY Ml CORTAm S1300R BEDAN. etandard £3i. haater, whltewalle. Light blue nnlih Only 01808. Eaey terme. PATTER80N CHEVROLET CO. 1000 8 WOODWARD AVE . B1RMIN0HAM. Ml 4-3730. CLEAN INO Chryeler, 8100, olarte good. After 4 ra 1-3300. 'lo ^DtliOR 6hbvv vs WiiflK- gHde wagon. OB 3-4U4. not CHEVROLET IkIPAiA 4-door hardtop. VI entina. automatic, power eteerlni. orakea wlndowe and 0-wa» eeati. Solid SSif""c‘ifEv^l#*^.''12S;“S: WOODWARD AVE.. BIRUIRO-HAM Ml 4-1730 iUo 'ciiiifROLET hardtop. kA- rwiKsa.sir’A'iKsa: LY NO MONEY DOWN. Aiiima paymente of 010.70 mi jCredll Mir., Mr, Mr A,Tcni» iwar., »». «^i*r^ at MI 4-7800. Harold Turntr. Ford. 'M CHEVY BEL AIR. V-0. BTIOC. Good tiree. '50 Impalo eol^rt VO, power, new ttraa. Beat oner. OL 1- 1000 CHEVROLET IMPALAsSTOR hardtop V8 engine. Pow.er^lde, Power iteerlng and brakea. Power erat. Power wlndowe. Buntan te'rmr *PArn™jiN**'aHE?RS V£1 AVE, BIRMINOHAM. I 4J718^. _______________j black lln- leh. Pull price, Ol.lH, LLOYD MOTORS, Uncoln-Me^ry-Com-|trMeteor-l^tUA^P o r d. S^S 8. 7chevy-delrat. I-DOOR, * JIck. R 3 I Cl '3-0003, after 0:30. CHEVROLET 310 3-DOQR. ;jrllnder. etandard jihlft, Kxli only 0608. Easy ten ____ ______ARD AVI MINOHAM Ml 4-3736. $7e~COBVETfB POWERED - >y. FE 4-0030. — Special - l')6)l C lIEVROLl'U' CORVAIR "700” 3-door with radio and healer, hat etandard tranemleelon. Here It a .real $1795 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt- Clemens St. FE 3-7SS4 IMl CHEVROLET Iktf ALA 4-DOpR. ______ ., eng Inq Powergllde. power eteerlni, radio, baalaf, *#ATTE^t80H --------------------------WOOD- whltewalli. Fawn b 008. Eaey terme. PATTERi CHEVROLET COj 1000 S. WO WARD AVE., BIRMINOHAM. PUMLIC NOTICE lOU Chevrolet. VI angina with tUck ehltt. 4-dr. No caih down uA eaey terme. Lucky Auto Salee, 103 8. Saginaw. FE 4-3314._ '63 CHEVY IMPALA 6 DOOR 8 CHEVROLET wI5l*'*tlrBe****Exceptlonally cli “ ■ Itanding value at 11338. BlRMINtiHAM 1160 BUICK CONVERTIBLE, LE-Sabre. Radio and heater, power braket and power eteerlng. A1 REAL SHARPIE! Pull price 01.-1 *■" LLOYD MOTORS. *^LIheoln- ! PUMLIC noticf: 4-door BlecayM i Ford. 332 S. Saginaw Nfw op4 Usad Tracks >S FORD VANNETT TRUCK. Excellent condition, take over pay- --------------------y r balance due of 0307. JOng ■to Balte. 3376 W. Huron, FE '60 OMC SUBURBAN, 6 CYLIM-der. r—"—" 3-3313 ’62s. ON DISPLAY •Century Exciting new 17' BUN SLED 17' HESOftTER - 10' RAVEN Owens 37' SPORT FISHERMAN 35' SKIFF EXPRESS Skee Craft 18' 8EBR1NO VOLVO 17' FISHERMAN OUTBOARD l''.vinrude Motbrs' NEW ELECTRIC PUSH BUTTONS Mazurek Marine -Sales Saginaw at B. Blvd. FE 4- ' Looking for Sbecial Units F/xtra Nice and in A-1 Condition! Priced to Sell! C SUBURBAN Carry-Al 1867 BUICK CONVERTIBLE. RA-____ dio and beater. Oynaflow, pow- mer braket and power eteerlng. full price 1886 LLOYD MOTORS, Lincoln - Mercury . Comet - Meteor-Engileh Ford. 333 8. Saginaw. FE 3-8131. ■ angUie w.... --------- - mletlon. Jlut like new. i-owner. No money''down, eaey terme. Lucky J2U*' * *** ISsTchIdvRoLET IMPALA 3 D861 Jotlyn Road. _ Bood Yimothy hay no rain. ---—--------e Rd OA A3108 IfETM frodaca 6446 Orchard Lk. Rd. Comer Wal-»and_Orchaid Lk. Omb week. i^ULTRYr EOOS.CAPntfR. VEO-f etablee. flowers and ^anft. nonM,4 ----------------- rDUNtYi Walton Dally 08 FE A4403 — also — New 1961 Ford P-lOO Walk-in Vanette! Save Over $800' *700*'len'*at"^30**pei le flberxlae boats Evlnrude motore ' RiSge Road________ Left and follow DAWSON 8 BALES 81CO LAKE. Phor ht on Hickory Demode Road a¥“tip° MOTOR STORAGE TUNE UP AND REPAIR GASOW -SPORTS CENTER-176 Ceee Lake Brt J831 KEEOO HARBOR MICH ■68 FORD RANCHERO shift, radio, beater whltewalle. Raven black finish. OnW 81306. Easy terms PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 8 WOODWARD AVE.. BIRMINOHAM MI 4-3736. 1868 dHEVY 3-DOpR, iXCELL*NT ehaM. good peint, no rust, good wblte-waU rubber, aulomauc.lm II MI Y-2174 after 0:30 p.m. Juliti McAuliffe FORD SALKS Call Truck .Department I 630 OAKLAND AVE FE 6 4101_________LI 3-303 , Better Used Trucks GMC Auto IniurancB 104 ve““'y£*‘3 TVihck OUK DLAL-S MKFORK YOU BUY! Roate_.from S' to' «'. Inboee. : baked goods OAKLAND cbui MARKET. 3360 Pontiac--- farm fqoipimat 87'oaklatId'^Sarise -exchange — " ■ r - ;381_8 JSaglnaw 81._FE 0 4101 >>OR JOHN DEERE AND NEW]JAKE ADVANTAOE OF WINTER Davu Met ULLOcTr : PINTER^S ,( CHAIN SAWS X -t - V .V * HEW AND USED e. c-.i* . USED CHAIN SAWS LOW ALL TYPES. safe DRIVER-merit RATED FOR THE SAFE DRIVER LOW RATES-FULL COVERAGE ALSO CANCELLED - REFUSED FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY YOUNO DRIVER PAYMENT PLANS Call Todav FE 4-3536 Check with ut on all Typee of Iniurancel FRANK A, * 'Ve_________________ lOSj 1000 CORVAIR 4-DOOR SEDAN. watte. Eitrs clean. Only --- Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEV-. ROLET OO. 1000 B. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINOHAM Ml 4-3735 10^7 CHEVY 310. 3-DOOR~wfTH 'W Corvette engine UL 3-1700, 1053 CHEVROLET 3 DOOR. “ L E T. automobile etlc tranemleMon. l.MO ml. .excellent —------------------ - peymentt of 03.00 P«r,week to King Auto sail ». tK iiUM. '67 DeBOTO FIREDOMB and braket 1 tnitlc tranemleelon. good clean dependable traneportattooi OOM. BIRMINGHAM Chrysler - Plymouth tl3 8 woodward Ml 7-3311 '00 DODOE DART PHOENIX, power steering. SaarUlec. Doing Into army. FE 1163 DODOE 67 DUUWB t-lAJWW. heftier, eicellent condtUoo. Tft»e ASS5M,I?nELY** HSr. nicely equipped. In perfeM condition, one-owner, low mileage, gleamliig met flnlehl ‘‘“‘BIRMINGHAM Chrysler - Plymouth §73 B. Wtmdwanl Ml 7-33U 1360 PORD 'COUNTBY SQUIRE 0 pasenger station wagon. V-8 engine, automatic, power eteerlng and brakes, luggage c*"*"-White with red trim. Only 01.1*6. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHBV-BOyeX CO, 100* S. WOODWARD •56 T-BIRD CONVBRTliSUt WITH corapleUU' '^bulltt Full price 81.445. One year guar-MlreV Boi BOB8T Dealrri Birmingham, one block south of 16 Mile Rd.------ Ml M53g R. ‘*“*^eUMDAYr - i. i I860 PonUac Catalina „ 1080 Pontiac 4-dooc hardtop 1*5* Cbevy Impala hardtop im Ford Convertible •— Chevy Bel Air 4-dr. —hardtop SAVE' ■ ' ■ '81 PONTIAC ConVertlbl# p 81806 '61 PONTIAC Wagon »}J»5 'rfBUICK Wagon Special lim ’*** PLYMOUTH Automatlo _ ---; IvOV VTirVjr i ikPORT-SFORT CAR SERVICE igg* pontlao----------------— ----Ytona Front Service ; lg07 CHevrolet 3-door robard Lk. Cor. Mapla I 1330 Bulck Convertible Pontiac 2-dopr sedan , „„„ _____Hontlaa Catalina ABSO- 1*** 4-door eedan ?^;^4o\1Sy bbwNljiS Ml i-TOWK Harold ' ■sTrENAULT EXCELLENT CON ditlon. *338 EM 3A117, 1034 Sbei brqqkf^C^m^rc^ PontlAc_______ nuii-k xrinnr -hardtop . _ jf hardtop ' Bel Air wagon * 1962 CREES t "ARE HOW OH DISPLAY" yoP DOLLAR JUNK I'ruck* Campers .Xc tracks, qr 5-w3a__ f *7 VOLKSWAOEN CLEAN, OOOD condltlen; $050. EM 3-3775, * , VOl.KSWAGEX;^! New Aulhortxed Dealer VVARfKMeIvLROYr INC. r. Hifon TRUCKS X. . OR 5-3433 '50 OLDS Station Itfagon •00 PONTIAC Ventura . Ill»» •00 CHEVY Impala 4-door *1W ■00 BUICK 3-Door Hardtop |1H> '80 CHEVROLET 3-Door "I" *14*5 •00 5IERCURY 4-Door Power 51*06 •50 PORD Falcon 4-door 111** ■00 OLDS 4-t>oor Hardtop 133*0 ■5* CHRYSLER H-top. Power 01«» •6* PON'HAC 4-Ooor H-top *ll*» •5* PONTIAC 4-Door Power 114*5 •5* PONTIAC convert. Power »l™*i '» CHEVT Bel Air 4-door ll***/ 112*6 '6* BUICK 4-Uoor H-top FORD 3-Door AutomaUe . |11W '53 HjetracUble H-top .. 3I<» •53 CHEVY 2-Door KYI. ,,,. lljip '5* CADDY. Power, Air Cond. iml •57 VikLKBWAOKM 3-Dwr 3 730 •63 CHEVY Plret Come . r«5 Gieiiiri'Tifbtbr .^iles W. Huron Open Tlllk j P.M. he,.mrrrr'"N'g‘l?ON‘Jf?*bo^ ' B Woodward AT# . Blrml—- iisi FORD 3 door, radio. Teater and automatic TRANSMISSION ABSOLUTELY 4-7600gf74 an- 0 CASH NEEDED eui« take over oaymente Itl payment due Marcb Itlb IIU MN'HAC HAROTOF 45 IU3t mo. 1B54 BUICK HARDTOP M ...... .. g 5.33 mo. 1334 FORD •3 111.45 mo. 1551 FORD CpNYEIVraLE 35 537.34 mo LAKESIDE MOTOBS M NASH RAIIbLER, ECyLlM-dor with etAndard Iraiumitaldit. 'adio aod haater. llUle bine beauty, 1 -----, EERO down and ^ymoalo of 047 o moiilb LLOira MOTORS. Lincoln - Mercury - Comet -Meteor-EnglUh Ford. IE I. Sof-Inaw, PE 3-OUl. SPEHAL Mew *83 oar, wllb radio, heala whltewalto. 14 0l.4tt.30, 300.31 d 340 33 per month. R&C RAMBLER EM 3dlM lig commor** Rd. station WAOON. II $279 Down! lEROME "Bright Spot" 1003 bLDBMOBILE 4-DOOk. Rl!-hullt. naedi rowtrlnd, boat olifar, PE 0-4407. WILSON 1961 CADILLAC CONVERTlBleE. WhHft vlth «1 ““ po««r ftAd ftV *‘“ $4595 1%1 CADILLAC SEDAM DeVILLE. Deeert Band wllb ----------------u mMcblng U ___ _ ftcccMorUft Including Inf. A beftoljrll $4295 I960 CADILLAC CONlfERTIBLB. Black wMIl _ top Black and white Interior JFull' power aod many aecettoritt. Hurry lor thU onol U't a SHARPIEI $3395 1962 BONNEVILLE $3195 I960 CADILLAC COUPE OoTflLLK. A Jat bUck boauty In ImmaculaU ttaapti PuU $3395 1961 PONTIAC Powar iUtrUtf ftsd b iKiriaa. a mshkji $2695 I960 PONTIAC CATALDfA 4-door elation wagon. Solid black. Power eteeikna. brakes, radio, haater, automatla ........ '■ 'r - “■ $1995 $1993 1961 OLDS F-gO SEDAN. Oreen with matcbbig ■------ ” * automatic. Power 1 m'ony 'aoeisorleg'. *A rare $2095 1959 OLDS |g BPOKTS COUPE. A am--------- ty loaded with aeceteorlee and Power. A^ low —"----- *------ $1895 -196&^RAMBLER- Nnr UimI Can AND 5”in^0^Hamffiun>er.Vert ’59 OLDS V88’ 4-DOOR power braket rONLY $1595 lEROME "Bright Spot' ! a-otag ikl oLdsMOBILB I DOOW JjA- Sfft.c'BBB-TiS'sS'SS; SOT.Mfssna..'; Mr. Parke at MI K-IMO. HaroM Tnmar, Fold. '________ H oiloi N coNviBTdilB. 'll PLYMOUTH WAOON 4 DOOR With g C?l. Tilth laanmTil Rad and wWua Flnh Fan Price: SURPLUS MOTORS ’radio,* TwA*iiii^*wSiw^ ll sSt%Msa?oN^?iSsi«TUf NO MONET DOWN. Aisume — Credit Mgr., Mr. Farka at Ml 4-7800. Mareitd Turner. Forj^. ' •II FONTUC 3-DOOR HARDTOP, ^ - - ITIAV CHAU MOTOM. PE ■w PONTIAC BOMNEVILLS, 4- Krfg itM poiitlAc cbiMWAin 3-d6or hardtop, bydramotlc. l-owntr, ei-cellent bdy aod meebanlcal coo-dlllon. beef oRer over MOO. OL People’s Auto .Sties 'I* Ohovy 3 *•- »•' '.l^o'Rlo 1347 FON'HAC SMNTS COUPE BiorpI Low acluol mlleoie Au-lomolle tteerlM aod broktt. Oood ------ tm. w-ttoi Eddie Nicholas Motors >“ ?^!fr°ood**So5!^ We orranso*?tooDcffg SO Dowa PONTIAC SPORT C< walls. 31.414. HAUPT s-umisss. SALBB. Clarkalao, one mile north of US I* on lilt, open Mon . Tnet.. and Thursday till I pm. SUPERVISOR'S CAR - 1340 PON- This Week’s Special $1095 1958 PLYMOUTH •* $795 R6lR motors ImperUl, chmaler. Plymou 734 Oakland Am. * ff 4JiW HASKINS Sharp Cars IN* Olda Dynamla « RoUdoy Coup#. HydramaUe, power eteer-iiif, power brakotv radio, boater. Uke new. Solid whlla flnleb. '*h.^Ar’UiS»"S!a,e‘*s auo^’. pSyMBM ofS.N PM - ~ —FINE USED tARS— ■H HILLMAN WAOON 'M VOLKSWAOEN Sqdan ■N JAOUAR 3.4 t^aot Automubile Import Co. 311 B. I ~FE iSU 1960 ' : RAMBLER 5 to Choose From All Gassic 4-Doors wmrEWALL TUES All Very Cow Mileage FROM . $1195 36 MONTHS TO PAY VENT UTTLE DOWN BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward Ave. MI 6-3900 [Bbleh sTAnoM WiOoli, leic 4-d6or. * cyUador with matlc. bM rodta ^aL er, wb^virUrlT^ u" 1N7 rambler STATION WAOON inv asi ffaVoidy^rVori* BUY YOUR NEW RAMBLER HOUGHTEN & SON^ IN N Main, RochaiUr OL 1-01*1 -----N VAUANT "IN' ^ ^ 4-DOOR SKOAN boautlftll Nrk KStS . „ ija, 2.^‘nH:i ,1ft': BIRMINGHAM ‘ Thrysler Ti’jymouth ♦MS wjmlward ^' 3g fliUth. Laalhar lnUrlof,jwdlo and heator. II.IN mlloel One owMr. $99.00 DOWN Or Your Old Car Will Buy a New 1962 Pontiac Tempest or a 1962 Rambler American Demonstrators 1962 RAMBLER 1962 RAMBLER AmbAfttftdor wftfM An ftU beauty. PuUjUMHtppbd- Uw ■ ‘"leoo DISCOUNT 1962 GRAND PRIX BoaoUtul oil rod fliSeh. fnU equlppad. olumlnaea whoele. Ir ““$700 DISCOUNT. Used Car 1300 Chevrolet Bel . hardtop. V.I analna Ing. power brakea. HASKINS Chevrolet-Olds "Tonr Crottroadt to Savlnge'' arketoD MA KlIW I* PONTIAC. HYDRA. M CADILLAC H-TOP --- II THUNDERBIRD H-TOF 131*8 II FOHTIAC 4-OOOR . --- •10*1 IIIM • illM Your Choice $145 lUl 1----------- IIU TONTIAC HARDTOF 1004 CHKVRciZT BEDAN RUSS JOHNSON whitewall tires, etandard I $1495 1960 FALCON 3-DOOR. Biaek, radio, beatar. whitewall Urtt and atandard abUt. $1195 1 Year GW-Warranty, WILSON PONTiAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. -Woodward” . .’ll!: d-'liM OUVER BUICK -ONE YEAR WARRANTY- DOUBLE yy CHECKED USED CARS ’62 BUICK Special 2-Door, V6 .... -’61 BUICK 2-Door Hardtop, power . '6.1 BUICK Special, V8 engine..... ’61 WICK 4yDoor Sedan ............ ’61 COMET 2-Door, automatic ...... ’60 PONTIAC Catalina 2-Door Sedan ’59 POnOF. Sierra WagOn. nice ... ’59 CHEVROLET Biscayne 2-Door . '59 BUICK .LeSabre 4-Door .. -.... ’59 BUICK invicta, power......... ’59 Mercury 2-Door Sedan.......... '59 PONTIAC Catalina Hardtop...... '58 PLYMOUTH 4-Door Wagon .... ’58 OLDSMOBILE 2*Door Sedan .., '57 CHEVROLET Bel Air Wagon^... '57 BUICK Special'2-Door Hardtop .. '53 CHEVROLET 4-Door Sedan "210” ....$2317 .....$2695 ....'..$1995 .....$2595 .....$1795 .....$1695 .....$1495 ......$1095 .....$1495 .....$1695 A....$ 975 ....:$i»5 .....$795 ....$875 .....$895 .....$ 795 .$ 245 OLIVERBUieK 210 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. A 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 6, 1962 TWENTY-THREE - -Today's Television Programs- - ttli MtariB m will nil to wMkMl mtm OlMlI 4—WWJ-TT I f->fxra-*T ivnpAr Kviaviiro •tto (2) Movto (cant.) (4) Wy»tt bip ' (T) aiMrroa Qty (oont.) (B) Popcy* (M) Ticker Tkpe •itt (4)WMther (T) Mahalto JackMO Singi •:H <3) Newt (4) Newt (T) Newt * (9) Quick Dttw McGnw (96) 900 Yetrt tt Woodwiadi 6:46 (2) Sporti (4) Sportt •:46' (2) Newt' (4) Newt ' (7) Newt, Weather, Sportt 7:N (2) Sea Hunt (4) Two reoet Watt (7) IvanhM (9) Man and the Challenge (S6) Great Dacitioiia 1962 7;N (2) Leonard felemtlcln (Special) (4) (Odor) Laramie (7) Buga Bunny (9) Movie: "Loit In a Harem” (1944). Abbott end 6tM (4) Conttnental Qatiroom dom. Bud Abbott, Lou Cbt- (4) Continental (^laaaroom — Government 7:69 (2) B'wana Don (4) TiMay (7) Funtwt (7) Johnny Gtn« (2) Captain (96) German for Tcachert (7) Jack LaLanne (96) Story ol Money (2) ‘‘Govemment Girl” (4) Uvlm (7) Movie: “She’a Danger- (2) BemiMntoeoU^_______ (4) Laramie (cont.) (7) Bachelor Father (9) Movie (coat.) 6:M (2) Henry Fonda (Special) (4) Alfred Hitchcock M7) New Breed (9) Movie (cont.) 9:N (2) Henry Fonda (cont.) (4) Dick PowoU (7) New Breed (oont.) (9) Men Into Space 9:M (2) Ichabod and Me (4) Dick PoweU (cont.) (7) Yourt tor a Song (9) J>Vont Page Challenge 19:M (2) <3arr#Moore ...,.; (4) Caln't Hundred — (7) Premiere (9) Interpol Calling UiM (2) Garry Moore (oont.) (4) Cain’a Hundred (oont.) (7) Premiere (oont.) (9) Dr. Hudaon U;aa (2) Newt (4) ^ (7) (9) Newt U:lt (7) Newt, Sportt U:16 (2) Weather (4) Weather (9) Weather Him (2» Sportt (4) ^»rtt (9) Teletcope UAW lliM (2) Movie: "The Gr Man” (Engllth, 1S66). Oock-maker tpendt time at an attt Sim. (7) Weather 11:M (4) (Color) Jack Paar (7) Movie; "The Jol Story.” Story of (tmouo entertainer A1 Joloon. Larry Parka, Evelyn Kcyet. (9) Movie; ”Hie Cruel Sea’ (Engllth, 1966). Stoiy U the ablii in the Britiah Navy. Jack HawUna, Donald Sln-den, Moira Litter. . TV Features tiN (9i) Alt for Everyday Ute fiU (4) Debbie Drake (9) Billboard (4) ((3okir) Say When (9) National School Show (96) Our Sdentmc Worid (7) Newt l9iN (2) 1 Love Lucy (4) (Oolor) Ftay Your Hunch (7) Lift of RUey (9) Chet Helene (96) Ewliah V Itott (9) Nuraery School Time UiM (2) Video Village (4) (Color) Price la Right (7) Texan (9) Romper Room (56) Spaniah Leaaon ItiU (56) German Letaaon UiM (2) December Bride (4) Ooneentration (7) Yonrt for A Song (96) Commonwealth of Na- *Greateet Single Speed Jump in History* WEDIODIDA^ AmSMOON 2,000-M.PH Airliners Are Predicted Before 1975 TVESDAY TV nOHUOITt 1^ Vtotod Preat IMaiatlliaal palace groundt for a perlocinanoe of Gagaku, aadent Japai Mr. Alto filmed art ami eluding Bugaku, a utyHttd dance i; the traditional Japanete (7) (9) Myrt and Doria (56) What’a New? (9) Newt U(MJ2) Search tor Tomorrow (4) Truth (7) Make A Fhce (9) Sutie lti46 (56) Spaniah Leiton (3) Guiding Light (56) German Leaaon UiH (4) Newt liM (3) Star Performance (4) Grouebo (7) Day in Court (9) Movie: "The Mad Geni- LOS ANGELES - Tooling out here from New York Monday at 600 mlieo an hour I waa aurpriaed 1:16 (56) French Leaaon UN (7) Newt UN (2) At the World Tume Dick Van Dyke, Carol Lynley. NEW BREED, 8:» p. m. (7). Part II. "Policemen Die Alone." A miaaing’witneaa retuma to help U. i capture a a: I. With (96) World Hiatory liM (4) Faye Eliaabeth t:W (2) Pattword (4) (Color) Jan Murray (7) Jane Wyman (56) Adventurea in Science t:M (4) Newt t:M (2) Houto Party (4) Loretta Young (7) Seven Keya (56) French Leaaon 6:N (2) Millionaire (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Queen lor a Day Ed Begley. Victor Joey, Zachary Scott, Ivan Dixon. DKK POWELL SMOW, 9 p. m. (4). "The Priaon.” Chariea Boyer atar la a drama about a piiaaner and guaird, the only men in a dreary MDEBE. 10 p. m. (7). "Hm ___^ Fortnum (John Gavin) la convicted of a crime by an eleo-U the year 3002 and la change bodica with a (Jainei Batton.) OABET MfMNHD iWOW, 10 pjn. (2). Comedian Ed Wynn and Eng-land’t Shliley Baaaey jata Garry. Durward Kirby and Carol Bemett •wmer Lamr The following la from an article in the National Civic Review by Col. C. Glen WllUamaon, USAF (ret.). It made me wonder ' the Boeing 707 remained aittome at auch a tluggiah pnee: fTTltoarlD Many a h (56) Flaherty and Film U16 (9) llovle: "TYIple Decep- l:N (3) Verdict la Youra (4) Our Five Daughlera (7) Who Do You lYuat? (56) Memo to Teacbera 9:M (2) Newa 4tW (2) Brli^ Day (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) American Bandatana (96) Comiponwealth of Na- 4:16 (3) Secret Storm 4IH (3) Edge of Night (4) Here’a Hol^wood (9) Raxde Daxato (56) French Ihrough Tele-viaion 4:61 (7) American Newaatand 4:H (4) Newa 6:16 (2) Movie; "Devil and the Deep” (4) (Odor) George Pierrot (7)' Johnny Ginger (9) Jinglea (56) What’a New? i:N (7) Rlverboat (96) Travel l:M (9) Rocky and Hia Frienda (56) Newa Magazine S;H (4) Kukla and OUie Floods Drive 123,000 From Philippine Homes 27 Oakland Motorists Lose Driving Privileges Drivera’ Ucenoea of 37 Oakland OMfflty motorMa hav* been either auapended or revoked recently by the Michigan Department of State. Ordered to ahow Snancial HirPEBVAOVUM Dirt, atonea Ed other foreign objecta which could damage the xkina and enginco of planet are awept up by thia big motorized vacuum cleaner-at Hanacom Field, Mam. Ihe 9-ton machine doea Ita Job while moving along at 35 to 40 m.p.h. over the alnwat alx million aquare feet of rampa, runwaya and taxlwaya at the field. An eight-cyltoder engine powera the 30-foot-long vehicle: a aimilar engine whlrla three giant fans that suck material into hoppers which are able to hold 6 cubic yards of <» m oixivictions of drunken drivi show financial re-Monsibillty following one or more unsatisfied financial Judgments tfSva aTmvaro*. »** aiWfrtoB si., .jlrUaa tJriw. SoaUi Lroa; RjuroM A. tWw St, WtWrterd TRVMhIp: O. MitaUlB. INS Bolton at., WnAod Uko; gonnoth P Proimlrt, tin Vlrilnto at., fray; OUnr W abntl. lOLaoTDIo 1^. Ostord Tovnohip: ond Wimoiii L. W*t-aon. ddS BoadrtokMa at.. Onion. Losing their licenaea because of unsatisfactory driving records were the following: WIIlli a. Oou. 44T CORiiron Arc. Pontine. Trnvli H. Bowden, tllll lUddlcUi - 1. BouUintld: Eurt ------- — “ •0^ 4H W.’jlnrrlooa’ St.. IdnISiMa ■KnT* Patrick J. Cauley, 130 Henry Clay St., and Ted^ B. Nelson. 