Home Edition Tim vomiMc press The Weal her, PONTIAC; MICHIGAN, MONDAY* JANUARY 15, 1962 -28 PAGES Doing Unto Others Inside Man Waters CLOTHING DRIVE - Pontiac School District today started its annual children-to-cliil-dren clothing drive which will continue the rest of the week. Shown here, giving things , they don’t need for those pupils vvho .do, ah> three Willis Elementary School pupils (left to right): Tony Davidge, sixth grader, 3784 Tienken road: Susan ^wanson, first grader, 3178 Shlmmons Road; and Linda Gronsky, fourth grader, 2202 Phillips Drive, all of Pontiac Township. Romney and Collins jReds Release Ruffle Each Other U.S. Students Couple DETROIT W—George Romney, weighing a decision whether to run tor governor of Michigan, has drawn thej fire of State Democratic Chairman John J. (Joe) Collins.! in Girl Smuggling Romney expressed his views on Michigan’s problems in att interview published in the Detroit Free Press Sun- Berlin day. The 54-year-old president of American Motors Corp.studenU-said Michigan’s national’-image needs a psycholog- n .. T Balloon Tears Congo Deputies Censure Gizenga for Defiance Pro-Red leader Held Virtual Prisoner as Troops Surround Home LEOPOLDVILLE, the; Congo UP)—'The Congo Par-j liament by an overwhelm-j ing majority censured Antoine Gizenga today for his defiance of the central Con-| go government. The pro-Communist cjep-j uty premier was a virtual! prisoner of U.N. and Congo-! lese forces encircling his. residence in Stanleyville, j The government announced Gizenga had agreed to end hia self-imposed exile and return to Leopoldville by this Saturday after his personal bodyguard surrendered Sunday to Congolese! | troops. His capitulation came too late j to avert t h e parliamentary I wrath. | After a brief hut angry debate, the vote* In the Chamber of Deputies was 67 for the censure mo-| tlon. a single vote against It, and; I one abstention. * j CAN BE OUSTED | The, parliamentary action lefti the way open for Premier Cyrille j Adoula to oust Gizenga from the _ {deputy premiership he aceepled East Bonin! last August but never actually Repeat Performance KC MISERY — Six Inches of new snow fell t in Kansas City Sunday. Several inches of packed ed from one up to more than she Inches of snow In a belt extending from northern Missouri across north- issued for the entire Lowi Peninsula. The storm moved into Ihe stale Sunday night, piling six inche snow on Grand Rapids and Muskegon and 10 Inches on sectors farther north. vcKlcn Michigan. Driving conditions hazardous throughout the snow belt. At least three truffle deaths| \ attributed to slippery highways, one each in nd Iowa. Thr 'Sukarno Ships {Attacked Only After Warning Patrol Claim* Thr«e, Vessels Were Invading West New Guinea Seas H O L L A N DI A, New Guinea, Tuesday UP) — An Indonesian torpedo boat was sunk Monday by Dutch patrol ships inside West New Guinea’s territorial waters on the south, coast, the navy said today. At leust three Indonesian motor torpedo bouts were intercepted and a second may have been sunk, the navy said. The other intruder fled. The Dutch News Agency quoted the navy commander In Hoi-landia as saying It was thought the Indonesian ware raft might have Iteen the vanguard for an Invasion (A Dutch Defense Ministry spokesman at The Hague refused I to- roriiment when asked whether the clash meant an actual state of wnr between the Netherlands and {Indonesia.) REPORT SOME KILLED | Indonesia ' has threatened * to seize West New Guinea by force, if ! necessary and Dutch officials at Diak report small bands of Indonesians have begun infiltration hat are being rounded up. They [said some have been killed in flashes with Dutch patrols. 1 The Navy spokesman said the | Indonesian torpedo boats were ____ Intercepted near Etna Bay. This ' Is a region within easy range of .1 some of the Eastern Indonesian Islands believed used as a base [or the Infiltrators. The Hollandia naval chief, Cmdr. Mis-'R- M. Elbers, was quoted as say-diod ing the Dutch ships opened fire southeast ambition might be followed by few-jsiffrtltying the malfunction of the (experiment as fragments burned 1 the plunge back to earth. er glittering generalities and specific positions. "It would also be helpful if he n,,. breakup of the big cotild brihg himself to reject the j, _ dubbed "Big Shot’’ — 1 old Republican line, that Michigan ered several pieces n unfit place in which to live r our children and progress." ROMNEY REPLIES Replying to Collins, Romney said: "I don’t see how he could , . . .. . that into my statement or anything! else that I have said. coated plastic into the ocean about 600 miles southeast of the Cape. The pieces, Hl*n-tasted brilliantly by the rays of the rising sun, provided a spectacular show tor observers. With Some Snow Expected Tonight The U.S, Weather Bureau tore-east three to five Inches of new snow throughout the state by tonight. The State Highway Department said most state roads were slippery this morning. Heavy snow was falling at 6 a.m. in northern Michigan but had turned to rain in southern counties, the department said. Roads in southeastern Michigan were generally clear but elsewhere highway crews were having difficulty keeping up with the snow fall. U. 5. and Market' Nations. Wrap Up Tariff Slashes Nearly one inch of snowfall, coupled with raider temperatures are expected tonight In the Pontiac area. Tonight’s low will be 24 with Tuesday’s high a chilly 30 degrees. ■ ★ ★ ★ Rain changing to snow throughout southern lower Michigan early today created hazardous road conditions for morning drivers. ripitntioQ totaling nearly .5 The two students were among six foreigners convicted by East German court of violating the East German law prohibiting "flight from the Republic”' ahd the passport law. The Americans w?re accused of ------------- trying to smuggle a girl student Inch Sunday will average three of Humboldt University in East I quarters of an Inch in snow flurries Berlin to the-West in Ihe luggage {through Thursday with mbre gen-compartment of their automobile.]Oral predpltullon near the weeks' ★ ★ end. The girl was not idenljfted in; The the report of the trial distributed!ing 8 i by the official East German news {at 5:30 o’clock. By agency, A.D.N. 'mercury showed 29. The highway department said most major highways jjrould be dear by 8 a.m. Rain In southeastern Michigan turned Into snow today. Temperatures this morning ranged from 20 degrees, at the Straits of Mackinac to 37 in Detroit. Highs around the state wfro expected to be from 26 to 3? today, with lows dipping to from .10 to 24 tonight. The heavy snowfall was due to diminish Tuesday to occasional snow and flurries. The five-day state weather fore-lowest temperature preced- cast called for temperatures slight-,ry. today was 34 degrees||y below normul with preclplta- neks while shoveling'«n|y .«’ndlnR ' •timing rounds. Ho added that one Indonesian •ssel—believed to be n motor torpedo boat—was sunk and the other Indonesian strips fled. (Best guessing was that the I11-jdonesian craft operated from Am-bolna, a small island oft Ceram, about 150 miles from the nearest Now Guinea point. (The Amsterdam newspaper Nieuws Van de Dag quoted the Dutch naval chief of staff in Hol-. _ llnndia as saying the -Indonesian WASHINGTON M-The United States find the Euro- niiva, foiw nun,bered four or five pean Common Market nations are reported to have ships.) wrapped up a sweeping tariff-cutting agreement on ~ 7~ many industrial products. il/.o. UOplOIGS The pact, it was understood, Involves up to 20 PerOQg/] Between ------------— —-♦cent reductions on hun- - Idreds of tariffs—more byDutch, Indonesia 1st News Conference{‘hc,f"a;;°" '"t;kcl lhanj Washington <* - us. m. • f r • in/ l^y United States. elate today deplored reports of a m# h/ Far inn IrK i a*g0 wa* Imported lh«t an ar-i<*)afth between Dutch and Indones- U£ I Qvlliy Jl IN jrnngemenl had been made for|ian naval vessels off west New protecting" Lj.S. farm' products In Guinea. They said the Incident ‘would not help efforts to work out "In my statement, I said Michigan has been a leader politically, economically and socially. Because of 'this some of tomorrow’s problems have^ shown up here earlier than in other states. House to Air Bill Hiking Mail Rate; Dems Back JFK sheeting was folded neatly in canister In -the nose of a Thor| rocket which blasted off at 6:06 a.m., In an experiment aimed at testing techniques for launching an advanced Echo communications satellite. A few minutes nfler the launch, the National Aeronautics and I I Space; Admlrttst ration, announced ] that the balloon Had separated from the Thpr and had started to inflate. But a short while later the space agenev said ‘that the loon had split. The Murderers—1 Diplomats, Bums Deal in Dope WASHINGTON ^^FresF:jra(4p wjjj1 |he dent Kennedy faces a barrnge or * „ ... „ ... questioning today on subjects The agriculture problem had ranging from his legislative pro- “•«'» **** ,n'h" gram to foreign affairs at his first 13 * negotiations. That newa cbnfcrcnce of 1962 apparently wan rlmml Mummy M ^ * a iii i - when the Common Market ham* The President whs schcd ^ moet nowamon at 4 pm. (Pontiac . • limp). The news conference, his! first since Nov. 2i). was not being; 'Vhen the deal goes through-televised or hrondeasi "live" hut and Informants Indicated it may lor'D. S. tariff reductions wi jin- near the signing stage AUTHORITY GRANTED # { Such authority was granted by | the 1958 enabling act of Ihe re-| {ciprocal trade program. This is | the program Kennedy wants great-1 I ly expanded to give him a freer i hand in negotiating massive tariff reductions with the Common Mar-| ket. State Department officials said! ict works v WASHINGTON W) — The House will take up postal rate increase legislation Jan. 23, with Democratic leaden pushing ft* Qfc $$21 million version favored by President Kennedy, Speaker John McCormack said today. After vlewti ) officials theorised that perhaps i the sphere carried too much re-sltfual/alr which caused it to expand toe quickly. The TV film, relayed from a ' camera In the Thor booster, showed vividly the separation of w ■ / ' the canister from the rocket, open* But McCormack shled awoy frorn ing o( cnni,ter with one-half predicting whether this form of dipping 0ff Into space and sudden the hill, the 1550. million version |nfiuti,m of Ihe bid loon and the Approved by the House Post Of*|a|m<)l,); immediate ripping, flee Committee, or some other Th^ iekrf first Appeared about variation will pass. three seconds after Inflation, and ’ll have no doubt that a bill will immediately spilt) the balloon Into pass," McCormack tolfl\ his new* several pieces, conference. ’’The form v^lll be for Newsmen viewed the film .‘at a the House to deetdr.’’ news conference. (Editor's Note—With a zealot’s single mindedness, the chief of the U.S. Bureau of Narcotics has waged hot war for a third of a century in this cou ntry and abroad against narcotics gangsters. In this, the first of 16 articles condensed from his new best setter, aThe Murderers,” he takes you behind the scenes in the fight). BY HARRY i. ANSUNGKR U.S. Commissioner of Narcotics AND WILL OURBLKR For more than 30 ye«fg Lhuve been warrin* against the murderers. These are the ,men who control the International traffic hi narcotics. They rangq from diplomats and ladles of society to silk-shifted racketeers, killers, and the side- walk vermin who serve as couriers and front-line vendors of dope. *. * * I have waged this protracted campaign since 1930, when I became United States Commissioner of Narcotic* and1 chief of the Federal Narcotics Bureau. Ours is a war fought on unsuspected battlefields, unrecognized In the midst of average communities. It mhy be waged tin the salon of a transatlantic jet, the office of a governor—or the linen closet of a .Westchester housewife. CRIMINAL OR ?VICTIM? j \ Many big dealers have in the most elite circles. One notorious international trafficker, v, responsible for the addiction of mlllloni In Africa. Asia, Europe, and America, was virtually lionized by New York-eodety when he dropped into the of World War II. The world of dope Is a misshapen, hallucinatory cosmos that thrives on Its own secrecy; Which Is the criminal and which the victim In It Is not as easy to define as some social casework- result of the agreement 1 |; would be that the Common Mar- _ |iket would lower its tariffs 20 per | 11 cent. I U.S, reductions—limited by Ihe | | trade nd—would be up to 20 per | S cent. The agreement was wogked out i «crs -r-r-i a.In Brussels with special presided- 1 is II (he Washington politician on the V Hal adviser Howard Peteraon rep-1 «r„--iBtL1vsSsfy £ with penthouse prostitutes who provide I Market-whlch is made 1 boudoir cocaine a* a special service.to |jup of Weg( Germanyi France. | customers? Is It the habitual criminal— 1! Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium | the car thief who picked up his drug Habit § and Luxembourg. in prison? Is It • the unseen "Investor” |j «—-- Who put* up cash needed for, the rat peaceful settlement of the dispute over the island. j Efforts are continuing through Informal diplomatic contacts to work out dirwt negotiations between the Dutch and Indonesians on the. New Guinea question, officials stressed. In Today's -j Press Faces Trouble 4 GOP opposition to Ken- | nedy’s programs tightens — J PAGE M. Angola Debate New U.N. discussion likely to strain U.S.-Portugal ties —PAGE IB. The Papuans merchandise? ‘Or is it a flaxen-hfilred 18-year-old girl sprawled nude ana, unconscious on a Harlem tenement f floor after, selling herself all afternoon. In exchange for a heroin shot? 1 , (tout, on Page a. Uol. S) 1 Echo Passing Tonight Jl The time, 4:29'a.m. The dlrec Sjtion, south., The height, $7-71 degrees above the horizon. The path, {southeast. Follow those directions [tonight,and you may catch a glimpse or the Echo I balloon _Jta(pHlt*. Lost Weekend •Students should find another wjty to cram — PAGE Area News ............... IB Comics ................'. it Editorials .......... .. t Markets .................. B Obituaries ............. * •' Sports ............... IM? Theaters ... . . II TV jb Radio Programs .. W Women’s Pages 7,..., ll-ll 4 TWO •>i‘. THE rONTIAC ■ State Dept. Hits British for Plane Sale WASHINGTON (AP) - The State Department told a congressional critic today that it had opposed a British sale of airliners to Communist China but that Britain felt it had every right to make its own decision. The State Department's position stated in a letter from Assistant Secretary Frederick Dutton to Sen. Kenneth B. Keating, R-N.Y, The senator Had protested the transaction to Secretary of State Dean Rusk. .★ ★ ★ In the multiminton-dollar deal Laotian Prince's Words Give Little Hope of Accord GENEVA (ft — Pro-Western Prince Boun Oum arrived today for another conference with Laos' other two political princes on the formation of a coalition government. ♦ .-.dr ★- But he gave no indication the meeting, sponsored by the 14-nation Laos conference, would produce agreement. A spokesman for Boun Oum said the formation of a coalition could only take place on Laotian soil, hot In Geneva. And the prince declared on the way here that he still would not agree to let Prince Souvanna Phouma’s neutralists take the key ministries of defense and interior In any coalition. SETS TIME LIMIT Boun Oum’s spokesman, Kham-phan Panya, also set a time limit for the talks here, declaring his prince had to be back in Laos by next Sunday, foi^his mother’s funeral. * However, W. Averell Harrl-man of the United States expressed optimism on Ms arrival and discounted Bonn Oum’s adamant statements concerning the defense and Interior ministries. "Many statements are made and there are many ways of coming to an agreement,” said Harriman, who is assistant secretary of state for Fhr Eastern affairs. "There is no need to be discouraged by anyone's statements,” he added. Harriman said he was "hopeful that with the presence of the three princes, progress can be made not only in the conference but also with the formation of a government of national unity." ■ Oum’s rivals, pro-Com- and Souvanna Phouma, are expected here Tuesday, r .Boun Oum’s Tightest government fears that giving the defense and interior posts to neutralists would result in the Communists taking them over eventually. ★ 1 ★ dr The United States has endorsed the idea of , putting neutralists in the two posts. Threaten Strike Against Merger TWU Will Set Dote Unless Jobs Insured by Pennsy, Central NEW YORK (UPD-The Transport Workers Union (TWU) wlU set a strike date next Saturday against the Pennsylvania and New York Central railroads unless the railroads guarantee that no jobs will be eliminated because of proposed merger. the Peipilig government late last year purchased six Vickers Vis? count airliners. Since then -Red China was* repotted to -have begun (alks for the purchase of .a fleet of Handley Page Herald airliners. Earlier this month, the Ro&tes Group, one of Britain’s motor builders, announced the sale of"139 trucks to Peiping. •TO CANCEL WOULD HURT’ Cancellation of the sale, Dutton told Keating, would cause public reaction in Britain "largely directed against the United States and, in the .judgment of the British government, .would cause undue harm to Anglo-American relations." 1 ★ ★ ★ Dutton said the State Department was consulted in advance’ about the aircraft ^leal and told the British *.'we were opposed to supplying the Chinese Communists with these planes together with embargoed equipment them," NOT BUILT YET Dutton told Keating the planes had not yet been built and that the "aircraft themselves are not subject to the International strategic trade embargo against the Sino-Sovlet ‘ bloc, although the weather radar, which .Is wholly British-made, and the navigation equipment for these planes are strategically rated." TWU President Michael Quill announced at an emerge meeting of his 15-man international executive council that he would ask the railroads later today for guarantee of "full employment under the conditions of ^|lt has been our policy wherever possible to limit Communist Chinese air transport capablli- es," Dutton told Keating. ★ ★. it Dutton said the British also gave these reasons for completing the deal: The strategically important British aircraft industry is badly in need of orders to main-? tain employment; the political effect Of this puprehase of aircraft of Western manufacture would have useful propaganda value;" and refusal of the contract would have greatly increased domestic pressures in the United Kingdom against the entire strategic trade control program. HEADING IN AND OUT — It looks, for a moment, as if Virginia has a double-headed governor when Albertis A. -Harrison Jr. (left) turns to accept congratulations, after being sworn In, at Richmond as Virginia’s 64th chief executive. Retiring .Gov. J. Lindsay Almond Jr. (right) turns away after the ceremony on the Capitol’s steps. i v Dope Trade Touches AIT McNamara, Aides Discuss Viet Nam HONOLULU (AP)—Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara arrived in Hawaii Sunday night for a day-long series of talks on Communist-threatened South Viet Nam. He confers today with Adm. Harry D. Fell, commander in chief of U S. forces In the Pacific, and other top military lead- Keatlng noted that there was no ’omment on xhis information that 'no assurance was given by Red China or the United Kingdom that the plane* would not be used for military purposes the Com-. Imunigtx and that government- Qulll also said he would ask Luaranlee(1 crwiit had been ex Ally, Oen. Robert F. Kennedy !tfindo(1 (0 ,he Chinese by the for an Investigation^ of the mer lIn|)ed KinK,iom to enable the ger, which he described as "this make thc purchase, $1.4 billion stock manipulation. The fiery TWU chief said he would summon presidents of 4t locals in the Pennsylvania Railroad and the heads of 31 locals in the New York Central system to a meeting here (at 10 a. in. KST) next Saturday "to set a strike date against both railroads" If he 'dvr job guarantees. (Continued From Page One) From the start I have thrown the full efforts of the bureau not against minor characters against major violators, the big hoods, the topdrawer importers and wholesalers. Some have controlled wholp communities and cities, police departments and mayors, judges, district attorneys and juries. Getting evidence to convict hoodlums who thrive In this heavily protected level, where the penalty for talking Is death, remains one of the most challenging assignments in law-enforcement. Yet there are those who do talk. They talk for profit, for special :onsideration in their own cases, help for a dying wife or mother, venge, or merely to salve •onsciehco. To Challenge Jury Selection "If they ugree, then of cour there will be no threat of strike said Quill, whose union repr gents 25,000 employes of the two rail giants. Jets Collide in German/ McNamara declined specific comment about the meetings but said the United States has no In- UNGEN, Germany U* — Two tentlon to use combat troops In British medium-range Canlie the beleaguered southeast Asian jet bombers eolflded In flight and nation. I crushed near here today, a British The defense head said hi* visit Air Flare spokesman said. The here i$ one of a series that would four-man.crew of one managed to be made-to US. operational com-1 bail out; -the three-man crew of mands throughout the world. 'the other is missing. work for us, while bors of the mob. 'mployees" of the ■i(T -retly they lining mem Such "special < Bureau come fil of the underwoi The job of actually bringing In the violators and securing the evidence Is carried on by Bureau agents. For week* or even years, the agent may live with narcotic gangsters. He becomes a part ol the gangster’s intymate life and family. One slip — one false word — could eost hi* life. The syndicate which the agent Infiltrates is a modern' phe ,i-i. a, it gm icnon. In 1914, wlu-n Ihe Harrison Milton Henry Will Try Art was pass,.d nai„)ti(. trafiick-tO Have Whole Panel j '"8 ln America was largely In the Dismissed Tuesday Another showdown in the selec-on of Circuit Court juries in Oakland county comes tomorrow be-Clrcuit Judge Frederick C. Zleni. is expected to rule on a motion filed by Pontiac attorney Mil-ton R. Henry. Henry seeks to have the entire 80-member Jury panel, which starts work on a new term tomorrow morning, dliunissed on the ground* that it does nqt represent a cross-section of the people of the county. hands of Ihe Chinese MORE PROFITABLE DRUGS Opium was Ihe most popular addictive drug in use. Only later did the so-called "white drugs"—morphine and heroin. — replace opium in popularity. Thc white drugs are quicker ln effect, more dangerous, addictive — and more profitable. ' Henry, who ha* filed similar motion* before on the * a m e grounds, ha* tiled hi* latent in be|wlf of John K. Full U.8. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC! AND VICINITY — Near one Inch of snow likely tonight. Rnow diminishing to snow flurries and turning colder tonight. Tuesday occasional snow and a little colder. Low tonight 24. High tomorrow 30. Wind southerly 10 to 20 miles becoming northerly later today. With the llarrlson laws, addiction In America wa* curtailed drastically — from one addict In every 4,000. But as the figure dropped, the underworld trafficker* got bolder. The hoodlum* were wtlllgg to take chancee because thc profits were immense. They killed when they had to. Spread out from New York to Paris, from Istanbul to Shanghai, - H EH........barged ISMS"!■»»? with the attempted murder of a 0nr p p()Wrr Pontiac General Hospital nurse Lorpw,8 of another, last March. . . . I knew that what he said was true. I had been working on the since my first day in office. With this blunt charge, however, time tvas running out — "if the newly formed Bureau was to win and hold the respect and support of Congress and the public, it would have to act fast. At that time the opium trade In America; den* could be found In t any American city. ★ ★ ★ Our preliminary investigations lad revealed thfrt the tongs and Chinese individuals were operating opium dens, gambling and brothels, on both sides of Pennsylvania Avenue. FIRST VIOLENCE Working closely with the Washington metropolitan police, I ordered all available agents thrown into thc investigations. Within a few days, we had our 'irst. taste of tong violence. ★ AW One of the On I-eong T o members had come over to side and was working as "special employe.” Some within his tong learned truth, and only two blrtcks fi the Capitol dome our man was shot dead on the street. No witnesses were available. No one wa* ever brought to trial. Despite this, our agents made number of' buys pf opium * Chinese establishments; Following the purchases we obtained secret warrants for raids on 30 opium dens in Washington, ail oi to Pennsylvania Avenue. ★ ★ , 4 | I picked a special occasion, a night when the Chinese were holding a convention in Washington and family representatives and tong leaders from cities all America would be on hand. Over Weekend Three Europeans Killed as Moslems, Settlers Attack Viciously 1 ALGIERS, Algeria OJPl)- Terrorists shot and killed three Europeans today in what police said Appeared to bf “executions” by ritfltwltlg extremists. $r '★ ■ Ellice said ope of the three men was Victor Demare, head of the Oran District Postal and Telecommunications Service. Another was Identified as Camille Bagur, an outspoken opponent of the terrorist Secret Army Organisation (OA8) and the* son of an avowed and-OAfl village councillor at nearby Bounin. Their, deaths and the slaying of I* policeman at Oran brought the death toll since Jan. 1 to 239, an avertwe of 15 persons a day. More than 900 persons have been wounded iii terrorist attacks by both OAS and MoMem rebel assassins during the same period. SHOT AND KILLED Demare, 4T, previously, had received threatening letters from the OAS, police said. He was shot down as he entered a building today. Bagur, 38, had previously survived OAS plastic bomb attacks, police said. He was shot and killed at Bllda. All- three victims apparently were on the OAS "execution list,’' police said. The policeman was not identified. Sr ★ ' ★ Police figures showed (hat 31 persons were killed and 76 wounded Sunday alone, bringing the total number of casualites since New Year’s Day to 239 dead and 18 wounded. In predominantly European Oran, Algeria’s second-largest city, police went out in force Sunday to break up roving packs of youths hunting down Moslems. the recently established post of ment in WcwRawn Cemetery, Decity civil defense administrative ' aide, Asst. City Manager Robert Keqning said today. ‘ , T believe that a decision could be made within three weeks as to which of the individuals would be the most Satisfactory for the added Kenning. of time 1$ nee- The attorney not only challenges the method of selecting the men and women jurors, but finds fault ( with wha( he calls the "built-in In-| firmitles" of the laws under which i|(y? election is made. As the smaller mobs destroyed each other,, thekshadow of grew larger with each "execution." This was the Grand Council of Ihe Mafia, with its plan of an international cartel controlling every phase of criminal a Washington police lent u* about 400 patrolmen. In addition, I had almost two doten top undercover agents heading up approximately ten raiding parties It was one of the largest and most carefully coordinated actions of metropolitan and federal authorities. We began in the early evening a center, [break In. drag out the participants, thc operators, the opium-smoking paraphernalia and tote off to Ihe police While we took them off, another raiding party would launch the next wove. This went on throughout the night. ‘ i i A -pedal committee tyijlniid County Bar Assoc jjjjlnlso undertaken a gene 141 the selection of juries. 34 expected next Monday When we in the Bureuu first ot the Oak **"' PHbHe about the m*4»- Mafia im-nace, many 4-rtmtnal . . , . authorities Jeeml. Mufia was a A V* j *! myth, they said. Mafia's press A repot s |„ America Joined the wher e either closed up moved to other > would take care r date. II ' “ jBlackfop Hearing, Rezoning on Agenda A; blacktop hearing and a quest lo re zone a parcel of land the two main items or night's Waterford Township agen-nccordlng to Clerk James E. Seeterlln. The hearing for Intent to proceed on uluektopplng Sylvan Shore* Drive will begin at 7:30 p.m. The nionlng of property on the northwest eoroer of Novara Street and Elisabeth Lake merclal I* scheduled ar nmiii NATIONAL WEATHER ~ RaHn or showetj are expected tonight alpng the Atlantic coast and along parts of. the Northwest and Central Pacific coast while show flurries are .forecast for the "Lake* area, the Northern (Appalachians and the Ohio Valley. It will fye colder in tlfo Plains and Gulf Slates. , Also, the boaird will establish hearing date for the Installetioh of 348 feet of eight-inch Mtwer pipe along Edgefield Street. Board members V*** *1»0 .consider a request of Police Chief Millard Pender to Increase salaries of four patrolmen, after one year of sendee with the department.. In 1929, Imlsaioner of prohibition. So long I held this post, I labored to my fullest strength to enforce the anti-alcohol laws. Bui this was a thankless and impossible asxign- LOOKED TO FUTURE Another danger was growing almost unnoticed. The big organized bootleg gangs were looking to the future when prohibition would be out. One lucrative outlet was colics. Chemical pjanfs of Europe and Asia already were producing vast quantities of drugs, which came into this country by various routes and smuggling techniques, In mo, President Hoover ngked me to take on n new re-thnt of -United nn Commissioner of N a root f hnd been in office only a week* when I found myself usplcious. beginning, this first ry at close quarters with the otic underworld. The main I street of the nation's capital, assistant com-{least, was no longer polluted. Tuesday: The "Dream Girl*’ floor 4>t thc Senate, Senator Cole Blease of South Carolina rose from his seat, waving in his hand a tin of*, opium. 'This was purchased," he ahouted, • \ yrl|h from "Th» Murdfr-t IM1 by Harry J. 4WpubltXl?.r; Varrsr", irl, 7, Dies of Burns After Stove Mishap Seven-year-old Karen Krafft this morning lost her battle for life In William Beaumont Hospital after being burned over 80 per cent of her body in her Pleasant Ridge home Friday. ★ A ★ Karen, 21 Oakdale Blvd., been left home alone with her two brothers, 11 and 5, Friday morning while her mother, Mrs, Ronald C. Krafft was drlvlngjher husband > a railroad station. When Karen bent oyfer a lighted stove to reach into ‘ a cupboard, her night clothing caught' flpe. She was taken to the Royal Oak hospital by Ferrtdale Five Department ambulance, Wide Coverage by Press Given a New Angle ALBANY, N.Y. (AP)—A woman caihMl the city desk of the Albany Times-Union and asked the slogan ot the newspaper business. "What do you call It? The fourth what?” *he asked. "The Fourth Estate," a report "Oh,” the woman *ald, “I ji told my daughter It was I fourth dimension." The Pay In Birmingham 8 Candidates Seek Post ot Civil Defense Aide ■ Eight candi- ations for held. 3p.m. today with entomb- frolL lie, Christian, president of the Acme Foundry Co., Detroit, died Satfaduy at tits' home after a long have to personally Interview quire tljne to make thorough la-vestlgatlon of those few which are the most likely candidate*.’’ The administrative aide will work out of the d|y manager’s office and, for the most part, , be responsible for correlating civil defense activities., ; ★ "t. ★ Kenning Will make his report the candidates at tonight’s City Commission meeting. Claire Cod, noted Woman organ virtuoso, will be the next artist to appear at the St. James Episcopal Church concert series Feb. 6. The 8:15 p.m. program will be held at the church; 355 W. Maple Road. PERFORMED AT POINT Miss COd has performed with major symphony orchestras, given recitals from coast to coast was the first woman organist to be invited to perform at West Point. Currently she is one of the accredited teachers of the Union Theological Semlnaty in New York, and head* the organ department at the Dalcroze School of Music. Robert S; Howard, an industrial development engineer with the Detroit Edison Co., be the guest speaker Friday at the Detroit Cbuntry Day School’s senior lecture. series. His topic will be entitled "Detroit’s Economy And Its Future." Howard, a 1955 graduate of the Michigan College of Mining And Technology, Houghton, Is at ent devoting full time to the development- work going on ii utility company. ★ AW He has served as a consultant to both industrial enterprises seeking new plant sites and to communities wishing to attract new Industries. *. William Christian Sr. Service for William Christian Sr. 8T, of >27394 Mornlngside Pi a*a, dent of Motors Metal Manufacturing Co., Detroit, He was ft member of (he Detroit Golf Club and the Detroit Rotary Cub. '★ "★ * Surviving are two sons, J. Don? aid and William, and four grand- .Mrs. Alton Orth . Service for, Mrs. Allen (Lillian I.) Orth, 61, of 683 MoheganTst., will be' 3 p.m. tomorrow at the Bell Chapel of the William R, Hamilton Co, .Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. MM. Orth died yesterday at her home following a short illness. ■■'★.★ ★ She had been active in the Guild at Christ Church Cranbrook. Surviving are her husband and son, Derek A. Police and Firemen Pensions Up for Vote It appeared today that posed $100,000 pension plan for police and firemen in Pontiac will be put to voters in the April 16 general election. - Petitions containing some 28,000 Signatures requesting that the plan be put on the ballot have been submitted to City Clerk Olga Berkeley and are being checked today. Petitions were submitted for two separate proposals. Each petition requires only 1,879 signatures of registered voters to have the proposal placed on the ballot. Deadline for submitting the petitions is tomorrow. ON CHAPTER 18 One petition proposes (hat police and firemen be excluded from; pension provisions .set up in Chapter 18 of the city charter. There were 14,153 signatures on that petition. ON CHAPTER 19 A second, containing 14,250 signatures, proposes that the separate Family ot Five Treated After Furnace Fumes A family of five was rushed to St. .Joseph Mercy Hospital by Pontiac firemen yesterday after being overcome by fumes from ,a broken furnace pipe. William Campbell, 39, his wile Evelyn, M, and their three ohll dren were taken to the hospital, by a fire department emergency crew, after Inhaling the fumes In their flat at 109 Lewi* at. All were trented and released at the hospital. The Campbell children are Debbie, 9; Billy, 7, and Michael,6. Firemen were called to the scene at about 11:30 e.m. pension plan be added to the char-* >r as Chapter 19. The petitions were submitted late Friday afternoon by Pontiac attorney Kenneth Hempstead, rep-resentlnR the Pontiac Police Officers’' Association and Pontiac Firefighters1 Association, sponsors of ihe new pldn. Based on 1961 payroll figures the plan would cost the city an additional $100,000 this year; according to A. A. Weinberg, of Chicago, consulting actuary for the sponsoring group*. The proposed 1962 budget now being prepared for a public hearing Jan. 23 doesn't include any provision for the new plan but does call for $210,000 to be used as a pay Increase or benefits for city employes. ★ ★ i ★ mted to the City Commission by former City Manager Walter K. Wlllman in November, It would require a tax rate hike of about 26 cents per $1,000 of assessed property Value. The addition of the proposed pension plan would necessitate another 35-cent tax rate Increase. ★ ★ ★ For this reason, commissioners were unwilling to include It in the 1962 budget. It was the general feeling of the commission that the resulting 61-cent tax rate increase would be too much in one year. Lathnip 'Tillage, was to have been Hearings Open on FEPC Bills NAACP, Labor Leaders Testify; Swainson and Williams to Be Called WASHINGTON (UPI) - A House labor subcommittee today opened hearings on fair employment practices legislation that may never get through Congress, but promises to roll up plenty of political mileage. ★ ★ ★ Chairman James Roosevelt, D-Calif., called for testimony from Negro and religious spokesmen in the first of five days of hearings. He listed top labor leaders, a high State Department official and a Northern Democratic governor for lhter sessions. II, national labor secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored Poople (NAACP); Dr. Herman Long, director of the race relations department, Fisk University, Nashville, Tenn.; and B. Tartt Bell, executive secretary of the American Friends Service Committee, High Point, N.C. were scheduled to be the first day witnesses. G. Mennen Williams, assistant secretary of state for African affaire; Gov. John Swainson of Michigan; President George Meany of the AFL-CIO; and President A. Philip Randolph of the AFL-CIO Sleeping Car Porters on tap for later testimony. URGES FEPC The NAACP official urged creation of a Fair Employment Practices Commission (FEPC) on the national level to step in where he said states have failed to end job discrimination. Hill ^ald many that In both the North and South "there Is n direct relationship between poverty and discrimination and the federal government must Intervene to eliminate both 4 these related evils which endanger American society." He said there was a pattern of discrimination built into labor contracts with Southern industry that prevented Negroes from rising above menial jobs. ★ ★ ★ But, he added, the problem must be attacked on a national level because in the Northern industrial centers "one out of every three Negro workers was unemployed sometime during 1961." OK Sterilization Move LONDON (AP) - A Church of England committee gave tentative approval today (o voluntary sterilization as a means of fighting overpopulation in India, but it criticized money payments as an Inducement to sterilization. Parents Visit Student Held in East Berlin BERLIN (UPI)—The parents of j a California student jailed by the Communists drove into East Berlin today to visit and bring him food. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Pankey of Tustin, Calif., drove through the Friedrichstrasae crossing point on the East-West Berlin border at 15 p.m. (8:15 a.m. Pontiac time). ' , More than half of *31 homicide victims are slain /by firearms. I Begin a New Adventure in Learning This Week at MSUO Today, the WINTER TERM begins in the Continuing Education Pro* grain at MSUO. Registration Monday through Thursday, January 15-18. Topics for All Entrants MSUO Campus Walton at Squirrel Road f FE 8*4515 T Wm f THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUABY15, 1902 Were Yo« Ben Before 1911...? tw'mMRHi. cor Al •uneral and' other expenses. lT'orx*:«rrt5 medical examination Free Information, no ....... Tear out this ad right now. .. Send your name, address and year of birth to: Central Security Life Insurance Co, Dept. L-432 B£[ SKTH- ■j| Stops Constipation due to “Aging Colon” iteiiet, doctors say. lias m now laxative pdaeiplo that rs-crsstas 3 essentials at youthfulra*uurity. As you grow older, tin iniernalmuscles of your colon wall alto age, lose the i body* ■* Sutfoaot !___ ___________f out and (brink so they fail to stimulate the urge to. purge. Of all leading tut* ‘y new Colon aid give* you lives, only ktiMMrvpH (1) Colonmd prevents tion of dry. hardened wai passage without pain " helps retone flabby cole on the nerve reflexes that stimulate the “mass movementMof your lower colon. Co urttAiD relieves even chrome constipation overnight; is so gentle it was hospital proved safe even for expect* ant mothers. Introductory Slat 43*. (Advertisement) Mor* Comfort Wearing FALSE TEETH !o2rpm&,d2^£!toSs!, pabtS nrmer so that they feel tortable. No gummy, ~ taste or reeling. It's * ■ “i. Does Si (Advertisement) "Must I Suffer All My Life because I’m a woman?’1 ailments at any age... both monthly oramps and "hot flashes* of ghange-ol-llfe I Just because you’re a woman you don’t have to suffer nasty cramps. Don’t have to go through the change with fear, misery! Today, most women can relieve | $$. ft to Money Lenders Again 9y 9AM DAWSON * AP Business News Analyst . NEW YORK - The U.S. Treasury is borrowing a billion dollars In new cash >today. It stoqMn’4 . 13%:. jay trouble raising the ‘mo&fy—but It HHl still be embanjased. dr dr' %• ’ That new borrowing pushes the federal debt up awfully dose to the |298*billion celling the Treas- when it got the debt temporarily 'at toe last session of Congress. The permanent level Is 3285 billion did getting back to that looks well nigh impossible at Thatfif Whit's behind the ruckus ver the federal debt ■ _ The Treasury gays it can’t maneuver as it should in the money market to get the beet terms of Interest and length of payments ILitilf too dose to toe ceiling, ft also fears that expenditures, foreseen or possible in this quickly changing world, could "push it tight against toe Ceiling, leaving it unable, to borrow to pay its bills If it obeys the law. this s Worse, the Treasury fears now that it might have to go into debt In excess of 3298 billion before the June 15 Tax collections rbU' in— and possib)y- above 3300 billion shortly before Christmas, because of the fall slack in tag receipts. The Treasury’s embarrassment is comparable to yours if your banker and other lending sources said you could borrow only• so much, and’you were near; or at that limit. You would be lng What to do abouf the expenses that vary from time to time and about any emergencies—not mention your inability to take ad-bargain when flits by. Air Tragedy Marks Mountain; 4 pied HOT SPRINGS, Ark., (AP)-$lue Mountain claimed its third airplane tragedy in four years when fdur California men died in the crash of their single-engine plane. The Californians went down Sunday In a spinning Beechcraft Bonanza in foggy, rainy weather-State trooper Glen Minton, who is pilot, theorized that the plane got into trouble in foul weather and lost A wing in a high-speed spin. Minton said Louis Risner of Englewood, Calif, apparently was the pilot. Other victims were Henry Gay Risner, Louis’ broth-' Russ Weininger, a business associate of Louis Risner; and Charles Cornell, all 'of the Los Angeles area. a total interest It pays, boosting ex--pnhditures by that much and thus The Treasury would like ceiling at all. Barring that, would like a boost shortly in the temporary ceiling, say to 3300 billion, and then later to several billions above that. This would top the record actual debt of 3300 billion during World War n. In 1946 the permanent debt ceiling was put at 3275 billion, raised to 3283 billion in 1958, ; billion in 1959. But from 1955 on, higher temporary ceilings were mbstly the rule. AGAINST A CEILING Hie argument against setting debt ceiling, and frequently changing It, is this: Congress itself votes the appropriations and programs that set the size of the Treasury's „ex-Congress votes the kinds and rates of taxes that provide almost all of the Treasury's receipts. If expenditures exceed the Treasury borrows adding to the debt if tax collections aren’t big enough. Hie Treasury, thinlp that If the ceiling was higher it could ctydose the borrowing-time and the terms servattyes think that without the ceiling toe administration might be tempted to spend carelessly run to Congress for appropriation to make up the deficit to pay the bills and toe federal debt rises. Cbngress, therefore, may set a permanent or temporary debt limit, but the actual size of the debt largely is set by toe amounts Congress appropriates and the taxes It authorizes. An added factor is the terms on which toe Treasury may borrow—how much Auunji, Miimu wvi “female sufferlni with Pinkham Tablets! In doctor’s tests with Pinkham longer suffered agonizing “period Fire Kills 5 Tots as Mother Watches ____d got remarkable relief from distress'of change-of-llfel No costly shots were used. Taking Pinkham Tablets alone, “hoc flashes” subside. Nervousness Is calmed. Then you can start living a full, happy life again I When simple Iron-deficiency anemia robs you of energy, Ptnkham Tablets are also a blessing I Rich in Iron, they help strengthen blood and vitality) *) don’t "give In” to female peace-of-n new relief from physical distress. t VOU PREFIX XIIQUID druggist* also I lave famous Lydia E. Ptnkham * I Vegetable Compound. BROWNSVILLE. Tenn. (AP) — Fire sweeping through a small frame house killed five small children as their mother watched helplessly. Mildred Agnew, 30, discovered her home in flames Sunday when she returned to check on her children. Mrs. Agnew had been, working at a nearby house. | The children were Dave Agnew j and Mildred Agnew, 5, twins; T. C. Agnew,- 4; Prentise Agnew, I 2; and J- T. Agnew, 1. Fire chief Battle Shaw said the; fire probably started from an open gas heater. i A Good Cigarette ot SIMMS LOWER PRICE MARVEL Cigarettes CARTON S8 N. Saginaw —Main Floor (Advertisement) WomenPast21 WITH BLADDER IRRITATION WITH BLADDER Alter 31, eonuDoh Kidney or Bladder Irritation* attest tvle* a* many woman a* men and may make youtenee and nervous from too trequent, burnln* or Itching urination both day todmsbt. OeeondarUy, you may lose ween and eutterfrom Headache*. Backache and (eel old, Ured.de- Compare the quality and price on Genuine Diamonds at Simms before you buy. Pay cash, pay less or use FREE LAYAWAY at no extra cost. DIAMOND sets Reg. $75—now DIAMOND SETS Reg. $100—now DIAMOND SETS' Reg. $150-—now DIAMOND SETS 12^33 BO00'! 66«7 lOOoo*1 Reg. $200—now DIAMOND SETS 2QQ00 Reg. $300—now Lowest Prices on 14K GOLD WEDDINC BANDS mm Jewelry Dept.—Main Floor s W OFF Crest FAMILY SIZE You pay only 73* This.Price Includes Your IOC Savings CAPITOL SAVINGS & LOAN, ASSOCIATION $2/400,000 in earnings paid to savers, in 1961 144th Semi-Annual Statement of Condition—December 31,1961 ASSETS First Mortgage Homo Loans................... $59,180,625.50 Homo Purchase Contracts............... . . ..... 2,354,272.47 Sharo Loans.................................*••••“ Interest In Process of Collection .............. 97,251.20 Horn* Office and Branch Office Building*, ...... 1,378,882.93 less depreciation BA BS4 07 Furniture, Fixtures and Equipment.................... oo.oon.v/ , less depredation , r Real Estate-Including Held for Redemption....... 256,365.98 Prepaid Expense............*..........*•........ J3,742.66 Miscellaneous Asset................................ Jl®»'28.78 Federal Home Leon Bank Stock................... • ^,300,000.00 United Staten Government SecurHIe............... 2,990,809.15 other Investment Securities..................... Cash on Hand and in Bank*....................... Total Aunt...........................,.$TI,88T,181.84 LIABILITIES Shareholder*1 Account Including Dividends Credited..................... $95,310,118.62 Loans In Praeesi.................•.............. JJMJJW Tax and Insurance, Escrow Accounts .............. 712,696.73 Unapplied Credit................................ I Contingent Profit on Real Estate Contracts ..... 256,106.67 Ressrv* for Interest Uncollected........«;«• • • • • 97,143.01 Reserves R $4,700,000.00 Undivided Profits •.. . . $1 ^601789.71 6.090,789.71 Total Liabilities....................