36146 Barrbwton St.. Madison ordered off the roads because they drove with a prevl-oualy suspended license. Failure tO appear for re-examination on charges of having ua-satisfactwy driving records were Robert W. Amsby. 2415 Barreft St., Royal Oak; and Dennis P. Gtoen, 1436 Wren St., Wixom. out to aee What The Brat fear la many hearts I "The advent of 2,000 m.pJi. aircraft In commercial service, prob-eUy by 1970 but certainly before 1975, will be an tamovaUon comparable, in effect, to the start of raDrooda. ITw effects of the supersonic transports (SSTs) will be much more then what might be expected from Just another Jump Washington Drama Brags of 2 Heroes •Umi win be the greatoet ato- kavy -of tmaepertatte, from "Beginning in the 'TD's the advantages of direct world contact will be availaUe even to some- of our most Inland citim, but only those which recognize the significance of the coming innovation and prepare to capitalize c will receive the benefits. MINDTE8 FROM PARIS "Kansas City may be onijr 175 minutes from Paris, and Houston might be Just 300 minutes from Rie De Janeiro. Aim, there Is an element of magic In the idea of arriving in New York three hours and 39 minutes BEFORE the dock time of. departure from London. “St. Laala win be oaly IM ndaulea flrsm Madrid, bat Kaa-aas City wOl sOn be nearly M mtoatoa tram M. Lsafo by too Col. WUHaraaon, whose war ex- e the great play and nn^, "Onnmand De-dslon,” finds himmlf bugged—as the aerospace industry in general is—by the sonic booms which bellow from sitoeraonic aircraft as the prow of a ship sends waves IS the water to port and starboard. At Cocoa Beach, Fla., one i _ not long ago. the string of motejs along the landy atrip was rocked by a aonle boom of audi fopce that hundreds of occupants poured r cape OSaaveral I 1 happened to be sittlag was It was a passing military Jet. at first said to have been j^loted by Oonndr. Alan Shepard-up there at the time but flying subaonlc, he explained. CONSTANT WORRY Whoever It wu, the boom he spread constitutes a constant worry ■ s bom. The Air Force and Navy ijuietly pay out thousands of doUara each year in sonic boom WASHINGTON (AP) - A 30-mlnute dranaa was presented at National Prem Building that had everything but rave reviews. It had suspense, a pretty ac- — a congressman and a Broad- ito one calling for a repeat performance, tor the drama was produced by an obstinate Meva- There were about 13 peraons in the devator — induding some members of a party for actrem Gretchen Wyler — when it became stuck between the second and third floors Monday night. Two of the passengers, Rep. Ed Edmondson, D-Okla., and actor Todd Jackson pried open the door, leaped about 5 feet to the second floor corridor below and called for help. Should Qscuss NATO N-Force "The only thing hazardous 2-Cor Family Crashei Inlo Troublft: Each Other INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) - Mrs. Freda G. Rundberg, 40, won’t have to alibi to her husband about how Me got the new dent in her car. She got tt when she stopped tor a red light and was struck by another car — driven by her husband, Herman, 98. WASHINGTON- (AP) - The thorny issue of whether the United States should supply the North Atlantic Alliance with an indep^ ent nuclear force Is expected to come up today when NATO retary General Dirk Stikker meets President Kennedy. Mom's Quick Thinking Tracts Tiny Contact Lens stikker Is a stremg advocate of such a force. Under the present NA’TO nuclear system, warheads are fully contrcdled by the United GRAND RAPIDS (UW) -liam Venema, 17, dropped his contact lens in a snowbank, but his mother helped him find It in 30 Mrs. Venema bad her son shovel the snow into buckets, melted the low and poured the water through sleve_nW^|_^j2BJ2J2j*2^ MANILA, Philippines (AP> -Floods have driven 128,000 Filipinos Iitm their homes on Mindanao Island in the past 10 days, and the water U stUl rising in I hmu*- A spokesman for the Social Wel^ (are Department said 100,000 people in Agu^ Province are threatened by floods. 'The situation was nude worm by tropical storm Fran, which dumped mort rain on the area. --Today's Radio Programs-- By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — Once a week, * columnist should be a good guy.' Not so often, naturally, that It’d become a habit with him... , He shouldn’t, for example, scribble things like "Hey, hey. isn’t that a funny coincidence about Princeai Boraya and Huid) O’Brian both being scheduled to be passengers on the Leonardo da Vinci’s maiden Mediterranean cruise? Is that a mere accident (wink, wink) that she boards In galmermo about Feb. 12 and he in Oerece a couple days afterward, ho de ho ho hor’ (So we’U throw that out as being beneath us.) Mr. Nice Ouy Columnist also shouldn't print things like this: ”Desr Earl: I hope Johnny Carson won’t take over the Jack Paar show. Bo looks like a searocrow. I am no toon- WWZ. Newt CKLW. n««« *|wKjiir. Ht«» opwN ?J?A.*!5fcNpw WBOnSSDAT MOBNOia s:ss-wik. nm^Afii. OKLW Para, S:SS-Wm. Juk B*rrii - ______iBiW-^WJn. nAri Ham , 1^. Ntwa. nrid WPOX. Iftwt, Jtnr Oliaa tS:SS-CXLW. MTrtIt LalMU wxTb. Wad sstssisi. •sto'swiausr* -xrt. w^ wm*; ntwi, Aran wm. Havt. Arwry siSB-wjn. WWJ, H«««, Ma^ tiw-wjn. nwra, naonh, tma MSU» WM'WMf rVWWt, mwWw asm- WJH, Mava. y»ra C*LW. *ao wr»R, Nrwi, Porta It:**—Win, Tlina for Unfit wxva Menatiw. ilaea liS^Wm. nawa. SBaVgiii .WWf, XavR llozaraU tiSB-esLw xavt. surnofc. 'l:t»-wn. Xaas. SbottaaM m. Bsj' WJBK. Ntwa, 1 WCAR. Nawi IBS: agouti"™ •aK*sw“s.)rs«' wxrz, Paol Winiar, Ka«i WPOX, Dm McUoA siis-wjn. Mwta a wrrx. wirikr. Xa — Nice Guy Wouldn’t Dare Write These Items WILSON that, tool Wo wonldh^t nspJiU Aie yewbegtitiafiig to get the Idea of the things we wouldn’t think of using? ★ ★ ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL . .. ’The "Two For the Seesaw” fflmlng was delayed two dajrs— Shirley MacLalne’s (Jrlveway CoUapsed In the L.A. rains . , . Danny Thomas’ daughter Mario auditioned for the lead opposite Ja«>n Bobards In "A Thpusand Clowns.” Andro Ponun-hoann said his wife Oamble’d like to come boro “but 6ho dooan’t want to be oxpoaed to the circus atmosphere” . . . Lta Taylor finishes her “Cleopatra” stint next month. . . . Who’s gonna help wltti JWS’f fltoessjpirofreito^ Clark wUl. EARL'S PEARLS: Pl^ the bose-hO has to get In eacly to aee who comes in late. TODAYS BEST LAUGH; The two hardest things for a man to find nowadays are sleop-in jnald and ai^eat-ln wife. WISH I’D SAID THAT: Housework is what a woman does that rwbody notices — unless she doesn’t do it. A local chorus girl Is wearing her wedding* ring on the wrong finger—she claims it’s her way of saying she married the wrong guy. That’s earl, brother. (Copyright, 1962) about it was to mako sure y go down yie shaft,” said Ed- Flremen then put a ladder up to the opening the others trapped in the elector climbed down to^salriy. . . BVm toe 166 mile flight to New Y«k (rwn St LouIb wM preboMy be uneeenemlcBl tor toe itor*,” WUItamsBo wrttoe, ’.’Becaum-ol the tonic boom the ■uperaonic Birliiwn wU Jiave to Mias Wyler and Jackaon am appearing here -in the musical comedy "Bye Bye Birdie." Ibey were at the praaa club building for a party given in honor of Miss Wyler, an OkUhoman, by the Oklahoma State Society. when they are at altitudes ranging from 13 to 19 milts above the "The 490,000-pound monsters will „o a total of about 90 mlmites and travel shout 690 miles In the ellinb and descent portions of each JFK, Strikktr Expsettd to Touch on luus in Meeting Today By CVNTHU LOWRY NEW YORK (AP)-There has been many a TV tale about sweet little old ladles with a penchant tor homicide and all of them have--- „ pale carbons of their reward. Tony RamtaU wu Abby and Martha Brewster, the back lor 90 minutu. It wu a fine, frolicsome TV adaptation of the long-running and classie "Arsenic and Old Lace." A good Urns was had by all Kennedy aald hi a speech si RACK IN ROLE Boris Karloff wu back in his original stage role of the murder ing Brewster brother who. owliig g ta eonalder tonitshiu! NATO .. unfortunate plastic surgtiy, resembled Boris Kariofl. * been adrieved.” He said suh eral ta ewerridp and eentool.” Stikker, of the Netherlands, Is " Kennedy today the nonnuclear goals are wril In sight. They include 27 divisions now in Central Europe and up “ more expected this year. FRANCE 9OOL One of the problems Is whether NATO members really want a Jointly controlled nuclear striking power. West Germany |s believed to be much in favor of the idea while Britain hu reservations and France is markedly cool. Another point at iBaue has beea. ta effect: Who Bpemke first? The UaHed Stale# waata the other mombero of NATO to spell out how they think NATO But the Western allies contend that the United States should move first, outlining Its concept o» a NATO controlled nuclear fori The foremost question is whether J1 19 nations are to have veto power over use of the nuclear jncK mnr aaww. on loima u«i • - -- “T."” tenons or whether a smaller - «jnlltloik-»weenm«rt waa-can^ nger sad 1 knnw wh»t • hostfor » "n show jjj^ro^roupTsmW lailM eeled at the last mtomta Iasi like. — Mrs. Mattie King, Tnlsa. F.8. I »m 74. refused to Stikker met with Rusk Monday and reported "a little progreaa” in their talks about Independent nu-dear armamenta for NATO. Removing Signs Showing Way to New CIA Building WASHINGTON (6) - Employes of tte superksecret Central Intelligence Agency are moving into the new CIA building in nearby Langley, Va. — so road signs pointing the way have beeij taken down. "Everybody who needs to get here knows how,” said a CIA spokesman. He explained the big green and white signs pointing the way to the ClA were tiiere' tb guide workmen to the building while it waA binder eoBSk^iction, ^ > cease ta Ip a rilMw flight. On the St. Louis to New York flight that would allow only eight or nine mlnqtos at crulsInR arrival at L.A. alrpert, where a kaagar m the far side of the (told lafonna yoa that Ihto is tha Mrthplaee of tha XlL This remarkable craft is the Srst big stepping stone to tndy maneuverable piloted spacecraR of the future. MaJ. Bob White USAF haa flown it to a speed of 4.093 m.p.h. and haa reached an altitude of 217,000 feet-about 41 and altitudes mentioned above wfll ____ timid and tentatlvd. Glenn’s Mercury capsule srill nqt be able to stay in orbit unless tt reaches a speed ol 17,900 m.p.h. and an altitude of • UtUe more Dose of 'Arsenic' Was a Real Treat Dorothy Stickney and Mildred Nstwick were delightful ss the Brewster aisten, who would never fibs but Just coukhi't resist ____recipe tor elderberry wine. Monday night, courtesy of NBC, htoipy normal Brewster nephew. Attempt to Halt Fighting in Laos British, Sovist Envoys Entsr RebeUHtld Land; Seek Cease-Fire Pact VIENTIANE (UPD—The British and Soviet ambassadors to Laoa flew into rebel-held territory (oday .... repiwsentatives of the International Control Cbmmlsslon (ICO in an attempt to halt heavy fighting on the Nam Tha front. USSD TVi •UAMNTIID D losmoz'i nau t tv vsy.JtTssis a good time to find out who sincere enemlea are. have ever had to temj^ trade your swivel chair for bed, here are a few types of visitors from your offUe you are bound to face: Hungry Hubert—He arrives iu|t as they bring in your evening meal. “I wouldn't over load ng stomach at a time like thia, says. Hubert lets you have the soup and crackers. Then he eats your bread and butter, roast beef and potatoes, and dessert. Hien h^ borrows a toothpick and leaves grumbling. 'VHow do they expect anyone to survive on grub like UOUUMDjONRfOnS it a happy choice for a really fine family meal he-cauta wa have NO JUKE BOX blarirfg In your ear and makirtg oonvertation an im-potaibility. What wa do have . it toft background designed to relax you and make dining more picatant. Wo have NO BAR. EITHER What you will find at the white rettaurant with the orange roof it a relaxing atmosphere, excellent service justhood food AT SENSIBLE PRICES Treat yourself arvi your family toon to a delicious meal at Howard Johnson's where everything It pl.anned to make eating an adven- 3660 DIXIE HIQHWAY AT DRAYTON PUINS ,IK)IIURD» JounsonS !. Overnight Ke* has come down with your ailment. JUST AN EXCUSE Practical Pamela — The pretty stenographer told the boss she'd need three hours off to visit you. She sticks her head in the door, says “Hi!'' brightly, and spends the remaining 3 hours, 59 minutes and 58 seconds doing her personal LAST KITES VETT’ Ambitious Albert—He has aJ ways wanted your Job. “Hav they given you the last rites yet?' he asks hopefully. When you shake your heacL~nO|- he -says, ■Well, • kee you back at the old alt mine." And ha tromps and goes to the nearest bar to drown his sorrow. JDolef hflps I leful Delbert-On the side he brother-in-law sell life insiu-ance. “You sure you got coverage?” he asks. "Re- , depHTOnent who passed away fast year? He only had |3,000 in In-aurance. Now 1 bear hla wife and (Uughters are taking in washing.” Take-charge Tillle—The PorvcW nel secretary is a fruatrat^'[ Florence Nightingale. ^ stuffs three pillows under you to makd you uncomfortable, bawls out the entire hospital staff foV neglecting you. As soon as she departs, angry nurse makes you vengc. ^QpfiprliUiMia -BDtxit a ' little f ; niow gin rummy?' demands, pulling out a deck of cards and shuffling them on your stomach. He feels sure that in your weakened condition he can win back the J3.17 he lost to you in the locker room two weeks before. CUSSES BROKEN? 13 N. SAGINAW ST. Coated-tongue Charlie » the of-fldk hypochondriac Inquires about your symptoms in. detalT, asks to sse your Indsioa, if any. The next morning, early, he is wheeled into Jht next room as an eme^ Heiihy Harry--“Boy, you never looked better in youif life!” yelps the office's professional 'iteppcr upper, slapping you so hard on the back he rips open three sutures. Then he sits down and reads you gags from old' Joke-books until you go into a coma, exhausted. After he leaves you revive and hang on the outside doorknob of ytw room a sign reading; “Please do not open until Christmas.” Peace Pickets Choose Jail His Omnipotence — The boss comes in swinging a golf club. ■'Take all th? time you need—and lon't worry,” he burbles. 'Tve got one of the younger executive trainees filling in for you, and he's doing a real bang-Up Job.” That does it. Pale and wan, you show up at work the next day. You realize. Ibat the ady ] place you'll ever recover is back in your warm swivel ch* your office well-wishers will no longer bother to. overwhelm you with cheer. WASHINGTON; (AP) - 1 ‘peace marchejhs" arrested front of the V^te Noose have chosen 10 days in Jail instead of paying 810 fines for refusing to comply with a Washington picketing law. The group was arrested Monday after refusing to obey a police order to move to the far end of a park across from the White House. Six others in the group sponsored by the Commltlee-Jen Nonviolent Action-Uf'New York eorapiied.' All were protesting nuclear testing. Police said they arrested the niob after explaining to them a Washington law forbidding dem----------- within 500 feet of an BAY SIGHT — Tourists arrive at the^l85-foot-blBii Goddess of Mercy figure at Tokyo Bay. The steel and concrete statue also serves as light tower for shipping. Group ProtBsts N-TbsH at WhitB Houib and Gat 10 Dayu or $10 Fina * A embassy or the grounds of any building occupied by foreign dignitaries. The police acted after Congo Premier Cyrllle Adoula entered the White House for luncheon wltA President Kennedy AAA The nine, who agreed to i across the street to th{.j>adL __ oMpJha-lae-vtaroTit, later told ..I^ipal Judge Edward A. Beard they felt "morally obligated" not to pay the fine. The nine were Identified a* Scojt Herrick, 36: his wile Beatrice, 36; Robert Gilmore. 40: and Susan Hoffnvui, 19, all ol New York: Lawrence Scott. 53, Washington: Gerald B. Lehmann, Mokena,. Ul.; Harry Purvis. Northport, N.Y.; Stephen Groff. ,20. Souderton. Pa., and Beverley Kanegson. 31. Norwich Conn. Gets $250 for Aiding Law UWRINGTIP^ 13S0 award has been paid by the Michigan petroleum industry to Dannus Davies of Detroit, who assisted police in thwarting the armed robbery of a gas station. The Industry has pkld out 14.850 in the past 18 months in such rewards to assist police in reducing crimes against gas stations. NORTH CENTRAL,.. WINGS FOR MID-AMERICA’S MAIN STREETS -Mld-Amcrica no\^ moves faster, goes more places — the main . economy — keep it on the go on tte grow, streeta of both major and amaHer cities air-linked by North When ym want to go places faat^-^use the airline that ..... . . .... . .. ... -n- . . M_ . iili.:_—I..—» Fn anw AMfina#inn call vnue travf Cratral’a route network, connecting Sioux City to South Bend, for instance; Fargo to Flint. Main streets that extend to the four, comers of the earth via North Central's connections with worldwide airlinei to any destination. *. . To ninety-one cities in mid-America and their satellite neighboring communities. North Central wings bring swift, modem travef — far above highway strain and stress. North Qefitrara jfast juid fjmailil^t flights give wings to mid-America's mqpan^|^^^ 'going places." For air travel to any destination call your travel agent or North Central Airlines. NOBTB CESraJU AtaUKSi America's leading local airline. Serving 91 cities ^ in 10 midwest states and Cinsds i > me you many ^ haadrejJs of steps ■every washday %' V s TAKE THE STEP THAT COUNTS AND | W GET A GAS CLOTHES DRYER TODAY I ^ Gas dries clothes aulfy soft, sweet and fresh g « INDOORS FOR ONLY PENNIES A LOAD ^ SEE THE NEW GAS DRYERS TODAY AT YOUR DEALER'S STORE..GET THIS Hosietfi Otiet Limited Supply DURING THIS SAIE...OAS DRYiRS INSTALLED FREE , # ?_____ Power ,, _ V.\> Compony V//y///,. illllllin:.' 111 I# A DISCOUNT PBICES ON SPEED QUEEN, W HI. FRIfilDAIRE Mi MAYTAB BAS DRYERS No Money Down—Free Instoilotion 108 NORTH SA^AW STREET FEdtrol 3-7114 Om" SWry Ivmiiig 'HI 9 P.M. ELECTRIC COMPANY S25 W. Huron St. PE 4-2525 lUST EAST of TIL-HUROI4 SHOPPING CENTER DISCOUNT PRICES on RCA WHIRLPOOL CCC ThB New FRIGIOAIRE, MAYTAG ond NORGE GA$ dec DRYERS... ond Got Your FREE HOSIERY DRYER of... A vkJC ^ A DCDT'C INSTALLATION—NO WATNC UAI$CK I d money DOWN-2-YRS. TO PAY “YOUR APPLIANCE SPECIALIST" V 121 N. SAGINAW ST. PE 5-UID9 FRAYER'S APPLIANCE 589 Orchard Loke Ave. FE 4-0526 Opon Evoningt 'til 8 P. M. — Soturdoy 'til 6 P. M. Get Your FREE HOSIERY DRYER at . . . FEDERAL DEPT. STORES Buy Gas Dryers with NO MONEY DOWN installed FREE' SEE OVK LARGE STOCK of GAS DRYERS . .. ■AltaTON-VBlOIDAlM-aMT—Oim qmniN-MUTTAO-BCA WHIKLTOOL JU Lmr if $148.00-lli Miiiy Dawn—lutillid Free! GET YOUR FREE HOSIERY DRYfR AT . . . AD 600D HOUSEKEBPIRC SHOP—91W. Hbibb St—F THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUBSDAY, FgBRUARY 6> 1962 KRAFT'S Mlllitcii WHIP THnOW, LOW PRICES OW« THIS CIRCULAR ARE EFFECTIVE TUESDAY, FEB. 6 Thru a MONDAY, FEB. 12 X- ‘-m: u % . '.'ii . t.1 with coupon on P«g« 3 a..-. BIG VALU BIG VALU STORES IN PONTIAC AREA 391 Aubiri Ave. Drayton Plaiis Naor Sanford 5060 Dixia Hwy. mm OraytM M«Im Cantat 536 N. Perry of Poddock Mf II ■ ■ ■ Me efltfiHfliAf Welled Leke S. Saginaw 700 Pontloc Tra» • ot Auburn .ot Mopit Rood OPEN DAILY 9 TO 9-CLOSED SUNDAY: TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. FEBRUARY «. 19«2 Come See V Save Stock up Now! Sptciol! MATCHiS 5cw:t. Ctn. Heine, BMch-Nut, Gtrbera Strsinad BABY QC FOODS ^ " 7 Assorted Flavors ROYAL Puddings Size EIno ' > PINTO BEANS FoodOiib CREAM CHEESE 3-Oz. Pkg. I*' SALE Bonqiiet CHICKEN BROTH iOVzOz. OC on EIno PORK l»i BEANS Can Aunt Jemimo - Llmltad Supply CORN 't’&r QC MEAL EhM TOMAtO SOUP 7 ss9* Elm KIDNEY BEANS 300 Size Can jM ' / % MiriKle Whip By Kraft 39 Quart Jar With Coupon ■>. on Page 3 EIno Broad Salad Dressing q* 3 V Plus 50 PrM |( Gold Ball Stamps—With Gxjpon on Page 3 rricos offocfiva l■Paapl Umimf, Nknmy'lt W» waanfa Ifta rigkl to ttmU qmmrtHu, PILLSBURrs Cake Mixes • White • Ydtew • Chocolate Fudge • Pink leiYioruKJe . Pineepple , . • Spice Save 17c on 3 Pkgs. -''i - .. i «.• »- -r ' ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. FEBRUARY «. 1903 THREE Lett Siamp§ Needed to m Yomr Books Lets Books Needed forjfom Choiee of Gifts FREE GOLD sisesa STAMPS cum THIS YALUAUM COUPON .... . i00,'s;u7l£r:,zl ■ • ^**?***““?*****^i“_ i(kew>MMro ""“""“""""""“""■I TKk CcMMM Hm No < ■% nwnd Mm^ ft. 1MI I This Coupon Hot No Coih Voluo. LMt Ont Por CiMtomor. | Chose and ScMibom COFFEE Big Vaiu's low tow Con Price WHh Coupon Below / ' SWEETEST BUY IN TOWN Pioneer Sugar -S a 49* APPIAN WAY PIZZA MIX Limft One — No Cbupon Needed Save 17c on S Pkgs. 3^1 an wLfR555jl*ltilrlUk m CP KialtOMp *39* TMi .Coupon TMt Coopon Hw ae Ce* Vsk*. UoiW ant^r CoKiiiir. «.Vji;^TCsnn4n.ili «»“- .57‘ With TMt Coupon four THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY JE-COUtt THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. FERRU&RY 6, li JCdOl Fivi CIVE the BIG VALU ROAST PICKLED BEEF PRACTICALLY BONELESS PORK ROAST Tender, Juicy, Blade Cuts Chuck Steaks | Rib Steaks 49> ’^h.69 Lb. Stewiog Beef C • Leon H • Pre-Diced V feireeff tm 391 lUBUUI NOW THERL ARE 19 BIG VALU SUPER* MARKETS 93S N. PKRIT SOI SAiOliW IRATTON PUni 8090 Dixie Hwy. IT# Niirvef*^^ • WBUBR LAKE. 700 PeBtiac TiaU •‘.r •si :'' f* . SIX THE PONtlAC PRESS. TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 0. 1902 RYE ; 'X i v' • ... ' X 160z. SnvA m A BREAP 11*^ Big VoW SpMlol TIDE DETERGENT 1T77' II^ANT.CHOCOUTE . i^45‘ With 1—ThrM Bud Rom LIQUID IVORY S3 8Y LIQUID ya Buv 48 and (ocalv* A hmt* for 1 Conr TETLEY TEA BAGS with 1—Two Bud Rom LIQUID IVORY ^63* ftMh Sin LIFEBUOY SOAF 2K35* l«Mi »—Two Bud lUwM IVORY SNOW r Klf«D 13S Slat 1 WNh a—Two lud. Nmm CHEER DETERGENT 52 r WNh l—TimWi ttM ZEST BEAUTY BAt 2K45- WMi 1—Two Bui mm IVORY SNOW - r 81' TMl WTwo Bud Row CHKR DETERGENT ^77* i:. V ... . V. . --- , . - • .V V i the PONTl^ PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBBU^Y 6, 1962 SEVEN. Gsfifit IVORY FUKES is 35' ^bODVvCw FIG BARS ’.^39' iR^nt coffee .^99' ISc Ofi LoM SURF DETERGENT s:64“ SuniMn^ HYDROX COOKIES AM ^rpoM HJ4A FLOUR i539' Barit Dallaht PRAISE SOAP 2 “34' WKita Stvon or Oorolon* - . BLEACH 5:39' Liqukf Pink TOPCO DETERGENT <.59“ Complaiiion Ptir* PRAISE SOAP 2.£i 31' L&NCHEON MEAT ’l£r 39' NORTHERN TISSUE^ 4-Roll QOe pok oo r'f KIGIIT THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUAR DNUOLOIL -r ^S!5SSP COFPEE Chase & Sanborn With C(x4x)n on Page 3 C91I 57 SnyiJ^s Quoit Jar ‘•n' ^ Why Pey 59c or More C ■jRy "'1 • BANANAS Golden Ripe Full of Nutritior 10 SPAGHini Surgef's —THIN — Save 10c 2-Lb^ Cello Pkg. 39 YAMS Golden Sweet No. 2 Size 10 \' No Coupon Needed Cello Pkg. Country Maid, Farm Sweet or Worthmore SLKiD BACON Large Grade "A" EGGS 45 Lb. BIG VALU STORES IN PONTIAC AREA With Coupon on Page 3 43 Doz. 398 Aibvri Ave. ^ DraytM PItiit. ^ Neor SonfenI . \5660 Dixie Hwy^ aiAA mm mm ■ OffirtM PialM Ctmlm 536 N. Perry Walled Lake 50 3. Sagiaaw too PvnMsc TniH •f Aubiara M»pl§ Woo4 .1 ! » ; / I OPEN DAILY 9 TO 9-CLOSED SUNDAY ¥ LOW, LOW FOOO PRICiS ¥ COURTEOUS SERVICE ¥ HAME BRAND FOODS ¥ LARGE VARIETIES ¥ PLUS GOLD BELL STAMPS fW TWO mmomi THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 6. 19g2 -y- Con-Con Voice Vote Retains Taxes The Day in Birmingham Plan tor Improvements Gas Levy ior Highways. Sales for Schools Kept Presented to Commission LANSING — Mirhigan's cvn-Ititutkxud'convention hai voted to retain the earmarking of gai and weight taxes for higtyw'ay purposes and indicated It will do the i with sales taxes for schools and local government. By an overwhelming voice vote, the convention decided to keep virtually intact a constitutional provision that all taxes imposed rectly or indirectly upon gasoline and like fuels sold or use«' propel motor vehicles" be. ^for highwa.vs. The committee also pointed out that so far as the two per cent for the schools was ion-slantially more than that "at certain to do so in the foreseeable future " delegates would change their On the diversion of sales lax money for schools and local government, the convention beat down several amendments aimed at eliminating such earmarking. Six other amendments were still pending when the convention adjourned Monday .night after several hours of debate. By an 10-4:1 vote, delegates voted down an amendment to the i-om-mittee report which would have eliminated earmarking for schools immediately and dropped the one-half per cent diversion to lo<-nl governments within five years. AS or NOW Under the present constitution, two per cent of the current four per rent tax Is set aside for school districts, while another one-half per cent is returned to cities, townships and villages on a population basis. la recMnmendlng that the present provtsions be maintained reported there was r ognitlon that earm hinds Is not the hesi But it the committee reasoned that upon this subject the people had spoken — and had done so recently and that when the people spi they are the 'vox' tvolce). "The members of the committee Frigid Weather Envelops Most of the Midwest feel that we are drawing a stlluiion that will lie worth keeping, and are not unmindful of the fart that it will not lie kept snless the voter* approve It." came after the eonventlbn tithe rpntln- ready had approved uatlon of highway fund earmarking. Coleman Young, D-Deiroit, said that it the convention adoptid the amendment It would go down In history as having voted to build four-fane superhighways, romplete with clover-leaves, rigtil up to the little red K-hool house — and tom down the 'school. Proponents of the plan to irmarking argued that the legis-iture should be given a free hand I carry out its responsibilities I the appropriation of state funds Id the handling of a tax pro- The ann-ndmenl, filed In the form of a rommlllee minority report, was sponsored by three Republicans — Charles J. Davis of Onondaga, Don F. Heyferth of Muskegon, and David K. I p ton of At. Joseph. In other developments, convention President Stephen S. Nisbet, R-Fremont, said he hoped to reach some agreement among leaders of both paiHes bn the amount of lime to be devoted to debate on controversial subjects. By The Assoelalrd Press Frigid air from Canada, p emd by stiff northerly winds, , vetoped broad areas of the tion's midsection today and the sting of the icy air was felt all the way into sections of the Gulf Coast. Nisbet said fhe three subiects mast likely to need a time limit were legislative rt'apportionment vs, election'of the administrative board, and local government Most of the eastern half ql the nation was in the path of the Arctic blasts, which ended a brief spell of mild weather. Coldest weather appeared confined to Minnesota, with temperatures dropping nearly 30 delves belAw zero in International Falls. Minn., on/the Canadian border. Monday’s high in the nortlwm border town was 10 below, and It was -37 this morning. It was -16 in Minneapolis and -17 in Duluth. Minn. Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., reported -15. Below zero readings also were reported in parts of Michigan, Wisconsin, the Dakotas. Iowa. Nebraska and northern Illinois. It was -1 in Chicago, which had a spring-like reading of 50 Sunday. The convention has sot Manh 31 as the deadline for adjournment. If the convention winds up its work by then, the propoied constitution will go on the ballot next November. "Otherwise, according to a tomey general's ruling, the people cannot vote on It until the ypring 1963 election. BIRMINGHAM - A proposed capital improvement program covering approximately a two-year period was presented to the City Commission last night * City Manager U R. Gare reported there is about |14S,(XI0 available In the capital improvement fund and of this an estimated 355,000 will be used for projects planned to be started before the fiscal year ends June 30. The $90,000 remaining In the fund, plus $103,000 to next year’s budget for improvemmts. would G. E. Migrants Dies in Hospital KKShlON AT ‘SAUK’ BAR — U. S. Atty. Gen. Robert Kennedy. center, gestures during a discussion session at a ‘sake’ bar in Tokyo Monday. (Sake la a favorite Japanese drink, rice wine.) Kennedy, who Is seati>d at the bar, is surrounded by ar PksMai Japanese men listening to the talk. Kennedy and his wife are visiting Japan as part of their goodwill tour around the world. (See story on page l.) MSUO Building to Be Dedicated Testify Graft Offered Ceremony for $2-Million Science - Engineering Structure Is Sotufflay WASHINGTON (API-Two Boston attorneys have testified that Massachusetts Highway Department land negotiator offered (hem graft money or help in •uring big cases. Dedication ceremonies for the $2-million s<-ience and engineering building at Michigan fltate University Oakland are .scheduled for .Saturday. .Speaker* at the dedieation will be niancellor D. R. Varner of MHI70! State Hen. FJmer R. Porter, R-Bllssfleld, chairman of the Henate Approprtathm* Committee; and State Rep. Henry M. Hogan Jr., R-Rirmlngham. Following the ceremony leading scientists will take part in a symposium on improviog science education. Moderator of the conference will be Dr. Bowen C. Dees, assistant director- for scientific personnel and education. National Science Foundation. The testimony came Monday as the House Public Works sub millee opened its investigation of scandals In ronnec-tion with federal road programs. INDUTKD A federal grand jury in Boston issued the indictments Moi against five more persons and two. ftrms. It charged them with conspiring to hike the price of land needed for highway right-of-way. Echo Expected Twice The Echo I satellite is scheduled for two appearances tonight in the Pontiac area. The science and engineering building which contains 85,000 s(juare feet of floor space Is the first one on the MSUO campus to be provided by the State Legislature. Other buildings have been erected as the result of gifts or loans. ■ s Elizabeth II Observes 1st Decade of Reign Its first appearance is scheduled for 7:12 p.m., ^m the north, 68. to 71 degrees above the horizon, moving northeast. It will return at-9:15 p.m., again in the north sky. at 79 to 84 degrees above the horizon, heading to the southeast. The Weather TRArmNa, rrheariti i,abh The new building.-has both teaching and research‘laboratories, faculty offices, library and classrooms as well as supporting facilities for instruction in mathemat- 1, chemistry, physics, the life sciences and engineering-science. In MHUO's new-htok eurrieu-lum, every ntudenl take* half his work In a prescribed list of liberal arts studies. Including a two-semroter mathematics- Full U. 8. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINTTY — Occasional sunshine tnd cold today, high 16. Fair and cold tonight. Low 6. Wednesday fair and not so cold, high 20. Northwesterly winds 15 to 25 miles today diminishing tonight and Wednesday. The university is also launching I new science-engineering program in which majors in the various fields of engineering have been abandoned in favor of engineering’s fundamentals such a* mathematics, chemistry and physics. Science and engineering faculties from all colleges and universities in Michigan, Illinois and Ohio have been invited to the dedication program as have sci- ence and mathematics teachers in 150 high schools in the Immediate LONDON (API — ’The decade of the new Elizabethan began today . with artillery and flag salutes to Queen Elizabeth II and toasts in the pubs to a long and happy reign for the 35-year-old monarch. Macmillan Vows Backing for U.N., Shuns Critics LONDON (m — Prime Minister Harold Macmillan Monday night overrode a Laborite motion of censure because of, his government’s gloomy outlook toward the future of the United Nations. The 67-year-oW prime minister, roundly cheered by Sir Winston Churchill and other Conservatives, promised continued support to the U.N. but said his government recognizes t h e organization’s peacemaking role has been harmed by financial difficulties and unexpected conditions that have developed since its birth in 1945. New Yoi^k Farmer Says Someone' Stole Bridge RANSOMVILLE. NY. (f» Someone has stolen James Foster's bridge. i Foster, says the bridge consisted of four lO-foot steel beams weiring 140 pounds each. He values the bridgili a — which the subcommittee that Frank L. Harney, a negotiator since convicted of conspiring to defraud Massachusetts, once offered to cut him in on graft payments. 'MADE OFFER' John D. Dwyer .said Harney once offered to steer a lucrative case his way if he would put in a good word for him with Mass-■husetts Atty. Gen. Edward J. MrCormack Jr.. nephew of Speaker of the House John W. McCormack. Dwyer said he later dropped a big case that had been referred to him by Harney after talking William Herblls of Boston (old Elizabeth was expected to spend the 10th anniversary of her ^ming queen quietly with her family. H was a day of leave-taking for the monarch and her husband, Prince Philip, who leaves by plane tonight for a two-month tour of Latin America. Will Leave U.N. Post NEW YORK, t* — Andrew M. Cordier, undersecretary of the United Nations who has been associated with it since its formative days, wiil leave his post at the end of the present session to join the staff of Columbia University. the matter over with Asst. Atty. Gen. Joseph Elcock. The Monday indictments are in addition to four earlier ones that ended in conviction of Harney and three others. The indictment chargrii that only $18,000 was paid for 14 acres of land near Lowell, Mass., out of which a two-acre plot was sold to the state for $120,000 in March 1959. Among those indicted Mdnday was the associate state public works commissioner, Fred B. Dole pf Shelburne, first appointed in 1963. Too Many Vitamins as Bad as Too Few' EAST LANSING (B — Now it'sing sold could result in danger- 0 many vitamins. Dr. Dorothy A. Arata, a nutrition researcher at Michigan State University, reports that many Americans may be getting an oversupply of what many once thought you couldn't get too much ous excesses for many people." Exeessive amounts of vitamins A and D^ which aie fat Mhibim. are known to be harniM, she in a reasonably balaneed diet. . The associate profewtor of foods and nutrition saM: 'For the ordinary person with a varied diet that regularly includes animal products, grain foods, green vegetables and fruits, [tin supplements and special fotxls are, at best, a waste ' money. ‘ ‘The great qualities of vitamin-enriched foods on the market,” she added, "combined with the many ‘supervitamln’ pills now be- sald. The B are water noluble, have been thought hnimleas. she said, with mirpluses being eliminated from But she has questioned the Idea. Preliminary results of research with white rats have shown that at least one B vitamin — niac does remain in the body. When combined with a greater Intake of fat than nbrmal, it causes'fat deposits in the liver and other undesirable side effects, she said. She also is studying the effects of overdoses of another B vitamin —thiamin. ^ Faddlts promote the sale of large doses of vitamins on the premise that if a little bit is good, even more is even better. Dr. Arata said. They are doing more harm than good, she added. allow the dty to undortsdn of toast dght malar projects. TO DtOUlDE PAVOfO The projects |)ro|weed for the 1$9MS fiscal year would include the paving of East Maple from Adams to CooUdge, the 14-Mlle Road paving fltm Greenfield to Southfield, and the Oakland Ave-^ right-^way acquIeUton from to Hunter Boule- vard. Mirfacing program, a dewatowa program, the Oaklaad At right-of-way arqulsltlea, eoastnirthm of the Maasr •r R^ Gare noted that three items which have been discussed recently would have an Impact in the capital improvement program if any or all of them are Ran Cranbrook Preti for 13 Years; Service Thursday Afternoon George E. Migrants, superinten-ent of the Cranbrook Press m Bloomfield HUIs, died yesterday at Pontiac General Hospital following a long illness. Mr. MigranU, 61, of STTS Dvorak :., Independence Township, has headed the operation, jestabllsbed by the Cranbrook Foundation to do all its printing, for 13 years. He began hi* career in printing at the age of 16 as an apprentice cempesiter wtth thS FraakHn Press In Jackson. He later joined Demay’s Printing Co., in Jackson, where he learned to operate a Linotype ma This was followed by positions at the Eton Rapids Journal, the Allen Printing Co., in Lansing and the American Bindery Co., in Do- In 1938, he reportfd to the Cran-rook Press to help out for a week as a linotype operatOf, a Job he held for 10 years before being named superintendent. ♦ w * Surviving are his wife Margaret; two daughters, Mrs. Gloria Broken-shire of Qmimerce Township and Mrs. Joellyn Gackstetter of Tawas Qty; three sons, George Jr., of Boston, Daniel and Richard, both at home; a sister, and nine grandchildren. Service will be 1 p.m. Hairsday at the Coats Funeral Honw, Drayton Plains, with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Chevrolet Executive, T. C. Naquin, Dies Thaddeus C. Naquin, manager of the dealer development department of Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors, died yesterday at Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit. 7{aquin, 62, of 3755 Bnxtkside Drive. Bloomfield Hills, had been ill for several months. He had been with the Chevrolet Division for 34 years. He was a member of St. Huge of the mils Catholic Church ami the Forest Lake Country Club. Surviving are his wife WlUye D.; a son, Thomas C. of Detroit! a sister, and three grandchildren. A Requiem Mass will be sold Thursday at Kentwood, La., with burial theve. Arrangements were made by the Bell C2iapel of the William R Hamilton Co. e method of financing the CBD programing has not been mined, but if the program proceeds and the city does participate in the cost, it could involve a rather sizable sum,” Gare said. The cMI defense plan for a municipal employes fallout shelter has been cstlnuted to cost between $50,000 and $60,000. The cost of the golf course could amount to $150,000, according to Gare. I a a a Gore asked that the commisskm make a decision on these three Items withlQ the next three months in order to dstsrmine whether they will be considered In the 1962-63 budget. Vofe to Proceed on Sewer Job in Waterford The Waterford Township Board voted Monday evening to proceed wtth the Edgefield . 