$73,087,201.94 0/ 10 Current Rate Savings in by Jan. IQth Receive Earnings From Jan. 1st I at munmai compounded and paid quarterly Or you can purchase ADVANCED CERTIFICATES Current Rate —■ ^ II If held to Maturity. Available In unite of $80.00 per share. Branchent PONTIAC 75 West Huron Stteet LATHRUP VILLAGE , , 27215 Southfield Road v DETROIT LANSING . Wa»hinjj[on Blvd. Home Office T WHERE SECURITY AND GOOD EARNINGS ON YOUR SHARE SAVINGS HAVE BEEN CONTINUOUS FOR OVER 72 YEARS Member—Federal Home L#an Bank System ■V, Matching RUG and LID COVER 2-Pc. Bath Mat Set Valurs to $2.50 Rubberized or Foam Backs Washable Rugs 1.00 Medium size tufted rugs in cut pile III or loops, all cotton In solid colors or 'tweeds with plain or fringed edges. 6-ft. Rug Runners ''Hr 287 Construe led fi ed-on quality Jute carpet back. Solid or tweeds in? loops^ Shop TONITI or TUESDAY for Thoao SIMMS PRICE-BUSTING DISCOUNTS! TONITE and TUESDAY SPECIALS CAMERA DEPARTMENT DISCOUNTS 'jki • m, w h SAWYER 3-D VIEWMASTER With FREE REEL 1.49 A Sawyer Viewmaster 3-D Color Reel Pack of 3- 98° ###**###*#*•*••••••* Compact 3-BULB BAR LITE ........w ■mu j”..®..... With Built-In Meter Penta 35mm Camera 79 17 Famous /GLOBAL’ 9-Transistor Radio C ton pair 1987 With Case, Battery, Earphone werful 9 tiainislor radio uses slandurd O 9 volt batteries. Conqih’le outfit. Only PORTABLE BATTERY OPERATED All Transistor TAPE RECORDERS Easiest to Operate—Exactly as Pictured Simms Discount Price I North Satina , liras ■22 rilkilkirMmml Record the children’s voice? i.. use it to dictate bu»in«»i letters . . t, correspond with relatives and friends' with tap* letters... and you cun carry it with you ./.. II uses mr*.pensive Iran, slstof batteries (which are included). Buy for gills or yoWselL SIMMS AUTO DEPARTMENT DISCOUNTS CHAMPION’ Spark Pings Regular $1.05 Value—Each Brand new 'Champion* spark plugs for most cars. Limit 8 plugs •per person. 59 EA. SAE Heavy Duty e TRANSMISSION FLUID A BRAKE FLUID 47*i $1.00 i Value I Full 14-ounce can. 70RI • mixes with other fluids. Limit-2 cans. Cor Windshield WASHER SOLVENT Reg. 59c 30,97c for i Full-Yue brand in large 16-ownc* size. Limit 6. T2-Ounce Size of GASUNE I ANTI FREEZE QQC i **7l*FAlU’| jOg values — prevents [ I,j gas line treeze-ups in a cold weather. Limit 8. CASITE TUNE-UP g- Stops Transmission Leaks J ----------- • Er*- Motor Honey £•79* SMOOTH -SEAL CASITE Smooth-Seal $1.75 129 Can I SHALERS RISLONE Oil Alloy PYROIL ‘A’ Engine Concentrate ********************we************< Oil Additive for Engines ALEMITE CD-2 42-Inch ALL STEEL : Car-Top Carriers Heavy Duly TARPAULINS 7x 7-Ft... 3.49 6x 8-Ft—4-79 It 9-Ft... 6.25 8x10-Ft....7.99 9x12-Ft. .10.89 ~"PHiimirti|*sl I* *t*ik' •n-hend. SIMMS 2nd Floor HOUSEWARE DISCOUNTS SL-j 2Vl-Qt. Whistling REVERE WARE 5-in-Y Cookers j TEA KETTLE $5.50 037 Seller W $4.95 Value l 99 'Extra heavy aluminum ... use at a covered saucepan, double boiltr, caiserolt, pudding pan or open saucepan. X Copper clad stainless steel • by Revere, Warning Whis* • tling pour spout. Trigger 2 control. MIRRO-MATIC Pressure Cooker 4-QUART #tegg $15.95 Value Famous Mirro-Malie cooker with exclusive pressure regulator that prevents presiuro from going higher than the recipe calls for. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••*•• Defrost Refrigerators This Easy Way With FROST-BAN Instant Spray 49 $1.89 Can 1 Speedy, pu«h button defrotiing — simply spray Frost-Ban on and In. mlnutps wipe away lea and ‘frost! Can’t harm fapdi, leaves no odors, mmoM 98 N. Saginaw \: :77; /EOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JANUARY Mr 1S6? I Give Tips on Stopping It - . " ■ ■ Doctors Disprove Tales About Snoring Find Bag of Yule Cards LONDON (AP)—The post « floe, .hogged down in a go-slow strike by employes seeking more announced Saturday I , By PHYIXIS BATTELLE ' ; NEW YORK—There is an old ’$ wives’ tale (an old, sleepy wives’ * tale) to the effect that men snore * more than women. % This is pot necessarily so. The > reason the rumor get around is Ttfafwomeh complain mote about « their snoring husbands, whereas * men are gallant enough to let , snoring wives lie. „ Net Is It necessarily true that It you can get the snorer to * nil ever Cram his back to Ms V side, he (or die) will play dead 1 dog. * A recent test made by the British Medical Association shows that thousands of people snore to the right, to the left, or with their laces turned down into the pillow. This latter is called the smothered snore, and some folks claim it has a soothing sound. n WON’T ADMIT IT * Understandably enough, most £ people who snore refuse to admit they snore at all, although a small percentage admit they can hear themselves snoring just be- Scared Britons Get Vaccinated Sixth Suspected Victim of Smallpox Dies, so 25,000 Given Shots LONDON (UPI) - The death of a sixth suspected smallpox victim sent frightened Britons to vaccipftion centers today under the urgent prodding of health authorities. The scare was centered chiefly in Yorkshire, where a middle-aged man died Sunday in Otley Hospital. If doctors confirm that smallpox took his life, the man will become the sixth confirmed or . suspected victim of the disfiguring disease since Jan. 7. Right now, authorities think the smallpox ' was brought to Britain from Pakistan last month. Four deaths in Britain have been established as smallpox victims. Authorities stepped up precautionary measures Sunday. Forty-elght passengers were detained more than an hour at London Airport when eight Pakistanis aboard onp flight complained of feeling iU. But doctor* diagnosed their trouble as travel sickness. More than 25,000 persons were - given shots in Bradford and York-' shire through Sunday. All of the deaths so far have occurred Within a 200 mile radius of Bradford. One druggist - reported selling - 3,500 doses of vaccine in one day, mostly to Bradford residents who bought it for their doctors to administer. Eddie, Liz Adopt Year-Old Orphan Girl Called Maria ' ROME (AP)—Screen star Eli*-abeth Taylor and Eddie Fisher announced today that they have adopted a year-old orphan girl named Maria. The announcement by the pie’s secretary did not specify whether the baby was Italian. It said; “Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Fisher are very happy to announce the adoption by law of little orphaned girl. They have been looking for the baby for almost two years. Maria. She is one year old." Miss Taylor and Fisher u married on May 12, 1959. She has two sons, 9 and nearly 7, by her second marriage to Michael Wilding, and a daughter, 4, by her third husband, the laic Mike Todd. Fisher has a daughter, 5, and a .son, nearly 4, by his previous marriage to Debbie Reynolds. tors falling asleep. Almost every snorer occasionally gets so nut* ecus he wakes himself—but likes |p think it was a car backfiring. , Those t(l» know they snore are often sensitive ikost H. ^ never dared marry because I'snored,” a Portsmouth, .England, woman wrote the B.M.A. After* testing 250 volunteers (according to a report in Science Digest), some British doctors have come out with a series of exercises which they.claim are effKtive snore-stoppers. .★ * * ★ - These home remedies are tor people who snore in their throats because their jaw or tongue falls back, or their palate or uvula flaps into a vibrating motion.” procedures to help yon tarn »pence ,. Exercise A—Designed to tighten the muscles w|^t .„h(M. toe mouth closed. Simply bold something firmly between the teeth (Suggested: A wooden tongue depressor) for 10 minutes after going to bed. After four or five minutes, the jaw muscles will feel fatigued. This is to be expected, so clench with it, ANOTHER METHOD Exercise B—To strengthen and shorten the muscles whieh hold the lower1 jaw and tongue forward. 1—For two or three minutes, press the fingers firmly against the chin and hold your Jaw of your fingers. 2—Press the tongue firmly against the lower teeth for three of four minutes. That’s all there Is to it. And British doctors claim that the exercises were effective In stop-' ping or curbing snoring in a majority of the cases. After only two weeks of work on the jaw. ★ . * ★ / If your spouse continues to jaw about how you’re snoring even after the exercises have been done, it is likely that your snoring is caused by restricted air passages in your nose. If that Is the case, there are only two ways to solve your problem-get a doctor to improve your nasal airways, or move to a hotel. bridge residents should get softie of their Christnuts postil to a few deys. Workmen clearing a fallen tree found a mail bag containing ounferidge - addressed Christmas canto-dated Dec, (Might (it BULGING EXCESSFAT Should Be IMMEDIATELY Eliminated If you WANT o ShapelySymmetrical Figure Sand today for this New METABOLISM Book (W$ Hove NO Mtdkino, Dirt or Anything f/se to Se/f You) BOOK will enable you to understand your own ease and may save you years of misery and embarrassment. Diet alone Je NOT, and never has been, the one and only answer to the problem of excess fat This Book contains Information generally known only to specialists. It explains the physiology of human Metabolism and the relation between glendular function and Obesity. It tula why some Individuals can eat all they weight (-weight ERE to MB _ _r gain You are told how . can be corrected and WHgRI look for HELP near your home. A Book Is sent only to these who want and need to reduce. The edition is limited. Notice may not appear again. Write at once—today for your copy. SEND 4 (Eour Cent) Stamps (16c) to help cover distribution coat You Incur no obligation. Wo hive no medicine or anything elite to sell. You will never be aeked to send us a penny of money, address D. Conway (RARInc.) Dept. U2 Bex 1314,Albuquerque,N. M. Justssyffomrc// The minute you want nM>iteyf phene for READY-CASH from Beneficial Oct Ate cadi you want when you want it Ott REAVY-CASH from Beneficial. It'ithe imtant way to clean up left-over bills, buy the things you need, do the things you want. Phone today! "You’re tne boss" at Beneficial. Loons $25tO $500 on Signature, Furniture or Cor BonOficiol Finance Co. of DftrOit > 7 West Lowrenco Stroot, Poittloc 2nd Fleer, Lawrence Bldg. ' * Fhene FKderal 2-9249 orsN evenings n ArroiNTMENT—mob* rot evening nouns —BENEFICIAL— FINANCE SYSTEM 1 Kroger Lowers Food Costs but never cuts quality! FLAY6RFUL LEAN GUNSBERG Corned Beef r.6* .59 SLICED BACON SALE! Serve n’ Save Bacon a a rice.' 45” Kwick Krisp Bacon . . . Ht 55“ Country Club Bacon . . . v:: 59° 6c OFF LABEL — FRESH ROASTED FIVE THE PONTIAC PRESS, "MONDAY, JkfoftRY 1% 1962 Stop Greeds Corruption in ‘Vice Squads* Be Prepared 6t$Stopped An “on-the-halT executive .will have an up-to-date Portrait in his p e r s o n a 1 file... Do you? ; 1' t diehard M ,' Photographer FE 4-3669 shoots them to the bottom of the sea like a torpedo . . . to keep from leaving a trail. There’s only one positive way of having the., following dinner tonight: Hot meat sandwich, brawn gravy, mashed potatoes, buttered briusel sprouts, fresh salad, assorted bread, strawberry Short cake, whipped cream, butter, coffee, tea and milk. You must be a member of the crew of a Polaris missile sub* By BOB CON8IDINE NEW YORK—A woman who Said She had been a dope1 addict ■tor 29 years before beating it six years ago colled up the other day to say the shocking traffic could be stopped In short aider. > "Tom Dewey Just about brought it to a complete halt yean ago in the biggeat junk town in the coun- Aging Parley June 18*20 ANN ARBOR (UPI) -The 15th be held June 18-20 at the University of Michigan. Discussions will include the capacity of. the national economy to support millions of older persons in retirement. Evening Appointments 518 West Huron . There will be movies in the deep tonight, too. Each Polaris sub carries 60* with it when It 'goes on two-month deterrent duty. And Eigen but means "It’e-an m wind that blows nobody good.” "It flourishes today because of the greed and corruption of people who'could Stop It. I did three stretches In the toughest jail of them All, Alderson, W. Va., and bought It from the very feds who Jailed me. Vice squad, cops, "The big dealers use kids today to push, but send an older guy { along to watch the kids to see that he doesn’t steal too much. The kid get* caught, and It's Just a juvenile offense. He’s soon back “When I had it bad,” the intelligent-sounding woman said, "I used to say an inelegant but honest prayer that I think sums it all up in one sentence. It went, "“Dear God, wfry don’t they do something to keep me from getting *’ stuff?’ ” Saints alive! Have you been keeping up with the way three of Ireland’s most honored ones have been kicking up their heels? St. Brigid, who brought the convent to Ireland 15 centuries ago, knocked St. Patrick’s record into a cocked hat early this month, St. Patrick himself, dead since 461 A.D. But St. Brendan, the blessed 6th Century Navigator who once landed on a whale’s back and tried THIS WliBK ONLY 6 F" 30‘ LARCE SIZI liy. 75c Dot. Variety • Plain or • Sugared 29 N. Saginaw, Downtown Pontiac minutes L. broke ,St, Patrick’s .old mark of five hours and 22 minutes. 8t. Patrick came right back and reclaimed the, record, then last week St. Brigid won It back, in Final Hearing Negro Cl Is Seeking Entrance to All-White Southern University JACKSON, Miss. (UPI) - U.S, District Judge Sidney Mize opens final hearing today in a lawsuit by a 29-year-old Negro Air Force veteran seeking to enter the all-white University of Missls-sippi. The suit, the first of Its type In Mississippi, May by James Meredith of Kosciusko, Minn., now a student at Jackson State College ter Negroes. Following a hearing which was delayed several times, Mize issued a ruling Dec. 13 in which he refused to issue a, temporary Injunction forcing Meredith’s immediate admittance to the university. The hearing is on a bid for a permanent injunction. it week, the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals at New Orleans refused to overturn the Dec. 13 ruling in which Mize said there was no evidence that Meredith was rejected as a student because he is a Negro. However, the higher court declared unconstitutional a university regulation requiring applicants to have letters of recommendation from six alumni. The regulation, adopted as a segregation safeguard, was a key part of the state’s case. Shop TONIGHT till 9 PLAID TRAVEL BAGS The smart way ‘to travel (or the thrifty shopper I These (old-over travel bags hang neatly in closet or Cor, fold over (or carrying like a suitcase. Waterproof lining, shoe pocket, lock, folding steel frame, black or red plaids. REPEAT OF A SELLOUT! Saves work, saves on heart strain I SNOW PLOW SPECIAL! 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Jews in the United States are satisfied, just as ate members of other religious organizations to depend upon the United States Government foie their representation and care not for the interference 'of a foreign state in their behalf. Israel iias responsibility enough for the people in its own country without attempting to represent dtisens of other areas. ‘Kennedy Is Losing Support of Labor* Apparently the ' honeymoon of President Kennedy and the unions has ended. ^linesHopetoRemedy Bleak Financial Status The 12,000 students in the state If II airlines get Government ap- university will have no choice but to proval, they will raise their fares by learn the party line. They not only three per cent op Feb. 1 in an at- -have to learn it, but also* adhere to tempt to get back into b 1 a c k ink. it. You can rest assured if they don’t, This follows a disastrous year, with reprisals will be in order. losses at between $20 and $30 mil* ~ lion. * The increase will be automatic unless the Civil Aeronautics Board f»ys no, but it is only temporary, and would expire July 31. ★ ★ ' ★ The CAB says the temporary hike would be during a study of trie problems of the airlines being made by ★ *■ ★ -It just so happens that the appointment of this vetecan Communist to head the university coincided with the renewal of the Cuban-Russian barter trado agreement Which 80 per cent of Cuba’s foreign trade has switched from the West to the Iron Curtain countries since 1959. It Is, indeed, a sorry plight, and all the Government,'"and adds that the the more reason we hope the Castro board feels that the fares were not the Red grip on neighboring Cuba is heart of the airlines’ current finan- smashed before too long. cial distress. .. . ...><..■■■■»■—■ ★ ★ ★ Speaking in Detroit recently, a government official said hs felt the main factor pushing the airlines into the loss columns wss their providing too much service. Allan S. Boyd, chairman of the Federal Civil Aeronautics Board, gave the opinion that the airlines are scheduling excessive flights, seemingly attempting to match their competitors flight for flight. ★ ★ ★ Boyd makes one point which makes a good deal of sense-—airline fares cannot be increased further without loss in patronage. Already many travelers are beginning to wonder, Is the speed of air travel worth the cost? “The problem lies on the expense side pf the ledger, not the revenue side, and must be attacked accordingly,” says Mr. Boyd. We concur. 209 National Building How/Many Lives Has He Left? The Man About Town The Two Worst Winter Storms in Pontiac Came Here 32 Years Apart Heat wave: What any temperature above 32 now looks like. Within the past century, Pontiac’s two worst storms were on April 6, 1886, which tied up everything for a week, and on Jan. 12, 1918, when It required three days for the city to dig Itself out. After the 1886 storm, which came nearly three weeks after the calendar’s entry of spring, the drifts on Saginaw Street reached the top of the store windows. The old two-story brick courthouse was nearly covered. No railroad trains were runrfor seven days, and no funerals could be held. That long time weather watcher, Robert M. Corblt of Oxford, writes me about the 1918 storm. It was followed by a three, day blizzard with the cold at 20 below zero. Coal was on war rationing, and many" homes were without heat. Thf 1918 storm also made political history In Oakland County. A prominent aspirant for the. nomination for President of the United States, Robert M. LaFollette With discipline slowly slipping 0f Wisconsin, was forced to spend three away from former standards and days with us. He was caught at Holly In law and order facing a greater changing from one railroad to another. . . _____* . rpy,. vaaVivfiin However, It wasn’t a complete loss to struggle, comments in The Nashville hlm M hlg plcture appeared on the flr#t Banner on this subject are especially page of week's Holly Herald. It also Interesting. put Holly's name on the front page of The Southern paper quotes The most every big newspaper In the nation m ,,____nt (P.S.: I almost wrote in every “other" big Chicago Tribune briefly and then of- nawspaper > His pose for that Holly paper picture was identical with the one for his statue how In the halls of the Senate at Wash-.... , . in g ton,, seated with one elbow, on knee “Illinois newspapers report thjs cfise and cWn rMtlng on that hand; • The publisher of that Holly paper, (who now is writing these lines), made more money in covering his visit for the big newspapers during those three days than he. had made In his own business for five David Lawrence Says: rejected his advice to hold the The AFL-CIQ adopted a resolution calling for shorter hours, more pay, and more paid leisure time. .Without mentioning the President or Labor Secretary A. J. Goldberg, another resolution hit out at "some leaders" of opinion who have been urging a wage freeze. JFK Changes Foreign Aid Stand Leniency to Criminals Often Results in Harm WASHINGTON — Small wonder the State of the Union message of President Kennedy got applause in the press around the world. For he said, in effect, that the United States will continue to pour billions of dollars abroad in foreign aid even to some! countries ad/ 7 * * ' , On this day In history: In 1831, the first practical Amerlcan-bullt locomotive “the best friend of'Charleston" made its first, run over the Charleston and Hamburg Railroad in S o u t h Carolina. „ In 1919, the famous Polish concert pianist, Ignace Jan Paderewski, became the -first premier of the Republic of Poland. In 1922, the Irish Free State was established. In 1952, Frank Costello, on trial , in New York City tor contempt of' the Senate for his refusal to answers questions before the Senate Crime Investigating .Committee, was released when the'jnry deadlocked, and asked to be dismissed. ★ Ur W A thought for the day: It is written in the New Testament according to the Gospel of Matthew: “All they that take the sword shall perish by the sword.” By JOHN C. METCALFE If I could hold your hand so, dawn . . . And walk with you beside the sea ... I think the chilling veil of fog ... As warm as words w!l?t *ar‘ Republicans Take a Look By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON - The Republicans, after several days of public soul searching in this congressional election year, are still trying to figure out where they stand and “In some countries we found that our officials took the position that the United States found it necessary to put up with a certain amount of blackmail simply because there were certain installations there that we wished to maintain... * who have i "If African nationalistic myopia myself and God.—George Eliot. Dr, Harold Hyman Says: Should Know Mechanics of Your Blood Pressure of love would be . . . And if before the rising sun . . . You were to place your hand In mine ... I think the early morning sky . . . With beams of gold would softly shine . . . And if you were to take my Hand . . . Around the middle of the day ... I think that all the . - . , ■ ------------ heavy clouds . . . Quite suddenly • Parties that merge would blow avfay . . . And If our 8011,6 Issues and then fly apart . hands were tightly clasped . . . a**Jn- ., - I could not five In peace if I put upon some dreamy afternoon . . The evidence is plain enough the shadow of a wilful sin between i think the rustling winds in trees that for most of the past 30 years the sight of the I They can’t find a hat to fit all of them. They are looking for a formula to beat the Democrats but they’ve been Inept in this department over the past 30 years. The Democrats are a divided lot, too. They sometimes give the impression of being not one party . Would sound like a romantic tune ... So, darling, let me hold your hand . . . When in the twilight shadows grow . . . Because I wonder what my heart... At such a time would come to know. Smiles fers its own ideas on this very important subject: ★ ★ ★ of one Ronald Tuckir who was released from prison in August after serving a two-year term for statutory rape to which he pleaded guilty. ★ ★ ★ “Now, reports the Chicago Tribune, years. ‘Tucker Is under arrest again for rape. He has admitted to police that gtm on the Holly subject, my present he was the masked gunman who in- 'historian there sends word that it was 20 vaded the home of a banker, beat and robbed him, and assaulted his wife. The victims identified him. Tucker has been identified also by the victim of another rape.’ ★ ★ ★ “It isn’t only in Illinois that rapists ,are caught, convicted, given light penalties, and ultimately released to become repeat offenders. “Murder many times compounds the guilt in this vilest of all crimes, to silence its victim. In cases of conviction on indisputable evidence, a life term should be mandatory with no provision for release by pardon or parole. ★ ★ ★ “Leniency serves the offender —not the victim or potential victim whom the law in more than theory Is enacted to protect.” Cuban Pupils to Learn the Communist Ways Cuban young folks are in for “Red” Vprhnl Orchids to— hot education in the years ahead ac-. M , cording to latest reports coming out of Havana. As might be expected, Juan Mari-hello, President of the Cuban Com- miuU»t Party. h» ^ mim<1 «ctor Autumi He™ ina*. of the 2O0*year-old University of Havana. ★ ★ ★ tail* assures/ us that the hub* Jolrlijr of ail tuture educated Cubans will be well-indoctrinated I. ; ' i' years ago today that one of the worst fires in that village’s history took place, when The Kroger Store was destroyed, at a loss In excess of $40,000. Practically all of the numerous lakes In the Pontlae area now are safe for skating. However, be careful about venturing too far from shore on the large ones. Cass lake has open water nftr Its center. The let la not safe where a stream enters or leaves a lake, and the ice on spy river or crook NEVER la safe. A letter from his proud grandmother, Mrs. Robert J. Bonlne of Lake Orton, tells me that David Donald Anderlio, the Infant son of Mr, and Mrs. Donald Anderlle, of Troy, can balance himself on s hand of either of hla parents, doing this at the age of three and ons-half months. Mr. Kennedy now puts It tjiis way in his latest message: ‘‘These programs help people, and, by helping people, they help freedom.” 'MAY BE VERY DIFFERENT* It is difficult to see how "freedom”-Is helped II Communist and totalitarian governments are supported with American money. The President adds: “The views of their governments may sometimes be very different from ours — but events In Africa, the Middle East and Eastern Europe teach ns never to write off any nation as lost ’1o the Communist camp.” Moscow, of course, has been willing to look the other way when American money Is given, for Instance, to Poland — it relieves the Kremlin of Just that much of a financial burden. ★ e a The cold tact Is that Moscow controls every one of the Communist countries on Its borders and is beginning to exercise similar control in Southeast Asia and Africa and some Latin American countries - by means of a well-trained apparatus of ."technicians,” students and other mem-iters of the Communist .party who have been taught in Moscow how to run a satellite government. If you are puzzled about your blood pressure, you may be In the same boat as the old vaudeville comic whose partner wanted to know “How high is up?” Like him, you couldn’t answer Sensibly unless you knew “up from where.” And, to find out the whereabouts of “where” you’d have to ask the right questions and receive reasonably Informative answers. That being so, I’ll try in (his and later columns to locate “where” for you so you’ll know what questions to ask your doctor So much then for the whereabouts of “where.” In another column I’ll try to suggest an answer to “how high Is up?” ★ v ★ * For a copy of Dr. Hyman’s leaflet, “What About Hardening of the Arteries?” Send 10 cents to Dr. Hyman, care of The Pontiac Press. Those $100-a-plate dinners we read about would open our, mouth so wide we wouldn't be able to chew. the Republicans have been out of step with public thinking. Since 1932, the Republicans have held the White House for only eight years—under Dwight D. Eisenhower. He was so popular that if he had run as a Democrat he probably would have won just as overwhelmingly, if not more so. In his case the party label hardly meant much. The consistent test of public fa- , vor showed up In Congress where, in the 30 years since 1932, voters elected a Republican majority only, twice, tor a total of four years, in 1946 and 1952. in Elsenhower’s last six years—including 1956 when he was reflected—the voters gave Congress to the Democrats. the information you need your guidance pnd, I hope, ? of mind about your heart. Case Records of a Psychologist: Couples CAN Live Economically he true also In African countries. Just three days after the Pres- The Country Parson Mrs. Nancy Crane of 85 West New York Ave.; 89th birthday. Mrs. Cornelia Zeeetraten of 48 Nelson fit.; 88th birthday. David Findley of Drayton Plains; 83hd'birthday. Mrs. Elisa Hanrtord Of Waterford;'83rd birthday,, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick G. Freeswell of Rochester; B3nd wedding anniversary. for pea1 MEANING OF FIGURES To discover the whereabouts of “where,” you’ll have to understand how your blood pressure is taken and something of the meaning of the figures you are given. Here I* what your doctor dor* when he records your tension: He snugs a cuff, containing a ruhtier bag, over your upper nrm. He inflates the rubber bag until he cun no longer feehthe pulse at your wrist. ★ ★ ★ He places the bell of his stethoscope over the course of tne artery that lies under the skin at the bend of your elbow. He slowly lots air out of the bag until he hear* thumping sounds at regular Intervals, corresponding to your heart beat. Hfe notes the level at which these are first heard clearly. And he records this level as your sjuto* llc tension, meaning that it represents the head of pressure at which the heart Is pumping blood through the underlying artery. This, as well as other readings, are given In millimeters of mercury for which the abbreviation is mm.Hg. WWW Having obtained systolic tension, he continues to deflnt the bag until the thumping sounds disappear. And this level Is the diastolic pressure Hurt approximates the amount of /resistance against which /tne cardiac pilinp has to act.. at your pressure is mo over lM writes iso ldo on ywr chart. By By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE L-407: Arlene, aged 26, is my daughter-in-law. When she and Philip got married, they moved to Bloomington, Iqd. where Philip did some part, time teaching and started graduate work toward his Ph.D. In history. They located in a little apartment and started! living on a budget. [ •The first time| Mrs. Crane and , visited them, they showed us t h e i r DR. CRANE pantry shelves, stacked high with canned goods. “And we got them at a bargain,” they exclaimed. Then they told ua they watched the ads In thq Bloomington newspaper for all groceiy sales. ★ ★ \ A Whenever they saw a good deal on canned goods, they took their full quota. And they really had shown Innately, they both liked eggs and eggs can be served In a wide variety of appetising ways, so they didn’t complain. And they purchased the|r eggs In 12-dozen lots from farmers when they’d drive up to visit us at our summer home 90 miles away from Bloomington, so they’d get them at 10 cents a doiten cheaper, thereby paying the gasoline bill for their trip. Since they don’t use cigarettes, they thus saved $4.42 per week which the average smoking couple burn up every week on the ends of their cigarettes. They don’t use liquor, so they also saved the 36-92 per week which the average liquor-using couple squander on-alcoholic beverages here In America. Arlene and Philip spent an average of only 19.50 per week for all groceries, whereas Hie average smoking and liquor owing family la America poors f n.M on tobacco and liquor every 7 days before they even begin to buy People with low intelligence are poor bargain hunters. On our South Side here in Chicago they squander money on water mel-they buying standard goods as cheaply aa my wife does, and ohe Is a snperb shopper. “Dad,” they also added, “we have lived our first year on only $9.50 per week for groceries.” And that Is certainly a splendid evidence of budgeting, plus bargaining, for any young married couple'here in modem America. for the year i960, which moans they applied to present inflationary levels, , „v ■’ Obviously, they dldu’f splurge on INbsao steaks, fur they used eggs ns their stable diet. Few Arlene and Philip thus furnished their table and also paid for all the gas and oil bills for their small car, on what many couples squander on nuisance and medically urn wisd habits. Far Philip’s Mk ear avoragee over St milee per gallon on regular gss, so Ms total fuel bills, even for occasional trips to Chicago, don’t ran |1.W per week. The reason I am mentioning their case is to show how young married couples with brains can still live' comparatively cheaply in Ameri-' .ca. •» ■ ★: um * ■ \ The higher your I Q. the less it coetsJyouto live! ought to be oinking that same money Into beans and potatoes. ★ ★ ★ Send for my booklet “How to Live on a Budget,” enclosing a stamped, return envelope, plus 20 cents. It will show you young couples how to live on a modest income and still attain a longer lifespan than the average couple. . Alwsya writ* n Mr* of Th* Mlchl*»n, .nolo Mtmpod. aeU-tdi Th* PontUc Prr«» m 4«Hy«red by corrier for to oonta a work; whtro msIjm m Oakhne, o*a****, iwinc-•ton, M»corob. Lap*** and w»*fi- gi m ;'TH^'IH>yfUC PRESS! MONDAY, )&3FUARY &19 P-1,: im jsssi$k DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS a. MMipr 0PIN IVIRY NIGHT Vo9 V FIDERALDEPT. STORES DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS fell / » V f JANtTAItY IX 1062 Pontiac Area Near Las Vegas <^)^NI»BWt~-rdauidrte^ Richard (Jim) Andrews, 60, of 10 Downing Court, died of a heart attack yesterday at the Veterans Hospital la Ann Arbor following an.illness of severaTmontha. A member of the Elks No. 810, American Legion, VFW and Moose grups, Mr. Andrews was last employed in plant protection at Pontiac Motors tor sopje 18 years. of Leonard; two brothers. Merton and Allen, both of Romeb; three sisters, and eight grandchildren. Survivors; include his wife Ollle, his stepsons, Austin Martin of Pontiac, Mid Robert Martin with the United States Air Force in France, his stepdaughters Mrs. Wayne Kerr of Harrisburg, III., and Mrs. Kaltnuth Blankenship of. Drayton Plains. Two sisters also' survive. Service will be held at 7 p.m. Tuesday at Huntoon Funeral Home followed by another service Thursday at 2 p.m. from the Turner Funeral Home in Harrisburg, JU. Burial will be In Sunset Lawn Cemetery there. MBS- harry w. wimbrow COMMERCE TOWNSHIP-Serv-ice for Mrs. Harry W. (Faye) Wimbrow, 58, Of 530 Commerce Road, will be l p m. tomorrow at “■ ‘ ‘son-Bird Funeral Home, Walled take. Burial will, be In Commerce Cemetery. Mrs. • Wimbrow died Saturday following an illness of three weeks. Surviving; are tour sons, Harry of Commerce, Gerald of . Texas, Ronald of Highland and Eugene, at home; tour daughters, Mrs. Henry Salvadors of Pontiac, Mrs. Lester Parsons of Commerce, Mrs. James Walls Of .Waterford and Mrs. Thomas Foster of Alaska; three sisters; and 13 grandchil* WILLIAM H. HAKEN William H. Haken of 1057 Hoi-, brook St., died Saturday Ih North-ville Hospital following an illness of several months. He was 93. Mr. Haken was formerly In the plumbing and heating business here for many years. 1 His survivors include two tons LeRoy F. Kellogg of Pontiac, ahd Marlon Kellogg of Milford, three daughters Mrs, John R. Noyes of Wing Lake, Mrs. Louis Conroy of Birmingham, and Mrs. Lynn D. Allen of Pontiac, and four grand-sons. _ Service will be 1 p.m., Tuesday at Spdrks-Grlffin Funeral Home with burial at Oak Hill Cemetery. IDA M. PEKKALA Ida M. Pekkala, 85, of 203 Gifford St., died of a stroke Saturday at her residence. She had been, ill several years. Miss Pekkala was formerly a registered nurse at Oakland County Contagious Hospital and Pontiac General Hospital. Thieves Damage Rochester Church and Steal Money Surviving are a brother, Erfiest Pekkala of Detroit, and a sister, Mrs. Fred L. Connell of Pontiac. Service will bp l:30 p.m. Tuesday at DpnMson-Johns Funeral Home with burial In Perry Mount Park-Cemetery. heart Of (be snow-covered ML Their, probing flashlight*, closed k room the size of a high ■* ’* ^Jstenlng -eer* Tourist - Awa f Hopes for Development of New Attrpction LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)—Last month workmen bulldozing a rohd to a new picnic grounds in the, Tolyabe Forest uncovered | | in a hillside. A couple of adventuresome souls wormed and stumbled inside?1 and down a narrow passage about twQ blocks long, pointing toward the ily yet beautifully with multicolored rock formations created by dsfpptot lime water, luwiderfie cavern in the mountain M miles northwest of this desert resort may some day become a tourist attraction. Those who have seen ft liken it the fiamed caves in Carlsbad, ’N.M., and Lufay, Va. There are. stalactites as thin as spaghetti and five feet tong, others that look like elephant ears with dainty patterns running through 'them. >, From the floor rise stalagmites that took and feel like wax candles. The colors are white, orange 'and frown, ' Adlai Cites Waning of Soviet Challenge ^tr,%rcS.B'™|Gatholics to Discuss ‘America's Legacy Award.” NEW YORK (URD—U.N. Ambassador Adlai Stevenson said Sunday the world challenge of Soviet communism may be on toe wane. “The promised victory of communism keeps on receding into the future,'' Stevenson said. “The juggernaut juft doesn't jug." He cited recent Soviet setbacks to Asia, Africa and Eastern Europe. Detroit Buses Extend Into 6 More Suburbs DETROIT (II — DSR bos service a«s extended today into six ‘radical toft" and “extreme right” for raising “voice* of doom” about the United States' position In the Cold War. Stevehson evaluated the curfeht I***®—* Ecumenical Council than 100 members of the Cathtote hierarchy gathered in the Vatican more suburb* formerly served by the intertown Suburban lines, which went out of busintos Deo. 31. DSR buses began rolling today jn fekster, Wayne, Melvindale, Alton Park, Southgate and Wyandotte. Earlier, DSR service had been extended to Dearborn, Dearborn Township, Garden City and Lincoln Park, all also, formerly served tor, Intertown., ____m”—a formal tog tor its opening, not announced. Between lMCtold ISSHhe number of VS. household* increased 23 pet.cent. palace today to begin a week of discussions on .• the "forthcoming Ecumenical Council under the persona] guidance of Pope John XXHI. Observers viewed the pontiffs desire to preside over today’s seNton of the council’* central - - sp tar- thur evidence of Ids wish to get It will be the first of its kind in almost 100 years. The council is expected to be held next fell. On Christmas Day; MIMEOGRAPHING SERVICE .. Bulletins, Letters, etc. FAST SERVIQE! Christian Literature Sales 39 Oakland FE 4-8581 ROCHESTER -- Thieves broke into St. Philips Episcopal Church here early this morning, did an estimated $1,000 worth of damage to the church offices and finally made off with about $40, of Sunday School offerings. According to Rev. Edgar A. Lucas, pastor of the church, the burglar* entered the building by" jimmying (be side door and breaking the glass In office doors a* they searched for A smalt safe, containing historical church records, was wrecked, Mr. Lucas said, and woodwork and cabinets in several offices were torn out by the theives. Rochester police are investigating the crime. The property was Insured, Mr. Lucas said but the Sunday School offering may not be.// Driver Says Thug Robs Him of $110 MRS. NORA L. THRASHER Service for Mrs. Nora L. Thrasher, 79, of 1818 Mans St„ Waterford Township, will be 1:30 p.m. Tuesday at Pursley Funeral Home. Burial will follow at Otlsville. Mrs. Thrasher died Friday at Pontiac General Hospital after an Illness of five weeks. Surviving are three sons, Eugene, George, and William, all of Pontiac, and two daughers, Mrs. Viola Mulrhead and Mrs. Viva Karpolcz, both of Waterford Township. One brother Alfred- Evans of Caro, 10 grandchildren, and three greatgrandchildren also survive. MRS. CLARENCE CRAWFORD OXFORD — Service for Mrs. Clarence (Margaret M.) Crawford, 76, formeily of Oxford, was to be at 2 p.m. today at Bossardet & Reid Funeral Home with burial in Oxford Cemetery. A former member of Ihe Oxford Congregational Church, Mrs. Crt ford died Saturday at Croswell I lowing a long illness. She is survived by a brother. A Waterford Township man told Pontiac police he was robbed of $110 Saturday by a bandit who jumped Into his ear at Ragley and Wesson Streets. Roy O. DoKtrcmont, 46. 2911 Bris-Court, said the thief got Into ..Is car when he stopped for u red light at the intersection. The man stuck something which could have been a gun into his side, according t<^ (he victim. D’Etremont told police the bandit Jumped out of his car at the next street after taking his wallet containing the cash and mlscel->uS papers. The robbery look place about 10;30 a.m. To Address Parents on Retarded Children GEORGE J. WKM II LAKE ORION — Service for George J. Welch, 72, of 414 Sunny-brook St., will be 2 p.m, tomorrow at Flumerfelt Funeral Home. Burial will be In Eastlawn Cemetery. An employe of Pontiac Motor Division for 34 years. Mr. Welch died unexpectedly of a heart attack Saturday. Surviving are his wife, Isabelle; two sons, George Jr. of Romeo und Robert of Drayton Plains; a The 8 p.m. public meeting will be hold at the Walled Lake Junior Iligh School. The monthly meeting of the group Is usually held on Wesnes-day but has been changed to Tuesday for this month only. Open f A.M. te 9 P.M. Dally Sunday 1:10 te 5 KUHN AUTO WASH Dr. Paul Thom. Oakland County director of sepeclnl education, will bo the guest speaker tomorrow at a meeting of the Special Education Parents Unit for . Retarded Children (SPUR). Extend Visa Priyeleges RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (^P) -Tourists from other parts of Ihe h e m I sphere planning Brazilian visits of up to 30 days may enter the country with a visa, the Foreign Office said. The privilege previously had been extended only to residents of Argentina and Uruguay. - U=0°^>o^o^ JoU Disjunct’ Mutter Little Note ... m We conduct funerals at a A distance qnd serve many fam- x ilies whose residence is some miles away. We take the deceased to distant points for interment — or bring them from a far away place where their passing may have occurred. (Phone Federal 4-4511 Pwihintf OnOerVLti [^onejsonrJloh^W ^TOttoN mr. Pontiac W: FROZEN FOOD SALE A&P BRAND—YOUR CHOICE Crinkle Cut Potatoes French Fried Potatoes • • • Chopped Broccoli......... Leaf Spinach......... Chopped Spinach .••••»• Green Peas......... Cut Corn . . ... ... • • » • • BANANAS HP SO NOURISHING FOR THE YOUNGSTERS SO ECONOMICAL AT AAPI POUND 10-01. PKO. lO-OZ. PKO. Mixed Vegetables ...............Wo. _ n - . ' 10-OZ. Peas & Carrots ...... • «»• 6-OZ. Grape Juice 7 -1*00 MADE WITH BUTTERMILK Jan. Parker Sliced, Enriched White Bread 2^.37* ELBERTA FREESTONE A&P Peaches Halves er Slice* 3 ss 79* WHITI AND ASIORTID COLORS Scot Paper Towels . .”88?" 29? All prices In this ad effective thru Tuesday, Jan. 1 In all Eastern Michigan AAP Super Market. It QUA? AttAHtlC > MCIHC TM Specials for Monday and Tuesdny Only Breakfast Treats "SUPER-RIGHT" SKINLESS, TINY LINKS Pork Sausage... » 39< SUNNYBROOK FRESH GRADE "A" Large Eggs ... 2 » 85< CALIFORNIA SWEET, GOLDEN Carrots SWEET AND JUICY FLORIDA Oranges 5 bag 35c SAVE MO—35c OFF LABEL—DAILY BRAND j Kibbled Bits - I49 ANN PAGE QUALITY Ketchup .. 3 49i I THE POKTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 15K1962 ::T:M ■ , nw,.> Comments on World Pressure Points , Western Diplornats Fear Coup to Gaulle Squirrel Takes Candy Frony Vending Machine a candy bar. then rmw off to the ft In PITTSBURGH «: A *quim| has been stealing candy bars from tiding machine in the city’s Noted from the foreign I n e w s time,1* many Vatican experts be-lieve he will not show up. Dr. Luis Amadao Blanco y Per- WESTERN FEARS . Increasing lawiesaness in Algeria Utbringblg anxiety fo Western dip* tomato over the poesibility of a coup aimed at overthrowing President Charles de Gaulle. Such a coup could setfouidy weaken NATO* the common market and efforts toward West European political Unity. , It would have a delaying effect, e least, on Britain’s par- to say the ticipation in the European inanity.” Further, any Upheaval in France would have a most damaging effect at a crucial moment In negotiations with Russia. CUBA VS. VATICAN Although the Cuban Embassy in Rome says Cuba’s new ambassador to the Vatican ,is due at months ago by the Castro gov-' replace another Cas- The new amibassador was supposed to have arrived in time for the celebrations of Pope John XIITs birthday and coronation anniversary Nov. 4. I*-4* ilAh< finally get foether in Geneva but diplomats there are warning not to expect too much too soon. It is unlikely they'can get down . ious work much before Jan. 16. And right-wing Prince Boun Oum already la, saying he has to be back in Laos by Jan. ft to attend his mother’s funeral. The Rome Embassy salm he was ill. Then the word leaked out that Castro had Incurred automatic ex-communication from the Roman Catholic Church because of his oppression-of church officials, the belief that Amadao-Blanc y Fernandez will not show up either. MORE STALLING OVER LAOS The three Laotian princes may CLEANING “DELUXE SERVICE” THRIFTY (At Re/gular Price! • SPOTTING • PRESSING • GARMENTS inspected, buttons, seams, minor touch-up repairs. rick t’p Service DRY CLEAN-ONLY FE 2-6474 7 A.M. 6 P.M- FATHER AHD SOH CLEAHERS 941 JOSLYR CORNER MANSFIELD “Where Quality Count*” The United States has been Boun Oum’s Chief sponsor-and is bring-Imum pressurt to him to reach agreement with his neutral and lettering fellow princeg. BUT AMERICAN Despite President Kennedy’s emphasis on continatkm of the “Buy American” campaign, the guessing in Tokyo is that foe pressure soon may be off, at least so far as Japan is concerned. The belief *priag* from U.8. ton’s current visit to'foe Fa Hamilton is reported to believe the policy has imposed hardships oil some nations, particularly those U.S. Allies from which America could ’buy goods to send to less-developed nations. PEACE IN NEW GUINEA Hie Philippines soon may enter the quiet, behind-the-scenes efforts to prevent a Netherlands-Indo-neslan war over Western Guinea, The Philippine maintains friendly relations with both nations, but New Guinea is in a vital' A spokesman says the bushy-tailed thief reaches a paw up in foe' back qf thC machine, grabs nearest frpu for i „ And it’s ft dfaKTimlnattog squiiv * rel. It takes only caipdy bam with ' nuts in them. San Bemardfoo County, Calif., ; is foe largest in foe Patted States.*' 'with ;«n area of 30JUI0 square mlles, it is about 15 ttmss ' big at Rhode Island. ' ' Philippine officials were prised last month when they the displeasure of Indonesia :ause they supported the of self-determination for foe Pap-j uan population of West New Guinea, y ’ " . j Sue Pinkerton Hurt When Car Skids on Ice An 18-year-old Waterfdrd Township girl is in fair condition at Pontiac General Hospital today after being hit by a car yesterday afternoon'. AP Photol-n WEDDING BELLS — British actor Rex Harrison, shown in costume for his role as Julius Caesar in the film, “Cleopatra,” and actress Rachel Roberts plan to wed, Harrison announced in Rome Saturday. The couple is shown in .May 1961 when Harrison escorted Miss Roberts around a film studio near Rome. Sue Pinkerton, 18, of 5032 Jer->ste St., told township police she was walking with friends to her :ar in the 900 Bowl parking lot. A car driven by Sigle W. Reed, 17, of 2869 N. Grant St., OaklfgJB Township, careened off one of the parked cars and struck Miss Pinkerton, pinning her against another cor, township police said-Reed told police he skidded on the icy pavement and lost control Of his car. Miss Pinkerton suffered an injured, pelvis and internal injuries. Mother, Daughter Graduate Together ASHVILLE, Ohio US - Mrs. Carl Scothom and her daughter Beverly, 21, both are 1961 graduates of Capital University in Columbus, Ohio. Mrs. Scothom was graduated from Chaney High School in Youngstown, Ohio, in 1934 and enrolled at Ohio State University. Irf her sophomore year, she gavej up formal education for marriage. Five years ago, she began sub-j stitute teaching and started backi to college classes to earn her degree. New York hns been the most heavily populated state since 1820. Some 200,000 new residences have gone up in West Berlin since the end of World War II. Every usable scrap of rubble from Allied bombings went into the rebuilding. The rest, piled in huge mounds, I was planted with flowers and grass |to provide hilly park scenery. M Don’t get | behind the “1-balP on yonr INCOME TAX MOP wmI ftu.lt U k wortk ft* 1 «r*rk **d «•"» *• ••'•••I* «4ft s H quickly at tour «*dY Tk* TAX SAVINGS w* dlwovw ofl*« P*T ft* ft*. 