8ewor District project when no objections were voiced during a bearing of Intent on the matter. Total estimated cost of the project was set at $4,834 with the unit cost for the eight residenU of the district set at |m.25. nseeHug ef the board. In other activity at the meeting the 'Township Board discossed methods of final acceptance of the Pontiac Mall sewer lines as proposed by the township engineers and resdved the plan. The developers of the Mall who were present at the meeting agreed to withhold sufficient funds from the contractor pending final acceptance of the project which Is now in use. Extension of this Pontiac sewer system will be maintained by Waterford Township. Plan Day-Care Center at Home for the Aged LIVONU, Mich. (AP)-A new home for the aged under construction here will have a daycare center for elderly persons, ^ter Elvira, assistant administrator of St. Mary's Hom«4or Jhe Aging, said elderiy persons will be able, to stop in tor the day, have a warm meal, recroatkxi. therapy and companloflshtp. County Gets Huge Airport Plan (Continued From Page One) provide space for four runways with lengths ranging from 10,000 to 14,000 feet. The longest would be adequate to handle the largest Jet liners in service. OPTIONS SECURED The existing small field, known as Allen Airport, will .form the nucleus for construction, along with another 300 adjacent aerfes. As additional land is needed to further develop the airport the county will seek to buy it at the now established value, or. if that fails, through condemnation. The committee has agreed to turn over the optloas at the paid price to the couaty it the board of supervisors agrees to por- Options to buy the total acres comprising the nucleus have been secured by a special committee of private promoters, known as the Industrial Aviation Committee, cooperating with the county officials concerned.t> This committee, headed by Royal Oak Industrialist and avi- However, no committment haa been made to the committee, Hamlin assured. pirked up the options through a Birmingham realtor. The necessary steps were taken vithout ever divulging their purpose. _Thi8 was done to prevent land prices fnxn soaring and to establish the value of adjacent land. Tl^ price on four parcels totaling 300 acres averaged out at $600 an acre. The agreed price on bridge WniCn mi m-it. .i.c pir*..; spanned a small ktilanl on his Ihe existing 140-acre airport with farm — at ,$40(, buildings was $163,000. "It was to the best inteiests of the public to procee<] (through an intermediary) without diacloaing the intended use of the land," Hamlin said. foretells 939,640 passengers^depart-ing annually fixm here by 1970 as compared with 2.7 mllli(xi leaving from Detroit-Metropolitan. On this basil, the repwt indicates that a $25-million-i^U8 facility win be needed In the county within the next 10 years. As the pulation continues to swell It is conceivable that the airport will have to be Increased to a $40-million operation eventually, Hamlin saidf' ^__________ “It the project becomes top large tor the county to handle ahme, It could possibly become BEGAN 5 YEARS AGO He began laying the groundwork for t^ hew airport flvi! years ago, consulting first with the CAB as to feasibility, of proceeding. to pNject%thi» fatare aeed of a seeoad majir airport la Ike expected populatioa trends, the fltin reeemmended Oaklaad Coaaty as a prinM lol*tioa. The La n Report tee headed by Rowston, support of the Ways and Means Committee. P P Ways and Means Chairman David Levinson assured the board that the necessary funds to proceed now are available in the county reserve. P P Part of these funds had been sought by the county Road Commission for bridge construction this year. The Landrum-Brown report jus-tifiea the continued existence of Pontiac Municipal Aiiport as a secondary airfield handling freight and short flights as it does no(y. PREVENTS INCREASE Location of Poiitiac- Municipal in and highways, prevents bicrearing its size.to accommodate a lot of air traffic and Jet aircraft, both Hamlin and . Mayor Rowston Hamlin polated Pat that the new sprawHag airport will Mt be coostnicted immedialely. “It Is necessary to proceed now so that the load wUI be avaiUble iThe proposal was presented t year as part of the regular county budget. The 811-iniUloa wi»th of road bnproremeats slated la the county this year wifi not la any way be aftootod by givipig up the $175,060 for bridges, said Thateh- agreed to wifiidraw its request the total airport. Of the sum sought by the commission $128,000 was intended to replace a bridge over flte Clinton River in Avon Townahip and straighten the approaches at Liv-enx^ and Avon roada-. CAN WAIT A YEAR "This and other, smaller brldgea can wait until next year," said Road Com'misiloner-Hibmd Thatcher. But he assured that the commission will seek appropriation of the Wire amount next Robbins was approached by Mayor Rowston in October regarding picking up the land options, with the understanding that any supportors would not be re-imburaed without the consent of the board of superviaora. dr ★ Robbins said he was immediately sold on the idea, certain that the airport was in the best inter,, ests of the community. ★ ★ ^ He formed a seven-member committee, the others being Merritt Hill, Tord Motor Oo. vice president in charge of the Tractora and Implements Division in Arming-ham; Peter J. Monaghan, of Monaghan, Monaghon A Crawmer law firm in Detndt; Corodius Ray HI, goieral manager of Ray Industries in Oxford; Milton K. Smith, president of Milsmith Industries, Ipc., Madison Heights; William A. Ternes,. ixvsident of TOntes Steel Co., Roseville; and John Wall, president of Permanent,M 1 takes an uncommon man to farm t^ese days In the opinion of a Midwestern farm editor. * * a Rod Turnbull, farm editor of the Kansas Oty Star, spoke here recently listing capital, skill and modern-day farmer. In tact, It takes the imeom- ating records of the 240 farmers in the Northeast Kansas Farm Management Association, Turnbull said the top , 60 farmers in group have bwn making as much the last few yenn as In the boom-time war period. But the lower 60, he said, are going in the hole every year. PART OF EXPANSION - Above is an architect’s rendering of the new branch office of First Pedreal Savings of Detroit at Farmington and Slocum Roads, Farmington. Construction Is scheduled to- start early this year and to be completed before the end of the year. The building is part of First Federal's multimillion-dollar expansion program. New Offices Planned in Oakland First Federal to Open 2 Branches Two new branch offices, both in Oakland County, will be finished and opened this year by First Fedend Savings of Detroit. Announcing these major projects In the firm’s 1962 expansion program, Hans Gehrke Jr., First Federal president, said the new branch at Maple and Cranbrook roads, Bloomfield Township, would be opened in April. The other Oakl^ county branch, at Farmington and Hlo- the end of INI. These wUI be No. 14 and 15 in First Federal’s branch setup in the three-county area of Wayne, Oakland and Macomb. The manager of the flrm’i Bloomfield branch wlU be. Paul UNUSUAL FEATURES There will be many unusual fea- tures in the Bloomfield building, according to a spokesman lor Aloys Frank Herman and Howard Thos. Simons, the architects, who described the nearly completed Structure as “a true bit of Geor-gian-American architecture." The exterior, of lace brick with stone trim. Is characteristic of the sturdy, yet refined, detail that prevailed In 18th century Colonial Amicrica. OsjrtertancUng "fiar ctaNarf Tiiaft (Msmobile’s Dynamic 881 Its famous Rocket V-8 with new high-comprenion Fire-Swirl combustion chamber squeezes extra “go” out of every gallon! Add smart looks, smooth ride, stylish interiors ... and it’s no wonder the Dynamic 88 is the outstanding buy in its class! gxtta" about owidni a ai.aBn/taBiL.E -SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED OLOSMORILE QUALITY DEALER - JEROME MOTOR SALES CO., 280 S. Saginaw St., Pontiac, Mich. - tune in tv at its USTI OLDSMOBREjMINOS you the OARiY MOORE SHOW, TUESDAY NIOHn, CEITV! - Growing Cattle Feed on Trays in Barn * NEW YORK (P — Cow pasturea of the future may grow on steel Instead of soil, according to "Steel Facts," publication of the American Irion and Steel Institute. The soil less agriculture is achieved by using hydroponics, a meth of using water, nutrient chemicals, proper light, tempera- ire and humidity. A farmer in Ohio is growing supplemental feed for his cattle on steel trays stacked in a steel building. He harvests part of his. crop each day—it grows about an inch daily. Lassiter's Daughter Is Granted Divorce Circuit Judge Clark J. Adams yesterday granted an uncontested divorce to Mrs. Zonyia Lassiter Stankov, 20, daughter of Mrs. Nelle Lassiter of Beverly Hills. Mrs. Stankov ch^ed her husband Thomas with not supporting her and their IH-year^ld son Steven. Mrs. Lassiter once was charged with-her husband’s 1959 murder but charges were later dismissed. Percy from KvomoIUi* WI M»ry A. from riioodoro -. ________ MHdrod A. from Junes P. Hutdon Huinoh C. from Jock IfeOowao Beverly M. from Rottnold R. RIppbei Ellsoboth J. from Donold C. HoCch ---- P. from Borboro B. Sellort Windows, dormers, cornices and cupola are white pine, the roof covered with clay shingle tile. This type of roofing was used extena-Ively in the restoration anc building o( Colonial Williamsburg in Virginia. ★ ★ * Restorations there called wood shingles of the type used by early Americans on their b and other buildings. When the fire hazard was considered, the Williamsburg restoration interests develot>ed a clay tile shingle that would look like the original shakes which were used on most colonial buildings. A ★ * The Williamsburg-type clay tile shingles are now being plac^ the new First Federal branch In Bloomfield. Fsetary Repfoseiitatlve Hera WEDNESDAY—2 to StSOp.m REMINGTON Elactric Shavar RECONDITIONED People Tell Us '^SIAAMS Is the Busiest Store in Town*' . . . Do YOU'! Know Why? Bdcousd SIMMS IS ALWAYS GIVING BIGGEST DISCOUNTS ,.. wed that'i a loci - day in and day out you’ll find more diicounted ilemi here ol Simms by accident thoif.-you do in most stor.es on purpose ... lor lurther proof, just check the items listed below. On Sole tomorrow, Wednesday from 9 o.m. to 6 p.m.___________________ , WEDNESDAY ONLY DISCOUNT BONUS Heavy ‘MIRRO’ ALUMIHUM Baking Wares I'ulues to $1.29 — each 67 Choice of heavy gouge 'Reody Mix Pons' in 3 osiorled IS plus a standard loaf pan. Styles os shown. MIRRO iKlro years of service. 2nd Floor ’ WEDNESDAY ONLY DISCOUNT BONUS Tubular St««l Hand!*—Cuthion 16-oz. Claw Hammer Regular $ 1.69 Volue - styled os shown, full pound weight, steel handle with cushion grip. Limit 2 per person. T-2nd floor WEDNESDAY ONLY DISCOUNT BONUS 1-Inch Tubular STEEL Frame Step Stools At Shown—In 2 Stylos 99 3 One style os shown, other style has solid bock ... seat height is 24 inches off ground, seat is * 17x17 inches. Steps hove rubber platforms, fold into iltbir when not in use. —2nd Floor WEDNESDAY ONLY DISCOUNT BONUS Pure GUM TURPENTINE Reg. $1.69 GALLON For thinning points, cleaning brushes, woodwork, furniture,, etc. Full gollon. limit 2 per person. -2nd Floor WEDNESDAY ONLY DISCOUNT BONUS Door Closer^ 147 For aluminum or wood storm doors —easy to install yourself. Mokes storm doors slom proof. Limit 7 per person. -2nd Floor ' I t ^ ■ HHpi Men Him- ssasrairsK jas'KSrrJt'as mmt eitHtaii leialti Of tamHi leMHm UNHcHb winvri «6n iniertt Tnmc Is mM eHy li ir«| mm. MmpI Ne Sebilitmi. W N. Saglisaw St. —Mala riooy FOUR ^JAO 3WW THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 6, 1962 Dutch, Indonesia Hit Neutral U.S. America Fails to Pacify Nothoriands, Asians in Air Stopover Dispute WASHINGTON (UPH - The United State* wai caught squarely In the middle of an international dispute today, with predictable results. Both contestants were taking it out on Washington. Ever since President Sukarno of Indonesia began talking earlier this winter of “liberating” Dutch-controlled W'est New Guinea, the United SUtes has tried to play a neutral and helpful role. The squabble Involved a NATO ally at a time when this eountry was trying to bnlM new trade relations wTlh Karope, and an I m p a r i a a t rrpreaentatlve of Aalaa aatlonaliam wMeh, In the cold war struggle with ttn- Bus-stuMi. the United Mtatra also was trying to befriend. Last week the Diitch-lndonesian quarrel look a sudden turn whli li was impossible for I’.S. dijdomac.v to duck. The Japanese government denied the Netherlands air stopover righto in Tokyo for planes ferrying Dutch troop replacements to West New Guinea. On Friday the Netherlands informed Washington that a KLM chartered plane carrying 110 aol-dlen to New Guinea—out of uniform and without their weapons— was making the trip across American continent with stopovers at Anchorage. Alaska, and Honolulu. Under the 1944 Chicago Air Convention, the Netherlands ady and the Senate Foreign lU-lations Coniniitiee. His meeting with Kennedy was reporttxl by the White House to have covered the secessionist Ka-inga.JProvince and the Congo's rawflRc' ills: White ' House Press Secretary Pierre Salinger declined to say whether any agreement had been reached on further U.S. aid. But reports were that the United States will announce in about a week an Increase In financial help, to be channeled through the United Nations. Gore added that, the 38-year-old premier had given the other senators “the impression of firmness, ability and courage. ” Sen. Frank Lausche, D-Ohlo. who Has criticized U.N. military operations in the Congo on behalf of Adoula's central government, said Adoula “impressed me very highly in the remarks he made today. I am presently of the opinion that the word spread about his orientation toward Moscow is definitely untrue" implementing" the agreement u ADOULA f^NFIDENT During a closed-door tea with the Foreign Relations Committee, Adoula was quoted by the vice chairman. Sen. Albert Gore, Tcnn., ns expressing confidence that “unity, peace and security” are coming to the strilo-torn Con- "Preiriler Adoula thought military the Unlit-d Nations can be withdrawn when law and order are firmly established Intthe Congo, but that •‘oonomic assistance will be needed for a longer term,". Gore said. der which Katangese leader Molsc Tshombe promised to bring his mineral rich province under Jurisdiction of the central government. Salinger said Kennedy and Adou-■ on “the desirability of Kennedy, AdoUla and their aides met for an hour and 15 minutes after the President had been host to the premier at a stag luncheon that included Vice President Johnson, Secretary of State Dean Rusk and about 40 others. Adoula was entertained Monday night at the home of Asst. Secretary of State G. Mennen Wliliama and Mrs. Williams. He spent the night at the President's guest house. SiniNG DUCK? You can bo suod for damate claims dua to aceidants that occur around your homo. A cloaning woman can fall ovor a chair, a noigh-bor or dolivary man can stumbi* on a toy, your dog might bit* a child. Th*s* and a hundred mor* can spoil LAWSUIT. B*st solution is a litti* low cost Insurance. CALL US! HEMPSTEAD ml fm mi 'wi s DOUBLE HOLDEN i 1 TRADING STAMPS# l — This is the latest accessory for a fallout ■belta*. By pedaling the cycle UMennittently, a storage battery is kept charged |o create an independent source of power tar light and other needs. Patty Sullivan demonstrates it in New ifoik. I s WEDNESDAY t Thrifty PHARMACISTS Charge LESS for Filling PRESCRIPTIONS! Drug Discovered to Help Control Top Eye Disease NE?P VORK (UPl) - A 30^ year-old eye specialist reported Monday that a drug haa been found which apparently controls a virus Infecton which is the nna-Jor corneal disease leading to loss of vision in this country. Dr. Herbert E. Kaufman of the University of Florida reported at a symposium on the results of research at the MassachusetU Eye and Bar Infirmary, Boston. He said that^ patients afflicted with the vinis known as herpes keratitis — were Ifested with the drug, and all were within a The dn« <5-lota-2 deoxyuradliit or IDU) toiginally was developed to slow the progress of leukemia. Major Jones Joins Air Reserve Unit Major Ernest C. Jones. 3080 Grom St., -has Joined the Pontiac Air Reserve squadron. U was announced today by LI. Ool. John L. Underwood, commander. TURNTABLE DINING — La Ronde, Honolulu's newest restaurant, perches atop the 23rd floor of the Ala Moana building, the city's newest and tallest office building. The dining room, seating 162 persons, makes one complete revolution every hour, providing diners with a panoramic vista. County Poor Firm Goes Ultramodern County Judge A. J. Joily says, Most residents presumably would draw enough from slate and federal pensions to pay their way. The county would help those over who could not pay the full amount. Proposed rents are $100 monthly for room and board in double roonu; $125 in single rooms; $10 dally in Ihe ■chronic hospital section and $125 monthly In the special service wing. ud^ Jolly f whlc^FYs to be finished early in 1963, will provide a psycholo^cai lift because residents will live in an atmosphere of independence and not as. wards of an institution. The human heart pumps enough lood in a single hour to equal about three times the body's vraight, accoriling to medical smdies. Reduce Request on Debt Limit Major Jones, who complete* 20 years of military service in May, flew eight bomber mlsslonB during World War II in the Pacific thea ler. He was previously assigned to the 9591 Air Reserve squadron Fort Harrison. Ind. He moved to Pontiac recently and is treasurer and director ol the Nu Era Corp. located in Rochester. He is married and has one child. Margaret Lucinda, 12. Quick, Prtliminary OK Given JFK AppiKil for Immediate $2 Billion WASHINGTON (AP) — Preri-dent Kennedy's admlistratlon cut request for a $R>-billlon Increase In the nstlonal debt llmU to ah Immediate $2 billion Monday and got quick preliminary approval from the House Way* and Means Committee. But Secretary of the Treaaury Douglas Dillon told the group he be beck before June 30 seeking the other $8J>illion limit In the ceiling. The tS-bllUoa InerMse, eltoo-Mve until Jane M, would raise Kennedy had asked lor a $10-Uion increase to take care pf Treasury needs through the fiscal year starting next July L There were indications Congress might at such an increase in a single step, and the administration decided to divide its request In two, keying the first one to the actual present condition of the Treasury. Dillon told the committee in written testimony, “a $300-billion limitation will afford us a margin of only $800 million in June and $2.1 billion in March, both of which margins are considerably below the $3-bilik>n' Sgure whjch is desirable and' in accord with past practice." Folks, here’s my pride and joy .10^ OLD STYLE WBISKET 1.DIII9 *4“ MORE MORE MORE Plus ALL The Protection Of A BANK lncr«as«d Inforest Rate now makes it more important than ever where you put your hard-earned dollars. Why settle for less than BANK PROTECTION? Today there ore more reasons than ever to Bonk at Community. OPEH YOUR ACCOUNT TODAY. National I Bank it Intliirar 13 OFFICE^ N. P»i»y . W. Huron . . . nsoso norsor ... Wodod Loko ... MSFord ... Union Ibko... Wotorford.., Woodumrd ,.. Loko Orion ... Remoe ... County Contor .Slodmfiold HilU. ■'Y 1' ^ ' ' ■■ ' , "r \ - " 'T TlIK'im nAC ]»UKS^s/ TlrKSI)A^ , I’jbjUJAHV (i. IJKJ2 Planning to invest? Howto choose a stock broker One* you plan to invert iuL/unerican busineei. the next etep ia to chooae a stock broker. An important atep? Very iiqportant. bmuae you will diacuas your flnancea with him. M it Mya to be careful—u in aelecting a doctor or lawyer. One good way to make a aeiection is to telephone or go into the office ^ a Member Firm of the New York Stock Exchange. It'a convenient, of course, to visit your nearest broker. (You might want to visit several firms, to make a compariMn.) You can get the advice of a trusted friend. Your lawyer or banker might recommend a broker to you. Member Firms are listed ia the Yellow Pages of the tdephone directory. Look in the Stock Broker section under “New York Stock Exchange." Then sit down with a Partner or Registered Representative and get acquainted. He can’t guarantee hia judgment, of course, but you can be assured that he has met the Exchange’s requirements for knowledge of the securities business. ^ Detcmdae with his hdp how much you can invMt after providing fpr bills and emergencies. Then, explore your goals. If you hope for added income during the year, investigate the records of stocks which have paid dividends with consistency. If you seek increased investment value through the.^j|mi^ou might want to consider companies which appear'to'li^ra.growth possibilities. Talk about bonds if ^rty of inertne and principal is your aim. ■ Reawmber that secaritlcs go down in price just as they go up; that companies may not continue to pay dividends or interest. Ask the Registered Representative about the great companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange. Then it’s up to you. Our free booklet, ’’dividends over the yeaiu,’’ records some 600 stocks that have paid a cuh dividend every year for 26 years or more. It explains the Monthly Investment Plan, which lets you invest with as little as $40 every three months. To get your copy, just mail the coupon. Own four $hmro of Amerkon buoineu Members New\brk Stock Exchange urr. Mail to a Mombor Firm of tba New York lo tbo Now York Stock Earhanf*, Dipt. 2-A. P.O. Boi 1070, Now York 1, N. Y. PlaaM trad mo, frao, "mviimcnds ovsb the tbjuw, a baik fuido Dr. Stanley W. Block Optometrist 3H3 EKsabaHi Loke Rd. Corner of Coss Loke'Rd. Evenings by Appointment Phone FE 2-2362 Clotod Wod. Rules on the Hiring of State Teachers LANSING (API - Local schoo boards operating a community coL lege department may hire nont'er tified teachers'(or the departmen without endangering their slate aid, Atty. On. Frank J. Kelley said Monday. 0 0 0 The legislature, Kelley said, lim-ildd the ban against noncertified teachers to those instructing kindergarten through the 12lh grades KeJIey said in an opinion asked by Dr. Lynn M. Bartlett, state superintendent of public Instruc-“Dn. Hlmllsrly, the Nlate law sttlbor- OUR THANKH — Probationary patrolman John Karman tiert) gels the heartfelt ^hanks of Mrs. Marjorie Jordan. ,22. and her misband Frank, in New York's Flushing Hospital Monday. Karman's moulh-to-moulh l>renthing re- ar Ph.M« slorwl signs of life to Mrs. Jord^ after a passing doctor could find ho such signs. The .Jordans . wen* thrown from a parked cab which was struck Irom behind by another car. Voice of the People • Continued from Page Gi When I see my friends, who hold high political offices, travel miles to attend $100 a plate dinners. and see their wives attend teas in honor of political grand(*es, in order to insure their own re-elc<-tion to office, it makes mo sick. Why don’t the Republicans stop insulting and criticizing our President aitd promote the good of our country? A Waterford Taxpayer Two Hockey Fans Tell Need for Rink I write in regard to the article From the I*ress Box," on thg need (or an artificial rink in Pontiac. It was stated that from 1937 through 1962 Pontiac has depended on natural ice. A city the size of Pontiac could afford to have an artificial rink (or open skating as well as hockey. Hockey is a growing sport. There ire lots of boys that participate tnd I am sure that with the barest 'ssential of an artificial rink tHerc would be a great increase. You never know from one day to the next when they will be able to play a game, depending on ‘ weather. Let's get . the ball rolling for arena. A Rockey Fan I commend Bruno Kearns for his article on the need (or an artificial Hockey is a growing ipoit and will continue if a placi* is provided. In Canadian towns 1.300 to 6000 people, they have an arc*na for their young people. It’s cheaper to build an arena than to build additions on the jails (or the delinquents. For the past four years I. with the help of fathers in the neighborhood. have provided a rink on the lake with boards and lights. And all the kids in this subdivision have turned into fine youngsters. We receive our thanks from seeing the kids have good clean fun. A lliickcy Cztach Criticizes Editorial on March of Dimes Why did The Pontiac Press make an editorial rase of the March of Dimes separate fund drive? It unnecessary . , , and unnecessarily derogatory. Who Is the "runllac An*a” 'that "stadles the budgets and vorth” of the 60 agencies In the Ignited Fund? What belter way Is there for Ihe 1‘ontiar area fo make such a study than asking people to give lo Individual agenci<*s so that they ran decide whether lo/1i1ve or wllh-hold from each one? Hooray for the Mturch ol Dimw. It stands on Its own feet. George Izienberger 410 E. Tenny.son St. Two United States Mail bqats make daily deliveries over a 65-mile route on Lake Winnipesaukee in New Hampshire. Autolite Studies Plan to Retrain Workers TOLEIX), Ohio (API - A plan I establish a $100,000 fund to retrain workers whase jobs are be-cllminal(*d is under study of the Electric Autolite Co. The company announced recently that is was closing its Toledo ^anl, eliminating some 900 jobs. The plant manufactures starling motors and grncrnlors. Details of Ihe retraining pn>-gram have not been nnnpleled, said Robert II. Davies. Autolite pn‘sldent. However, he added, Ihe plan will go into effect "after Ihe completion of current production schedules,’" which is expected to lake between two and three months. In addition, Autolite plims to establish an employment service to help displaced workers find jobs in the Toledo area, Davies I sald.^f Incense Causes Blaze KUALA LUMPUR, Malaya (AP) —Chinese New Year joss slicks burning in a temple are believed |o have caused a fire which raged through a wooden squatter hut here Monday, leaving more than lOO persons homeless. There casualties. college dlBliicts requires only the college ndmlnlslralor to have or be eligible for a leacher’s ceiH-fleate. However, Kelley added, trustees of community (Alleges organized under Itw district plan must hire only teachers who meet standaids by the Slate Board of Education noTonIy| The 21st verse of the seventh is self-supporting but also usually chapter of Ezra in the Bible can-returns an annual profit as well. > tains every letter of the alphabet. ADVSaTMEMKNT CATHOLIGS GET L0W(M)ST HOSPITAL PLAN Catholic men and women now I as you wish—for hospital bllU, from our 80-year-ola non-profit Soclety-the CathoUc Knlghu of Oeorge. Here’s an exttmple: plaiw to bring your present tn- Insuranoe. Payments of |100 • ItiUt n U’cek sn> sisn .'svalluhl Insured at additional c You a .surance up to date or get complete protection. With hoepital eoets up |375'r since IMO tnerr Is a good chance you need more Ihsurance Send (or complete information Including details on our excellent .life Insurance plans. There is no paid in ^dltlon to other!obligation -- so mall the coupon This (hx*8 not grant the board I authority to. certificate community.! college teachers, he said. • Local Con-Con Men Plan Saturday Quiz Two of Oakland County’s consti- i tutional convention delegates will J hold "dutch treat" breakfasts Sat- s urday lo explain the .progress of i* Insurance. You spend the money today FREE! NO OBLIGATION CATHOLIC KNIGHTS OF ST. GEORGE‘S I 106 Penobteof Building Detroit 26. Michigan, WO 2-9793 Please rush tree (acts on insurance plan (or Catholics Name........................................Age. Address.......................................... City . . , .........County........State! , Phone .....Occupation.......... Delttgatc Rli hiird Van Du-■rn, R Bingham Farms, will be at IIm* Howard Johnson’s restaurant, Northweslera Highway and IlhMtIe Rtiad, al • a.in. \ At fhe Howard Johnson’s res-' J laurant at 13-Mile Road and Wood-1 • ward Avenue in Royal Oak. Dele J gale Arthur G. Elliott Jr., R-Pleas- e ant Ridge, will appear al the same * ' Aeeeeee-eeeee NEWSPAPERS WANTED HIGHEST PRICES PAID WE PICK CP CHURCHES and SCHOOLS FE 3-0309 Approve Smith as Judge WASHINGTON (AP) - The ale confirmed by volc*e vote* Monday President Kennedy’s nomination of Talbot Smith lo be U.l judge for the Eastern District of Michigan. NEW BEAUTY, QUALITY, VERSATILITY...BUDGET PRICED! OPEN FRIDAY TIL 9 P. M. 7-piece ComkJjii YOUTH ROOM GROUPS Shop yMr noorosf lor your WEONESDAY SUflPRISE! big group of tuft spreads . . . solids, "stripes, hobnails, overloys! twin or »ui. Find evei’y favorite style in Penney’s great assortment, every one specially priced! Find all cotton, rayon and cotton, in the most fashionable colors! Find stylish details like fringe, finish. Machine washable in lukewarm water—no iron! PwiitiRy’t HC^WNfOWN 0|N»ii WwdiMidwy yoii’ll^livo better, yeu*H tawf j mm ^7" ' THK PONTIAC PBKSS. Tt^ESDAY, FK William L. Belaney s u intiinp hand of bridge rvokes suspitious smiles from his companions Tfrom Icfl) Wqfne L Fyke, Spokane yUla- Mrs. Helaney, (.hipp^a Road; and Mrs. Fyke,'us the foursome PonlUe Prr«t PbiKto feathers for a practice session 'in anticipation of Friday's Fontinc City .Fanhellenic benefit (wd party in Fir.st Federal Savings and Loan .Association of Oakland's building. Hostess Must Take' Smoking Q; How can one tactfully curb dinner table imoklnR? I am RottinK tired of havInR the time and effort that goes Into cooklnR a party dinner spoiled , because of the rudeness of our guests. Neither my husband nor 1 smoke but do not object to smoking, except at the dinner table. it I purposely lepve ash trays off the table, these friends go and get them without even asking if smoking Is • permitted. I tvive no objection to cigarettes’ at the end of the meal but these people, whose bad munn(l and 1 would like to dotuile one of the pews as a memorial to my piirettts. Will you please tell me how W Juvenile delinquency is the topic Mrs. Fern Parent, head visiting teacher tor the board of education, will discuss at the February meeting of I>ongfel-low ftchodl's PTA Thursday. Following the gathering in the school auditorium at 2 p.m., home, room mothers will attend to the refreshments. WIUMIN In celebration of Founder's day and Brotherhood Week, Wilson School’s sixth graders will presfent a'program depict, ing the meaning of brotherhood. Three selections will be given at the PTA meeting Thursday by the Wilson choir, directed by Richard Johnson. Sam Jones, executive director of Pontiac Area Urban League, will be guest speaker for the 7:30 p.m. gathering. Among past presidents of the PTA to attend will be Mrs. Burtis px)we, Mrs. John Mavis, Mrs. D. E. Hopkins itad Mrs. James Hartsock. all of whom will receive corsages. Twelve cakes representing 12 months of the year and, baked by executive board members, \yill highlight the refreshment display. ALCOTT Bill Hopkins, chief naturalist for the Huron-Olnton Metropolitan Authority, will be guest speaker at Alcott Elementary l^hool ’Thursday. Students , will hear lectures concerning birds, forests, winter wildlife and pond life'at 8:15 a.m. and at 2:30 p.m. Loreiia Adams, school principal, arrang^ for the appointment. MoOONNEU, . In keeping with the year’s theme, ^’Awake and Grow with PTA ”, Margaret Scott will speak on "'The Audio-Visual Role” in classroom teaching at McCOnnell School's regular PTA meeting Thursday. Machines and" equlpfhent us<>d in teaching children will tx' dlspluyed at the 2:15 gathering. A playr(x)m is |)rovid«l for small children. WII.I.IK Mrs. Willis Schnekenburger will preside at the regular meeting of the Willis School PTA group 7:.30 Thursday evening in the multipurpose room. Following presentations by the ninth grade choir from James Madison Junior High .S<-hool, under direction of Dayid Stimac, Arden Sears will sing several selection.s. Mrs. Or\'ille Gauthier, hepd librarian of Pontiac Schools, will explain the library’s vari-OU.S functions and will show development of social studies unit on South America. Introduction of the student librarians and explanation of their work will be given by Mrs. l.awrence Place, tear-h-er librarian. They are Yu-vonne Pruett, Janet Reynolds. Linda Thompson, Sandra Chase, Susan I.imbros, Paul King, Linda Gronsky, Susan Cotcher, Judy Harbin, Sally Trousdale and Virginia Schnekenburger, head librarian. Proceeds from the PTA candy sale set for Wednesday will be used to meet budget expenses. Bu(d Guest to Address Unit at Tea Webster .School’s Parent-Teacher Association has : planned a public international lea for Thursday's 7;.30 p.m. meeting in the sc'hool gymnasium. Bud Guest, Detroit radio personality, will be the group's guest speaker At the meeting's close PTA moll\(‘rs will serve (txddes made from recipes of. their native countries. Serving on the baking committee are Mrs. Juho Hsu. Mrs, Ross Ellioit, Mrs, John Davidson. Mrs. Norval Gee, Mrs. Myroslaw Hrushka, Mrs. Alike Andonian. Mrs. Vahrlg Andonian . and Mn. 4 « f k Negoahian. completing the coaainitlee'' list aro Mi-s. Paul Mttchell, Mrs. William MllcheV, Mrs Thomas Nicholas, Nick Pigjalheodore and Mnh Alex cavils. Set Dance Lessons .Square dance les.sons, intermediate fo advance, will be given at Pontiac Townshi|> Hall. Opdyke near Pontiac Road, each ’Thursday rwning from 8 to 10 o’clock. Edwin Farr of Detroit will iastruct the class. 'Wigs' of Wool.. ’ INEA)—Tim wig hat is popular for wintec, in bright crocheted wool yarn. Many women find it Indispensable for days when hair needs doing and there isn’t time to go to Annual Dinner Meeting Feb. 14 Pierce PTO Sets Event The annual dinner meeting for the Waterford Township John D. Pierce School Parent-Teacher Organization will be held 6:30 p.m. Feb. 14. Tickets will be on sale through Friday only, and may be obtainedinthe school’s home rooms by students and parents. ★ ★ ★ Because last year’s PTO dinner meeting was so successful. officers decided to make the affair an annual project, according to Gabe Roth, president. Purpose of this type of meet- ing is "to communicate -fara-lly-style regarding our chlf-dren, our school, our community and maybe even ourselves," Roth said, y , MoreyUkn 1,000 notices have, been mailed to parents of Pierce Junior High School slu-. dents in an effort to stimulate more Interest in school-centered activities. Following the dinner hour, an "education and entertainment” program will be presented. All Interested persons are urged to make reservations by purchasing tickets in advance. Farent-Teacher Organization officials are shown completing plans for the .second annual FTO dinner-meeting 6:30 p.m. Feb. 14 in the John D. Fierce Junior High School gymnasium. From left are.Mrs. Marie Kurtz, co*chairrnan; Mrs. Shirley McCoy, food service director; William Aebersold, school principal; Mrs. Carql Wolverton, teacher f . representative^ and Mrs. Zelda Farme-lee, vice president, y ^ SIXT THE PON/TIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 6. 