0* «MAMI TM. r«' HOCK woyl W* MV* WUV ||R 5 N*Um'i Lorgvit T*( S.rvJc* 207 MH«m Ainu ft* U*H«d Sftft* 82 West Huron Street—Pontiac Weekday* 9 a.m.-9 p.m., Sat. and Sun. 9-5. Phon*: FE 4-9225 APPOINTMENT NECESSARY ■■■■■■■■■ Virginia River Formed in More Than One Way SPOTSYLVANIA, Va. (A — This is the story of seven rivers — the Ta, Po, Nl, Matta, Poni, and Mattaponi, all rising in Spotsylvania county. » The Mat and Ta run together to form the Matta and. the Po and the Ni join to form the Poni. When the Matta and foe Poni join it is the Mattaponi. dr A ■ A .. it, alafi, the Mattaponi doesn't into the sea — it joins the Ttamunkey to form the York, one of Virginia's largest. About 60 U. S. cities levy a tax in tobacco products. What a Wonderful Way to Start the Week n VALUES GALORE! PRICES LIKE NEVER BEFORE! FACTORY AUTHORIZED CLEARANCE GENERAL ELECTRIC 2-Cycle Filter-Flo Automatic Washer With Suds Saver Control: Our Sale Price Including Installation Delivery and Free 1-Year Service! NO MONEY DOWN EMERSON CLEAR-OUT OF FLOOR SAMPLES Mostly One-of-a-Kind— Some Scratched—Marred— Dented—All Brand New SAVE 4 SPJBED PORTABLE AUTOMATIC STEREO HI FI 19” PORTABLE TV $126.00 11 Cu. Ft. FREEZER now $168.00 Motorola Console STEREO *178.00 GENERAL ELECTRIC 1 H.P. VACUUM CLEANER SW*EL *34.88 Maytag Wringer WASHER moo Electric 4'Burner Apt. Size RANGE *128.00 GENERAL ELECTRIC CLOTHES DRYER DELUXE MODEL With Adjustable Temperature Control! Installed Free On Detroit Edition Lines LIMITED OFFER ON FREE WIRING 9*P INStANT CREDIT! OPEN FRI. AND MON. ’EVES. TO 9:00 P.M. 90 Day t Same At NO MONEY of PONTIAC C&hl 51 Wert Huron Street : ■ • . PE 4-1555 *** unsw nu. awu nun. bybe>. iu »:«u r, ^ GOOD HMM PENNEY’S GREAT ring Fabric mpWmm ' t. -a y *•. I PENN EYS - D0WNTOWN Open (very Mon., Frl. 9:10 A. M. to 9:00 P. M, All Other Weekday! 9:10 A. M. to 5:30 P. M. PENNEY'S-MIRACLE MICE Setlw Open Ivory Weekday—Monday'thru Saturday 10:00 AsM. 9:0P-P, M. n.7^\ - V' 4...1- •1 Y .■i. VI- ' -I ■ \* \i ■ I.!.. ..... Uiji What a sale! Low, low prices. Special easy terms. J7* We're out to bust our quota ------- in the nationwide Frigiaaire BIG VALUE sales drive. Only big quantity sales will do it. But hurry! Thera's a limit to how long bargains like these will stay in the store. ERIGIDAIRE TJRli PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JANUARY 15, 1962 Madison Heights Force Objects to Bar Owner on Civil Service Unit * MADISON HEIGHTS (li-Madi-?on Heights policemen 'refused to withdraw a complaint yesterday against haying a bar owner serving on their 'Civil Service Commission. the veto and Clarkson asked tor d!!e legal opinion of Ginn. The realty firm had intended to get the project under way immediately, paying .for con- The suburb’s entire 18-man bo-lice force signed a letter objecting tp Bernard Travnlftar as one of three* members of the commission which rules on police personnel matters. WED ABOARD AIRLINER — Barry Hdren-iein, 28, of Tallahassee, Fla., and his bride the former Marilyn Le Gear, 26, an airline stewardess from Saginaw, are shown at the door of a jetliner after arriving at New York’s Ar HwMu Idlewild Airport from Miami, Fla., yesterday. They were married aboard the plane during the flight. The couple met on the same Miami-New^ York flight three years ago. State Girl Finds Love at 1st Flight Saginaw Stewardess Wed Aboard1 Jetliner 1 Where She Met Athldte 6 Oakland Students to Receive Degrees , NEW YORK m — A girl from Michigan got married on a jet airliner traveling 650 miles an hour at an altitude of 33,000 feet Sunday. The vice-mayor of Miami Beach, Fla., performed the ceremony. Afterward, the 51 passengers drank champagne as wedding guests. It was the marriage, of Marilyn Letiear, 26, Saginaw airline stewardess, and Barry Horen-beln, 20, Tallahassee, Fla., printing firm employe and former j University of Florida baseball star. The wedding took place on Northeast Airlines’ Flight 52 from Miami to New York, the flight on which Marilyn and Barty Npw — met three years ago. Two from Uthrup village who , Capt. William Waters of Miami. wm r(.c,>jve degrees are Melvin C. I , piloted the plane. He also was i"»,|A1|drpdge 2835 Lathrup boulevard. pilot nr> flirrht thro* vp;ir» Hl/O. I B _____ At Western Michigan Six Oakland County students will be among the 438 graduates to receive diplomas and teaching certificates at Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, Saturday. The commencement service normally is held on Sunday but this year has been moved up to Saturday at 2 p.m. in the university field house. The prospective graduates Include William R. Mackson, of 11740 Big Lake Road, Dayts-burg, who has earned a bachelor of science degree and a secondary teaching certificate. A B.S. degree and elementary teaching certificate will be awarded to Mary L. Law, of 3103 Cass Lake Ave., Keego Harbor, and a B.S. degree also to Ruth M. Andrews, of 56766 Grand River, B.A. in business administration; and Beverly J. Barrett, of 18564 Saratoga St., a B.A. and elementary certificate. Also in the group are Glenn A. Enders, of 46920 12 Mile Road, Walled Lake, B.A. and secondary certificate; and Paul R. Knapp, of 52815 12 Mile Road, Wixom, business administration. met with city officials for two hour* before refusing to withdraw the letter. * ★ ★ Patrolmen said their letter was not the result of any complaint against Travnlkar, but was merely a statement of ."principle," k k f "Members of the Police Department In their line of duty are required to enforce all laws, whether state or local, in respect to liquor and licenses and reflations,” the letter said. / k k ★ ' 'In view of the fact that Mr. Travnikar Is a bar owner . . . in addition to a member of the civil sendee board, which has the upper hand in the control of police personnel, a tendency to be overlook discrepancies may at one time or another exist," it continued. Band Boosters to Meet Entertainment at the Avondale Band Boosters’ meeting 8 p.m. tomorrow will be provided by Ton-ette classes in the local schools. The meeting will be held at Avondale Senior High School, 1435 Auburn Road. MttS. DOUGLAS P. KOPPELA Jacqueline Logie Weds D. P. Koppela KEEGO HARBOR — Jacqueline Logie-’became the bride of Douglas P. Koppela in a recent ceremony performed by Waterford Township Justice of the Peace Patrick K. Daly. ★ ★ ★ The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Logie cl 3187 Orchard Lake Road. ★ . ★ * Parents of the bridegroom, are Mr. and Mrs. Roy C, Koppela of 1831 Beechmont St., Keego Harbor. ★ ★ ★ Attending the couple was David Beyris of Commerce Township. Killed in 2-Truck Crash MUSCATINE, fowa <*> — Steven Stefunick, 46, of Greenville, Mich, was killed yesterday when his semitrailer tractor collided with a semitrailer truck on ice-covered Highway 6 north of here. The other driver was hospitalized. SOUTHFIELD - Legality of a contract that would pave the way for a multimillion-dollar expansion program at the Northland Center is expected to be determined tonight. ★ * .* City Attorney James C. Ginn will give an opinion on the contract between the city and the Hudson-Webber Realty Co. that would allow immediate construction of a storm sewer under the proposed Northwestern Highway freeway extension. The storm facility would serve new developments in the Northland area, according to th e realty Arm, a subsidiary of the J. L. Hudson Co. Mayor S. James Clarkson last week vetoed the contract, stating that the method of financing the osed project is illegal because it would bind a future council. OVERRODE VETO The council, however, overrode 'Fathers' Night' to Host Avondale School Board AUBURN HEIGHTS — Fathers’ Night will be observed by the Stone-Auburn Heights Parent-Teachers Association at its 8 p.m. meeting Thursday at Stone School. k~it .ii Several members of the Avondale Board of Education will be present to discuss the local school system during a question and |m swer period. The firm would then be reimbursed by the city when it takes the financing at a later date. OK Constitution Merging Church in Rochester ROCHESTER — The First Congregational Church of Rochester has voted lo adopt a new constitution merging it with the Evangelical and Reformed churches of the United States. The new denomination, officially born last summer, Is known at the United Chureh of Christ. Rev- Robert H. Jacobson, pastor of the Rochester church, explained that the merger will not change the name or services of the local church. He said the union was conceived by church officials as an "adventure of faith” toward uniting Christianity. The merger proved by an 84 per cent vote of the Rochester members. ★ k ■ k Officers elected by the congregation to serve for 1962 are Edmond Frost, moderator; Mrs. Earl Kohn, clerk; and Hudson Hill, PATRICIA ANN RRABO Mr. and Mrs. George Brabo of 734 N. Oxford Road, Oxford Township, announce the engagement of their daughter Patricia Ann to Airman 3.C. Floyd M. Cole, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jake Cole of 75 Snyder Road, Orion Township. No wedding date has been set. Square Dance Club Will Meet Tuesday WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN-SHIP — The Middle Straits 8’s Square Dance Club will . meet tomorrow from 8 to 10:30 jp.ih. at the Middle Straits Community Center, 3950 Green Lake Road. Anyone having completed 10 lessons in Western square dancing is welcome to attend toe meeting. The clUb also announces that registrations for the series of eight Western square dance lessons will close Wednesday. The elapses will be held at the Commuinty Center Wednesdays at 8 p.m. with Bob Longe giving toe instructions. Michigan food industries provide 20 scholarships tor students studying in the field of food science. n the flight three yc The officiating was by Malvln Englander, Miami Beach’* vice-mayor. Horcnbcin curried his l> ride down the ramp in his arm * upon the pi ane's landing at fdlew ild Air- port. The newlyweds brgai II the ir lion- cymoc in here. They'll slay ill Ihe Waldorf-Astoria Hotel for a few daya and then’'fly tr > Be rmuda.j Thoy will make theii r ho me in To Question Woman in Fatal Shooting HILLSDALE — State police said Mrs. Nina Drake, 41, would be questioned further today about the fatal shooting of her husband Gene, 42: at their ( u rn home four miles southeast of here. Drake died In llill*dale III I Avondale Slates Registration for Adult Courses Registration-for adult rducatlo Avondale Senior High School will take pluec Jan. 22, from 7 to 8 p.m., according to the director. William Saville. k k k Advanced cake decorating, advanced sewing, typing, shorthand, bookkeeping, art and driver education for adults are being offered on Monday nights Irom 7 until 9. ' Beginning tewing, beginning cake decorating, art and driver education for adults on Tuesday evenings also are offered. Classes will begin Jan. 29 and will run for 10 weeks. All classes, 'pt driver training, have pital lale y, -sterdav an It, iur ami of $5. These classes must have at one half Kfl< i-r hi- was sti .lick by I least 12 people r •moiled or they a shotgun h last. will be ranee lied. ‘ The fee for driv- Stale polici i« Mini il appe a red Ihe er training v nil Im r 120. maple had over a sholi argued and s t Higgled pm. Mrs 1 >r; 1 For those will) ( •annot makf* the not held. I'o lice said site was un- i registration Jan. 22. S a v 111 e able to ivra II who! happi i stales that h< r will accept registra- The I)' ala’ N have five children lions by -lele| phone during the day! ranging in a ge from s In Id at the high NClWMI Mackinaw Frees Cutter, Ferries Coast Guard Icebreaker Releases Tanker Stuck for Nearly a Week MUSKEGON (P - The Coast Guard’s big icebreaker Mackinaw rescued the cutter Woodbine, two car ferries and an oil tanker from windrowed ice at'two Lake Mich-igan ports yesterday. The Mackinaw usually doesn’t operate on this side of Lake Michigan and it drew a crowd of spectators as It went Into action here in a driving snowstorm. The Coast Guard assigned the Woodbine to Icebreaking here. The putter got stuck In tho Ice Inside the breakwaters of the harbor entrance and required help from tho more powerful Mackinaw. The Mackinaw also cleared paths of the car ferries City of Madison and City of Milwaukee. Ice from six to 10 feet deep blocked tog ferries from entering the harbor. The Grand Trunk Railroad ferries operate between Muskegon and Milwaukee. The Mackinaw then went to Grand Haven, 15 miles south of here, and freed the tanker Daniel Pierce from heavy ice. The tanker bad been stuck'in the ice for nearly a week. • ALA0ON L DUqUKTTK The engagement of A bison 1. Duquette to Airman 3‘C Richard L. Schomber* is announced by her mother Mrs. Russell J. Williams of HJ5 Wabash Road, Avon Township. The prospective brfdegroom to' toe son of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Schombers, of 2085 Crooks Road, Avon hip. No wedding date has Township, been) set. HARRIET IRENE MOORE A May 5 wedding lx planned by Harriet Irene Moore and Laurence David Moore whose 'engagement is announced by her parents Mr. arid Mrs. Earl L. MoOre ■ of 57 Brabh Road, Oxford Township. The prospective ^bridegroom Is the son of Mr. arid Mrs. Don Moran of 104^0 Dartmouth tjqed, Independence Township. \i 4-H Club Members to Receive Awards ' TROY—Awards for outstanding 4-H Club projects in 1961 will be presented at 4 p.m. Thursday to four members of the Troy 4-H Livestock Club at the Troy Fire Hall, 5930 Llvernois Road. Mrs. Ruth Montney, newly-appointed second 4-H Club agent for Oakland County, will make the presentations to Jeffery Trost for his flower project; to Terry Stewart for his poultry project; and to Jayne Kumlcr and Harold Barnard for their sheep projects. Mrs. Montney will also discuss 4-H projects available thin summer Ih livestock, garden, flowers and poultry. ‘ Boys or girls nt least 10 years of age who are interested In the summer projects are invited to attend the meeting. PTA to Hear Speech, Watch Travel Films .WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN-SHIP — Jack Schuler, president of the West Bloomfield Board of Education, will be the featured speaker Thursday at the 8 p.m. meeting * of the West Bloomfield High School Parent-Teacher Association, ) He will discuss some ol the problems and decisions confronting the school board now and in the future. Travel films taken In Spain and Africa tola past sumnW Will be shown by John Frlgld»lr§ Exclusive! ....Open Until 9 MONDAY and FRIDAY Lowest Priced WASHER you can buy that! SOAKS automatically WASHES automatically SPECIAL! CLOSE-OUT PRICES ON A FEW *61 REFRIGERATORS Matching Electric DRYER ’148°* with Flowing Heat FREE WIRING on Detroit Edison Linos Model DDA-62 n ns rrr.fi* mm mu Call us for authorized FRIGIDAIRE F factory-trained SERVICE FAST ’ EFFICIENT • REASONABLE 9m. Open ’til 9, P.M. MONDAY and FRIDAY jmmI mm wmm mm ’ GRUMP ELECTRIC, Inc. i KK722 toSMi asm orr tt 3465 AM ' w m&m. Il THE PQNTjAC PliESS, MQWAV,, J, 15, '1902 \ f,jrr.y mmm*'.........um^tmrr.nrri..j.1.r Miss Booth Womens Section -Jht ■**■*”" ■ ■ ; ffi^rtH*SS ■W to OfferClasses ^ Frw5“ In French an3~ Spanish French as well as Spanish classes will be Offered by the Fpntiac Young Women's Christian Association during winter term classes, scheduled to’ start the' week of Jan. 22. A * * A t Swimming classes for mothers of very young children, designed to offer instruction in teaching tots to swim, also are planned. A A * An introduction to art course for boys and girls between the ages of eight and 14 will) be > offered Saturday mornings. Six-ten Netzler, an MSUO student who recently won the Potere prize in a juried show in Rochester and who has shown GAIL LEE JOHNSON AT MSU, WMU paintings in several other area showft, will be instructor. Bowling will move' to West-, side Lanes On Orchard Lake-Avenue with Marguerite Young as instructor. Cake decorating, bridge and sewing, will be offered both morning and evening. Rat making, which will emphasize “transitional hats,”ViU move to Wednesday afternoons to accommodate women who wish to participate in the swimming and trimming program Wednesday mornings in the YMGA gym and pod.'Nursery hours will be extended for convenience of the “mad hatters,” according to Reba R. Netzler, YWCA executive director. The engagement is announced of Gail Lee Johnson daughter of Mrs. Allen E. Amoe of Waterford Township and Leslie Johnson of Detroit to Airman 3.C . 'Raymond G. Fulkerson, son ' of the Hurl Fulkersons -of Waterford Township. Graduations Top College News Fall quarter graduates at Michigan State University from the Pontiac area included Edwin B. Johnston, son of Mr.'-and Mrs. R. E. Johnston; of Joslyn Avenue. ......... He received a bachelor of science degree in health and physical education. AAA Karen Rognaldson, daughter of the Clarence Rogtialdsons of West Ann Arbor Avenue, and Ruth Bell, daughter of the Russell Bells of Hudson Street, were two of 85 women to attend the Sophomore Honor Chocolate, sponsored by Arista, honor society for senior women, at Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo. Both girls are in the elementary education cdrriculum. ★ A A A graduating class of 438 persons will receive diplomas and teaching certificates Saturday afternoon in the field-house at Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo. Included in this class are John J. Frlcke, Lynch Street, bachelor of science; Larry B. Sampson, Watkins Lake, Waterford Township, and John C. Wettlaufer, Edgefield Avenue, Waterford Township, bachelor of arts in business administration; Sybil G- Simmons, Dolcman Street, bachelor of arts and secondary cer-. tificate. Robert L. Ogur, Bloomfield Hills, will receive a two-year machine tool certificate. From Birmingham are Lynne A. MacCracken, bachelor of science, secondary and vocational industrial certificates; Gerald W. Millsay, bachelor of business administration; and Judith M. Shafer, bachelor of science. Susan Wotlla, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Felix Wotiia of Pontiac Drive, has been named to the dean’s list of Kalamazoo College- Susan, a freshman, is enrolled for the second quarter undeir'~the college’s new four-quarter plan for year-around operatica. ( A A A Patrlcll Coyle, daughter of the James W. Coyles, Birmingham, 'has been glected to the Catholic Action Council from the class of 1965 at Manhat-tanville College >of the Sacred Heart,. Purchase, N.Y. . An English major, Patricia, *- ajar a member of the Pius r and Children of Miry She is on the staff of Tower, the college yearbook and previously attended the Convent of the Sacret Reart, Bloomfield Hills. To Sing Work by Brahms The Michigan State University Oakland Chorus will join the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra in a presentation of Brahms’ “Schicksaf Lied," when the orchestra comes to Pontiac March 3. The orchestra will be directed by its new conductor, Stanislav Skrowaczewski. .The program is set for 8:15 p.m. at Pontiac Northern High School. % - m Marge Ellison, formerly • YWCA mosaics and ceramics Instructor, will come from her. sew home in- Southfielc} to resume her class. Other popular classes again offered will include chink painting, needle arts, sliversmithing, aluminum etching, copper tooling and, group piano. TO INSTRUCT Instructor! also include Annette Buzz, supervisor of the swimming program which ranges from beginners to senior life- saving; Nancy Beauchamp and Judith Hewett, swimming instructors with Jean Stickney as assistant; Winifred Lewis and Mildred Hollis,* morning and evening bridge, respectively; L i g i a Bueno, Spanish; 'and Marguerite Day, needlework arts. v * A A Others are Clarence Fleury of Kettering High School’s fac-' ulty, French; Marie Gabert,' sewing; Lucille Gloster, millinery; Audrey Hines, cake decorating; Amy Hogle) piano;. Amy Krueger, silversmithing; Lena McCulley, aluminum etching and copper tooling; and Wava Warner, china painting. Mrs. William Crisp Jr. is chairman of adijlt classes. A A * Operating three days a week, the YWCA nursery is supervised by Mrs. Hazel Beutler, under chairmanship * of Mrs. Floyd Vincent. Nursery teachers include Alice Pickup, Marie Vallaincourt and Mary Wagg. Activities calendars, mailed recently to association members and friends, also announce a nursery benefit card party JFeb. 5. Admission to the Affair will include a “white elephant." 15 in Culture Club Reply to Roll Coll Fifteen members of tKfe Child Culture Club answered the roll call question, “Are You a Fprniture Changer?” Thursday evening in the home of Mrs. Jorma Sarto on Honeysuckle Drive. Mrs. Walter Johnson was cohostess. AAA Mrs. Earl Steinhart showed a Better Homes and Garden, film entitled “Ideas to Improve Your Home." The secret pal revelation dinner on Feb. 8 was announced. AAA Mrs. Donald Rolfe of East Iroquois Road will be hostess - for the Jan. 25 meeting. Sorority Meets With Mrs. White Mrs. Forest White of Pioneer Street was hostess to the Omega Alpha Sorority Wednesday evening. Mrs. Joseph Fox assisted. President Mrs. Lloyd 9tal-cup appointed MTs. Thomas Beal to the office of recording secretary. The group sewed dressings for car Melinda Farr Booth, daugh- Scripps Booth of Thomlea, Bloomfield Hills, and Thomas D. Hubbard, son of the Harold S. Hubbards of Tipton, Ind., were wad Saturday afternoon * in the- St. Maiy of the Virgin Episcopal Church, San Francisco. Rev. Keppei W. Hill, th^ rector, officiated. A reception in the Clift Hotel followed the ceremony. A * - A The bride was attired in a bouffant gown of champagne peau de soie with lace bodice, styled with elbow-length sleeves. She wore a matching whimsey and carried cymbid-lum orchids. , A A A * Mrs. Ronald W. Ballantyne, Birmingham, her sister’s matron of honor and only attendant, appeared in ice-Mue linen inset with lace, styled with cap sleeves. Her flowers were Carol Amling and garnet Wiliiam W. Kirsch of Sau-salito, Calif., served as best man, and Russell Wendroff of San Francisco ushered. A A A Out-of-town guests included parents of the bridal couple, Mrs, Donald Neuman, the bridegroom's sister of Chicago, Ralph R. Calder of Detroit and Ronald W. Ballantyne. Mr. and Mrs. Hubbard will make their home in San Francisco. Nursery School Parents Hear About Books Temple Beth Jacob Nursery School parents met Thursday evening at the Temple on Eliz-beth Lake Road. AAA Mrs. Janet Gauthier, head elementary school librarian from the Public School Instructional Materials Center, spoke on books beamed to the preschool child, and read excerpts from several. A film, "Frustrating Fours and Fascinating Fives" was screened. Discussion followed. A A A Mrs. Herman Stenbuck, nursery school teacher, reported on recent school activities. With several parents, she will attend an institute sponsored by the Preschool Association Jan. 17, 24 and 31 at the City and Country School of Bloomfield Hills. The institute will cover dancer” arts and crafts and scieneA / Refreshments were--served by Mrs. William Freyermulh, Mrs. Harold Abrams and Mrs. John Harris. Tournament Held by Bonneville Club Seven tables ptayed at Bon-, neville Bridge Club's weekly tournament Saturday evening in Hotel Waldidn. Winners included Dr. and Mrs. Charles Patrick, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Longstreth and Dr. and Mrs. Edward F.'Collins. ^ ' A A A * Others were Mrs. Melvin Small and Charles Strellnger, Mrs. Eleanor Haack and Mrs. Tom Hollis, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Benjamin. Make You Feel Like an Intruder These Salesladies Hate to Sell By RUTH MILLKTT Newspaper Enterprise Assn. Have you noticed how many people in selling jobs today act as it they don’t want to sell you anything? You walk into a store all set to make a purchase — knowing exactly what you want and ready to do business quickly. Does a clerk hurry over to you, give you his undivided attention, and then set about,to fond you what you want? Sometime^. , ★ ★ ★ But all too often these days you walk Into a store and stand around fooling llko an Intruder. Nobody looks your way. A couple* of clerks are standing off In a comer having a private chat. They obviously have no Intention of being interrupted. Another Is on the telephone, talking and doodling While carrying on a personal conversation. • HAVE CHOICE Bo you have a choice of either turning around and walking out or saying meekly, “Can someone wait on me, please?_” / ' dr A dr , If you decide on the latter ddn't be surprised if you get an Irritated look and even catch a glimpse’ of a shrug 4 of the shoulders as one clerk indicates to another that here’s One bf those bores again — a customer who Insists on buying something. Another dodge the clerks with the “I-hate-customers" attitude use Is to stand and tidy up shelves while you cool your heels, obviously in the hope that you might give up and go away, dr dr If you don’t give up, the clerk who is too busy tidying merchandise to sell any may call out loudly, “Will you come and wait on this customer? I’m busy." Why people who hate to sell take selling Jobe Is a mystery. But a lot of them do. Maybe they don’t keep their jobs long - hut evidently there Is always someone else who hates selling to step In and take oved for a whllg. ' ■ > . What salespeople who hath to sell cost their employers before they finally get fired must be-plenty. Yoyng folks’ problems are discussed in Ruth Mlllett’s new booklet, “Tips on Teen-Agers.’’ Mail 25 cents to Ruth Millett Reader, Service, in care of The Pontiac Press, P.O. Box 489, Dept. A Radio City Station, New York 19, N.Y. 11111 .... tdmmmmmmmmthmim Spring headliners range from a 1962 version of the traditional sailor to a petaled cloche. These four chapeaux made fashion headlines at a recent New York millinery show. The Lilly Dache sailor at upper left features cushioned brim and high balloon crown in white rough straw with narrow coffee Abby Says: Be Hospitable AP Wirrphoto grosgrain band and cloud of veiling. At top right is a breton of lemon veiling faced with forsythia by Gigi. At bottom are the petal brimmed cloche of raspberry sherbert straw by John Frederics and a tailored breton in cafe creme straw braid with black glace kid band insert by Mr. John. Try Gobbling Up Turkey By ABIGAIL VAN BI RI N DEAR ABBY: Every Christmas my husband gets an 18-or 20-pound turkey from his boss. Our problem is that neither my husband nor turkey that just the two how ABBY a can get of turkey while. We aren’t so well off that we can throW or give it away. Would it be all right to sell it? That doesn’t seem right somehow. TROUBLED DEAR TROUBLED: Don’t sell it. Why not roast it and invite some friends in? Or cook it and freeze what you don't eat. Or get a cook book and discover how many ways there are to fix turkey. There’s turkey salad, turkey soup, turkey bash, creamed . turkey, stewed turkey and cold turkey. If you prepare it properly, you’ll gobble it up in no time. . AAA DEAR ABBY: My parenls won't let me do the twist as they say it causes heart attacks. Is this true? TWISTER DEAR TWISTER: For those doing it, of those watching II? DEAR ABBY: I read in a horoscope magazine that people who are born under differ- 11 Service Society Circles View January Programs January meetings for 11 circles of the Women's Society of Christian Service, Central Methodist Church, were attended last week. Rev. Harold Johnson narrated a film "Cats and People" and .spoke on alcoholism he-, fore 15 members of the Martha Graf Circle in the .home of Mrs. Robert E. Field, South Avery Road. Waterford Township. Mra. George Cryer was a guest. ", - A A A The Janette Geiger Hoepner Circle met with Mrs. Fred Mueller of Crane Street. Mrs. Ivan Riggs was cohosless. Mrs. llarokj Sibley of James' K Boulevard opened her''home „.tO the-Barbara Norris Circle for brunch, with Mrs. P. (5. IAtimer assisting. Mrs. William G. Lacy gave the program "What to Do When." AAA The Jean Bagnall Circle met for a salad luncheon’ In Ihe home of Mrs. Richard Balmer on Chadwick Drive, Waterford Township. AAA Mrs. Arthur P. Sweet reviewed the Book "The Listeners’’ for the Ortha Lane and Marta Simonsson circle* at a cooperative luncheon In Fellowship Hall. ★ A A “Alcohol atu) the Christian Responsibility" by Mrs. John Miller highlighted a meeting of the Etha Nagler Circle in Mrs. Hercules Renda’s home on East Montcalm Street., “AAA Mrs. Maude Schram of Sylvan Village served dessert luncheon to the Marion Shaw Circle. Mrs. Emerson Brown , gave the program. A A A The Adam Puhlgg Circle had dessert luncheon with Mrs. P. H. Kemp of Cherokee Road. AAA FlfteCh members of the Ot- 1 to Sisters Circle were guests of Mrs. William Hadaell of Exmoor Street, Waterford Township. Two members of Alano gave the program, and Mrs. Edwin Adler was welcomed as a new member. A A A The Leora Shanks Circle met with Mrs. John Davidson of Murphy Avenue. eht signs don’t get along with each other. I think that’s the trouble with my mother and me. She is very bossy and wabby and is always asking me a million questions. She complains a lot that she doesn't feel good, but I’m sure it's just an act she puts on to get sympathy. She is more strict with me than any of my friends' mothers are with them. t She forces me to* go to Sunday school and lokc piano lessons. I am 14 and am treated like a baby. Is what the horoscope magazine said true? And what does the future Isold for FOURTEEN DEAR FOURTEEN: Since you are old enough to read, may I suggest a very good book? The Bible. I don't know what the future holds for you, but It will hold much more if you will honor your mother.*— How is the world treating you? Unload your problems on Abby, care of The Pontiac Alumnae to Meet Oakland County Chapter of Siena Heights College Alumnae Association’s guest speaker for a meeting Friday will be Rev, John Zivers, archdi-oeesan assistant superintendent of schools. Mrs, Richard Johnson yf Warren will be hos- Af Wlr*»kaU Recorded voice of Gina Drazin warns Air Force B58 bomber pilots in well modulated tones of malfunctions in their aircraft. Here she records into a small black box (below) which is fitted into the giant bombers' instrument panels. Although warning lights 1 flash on the ^planes’ instrument panels when trouble threatens, designers felt tune a pleasant female veice would succeed!n capturing the pilot’s attention. v Meetings ' Conducted by Groups Several of Find Presbyterian Church’s women’s groups have completed January meetings. A National Minions RUdy “Journey into Understanding’’ was presented by Mrs.' W"'’ aid Wright for Maty Martha Group in the Henry Clay Ave* nue home of Mrs.-Pierce Bou-f fin. Mrs. Jack Hunt was cohostess. Bible study from Paul's Epistle to Romans was introduced by. Mrs. JudSon Frankenfieid. Mrs. Joe Duffield was guest at the Thursday gathering. Members plan a tuu»uing rattles _ remit. The eat we’ve told, him to pat tag, am deceiving. So, if be Is like Authority* we have to back up intelligent, he pays littlef attention -------^ |g| "4*“ ** *w A*’r to a command dike "Don’t, play with the toasteri’ until year make our wish tor obedience real tor him by making it impossible .tor a scratch. He steps on a stone— and the ground he thought was safe rises Up and hits him. Appearances, he is busily learn- him to play with It. „ We can't behave Hire old alarm chicks with toddlers. We Have be what we appear to be..' Plans Lesson in Leadership Mrs. Elly Peterson, state central committee vice chairman and newly appointed state director of Republican party organization will conduct a countywide meeting Jan. 20 In the Bloomfield Hill* Junior High School, West Quarton Road near Telegraph Road. The meeting will be a leadership training lesson and will run from 9:30 to 3:30 p.m. • Luncheon will be offered at a nominal fee. * Reservations are not required and anyone wishing further details may call Oakland County Republican Headquarters. Mrs. Robert Ballard of Lou-ella Drive, Waterford Township, attended her daughter’s shower with Mrs. Gerald Roland of Oxford, mother of the bridegroom-elect, and his sisters Mrs. Jacob Mason and Kay. Among some 27 guests were Mrs. Glenn Sutton and Mrs. Marvin Stevens, Drayton' Plains: Mrs. Paul Rngatz, Clarkston, Mrs. Gordon McIntyre, Oakwood: Mrs. Carroll Roth, Waterford, also Mrs. Elsie Chambers and Doris Clevenger, Birmingham. Young Adult Group Selects Officers St* Paul Methodist Church’s Young Adults’ group elected officers at Friday's meeting In the home of the Eldon Parrotts on Rutherford Road, Bloomfield Hills. Newly ..elected officers discussing membership increase plans were Mrs. Harry Reynolds, president; Harold Reynolds, vice president; Mrs. Parrott, secretary - treasurer; and Mrs. John Haroutunian, publicity chairman. a Price Salon Waves $10.00 - $5.00 Includes $12.50 ■ $6.25 ’ • Haircut $15.00 - $7.50 • Shampoo $17.50 - $8.75 •ration Set Mon., Tues., Wed. $145 SHAMPOO and SET L eisners Beauty Salon 2nd Floor 42 NO. SAGINAW PHONE FE 3*1343 No Appointment Necessary Open Mon. and Frl. Even, ’ill I P.M. the noise* with action so that our word*ymm .0 of one piece to him. Then he cart If we are ghing to trust 'us.. . v . ......... lb* trouble i*. we confuse the toddler’* qeed to explore ottr character with defiance. We take hi* probings into the, quality of toXr firmness as our personal and particular problem. It Isn’t. He ■ Your Drapes CLEANED--PRESSED MAIN CLEANHS January SALE Outstanding Sa1 Religious Merchandise in' Stock. 20% lo50% OFF IMPORTED WOOD CARVINGS Imported Colored Porcelain Figurine* RELIGIOUS PICTURES '/» OFF adonna Si lop Pontiac'» Complete Catholic Gift and Supply Hotue 742 West Huron St., Pontiac FE 5*9275 OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY EVENINGS ’til 10 P.M. You’ll find fashion magic in our selection of over 400 beautiful frames Givo your personality a dramatic, alluring touch. We have shapes for every facial contour, colors to compliment every complexion. A Complete Optical Service DIVIDED PAYMENTS AVAILABLE • Contact Loniot » Eyo Examination* • Fashion-Fitted lys-Woar • Soloctlon of Over 400 • Prtclslon ten* Grinding • Fast Repair Service • Complete Eye Gloi* , Manufacturing Facilities • Dahlberg Hearing Aids E. STEINMAN, O D. PHONE FE 2*2898 109 NORTH SAGINAW STREET Opan Daily 9:30 to 5:30 — Fridays 9:30 to 8:30 Open Tonight Until 9 P.M. JANUARY CLEARANCE Annual Pendleton Clearance What's left in this once-a-year sale of discontined styles and patterns. r* % * Vi Off Fur Trim Coats ' t REGULAR TO *225 $69 to *119 Untrimmed Coats REGULAR TO *110 '39 e ’59 This Week Only! ^jjli Save Up to $1 05 on every box of those irresistible Seamless stockings! Shoe Clearance Sizes are not 100% . . . for this reason qur shoe values are unusually high! UP JO 60% o OFF ANDREW GELLER MADEMOISELLE CARESSA PROTOGES CELLINI GAMINS $5 TOWN & COUNTRY FIANCEE CAPEZIO i DOMANI OLD MAINE TROTJER ’15 Regular to $2993 f , .HURON at TELEGRAPH. Mon.,| Thur*.. TrL 10 M> $ •— Tues., Wed.,, Sot. 10 to 6 -O ; /, . v'\. V THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 15, 1962 THIRTEEN This Year With a JicMw, NEW. PERMANENT $5--$6 — $7.50 Styled Hair Cutting from .. $1.50 ANNALIESE BEAUTY SHOP Oar Phone May te Oat of Ordar Plaa*. Try Aaainll $25to$500 CASH IN ONE DAY OR LESS YOUR CHOICE OF PAYMENT PLAN ' — Phone in Advance — . IVe'll Have Everything Ready for You When You Arrive STATE FINANCE COMPANY 508 Pon«ac^Stat^Banl^Bldfl^*****■ ‘BUD’ NICHOLIE CALLING- When did you last evaluate your present insurance protection on honuf and valuables? Now, Through Our Homeowner*' ONE POLICY PROTECTION PUN It coat* you only ‘pennies a day' to ensure ‘complete' protection. Check today* and make certain that your Insurance Is In line with today's replacement value of your property ... It not, (lve tot a call today! 'Bud' NICHOLIE For COMPLETE Carohoo Protection 49 Mt. Clemens Street ' PI 3-7858 BARGAINS IN - DRY-f CLEANING SPECIAL! SKIRTS PANTS SWEATERS SPORT SHIRTS CASK and CARRY MCKIIF ant'DELIVERY tj EXTRA CLEANER* gn"\"X duality Cleaning W** Since 1929 Boredom Takes tte Toll Don't Eat Bines Away , By JOSEPHINE LQWMAN . It was just like toy other day. "That’s the trouble,” thought Mary “ body. All days seemed fob the same; over and over again the same duties., the same procrastinations and■ the same boredom. »*, She muddled through every day like a snowplow with its blade loose at one end. wringing this way and that, piling up more hall finished jobs and more and more confusion and hecticness and fatigue which made it impossible to accomplish anything at all. 4922 SIZES 36-48 M* Printed pattern 4922: Women’s Sizes 36, 38, 40, 4Z, 44,. 46, 48. Size 36 jacket and full skirt take 7% yards 35-inch fabric. Send fifty-cents in coins for this pattern — add 10 cents for each pattern for lst-class mailing. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly Name, Address with Zone, Size and Style Number. Special Spring-Summer Pattern Catalog — ready now! More than 100 sparkling styles — sun, sport, day, dance, work, travel. All sizes! | ' 35 cents. Rev. Patterson Sets Meetings Three January meetings with Rev. Robert P. Patterson, new associate rector, have been scheduled for the Episcopal Church Women of Christ Church Cranbrook. Ar ★ At First of these will be at 10:45 Tuesday, with the day’s program beginning with a service ot Holy Communion at 10 a. m. A business meeting will follow the 12:15 luncheon. Mr. Patterson’s subject will be ‘‘Prayer.’’ * Ar A On Jan. 23, Mr. Patterson will speak in the morning at 10:45 and again following the luncheon. chair for the umpteenth time and contemplated * her surroundings a jaundiced eye. Everything ted too much to cope with, st’s happened to me anyway?" she wondered. Mary Somebody was considered an Intelligent girl. She had had Interests and friends and waa thought to be quite good looking. By most standards she would be considered lucky now. She and her husband were reasonably happy, although life had become very humdrum. They bad their financial difficulties, but then who didn’t? Two Chapters Join for Get Together Phi Kappa Tau Chapter, Pi Omicorn National Sorority, joined the Iota Eta Chapter Thursday evening in the Drayton Woods home of Mrs. Robert Dunham. Mrs. John B. Wilson assisted as cohostess. Dr. Lowell Eklund, director Of, continuing education, Michigan State University Oakland, gave an informal talk on the lecture series at the university, February through April. Mrs. Paul Hoskins of Lincoln Avenue will be hostess for the next council meeting at 8 p.m. Thursday. This will be an open meeting. Holds Skofe Porty Members of Beta Omega Chapter of Lambda Oil Omega Sorority attended a recent skating party and business meeting in the Sylvan Village home pl Mrs. James Hudson. Mrs. Frank Mulhollnnd of Jamestown Street will be hostess for a pledge tea and social houi* Tuesday evening. New members will be pledged Feb. 6. Names were drawn for this year’s secret pals. Host Pilgrim Group Members of Pilgrim Group, First Congregational Church, were Friday luncheon guests of Mrs. John Walls of .South Johnson Avenue. Mrs. Harry Lillie, Mrs. Norman Feet and Mrs. C. B. Taylor were cohostesses. Mrs. Leon F. Cobb read devotions. Guests for the afternoon were Mrs. Jeanne Kiltie and Mrs. J. A. Hatton. ___ is certainly in • “Why should I care mood” today, hut after all she Was that way most day*. She gazed at the mess around her with appthy and thought, "Why should I care?” She waa suddenly filled with Artless boredom, which Is the worst kind, "and pulled herself out of her phatr. On 'the why to toe refrigerator she caught a glimpse of herself la a minor and stopped to take a good look. Go Quietly if You Must Leave Early By The Emily Post Institute Q: All of my friends are "night owls” whereas I don’t like staying up very late nt night When Invited to a, party how can I leave at a reasonable hour without breaking up the party? People always seem to think they should leave soon after the first one makes the move. A: The best way is to make your going as inconspicuous as possible. That is, you can explain to your host (or hostess) that you have to leave but don’t want to break up the party, so please- not to take any notice of your going. Then if you wait a few minutes, you can slip away without being noticed. On the other hand, if you go up to the hostess and shake hands and say good night, that will certainly tend to break up the party. ★ ★ ★ Q: Next month my 9-year-old daughter will be a junior bridesmaid at a relative's wedihg. Her dress is fashioned after the bridesmaids’ dresses. There will also be a flower girl who is 4 years of age. The problem is that the bride wants the two young attendants to wear head-pieces exactly like those worn by the bridesmaids which consist of plumes and veiling. I believe that this combination would not be in good taste for two young attendants and that they are much too young to wear veils over their faces. Would you please give me your opinion on this matter as the wedding is drawing near and the problem is far from settled. A: I agree with you. In fact, plumes and veils over the faces of these children would be little short of ridiculous. ★ ★ ★ Q: When 1 have two couples in to dinner, do I tell each guest where to sit at the dining table, or do they sit wherever they please? A: You tell ‘them where to sit. You seat the most important or oldest man on your right, the second in importance on your left and their wives on the right and loft of your husband. Alumnae Club toMeet Jan. 27 Dr. Dllllon McKinney, principal of the Juvenile Detention Home, 'Detroit, will be guest speaker for the Wayne State University Alumnae Club of Birmingham on Jan. 27. Ills topic will 'be “Today’s Youth and Tomorrow’s World.” The meeting, arranged by the program chairman, Mrs. Harold Longeway, will be in the Birmingham Room of Demery's' Birmingham store from 2 to 4 p. m. Refreshments will be served by Mrs. Phillip Taormina and her committee. Tedx “Chuck Wagon” Buffet ^ Every Tuesday Evening S to 8 o’clock Delirious Dinner for the Whole Family! A wide Selection of fine foods—lust got In your oar and drive to Ted’s. Woodward at Square Lake Hoad | ‘ Phone: FE 4-6630 , thought, "Why should I cate? What does It matter aaywdyt* Wifi) fire memory of her appearance fresh and vivid in her mind, she hesitated for a moment before the Icebox cake and the creamed chicken she planned to heat for a reassuring Utile snack. ."After all, they say that food is one of man’s and woman’s most fundamental comforts,” rite whispered to herself. Ar ★ * This day was typical of most of Mary Somebody's days except that it seemed to her to be the epitome, the peak or the ultimate of something, she hardly knew what. As a result, there was a very stirring of ambition and ergy and interest. It was \ small indeed, but it was there and she felt It. She experienced It for just a moment. It disappeared as suddenly as a snowflake in an oven. Nurses to Wed*1 Dental Talk^ Oakland County District Nurses Association will meet Tuesday to hear a panel of dentists present a program. ■ “The-' Dentist .-and Row He Serves Your Community." Participants will be Dr, Hugh Ko-pel, Dr. Adolfo Bruni and Dr. Carl Rasak. A coffee hour at 7:30 wfll' Start the meeting to the St. Joseph Mercy Hospital nurses' " home. Area nurses are invited to attend, according to Ayleen Wright, association public relations chairman. »,... New Sylvanites Meet for Cards Mrs. Erwin Nichols of Sylvan Lake opened her home to the New Sylvanites Club members Thursday evening. Re- lowing an evening of cards. A letter from Pontiac State , Hospital acknowledged a donation for new eye-glasses for a patient. While raiding the icebox. Mary Somebody had a sudden, fleeting thought: Perhaps a self-improvement plan would be worthwhile. Drift LEAVE A SHADOW OVER YOUR HOME Id (|m event of your death, wouldn’t you like to leave your bom* mortgage free? Make certain you leave your family a home instead of a mortgage through our Mortgage Caocella. tion Plan. For detail* call or M. E. DANIELS District Manager 563 Wait Huron FE 3-7111 MODERN WOODMEN OP AMERICA Horn# Office. Rock Island. ID Twins1 Mothers % See 'Birth1 Film » Mrs, Mom Rommel, -grad- • uate of Wayne State University J College of Nursing, narrated * a film on "Birth” before file' > I Twin Mothers' Club Thursday | evening to the CommuoilJM ' Services '’Budding. = - I DANCING AND COCKTAILS in the Cabaret Cocktail Lounge Waa. thro Sat., • P.M.-l AM. Rdtuitfealnn For Rwervatlen* «K2- rector of the Northeastern Illinois ; The. affair, from 3 pm. to 10 p.m., is open to .the public, accord* « ing to Clyde E. Cook, associate county planner in charge of arrangements. Reservations can ^be If You Were Born Before 1910 i . . let us tell you how you can Still, apply for a $1,000 life insurance policy (Issued up to age 80). You may cany the policy the rest bTyour life to help e^se the burden of final expenses bn your family. No one will calk on you. You handlb the entire transaction by than with OLD AMERICAN, the pompany which helped pioneer insurance, for senior Americans. Tear out this ad and * mail it today with your name, address and year of birth to Old American Insurance Co., 4800 Oak, Dept. L121A, Kansas City 12, Mo. No obligation! turor at Northwestern University He is the author of research studies and Articles on city planning, urban renewal, housing and related subjects, and has served often- as an adviser to the federal government., SIX WORKSHOPS flic conference will be divided into six workshop sessions led. by local men active in county planning. Topics for the afternoon include zoning administration, comprehensive planning- qnd public works planning and design. I Sessions at 8:30 p.m., following! dinner include the legal aspects of zoning and planning for industrial growth. *• The growth session discusses What the community- must do to attract and retain desirable industrial development, the factors involved -in plant location and the special requirements of the .search facility, Indict General Elections to Last Most of February . HEW DELHI «* - India’s third general elections will begin Feb. 2 and end in most areas by Feb. 29, the election commission FIT FOR THE BIRDS - Freezing , and be-low-zero weather of the past week, left little room for wetting pinfeathers on the wildfowl-at Ndrthlawn Park in Jackson. The ducks and geese, always looking for open water,, fouhd only one small open space- to paddle “IP ha ponds at the park be-Cpme frozen'. About 210 million persons are the lower house o: and state assemblies. Only Prime? Minister Nehru’s Congress party is running enough candidates to'win dontrol of parliament and most assemblies. Other parties seek only to become tiie leading opposition group. , Trad.WMiR.tbUp . , W5*0 t **“ parliament of 1962 trade between japan .and Communist North Viet-*- Nam should1 total $28 million, doable the. 1801 figure. (A4v.rttMm.pt) Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Stops Itth—Relieves Pain Soviet Union Plan Full of Political PAUL OPPERMANN city planning tor many years Oppermann baa had a part In metropolitan planning projects across the Untied States. He has lectured In tpis field at the University of California, at the American University in Washington, D. C., and is currently a lec- 0 The People of Ooklond County Who Never Finished h HIGH SCHOOL ^ are Invited to write for FREE booklet. Tells how yon can k earn your American School Diploma. ~ AT HOME IN SPARE TIME amaiCAN SCHOOL r r m r, o. n« tem All** Park, Ml*klf.a % Seal your FREE M-P*(* tilth School Booklet & N*m« ...............**• ...... to .•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••J NEWSPAPERS I, WANTED 1 ^HIGHEST PRICES PAID : WE PICK 17P j CHURCHES and SCHOOLS * FE 2-0209 on expressways will Include the impact of freeways’on local planning and land use patterns, the use of computer* In determining highway location and padties, and the Importance of coordination between state,, county and municipal highway officials, Among those heading the sessions will be Paul M. Reid, executive director to the Detroit Metropolitan Area Regional Planning Commission; R. J. Alexander, Oakland County Public Works director; George B. Catlin, director of area development for the 'Detroit Edison Co.; and Paul Van Roekel, Oakland County Road Commission highway engincr. j MOSCOW <*> — This year Soviet movie commissars are planning more than 60 major films, most with heavy doses of politics. ★ * ★ The best known film will be Tolstoy’s "War - and Peace, which shooting is to begin this summer. Its makers will probably play it straight, tyut a description of other forthcoming films, as printed by the government newspaper Izvestia, leaves tittle doubt that Communist indoctrination is still a prime goal of Soviet movie makers. following under construction, “'will take , “Soviet oil to Soviet bloc countries In Eastern Europe. "The General and the Daisies” — dedicated to the "exposure of the forces of aggression and the advocates of nuclear There will be A film will also be made about the four Russians who drifted for. 46 dayR in the Pacific before being picked up by a United States For the first time____ found a new healing substance with the astonishing ability to shrink hemorrhoids, stop itch-i )ng, ana relieve pain - without aurgery. • .. In on# hemorrhoid ease after another,"very striking improvement” was reported and verified by a doctor’s observations. Fain was relieved promptly. And, while gently relieving pain, actual reduction or retraction (shrinking) took place. And most amazing of all -this improvement was maintained in cases where’a doctor’s observations were continued over a period of many months! In fact, results were so thorough that sufferers were able to make such astonishing state- ments as “PHliis have censed to be w-torobiem!’’ And aptong these Sufferers wefe> very wide variety of hemorrhoid conditions, spmc Of 10 to 20 years’standing. , All this, without the use of narcotics, anesthetics or astringents of any kind. The secret is a new Healing substance (Bio- . tiori. Already, Bio-Dyne ia in wide use for healing injured tissue oh all parts of the body. This new healing substance ippository or otnt-ilted Prepay is offered ir. went form, catted Prepara..... H*. Ask for individually sealed convenient Preparation H Sup-Preparation H ORMRIHP --h special applicator. Preparation H is sold at all drug counters. Izvestia listed the titles and descriptions: “The Htnner” — a collective farm girl falls under the influ-w ? w w I cnee of her religious parents, Presiding at the dinner will be bul „a b|f tniP tove makM her J. Robert F. Swanson, chairman |ook ,m „fa differently.” the County Planning * Comls-i. M.SUO Chancellor D. B. Var* rr will give the welcome. Delos Hamlin, chairman of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors will review highlights in the county’s development to date. •ooooooooo* C flCHAP»####0#00#0#0000* Discoverer Misses, lands in 5. Pacific VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AP)—Another Dis-•overcr satellite has gone awry. The Air Force fired No. 37 Saturday, but it failed to go into orbit. Officials said tht second stage landed somewhere in South Pacific. ★ ★ A i " the 1£( h Discoverer which failed to orbit. The Air Force has recovered 11 of 22 cessfuily ejected capsules. The latest capsule was carrying ’’sky spy” films and tapes of the type to be used in planned Samos and Midas satellites. "Seven Nursemaids” — how a Communist labor.brigade takes a "difficult’’ companion under its wing and re-educates him. This one is listed as a comedy. ★ ★ ★ "Flood Time” — a collective j [farm village tackles "the impor-jtant subject of - Communist attitude toward labor." "Fulcrum’’ — ' too officers, discharged after World War II, I "come up against the shady side ; of life as brought about by the i cult of the Individual, but they do not lose faith In the true cause of the party.” "Three Drops in the Ocean”—! heroes will be workers of the! Minsk auto factory. * * * j “People and Animals” —_ one ‘‘glorifies the dignity of Soviet man; the humanism of our society.” “Three Day* In the life of Builders of the Friendship Oil Pipeline” — this pipeline, now | toes. | LOOK! SAVE! TENDER—SLICED BEEF LIVER GRADE 1—CHUNK URGE BOLOGNA YOUR CHOICE!! FRESH—MEATY PIG HOCKS KOSHER STYLE CORNED .BEEF TENDER BEEF TASTY RIB STEAKS .39 WATCH FOR IT .COMING SOON .A BAZLEY MARKET IN DRAYTON PLAINS TO SERVE YOU BETTER — COMING SOON SAVE! BY MAIL at FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS We Are As Near As Your Mailbox at 4% COMPOUNDED QUARTERLY Write for our. Save-by-Mail form ... or pick one up while you are in any one of our six offices . . . then just deposit your savings funds in the nearest mailbox together with the form. It’s as simple as that! All savings received on or before the 10th of the month start earning from the first of thqt month. All Accounts Insured Up to *10,000.00 ——SEND THIS COyPON FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS of Oakland 761 W. HURON Gentlemen: I want to open a savings account by mail. Please send me the necessary material and information without cost or obligation. 1 NAME. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN DDRESS. CITY............ t., .STATE,. . . •+- ■W&¥?W> ; * *jui’ '• ■SfW THE tONTlXC PRESS v mwwm *■' *■ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN* FIFTEEN At Ph*(of*i £*, GOOD FOR A TO — Pick (Night Train) Lane of the Detroit at Los Angeles and gallops 42 yards for a,touchdown. Lane es- ilionil and one of, the Western Division all-stars Intercepts 'a caped Tittle (16) and Mike McCormack'(76) of the Eastern ■■' . night. It was New York's fifth straight loss, seventh in eight starts and left the fourth-place i just one point up. Third-place Chicago increased its margin over New . York to three points, 41-38, with a couple of last periqd power play jjoals that produced a 2-2 tie Toronto. MONTREAL HIKES LEAD The tie combined with Montreal’s 4-1 victory over Boston to allow the. Canadiens to stretch their first place lead to two points, 56.54, over the Maple Leafs. Stan Mikita and defenseman Pierre Pilote each got a power pity goal midway through the third period as Chicago overcame a 2-0 Toronto lead and finished in a tic for the 13th time this season. Bob Baun and Rave Keon scored in the first period for the Leafs. Detroit scored twice in the last seven minutes ttTovercome a 1-0 deficit against the Rangers. Norm Uliman’s goal with 90 seconds left 'was the Winner. New York pulled goalie Gump Worsley the last 55 seconds in favor of a sixth attacker, but couldn't produce the equalizer. Dean Pjgntice of New York broke a scoreless deadlock early in the final period. Claude La-Farge matched it at 13:17. Forge matched it at 13:17. CHICAGO (AP) — The National,date when the AAU selects ath-Collegiate Athletic Association has letes to represent the U.S. in the fired another broadside, a plan for dual meet with Russia at Stnn-a new U.S, Track and Field Fed-1 ford University in July, eration, in its three-way skirmish ■ * * * with the Amateur Athletic JUnion. The NCAA council was Author-, * i, ^ |ized to take the NCAA-AAU dis-: A rough outline of the fodcra-ipute tp the federal government.' non was drafted Sunday by the « necessary. In dosing sessions, executive committee of the Na-» turned the handling of the mat-, tlonal Collegiate Track Coaches! tor over to the committee on AAU- [ Association. No structure was an-1Olympic relations, headed by Wil-j nouncod, but the committee saidjtojr Johns, UCLA athletic director, it approved a possible outdoor _ * * * j federation championship for this NCAA exa«itlye director Walter summer to oppose the AAU out-1 Byers said JOhns -was instructed door championships. . »<> confer with the legislative com-1 ^ ^ mlttee if his group decides federal - ,. , , . „ „j,K mediation is needed, *' The NCAA also is feuding with ^ ^ ~ 4r , the AAU. in two other sports. In| _. . ntWrtip organizations ,0 ‘r8.ck. ‘‘jfJhave tentatively schedt/led a meet- NCAA has authorized creation of, Jn Feb 4 t0 con. a new federation in gymnastics^ ^ ^ WUke • vlc? prcBi. One already has been drawn up! of ^ lnt<,,.nationol Baskct-In basketball. Federation, as mediator in CONSIDER CONFLICT 'the Imssle over basketball. NCTCA president Chick Werner of Penn State said the new track federation will consider staging a. championship meet op, the same| I day as the AAU meet/lf the AAU| refuses to accept representation in the federation. , ,nm emiged from the 1962 Pro The NCAA made several other m o( thc wildest in hls- significant moves during- the J wllh a 3W0 victprj'-but it (week's convention. took a combination of triumph BAN OUTSIDE BASKETBALL and tragedy to overturn the un- It.banned outside organized has-!derdog East. , ’ - kctball competition, aimed at era-1 The IngredietjlirTbr the National dicating gambling ami bribery. I Football League's post - season outlawed sutomer: thriller, witnessed Sunday by 5t,- leagues and related basketball tlvily for collegluns. The council toughened reflations concerning transfers from junior colleges to four-year schools. Ifpwever, the group failed for the second straight pass the, national letter of intent prospod PRESS BOX of Houghton. Mich., STEERING ONE OUT - ..Lornc K/.ump Worsley (1), New York Ranges, goalie, 'steer puck away from the net after a rush Red Wings in last night's NHL game Emmanuel Fouls Out Against North Branch Bob 1-1 finished 3rd in the slalo of the Lnuberhom ski tournament Sunday at Wengen. Switzerland, but was disqualified for missing a gate on thc 1st trip. Switzerland's Adolf Mathys won the event, beating France’s Charles Bozon. SI. Frederick Tops Shamrocks, 41-35 St. Frederick kept its Suburban Ferndale travels to Birmingham Catholic League title hopes alive Saturday night by downing city rival St. Michael 41-35 at Northern High. Emmanuel Christian 1 o s t to North Branch 65-53 in a game called with 30 seconds remaining because the Lancers had only one player left on the floor. The oth-either had fouled, out or been ejected from the game. Trey posted Its sixth victory in seven starts, bombing Romeo, 77-51. Seaholm, Avondale goes to Clin-tondale and the Southern Thumb tournament gets under way. NOT TOO CLOSE The city parochial game was not as close as the final score indicates. The area acheduie is light Tues- St, Michael host* Orchard Lake St. Mary and St. Fred has a rematch at Waterford Our Lady of the Lakes. The two Waterford public schools are in action, the Township hosting Cranbrook and Ket- NO PENALTIES CALLED Despite hard checking, referee Frank Udvarl didn’t call a penalty,; a rarity in the NHL. Ralph Backstrom, who does his best work against the lowly Bruins, scored twice for the Canadiens. They were h)s 18th And 19th of the season, and nine have been terlng playing at Lake Orion. against Boston. Phil Goyefte and Gtlles Tram- Shue Paces Pistons; Stilt Hits 73, Then 62 Map also struck for the winners. Jdhhny Bucyk, scored for Boston. 'In Saturday gptoe*,, Montreal beat Boston 5-3, Toronto edf"1 Detroit 4-3 and . Chicago tun Ijack New York 4-2. FORT Wayne, Ind. <* - Gene Shue enjoyed his old home court «o much last night that he scored 5B points in leading# the Detroit ftstons to a 118-108 victory over the DM Angeles Lakers. Gnosie Pointe Skiers Win Prep Triangular Grosze pointe High school dom* . kitted the first scheduled triangular prep plalom ski meet at Mt. Holly Saturday in both the boys end girts divisions. Wunsch of Grhsae Pointe was the boys’ winner with a combined time pf 56.9, with teammate Hedge finishing seMnd in 1:05.4 and Alexander of Bmky taking third In / . j taking third _ „ ... list of the local entries was John Crary of Waterford Who took 5th in a time of 1:22.0. Pottle of, Grosle Pointe was the • ‘ MRS ’ Miss Tripp of Waterford was third in 1:24.3, Next Saturday rn&alng, Bloomfield HUM, Berkley "and Walled Lake engage in of 21 free throws while the Mike* could make only seven of 25. John Bradley was high for the winners with nine points. Chuck Dean pumped in eight and Pete Vasquez added seven. bal- St. Fred, displaying aimed attack, pulled slowly away until the fourth quarter. The the deficit In the elosthg period, Harold Niehols of Battie Creek, Mich, was In 9th place today in the $366,080 Petersen Bowling Classic aDChicago wllh a score of 1,574. Bill Rozek of Joliet,' 111,, leads the field with 1,638. Larry Sonnenberg took game honors while pacing St. Michael with 18. Charlie Daul, one of the Mg guns In the Shamrock attack, was limited to three points. Emmanuel started the game with eight players In uniform. The Lancers held their own through three quarters, but then Anils started to hurt. The victory Rives St. Fred a 3-2 SCL record, a game behind lead- in Rqyal Oak St. Mary. The Mike-1 North Branch held a 42-41 admen are 0-4 in league action. j ventage going into the final period. With two minutes to play the Bron- ,1. Nell (Skip) Stahlcy was fired last night os head foot-hall coach at the University of Idaho, but was retained as athletic director. He has held the dual post for the past two year*- 409 Coltseuni fans and a national television audience of millions: A 12-yard touchdown pass by Johnny Unites to. Jon Arnett in the last two seconds, a last-minute fumble by the East's'* Jim Brown that paved the way for ther final West score, and a blocked ‘-registration system of' conversion attempt in the third athletes. j period, me convention also refused a j IJKE 00AT Not re Dnmo proposal that the fool- ball rules committer be*authorized- After it was over. Brown— to reverse the outcome'of games, named the most valuable player Members sidetracked the sugges-1—indicated he felt more like a lion on the grounds finnl author- |gont. Here’s, why: ilv over contests should remain1 With five minutes left, the bril-with game officials. • -J limit Cleveland fullback shook off — four tuckers and bulldozed 70 oirds to a touchdown, giving the Cast a 30-24 edge. But on a routine running play vith slightly more than a minute eft, Brown fumbled. Chicago's > Un here With a minute led and thc ball i the East’s 41, Unitas went to ork. The Baltimore'stqr passed for 15 yards to rookie Mike Ditka of Chicago and 14 yards to Colt teammate Lenny Moore. With 15 seconds left, a Unitas pass to Moore fell incomplete. As the seconds ticked nway, Unitas rolled to tyto left,-‘barely eluding a grasp ‘of New York's Andy Robustellie, spotted elusive I/js Angeles halfback Amett alone in tlie end zone mu| tossed him n perfect strike. 7 BATTLE’S OVER — Tommy Jacobs, toft, and Johnny Pott embrace each other after Jacobs won their suddcn-dcath playoff Sunday to win the 525.000 San Diego Open golf tournament. They finished the regulation 72 holes with 277s. Jaj the 1st extra hole to win. 1 u lid-died" Jack Deo of Troy, Mich., won (he championship In (Ira Jnvnnlle men's division of the Midwestern Sectional Figure Skating Cham-plonships at Denver, Colo., Sat-, unlay. Deo qualified for the 1M9 United States meet Feb. 1-4 nt Jacobs Playoff Victor in Open at San Diego The new United Football League increased its player limit from 30 to 33 with an extra squad of five-™" sinn nt its twO-dflV. 11 K°U< Poor foul shooting hurt the Shamrocks. Both teams dropped J4 field goals, but St. Fred converted 13 were on lop 56-51 and Emman-was down to two players. A minute and a half later only Greg Thompson remained on the floor -for the host team and the game terminated. at the final session of its two-day, , , , „ meeting at Columbus. Wayne, a happy Tommy Jacobs of Be Eberhnrt of Grand Rapids was elected to the board of trustee SEVEN BENCHED Five Emmanuel players were ousted on fouls' and two were ejected by the officials, Irv Thomp-and Dave Larkjn. Northern, Chiefs to Meet Again Tuesday on Mat Romeo's John Manley took game Whipped the Warriors 145-136. *lUt it dldn t help the Bulldogs who Celtics’ Eastern Division leaders j Shue, in n long-range shooting ........ "1 M « Of II Shots troRtho Pistons were a Port Wayne team In the National, Shue’s scoring helped but nisi probably did the absence of (H Baylor from the Laker lineup. Baylor, the Lakers’ top marlnman, Is in the Army. Detroit kept ahead to the finish after breaking an early 14-14 fie. Dm Ohl scored 23 points tor Detroit. Jenry West led the Lakers, Western Division leaders, j||$KV 7 ! . ' WILT—WEEKEND STAR The undisputed strip of the week- CraM NBA action was WUt Cham-lain, , the Philadelphia Warrior | giant who tallied 13S points ih two; gomes. ' | Chamberlain bettered the regu-lation game mark with 73 points S$alnst Chicago Saturday,night to a 135-117 victory, fi»n improved Ms own Boston Garden efforji h 62 points yegterday aa the Ham Jones scored SO points, Tommy Helnsohn 27, Mil Russell 23 and Bob Cousy 20 for Boston, which Is 6-0 against the Warriors this year. In other Sunday action, Syra-:use crushed New York 141-118 for the Nats’ sixth straight victory and Cincinnati outlasted St. Louis 119-114. No games ar6 scheduled today, with the annual All-Star game on trailed 46-19 al halftime. Tom Kelly hit 19, Roger Qualmann scored 17 and Harold Ktasendort tallied 16 for Troy, ONrlll feS5b’* Hoffman 14-9) Iran fef Qai ESft.-£±i!S a iM» Attradanc*— J.tjt. ’ ' 3 IS Sradl l\ Xd: i M»3» Lufkin . ■■ Totals 14 If 91 Wars kr Qaartara .1 li H ifcU '-NEIL DKTKOIT no. ■•'Y'o’ir ri> e [gte S Pry h] j-3 3J jbwtu 4 j 1-1 14 toss: u ps: j a : til ! S*7n * 1. 1 U# 0 Total* 93M-14M Total* 9013-1S9I , Sooro fey Qnrlwi. ■. Totals 4413-31 III 8 It M WKSTEWS DIVISION . SVANJIMOS IN niVMION Was Laal r«l Oahlsd • i V i & "11 | g, • f M | 7 It Ifc® SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) - position a j There's nothing like money to; "0^ 69 morale, -i , the start of the day, for 277. Another nlP'gnd-tuck battle Is expected when Pontiac Northern and Pontine (Wntrsl collide ngaln |n wrestling tomorrow night nt 7:30 at the lluskle gym. muda Dunes, Calif., way today to the Bing Crosby Clambake after winning the $25,-000 San Diego Open. Jacobi, whose*. tost good win was at Denver In 1958, pocketed $3,900 as the winner of a dramatic sudden death ptoyoff with another young tournament pro, Johnny Pott of Ocean Springs, Miss. Both are 26, both are ex-collegians—Jacobs from Southern California, Pott from Louisiana Stale. imle his bid in a pair of threesomes thut included Mike' Souchak, Bob Gonlby, Art Wail [ho led the Jr Gary Player and Jay Hebert. Jacobs was tied for 15th place Sunday morning. lie wns three shots off the pace after 63 holes, and indeed, was no better than 50th at the end of the first two rounds. Jim Mnrtin of Detroit kicked the winning conversion, his fourth of the day. Martin also booted a 27-yard field goal in the second period. Another crucial play occurred in the third quarter when Green Bay’s Itonry Jordan and Detroit's Dick (Night Train) Lane broke through to bat down an Eastern conversion attempt. Jordan was named most valuable lineman, and the blocked PAT eventually spelled defeat for the East, the loser in the Inst three i Bowl games. The West has 8-4 edge in the series. BROWN NAMED MVP Ironically, sports writers named Brown most valuable player minutes after his 70-yard touchdown gallop—and seconds before his fumble. Asked about the award, Brown continental: "Thanks, but did you playfer of the game? It must've been fumblcr, of the game." Brown said of his last-minute bobble: "It wns soil of a wedge play Into the line and I was still my feet when somebody rge) pulled the ball out of my, i East Coach Allie Sherman, the ew York Giants' rookie pilot, re- -fused to pin goat horns on Brown; "Everybody fumbles. It Just a terrible bad break for Jim that it had to happen to him at that time." Each West player got $800. The JPNH continued the older school In their m«4- series by winning k squeaker last BEAT SEASONED PROM It could hardly be called t Pott still was close in the hunt going Into thq final nine holes, but few gave him much chance to hang on with the likes of Sou-chak and Goalby, the cool lead-thls point. | i Came the playoff. The gallery I of 9,000 at the Stardust Country rout |club was rooting for both. Easterners pocketed 5600 apiece. Kansas City Wins ABL Championship Jacobs shot a (final round 65. six blows under par, for 277 and finished early. Pott, In a better Eagles Keg Meet Start* Here Women Lead State City Local bowling teams got off to big starts In the opening rounds ot state tournaments over the The Randy Wesf Hair Stylist aggregation ot Pontiac took the handicap and actual leads at the women’s event Its Muskegon while Waterford group* were gaining 2nd and 3cd places to Eagles competition bore at Airway Lanes. viola Cereal's Stylist* l»i*4 2,IN for handicap and '2.636 actual to head 166 entries from 86 cities. Pat Lisowski ot Warrei all events with 1,819 hand! ,m . of Detroit lead doubles with 1,206-1,122 and Mary Hewitt heads both depart-, ments In singles with 600 and 648.' She is'also a Detroiter.9 The tourney runs through April 29. Corey Gulf of Grand Rapids set a solid target for the Eagle# to shout at the aoxt alx week-ends with 3,(MS at Airway, Waterford Team 4 followed with 2.945 and Team 3 totaled 2,911. Saginaw ranks 4th with 2,859 and The Pin Pinchers of Ontotl Rapids complete the 1st five at 2,848. Michigan president Beverly Van Duron of Hazel Park threw the let ball to ceremonllea prior to the start of action for tha Katies, Poll, a good-looking dark-haired young man, got down first with a par on the extra hole. Jacobs ended matters when he sank a 14-foot putt for a birdie three. ■f * * * SAN DIEGO. Cam. (AP) - Scorti sod umrv winning! in th* Mn Dt«*o Oi>«» olf Tournament: - Tommy Jacobn. *3.900 Johnny Poll. 91,900 "“too Bayor, *1.490 Wall Jr . 11.(90 Mliio Souchak. *1,100 jay Hobort. *i.*00 Sok Ooalby. *1.900 . fc3ori,i l47-7MIMr77 J*7|«7M4*~!7I DicklnW. itj. mo _ tSa. ......RMRR ia,*as : b« Al Baldlnf. *090 . .mSTMHi CLEVELAND (AP)-The Kan-sas City Steers go into the second half of the American Basketball League campaign today wearing the title of champions. The Steers won the first-halt title In a playoff over the weekend, defeating the Cleveland Pip-games to one. The title guarantees Kansas City a spot In the playoffs at the end of the sea-although It looks as though no special pass will be necessary If the Steers keep on playing the w%y (hey have been. Kansas City, leaders to the ABL’s Western Division, displayed a strong defense and accurate shooting as they downed Cleveland 120-104 to the third game of the series Sunday. The pipers, whp were off to their | shtotlng, led briefly at? the start at the game. Then Kansaa Chy, Sparked by Nick Mantis And Larry Stoverman surged ahead and stpyed there. Ztphyrji Run Wild, 13*2 MUSKEGON, Mich, <1* - The Muskegon Zephyrs ran wild in trouncing the Fort Wayne Hornets, 13-2 in their Intomattonal Hockey League gam» yesterday. .4 'X\ . 7V,;:- /n rtv SiXTKKN Twelve of the first. 41 PGA golf by playoffs. The PGA believe* tournaments ol 1961 were decided I this to be a record. TCHIS PONTIAC ATTENTION YOUNG MEN* Your future is in electronic*^,.. . the fastest growing industry the [world todayl Plan for that future by taking the finest training: available. Enroll now for our next "Electronic Engi*. fleering Training" program. Mull Coupon or Cult f«* CompUtu Information Electronics Institute of Technology 2457 Woodward |0«WW SMf.) m feTlflilTA PRESENTS: THE FINEST ) N.B. A. DOUBLEHEADER f IN DETROIT'S HISTORY! Weber* Gjarms National Champs in Keg Battle MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)-The pew king and queen of national all-star bowling are Dick Weber, | lanky 32-year-pld St. Louis pro, and Mr*. Shirley Ganna or Cht-cagp. Weber scored ” a 10th frame strike for a 248 Saturday, night, after trailing to the first two games of a tight match with Roy Lown of El Paso, TVx. Weber’s S-{game margin was 619-600. I Both men were among bowlers who rolled a record five perfect, i 300 games during the 21st annual [tournament. Mra. Harms, 37. defeated Joy; Abel of Chicago 647-638 after Misfei [Abel had an early 47-pin lead. f Tops for ^^siwfftrmsi WED. JAN. 17th-9:00 P. M. BILL RUSSELL ANO THE BOSTON CELTICS DETROIT PISTONS featuring rookie forward RAY SCOTT WED. JA "Wilt lie Stilt" CHAMBERLAIN AND THE PHILADELPHIA WARRIORS BOB PETTIT «»th« H ST. LOUIS HAWKS—7:00 P.M. NO INCREASE IN PRICES! »M4f**dS»Jt«»200 BOX OTOCE OPEN 10 All.• PM WOodward 2-7844 CONVENTION ARENA Distinctive design, a smooth soaring ride, and rugged conetruction. Powered by the famous Cushman Husky 4-cycle engine. Up to 90 miles per hour, up to-100 miles per gallon. Ask for rail demonstration Only $25-00 Down ANDERSON SALKS b SCRVICI 230 lest Pike St. FI 2-8309 MONDAY, JANUARY U, 19W DOWNWARD BO — Clint B$ach soars through the air on one of his 75 foot Jumps on the 30-meter hm at Grampian Mt. yesterday. Beach won with jumps of 75-75-67 feet. Last Major Leaguer Known as 'Pep' Dies JAMESTOWN, N.C. (AP)-L el Floyd Young, probably the latest in a line of major league baseball players to carry the traditional nickname of ‘‘Pep’ Young, died Sunday of a heart attack. He. was 54. LAKEWOOD LANES Open Bowling Weekdays } Games for $1.00 Sat. and San. 40e a tine MODERN COCKTAIL LOUNGE n SIM Sltl W«l Huron St. Ex-OIppiansWin Speed Skate Title MILWAUKEE W — The youth and experience of two former U.S. Olympic team members carried them to more titles In the Great Lakes Speed Skating Championships during the weekend. Floyd Bedbury, 24, St. Paul, [inn., won the senior men’s laurels with 22 points. Mrs. Jeanne Omelenchuk of Detroit picked up 15 points to secure the crown she won in 1958 and 1959. Mrs. Omelenchuk shattered the half-mile meet record on her way to victory. Clint Beach of the Flint Ski Club, one of the outstanding young jump-in lower Michigan, won- the Gramplari Mt. jumping tournament Sunday with jumps of 75-7547 feet. ★ ★ A He accumulated a total of 130 points, just edging out John Tesse-mer of Rochester who was representing Briar Hill. Tessemer had 129.2 points, with jumps of 7067-68 feet. V L ,★ ★' In third place was John Grames of Pontiac, jumping for the host Grampian Mt. team. He had 124 points with jumps of 71-68-70 feet In 4th place wu Adolph Op-berg of Caberfae with Jumps of 62-67-60 feet for 122.6 points and following was Carl Nolan from Rochester, Jumping for Briar Bill with 121.7 points with Jumps of 64-66 and 68 feet. Host instructor Dan Guthrie of Grampian was in 6th place with jumps of 644149 feet and 118.8 points followed by his brother Ralph with 115.9 points and 6241 and 55 feet. ★ ★ ★ In competition for the tei trophy, the Briar Hill jumpers cumulated 19 points with host Grampian Mt. getting 17. 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Extra quiet, too, wlth'260sq. ft. of insulation. Needs routine service only twice a year, or at 6,000-to 30,000-mile intervals. Adda Up to the: best car value in the popular-price range. UNOOLN ■ MtROURY DIVISION • 1SM MISOUHY* • CSOOUCTS Of (jffiwjtD NOTOS COMPANY ■ 3SEE THE BEST-LOOKING BUYS-N0W IN EACH SIZE-AT MERCURY QUALITY HEADQUARTERS 1 LLOYD MOTORS LINCOLN—MERCURY—COMET ‘j' l\ 232 SOUTH SAGINAW STREET 7 F| 2-9131 ' >. : ; -» • " 7 v , y - . ■ *'7 __________________ Winners of the Gi#f$l&'Mt. jumping tournament were (left to right) Clint Beach of Flint, John Tessemer of Rochester and John Grames of Pontiac. They finished in this order respectively, Beach had 130 points total While Tessemer compiled129.2 points. Flint Jumper Wins Grampian Mt. Meet Ex-Boston Star Dead PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - Leslie Mann, 16-year major league veteran and an outfielder on the 1914 Boston Braves “miracle team,” died Sunday as he drove his car. He was 68. Police said Mann apparently suf-suffered a heart attack. The swerved into two parked autos and a utility pole. KRAFT WINTER- TREADS (Applied to select casings or your own tirespS It was the first tournament for the newly built 30-meter jump at Grthnpian Mt. and a good crowd of people watched the first event held there. ★ ★ ★ Guthrie, who heads the instruc-onal jumping classes each Thursday and Saturday at Grampian, said a junior jumping tournament is planned later in the season. The j u m ping sessions are free of charge. Sets Record in Ski Jump WESTBY, Wis. (AP) - A highflying truck driver who overcame a bad start to spar to a North American ski Jumping record, will lead the United States team when it goes behind the Iron Curtain in quest of world honors. John Balfanz, 21, of Minneapolis, leaped 317 feet—a foot over old mark—in claiming his rec and taking the top place or the four-man U.S. team Sunday. The squad will leave Jan, 24 to compete in the World Ski Jumping Championships at Zakopane, Poland, Feb. 18-25. Balfanz’ teammates, in their jumping order, will be Robert Keck, Oconomowoc, Wis.; Steve Reischl, Steamboat Springs, Colo., Jim Brennan, Edmonds, Wash. Three alternates also named, but they will not make the trip unless additional funds are found to pay their expenses. They are Willie Ericksoh, Iron Mountain, Mich.; Lyle Swenson, Westby, and John Elliott, Steamboat Springs. . ONE WEEK ONLY! S AT EARL SCHEIB S your car is tunnel baked. 3 YEAR WRITTEN GUARANTEE honored in over 100 cities. One day, service—in by 9 out by 5. Complete upholstery service. Free body and fender estimates. WORLD’S LARGEST AUTO PAINTER BE SURE IT'S EARL SCHEIB 1ST South Suflnuw WU** 4-OW So Economical, Sava Up fra Vi Cost of Haw Winter Tires! ED mUAMS 4$1 S. Saginaw at Raeburn AVOID THIS! SERVICE STORE 30S.CXSS - ■ FE 5-6123 I 1 THE* PONTIAC PItBSS, MOOTSaY, JANUARY ig, 1062! SEVENTEEN Bow Cage Record; Albion Romps Wayne Nips Northern, Ferris ana Eastern Win Easily IV By The Associated Press Western Michigan University emerged from the weekend basketball campaign with a record of two victories and two losses in the , Mid-American Conference. The B r o n c o s defeated last-place Kent State 72-88 In a game at Kalamazoo Saturday night and now are tied for third place with Toledo and Ohio University. - -Bowling Green’s high-flying team todk sole possession of first plpce with an 85-73 victory over second-place Miami of Ohio. The Falcons now are the only unbeaten team in conference play with a 44) record. Western’s two defeats in conference games have been by one-point margins. Mannie Newsome scored points in pacing the Broncos to their victory over Kent State. M8U, ‘M’ SEE ACTION Michigan and Michigan Stat will try for their first Big Teh victories tonight. Iowa will be at Ann Arbor and Purdue at East Lansing. The Spartans suffered thel third straight defeat in the conference when Illinois edged them 66-65 at East Lansing. Michigan was no match tor Ohio State and the top-ranked Buckeyes won 89-64 at Columbus. It was Michigan’s second conference loss without a win. Notre Dame played its best game of the season in upsetting Detroit's Titans' 77-59 at South Bend, Ind. Five Notre Dame starters went all the way for the victory which broke a six-game losing streak for the Irish. Notre Dame was left still in the red with a 4-8 record. Detroit had been stopped only three times in 12 previous starts. Eddie Schnurr led the Irish attack with 25 points and 14 rebounds. Dqve Debusschere tallied 21 for the Titans and -grabbed 19 rebounds. ALBION WINS AGAIN Albion, the MIAA leader, won its fourth straight conference game by beating Olivet 79-50. Albion came from behind an 11-point deficit in the first half for a 33-26 halftime lead and outshot Olivet 52 to 28 per cent on field goal attempts in the second half.. The loss was Olivet’s fourth In five MIAA games. Wayne State edged Northern Michigan 66-65. Wayne surged to victoiy when Fred Prime scored on a layup with 1:51 remaining. | The Tartars then went into a freeze and kept the ball away from Northern until the clock ran out. Wayne, pow is 4-4 and North-j em 4-5. MSU, Michigan and Titans Western Evens A * * J ShakeupExpected After Cage Upsets / EAST ' w • Pa. 88, Wake Fore«C83 I. Csmesla Tech 36 —MM ...Si. Booaveotura 81 . Tempi# W, Muhlenberg 13 . - 8t. John’s, N,Y. 73. Creighton S3 it Muter College 1 SATURDAY'S GAM M, Maryland M West VwftntA MO, George Wash. 61 m Florida 43* Auburn 40 \ Alabama 47, GeoralaSS Richmond 72, VMI 53 , Marsha^loMfcl^“ta~T*eh ** Connecticut^ 69, Manhattan M Cornell 8*. Harvard 71 Princeton St, Brown M Columbia It, Dartmouth M Holy Cree* 55. Assumption, Maes. 41 Navy 7», Penn State *7 Pittsburgh 56, Wsstmlnster. Pa. 4} Georgetown, D.C. 84. Seton Hall 83, oVer- 72. Alfred 85 ' SOUTH . MO, Mississippi State I Western Kentucky 72, Murray, Ky. I Eastern Kentucky 87. East Tennesse, Morehead. icy. 8sl_t— fi * Xavier, Ohio Dayton 72. 1 Iowa 88. IU Nort4 Dame k, Mmv» ee Illinois 88. Michigan State ft Purdue so. Northwestern 74 • Oklahoma City 88, Centenary 87 Bowling Oreen 8S. Miami, Ohio ------* 85, Missouri 54 ' a 88. St. Louie 78 • Toledo 75. Ohio V, 87 §H|BW It Colorado 58, I iraSt* 7fr 1. Oregon « ate rl Wy, } 89. overtime mta Clara m Memphis stats 87. Loyola, New Or-leans 7t ’ Tulane 83. National Teapi of Peru 55 * SOUTHWEST Texas Tech 88. Baylor 91 Utah 72, Now Mexico 88 Texas Western 57, Artsona 55, overtime West Texas Stale 84. Hardin Slmnur Drake 71. North Texas state 88 By The Associated Press If anything is sure in Southern Conference basketball, it’s West Virginia. Of course a basketball—despite its perfectly regular shape—sometimes can take funny bounces, and it did for West Virginia last March. Overwhelming favorites to Ivin the Conference title for the seventh straight time, the Mountaineers were toppled/by William and Mary in the league tournament semifinals and the crown eventually went to George Washington, All of that took place at the Richmond Arena, which West Vlr-ginih will visit tonight for the first time since that unhappy experience last year. The high-powered Mountaineers, fresh froqi a 120-68 romp over George Washington Saturday night with a glistening 8-0 conference record, have their .second meeting of the sea-with Richmond’s SpideTs. they handled Richmond a month ago without Btraln, 97-61. The Mountaineers were among the nation's top ten about that time, but were .dumped out after a string of three losses. Since then they’ve surged back by, winning five straight. EXPECT POLL SHAKEUP There are likely to be .some shaking up in those ratings, too, after sofhe surprises last week. Fourth-ranked Southern California Rangers Edge Forge, 3-2 The Mountain View nipped Standard Forge, 3-2, in a battle of city American league hockey powers Saturday at North-side Park. / Neal Norgrove of the Rangers and Forge’s Rick Foster each scored two goals. Mountain View’s other counter was tallied by Steve Sheffer. In -another AL contest, Bob Alton and Dave Blank fired two goals apiece to pace the Pontiac Central Raiders to a 5-2 victory over Pontiac Northern. Dave Keaggy Jr. netted three goals and Tom Davis made a pair to feature the Drayton Spades’ 5-2 win over Boys Club in National loop action. Dave Parker’s three goals spotlighted Mounfain View’s 94) rout of Union Lake Heating and Dan Olech had five goals as Forge shut out the Pontiac Optimists, 104), in other NL games. Union Lake meets Boys Club at 6:30 p;m. and the Spades face the Rangers Tuesday night in National duels on Northside^ ice. upset, sixth-ranked VUlanova got racked* up, seventh-ranked Mississippi State’s unbeaten string came to an e«, us Wayna State —. _____ Albion 70. Olivet 80 Detroit Tech 78. Alma 72 Eastern Michigan 75. Adrian 65 Boo Tech 82. Northarood 78 Michigan Tech 4, Minnesota 2 Western Michigan 5, Ohio 8tate 3 Denver >, North Dakota 4 (overtime) Wrestling Michigan State 14. Indiana 14 (tie) Michigan 19. Purdue 11 Western Michigan 19. Ohio University Air Force Academy 33, Michigan State » 84W, J tan 89. I Northern Illlnola 89, Eastern MIc Central Michigan IT, Northern II MtaMSan 88. Purdue .. Western Michigan 88, Ohio University Detroit Tech 78. Western Ontario 88 See Lucite Paint Demonstrated at B & G TILE This Weekend Nm Lucite WALLPAM Miss "LUCITE" Will Be at B & G FRI.. JAN. 1? 3 P.M.-9 P.M, SAT., JAN. 20 12 NOON-6 P.M. Decorating Ideas, to Take Home... We'll gladly lend yon "Du Pent Color Scheme Classic!" - 20.pages of dico-rating idaas—large sheets gf all "Lucite'’ Well Paint colors-50 haminlius color BsG TILE 1075 W. HURON PONTIAC, MICH. 4 DAY SPECIAL All 4 Wheels Relined $7^ 11 If You Don’t Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! EIGHTEEN ■.* * : v 64Do you know, Sue, jf it weren’t for ' Pontiac Press advertisings J couldn’t keep^within our household budget.” v —:---;— THE PONT1ACPRESS, MONDAY* JANUARY 13, 1962 V - >1 msmm “That goes for most of us, Ginny. My saving on food alone buys our gasoline. And with those six lovely little imps to clothe, I’d never make it without the daily offerings of merchants in The Press.” '• —---------------------v. You can’t “keep, house” without The Press at least you can’t do it economically. Press advertisers are the backbone of all the buying and selling in this area. The Press is , the clearing house. ][t shows you where to save BIG MONEY. . “My Lucy started buying furniture from Press advertising six months before she was married. Now when that Little Bundle From Heaven shows up in May, she and A1 won’t be knocked flat like that young couple down the block.” * > .... I' s_________________________________________________________/ THE PONTIAC PftESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 15, I9(& 1 ‘jsimi’L'Wb NYC PENNSY lines — This map shows the main trank lines of the Pennsylvania and the New York Central railroads which lace the northeastern part of the nation. The two . corporations formally agreed Friday on plans* AP Photofax , to merge into a single system. Under the plan, the new network would be called the Pennsylvania New York Central Transportaton Co. with headquarters in Pennsylvania! Election Could Decide the Nation's Future in ; East-West Cold War HELSINKI (OP!) - Finland to! today begins two days of voting that could decide this nation’s future in the East^West Gold War. Observers considered President Urho Kekkonen a virtual shoo-in as the man who negotiated this sturdy country’s neutrality in direct talks with Soviet Premies Nikita E. Khrushchev. It was less than three months i go that Finland’s giant neigh-or, Russia, began applying pressure for joint military talks between the two countries. in. the Baltic and that "Finland’s neutrality. was being mined. However, Russia’s demands for a military parley were withdrawn aitta? Kekkdneh met with Khrushchev. . About 2 millions Finns will vote for 300 presidential electors today and Tuesday. On Feb. 15, the electors will meet here to choose a president for the next six years. The official socialist .group backing moderate Rafael Paasio.j while leftists within "it are "hup-porting Emil Skog, a former party chairman. Paavo Aitio, 42-year old vice speaker of parliament, is Communist candidate. FAMILY ROOM SEE...:! BEFORE You BUY Likely to Strain U.S.-Portugal Ties U.N. Renews Debate on Angola UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) —Renewed U.N. debate on Angola today puts a new strain' on ties between the United States and its Atlantic ally Portugal. Sr ★ , ★ The debate was the first major business as the General Assembly resumes its 16th annual session after a Christmas recegs. Asian and European diplomats said U.S. delegates had told them would adopt a moderate, meaning- fill resolution that would push the Portuguese toward self-determination tor Angola. But Portugal contended that the assembly had no right to even discuss its big West African territory. It maintained that all it hoped the 104-natlon assembly Portuguese overseas territories provinces, not colonies, and their control is a domestic matter outside the assembly’s jurisdiction. Rusk to Brief Congress as U.N.- Bond Row Flares WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of State Dean Rusk goes to Capitol Hill today to brief members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on world trouble spots. One possible subject tor discussion is proposed U.S. purchase of U.N. bonds. ★ ★ ★ Rusk appears before a closed session of the committee as Congress members continue to voice their opinions of President Kennedy's proposal for authority to purchase half of a 3200-million U.N. bond issue. WOULD PAY CONGO COST The 25-year, 2-per cent bonds would help pay the cost of U.N. operations in the Congo and the Middle East. A Democrat, Sen. Harry F. Byrd, of Virginia, has been vocal and persistent In his opposition to the idea. Sunday a Republican, Sen. John Sherman Cooper, of Kentucky, swung behind it. ★ * ★ “We’ve committed outselves to If. we’re In it and PH vote for it," he said of the U.N. financing plan. Thatcher, Patterson . and Warnat INSURANCE But, Cooper added on a television interview—CBS — “Washington Conversation”—tht United States should Inform all nations it will not continue such aid unless they pay up their U.N, ments. Elsewhere, Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., a member of the Senate committee, championed U.S. purchase of the bonds to help “clinch (Soviet Premier) Khrushchev’s defeat In the Congo.” ; “The one biggest defeat Khrushchev has suffered in the last 10 years has been in the Congo," Gore said. “Success in the Congo, which meana success in Africa, will represent our biggest victory since World War II.’’ DENOUNCES PROPOSAL Sen. George D. Aiken, R-Vt., denounced the bond issue- proposal Sunday asserting it would provide the Soviet Union “a long-time escape avenue” for refusing to pay its share of the Congo operation. Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana said he is 'hopeful that we can get through what the administration requested, and that is a 5100-million bond issue underwritten by us which will be repayable.” The U.N. deficit jp expected to reach 3170 million by June 30. The world organization has been able ta.collect special assessments for Its Congo operations and its truce supervision in the Gaza Strip. There was speculation that the Portuguese delegation would boycott the Angola debate as it did on a similar occasion last April. Sources in Lisbon have predicted that Portugal would quit the United Nations if the assembly censured rule over Angola. Diplomatic sources said United States probably would not introduce a resolution itself but would try to see that any introduced from Africa, Asia or Latin America would contribute toward Communist countries were reported seking to get African delegations to put in a resolution that countries to refrain from supplying Portugal arms to use against the rebels and (2) ask the assembly's 17-natipn special committee on independence for colonies to give its first attention to Angola. Whatever the United States or the Soviet bloc might want, the 50-nation Asian-African group was expected to produce its own i lution on Angola and push "It through the assembly with little o change. Soviets Turning Out the Most'Scientists Lean . . Tender PORK STEAK 49 WASHINGTON tfl - The goviet Union is turning out each year twice as many scientists and engineers as the United States, says a specialist on Russian education. The specialist, Nicholas DeWitt said the United States produces about 90,000 engineering, science and applied science professionals yearly to the Soviets’ 190,000. RATE INCREASING In this decade, .DeWitt said in a report prepared for the National -Science Foundation,.the ■ Russian annual rate will climb to '2!50!00ff, j more than double the anticipated U.S. rate. How good is the Soviet instruction? DeWitt said it covers fundamentals extensively but is “direct-d toward narrowly defined specifies, with the main purpose of equipping the individual student to perform a specific job.'’ OUR BUILDING IS COMIMG DOWN! , WE MUST CLEAR OUT! . „ ... -S' RUSTIC WALL TILE 1c J2E « I v- 10 Pcs. 9"x9“ 'w 95 13V RUGS *3« Rubber Bate 9*r». CERAMIC 98* Inlaid Tile 9"»9M 64Ea. ARMSTRONG ASPHALT TILE 1(t quality 9x9xVi *3 49 Plastic c ?49\1 6W ARMSTRONG'S INLAID TILE JOV VINYL WALL COVERING S4” high 25* ?! BUY-LO Warehouse Linoleum-Tile Outlet 102-104 S. Saginaw (Next Door to May's) Free Porking in Rear / Q»en Monday and Mdey’HI 9 P.M. ■ H” Vinyl SOLID VINYL 5* ASPHALT TILE SPATTER 4fio. Peter's Skinless Pressell's Peter's Hickory House LINK 9-PACK SLICED SAUSAGE HOT DOGS BACON 3i;s1M 3"-$l00 49\. ( Gigantic Chicken Parts Sale!! > * NECKS and BACKS IOc lb. * CHICKEN WINGS..19clb. *CHICWXS^45clb. ★ CHICKEN BREASTS 55c lb. with Portion of Ribs PICK-A-PART • 3 THIGHS • 3 BREASTS • 3 DRUMSTICKS Troy CQC Pack Van Camp’s BEEF STEW l’/2-lb. Can 39 PEOPLE’S FOOD MARKETS IW 35TP BE Ppm sfc’l ' ■ tJJ2t»*WI* I ■ ! I ? MV* A WltK ■ FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS lUUkblUlMv 1 btubwnewc ItEfPSI •271 Ccai* Lain RAW P «MRg:‘s ; fgfff i § i *' ’ '>’^% ’ \~t iANttARYgjg,j962 11 ■ ^ - ^ Bits and Snatches -From Hollywood ■ „H * \ .',£i Wfiof Con Clan Gef Frank for Wedding? are the son of a member. These an» the same unions complaining What a difference flubber can. make.1 Disney, productions made $4.5 million in 1961, compared tc a |i|M, Oder a.miUion in MW.. By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-TV Writer HOLLYWOOD — Today’s dilemma: What do Peter, Sammy, *an, etc.’, give their leader for wedding present? >!. . And how does Sinatra’s engagement Juliet Prowse strike Dorothy Provine, who now has lost Prank — and! ‘The Roaringj Twenties?" Dinah Shore is; still ducking the j press because she: doesn’t want to! talk about the divorce ... The two top mo-1 vie fan mags are| a puzsie. One moMAS gave up scandal for the sweetness-and-Ught routine, the other did the opposite. /*•». jki Doris Day should have a talk with huaband-producer Marty Melcher. She’s still too yotthg and pretty to be filmed all those filters, as in "Lover Come Back/’ ,t/;Saddest sight in town: The leveling of ajl [wonderful outdoor sets at Fox to make way for a building complex. Down with progress! ... * * * Concerning "Something's Got to Give,’’ it may be Marilyn Monroe, who isn’t satisfied with the script . . . "Flower Drum Song” Is fine entertainment, but do you really need two dream sequences In one picture? ... Fox, which, allowed "The Innocents” to escape rather than being released, is now be- TENDER SITUATION Jill St. John Is typed. She plays movie starlet in Rome in both Tender Is the Night” and ‘Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone." . . Why was "Tender” released just after the Academy deadline? Because Fox didn’t want it to interfere with the Oscar’chances of "The Hustler?" . . . Still ‘Unanswered: What does Jeffrey Hunter do jtor an encore after "King of Kings?” .... . *8 Add Gene Kelly to the pro-Twisters: “It lets people who can’t dance think they can. and those who can dance can have fun with it." .. . Nomination: Warren Beatty for the slobchlest new star offscreen since James Dean . . . Debbie Reynolds is one take a middling comedy-Western ke "Second Time Around” arid rake it fun... - ■ Worth looking into?—Hie dpim of University Cinema Arts graduates that certain studio unions are impossible to Join unless you ★ OPEN ★ FRIDAY SAT.-SUN. KEEGO AN aiA KAZAN PRODUCTION PLUS 2nd NSW PIATVM “SHADOWnfiCAT” re MerrtU ! Barfexa Shelly Blue Star BARGAIN FOR TODAY and TUESDAY HAMBURGERS ONLY 19° Giant Pandas to Lucky Buyer Carry Out Call FE 8-15H Blue Star Drive-In Opdyke and Pontiac Roads —REGULAR PRICES-— strand BIG DOUBLE FEATURE vhpL& - ,M a—niBBMiiMipw MNtgi nisi ARTHUR ODOHHELL PLUS—THIS 2nd GREAT COMEDY! ROCK HUDSON i nows DAYS mEaitnan COLOR-CINEMASCOPE I TONvRANDfllL „wt WH-imn Mgju» H AP Phatafax BKlAeu AWARD - Elizabeth Taylor poses in Rome with the "David of Donatello’ award given her as the best non-Italiart actress of the 1959-60 season for her role in "Suddenly Last Summer." The award often Is called the Italian "Oscar.” Miss Taylor was recovering from her near-fatal illness when the awards were presented last year. Bury Kovacs Today With Simple Rites HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Emlci Is the only child of Kovac’s nine-Kovacs, the mustachioed corned!- wJth Mt“ Adams' l who once said every moment! of life should be enjoyed, lived j and treasured, will be buried to-today ' with simple Presbyterian rites. Ernie often said he. didn’t want to leave with the usual fanfare of Hollywood funerals, so his widow, singer Edle Adams, arranged the brief church rites and private burial at Forest Lawn’s Hollywood llills Cemetery. There will be no eulogy, The 42 year-old comedian was killed early .Saturday when his compact station wagon skidded Into a telephone pole. | Jack Lemmop, Frank Sinatn Dean Martin, Billy Wilder, Dick' Quine and Joe Mlkulos will be active pallbearers. Kovacs’ father Andrew Kovacs, and the comedian's brother, Tom Kovacs, will be! honorary pallbearers. Miss Adams, badly shaken by the accident and under heavy sedation, was able to leave her bed' Sunday, She spent some time with the Kovacs’ three children and with her mother, who flew here' from Englewood, N.J. The two older girls, Betty, 15,1 and Kippie, IS—Kovacs’ daughters i ,by a previous marriage—were j taking their father’s death very* [hard, a friend said. Mia Susan, 2, Wrigley 'Swift Premium or Armour Star Smoked HAMS WRIGLEY BACON SALE a* as- 49V Avq. Wt. 14-16-lb. 49‘ Avg. Wt. ' Butt Portion Ham Whole Smoked Ham Smoked Ham Center Slices U.S. Gov’t Grade 'A/ Gov't Inspected Fryers 29 a COFFEE SALE Coffee 2-89‘ Cut-up Pryors • . • 33V Special Savings on FLOUR Gold Medal With Coupon 25-lb. Bog NOW SAVE $1,000 • Executive and • Demonstrator CARS 280 S. Saginaw FE 3-7021 Deforest Pre-Ground Coffee | Delcresf Insfanf Coffee I Hills insfanf Coffee s£ Gaylord Pure Creamery Butter Florida, All Juice, Pineapple ORANGES or Florida Ruby Red Seedless GRAPEFRUIT J 49* >99* 79* Elna Pure White 59 5 Shortening « Frozen Peach, Apple, Cherry or Coconut Banquet Pies 29’ 169 Food Club VALUABLE WRIQLEY COUPON 44#* lb. Bag Oel Monte Early Garden Peas SAVE'29c 6^r° Del Monte Cream or Whole Kernel Cora SAVE 17c ftgl* Catsup SAVE 24c him effective thru hitidey, Jan. IS. Wt mm *• right It limit quantities. OET FINER GIFTS FASTER WITH GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS all m tHE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 15, 1962 TWENTY Delay Day oi Cram Sessions Are Only Lost Weekends 5 By LESLIE*. NASON, ED.D. '' ,Pfof«W ol.Education. >. > ■ University ol Southern California The all-night "crUrt’ has become » well*________________ • social event in. American high schools, colleges; and .universities, That’s too had. It probably helps; you fall more •than it helps you I suebped. ■ | The “cram”; session is t just what the lytme implies. You at-l tempt to. crowd, all the infocma-l tion that should DR. NASON - have been acquired during a semester's work into your mind in One all-out, afthight, ettaii It didn’t start that way. It just grew. At first you put oft study no* and managed to pull fhtafst out of the Are by cramming. The: cram sessions got, longer and longer' as you got farther along a few unto# The re&SW forth* bieakffOWn ls Instead of taking this as j warning, hhwever, you “bought’ the system. It became yoiv only way to study. By the fredhman or sophomore : years /in college, the cram sessions have reached exhausting, all-night proportions. DAY OS' RECKONING '* > There will be/a.day of reckoning, of course. At some place along the line the cram session, which worked lh high school, will j the point of not working at all. For a few outstanding students it maV not happen until they get td graduate school. For most, it will happen in the first year or two of college. • Airfields, Fuel Depots NATO Using Scotland obvious. 'Our minds just work at peak efficiency when they are overloaded. We overload them when we try to Jam all those 'facts.’’ into placp at once. Our minds can accept the facts,, but It has no time, and no logical system, fhr organizing them into a useful pattern. Because of iiiis, most of what we learn In a cram session Is wasted, As ‘'remembered facts” rather ' than as * part of our actual knowledge, the Items fade away almost as rapidly as they were crammed Into place. They are no longer available when we need them most. If you want to enter your semes-er examinations rested, with calm assurance rather than suppressed panic, try a new system. Substitute the kind, of review that for a short, useful “polish” session rather than an exhausting GLASGOW, Scotland (B-Scotland is playing a steadily growing role In activities of the Atlantic pact. #■ * dr A Polaris submarine base was set up at flWy Loch a year ago. To protect it, a submarine boom is now being built across the River Clyde at Fairlie. Far to the north -NATO tael depot Is under straction at Loch Ewe, In the western highlands. This and two similar Installations being built near the Clyde will be available to refuel aircraft carriers. A Id-million airfield to accommodate carrier-based planes is almost complete qt Machrihanlsh, Argyllshire. Another landing field for carrier planes will be at Storn- oway, on the Hebridean Island of Lewis, where runways of the existing airfield are being extended. ' * ★ h' These and other projects, expected to total nearly $6ty million, provide an infusion of prosperity in a land where jobs are often scarce. Ing David Allen Oray, 1S50S. To Clarence Oray. father ohtld. Petition having been tiled In thle Court alleging that the present whereabouts of the father of raid minor child are unknown and eald child Is dependent upon the public for aupport and that said child should 'be placed under the jurisdiction of thle Court. In the name of the people of the State of Michigan, you are hereby notified that the hearing on said petition wlU be held at ths Oakland County Service Center, Court House Annex, 1M0B West Blvd., In the City of Pontiac In said County, on the nth day of January, a.d. ini, at 1:30 o’dook in tha afternoon, and yoq are hereby commended to appear per-sonalbTat said hearing^ ersonal B»rvlcee,h?reof!> this summons anS notice shall be served by publication - - --one week i>revloui to (aid I The Pontlao Press, a newspap an^dreulated In said ^County. Adams, Judge of said Court, In the City of Pontlae In said County, this llth day Automobile Club Names Longtime Official to Post DETROIT W — Harry Newberry Rogan, who virtually grew up with the automobile, was named assist-' ant general manager of the Automobile Club of Michigan today. Rogan, 47, native Detroiter and an auto club employe or-official since he was a boy of 14, Is said to have driven nearly one million miles In the United States and traveled to M countries— all In behalf of auto travelers. Since 1946, he had been in charge of foreign and domestic travel departments of the auto club. It it It ■ Rogan has routed more people on pleasure trips "than any other man In the world," said Fred N. Rehm, the club’s general manager. if January, A.D. 1M3. DONALD X. ADAMS Judgs ot Prohats DILPHA A. BOUOINE Dsputy Probate Register Juvenile Division Jan. 1». I*“ STATE OP MICHIGAN IN THE 714 714 714 .... Boyn Mat .90 3204 33ft 12% I “ —R— 17 1314 13 13 — 2 MJ4 1104 19%+ 13 37% 37% 17%.. 1 904 904 9%. U 31% Lift ilft.+ WASHINGTON (AP)-The U.S. balance .of payments situation took a sharp and unexpected turn for the worse in the last quarter of 1961, Preliminary figures indicate that the payments deficit soared to an annual rate of about $5 billion, not far from the peak rate of $9.7 billion recorded a year earlier at the height of a rush by foreigners to buy American gold. in the Juiy-September quarter of last year the deficit rate $3.1 billion. The deficit, in essence, repre-mts the difference bet' the amount of money Americans spend, lend, invest and give away abroad and the lesser, amount received from foreign sources. IMPACT ON DOLLAR The U.S. balance of payments is considered important because It direct impact on the strength and stability of the dol-the principal Western currency. The surprising change in payments situation was disclosed over the weekend by informed sources, who also said the precise cause had not been determined. Biblical Author, 90, Dios LOS ANGELES (AP) - Edgai Johnson Goodspeed, 90, noted Biblical scholar and author of more 50 hooka, died Saturday of a stroke. Dr. Goodspeed was chairman of the New Testament department at the University of Chicago from 1923 until his retirement in 1937. - u Rbacm Ml - a, Rlchfld Oil 1 R „ _ ft .Rohr Corp 1 30 93'/. 92% 92%-— % *«•} g.ul1 9 19% 10% 19% I Royal McB " 41% 44V*— %| » 97% 47% 47%+ ft Safaway 81 mi 43 ’ 4] ft 43ft— V* St Jo* L*ad 11 03% 13% 83%— % 8tL S*n P 1 ' .?? k?% Igt^Rjjl p*" ' fiPl News in Brief jL j7%— %' An estimated $125 was taken by 7* 79 — % burglars who broke into an office imptr u li i L9 14% 18% 14% 84ft 34 ft I 19V* 15% 15 ft- .... _ 14 29 25% 25% li 90% 59ft— %|^Uf,r‘n« 140» 13 10% 10^ 104 “ 41% IP 41 r io% io% io%- ; 37ft J7 37 '+ % ....... ' MjH ****** (? I Sheifoil k Shall Ru Slaglar safe over the weekend at the Pine Knob Elementary School in Independence Township, according to Oakland County Sheriff’s deputies. A portable television set valued 4 at $180 was stolen by thieves who • smashed open the front window of . the Walton TV Shop, 515 E. Wal-[ ton Blvd., between 3:45 and 4:30 today, it was reported to * Pontiac police this morning. St. Michaels Class of 1MI Are having a reunion dinner at Airway Lanes on M59, January 20 at * —Adv. announced that —- —I—— -— has received an order for 200 single-level buses (as the above). The buses, which are expected to brings about improved fuel performance and all-around economy of operation, are 35 feet long and will carry 38 passengers. This; 300- Would Nullify Antitrust Victory* i ..____i_____ ~~ —i • aaftie type buses from Gryehaund. GMC Track and Coach wifi begin delivery of the buses thfs month at the rate of 60 monthly. Completion of the total order reprraehpg a $22.5-million purchase is slated in August. I Hr- \ Says Du Pont Bill Upsets Ruling Livestock Grain Prices 1— 7 34% 34% 34%+ % 4 39% 39% 31% + % 3 72% 72% 78ft— % 17 22% Sift Sift- ft 12 85ft 94% 84 ft— % 10 14% 83% 83ft— % 10 81 80ft 50%— ft 1 54% Mft 94ft— ft I 21% 21 ft lift- ft 3 39 % 39ft 3«ft 111 16. -T— NH Change +1 20 33% 23% 23%— % gJOR ¥•*- Tg.l 101.8 40 89% 85% 55%+ ft &*?• W H I }!! 5 s«| a «t !’!S ,a5,arsars*i,v « M —c i ss a sr‘* OMCnt 50 6 S 4 rw • JUk M r 21 22% 2899 ffiTf ‘ Borax .90 8 37% 37% 27% + 1 Freight 2.20 4 90% 90% ,10ft- 1 jjjeum 2.90a II 193 102% 103ft— 1 American Stock Exch. (Figure* after decimals are In eighths) NEW YORK (API—American Stocks: Figure* after decimal point* are eighths Cal Kl Pw .... 21.7 Mead John ..137.8 Treasury Position 8! 49% 49% 48%— ft 14 33 ‘ 33% 2214— ft IT lift 19ft lift .... 12 84ft 84 i4 ..... ~-N— ! ■« , 81% h%- ft 7 lift 13 iift+ ft M Mft II M%+ ft 13 120% 120% ltOft —Y —7 I Ift *% 8ft- ■ iii SR ”% 2 8 40% 40ft 40% + “rt« ii * 1 KM&h; 17% VIN YNH A Hart 9 2 7 7 k Mft-% NT Shtntod 10 lift 14% II + 43ft + V* Nla Mft 1 00 29 44% 44ft 44Ve~ 84%+ ft NorfAfOH 4a 8 IMft 1M% 108% + Bft,+ ft No Am A» 2 22 49 % 99% 99% ♦ 89ft—1%, Nor N Oak f.88 11 «ft 42ft 4tft~ 27 %— % Nor Pac 1.20 1 42ft 42ft 42ft + lift- % Nor Rta Pw 119 7 34ft 34% 34% Soft* ft Nwthrp naw^ I 31 3J - Nor‘^ra,'l» i 94% Mft M%7 WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen. Albert Gore, D^-Tenn., said today a Du Pont tax bill up for debate in the Senate would abort the antitrust victory won by the government against the company. Gore's remarks were prepared for the opening of Senate discussion-of tiie House-passed'bill. .It wpuld ease the tax impact on Du Pont stockholders who might receive General Motors shares under a divestiture plan.' FEARS CONFLICT Gore released a letter from Robert F. Kennedy Sunday night in which the attorney general said concerned that passage of the bill may cause a district eourt in Chicago to rule against the government in its antitrust battle against a Du Pont-G.M. tieup. ★ ★ ★ Kennedy said it would be most [helpful if it could be made crystal clear in further debate that by passing the bill Congress does not express an “opinion as to the method of divestiture." Ending a 12-year antitrust case, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled last May that Du Pont must dispose of its 63 million shares of G.M. stock. OPPOSES METHOD Du Pont officials have said they would like to carry out the divestiture by distributing the GM. shares to Du Pont stockholders, but feel they cannot do so because of the heavy tax burden. The Justice Department has op-posed this method in its arguments in the Chicago court. The department said the divestiture would leave a large block of G.M. stock in the hands dTthe Du Pont family. The bill would allow transfers of G.M. stock to Du Pont stockholders to be treated as a return of capital. Under present law the receiving stockholders would be assessed at full income tax rates. The tax could exceed $1 billion. ‘FAIR SOLUTION* Sponsors of the legislation tried to get it through the Senate before adjournment last September but its foes forced a delay. It was ed then to begin debate on, this date. Ford Tells of Top Posts for Five Area Executives Sen. John J. Williams, R-Del.A chief Senate sponsor of the legislation, contended the bill provides a fair solution to the outcome of the antitrust case. / Although Gore pledged a hard; fight against the bill, he said he realized it probably will be passed later this week. 'KENNEDY CONTENTION' Gore'quoted Kennedy’s letter as saying that the Du Pont stock distribution, or “pass-through" proposal, “would permit a large percentage of General Motors stock fo be lodged in Du Pont family hands. This would mean that the Du Pont family could still effectively control General Motors as well as Du Pont.” In his Senate speech, Gore described Du Pont and G.M. as “the axis of a giant corporate ’complex that is competitively irAsistible” and said the antimonopoly issue-' is paramount, outweighing the tax consequences of the bill. Gore is pressing for adoption of an amendment that would require Christiana Securities Co., an investment firm largely owned by members-of the Du Pont family, to sell any G.M. stock it received from a distribution by the Du Pont Co. Christiana owns about 29 per cent of the Du Pont stock and thus would be entitled to 18 million G.M. shares in the divestiture. Officials of- the investment firm have said they would pass these G.M. shares along to Christiana stockholders Five executives from the Birmingham - Bloomfield Township area are among six who have received top-level appointments with the Ford Division of Ford Motor Co. Named assistant general manager* of the division were Matthew S. McLaughlin of 1M2 Juniper Lane, Bloomfield Hills, and Donald N. Frey, 1052 Wad-dlngton, Bloomfield Township. ...... McLaughlin, who had joined mi J}* Ford in sales in 1946, had been u.91named the division’s general sales { manager in January, 1960. former position as assistaht general sales manager. Paul F. | of 1076 Gli Drive, Birmingham, named general parts a n dj service from "his formei post as assistant! sales manager of] parts and service. Also named wasl O. F. Yande, of| Dearborn, ant general LliiHENZ manager of field operations, now named general sales manager. McLaughlin _____________ Frey started his Ford career as manager of the metallurgical der partment in the company’s scientific laboratory in 1951 and named products planning manager for the Ford division ip January last year. OTHER APPOINTMENTS Additional executive appoint- Stocks of Local M»r,st P<-t™ * a5 w« ; Wood Drive, Bloomfield Township, suparmarkrt* .....*5 **18*1' named to succeel Frey at division Lm?i*iana' d>*' co 39 4 $5*,produot planning manager. Ho for-mot*1 Ch*m. Co iSdi ij.4 tf.8 mcrly was car planning riod Btora* .... Mr - 8 Business Notes Apoointment and promotion of J. F. Klausmeyer, 1326 Florence S,., Watkins Lake, an regional manager (or the National Bowl-O-Mat Coi*p. rnidwestern area of operations, is announced by Daniel Parke Lieblich, president of the firm. Klaus meyer [erred from Lauderdale, where he manager ■■■Mi I LAUX E. F. Laux of 32551 W. Haver-ford Rd„ Birmingham, named _ , ii.# oral marketing manager from hli Rhode Island far Jhe smallest 0fj rp the 5G states. Ilg/area is about|.,(r, CMn m three times greater than that «+« NWr York dtp. "■ ■ i r... • *t‘6 S; 2 50 I WMr 4 4|1£ 4l*a 41V snFftgqifiii ijS A|jj Flood. Damage in Spain > K-j ....lit :h K-3 .. .. .8.9} i.( Orowth.... tin. ]).< 1*2.:.;... i| |! government says recent floods in this area forced evacuation M 11,700 residents, . destroyed es and Inundated 77,000 acres. . '■ V\ A _ s 40-center. Pres-, he wil his regional [office at Skore i, Inc., Tay-where they 'operate a 48-lane KLAUSMEYER establishment. , He is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Leonard F. Klausmeyer of 111 Oneida Road, Ford to Ifnveil 1 Flail Mower' tor Spring Use The “flail mower", a new concept in mowers, will be available this spring to park fold grounds keepers, golf course operators and other lawn maintenance specialists. The implement is a development of Ford Motor Co. Tractor < and Implement Division, Birmlng-im, As contrasted with sickle bar towers whose teeth work like scissors, with reel-type mowers whose blades cut against a stationary bar or. with rotary cutters whose blades move in a horizontal plane across the grass, the flail mower has free swinging blades which hang from a rotor parallel ,to the ground. , This construction offers a number of advantages over conven- E. Dearborn, divisional general "Wltb thq. blades moving downward in an arc as the rotor turns at high speed, this machine virtue ally eliminates the hazard of objects being thrown beyond its protective shield," he said. Furthermore, the impact of the flail blades pulverizes grass clippings before they reacib the ground so that there are no grass windrows and no unsightly piles of debris to be seen after mowing," he added. A roller at the rear of the moWer shields the unit and accurately controls height of cut, he said. available in 5, 6 and 7-foot widths, Is a spinning rotor with loosehanging flail* Which make quick worfa; of cutting end pulverising vegetation on iawnii golf courses and roadsides. The downward- * cutting and pulverizing action leave1* & smooth, attractive surface free of windrows and other debris. THB PONTIAC PRESS, itfONgAY, JANUARY 15, 1962 TWENTY THREE B POOR FISH - Following a week of subzero temperatures, Michigan’s Ice fishermen came out in, cloves when the i* i high of 33 degrees. This crowded temperature climbed t lagoon at Detroit’s Metropolitan Beach off Lake St. Clair was pictured by a photographer who found a vantage, point to look down on the sportsmen: ‘*MM’ UJS. AMonsters9Baffle Britishers By HARRY FERGUSON LONDON (UPI)—Something new has been added to the standard list of complaints made by Englishmen who have just returned from the United States. Seems British citizens are being Isolated in hotel rooms where mechanical monsters intimidate them, ft , ★ ft Space does not permit a definitive list of the things wrong with America, but here is a small sample: , Traffic proceeds on the wrong side of the street, houses and apartments are kept at such a high temperature that you can roast a turkey outside the stove, the beer Is so cojd all the flavor Is driven out of It, Hie natives have an uncouth habit of cutting a piece of meat and then trans- ferring the fork to the right hand to spear it, the summers are hot and the winters are cold, there is no royal family, when you are Introduced to an American he utters a barbaric phrase that sounds Uke “hi;” Stratford, Conn., is bigger than Stratford, England, but It has never produced a William Shakespeare, American businessmen talk business all the time even when Trying to Stir Up the Natives Indonesians Creep Into W. New Guinea BIAK, Dutch New Guinea UR— A Dutch official said today that small bands of Indonesians have attenipted to infiltrate West New Guinea and, that some had been killed in skirmishes with Dutch patrols. Hendrik Assink, .district officer of Blak, estimated the total number of invaders at “perhaps a couple of hundred." Their purpose, he said*, is to try to stir up unrest among the Papuan population. The Indonesian bands “have been a total loss as they have not been supported with supplies,” he added. "They cannot live in the jungle so they come fmfrillages and the people tell us right away," he continued. Assink said some of the infiltrators were former employes in New Guinea, who returned in groups of 20 or 30 carrying modern weap-"but they are interested in agitation, not in fighting, unless attacked." JETS ROAR Biak Island, off the northwest coast* of New Guinea, is the largest center of Dutch military installations. Patrol planes take off regularly to watch the coast , and jet fighters roar overhead in readi- Oakland Candidates for U.S. Academies Appointments of Oakland County. WiklterV. Pastnski, 18, of 19330 high school graduates to West Hilton, Southfield. Point and Annapolis , were an- William J. Hosken III, 18, of nounced today by Congressman 12331 Pembroke. Birmingham. William S. Broomfield, R-Onkland Douglas \V. Ruffleyt.17, of 845 County. West Oakridge, Femdah*. * * * WEST POETr ALTERNATES Broomfield also announced 11 nominations to the .Air Academy from whom one will be selected a cadet after further tests. Principal candidate for West • Point (Army) Military Academy Is an 18-year-old Ferndale youth, Robert A. Mentell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony W. Mentell, 685 E. Chesterfield St. He was graduated from Ferndale High School last June. ANNAPOLIS CANDIDATES _________ Two principal candidates for two positions as midshipmen at Annapolis Naval Academy are: John P. Emmett Jr., 17, son of Mrs. Carol P. Emmett of 231 Oakland, Birmingham. He will graduate from Seaholm High School in June. Richard L. Martens, 18, son Mr. and Mrs. George F. Marie...., of 8410 Golfside Drive. Milford. I North Glenhurs! He was graduated from Walled Lake High School last June and is attending the University of Michigan. ★ ft' ft A Pontiac youth is among the 11 candidates competing for one position as cadet at Air Force Academy. He is Jerry D. Cunningham, 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Cunningham of 317 Elizabeth Lake Road. Jerry is now attending Michigan State University after being graduated from Pontiac Central High School last June. West Point alternates are: Thomas D. Quinn. 18, of 747 W. Hazelhurst, Ferndale. Terrence N. Hill, 17, of 1343 Buckingham, Birmingham. Stuart C. Glover, 19, of 1171 Withington, Ferndale. ANNAPOMg ALTERNATES Annapolis alternates are: Dennis Custance, 19, of 509 Or-chardview, Royal Oak. Arthur W. Cash Jr., 17, of 3918 Custer, Royal Oak. Duncan E. Newton, 17, of 35 Norwich, Pleasant Ridge. James W, Oliver, 19, of 23975 Beech, Southfield. FVederick H. Barnard, 19, of 5945 Llvemols, Troy. Frederick S. Muenchlnger, 17, of 812 Pleasant, Birmingham. Robert At. DeMattia, 17, of 27404 Drake, Farmington. ' Charles D. Gardiner Jr., 17, of | 607 Hawthorne, Birmihghi John R. Derrick, 17. of 690 Birmingham FOR AIR ACADEMY Others competing for the Air Force Academy position are: Robert B. Rottiers. 17, of 25530 Tweed Road, Birmingham. Mlchafil Montie, 20, of 1402 West 12 Mile Road, Royal Oak. Joseph N. Amalfitano, 17, of 1480 Imlrood* Circle, Bloomfield Hills. Wesley W. Grube, 17, of 1094 Worthington, Birmingham. Jon L. Miller, 17. of 1119 Hill- Donald C. Coe, 18, of 1747 East Highland, Highland. Carl* E. Swindlehurst Jr., 17, of 628 West Lewiston, FemMe^, U.S. Copters, Planes Arrive for Viet Nam SAIGON, South Viet Nam A U.S. Navy ship arrived today with two large Army helicopters and several observation planes to aid the forces of President Ngo Dlnh Diem against the Communist Viet Cong guerrillas. ft Sr * The aircraft ferry Breton, converted carrier, also had seven jet fighters and a Neptune flying boat bomber on her deck, but these weri to be taken to Yokosuka Naval Air Station in Japan, U.S. sources said, ♦ ♦ ft Four jets bearing the markings of the U.S Air Force's 109th Fighter Squadron landed today at Saigon Airport, but U.S. sources declined to comment on them. i it a The sources denied a report that the Breton had discharged a company of helicopters—-about 20. aircraft and 200 men—farther up the east coast of Viet Nam Sunday. For thaw whs figure. Naw SMITH CORONA Publisher Succumbs SAINT JOHN, N.B. CAP) -Thomas F, Drummle, 76, former publisher of the Telegraph-Journal and the Evening TimeaGlobe, died Saturday of a heart attack. Drummle retired a yeaf ago as chairman Of the board of/the N Brunswick Publishing Cp., L which publishes the two Saint John iDalUea. He w«s born in Saint John. But Assink said a full-scale Invasion Is not expected yet and very few families—none of government officials—have been evacuated, "The country defends Itself, It is so rough," he said. "There are only a few patches of cultivated $rea. The rest is swamp with mosquitoes, snakes and hostile Papuans." "For 10 years Sukarno has been telling us he will come this year one official said, “but he car . afford* a long war and he cannot take New Guinea in a few days. | The Dutch aircraft carrier Kan Doorman, accompanied by tw destroyers and a submarine, sailed today from Rotterdam for the Dutch West Indies on an announced thhee-month show-the-flag tour. Hie navy denied reports that the flotilla may continue to West New Guinea. ft ft ft In Jakarta, the Indonesian army announced the call-up today of thousands »of volunteers who re sponded to President Sukarno' call to oust the Dutch from West New Guinea. Maj. Gen. Achmad Janl, commander for the New Guinea operation, said military preparations are going on throughout the country. SUKARNO RELAXES Foreign diplomatic efforts were continuing in an attempt in the dispute peacefully hut Indonesians feel that Sukarno is determined to invade union* I he j Dutch agrpe to hand over admin-' isfration of tiie,territory. The president's top aides Indicated, however, he has relnxed on the 7-10 day deadline he set Inst week for a decision on wheth-he could get the territory by peaceful negotiations. Indonesian authorities clamped blackout on further reports dealing with the alleged attempt to assassinate Sukarno while he touring the South Celebes eight days ago. * * * , There was no cdhflrmation of' reported statement by the South Celebes commander, Col. Yusuf, that three Dutchmen have been arrested and one Is accused of throwing the grenade that exploded near Sukarno. ft ft ft In Hong Kong, the Philippines’ ew chief delegate to the U.N., Jacinto C' Borja, said his government favors placing Dutch-held West New Guinea under a U.N. trusteeship. However, Borja told during a stopover on his way to New York he had structlons from his government to submit such a resolution to the U.N. A Dutch move for such an arrangement died for lack of support in the U.N: Assembly last fall. Now harken to Miss Dee Wells, who returned recently from the United States and was so shaken by a night in a Miami hotel that she related her adventures in a communication to the London Daily Herald. FLICKS, EXTORTS, DEPARTS A bell boy escorted her to a room, flicked some switches, extorted a dollar from her and slammed the door. "The radio-was on full blast," she writes. "The television was on. The nlr conditioning was adjusted to send the temperature down to zero. “Every light in the room was on. I escaped into the bathroom for a drink of water. The glass was triple, super-sealed in cellophane and I could not puncture it. ‘I returned to the bedroom and two printed notices swam into eye leveh 'Take a live alligator home; perfect present for the kiddles,’ and, slightly to the left, 'Insert 25 cents.' I put my quarter dollar Into the slot. No live alligator appeared. “Instead, the bed began to shake and quiver. The bed shook for half an hour and then I saw a sign in small print 'Weary? Tense? This bed is specially fitted with a re-laxicating mattress which will soothe your fatigue away.’ ” FIGHTS BACK Miss Wells has too much pride to summon help. She fought back single-handed i against the monsters by finding ai ''hidden dial’’ which turned off the! radio. Along the eelling moulding she I located the air conditioner and r gave the wheel a full spin. She got the sound turned off the television set but could not do anything about the picture so she covered the screen with a blanket. She did not drop any more quarters into the relaxlcator. She went to bed thirsty. ft ft ft Next morning the room temperature was 90 degrees. Two figures on the .TV screen were fighting a roaring gun battle with silencers on their pistols and mouths. When she checked out, the bell boys Ignored her. t. Clemens PUBLIC SAL! • Uj lpM.^at 10:10 a e. Mich, i a addreai i highest bjdderT'Car inVybe inspected GENERAL MOTORS ACCEPTANCE CORP Jan. IS and IS. II PUBLIC SALE First friction match wa« pah united in Britain in 1826. h«-Dodf1 Spatial, 'fpha l°n GENERAL MOTORS ACCEPTANCE CORP Jan. IS and 10, 1*«2 PUBLIC SALE ~ i January IS, 1181, ai 10:10 a.m. Mt. Clemens St . hontlac. Mich Pontiac a-Door Ventura, nrlal n SOlPnsi, will hi Hold ai public i (or each to highest bidder, ear , napected at abovt addreta. GENERAL M< ACCBPTANC1 ______ Jan. 10 and 10.1001 let la hereby give ity with the Mlchlga a underalgnad City -iept Su---------- City of Pontia oho^majuapply "fcotice hereby further alven that 1 |ti| the City Hall, IS S. Park) _____. . Monday, February S. IMS from ■ o'clock a.m. until f o’clock p.m the last day to receive regiet ration a ana ranafer of regiatratlona by persona P£at«d:°January 10, INI. * OLGA BARKELEV City Cirri Jan. l* and si, imi _______ „ . „BUO Notice la hereby slven Report Attempt to Kill British Diplomat in Taiz ADEN (AP) — ■/ A weekend I,,, attempt on thb life of the British!** charge d'affaires in Tail, Yemen, j Jaw Ronald Bailey, was reported to-! day. ! the prbnosad An official statement raid Bai-leuiminra ley, 44, had been flown to Aden] for treatment In a plane sent by] iman Ahmed, Yemen’s rultr. ] »pln Lot M riciipt l.„ ...... — vleor'e Plat Do, 11. Thle la known aa 1350 I. Walton, Monilns to Anthony A.m.' [ M j-BEfihodM Bookkeeping & Taxes H BOOKKEEPING. Al.L TAXES EM 3-3416_______ 888.1426 Dreitmaking t Tailoring 17 DRESSMAKINO. TAILORING Al-t»rat|onn, Mm Bq<1p1I FE 4*MS3 HEMMING AND ALTERATIONS, It j,Income Tax Service 20. COCKER , log 111 1110 I turn, k,»n FE S-oid.___ Help Wanted Male Al I NOW nlng work. Apply evenings. 5171 Plate Hwy , Drayton Plains lelp Wanted 8 lilt,0(1 1 lntiors Wanted A-Positive, It-Positive 1-T. 4-W7 ( transportation. Congenial^ lb 3-IS12 tor appt. **! i tiorffiko bupervioar t j f*ORNKR PIKE and ^MUet ^NTS^ i IN YOUR HOME OR MINE ____ OR 3-3332 _ 1 LONG FORM ITEMIZED I N YOU It I |ft. Phono EE j Convole ue nt-Nursing 21 i I VACANCY FOItrbedridden Moving ond Trucking 22 List careful movino iow . ul : i FE t> Pointing l Decorating | AAA PAINTING AND DEC BODY 8IIOP MANAGERS initiation t WOMAN TO| l.anslnx 13, Michigan •ppllcfttlong la January 30. 1M3. ELEcfROWfttnFliAtbdffAlPMic AIDE I $103 00 TECHNICIAN II - By' interior decorator b Vour PAiNf I N O A Ni > 'Uai advert h > pi a I. Parnui ARE DEBTS WOK KYINti YOU? ~ No %harga for buiigat analyito MTcnfoAN “credit COUNCILLORS 703 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FB 8-0455 Pontiac's oldest and largstt budg- A HI'. YOU WOK HI ED OVER DEBTS? CONSOLIDATE ALL YOUR SILLS AND L«T US OlVK YOU ONE PLACR TO PAY BUDGET SERVICE -- W. HURON FR 4-0001 AvaiLABTE - chHTfSr YbOR niy,' tTUPk H&t ' ,0“r pay’off YOUR BILLS WITHOUT A I.OANI Arrange to par all your bills past due or not with one weeklj payment you can afford. AS LOW AS $10 WEEK Avoid ggrnlahment DESIGN ENGINEERS Automotive S Live roots, Troy. KXPBliTKNcKD^ COUNTFR MAN, | • House! log*f n"* Hunter,y Blun'lnr I ~EN( iInLi-.K U KITEK- !'eplialutrophy. For Vnlor. motion oml appUcntlon for oanmlnatlon writ#. Ilehlgon^vt. fcrjjgo. . Mli BeSJ I repttng applh January ^ •* STrlSfi 1063 MARK I El) MAN m*™ Fonllae U*orm Ilrayton j FIs Invesligaliuth to°operate an tss&x. MSimW train you,1 Halory, commies: bonus, and profit sharing. 1 Lakcvtrw 7-7033 for appolntm TiftST Seven ^IUo Rd^Dett ACT NOW iivtwpr«|urtj| Mimona^alrra I.KS (lilAPANTFEtCwrlle Kt: detail! National Dyna FOR’ A BOMB APPOINTM KNT CITY ADJUSTMENT SERVICFi: . FK 5-9281 ... Hr, Nuron Ponttae, Mieh. OPFOSITB MAIN POST OFFICB Member of Pontia,■ Chamber of Commerce . LOffl wilOOT iAFltfaDd eeonomlealty with newly roloaaed, Dea-A-jlet tablets 06 centsTay torartlDlrectef* '_____\4 GOATS* FUNBRAL HOM* DRAYTON PLAINS OR B-Tlfsl c»r *i*»B#ntl«l. Ag« 37 $0436 No Lav-Off* in 1%2 *0*00* to%rlnrW,ourms* n. Pontiac Must he msrAeirM11 tV 31 “with ■uallly^for’Vu VojL "averaging nolntmont IS tor op- to m«n. sun, fwe wi>«k tmin- Itif prog rum paid for by oompftny. 13 pH hr. Kfu>$ hove ear *nd FW ♦^006 •RRllANiNT JOil WifH BETPliH rlence heeded Funllao area 1.1M081 before li a m d«Ill REGISTRATIONS FOR TRAINING classes In an exciting new sale* Job are now being taken. Trainee) will be paid S3 oer hour foi learning an outstanding business sport cools without one pennv cost and ogree (O show them l» friends? Yvu enn moke up to 040 00 In n doy oven in tptie lime, without convosslog. Mane. Field. 533 South Thronp It . Dept. D-037, Chlcogo .7, Illinois _ Sole* Help, Mote-Female 8-A HALES TRAINER 15 35 CAR E8 trelnhig FE *4 000] for appohil ,,, Employment Agencies 9 SALES 1 run* 4*° ' lioST * lo>4$iAr0 wi t h •ml <»r fumlihtf lions. Midwest Eat Ppntlao State : __ 5 0227.______ EVELYN 1!D WARDS "VOCATIONAL COUNSELING SERVICE" IMi East Huron Sulto 1 ___Phone FE 4-0584___ SECRETARY | INTf itlOR AND KXTEftto,' pointing Well washing. Free nil mates FE_J-0378 ____ FAiNfiNO. FAFERlNO, RRMOV al Washing FE 2-2313__________ Treniperrotlea 25 4 ENOINE AIRLINER NON-STOP I »h Ani«I«H. H*n Frtnrlaco. H«n Diego. 17166 6M rXtr* Nrw York. |1». Miami, 644 Furry * Horvlct lncp OR 3.1364, „ lfaViho fY)fl H2S1IDA JAH If lo ihm •ijp«nn«t. Ph1 OR T6016 WANTED: RIDR FROM CHINN Rd lo •Auburn and LWrrmMj Wanted'Children to Board 2l Wonted Hooiekold grade 29 11 cASiFl'oirruifNFruity: and" af Lgrton's F*/1 4 3081° MET Ue BuV if 3R heL'l i i Von YOU OXFORD l.GMMUNITY * AUCTION OA 8-3881 _____ WILL BUT? ODD LOTH OR Wanted Real iitate 36 BUILDER #NKKD8 I I WORK ( AB B 8 r»U^LDINQ13CO 9_ “CASH —48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS — HOMES EQUITIES WRIGHT 342 Oakjand Avs FE 8-84)1 cAHirrbR YOUifritiuTfF~l.r Middleton, Broker. FE 4-3IM1 FE 4 0312 . ____ LIHTIN08-COLORED L R, Middleton FK 3-3203 TRUCK MECHANIC WITH OWN tools. Call In person. 004 Franklin Rd Pontiac, Only qualified me-ahanlca need apply. *Wr Are “Looking for Car Sale* Personnel For an AuthorliM, Dealership, BOnd Reply lo I'ontlnc Press, - - -lm, address, and YOUNG ivlAN - $96 “ teloo of national or ryphtg ond k SMg. Vli InetriKtlent-Scheete 14 ..MUSIC LESSONS $1.00 IM v created a variety ot poeltlons lor 3 0023. Call tonight 5 p m.-g p at foi peraonal Interview. Piano — Guitar Accorcjion » Instruments i i Furnished Music Center 208 N. Saginaw {•&4-4?0O i money ^ulckl^r call ua for im-m V.f. ' wiVkfhwiiam 7100 W. Maple' MAyialr 6-8350 Apartawatf-Fernielied " 37 3 ROOM*. PRIVATE BATH AND entrance, FBI O-TOtO " i jtooil EpftaiiicY Alberta Apartments- 200 N. Paddock ______ FK 2 3000 I B*T)Aodiir'VE)AV COitrANti clean, strictly private entrance and Mtln, Ideal for working coo-plo. bdulte only. PE MW f beEroom delOT otto apartment Ne . _____ fleet f|por. wirklna ^ door^ | LATEST NEWS 16 LUTED . News of What to BELL. RENT ■UlfTovder yot Jm ‘ * .WANT.. TO . Eaar. Jwm.'"* / / #r „ THE POHTIACJPjtlSS, MONDAY, JANUARY 15. 1962 TWENTY^IVg STOUTS Best Buys vyTtos? ovrmrmst a lovely roue FORA LARGE FAMILY! A* fine a location li Anywhere In Pontlao. Newly decorated 4 bedroom brtck colonial with car-, < • peted living room aim entry Mil, formet dining room, wej] taturee for mm to see. M velue et *23,wo. term THOM WHO DESIRE THE “1E8T JH -LAKE LIVING — BU Lake, front brtck lft 'Ti, ,°*nss?' Bfaabeth £7 1 ft bath down plug bedroom, and full laaement with recreation room. Hew tea (urneee and elective hot water. Carpeting and drapee included. Viata view thermopane wlndowa overlooking the lake. Beautiful sand (Mintage.' 2 car garage. Attractive ground* For high quality in lake living Inspect thl* property. rear union lake village — 4 bedroom* on paved road in the Union Lake area. Frame family home with basement and - “TRIo. heat. Very lmmacu-hrougbout and ready M |n. 41,800 dam................. move' In. |] poueiilon. NO BETTER Ml_______IN ROCHES- ___I AREA I -r Attractive 2 story frame located ' son's rural charm „. rural charm .............. _ CheeB* VaUey. * Walkout- h**& ment, finished recreation room with bar. 2 acres of land well landioaped. NOW HEAR THIS! PRICE JUST REDUCED TO: ......1. With 41.(100 down —■ Sis.suv. wun fi.ouv aown W1U1 reasonable monthly, payments. MONTGOMERY WARD EMPLOYEES ATTENTION! — We are offering the “Buy of the Year’ within walking' distance to you :lng' dta.............. nw RDP Solid * bedroom frame with 2 down and full bath and -2 bedrooms up and full bath. Basement with OA8 heat. Fireplace. Oak floors. Price 47,500 with 41.000 down. Vaoant tor Immediate posaes- rtSK hen with built In oven SCHRAM -2ft acres with apple* and 2-bedroom home renting for $4 a month. All this for 411.0C 11,000 will b it 410.000 on FHA ti IVAN W. SCHRAM REALTOR l i : 5-9471 M2 JOBLYN COR. MANSFIELD OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAY MULTIPLE LISTINO SERVICE DORRIS. LONG-LOW and I are proud to show. 415.000. IDEAL STARTER HOME: I,ocat( living room wltt com- *yteKS; carpeted living room fortable family room, lng room and oounti 411,300. 'BUD' Sale Houses O'NEIL MULTIPLE LISTINO SERVICE TOW COOT HOUSING. Located on E. Brooklyn. This 2-bedroom home ln selling for II.— ~ J —- is stlihg tpr 47.500 and It’ iw .Ike neWT it will take approximately 0<00 to handle and you win have a monthly payment nl H. tWln IA Vnn.t * BRAND NEW l LOOK AT. SMRBIHI home. Plastered walls, - d aluminum aldhigrwttil 2-car .garage. All^thl* located on a 100x150 pant and wehave*SfTkey. '^Hf SYLVAN IAKB, located In ... van Village. You can buy tide neat and clean 2-bedroom home for a thousand dollar! down on a land contrast. All rooms are on one floor, big- eating area and extra large utility room, wooded lot, ■H garage. 40,500 li the' full t NEW HOME FOR THE NEW YEAR. Here is a home In which you can take pride " garage, patio. - recreation ind Toads oflMIHB ' ' ir_______ ____„ r conventional, colonial offers a big living room (over 2(0 With ' a natural brick fireplace, a formal dining room and a nice kltch-* en having table .space for break-extra “lav” In the basement will garage, Gorgeous, shaded lot; Webster School close by. Must be cold quickly to settle an eetate. SYLVAN-A PRESTIGE VILLAGE. Owner leaving area add will dispose of hie beautiful family home. A vestibule ets steps li living to a grand plano-slze There la a full dining large den, kitchen ana . I/s No Money Down BEAUTIFUL CEDAR SHAKE8, E 18 A REAL SjEAUTY^ 01 terms with a bas I monthly payments of for* 3$' condition. $10,000 appralsa MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE IRWIN Tri-Level 3 ^bedrooms. 4-Hedrooin Homes-Farms 3-BEDROOM BRICK HOME - Rfl RH?a'ReCBlT8ylviinn8Vlll»gc* Fll ar,mmrdlal* po‘hps8,o, DOOM HOME 1: COUNTRY ■ 4-BEDROOM FARM HOME-Base- > Dixie Hwy. $20.50 f-ROOM INSULATED BRICK Hero’s .A Dandy Tlp-t^njjrth slde^locstlon spot- »’’r'ee'l?Ul a' Immediate Possession Crescent Lake section, neat 2-bedroom, oil funiace, slum, storms. HOYT nun,, - Hwunuill UtChSn With lots r closet apace, Stainless steel buement, gas heat, car a half garage. On the city -Telegtaph^,,^^ - bMSwjAUMMjlto Tor e IBTINO SERVICE^ polnemftit call FE RESTAURANT ECONO-TRI 1 3-Bedroom Tri-Level $8995 (plu* lot) 1 your lot i No mortgage TO MODEL: Elisabeth Lake Rd, to Union Lak* Rd. South tc Farnsworth. Right to model, OPEN DAILY: Mon. thru Frl. 3 to 4 P.M. Sat. It Surt. 1 to 5 P.M. J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor FB » TEMPEST RANCH HOME $29.00 MOVE YOU. IN YOU CANT AFFORD TO RENT WHEN YOU CAN BUY STATIONS FOR LEASE GOOD POTENTIAL. Pleaac call between 8 a. hi., and 5 p. m. 682-3344 or after 8 p. m. 882-3497. PURE OIL COMPANY._______ TAVERN. OWNER'S APT. -EA8Y ----- tavern with plenty of — growlr - ---- rUNTIAU $49.70 3 Large Bedrooms All Carpeting Included MANY OTHER DELUXE FEATURES CHOICE LOCATIONS IN ALL PARTS OF NORTH PONTIAC CITY MODEL AT PARTRIDGE ND ASSOC., Realtor leases Throughout Mich. ____HURON PE 4-3581 WANTED: I WILL INVEST $2,600 In your business on a partnership mus^erbenopen to audit. Press Box, i 1P8N. EastBlvd. I Block N of Pike on East Blvd. Open Daily, Sun. 12-9 Model Phone FE 5-3676 8.B.B. BUILPINO CO- CLARKSTON AREA A new 3-bedroom brick with full basement and 2-car .attached garage. Menv special feature! such as: A finished baeement recreation room with large windows^and special ^kitchen wRh loti of cum Suit Land Contracts AN IMMEDIATE SALE FOR YOUR Land Contracts you deal. Warren hardwtjod floi paved road. 1 Income Property SUBURBAN DUPLEX —und level, separate d gffsKSt j Lake Property EXCELLENT FIS _____51 I, 8WIM-mtnutes t-7?n 9. FE 4-4808. LI !KE~Fr6nT. YEAR !. 810. Reiort Property _____ 52 FLORIDA RANCH, SINGLE Suburban Property WINTER BARGAIN LoH-Acreag« 50 ACRES. FLOWINO WELL, ■__ .in'enoT UL° 2-5joI’* CLARk8T0N”7RjAjHi^00D lllage. Out Dlxlq Hwy. to May-lee ltd.; turn right to Kingfisher Vooded lots. 100 x 150. JPaved treats. Oood restrictions. Only 10 Bun. 1 to 5. Ml 4-THKRE'g A LOT YOU'LL l.IKE AT ?: I ». 815,08 TIIEROKEE JHL1 -S! "-**drlve *0*1 Elizabeth VLake Rd Big Family Home Elizabeth Lake Estate: tomaflo °1 itr xarag irlvlfogo*. “Bud" Nicholie, Realtor 48 Mt. Clemens St, FE 5-1201 After 6 p.m. FE 4-8773 GILES S 8800 DOWN i home has boen cut In terms. Full basement, ail floors, plastered rth of Huron. 8«. In a stlon. Only 07,000 full llsaster sale beoause of arg* Roman brick 14x15 living roo 2 ceramic tile I ___ VACANT -$250 wif HAVE SEVER A L *lfoM E8 UNDER 110.000 - SOME WITH LOW DOWN, OIVB US A BUZZ. UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE l 3-124 6-1241 I. MA 5 ANNETT Pontiac Mall Are: manucl Baptist Area nt. gas'heat. "ammL^slorr I neighborhood *12,500, FI St. Benedict’s Ar( Lake privileges plus )i >h with picture window and plaoe in living rm„ carpet- .....m'VaOtT.-- baths, tsg«^tl7V00, terms. ' f IRI htartoffrapiaoe, |jetlo, Itandjr kitchen Nmjimi will tha un ANUETT INC. Realtors 24 B. Huron St. Open Evening* and Sunday 1-4 PE 8-0466 ■ ' LKSIJK n. . TRIPP. Beautiful Drayton Woe Large brick ranch; '3 large I room* and paneled den. L* ~x~ -“1'r''t*ji(ao* irag* °rt|on.. —-laoned pUatered garage. 76 w**t Huron Wr**t FB Mill or EE 441144 CARL W. BIRD, Realtor 503 Community National Bank Bld|. FB 4-4211 Eves. FE 8-1302 . . lIPnPPTTTiiTOHlA Rd. Be*t offer. 227 Ri. 4, Se-wlcktey. Pa. 6iM> WeIL with 4 inch casing on property, three miles from Fontlao. Dorris (i son Realtors, OR 4-0324. INVEST OR' BUILD . MPiiP.. HR oareel with lng terrain, trout stream, trees, 1 road frontage. Fin* Invest-it pleee. 18,780, 1178 down. . 1‘ANGUS. Realtor OKTONVILLB I, Stre NA 7 Sale Farms 28 ACRES Clarence C. Ridgeway BROKKR rm 5-7061 w. walton blvd. Sale Bufiness Property 57 6,000 SQUARE FT. BRICK AHD 10 ft 3, 82804 ■ ... perk fiirmfi FE 2-7287. BY OWNER, &U---------- •tores, 4 apartments, |27j down, OR 3-6764, OR 3-1 COMMIRC1AL BuTldJ Oakland. Call FK 5-0404 COllI'ScfAt. BUILDINO. oioop , returns. OR >fe.-------------- COMMERCIAL BUILDINO, AP-projtlmatel^^WIO ’JJ block, all dear span floor apace, large show room and eisa service entrance, located qri S. *»*• tnaw ■ Bt. By owner. FE $-3864. Builneu Opportunities K FOR SALl (Tale mr van auto wai - * -“jn payment, c *4 Outstanding f Florida Opportunity Sale or trade with terms)! fl-ui boating and fishing Wr vvratlon spot • furnished nr li Cell for oomplr REALTY CO. TIZZY Br Kate Osann Sole Household Heads if A-i TAVERN ^S5y 4 'Peterson Real Estate MY 34681 GIFT sRbP Birmingham area. .'Convert 4 time for *ati*- facUon ai Michigan business SALES- CORPORATION jmV A. LANDMESSER, BROKER Oood going bu meat. Clean. Sb< Illness - forces, <_ :FORGE R. .IRWIN, 4 BRAND tb ail at- WASHERS, DRY RCA Whirlpool combination Demo, Installed - -K 2241 Hamilton *Washer, automatic OOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP of Fontlao »t West Bum * * Sunoco Service Station iuid never ' be laid off. . MODERATE INVESTMENT SALARY PAID while learning YOUR AGE IB no factor For Information call' Mr) Crawford TR. 2-8100. MOO. though. F-‘ 6:10, a.m. to 1:30 p.m. PR 7-1 Ero4. Mon, through Friday. operate ti irking at a of Toledo. Recently remodeled and air conditioned Only 45,800 down. tlon Located In stable 7 area community on. main i Excellent brtck bldg, with -- 3 bedroom owner's apt. juT 430,000 plus Zoned Manufacturing Close-In iocafli "-----—---lu_______ |»ro«o Iding5 20x80 Lot 100x600. v location on bu*» »avad thoroughfare, Ideal for > out < BETTER CONTRACT BUYS n June 1001 f llscoiint of 43,71 .o handle. 478 pt COU1 $13.01 r'Discouiii - 1068 for !t» of°$75. CENT- DISCOUNT — Sold 16.810. c r $7,500 PARTRIDGE a Assoc.. Realtor (. Huron FE 4 Soap, sufar, coffee, butter, cake mix, cereal, soup, food, ' vegetables, fruits, Kleenex, pet milk, baby /oods. frozen foods and paper goods. Call for free catalog J Infownetlon. EM 3-3236, * | ANTIQUE SETTEE WITO chairs, iperble top dresier, 2 w* nut cane aeeted chairs, coffi table, antique trunk. EM 3-801 OVAL WHITE MARBLE TOP TA-ble. 860 Winding Dr.. S. Elisabeth - ■ - ‘ is. Call after 3 p.m. . "Certainly you can carry my books home, Alfred, just _ leave them on the porch as you go by! ’’ LOANS 0 TO 4800 — (25 - TEAGUE FINANCE CO. 202 S. MAIN 214 E. ST. CLAIR ROCHESTER ROMEO LOANS 826 TO 8600 -.07--- OL 1-8781 ____ PL 2-3610 “FRIENDLY SERVICE'' Mortgage Leans Voss & Buckner, Inc. 209 National Bids, FE 4-4720 $750 10 $2,000 CASH LOANS on autoe home equities, homi furnishings and equipment 24 to 36 months terms. Group all youi debts Into one account with only one plaoe to p*y. Family Acceptance Corp. St7 National Bldg. , Huron, Pontlao Telephone 338-4023 A Mortgage We make mortgr-your requlremr- servtce. Remodeling ■tructlon loans. Cas aoltdat* debts Cheff Mortg. and Ri 383-8333 or 083- ’roblem? Prompt 'de'pcndabfe MORTGAGE ( Swaps .MG8T J foot frontage. No aprals- lanMcVhbqTTl'c* 43 Wanted Contracts—Mtg. 60-A ABSOLUTELY THE FASTEST SC- AN IMMEDIATE ®AL®o before you altor. 77 N. Saginaw, Pontiac. ABILITY cash for your Li equities and mi tn expert counsel with you. Ci red McCullough, 882-1820. ARRO REALTY 6143 Caes-EUs*beth Ro«d TRADE EQUITY IN 2-BP.I>-a home. lVi-car gerege. for ' pickup truck, housetrsllcr. 3-3234.y "* ° Sole Household Good* 65 buyers for contracts CLARK REAL ESTATE 3101 W. Huron FE 4-4813, ft PRICE — REJECTS, BEAUTI-ful living room aultea. Low- e-878. 81 60 week. Bargain Housi 103 N. C*a«- FE 2-0542.____ ASH FOR YOUR LAND CON-tract W* buy It from you oi-aalvaa. Quick service. Bring y< contract and abstract wltfi r< L. H Brown Realtor, 50* Eili belli Lake Road. Ask for V BroWn. FE 2-4810. Reasonable d 10 Dixie Hwy. OR IMMEDIATE ACTION end title. Aek (or Ken Tempi 882-0900. 2339 Orchard Lk. R LAND cbNTRACTS BOUGHT AN/- BL\ - SELL- Pearson's Fur 42 Orchard Lake Av< hlgan, Earl Garrela, neaitor, von Commerce Ro—J Orchard J.ake. EMpIre 3-3811 Money to Lean 61 (UoensedJM^ej^^n^r*)__ $25 to $500 on Your SIGNATURE CONVENIENT I months to repay Need $25 to $500? Sec Seaboard *«-Phone FE 3-7617 1185 N. Perry St. PARKINO NO PROBLEM Seaboard Finance Co. BUCKNER FINANCE COMPANY WHERE TOO CAN BORROW UP TO $500 OFFICES IN fontlao - Drayton Plains — Utica Wailed Lk., Birmingham. Plymouth ilVftoT ____ rroNE 40t Pontiac State Bank Build FE 4-1538-9 -wmwmntmr . $25 TO $500 s^EWNggeS; ■CENTURY FINANCE COMPANY asa 1-8184 Get $25 to $500 ON YOUE Sighature’ "rtioWTk'M OAKLAND, t Loan Company i 22 Pontlao state Bank Bldg. 11 AUTOMATIC WASHER AND have you? 1 CARPETED take HOUBETRAlLEn .. HHIH all: ........r *28; 17" TV 829; 1 TV 835 ; 3 piece bedroom • 619; apt- *l*otrioisl Sale Heuieheld Goods 65 WANTED TO BUYj ,U8ED TV'8, 67 Sale Miicellaneoui 9X12 FOAM BACK RU08, BRAND w, *14.88, *22.86 and $24.66. :minister rugs, $39.96. 9x12 rug - ““ $7.98 BT" 2 Orchard Lk- A il controls for auto-nun holes, blind hems, is, fancy dbslgus. Re-f payments $6 per mo. ish price of -88.70. FE ___PROJECToR7 826. 14" 898 FE 2-1383.__________ _K12 RUGS.......... I ASPHALT tile, ea PLASTIC TILE, EA •BUYLO" TILE. 183 8 . 8AG1N Berry Garage Door L’actory Seconds BLONDE DROP room table ai BUNK BEDS, BRAND NEW, MA- $37.58 complete; also trundle beds and .triple bunk bede. PEARSONS. 42 Orchard Lake Ave. PE 4-7881. COMPLETELY RECONDITIONED - s. Johnson Ra-Walton. FE ELECTRIC DRYER $46. REFRIO-erator $38. Both In good condition. Virgil Harris. FE 8-2788. ELECTRIC DRYER. /tiTOMATIC '. mod. Frlgldairs freezer •ffi! Crump Iilectnc, Inc. 3488 Auburp Rd. FE 4-3873 FOAM MATTRESS AND Box Spring Sets ..... 6 PIECE DINETTE SET Uaad. chroma trim ....... 2 PIECE L1VINO ROOM WKC’a WAREHOUSE 28 West Alley FE 3-71 FRENCH PROVINCIAL aOF/T $ FREEZERS. UPRIGHT. FAMOUS values—8^48 98. ^hlle’they' i, TV & H OUN CABINET WITH OLASS _____ Motorola portable . 19" Admiral television. 7 piece kitchen -------*•“' m 1, $4.19, ft" COPPER rollets $19 98. G. A. POAM BACK RUOS KARIiN CARPET Dixie Hwy. . OR 3- Drayton Plains ______ 228 OH, I'ANK, EASY WASHER Oood condition. 616 ei SION LADDERS. Wholesale and Retail! AVIS CABINET SHOP, 1678 Opdyk( Road, FE 4-4380. ACCEPT NEW PAYMENTS 66 00 •signs, buttonholes, 1 price $40.10 with on delinquent account, or on *41.14 total cash price. Call 3: 8487, Capitol Sewing Center f appointment. AUDIO TONE, TOP BRAND HE AIL for $178, while supply lasts. Phone FE 6-7598 ___________________ BURROUGHS electric t Bank Bldg., FE 9-07: A-COI.A MACHINE)’ CIRCLE FLUORESCENT ■i-n- I ) ROOM TABLE, 8 CHAIRS . iii* K BEDS. WAXED I.IOCIDATIXG CASH WAV !STANLEY ALUMINUM WINDOWS 4x8 ft Masonite .... $18* 4x* ft Pegboerd *3 ** 18x41 32-ft. Rock 4x8 Plasterboard 4x8 H Plyscore Burmeister........... LUMBER COMPANY >40 Cooley Lake Rd. EM 3 4171 Open 8 am to * p.m. dally Sunday H a m. to v p m._ BATHROOM FIXTURES. OIL AND EVERYTHING MUST aOI Easy terms BEDROOM OUTFITTING CO T63 Dixie Drayton Plains CEMENT STEPS, READY MADE, ..— block. 1oor sills, Pontlaa Pre-Cast Walton. FE 3-3800. REFRIGERATOR, $30. : slips. 812-8814_befors 6 &ELUXE nVLON PLAYfEN.’TIA by lumper, walker, etc. All for 648. 882-1741. _ ________ FORMICA. pTUMBINd, P A I N T, glass, wiring. Open 7 deye. PE 8-4713. Montcalm Supply, 168 W. 4 REPOHRERED E wert>ers*^ifll sizes’, $10 up. Oil space heater^. *16j 3|#Pl«4 JJ*1"* healers. *blg'picture *TV. r$a*7 odd beds, dressers, chests, springs, dinettes, bookcases and sewing machines. Everything In used fur-nlture at bargain -tkaa A,an NEW living lug _.id mattresses. Factory acoonds. Aoout ft price. EZ Sewing Mach Equipped balance'll (31.61. C( Sewing Cr iuii u, l. $1 60 Orchard i .PliSi~puNCA l^omi-^EaMnA. 'eElnet, dropVaf'table and pada. 6 chairs buffet. 8X13 BUOS........... ASPHALT TILE, EA. "’LAST1C TILE, EA. BUYLO" TILE. 183 $3.si I. SAOINAW KAREN CARPET • Dial* Hwy. OR 1-3100 _____Drayton Plains ar-. and 24“ TVe........ 80 other set* to eluh WO Buy, Bell end Walton TV, FB 3-2287 tth*. 20.Sit Up a15ut Afi¥+HlikaJ Vou w FOR THE -HOME CAN FOUND AT LAO BALES. CRT ................. parkLg. Phone ! PR?. • PEN I i.Vli-jM Furniture and appli-•-‘-df NEW AND trade dept, for OPEN MON.-SAT, *_ TO * 4aAffia,f.. of Auburn Heights on Auburn, lEBUIf.T VACUUMS, $12.86 til 42 W. Huron, Barnes * Hargravi t eFr I 6 E R A T O R, $38; GAS stove,^^$2^ 21“ TV. goodie' ' 846; eectlonal, 548.' Harrle'i, DUSTY CONCRETE FLOORS ipleqinexpen»!ve Application ____ Builder Supply_____PK M1IS FREE STand'ino toiletsTii China Lav with trim 411 Stainless steel sink *21 ft dopper, **' _ |B, I1" - ( 4144.41 TVs - I tmm mp mm SWEET'S RADIO AND APPL.< 423 W. Huron, FE 4-1133. STOVES OP AM, XlMbS. 4*2 UT. .roeTp'irMteVl'sInk. „ *4 16 SAVE PLUMB1NO SUPPLY ..J 8. SAOINAW___ FB 6-41 #Kee ESTIMATES On NEW Ah —^ oil f urn Hoes, a A BKWINO MACH I NEB, ri. tp „jtohery^URd* ORP?4l0l!g ^ ^ sTnoer aUTCMA'ndrbtAL zio Zag control sewing machine In olin’s Party Store 3$ BALDWIN AVENUE open to, a m. - 7 d.yt a w. Kitchen Efjumment e^f n buttons, mon ling. New per ’>W>r4-9tlLl 18, 'S24.ll, Mr ward it Sqiieri r;oSsv, USED APPLIANCES We have e good selection of auto trie*1 ranges, gas and* electric refrigerators. h^ldHl|Ti^and| wring- reconditioned by our fine service dept. AUo carry our guarantee as to performancs. All reasonably priced,, Consumers Power Co. ,28 W. Lawrence wrinoer washer. 4«5, 3i" rv. *48, JMMI In iMillMaME” VlraU Harrla, WYMAN'S fi^d i-pii USED TRADE-IN DEPT, ir. *lectrto_Wesher . *4* 8 tov* * *“ * I” ili.fi ______ ... .... .... ... 43*41 3*-lnon elec. -- " li W. Flkej -' RfeACH CASH CUS E*4*fl23 ..«•» Terr TOMERS through Classified Ads. Call FI'. 2-8181. and ask {on Want Ads resrUTv NEED A BUILDINO — »3.««, less than *1.20 aq. ft. i OR 4-0334 before 8 p.m. W. *t stawart. #— equipment complete. FE 4-1-ROMKX WITH "oTOONirw—_ tor 288 ft. cSl. Ho, l^earv- Thompson, 7008 Mp ftiI. STAINLESS STEEL DOUBLE SINK West. SPECIALS ..... .te («Xl) ,.... il Ceda* closet ll»ar • • ■ 20o aq. R. • PONTIAC PLYWOOD CP, 14*4 Baldwin Av*. FE 2-2843 SINOER DELUXE SEWING MA- wnQ1 348 let St.. Roehaator. Ot tSB, jtEOISTERED DACHSHUND FOR sale, male. Sft mo*, old. EM 3-4444. , 12 mo***5df Excellent voice, 4*8. 1248 W. Sllvtr- r '^o^ba’iandejif J32 or on^ jiaym*^ I MW. TIME TO WINTERIZE ■MB' 11 4TION TRIM TERMS "REE ESTIMATES FHA TERN SURPLUS LUMBER IND MATERIAL SALES COMPANY 340 Highland Rd. (MBS) OB 3-7003 TALBOTT LUMBER BPS paint, Oold Bond paint. DuPont luclt* no drip wall paint. Hardware, plumbing, elealrieal 1 full II Hobbies & Supplies B8 Oakland A i. -Ill 8:30. Sun? * t< Cone's Rental. THE SALVATION ARMY REDSHIELD STORE rineb sliiurvuHiiH 111 EAST LAWRENCE Everything to meet yolir needs. Clothiog. Furniture, Appliances. USED GAS FURNACE. LIKE NEW. Livestock $3 CHOICE BEEP. QUARTER, HALF. Hey-Groln-Foed % >4 U ivoewrlters. editing ' machines! mimeograph, etc. OR 3-9747. Ml 8-3010 Forbes Printing Ai Office OOOD. BRIOHT MIXED HAT. Canigra*—Service 70 LET US SELL YOUR USED CAM- Harold’s Camera Shop. 313 1 _Maln, Romeo, Mich. Pli PL 3-36 Musical Geode * 7 N g£teUMC CFE 8-5222 HAMMOND 8PINKT OROAN j $1,905. MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd. (Acrosa from Tel-Huron) FE 2-8807 BRAND NEW LOWREY STARLET Phone FK 4 RECONbtTIONED, 1 after i, OR CHOOSE PROM LARGE SELECTION OF ACCORDIONS. OUITARS. DRUMS, BONGOS, ORGANS. MANY O'THER INSTRUMENTS Priced to Suit Your 'Puree. LAYAWAY PLAN • • EZ TERMS EDWARDS 18 8 SAOINAW Mitchell organ *100 Electric * pump reed organ *150 GRIN NELL’S 27 S, Saginaw • , FE 3-7188 SELL YOUR PIANO 1 Office Equipment 72 2 NEW HAND-ADDINO MACHINES ADDING MACHINES • Cash Register aw ■ FK 6-6I0I USED OFFICE MA- rence Bt., Pontiac, FE 3-0136 NEW NATiyjjjL^CASH ^REOtSj *ctory**re ^ y OU c ^ ^ g NN“Vuron, ronttGc#Vr*ioa?fl 34233 Mt Cltm«ni, HOW ISED I NAXOS thoroughly re-eon-(166. Orand player piano, e-condlUontd. thoroughly Several uaad organ* All chord orgeni reduc, GAI-LAGIIER’S Stare Equipment HOBART FOOD CHOPPER > {parting Goods I BULMAN HARDWARE BROWNING GUNS USED OUNS _ 8646 Elisabeth Like Rd. F* 6-477 OPEN DAILY 'TIL I; SUN 8- S il price,. Stalnleae alee offar rtfusai. ... ..... Royal Oak Kltehana, 4230 Woodward at 13ft Mil* Rd. 9-2144 LESTER MAHOGANY sPuTeT. ‘01 Bonnevill* I CifficR sniWtri' PtAN'o1"'«jlL1 Pa QiSIvfii^V fk f'dlSRfgwSI. ^r«?. ■ ^ _______________fcsaBS£. T„ n>. idlnlna rm*., togflla. garde •rlced not at qlaeount hut iw wholatal*. Michigan Flu it, »3 Orchard Lai" 9 *h6# I»lovW'‘i SERVICE. Pontiac Farm anti Industrial Tractor Co. *29 Woodward Ave. hone FE 4-1443 V rE 4-0461 MEbtCINi CABINirs LAROElO' km of";:^ or Without light*, eliding ' Terrific buy*' Mlchliai* FI Telegraph. KELLY HARDWARE New and Used Gtyi* Com plat# lint of hunting aqulpment. Myera Fumhs. . . 3014 Auburn at Adame UL 3-9440 Open Dally ‘ - Sand—Grovgl—Dirt __76 YARDS CHOICE ROAD GRAVEL 67 del. Fill sand. FS-_--~_„ cnliiiitfE^BfBNF laRb, dKXV) I. EerlI Howard. EM JMltll. Woed-Ceai-Ceks-Fusl 77 ABf! W<5oo, FUHNACI!, F t il k) pl»,:« and *lab wood. Low prloe. g?Yoi78 or fnVfiiy' *"y 1 all kinds 6r~yt6ob and klN-dllnij. Tg 4^4«l. OR 2-81I8. 776 CANNBL COAL, THE IDEAL FIRE "“rnaoe — fireple** Fuel and Fat ..... FB 6-4160. Nff KINDLINd W56b 338-0338 M^ThomaV**! F1REHI ACK IS 1. OTHERS TO 8180, Pstg-HEBtiiigPegf bell Rd, fHITP eA'...—- m 88 WllltamaT JE 4>d43I. . -nr—aw EVERY SUNDAY OPEN 7 DAYS E JUY—SELL—RETAIL DAILY DOOR PR1ZEB EVERY AUCTION Lunch Rcom ^en Evey Auction COLLECTOR’S ITEM 111* Government Prohibition bal-' 873-0728. II A BU. AND UP. ___ _____ Homestead Orchard*, 8400 Orchard, Lk. Rd. Corner Wal- 1 Orchard ..Lk. Open NEW AND USED USED CHAIN SAWS LOW - CHAIN SAW RENTALS KING BROS. * 4-0734 PE 4-1112 PONTIAC ROAD AT OPDYKB MYERS SNOW PUSWS POR AtiC TRUCKS, TRACTORS AND JEEPS. PARTS, SALES AND SERVICE. Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 128 Woodward Ave McCULLOCH CHAIN 8 A MESSAGE FROM US TO YOU ..ch wa feel will be of great move Into a completely f DETROIT MOBILE HOMI equalled In the « Boh Hutchinson Mobile Home Sales. Inc. 4301 Dixie llwy OR 3-128d OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK EXPERT MOBILE HOME REPAIR Parkhurst 1 railer Sales -finest in mobile livino— Featuring New Moon~Owo**o— Venture — Buddy Quality Mobile i M34. MV 3-4811. •1 trailer*. lulled C and bottle, ■E 4-8743 ?51«on trader baLe* Oogd buy* on dliHiy modfla. mgM ------------- Wtnttr prtc«« :r c TRAVEL TRAILERS — Winter Rates — IE. E. Howland, Rentals 3246 Dixie Highway_OR 3-1488 -ONLY TWO 1 COMINO SOON - ALSO — NOW IS THE TIME OR US TO PICK UP AND SELL ^v^ha've'buyeJis WAITING I CALL US TODAY! 11 hilly Marine & ( oaHi _ _Open Sunday* OXFORD Trailer Sales ». All length* i, I •!■•*. I*' • Ueed Unit*. All Hie. 7'-*' U«d can b* purchased plan. ASK ABOUT FREE LAMP For A Really Good Buy See'1 U* Today I TELEPHONE MY 2-8721 flriis-AEle-Truck KUHN -...MM.. 14* W. Huron PE 1-1211 fc-Tikii;....UBBIiraGB: --- -----82.*8. Motor Mart. to aim. ...-2J E,___________________ iTANDARb BRAHtTltEW Ttltgk. Trade In on General Sut*4y Tires. *- up to ft of Mfg.’e UM i, Black or whuewalit. ED WILLIAMS' 481 8. gaglnaw a Used au+o and ' r^5l- 2 TOY HaNACTIBSTER PUPS, male, femaia, > 7 waake old. OA tliri . CRANKSHAFT GRINDING IN THE ear. Cylinders reborvd Zuck Machine Shop, 13 Bond. Phone FB 4 Bone Hound. $20. After a!88. MX S’’4 RKOI TiRED GERMAN Motor Sceetert M AShepherd, male. Weck-Un, 7 moe. old OR 4-1143, HEW - USED CUSHMAN AND Venn* Scooter*, B-Z term*. Aw-darion Sale* * service, FE 2-S34S Alfc DAChsilUNl) F U F ». 41# i damn Jeheioi’i VK r&lix&vtkiS?i&TiSffti, very (ood brush dog, UL }-)531. Beatt-Accstforiei |7 iriXaLES AKC '' Femalm. EX-cellent pedigree, 10 mohih* and 1 year old. EoUt, are hunting. MA 5-l*>g. , 1 oijjC^it'Fdpi. ( wii!"dii>."'ffc 1 r , , ' Wv,' 1 ' "* . .b- v* ■ * ■ , fy*.. t - - , i ■ v . y . f > ; ,.v V. :i m m TWENTY-SIX TljE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUABY 13,1962 CLOSEOUT SALE, a' *88 ■ T!'U"» T1PSICO up • fl5S)*to W.'Highland. Right Hickory Ridge Rbed to , „ Demode „v.a ~~ ____jw sign*. Phone MAlns Milt Road. Left Phow_________ BIG VALUEUUNTERS OWENS — «E*ay$k88&gK‘ FEW ’ftj EVINRUDE AND MERCURY MOTORS SEE US NOW Haw ami Uw4 Cot 10$ *50 BDXCK 4 DOOR HARDTOP, pjjlf(i MARVEL MOTORS. FE 1^, oof Cot 1*4 kessler:s'. Inside Used Car Lot AH Inside — AH Sharp 10 N. Washington Oxford oa 8-1400 We bug used cure! . TRY ' FISCHER BUICK _ 780 S. Woodward B Ham. m 4-8322 15>55 Chevy 6 Wagon - Radto?'Heater*8tlck ahlft/A Birmingham ear that haa. had wonderful oare.- Excellent tires. Priced right. People’s Auto Sales 08 Oakland- , FE 3-238L •IF mutex 1 im^aLa, 2 »oor hardtop, new tlrea, 341 engine, standard transmlaslon, solid rad. ’82150. FE 8-0118. *03 CHEVROLET 2 DOOR. $145 MARVEL MOTORS. FE 0-4070. 1007 BOiCk HARDTOP. SPECIAL. 2-door, radio and heater, power brakes add power stearins. Dv-naflow. ZERO down and monthly payments of 048. LLOYD , MOTORS Llncoln-Meroury-Com-1 et-Meteor, 232 8. Saginaw., FE; MUl -nwr—STT—S*,i.Hd-J 1057 BUICK. BLACK AND WHITE 4-door centruy. like new. Pull price 0508. no money -down, . Lucky Auto-Bales, 123 8. Saginaw. FE 4-2214. 1250 BUICK. 2 DOOR. RADIO, heater, excellent condition. $050. -ML 8,8587, Birmingham. 1053 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 2-, door ledan, 8-cyllndcr, stick'shift. Radio, heater. Only -0240. Easy: ’ terms PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO 1000 8 WOODWARD AVE BIRMINOHAM MI 4-2730. •57 BUICK 3 DOOR HARDTOP With Auto. VI Power Steering, Radio. 46,000 actual miles. BOB Mazurek Marine ^Salcs GASOW Vinter Storage, Inside end Out* Complete Repair Service PINTER'S 8 INBOARD - OUTBOARD SALKS-SERVICE-STORAGE , Complete boat and motor repal Fall line of new end ued boat Airplanes WANT TO FLY? By Anderoou 4 Leaning 1957 BU1CK HUP Hardtop, haa rat and equipjped^wltl white* (Intel), tl .__1 CHEVROLET. 1MPALA. 1 i door, hardtop, auto, trana. po i steering, radio, heater, low n ■ age, >1035. Phone PE 4 jjjj 1 1901 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 4- 966 BUICK* HARDTOP. RADIO I 1900 CORVAIR MONZA, WHITE AND HEATER, WHITEWALL j with red trim. Radio, heater, ISM TIRES AND AUTOMAT I-C transmission, 11,000 miles. TRANSMISSION. ABSOLUTELY condition 11,000. FE 5-8003. NO MONEY DOWN. Aeeume pay- .. CHEVROLET IMPALA J-DOOR moms ui .<». io iUnd*K rntflow transmls- ____ ______ this one. Full price on this If $495. LLOYD. MOTORS. Lincoln-Mcrcury-Com et-Meteor, 232 8. Saginaw. FE 2-6131.________________________ .Now and died Cm 195® MERCURY Rochester Ford^ Dealer r hardtop/ Thla car haw full power'snd has many.extra* for hJjrire tffiaotwatry^LOTO MOTORS. Lincoln-Mercury-pom-et-Meteor. 232 8, Saginaw, FS METAL CAB, SNOjV Cut it out! That’s a GOOD guy! New cuid Used Cars Easy terms, PATTER80N CHEVROLET CO., 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINGHAM, MI 4-0730, $1695, CHEVROLET BEL AIR 2-j.r wowergllde, ra-..vlla. Hondorus .......... uctory Official s .. Jnly 01.000. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO. 1000 8. WOOD-WARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. MI 10 OAKLAND AVE. Wanted Cars-Trvcks 101 j $25 MORE For that high grade used car. se« us. before you sell. H J. Van Welt. 4040 Dixie" Highway. Phone Dll Alt r IsAIBa wwuailf tniw AveriHs CALIFORNIA BEAUTY!! 1961 CORVAIR a Station Wagon, 9,000 miles, 1 0-2008. I CHEVY 0 WAOON. STUART Conway__dealer. FE 2-0400. ^ 00 CHEVROLET IMPALA - to wit tOP t*8 — CALL FE 5-8142 1AM ALLEN * SON INC. Tw DOLLAR~jBNK CAR8 ANl) _ UUCksT OR 3-‘~ FOR "ULftAW ’ uoau tans GLENN'S power gilus ^a^complete^ in $2895 WILSON 1967 FORD FAIRLANE, 2-DOOR , and fieater. power HRMTudSyi :oln-Mercury-Conr j payments LLOYD 1 Mereury-Cor '60 Falcon REAL NICE 4-DOOR! Irith radio, heater, wafttera, back up lights. $1395 BEATTIE PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1350 N. Woodward BIRMINGHAM____Ml 4-1030 Credit Mgr . Mr Pai OUR FORD DEALER Since 1030 r STOPLIGHT IN WATERFORD OR 3-1291 I FORD CONVERTIBLE. $135. r takes. 420-2208 CASH NEEDED 0 DODOE 011.08 ir 1901 CHEVROLET BEL AIR door aedan. 8 cylinder, power-glide. Only 01.895 PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO , 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE . BIRMINGHAM. MI 59 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN. 4-DOOh, with auto, trana slon, whitewalls l Clean In am JUNKERS, ROYAL AUTO PARTS TOP BUCK-JUNK CAR, TRUCK, PONTIAC WAJITK_ FE J-0200; WANTED; Ellsworth M&M MOTOR SALES Uitd Auto-Truck fart* 102 OOdD CONDITION ’40 FORD glfla. Call OR 3 04* after New and Meed Trucks 103 PICK- •53*. CHEVY, W »•<"<»•_______________ •02 FORD PICKUP, GOOD .j&or "" ....... CHfcVrIJCet tk 3 ■07 FORD CUSTOM CAB, ‘A TON t^t!UUI, *2 223V f><110, **Ur’ MOTORS. % 19'iTTnFViloi.ET 1 TON~PANEl! aa? as1, I Mm on both PATTERSON ciEVROl.KT CO 1090 s WOOD-WARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml ♦Jhft •03 FORI) F IIIO’ DUMP. 0 1 1000 PONTIAC .... 013 00 n 1003 FORD 033 x LAKESIDE MOTORS Montcalm________331 (CADILLAC SEDAN DeVl ;h E SELECTION 0 I Dow; Hydra I' lBi. p/tTER^ON CHEV^tO-LHTT CO- 1000 S. WOODWARD AV»„ BIRMINGHAM, Ml 4-2730. 1000 CHEVROLET 2 DOOR. RADIO AND HEATER ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume Credit*"mo?!, *Mr°* A'rks!" at MI 4-7000 Harold Turnar, Ford. engine. 1 power glide LLOYD MOTORS, Lincoln -QUALITY SPI'AKS- PONTIAC I CADILLAC COUPE DeVIl.LE white finish.' 13.000. I FORD STATION" W/tOON. V0, 1907 CHEVROLET 2-DOOIUHARD-top. V-8 engine. Powergllde, radio, heater, whitewall tires, Only 0790. Easy terms. PATTERSON -•CHEVROLET CO, 1000 S. WOODWARD AVE., BIRMINO-HAM. MI 4-2730. . •00 CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE, sharp. FE 4-0431 after 0 p m. BRAND NEW 1%1 CIIKVROU.T PATTERSON CIIKVROU.T CO. $1295 VOH ruiu; A UWIV »-o. nvA«-MATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO AND HEATER AND WHITE-WALL TIRES ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Amume pay- 4-7500, Harold 1 Sales, SPECIAL lew *62 car. with radio, heat vhltewails, 14 $1,489.20, $89.20 i 46 92 per month. R&C RAMBLER . SUPER MARKET I 3-4156 8146 Commerca I New and Used Cars _________106 i - bus, , LOW standard, like •58 FORD FAIRLANE. 1059 FORD OALAXIE CONVERTI- whltewall tires. This ci- . prlcal at 01.490. LLOYD MOTORS, Llncoln-Mercury-Comet-Meteor. 232* S. Saginaw St. *”— 1955 FORD nation Wagon, V-g engine, an natlo transmission. Sharp. Oi 1400. Easy terms. SCHUCK FORD ; FORD FAIRLANE 2-DOOR. I. FE 2-0131. 1009 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN. AUTO MATIC TRANSMISSION AND RADIO. HEATER AND WHITEWALLS. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payments of 533.70 per mo. Call Mr. Parka, at »" ild Turney, Ford. 80 FORD OALAXIE 4-DOOR 8H dan equipped with radio, how er. Power brakes, power steel Ing, Factory air conditioning Full price for this cer la 01001 LLOYD MOTORS. Llncoln-Mei cury-Comat-Meteor, 232 8. Sat I, FE 2-9131. . 1-OWNER TRADE-INS 1960 Dodge Dart, \ $60.80 a month. 1961 Plymouth, 4-< R6tR MOTORS 1000 MERCURY HARDTOP. RA-. DIO AND HEATER, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume payment* of 014.1t per mo. Cell Credit Mgr.. Mr. Park* at MI ♦•780a. Harold Turner, Ford. 1000 MERCURY 4-DOOR. HAS .... dto and heater along with the whitewall tires, sharp beige fin-t*h and » 1-owner. The full price la only $1,200. LLOYD MOTORS, • Lincoln - Mercury --—. .v----------- 23j 8 saglnaw, cury-Comet-Meteor, 232 a. sagl- nan vnn 0.01*11 0 USED CARS TO MEEf EVERYONE’S , POCKETBOOK .‘.$3195 *6l Thunderbird Popular blue.Uke n_„, ,__ er. hardtop. This la really a beauty. . Come out and eoa It. ’60 Pontiac________ Tu-tone blue 4-door_________ owner. Power steering and brakes. Reduced for a bargain ,.$1895 ..$1595 ’60 Comet ............. Coupe with automatic .............. •Ion. All white With red Interior. Real aharp. ’59 Rambler .......$ 995 Wagon. This little American beauty ^wlll perform with the beat mileage. * *0U In°n*J' °D *** ’59 Lark Wagon . . .$ 995 | 'MT-----------------------nlly car or Ideal for number This Week’s Special Kg Chevrolet sup rdtop with radio, hi 100g Chevrolet super Impali Hardtop with radio, heater, “348‘ engine, 4-speed eyncromeah trana. mission, positive traction r - - -end with 411 axle. Thla la a ty and sharp. Only 01000. Good Transportation Starting at $145 Ntw and Used Cars ; fBUY YOUR NEW OLDSMOBILE - dan. Radio and heater, power brakes and steering. 1-owner Raw. Maroon finish. .* 01,000. LLOYD MO- Pull prt< ' TQMd,. ■Pm________ Meteor,. 2» 8. Saginaw, FE 1980 oldsmobilb' S-DOOR BARD-t™> B*RO down. Aaaume pay-04.00 per week. LLOYD 1 Llnooln-Mercury-"— 232 B. Saginaw. Puii'piiee 11,190. lloA)* TORS. Lincoln Mercury-Comet- Meteor, 232 8. Saginaw, FE MARVEL MOTORS; FE $^070'. •05 PLYMOUTH* WAOON, WITH Auto. Transmlaslon, and In Excellent Condition) Hus one you MUST SEEK BOB HART MO-tors, MO, Orchard Lfeke at Yoor-hcls_>E M990. ■' -- PLYMOUTH CLUB 8E„....... RADIO AND HEATER. ABSOLUTELY -NO MONEY DOWN. Assume navmenta'* nf 193.4* ner ------ payments* of 123. mo. Coll "Credit Mgr., Mr. Park* 8UF ♦*»-------------------- cent, hydra., padded dashboard, *«d beater, seats luce new. and body in very ^ood 1901 PONTIAC CATALINA CON-vertlble. Power steering and brakes. Beautiful dark blue, white top. Matching blue Interior. Factory official's car. 7,000 miles. Spare* never down. $3806. SUB-URBAN-OLDS USED CAR8, 850 S. Woodward, Birmingham. Ml 4-4480. _________________ owner, 0880, 28 Waldo, FE 8-2488. II TEMPE8T 4-DOOR, WAOON, Super Deluxe, spotless, low mile- lt Mgr. Harold Mr. Parks at MI 4-7500, SttT Turner, Ford. Now and Uwd Car* 106 1989 PONTIAC ♦•OfXJiL BdWKJ, EM-Sf^ ItiB 190 •81 BONNETTOLM^OgN VtaTBlIJ “ * v s... he. a and hattaP i^tewal? tires. Assume, pay BLEB, (M 8. Woodward Ave. Blrtnlnr''— * IKSSf Automobile Import Go. •‘Your Authorised BMC Dealer1*,. 311 8. Saginaw PB 3-7040 iaAMO tOBw-’61 Rambler Classic SUPER 0 DOOR, With 6 Cyl. Bn gins. Standard Transmission, In ceSlRer PUdsh U IfEW^CAR OTaIbAbOT®^'#* Will’AMapt, the following. Boats, Motors, Bono off a steam wmitle, Sunshine from a beanery. Exhaust fiune* from an outboard motor, or almost any* thing movable, on * used oar Bill Spence, Rambler 1207 PONTIAC 8TARCHIEF, 4-door hardtop, hiM power brakes, •teerths, seats, window*, automatic transmission, radio and heater, whitewall Urea. A Blr- | BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER, 080 _ S. Woodward Art., Birmingham; MI 0-3000. “S^*W„WtJSSS8 1*01 PONTIAC, BONNEVILLE, convertible, power brakes, power Iteerinf. bucket teats, a low mileage beauty, priced for quick ■ale. 03,0*8. CaU MI 8-1000 Ext. 300. - pat'tEWi'Sn* CTfEVaS^ET*Oil; 1006 RAMBLER 4-DOOR, 0 CYL- r.n>,‘«.,SSVA^RSa HAM. MI 4-272*. *80 PONTIAC, 2 DOOR HARDTbP. Make offer. 082-3420. *00 PONTIAC ** BOOR SEDAN. CATALINA With Auto, Transmit-. • slon, Radio, Heaton and One owner! 11700. BAUPT PONTIAC SALES, Clarkaton. One mile north of Us 10 on M-U, Open Mon., Tues. and Thura. until 0 pm. MA 0-0808 1080 RENAULT . DAUPHINE, RA-DIO AND HEATER, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Asiuma payments of *32.33 per mo. Call Credit M*r., Mr. Park* at MX 4-7500, Harold Turner.. Fora. ,’54 Pontiac Convertible Oood condition, 0180 FE 4-3181 after 4|39 1080 8TUDEBAKER LARK 3 DOOR 0 cylinder, automatic transmlaslon. whitewall tires, ortotnai I-owner, 12,000 miles cart Th* like* to*! suburban-olds'100 usSd CARS, 008 S. Woodward, Birmingham, MI 4-4400. *50 PONTIAC STICK SHIFT. Tilt POWER, 2 Door Hardtop! ’AU BUck 1 CRAKE MOTOR8. PE 1*08 PONTIAC HYDRAMATIC, . good condition. EM 3-42*2. 1900 RAtdSLER AMERICAN 2-dooor sedan. Overdrive, radio, heater, .whitewalls,. Only *000. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO., 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE., B1R-MINOUAM. MI 4-2738. DON’T SAY YES TO ANY DEAL UNTIL YOU CHECK) Rammler Dallas DODOE - CHRYSLER - IMPERIAL 8XMCA - DODOE TRUCKS OL 2-0111 1001 N. MAIN ROCHESTER 1*60 RAMBLER SOPER 4-DOOR, has- radio and heater, whitewall Urea, sparkling aiure blue finish. Extra aharp. Assume payments of 020 53 per month with low cash down or old trade. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER. *00 S. Woodward Avt., Birmingham. MI 0-3*00. 1*87 RAMBLER STATION WAO-on, 4-door. 0 cylinder engine with overdrive, radio and beater, excellent transportation, full price only $2*0. BIRMINGHAM RAMBLER. 080 8. Woodward I Ave., Birmingham. MI 0-3000. 1*00 VOLK8WAOEN, BUN ROOP. radio and heater. Whitewall tlree. $100 down, aeeume payments of 00.00 per week. LLOYD MOTORS, Llncoln-Mercury-Com-et-Meteor, 232 S. Saginaw, PB FORD RETRACTABLE 2-aooor hardtop. V-S engine, automatic, power steering and brakes- white with coooa trim. Only 0790. Easy terms. PATTERSON CHEVROLET CO.. 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE.. BIRMINO-HAM Ml 4-2738. . ______ 1957 PONTIAC CHIEFTAIN SEDAN Orey.and white. Radio and heater. standard transmission. Low mileage. One owner Phqne FE 1953 Pontiac Hardtop, extra nice ONLY $99 DOWN 1962 American 2-Door RUSS JOHNSON 105 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE. Radio land heater, automatic transmission. ZERO down, assume payments of \ 04.00 per week. LLOYD MOTORS. Uo-coln-Mercury-Comet-Meteor, 232 B- Baglnaw,------------ ■ Special — 1961 PONTIAC smooth Hy dramatic trana ston. Power brake* and P« dowa. Has light green finis! 0 4-3828 Lake Orion PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 65 Mt. Clemens St. FE 3-7954 NO MONEY DOWN f AKE OVER PAYMENTS AS LOW AS $1.08 A W&K Almost 150 Cajs to Choose From All Must Be Liquidated Immediately *54 Ford Wagon ....... *00 Chevrolet Hardtop . •00 Plymouth Wagon ... *00 Bulck Hardtop .... •00 Pontiac Catalina . *80 Ford 4-Door ..... '57 DeSoto Hardtop '57 Rambler 4-Door . '50 Chevy ........... CAR BAL. D *82 Cadillac Coupe ....... I 187 Dodge Wa$on . •00 Plymouth .... '08 Chevy, SUck, S PLUS MANY OTHERS arrange financing even If you've had ered KING AUTO SALES (2 BIG LOCATIONS) CHEVY V0. 4 DOOR WAOON, 1907“DeS6fo ~8TATl6N~WAOON~4- tZh. *I?ke*new, fulj^price'tm. ___ ile«1_l»3 8 Saginaw. FE 4-2314 DOIIOE WAOON. ''00. RADIO. PLYMOUTH HARDTOP. GMC Factorv Branch OAKLAND AT CASH PB ,S-9488 •07 FORD CLUB CpUPE V8, I •50 FORD V0 2-door, like new, I 550 Oakland Ave. 1008 BUICK 8UPE Auto Imuronce ANDERSON AUTO INSURANCE $.)7 l;OR f, MONTHS GLENN'S SHARP CARS Foreign Can VoTliwa3ES^84 ^heda^n^" \ ' M.ksu V.I'.NS! it’s Motor Sales Surplus Motors 60 I*ord Convertible Vlth Radio, Heater. Stands Tranemlaalon apd Whitewall Nloe Througho" $1595 John McAuliffe, Ford 1966 FORD CUSTOM 3 DOOR. P Don't Be Knocked Out By WINTER'S PUNCH These Used Car Values Will Make You Think It's Springtime! . FULL POWER. TRADE NOW arid $AVE •One lull Year Warranty Tell Everybody About it with a Pontiac Press 1 Want Ad Need Transportation That’* because of the gfeater selection of everything from automobiles to employment offered every day. lust Dial FE 2-8181 PLYMOUTH Blffltr Wit mi tv I rul! Price $11 M Mo 6 BUICK HARDTOP Sharp! Full Price $14 66 Mo ►NT1AC Catalina Hi I Price $“ *LYMOUTH Wagon $17.06 497 Full Pi '67 FORD Pair lane 6-Door Hardtop. Black Beauty! $497 Full Price $17.00 Mo, 66 CHRYSLER WINDSOR $397 Full Prlo# $13.00 Mo. *66 FORD Country Haul re 397 Full Price $14 66 Mo 7 Full - SPOT DELIVERY- Liquidqtion Lot 150 S. Saginaw St.) FE 8-4071-2! '(.1 III l( K ....$2605 wI"hA:"a" to Vanem'la .Biakesl* WhlteweMi 1 cvrng an W 111 l( K .... , ...$2105! LrflAmiK 4^ noon HARDTOP, Brnkent WhlTow*11*^1 Bluff Fiji 1 >«h 1 fnd VldSlg'm \S9 1UJICK ...$1485 LffflABRK^ 2 ^DOOH HARDTOP ml1! * Radio, Hffatffr, and Auto. Tranamlu '57 CHEVROLE’ r $ 895 STATION WAOON, With ‘ Auto. 0 TCyV" and1Bofld Bn Inst pfiilahl ..$ 695 BPORT STATION WAOON. Wltfl Power Steering, Auto I Radio, anr OLIVER BUICK EK 2-9101 ,. . Are you ready for ,like-new car? ) Just Dial FE 2-8181 Ask for Want Ada 1959 CHEVY Impale ^4-Door Sedan. Powergllde, ^VA^eng / $1695 irir radio, heater and 1959 BUICK $1895 iwer brakes, Dynaflow Oo fimt clftAs. 1956 PONTIAC ... Star Chief 2-Door Hardtop. Hydramatle ti:an $295 1958 PONTIAC $1095' Chieftain 2-DoOr Sedan with radio, heater, Hydramatle tranemlaalon 1959 PONTIAC .... Catalina^ 4-Door ^anltop^ Power $1695 |Mwe^(brake», Hydra- 1959 PONTIAC Star Chief Sedan. Power ateerlng, power transmlaalon, radio, heater and whitewalls, $1695 brakes, Hydramatle Beautiful dawn fire 1955 BUICK ....... $195 1960 PONTIAC ..,. 4-poor Hardtop with HydramaUo tranamlaaU whitewall*. Beautiful green flnlah. Plastic c ....$1995 >n, radio, htater and over*. Stilt Uka naw. 1960 PONTIAC .... ....$1995 Catalina 4-Door Hardtop with radio, heater Whit* with fawn trim. Strlelly beautiful. and whitewall Urea. 1960 VOLKSWAGEN ............ ........$1495 2-Door Sedan with radio, gaa heater and whitewall' tlree. Red With white leather trim. Still like new. 1955 PONTIAC ...............................$.495 2-Door Sedan with Hydramatle transmission, radio, heater and whitewall Urea. Rad and Ivory finish .38.000 actual mllea. A one-owner. Hurry I 1959 BUICK .. 4-Door Sedan^w^h D 1960 PONTIAC .............................v....$2095 Catalina 0-Door Hardtop with pqwtr steering, power brakes, Hy-dramatis transmission, radio, naater and whitewalls. A real Come in and Meet Our Courteous Sales Force Tommy Thompson Frank Bouck Tom Stackler ‘ . Cy I’erlman John Donley Dexter Kennedy Ron Shelton John Barhato Bud Shelton 1960 FORD .....................................$1795 Oalaxle 2-Door Hardtop. Ford-O-Matlc transmission, radio, heater and whitewalls. You art buying th* best whan you buy this on*. 1959 PONTIAC ».................................$1595 radio, beater and 1959 PONTIAC ................$1595 1956 OLDSMOBILE ........................$ 395 8-Door Hardtop with Hydramatle transmission, radio, heater and whitewall urea. Now being uaed eel company loaner. It'i nloe for the prise. 1956 PONTIAC ...................$445 Station Wagon with Hydramatlo transmission, radio, heater and 1959 FORD........................$1495 Oalaxle 3-Door Sedan with V-8 engine, FonLO-Matlc, radio, heater and whitewall tlree. It's ready to go. 1958 BUICK .......................$1195 2-Door Sedan with Dynaflow transmission, radio, heater and whitewall tires. Beautiful gold and Ivory finish. One owner, 1959 BUICK .......................$1695 4-Door Hardtop with Dynaflow tranemlaalon, radio, haater and whitewall Uree. Sharp all the way, 1959 CHEVY ......................$1195 i Powergllde transmlaslon, radio, I whitewall tire*. Blue with ivory top. Lika new. 1961 PONTIAC ..................$2795 Bonneville 4-Door Hardtop with power steering, power brnkee, Hydramatle, whitewalls, radio and heater. Solid white finish. 1956 PONTIAC ....................$695 0-door Hardtop with Hydramatle transmlaslon, radio and heater. A black and Ivory beauty. 1961 PONTIAC ..................$2695 Star Chief 4-Door HsTdtop with power steering, Hydramatle transmission, radio, heater, whitewalls, easy eya glass, outside remote control mirror. Guaranteed only 11,000 actual mile*, 1957 CHEVY ......................$995 Bel Air Wagon with V-*' engine, automatlo transmission, radio, heater and whitewall Urea. Not a scratch and‘solid au th# way. Must tee to appreciate. 1959 PONTIAC .................$1995 Bonneville 2-Door Hardtop with power eteerlng, power brakes, Hy* dramatle transmission, radio, boater and whitewalls. Beautiful leather trim and like new. We have 2 Bonnevtllee to ehooia from, (old, oopper, PONTIAC The Only Thing We Give Away Is Good Deals! SHELTON BUICK m MAIN ST. , . ROCHESTER OLive 1-8133 '.T Used Car;Lot Across From.New Car Sales - closed Wed.-Frl.-Sat. at 6 P.M. 4—j-K '"'n I" ’■ "V'-' ■’ '• 'ft.'1, . I ...... All' V. X i •**1» * ftrfl THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY ffr, 1962 — TWENTY-SEVEN t ^Today's Television Programs- - ProgMM famished by stations listed la this column are subjected to change without notice Cbsaasi C*»ni>*» t-WWJ-TY Cb—■«! 7--WKYB-YT CUw) P-ffltW-TVCbsossl **~WfVIU 1:00 (2) Movie (Coat.) (4) Wyatt Earp \ (7) Aquanauts (Cont.) (9) Popeye (36) Keynotes . 0:9s (4) Weather (?) Mahalia Jackson Sings 6: SO (2) News (4) News ill ......... .... I (SB) French Through TV K# (2) Sports aborts «:4B (2) News * (,4yNlws (7) News, Weather,. Sports 7:M (2) Everglades , (4) George Pierrot Show ; (Color) - * , . j ' (7) Expedition / ' (9) You Asked for It ; £ (56) Portraits la Print 7:30 (2) Danger Man '. (4) George Pierrot (Cont;) ‘‘ , (7) Cheyenne - (9) Mpvie -r»., "Monsoon.’ (1952) A handsome young American is attracted /his fiancee’s beautiful sister. Ursula ThipssN Diana Douglas, George Nader. (56) Way of Life 0:19 (2) Pete and Gladys : (4) Robert E. tee (Special) . (7) CheyenVie (Cont.) , (9) Movie (Cont.)' (56) Doctors of Hope 1:99. (2) Window on Main Street (4) Price Is Right (Color) (7) Rifleman 4 (9) Movie (Cont.) 9:09 (2) Danny Thomas (4) 87th Precinct (7) Surfside 6 (9) Don Messer’s Jubilee (56) Guest Traveler 9:90 (2) Andy Griffith (4) 87th Precinct (Cont.) (7) Surfside 6 (Cont.) (9) Festival 10:19 (2) Hennesey (4) Thriller (7) Ben Casey (9) Festival (Cont.) 10:30 (2) I’ve Got a Secret (4) Thriller (Cont.) . (7) Ben Casey (Cont.) (9) Festival (Cont.) 11:00 (2) News (4) News (7) News (9) News 11:19 (7) News, Sports 11:16 (2) Weather (4) Weather (9) Weather 11:90 (2) Sports (4) Sports (9) Telescope UAW 11:91. (9) .Movie—“Ring of Fear.’ (1954) A homicidal maniac sets out to wreck the Clyde Beatty circus. Clyde Beatty, Pat O'Brien, Mickey Spil-lane. (7) Weather 11:30 (4) (Color) Jack Paar (7) Overland Trail (9) Movie — "The Gorgeous Hussy." (1936) The beautiful wife of a Cabinet minister causes a rift in Andrew Jackson’s cabinet. Joan Crawford. TUESDAY MORNING 0:00 (41 Continental Classroom— Algebra (Color) 0:90 (2) Meditations 0:96 (2) On the Farm Front 0:80 (2) College of the Air ' (4) Continental Classroom- Government. (Color) 7:00 (2) B’Wana Don ' (4) Today .(7) Funews 7:80 (7) Johnny Ginger 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (56) French for Teachers 8:30 (7) Jack LaLanne . > (56) French Through Televi- 10:09 (4) Say When (56) Our Scientific World 10:99 (7) News 19:25 (9) Billboard 10:80 (2) I Love Lucy (4) Play Your Hunch. (Odor) (7) Ufa of Riley (9) Chez Helene " English V 9:00 (2) Movie - "Full Confession” (4) Ed Allen ' ' (7) Movie — ‘.'Youth • Trial” (56) Mathematics, for You 9:30 (4) Gateway to Glhmour ., (56) Book Parade 9:46 (4) Debbie Drake (3) Video Village (4) Price. Is Right. (Color) (7) Texan , (9), Romper Room (56) Spanish Lesson 11:16 (56) German Lesson (2) December Bride ' (4) Concentration (7).Yours for a Song (56) History With Herb Hake TV Features By United Press' International EXPEDITION!, 7 *p. m. (7). "Cranbrook Academy.’’ A complete tour of the internationally known art academy in Bloomfield Hills. ’LEE, THE VIRGINIAN*’ p. m. (4). StUls-in-actlon will piot key episodes in tj|e career of Gen. Robert E. Lee, including his refusal to serve as a union general out of loyalty to Virginia, the end of war and Lee’s five years as president of Washington Ctf _ (now Washington aid Lee University.) New film footage shows the countryside, buildings and battlefields associated with Lee at Arlington, Richmond, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville and Harpers Ferry. DANNY THOMAS SHOW .. m. (2). Danny tries,,to show Linda (Angela Cartwright) that football isn’t a game for girls. ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW, 9:30 p. m. (2). Andy tries to show the cocky son of an influential man that money and influence aren’t everything. FESTIVAL; 9:30 p. m. m. "The Lady’s Not for Bumlngj^my Christopher Fry. In 15th Century England, a world-weary soldier who wants to die and a young witch who doesn’t, meet at the mayor's house. W (7), BEN CASEY, "Imagine a Long, Bright Corri-’ Dr. Casey (Vincent Edwards) clashes with the chief supervising nurse who says he has grown too soft as a neurosurgeon. HENNESEY, 10 p. m. (2). Harvey Spencer Blair III (James Koto) gets into the act when Chick (Jackie Cooper) sets to buy an engagement ring for Martha (Abby Dalton) THRILLER, 10 p. m. (4). Strega,” drama about an artist who challenges a witch’s powers when he falls in love with her daughter. Stars Ursula Andres, Ramon Novarro, Alejandro Rey. Boris Karloff, host. JACK PAAR SHOW, 11:30 p. m. (4). Hugh Downs is the host while Paar takes the night off. Guest: jPat Carroll. (Color). SPEAKING OP EATING 9 T“ r r r w IT nr IS 14 nr it IT IT It II ■ 9r HT B H 99 ST IT M sr r 19 41 (1 ir IT 12 U IT U M ssl: TUESDAY AFTERNOON 1:00 (2) Love of Life ^ (4) Your First Impression (Color) ' (7) Camouflage - (9) Mary Morgan (56) What’s New? . 12:20 (9) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Truth or Consequences (7) Make a Face (9) Susie I (561 Spanish Lesson 12)46 (2) Guiding Light (56) German Lesson 12)68 (4) News 1:00 (2) Star Performance s (4) Groucho (7) Day in Court (9) Movie—"Mannequin” 1:10 (56) French Lesson 1:26 (7) News 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (4) "People Are Funny” - (7) How to Marry a Millionaire (56) World History , 1:66 (4) Faye Elizabeth 2:00 (2) Password (4) Jan Murray. (Color) (7) Jane Wyman , (56) French Lesson 2:96v(4) News 2:80 (2) House Party (4) Loretta Young (7) Seven Keys 3:00 (2) Millionaire 1 (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Queen for a Day (9) News 3:10 (9) Movie—'"Mokey” 3:30 (2) Verdict Is Yours (4) Our Five Daughters (7) Who Do You Trust? 9:86 (2) News 4:00 (2) Brighter Day (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) American Bandstand (56) Portraits In Print 4il6 (2) Secret Storm 4:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) Here’s Hollywood (9) Razzle Dazzle (56) Japan: Changing Years 4:50 (7) American Newsstand 4:56 (4) NCWs 5:00 (2) Movie — "Roar of the Dragon (4) George Pierrot. (Color) (7) Johnny Ginger (9) Jingles (56) What's New? 5:30 (7) Cimarron City (56) British Calendar 5:45 (9) Rocky and His Friends (56) News Magazine 5:55 (4) Kukla and Ollie Supervisors Favor Local Direction State Senator Farrell E. Roberts, R-Oakland County, today gained local support for his plan to put administration of Michi-1 mental health program at The community level. (., The Oakland County Board of Supervisors’ Legislative Committee agr&d to back the senator here and throughout the metropolitan area. Sen. Roberts Prentiss Brown Jr. in State Senate Race ST. IGNACE (UPI) - Prentiss Brown Jr., son of former U.S. Sen. Prentiss Brown, D-Mich., today annouced his candidacy for state senator from the 30th Senatorial District special election fill the seat* left vacant last week by the death of Sen. William T. Miron, D-Escanaba. The primary has been called for Feb. 20. Brown, 30, is expected to be the only Democrat seeking his party’s nomination In the primary. He claims regular Democratic organisation support. Kent T. Lundgren, Menominee Republican, is expected to announce his candidacy for the GOP nomination Wednesday. Lundgren ran unsuccessfully against Miron in 1956, 1958 and 1960. He is a delegate to the stitutional convention. - - Today's Radio Programs-- WPON (IMS) WJBK (ID MONDAY EVENING w wj, new, CKLW. Now* WXYZ. 1 Hsrvoy. WinUr WJBK, Kennedy m. Gnu S:*S~WJB. BUilnoii 7:W—WJR, QUSlt Haul* WWJ, Pli. Opinion WKfk. id Morgan - * CgLW, f. Iiiwl* , . WJBK, Jack the Bellboy WCAR, A. Cooper IM-JgJk.' Choral ssarasB. - • :M—WJK. NBC Nowomen .’ter&isr '“mm I*:lg—WXW. Ken 10:So—WWJ, World Now* CKLW. Hopwood WCAR. B. Monts WXYZ. S*bs*Usn 11 IS—WJR, B. Reynold WWJ. Orgsn Mail* CKM. j^fe^wjp WCAR U.nP WWJ, Viwn WWW WCAR A Cooper TVMHBAY MORNING OiSO—WJR. Vole# o» Apia, WWJ Now*. Robert* m. fit Sr uw" MSmi 1. Awry WPON, Sport* 1AM Ntwo, _ wpon! ¥#«. **•*!» WJBK. N*W*. [S^N***, Wolf jAwnr- J Al* Eya nftrtW WJBK,' N*w*. , . wporii N*wa*t*wi* a b oo—wjr. New*, Murray WWJ, Ntw*. Marten* WXYZ, Paul Horny, WoU CKLW, New*, David - CKLWl New*, Da: _ “lit . jftws, (tvarj, Sr WCAR •yrov. OsM-WJR, CKLW, Ml LtWU Show OKLW, woo—wjr, Kart Mata WJWM. Now*, Bold _ WPON, NOVA Sorry Ol*en "iM pi iff6!!: in new*. JumStll ■WJR. TWO lor Mu •ww WXYZ, New*, MeHteWy CKLW, J«0 Van WJBK New*. R*ld , WPON. Maw*, Jerry tHMB 8s-sm>u ii*a-WJR Hawk ihowoaaa IiSS—WXYZ, MdNeeley. News *i*a—WJR. New*. She WWJ, Maw*, MaiwaU CKLW, M*wi Davta wjbk, Mawi, Lib WPON, p*«ri, Don MoUod *i*a—CKLW, Sblltbrtah % OKLW. ■ ... ~rJML N*w*. Robert too WWJ.Jyre^^uniffr'&ub Soft nV tLW. Bud Dartee fea- Prize-Winnkig Boy Arrested in Thefts Philty Mayor Resigns GLEN-COVE, N.Y. 1*1 —A 17-year-old Loog Island youth — who won a prize at a teachers' eadiibit nine months ago for helping to build a model of a workable atom smaslier — has been accused of pilfering small sums from the desk of his high school principal. Police said, the youth, Ev Spier, tojd then) *' he stole the money to ouy scientific- books magazines. James Maiden, principal of. Glen Cove tiigh School, said the thefts totaled less than $50. Police arrested Eugene after Maiden reported that while he ' working at his desk Sunday caught the youth climbing through an unlocked window in a hallway. ^^ r ’ -.y • Oil Companies Announce New Gas Price Cuts HAND OF COMFORT — Tenderness and comfort are expressed by the hand of this young Peruvian girl as she watches over her 11-year-old relative, Mario Leneval, in a hospital at Yungay. Mario is the only surviving member of his family. All others were killed AP Photofax when the avalanche from Mt. Huascaran swept away the village of Ranrahirca last week. Mario owes his life to the fact his father sent him to Yungay to seek a job. He was caught in the edge of the avalanche and escaped, with injuries. Major oil companies in the Pontiac area announced a one-cent reduction in gasoline tank wagon prices to dealers Mbnday morning, joining Mobil Oil Co., which made similar price reduction Saturday, Most Mobil Oil Co. dealers began passing the lower price along to customers over the weekend. Dealers of other oil companies expected to mpke a similar price adjustment today. Back Mental Health Plan which he has drafted into a bill to go before the State Legislature this'term, at a meeting with the committee this morning in Pontiac. Basically, the senator proopses that a local community board take over administration, of child guidance clinifis—and eventually adult clinics—and that it be appointed by the chairman of the County Board of Supervisors. ‘ Diver's 'Joke' Is Nearly True Man Attacked by Shark During an Underwater Outing Off Frisco SAN FRANCISCO W-A brawny, six-foot skin diver told his wife, I probably won’t be back. I figure a shark will get me.” Floyd Pair Jr., 29, a Sacramento, Calif., milkman said it as a joke but he almost foretold his fate. Ohly the ending turned out differently. Here’s what happened Sunday: He is convinced that enabling more emotionally disturbed per-to receive early outpatient care at the clinics would result in vacant beds in the ^long-overcrowded state mental institutions. The result would be two-fold, he said—curing troubled persons before they become mental cases needing to be Institutionalised and thus cutting the cost of care. According to Sen. Roberts’ plan, the clinics would receive matching funds from the state with perhaps a sliding scale for poorer counties.’ SUGGESTS REVENUE Local funds might be raised through a state income tax where Pair came to San Francisco for a day’s skin diving near the Farallon Islands 25 miles west of the Golden Gate. Ho waa one of a party of 100 Sacramento area divers who had chartered cities and counties would receive 1 per cent for mental care, he suggested. 'Or without a state income tax, these municipalities might raise from M to Va a mill for such purpose, he added. At about 11 a.m. Pair went over the side of the boat, New Merri-mac, a black skin suit taut against his body, oxygen tanks on his back, face mask in place, spear gun in his hand. •IT HIT MB'' 'I went down to about 40 feet,” Pair recounted. "I chased a fish, lost him, decided to surface. Then it hit me, just as 7 surfaced, At first I thought it was a seal. But a seal doesn't have mouth that big. It was brown, and every inch of 14 feet long. It hit me from the right side and started shaking me like a dog plays with bone. "I saw that it was a shark. I remember thinking first that It didn’t hurt. Then I half remcm- German deep sea expert, Hane Hass said to make a lot of nolsb and hit an attacking shark In the face. I spit out my breathing mouthpiece, began yelling, "Shark! Shark!’ at the same time I began jabbing at the shark’s snout with ipear. He let loose of mo and off.” Two other divers helped Pair back to the New Merrimac. In minutes the water was cleared of other divers. A helicopter called and took Pair to San Francisco’s Franklin Hospital. The county could collect the tax In the same way It raises funds for the Huron Valley— Clinton Park Authority, the senator pointed out. The Legislative Committee, headed by John G. Semann, supervisor from Berkley, agreed to recommend support of Sen. Roberts’ bill by both the County Board of Supervisors and the Supervisors Inter-County Committee, composed of members from Mafomb, Mon- wiA Anlrlnnfl Ct Plait* ’ UlaoManaiii roe, Oakland, St. Clair/Washtenaw and Wayne counties. .Sen Roberts said he expected opposition to his bill from the State Health Department. A spokesman for the department reported it was in favor of clinics but operated under the department instead of locally. The senator Is chairman of a Senate Interim committee on the community mental health prob- County Corporation Counsel Nor man R. Barnard termed Sen. Roberts' proposal "capable of solving local (mental health) prob- 22 Men Facing Gaming Charges in Pontiac Raid Twenty-two men face trial on gambling charges today as the result of the second raid in nine months oh a'shoe shine shop at 92H Bagley St. Officers from the police department’s vice squad, led by Lt. William F. Nesbitt, raided the back room of the shop at 10:55 p.m. Saturday. It was the largest gambling roundup In the city since April 22 when police arrested S3 persons In n combined raid at both 92% and 95 Bagley St. Johnnl James, 47, 51 Lull St., who Is charged with operating the illegal gambline room, stood mute op the charge today in Municipal Court and is free on 3100 bond. FREED ON BOND Also free on 3100 bonds are Jcs-le B. Thomas, 29, 199 Wall St. and M. C. Smith, 30, 19 Hibbard Court, who stood mute on charges of aiding and abetting Illegal gambling. dames, Thomas and Smith wjll appear for examination Feb. I Court along with 19 ' new Mobil cut dropped the tank wagon price to 6.8 cents per gallon (or regular and 10.3 cents a gallon for premium. These prices do not include state and federal taxes. A spokesman for Mobil said the price cut, effective in Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties, was made to enable dealers to meet competitive conditions. YOU'vo Got Troubles? JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -Fire destroyed Marlow V. White’s tailoring, dry cleaning and laundry business Friday. When he walked out of his house to go to church Sunday, he found a had stolen his car. Barnard pointed out two problems here: During the past three years the Board of Supervisors has appropriated funds to care for emergency cases of mentally ill in private hospitals so they could be kept out of the county jail until they might be admitted to a state Institution. "However, greater number* of patients are being housed each year at county expense and for longer periods of time,” he ‘At the end of 1960 there were 24 patients at St. Clair Hospital (in Detroit) at county expense awaiting admittance to state institutions, and at the ehd of 1961 there were 64 patients.” Barnard and other county officials foresee the number in this category continuing to grow at proportionately Increasing ccatt to the county. The second problem referred Increasing county funds toe the child guidance clinics now In operation, with no way at pres- PHILADELPHIA Richardson Dttworth has v. effective Feb. 'tt, seek the Democratic gubernatorial nomination in the May® 15 primary election. Communist Leader Diet NEW DELHI, India (AP) — Ajoy Ghosh, 52, secretary general of the Communist Party ^^of India tor the past 10 years, *' - %be Associated Press count of Weekend deaths began Friday at /f p.m.' Snd ended' Sunday at midnight. TRAFFIC Airman-tC. Monte J. Rupert, JI, of Selfrldge Air Force Base; his wile Verta Mae, 19, and their 6-fhonth-old daughter Denise were killed Saturday when a runaway truck trailer plowed intoflheif car on Dix Highway in Detroit’s Lower West Side. . Senate Democrats wader Mike Mansfield of Montana faced real-ities Sunday when he said-he was Jcounting on Republican votes to I gain approval of some programs opposed by conservatives of both parties. MORK OPPOSITION 8EKN Mansfield noted that several key Kennedy bills would have failed in Congress last year if. Republicans had not contributed from five to 13 Senate votes tor them. the mil is called. ‘NEARLY CNAIMOUS' .•‘When we- Republicans, believe I While some Republicans will | continue to1 support specific Kennedy recommendations, Sen. Thomas H. Kuchel, R-Calif, said I Kant hack, «l. of Aliena. was killed Saturday when nomas n. ivuuiei, » na,u u ",v » . . I an interview he thinks there balanced budget is kept. ,^."1 think Republicans are going [to be nearly uhanlmous in- oppoal- ___...rity to cut taxes. And we are irenia, was iw-pnspu™* wp.w not going to accept any farm pn>: far as Sen. Baby Goldwater, R-that delegates to the Agti-Mt., ih demanding a "clearly npDIirtment what would Kna nt Attmnroaiinn • FTIIC,II WIT- the President's recommendations are In the best Interests of the country, we jvill support them,” Kuchel saldv "When we think the President hi wrong, we will op1 pose his proposals and offer what we consider constructive alternatives. "On fundamental issues, however, I think the Republicans are going to be nearly unanimous. We all want fiscal responsibility of the type that the Democrats don’t always demonstrate. We are going to do everything we can to see to it that the President’s pledge of a off I north of Alpena on U.S. 23 and j||naslied head-on Into • third Jfr* »'ldrs. Ann Baas. 67, of Falmouth. Was injured fatally Saturday in a two-car collision on M66 south of McRain in Missaukee County. §>aul Harlow, 65, of Highland Park, a pedestrian, was struck and killed by a ckr Saturday night ijj Highland Park. — -------I ; Shot Outside Bar 4 Held by State Police; Victims In Novi Fight After Aiding Friend 29, of Mrs. Betty Flannagan, Detroit, died Sunday after being injured Saturday night in a four-dir smashup on Detroit’s West gfyjje. Ten other persons were in- I Two Novi men shot during a fight outside a village bar Saturday night remain on the critical at St. Mary’s Hospital, Livonia. *TLawrence A, Cabay, 47, of Stand-was killed Sunday when his mi# left a rural road near Pln-cohnlng and plunged Into a ditch. FIRES Charles A. Baker, 65. of Cedar-viDe in the Upper Peninsula, died in a fire at his home ’ Saturday night. The flames destroyed the one-story frame building. Henry Johnson, 83, perished Sunday when fire destroyed his two-stiry frame house at Marine City. Ha iived alone. Cause of the blaze §n not Immediately determined. Ronald Noland, 22, of 1605 E, Lake Drive, was shot four times in the stomach and once In the arm, and William J. Daugherty. 24, of 1513 E. Lake Driye, was wounded in the chest. Being held by Bedford State Police for questioning In the shooting Is Wallace Johnson, 23, of Chicago. Roy Turner, 26, and James Johnson, 25, both of Chicago and Royal Cloodaher, 17, of Dawson Springs, Ky., companions of Johnson, also are being held for Investigation of felonious as- tall, unidentified man * credited by witnesses with saving blind woman from possible injury at the, intersection of Saginaw and Huron streets at about 10:30 this morning. For a few minutes, in fact, he was kept jumping. Three middle-aged blind persons with leader dogs attempted to cross Huron almost simultaneously. iBritain Takes :Nosedive; Uses the Centigrade Novi police said the lour men tried to force a crippled companion of Noland and Daugherty to play cards for beer at the Darby Bar. 13 Mile and Novi roads. Noland and Daugherty intervened. LONDON (R - Temperatures took a steep dive all over Britain today, but winter had nothing to do with it. Britain began shaking off- n tradition and switched from the Fahrenheit to Iho centigrade scale of thermometer marking, The change to the continental way of measuring hot and cold was the first phase of an official program to convert Britons Jo tiw decimal system of measuring. John Poxln, owner of the bar, told police he ordered the four men out of the tavern, and Noland and Daugherty followed. A short time later, Noland and Daugherty stumbled Into the bar and collapsed. They bad been whot. Patrons In the bar said they heard no shots since Ihe Juke box was turned on high. The shooting oceured shortly before 11 pm. At 11:10 James Johnson and GoodHher walked Into the Walled Lake police station and said they v/ere Innocently Involved in a shooting. Eventually they will use decimals to reckon how rich, ns well ns how hot they are. ' Sheriffs deputies and Novi po-jlice later found Wallace Johnson uml Tumor at the home of John-Ison’s brother-in-law, John L. Tau-bee. 2293 Shawood St., about three blocks from the bar. At 9 p.m. in London It was,39 degrees Fahrenheit. Translated Into centigrade It looked sensa-ttonnl—4 degrees. The switch was gradual. Television and radio wen thermal* gave both eentrlgriide and Fahrenheit figures. Eventually Fahrenheit will be quietly dropped. State Police Detective Calvin Le-pirn, said the gun used in the shooting has not been found. Acheson in Cambodia Stop Bad Breath Iwwtrn HutMtouct 1 Tlntt Faster CirtlSid Idnratwjr t«t» »rm BflLASS Utah Mutrtlin } Umi m mUl itanutt itiditr in"5m*ANS 77'Iw'fili (Ml"t7n»w» Mint JSd tt dfSHliU. S»*d *»«t»l td MU- ANS>M|d»uf|r I. V. hr littnltrit wmpU PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) - Former U.S. Secretary of State Jean Acheson and his wife drived here Sunday as guest s of the f'ainlxstian government. Acheson noted aj attorney for Cambodia in Iho country's legal battle International Court of Justice with Thailand over the ancient borde temple of Prenh Viheur. The court upheld Acheson’s contention that it had Jurisdiction over the dispute. New 7-Fopt Vacuum Cleaner Hose Braided Cloth, All Rubber I no plastic or vinyl) $495 Rifulcn S7.S0 PLASTIC HOSES S3.9S Psrti «nd REPAIR SIRVICI ON ALL CLIANIRS Disposal lags—Hosas—Jrudhoi—■•Its—Allachmnnl*—tie. "Rebuilt by Curt’s Applisncoi Using Our Own Parts" FULLY GUARANTEED Attachments Included 9 Homo Demonstration OR 4*1101 Within 25 Mila Radius CURT’S APPLIANCES pMtary AuUmBsM WHU* D»»l»i ■r,... ' NIW LOCATION 4 .1,*. «)' •“’KKT.fSlfu ,-M#' m S «Ud •* H»ieS«rr kd Mss UtmUr an* Frittoy 'Ml * B^sBakV'^X hi Vk--1 ’ • . .* 'Scout' Aids Blind Across Busy Street Witnesses said the man with grey hair, a brush haircut and wearing a gray jacket, stopped to help one woman across the street. As he got her safely to the other side, he looked back and saw second blind woman crossing, but walking at an angle into the inter- f section. going north on Saginaw barely missed hitting her. He ran Into the Intersection amid heavy traffic and guided the second woman safely to the north side of Huron. ' Alter giving her directions, said witnesses,- the man turned and blinked In disbelief as he was eonfronted by a blind man waiting to cross Huron. He ottered a third good deed but the blind man said, “No thunks, I can make it okay myself.’* witnesses reported. \ The "boy scout” smiled h n d walked away, refusing to identity himself. Ten in Family Die in Farm Home Fire MORRILTON, Ark. (B—-Ten persons, Including eight children, burned to death when a predawn fire swept their farm home miles north of here today. Sheriff Marlin Hawkins Identified Ihe victims ns Mr. and Mrs. Andy Paladlno and their children, ranging In age from 3 to 12 years. The fire, funned by a swift wind, lad swept through the two-story frame house before being discovered by a neighbor, Hawkins said. Eight bodies were recovered but burned beyond recognition. Cause of the fire was nol Immediately known. cultureDepartment what ’ would amount to the authority to pass laws in this field.’'’s ______ „ ’clearly recognizable” fine of demarcation between the Republicans and the Democrats. TOO DWERMFIRD GolWater, that the patty's presidential defeat of 1960 may have come about "because we were not Republican enough.” , : 1 - Rr1 ' Goldvyater^ald it didn’t help “to Western Republicans, Juvlta Republicans, or .Sf jinHIynns OP mod«nt Rep®!!* •Not* does it help "’when some of our detractors get Into a pwv tlcularly vengeful mood and refer to "6oma;;of- it# Jas :6dMwate%;Rjp-, publicans," he added. SAVINGS.. Gear your savings to a more enjoyable gnd healthier financial future . . . Put yourself in motion and make regular deposits of part of each pay-check ... A BANK savings account will work for you and it's insured at every turn by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. Bank IMember Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 13 OFFICES DOWNTOWN ... W. HURON ... N. PERRY ... KEEGO HARBOR ... WALLED LARE ... MILFORD ... ROMEO UNION LAKE . -. LAKE ORION ... WATERFORD ... COUNTY CENTER . -. 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Gee's fleet of new, modernGMC Trucks, accuracy),' deliver" Gee's ileaner hurniiy, better quality Fuel Oil in Pontiac, Drayton Plains, Waterford, Clarkston, Orion, Oil in Pontiac, Drayton Plains, wareirorq, Auburn Heights, Bloomfield Hills. Keega Hatbor and the surrounding area. May we Include your home on pur ever-growing list of satisfied customers? Dial FE 5-8181. m: I, m ,r : A' 'i. ■ Am 09486688 the Weather v ■■ :rW''W ; * \.; U.S. VMtu Bureau Forecast I
ere generally clear but elsewhere highway crews were having difficulty keeping up with the snow tan. The highway department said most major highways would be clear by 8 a.m. Rain In southeastern Michigan turned into snow today. Temperatures t h ,,i s morning ranged from 20 degrees at the Straits of Mackinac to 3? in Detroit. Highs around the slate were expected to be from 26 to 32 today, with lows dipping to from 10 to 24 tonight. The heavy snowfall was due to diminish Tuesday to occasional snow and flurries. WASHINGTON Wl-The United State* and the Euro-j^J^£ pean Common Market nations are reported to h av e,iy below normal with precipita-three seconds after Inflation, and|wr£mDe(j up a sweeping tariff-cutting agreement on lion of one-half to three-quarters j immediately split'.the balloon into ~ of an inch. | several pieces many industrial products. same across midwest Newsmen viewed the film at a! The pact, it was understood, involves up to 20 per H were attributed to slippery high-!—The U.S. Navy's new atom-pow-nch in Kansas, Mis-|cred cruiser Long Bench arrived 1st News Conference in '62 Facing JFK WASHINGTON (UPli - President Kennedy faces a barrage of questioning today on subjects ranging from his legislative program to foreign nffnirs at his first news conference of 1962. The President wns scheduled to meet newsmen at 4 p m. (Pontiac he news conference, his first since Nov. 29, wrts not being televised or broadcast '’live" but the networks were recording It for later use. CLOTHING DRIVE -trict today started its am dren clothing drive which w of the week. Shown here, don’t need for those pupils Willis Klementury School pupil: Tony Dnvidge, sixth grader, 37l Susan Swanson, first grader, Road; and l.imla Gronsky, fm Phillips Drive, all of Pontiac ’1 ; (left to light):. I Tienken road; 3178 Shlmmons rth grader, 2202 2 on Critical List;[Romney and Collins Shot Outside Barj Ruffle Each Other 4 Held by State Police;! DETROIT (An—George Romney, weighing a decision Victim* in Novi F i g ht(whether to run for governor of Michigan, has drawn the After Aiding Friend j fire or State Democratic Chairman John J. (Joe) Collins. ( Romney expressed his views on Michigan’s problems Two Novi men shot during aj In an interview published in the Detroit Free Press Sun-fight outside a village bar Satur- da„ The 54-yoar-old president of American Motors Coro, day night remain on the critical list at St. Maiy’s Hospital, Livonia.(said Michigan s national. image needs p psycholog- L face-lifting which igo.) r:.!. Ronald Noland, 22. Lake Drive, was shot I..... in the stomach and once in theisaid only a new Republican arm, and William J. Dnfcghorty, 24, j administration c a n pe of 1513 E. Lake Drive, was wound-1 cd in the chest. form. Ron Being held by Bedford Stale Pol lee for questioning In the Vl' ' Nhootlng I* Wallace Johnson, :>:t, pnldicui n of Chicago. Roy Turner, 2(1, and I Hut he d( •lame* Johnson, 28, both of Uhl- j comes the eago and Royal Goodnher, 17, of bom Den) Dawson Spring*, Ky., companion* Swalnson. of Johnson, also are being held j In a sin for Investigation of fetonlou* a*- said: sanlt. | „Mr „ Novi police said the (our m tried to force a crippled companl of Noland and Daugherty to play! que cards for beer at the Darby Ft 13 Mile and Novi roads. Noland i Daugherty Intervened lia iclliel r the v -ek the Re- “Diver's 'Joke' Is Nearly True Mart Attacked by Shark During an Underwater Outing Off Frisco SAN FRANCISCO >f tin' ohn Poxln, owner told police he orden of tin* tavern, and Daugherty follow A short time later, Noland and Daugherty Ntumhli-d Into tin* bar and eollapNcd. They had been j, Kind. Patron* In the bar *uld they heard no *hot* slnee the juke box J wa* turned on high. The shooting ocouml shortly lie- founded upon luinatloi) to distort •ntal lark of und< • stale, should III surprising. UV would hope III IlfillNC com- t|six-foot skin diver told ’ "1 probably won’t be hi -ml are most !urc a shark will get me NIK-ll P lo- | * * * ll) a deter- Flu>d Ran' Jr., '29. a Sa ni> || funilii' j Calif., milkman said it refunding of | tint la- almost foretold 1 tip vlPWPd lOttl.v tlx- ending turned i glitter iglll h and n ind Informants indicated it niayjAuri and Iowa. Three persons died today (or a "goodwill visit to Brem- fore 11 p.m. At 11:10 James John- Ihe first European |x>rt of Ison and Gooduher walked into the tariff reductions would be of heart attacks while shoveling erhav ntinued on Page 2, Col. 2) 'snow in Illinois. 'call U The Murderers—1 [‘‘It WOtlld also In' helpful if hr |>I|M bring himself to reject the Id Republican line that Michigan, i an unfit place in which to live.! real our children and progress." | ROMNEY It El'Ll EX Replying io Collins. Romney:! of a party of IIMI Sacramento ) divers who hud chartered ■ ImiuI* for the purpose. a black skin suit t; a* that I havi “'In three | quar tecs of an inch in snow flurries || through Thursday with me ax* gen- j era! precipitation near thi » week- 1 end. ) Th- (- lowest tcmjierature preced* 11 ing 1 8 a.m. today was 34 degrees l at 5 :30* o'clock. By 1 p. m. the P |mer< :ury showed 33. Diplomats, Bums Deal in Dope stale : Michigan ha* been a leader po j lltlcallv, (•eonomleatly and no ,’lt elally. Reeau*e of this some o tomorrow'* problems have slmwi 1 up here earlier than In olhei intd | Mu . II nd Flashes J HOLLAND!A, New 1{ Guinea — (AP) An In- § donesian motor torpedo || boat has been sunk by | Dutch warships in Dutch, territorial waters off New -J Guinea, a Navy spokes- j | map said today. (Editor’* Note—With a zealot'* single yrindedne**, the chief of the U.S. Bureau of Narcotic* ha* waged hot war for a third of a century In tbt* country and abroad again*! narcotic* gangNter*. In till*, the first of IS article* Con-densed from hi* new be*t '*eller, “The ■ Murderer*,” he lake* yon behind the scene* in the fight and expound* hi* views, some of them controversial, on thl* International menace.) BY HARRY J. AN8LINGKR U.S. Com mi iwloner of Nareotle* AND WILL OURKLKR For more than 30 years 1 have been warring against the murderer*. These are the men who control the international traffic.in narcotic*. They range from diplomats and ladles*of society tq, silk-shirted racketeers, killers, and the side- wulk vermin who *crvo a* courier* and front-line vendors of dope. * * * 1 have waged this protracted campaign Since 1930, when I became United States Commissioner of Narcotics and chief of the Federal Narcotics Bureau. Ours is a war fought on unsuspected battlefields, unrdecognrzcd in flic midst of average communities. Jt may be waged in the salon of a transatlantic jet, th«* office of a governor—or the linen closet of a Westchester housewife. CRIMINAL or victim? Many big dealers muve In the most elite Circles. One notorious international trafficker, responsible for the addiction of million* In Africa, 'Asia, Europe, and America, was virtually lionized by New York society when he dropped Into I Slat) the WMWimiMRM i tw iMHIMl United of World War II. The world of dope I* a inl**hapen, hsltuflnatnry cosmos that thrive* on It* - own secrecy. Which I* the criminal •nd which the victim In II I* not n* easy to define as some social casework-ers Insist. Is It the Washington politician on the hinges of the crime syndicate, consorting with penthouse prostitutes who provide boudoir cocaine a* a special service to customer*? Is It the habitual criminal— tlie cur thief who picked up his drug habit In prison? Is It the unseenv’investor" who puts up cash needed lor the raw merchandise? Or is it a flaxen-haired 18-year-old girl sprawled nude and unconscious on a Harlem tonement floor after selling herself all afternoon, In exchange for a heroin allot? i, (Goal, on Page 2, Col. i) t long. It hit "I (\,nil I ,• iiim tic living in ,l'<' ^oni "" 1 ’M’* anc* M,iirt«il Michigan than any oilier state. So,sh’,kl"« n,<‘ lik’’ " ‘,l)K w®i» ‘.far as4 am concerned this Is the ". Uono j I place. Michigan has the opportun- ."I *n\v tlinl it wa* a shark. I city to fmike some breakthroughs renieinhcr thinking first that H ‘land establish new patterns for the! didn't hurl. Then I half remem. !ination just as It has in the past! hered something I had read by $ < (1(1(1 oil)' constitutional convention! German deep *ea expert. Ilan* I may spark In the rest of the coun- Hu**. | j try what Is needed at the state^ "Hu** «aiil to make u lot of lavel : noise and hit an attacking shsg'k The editors und reporters vvho.in the lace. « Interviewed Romney said it was a * * !■! their consensus’*!hat -lie will run for, ••] gplt out my breuthing mouit-L govenior even-though he says’hi*! piece, began yelling. "SharfC | j decision is not yet made. 'shark!' at the same time I begun -----s------—------ . jabbing at, the shark’s snout with ’[Echo Passing Tonight JjV "i’0UI llt'lrt *<»"»’of 1 / 11 The time, 4:29 a.m. The direc-i * * * L.lion, south. The In'tght, 67-71 de-; Two- other divers helped Paii ;,ji.grees above the horizon. The path,[buck to |he New Merrimuc. In Hisoutheast. Follow those directions minutes the water 'vpsYleared of ijtonlght and you may catch other divers. A helicopter wi» ■[glimpse of the ^cho I balloon|called ami took Pair to San Fran-'elsco’s Franklin Hospital. 'j ' 11 ' .\J . ! Satellite mm m......- qjjj'' ;> 'v. ' 1 *” Y TH3B fONI^AC ^Rl^^^QNpAYy JANUARY 15, 1962 ■ffs wfT >r "3 State Dept. Hits British for Plane Sale to Mao WASHINGTON (AP) — The State Department told a congressional critic today that it had opposed a British sale of airliners tp Communist China but thfct Britain felt it had every right to make its own decision/ : The State Department's position! In the multimillion-dollar deal was stated in a letter from Assistant Secretary Frederick G. Dutton to Sen. Kenneth B. Keating, RrN.Y. The senator had tested the transaction, to Secretary of State Dean Rusk. Laotian Prince's Words Give Little Hope of Accord GENEVA Uh — Pro-Western Prince Boun Oum arrived today lor another conference with Laos’ other two political princes on the formation of a coalition government. ★ ★ ★ But he gave no indication the meeting, sponsored by the 14-nation Laos conference, would produce agreement. A spokesman for Boun Oum said the formation of a coalition could only take place on Laotian soil, not In Geneva. And the prince declared on the way here that he still would not agree to let Prince Souvanna Phouma’s neutralists take the key ministries of defense and interior | be in any coalition. SETS TIME LIMIT Boun Oum’s spokesman, Kht phan Panya, also set a time limit for the talks here, declaring his prince had to be hack in Laos by next Sunday for his mother’s fu- Boun Opm’s rivals, pro-Com-muniftt Prince Houphanouvang and Souvanna Phouma, are expected here Tuesday. Boun Oum’s Tightest government fears that giving the defense and interior posts to neutralists would result in the Communists taking them over eventually. The United States has endorsed the idea of putting neutralists in the two posts. neral. However, W. Averell llarrl-man of the United States expressed optimism on his arrival and U.5., 'Market' Nations Agree tContinued From Page One) ’ the signing stage — the il4 u via riff bjt....... fflS lade under the authority already held by President Kennedy. AUTHORITY GRANTED Such authority was granted by the 1958 enabling act of the reciprocal tirade program. This is the program Kennedy wants greatly expanded to give him a freer hand in negotiating massive tariff reductions with the Common Market. State Department officials said] Bat one result of the agreement would be that the Common Market would lower its tariffs 20 per !. reductions—limited by the ■ act—would be up to 20 concerning the defense and Interior ministries. "Many statements are made and there are many ways of coming to an agreement,” said Ilarrlman, who is assistant secretary of state for Far -Eastern affairs. j ^ "There is no need to be dls-T""' . couraged by anyone's state- »ONE IN BRUSSELS ments," he added. | The agreement was worked out Harriman said he was "hopefuljin Brussels with special presidential with the presence of the tipi adviser Howard Peterson rep-three princes, progress can he resenting the United States in made not only in the conference final talks with officials of the Iml also with the formation of a I Common Market—which is made government of national unity." lup of West Germany, France, i Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium McNamara, Aides Discuss Viet Nam HONOLULU (AP)—Secretary of| Defense Robert S. McNamara arrived in Hawaii Sunday night for ;i day-long series of talks on Communist-threatened South Viet lie ■onfer today with Adm. I Luxcmbou In the Brussel* meeting, the Common Market official* have been negotiating agreements for the second stage of a three-phase trade program. Completion of the second stage after 16 days of tough horse trading smooths the wny for negotiations with other European nations seeking to join the trade bloc and for possible bilateral agreements with the United States. the Peiping government late last year purchased six Vickers Viscount airliners. Since then Red China was reported to have begun talks for the purchase of a fleet of Handley Page Herald airliners. Earlier this month, the Rootes Group, one of Britain’s biggest motor builders, announced the sale of 130 trucks to Peiping. ‘TO CANCEL WOULD HURT’ Cancellation of the sale, Dutton told Keating, would cause public reaction in Britain "largely directed against the United States and, in the judgment of the British government, would cause undue harm (o Anglo-American relations.” ★ ★ * Dutton said the State Department was consulted In advance about the aircraft deal and told the British "we, were opposed to supplying the Chinese Communists with these planes together with the embargoed equipment on them.” NOT BUILT YET Dutton told Keating the planes had not yet been built and that the "aircraft themselves are not subject to the international strategic trade embargo against the Sino-Soviet bloc, although the weather radar, which is wholly British-made, and the navigation equipment for these planes are strategically rated.” ★ A A It has been our policy wherever possible to limit Communist Chinese air transport capabilities,” Dutton told Keating. AAA Dutton said the British also gave these reasons for completing (he deal: The strategically important British aircraft industry Is badly in need of orders to maintain employment; the political effect of this purchase of aircraf of Western manufacture would have useful propaganda value; and refusal of the contract would have greatly increased domestic pressures in the United Kingdom against the entire strategic trade control program. A' A A Keating noted that there was no •omment on his information that ‘no assurance was given by Red China or the United Kingdom that the planes would not be used for military purposes by the Communists and that government-guaranteed credit had been extended to the Red Chinese by the [United Kingdom to enable them to make the purchases.” chief of US. forces in the Pacific, and other top military lead-l< Cl'S I McNamara declined specified comment about the meetings but'I said the United Stales lias no in-; trillion to use combat troops in|t the beleaguered southeast, Asian| The defense head said Ins visit a here I* one of a series that would be made to U S. operational com-j mauds throughout tin- world urket’ goal i giant that could com-- successfully with both the United States and the Communist blue. To face, the challenge, Kennedy wants a bold new program. Under the Reciprocal Trade Act - keystone of the nation’s foreign economic policy—the president' authority is now limited to iten The ennhling act •xpires Jur :to, /sasfiiia'WJMiiiHiilwiii The Weather S, V..' 'if . ■ t. /. I- ■' ■ 1 1.. ' I .l*' !..(■■ WP iMO Full U.H. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Near one inch of snow - likely tonight. Know diminishing to snow flurries atrkd turning colder tonight. Tuesday occasional snow and a little colder, Low tonight 24. High tomorrow 30. Wind southerly 10 to 20 miles becoming northerly later today. Tod«r In Panllar III*hr.I and l.awrat Trmprralurra ^NATIONAL WEATHER — Rain or showers are expected . tonight along the Atlantic coast and along part* of the North-" west and Central Pacific (.-oast whiR- snow flurries are forecast1' ""{or the Lakes area, the, Northern Appalachians and the Ohio Valley. It will bp colder lii the Plains and Gull Slates. To Challenge Jury Selection Milton Henry Will Try to Have Whole Panel Dismissed Tuesday Another showdown in the selection of Circuit Court juries in Oak-i land county comes tomorrow before Circuit Judge Frederick C, Zicm. lie Is expected to rule on a motion filed by Pontiac attorney Mil-ton R. Henry. Henry recks to have the entire 80-mcmber jury panel, which starts work on a new term tomorrow morning, dismissed on the grounds that It does not represent a cross-section of the people of Ihe county. Henry, who has filed similar motions before on the same grounds, has filed His latest In behalf of John E. Stinson, 21-year-old Pontiac man charged with the attempted murder of n Pontiac General Hospltul nurse lust March. Ilia trial is due to start before the Jury tomorrow. The attorney not only challenges Ihe method of selecting the men and women Jurors, but finds fault with what he calls the “built-in Infirmities” of the lawa under which selection Is made. A special committee of (lie O land County Bar Association h also undertaken a general study of he selection of Juries. A report is “xpcclcd next Monday. Two Critical After Shooting Walled Lake police station and said they were innocently Involved in a shooting. Sheriff's deputies and Novi polite later found Wallace Johnson il Turner at the home of John-I's brother-in-law, John L. Tauber, 2293 Shawood SI , about three blocks from the bar. State Pol Icq Detective Calvin l-e-pit-n, said the gun used In 1 h e shooting has not been found. Jots Collide in Germany l,INGEN, Germany Utl — Two British medium-range Canberra jet bomber* collided In flight and crashed near here today, a British Air Force spokesman said. The four-man crew of one managed to II oul; the ’three-man crew of f other lit miiftlng. ' i \ * ’ Algeria Bloody Over Weekend Three Europeans Killed as Moslems, Settlers Attack Viciously HEADING IN AND OUT — It looks, for a moment, as if Virginia has a double-headed governor when Albertis A. Harrison Jr. (left) turns to accept congratulations after being sworn in at Richmond as Virginia’s 64th chief executive. Retiring Govv J. Lindsay Almond Jr. (right) turns away after the ceremony on the Capitol’s steps. Dope Trade Touches All (Continued From Page One) From the start I have thrown the full efforts of the bureau not against minor characters but against major violators, the big hoods, the topdrawer importers and wholesalers. Some have controlled whole communities and cities, police departments and mayors, judges,' district attorneys and juries. Getting evidence to convict hoodlums who thrive in this heavily protected level, where the penalty for talking is death, remains one of the most challenging assignments In law enforcement. Yet there are those who do talk. They talk for profit, for special consideration in their- own cases, help for a dying wife or mothei for revenge, or merely to salve their conscience. Secretly they work for us, while remaining members of the mob. Such "special employees” of the Bureau come from every stratum of the underworld. The job of actually bringing In the violators and securing the evidence Is carried on by Bureau agents. For 1 weeks or even years, the agent may live with narcotic gangsters. He becomes a part of the gangster’s intimate life and family. One slip — one false word — could cost his life. The syndicate which the agent infiltrates is a modern phe In 1914, when the Hur us passed, narcotic traffick ing in America was largely in the hands of Ihe Chinese. MORE PROFITABLE DRUGS Opium was the morft popular addictive drug in use. Only later did :ulled “white drugs’’—morphine and heroin — replace opium In, popularity. The white drugs are quicker in effect, more dangerous, addictive — and more profitable. With the Harrison laws, addle* lion In America was curtailed drastically — front one addict In every 4,000. But as the figure dropped, the underworld traffickers gol ladder. The hoodlums were willing to take chances because the profits were Immense. They killed when they had to. Spread oqt from New York to Paris, from Istanbul to Shanghai, from Rome to Roanoke, the mobs and their leaders trusted One group rose to power corpses of another. ★ * * As the smaller mobs destroyed ■licit other, the shadow of trew .larger with each ‘execution.” This was the Grand Council of the Mafin, with its plan international cartel controlling every phnse of criminal activity. When we In the Burenu first warned the public about the nco-Mafla menace, many ertmllial authorities Jeered. Mafia was a myth, they said. Mafia’s press agents In America Joined the In ]92!), I became assistant com-mixsioner of prohibition. So long is I held this post, I laltored to tty fullest strength to enforce (lie imli-ulcohol laws. But this wus a thankless mid Impossible usRign- LOOKED TO FUTURE Another danger was growing al-lost unnoticed. The big organized bootleg gangs were looking to the future when prohibition would be out. One lucrative outlet colics. Chemical plants of Europe and Asia already were producing vast quantities of drugs which into this country by various routes and smuggling techniques. In 1S.KI, President Hoover asked me to take on a new responsibility that of United Stale* Commissioner of N a rootles. I had been In office only a lew week* when I found myself and the new Burenu the object of n blistering assault from the floor of the Senate. Senator Cole Bleare of South ?arollnt)' rose from his sent, waving in his hand a tin of opium. I "This wus purchased,” he shouted. I knew that what he said was true. I had been working on the case since my first day in office. With this blunt charge, however, time was running out — if the newly formed Bureau was to and hold the respect and support of Congress and the public, it would have to act fast. At that time the Chinese still had a virtual monopoly on the opium trade in America; opium could be found in almost any ^American city. N* * * ALGIERS, Algeria (UPD— Terrorists shot and killed three Europeans today in what police said appeared to be "executions” by rightwing extremists. ■ ★ ★ Kilice said one of the three men was Victor Demare, head of the Oran District Postal and Telecommunications Service. Another was Identified as Camille Bagur, an outspoken opponent of the terrorist Secret Army Organisation (OA8) and the son of an avowed antl-OAS village councillor at nearby Souma. Their deaths and the slaying o( i policeman at Oran brought the death toll since Jan. 1 to 239, an average of 15 persons a day. More than 500 persons have been wounded in terrorist attacks by both O^S and Moslem rebel assassins during the same period. SHOT AND KILLED Demare, 47, previously had received threatening letters from tha OAS, police said. He was shot down as he entered a building today. Bagur, 38, had previously survived OAS plastic bomb attacks, police said. He was shot and killed at lida. All three victims apparently ere on the OAS “execution list, police said. The policeman was not identified. •k 1* ★' Police figures showed that 31 persons were killed and 76 wounded Sunday alone, bringing the total number of casualites since New Year’s Day to 239 dead and 288 .wounded. In predominantly European Oran, Algeria’s second-largest city, police went out in force Sunday to break up roving packs of youths hunting down Moslems. Our preliminary investigations had revealed that the tongs and Chinese individuals were operating opium dens, gambling and brothels, on both sides of Pennsylvania Avenue. FIRST VIOLENCE Working closely with the Washington ^metropolitan police, I ordered1 all available agents thrown into the investigations. Within a few days, we had our irst taste of tong violence. One of the On Leong Tong members had come over to our side and was working as a “special employe.” Someone within his tong learned the truth, and only two blocks from the Capitol dome our man was shot dead on the street. No witnesses were available. No one was ever brought to trial Despite this, our agents made a number of buys of opium at Chinese establishments. Following the purchases we obtained secret warrants for raids on 30 .opium Washington, all or to Pennsylvania Avenue. 1 picked a special occasion, a night when the Chinese were holding a convention in Washington and family representatives and tong leaders from cities all over America would be on hand. Washington police lent us about 400 patrolmen. In addition, I had almost two dosen top Undercover agents heading up approximately ten raiding parties II was one of the largest and most carefully coordinated actions of metropolitan and federal authorities. We began In the early evening We would swoop down on a center, brenk in, drag out the participants, the operators, the opiumsmoking paraphernalia and tote the whole business off to the police station. ** While we took them off, another 'aiding party would launch the next wave. This went on throughout the night. The dens were either closed up pern lently i olhei ould lake care of them at a later date. It was i auspicious beginning, this first ictory at close quarters with Ihe iircotic underworld. The main Ireet of the nation’s capital, at ■ast, was no longer polluted. Tuesday: The "Dreuin Girls” Girl, 7; Dies of Burns After Stove Mishap Seven-yenr-old Karen Krafft this torning lost her buttle for life in William Beaumont Hbspltal after being burned over 80 per cent of her body in her Pleasant Ridge home Friday. ★ * ★ 21 Oakdale Blvd., had bccA left home alone with he brothers. 11 and 5, Friday i ing while her mother, Mrs. Ronald k Krafft was driving her husband » a railroad station, ‘ When Karen bent over a; lighted stovV to reach into a cupboard, her night clothing caught fire. Snei was taken to the Royal Oak hospital by Ferndale Fire Department ambulance,. The Day in Birmingham 8 Candidates Seek Post of Civil Defense Aide Wide Coverage by Press Given a New Angle ALBANY, N.Y. (AP)—A woman called the city desk of the Albany Times-Unton and asked the slogan of the newspaper business. “What do you call It? The fourth what?” she asked. “The Fourth Estate,” a reporter replied. * ★ ★ “Oh,” the woman said, “I Just told my daughter It was the fourth dimension.” BIRMINGHAM — Eight candidates have filed applications for the recently established poet of city civil defense administrative aide, Asst. Gity Manager Robert Kenning said today. ★ ★ ★ ' “I believe that a decision could be made within three weeks as to which of the individuals would be the most satisfactory for the position,” added Kenning, ‘ “This amount of time Is necessary because we will not only have to personally Interview each applicant but we win require time to make thorough Investigation of those few which are the most likely candidates.’’ The administrative aide will work out of the city manager’ office and, for the most part, be responsible for correlating civil defense activities. "v ★ * ★ Kenning will make his report the candidates at tonight’s City Commission meeting. Claire Gobi, noted whman organ virtuoso, will be the next artist to appear at the St. James Episcopal Church concert series Feb. 6. The 8:15 p.m. program will be held at the church, 355 W. Maple Road. performed at point Miss Coci has performed with major symphony orchestras, given recitals from coast to coast and was the first woman organist to be invited to perform at West Point. Currently she is one of the accredited teachers of the Union Theological Seminary in New York, and heads the organ department at the Dalcroze School of Music. Robert S. Howard, an industrial development engineer associated with' the Detroit Edison Co., will be the guest speaker Friday at then Detroit Country Day School’s lemor lecture series. His topic will be entitled “Detroit’s Economy And Its Future.” Howard, a 1955 graduate of the Michigan College of Mining and Technology, Houghton, is at present devoting full time to the area development work going on in the utility company. ★ Sr * He has served as a consultant to both industrial enterprises seek-plant sites and to communities wishing to attract new industries. William Christian Sr. Service for William'Christian Sr. 87, of 27394 Momlngside Plaza Lathrup' Village, was to have bean held, 3fjp.m. today with entombment in Woodlawn Cemetery, Detroit. ★ If * , Mr. Christian, president of the Acme Foundry Co., Detroit, died Saturday at his home after a long llness. ' Active In business until just recently, he waa a former president of Motor* Metal Manufacturing Co., Detrtfitt. He was a member of the Detroit Golf Club and the Detroit Rotary dub. ,★ ★ Ar Surviving are two sons, J. Don-Id and Wiliam, and four grand- Mrs. AUen Orth Service for Mrs. Allen (Lillian M.) Orth, 61, of 683 Mohegan St., will be 3 p.m. tomorrow at the Bell Chapel of the WJUipm R-Hamilton Co. Burial will be In White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. Mrs. Orth died yesterday at her home following a short illness. ★ ★ - ★ She had been active in the' Guild at Christ Church Cranbrook. Surviving are her husband and a son, Derek A. Hearings Open on FEPC Bills NAACP, Labor Leaders Testify; Swainson and Williams to Be Called Police and Firemen Pensions Up for Vote It appeared today that a proposed $100,000 pension plan for police and firemen in Pontiac will be put to,voters io.the April 16 general election. Petitions containing some 28,000 signatures requesting that the plan be put on the ballot have been'sub-mitted to City Clerk Olga Barke-ley and are being checked today. Petitions were submitted for two separate proposals. Eaeh petition requires only 1,879 signatures of registered voters to have the proposal placed on the ballot. Deadline for submitting the petitions Is tomorrow. ON CHAPTER 18 One petition proposes that police and firemen be excluded from pension provisions set up in Chapter 18 of the city charter. There were 14,153 signatures on that petition. ON CHAPTER 19 .. second, containing .14,250 signatures, proposes that the separate Family of Five Treated After Furnace Fumes A family of five was rushed to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital by Pontiac firemen yesterday after be-rcome by lumen from a broken furnace pipe. William Campbell, 39, Ills wile Evelyn, 88. and their three children were taken to the hospital, by a fire department emergency crew, after Inhaling the fumes In their flat at 108 Lewis Ht. All were treated and released at the hospital. The Campbell children are Debbie, 9; Billy, 7, and Michael.6. Firemen were called to the scene at about 11:30 a m. pension plan be added to the char-■r as Chapter 19. The petitions were submitted late Friday afternoon by Pontiac attorney Kenneth Hempstead, representing the Pontiac Police Officers’ Association and Pontiac Firefighters Association, sponsors of he new plan. Based on 1981 payroll figures the plan would cost the city an additional $100,000 this year, according to A. A. Weinberg,'of Chicago, consulting actuary for the sponsoring groups. The proposed 1962 budget how being prepared for a public hearing Jan. 23 doesn’t include any provision for the new plan but does call for $210,000 to be used as a >ay increase or benefits for city ■mployes. * * * Presented to (he City Commission by former City Manager Walter K. Wlllman in November, it would require a (ax rate hike of about 26 cents per $1,000 of assessed property value. The addition of the proposed pension plan would necessitate another 35-cent tax rate Increase. k k k For this reason, commissioners were unwilling to Include it In the 1962 budget. It was the general feeling of the commission that the resulting 61-cent tax rate increase would be too much In one year. WASHINGTON (UPI) - A House labor subcommittee today opened hearings on fair employment practices legislation that may never get through Congrehs, but promises to roll up plenty of political mileage. k k k Chairman James Roosevelt, D-Calif., called for testimony from Negro and religious spokesmen in the first of five days of hearings. He listed top labor leaders, a high State Department official and a Northern Democratic governor for later sessions. Herbert Hill, national labor secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP); Dr. Herman Long, director of the race relations department, Fisk University, Nashville, Tenn.; and B. Tartt Bell, executive secretary of the American Friends Service Committee, High Point, N.C. were scheduled to be the first day witnesses. G. Mennen Williams, assistant secretary of state for African affairs; Gov. John Swainson of Michigan; President George Meany of the AFL-CIO: and President A. Philip Randolph of the AFL-CIO Sleeping Car Porters on tap for later testimony. URGES FEPC The NAACP official urged creation of a Fair Employment Practices Commission (FEPC) on the national level to step in where he said states have failed to end job discrimination. Hill said v In prepared testimony that In both the North and South “there Is a direct relationship between 'poverty and discrimination and the federal government must Intervene to el-Inato both of these related evils which endanger American society.’’ He said there was a pattern of discrimination built into labor contracts with Southern industry that prevented Negroes from rising above menial jobs. ★ ♦ k But, he added, the problem must be attacked on a national level because in the Northern Industrial centers “one out of every three Negro workers was unemployed sometime during 1961.” OK Sterilization Move LONDON (AP) — A Church of England committee gave tentative approval today to voluntary sterilization as a means of fighting overpopulation In India, but It criticized money payments as an Inducement to sterilization. JParents Visit Student Held in East Berlin BERLIN (UPI)—The parents-of j a California student Jailed by the Communist* drove into East Berlin today to visit and bring him food. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Pankey of Tustln, Calif., drove through the Friedrichatraxse crossing point op the Fust-West Berlin border at 1:15 p.m. (8:15 ,a.m. Pontiac tilme). More thaif half of all homicide victims are slain by firearms. I Begin a New Adventure in Learning This Week at MSUO Today, the WINTER TERM begins in the Continuing Education Program at MSUO. Registration Monday through Thursday, January 15-18. Topics for All Entrants f MSUO Campus Walton at Squirrel Road 1 FE 8-4(515 THE PONTIAC MONDAY, JANUARY 15, 1962 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN* PRESS FIFTEEN Another Bro Fired in Skirmish jWest Scores in Last Seconds of 31-30 Victory MVP Brown Sets Up Clincher on Fumble; Lane Stars CHICAGO (AP) — The National j date when the AAU sale GOQD FOR A TD — Dick (Night Train) Lane of the Detroit Lions and one of the Western Division ail-stars intercepts a Y. A. Tittle pass in the 1st period of Sunday’s Pro Bowl game at Los Angeles and gallops 42 yards ( caped Tittle (16) and Mike MeCorm Division squad. The West won, 31-30. Ullman's Move Closer to Rangers on 2-1 Win Norm Hits Tie-Breaker With 90 Seconds Left; No Penalties Called By the Associated Press The Detroit Red Wings, who have lost only once in their last six games, have advanced to within one point of fourth place, the last playoff position in the National Hockey League. One of the key victories was a 2*1 last period comeback decision over slumping New York Sunday night. It was New York’s fifth straight loss, seventh . in eight starts and left the fourth-place Rangers just one point up. ★ * * Third-place Chicago increased Its margin over New York to three points, 41-38, with a couple of last period power play goals that produced a 2-2 tie with Toronto. MONTREAL HIKES LEAD The tie combined with Montreal’s 4-1 victory over Boston to allow the Canadiens to stretch Surging Keeps Wings Collegiate Athletic Association has fired another broadside, a plan for U.S. Track and Field Federation, in its three-way skirmish With thq Amateur Athletic Union! ■ ★ ★ ★ I A rough outline of Ihe federation' was drafted Sunday by the executive committee of the Nail ional Collegiate Track Conches Association. No structure was announced, but Ihe committee said it approved a possible outdoor federation championship for this summer to oppose the AAU outdoor championships. The NCAA a|so is feuding with I the AAU in two other sports. In addition to track and field, the NCAA Ins authorized creation of a new federation in gymnastics. One already has been drawn up hi basketball. CONSIDER CONFLICT NCTCA president Chick Weij .letes to • represent the U.S dual meet with Russia ford University in July, The NCAA council ized to take the NCAA-AAU dispute to the federal government, if necessary. In closing sessions, it turned the handling of the matter over to the committee on AAU-Olympic relations, headed by Wilbur Johns, UCLA athletic director. NCAA executive director Walter Byers said Johns was Instructed to confer with the legislative committee If his group deckles federal mediation is needed. •is ath-j The NCAA in the significant i t Stan- week's 'convention. BAN OUTSIDE BASKETBALL author-! 11 banned outside organized has LOS ANGELES (AP) - The jWest emrged from the 1962 Pro ieveral other |gjivvl. one of the wildest in his-during iirgan •ntatively scheduled ing in Kansas City Feb. 4 to con-1 to rev< for with Louis Wilke, vice piesi- Mcmlx dent of Ihe International Basket- lion ot ball Federation, as mediator in ily nv the hassle over basketball. ! with g ketball competition, aimed at dicating gambling and bribery. The move outlawed summer leagues and related basketball activity for collegians." The council toughened regulations concerning transfers from junior colleges to four-year schools. However, the group failed for the second straight year to pass the national letter of intent —a pro-registrnlioi prospective athletes The convention also refused a Notre Dame proposal that the foot-hall rules committee be author their first place lead to two points, 56-54, over the Maple Leafs. Stan Mikita and defenseman; Pierre Pilote each got a power play goal midway through the third period as Chicago overcame a 2-0 Toronto lead and finished in a tie for the 13th time this season. Bob Baun and Dave Keon scored in the first period for the Leafs. Detroit scoredJjvlce in the last seven minutes to overcome deficit against the Rangers. Norm Ullman's goal with 90 seconds left was the winner. New York pulled goalie Gump Worsley in the last 55 seconds in favor of sixth attacker, but couldn't produce the equalizer. Dean Prentice of New York broke a scoreless deadlock early in the final period. Claude La-Farge matched It at 13:17, Forge matched it at 13:17. NO PENALTIES CALLED I Despite hard checking, referoej Frank Udvarl didn’t call a penalty, a rarity In the NHL, Ralph Backs!rom, who does his! best work against the lowly Bniins, scored twice for the Cana dlens. They were his 18th and 19th of the season, and nine have been against Bokton. Phil Goyette and Giiles Tremblay also struck for the winners. Johnny Bucyk, scored for Boston. In Saturday games, Montreal beat Boston 5-3, Toronto edged Detroit 4-3 and, Chicago turned buck New York 4-lj. STEERING ONE OUT — I-orno (C.mnpi Worsley (l). New York Ranger goalie, steers puck away from the net after a rush by ili<-Red Wings in last night s NHL game ai l>. Emmanuel Fouls Out Against North Branch Sf. Frederick Tops Shamrocks, St. Frederick kept its Suburban Catholic League title hopes alive [Saturday night by downing city rival St. Michael 41-35 at Northern High. Emmanuel Christian lost to North Branch 65-53 in i called with 30 seconds remaining the Lancers had only one player left on Ihe floor. The oth-either had fouled out or been ej(jpted from the game. Troy posted Its sixth victory In seven starts, bombing Romeo, 17-51. The area schedule is light Tuesday. St. Michael hosts Orchard Luke St. Mary and St. Fred hus match at Waterford Our Lady of the Lakes. The two Waterford pub-:hools are in action, the Township hosting Cranbrook and Kettering playing at Lake Orion. Ferndule travels to Birmingham Seaholm, Avondale goes to Clin-tondale and the Southern Thumb tournament gets under way. NOT TOO CLOSE The city parochial game was not as close as the final score indicates. St, Frock, displaying a balanced attack, pulled slowly away until the fourth quarter. The Shamrocks sliced six point* off till- deficit In the cloning period, but th« Rams were never in too of 21 free throws while the Mikc-^H men could make only seven of 25.! |jH) * * * i Mich, John Bradley was high for the the winners with nine points. Chuck Deun pumped in eight and Pete Vusquez added seven. Larry Sonnenberg took game honors while pacing St. Michael With 18. Charlie Daul, one of the big gnns In the Shamrock attack, was limited to three points. Emmanuel started the game with eight players in uniform. The Lancers held their own through throe quarters, but then fouls started to hurt. PRESS BOX tory, with a 31-30 victory—but It took a combination of triumph and tragedy to overturn the underdog East. The ingredients for the National Football League’s post - season thriller, witnessed Sunday by 57,-409 Coliseum fans and a national television audience of millions: A 12-yard touchdown pass by Johnny Unitas to Jon Arnett in the last *two seconds, a last-minute fumble by Ihe East’s Jim Brown that paved the way for the final Wesl score, and a blocked of [conversion attempt in Ihe third FEELS LIKE GOAT rj| After it was over, Brown— s named the most valuable player s.i—indicated he fell more like a Here’s why; inj With five minute* left, the brilliant Cleveland fullback shook off four tuckers and bulldozed 70 | jvards to n touchdown, giving the i East a 30-24 edge Classic at Chicago with a see 1,574. Bill Rozek of Joliet. III., leads the field with 1,638. * ★/ * Jack Deo of Troy, Mich., won the championship In the Juvenile men’s division of Ihe Midwestern Sectional Figure Skating Championship* at Denver, Colo-, Saturday. Deo qualified for the l #62 United States meet Feb. 1-4 at BATTLE’S OVER — Tommy Jaec embrace each other after Jacobs woi off Sunday to win the $25,000 San Di< They finished the regulation 72 holes Ihe 1st extra hole to win. It, and Johnny Pol • sudden-death plaj Jacobs Playoff Victor in Open at San Diego Shue Paces ; Stilt Hits 73, Then 62 The victory gives St. Fred a 3-2 SCL record, a game behind lead-i in Royal Oak St. Mary. The Mike- Norlh Branch held "a 42-41 admen arc 0-4 tn league action. [vantage going into the final period. , , . * „ jWith two minutes to play the Bron- Poor fou shooting hurt the Sham-jew were on lop 56-51 and Emman-rocks. Bolb learns dropped 14 field |w!ls down ,0 ,wo , A goals, but St. Fred converted 13iminulc and a half laler only Greg [Thompson remained on the floor for the host team and (he game was terminated. SEVEN BENCHED Five Emmanuel players were' !ousted, on fouls and two were ’Jet ted by the officials, Irv Thomp-ion and Dave Larkin. Grosse Pointe Skiers Win Prep Triangular Grosse Pointe High-school dominated the first scheduled triangular prep slalom ski meet, at Ml. Holly Saturday In both tho-4»ys and girls divisions. Wunsch of Grosse Pointe was the boys’ winner with a combined time of 56.9, with teatamato Hedge finishing second In 1:05.4 and Alexander of Berkley taking third In 1:13.9. Best ot the local entries ' John: Crary of Waterford who, took !sth In a time of 1:^2 0. Miss Pottle ot Grosse Pointe was the ) girls’ winner In 1:05.6 and Miss Wunsch was second In 1:15.1. Miss Tripp of Waterford was third In 1:24.3. Next Saturday morning, Bloomfield Hills, Berkley and Walled Lake engage In u triangular. * FORT WAYNE, Ind. W) — Gene Shue enjoyed his old home court much last night that he scored 32 points In leading the Detroit Pistons to a 118-108 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers. Shue, In a long-range shooting exhibition, hit on 8 of 11 shots from far out on the floor In the first half. Before moving to De-troit the Pistons were a Fort Wayne team In the National Basketball Association. Shue’s scoring helped but so also probably did the absence of Elgin Baylor from the Laker lineup. Baylor, the Lakers’ top marksman, is In the Army. Detroit kept ahead to the finish after breaking an early 14-14 tie. Oort Ohl scored 23 points for Detroit. Jerry West led the Lakers, Western Division leaders, with 31. * j WILT—WEEKEND NT A It The undisputed star of the week- on» An*, ■nd NBA action was Wilt Cham- - ■?lt berlain, the Philadelphia Warrior giant who .tallied 133 points In two games. f ' , Chamberlfelii bettered the regulation game mark with 73 points , against Chicago Saturday night in " II a 135-117 victqry, then Improved on his own Boston Garden effort with 62 points yesterday as \ the **,!«»! V v Celtics’ Eastern Division leaders whipped the Warriors 145-136. Nam Jones scored 30 points, Tommy lletnsohn 27, Bill Run-sell 23 and Bob Cousy 20 for Boston, which I* 0-0 against the Warrior* this year. In other Sunday action, Syra-I cuso crushed New York 141-118 for the Nats’ sixth straight victory and Cincinnati outlasted St. Louis 119-114. No games are scheduled hxiny, with the annual All-Star game on tap in St. Louis tomorrow. SPORTS- .................. -NBIL Romeo’s John Hanley look game scoring honors with 22 points but it didn’t help the Bulldogs who trailed 46-19 at halftime. Tom Kelly hit 19, Roger Qualm,-inn scored 17 and Harold Klusendorl tallied 16 for Troy, MIKE IMP NT. FlfRI) (41) P« IT TP rfl FT TP The new United Football lxaiguej SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) —'position ul the start of Ihe increased its player limit from 30|Thore,H nothing like money to "«M“d 6!) for 277. to 33 with an extra squad of five waJ Pott made his hid In a p, at the final session of its two-day p008 1 * ' threesomes' that included >etlng at Columbus. Wayne [a happy Tommy Jacobs of Ber-j^^,,^^ ( Northern, Chiefs to Meet Again Tuesday on Mat Another nlp-and-tuck battle Is expected when Pontine Northern and Pontiac Central collide again In wrestfing tomorrow night at 7:30 at the fluskie gym. ft ft ft PNH continued to dominate the older school tn their mat sc-lie* by winning a squeaker last muda Dunes, Calif,, who led the [way today lo Ihe Ring Crosby jClumbake after winning the $*,- jSunday moving. ' ||. 000 San Diego Open.' shots off the Jucobs, whose Iasi good win was at Denver In 1958, pocketed $3,500 as Ihe winner of a dramatic [sudden death plokpff with another young tournament pro, Johnny Pott of Ocean Springs, Miss. Both are 26, both are ex-collegians—Jacobs from Sou the California, Pott from Louista State. BEAT SEASON ED PROS It could hardly be called a rout but the point was that these kldff subdued a lough field of seasoned pros. Jacobs shot a final round 65. six blows under par, for 277 andj finished early. Poll, in a better Hut on a i online running play !with slightly i nore Ilian a minute left. Brown fumbled. Chicago's Bill George. who pried the ball loose From Hr own, i .covered it to set .m Unit:,s’ heroics With a miimt.- left ami Hie I:;,II ion Ihe Last's 41. Unitas went to work The R:i illimore star passed [•for 15 yards ! o rookie Mike Ditka of Chleago nnd 14 yards to Colt jleammate Lei mv Moore. With 14 seconds left. a Unitas pass to 1 Moore fell In. ■Omplete, As the sec ■owls tickl'd away. Unitas rolled to his left, barely eludin'; a gri asp of New York's Andy Robustellie, spotted elusive Los Angeles h lalfbnck Arnett alone in the end zoi ae nnd tossed him a ported strike * Jim Marti? i of Detroit kicked Ihe winning < ■.inversion, his fourth of the day. Martin also booled a 27-ynrd field goal in the serond period. Another . r, .trial play occurred m the third . quarter when Green Bay’s Henry , Jordan and Detroit's Dick (Night Train) Lane broke through lo In it down an Eastern conversion at tempt. .Ionian was named most vnlua- ble lineman, a iimI the blocked PAT eventually spi died defeat foj- the East, the Ins. ■r m Ihe last three [Pro Bowl gat lies. The West has [an 8-4 edge i n the series. BROWN NAM ED 3IVP | Ironically, s ports -writers nimied Brown most v altmblc player min- utes after his 70-yard touchdown gallop—and f icconds before his fumble. Asked alioui the award, Brown commented: ” Thanks,, (jut did you say player of Ihe game? It must’ve been i fumbler of the [game." | Brown said ihobble: "It w us sort of a wedge play into Ihe line and I was still on my feet when somebody 1 (George) pulh I’d the ball out of " East Coach Allie Sherman, foe. New York Gia ills' rookie pilot, re- fused lo pin g o a t horns on Brown: ”Kvei rybody fumbles. It wns Just a lei rible bad break for Jim (hut It ha d to happen to him at (hnf time.” Each Wesl player got $800. The Poll still was close in i the hum | going i into the final nine holes , but few gave him much i t.'hane e to j hang , on with the like: s of Sod-1 clink i nnd Goalhy, the cool lead- ers at this point. Cam o the playoff. Tl 1C Kfl illery of 9,000 at the Stardust Country Club wag rooting for Isith. Pott, a good-looking dark-haired young mnn^ got down first ABL Championship WlflfffttA ft 3-3 13 jAckfton | 16 rarkx t h 5 Roger*T 1 4-4 II Eagles Keg Meet Starts Here City Women "Lead State /K'ul bowling teams got off big starts In the opening rounds f state, tournaments over the eekend. The Randv West Hair Stylist aggregation . of Pontiac took the handicap and actuaT leads at the women’s event in Muskegon while Waterford groups were gaining 2nd and 3rd places In Engles competition here at Airway Lattes. viol* Cargill’* Stylist* fired 2,MO for handicap and 2,635 actual to head 106 entries frond 26 cltle*. Pat Lisowskt of Warren paejs] all events wljh 1,819 handicap and 1,7U actual. Donzclla Brown and Connie Rhodmhn ot Detroit lead I ' " . In doubles with 1,206-1,122 nnd Mary Hewitt heads Isith departments in singles with 600 ami 648. She Is also a Detroiter. The tourney runs through April 29. ’ Corey Gulf qf Grand Rapids set a solid target for tiff. Eagles lo shoot at the next six weekends with 3,006 at Airway. I Waterford Team 4 followed with 2,945 add Team 3 totaled 2,911, Saginaw, ranks 4th with 2,859 and The Pin Pinchers of Grand Rnplds complete the 1st fivd at 2,848. Mic higan president Beverly Van DUsen of Hnxcl Park threw, 1st ball' in ceremonies prior tea ■tart ot action' for the Eagles) CLEVELAND (AP)-The Kansas City Steers go tnio the second half of the American Basketball League campaign today wearing ^^jthe title of champions, o h<‘; The Steers 'Won the first-half ilrdie'tin,. |n „ ,,|nyofI over the week-•nd, defeating the Cleveland Pip->rs two games to one. The title guarantees Kansas City a spot tn the playoffs at the end of the season, although it looks as though special pass will be necessary if thd Steers keep on playing the way they have been. Kansas City, leaders In the ABL’s Western Division, displayed a strong defense and accurate shooting as they downed Cleveland 120-104 in the third game of the series Sunday. The Pipers, who were oft In their shooting,, led briefly at the startt of the game. Then Kansas, City, sparked by Nick Mantis and Larry Stavernum surged ahead and stayed there. . 7i-n-Tt-n-i_ . 72-WI-mi -M,1 . u m-n-n-m 5 A Zephyrs Run Wild* 13-2 MUSKEGON, Mftch. W - The Muskegon Zephyrs' ' ran wild tn trouncing tne Fort jjVayne Komets, 13-2 t| their international Hockey League game ycsturdjSy. ' \ PONTIAC? MICHIGAN. MONDAY, JANUARY 15, W2 Profit Taking Nips 2 Railroads MARKETS The 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 o Friday. Detroit Produce rarrr Apples. Delicious, bu............ Apples. Jon»t!>»n ................ Apples, Melntosh ................ Apples. Northern Spy ............ Apple Cider, 4 «*1............... VefeUklee Beets,' topped ........... ...... Cabbage, curly, hu............... Cabbage, red, bu. ............... Cobbage, standard variety ....... Carrots, cello pak .............. Carrots, topped, bu.............. Celery, root .. ................. Horseradish, pk.................. Leeks .................. Onions, 50-lb. Active Market Generally Hig/ier Hurt Abroad NEW YOftK Oh-New York Central and Pennsylvania Railroad were nipped by profit taking in a generally higher stock market early today. Trading was fairly active. Gains and losses of most key stocks were fractional. Central and Pemtsy were sold as trader* took profits oat their rise in anticipation of late Friday news of their agreement to merge. Central traded about a poin lower subsequent to its opening at fairly steady, motors were Poultry and Eggs deteoit roriTir ^g^h.n.^1: MM ty^h.n 31.' Bsrrsd' Bock 21-33. DETHOtT EOGS DETKOIT. Jsil ^la^lAfh — Eg^jtpi-lcs including U. ■.) ^ ^ __; medium 33-31 (“jJ-M^Tgrads' B"chick NEW YORK (AP) - Bond prices were steady in a quiet opening today Over the counter dealer* In 17.8. government securities posted no changes In the entire bond list. Ralls were the most active section among corporates traded on the New York Stock Exchange and they headed upward. JFM£gainers mle buying price* AA 60; 93 A Ml 90 on 90 B 68*,,; 99 i Eggs itesdy to ill prlcci unchanged 1 nchanged; 93 B 60Vi, jn C CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAOO, Jan. 10 lAP) — (USDAI ,lve poultry: ^wholesale . 0'""'Plymouth fiock' f Livestock opened on 10,000 shares, off % at 18, and enlarged its loss slight-ly. INSPIRED BY RUMORS Amerada continued inspired by rumors of a takeover deal and. spurted more than 4. Gulf Oil dropped 14 at 38% on an opener of 10,300 shares. The list was higher at the opening an# retained the pins edge narrowly ns early prices were pared. While the rest of the rails held changed , to lower and steels were narrowly mixed. utilities, nonferrous metals, oils and airlines helped keep the av-ige higher. There was no outstanding Bonds Quiet but Steady included Issues of both the Pennsylvania and New York Central. Directors of the two rails approved a merger proposal Friday. ★ ★ it The Central 4s gained 1% at 58% at one time. However, Central 6s lost 1% at 87%. Pensy 414* of *81 were up 1 at 74V* while the 4%s of 1984 gained 1 at 73. Utilities dipped while industrials were mixed. Gains a Opening blocks included: Gen-_ral Dynamics, up % at 34% on 5,000 shares; General Electric, up % at 71% on 4,500; and Douglas Aircraft, up % at 35 on 5,000. Vote on Contracts Set at Three Ford Plants TORONTO — Ratification votes will be held today at four Ford of Canada plants on a new three-year contract with the United Auto Workers (CLS). Settlement was reached Saturday after all-night negotiations Med to clear the walkout deadline of midnight Friday night. The Elder Canal - opened through the Danish-ruled duchies of Schleswig and Holstein in 1784 the first of the world’s great canals. The New York Stock Exchange 4 70% 70'/« 70'/«+ Vi 34 II '19% 20% + Vi s r S S+% «=8 rood r»lr .90b Cp 1.40 ____Mot 3.80 Forcm Dslr .1 Foot Wheel lb Freept Sul 1.30 Fruoh Trs 1.30 —G— ECOPt lb 1 34Vi 34V* MV* Oen Dynom 300 34% 33% 33% Oen Prec l.IO 7 *7J» 3in o#»+iv* Oen Pub BV .32e 7 7% 7 V* 7% + Vi Oon Pub Ul 1.30 11 12% 33% 32%— % Oen By Slg 1.20 3 42% 41V* 42%........... O Tel A XI .74 71 37% 37% 27%..... 10 55% 69% 66% + 13 2% 2% 3%. I > 9 39 28% 28% + % 58 34% 24 24 * % -B— 4 I* 14% + 28 23% 33% 23% f INI 42% 41% 42% +1 —c— I «% r,% 1% .. 35s 13 15% 19% 19% + rl 13 112% 112% 112% + 8 26 29 29 ... 98 29% 39% 29%- Treasury Position Ttsr 1961-62 1961-42 I960 I 0 20 27% 27 27t 10 232% 211 2|l 4 30% 30% 30' —E— ■ 9 26% 29% 26 4 % 1 00 6 47% 47% 47%+ % '■() 10« V« 107 107 — % I p m 2.090,000 The average width of C%lle is only a little more than 100 miles, 4 79% in 30% 37% Lent Chg- 79%.... 37%+ % Ml 2.60 _____AO .261 Smith Cor Smith KP is I 40 39% 39%— % floctrnr 7r I .? .F* ,? + 2 SoCslHd 3.1 I 110 110 110 7 % J 16% 19% 15VJ- % —K— 34 ptt 25^ 15%+ \ 3 » ® §Li; ■: si sit a*. 40 41% 42% 42%+ 1 r rc s% a%7 18 28% 28% 28 V*— ' 14 20% 20% 20V* + J °* 7 22% 22% «%iv. ! & & i8+ % I II 2254 22% 32%— J 90 '! 64% 54% 54%-— 1 14 61% 41% 01%+ V —M— “Ifjfp I 40 27% 27'! 27% 4 % -N— *2 54’4 54% 8 8## 7 25% 26% 25%- % 17 20% 204* 20% 4 % 11 § H.S ____■ .... . 25% 22% »%- % Centrsl 117 20% 20% 29%+ % Qi 9 IU ............... «hl|>bd >0 a El 2.99 7 48% 99% 99% 4 V* iltl 1.29. i 39% f|% 38%) % iAHlppl illlp Mor 1,80,. I 106% Sudden Turn for Worse Revealed in Deficit of Balance of Payments WASHINGTON (AP)-Tte U.S-balance of payments iHnaHe* took a sharp'and unexpected turn for the worse in the last quarter of 1961. Preliminary figures indicate that the payments deficit soared i annual rate of about S5 bil-not far from the peak rate of $5.7 billion recorded a year earlier at the height of a rush by foreigners to buy American gold. ★ * ★ In the July-September quarter of last year the deficit rate was $3.1 billion. The deficit, in essence, represents the difference between the amount of money Americans spend, lend, invest and give away abroad and the lesser amount received from foreign sources. IMPACT ON DOLLAR The U.S. balance of payments is considered important because has a direct impact on the strength and stability of the dol-the principal Western cur- ORDERS *00 BUSES t- Greyhound Corp- has announced that CMC Truck and Coach Division has received an order for 200 single-level buses (as the above). The buses, which are expected to bring about improved fuel performance and all-around economy of operation, are 35 feet long and will carry 38 passengers. This 200-. bus order follows a previous order ior aw w the same type buses from Gryehound. GMC Truck and Coach will begin delivery of The buses this month at the- rate of 60 monthly. Completion of the total order representing a , $22.5-million purchase is slated in August. ‘Would Nullify Antitrust Victory’ Says Du Pont Bill Upsets Ruling The surprising change ii payments situation was disclosed over the weekend by informed sources, who also said the precise cause had not been determined. Biblical Author, 90, Dies LOS ANGELES (AP) - Edgar Johnson Goodspeed, 90, noted Biblical scholar mid author of more than 50 books, died Saturday of a stroke. Dr. Goodspeed was chairman of the New Testament department at the University of Chicago from 1923 until his retirement in 1937. News in Brief Rtj Pip 1.40b i D Imper U An estimated tilt was taken by 1 % burglars who broke into an office safe over the weekend at the Pine Knob Elementary School in Independence Township, according to Oakland County Sheriff’s deputies. smashed open the front window of the Walton TV Shop, 515 E. Walton Blvd., between 3:45 and 4:30 today, it was reported to Pontiac police this morning. I Michaels Class of 1941 Are having a reunion dinner at Airway Lanes on M59, January 20 at WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., said today a Du Pont tax bill up for debate the Senate would abort the antitrust victory won by the government against the company. Gore’s remarks were prepared for the opening of Senate discussion of the House-passed bill. It would ease the tax Impact on Du Pont stockholders who might receive General Motors shares under a divestiture plan. FEARS CONFLICT Gore released a letter from Robert F. Kennedy Sunday night in which the attorney general said he was concerned that passage of the bill may cause a district court in Chicago to rule against the government in its antitrust battle against a Du Pont-G.M. tieup. ★ ★ ★ Kennedy said it would be most helpful if it could be made crystal clear in further* debate that -by passing the bill Congress does not express an ‘‘opinion as to the method of divestiture.” Ending a 12-year antitrust case, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled last Grain Prices American Stock Exch. (Figures After decimals ere In eighths) NEW YORK (API Cohu Bl«e . Creole Pet . Dynam Am .. 10.2 M«k6:20 (2) Meditations 6:25 (2) On the Farm Front 6:30 (2) College of the Air’ — Biology (4) Continental Classroom-Government. , (Color) 7:00 (2)'B’Wana Don (4) Today -(7) Fiinews | 7:30 (7) Johnny Ginger 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (56) French for Teachers 8:30 (7) Jack LaLanne 1 (56) French Through. Television 9:00 (2) Movie — “Full Confession” , (4) Ed Allen (7) Movie — “Youth on Trial” (56) Mathematics for You 9:30 (4) Gateway to Glamour (56) Book Parade 9:45 (4) Debbie Drake TV Features 1 Food flah 6 Corn on l 8 Vegetable: 12 Operatic i 1] Color 14 Heraldic I 15 Narrate 16 Mineral ri 17 Row IS Bravery It Goddess of 10 R'eavy rod 11 Ejaculations By United Press International EXPEDITION!, 7 p. m. (7). ‘Cranbrook Academy.’’ A complete tour of the internationally known art academy in Bloomfield Hills. ‘LEE, THE VIRGINIAN,” m. (4). Stills-in-action will depict key episodes in the career of Gen. Robert E. Lee, including his refusal to senjg,as a union general out of loyaBytb Virginia, the end of war and Lee’s five years as president of Washington College (now Washington and Lee University.) New film footage shows the countryside, buildings and battlefields associated with Lee at Arlington, Richmond, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville. and Hampers Fewy. ★ * ★ DANNY THOMAS SHOW, 9 I m. (2), Danny tries to show Linda (Angela Cartwright) that football isn’t a game for girls. ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW, 9:30 p. m. (2). Andy tries to show the cocky son of an influential that money and influence . everything. FESTIVAL, 9:30 p. m. (9). "The Lady’s Not for Burning,” by Christopher Fry. In 15th Century England, a world-weary soldier who wants to die and a young witch who doesn't, meet at the mayor’s house. BEN CASEY, 10 p. m. (7). “Imagine a Long, Bright Corridor.” Dr. Casey (Vincent Edwards) clashes with the chief supervising nurse who says he has grown too soft as a neurosurgeon. HENNESEY, 10 p. m. (2). Harvey Spencer Blair III (James Ko-mack) gets into the act when Chick (Jackie Cooper) sets out to buy an engagement ring for Martha (Abby Dalton). WWW THRILLER, 10 p. m. (4). “La Strega," drama about an artist who challenges a witch's powers when he falls in love with her daughter. Stars Ursula Andres, Ramon Novarro, Alejandro Rey. Boris Karloff, host. JACK PAAR SHOW, 11:30 p. m. (4), Hugh Downs is the host while Paar takes the night off. Guest: | Pat Carroll. (Color). 4PKAKING OF EATING r~ ST r“ & 6 r 8 IT rr it 14 IS 16 17 it 13 ■ r itl H r 23 24 2S ■ r VI 26 ST to B r 1 sr ■ r m r r tt 37 H r w ■ r 41 42 43 ■ r 45 48 17 49 w u SI S2 93 9T SB 96 IB j- 4 noney > niM“i 6 Feminine suffix J m'lMr/Voddeu ACROSS 10 Nautloal Term 12 Nimbus 13 Wloked 14 Appte^ re: 06 (4) Say wrfen (56) Our Scientific, World 20 (7) News 25 (9) Billboard 30 (2) I Love Lucy (4) Play Your Hunch. (Color) (7) Life of Riley (9) Chez Helene (56) English V 45 (9) Nursery School Time 00 (2) Video Village (4) Price Is Right. (Color) (7) Texan • (9) Romper Room (56) Spanish Lesson 15 (56) German 1+esson 30 (2) December Bride (4) Concentration (7) Yours for a Song (56) History With Herb Hake TUESDAY AFTERNOON 00 (2) Love of Life (4) Your First Impression (Color) (7) Camouflage (9) Mary Morgan (56) What’s New? :20 (9) News 4 30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Truth or Consequences (7) Make a Face , (9) Susie (56) Spanish Lesson (56) German Lesson (4)’ News (2) Star Performance (4) Groucho (7) Day in Court (9) Movie—"Mannequin” (56) French Lesson (7) News (2) As the World Turns (4) "People Are Funny” (7) How to Marry a Millionaire (56) World History (4) Faye Elizabeth (2) Password (4) Jan Murray. (Color) 1 (7) Jane Wyman (56) French Lesson (4) News (2) House Party (4) Loretta Young (7) Seven Keys (2) Millionaire (4) Young Dr. Malone (7) Queen for a Day (9) News (9) Movie—'“Mokey” (2) Verdict Is Yours (4) Our Five Daughters (7) Who Do You Trust? (2) News (2) Brighter Day (4) Make Room for Daddy (7) American Bandstand (56) Portraits in Print (2) Secret Storm (2) Edge of Night (4) Here’s Hollywood (9) Razzle Dazzle (56) Japan: Changing Years (7) American Newsstand (4) News (2) Movie — “Roar of the Dragon (4) George Pierrot. (Color) (7) Johnny Ginger (9) Jingles (56) What’s New? (7) Cimarron City (56) British Calendar (9) Rocky and His Friends (56) News Magazine (4) Kukla and Ollic Device Can Hold Cruising Speed New Control System for Passenger Cars Developed by AC “Electro-Cruise,” an automatic cruise control system for passenger cars, has been developed by | AC Spark Plug Division of General Motors. The device permits a driver to set the speed at whioh he wants to travel, maintains that rate and wafris either silently or audibly against exceeding the preselected speed. AC demonstrated the system at the Society of Autotoor five Engineers Congress and Exposition in Detroit’s Cobo .Half. Glen R. Fitzgerald, AC director of sales and engineering, said can equipped with Electro-Cruise can be operated for miles on turnpikes or open highways without the driver’s foot on the accelerator. “The system will hold to within 1.5 miles per hour of the preselected speed on level Ur rolling terrain,” Fitzgerald said. “The extra comfort and convenience of automatic speed control helps reduce driver fatigue and prevents 'accelerator cramp' and strain.' Prentiss Brown Jr. in State Senate Pace ST. IGNACE (UPI) - Prentiss rown Jr., son of former U.S. Sen, Prentiss Brown, D-Mich., today annouced his candidacy for state senator from the 30th Senatorial District WWW A special election has been 'ailed for April 2 in the district fill tho seat left vacant last week by the death of Sen. William T. Miron, D-Escanaba. The primary has been called for Feb, 20, Brown, 36, Is expected to the only Democrat seeking party’s nomination In the | mary. He claims regular Dei cratlo organization support, Kent T. Lundgren, Menominee Republican, Is expected nounce his candidacy for the GOP nomination Wednesday, WWW Lundgren ran unsuccessfully against Miron in 1956, 1958 and 1960. He is a delegate to the constitutional convention. --Todays Radio Programs-- MONDAY EVENING 6:00—WJU. New! ciaw. n«*« WXVZ. Hiirvi’V. Winter WJBK, Kennedy WCAR, P. Pnulln WPON. Nlwa, Sports wxvz, Alex Drier WPON. News, B. Oreene WCAR. Bherldsn'e Ride CKLW, Bud Dtvlee WJBK, Robert ID. Lee 1:M—WJR, guest House WWJ, Ph. Opinion WXVZ, Ed Moreen CKLW, F, Lewie WJBK, Jack the. Bellboy WCAR, A. Cooper 7:M—VtfJR Chore! CKLW, Bob Steton wxyz, j. febaatlan 6:00—WJR. NBC Nowimen tiOS-WJR Tonight St • CKLW, R. Knowlei WWJ, Fsye Elliebeth T* 11 iSS—WJR. I ’ WWJ, News WXVZ (1216) WCAR (IIM) WPON (I46S) WJBK (IMS) WWJ. My True Story WPON, News. Oleen Show WJBK. News, Reid Ills—WXYZ. McNeeley, Newi 2:00—WJR, kiwi, Showceeo WWJ, Nowt, Maxwell cki.w. Newi Daele WJBK, News. Let WPON, Newi, Don MoLeod till*—CKLW. Bhl ft break 6:00—WJR, we we, Showcase WWJ, News. Me swell WXYZ, Winter CKLW, Davie* WJBK, Newe, Robert Lee WCAR, Newi, Sheridan WPON, Rewe, Don McLeod 8:60—WJR. Muelo HlQ CKLW, Bud Device CKLW. Hopwoad WCAR B. Morris WXYZ. Sebastian 11:18—WJR, B. Reynold* ' w 7\ M"*’ca »::**—WJR, Newe, Bhowbaea WXvi, Winter WJBK, Newi. Lee . WCAR, News. Rherldan WPON. Newi, Don MoLeod WPON, News, Don McLeod wjbk, How*. Lee • i a#—WJR, Musts Rail WWA Hewe^ Bumper Club 'wxyz, *8layor inaugurated Electro-Cruise is expected to be available as optional equipment ime 1963 model cars. Current plans are to offer the system only as a factory-installed option, future years, however, it may be offered as a dealer-installed option. ' None Reported Hurt in Landing Accident BIRMINGHAM, Ala. —A four-engine Eastern Airlines Elect ra turbo-prop had what Eastern officials called a “landing accident" Sunday night. The plane’s 25 passengers were not Injured. Preliminary investigation,did not reveal if the plane made a belly landing or if its landing gear collapsed. The ’ plane’s four props ere damaged. A Federal Aviation Agency spokesman said "it was not ai emergency landing.” The plant will remain on a runway until ai FA A investigation .is completed. I don’t know what happened,’ said Bea Fuller, a stewardess oi the plane. "I am glad everyone got off all right.” 'Farmer's Daughter' A Real Vote Getter ICICLES IN mingham, Ala., king-size Icicles the picture, his 5-foot son DIXIE — Bill Adams, U-yd News photographer Bob Adams, sizes on ;i cliff near Birmingham. Adams, mated some of the icicles at 30 fed, left. How Can It Be? Jack Benny, '39,' Wed 35 Years HOLLYWOOD (APt - Comedl-3 Jack Benny celebrated his 35th wedding anniversary Sunday-pretty good for a follow wild says he is only 39 years old. Benny and Mary Livingston met i Los Angeles while placing In musical. They were married in Waukegan, 111., in 11)27. Peru Vaccinates Against Typhoid U.S. Ambassador Gets Water Purifier From Panama to Help ret of (heir t'ossful i WILSON Juliet Vowed Year Ago She'd Marry Frank By EARL WILSON “Tall Gal Plays It Cool, Confident, Independent aifd Loyal and Gets Her Guy.” There’s your Juliet Prowse story. Jkavlng been a rlngsldcr at Frank Slna-tra’s life, I now claim that Juliet, with her long, pretty, sexy legs and her cool continental calm, may succeed In making him a henpecked husband like the rest of us. About a year ago, Juliet sat around the lounge of the Las Vegas Sands and said, “I love him and I’m going to marry him." ★ ★ Ar j Some of them smiled ana went off and played roulette but Juliet bagged Romeo. ( Juliet and I were having a slight interview here 10 days ago — I think she was having coffee grog — and she spoke of her height being a handicap. Why, It’s a tower of strength! “I think I’ve grown ... I think I’m now 5’8”, she said. “The difficulty, ” she lamented, "Is getting tall boys. “Most boys are 5’9” or so, which Is fine If I’m In my flats, but If I’m not, what’m I to do?” ★ ★ ★ Well, Juliet, doesn’t have to brood any more, because Mrs. Sinatra In the cafes — how would It look? Juliet didn’t tell me a* single thing about marrying Frank, of course. Though he was calling her every day ve found out since). But she was loyal to the Thin One. THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... Connie Francis signed a huge contract — 5 years with MGM Pictures, 3 years with MGM Records.... Joe Louis applied in California for a boxing promoters' license. . . Rhonda Fleming will tour with the "Night With George Oersh-wln” musicale. . . . NBC Is cooking a deal with Yves Montand for three TV’ers, to be filmed In N. Y„ Rome and Paris. TODAY’S BEST LAUGII: A vacuum cleaner company has a new model called The Little Woman; a special attachment cleans out pants pockets. WISH I’D SAID THAT: Do something every day to make others happy — even If it’s just to leave ’em ulone. That's earl brother. LIMA, Peru (AP)—Compulsory mass inoculations were In progress in the Andes valley of Hau-f aylas toduy to Hvcrt a typhoid! epidemic in the wake of last1 week’s devastating avalanche. | With most of the water supply! polluted, the Health Ministry said! typhoid reportedly has broken out in the area where a landslide of ice, roeks and mud covered an area 10 miles long and a mile wide last Wednesday night. * * * Health Minister Eduardo Wats-! son Cisneros .estimated 3,500 to 3,800 persons perished. U.S. Ambassador James Loeb said he was arranging for a sup-1 ply of water purifier to lie flown from Panama. By CYNTHIA LOWRY NEW YORK (AP) — “Theater 1," NBC’s monthly series of television dramas adapted from mo* tion pictures, has been one of the season’s great disappointments. The first three or four shows have not been noteworthy. But Sunday night’s adaptation of "The Farmer’s Daughter” was bright, engagingly acted and thoroughly amusing. The story is a political fairy tale: —about the Swedish maid in aj political household who,by a trick [of fate runs for Congress and eventually winds up in the arms of her employer’s congressman1 DANDY ACCENT Lee Remick played tlm pretty: amateur politician with a dandy | Swedish accent. Cornelia Otisj Skinner was the family matriarch (and why' don't we see more of this-lady on TV?). But it was the iCooling-Of! Period I Ends Lor TWA Pilots I NEW YORK IJH — A 60-day cool; ing-off period in a dispute between Trans World Airlines and a union representing its pilots expired at midnight. I Expiration of the period, ordered under the Railway Labor Act, left the 1,500 pilots free to strike if I they desired. i Francis A. O’Neill Jr., a mem tier of Hie National Mediation Board who has been mediating the dispute, Nuid he did not expect a walkout. Negotiations between members of the Air Line Pilots Association and TWA officials resume today. The talks had been adjourned since Friday., O'Neill said lie believed TWA! pilots would continue to work just! as pilots of Pan American World Airways have continued to fly although a cooling-off period in a Pan American dispute ended at midnight Tuesday. presence of Peter Lawford as the aristocratic, impetuous young congressman that gave the comedy just thd right spark. All real political party labels were carefully removed from the plot so there couldn't be any possible embarrassment in high places. Anyway, it was all good fun. • RENTAL • SOFT WATER - Unlimited Quantities $3 only “*# month LINDSAY SOFT WATER CO. 88 Newberry St. FE 8-0021 Woman tortured by Agonizing ITCH '7 nearly itched to death (dikytart. Then /found a fwfouondtr crime. Now Tm happy," strifes Mrs. P. Ramsay of LA. Calif. Htn'i bleated relief from rectel itch, chafing, rash and ecxema with an amaxingeew tCiemiSc formula called LANACANB.ThiefaM-actiog medicated creme Iti I It bermful bacteria aatme while it eootbea raw. irritated end inflamed natue. Stopa scratching—ao HMeda healing. Don't roller I Get LANACANs at druggiua. RCA COLOR TV Sweet’s Radio TV RCA COLOR TV CHECK OUR DEAL! COLOR TV Open * to S Monday and Friday CONDON'S TV 730 W. Huron St. FE 4-9730 led the President Manuel nation in a day of Roman Catholic Archbishop j Juan Landazuri was to officiate! it a requiem mass in Lima’s! pothedrnl. FEAR MORE TROUBLE Mor<» avalanches were feared j ‘cause snow Is still melting and mountain lakes are overflowing.! A second avalanche, smaller than last week’s killer, thundered Intoj uninhabited countryside Saturday. So far, i 45 feet deep in many CONSOLIDATE YOUR DEBTS Become Debt Free the Sensible Way Arrange for a Schedule of Payments to Fit Vour Income • NO LIMIT TO AMOUNT • Requirements: Your Sincere Desire to Get Out of Debt Phone FE 8-0456 OR SEE Michigan Credit Counsellors 702 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Ponfisc'l Oldctf and Largatf Debt Management Company Mombor—American Association Credit Counsolfbrs —Michigan Associalion of Credit Counsellors |ohn M. Hsnion, Director Locally Owned and Oporstod KIIONDA i aiixl Ihf disk of gelling heavy( equipment into (he mountainous area to help in the digging. ! JUST ARRIVED—NEW FOR '62! Youth Shot by Friend j NEW MOTOROLA NEW GENERAL ELECTRIC Lending 'Helping Hand' I 27" TV 18.8 Cu. Ft. NEW ORLEANS, La. (AP)-A' 17-yenr-old high school senior wa»i l-Ysar Parti Warranty REFRlfiERATOR killed in an unusual accident on his first hunting, trip, , TERMS TERMS Richard C. Stol? slipped into, OPEN EVERY EVENING 'TIL 9 P. M. a mudhole Sunday and asked one; of his three companions (or help. | Authorities said the companion extended the barrel oi his shot-1 gun and when Stoll/, pulled on it the gun discharged. 1 ISLnpU ELECTRIC COMPANY 825 W. Huron St. FI 4-2525 SPECIAL! on HEATING EQUIPMENT Forced Air Gas Furnaces *451°° FURNACE CLEANING (WSO With This AJ MICHIGAN HEATING COMPANY 88 Newberry St. FE 8-6621 GET OUT OF DEBT! WITHOUT A LOAN CONSOLIDATE and Arrange to Pay All Your Bills Past Due or Not . ^ nCBEBnfflBBBI One weekly payment pays all your bills, avoid garnishments and repossessions and keep your good credit rating. Np cosigners needed. Michigan's lorgest credit Management Company. BUDGET AID ASSOCIATION, INC. DON'T SE CONFUSED WITH IMITATORS ... DEAL WITH MICHIGAN'S LARGEST COMPANY 1011 W. Huron FE 4-0951 Additional OMicos Throughout Michigan (I Vi Blocks Wost of Holograph) Member Pontiac Chamber t g°tog to accept any farm pro- » »»«“«> »■ a abrogate it. o>raUuatonal.mtbor >moont to „„ “*• " laws in this field." ’If.I read the signs right, there) Kuchel, who needs independent TOO DIVERSIFIED will be Overwhelming, Republican and Democratic support, in this Goldwater, a spokesman opposition to giving tlie President j year’s bid for re-election in Cali-[conservatives, told the Republican ■NEARLY UNAIMOUS’ ’When we Republicans believe the President's recommendations are in the best interests of the country, we will support them, Kuchel said. ‘‘When we think the President is wrong, we will oppose his proposals, and offer what we consider constructive altema- -publicans will support specific Ken- ; While nedy recommendations. !Thomas II. Kuchel, R-Calif, said in an interview he thinks there ’On fundamental issues, however, I think the Republicans are going to be nearly unanimous. We all want fiscal responsibility of the type that the Democrats don’ always demonstrate. We are going to do everything we can to see f it that the President's pledge of balanced budget is kept. bou red off i Mrs. Ann Baas, 67. of Falmouth, was injured fatally Saturday in a| twb-car collision on M6G south of; McBain in Missaukee Cotuit )f IliJ Haunted House Exploration Kills Curious Youth Lake Shippers Open Detroit Conference Paul Harlow, 65, Park, Highland (I Hilled iiy a r Salttrdaj Detroit, (Iasi Sunday alter injbrcd Saturday night in i car smashup on Detroit's s other persons wi Side Jilted. DETROIT (JB — Shippers of the IIAMfLTON. Ohio (AP) — An.great Lakes met here today for excursion to a supposedly taunted three days of sessions on a variety house ended in tragedy for jo; subjects, a University or Cincinnati fresh-1 one dealt with the reduction in) ‘ in.in Sunday night when he was;t|H. Shipping sources here! "““’killed by a shotgun blast. The Lay the lakes lost 81 vessels during iowner of (he house fired the gun. ,he past ypnr because of economic sinnif's deputies said. factors while udding only 14. 1 "t| The dead youth was identified) -pi,,. meetings brought together 1)01 nk j ns Jack W. Lung hoist, 18. of Cin-1 m,.mbers of the Lake Carriers As-| four-1,-im.iti. No charges were placed! social ion of the United States andl " ■'s1,against I lurry Deroorrt, 62, the ,|M. Dominion Marine Assoc '• 'n- house owner. , )0[ Canada. fornia, was* not prepared to go — far as Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., in demanding a "clearly recognizable” line of demarcation between the Republicans and the Democrats. National Committee conference in Oklahoma City ovpr the weekend that the party’s presidential, defeat dt i960 may have come about 'because we were not Republican enough." • t Y Western Republicans, or Javits Republicans,' or „ Rockefeller Republicans or' modem Republicans." ' ' Goldwater said (t didn't-help "to ayj^our members categorized aS! 'Nor dees it help when some of our detractors get Into a par-, ticularly vengeful mood and refer to some of us as Goldwater Republicans,” hS added. GEARED FOR SAVINGS. r> lo dei and plunged into a (Inch, t ★ * * Langlmrxt and nine others made; T^jay’s discussions nee A. Cabay. 47, of Stand- the trek lo the house. Langhorst's. wjj|, n)(, ^.s. and Canadian i killed Sunday when his friends told deputies they hadL,.n|ng bodies of the St. Lawi ural road .near Pin- met some girls at a drive-in whOi j-eaway Tuesday the shipper! told them about "haunted houses” hoar representatives of Ihe Navy, n the vicinity. Coast Guard nnd eivilin * * * j on plans to meet with national They dec ided to visit one. I emergencies The ears stopped in Demorel's' • . ________.... pheIto.2rsTiro,tshlItgSflbMn'Champagne Car y'Cll tlie ; ilding. hry .Johnson, S3, perished Sun-j house and collapsed in the y when fire destroyed his two- the -youths told deputies. ■ frame house id Marine Cily. Deputies said Demoret had I r of the blaze annoyed by other ytouths breaking] on Subway Bids ..j lor Passengers nen > his home dghls NEW YORK I AID "Chat Britain Takes Nosedive; Uses the Centigrade Macmillan Tells Queen of Talks With Kennedy LONDON (AID -I’i lurold Macmillan fit li/alicili’s country tiindringluim today I subway l ie city transit authority : "some da.v this rhonlh' run a ear on Ihe West Side with carpeting, dra rous floral arrange rl colored lighting—ever The author (Ills ■ | Kennedy and Chan i'(K)|M>rating with a pi 'lithe Young Men’s Board of Trade “ to w in passenger support in keeping Ihe city’s 6,000 subway " "litter free until ‘63.” Native of Michigan Dies 'Man of 100 Voices' Dies K. Kills, 62. ngricul-c adviser to the Inter-peration Administra-■y, died Sunday of a - Booth killed dlision. - college of iigrlctiltutf rrsity of Arkansas. Kilo lurparing to reinrn ti: CRYSTAL LAKE, III. OB ip, Luck, X<. known ad "Man of 100 Voices,” wi 'Saturday in a ear-truck Luck, who ( hanged his voice tel portray several roles on radio, was (in Ihe old "Fibber Magee and Molly" show, "Lum nnd Abner" and "One Man’s Family." He also did sound effects for tele- ials. i YOU've Got Troubles? Philly Mayor Resigns JACKSONVILLE, Fin (AP PHILADELPHIA w — Mayor —, Richardson Dilworth has resigned Gear your sat my i to a more enjoyable and healthier financial future . . . Put yourself in motion and make regular deposit* of part of each paycheck . . . A RANK savings account will work for you and it's insured at every turn by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. Bank .Member Federal Deposit Insurance. Corporation 13 OFFICES -DOWNTOWN ... W. HURON ... N. PERRY ... KEEGO HARBOR -. .WALLED LAKE . . - MILFORD ... ROMEO UNION LAKE . . . LAKE ORION . . . WATERFORD .... COUNTY CENTER . . - WOODWARD and BLOOMFIELD HILH.S Stop Bad Breath Communist Leader Dies • I t.III. India (AID SwNtena Mouth Stomach 3 timet fatter CTStJrCESSE New 7-Foot Vacuum Cleaner Hose p|| Braided Cloth, All Rubber $495 Regular $7.50 PLASTIC HOSES S3.95 Como In or Froo Delivery Porta end REPAIR SERVICI ON ALL CLEANERS —Brushes—Bella—A tlachmenls—Etc. ullt by Curt'a Appliance! Using Our Own Porta" FULLY GUARANTEED Attachments Included $1.25 Week Ftee Home Oemoostiation Oil 4*1101 Within 25 Mile Radius CURT’S APPLIANCES Open Monday and More and More People Are Switching to Gee .. . . THERE IS A REASON! it One of Pontiac's Oldest and Largest Independent Home-Owned Distributors of Better Quality Fuel Oil with 37 years continuous service to customers. A Personalized service by a staff of Oakland County residents, who live and work in this area and know just the type fuel oil needed to give complete heating satisfaction. it Prompt, Dependable, Automatic Supply assures customers of never being without .plenty of Gee Quality Fuel Oil. A New, Modern GMC Trucks, Radio dispatched to give quicker and better service. Meter equipped for accuracy. it Easy Budget Plan which eliminates costly fuel oil bills in colder months. it Holden Red Stamps at no extra cost . . . Holden Stamps are redeemable for valuable premiums. GET COMPLETE HEATING SATISFACTION GET HOLDEN NED STAMPS, TOO! No matter where you live ... You,-loo, can enjoy Safe, Dependable Warmth, Comfort and Economy! Gee's fleet of new, modern GMC Trucks, (mefST equipped for accuracy), deliver Gee's cleaner burning, better quality Fuel j Oil . In Pontiac, Drayton Plains, Waterford, Clarkston, Orion, Auburn Heights, Bloomfield Hills, Keego Harbor and the surrounding area. May we include your home on our ever-growing list of satisfied customers? Dial FE 5-8181. •» ' ) £11