1962' urging Toward All-Time Honors Veterana Bob Turtey and John Blanchard werr in the group ai the Yankeea opened advanced apring training at a new mlllloiv dollar atadlum in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Monday. They were greeted by 2,000 lana. New York had trained at St. Peteraburg lor 2b MeadMfiwoek OoBatry dab aa-neuaoed yeatej^y that the wla-aer of the IMI aaoatear athlete awaid la MIcUgaa la Detroit •iaarterbaek Jeny Oroao. He will be honored Friday night at the - - , Night Tlg^ pitcher Fred Gladding algned yeaterday. Othera were: three Waahington rookiea, NL ba' king Roberto Gemente of Pitta-burgh, Howie Nunn and another New York Met hurler, tour Phil-lie pitchera, four Oard rookiea and Jim Davenport ol the Glanta. thla weekead la Fraaoe, wID be raa Bader a new title — The World Oameo of the II aehedaled la March deopile All-time great Bob COuay admitted yeaterday be Is giving aome thought to retirement but said he will not decide until after the current season. ‘It's ^tting a lltle tougher to play,” he said. * A a Northern Michigan walloped Alma 74-52, St. Norbert downed Michigan Tech gl-7i Southern Illi-nois blasted Central Michigan 85-52 and Hillsdale nipped Assumption of Ontario 0M7 in basketball Monday. Ga^ Silc scored 25 in Northern debut, Dick Cvengros 20 for Tech and Charles Works M for Hillsdale. Howe Closing on Bathgate Iowa No Match as Ohio State Wins by 89-63 Wolverines Pull Upset by Dumping Wisconsin 81-74 in Big Ten By The Associated Press Irrepressible Ohio State, the nation's top-ranked team, conceivably -could take Its place among collegiate basketball's all-tliae elite. The current band of the aU-canquering Buckeyes is streaking along in devastating fashion with 17 straight victories. No. 17 came Monday night at home—an Impressive 8S4I3 lacing of Iowa in a Big Ten game that gave the Bucks undisputed posseulon of first place. Of course, just a year .ago, Jerry Lucas B Co. were doing the same thing—winning at will. They had put together a tidy string of 32 triumphs in a row. Five of the conquests had been accomplished at the end of the 1960 campaign en route to the national championship. The Bucks captured 27 straight last season and needed only a win over Gncinnati in the NCAA final for a 28-0 undefeated slate and a 33-game skein. But the Bearcats had different ideas and upended Ohio State 70-65 in overtime. Undaunted, coach Fred Taylor’s lads are back in business again, and the way they’re going they’re going to be mighty hard to slop. The Buckeyes have a 7-0 Big Ten record and have seven more games to play—all league games. Ohio SUte’s last regular sea- The Buckeyes built a 41-H bulge over Iowa with 5M minutes left in the half and coasted in. Ohio SUte lad at halftime 53-26 and opened up an 82^ nnargin with 6:80 left. Lucas was high for the winners with 24 points in 27 minutes of action but Iowa's Don Nelson topped afl scorers with 28. MfMfTREAL (AP)-Andy Bathgate of the New York Rangers snapped his slump last week but still lost another point National Hockey League scaring lead to runner-up Gordie Howe of Detroit. * * * Statistics from the league today . show Bathgate with 19 goals and a top total of 44 assists for 63 points. The Ranger ace. scoreleu the previous week, set goal and assisted on three others in New York's four games. Howe, five-time league scoring champion, still pulled to within three points of Bathgate, colicctipg one goal and fohr assists for 60 points. ★ * , * The two young stars of the Chicago BUck Hawks, Bobby Hull and Stan Mlkita, had big weeks and moved into third place, each with 53 points. DeMarco After Money BOSTON (AP)—Former champion Tony DeMarco faces Stefan Redl tonigrt with a new outlook toward boxing—make big money or retire. «P Ph*«W»x DRIVKM OUT — Doug Herncr of Michigan drives out of the pack with a rebound during action against Wisconsin last night. Teammate John Ooslerbaan makes room. Badgers are Jack Brens <54) and Mike O’Melia. The Wolverines staged a big upset. A/loore A4oy M/ss Baltimore Tourney By CHUfK ABAIR Monroe Moore, the Pontiac bowl-‘ who has made a big Jump In the Income bracket in v i weeks, does not expect to take part In the Professional Bowler’ Association Baltimore Open tourney this weekend. ★ * * He would like to drop out of ceedlng mt^s at Akron and Geve-land Ohio but will likely compete n them. The US Bowl laatnictor has been having a bout with a stiff neek. That eomhlned with the grind, presnnre and travel problems of competing In two major events at once prompted his decision on draping out of this Unanimous Ballot Cast for OSU Five By THU AhHOUlATED PRiCHH Unbeaten Ohio Stale has done it again. Once more the weekly Associated Preu poll of a committee of sports writers and sport-casters has cast a unanimous ballot for the Buckeyes. Coach Fred Taylor, used all of his 14 men Saturday as Ohio State ran its winning streak to 16 by thumping Northwestern 97-61. As the poll covered only games through Saturday, Feb. 3, five-game Big Ten winning streak 81-74 and dropped the Badgers IH games bthlnd Ohio SUte as Tom Cole hit for 23 points. Mississippi SUte. ranked ninth in the current AsoocUted Press poll and the only other top teg team In action Monday night, TUlane 70-56 tor iU 17th in 18 outings. Leland Mitchell paced ............... “ glnU. I In other games, Colorado's Big Eight leaders turagd back Oklahoma 5450 for was not. included in the total. After Saturday's game w Minnesota. Ohio State ^ill have only six more to play In the teg- Two-Man Scoring Race straight Jim Davis Iced the ver^ with tour sue-cesofUl free throws in the stretch. Arisona State 'University ran iU PM record to 6-0 and grabbed least a share of the Border Oonfeience crown with a 94-70 decision over New Mexico SUte. Nick Werkman of Seton Hall, the leading scorer with a 33-point average, collecied CHICAGO - iimmy Rayl^f tidiana and Terry Disching^r o hirdue have narrowed theUig lyi all-games basketball attoring race Into a two-man affair. Rayl leads the league with a 27.7 spark Florida to a 9253 win o\4r Davidson stretched its victory string to 12 in handing Richmond 55-52 Southern donference reversal. Dave Downey’s 28 poinU triggered Illinois to an 8950 Big Ten triumph over Minnesota. Auburn rallied in the second half to trip Georgia Tech 48-39 in a SEC game. Oklahoma Gty outlasted West Texas State 129-106 behind Larry Jones’ 31-point outburst. ular season, including a bl^ date with Wisconsin March 3. Ohio State, upset In overtime in the NCAA final last year by Cinciiv nati for its only loss last year, never has gone all the way to a perfect basketball season. The only change among the top ten teams In the new poll found Oregon State (16-1) moving into the select'■circle and Southern California (12-4) dropping out after IU defeat by UCLA. Next In line after Ohio State came the Kentucky .Wildcats, who added to their record last week by knocking off Georgia Tech. Georgia and Florida. Kentucky Reed Ranked No. for Indoor Tennis average on 416 points in 15 games but Dlschlnger lurks close behind with a 27.2 mark on 464 points in 17 g Jerry Lucas of Ohio State and Don Nelson of Iowa appear to be out of it. They cany i^tical 22.7 averages with Lucas getting 387 points in 17 games and Nelson 364 points in 16 games. -rtie cxiNraasNcs L Pet. PU. NEW YORK (AP) - Whitney Reed of Alameda, Calif., the top-ranked men's singles tennis play-n the country, was seeded 1 in the domestic rankings Monday for the USLTA National Tennis Championships, starting Wednesday here. Chuck McKinley of St. Louis was seeded No. 2; Donald Dell of ! Bethesda, Md., No. 3 and Frank Froehling of Coral Gables, Fla. No. 4. Rod Laver of Australia, th( Wimbledbn champion was top-seeded in the foreign draw and Manuel ^ntana of Spain was ranked second. The draw had been postponed from Friday night to enable the tournament committee to try to obtain the entries of two pavis Cup players from California, Dennis Ralston of Bakersfield and Jon Douglas of Palo Alto. Ralston has just completed a six-months pension imposed by the U.S. Lawn Tennis Association. % «IS 4«| 4M 4M t a .'lu ALL OAISBS W L Ptl. rU. IT’S WARM SOMEWHERE - The New York ' Yankees found sunny skies yesterday when they opened advancMl spring training at their new millk>n-doli&r Fort Lauderdale, Fla., camp. Included Jn the group were, left to right, young prospects Jake Gibbs and Charley Keller, former great Joe DiMagglo and manager Ralph Houk. DiMaggio will aid the hitters. Keller is the'son of ex-Bomber slu^er. NorthmtUrn a a aoo iiii i»a . 1 10 .171 lOTO nos Backtield Coach Quits U-D Job to Return East DETROIT (UPI) - Bob Hicks annouced his resignation yesterday as defensive backfield coach at the University of Detroit. ★ ★ * Hicks submitted his resignation to John Idzik, recently appointed head football coach at Detroit. Idzik had asked Hicks to stay on as an assistant coach. ★ ★ ★ But Hicks said he and his wife wanted to return to Eastern Pennsylvania. They are from the Lancaster, Pa., area. Hicks declined to say what Job he has accepted. idzik succeeded Jiip Miller as head coach of the Titans last month when Miller accepted ' the head coaching poet at Boston College. Hicks has l^n an assistant coach with Detroit for three years. hasn’t lost since it bowed to Southern Cal Dec. 4 In iU second game. Its next game Is with Mississippi on Saturday. Gncinnati held tight to third place, right on Kentucky’s heels, by 'boosting its season record to 17-2 by beating Drake, Houston and North Texas SUte. A A A Kansas State also remained in step, clinging to fourth place on a victory over Nebraska that sent Its record to 15-2. Stole plays Kansas Wednesday and Missouri Saturday in Big Eight action. After the first four, the drder shifted a bit. Southern Cal, which had been fifth a week ago, f e 1 out of the top ten and Duke, winner over South Carolinn and North Carolina, moved up a peg to fifth. Duke’s schedule for the week included a Tuesday game at North Carolina State and a Saturday home date with Virginia. AAA Duquesne also moved up one place to sixth on victories over Villanova and St. Francis, N.Y. The Dukes have a rematch with ViUanova Wednesday at Philadelphia. Bradley hopped two places to seventh with triumphs over Tulsa and St. Louis. North Texas state (Thursday) and Louisville (Saturday) are next in line for Brad* ley. Bowling Green, wira Miami. Ohio, remained in eighth position. It plays Toledo Wednesday and Marshall Saturday. Mississippi State advanced position to ninth by beating Delta State and LSU. They played Tu-lane Monday night and face Tennessee Saturday. The new entry is Oregon Slate, winner of 15 straight after losing to Montana Dec. 2 in their second game. Oregon State swept both ends of a home and home series with Oregon last weekend. Next in line Is a Saturday game at Portland. h) |Mr«nU>«M4: (PSii. niSm « 1. Ohio SWe (41) (1S4) I. Konluckr (lS-1) ...... J. ClncInnUl (I7-J) ...... 4. Kuiu SUU (IM) ............. 5. Duk* (14-3) ................. 7. Bikdlar (14-S) .............. I. BowItnt Oroa tlS-1) .. I. MluUtlppI Ststt (14-1) U. Orofon Stkto (lf-1) Otticri roMlvInf Totu. not nccc------- a ordor wore: Southoin CslUornl*. Watt rirtlnl*. Wlicoiuln. UCLA. VUluioi riehlU ------- ------------- ■ ■ Dnytiti Loyoto of Chlei LouUy I. Ohio SUte i34i lU-O 3. anclnnotl (17-3) ... J. Kentucky <11 llS-1) 4. Ktnut State llS-3) 5. Duke (14-3) ......... Southern Callfomls i T, tJ: 14 Utah and Weat Vlrslols 13 each; II ---- -taU 0. 13; 17, LoyoU (111. John’a (N.Y.) I; ----------- Lojvla (Calif.). Othera^oiorado 8Uto. Teaaa Tech State 3 e I Utah By 1%o AaaooIntaS Froaa EAST Providenc* 13. Lwnoyno 41 - ■ “ M. Upanta N V|r|li^ Mlaaourl 71. Xanana M , Illlnola «. MInneaota Ml Coorndo M. Oklahoma H Nobraaka 17. Oldahoma • Oklahoma City 1». Weat Butler M, WiMah 67 _ Crelshton 7*. Marquette 7L Drake M. Steyana «»*•—' » 17. luetta 7L rntrOm itagrWujM' Texaa Weatem 13 I U. M. New Mexieo State 7 MICHIGAN OO^OB ,SOOaBBOAKD Northern Mlchlsan 7L Al Chicaco Ta. Syr^i Loa Araelaa »t Nay .Detroit at Cincinnati IBlIikBMT'S SCHEDULE ■ at Detrgjj^ MONDAYS BBSULTS I played TODAY'S SCHEDULE v Kanaaa CUy ea. HawaU at San Dleto San^PraneiKo ra. C)evel|nd at BataE^. New York Y* •* Sin FTanclita at CloYoland ^ Moope told The Preu he tvould like to stay off the tour until he is eliminated from the televlaion show ’’Make That Spare” because it. Is getting incrsasingly dltficult to be in bpth. H#* wanU to concentrate on being sparemaster. AAA His tourney commltmftita were to end with the Geveland competition but he would likely sign up more if beaten out in spare duels which occur each Saturday night In New York Gty. of the eoantry' _________ , topplera Ratarday Blgbt oa Ott show la Ray Bkrth. He hoa heal 4in AHdy Regosalea. ABb- BnMdt. HtaH OINord, Al lUivaa, Dirk Hoover and Roa Oaodern al II.-000 rHp sad added 6U.0M flat pot spore to beesme the tod hlgheol mooey wtaoer oa the program at IM,M. Doa Carter woo mjMt, BMolly so two Jock- He Tvon 61.610 in tourney appMU--ancet in Albany, N.Y. and Philadelphia ftidahing 6th and 25th, re-spfwtlvely. AAA Bluth eliminated ”Mo” in head-to-head eomprtition at Albany to the focal star may gH a chance for Martin Named to Denver Job ll>.sos HMII.E — Monroe Moore of Pontiac wears |15.fK)0 smile after defeating' 6th straight opponent for $1,(X)0 and making Jackpot shot on national spare program recently. He won $160 earlier in the day in a pro tourney. Moore does not expect to compete in the Baltimore Open this weekend. Thinclads Taking Sides in Glass Pole Dipte NEW YORK (UPI) - Marine Q>i. John Uelses. the wOrid’s first l^foot pole vaulter, may have catapult^ himself right oiit of championship competition if the International Amateur Athletic Federation finds grounds lo ban m famed fiber glass truck tool. Harold Abrahams, chairman ol the federation’s technical commlt- New Assistant Mentor *»*»«■«• k'"* !>«'«■ 'he n«me for AFL team ■ ’ DENVER. Colo. (UPI)—Detroit Lions’ linebacker and place kicking specialist Jim Martin. 37. was appointed offensive line coach for the Denver Broncos of the American Football League yesterday. AAA Martin’s hiring was announced after a meeting with Jack Faulkner. Denver’s new head coach. He became the second assistant picked by Faulkner. The other was defensive line coach Dale Dodrill. holdover from the staff of ex-coach Frank Fllchock, AAA Martin, a Notre Dame teammate of Broncos’ quarterback Frank Tripucka, has played 12 seasons in the National Football League and was an All America tackle in college. Faulkner said he hoped to hire 1 offensive end coach by Wednesday and to name his defensive backfield coach Friday. Tournament Victory Gives Palmer Boost DUNEDIN, Fla. (AP)-Arnold Palmer has crashed the PGA’s list of top money winners as a result of his victory in the Palm Springs Golf Gassic last weekend. The $5,300 first prize money boosted P’almei'’8 1962 winnings to $7,125 and moved him into fourth place among the Jop 10. Gene Littler increased his lead with his tie for second place in the Palm Springs tourney." The $2,800 check boosted his winnings to $14,050. Phil Rodgrs picked up only $525 at Palm’ Springs to make his $10,225. Tommy Jacobs in third place ha^ won $7,674. Stagg Hospitalized With Knee Ailment arOOCTON, Callf. (AP)—Amos Alonzo Stagg, 99, the grand oid-man of the American sports was reported In satisfactory condition today at Dameron Hospital here. The great football coach, legend in his own lifetime, is in thei hospital because of a kneb ailment. His physician stressed that St^g was ndt in serious condition but he,'pointed out that at his advanced age any ailment could be serious. “We are haring Ihf tested to see lo what extent they are ralapultx,” Abrahams said. If the federation outlaws the fiber glass pole, Uelses will be like et Marine invading n iK'achhead without a landing boat. The German-born track star sound 16 feet, one-quarter inch and 16 feet, three-quarter Inch on successive nights lost weekend-a feat he couldn’ come near matching in previous efforts with the standard metal pole. AAA Meanwhile, thexM) lor and against the use of fiber glass poles are rapidly taking sides. , Don Bragg, who had held the world Indoor record of IM'/i, railed the pliable pole a ”glm-inlck.” ’’The fiber glass pole has roomi pletely changed (l)e science of pole vaulting and should be outlawed or at least listed in a separate cate-gbry,” the 1960 Olympic champion said from his home In nciU'by Penns Grove, N.J. MAY HURT U.fl. Bragg said the United States would lose its traditional world domination of pole vaulting if the pole ‘ received official sanction. 1‘lnrus flober, former chairman of the National AAU's track and field roiiinilllee, railed Uelses mastery of the llher glass pole “progress.’’ “Sure, the fiber glass-pole bends more than the metal pole," Sober said, ’’but the metal pole bends more than (he old bamboo poles. It’s unfortunate that Bragg got caught in the changeover in equipment, but that's progress and you an’t stop progress.” AAA Cornelius Warmerdam. the A game campaigner, <’4Mnle exclaimed that “the best roordl-nalqd Individuals still will be Ibe best vaullers.’’ "If they outlaw fiber glass.” Warmerdam explained, "better wood probably would be developed and jumpers still will go higher—up to 17-18 feet. We are going to have to change our thinking on what’s a good jump because of technical improvements in the poles.” A A A ■ George Davies, who unofficially cracked the world mark when he vaulted better than 15-10 in i960, said he has been using the pole since his high school days. ’These glass poles have been around since 1952 and many vault-ers have used them alnce,” the Arizona University student said. "No comment was raised until the record was broken.” '' Davies said he leaned toward the dictionary definition 0/ pole vaulting—’’getting over a cross bar urith the aid of a pole.” It doesn't say what Ihe pole must be made ot." Need More Athletes, fewer Fans-White Begins Tomorrow Yacht Skipper Moves Mountain to Pacific SAN ,DIEGO, Calif; (AP) -There was a bit of confusion in the San Diego to Acapulco, Mexico, yacht race Monday when one of the entries reported Its posi- on to the committee in charge. Officials checked the position reported by Commodo)-e Garrick O'Brien, skipper of the class. B Yacht, -Mickey, then sent woi^d back that if the observations were correct the boat must be atop a mountain on ihe Hamilton Ranch in Baja California. Eventually (hey agreed that Mickey still waSjBi in the Pacific Ocean, PHILADELPHIA 7AP)-Byron (Whlzzer) White, U.S. Deputy Attorney General, sayi America needs' more Paul Hornungs and Fergusons and fewer spectators in atbietics. AAA While addressed the 2Sth annual Maxwell Football Gub dinner Monday night honoring Horn&ng of National Football League chaiTipion Green Bay Packers and Ferguson of Ohio State as the professional and college foolball players of the year. AAA I am and have been a rabid I,” said White. "Bui I am com cerned because athletics. are not reaching anywhere near the majority of our young- people. We’ve got to have more participants.” White, a former foootbali star at Colorado, said a special physical fitness test given at Yale the last 10 years had shown a decline In (he abled-bodied. He said 51 per cent of those who took it. in 1951 "passed but the figure dropped to 43 per cent in 1956 and 38 per cent last year. WESTESN DIVISION CHiCAOO-AUtn TtKunjj. ISL Ch)e*«o. apomted BUly Plck»U. UOV-flta York. SYDNEY, Auitr»II« — OATT CoWlwrn. - - nirAlla. sloppad Ekro Omti* 144V4, AuitfAUa. I. Skate Series to Start Having trouble learning to use those new, ice skates? Theif you won’t want to miss SKATING IS SIMPLE, an illus-traled series by Irving Jaffee, former Olympic speed skating champion who has taught thousands ol youngsters how to ice skate. Jaffee, winter sports director at Grossingers, N. Y.'. won the 10,000 meter speed test in the 1928 Olympics at St. Moritz. Switzerland. In 1932 he won the 5,000 and 10,000 meter events in the winter Olympits at Uke Hacid, N. Y. The series of four illustrations s'arts in this newspaper tbrnarow. Don’t miss them. "If you can walk you can skate.” says Irving Jaffee. Don’t miss his series. ^ - THE l*0\TiAC TRESS. TUE.^UAV. FlCHRl ARY Chiefs, OL St Mary Home for Key Games pH m n .^EjirkEx PCH to Host Flint Central in 'Must' Tilt Eaglets Dgel Rams as Mikes vs. Leaders; Falcons at Avondale By mi'CK ABAIR Another "miut” game for Pon-tlae Central and a cnirlal pair of <-onlPRta Ift the Suburban Cnthollr l.«'nRUe will feature tonight's pn*p basketball schedule. The (lilefs will meet Flint Central while Orchard Lake .St. Mary battle St. Fred and St. Miclwiid takes on SCI. leader 'Royal Oak St. Mary. witl played on liM-al eoarts. There will be a total of It ing area sehools on It wiU be one of the biggest Tuesdays of the season for leagues with the Saginaw Valley, parochial conference and F.astem Michigan having full slates. Utica and Or-tonvUle will also have loop outings. Heading the ''outside" actitm will be a battle ladwefn nelghbdrs Kochesler and t Avon^lc at the Yrllowjacket gym. PCH Is gunalng for a perfei l finish In Valley play In hopes that Haglnaw will hill at least om.e. The Chiefs have three games to go and the lenders RKt for bio flNK - These Oi chard Lahe It. Mary cagers, carrying hopn lot at least a title share, host St. Fred tonight in, a big Suburban Catholic game ur leadei Royal Oak rsallss Prri standing, left io right, John Rompel, John ^ Miller. Seated, same order St. Mary vs. St. Michael. The Eaglets arc. Stolnirki and Stan Sawicki. Janiszewskl. The Chiefs, led by steady scorers Rudy Ransom and Clarence iViuglas, will be favored to make their record M ip the Valley and KM over all Th. v «on by 23 in Saifinaw, Rivcr Rouge, Perry Rated No. 1 an variwar meetingT ----—....... ....... ........................ — Miller. Seated, Ernie Mazur Unbeaten 300 Lounge raced to its lUh viebry of the season in the City Raskeiball I.eague'8 American division with an WM2 rout of s Mon- Scoring Mark Needs 54 Points Next Time Out to Eclipse Season Record NEW YORK (AP)-WUt Chain berlaln, I^ladclphia's point-ar iptnute scorer, needs only M points—one night's work for him —to sel a National Basketball Association scoring record third conscculive season. Unbeaten Lounge Cagrers'“ty Johansson Race to Victory No. 11 Town & Country stayed In the thick of the National loop race by day night at Pontine Central. Four IsMinge pla.vera broke lato dmibln HgurAN, t^i^ed by Kell* Kruuks who tallied 20 |NilalH. Newbighaiii's Ham Hheehy took Mwrlng huiMsm wilh 30. champion Joe' Bygraves in whijiping UcanHee Trucks 6-f-M lO-round heavyweight l)ou( here behind the 34 point scoring spree Friday nighl. ^, )f Roger Reynolds. Bs'urdsliie's ♦ * * ’.ary Acker, tallied r. j 1. (Tiallenge Dlek Riehardson of it it It jWalcM for Ihc European title. A ftmnlMiu.iPlcr rally enabled . J' bht .%nny Liston in an out-West KIwams lo ni|> New Hope In Inst night's, most exciting ahtisin, Buckner Finance nosed ou\! Clurkston.67-6b. Buckner, I railing at hulftinte by a XWJb Count, pul the decLsIon on Ice with a 22-10, bulge In the third quarter. Buekner put five cagers In double figures, headed by Jerry Hlll| who hit lit points. Don Piehiannic 51-30 in a Class D contest at Lincoln. KIwanIs Haul'd :i5-29 entering the linal la-rlod. New Hope's (Hiuck Rollink was lop scorer with W fx(inl.s. CITY BSsatTBALL NTANDINUS door bout here. 3. Tnke another world title. aek at the nu'shtsl 15 In defeat. The 7-foof-l WarrTors' star, who set NBA total point marks In each of the two years he has ‘ In the loop, has 2,980 points In games through Saturday, and Is certain lo obliterale last year'i mark of 3.0.33. NBA statistics released today low Chamberlain with a game average of 49.7, compareii lo last ri'cord of .38.3. He's also wrlthin 79 field goal attempts of his 1961 record of 2.479 and within of bn-aking his record 1,251 flc|d goals made. jans. The losers’ Sam Cole scored rt Steve’ Tlionipson fired 18 points load CIO Local 590 to a 79-57 erdict o\er the Southwest Tro- Jerry milhiiiiN rlHixl 3!> imliitN and leamninie .loba Dmuly Mdded 31 as Newmua AMK druhlieil lAdielaiMl Kbannary u( the Waterford Is-ague M-IA In an exhi-billon game. Hlu Thorell eolleel-<><1 a for the lanquIsheU. ■4 City Wrestlers Away, Skippers Bi'Ilamy leada in field goal cenlage with 51.6; Dolph Si-hayesIT/ici/ J^^ffarinrr bt Syracuse in fne throws made. ^ iYCTUCf/iijy Chamberlain In rebounds _ , _ , with 1.531 lor a 25.5 mark: and * 7" '"i r> a ^ , . . .u .ftwav and Ihr twu W*f#Tfordn wil » bid W'^'S'linU Mhedule “ Jo ^ “ " r* S STi Central wUI htwe tlfe hurculean Im 2? Irying to upset power- bin. MS 170* "s packed Hazel Park. Northern hndl 7 ourhn’ N'v' 11 S Im Ml i'‘'' malih at Crunlm)ok. l! Tw^niin^jCm., | * * * Kpii^.ring, will he playing host 2. Potiit. a I. Wort. U- i END ADVANCE Coach Art Van Ryzln's crew should have n'newed spark after that big comeback victory over Flint Southwestern last Friday. Same Poll Leaders Joe Joseph Heads Ftee Clinic at Huron to Waterford. Southfield RoyiU Oak Dondero ami Berkley goi's to Fitzgerald in oihe MMEI' the minute yomsantit Flint Central may offer more opiMNlllon than last time. The Sj,ginaw. River RougC,. Perry Indians have won five of aoven j„n(j Champion continued aa Michi-Htarfa since the rout by Fontlae 'ga„,, basketball frontrunners to-and have lo-en a steady aioring q,,,, „„„,h before the start of quintet. |j[he annual stale tournament Flint will be missing -starting renter Al 'Snyder,, who broke his wrist Friday. Jim Merri weal her. Voles and Bob Barnett steady Indian scorers In a racehorse attficlt. Saginaw should have no trouble at all taking Iti 9th straight as host to the toothless j9ay City Wolves. Third place Arthur Hill will Hkely have an easy one al Ray City Handy and Midland vs. Flint Northern. Only River Rouge 112-11, Gass B leader, suffered a defeat last week; its 29-gamc winning Btnpped to third. Thai was the only major reshuffling in the four classes. Perry (12-0) held onto first position in Gass C despite a four-point squeaker against Ovid. Champion (13-0) again was the leader in Class D. More Trouble for Hawks By THE AASOCIATED PREH8 ' The news fr«m the Hawks' I Even when they have a day team physician. Dr. Stan London, off, the hapless St. Louis HawksVame Monday night While the IDLE TWO WEEKH ' I Hawks were idle from NBA Orchard Lake, idle lor two! five-time champs of the *'on. weeks, win entertain slumping St. Western Division of the National ♦ * * Fred m.'eding a victory and-some Basketball Association, now drag- Two games were played and help from other local schools lolj^ing their sneakers in fourth'St. Louis' successor as kingpin in k<>ep alive title hopes. jpl.-ice, have lost hulking Clyde ithe West, the Los Angeles Lakers. The F'aiglels, very rough Lovelletle for the rest of the sea-j and the Hawks' perennial title iN-at always at home, havh a 7"? ‘T fhree-gwne victory streak gidag \*>”_}« his back- and uwn a December trium|ih k®**''* J"**” ^ k*** li***' over the Rams. Ht. Fred has |a week or 10 days after bijeaking playoff opponents, Boston Cel-..................4iivii Royal Oak St. Mary can clinch a He for the crown by beating St. Michael at the Northern gym but that may not be too easy. The Irish won by 10 in the season Lovellette. who with Bob Pet-lit and Giff Hagan gave the Hawks the top front line In the NBA in recent years, suffered the injury against Los Angeles Saturday nighl. He was just back opener but the Shamrocks have jp action after missing 16 games been ^improving sp.-irked by the ,brough an injury suffered Jan. scoring of Charlie Daul. "We're hoping to knock off Royal Oak toC help Orchard Lake, " coach Jim Nlcbauor of the Mike men said today. His charges have won two In succession after a dismal beginning. St. Rita vs Ht. Benedict and St. James goes to St. dement to Complete the list. In the EML. .Birmingham Sea-liolm will try to cook up some surprises as host to front-running East Detroit. Port Huron and Ferndale clash and Hazel Park plays Mt. Gemens. Avondale may be'^uady to give Rochester trouble despite almost opposite records. The Jackets are fresh from an impressive upset of Oak- Park. Uficq, apparently back in high gear again, has a Bl-County tilt at Warren. Ortonville will try to snap a four-game losing spree at home against Genesee in a Gene-sec "B” affair. Elsewhere, Lgpeer travels to Owosso, Lamph^ and Cran-brook will do battle, Cbuntry Day meets hot Grosse Pointe University Si’hool and North Branch tries to get In a makeup game at Elkton-Pigeon-Bay Port. The Broncos have only got In six games because of postponements due to weather cortdltlons. Colgate Coach Resigns After Winning Season HAMILTON, N.Y. (UF*'!) — Alva Kelley has resigned as .head football coach of Colgate University, it was disclosed today. Kelley, who sieei^ the Red Raiders to their first winning season-in five years In 1961, Wil(, join a buffalo Business roncem as an industrial engineer, an announcement from Colgate president Everett Case said. His teatn^s 5-4 record last year included wAs over Harvard, Princeton and Yale, so-called big three of the Ivy Ix?ague. 1 tics, fattened their division leads. The Lakers, with Jerry West treating the home folks at Morgantown, W.Va., to 46 points, whipped Gnclnnati 134-123, oprti-Ing arf 11-game lead over the Royals in the Western Division. The Celtics, with four players scoring 20 op more points, thumped the Chicago Packers 127-111 in Chicago and moved eight games up on (he runner-up,team in the. East, the Philadelphia* Warriors. MORE AWARDH — Paul Homung, left, of Green Bay, poses with Ohio State star Bob Ferguson as they show off awards received from Maxwell Football Gub In Philadelphia last night. They were named the top players In pro and college ball. 300 LOUNGE Dining and Dancing Every Night Music by CHUBBY KEMP and HER TRK I BUSINESS MEN’S LUNCH , 100 South Cass Uke Rd,—Ph9iii^^ In Class C, however, second-ranked Capac (IS-0) was lied by Hanlt Hie. Marie Ixirelto (IM)-lAirettu cibnbed up from fourth place as Imlay City (13-1), third last week, dropped lo flflh after losing to Haglnaw Buena Vhla. (irosse Polnie Ht. Paul (10-0), defending Class C champion, moved into lourth, aa advance vt one . Dofrolt NorUiwritorn it-Oi . Orsnd Rsplrti SouUi 110-01 . 315 . Detroit Eoitern iS-lt . BnUod Htrbor iS-li CLASS B I. Holland Chrlitlsa Ul-li t. Huog (lO-Oi . .......... I. Norillwu* llO-Oi ...... 6. Buchsntn (*-li ........ 1 Elkton-PIfeon-Bsy Port ii I. Willo* Run it-W ........ I. Redtord Bt. Usry IlS-Oi . 10. Detroit VlelUtlon i»-0i CLASS C Joe Jo.seph, natiojial bowling star who made the 1961 All-America team, will heiKl a free instru*-tional rlinif' to be t'onducted Wednesday from 1 lo 1 p.m. at Huron Bowl. Other standouts from the Detroit All Star Gassle will help give pointers lo area keglcrs. Joseph, a former Huron instrue-tor, sparked Detroit Pfeiffer'! 1955 ABC team honors and was part of the runnerup duo in doubles Ihn-e years later. Ho hag been a finalist five times in the BPAA All Star. The free school was held last weclwral Airwdy Lanes. Capitol in First Place Table Tennis League Cspltol hold! s •Urn. im» nmr *di In thr fontlsr Tsblr 1>nnli Lossi —'-to thin woek'i orllon rSfed'*P»l Hsn"* li-ir 2M Prep Cage Calendar HIGH SCHOOL BASRSmiLL 6t. Rocbe»t€. -o ........ L'Anie Cr«u*e at Harper Wooda Oeneaee at Ortomrllle Cranbrook at Lamphere < h at Clkton-PlaeoD'Bay Port \ NT4NOINGH •5 \9 C. Kitchen 57 37 Detroit Ice . 51 MidWfhl Am t& 35 PepRl Waterford Cage OLL Graders Win Bprncor Ploort 7 Don Nlcholia Tonithl Ji t ;16, Tripp CLASS B W I. W I 0 Johnion An. 4 5 3 O Ketl RmUv 3 5 3 Boartett'a Bike» 0 ,t Crary Jr. Hlat WednMrfay'i ii Hlffhi: 715, Hoyt JA A VI O'Neil (1 Thuriday's gam NrabtU’a |B| I At drnryi: --- lAi. S:3«. NIchotK LEAIIINO SCORERS; * Cork, LokeUnd I u!) , 1,2« ’Trfpp"' ' 2. (Tltl Ctpoc 113-01 Snult Bte. Ilirlo Loretto il2-li 4. Oroue Point# Bt. Paul ilO-Oi 5. Imlny City il2-U ............. t. Ootrolt AU SnlnM ilS-Ii ----- T. Joekson St. Mnry dO-Oi .. .. I. SobowkinE -<> S. SIwphtrd I S. But Lnnilni .. 7. HlihUnd Park S. Ekfit Detroit . . * Pontltc Central Detroit NortReaetern CLASS B 1. River Rouge . on-Pigeon-I on ylMtati 1 Willow R LOOK WHAT'S HERE! Deals that you won't find often ore to be hod at Haskins this,week on New and Used Cars alike. Don't miss out! HERE'S AN EXAMPLE: MAC McDowell Brand New. F-85 Olds Coupe as Low as $2,365 Delivered, Tax and Plates Included HASKINS OLDSMOBILE Corner of M-I5 and US-10, ClorktVn BENinCIAL FINANCE CO. I OF DETROIT 'S3 ACE William E. Jack-gon of Pontiac wa.s the second Michigan goKi'r to score ii hole-in-ono,nl PInchursI N C. Country Gub. Pinehiirgl Ims Item a winter' goll mocca lor nmny area golfers each year Jackson, jilay-ing wilh Hot) Multhalcr ami Bob Matius, both of Detroit, la.st Weekend aci'd the 14th holt! of the numlH.‘r lour emirse wilh an eight iron. He is a tnember of Indianwuod Country Clul). FE 2-9249 Rallying from an early 11-3 defl-| rit. Our Udy of the Lakes defeated .St. Frederick 32-lfi in a Sunday grade school game paced by Mike Harrington's 14 points. The losers 8con>d only two points in the last half after leading 12-11 al halftime. TIRE DISCOUNTS Why Hay a RvoagT Brand Maw SNOW TIMS 6.70x15 tt‘ $7.95 7.50x14 Tr $8.95 " RICULAR TIRIS 6.70x15 "jr $4.88 7.50x14 $9.88 UNITED TIRE SERVKE H0I22IM2HAIIT HO t 3VA2 yoQ I - vfm«T fib«iD yrd3 I 8291-d291 3TIJ31UD1I0T «3or* M0I88IM8HAHT 3JaAIJ3fl rOYO-b 33 DAITH09 .(2 Jid*! .M I** DAITH09 32 LANES TO SERVE YOU HURON BOWL 2525 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 5-2525 IMPROVE YOUR GAME!! Come lo The DETROIT NEWS Free Instructional Clinic with JOE JOSEPH mt-er o) t)ic 1961 Bowling All-American Team and Brunswick Advisory Staff Member) and THESE OTHER WELL KNOWN STARS From the Detroit A It Star CUissic DAVE SOUTAR • MIKE MORYS KEN CHARREHE • DON WRAY ROGER HELLE Wed.y Feba 1, 1:00 to 4:00 P.M. r TIIK ruNTlAC! 1,*KKSS, TUESUAV; FKimUAlir 0, 1»02 ,1 "W'Tl.' 54Micets*Business aritt iFmlnce MARKETS || Period of Consolidation Seen The toUowlng are top prices coverlnK sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them In wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets, as^ of Friday. Detroit Produce raurr . SpplM. OC.elMu. ba. .. Appitt. Jonatbaa ...... Appiaa. MelBhMh Applaa. NorUwra Sn Applat. Cldar. « tal- 1i Cabbsta. curir, bu. . Cabbata. rad. bb Cabbafa, alaadard aarlatj Carrola eaUa pak .......... Carrala. toppM, ba. ........ Texaco fell more than a point on S n^s that it is planning to merge S with and liquidate TXL Oil. The ! Tin proposed basis of the exchange of stock is seven shares pf Texaco tor FaraJar. reo*. daa. raraalpa. Vb ba. —‘pa, aula pal «•. K Iba. Poultry and Eggs f poultrr-Whllai ll-». DS'fROIT BOOS DETRorr. rab. I (AP> - Sn priaaa paid par doaaa at Datrolt bjt llrat ra> »iv.rt (includlni US.) ... —... n jd17tb: ma-dium I1-36U: ebackt »•». CHICAOo!' ‘ Roaatar. ..d Whita Hark (r; ButWr: aUadr. ----------------— IS4.; H tcara UV<: Id tcora M4a. ■<.••• ahoul alaaf"" ------ I chaeka CHICAGO rOCLTBT CHICAGO. Jan 31 lAPi - lUBDAI— Lira poultry: Wholaaala buying price unc^l^; apacW fad Whlta^Rock irj llnia “ Plymouth Rock Iryara 33W; duel Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCE DETROIT. Pab 4 lAP) lUSDA! CaUla 3400. Bulk early aupply alaushUr ateara and helirrt; atandard and load sradaa pradomlnatini. amall Incraaaed ahowini of good and choice aleera and ------- —nderate aup|>ly: ojien- > loarar choice ______ateady „ halfera 30-M canta ppanlng weak to m„.., —-------------- ------- C^era and cuttera about ateady: 0 head mined huh cholcr and prime aroi'~* li#- lb. atrera 37.00; acallarlng cho lt»ra 3S.70-30.00; mlied loada high |i and low choice 34.70-30.70; |Ood in aUera 33.70-14 70; aeveral loada cha... helfara 34 00-30; mliad loada high lood and tow choice helfara 33 00.34 00; utility cowa 14 00-10. few up to II" ---------------- •"d eutUra 13-14 00 700. Barrowa. fllti. ----- I ataady; lew head aalact number L. '1. 11-10.10; ..JO lb. 17.00-17.7l: M-IJO lb. 17.00-17.10; 340 lb. 10.70-17." ' mliad 3 and 3 100-340 lb. 10.70-17.40 ' 3 aiMI 3 S40-370 Ib 10-10 00; number 3 370- 5Sr lb 10.30-10 71; I. 3 and 3 300UOO ■- aowa T4.10-30; 3 and 3 400400 Ib. ac 13.30-13 70. ^ —... vealara 30- itandard 34- r/e' ^3? y ll-M. r° to afrong 43; good and 30'''cull and i_____ ______ Sheep 1100. Early trade lamba 100 Ib. down ataady .. heavier walghU alow, ataady to bulk early aupplyv •bom lamba; . Ilmlad ahowing wooled lamba aarly.; — —aatly prime high yielding ll.ldlO.OO; I----* -‘"— I lamba 17- woolad lamba : CHICAGO LIVESTOCE CHICAGO. Pab 0 lUPIl—Hoga 0. Palrly active..Steady to atrong; No • ’ 'TO-ijO Iba 17 00-17.00; Vo : Stocks Mixed in Active Trade NEW YORK tffi - The stock market dispiayed a thoroughly mixed pattern in active trading eariy today. Gains and losses of most key stocks went from fractions about a point. The list aval at the erest of t five-day advaiN« which ran 11 shares of TXL — giving holders of TXL quite a premium on the basis of Monday's closing prices. OPENINQ DELAYED TXL Oil was delayed In opening lie to a large accumulation of buy orders. Steels were only a bit higher on balance despite the rise of weekly steel production to a 23-month peak. Bethlehem and U.S. Steel (ex dividend) added fractions. Tobaccos, chemicals and mall order-retails were mostly on the upside. (Mis were off. Ralls, utilities, drugs and electrical equip- recent retreat, trading about unchanged but Boeing was off about a point and United Aircraft lost a fraction, giving this somewhat lower tone. GM Truck Sales Up in January Prices were mixed on the American Stock Exchange. Gainers Included Technicolor, Syntex and Insurance Co. of North America. Barnes Engineering and New Jer sey Zinc were among the losers. Republic Aviation stemmed its Bonds Uneven at Opening NEW YORK un-Bond prices opened higher today in quiet trading. Over the counter dealers In U.S. government securities posted some -gains of 1/K In the Intermediate section. Most long Rails and utilities edged up- ward in corporate trading on the New York Stock Exchange, dustrials held steady. Among the few movements of a point or more were Commonwealth Edison 3s of 1999. up 1 at 77 and LorUlaid 4%s off 1 at 102H. Baltimore Gas A Electric Convertible 4Mu fell 2V3 at 144. American Stock Exch. (Plfurao afUr daelmaU.ara In pish g^„*ki£' . :S;| ■ f« . _ GMC Truck's domestic retail deliveries that started last October moved into the new year, with 6,343 new trucks being- delivered in January, it was announced today by Calvin J. Werner, vice president of General Motors and general manager of GMC Truck A Coach Division. s.“|Ar, 41.4 Mu»k P Rli 13.4 Novo Indua H.4 P eine Pat L .3 Paie Her 104 Ta^ileo He said last month's figure topped deliveries in January 1961, by 22.2 per cent and set a six-year CatopUaS by Tba AaaaalalaS Praaa 30 10 10 10 II RoUa M. Visa. Pon. L.TS. 1ST si R ! -7aak Aoo 70.0 100.0 00.3 00.0 lonth Afo 70 4 101 9 Oil 00.3 ,’aar Am 77.0 » 0 00 7 04.3 100143 Blfh 70 7 IM.T J0| g.l Ol-tt Low 00 Hloh DOW JONES I P. 90 Bide. 700.31 Off 0 . 30 RalU I400I Off 0.03 19 UlUo •“ •* * •• la 139 10 Up 0.39 icke 941.43 Dp 0.04 a to 1 p.m. f.300.000 The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (API—Pollowins U a I aatoclad atock tronaacllona on Uia I rork Stock Xichansa wlUi lOooday o ACP Ind 3 00 (hda.l Hlfb Low LaatChk. 3 00% OOH OOtbv V, Ml 1 37t» t7>ii Poram Dair 9M Pott Whaal lb Praapt Sul 130 Pruan Tra 1.30 .Ir Radue 3.00 6 30 30 30 - ta 10 nV, 71H 714b- % 34 17H 17S 174a- HlOan AceOpI 30 07Va OOVt 07 - - -— 00 lOOVb 107H 1077b- S 3 I3»4 134, 1344- • 30 437b 43H.437bv II 304. 34tb 30Vb- 0 Btb 3S4t 394bv Alias cp oOf "lasLuiI 3 lasPw 1.00 llOd Cb 1.00 lU Chal 139| Vt.Otn CItar 1.30 a „a ,y, ,y, Oaii Dynam 7 314b 31V, 31794 VblOan Slae 3 1 Il4b UH I1H+ 7b|Oan Pdt 100 3 OOV. 40 40 - 7b Gan MUU 1.30 I 474b 47S 474b-f ValGan klotore 3a 114 93V, 937b 9374 Gan Prat I 30 30 OIH 097b 00 4 Tb'Oan Pub Ov 33. 14 3l4b 31 •• ••• • •• 3 334b UV, 3341 I 404, OOV. 40V., . 00 304a 394b 394b- 7b M 7444 74 74 - 7b in 07% 0744 rS ' - I 3774 S I 3344 gr: Am B Bd Par lb Con 3 ... Cvan 160 AmCyan 100 Am El Pw t oo ■ * PPw .90 MliPdr “ AmMat Cl I 40 40 447b 444b 444b- n 40'-4 09 09V., 0 107b 107b 107b-141 30' — — 41 10 77 93V, ll'-b 91V,. 140 177b 16% 10%-. . 71 40% 46% 464b— 4b 4 1374 IIV. UV. 17 67% I6'b 6t%- 44 30 4174 41V, 4174 “ 7 04% 14V, 04V, 00 3% 3% rbv % 1074 107b- 7b Oran C BU 1.40 36V, 36>b, 4, 01 AOfP J lOa 19% 39’*- 4b Ol No Hr T in It 19% 16 , % 01 W Fin 34 46% 60V. 40V.,-S Oraybound 110 1 07% 67% 67%, % Onim Aire 1.90 4 0.7% 03% 034b- • '-- •• I 30%, Royal McB Saleway SI I . 17%, %10 „ ......40% 4<|4b- ’* 1 90 3 30’b 30% 30’*, 114 49% 43V, 477*— U 30% 30 30 —H— a UV. ss% 90V,, 1074 lOV,- AkSP Inc .39e Ampai Cp Amph Bora 141 ------- 11 OOV, 04 04V.,.7b 3 70% 30% JO’b, % Halliburton 3. 30 30 10% 30 -, 44 H %, V. H SIL Son P I St Ru Pap 1.40b Son D Imp II Schenlay I Havas Ind .3Ss SO - h'hiU iso 71 - WIHenton Npt I 30% H(rff Blacl 3 30V, 1074 OOV,- 44 I 10% 10% 10%, % 3 10% 10% 19% 7% 7% 3%— % , V, Hooker Ch I 3 91% 917b 9I7b- % SSuCaTEdT 0 1147b 114% 1147b, 1 19% 19% 19%- % 13 1% • * •' I 30’* M’b 30%, % HoualLBP 1.00 0. 5* .. J. 1 310-300 ... ____________ Cattia 10.000. calvat 100. Local racelpta amallaat for any Monday tinea May. IMI and 13 market lupply tmallait lot any Monday ilnea June. INI: tradins rather •tow. tlaushlar •taar> and haliers strons to 39 hisnar; cows stow, ataady; bulU ttaadv to 10 hlsbar; vaalari and stockers and laodart ataady; load Iota hlsh choice and prime ltkO-1460 Ib. alaushter staarc .....................da prime 1300-1400 • ooLiooo Iba. ass- - - 1 ^holce ■no primv iipu- 21.00-MOO: four lb. a.M; iwik 4 16 79; load loU 3 133% 131% 133% , 307*- % IB Cent 3 ■ 41 , %'lns Rond 31 ■ 71%, 7*|inMd 811 I. I 25 25 2^5 Bors Warn 1 Brissa HI Brtot My 1.10s Bruntwick .W 1 4S4b 41% 41%, 7b,lntorlaklr 1.00 a A3 41% 417b, - • I aV. B% 874 ^ 74 MV, 94V, 9474— % II 04 8% 0374- ‘ 1 7% 774- 7%, Stocks of Local Interest_____________________ Pisuraa anar decimal polnta.ara elshtbe Camb R Ui 39a W , BM Atoed ' Jl‘l52ulp“To;?"^*“ JSi Arkanias Louisiana Gas Co M l 40 cum ji Raldwln-Mont Chem Co. Pld. 13 13 3 enter 'Trac 1 KTd^Sn'Tos'^”* ‘Jo ‘J*Jg;r.v,‘“ HooraV Ball k Bearins 310 M ICen Hud 0 1.04 Leonard Rennins II.} 114 Prophet Co 8.0 M.3 Rockwall Standard 30 30 ‘Toledo Ediaon Co 30.1 a.I OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS ‘The ioUowlns quouuon do not nec essarily raprasaot actual transactions bui are Intended as a sulde to the approil 3 30% 17 9M 40 M% 90,; M7b_,l% ‘l 13% 11% 13%, % U 144( 14% 14%, " 8 99% 997b 99%, 17 19% 19% ltV„ —J-^ i! r —K— Kiyurltoth loi’a *9 8% 874 874 T 5 Kennecott 9s SouNOai 3 ----'ac l.M Ry 3W ry Rd 1.18 .re D la . _ Brand I.IO Old Kolls 118 SldOIICal 2b BldOllInd 1.40b n Locan .7 nesAL ISO ChMSPliPftc • Pood . ^oblif He _______d CriiUl goctronlCA CopkUl •ctroDlCA LnUmaUonftl CUv El III t CocftCol% 2.40 Co!flns*'^Sd ‘ McLouth Steel Co. MIchlsan Seamlees Tube Co. Pioneer PInaoca Santa Pe Drillms TranaconUnental Oaa Pipe Lint Vamort OInser Alt 2»nr8hoe Wyandotte Chemical MUTUAL FUNDS Eryslooc Growth - K-3 Maisachusalti 41 IS 37% 37% . . 1 02% «% 03H- % 3 M% 34V. M7e, Vt M 42% 42% 87b- % Lahlah Cbl L#h Port C iS U 8% 49%, % 19 8% 8% 8% 14 8% 8% 19%-19 907b 57% ' ..... 04% 04% 04%, % I 42 41% 41’*- V- I 8% 8 8%, r 30% 8’* 8Ve- ,. I SV, 8 15 - % ’ 87b 8 237 18 21% 8 » - Vs 14 17% 17% 17%, % LIUonInd S.90f 97% 90 69% U% 34 4 8 0 Col Ptet 791 314 8AComI Crad 1.40 8 3/3 ComI Snlv .lOb 8.1 8.7 Comw Bd lb 9 M% 90% 90% . . 8 IP/a N% 107*- % 10 19% U% 19% .. 8 8’* 407, 40Vb, % 19 «’* 8% 37%, % 0 8’* 8V, 8%, % 13 U% 3 U%, % 1 MV, 33 M - V, . Vb LockhAIre - . . Sb Loaw'a Tbaa in Lorn S Gas 1 ^ Lone Isl LI 1.90 . Lorfllard 3.8 I 9|V, *18 18 8% 8%, I' 33’, 8V, 8'4- ' 8% 8% 29%, ' .75% M'b 99%- j . ...... '7 M% S% St*^ ' —M— ____Trfc 1.8 8 8% 19, MadlsonPd 3 45e " ■" , 8V. 8V, 0 U% 01% 8%, 7 13 12% v8V. 8% » Wt n n — 7 9 103% 18% 103V,, 17 14 50% 87* MVa- 7 II 99% 8% 59%, 7 13 U% U U%,I 10% I 2 8 8 U M% 4 1 Ind .Ml 3 OV, ,1% 19 8% 8 6,343 Units Delivered in Month to Set a New Six-Year High r the ‘ moMthy. lO-Asy perl The iMt lO-Asy period of Jsnu-sry neni the dellverifpi souring to new levels, in thst period, domestic deliveries totsled t,U7 onlli, making It the best final 10-day period In any January since IMS. GMC's iiruck sales started their climb following the announcement of the new GMC llghl, medium and he^vy-duty truck line last fall. In October. November and December of last year, domestic deliveries totaled 19,866 units, a 9.2 per ent increase over the safne period In 1960. GM Will Uphold Franchise Sales Probing Manipulation of Stock by Ad Drives WASHINGTON (AP)-Ths gov-, emment Is investlgiillng the possible manlpulktion 6t stock mai* ket prices through publicity campaigns financed by publicly owned corporations. This is one of two new areas being studied by the Securities and Exbhange Commission in Us extensive Inquiry into the aecuri-tiei industry. • OONDVCTINO STUDY It was learned today that SEC siaff members also have been m-tervlewing industry leaden in New York about the operatloiu of money lenders who ftUhnce stock transactions. This uraa believed be the prelude to a more inti sive study of lenders who are f empt from the stock market credit restrictions Imposed by the Federal Reserve Board. The manipulation through publicity phase of the inquiry is focusing on the activities of a small group of flnam-ial public relations firms, most of them located in New York. The SEC wants to find out hether any of these firms, in their effort to promote the corporations that hire Ihem, have circulated preas releases aimed at affecting slock prices. CHECKING USAGE From what is known of the investigation, it seems apparent that the SEC is checking newspaper usage of certain releases and subsequent changes in stock prices. An area of special concern is Canadian oil industry has warned to step up its oil explorations to obtain reserves capable of supplying the market demands foreesM for 1970. A demand of 1 million barrels day from western Canada has been forecast for 1970, and production potentials of abwt 1.260 million barrels. Executive Says ^Method of Distribution Vital to the Industry Dni^ .Mb Rav'Tob li? tebMin Mf ________; 25: 38 8 IS% 10 — 16 M% 9/S M7', I a 8% 8’* 03’* I 6 «% 8% W% t 49 r% 377, MTV- By l>HI,FXiAK A.P, Aul(aiinllve Writer ATLAN'nC OTT, N.J., - A top General Motors official said today franchise selling Is vital to the automobile business and that GM is prepared to battle the federal 'J 14% 14% 14% r% government In court (o prove It. ”7 JJ5 Jiv, 5! * * * i7» MS. 87, 8%, ',| James M. Roche, vice presl- 14% 14%, % dent—distribution for GM, referred to an indictment returned by a federal grand Jury in Los Angeles charging the auto company with inducing and persuading dealers to retrain from using discount houses additional sales outlets. 7 8% 8% 8’* 70 19% 14% 19'/., 7 8V, 8 8V-, 9 M J 10% 0% 07*- % M 8/ 97’* 3T/,, 7^ « 3 30% 8% 87*- % i 146 707i 707, 79% 0 137* 13% 13% 49 30% M% 30%— < I 8% av. 87*,‘5 1 8’* 87* 87*— 7* I nV, W74 874,1 StdOllNJ . . StdOllOh 2.M SlondPkt Sian War 12( Stauft Ch 1.301 lerl Druf 1.6 Stevens JP l.9( Stud Pock Bunray 1.40 ^wlftACo 1.00 8’S5 2 25 25 \ •2S4 I 13 M% M% —T— SiJ S!* ! 121 97% MV, 87*, V, Teilron I 8 " • ■ ■ .rt Tiink"RB°2.40 Tran W Air Tranaamer .8 8 av,' a 8 13 10S% 106% 1M% ' S 8’* 8% 8’*. % 1 19% 19% 10%, 7{ 6 8 29’* 8’V-t% 8 43 41% 4I^ '7% No date has been set for trial I the CRlIfornia case but Roche Md when the trial comes "We will vigorously defend not only the lawfulness of our actions, but we will vigorously defend the franchise system of distribution as being of vital importance to customers, dealers, to manufacturers and to the economy of our country." Roche said eaeh suto manufacturer ban legal responsibilities lor the performsnre and safety of his prothicts and must be able to exercise some discretion In It Cen 1, Oil ;J!!3- Un Carb 3.H 19 114% Im5 1 ~ Tier 4 8 3 M% 46% .. . Ml Cal 8 6 MV, u% 87*-% •*« 1 20a 14 .74% 37’* .8’*— V, Air Lin 90b 10 37% 37% 87*— *' AIre 2 on 5" 4«‘', 49%- d Cp 8s 2 IV, IV, s%, Frufi 90 77 jn% ?«’* 7"’*— Cto 1 M 8 8>* 8V, 8 V,— ... MAM 1 (7 8% 77S* 8%— US Prtlihl 2 14 41 40% 41 , ns Ornsum 2.S0* 31 0*’4 8 tons Hoff M 4 3% J%‘ 3% .. rs LtnU: 2b 3 3S>* 87* 8%~ ’7 Riih ■> » 1’ 7«’', «»■* —+ ' It 37c I 77% 77% 8% 13 77% T»S*_ 7 Small . Crana Co I 3 04 Crow Coll l.Olf " ‘“‘ Crown Zall 1.00b Cruc 8tl .8 Cudlhy Pk i- % 19 30'/, is% 87*-.’* ■ "" M% 8%,% 197* 197*- % 14% 147*- % ' 10%— • laniuardl _Jartu M .: May D Sir Mebon Air . ■ -:p 1.70 ______1.00 MarrChAS MOM 3 MIddIr S Ul I 18 4 M% .73% 63%— % ..ay, -«/____ Upjohn Putnam Orowth Televlsl^ Ejearonli Wrllloftao Puntl ‘Nominal qucoatloi I 147, 14% 147*— % Treasury Position WABHINOTON (API — Tht cash poi tion of Bw Treasury compared with co I Disney 40b DU C Boas 'Doma Min I Doug AIre 4 317* 21% 217*- 7* 3 17% 17% 17%, 5 2 fi5 5 MontDUt 1.8 II 18 18% 129 " T* 10 ih 55 St 5 .... S5 ?J5:5 3 10% 3 01% —N— 0 8 V 8 30% 87*- 17 147* 14% 14% *. 4 18% HOT* HOT*- 7* 14 04% 04% 04%,IV, „ MLL . eeu— IV. i 7'% 7 , r 92 91% 51%— % _V- n 2 8V, 8V, 2SV, 3b II 8’* 8% M%, —w— 6 7% 7% 7%- 1 Banconi 1 1 Md l.Af lUnTel 1.40 Woolwortti 2.M MO 7 93% 92% 73%, % J. A., .(irmstrong, director and general mahAger of the producing department of Imperiat Oil Limited, stated in Edmonton the oU demands on western CRnada by 1970 would require an additional expenditure of 150 million annually for explorations. IRVING J. GORDON R4N-he mmintaiiied in a spo-ech ib the Annual breakfast of the SS Year Club ol the National Auto DMlprs Assoclallon that dis-coont bouse selllug is “a practice the franchise system of disiribuflon In the Namedyto Head Merchant Group at Tel-Huron Tel-Huron Merchants' Association has elected Irving J. Gordon of 320 Lorberta l.jine, Waterford Township, president for the coming year. for and servlee. He said further that a manufacturer must place his dealers and distribute his products in'such a way that every dealer has a o earn a profit. This. Roche' said, is assured only through a sound franchise system. Gordon 8uccee4s Raymond Smith, former manager of the center's S. S. Kresge Store, who was irecently transferred. Hawaiian Gafdens Changes Managefs The 45th annual convention of the Auto Dealers Association moved info Us fourth day today. It ends Wednesday with a speech by Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson. News in Brief The Hawaiian Gardens restaurant in Holly Township has come under the management of the Sutton and Clements Corp., owners of Fox k Hounds Inn of Bloom-fioid HUIs. Thieves tmik an adding machine id a- cash register with a total value of $199 in a burglary between 3:30 and 4 a.m. today at the Pontiac Cash Register Sales Service, 337 S. Saginaw St., cording to Pontiac police. __________S5'S5t5 'was reported missing. 50r 87* 21% 3S7*- ^ 8 07% 07% S7%— V, DcpoalU Ptacal Tear July 1 . WIthdrawaU llacal yea Tottl debt ..... l“w^ll4 _E— Demits -s Ptacal year July 1 Withdrawals llacal yes Toutl debt ....... . Gold •includea 0437.473.103 19 debt o . • su.ws.ua.esi.s, I 33.18.98.84,33 S*T .1" *t3M.NI.ni.M3.M SUL*21.**, M * ‘Ve'b^TS?.^* 15 I 4 IMM 031.MCan7*>»» Ca.tCoo 18 9 M.no.303.1tl M C«“‘his 3 340 . I 54.98.734,1918 Con* Mot 46 •038.170J71.nO.31 Coni OU hOOa ■ ">.440.093.84 07 Copper Rns WMk ( SSftob 38.0 18.0 18.3 .1 Pair Cam SOb 38.9 18.0 U7J 2M.I NAPI Cp Nat BUe I Nat can .nf NCaata Ref 1 NM Datn I 19 25% 8% 8%-%H5SSa»^ U iT" 87* 8^1% 8 8 8% 8%^ % NM ^ L29ii 19 03% 01% 0I<*-3% ZShllh Had. 16 00% 07% 077*- V* NM StoVi Wl 3 8% 44% 44%, % 27 8% 31% 8%, % NM ThaaAT 8 7V, 7Vs 7% "sles rifures are unofficial. 8 237 28 38 New Eng El 1.12 14 8’* 39% 8^ % Ratas of dividend* In tbe • 90% 8% qOT*- % NT CenlSal >»*»}!• lift 12? ““n V* “j?”*,' '•" CHasL 3 10 40% 40% 40% . I tbe tost quarterly or ioml-annL---- totoid - 1 1.7% 13% 177^ ?*>|lton. Uniats otherwlae noted, sneclnl or fj»' 8», 8% 8V,- Vs Nln Mftr 18 » M% 45% 4}%+ W *»lm dlvMonda nrt ^ tncludelr r 93% 93% 33%, % Norf A West 4n 19 18% 104% lS%, %■ a-Alac pair or ,e»trai. I^Annunl mte ij”' 16 104 103% 103%—IV, No Am Ay 3 40 07% M% 07 — 7* phu ttock dlTldrod. d—Oocinrod or paid 1 8% 30% M%— % Nw Pne 3.8 0 42% 43V, 437*, %l|n 181. plus stock dividend. e^Deeltred p' 3 55 n5 n%T % Her Bto ^1.11 19 8% 8V, pold to ter Ihlt you. t-Aynble In wf° M 8% SOT** % Northrop 44 »% MV, M%—1% •toekdurint 181 estimated cash value 8 40% 40% M , %Nwel Alrlbi Ju n M% 8% JO^-t K mi **-dleldand or ex-dUtrlbutlon dato.'jy), H J,™- (7 5%,1% Norwich Pt la 0 M% M% »%— % g—Paid Iqa* 7«ar h—Declared or 14 St +l . mm m A- u. clir^-or paid thU year, in accumulative qm S r ^ S5t 5 s E S% S5l 5 ?J5 55 9^5oiteM^..„ 5f lS5 S5 S5^‘ LUt* *1% Im^iiMrlbutloo dale. y-UquMaUng dlti- 0 55 8% 55:- % 7 8% 8 8 , %|dlstrlbuUeo xr—Ex rights, x 0 8% 93% 8%, %!warranU. ww—WIUi warranU. 9 8% 8% 8%, %:dlHrlbut*d. wl--7^an Ufued. g 1 m 94% 874- 741 day dallTeryi wt--WarranU. The main the Pontiac Municipal foil Course were ransacked Sunday night or early yesterday, it was reported to police yesterday morning. Nothing Groin Prices CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO. Pab 0 (API—opening grain prices: , . 2.10% Dec. J;lJ5Mfi?C May July . 1.11% Sep. .1.19 Dee........... 1.17% Lard (Drumsi .,147% Mar...........0.67 May ......... 0S3 077* Jt^ ,.p .10.03 ^ Oxlord Pap 1 1 8% —Pm OAEI 31 03% 00% OOV,- % Pac TAT 1.8 ■ 0% 07, 0%, V,.pM,AWAIr to S4% M% MV«- 7* Param PIct 4 DtyHeada DaelaM P» 84% at Pay-Bale ried Rooaid able 14 31% 31V, 31V,— % Penni .4 Ptrestene lb 4 497* 4— ' '---- ,4 PitaiartP 3 07f 18 44% 4 0 PlIBIkote UOg 19 34% 3 % Peabody ^ ,---loy JC PaPwAU . I PaRB .29g II PepsiCola I Ipnier 60a I 34% 3 . „ , 47% ( U 8% aVs 8%, 8 8% 13% 137h-1 52% 53% 9374 *W?tbfit'”^ i^r* pi .875 0 *Sf?j Hawaii officially came under jur-Isdletlon of tbe .UnWed SUtes in 407, «%— % panles. Gordon In owner-manager of the Tel-Huron (hildren’s Shop. He has been a ston- owner at Tel-Huron Shopping Center and past seven years. The corporation, owners of the Bloomfield Hilla restfiurant, two Detroit restaurants and several coffee shops, has an option to purchase Hawaiian Gardens in a year, according to Fred D. Barton, its present owner and builder. Barton, who opened the novel restaurant in an Hawaiian atmosphere on May 30, last year, said he is selling "so the restaurant can un by people experienced in the business." |the possibility that publicity campaigns have helped generate, public enthuaiaam tor pertain recent **bot laauei” — new stock issues svhtoti have shown sharp' price advance Immediately or soon after reaching mar|cet. COULD cmkqK d6wn The Six: nevdr has tried to use Its anti-fraud powePi against public relations organizhtjiins. How-officials said the powers could be used if s firm cdn^lred to Jiggle market pricei by 4is-tributing Inaccurate or miilei^litg press releases. Unregulated money lenden also have been a source of concern lo the SEC for some time. The com-mtaaion has never before Investigated their activities directly because of their exemption from the market credit restrictions. , The credit curbs apply only lo banks and brokerage housaa. exprem dismay Privately, some members of the comminion have expreiaed ' dls- _____________________ bring , the unreatricted lenden wtffim the scope of its regulationa. Through these lenden, apecu-lators can finance stock purchases and avoid the Federal Reterve Board's gneral requirement of a 70 per cent cash doum payment. The SEC currently is consider-ind^ aUegatlona that two prominent New York brokerage firma Illegally Nfuranged for eustomerb to obtain credit from these sources. Thd firms are Sutro Bros, k Co., and Schweickart k Ob. Canadian Oil Industry ^ Urged to Boost Exploration A govcrameul study of northern pefroliRim deve^menl prepared by Dr. G. D. Qolrin of the University of Briiish Columbia, envisages a market of ap lo t.03 million barrels dally for ArcHr oil by ISM. Dr. Quirin has visualized a pipeline network with an outlet at Skagway, Alaska, to transport Yukon and northwest territories oil to offshore markets.- Greaier emphasis on d)fta processing and interpretation In the field of research has already raised geophysical explorations to b tween $46 million and $50 million year since 1951, although field coata have been cut lo about one-third. In the Northern oil would likely be an entirely export propoaition, since it could not compete ivlth prairie in Canada and the' United States, except in California and the Maritime Provincei. would pul Canada on a competitive basin on sales to Europe and tbe Far East. Northern Affairs and National Resources Minister Walter Dina-dalc has said Arctic oil need not compete directly with Alberta He said Arctic oil could compete in the northern European market, while mainland ojl could find markets as far west as Japan and New Zealand. The primary requirement ia lor Mibatantially Increased exploration and development over the next two lies, but at costs which arill enable Canadian oil to remain comDetitive on world mariipu. RESTS ON ASSUMPTION expansion of The predictions Canadian oil expi Quirin's assumption that oil will be found in the Arctic In marketable quantities. This calls for large expenditures of exploration. AMC Announces 2-Door Models of Ambassador American Motors today announced the addition of new two-door (spdan models in the 1962 Rambler Ambassador V8 line-up, the firm's luxury compact-car series. The first new model came off the assembly line at the Rambler plant in Kenosha, Wis„ yesterday, said V. E. Boyd, sales vice president? 'The new Ambassador two d4Mr model «vtll be available in both the 4M and Custom series, Aiyd At the beginning of the 1962 model year, two door ^an models were added to the Rambler line. The sales popularity of these models prompted the addition of two-dobr sedans in the Rambler Ambassador V8 line, Boyd said. The new models will have all the features of the other Ambassador models, he said, including the 250-horsepower B8 engine lan option of 270 horsepower. Premier E. C. M s R R I a g Df Alberta has anoouared that changes In the provliMie’s oU nad gas laws will be latraduoed si the next setalon ot the Icflsla- s means ol Increnaing provtadal leglalallon, they woald alao give Incentive to rxpiorailon and de-velopmenl of oil reaerveo. One problem to be overcome In the development of Arctic oil exports would be that ot transporta-tipn. He also bao Invtahmed ol wllhstaMlInR the hotterlag ol ot wHhstaniHiig the batteiing ot northern Ice packs, lo carry AroMr oil to noHkcni Europe aad kets. 2 Pontiac Motor Sales Executives Get Promotions tW promotion of tTvo Pontiai Motor Division sales executives to new posts in Kansas Oty and Oklahoma City has been announc^ by Frank V. Bridge, the division's geheral salet manager. Bridge said William L. Smith, former tales manager of the Oklahoma City zone Jor Pontiac Motor, has been assigned to a similar position in the Kansas City zone. Kenneth L. Delashaw, former Assistant zone manager in Chicago, has been named to the position in Okla^ma City vacated by Smith. Smith, who” Joined the Pofttiac Motor Division in 1940 as a service adjuster, has served as district manager, parts and accessories manager and business management manager. Delshaw Joined Pontiac in 1950 and has held positions as car distributor, office rnanSger, district manager and business management manager. NEW MODEL-Two^f&r sedan models have 400 or $54 below comparable four-door sedans, been added t» the 1962 Rambler Ambassador ^ Like all Ambassadors, • the new models -have V8 lin#. Suggested advertised-delivered prierti ‘horsepower ratings of . 250, ivlth a 270-horhcppWer will be $2,410 foT the Custom and $2,551 for the option available. i \: