TheW«ath»r B* WmUmt Bums FtrMut. CImmIf. com. UMalb Pact t) THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Editioir 118th YEAR PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1961—36 PAGES Unvis lligliway PrdjecTtor By President and Wives Fliers Greeted Warmly WASHINGTON w - Under tight security wraps, the two RB47 fliers released from Russian imprtson-ment flew home tb America today and got a hearty welcome from President Kenne^ and their families. Bareheaded In the cold, Kennedy greeted the fliers at nearby Andrews Air Force Base but passed up a chance to make a public speech of welcome over TV. No interviews witli the men were permitted for the time being. Pierre Salinger, presidential press secretary, said this was because the State Department did not want to jeopardize prospects of improving relations with Russia. Capts. John R. MoKone, M, and Freeman B. OInistead, 25, landed at 11:58 a. m. (Pontiac time) at Andrews AFB, Md„ Imprisonment by the Soviets. 20 degrees as the fliers stepped into the arms of their loved ones. Their wives had been waiting here since Thursday to meet them. Also here were Olmstead s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Blaine Olmstead (Continued on Page 2, Col, 6) FIRST KISS — Capt. James Olmstead (right) gets a kiss from liis mother as C^pt. John Mc-Kone (left) kisses his wjfe when the freed fliers Ar Ph,ufs« arrive at Andrews AFB, Md.. today. In the center is Capt. McKonc's wife and at left is President Kennedy, who greeted the fliers. Attempt to Keep Municipal lax Hike to 33 Cents City Commission Aims at Rate of $13.60 Per $1,000 Valuation Belt-tightening City com-; missioners have slashed I proposed tax levies byj $115,000 in an effort to hold down the 1961 municipal' tax increase to 33 cents. ■ If the strategy they plotted last night at an in-1 formal meeting works out.: the tax rate will hit $13.60| for every $1,000 of assessed valuation. For an average home assessed i af S5,000, this would mean a tax| bill of S68, or a $1.65 increase: over last year. The tax rale won't be set of-; fic-Ully until after the B«>ard of ; Kevlew hearings this spring. The ! commission Is counting on a total j assessed valuation of at least • S't90 million for a tax base, a ; I rise of about 19 million over ( Iasi .year. The I9W rise was ! about 54 million. Anticipating a slack year ^ncghboi-hood improvements, com-| Commissioner John C. Makic today released !mis.moners uimeH »hi> e ach at /.a,,. . . ... ' LEGEND isr riVE YEA8 PROGRAM |l997-<2) FStEWAY CONSTRUCTION OTMES TSUNKLINt IMPSOVtMtNTS MAP OF THE FUTIRE - State Highway 2ND FIVE YEAR PROGRAM (It62-ST) tstass FRECWAT CONSTRUCTION ..—..OTHER trunkline improvements Pontiac School Board Prefers Barefaced Boys In.slead of raising about $1,015. 000 through a full, $3.50 capital improvement levy, they plan or around $900,000 under a partial, i$3.10 levy. j The $115,000 slash is to be offset jhy adding another $.50,000 to the 1 budget from the unappropriated I Furplus-rthe money the city de- ^ ft's going to in- warmer—but not jP*’"*** RpI through the slx- imtU a giudimt—wemlRtA ti'pfid month period from the end of the .begins Monday. Teni))eratuiva will!^***'®' 1” December to tax.col- Just Hang On I a Little Longer; Warm Trend Due \ Section time in July. this map showing the past five-year highway building program in Oakland Cbunty (1957-19§2i and the next five-year program (1962-1967) which will provide $16.5 million worth of highway improvements in the county. The legend at tiie bottom of the map shows both programs. The new program includes completion of the Walter P. Chrysler freeway (lifterstate 75) in the county. Ground was broken .yesterday for the start of tile freeway. Adlai Tells Reporters at U. N. *JFK Might Meet Nikita* .............. ....,... The rut in t'li.v .Manage._______ „„„ itures will conliniie alxmt Jl deJ Irr K. Wlllinan’N propoNcd budj^j ^ ,grees below the imrmal high or rounds out at about MJ.Inni UNITED NATIONS. N.Y, Adlai Stevenson said today i A word of warning to teachers and students In Pon- hit a low of 3 above tonight, tiac; Shave that hair off.your chinny-chln-chin, the; weatherman said temr>eia school board wants just nice clean skin. I'.'T,_____________________________________________ What may have been a mark of distinction 100 years|s3 and no7nia'i'"iow""of 'T9 through! this leaves the budeet to i«. ^ago, is a bone of contention Sunday. adopted Tuesday night at around « . . among school officials to- I’reelpilalion win lutal about million, alwut $400,'““ - Missionaries iday- 'informal” session last , * ... ...„ ...______ night, ttio Pontiac School Boaidl. recording in down-1j„ (^xes, about $208,000 more than! Stevenson, new U.N. ambassador wrestled with the pi-oblem of Cen-'^rs dZ7« i*" ‘»e United Nations, made the tennial beards. cUmbld^ifTraf ^ ? 'ur‘udcs,statement in response to ques- Board members parted a little ^ P ^ Col. 2) tions at a news conference, his to the left.. ! Two Pontiac missionaric’s res- . Several p r I n r i p a I v have CooklHg School OF TortUfe LeSSOH? Rejoin Their Families nedy wfnild b<- happy to meet Premier Khi-UKhche\ tf the Soviet leader attends the resumed A 1961 lax levy of session of the U.N. General As-S13.60 on a tax base of $290 million ,sembly starting March 7. would bring in about $3.94 million I rued from rcbel-^held Kivu Province in the Congo by a United Nations patrol were reunited at midnight with .their families British Uganda. * * a Their mother. Mrs. Albert Slater r>f 187 E. Huron St., talked with Drs. John. 29, and Dwight, 34, and their wives today by telephone. She placed the call from Pontiac at 10 a.m. and reached her sons at - .tke^hotcl_ in Kampala, ‘ Ugntyti* where they are now staying unSer UN protectioa The two doctors reported they MS ttenrttminfa were tnnfotRl health but that they had lost most of their personal possessions In the flight from the remote Palmer Mission Hospital, where they wi Kisn. The UN patrol of .30 Nigerian soldiers rescued the doctors from the rebel-controlled mission pital Monday. They completed the la.st 300 miles of the flight last night in UN trucks. ♦ * ................ The two wives and their six children managed to safely escape Kivu Province earlier this month >'. hen supporters of ex-Premier Patrice Lumumba first went on a rampage molesting white persons. In Today s Press brought to my attention the fact that these beards do not look very respectable in our high schools, whether on tearhers or sludents," said Ur, Dana P. BTiltmer, superinlendent. With that, the battle was on. “Just how much beard can a student grow?” asked William H. Anderson. “It can't amount to much.” “You’d be surprised beard-growing capacity of some Michigan—Civil War... 4 But Ladies, the Food Is to Eat! tor who. If hr esta another chop or two, won't be able to tee the solf ball he illcea ao well, and aend him to a cooklni achool before he'a had a chance to eat lunch, and herc'a are heartless and without doubt, stomachless. Do you know what they did yesterday at The Pontiac Press cooking school? Com$es ....26 County News .12 Editorials .6 High Sehuol .19 Markets 28 Obituaries 5 Pel Dorlor ■ tl Xports ■' 22 25 Theaters 26 21 TV and Radio Programs 55 Wilson. Harl 55 Women’s Pages 14-17 of me “Boys-^en junior nlgi) boys,” asserted Dr. Philip J Proud, assistant superintendent. •T et. Ernest Mann, who have been working on the ease^ said i Most of the work on the Chrys-Ter freeway has been programed in the 1957-62 program. Included Into I If We believe the mother, finding Ihe boy dead, decided lo take he:-life," Mann laid. The Iragetbt wa* discovered that afternoon by Mrs. Denham's moth-Mrs. Nell Adler. 1910 HUIalde Drive. She found the child dead in his crib and Mrs. Denham in a coma. Mrs. Denham died Dec. 19 at Pontiac General Hospital without regaining consciousness. Police were baffled whea they found a phone ripped from the wall of the home, but no other signs of violence. A S'i-week-old-ehlld In another room was unhurt. Autopsies performed on both the bodies by Pontiac area patholo-gi.sts were inconclusive. The lather, who was working that day, said his wife had suF fered previously from a nervous disorder. poUce said. I the future work is the final leg, that four-mile segment from Eight Mile road nonh to the south city limits of Madison Heights. * * a This projei l. which wdl cost iM itimated STJ million, will placed under rontract in 1963 Uuutrarls are rxperted lo he let for the M59 widening project the same year. Markie said another project in the next five-year scheduling is the construction of 8.5 miles of K59 (Auburn road) as a freeway stretching from the Grand Trunk Railroad on Pontiac’s east side to (Continued on Page 2. Col. 3) PUNJABS HYPNO TIES TWO THE PONTIAC, PRESS, FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1961 City Draft Board 67 Wins Service Award ^ In rMognition of 20 yean of ™ patriotic public service in meeting the Wior............... ition's military manpower! needs, Oakland County Draft Board 67 has been awarded a certificate! of appreciation and a citation from the State Selective Service headquarters in Lansing. ♦ ★ * The local draft board is headed by William B. Hartman, a Pontiac attorney, who has served the lective service office here for the I past 20/years. Ser\lii|C with him sinre Inception of Board *7 has been its ' medical adviser, »r. Kdward A. | Christie. A physician 'in Pontiac, Dr. Christie lives at'6239 Malvers St,. Troy. Hartman lives at 3970 Pitt St., Waterford Township. Both men received individual certificates of appreciation from headquarters. * ’ * « ‘Tn transmitting the individual awards issued in the name of the President, state director Col. Arthur A. Holmes declared, “'With these certificates goes my sincere appreciation for your devotion to duty, your integrity and ieadership, and your demonstrated spirit of volunteer public service.' Other members of the local board are V. J, Manikoff, secretary: Edward H. Uird, Emmett J. Lelb, and Robert V. Parent!. DR. EDWARD A. CHRIS'nR Boys... Warning! Keep Chin Clean Try to Hold Down Municipal Tax Hike (Continued From Page One) millage for operational costs, debt retirement and waste coliection. The rate has been $13.27 sincej 1958. In 19.97 it was $13.70, br 10 cents above the rate proposed for this year. The cut in capital improvement fund.s won’t hurt street or sidewalk improvement programs, since the city finances its share of these out of state gas and weight tax funds. Oakland Highway Plans Told in Detail by Mackie (Continued From Page Onet ; Storm and sanitary sewer con-Jstruction mifdrt be affected, but I the commission did not iook upon superintendent, informed the 1961 as a year in which special hoard that "------ - , tenance mei beards. " "I don’t see how you can prohibit them, ” said Rev. Parker, who sports a modified goatee himself. ■’It's not going to be a popular decision either way. hut I don't think we should allow the beards, moaned Proud. "1 don't think we should Ik* too llrict. After all, it's our Centennial Possibly we should discourage but not prohibit the beards," suggested Uienn H. Griffin. "Can't you imagine a group of graduating seniors with beards?" said Whitmer. * ♦ ★ The )v)ard decided to take a stand on "discouraging the growing of beards in school until the last 10 days to 2 weeks of the semester, at least " Soviets Okay Dam Loan MOS(X)W (UFM) The Soviet parliament Thursday ratified a $810 million loan to the United Arab Republic for completion of the Aswan High Dam on the Nile River The city has already two big sliees out of the 1961 capital Improvement funds — $467,000 lo pay off tax anticipa-tlad. -Part of this qirejeeb will be to extend Squdre Lake road easterly to connect up with the Chrysler. This latter work will be done during the last half of 1962, while Square Lake road will be widened to five lanes in 1964. Thatclier was pleased to learn that a project assigned No. 1 j orily by the road commission that of Improving M218 (Orchard Lake road and Pontiac Trail) from Pontiac to a point near Wixom — was included in Mackie’s program to be. No construction date, however, has tieen set. Thla l7.7-mlle project ahould be particularly pleasing, too, to fmilball-bound motorists headed toward Ann Arbor. Other projects in the future plans jre: Widening four miles of Telegraph nmd from four to six lanes from Eight Mile road to connect up with the new 11'i Mile road (Interstate 696). This is expected to be placed under contract in 1965. * * ”★ Improvement of the interchange at the Farmington - Brighton expressway (Interstate 96) and M218 to increase Its traffic capacity. Mackie said $4.6 million has earmarked for preliminary Ion during Its new program. More than half of this money is earmarked for work in and around the state’s large urban areas, he| said. of south Oakland Coun-. ty's east.west freeway (Inler-stale 686) and for preliminary 4 englne«>ring and purchase ot right-of-way tor Interstate 96 Eight Mile mad lo Farm- ington Hlthtit trtnprrstui Wrtther -LUM • 1 Bl At the same time, Mackie said, money left in the bond issue, or-iiginally intended for the contro-11 jversial exlen.sion of Northwestern j*, I Highway, after construction of the •NorlhweRlern freeway between rt jEight Mile mad and IIH Mile road M ■j’lHoterstale 6!I6) wilT be used for la iiipn-liminary engineering and pur-jjichnse of right-of-way for the future S' jj extension of the freeway li I'to M.59. Mackie said he could not pln-ii 'I! point when the extension project ihiniion 'll i» would be constructed. I Lot ARffh-i M ; »r rk*ui>i NATIffNAI. HEATHER -( Snow flurries are expi-ctiHl tonight over the cenVal Appalachians and northern Ukes with light snow over the western part of the northern Plains, central Plains and southern Rockies. Raiji an^snow mixed is forecast for tiie Great Basin, New Mexico arid T/xas with kcattered' showers for Arizona and California. Colder weather is slated for the North Atlantic atales and oouthem fVxdues with mild weather expected from the 1 lo northern Plains. Mackie said the $46.5 million In be npeul In Oakland f'oanty during the 196? 67 program tai-rliiden the cost of engineering and right-of-way. several newspapers before Nowmber election. Secrecy labels were left similar studies conducted in the Most of the stale projects are comitructed on a 90-10 matching basis, with the federal govermnent providing 90 per cent of the proj-cost and the state the bal- unce. After he appeared in Pontiac. Mackie movrti over to Mount Clemens and told officials there his department planned to spend $18 million for location of roads in Macomb County, Including the conversion of M59 Into a freeway. ho far. projects totaling $!$.? million have been eompicled during the first five-year program or are under constniclloii, while projects totaling $64.4 million, K lAIhEh FMMIR mostly on Interstate 7$ and la i The other, dated June partmenfs 1957-62 program, which totaled $lVs billion, will give Michigan "a basic framework of efficient highways.” "Now we must go back and BH in .some of the details to get the best use out of that framework,’ the' cqmmissifflier said. "We will concentrate, during the seebnd five-year program, on penetrating cities and making them more accessible to the cross-country freeway system." Mackie said the department will s 0 mil- land County would have nearly 90 miles of freeway open to traffic —more than any other county i Michigan except Wayne County. Mackie said he is announcing his second five-year construction program now to allow local governmental bodies to make their plans for the future. "By announcing our plans these communities will be able to start budgeting for their share of the cost of these improvements, as well as for other improvements they will want to make in conjunction with our road building program," Mackie said. TB Sanatorium Eyed as a Mental Hospital LANSING ur — state health officials are taking steps to convert the entire 358-bed state tuberculosis sanatorium at Howell into a mental hospital. Continuing success in the battle against spread of tuberculosis makes the shift possible, said Dr. Albert E; Heustis, state health commissioner. Heustis said Thursday that the health department’s advisory - _ __ ,________, forlums has supported a recom- 'hgTtM^HngTor ftMTe^^ -mwiditltm ttr transfer about 166- TB patients at Howell to empty beds In Detroit TB hospllals. The department, he said, has asked Detroit’s Common Coimcil to enlarge the service area of Herman Kiefer TB Hospital to include Lenawee, Livingston, Monroe, St. Clatf^and Washtenaw counties. All now are Served by the Howell institution. JAMES C. ZEDER Ex-Chryslei Official After U. of M. Post James C. Zeder, 60, retired director and vice president of Chrysler Corp., has announced that he will be a candidate for the Republican nomination for the Board of Regents of the University of Michigan. * * * Zeder, who lives at 1040 Orchard Ridge Road, Bloomfield Hills, Is a director of the University of hUchigan Development Committee, chairnuin ot the board of governors of the university’s Memorial Phoenix Project, a trustee of the University of Detroit, and vice president of the Michigan State University Oakland F'oundatlon. A candidate for regent will be selected at the Republican state convention in Detroit Feb. 3-4. Ik'fore his retirement in 1959, Zeder was vice president in charge of engineering for Chrysler. * It It He graduated from the University of Michigan in 1922 with a degree in mechanical engineering. During World War II he directed engineering developments ndating to the A-bomb, gyro coraiwsses. tanks, and jtntl-alr-craft cannon. ” ’ At the same time he directed , war engineering board composed of 800 of the nation's top scientists. * ♦ ★ He holds honorary degrees from the University of Michigan, Lawrence Institute of Technology, and the University of Dayton. The Day in Birmingham BIRMINGHAM Starry-eyed or not, there will be some area mt-dents w4m> will soon be in ' tovies. ♦ ♦ ★ However, tbeir appearances camera" won’t lead to a Hollywood contract or a gold Oscar. More likely they’ll wind up with a yellow traffic violation ticket The oerreu test will be given be filmed by a camera-equipped, unmarked police car. The car will be furnished by General Motors Corp. for a joint traffic study to be undertaken by the Birmingham I^ice Depart-: and the automobile firm's research laboratories. ★ ★ ★ While no starting date has been set for the traffic study, the city (xmunission has appro^ of the The new car, wUch will be turned over to the city once the atiidy Is complete, will be equipped with a $Snun camera taking movtea or A 16mm camera and other traffic enforcement equipment will also be carried tn the vehicle. WWW Purpose of the study, which is expected to take three months, to film motcaists in various traffic situations that could or do lead to accidents, according to Robert Herman, head of the theoretical physics department of the research latoratories. In a letter to Police Chief Ralph W. Moxley, Hennan explained that a repreaentative from Us department will accompany a police officer in the oar. The GM employe would be deputized by the Oakland Cbunty Sheriff's Department to avoid any legal complications, Herman said. ★ ★ ♦ A detailed report of the study will be turned over to the city its completion. New officers have been installed in the Ladles Auxiliary of the Metropolitan Cliri> of Birmingham and Bloomfield Hills, Spirit 9. They an Mrs. Howard Hatt, presideat: Mrs. Foster Raymond, Gafcia Won't Debate MANILA (AP)—President Carlos P. Garcia today refused to debate with his opponent in the Philippines' presidential campaign, Vice President Diosdado HacapUfU. Tte propoenl wnn prompted by the Kennedy-Nixon campaign dkwtes in the United SUtes. A spokesman said a debate with his opponent would not be in keeping with Garda’s position as chief of state. Past national president of the organizatkm Mi?- Frederick Kemp of Birmingham was the installing officer. * a ★ The club will meet Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Ambert Peterson of 1259 Cedar Drive. John K. Stevenson, general chairman of the 1961 Community House Fund Drive March 6-10, announced today that S. Tenney McGraw of 690 Kimberly Road would serve as chairman of business solidtations. 4 ★ a a Mrs. Robert J. Mason of 564 Overhlll Road and Mrs. Raymond “ Giffcls of 929 Glengary Road were named cochairman of women’s participation. a a a Thobum H. Wiant of 4431 Karen Lane, Bloomfield Hills, was named public relations chairman. Fliers Greeted Warmly by Wives (Continued From Page One) of Elmira, N. Y., and the flier’s | brother and sister-in-law. Dr. and^ Mrs. C. Brent Olmstead of Buffalo, I N. Y. I a a a | Other welcomers included Secre-| tary of the Air Force Eugene! Zuckert, Air Force Chief of Staff! Gen. ’Thomas D. White, and Rich-1 ard H. Davis, deputy assistant sec-1 retary of state for European af-| fairs. President Kennedy, who an-, nounced the fliers’ release dramatically two days ago, flew out 15 miles from the White House Andrews AFB to greet the homecomers. He went by helicopter. And, as usual he wore no the field despite the chill. SHAKE HANDS McKone was the first down the ramp ot the Constellation plane which carried the fliers on the last leg of their trip, from Goo.se Bay. Labrador, to Andrews Field. McKone saluted, then shook Kennedy’s hand. Then the fliers immediately turned to their waiting wives and embraced them long and lovingly. Both women were wearing bright red coats and bright corsages. -------....................... Although there had been^labor-ate 'TV and press preparations in the belief Kennedy might make a public address of welcome at the field, he did not do so. After greeting the fliers their families, he took off again for the White House in his helicopter. Kennedy got back to the White House at 12:20 p.m. U.S. Prestige Opinion ^olls Are Made Public WASHINGTON (AP)—Two gov-:and France. But both America emment polls which said U.S. and President Elsenhower contin- prestige declined last year some parts of the world were made public today on orders from President Kennedy. The studies released by the U.S. Information Agency had figured In the 1960 election campaign. Much of the two foreign opinion ued to stand far ahead In esteem compared with the Soviet Union and Premier Khrushchev, also lost in public favor. ’The d^uments were referred to frequently in the 1960 campaign samplings had been publlriaxl by Kennedy said American prestige One of the studies, dated Oct. 10, 1960, says that people In most parts of the free world believe that the Soviet Union is ahead of America in space achievemfnts and will lead in apace 10 years had plunged under Eisenhower' rule. Vice President Richard M. Nixon said U.S. prestige had hit new high. Kennedy demanded that the USIA documents be made public, but the "' ■ .......... refused. Officials connected with .studies felt then—and many still feel—that the report.s should' be kept secret. They contend that 1960|the studies are the internal work-(reewsys, reiiialn to ;stales (hat after the collapse of,ing tools for the agency, needed I be awarded beiweea aow> and I the Paris summit conference last j(o help draw an accurate picture j June $6, 116?, Moekle said. [May public opinion toward the of how others see the United I Mackie said the highway de- United States declined in Britain Isutes.' I ' i I . They say that the value of many of the studies would seriously breached, and opinions would be less candidly expressed, U the results were opened to public scrutiny. * * ♦ A third report which figured in the campaign and was ’’leaked" to the press was dated Aug. 29, I960, under the heading "free World Views of the U.S.-U.S.S.R. Power Balance." The secrecy restriction remains on that docu-lent. The USIA acted after Kennedy told a questioner at his Wednesday night news conference; * It It 'I do think that it would be helpful to release the polls which were discussed last fall.’’ Kennedy also said he had no objection at all to releasing the polls, or the results of the pdli. . j USIA spokesman said the Aug. 29 document, still withheld, Is not a poll but rather a broader-ranging «tudy which includes analysis. TONIGHT tmi SATURDAY HOUSEWARES SPECIALS Poly pusne ‘Haadi-Poa’ I 12” Wash Basin! Rap. SOc SaJIar AH All purpoi* pan won't tcrstcli. riut. lA ■ ^ losk or break. Ai- "W M •orled colors. ■ ■ Sale of Profesioeal Type OSTER aECTRIC CUPPERS end VIBRAT0R-MASSA6ER MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS OSTER Pro ^ Stylo ELECTRIC Hoir Clippers ''OSrSR" SHmaJax It, Power Massager added hand power M m (or reltxlns mat- ^ ^ 98 N. Saginaw—Main Floor VnbfakabU Poly Plaitie 21-Qt. Wostebosket Rog. $2.95 EKCO FLINT Slainlm Waverly Edge Knives Values to $3.50 • STKAK SLICSB a COOK'S KNIVS • CtILITY KNiri • BREAD sad CAKE KNIFE • rtas Other Stjlee is Stock Flint stainlsss Waverly knives sfiy sharp year te , iemous Pakkiwood handles. Save 3-Qt. Covered Sauce Pans 38 1 $2.95 Value Heavy gauge aluminum pen with| cover, bekelite handle end knob! ere heat rosistont. As shown, aaaaaaaeaaaaaaaaaaaaa! ]68 Molded Rabbor Cempetad Dilb Diainer «nd Dreinboard Tray $2.49 Value Dish drainer end dreinboerd trey combinetion in essorted colors. Stertderd size for most eny counter fop. M N. Soginow • 2ad Floor ■4^'. Deal With Sirami—the BIG DEAL DISCOUNTER —Tonight and Soturdoy ■ennsmsiai Malar Oil-2 Gals. EAGLE Pin Tumbler Dear Nila Leek I” $2.95 Value No specie! tools needed to install this lock. Complete with two keys. As shown. Limit 1 lock. AUTO Slip-On Style Oar Seal Omr Gar Top Carriers 944 $13.95 Value m—All iteel carrlere with taro ----- --) Ruction cup* ueed. Vt,” Elactrie Drill Regnlai iISJS Valeo Pawrrful S amp drill ^ MRAB r^. '».Vd%V in®’ 0400 tor liomc won- ■■■ W N. Sogiaaw • $ad Floor ' ' ■V. ' THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. JANUARY 27, 1961 THREE. Girl, 14, to Death ALBUQUERQUE. N.M. (AP)-A teen-age girl was found beaten to deoth Tl' a ravine near Ber home and police said a schoolmate admitted bitting her on the head with a rock. ★ ★ The battered and tumbleweed last night approved the hiring of a new coordinator of secondary covered body of Janice McKerrow. 1 Thursday ni*d)t by 14. was found___________ her 8-year-old brother who pointed it out to his unde and a poUce officer. pal at Eastern Junior High School. William J. Lacy, principal of Washington Junior High School, named as the new coordin- atw. An autopsy showed the girl had not been sexually assaulted * * ^ Police Chief Paul Shaver said the youth, also 14, was being driven to the police station when he said: "I did it.” Shaver said the ]^th later told officers that he hit the girl on the head with a rock. (Advert lumeot) SINUS Sufferers H»e’l |oo4 M»i (w rwt Euleiive *•« r".i OecMiieelMt leblett eellniid coetieucudv to dreie eed NA-CUAS II (II st««' Board of Education Fills 2 Pontiac Posts The PdnUac Bowtf of Edticatiiin Tro Z Beat Lake Girl at Fowler, Colo. RoMell W. Oirtis, who has resigned to accept a position as assistant to the superintendent In the Highland Park School District. Named to the position of as.si8-! tant principal was Donald E. De-Voe, a social studies teacher and attendance officer at Eastern. Lacy. 48, of 194 Chippewa Road, came to Pontiac in 1941 as a teacher at Wisner School. ' He has been teaching since 1932. After serving four years in the Army during World War II, Lacy return^ and took a position teaching business education at Pontiac Central High School. He became bookstore manager at Central In IMZ and chairman of Central’s business education department bi 1964. In 1957 he was an administrative assistant and was named principal at Washington Junior High in 1958. i»i ★ W ★ —Dr«( Deri. He holds a Bachelor of Arts Teachers College and -a Masters Degree in Education from Wayne State University. * In recommending Lacy for the post. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer, superintendent, said, "It is believed he will be able to fill this position with the same success he has demonstrated in other positions which he has held in the school system.” Is State Cherry Pie Champion GRAND RAPIDS. (UPI) - Bon- DeVoe is married uid has two children. He holds degrees from Albion College and the University of MHiigan. He will assume his new position immediately. in Traffic Fatality I Charged with negligent homi-_ . . cide stemming from a traffic ae- Dec. 10, Elmer Sanders, teacher in the tiny West Michigan community of Bw Lake, today won the 1961 Michigan Cherry Pie Baking Contest. The Bear Lake High School Friends and Relatives Remembered by Actor SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (API —More than $150,000 of the estate of actor Barry Fitzgerald will go to relatives and friends. B -will take over I DeVoe, 33. of 200 Arizona St.. Rochester, has been teaching here , , , j j The bequests include $15,000 to !Sean O'Casey, the Irish play- cherry pie making champion at a lancheon here attended by •! other Michigan teen-ager girls who had competed in the lw«»-day contest. Bonnie was awarded a $300 col- Shop and Save at SIMMS 'til 10 P.M. OPEN NIGHTS; of Detroit stood mute at his arraignment in Springfield Township Justice Court yesterday after-jon. ; He is charged in the death ofj Elmer Blunt, 36. also of Detroit l who allegedly succumbed from ln-| Juries received as a passenger inj Sanders car when it crashed intol a utility pole along Dixie High-1 way in the township. * A plea df not guilty «as entered lege scholarship and a trip to for Sanders by Justice of thej Oiicago to compete in the National|Peace Emmet J. Leib who sched-| CTerry Pie Baking Contest Feb.'uled an examination of the char;.^I ■for Feb. 2 and set bond at $300. Una Slott of Hollywood, a niece of Fitzgerald, was left $35,000.] Marie Mortjshed of Hollywood, a sister, will get $25,00Q. WOW—'creom' of Brand Cosmetic Homes ot SIMMS DISCOUNT PRICES —Shop Here Tonight and Soturdoy— SAVE ON COSMETICS 1.75 HUDNUT Hand and Body Lotion .........89c 2.50 H. H. AYERS Hand Cream 93c 1.00 JERGENS All-Purposo Cream ............49e 1.49 LADY ESTHER 4-Purpose Cream 77c 2.00 EVE. IN PARIS Dry Skin Creom 77c 1.75 DuBARRY Skin Freshener Lotion........1.00 2.50 H. H. AYERS Luxurio Cream ...........1.19 3.00 PONDS Cold Cream.....................1.39 2.35 DuBARRY Cleonsing Cream ............1.50 3.50 DuBARRY Young Promise .............2.00 5.00 DuBARRY Royol Nectar 2.50 2.00 COTY Vitamin Hand ond Body Lotion. ... 1.25 4.00 LANOLIN PLUS Cleonsing Creom 1.79 3.50 CHANTILLY Liquid Sachet with T. W. 2.50 5.00 CIROS Essence Mist with Perfume .....3.50 3.50 COTY Vitomin Beauty Conditioner......2.50 • 5.00 COTY Vitamin Beauty Moisturixer S8 North Baginaw Stroot 3.50 CofDioticf- Moia Floor Big Deal Discouits for TONIGHT ud SAT. TRANSISTOR RADIOS 199 UL TBUISISTOR Only 30 Loft with powrrtui rarphon* apvtkvr 6-TRANSISTOR Compare lo S3I.9S 15“ 8-TRANSISTOB Compare to SJ9.95 With €•»*. -bsttery (nd nrphonr 19" MR. Short Wato ABd AM RAdio 2387 : Transistor Radio Battory I 3 ^“89* • Value • 'Mtuir loni life Imported bottertM for mo«t tn: O traniUtor radio, twitch your radio balterlu arouni %tttatttttttttttttttttett*tttttttttottttt^ } Her Tear TraafUler Madia on Haaia Carrttf or Charge Tear Weak Ballariae to Like-Mew icilerlee Battery Charger ‘r* 069 raict Last Week of SIMMS ONCE-A-YEAR JANUARY CLEARANCE of Famons PHOTO NEEDS This is the wind-up of our Jonuory cleoronce . . . come in for these specials plus the many other unodvertised bargains. Use free loyoway tonite and Saturday. Guaranteed to flash. Here is Your Once-o-Yeor Opportunity to Save Sale of 35mm Slide Cameras NEW—USED—DEMONSTRATOR Models GROUP 1 Values lo $5o -YOUR CHOICE i(r Monte 35nnm brands. Free layaway GROUP 2 Values to $75 -YOUR CHOICE Choice of Kodak Pony 35mm, Argus C-3, Wall Wide 35mm, Giro 35mm, in one or 2 of a kind. Use Simms layaway 14 00 Sale ARGUS Slide Proj'ectors Reg. $74.50 Ar-g u s outomatic 545 model. 500 wotts. $1 Holds in Loyoway R((. III4.M Eleeira- Here it Your Onte-o-Yeor Opportunity to Sov Model 80 ond 95 a Tour Cboico M of Eilher Model. 'Si Gnnuian Polaroid Only 2 Model 80 cameras left, 2',2*. . _ •-minute. Only 3 model 95_cameras left size. Demonstrator or Used Models Here is Your Once-u-Yeor Opportunity to Sove Takes the Place of a 4-Bulb Barlite Sylvania ‘SUN-GUN’ Exactly At Shown — Reg. $24.95 Newest model—replaces bulky 4-bulb barlites — gM same powerful brilliance S for perfect indoor pic- I fures. ■ Sun-Cun Carry CaM 3.88 Hete is Your Once 0 Year Opportunity to Sove 49.7 Loyoway 79” kA 100 Study Outer Space With This Deluxe 2.4 Inch, 127 Power Tripod TELESCOPE 24” Ptec. - 77 > and in a power Dual knob micro ’ jyUAAA/UTTL CAMERAS —Main rioet AHENTION LADIES! -at SIMMS you buy newest *5.95 to *10.98 Dresses now for ONLY- TONITE and SkTOHtAY Big Deal DISCOUNTS Sale of Electric Razors SUNBEAM or SCHICK AOS LADY'S SHAVERS || Valoe. u tir .'Mi V $21.50 Lady Sunbeam 4A95 ELEGANCE 1 Wllb reller bead S3I.50 SCHICK. HOME and TRAVEL .1 .peed raaor $35.95 REMINGTON ELECTRONIC $19.95 Lady Ram. 4A95 ELECTRIC RAZOR IA XdlaaUble head Make Your Electric Razor Like Mew With Eactory Replacement Heads and Cutters. om NORELCO Head and Gaiter Megalar S2M Value—Back mm Single head and cutter tor Norelco ■ ■ bhavers. Norelcos usa 2 heads ■ (2 Haad Seta $3.50) | Haad ••••••••••••a# eaeaeaeeaea^a •#######••#•••• SUNBEIM Bant Comb t Cotter 2” and M _ _ .... — ----- With Brad and Cuttcra. *****••••••••••••••aeeeooe••••••••••••••••• Holds Any Make Electric Razor ‘Zippy’ SHAVER CRADLE ni CORD HOLDER 33 Meg. $1.49 Seller As shown—keeps shaver and fcofd neat ynd handla. Cradle face has a mirror. 1 L F r i dgys-So tu rdqys and Mondays We Bought 3000 Pain of FIRST QUALITY Footweor to Bring Prices D-O-W-N As Ona of Michigan's largest shoe Outlets we can demand prica cWi-cassions . . . and yve ALW/QTS pass tha savings on to our esa-fomers. Over a Dozen Mew Styles m ENDICOTT-JOHNSON. Children's Footwear All FIRST Quolity— -All Popular Stylod All Sisaa—8Vi to 12—12 Vi to 9 Genuine leather uppers, long Wearing composition soles, rubber heels. StylM for dress-up and school wear. -JOHNSON UNCONDITIONAL GUARANTEED—1stQuol. Boys' and Girls' Deluxe Styles —Originol to $4.98— • Gum Drops # Boys Oxfords e Cho-Chos e Loafer* e Sondols e Flats Sizes 8': to 12—I2V2 to 3, narrow widths included Over a dozen new styles. sluxe S 2 98 ONE BIG LOT — 8 Popular Styles Big-Boys' OXFORDS Guoronteed FIRST Quality Values 098 to $5.95 ^ Siiet 2Vi to 6 Loafers, Velcto, Tie Oxfords, etc Black and brown leather uppers. Men's ond Young Men's Loafers and Oxfords Dress and Casual Styles Sizes 6 to 12-barni complete ranges ii style. LONDON SQUARE" ond OliMn Joys’. S6JW Oxfords 4« MEN'S ond YOUNG MEN'S "London Squoro" ond "Mostor" ■by ENDICOTT JOHMSOM Points ond Looftr Stylos Rcgula, $H.95 Regular and ^est lallar’ atyles In browns and black. Daluxa leather ' uppers, composition tolet. Over 98 N. SAGINAW ST. SHOSS-BoMmmt FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. JA?^UARY 27, 1961 Fifth Chapter . , , Michigan's Vital Role in Civil War Jackson Man in Southern Prison Confides Hopes, Fears to His Diary II w*t.) came a change in treatment byi Ilia captors. No longer were the prisoners al-| lowed to have visitors and to purchase food and drink from local! merchants. The diary entry of By DR. PHILIP MASON Arcldvtot. Wayne State University William H. Withington W,- training at Fort Wayne in Detroit, the iTgimenI left for Washington, Wt byjhe township and the IV-D.C, for duty around the capital ''•"“'•‘'“'ring Co. city. EAGER FOR BAITI.E Dixie Highway, $1*2,112. The Dostal Foundry Co. was assessed at $201,600. The soldiers of the .Michigan * * regiment were eager for battle— * after all. they had only three, 'T*''’ ''idUstries stale equalization months to defeat the South. The W.1,53,008 represents 6.45 [xr Wsl skirmish came on May 24 < *•"' •>' Ihe lolal stale equalized when the regiment took possession Waterford Township, of Alexandria, Va. It wasn't untih'^'bich is $93,023,342. the Battle of Bull Run or Manasses, ------ in July. 1861, however, that the » . , jy. , .Michigan regiment was baptized /iViCflOrS I JllCi in battle. i The men fought with dlstinc ^ tiQSlGT tO tion under (k>l. Oriando B. Will frs Prppu/rrv eox. but the Inhrn forees were tO f leeWUy no maleh that day lor If federate*. The battle end rout at the Union Aniiy. defiignated to rail attention Pontiac aeeompliahment* during annual banquet of the Pontiac | the centennial obaervatlon. f Area Chamber of Commene pti Elks Temple Wednesday, | Toastmaster for the evening wUlj Another feature will be a talk onllv Howard M. Nelson, new second' the prevention of juvenile delin-jvice president of the chamber. | qurncy by Dr. (art S. Winter, Oakt Officers to be installed are Danal Purk^IIL clergyman who headed p pirsident;- Carl D. the Muhjgan State Crime '^om-.^ president; Nel- m.ssion under (,0V !■ rank D, F.U-,^„, j. Hathaway, secre-| tary: and Gaylord L. Harrington, More than KHt iktsoiis are ex- treasurer. (k-l. 7. “Tuttle of 4lh Miehigan released from three or four daya sotitary confinement in the daiY magaxine for refusal to work.” In addition to comments about the ill treatment he and his fellow officers received as prisoners, the diary reveals how often Capt. Withington thought about his wife back home in Jackson. He was immediately concerned when he learned that he had been reported "killed in action" ! She was on his mind constantly! i while a prisoner. On the 21st dayi of September he wrote: As the rumors spread about a for on Jaa 30, 1862, he was possible exchange of prisoners between the North and South, Capt. Withii^on turned his attention to thoughts of home. On Oct. 4, he wrote: “I spend a couple of boars every pleasant night upon the ramparts. At snch time my thought* Inexitably turn homeward and dwell upon the loved one* there. Oh my darling noble wife, what bliss is In store for me on my return — when?” Withington's hopes were fulfilled, changed and returned to JackMn. August 1862 he returned to Army life as colond of the 17th Michigan Infantry. Later he was breveted brigadier general in the U.S. Vtdunteers for conspicuous gallantry at the battle of South Mountain, Md., Sept. 14. 1862. Withington died at Jackson June 27, 1903. The diary of Capt. Withington is I the custody of the Detroit Historical Museum. The main collcc- Oct. 18. "A miserable night. The rain had driven in the mosquitoes SO CONCERNED "While picking up sea shells I am constantly thinking of Julia.! She loves them. I see her now on! tibn of Withington Qvil War letters Oct. 11. "My happiest momentslare in the University of Michigan are in thinking of my Julia. Noble, Historical Collections in Ann Arbor, true loving wife that thou art. My ★ * * priceless treasure. Can I ever! Next Installment: The Upper speak a harsh word to her again!* Peninsula and the CIvU War. LAN.SING (UPII—Airplane pilots are among those who bcnefii from now interstate freeways, state The 1st Michigan suffered heavy|highway officials report. casualtiM in the battle and manyl rhe divided highways provide a o its officers were captured. Capt. feature easily distinguishable from Withington was taken prisoner by ,he air, said Highway Commission-the Confederates while asslstinglpr John c Mackic. his wounded commander, Col. ^ Willcox. Mackle said the new hlghwayi Although stripped of his belongings. he did keep his pocket diary and in the following weeks and months he recorded his daily experiences. already lielng used guides for planes. A shcriTrs deputy near Kalama-Kio recently noticed a twin-engine plane drop to within 25 feet of the The size of the diary — f h r e e Interstate 94 freeway, aPliarently' Inches by *ix inches — limited the;in an attempt to read the route! entries, but even his brief com-1 markers for guides, he said, ments reveal vivid accounts ofj Special Record Orders Taken Upon Request _ _ ^ Q, Genter —_ *^81 S.SAGINAW • • • PONTIAC ) Hi-Fi ’Srefieo • musical /Nsri^uMLNrs • Qecocos ( pdUlnivujO "(961 lO-BOY COMSOIE Wit/ LESS ALLOWANCE FOR 22'' YOUR PRESENT TV with SWIVEL BASE TV NO MONEY DOWN GOOD HOUMEPING of PONTIAC 51 West Huron Street FE 4-1555 life in a Confederate prison camp. The entry of Sunday, July 21, 1861, describes his capture: DIARY TELES IT "BattV^ Manasses. UmUu arm*: at 2 o'clock. Started at 4 for Mana.s.scs. Defeated and taken prison with Col. Willcox while helping him off the field. Taken to Lewis House." July 22. "A day of horror*. The groans of the wounded resound through the house day and night. Assisted In bringing In the YOU SAVE P' TO 60% ON QUALITY niMUTURE LEWIS MID-WINTEFSALE July 22. "Numerous callers. Went over the baltlelicld, .Scene of horrors. Visited the hospitals and found Michigan men.” July 29. "Hard btead for fare. 1 will never complain of Julia's fable again if I reach home" (Julia was his wiic.i July 2!t. “Time liangs heavily. The colonel could be taken to Richmond but they Hunk it unsafe to, move Capt. Ricketts yet. 1 am anxious to lie uU. Aug. 2. "Alter a most tedious Journey, arrived at Ricliinond at half-past SIX. Thirty wounded, soldiers in same train. Taken to| gen«'ral hospital. The .Sisters gave up a good supjNT ' Aug. 7. "Lt. .Mauch had his leg amputati-d. Sat up with him.” Aug. 9. "I'lsir ,Mauch died at 9 43 pm. Wrote his wife Aug. 1$. "Lt. Thomas r picture window or cocktail table with .slatted decorative mirror. • Autumn Ton Mahogany, Wos $297.50 $192 A big ^ savlnt on a very attracUve group. Storage headboard with large dresser and cheat. * 5 Feet Sofa—Rubber Cushion, Wos $159.00 -----r.--.ww..................................$109.00 Sy. covered ** Turquoise Aug. 18, ''Ciipl Klisha N Jones, 4th .Maine, died this aiternoon Fi\f patients died today 1 look out on tlie burying ground and see coffins piled one ujain aiiotlicr " Aug 20. ■■Head Dickens' Perils of Knglish Piisoners. Chess with t ape .lenkins and the colonel Talher llutx rt lallcd to see ('apt Hickcit-. A kindlicarti'd and c\ ccljeni man, u-iy dcmoiiMi alive in bts- affeeiKm Kissed the cap-, tain. Calleii again in the allei 1 and bioughi pniries, brandy. • Group of Pictures—Big Selection ’/3 Off • A Complete Group, Wos $254 $188 • Troditionol Lounge Chairs, Were $99.50 $59.50 So^S^** ““ CNolCft o’ lime, men or beige. Foam trartlvfly framed for tradl- • $69.50 Chest of Many Uses $39.75 Adaptable for hall con.sqle c * French Provinciol in Fruitwood, ^ Wos $318.50 $269.50 • Plostic Fireside Choirs, Were $39.95. . $28.95 TOp!IS)s®2‘S‘" •‘I'Mt end 1 in beige. ^ • Smort Contemporary Chairs, Wos $79 $39 am‘’«p*s.’'“"* cushions. ALL CO-RELATED GROUPS-DECLARATION OY DREXEL, AMERICAN SQUARE-DECORUM BY FOUNDERS-10% DISCOUNT! ja-af hes, I Aug. 24. Judge Morgan of. l>iui*iana called and in tlie afti r n*»on *«-nt three bottl<-s ea”Patrlots from the British let the law of supply and demuid ®“‘ apparently our supremacy take effect gradually. Subsidies mid ““ ’"“"'y ‘^e topmost level. David Lawrence Says: controls were ..Imply to help the 8cneral aver- Voice of the People: *Eaeh Ameriam Liable for Self and Neighbor' This is yot^country and it will only be as good as you make It As an American you are respoosible for youra^ and your neighbors. It Is your responsibility to'see that your home and your family are the best. Get your neighbors to help each other better your conununity. God gave us the best rules for this game ol life. Let’s put them faito use. Peace cannot be. conquered, it must be created. Just a Bit Out of Place farmer in rough times and not to be a permanent fixture. But Congress, under pressure from farm politicians, didn’t see it that way. Mr. Benson did have some success in the soil conservation program and in surplus food disposal to needy countries. ’There are about 28 million acres in the reserve now and the net Federal saving because of reduced farm price support payments is figured at $;I00 million a year. “Four-fifth.s of agriculture is now freed of controls and is in pretty good balance," says the former secretary. ★ ★ ★ It is thought that any new Democratic farm program will be along simitar lines but under a different name. Conservation has helped toward a. balanced, stabilized farm economy by putting land not now needed for crops Into some other good use. NeViertheless, our Government’s Investment In surplus and carry-over stocks is over a result of last year’s bumper crop on the smallest acreage Jn 40 years. Sec. Freeman will have the same problems to deal with as had Mr. Benson, the same pressures and the same Congressmen. Optimis-tically, the new secretary has outlined a policy to include “programs that will assure the efficient-American family farm the opportunity to achieve parity of income without exploiting either consumers or taxpayers.” ★ ★ ★ age, we take a back seat. ★ ★ ★ Boys and girls, away to the gyms, the play fields and the sports of childhood. Perhaps you’re too TV addicted. Perhaps you ride too often instead of walking. Must this continue? The Man About Town ----- Few More Firsts Sugprested by the Readers of This Column; Thanks Mouth: The egoUfit's trap, grocer’a friend, fool’i bait, orator’a pride, dentist'! gold mine, alcoholic's obituary and brain’s expose. From Royal Oak, written by that perennial booster. Arthur Plumrose, comes the query: "Why haven't you told the world that Oakland County has within its borders the finest zoo in Michigan, billion as which our state's largest city had to go Did JFK Make a Deal for fliers? WA.SHINGTON — What ransom "Q. Does that mean, sir. that The inference is clear that price did the Un^ States govern- they accepted a reassurance of whether the commitment not to -ment pay the Soviet government no more overflights as an ex- ^ ' to effect the re- change? ^2 flighU was given in a lease of the two ♦ w ★ conversation at Moscow by Am- fliers from the m ; "A. It is a fact that I have bassador Thompson during the last RB47 who were ordered that the flights not be kidnaped on the resumed, which Is a continuation . high seas and of the order given by President fliers, the Soviets held for seven Eisenhower In May ol last year." Ihemkelves took the two to be - mon 1 h g- - witheut-^^J^^B^K This-leaves, unanswered exactly being permltted^H^H^'fl how and why and when the pledge "' to communicategiven to the Soviet Union that with their own^H JK no more U2 overflights would be government? authorized, this country makeHHHHi^H ★ w e any concessions to LAWRENCE For one thing. Mr. Kennedy the Soviets, and, if so. Just what made it clear at the newt con-! they? Some senators are ask- Compliments Flow for New First Lady I wanted Pat Nixon to be our new First Lady, but I'll have to admit Jackie Kennedy has added a lot of sparkle to the national scene. Her youth, beauty and intelligence will make Washington functions much gayer, and a baby in the- White House wrili be great fun, too. I hope she has a couple more while she’s there. (When my husband saw this letter, he said, "Better Include one lambasting Jack Kennedy. We don’t want to get too carried away.” But that can wait until later.) Republican Appeals for Prayer for Administrators Rulers, presidents and governors are not a terror to good works but to the evil. Can we truly believe that this will also be true of Kennedy and Swainson? I appeal to every Christian to pray to God, to speak to both the president and governor an^ bring them nearer to God to do God’s will. John Hillman Waterford ‘People Should Live by (^’s Laws* Most of us hope to live to be a hundred years old, but this is a short time compared to eternity OneWknlsTrytiw Says Many Schools Want Federal Aid The editorial crlUdzing Sen. McNamara seemed unfair and un-informed saying "Michigan doesn't want this bill" covers a iot of territory. * ★ * There are thousands af teachers, school administrators, PTA heads, school board members and parents who have been srork-lag for federal bM. Many MI e h I g a a school sya-terns receive federal aid la sense form mad have been. Poatlae schools receive federal aid aonr. They welcomed It, ★ ★ ★ Sen. McNamaca knows a good deal about the needs of education. • Michigan receives children from all over the United States. Often they come from areas where educational opportunity is far below ours. Interested in Edneatlon Ing these questions. ★ * * As one studies the transcript of President Kennedy's first news conference, it Is apparent that the administration here has not given to the American people the whole story of just what happened in the exchanges of messages between Moscow and Washington in the last few days. One of the newsmen asked this question: * A ★ "Mr. President, can you tell i ference that the shooting down of mitment was announced by Presi-the RB47 was in an entirely dif- Kennedy that there would be ferent category from the U2 Incl- "<> more U2 overflights. (Copyright, INI) Dr, William Brady Says: \ Mother Likes the Idea of Having Baby at Home God bas laid down a few simple laws for us to live by. If we live by these laws we will be In a better shape to meet our future life and If It develops that there Is no future life we will have been happier while here on earth. , . ____If enough people lived by God's lease of the RB47 fliers, laws we could make a paradise " right here on earth and there would not be the utter confusion that exists today. Why don’t you give it a trial and be happy? Ralph T. Keeling It may well be argued whether the United States was party to a "deal." but the plain facts are that, simultaneously with the The Almanac By United Press latematloaal Today is Friday, Jan. 27, the 27th day of the year, with 338 more in 1961. The moon is approaching its full phase. The evening stars are Venus and Mars. On this day in history: In 1756, Austrian composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was " bom. Tn 1832. English clergyman and mathematician Charles Dodgson was bom. Under the name ol Lewis Carroll he wrote "Alice in Wonderland." In lte9, American labor leader Samuel Gompers was bom. In 1880. Thomas Alva Edison received a patent for an electric incandescent lamp. In 1885, American composer Jerome Kera was bom. Thought for today: American politician John James- Ingalls said: "The purification of politics is an Iridescent dream." Portraits Smiles outside the llmlU of its own county to «omelhing about what your role In the same vein, a phone call from Mrs. Beverly HInchfleld of Birmingham points out that her former home city of Flint has been endeavoring for many years to help Its Genesee County establl.sh a zoo, with no success, when Oakland County already has within Its area one of the world’s leading zoos. "You’re always looking for another Oakland County first," writes "One of This Large Number," That’s the Ideal goal but how to ^ you’ve missed. More fishing through the Ire is done every winter on Oakland County lakes than in any othej county In Michigan and perhap.s in the entire jiatlon " reach It Is the problem. Robert Kennedy WiR Attack Top Shysters waa. if you had one, in the lease of these fliers? Did this come about as a consequence of some action you took?" Mr. Kennedy did not answer the question. He simply said that "this matter has been under discussion” by the American ambassador in Moscow and Soviet authorities. AAA The reporters asked the President this question: "In consequence of Mr. Khrushchev’s apparent indication last week of a willingness to release the American fliers, have you sent any communication to him through Ambassador Thompson or other- Mr. Kennedy's answer was: "We have had several exchanges with the .Soviet authorities. I do not believe that one has taken place since the release of the "I went to one doctor for our first four children and could never get permission for my husband to be in the delivery room," writes a Minnesota reader. “When our fifth child was on the way we decided to have a different doctor When I asked him for permission for my husband to be with me in the de- infected with whatever any of the other babies happened to have. Indeed, that is the reason why 20th century hospitals are abandoning the practice of crowding babies together in the show win- dreamed* How niirw.ru I____i-______u ®re"n«l By JOHN C. MKTCAI.FK I offered you my trusting heart . . . That we would life enjoy . . . And hoped that I would be your girl . . . And you my special boy . . . Our many friends accepted us ... As sweethearts young and gay . . . And I had thought that through the years ... We would remain this way . . . You wore to me the knight of old ... So loyal and so kind ... I never Don’t blow up when a tire does. The opinions of those with you may be much harder to change. AAA A lot of giris don’t discover that randy la also sold Jby tho bag until they get married. AAA All Broadway shows are a gamble. says a producer. Those that win do so on a full house. dow nursery and keeping each baby practically Isolated, in a bassinet or crib ^side the mother's Slfiwd iMttN. aol more Uito oo« P«S» or IM word! long pertalnlni to porwn.1 hetIUi and hAnno. not dl” »•••, ^agnoolt, or treotbont. will bo •tampo^oelf-addreiiod onrclopo !■ sont to Tho Pontiac Prou. Pontiac, Ulebitan. (CM»yright INI) the day would come . THOUGHTS FOR TODAY The people of Israel walked In all the alna which Jeroboam did; they did not depart from them.— n Kings 17:R. A A A Never let man imagine that he can pursue a good end by evil means, without sinning against liis livery room he said, ‘Sure, he can help if he wants to!’ Both i doctors practice in the same hos- CaS6 ReCOrds Of E Psychologist: When you might change your mind ... I do not know what Intervened ... 'TO bring about the end . . . Unless it is that you have found . . . Another trusting friend . . . But, darling, if it is to be .. . That we must stay apart ... Please smile at me in passing by owti soul! Any other issue Ja . . . To ease my broken heart. doubtful; the evil effect on himself (Copyright, INI) is certain-Robert Southey. An Interesting note comes from . Attorney General Robert F. Ken- Roger Ramsole NEDY apparently intends to "wage an Milford, who says: "Regarding your all opt war on vice overlord.s. gang- Td tfkrn^^\er a^^^ sters and union racketeers. This word comes from Washington, ir ir it To quote the Di.hlrict of Colum-l)ia hiory further: “Young Ken-nedy will fcK-gs on cawew of real Ohio System which ha.s 35 miles of main line track In Oakland County, you failed to say that if the merger takes place It would make us a part of the first railroad to be opened for traffic in the United States. " The B&O started in 1830, the first In the nation. I-aler in (he news conference, Jl«u:e-jvas--a_Juriher jMlloQuy. on this subject: "Q. Did the Russians ask any quid pro quo or did we make any concessions to them in exchange for the release of these fliers? If not, how do you account for this remarkable lumabout in their re-lalioni with us? importance," instead of compiling an “impreshive" record^ of-many,— many ronvictiona that center around the small fry. ★ ★ ★ It Is my privilege to be an ob-antics of a nuthatch that has been house-lamed, and shows such marvelous bird sense and appreciation that it will be my top itory in a few days. It already Is making Audubon hiatory. "A. The statement which I have made Is a statement which the United States government put forward-on this matter. which Lread-to you earlier In regard to over- Joyed it. flights. 1 would not attempt to make a judgment as to why Soviet Union chose to release them at this time. I did say In pilal. "When I knew the baby was coming I was in no hurry to get to the hospital. I wasn't worried. My husband would take care of “FIntll.v we wiBilrd loo long and Hie baby was born at home. Didn’t rail iny doctor berause he had been III shortly brforr. t ailed one that Uvea eloae by. He did what was nereanary and then arranged for admiaalon lo the hoapltal—thla was brraliar of trouble with iiiy Irga. "They wouldn’t take the baby in the nursery because the baby was l)om outside the hospital." (That was, of course, to protect other bailies in the nursery from infec-tton.’l "They put the baby in the room Conversation Formula Valuable The H-E-L-P ’ formula may -"H” stands for "Hobbies." so be of more immediate value to gracefully probe into’your escort’s 0 dating teen-ager than a year childhood to see if he was a Bov ^ for raanoB fodtil^ at Instead, ask It U. S. Senalora ahottid be Hmited lo two lerma, as the President Is. or If iS-year- time to zoom your rating as "date bait" with that famous formula, so send for it. After memorizing it, then pass H around among your classmates, too. match pads and bottle caps. that age. Von ran Insert some of your own hobbles lo match his and really gel quite chummy. Rut he a good llalener and laugh freely to Inflate hla Does he think we should draft boys in peace, when England and "If we have another baby we ll plan on having it at home! "This was a wonderful experi- The nation will soundly applaud any move to concentrate on the top shysters. Let the camp followers fall where they may. Kennedy has shown a genuine hatred for the undei-world denizens and early Indications suggest he proposes to give them the full mRtens and smudge pot. " treatment. More power to him. my •Utement to Mr. Arr^Uh some of our friends tho^ht fenrilcr in th* nrM« mnfMwnrw) . . "We heard you were coming to Florida," says a post card from Mr. and Mrs. William 8. Nugent of Lake Orion, now at Palm Beach. Tliey advise: "Bring a heavy overcoat, electric (earlier in the press conference) that this had removed a serious obstacle in the way of peaceful relations between the Soviet Union and the United States, and I wquid judge that they desire to remove that serious obstacle. The Country Parson By DR. GEORGE W. CRANK CASE G-489: Helen H. aged 17, is a pretty college coed__ "But. Dr. Crane." she said. "I am miserable because I am so tongue-tied when on a dale. "Boys often ask me to go with them to a movie or a iports event, but after I mention the weather and our basketball team's last| game, I am formula. ' ^ meS.inrm mywif ’’E" indicates ’’Entertainment. lieanly queens to captivate a boy friend. I Just inflate his ego. for every-» body has this famous motto tat- ___foo^^acrqss his cheat—"I Want to Feel iinportant,”--------r:__: Your laughter at his Jokes wins him far quicker than all your rouge and lipstick, a new hairdo and nail polish! But don’t omit the latter, in reason. If conversation about hobbies '* n’t build up enough momen- others are cutting out their con-scription? You win find that 30 minutes of Verbal Orchids to- Mr. and Mrs. Horner Wolcott of Sylvan Lake; Mth wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Kerr Our American Asaociatlon lor "Miaa an- Health, Physical Education and Kec- Mrs. Augustine Browne reation has a jawbreaking name and Waterford; sand birthday. British Outclass Our Youth in Athletics ltd current pronouncement is a bit ^ath-taking. It says our young people are gel-ting aoft and flabby in comparison .Mr. and Mrs. Abner Gundry of Birmingham; 51st wedding anniversary. Charles Cross of Clarkston; S7at birtliday. it was really something—everyone goes to the hospital to have a baby, they said. When I told them I'd do It that way again I guess they thought I was crazy. "But it was a wonderful feeling to be together when our baby was born. Certainly we'll have the — ________... . . ______ next one, if there is another, at third time within an hourrit”ls the'^stand'aM ^ ® stamped return envelope, pliM ' Sinceroly mljT‘ Sincerely, m^ ;frakl to go out anymore. likewise covers square dancing. !.» .f?® practice on the "H-E-L-P" formula will work wonders on your very next date, as Helen proved. Sehd for the “Formula For Interesting Conversation," enclosing Mrs.---------------"It is possible to become a good A man's place is right there conversationalist in a hurry, for I Home Is the best place to have a baby—and the safest. The boapllal ta which the reader went after the baby was born la r\identl.v a alneteentli lenlury Instllullon. complete wllb star chamber delivery H E L-P, H E LP "Help, help," U the (eeUng of ________ Helen an^i millions of other young ‘f he ever used comic books folks in the same boat *“ • swimming, and other sports. And this one category is general- .... ly good enough td handle a long evenlng. If not, then ahlft to ”L.’’ meaning "Uterature.’’ Stick to common experiences and eneloilnt a loni 4e ilemped, '•a •n»»lop« od ase to eo»»r eoiU whOB TOO stiMl >rcbolo|]«ai chorta oad p»m- (Copyright INI) "It always seems lo be easier le be sorry for sonrethlai we’vo doao lhaa It traa ant N da It.’’ This mother didn't mention it, but she should be glad for her baby’s aake that the hospital ex-rlu(M her baby from the nursery —where the baby might easily ba So me that verV word “H K I.J*” as a meaas oKhaa-dtlng yoar ronversallanal drob-lemo. j ^ After yoa have rah short of ammimllloa. following yoar dls-rusulon of Ike weather and the ■ebool team's last game, then aa ♦’H*' la your magle in high school as the basis for English themes or book reviews. See which romics in this newspaper he likes best and which he Seldom reads. Ask about Tom Sawypr. Does he think Shakespeare could tell any of his writings if he were alive today? Finally, use "P," meaning "Politics," but don't get Into a heated argument.' Ihli n«*ipoprr u wrll si ill AP niwi riliDitchii. esrrUr'* Mtllrd 10 Ook'ltnd. OoonXVLW^nt^ Mm MiromS. LopMr and WiiC-trniw Countiri u l» til OS ■ rror -Iwwhtrs Ip Mirhtxan and til othrr .U th» OnlUd atitM m 40 t Wtr AU oitH (uStrriBiltat payable L. b#»n Mid u. iv* ''**• tewflAi. Mirhista. Htmbor of aao. Ships Patrol in PacifiV THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. JAM ARV >7. 1961 seven Will Reds Send Up Two Men? WASHDslGTON (AP»-The viet Union's next space spectacu-Iv co«M be to put two men into orbit, both in the same big capsule. She would not only seize the prize of being first in human space flight — two men would trump even moi-e the U.S. program to put one astronaut into orbit. ♦ * * Four Soviet range ships patrolling the Pacific ocean for the last week in the target area used tor Smoke Suffocates Girl in Warren Home Living Costs Up Tenth of Per Cent in December Washington ^-Living costs!'*’- some of the Soviet missile firings .indicate Moscow is on the verge of trying another space shoot. There is much specuiation this might be a spacecraft carrying a man, rather than a collection of animals. The possibility the Soviets might send tip two men at once is reasonable speculation, a U.S. space official said informally. The Soviet have the capability of a big booster rocket and large capsule, he said. And "solving the problems of re-entry and life support is no harder for two men 1 bedroom HoncI fire at girl friend's Warren home where she was an overnight guest. edged to another m-ord high De<-ember. If was the 10th in-jcivase in 11 months. ^ The l^abor Department i-epoiied * * 'wiay its con.sumers price inde.x •ihe girl, .laiwt James, appar- jiwse one-tenth of one per cent entl.v became confused in the between November and December, strange bedroom and could not .This put the index at 127 5. The find her way, firemen said. l9kl7-49 average level is the ba.se Others In the household, in- of 100 used in the index, eluding Janel’s friend Nancy I Higher food prices and shelter riagg, IJ.^esca^d. ^ [costs contributed most to the In- * [crease between November and De- Many space and iwkpt cxperLs think the race to put a man in [space is almost sure to go to the .Soviets. The Soviets long have had much more powerful booster’ rockets. To Honor Commissioner City Commissioner Milton R. Henry, scheduled to leave Pontiac sooh for Ghana, Africa, to organize a business for housing de-veliSiiment, will be honored Janet, trapped In the liedroom, cember. Hlls^fuilVaJr^n' “ ^ ® beginning at"rp.^m. &t“ Hospital in Warren. cent above the level a .year earlier, lurday at Trinity Baptist Church. [Junk Office Slayings Suspecf Is Charged DKTKOrr (I’PI) -- DeMt Jl^ Old Classmates iHeniy Withdraws Reunited by Head-On Crash today annonneeiFttiey lave charged WilHam Delk. 23. High land Park, with first degree murder in the ala.vings of Junk dealer Abrahim Siegel, 7*. and his secretary, Mrs. Dolores Pfetxing, 32. * * * Police said Delk’s accomplice in the robbery-slaying had ^ven them a full statement detailing how Delk had killed Siegel and the woman Iasi Nov. IS in fUe-gel's office. ★ * ★ They did not reveal the name of the aeromplb-e who will be a slate’s wHness.. against Delk. Roth Delk and the aci-ompllce have been held in the Wayne County Jail for some lime un other charges and the a<-c»m- plice told of the Siegel-Pfetzing sla.vings Thursday. poNee said. [Profest fo Jury Two -hiTa doctors who attendwl:.. Attorney Milton R. Henry today .Withdrew his motion requesting' M Circuit Ju^e H. Russel Holland m a hiad-I^s . to dismiss the present 73-member „ in Avon township. jrepresentative of the country's lo- ^h^ were rushed by ambulance tab population. to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital where they were treated by another for^ mer classmate. Dr. Robert Poole, staff surgeon. One vlellm. Dr. Merle Childers, 41, of 1337 Shenandoah St., Kochester was reported in satisfactory eondltlon today with facial Injuries. The other. Dr. Mw tot mont to sheriff how the accident occurred. Both were on their way home at the Navy Snips Collide ‘‘i"® crash. ....... ' They and Dr. Poole attended NORFOLK. Va. (UPD — Themedical school at Wayne State aircraft carrier Essex and the de- University in Detroit from 1949 to slroyer Murray collided at sea dur- ’M. ing a refueling exercise about 250. __________________ miles off Cape Hatteras, N.C..| Desertion is grounds for divorce' early Thursday, the Navy reported.4n all states except North Carolina' There were no casualties. and Ohio. Henry gave no reason. Because of the delay in acting on the pending motion, the prosecutor's office said that Henry's client, accused bad check passer Frank M. Zletek. 38. of ‘20 S. Pad-dock St., would not stand trial until the March jury term. ......... ............... ! It was at the start of Ziefek's Koltonow, M of ISlSl Tes- a $123 check that lie SI.. Oak Park, was released H^nry made his motion, from the hospital following treatment. Neither Dr. Childers nor Dr, Koltonow had .vet made a .siale-depuli FOR REI\T FLOOR SANDERS Floor Polishors Open Evenings 'til 8 Boadway-Shell Hdw. 650 Auburn Ava. FE 2-6506 Plan If of Fra# Parkin gr The ABINGTON Model 211-CD-86 • 21" Tube (Overall Diameter) • 260 Sq. In. Viewable Picture • New Super-Pawer Chassis • New RCA Lang-Range Tuner SWEETS RADIO and APPLIANCE 422 West Huron Street FE 4-1133 FREE PARKING Bejmeyis ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY! HURRY! HURRY! HURRY! GET HERE TOMORROW UST 3 DAYS OF PENNEY’S GREAT aEARANCE EVENT HVENTOIflaflUtllNCE SENSATIONAL JANUARY SAVINGS ON BOYS’ WINTER JACKETS! $ 7 and BOYS' SIZES • COTTON SHEENS •QUILTED PARKAS •PILE LININGS •KNIT COLLAR and CUFFS •FINEST DETAILS TREMENDOUS VALUE ON MEN^S WINTER JACKETS *9and‘12 MEN'S SIZES • POPULAR STYLES •COTTON CORDS •COTTON SHEENS •PILE LINED • QUILT LINED MEN’S TOPCOATS Mcn’.s fine (jiialit.v lopcoal.s. Sep Ijcautiful styles, 100'< wools, many with zip out lininjf.s, bal raglan sleeves, ronliiieiital styles. Greys, browns, olives — hurry in for these. Men's sizes. 22 GIRLS’ SKIRTS Girls’ skirts. See washable wool, plaids, solids, some pleated and some plain. All reduced to clear. Girl’s sizes 3 to 6x •nd 7 to 14. 1 88 MEN’S FLANNEL SHIRTS Stay warm with these cotton flannelette shirts. Fine a.ssort-ment. Barrel cuffs, sanforized, jiermanent stays. Single jiock-et. Long wearing and they’re good looking too. Men’s sizes. $1 GIRLS’ CUDDLE CAPS Girls' tuddle caps of 100% hi-bulk orlon acrylic several different styles and beautiful colors. Washable. Styles for all ages. 33‘ Women’s Cotton Flannel P.J. Women's eotloii flannel gown.s, and pa .jamas. Keep warm the rest of the winter with the.se. Floral prints and pastel colors. Sanforized and long wearing. Women’s sizes. 1 44 Girls’ GLOVES and MITTENS \Fine selection of girls’ wool gloves and orlon acrylic mittene. Keep their hands warm the remaining part of this winter. 44« GIRLS’ BULKY SWEATERS Gills’ bulky knit sweaters made fi'iim orlon acrylic. ( ardigans and some iiulloN’ei's. Ucantiful e»»lois. Keel, blue, white, and otive. Sizes-to 6x and 7 to M. I Hl*r« 2« 3-0 Now 1791>0 SOUD MAPIX BEOS 'Twin or full size with extra heavy |M)*u and wood rails Reg 42.50 Now 24-50 MODERN TABLES — Step, end and rocklall with plastic top. Blond flnlah, cash and carry. Reg 2450. Now 8 05. TRUNDLE BUNK BED — Solid maple with solid end lianels. Reg 60 50. Now 3050. KELVINATOR DRYER 19,59 model brand new electric Reg 189 05 Now 125 00 PUI.L DOWN LAMPS bv Mghl/iller with plastic sliadr Reg 27 85 Now 12 85 SOUD WALNUT HUTCH by Kruehlcr with base and top, 54 ’ size Reg. 238-50. Now 140.50 SWIVEL ROCKER.S , Plastic irm* with frieze segKaiid back. Ctmie.e of colors lU'g , 79.50 Now 4950 MAPLE CHEST—Solid maple 3 drawer chest 30" wide Keg .59.50 Now 39-50 7-PC DINETTE by Daystrom with ext. table and 6 chairs Reg. U9A0 HOW 78-50. HOLLYWeXJD BED. Complete, twin alze by Seaiy wltli plaatic headboard and metal fraine. box spring and mattreas. Reg. 80 60. Now 6050. 3-PC. CURVED 8ECTIONALB Top quality sectional* in the flne.st of covers. We have four to sell that liave been reduced by as much a* 50'i. ODD DINING ROOM CHAIRS — Your choice In lilond or dark flnlsiies. Reg. 1005 Now 1000. TERMS W bAY^ SAME AS CASH — 2 YEAR PAYMENTS S-G CIOSID WiMKSOAV WAREHOUSE FURNITURE SALES ,e s.9279 20 FRANKLIN RD. JUST OFF S. SAGINAW ST. Optn Mon., Fri. 'til 9:00—Tm«., Thuro., S«t. 'HI 5:B0 The two organizations merged . nl the convention of the nssorla-I which elosed yesterday In Murphy .)r.. clerk-register of deeds for Oakland in connection with a ring that po- |,j,g been named to the lice zaid set fires to collect division of the recently surance money. .consolidated Michigan Slate Asso- Leonard ZiskI, assistant Wayne elation of Supervisors ■-and Michi-County prosecutor, described the gan Institute of Local Government, person.* as belonging to "Arson, j He said they had collected some $130,000 in insurance on property which had been deliberately set afire since December 1959. Ziski said Burrell Mangrum, 34,1 The edu. ation division is lespon-of Detroit, was the leader of the information and publica- group. Mangrum and the others '''“le government, were named in warrants charging conspiracy to burn insured Prt>p- p|Q|f0f erty. The warrants charge eight, specific cases of arson. ' MIAMI. Ha. tfi—Richard I'av- The others anested included, ||rk, Deliiiont. N.H. oldster ae-Mrs. I-ois Chapman, 39. of Oak; rused of plotting to bloyv up Park. j President Kennedy at raliii Reach last Deersiiher, was or- Allege Czech Espionage ’ I Hospital BERN. .Swit/erlimd lUPli - Switzerland has lodged a "sharp; The faeio-scapulo-humeral form test" with Czerlioslovaklaiof muscular dystrophy commences! against alleged Czech espionage jin early adulthood and affects the in Swiss lerritoi-y, the government facial muscles, shoulders announced today, iuptjer arms. HARRISON’S GREATEST CARPET INVENTORY CLEARANCE-EVER- SAVINGS OF 30% to 70% Now 1n~frogress at Our Birmingham Store! 999 Hunter Blvd. Over 1,250 full rolls, part-rolls, roll ends, large remnant's, room size rugs of America's finest- broad-looms in the greatest markdown event history. in our Don’t Miss This Big Savings Opportunity! HAHRISON’S BIRMINGHAM 999 HUNTER BLVD. of Woodword TO BE GIVEN AWAY FREE! One Shetland Floortmith Rug Cleaner-Floor Polisher will be given away free at each of the Big 4 Hardware store* on Morgh 4th at 5 P.M. Just fill in the coupon and drop it off et any of the Big 4 Hardware Store*. You need not be present to win. Must be 18 yeor* or older. “ Cll» .n« T.k. ThU C.pM U The Shetland Flcxjrsmith Rug Cleaner - Floor Polisher scrubs, waxes, and buffs. Shonnpoos all your rugs automaticolly. Wox and polish oil your floors automatically! Scrubs oil your floors automaticolly SHETLAND POLISHER Address City Telephone No. ^fCORAXQ# JATEX RUVUELL UECURATURS LATEX INTERIUR 1UU Colors Plus Whit* ™ MU®* 4 BUCKLE Heavy Duty ARCTICS *5.44 RUBBER ZIPPER BOOTS ^3.99 PAINT TRAY and ROLLER 99* Complete 7" PAINT ROLLER COVERS 59‘ AU-PunrosE PAINT THINNER ST Sled Close-Out 25% off Pint Thermos' Reg. n.79 39 Thermal Underwear TUPS and BUTTUMS $099 Set 29 Annual Close*Out ICE SKATES Sole MEN'S FIGURE and HOCKEY LADIES' FIGURE - COUPON... RED HOODED ^5^ TRADE IN On Any Salable Used Ice Skates COUPON YOUR CHOICE INSULATED DACRON UNDERWEAR or ^ imsulated ROOTS Sweatshirt THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIPAY. JANUARY 27. 1961 NINE SOUTHIRN HOMIS Inc. MFO. OF inTTidiosAt Thit Spacioui2 BEDROOM HOME AVI CAN bE YOURS TQPAT! OTHIR RUNS AVAIURLi--► 24 X 32—2 BEDROOM HOMES 4r 24 X 40 or 24 X 44—3 BEDROOM HOMES 4r 24 X 48—4 BEDROOM HOMES ALSO AVA/lABtE—TR/.lEVEt FLANS VISIT OUR DISPLAY NOMI TODAY Robeit Braun. Midweit Homes Dealer 23421 Gitnweod Read Mt. Michigan Diiplay Located South of CratioN—off Metropolitan •each Highway—215S0 Nunnelley Rd., Mt. Clamant, Mich. FOR INFORMATION WRITE: SOUTHERN j HOMES IRC. ! Brx lOf, CliRriMfM. III. j I would like to mo ..oretl diiploy homo Q I * Do you ew* o lott* ,A.arw lOty- WHO WILL REIGN? — The first queen to be crowned at Michigan State University Oakland will be one of these 15 coeds. The winner will leign as snow queen at Saturday night’s "Snow Ball.^’ The ball is the final event of the 1961 MSUO Winter Carnival. The candidates, each nominated by a campus organization, are (front row. from left): Marilyn Bell, 19. 186 Liberty St.; Mary Hayward. 19. Royal Oak; Patty Ferrell, 20. Utica; Ardith Morris, 18, St. aair Shores; Sandra Van Cauwenberg. 18, St. Qair Shores. Center row (from left): Eva Zumwalt. 19. of 820 E. Auburn Rd., rmi Ph.t. Av-on Township; LindH^Hnywuutl. 18. Ml. Clpiiiens; Pal Parker, 20. of 3065 Ci-ook.s Rd., Avon Township; Barbara Garlit:k. 21, of 1205 Nakomis Dr., Onon Township: Rita Stanley. 19. of 2290 Rosewood Dr, Waterfoi-d Township. Last row (from left); Joan Gibb, 19, of 2893 Ctooley Lake Rd., W’hile Lake Township: Mary Puzerski, 19, of 571 E. Wattles St., Troy; Diana Broome, 18, Royal Oak; Dimmle Govenis, 19. 3.30 E. Pike St.; Marge Swoboda, 19, of 421 Taylor St., Avon Township. $8 Girls' Car Coots $12 Boys' Snow Soits 8.99 In 2nd State Police District Must G/Ve Details on Accidents ^ , receive instructions in preparation "of detniled accident reports nnd jP^il the photographing of accident I tljji f scenes. | j Analysts at Cornell I’nirersily i jA ^ will pour over the reports us part toML; of a nationwide program lH'gun;|» A^ I by the university in 1958. ■ For the next three months.jand death for thoii.sands on thejti-oopers will be taking part in an Other cooperating organizations'll* state Police troopers at the Pon-i nation's highways each year. I intensive research program be-will be the Michigan Department ' " tiac Post are going to have a lot I ♦ * ★ ! ginning Feb. 1. 'of Health the .State Medical Society more papeiwk on iheii- hands.. Throughout the 2nd State Policel out of the piles of papeiwork Michigan Hospital Aisoci- : ^ * District — Oakland, Lapeer, Ma- u ...in_________________ ’ WWW District — Oakland. Lapeer, i, _____ Their papeiwork may somedayjeomb. Monroe. St. Clair. WaSh-L auesHons such as-mean the difference between lifeltenaw, and Wayne Counties —' iatlon. Assisting in the local project i APPUMCE NYERS-OUIE FREHEI SAYS; “I AM PREPARED” r . . to give you one of the best appliance, TV or hi-fi deols in the United Stotes. questions, such m iWllliam b. Coleman, field'repn- 1 genw. than the standard model? l^nUtive of Cornell’s automotive I: Would a different car design.•rash injury research, have prevented a death or less ! Capt. Fred E. Davis, district: Iiencd Injuries to passengers'.' j commander, said the troopers' ac-j What causes a motorist to bej'^W^n* reports will lie only a ■; mangled in a collision' ||DKTA1US! DETAILS! I beginning. SHOP FRETTER TODAY FOR THE BEST DEALS EVER STEREO, HI-FI AM-FM RADIO $159.95 NaRCE NORGI 30 INCH GAS DRYER GAS RANGE ' 3 temperature. Stop 'n' Dry. ruttproof cabinet with an automatic own $139.00 $114.50 FAMOUS MAKf AUTOMATIC WASHER All porccliln cabinet, water temp, control, water level control, lint niter, detergent dlapenier. $159.80 _ The order of the day will be! injuries and dead will be: I! detail in injury accident report.s.i^®*'”"'*^ through hospitals and jDetails, Details and details. jmorgues. Perhaps the informatkNi Ij More than 60 command officers ***‘’*‘*^ experts to jmet Wednesday and Thursday to' ®®'’’ what Tauses certain injuries 'plan the operation. —and to reixmimend measures which would prevent them. The cause of the accidents i.sn’t the first concern of the invest!-j gators. ! They want to know what hap-i pens while a person is hurled | about inside a car. they knew, they can look MAYTAG AUTOMATIC WASHER Floor iomplf. with woler temp, coptrol. water level control, nudo •over and filter agltalor. $198.20 RCA 17-INCH PORTABLE $135.00 FREE! KEYSTONE 8mm CAMERA At Fretter'a with any purchsM of $200 or more this week. Coupon good ot Hmo of purchaao only. Somo makos oscoptod. EASY SPIN DRYER $163.20 12 Cu. Ft. WESTINGHOUSE REFRIGERATOR $Viwo Attending from Pontiac were Sgt. Lorenz H. Ahlgriiii, pool commander, and <’pla. John Benner, Peter Waiaanen and .Maitland I.an Pmident Kennedy's first White House press conlorence was the best unrehearsed television show since the Saal tane-^ the 1960 W«;Mffor an orderly ewers to those questions. It takes courage l«r any man to face a room filled with 400 jumplng-jack questioners. It calls grasp of U.R. and woiM eond-dons and, finally. It Is Impera- "It'S way out front in flavor,”. tiVrS MR. SMOOTH TO MR. SILK physically or mentally inctpod- It was the performance of a political virtuoso, articulate, formative, rewarding. But. it must have exasperated millions see and hear certain Mr. Kennedy came to the lecleni looking like a good young actor playing the old 41mmy Stewart rde in "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington," but when he opened his mouth, a whole nation and (sinee then) the peoples of many countries Including the U.&S.R., knew Ed Morgan of ABC was they were in the presence of a questioner who asked two coman in absolute codpiand of hlm< hesive quMtions in succession. The self, positive in his thinking, others came therer-as alw^rs-(right. Dr. Peale’),^ and superbly Intent on asking some carefully well4nformed. memorized question and, s'VTwa iNwiwna water, they asked it EXTRA INNINGS In the space of 37 minutes - like | answered just before that, the aforementioned Wortd Series Stricter Labeling Due on Drug Chloromycetin WASHINGT(»< (UPI) r- Tb* U.S. Ftysd and Drug Administration .(FDA) announced iWaday that it will permit continued mai^ kedng of the dnv Chloromycetin under new and stricter labeling requirements. FDA Commissioner George P. Larrick said that a panel of aci-entlsu appointed by the National game, this one . ran into extra innings — Mr. Kennedy touched these bases: Geneva atomic testfag dellber-atipas, food for the Congo, release of the two sanlvora of the RB47, relatfons with the Soviet Unhw, farther baa on Ut flights. arament plans, HvU rights, the risk of appearing on live TV, I Cuba, Latin America, Infiltration of alien ideologies there, I the House Ways and Means Com-I mittee, rights and sovereignty 1 of Coagrem, Impending legtsla- Suggests New Degree NEW YORK (AP)-A hCW degree, doctor of arts in mathematics, has been recommended in an effort to obtain better teachers in the field of mathematics. The recommendation was made Thursday by the Mathematical Association of America and the American Mathematical Society. •ran SMOOTH AS SILK H -0 -< A JUIWS BUIE! MSriLUIS CdMPtur. UWIESCflUIO. IXDIUi lUIKS miSUt. H NOW. m% SUM KUTUl SPtlITt. j and farmers; and the Navy’s po-I sitlon In respect to the Port-^ I uguese liner Santa Maria. . ] In addition, he gave the first full reading on the exact whereabouts of that ship, theif turned I to reciprocal trade agreements, I import-export balances, leakage of dollars and gold, a return of servicemen’s families frdm overseas, the New York Democratic party’s SNAFU, unemployment, release of secret reports on loss {of American prestige overseas, I censorship, summits, traditional {diplomatic channels, the- budget I (he ducked this), food for Red China, why he ignored domestic I matters in his inaugural address, I Laos, U2 pilot Francis Powers, the 111 fliers shot down over Armenia, I why KhnLshchev released the RB47 fliers at just this time. Electoral College reforms, and the question of "succession’’ in case he Research Council bad determined that cfatoromycetln "is a valuable drug that should remain on . the market" R is produced by Parke, Davis* Co. But be said that the scientiats had recommended a revision of the drug iabri "to give added emphasis to the waniingB against Ito in minor Infections." ’The International Postal Union was established by the Treaty of Berne in 1874. Lena is a river 3,000 miles kag in ffiheria. It empties into the Antic Ocean. D.FALSE TEETH keek. SnSe or $Hp7 risMs, holda tslae MM mart Bmly In pUoe. Do not (IMe. eUp or nek. Mo tummy, sooey. P**ty Urto or fwluis.FA8'l'Urau>lkalUl« (n«i-seM). Dow not tour. CheckJ ’taisM oSor tewth”. OM PASmiTB^ [urn STORE MIRACLE MILE PRE- INVENTORY ENDS SATURDAY AT 9 P.M. SHOES ? Regular to $8.00 Ladies’ Casuals and Miscellaneous Shoes . ^ Regular to $7.00 I-Adies’ Handbags ............................. _ Regular to $7.00 , Boys’ and Girls’ Shoes ........................ American Girl Dress and Casuals................ Regular to $10.00 Glamor Deb Sport Oxfords and Casuals . .. Regular to $16.00 Ladies’ and Children’s Leather Snow Boots . Regular to $15.00 ar rbciaui NAMED TO POST-Jospph Charles .Swidler, 54, of Nashville, Tenn., will be named chairman of the Federal Power Commission, the White House announced Thursday. *1.00 *2.00 *2.00 *5.00 *5.00 ' *6.00 to $15.00 A A Ladies’ Naturalizers ..................'o.UU Regular to $12.00 #\/\ Men’s Fur-Lined Slippers..............^/ .UU Regular to $13.00 f\ Men’s Porto-Ped High Work Shoes......^f.UU CHILDREN’S KiS""- tlO.M.•13.99.116.99 Regular $2 98 ^ _ Boys’ liong Sleeve Sport Shirts......'Z.UO Boys’ Raincoats . ........ Reduced 20% S'co.1 S.I................*19.90 - *24.90 Regular to $19.95 A A Girls’ Dresses (sizes 12-14)......... Regular to $12.98 wye AF\ (Jirls’ Chubbette Dresses ........... Children’s^Snow Suits and Car Coats . . ^9.99 - 2.99 MEX’S *12.99-*16,99-*24,99 *9.90 *3.99 Regular to $35.00 Men’s Jackets and Suburbans ......... Regular to $16.95 Men’s All Wool Trousers . Regular to $6 98 Men’s Cordproy Slacks .. Regular to $79.50 »i|« wen WPFN Men’s Topcoats............................. ^41 -»5l -^59 Regular $29.95 Men’s Zip-Lined Raincoats ..........................'29.00 Regular to $89.50 Pk«t« nearly as long as he has, first at the Roosevelt Mementary School where he was employed 25 years and 5 years at the West Bloomfield where he is chief custodian. He said he had planned to. use the chair for ice fishing before it collapsed. county jail, a century-old lockup ; for a broader educational pro- < -------— ----------- -- igram and permitted an ndjust- jment in teachers' salaries. It also would have made pos-! sible the replacement of more than j Petitions Due In tor Primaries New Junior High to End "Half Days in Oak Park Pontiac Twp. Dems to Hear Dr. Bartlett PONTIAC TDWNSHIP — Dr. half of the 15 school buses withj OAK PARK — Half-day itessions!been using the high school tacili-' new vehicles, according to school,will end Monday for more than ties in the afternoon. tendent of^Mic Instruction, will The addition I officials. 2.000 junior and senior high school! ' "The school hoard has deter-1 students here with the opening of . , , . Imined that four mills are abso-,a J1.9 million junior high school! bchoolcontalnsSO regularclass-ilutely neces.sary to continue the,building. thive science AAiHnrW onH Rofhpstpr education in^ The new facility is an addition! rooms f M^rd and Rochester Hcmcntaty school.: ‘bree workshop.. Office Seekers Have Intcndcnt said today, jit will be known as the Oak Park; There is al.so a library, cafe- 'til Noon Soturdov *b«t board members Junior High School. .tcria,'three instrumental and vo- ' !feel that the reauested millaeel „^ventH and eighth speak at the Monday night meeting of the Pontiac Township Democratic Club. Cluh members have billed the 7:30 p.m. aesaton aa ^ “Get Acquainted With the CandMatea*’ meeting. The Democratic candidates for township offices in the Feb. Won't Improve Rochester Road No Funds Availablo for Ml 50 Says State; May Give It to Oakland AVON TOWNSHIP - The State Highway Department has advised the Township Board that is present plans do not include improvement or resurfacing of Rochester Road (M150) norfii of Rochester. ★ dr ★ A highway department o^cial repealed that no funds are available for improvement of the road and that it is not Included in a current five-year plan for resurfacing of state trunklines. A petition complaining nboNt the condition of the rend, signed by nbottt 109 commuters who travel on it daily, was tamed in to township offlclabi last month, according to Township Clerk Mrs. Frsaces Covert. She said the petition was forwarded to the state highway department. In answer to the petition, R. A. Trebilcock, director of program-! ming for the planning (^ce of the state highway department, In-j dicated the thoroughfare may bej turned over to Oakland County. ! it it it Trebilcock stated hLs department now is considering the possibility of giving local authorities jurisdiction over the state trunkline. Mrs. covert aald the petition received here was aigned mainly I by peraona who live outside the | townahip but who use the road traveling to and from work. However, complaints about the! "poor condition'’ of thT tronkltne! were voiced by township residents who attended a special forum on rodds held Sept. 15 in Rochester. ★ dr , ★ Paul Van Roekel, highway engineer for the Oakland County Road Commission, told residents that his department could do nothing about improving Rochester Road because it was under the jurisdiction of the State Highway Department. « I feel that the requested millagei „^venlH and eighth “(bees, counseling will enable them just to "gel by " »|p<|enls will transfer ^P*^* '*** education, receiving,primary have been Invited Hopefuls seeking nomination In fer the next eoiiple of years. , Monday from the Oak Park High teachers rooms, kitchen. boil-I speak, fhe February primary elections in! .Stanley reminded voters that by! Schooxt Is a two-year term. Two of the eoun-ell seats are for three years. The third eoiinell (smt Is for a , one-year term and «lll fill a vaeaney erealed by the reslgna- j tinn of Wilbur .liihnson who nlll . run for president. Village President .loseph Cerrnrd has stated he will not seek a fourth term. The councilmen whose regular terms are expiring are Vernon Rounds and Paul Plolzcr. Them are fov o|M-n In KiH-hesler. They a ones now held by darenee M. Burr, Roy KeHold, Jay F.ldred and John Boeberilt. Practice Stopped , .SllKt.RY TOWNSttrP - A 6.3-j year-old woman, arrested by stalej jpoliee rot- practieing ehiropraelie without a license, was to be ar-! I aigned today in Macomb County Ju.slice Court in Mount Clemens. Slate trooper .lames Niedcr-meier or the Center Line Post to Mrs. Frieda 11. Reehert's ottire at 7020 22-Mile Road and complained ol a pain in the right side of his back.. . . a . V Wixom to Open Tlu‘ sonioi* hiKh students have ^ * been attending classes in the morn- New City Hall ing and the younger pupils have Mrs. Reli'hert diagnosed the aliment ns a pinched nerve. Alter mnssaglng his bsek, she |N>llceman he was cured . hut advls<-d him to come bark As many as eight candidates may for snolher treatment next file, two for each offlec, and no week. primary will be required, accord- Nieilcrmeicr wls) said h» ing to Village Clerk Maxine York .unually had ’nothing wrong with * * * his hack when he went to the The three olfiee seekers who re- woman's office, paid the woman reive the higtwst voles in the jo j,, marked hills and Ih. March 13 election will serve for i-extrd her. two years and the next in line for The stale li'ooper l•e|K)rled the cne. woman had no Hrense to o(ierale, * * * except a plaque on the w all which I The village laeskhml and prexi- wag a vwttfitatton of spiriluail______________ dent pro lem are eleeled hy the nimisliy of the While Hnilherhood Hcrard of rwSTi Pihelxnob Road, council at the organi/alional meet-'of Truth. It was dated April 6,^ Independence Township, an-ing following the spring balloting 1918, _______ Monday Morning CTLARKSTCM4—A new group, the Men's Chess CHub, has been organised and is seeWng others interested in playing oheu once a week. Organized by Roger Ashely, the group meets «t 7:30 p.m. each Wednesday in the Methodist WIXOM - The new City Hallif^hurch parlors. For further hero will be open lor business formation residents — -Monday. City Cleik Lillian Byrd .said that equipment, furniture and files will be moved into the $32,500 municipal building tomorrow. (iHFMHU.YN K. IIKKAI.D (Tiesler Machin-Tate Nuptials Mounce the engagement of their (laughter Cwendolyn R. to Iji.v-re.ice ,M. Ilollerbach. son of Mr. and Mrs. Ahiys C. Hollerbaeh of The city office Is the first unit In a proposed elvie renter development. It is on the south aide of Pontiac Trail, just east of WIxom Road. The one-story city hall will house the police and fire departments, the department of public works, the justice of the peace court. It large City Council meeting room. * ♦ * 'The new building is about three blocks from the present city hall, jjocaled at 131 N. WIxom Road In a icmixlclcd home. . . - - - ■ * ★ ■ A ( The new city hall was construct-d by Frank Stewart and Son,; nc.. of Pontiac, and designed by. Kainclmtri, .McMtrflan and Associates of Ann Arbor. | The city of New Orleans was' founded on its present site in 1718 by a French captain named Jean' A June I do Bienville, who was born in Can-! call cither Ashley or Warren Navarre, 6711 Wealthy St. Weekly Papers Win EAST LANSING »-Winners of awards for excellence in typography among weekly newspapers were announced today at thif 93rd annual convention of the Michigan Press Association. The award winners in the five circulation classes Gros.se Pointe News, Lapeer County Press, Northville Record, Oio \h>^.scnger and D e x t e leader. Speak Evening Vows ORION 1X)W.NSIIir-^ThiM^Tn»t4—Thr^ bride is the daughter of “fTrshxlcrian fTiurch. Pontiac, | Mr. and Mrs. Grvirgc F. Tate of was the soiling for the wedding 1705 Grccnshicid Road, The bride-of Muriel .loyce rale ami David j groom's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Randall Mkihin The Rev, Wil- David F. Marhin of 3180 Martell liam H Marbach performed the'Road, Avon Township, evening'riles J wrddlng the bride rhoae a wallslength gown of while nianfttty tore over taffeta featuring a molded bodice alyled with a Hahrina neckline and cap sleeves. The eummer-hiind at the waistline bad hows and streamers In front. A tiara held her full, circular I veil which was fingertip length. White ramations snd miniature red roses ' with Ivy streamers adorned the while Bible sh* ctrj ried. Matron ol honor was Mrs. Arthur Heckman ol Lake Orion, sister of the bride. Serving as best man was Dennis K. Carroll of Ponflar. Dsvkj Mayers snd Stanley (?srey were ushers ' . \ MM. DAVIO B. MACHIN Following Ihi- nuptials s reception was held In the church parlor. Then Ihf newlyweds left on a honeymoon trip to Atlanta after which they will live at 221 Chandler Si., ^tiac Township. Time to Feed the WILD BIRDS Kcu mu> im Mznin SUi.eCi; 10Uf.Sl.10 25Uf.S2.S0 • Mediaa She Clicked Con witk Whoil 5 Lbi. 35c 10 Ikf. SSc 25 Um. 11.35 Suilower Seed 19c Lk. 10 lor 11.75 Row Poiiati.....39c Lb. REGAL SEED and LAWN SUPPLY CO. TOUGHi TESTED McCULLOCH MEC/356 CH6IN SEW • Wtflhtrprsoftd for fiit starts-wintif or summer «lilhltsi |tar-drlvt saw made • Torture tasted for doptoO-abillty • Cult flush with ground • 15* plungo how-bars up to 32* / You Con Buy d McCulloch Ckdin Only *149” EASY TIME PAYMENTS KING BROS. Pontiec Rd. ef O^lst PI 4-0714 PI 4-1112 EARGUNS FOR YOU Auto Parti & accessories FUEL PUMPS BRAKE LINING TUNE-UP KITS MASTER CYLINDERS SEAL BEAM LITES MIRRORS CLEANERS POLISHES FLOOR MATS SHOCK ABSORBERS ETC. ETC. ETC. lOPEN SUNDAYS 10:30 A. M. to 2 P. M.| RADIOS WI HAVE RADIOS — TABLE MODELS FROM 10.61 to II9.9S 6 TRANSISTOR ONLY S1795 Traia Eafineon Lionel Track 15c oack HO Snap Track 12Vt" HO Homoto Switchoi Only 15.11 per Pair 027 Switckoi (loaoto) Only S4.98 per Pair Set!—Can—Eiginof “Bolt PricM in Town" —ELECTRICAL WIRING DEVICES— SN0F...C0MPUE 60%0ffRtlail 1Un THE THING TO FINISH OFF THAT RECREATION ROOM OR DEN. aa CUTS PLYWOOD LIKE OUTTBR We Sell RCA Tubes GET THE JUMP ON SPRINGTIME-START CLEAN UP AND PAINT-UP NOW! $3.89 ALSO ... far Cal. Kem-Tone GALLON THE SAW OF YOUR DREAMS $i^98 THE '^DeWALT POWER SHOP*' Model 925E e CUTS BIG 2Vi" DEEP e EXTREMELY ACCURATE AND SAFE TO USE e BIG RIP and CROSS CUT CAPACITY e SAFETY KEY SWITCH e DELIVERS 2 HORSE-POWER THE BEST ALWAYS COSTS LESS NOW *179" General Warehouse Co. 2258 Dixie Mwy. SPECIALIZED SERVICE •TV •HI.ri •RADIO •T\N recorders • R. A. SYSTEMS • OFFICE INTER.COMS • WBKOK FACTORY SERVICE BLAKE RADIO-TV ) THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JANUARY 27. 1961 THIRTEEN 2 Women Held in Embezzlement Stevens, 25. both employee o( the Bank ol Sblimatoo (W. Va.) near hRre. They will appear before U.S. Commissioner L. T. Eddy. Hie ahortagea in the baidc's ac-couote were revealed Thursday, but there was no explanation as to how they were discovered or $22A224J0 jShortagft^»»yJgig,iJg^ in W. Virginia Bank " Revealed Thursday rAIRMONT, W. Va. (AP)-A gray-haired q>inster and a young mother of two children have been arrested on federal charges stemming from a S224.224.1D shortage at a bank where they b(^ worked. insu^ by the Federal Deposit Insurance Cwp. Wayne C. Haaicer, president of the bank, said depositors would face no losses. Authorities said Mias Fortney was employed by the bank for 28 years, many of them as assistant casl^. Both she and Mrs. Stevens,' wife of a coal company employe, have lived all their lives at Shinnston, -a town of about I Held for arraignment today on 2,500 residents, embezzlement charges were Miss’ Mrc. Stevens was employed for Lecy Fortney. 62, and Jo Ann e ght yeai-s as a bookkeeper. Icy Bank Zips Cars Into River Down in Memphis MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - Hundreds of motorists ordinarily parfc{ their eutoniflibilra bh tte steep,] cobblestoned bank of the Wolf River at its confluence with the Mississippi near downtown Mem- his. Few of them dared to Thursday, after five unwary motorists stepped on the brakes, zipped down the ice-coated stones iike bobdeds and plunged into the water. All the drivers evacuated successfully but one car disappeared entirely and the others were par-' It tally submerged. The weasel is a small reddish-! Some 20,000 Americana were brown animal that turns white in Egypt’s largest single crop el Isr-frlgld cold dimates. )(.................— TWO DOCTORS ON DUTY ASSURE YOU_______ IMMEDIATE SERVICE on EYE EXAMINATIONS FILLING PRESCRIPTIONS EYE GLASS REPAIRS PONTIAC OPTICAL CENTER 103 N. Saginaw (across from Simms) FE 2*0291 Hrs. 9:30-5:30 Daily Mon. or FrI. Eve. by Apmf. A A. Miles, O.D. — P. C. Fcinberg, 0.0. ar Pbatotw SHE’S ON BALANCE — A Rock Island RaUroad freight car sti-ikes a balance on an overpass at Hampton, Iowa, as one of 24 cars which jumped the track Wednesday night. Cause of the derailment hadn’t been determined ’Thursday. ’The tallest building in the United | land’s 52 story Terminal Tower. It States, outside New York, is Cleve-lis 708 feet hi^. on Carpet Roll Balances Dascriptioa _ Wat Beige ‘501’ Nylon ..................249.50 Beige Wool Tweed ...................127.70 Beige Acrilan Tweed ................284.30 Nutria Acrilan Wilton ..............238.40 Beige Acrilan ......................175.60 Beige Wool Tweed ........ ..........327.20 Black and White Wool Tweed ........149.65 nos MANY oTHtnn NO MONEY DOWN! UP T0|gMONTHS TO PAY! C OVERINGS 3511 Elizabeth Lake Road FE 4-7775 ' Open Friday, StUurday and Monday Evenings EVERYTHING MUST GO! OPEN MONDAY and FRIDAY 'til 9 P. M. 24 MONTHS TO PAY WERE WAY OVERSTOCKED! Our Inventory Must Re Ralanced at Once! * The situotion is pretty shaky. There ore new lines coming out that we must hove in our store, but we can't get them because we hove so much spoce and money tied up in our present stock! NO MONEY DOWN! klVM« ROOM sums, SOFAS aad SECTIONAIS SOFA BED ond CHAIR Innerspring Constniction SOFA and CHAIR-Rtveriibl* Innaripring Cwihions Nylon SOFA ond CHAIR Foam Cushioat Washabl* SOFA BED ond CHAIR, Brtathnblt Nougobydt Nylon 3-Pc. SECTIONAL Foam Rovtriiblo Cutbioni HIDE-A-WAY BED and CHAIR Foam Cusbions ............... Dtluxt 3-Pc. SECTIONAL, Nylon Foom Cusbions ond Bock *88 *98 *118 *148 *178 *188 *268 BEDROOM SVniS «I.T,: THE AXi...DBt INHERSPBING MAHHESS^d BOX SPRING INCLUDED FORMia TOP 5-fc. Dinotto 30x40x42 44.88 5-Pc. 30x40x41, Chromo or Bronx* 48.88 7-Pc. 38x48x60 Cbrom* or Bronx*__ 68.88 BRODY, 7-Pc. Roond 42x42x60 B8.S8 9-Pc. 36x54x72 Cbrom* *r Bronx* 18.88 TABLE LAMPS-3 C*i*rs 3.28 sfEP or COFFU TABLES 7.88 ROOM SIZE TWEED RUGS, 9x12 35.00 WALL MIRRORS Roducod for Cloaranc* Gray DoubI* Drossor, Mirror, Bookcos* Bod, Chost Walnut TrIpIt Drossor, Choit, Bookcos* Bod ond Mirror Gray Hardwood Drossor, Chost, Mirror, Bookcos* Bod Bossott Whit* Triplo Drossor, Chost, Bookcos* Bod .......... Danish Walnut Triplo Drossor, Chost, Bookcos* B>*d............ Cordovun Mhg. Triplo Drossor, Chost, Bookcos* Bod *148 *178 *198 *228 *228 gliggfW INNERSPRING Mottross, or Box Spring 17J8 SERTA-Extro Firm Mottross 27.18 BUnON FREE Orthopodic Typo 37.88 SERTA-Firm Button Fro* Mottross 42.88 HOLLYWOOD BEO-Complot* 45.00 moa:T.T.nrfT] SCRATCH-PROOF BUNK BEDS-Compkt* 101.00 MODERN ROCKER 29.00 Plostic Loungo-Wkit*, R*g. $99.95 68.00 MODERN LOUNGE CHAIR 49.00 BROYHILL DINING ROOM with BUFFET 218.00 STRATOLOUNGER RECLINER 65.00 TELEVISIONS R*duc*d lor Clooronc* BERKLINE RUSTIC ROCKER 69.00 ALUMINUM EASY-TO-READ...DAY OR NIGHT ADDRESS SIGN I Cofflploto With AiyFoorNoiobort $<100 1' 160,19| IMPOETD (BUMK SfCDUO(TUP0TS(T\^ Cosh ond Corry • OPEN MON. ond FRI. FROM 9 TO 9 «FREE DELIVERY e 24 MONTHS TO PAY e NO MONEY DOWN • 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH • FREE PARKING Cauhm WIU NOT RUST! Phone FE 58114-5 W ALCOA ALUMINUM FRAME ★ 4 BAKELfTE NUMERALS W PERMANENT REPLEQINO COATING BY MAKERS OF SCOTCHUTE ADALlAOrV FURNITURE v/|\V>nnM/ COMPANY 164 ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE • PONTIAC 3 Blocks West of South Saginaw A “ONCE-IN-A-LIFETIME” OPPORTUNITY TO SAVE FOURTEEN THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JANUARY 27« 1961 Admiring hntx for a spring fashion show and luncheon sponsored hv St. Joseph Mercy Hospital blood ftroup March 17 at the Klhs Club are Mrs. Verne. Drew of Bloomfield llif;hlands. at left; \lrs. Alan Phin of Detroit, fashion commentator: and March 17 at Elks Club Hospital Unit Plans- Fashion Show The St. Josc[>h Mercy Hospital Blood Group has corn-plrled plans for a sprinK fashion show and luncheon Man h 17 at the Elks Qub. The entire proceeds will l)e applied directly to the purchase of a I)I(xkI machine to serve the public at the hospital. Communities Including Royal Oak, Birmingham, Rochester, Waterfoi-d and envimns will benefit. Commentator for fashions by I' ranklin Simon Co, of l>troil, Northland and New York will b<* Mrs., Alan Phin of Detroit, coonlinator of (asliion shows in New York, Chicago and California. * * * Coiffures will be designed by .Maf Mardigian of The Blue Wig in the Bkjomficid Plaza, with make-up by Ix'if Bergan, beauty consultant of Birmingham and Pontiac. • Working on the committee lor the \'l o'clock luncheon are Mi-s. F. 0. Rorabaugh, president; .Mrs. Peter Davidson, honorai7 president; Mrs. Robert C; Tricker, vice president: Mrs. Verne Drew. . luncheon chairman: Mrs. Fred Cockle, .secretary-treasurer: Mrs. CLf-ford Dick, prize chairman: .Mrs. Joseph Spadafoi'e, prize ciK'hairman; Mrs. Carleton Wright, finance; and .Mi’s. Austin .Sansone, Publicity. Bridge Crowd Goes Tripping Around By MARY EM.EN MEAD BIRMINGHAM - Cocktails, bullet dinner and bridge will combine to make Saturday night festive lor 12 Birming-^ham couples who’ve Ix-eii meeting on this basis, monthly, for a nuinlicr of years. Changing the routine a bit. the Leon Haris of Puritan Road suggested that they he hosts lor the cocktail hour, alter which everyone will tnsip over to the Robert Ba.xters' on Pilgrim Road for llie remainder of the evening Group Includes Mr. ami Mrs. Robert Green, Mr and Mrs. Robert Denl’yl, Mr. and Ml’S. Fram’is Mi’Math, Mr. and Mrs. (kirdon DeBoard, Mr. and Mn. William flray, the Raymond Flynns, the Kingsley Browns, Mr. and .Mrs Roliert Mt'ck, the Richard Halsteads and Mr ami Mrs Rola'rt Haefner. The latter couple otiviousl.v has two loVes when it comes to recreation — one bridge, the other skiing. And at ihis point they're ta-nt on a conihina-tion which should satisfy to —the hilt,_____^___________________ Come Feb in, they'll lake oil from their home in Fo\-cioft to join meinls’is of iln-ir duplicate briilge group for a weekend at Crystal .Mnuntam ski reson near Beiilab Mrs Haefner claims. U s a sort of miniaiure sbiy miniature' lioyne Mountain, lint we lose it tie«tu.s(> tCir small and Tin-' cluttered " ‘ Driving up from Rtimlngham lor the weekend will be Mi and Mrs. Wright Hitt, Mr. and Mrs. Neil Dostal, Mr. and .Mrs. Itei-ne .Surge, the Barry MeCata-s and Mr. and Mrs. Harry F’rU’e. Mr. and Mrs. William Kemp and Mr. and .Mrs. Gordon Doule of Ham iiiond l,akc, Pontiac, are also memliers of the group who are going. Mr and Mrs. I'rban Udall M'lHxlhouse, of l,ake Park Drive, announce the engagement of their daughter, Alison Rums, to William Ban’ett Burleigh, son of Mr, and Mrs. Thomas Dearborn Burleigh of Alexandria. V'a. Alison, who attended Miami Yomar Group Gets Together Memliers of the Yomar (’•naip of First Ihesbyterian Church met Thursday for cooperative dinner at the church. Mrs Ralph Ma.son was dinner chairman , _ Dr, William H, Marbai’h led on the Book of-J University, O.xfoi-d, Ohio, is T’urrently a senior at the University of California, where her sorority is Pi Beta Phi. Her fiance, a graduate of the University of Colorado is attending law sT’hool at the UnP versity of California. His fraternity is Sigma Chi. The couple plans a June 24 wedding. and the Rev. Galen Hershey s|Ktke on the work of the Women's Association. Mrs IVjnald Weed led group singing Guests were Mrs Marbaih. Mis. Hershey, Mrs Earle Van I'.'ke Jr, and Mrs Rrnesi .Severance Mrs James .Sparks aiKl Mrs. Samuel .Miller were welcomed as new memlsus llosleics for the Feb. 23 meeting will lx- Mrs. Wallace Brown of Tilden Avenue, Garnered for You The Joseph J. Hartlgans of Macintosh Lane, Bloomfield Hills, will be hosts at a Saturday evening buffet honoring the third wedding anniversary of their daughter and son-in-law, the Richard O’Connors. Some 75 young friends of the O’Connors and family friends of the Hartlgans have been invited. •k it it Mr anri Mrn Harvey R. Weyhing (June D. Bush) Of Adamson Road, Drayton Plains, are announcing the blrtb of a daughter, Mitzi Lisa, Jan. 1 at Pontiac Oeneral Hospital. The grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Foltln lihd the R. J. Weyhlngs. all of Detroit. it it it' The Lucky 13 Birthday Club, meeting Monday evening with Mrs. Ralph Deem on Stirling Avenue, honored the birthday of Mrs. Johnnie Bee and elected her as president. Prizes were taken home by Mrs. Bee, Mrs. Ander-&oa Bee and Mrs. Steve Sapalak. Secret pals will be disclosed kt the February meeting with Mrs. Roy Deem. The Irving M. Webbs of Waterford Township announce the engagement of their daughter Carol Thressa to Cernld L. Haney, son of. the Fred Haneys of Keego Harbor, CAROL THRESSA WEBB 'The Daniel W. Oreenwalds (Barbara McReyn-olds) are parents of twin sons, Kelly Jay and Kevin Ray, born Jan. 19 at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. -Grandparents are the Emil Oreenwalds of Whlttemore Street and Mr. and Mrs. H. Durelle Mc-Reynolds of Alberta Street, Pontiac Township. it it it Michigan weather seems mild to the H u b e r t Helntzelmans of Madison, Maine, who left home at 26 below zero. Joining them Wednesday at the Howard Helntzelmans of Milford where they are house-guests, were other cold-weather dinner guests, the Jack McDonalds of Calgary, Alberta and Mrs. Helntzelman’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rogers of Detroit. it it it A daughter, Belinda Mae, was born Dec. 26 to Mr. and Mrs. Jack Randall (Betty Jo Rose) of Evee Road, Clarkston, in Pontiac Oeneral Hpspltal. Grandparents are the William B. Press woods of Clarkston and the Benjamin Ozbuns of Hudson Avenue, Maternal great - grandparents are Mrs. Joseph Rose of Columbus, Ohio and the W. O. Haddocks of Norfolk, Va. Paternal great-grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Fred Crouch of Davisburg. Dior Look Swings Hips PXBtiM Preu Ph*U Mrs. Robert C. Tricker, vice president, holding a hat worn 12i years ago. Plans were completed at a committee luncheon Wednesday at Fox and Hounds Inn. Mrs. Romney to Cochairman Opera Event Mrs. Henry Ford II, general chairman, has announced that .Mrs. George Romney will serve as cochairman for the 1961 Detroit appearance of the Metppolitan Opera. "With her fine record of servic’e in other civic endeavors, Mrs. Romney is an ideal choice for cochairman, and I am delighted that she has agre^ to join us. I look forward to working with her,” said Mr^ Ford. Mrs. Ford and Mi's. Romney will' preside at a statewide luncheon meeting of the Committee at Detroit’s Masonic Temple Feb. 10. The 1961 season for “The Met" in Detroit will consist of six evening performances and a Saturday matinee "La Boheme," on May 27. Evening presentations will be "Turan-dot," May 22: "Marth*" May 2.1: "Rigoletto." May ‘24: "Na-bucco,” May 25: "Aida.” May 26; and "La Traviata.’ 27. May PARIS «»— Designer Marc Bohan stripped the spinach from fashion Thursday morning in a lady-like collection far Dior that may well prove the biggest style hit since the "new look." ★ ♦ ♦ What Bohan names the “slim look" is a silhouette with a long waisUine bodice to the top of the hip, with lightly flared skirts often showing a bit of the kneecap. BOHAN’S A SMASH Enthusiastic applause throughout the show made it clear that Bohan has a smash hit for his debut as a replacement for Yves Matthieu Saint-Laurent. If the bosom and the waist are bypassed in the "slim look,” hips are hugged and legs emphasized. ’The most astonishing thing about the show was that it contained not a single eccentricity. ★ ★ ★ The long-waisted, short-skirted general outline naturally recalls the flapper era, but Reveal Vacancies at Nursery School Several vacancies for Pontiac Cooperative N u r s ery School’s next semester, beginning Wednesday, were announced by Mrs. Clyde Her-I’ing at a staff meeting ’Tuesday. Parents and teachers met in their new quarters at First Free Methodist Church. ♦ ♦ A Mrs. Joe Anderson and Mrs. Jack Kirksey announced the arrival of new equipment. Mrs. Larry Purvis and Mrs. William Tebeau read schedules which assisting mothers will follow in the new term. ★ * * Following the business meeting, Mrs. Anderson led a discussion ’•’The Perfect Nursery School." Sorority Arrives Clad as Children Eighteen members of Omega Mu Sigma Sorority arrived at the Mark Avenue home of Mrs.' Patrick J. Cullen in children’s costumes Tuesday evening as a birthday surprise foFMrsiRayinoitS son and Mrs. Harold Clifford. Mrs. Louis Livingston shared hostess honors and assisted with juvenile games. Mrs, Leo Halfpenny’s costume wbn the prize for originality. Tentative plans were made for the annual benefit card party April 19 at Pontiac Federal Savings and Loan Building. ARC Class Plans Program Sundoy ’The class In Home Care 6f the Sick and Injured, sponsored by The American Red Cross and taught by Mrs. Gertrude L. Fleming will present a* program following graduation exercises at 3 p.m. Sunday in St. John Methodist Church, Highland Avenue. ’The Rev. M. L. J. Bellinger, pastor, will present pins and (’ertlficates. Four Pages Today in Women's Section Bohan’s interpretatioo is fresh as a daisy. His pure and sim- sons w pie elegance had the audience of his favorable compari-Molynetix at the top Jackie's Other Self The influence of the 20s Is strongest In evenii« wear, for Bohan nutkes dozens of waistless beaded sheaths, all with hip belU 9^ tight fitting at the hip. Lady Diana Duff Cooper and the Duchess d Wfcdsor were at the press opening, and Lady Diana, peering at the mannequins through tinted, plasticframed glasses, saw a printed chiffon formal with trailing train named "Diana” for her. * ♦ ★ Whatever happens to Saint-Laurent, who suffered a nervous breakdown during a brief spell of military service, Marc Bohan mlde his name in fashion Thursday morning. Nobody believes Dior will willingly let him go now. Women should love his qn-Irilly.'easy to wear, easy to walk in clothes, which for once are as pretty as they are elegant. A fairly slim pair of hips is the only thing they require. When the 34-year-old designer forgot his ladylike look to cut just thred' necklines that plunged right to the waist the audience took it as a Joke AT Pretty Pamela'^ Turnure, 23, press secretary whose resemblance to her boss. First Lady Mrs., Jacqueline Kennedy, is astonishing, poses at the White House. The first press secretary to be employed by a First Lady, she will act as "an intermediary" between Mrs. Kennedy, Pierre Salinger, the President's secretary and reporters. Mrs. Tarr Opens Home for Club Mrs. Robert Tarr opened her home on West Iroquois Road to members of the University of Michigan Alumnae Gub on Tuesday. Cressy Larson, director of the Pontiac Boys’ Qub spoke on the activities of the group and Its contribution to the community. Hostesses were Mrs. Maxwell H. Doerr, Mrs. Conrad Church. Kate Sawyer and Doris Haynes. Womens Section Abby Says Get an Adjustment Fast Cas6 of the Grinning Teeth! Bjr ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I decided to write to you after reading that letter from the woman who said her hus- be caught ABBY dead outside without his teeth. Even when he washes the car his teeth are In, but the minute he gets in the house with me, out they come! He sets them any place — on the table, on the sewing machine. It seems wherever I go his teeth are grinning at me until I could scream. At mealtime he gums his food until I can’t stand it. Talk gets me nowhere! He says it’s ■iiia iiome and heJs king, teeth or no teeth. FED UP DEAR FEID: Your husband’s dentures ptbbably fit poorly or he wouldn't be removing, them every chance he gets. Insist that be go back to the dentist who made them. A minor ad-ju.stment could make a major improvement in your life — and in his. * * * ' DEAR ABBY; My dad is a salesman. His customers sometimes call him at home to give him orders. Don't you think there should be a special time for these people to call him so the rest of the family can use the phone without getting their heads blown off? The minute one of us gets on the telephone my father starts to yell. "Get off the phone! Someone might be trying to call me!" . This has been the top argument in our house for a long time. Can you offer any solutions? SALESMAN’S DAUGHTER telephone for his business calls. If the family agrees to conserve on other things, he can afford it. Where the happiness of an entire family is involved, he can’t afford not to. ★ * * DEAR ABBY; I am planning to be manied soon. My fiance was married l^fore (about five years ago) and all his friends and relatives sent him wedding gifts for that occasion. He was divorced and his ex-wife took all their wedding presents with her. We would like to send wedding invitations to his friends and relatives because we truly want them to attend our wedding. But we want them to know that we do not expect them to send another present. Can we write on the invita-' tions, "No presents, please"? CONFUSED DEAR CONFU^: It is Improper to write a message of any sort on a wedding invitation. If they want to lend their "presence." they’ll be glad to send their "presents.” ‘'Good-Looking!’ You ’ll Hear at OES Card Party These attractive troys will he awarded as table prizes when Archie Chapter No. 503, Order of the Eastern Star, sponsors its annual card party at 8 p.m. Monday in the Masonic Temple on Stale Street. Pictured at a final committee meeting are (from left) Snltoc rrtm iThito Mrs. Harry Lunsford of Silverhell Road, ticket chairman; Mrs. Robert Scharf of Pine Lake Road, worthy matron; J^rs. Eugene Perkio of Riviera Street, ■ ’ party chairman; and Mrs. Edumrd Moden of Lincoln Avenue, prizes. THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, JANUARY 2T. 1961 FIFTEWf Hormones fpr Hair Scared by Thinning Scalp Bjr JOSEPHINE LOWMAM' (The QuesUon Bck) Q. “About 15 yeon ago. when In my late aOi, I had a complete hyatanctomy. I have had no aide eftecta but now, at miiMOa, I find my hair becoming alarmingly thin. “My general health ia excellent ao far as I know. Gould this condition be due to lack of hormones? Would It be beneficial for me to consider taking hormones? My hair looks lifeless. There are no actual bald spots but just general thinness and it's steadily becoming thinner all the time. “I would visit my doctor but now live in a different city and it seems easy to put off a visit to a strange physician when I am in good health.” A ★ * A. Nobody knows Just what causes thinning hair although there are certain factors which have been pinpointed. Heredity, a low thyroid, nervous stress and certain illnesses are some. scribed tor this condMon. Naturally yon HMst not take these without a physictan’s advice and I suggest you locate a well-qualified doctor in your new place of residence. You should do this anyway. Call your local county medical society or a local hospital for the name of h competent doctor on their staff. Sr dr * Q. "I am wondering if I should gain weight or stay at the weight I now am. I am 2S years (dd. I am 5 feet and weigh pounds. My bust measures 34 inches, waist 24 and hips 34. I have a very small bone structure. My husband keeps telling me to lose weight.” A. Your weight is correct. Your is a difficult man to Hospital Staff Hosts Newcomers Twenty-tour members dewpomers* Club of Pontiac wen entertained at the staff bouse on State Hospital Sharing hostess honors were Mrs. Walter H. Obenauf, Mrs. Loran W. GcrUnger and Mri< Jaraslav Orny. Pleasant living” quit period. Mrs. James C. Wood was ooalest winner. New members Mrs. Edward Mai-lonen and Mrs. Robert L'Hullier and a guest Mrs. F. Rex Mac-Kercher, were welcomed. ★ AW Mrs. Wood will be hostess tor the Feb. 8 meeting at 1 p.m. in her home on Eileen Drive, Bloomfield Township. • Your Clubs a Bore? Put 'Em to This Test Q. “How long wUl it take before I begin to see some improvement when I take waist-slimming exercises?” A. If you do them regularly every day, gradually Increasing the number of times you do each exercise daily, you will begin to see a difference in two weeks or a little more. A ★ A Q. "Can a woman of 37 improve her figure with exercise or is she too old?” A. I have seen j^omen of 70 improve their figures with exer- Q. "Is there anything that can be done about the small on-the-surface, little broken veins?” A. They can be removed by a dermatologist but this usually is temporary. Why not use a waterproof make-up to cover them? The Suez canal runs almost due north and south lor 104.5 miles of routing through marshy lakes and desert areas. If you do your waist exercises every day, gradually increasing the number of times you do each exercise daily, you will be^in to see a difference in your figure in about two weeks. By RITTH MIU,ETT Do you suffer from frequent attacks of clubitis? That is, do you sometimes think that if you have to go to one more meeting, serve on one more committee, or call one more list of names you’ll blow your top? ★ ★ ♦ If so, it is high time to put every organization to whidi you belong to a test. Ask yourself these questions about each one. Am I still as Interested In this group as I was when I joined and as convinced as 1 was then that It serves a useful Do I enjoy anything about being a member of tMs organization, or do I simply belong because " I should? Would I quit this organization tomorrow if I waren't afraid of what “they" (meaning the other members) would say about my quitting? Have I really contributed enough to this organization to justify the time I have spent at meetings? Are most of the members “working” members or “talking” members? It this organization were disbanded would it really matter to anyone but the members? Are there any ways in which could better spend the time give to this organization? Try those questions on each organization and you may be shocked at how many Of them flunk the test outright. •k It it For Happy Sdutions to some of the problems in husband-wife relationships order your copy of Ruth Millett’s booklet, "How to Have a Happy Husband.” Just send 25 ceqts to Ruth Millett Reader Service, c/o The Pontiac Press, P.O. Box 489, Dept. Radio City Station, New York 19, N.Y. Every family should operate on a budget. It tells you two weeks ahead of time that you’re gonna be broke in two weeks . . . Money can cause people to do some funny things — pai^cularly when they don’t have any. —Earl Wilson. Os., presented a film an Interior Next Programs Announced to Music Guild Members of Pontiac Music Guild met Tuesday morning at the studio of Charles Wilson in the First Congregational Church. Amy Hogle presided in the absence of the president. Wendell Ecker of the Morris Music Company, organist and pianist, presented an all-Oionin program which included Mazurka No. 4, Opus 33; Opus 15 and Opus 55 from Nocturne No. 1. Robert Noehren, university organist from Ann Arbor, will appear in recital at 4 p.m., Sunday at Temple Beth cob. ★ ★ ★ Dr. Roy Underwood of Michigan State University will present a concert for guild members, their students and friends Feb. 11 at the Hrst Congregational Church at 8 p.m. An organ recital by Edgar Billups at All Saints Episcopal Chur^ is slated for Feb. 14. Charles Wilson announced the next guild student recital March 21 at the Calbi Music Company at 8 p.m. Mrs. Cart QUford and Miss Hogle assisted Mr. Wilson with the social hour. Mrs. Carol Hayes was a guest. ’The group will meet at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Schmitz on Kennett Road. Feb. 28 at 8 p.m. 5 A Mirror. Trim and Tailored (UPI) — As slim and trim as a sapling, the new slacks are tapered to the ankle for a more Slender look and are topped with a classic long-sleeved shirt tailored in one of the many cotton-satin prints fdr a softly feminine mood. A September altar date is ruunrsd by Nancy Elisabeth Wright, daughter of the Diamond R. Wrighu of Lowell Street and Lawrence L. Pfeffer, son of the Joseph Pfeffers of Elizabeth Lake Road. Now Mink's Pink (UPI) - nibidrs In the ptoik. 1 «*»wl cMlar «ysd pink Teitman Furs Inc., New York, | to match a cashmere sweater. PAIAHOUNT SEAUn SCHOOL 11 Vi S. SoglMw, Isple TiMsHr IMf., Peetiac, Mch. OarellaMalt AvaUohle la Dey er fveaiaar Classes Write, Pkoae or Call ia Persoa for Free Pampkht PHONE FEDERAL 4-23S2 ilVANCY ELIZABETH WRIGHT Planning Party The Galloway Lake MOMS of America, Unit 21, will npoa. sor a "Your Age” card party at 7 p.m., Saturday at the . Pontiac Township Hall on North Opdyke Road. Proceeds will be tagged for the hospital veterans. reflecting your persoixility anTi Ail Wool Off White . . . *595 Y4 (Ideel For Bcdroomil High Pile Plush Cotton . *49'’’''' Loop Tweed . . . ^8^5 Yd. EARLY AMERICAN All Wool Block Pattern. ^©^•'•Yd. With Every Carpet Purchase Heavy Duty Rubber and Hair Combination Padding TOO BUSY TO SHOP? WE'LL COME TO YOU! Coll Georgs Tuson st OR 3-1225. Ho will bs glad to corns to your horns to »how you Mmptes end help »^vs your carpet problems. Coll Todsy. 50' See You In Church Sundoy SMCTEEX THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1961 PRE.SPRBVG SPECIAL 20% Off on All Regular Priced PERMANENTS Bring This Ad on Monday, Tuesday Wednesday For an Added Savings of $1.00 TONY’S Main Floor. 35 West Huron St. Shop Don't Shield the Children From Hostility By MUUEL LAWRENCE jDear Mn. Lawrence; 1 Last year my little boy enjoyed I kindergarten very much. But this lyear every other morning he'll say don't want to go to school today." He says that his first grade .teacher is always "yeiling" at him. !My problem is whether or not to have a little talk with her about 'Dinan into a seU-posansed ooel Lets depart Faiiytaad piyloome down to earth. It you dm't, your small boy may continue to believe in magic that can transform yelling first grade teacher into his nice kindergarten one. this. Other mothers tell me that she's been abusK-e toward their youngsters too . . . Kingsley Inn BLOOMHELD HILLS Dining at Its very best in an atmosphere of elegance and charm NOW SERVING OUR FAMOUS Enpsh Type Buffet Brunch $2.00 Per Person—$1.50 Children to 10 Years Every Sumloy from II A. to 2 I*. M. DANCINt; Every Saturday Night in the COTILLION ROOM to the Music of MERT VOWREN and His ORCHESTRA JOE ALEXANDER in the VILLAGE PCB Are You Planning a Parly? We would be happy to show you our faeillUes for prirste par-Uca. banqueU, weddins rrceplloni and catering In your home. OPEN 7 D.VYS A WEEK-Phone for Reservations MI 4-1400 Answer; Do you really believe hat a "little talk" with this teaeh-r can change her from an irritable she Is. he I himselt to be a bad boy. Actually, it is not fine for chU-dren to be constantly associated with kindly, patient, interested peo- For the world isn't entirely composed of them. That we resist i this fact is our problem. We just IdoD't like to believe that hostile 'people exi.st in the world and want children to share out view of it as . unfailing beneficent ALARMED AT VIRTUE Stnnehow we’ve got the imprea-sioh that everyone will love us if are just go^ enough oursdves. So we are alarmed for the virtue of a child who says, "My teadwr is mean," just as ^ fawning courtiers in the fairy tale were dsocked the little boy said, "But the emperor you aajn is weiuing such kingly robes is naked! ” Because we are afraid of hostility ourselves, we don't want children to register it as truth but ii>-stead tell them cruel lies about llhey can change it if they are only good, obedient, loving, etc., etc. •■nouglv U jrw eaa atop Mteriatadi^; reallBtle tiapea el ebenghg Ms toactor, yoar Uttla bay wUI stop, faa and take better care not to aroaae bar hoatiUty tawtead W preteadliig It Isn't tbare waiting Let me say right here that our mental hospitals are jammed with people who believed that everybody loved them. When the truth finally hit them, they got shocked out'of this world. So it is not terrible when a child meets someone who doesn’t love him. It can only become terrible when we tell him the truth true. For Gracious Suburban lAviiiff Moiie to RIVERDALE HILLS Beautiful Lake front home.s In a highly restricted Colonial any style, ^ distance from the proposed Jamc.<( Cousens Expressway to Detroit. the six smiling faces above represent five generations. Posing at a recent family get-together are Ronald Lem-mert. (left) ami brother Rodney, 3, u ith grent-great-gramlmother Mrs. Eliza Marcum of fan Dyke. Standing (from left) are the boys' mother Mrs. Albert Lemmert, Richwood Street; grandmother Mrs. Paul Chancey, North East Boulemrd; and great-grandmother Mrs, Albert Marcum, Michigan Avenue. Located on Elizabeth Lake Road Just West of Williams Lake Road The first dikes to protect Holland houses from rising canal ters were high mounds atop, I which rude huts were built. Tlu n 'p 'Farm, Garden' to Meet ; mounds were connected to form dikes keeping rising waters in * the canals under control. ’8 PAGEANT The .search for Michigan's ideal High School Senior Girl State Finals SpoiiHored hy tin* JUNIOR CHAMBER of COMMERCE PontiaeJVortherii Hitjh School Audiloriiini Saturda>, Jan. 28 7:00 P. M. MISS SII XRON Sill TTY Mulligan ,v Juniuj Miss of 19(}0 DONATION S\M) at the door If you are aiixiouH to watch MichigHii’n Junior Miss selected for the National hinalH, to he held m Mnt»je, Aiabama, bp there early for the Ije.st seats Junior .Misses are judged on character, personal ambitions, personality, charm, talent, |K)i.se, apitearance in formal attire. FIKST I>m/K A $5fX) scholarship provided by the Bottlers of Coca-Cola and an all ex-^nse paid trip to Mobile for the National Finals. Also other fine prizes from local merchants. The Last part of the State Finals will be Broadcast on WPON (MHO KC) starting at 8:30 P.M. The Feb. 13 meeting ol Birmingham Branch, W o m a n's National Farm and Garden Association. will be a tea In Birmingham Commuhlty Hou.se. Mrs. G. H. Willett. Birming-ham'.s mayor, will talk briefly on "Civic rmprovement in Birmingham” . Main speaker will be Donald J. Richaids, education consul- tant with the Michigan Department of Conservation. He will speak on general conservation with emphasis on wild flowers and will show slides. The stegosaurus, one of the pre-j jhi.storie dinosaur .species, was [about 30 feet long with a heavily 1 armored body and small head. Only one of over 300 Open Stock Dinnerware patterns offering top seIection.s and priced to give top values. Taylorton AMERICAN nNE CHINA at Price.s Yoi^Can Afford- Silver Wheal PHttern 45-Pe. Set - Service for 8. . $^^95 Vramatie new roylorlon Ckiao—grocafa), efnrabja, transfucMl, oranproof—ii YOUR Chios ... for arary day, or lor lha moat ipaciol occoiioa. Guorsnlaad for ona yaor aaaian braokactaf A Large Assortment of Dinnerware Patterns Are Being Closed Out at Worthwhile Savings liottled under authority of Coca-Cola Company by Coca-Cola Bottlinif Company of Pontiac, IMichii:an Michigan's Largest Dinjisjmire Specialty Store ^0^ N4HITH END OF MIRACLE MILE gHOPFlNG CENTER ON TELEORAFH ROAD ^Telephone FE 2-8642^ s t. Card Date Gets Lost in Shuffle By The Emily Post IiMtItule Quntlon; I play cards with a group of women almost every week. Each week the meeting is held in someone else’s house. When we leave, the-person whose turn it is next, always sayS, “We will play at my house next week. Last week nothing was said and so I took it for granted that we would not be playing cards and so (AP) - Elvta Presley is signed to a four-year contract with Metroldwyn-Ma-yer and probabiy will make his ■‘'^^ISoyiah Pick U.N. Hrad K this spring. Africa. The meeting is scheduled * * * BIOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet tor «riy February in Addis Aba- The studio announced Tlniradaylnews agency, Taos, reported|*^ Ethiopia, that the piitar-playlng singer and Thprsday night that Vladimir! actor .wiU do both musicals and Semenov, deputy Soviet foreign 'Hie area of Maryland is 10,577 picture minister. wiU head the Soviet dele- square mites, of which 6B0 square .................................................. of thelmaes are inland waterway surface. hasn’t been setected yet. 110 the third i Finest Quality Carpets McLEOD CARPETS WOODWABD mt SQUABS LABS U. Next to TWf RMtoanat SUKV1VOB8’ MONATLTIES-President Kennedy holds a oMIection of signatures in Japane.se as he meets Dr. Gunji Honoso at the White House Wednesday. Dr. Honoso is a Tokyo law professor. With them is the professor’s kimono-clad daugh- Ar rketorxx ter Huimko, HonOso brought the President the signatures of the 17 survivors of the Japanese destroyer which sank the PT boat Kennedy commanded in World War II, Supervisors Assn. Opposes Con-Con LANSING lUPlt-The Michigan State Association of Supervisors went on record Thursday opposing a con-stitutional convention but in-r' Bleated how it wanted delegate.s’ chosen if the people call a con-con. Hie organlxallon defeated a resolutions committee recommendation which would have put It In support of minpaiilslan selection of delegates. A motion to oppose the call of a convention, which will be on the' April 3 ballot, received heavy! support „ Rock Point near Charlo A-Waste Into Great Lake voix. Limits on the amount of radio-LANSING (UPD — Consumers active material allowed in the Power Co, received permission waste water were set at the com-Thursday from the water resources mission’s monthly meeting, said commission to discharge waste iLoring Oeming, chief engineer for into l.Kike Michigan from its nu-'the commission. Castro Cuts Off Cuban Cash for Students at LSU BA’TON ROUGE, La. (APi-j Some .38 Cuban student.s at Loui-| siana State university today faced j the spring term without funds for tuition, books, i-oom or lioard. The 38—nearly half of LSU's 80 Cuban students—are victims of a clamp-down by Premier f'idel; Castro that has prevented traps-' fer of funds from the Caribbean' Island. 1 A citizens committee, formed hr help the ('ubans, has nskisl f6 abandoned vehicles next Tues-; day and at least one w ill provide i containing a piano, a gas range, i a soda fountain and two cash; jegisters. Special Sale! 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Caxlni Lin Ft s. 16-Inch Mediem TWINSULATION INSULATION r jr ^ ZONdLlTR — Lsrte Bat ....II.4S Jhre LOOSB BOCK WOOL-Bat .Me GOLD BOND MATT THICK insclation—nt.M per i.tso ti. ■■reH ALIININCM FOIL B ■ ■ M iwsrLATioN-aos rt, Rau .M.fw ^ CROMA-SHAKE A A»EST0S 9INEG w ■■■" Regulorly $*| Cedai Shekel $1095 Entire Stock! $• Partieal Board */a-4x8 4495 ALWINUN SIMie E16HT SOTP95 INCH 27' 'ORTHERN UMBER Co. "WE DELIVER" ] 7940 Cooley Lake Road TCDliC Matoriali Can Bo I df PNd Bought With No Monay Down "hdony Months tf Pay" All Pricot in Qosntity Quotod Open Doily 8 A. M. to 8 P. M.—Sundoy 10 A. M. *til 2 f.i EM 3-4171 Is Your High School Ropresented in The Press? V THE PONTIAC PRESS Watch for School Nows On This Pago Each Friday FRIDAY. JANUARY 27. 1961 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, NINETEEN Seniors Hold Mock Vote at Watertoid By BARB gECAN Along with the end of the aemei-ter at Waterford Township High School, came the announcement of i-esults of a recent mock election 'in the senior class. Awarded the honors of these positions were Kay McMorris and Mike Kaines, most valuable; Joelr lyn Prout and aark Lefurgy, mort likely to succeed, and Linda Law-son and Don Wennsten, most talented. Other “award” winners were Jean Honharf and Tom McArthur, most all-around; Diane douse and Ed Stlgers, most athletic; Carolyn Klender and Jack Craven, class flirt, and Sue Mobey and Joe Stodgel, wittiest. Sue Elliot and Dennis Klender were voted most dependable and HeWi Volgelberg and Bob Nestor, friendliest. Elected mo.st courteous were Sue Beaver and Tom Goddard. Also selected were the senior! class- motto, song colors, and flower. The motto of the class of 1 1981 is "We follow today; tomor-i row we lead.” ^osen as the class flower was| thfrorchid. Tuesday of next week 6 students! of Mrs. Mary Aperauch's Journal-, ism I cla.ss will attend an all-day* conference at Birmingham Sea-1 holm High School. Representing Waterford will bo Sue Tyrrell, editor of the school newspaper. Barb gecan, eo-editor; Nikki Herald, advertising manager; Mike Aperauch, photographer; Glenn Leuhman, sports writer, and Janice Had- jPlan Band Concert ^ at Clarkston High By JANET T18CH Weeks of, preparation will finally end in a variety of musical numbers to be displayed at the Clarkston High Schod Winter Band Concert Feb. 1, at 8:15 p.m. of the performance or from any band member. The price is just 50 cents for students and 75 cents for adults. The program is especially designed to present as many different ty pes Of ssleotlons as possible. The traditional “Otar-Spangled Banner” will begin the program and the musical lilt will continue through such numbers as “Glory of the Sea," overture to “The Messiah,” “Bugler’s HoU-day,” “U’l Abner,” and “The Pearl Fishers.” Other selections include "Th< Typewriter,” "Ballet Egyptian,' "Sound of Music” and a march called "The Nutmeggers.’’ An enjoyable evening should be in store for those in attendance. Tickets will be on sale the night Urick, clarinet; and Julia Wood, alto clarinet. Congratulations are certainly in order for these outstanding band members. But the approach of the ^Winter Concert wasn't all that gea-eraled siMtemciit la the schooTo Ute tense excitement of tryouts ended and happy winners have received notice of their admission Wayne-Oakland County League Band. Clarkston High Schocd will be well represented. The following were chosen as members: Richard Buelel, clarinet; Gary Halser, snare drum; ‘nm Jockwig, comet; and Pat Jordan, sousaphone. Also chosen were Tom Kreger, baritone; Fred Lissner, bass ciari-net; Sue Staley, ba.ssoon; Dennis W. Bloomfield Hailkaretaker Semester Closes With Exams Some of the highlights of the program are guest speakers from noted area papers and group discussions concerning the problems of a high school newspaper. Tomorrow night the annual donkey basketball game will be played in the W.T.H.S. gymnasium between the AVaterfoid faculty and the combined Pierce and Crary Junior High faculties. PEPPy PUPILS PAINT POSTERS - These girts are active members of a very active organization at Pontiac Northern High School — the PNH Pep Qub. Among their many activities is painting posters to push various student events. Working on a poster here are (from left) Linda Hogg,..-a senior; Carla Doolin, PmUm Prn, Ph,l» sophomore; Geoigia MeSkulin, senior; and Sharon Verwey, sophomore. The pep club also sponsors many events lor the student body such as rallies, dances and assemblies. Currently, the PNH Pep Oub boasts a membership of some 63 students. PCH Students Will End Semester Tonight Dancing Kids Kept' Him Young for 30 Years; Give Him a Worm Farewell By CAROLYN MAVIS Last Friday was a big day for William F. McCracken. He was retiring alter many years of service as head custodian at West Bloomfield Township High School and the school and its administrators honored him with a unique award. I By BARB GRIFFIN With semester exams over and [report cards marked, many Pon-itiac Central students will cele-ibrate by attending the "Varsity 'Drag" tonight. PNH Pep Club Is Active to the End This dance, sponosored by the To be in good form for this weekend of skiing, members take to the slopes Wednesday nights after school at either Ml. Grampian or Mt. Holly at reduced rates. Gub members are also planning By DIANE M. WALTER -Scholarship (^ifying Test giveni from the resources of the Ma- Sfudents were caught in a whirl-1»*1 spring, pool of activities this, week at Pon- Each student who is endorsed by tiac Northern High School as the his school, receives a formal let-semester came to a close. of commendation signed by Everyone was busy cramming | iV* P^ncipal and the p^ito^ Po for exams this week and had little 'he National Merit Scholarship! tional Merit Scholarship Corpor- corporations, foundations, associations and individuals, of which 'ontiac Motor Division is one. time for anything else. Halls at St. Fred's Quiet; Exams Over debate wen explained and JI-lustrated to the student body and faculty. Pam Dunum, senior, and Bill Basinger, sophomore, participated . ________ .... on the negative team. It 18 our earnest hope that the, ^ recipients will continue their ed-j Kovach, sophomore, and Bill Ranwey and Danny Ma- ucation. and thus not only benefit,®'” Ramsey, senior, were of the jean Mere annoiinred th\% week ’themselves, but the nation/' Beatrice Siev, mn the commended KtudentH. ! Stalnakcr. acted as time keeper. Corporation. Blit there's at least one Kunizallon at Nnrthcni that w|s aside time to boost s< sidrM. That’s tl.e 1*MI Pep f'lub.! According to John M. Sialfiaker, lts63 hard.wo.-kmg membeis are*”''* . National Merit!the Norther and is ready and wailing to By MARY ELLEN DETMER ‘^-y P^' out on a clean slate torV si" were desIr'S'"”*""itho united States in recognition of students rested for a sliprt Ixili-; ' their excellent performance on the day after tedious exams. President ol the |M‘p eluli this [National Merit Scholarship Qual- Thc Students were bent on recol-! K«r 1» Lynda Hogg, a 17-year- ifying Test. Iccling a lull semesters work andj old senior. j •"n.gjjg students.” lie continues, putting it to effect. For the Seniors other officers are Sue Jones,!"ai-e so outstanding that we wish . .. .... , .. this was a specially trying period. Lice president; Barb Beriyman.ito single them out for .special at-j*!'® for qualified men in the Anticipating visions of diplomaSlt^asurcr; and Pam Huntly, sec tention. n .h. neoe future, good marks ^etary. I -The semifinalists and The club recently, took part Pep Club, will be held in the boys' gym from 10 to 12 immediately following the Central-Arthur Hill basketball game. Marilyn Coifing, music chair-iwi. has engaged Jen^v 1,-lbby's band to provide the music lor the dance. Tickets are 75 cents drag and 50 cents stag. Linda Brooks is tickets and publicity chairman. Refreshment^ will be provided by Sharon Guenther. The Y-Teen Gub will assist by checking coats at this affair. presented on behalf of to attend a movie on skiing Feb. I the Board of Education, faculty, sponsored by the American administration and student body. Field Service Committee at Birm-| ♦ A * ui„u At the pep session McCracken In^am High School. photographed receiving the Officers of the Ski Gub are Dar-l pogg and then with the chccrlead- Members of the Ski Gub are looking forward to their annual ski retreat up north, tentatively scheduled for the last weekend In I February. McCracken was presented the first Lifetime Athletic Pnss ever nwsrded in the West Bloomfield Township School Dislrlct during a pep session. This pass, presented by Donald A. Bradford, athletic director at West Bloomfield High School, was in Tccognition of McCracken's 30 yeai-s ol service in the school sys- tem. It ' lene Woodhull, president^ Mary Shadley, vice president; Ann Ifod-ges, secretary, and Sue U-c, treas- s clustered around him. A great cheer was heard as e walked to receive the pass and the attitude of everyone was that of sadness. Physical educatior instructor ] Marjorie Jackson, advices BTOup. , I Mr. McCracken, a maintenance LmI night the Central PTA met j man who sees that the school In the newly remodeled swimming | keeps running smoothly . pool room. Representatives from flciully retiring Uxlay He plans varknis clubs spoke to mombersi to take a well-earned vacation with about their activilios. jhis wile and travel to California. Gubs represented w ere the Math I * * * Gub, Biology Club, Future Teach- When asked what he would miss ers. Varsity Gub and the Toma-|most, Mr . McCracken replied, hawk and Quiver. ["The kids, they keep me young." Tom received first place and Ted, second. Their drafting teacher Is Enar West. Mr. Kaiser stressed in his talk in the 1 .Jin the United States. Scholarship awards are made of young men and present them with a challenge. A mock debate was also presented to the student body at a recent assembly. Judging, technliiiies of debate, i fypfcal ;field of engineering and design-, ! tabulated and re|»rt^. Both t^ sold homemade candy after school, jail high school seniors, and this students and the teachers will be William Rose is tlicir spon-;cer t a i n 1 y signifies noteworthy displaying varied ^tenances.sor. ^achievement'' h^ explained. th\ parents\et’the remits* Si'^lORS HONORED ' scholarship compe- Last Friday the Seniors launched Two seniors at Northern have jf/®I|„‘f,„“|^" their long-planned candy sale. The been honored for outstanding per-money received will go towards formance on the National Merit! producing the Senior play this year. With the seniors working as hard as they are their goal should be easily reached. Monday will mark the end of the sale. Earlier thLs week at a short but Important assembly Father Fe-mJnineo, director of Teen Gub, addressed the group. He laid down the rules for ai- Ry PAT BURNS the language was heard fluently as oratory with individnol bootho tendance at the Teen Gub dances St. Michael High School is losing .student.s taking the course found; console caMnet is the ardent plainly but sternly. Father felt no tinu'- in employing the themselves tape recording the ro.i their leaeher. Sister this w»w-necessary l^au.se a few- atiproach to leaching.«Lthe-Fi*nch' students seemed iti be abusing language. privileges at the dances. Through the halls of St. Mike' ooRvene THE ]\ATIOI¥’S MOST WAI^TED HOMES Pupils Use Tape Recorders 1027 SQ. FT. OF LIVING AREA INDIVIDUAL ROOM GAS HEAT AHACHED GARAGE 8" HOROZONTAL ALUMINUM SIDING GLASS WINDOW WALL SEPARAn LAUNDRY AREA FAMILY ROOM WITH SLIDING GLASS DOOR ONTO PATIO ALL ALUMINUM 3 BEDROOMS Va acre lots SCHOOLS, SHOPPING NEARBY Micliaelites Talking to Themselves AT OUR LOWEST PRICE EVER OFFERED ! maHn?^ langUHge-ttitr'-wreir“ . A fully eqiii|>pe«l language li ' -teanne Marie. i l-ast year, she received a scholar-iship wliich distinguished her aa[ the only Michigan participant attending the 1960 Summer Language Institute held at Rosary College, River Forest, Illinois. The Institute was sponsored by| the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare. , We are fortunate in having such* an experienced and excellent! language teacher. 1 Classrooms were empty today as the end of the first half of the school year brought the annual semester holiday. Ta offset the strain of final exams the Athletio Association lo aponaorlng the aaanal, “Sweater Swing.” The dance will be held tonight in the school gym from 8:30 lo 11:30. Admission is SOc per person and the dance is open to the public. A guest disc jockey will spin the records. greet the stn- The cards win be distributed Individually by Father Hayes. MODERN LA.NGUAGB AIDA - These pupils at St. Michael’s High School are using some of the latest methotjs of learning the French language. Studeirts learn much faster by being able to hear their own mistakes. This is when tape recorders play such an Important it^. Nancy OmUm fren riwU Fetter of 59 Home St. is carefully listening to a conv’ersation she has just recorded, while Michael Oroans of 30 Ogemaw St, is busy recording his lesson. Earfihones enable students to Ustpn and record in the aame room without diaturblng each Twenty students from 81. Mikes will be representative delegates to the Training School of Sodality Action (TSSA) to bo held on Saturday, Feb. 4, at the University! of Detroit. Small discussion groups, with representatives from an parta of the state, will be icheduled from 9:45 a.m. to 5:00 p.m: The theme of the convention la ' Leadership for Life.” TWENTY THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JANUARY 27. 1961 ★ GETS HIS CUT! ★ Popular Night Club owner Dick Scribner presents o huge Anniversary.coke to his orchestra leader Frankie Meodows. Meadows of Radio and TV background now boasts one of the longest playing contracts in the orea, having mode music with his band f£r more than two years at Scrib's Bar and Restauront, 130 S. Telegraph Rd. RESTAURANT ^Martha’ at the Met Malilda Steals the Show NEW YORK (API-The revival at the Metropolitan Opera Thursday ni^ was "Martha," but it was four-foot^ Matilda that galloped away with the show. Friedrich Von Flotow's trlliy period piece was given here for the first time in 30 years. It's timental, lilting work, but it takes more than sentiments and lilts to make an opera, and this production had it: w w ★ Matilda, a horse. SQUARE aad BOUND DANCING riant Orebni GARDEN CENTER Bollraom t*ST WaaSwarS, Uatrall Daaclas Enrr Than., Sat., Sia. ■t Campes Bollreom Her handler, in the costume of a 19th century fanner, kept a tight hold on the glossy black mare but even so, once in the wagon shafts and ready to drive off with the four principals, she pranced, she kicked, and for a second it looked as though a quartet of stars would topple over the and into the orchestra pit. * ★ ★ The horseplay, coming right at the end of Act I, stirred the audience to an enthusiasm which Von Flotow, despite the singing of Victoria de Los Angeles, Rosalind ^ias, Richard Tucker and Giorgio could not all by himself arouse. ♦ ★ * Waltzing Matilda took no curtain calls, but she crossed backstage at the start of Act II and got warm applause. The Met said Matilda behaved docilely at rehearsals, and had made her debut earlier in “Manon” with no display of operatic temperament at all. “BIC GALA PARTY” GIRLS! Would You Like to Be Queen for o Doy? Come to the 'Mordi Gros' Escli Night a Girl is sslscted as Qwtsn, tvtry Friday night ws select a Queen fer the week. All weekly Queens will be in final contest Feb. 10,1961. The Queen ond her Court Tuetdoy, Feb. 14 will reign all day and Pancakes will be served from 10 A.AA. to I P.Ai, dancing, music, songs, balloens, noise-makers, herns, costumes, etc. will be furnished. Tou must he 21 to enter. -K NEW DRAYTON INN J Restaurant and Cocktail Lounge jL •k, ,4191 Diyc H>y or J.7I61 D.oyton Plom» Y7TUITS COCKTAILv-LOUNGE FE 8-0938 VEST HURON It ELIZABETH LAKE ROA MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY Music of The Skes Brothers Piss “2" Others |sm SMtlent Evary Monday '^nje£/iJ^cuinaj; FOOD LIQUOR SUNDAY SPECIAL ROAST PORK Balk aaS Batltr ^]50 FE 3 2 9 7 3 Open Dally t AJf. to t A.M. Sunday Z P.M. to t A.M. Plenty of Proa Parking 1650 ' N. Perry at Pontiac Rd. VISIT OUft COCKTAIL LOUNGE ClUBfrAHOE -Mtr ► " A 4769 Dikib^Hwy'^ Droyton Plains PINE LIQUORS, BEER AND WINE "UOIES" NIGHT EVERY WIDNUDAY Wa Celar la Spaclal Porliaa. Wtddlngt and Bowllag laaqaato DANCING NIGHTLYI Muiic by (ba ”3 Lllllo Wordi" « M lb* Uro* a r.a4U *a tb* a Ear aa Iba Draaia ■ STjOwsr Baa ’Ea. Haar 'Ea, Taa’U Baja, 'I The BRUSH MOUNTAIN BOYS Batelal rriaar-'-Jafttry” LaoaarO Stjiaa aa ttaa OM TIaa Fl«la Ona o( the Faat- Papalar TV, Eaeardlag Artlat V? Vet air, Uiey'ra bera eeerr “ '■* and ^Saturday n!|ht to pit to aea atid haar theta boyt for § ¥ Cback TatUa Hera Are Baae ef the Flae Reeordlace They Made Fameat SPADAFORE BAR I Mandolin 6 N. Caaa (Comer of Huron) pickin’ outtar. On hli Spanltb FOOD AT ITS BEST . . . FORTIES BICMAR Bor ond Restouront LIQUOR--BEER —WINE TO TAKE OUT SPAGHETTI All You Con Eat $100 FRIDAY ONLY FISH and CHIPS All You Can Eot 95* Special fer Friday Perch Dinner_______85c We Are Now Featnring PIZZA BURGERS This Menu in Addition to Our Regular STEAKS r- CHOPS —* PIZZA TAKE-OUT SERVICE ON ALL DINNERS RESTAURANT OPEN 5:00 A.M. TO 7:00 P.M. Dinner* Served In tb* Bar Dining Re«m 'til 10 p.m. SUBMARINE SANDWICHES KOSHER CORNED BEEP Now Ftbturing — FRIDAY and SATURDAY the Scintillating BETTY RIDLEY Playing Your Fovorite Tunes at the Keyboard 94-96-98 W. Huron St. Editors Face Challenge of Rallying Enthusiasm WINNIE’S BACK — Sir Winston Churchill, cigar in mouth, wavea to the crowd as he leaves his London home Thursday to attend a session of the House of Commons for the first time since suffering a back Injury last November. Little Nations Asked to Stand Pat in Congo EAST LANSING (B-The newspapers of America lace the greatest diallenge of their history, says the president of the U.S. Chamber of Cfonunerce. The scope of this challenge described today In a speech prepared for noon delivery by Arthur H. (Red) Motley, also president and publisher of Parade Publications, Inc. ★ ★ ★ Motley was kickoff speaker at the 93rd annual convention of the Michigan Press Association (MPA) Newspapers, Motley added, have the first responsibility In closing the nation’s most pressing "Information gap” in modern times. "The Sixties obvtousiy wiii be tail of challenge lor the newspapers,’’ MoUey said. "N o t merely the challenge of nteetlng Incren^ couts and competition from other typea of media, bat of meeting the challenge of thla decade. "The challenge of the decade, both domestic and international, will be political,’’ he predicted. "The real test will be the ability of bur government and its allies to adequately handle both domestic and international problems. 'In this area," he said, sponsible newspapers have their greatest obligation. Because newspapers can spark public Interest and enthusiasm, proride local leadership and rally the energies o| the citizens, they must once again return to the role of a crusader.” Newspapers, Motley said, have a particularly urgent reapc»sibll-~* ity to make issues dear to the voters, tp . make the records and abilities of the candidates known and to eihphasize the importance ! of a wise choice. WATCH By WILLIAM N. OATI9 ,tive involvement of major pow-UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (APilers.” Sign Trade Agreement — Secretary General Dag Ham-! Hamiharskjold's letter was sent marskjold has warned that thej^ec. 14 to Ceylon. Guinea, Indo-big powers might be drawn into ‘open and active involvement” in the Congo if the smaller nations their troops out of the U.N. command. bility if the weakening of the U.N. force brought "a disintegration within the country provoking ac- Harlem Folk 'Guilty of Favoritism' NEW YORK (AP) - A State Supreme Court justice says some Negro leaders in Harlem are fomenting racial discrimination against white men" and this is as unlawful as it is for white people to di.scriminate against Negroes. Justice Irving H. Saypol made the declaration in a criitanal tempt conviction of the leader of a Harlem groUp seeking to force white store owners to buy supplies from Negro salesmen. no STANLEY Comady M.C, JAM SESSION Every Tuesday with Freak Perry and H DtBirs Inn DANCING 1 Friday tad Saturday Niglitf BILL LAWSON'S Bond 9451 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD EM 3-9124 FINE UGUOR-NEER-Wmi nesia, Morocco, Yugoslavia and the United Arab Republic, ell of •horn have ordered their forees out of the Congo or threatened so. The message was not made public until Thursday, when Hammarskjold submitted it to Omar Loutfi of the U.A.R., Security Council president for January. The secretary genera] apparently decided to make the letter public to try to head off plans by Indonesia, Morocco and the U.A.R. to pull their 4.900 men out of the TJ.N. force in the next few reducing the ‘ force to 13,259. Yugoslavia already has pulled out Its 21 men, Guinea is now withdrawing its 749, but Ceylon apparently has decided to keep in a 9-man contingent. ★ ★ ★ ‘Severe weakening of the force! by reason of withdrawals,” Ham-1 marskjold wrote, "may make It impossible for CThe U.N. force) to function effectively and would thus make necessary a proposal for the liquidation, of the force and In consequence the entire United Nations operation in the Congo.” I c, ’j 1 . . I I*' such an event, he warned, 'Thur^diyT oP-uiO" the peace of "a substantial pari "There smolders among us anj 'unlawful condition both distress-' !ing and dLsgraceful. i "In Harlem, Negro leaders, I civic, political and clerical, and Ithe local branch of an a.ssociatibn Idfdirated to promoting the lot of; I their fellows, 4ncluding elimina-|tion of racial discrimination, are fomenting racial discrimination against white men.” ★ ★ The opinion added: "As Negroes they know fully what racial dis-! crlmln.’ttkm is. And -yetr-na-: dark skin, they a^tate by ■d and action—speech, print, boycott and picketing—to deprive white men of their livelihoods solely because they are white-skinned, so as to replace these victims with their selected Negroes" |Gran(i Jury to Probe Mexican Jet Crash NEW YORK (UPI)-A grandj jury will be asked to investigate last week’s crash of a Mexican jjetliner at Idlewild Airport. It will be the first time In 10! years an air crash has been referred to a grand jury. A spokesman for the Queens! County District Attorney’s Office said Thursday the incidence crashes in the New York area dur-; Ing the past year made It necessary to turn over evidence on the latest crash to a grand jury. FDR Jr. Won't l^ome WASHINGTON (AP) - Diplomats said Thursday they under-I stood Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr. had declined an opportunity to become President Kennedy’s am-Ibassor to Rome. White House 'Press Secretary Pierre Salinger I said, in response to a query, that! I he knew nothing about the report.; TOKYO (AP)—Burma and Cbm-munist North Korea signed a d e agreement Thursday in Pyongyang, Pyongyang radio announce. 'The North Korean broadcast did not disclose the value of trade involved. For the koHosf hoot during the long wintor month*, got tho tep-promium coal on an automatic dalivary ayttam and atay warm all wintar. LUMBER • 3-^SUPPUti -fUEL 549 N. JAGINAW JT. fbwttvifc.Af/cA'^FE.4 2521 SEE ELVIS AS TOUtE NEVER SEEN HIM BEFORE! HalWauis _ ____________ •ROOUenON jouET prowse • • Tisiiiesier UNIT 2 UNIT 3 HARRY’S BAR LIQUOR ~ BEER WINE FINE FOOD S6I-70 Soofli SooforN St. n LEGIONSOF -f THEmE THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. JANUARY 27. 1961 TWENTY-ONE The 11th century Cathedral of Chartrea, in FYanoe, ^ one tower readiing 350 fleet, and another finished in the 16th cehtury, reaching 377 feet. I Shirley J6nes Is a Surprise COLLIER lanes DANCE SATURDAY NIGHT For Matnbers and CuMta FH.. Bat.. Bu. « "tU • F. M. Fish or CliickMi Dinnar . .$1.00 Steak or Skrimp Dinner . .^1.50 Waterford Eaglet No. 2SI7 0-9:l0 G.l. BLUES l;00-3d)7-5:l4.7ai.9a0 .Hal IQ I ' M€.« TM€ UtO, WMTI .NO~|//7^ HVflbkllf ' woNocBful »coi« »ico<«)€0,K//r PMOOUCTION t mmm Glass Beads Make Hoad Strip Shine ■ LANSING (B - About 700,000 pounds of tiny glass heads were spread along Michigan's state last year. They were sprinkled on freshly painted center strips. I The beads, not much larger than grains of salt, are what make the center lines glow when the beams from car headlights strike them at night. A good deal of testing went Into developnient of the reflecting method. "It was found that little round beads are Ijest for reflecting be-cau.so a glass sphere catches a beam of light from any direction lanfil reflects it back along a line lexactly parallel,” said Highway Commissioner John C. Mackie. ★ ★ ★ 1 "Thus, the lights from a motor-list’s car are certain to be bounced back to his eyes.” The Highway Department specifies that only a small percentage of the beads, costing 10 cents a pound, can lie of irregular shape. Dcpainnent inspectors use a mi-(roscoiH' to make surc> that enough of them are apheiical. Heart Research Costly NEW YORK (UPD-The American Heart Association has announced it spent $24.37 million during the 19.59-60 fiscjil year to combat heart disease—including a rec-! ord 59.03 million for research. ' ^ZZaKEECO —rti s FKATl BE— CONTtXVOL'S BBOWINCln ssTransr and scndat Dooas ortN i:m r.M. PONTIAC CENTRAL HIGH GYM 28-29 ON STAGE — IN PERSON I JIMMY MARTIN and Hit Sunny Mountain loyi Start of WWVA-|amborao ON OUR SCREEN AMERICA'S GREATEST WITH a CAST OR ovn too OtMl OR OAOWCAH WNt CStm ------* "MtNMT OITA tayi SAVE MONEY PwHm FIrt Flafeurt NOW PREMIERE SHOWINfil t- T«l.«r.>l. .1 S.l»r. t.t. M. lin V If III U a Open 6:30 P. M. Show Storta 7:00 P. M. FE 2-1000 jK^-^/i^lTHEATER BBHE-IB i J4 1 COMFORT ELECTRIC IN-CAR HEATERS NO EXTRA CHARGE “SENSATIONAL —AND I MEAN SENSATIONAL" Sponcar TRACY Frodoric Gan* MARCH KELLY T- Truy Mxitai KiaY Inhi T^b 'INHERIT THE WIND" IS ONE OF THE MOSTRRILUANT DISPUYS OF ACTING EVER WITNESSEDIW -Nav Fart Tlinai ITS kU UOUT THE FUIODS MONKEY TRUE. TUT KOCKEDkMEBICk-SrUU HT CONTINUODSLTI ^mss■ -AND IN COLOR- They Dared Brina Law THE PONTl'AC PRESS, FRIDAY, JANUARY 27. 1961 Walter Hyry has been in eompetiUvc skUn^ for 26 years and he admits that he doesn’t even own a palrj of downhill skis. This seems to be the case with many skiers who concentrate on jumping alone. *T’ve used jumpers since I was five years old,” said the 36-year-old Berkley tool arid die maker who won the Veteran’s Class of the 8th annual Kandahar Ski Jump for the third time last weekend. “The reason there has be^ so much interest in ski jumping because where I was from in Upper Michigan all the kids had one goal—to conquer “Suicide Hill,’’ said Hyry. Raised in the Ishpemping area, Hyry accomplished that goal at the age of 15 when he conquered “Suicide. He went 180 feet, and later pushed it to 225 feet. “It’s a matter of opinion for ski jumpers, but “Suicide Hill” is the toughest in my book," he said, “and I look forward to jumping the hill against my old friends up there every year.” What’s makes it “Suicide Hill?” Wings Continue Home Slump DFrmOIT (AP) — Stan MikiU (ought his way around the Detroit defenae Thursday night (or a Chicago goal in the third period that earned the Black Hawks a 2-2 tie with the Red Wings in a National Hockey League game. Mikita's trying goal, coming about halt way through the period, kept the (ourth-place Red Wings jin their Olympia Stadium slump. I The Red Wings have won only one {game in their last dozen home I starts. i Both goal tenders were superb, Glenn Hall of Chicago stopping 40 shots and Detroit's Terry Sawchuk “I guess its the tremendous speed you reach on the!kicking out 3i. hill to edge of the takeoff,” said Hyry. “We were clocked!, '^'*‘'** ^ . j ,, , . ,, (enseman Al Arbour at the De- at 53 and 54 miles an hour one day. jtp^t unc. tore down right ★ ★ ★ wing and put a 20-(oot shot into When Walt cahie off the “Kandahar Jump after a dis-; tance of 107 feet, he hobbled to the club house.- ski jump,” he said, “and I’ve got it taped up pretty tight.” , Even with the ankle his effort was good enough to' edge his brother Alden on points. ‘ Fall? Oh, yes I’ve had plenty of them. Tom llga-, ments, sprained ankles, twisted knees, but fortunately! nothing serious,” he said. Hyry made good use of his skiing abilities. He got his first pair of slak>m skis when in the army while with the 10th Mountain Division in Colorado. From there he was on U.S. Ski Divisions in Italy, so in his 30 years on slats there was no Interruption. ' “I’ll just keep on skiing until I feel I’ve had it, buti one think I know, I will never quit and then try to come! back after a couple years. This is the toughest thing to! do. I guess we get leery with age.” he said. ★ ★ ★ Hyry’s 7-year-old son and 10-year-old daughter are! strong ski enthusiasts. “I’m not pushing them to bei jumpers, if they want to stick with downhill skiing! that’s fine, but I’m not a parent who would jump withi fear, as many do, if they should decide on ski Jumping. ” Before parents allow their children to try ski jump-! Ing however, Hyry strongly advi.ses they get good basic instructions. “It’s tremendous fun, but its-dangerous for a person who doesn’t know what he’s doing on a jump,” he con-j eluded. bit too late (or them to bid (or a place in the playoffs. Eric Nesterenko scored-CMea- The Bruins kept the Tmnnto: go's other goal after only 37 onds of play. His 2S-(oot blast got through ^wchuk’s pads. Gordie Howe scored his first goal in 11 games and tied the score six minutes later. Both Detroit goals were scored when Chicago was short-handed. Howe punched in his own rebound, and Parker MacDonald gave the Red Wings the lead when he tipped In Pete Goegan's long blast early In the second period. Sparked by some o( the players acquired in recent trades, last-place Boston Bruins seem to be making tijmselves a (actor in the National Hockey I.eague race Maple Leafs from gaining with Montreal lor the NHL lead Thursday night and it was a former Canadian, traded to Boston this season, who turned the trick. Andre Pronovost slapped in the winning goal for Boston's 5-4 vic- tory over the Leafs in the third period. And Murray Oliver, one of the three newcomers from Detroit, provided one of the assists. It was the second straight sparkling performance by Bruins,' who lost 2-1 to the New York Rangers Wednesday gave the Rangers (its with swift attacks before they went down. Major College Quintets Back Alter Examinations By The Associated Press Mid-term examinations completed at most schools, major college basketball resumes full-scale competition this weekend with seventh-ranked St. John's and ninth-ranked Southern California leading the pack back to a normally hectic schedule. The St. John's Redmen (10-2) who had travel troubles with the eastern snowstorm, are scheduled (or more at St. Louis tonight in one of only three trips away from the New York area. Southern California, which rode its 12-2 record into the Associated Press top Ten this week, entertains Air Force tonight before meeting Denver Saturday night as the major powers return with a whopping program. Tonight Temple meets Middle \r .S<-RA.\im,K Hon Murphy (lOt of the Chicago Black Hawks, holds off Gordie Howe of the Red Wings as Howe makes a desperate bid to get a stick on the puck which is shown at the bottom of the net just inches from the goal mouth. Chicago goalie Glenn Hall was pushed into the net but managed to knock the disc out. The game ended in a 2-2 tie. Big Keg Tourney Slate Set Atlantic conference leader LaSalle, Brigham Young is at Utah State for a Skyline clash and Richmond plays Southern Oonferenoe challenger the Citadel. In non-league games, Oklahoma City Is at 8MU. Oregon State at Portland, Denver at UCLA, and Washington at Oregon. Saturday, play breaks out from coast to coast after the relatively quiet last two weeks while the crew-cuts were concentrating on classroom, rather than hardwood, tests. Top-ranked Ohio State (13-0), the only major unbeaten team, tests its 13-game winning streak and its Big Ten leadership against iflth-j-WhitseU was a defensive back, ranked Purdue in what promises to be a tidy duel between the Buckeys' Jerry Lucas and ti boilermakers' Terry Dischinger. Marquette in the National Slate VS Mainland NEW VIKINGS — Dave Middleton (top) and Dave Whltsell (lower photo) were two of the three Lions picked by the new Minnesota Vikings of the NFL. The other was tackle Grady Alderman. Middleton Is a doctor at Ann Arbor. He Is an end while ' Hawaii Halts Grid Lions Lose Two Other Players to New Team Minnesota Also Picks Whitsell, Alderman; Accent on Youth NEW YORK (UPD-Three play ers weiy sheared from the Detroit Lion roster yesterday as the new Minnesota Vikings reached Into the National Football League grab-bag in search of a repre sentatlve team for next autumn's warfare. Veteran end Dave Middleton, de fensive halfback Dave Whitsell and rookie guard Grady Alderman were snatched from the Lions in a special draft at the annual NFL meeting here. The Vikings, who recently signed all-pro quarterback Norm Van Brocklin to coach them through their maiden season, emphasized youth in most of their choices. In selecting Middleton, the Minnesota club Is gambling on the former Auburn AU-Araerloan changing his mind about retirement. Middleton recently announced that he planned to withdraw from pro feetiMlI to pursue his medical career. Viking officials hope to p«>i-suade Middleton to continue his studies at the famed Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. Whitsell, a former Indiana star, was unable to nail down a- first-string job with the Lions, but he is considered an excellent prospect. Alderman, who gained his collegiate exp^ence at the University of Detroit, played sparingly foi' coach George Wilson's club last Of the M ‘ yesterday from the It “old" teams (Dallas excepted) 1.1 were first year men and eight had only two years of pro experience. Only six had played In the league (or more than four years. game, and fifth-ranked Duke plays Qemson in search of its sixth; HONOLULU (APt—The Univer-i •'•‘•'■If** '‘*l»*'rtenre was s.l straight Atlantic Coast Conference i . -ui vears. tvictory in other s a t u r d a y <*’**' ’ matches. season's frwtball schedule Van Brocklin s ight, the Uni W Ullf, (--eemmurntyr^STiTHs clUBT he got ‘‘about He said the the Strongest Detroit gets back into action, j u . u i. against a rugged Toledo Umversi-i*“PP'>'-‘ “‘‘"‘‘**‘^“‘'''‘''«‘•"" I .. * * * ty team which has a record of 11-2.1"f intercollegiate competi- "We didn t get as many pass The Titans still hopeful of a post- tion. defendere and pa« catchers as we A bic bowline tournament week-tournament bid have been ★ * ★ wantH," he said. "But that is off for nearly two weeks because! But t University regents, in [Something that every team in the of exams. Last year the Rockets Thursday s meeting, indicated '* looking for. With George beat the Titans in Toledo the same attempt will be made to have oth- (quarterback acquired from day that Detroit accepted an NIT er Hawaii colleges field teams tol^*'"' ^ork in a trade) and Francis Kia ...itk Tarkenton (Georgia qunrterback end involving five area keg establishments gets under way tomor- Olympic Decathlon Champion Honored by AP Johnson Is 'Athlete of Year By Hie Associated Press Rafer Lewis Johnson, Olympic Decathlon champion, world record holder and the man who resented perfection to his team- er (or the American team in Ihcier last summer. Kuznetsov' I pre-| i world recoi-d was 8,357. Palmer, a fwwrr-hittlng goKl pro from laitrobe. Pa., domln-| ated the American golf scene asi one else has done In recent | yeai-s, lie won the Masters and the (ip<-n with a rouple of stir- c opening ceremony—an Indication > of the high regard in which hii' >• teammates held him, Olympic Decathlon mates, is the Attilete of the Yeariproved an unusually severe lest, for I960 .Storms interrupted the first day's Johnson, who Iwat out his pro- '"'dnight iM-fore the athletes rom-lege, r K Yang of Nationall.vt'heir chores China in the gruelling 10-event[: I'hc 2f)0-|K>iin(l .lohnson M.-emedjring finisiies. He mis.sed catching test St the Rome Olympics, was lo lin- more quickly than his ri-1Australia's Kel Nagle by a stroke: proclaimed the world's greale.st|vals .iml after six evr-nts he was an the iti ttish 0|M-n and he was all-around athlete after that vie 'trailing Yang, his teamrnale at a contender in the PGA Cham-tory.s t'Cl.A But he rallied his strength pionship up to the fi9th hole. He - And his tesmmsb^ l/«e f-WhoUni«nd drew ahead in the <>losingtle*«ied wiUv -iiam Sn^ to .win: adder!: "To most of the guys on '‘v<’nls (o lieat Yang by .')8 point.s the Canada Cup for the United the team he repres«-nts perfee-j~*(-^^2 to 8,3.34. Kuznelsdv was .Stales. He piled up 873,716,19 inj tion " ithii-d with 7,808, offieial PGA tournament winnings, Johnson was named today as! This established an Olympic a record, the Male A,(hle(e of the Year in!'’’’''/''’'! b^«'ing Milt Campbell's! * * * ' the annual Assor-ialed Pres,s mark of 7,9.37, but It fell far P.-dterson was recognized for; by the vote of 256 iqKirls w liters I’**’'”'* ‘d d’'’ 3.69:1 ptMnts Johnsoij (tie unprecedented feat he aeeom- i and editors thi-oughmil the United!*’'*d «t F.iigene, Ore , earli (dished last June 20 when hej .States. He won nut over Amnlfl j Palmer, whose l!it»0 (irforniances ranked him as the'world's nuf-tlanding golfer, hy a slim mai-gm of 19 points in the halloling Johnson will rereive the Kia-temal Order of- l-jigles Krederick C. -Miller Trophy al a clvir lunc heon in Milwaukee Feb '27 He is the first American athlete to receive the trophy in thn-e years. It was won last year by -Sweden's heavyweight < liamplon. The year before it was Herb Elliott, the Australian miler Johnson was named first on 93 of the 2S6 ballots. Palmer, winner of the U.S. 0|a-n golf championship and the Masters and second In the British Open, received 73 first place veiles. On a point basis, with three awarded for a first place vote, two for v-eond and one for third, it was Johnson 398 and Palmer 379. Floyd Patterson, the first boxer ever to lose the heavyweight championship and regain it. placed third in (lie voting with '29 flrats and 168 ixiints. Norm Van Brocklin. who quarleiiiaefced the Philadelphia Eagles to the National Fziotliall l,eague championship. was fourth with 10 firsts and 141 fioint*. Johnson, a (aiwerful 6-trKd-3 Negro (nim Kingaburg, Calif., went into the Olympics as an oulstand ing favorite. Two months befwc he had bettered the listed world record of Russia's Vasily Kuznetsov by moiT than 200 points He had been chosen as the Rag bear- {knocked out Johansson in the fifth round and regained the world I crown he had lost the year before. 4 Teams Gain Spots in Semis Heattog and Optimists ' Eliminate Boys Club, Spades in Hockey Pontiac Boys Club and the Drayton .Spades (ell by, the wayside and North Woodward Heating and the Pontiac Optimists reached the semifinals last night at North-side Park in the City Junior Hockey League's National division tournament. The Optimists spotted Dra.vton a '2-0 first-period lead, then came roaring bark to defeat (he Spades in ovcHime, 4-3. Ken Plrochta. who scored twice for the Optimists. tallied the winning goal In the .3rd minute of overtime. The winner's other two goals were made by Nick Schlickt. Beys Chib rlung to a 1-6 edge until the >rd period when the Woodward skaters expidded lor all five ot their counters to chalk up a S-l vietery. Three semifinal games are scheduled Saturday on Northside Ice, two in the National loop and one in ^>e American, as part of the city's annual Winter Carnival program. Standard Forge plays the Mountain View Rangers at 9:30 a.m. In an AL semi with the winner going against the Pontiac Central Raiders for the title. In NL semis. Heating (aces the Optimists at 11 o'clock and (he Rangers meet Forge at 2:30 p.m. No games are slated today in (he double-elimination tourney. The Lodge 810 alleys an^ Huron Bowl will ho.st the 1st of nine weekends of conipelition in (ho Elks State event for men. The Knights of Columbus has a one-day meet Saturday at Motor Inn, Huron Valley team play has its 2nd round at Milford Fairgrounds and a General Motors tourney (or girls is set for Sylvan Lanes. Eight of the 45 cities with entries in the Elks battle will be represented here Sadurday and Sunday. Besides Pontiac, keglers from Farmington, Saginaw, Isinsing, Midland, Aim Arbor, Jackson and Muskegon will be taking part. All team play is at the Elks with doubles and singles at Huron. Ralph Ware of Pontiac, presi- compete with. PCH Matmen Star in Loss Huskies Defeat Skippers Pontiac Northern kept rolling plus two forfeits. The Dragons along. Walled Lake walloped Berkley and Pontiac Central was impressive In defeat In an action-packed wrestling program Thursday night. The Huskies trailed early but then took complete charge to slam Waterford 398 featuring the 13th straight win by Dave Fox and Winfred Miracle^^ Miracle and Toby Conlor had quick falls, the latter dent of the Michigan State Flks| pinning a man 40 pounds heavier. Bowling Association, will preside;Hard-earned decisions for Don over the affair. Teets of PNH and .Skipper Jim ♦ ★ * Cook were other highlights. Tonight is the deadline f»'’hrs. ! series for this area when he blasted the pins (or games of 223-255-246 and a 724 series this week. Augello has a respectlble 181 average ' in the aassic thi* only ratei him the upper bracket of the lower standing!. Next to Augello was Ron Roth-barth with a 659 on games of 213-346'3e9. Others with high series (vere Red Conte 647, L. Hook 644, T. McDonald 639, Bob Turnbull 633 and Jim Walker 626. Ten other series over 600 were rolled. High games were rolled by Conte at 254. TurnbuU 2S2, Walker 249, McDonald 245, and Norm Keeley 235. There were 65 more games over 200 rolled. This week was unusual as no lam was able to sweep m series om Its rival, two game winners Included Tony's Rental over Ptx-zuti's Ixiunge, West Side Lanes Oakland Coin, Coca Oda over Cranbrook evened its record at 2-2 downing Lake Orion 27-20. the Oanes wins were decisions I Piston Streak Faces Big Weekend Test B()STON (* - The Detroit PLs-ton.s' seven - game winning streak, third longest of the season in the National Basketball Aaaodation, meets the strongest possible test weekend. By Dee Purrelht A.MF Staff of (hamptmiN lohTy a handful "of the pros cffTf I handle it. The Pistons will travel coast-to-coast in an effort to keep the streak alive. They start tonight in Boston the Fjistern Division. The Pistons have won onlv one of six starts against the Celtics, and haven't „ beaten the Celties in the last 11 Blcmar Inn Sp^s^riffln over ,nps to Boston Xrinlja Y Ijinivli I •sLa 'a a Triple X Lunch, Lake Center j Drugs over Paiquale's Pizzeria,, The Pistons then must jet to Calbl Musfr wer Blue <>aners.ji,os Ang,-les for two games against Judah Lake Mart over Hazelton|the Lakers — then It's back to Uttering and the upset of the|New York for a third straight Week when a weak Slaters Con* game aRalnst pM Angeles Crete team measured the league The Ptotona play the Ukers In leading and powerlul West S|dc Loa Angeles on Sunday and Mon-Mobil team two games to one. 'day. ! This is the type delivery that {looks beautiful as it takes a wide-breaking arc traveling down the lane toward the pins. It's what is known in bowling as a spectator ball. Unfortunately, It doesn't do as much for the bowler. ’Hte curve ball la released with the thumb turned in toward the body in a position equivalent to 9 o'clock on a watch dial. The thumb is brought to that position by means of a pronounced count-er-clockwire turn of the wrist. This turning action makes the ball break across a total of as many -as 20 or 25 boards on (he lane. Compared to about 7 to 10 for the hook ball. Because you have this greater margin (or error it it best to slay away from curve hailing unless you have pin-point accuracy as wdl as very strong wrists and hands. Today's ultrsn slick lanes cause the sweeping curve to skid erratically so that thumb turnro in THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. JAXUARY 27. 1961 TWEXTY-THREE Come to Poole's Tomoravw^ Saliriay 8 lo 12 Jaaury 28lh Hayes Jones to Compete for Pontiac Track Club Briii| Yoer QuMtiMt- ... Talk to Factory Roprosoatativos From Five Major Building Products Hayes Jones, the most fanxws athlete in this city’s history, heads star-studded array of local track athletes who will compete for the newly-formed Pontiac Track Qub I in future amateur events. The chib Is oader the super-piston and guidance sf Dean Wilson, Pontiac Central’s head track coach, and the organisa-rend Hke a Roberts Signs for 14th Year FREE HOT COFFEE BALSAM WOOL INSULATION BRUCE HARDWOOD FLOORING METALBESTOS PRE-FAB CHIMNEY UNI-BILT FIREPLACES ZONOLITE INSULATION for as little as ^m.oo Uni-bilt Fireplaces bring you all the beauty, charm and warmth of wood-burning fireplaces^t a tric-of the cost of masonry. FACrrORY BUILT, READY TO INSTALL! Connect to existing flue or to prefabricated chimney. INSTALLS EASILY IN LESS THAN A DAYI No simple do-it-yourself job. _ ISI OAKLAND Aift..PotrrtAC Pft^fg4tS94 £MlUSAcppmf0uihjL,7tueNAPHM. M-^8-96/8 . . .TASTES CHANGE “who's who" track circles. Jones, the Ponitac Central and Eastern Michigan hurdler who won bronze medal in tlw 1960 Olympic Games at Rome, will compete for the dub in his specialty, the hurdles. Other members of the club at this time, all former PCH athletes who helped the Chiefs win five state Qass A track titles in a six year span, includes: Joe Anderson, IMh Michigan cross country Ontral’s recor Pay Remains Same at About $45,000; Will Work Harder Jim Nelson, 880 and mile. I Ed Drayton, broad jump and' hurdles. I Joe McCauley, dashes and broad* jump. ‘ Andy Terry, hurdles. Jerry Rush, shot putter whose ~P«HW^DKLPH1A.4^> - Robin I with the It- Roberts, one of the first major | league bonus players to make said today he's "in good shape, quite happy and looking forward” to his 14th season with the Philadelphia Phillies. Roberts signed with the Phils Thursday "for the same salary I got last year" to complete in two days the signing of the three «till active players most domin-ba.seball throughout the wlwle Hiisf” decadr; ’ ★ A * Sian Mustal signed with Louis Cardinals and southpaw Warren Spahn with Milwaukee, both lor an estimated $75,000 on Wednesday. Roberts and the Phils declined to state his salary, believed to be $45,000. 34-year-old right-hander said it took only a couple brief i conferences with owner Bob Carpenter and general manager John ^Quinn before he agreed to tei-ms. Despite his 12-16 record with the last place Philadelphians, Roberts said "I thought I did well tom of 59-5. Bill Douglas, state 880 champion in 1955 and 1956. i Ken Byrd, 440 Imd 880. Julius Harper; hurdles and high jump. Danny Sowell, broad jumper and: hurdler who owns a 2^foot leap, and a 14.3 clocking in the high sticks while serving in the U.S.; Army. Charles Kemtrell, high jumper^ Bob Manning, 1958 Michigan champion in the 100 and 220 daahea who mn 100 meters in lO.S last spring while on a U,8. Department tour of South Africa. Wilson expects the membership to increase and the new group will get its first taste of competition on Saturday, Feb. 11, in the Michigan AAU meet at the University of Michigan. ★ W ★ The club is looking for ways to finance the purchase of white T-j shirts and Wilson hopes that the hope fd do better this ySSF: Nd hoys will be able to City Table Netmen to Meet Royal Oak at 7:30 in the Pontiac Ccntr.d girls' gym. The top six players of each city, will play a round robin scries. Jerry Kruskie, Howard Hcck-i man, Adolph Magnus, Vic Corpnn,| Manfred Hershacher and Maiv; Barnhart will play for the PTTA. | In last night's matches. Sea-! man's took over first place in tliej IPTTA with a 4-1 win over Kuhns, j jOther matches saw Jim’s defeat iPonliac Rec, 6-3, Superior over! jNutrilite, 4-1. Dorris over Detroit} Ice, 4-3, Capitol over Frostop, 2-1 i land Aluminum over A&W, 3-0. | I STANDINGS I P.lnti I ‘8**ihini M Capitol iJIm-JImt Nutrlllla Detroit 4t Proalop ISuparlor 41 Kuhn iDorrIi 35 Pontiac I All Alum. 14 A*W at the State AAU meet. Wilson said that the words "Pontiac Track Gub” would be spelled! across the front of the shirts. change to Americans whiskey IN THE SMART SQUARE BOTTLE ESTD SEVEN STAR America’s taste has changed! Now it’e TURN TO THE LIGHT ... for America’s LIGHTEST whiskey . . . G&W SEVEN STAR ... an instant hit with aU who appreciate LIGHTNESS, delicate flavor and pleasant aroma. Compare G&W SEVEN STAR . . . the whiskey with a DIFFERENCE. The distinctive square bottle promises a new experience ... You can actually SEE the DIFFERENCE before you taste it. $2T5 GtW StVtN STAR BIENOEO WHISKEY. M PROOF. 40% STRAIGHT WHISKEY t YEARS OR MORE OLD, 60% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS. 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Eddie Steele, Irc‘ AkJt\ AWWAiiim .... ... * 630 OAKLAND AVENUE, PONTIAC 5806 DIXIE HWY., WATERFORD 2705 ORCHARD LAKE RD., KEEGO HARBOR TWENTV-FOUR THE PONTIAC PtlESS, FRIDAY, JANUARY 27. i961 STOP THAT NOISE ISecond Place Battles Highlight Area Cage Schedule Three-Way Ties No. 23—Baseball’s Unforgettable Games Hank Greenberg's Grand Slam Homer Wins Pennant for the Tigers in 1945 Get your car a new Midaa muffler GUARANTEED for wlont M you Dwn your Free installation takes onl/ 15 minutes at your ■ By aOK RKICIILER and iby Washington, the surprise club waited for an hour beyond game|ncrs waiting for Greenberg ■ * BKN OLAN 'of the year |time. I home plate, but all the 'other ■ It was a dark, dreary day. A| Then, by fieak schedule-making, j ^ *“• ■ r»in was fniiinff—haHlv an ....... 'desp te a field so muddy thcJto pound his back and _ misty ram was tailing—naraiy an . '~I . r' _ H ideal setting for the most brilliant B moment in the career of o ■ ba.sebaH's greatest sluggers. ■ Hank Greenberg, at 34, had Detroit’s record was M-M ■ come back from the wars. Kour with four games to play. They J years had been gouged out of his spHt a mtd-week doubleheader. 2 playing career. All they had to do was win play.lTige thcJto p players did more wading thanlhand. The strain of the pennant „ji a week early. Their record was 861 walking. Virgil Trucks was the race was over. It was a happy won and 67 lost. < | Detroit starter. Nelson Potter bunch of Bengals, and the hap- I was the St. Louis hurler. piest of them all was Hank Green- ! The Browns showed they meant berg. I business by banging Trucks for| * * « __ ___________ I a run in the first inning—a double It was ah easy chore for A1 oV'the^o reriialnlng games and i^y Don Gutteridge and a single Benton to retire the Browns in ■ to a close, he returned to the De- Now it was the last day of the ‘® ,„uph If was too dark and ton . he had nsen to glory. ,94^, st. Uuis. The Tigersf and Kddie Mayo. J He Jolne^l rfTe Hub on July 1. game in front with twoj They pulled ahead in the sixth less than an inning. The grand 5 1945. and he celebrated his re- |‘o P*ay They had to win one on a pair of walks and Paul|s|am that won the pennant on the il turn by hitting a home run. By Rome. A double victory by the i Richards’ single. Trucks weak-1 last day of the season was Green- B the wrond week of July, the Browns would throw the race intO|ened in the St. Louis sixth. Potter' berg’s 13th homer since rejoin- ■ Tigers were leading the Amerl- I*®- hit him for a double and Gut-|jng the Tigers in July. It couldn’t ■ ran League rare. ” THE RAIN BE DA.M.NED ’ | teridge walked. jhave come at a more propitious S But fmm here right down to: Rain threatened to wash out the.time. : ,h. ... T«.n, d»,lch«d.r. ^ H» ,.o ^ ~ pending rally in short order. In the seven'h, however, the Browns nailed him lor Uic tj-ing nin, when Gene Moore dbuBW anJ Vem Stephens singled. Then in the last of the eighth, F’inney singled and George Mc-Quinn doubled to put the Browns in front, 3-2. Detroit’s hopes were as dark as the weather when the Tigers came up for their final turn at bat. Manager. Steve O’Neill sent Hub Walker up to bat for New-houser. Hub singled. Webb bunted and both runners were safe when McQumn threw too late to second. Mayo moved the runners along with a sacrifice. Strategy called | for an intentional pass to Doc| rramer. Tilling the bases, and | ifctling up a double-play situation on Greenberg. i M CKY THIRTEENTH Tension hung as low as thc| clouds while Greenberg took his| familiar stance at the plate. The first pitch was outside. Ball one. Poller looked over the runners, and then fired a fast ball to the plate, (.reienberg swung. The hall sailed on a line to left field, close to the foul line. in Two Leagues Will Be Broken Bloomfield Clorkston; has 44 points in seven games. Home for Berkley While Pontiac Northern and Holly continue their drives for almost certain championships in the Inter-Lakes and Wayne-Oak-land Leagues, a dog-fight for second place has developed in eagh loop. T^erc is a three-way tie in both leagues. One team is certain to drop lower in the W - 0 tonight i when Clarkston travels to Bloomfield Hills. Milford will be hoping to stay tied with the winner of this game when the Redskins en-i tertain Northville. ★ Jim Dennis will be in the start- Farmington’s runnerup hopes in ing lineup tonight as Emmanuel the 1-L face the most serious, Christian tries to halt a losing threat tonight when the Yellow^ streak at Whitmore Lake. He Jackets travel to Pontiac North-; cm. Waterford, tied for second,! plays host to Berkley, and the third runnerop. Walled Lake, Jour-nics to Southfield. Should all three necond place teams lose, then Berkley would be alone in Necond. It will be Bloomfield Hills’ Art Tregenza and Brice Billings against Clarkston’s 1-2 punch of Gar Wilson, and Bill Powell. Both teams have started to come on strong after slow starts. The winner of this contest will be in a good position to end the season in second place or challenge Ijolly should the Broncos' collapse. * ★ ★ Waterford's game with Berkley should be a close one. The Skippers have downed their last three opponents and have the home court advantage. Berkley hasn’t been consistent and the Bears have been out of action for 101 days. Auerbach and Cousy to Return Next Year PHILADEIPHU (AP) - Red Auerbach will return as coach of the Boston Celtics next year and BA CouiQf will {day at least another season, both said today, contrary to Indications they might retire after mis season, Sharman also will be back as a player, he said, unless he gets an attractive coaching offer, either as a full-time coach or player-coach. Tech'S Bradley Still Tops NAIA at 32.4 KANSAS CITY (AP) - John Waterford Bradley of Lawrence (Mich.) Tech continued to lead National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics basketball players in scoring average—32.4 for 14 games. NAIA statistics for games through last week showed Lind-berg Moody of South Carolina State in second place with 30.9. Hills Ploys We Also Have Other MUFFLERS Chevy Mviflers 1950-1959 *8“ »9« Fold Mniilers I95S-I959 OTHER CARS AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES LEE'S SALES and SERVICE 921 Mt. Clemens FE 3-9830 r«oll«c PreM r \TMIS At Your Paneling and Tile Headquarters CEUN6TILE White 12112 ) Slight Irregulor' 8 V2 FIR STRIPING 1x2 2* V-Groove MAHOGANY *4’® Pr«.Fittitb«4, n••u»i(ut Vinyl Finhh mo KNOHY PINE PANELING 1x10 TROPICOLOR V-GROOVE MAHOGANY Pottal Colors—Pro-Finishod $iT95 All Pricft Quotod Art Cosh and Corry DICKIE lllMDER CO. 2495 Orchord Loko Avo., Koogo Horbor FE 4-3538 WINTIR HOURS: 7:10 «• 5:00 Manday thru Friday—Saturday 7:i0 ta 1:00 p.m. LEAD HAWKS — Front-running Drtonville goes after Its .5th All eyes followed the flight of South CeniraJ triumphTonlgRragamSr Worth Branch led^ the ball until it landed in the left, veterans, left to right, Doug Moors. Bob Hickey and Jim Hutchings, field bleachers. The third-base Hutchings heads the offense with a 19 per game point average, umpire. Cal Hubbard, ran out for| Moore has 13.3 and playmaker Hickey 8.6. a Mter look and .signaled "lair ----------- ------- ---------------------------------------—" ball” Some in the gathering ol .■)„582 hooted the decisio'rl^ but it Dr/^rnr^^Ar Dntre-stood as called by Hubbard. rlUmUlCl ruyS $70,000 for Use Wings Reinstate McNeill for Farm of Trotter Name i .SAN FRANCTSCO (AP) - Abe iSapers(ein of Chicago, owner of ■the Harlem Glolretrotters, won a $70,000 award in U, S. District DETROIT (AP)-Billy McNeill 'Thursday from a sports pro- who retirM from hockey rather had used the name than accept a trade to the New York Rangers, Thursday was reinstated by the Detroit Red Wings and will play part-time for their Edmonton farm club, McNeill balked at a trade last February In which he and Red Kelly were sent to New York. also refiLsed to report and the trade was canceled. He later was dealt to the Toronto Maple I/'nfs :md ended a short-lived retirement. General Manager Jack Adams Thistle Crown to Area Sailor Judge Albert C. Wollenberg gave Saperstein Judgment against Western Promotions, Inc., and its promoter, Leo Leavitt of San Francisco and Honolulu. The judge, In a 90-minute trial without a jury, found Leavitt and hls organization guilty of asing the name of Harlem Trotters for his basketball team which toured orihV"Naimn,7 Ho^kev C^aeu>»stralia and the Orient in 19.58. « ‘W* ^ham- trirt>T= Leavitt was permanentlv m -1 ^'""fhip. finished second and filth in Tuesday ST. PETERSBURG. Fla. (AP) •A 22-year-old resident of a Detroit suburb repaired his mainsail and headed for home today with the winner’s trophy from the 1961 National Thistle, Class Sailing Championship. Skip Boston of Mount Oemens won the title Thursday by finishing ahead of 31 other boats in the race of the three-day regatta. Boston's boat crossed ish line of the five-mile race on Tampa Bay well in front of the pack, despite the loss of its mainsail after the final turn. The youthful sailmaker. son ol a two-time winner of this cham- The Vikings of Walled Lake| could be walking into a basket' full of trouble at Southfield. The Blue Jays have been gaining ex-| with each game and they 1 al.so have the law of averages on their side after nine straight' lo.sses. ' Lake Orion’s Dragons have a good chance to advance in the Oakland B League, Tom Reed and his teammates travel to last place Madison. Clawson, in fifth place.| a half game ahead of Orion, goes to strong Fitzgerald. Avondale is at Troy in the other game. ★ ★ ★ Oxford, winless In seven games, ■ could do Ortonvllle a big favor when the Wildcats entertain Imlay City for a-South Central game. An upset victory by Oxford would all but eliminate the Spartans from the title picture providingi Ortonvllle takes North Branch at home. Royal Oak Kimball will try to gain the .500 mark In Eastern Michigan League play at Injury-riddled Birmingham Seaholm. Birmingham and Ro.val Oak Kimball, fighting for the prep HwKnmtng supremacy In Oakland County, meet lor the second Play in all" the'Edmonton (Airathe court from using a’*" Flym* “Western Hockrv League-f'‘^T which would cpnfusc in thc|®'^‘]^ Wednesdays The Maples defeated Kimball ,--- public mind his (earn with Ihc!*”’ MUD AND SNOW TIRE DISCOUNTS Whr Bar a Rreaa? BraaS Nt«. rint CUm Tawn and Caaalrr Tts* rrtaS 6.70x15 $10.95 7.50x14 $10.95 _ «lrt aff NO MONEY DOWN Span. Ijapart^aad Carnot* United Tire Service CUSTOM COATED Maples-Kimball Renew Swimming Pool Rivalry home games plus those at Calgary. Alta. Harlem Globetrotters. Burgess Scores 52 Crane Skaters Win, 3-1 His total of'150V« points placed ihini lOVi ahead of Elmer Richards of New York City in over- SPOKANf:, Wash. (APi — Cranbrook scored a 3-1 hockey Frank Burgess scored :>2 points victory over Catholic Central to lead the Gonzaga Bulldogs fojyeslerdfly with goals by John’Bil-a 123 79 victory over the California! lesdon, Jim Anderson and Jack Aggies Thursday night. 'McCarthy. Tom's Bock! Yes the Football Seoson Is Over ond Toih Is Bock ot Shelton’s CALL TOM TODAY *2167 He’ll Deliver a New Tempest for Shelton Pontiac-Buick 223 MAIN STREET ROCHESTER tim 'meet In' the'Tnr-mingham pool and sinre then «arh team has lost only to powerful Ann Arbor. Femdale will meet Mt. Clemens In an Eastern Michigan Ixiague meet and Pontiac Cen-tml swima against the power of the Saginaw Valley, Arthur Hill. Hazel Park, winlesa In 8 trlea. standings. Next came Douglas W'ake of Royal Oak, Mich., 123Vii: Dr. Robert Derue ol Sandusky, Ohio, 11914: and Dave Minton ol Columbus, Ohio, points. ___________ Derue wriif into the last race! goes to wiiriin with a 2)4 point load over Bos- |„ in,| ton. but fouled out when his boalj „.,ion. Madison ew_„.. TOllided with the one skippered by ,^onI to 4-4 by defeating ; Harper Wooda, M-M, Madison _. , ' , •«®l‘ ■'< h“l Individual first, Clev^nd ptlcher Jim Perry nl- iQ^ng bom team Rliyt. lowed the most American League home runi In 1960. He gave up 35. Cloie-Ont OB 1960 RAMBLERS MERCURTS Save Up to $900 Wilson Ante Sales. Inc. M-sa ■( MIINia Bd„ swimming SNOW TIRES Cnarantaad Naw Traadi 2F.rl2222 7,50x14 6.70x15 CUARANTIID lONDEO Brokes Relined 8075 !r|.V!rr .HI INtT.UATION MUFFLERS »8«» end PipMeelh Oeereateed fer Ibe LI KUHN Auto Service FI 2-I2IS IMPORTED CARS of OAKLAND COUNTY W. MopU Lk. Rd. MA 6-2491 to trsntyl*—Utchnlk (Mi. Ttm»—| buttsrfljr—Cooutock iMl Ttma—| |M baekttrok*—atukut (U). ’nm*—I 1(W^ breaUitroke—Ketiilink (Ml. Time' lao fnntylk--Andrrion (HP). niB»—^ 134 . Tlmt—: ^ m (rmtrl*—Otrntt iMi. Time—| Medltr relsr—Harper Woodi Freestyle relay—Harper Wood* 1:11.3.: GO-KARTS HOT ROD SPEED EQUIPMENT CUSTOM COLOR 84 S. Parry FE 4-9514 DON’T BUY CAR RUGS! UNTIL YOU'VE READ THIS Poul's Seat Covers hove mode a special purchase pf original equipment cor rugs thot will fit all G.M. cars. They ore the type found on n"•• -nrs that protect corpeting ond retoin-your cor 's volue. They fit under the door sills to give ?te protection. Buy 'em of $2.99 Poir PAUl’S SEAT COVERS 286 S. Soginow Sr. FE 4-9936 tHE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1961 TWENTY-FIVg PCH Gets 2nd Crack at Arthur Cm. Ttlwnvk M., I n S-TM* o»M t-1 D«Ur-^4 UL Tennessee State Retains Small SchoolHoopLead ■yBlLLCXHIMWEU. The Chiefs of Pontiac Central feivenfly hope that tonight's Saginaw Valley Conference basketball duel with Arthur Hill at PCH is not a r^pea^ of their pretious meet- Aft Vaa Rysla’s eagers wonid The Chiefs staged a trennendous rally in that contest, but it was too little and too late. They scoitd only five points in the 1st quarter. fdl 20 behind late in the 2nd period, then suffered a slim four-scru wUh tile pe^ HHUtea. point defeat. TM deteadiag Valley champs ' It was perhaps the key game in Doytimt or Nighttimo Open Bowling Daily Practice Now for Biodie 2nd in Frisco Open; Prefers Football FE 5-6032 MOTOR INN RECREATION SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-Golf-ing quarterback John Brodle of the San Francisco 40ers', a stroke off the first round pace'in the $57,000 San Francisco Opei, wants it known he still prefers football. The personable gridder-goller, a pro at both gtames, fired a 5-under-par 66 Thursday to wind up just behind the pace-setting George Bayer and Charlie Sifford. ‘T didn’t make a bad putt all day," he Conunented with a grin. “That's unusual for me.” Ibe fans who usually watch Brodie perform in Kezar Stadium gave him a big hand as he finished his round, missing k 25-foot I eagle putt by just an inch. He had sunk a 20-footer, two 15-footers and a 12^footer while I collecting six birdies and only one Central's bid for a 3rd straightlOaMiiea Douglas, the dub's lead SVC tiUe and 4th in the last five Ing scorer, or Dennis Diehni. years. It got the Chiefs off on Fowler is expected to start Kurt the wrong foot and they have never Schults and Jerry Calkins at for-really settled down since. wards, Craig Dill at center and The HUUtes kre always trouble- Dennis Schumacher and Tom Hill at guards. Arthur Hill has a tall front line with Dill measuring 66, Schultz 6-4 and Calkins 6-2. Schumacher and Hill both score well from outside. bogey. John also tanked a putt of 25 feet for a par that made him happiest of all. Someone asked, “Do you think you might cut short your football career to concentrate on golf?" came the answer in the same snappy tenor Brodie might have used to say “go"^on the football field. "I know I’d like to play more football, 1 love that game. It's the best there is. Here I might shoot an 82 tomorrow and be out of it.” The 25-year-old former Stanford football and golf Star became a golf pro a couple of yekrs ago and went on the PGA tour for a short time in 1960. some lor the PCH quintet and tonight's encounter should be no exception to the rule, especially since Chuck Fowler's outfit still has chance to win or share the SVC :rown. Central's championship dreams were practtcaliy stamp^ out by the (l-SZ loss to leggne-leading Saginaw High and the miefs trail the unbeaten Trojans by two full' games as the conference schedule enters Its 2nd and final round. Van Ryzin has juggled his per-scmnel for the return bout. Two juniors, 6-6 center Otto Kennedy and *5-7 guard Roy Couser, have returned to the varsity unit and forward Willie Ratliff has bem sent back to the reserves. Andy Roach was siuspended from school for disciplinary reasons, Only three FCH players are definite starters — George Fed, Codker and Kennedy in the center post. Fed will, be joined at forward by either Paul Brown or Bradell Pritchett and the other guard position is slated for either Hie Chiefs can grab a share of 2nd place and help soothe their wounded pride by toppUng Sagindw's Trojans are setting the Valley pace with a 5-0 mark, Arthur Hill comes next at 4-1 and PCH^is 3rd at 3-2. In other Valley contests this! evening, Flint N — JJhe Boston Celtics were riding high today in the Eastern Division of the National Basketball Association with a 4's-game lead, their biggest margin of the'year, after defeating second-place Philadelphia. We've got a good chance to win it," said coach Red Auerbach of the Celtics after his club had come from behind to defeat the Warriors, 129-121, in the only game Thursday night. It was Philadelphia’s third straight loss. It will be a tou^h task for thej Warriors, who hifit themselves by making only 27 of 44 free throws' compared to 31 of 38 by Boston. I to catch the Celtics now. At this same time a year ago, Boston had a 4’ia-game lead over Philadelphia and went on to win the Eastern crown by 10. Ex-Champions Clash in Women's Meet HOIA.YWQOD, FU. (AP)-Two wmer championship teams vie with each other today in the second 18-hole round ot the International Women’s Four-Ball golf tournament. Marlene Streit, Toronto, and Ann Casey Johnstone. Mason City, Iowa, the 1959 winners, oppose Mary Ann Downey, Baltimore; and Marge Lindsay, Decatur, HI. 1957 champions. ★ . * ★ The Streit-Johnstone duo, fa vored to win. scored a 6-over-par 2 and 1 elimination victory ovei Marge Butns, Gremsboro, N.C. and Mrs. Maurice Glick, Baltimore, Thursday. Downey-Lindsay won over Joan Toski Burke, West Orange, N.J. and Connie Malta, Sharon, Mass. 4 and 3. The defending champions, Jo-nne Goodwin of Haverhill, Mass., and Doris Phillips of Belleville, 111., were upset 1 up by Mrs. H.S. Semite of Sewickley. Pa., and Maureen Crum of Plant City, Institute, with four of its starting five shooting in double figures, vaulted to its 11th basketball victory in 14 games last night — 72-62 triumph over Michigan Tech. The loss ..was Tech’s ninth 12 starts. JANOAIY tnciMl \ 1 Thu CetipM WoftK f A A A k MUFHEItS SOSO i Cvl. 'K-17 INSTALLED FREE! The Crusher' in Action A1 Thomas, local wrestling official who was threatened by “The Crusher” Cortez on a TV match last weekend, will officiate the tag bout between Cortez and Percy Pringle against Leaping Larry and The Terrible Turk at the Pontiac Armory. Red Donovan versus Mr. X and Ivan Rus.sell and Dick Campbell wrestle in the other bouts tonight. raiLAPELPHIA Hflnfiohn fUmsey RuDBell Coufiy 49 JI Ttr- Tatahi 31 14 n t^izi NBA Standings EANTRRM DIVIHION Bowlins Night? Wmi LmI Pel. Beb I. Bfbliid Drayton Drugs, Kuhn's Win Waterford Gomes Drayton Drugs and Kuhn’s Auto Wash posted victories last night in the Class B Waterford Recreation l>>agup. ; Curt Kuhne scored 18 points to ' load Drayton’s over R & R Motions. 69 r>4. Phil Felice hit ‘21 for the losers. Tom Belton’s 21 mark- The YMCA Community League basketball board will hold a meeting tonight to make plans for playoffs, awards and presentations for its six-team league now at the halfway point. All .Saints leads the way at 5-0. 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FRIDAY, j^ANUARY^, 1961 Kennedy Now Will Seek Release of 5 in China ADAM AMES B7 Un Fin* WASHINGTON lAP)—With thejning; to press Communist China msts would join in fresh attempts release ol two American airmen j again for the release plished. the United States is solve outstanding problems, Menshikov said "this also depends on both sides." U2Spy Pilot's Dad Hopeful j U.S. officials said today* the new I effort on behalf of the prisoners will be made at Warsaw Feb. 2 when the Chinese Communist and American ambassadors are scheduled to hold their 103rd meeting. .State Department officials consider the continued holding of the! But the cool reception given to Presidept Kennedy in the Chinese Communist Press is far from encouraging. j TO BK KKNNEDV'S IXKTOR —Dr. Janet Travell Thursday was named President Kennedy's personal White House physician. She is credited with once saving his life, and is the first woman to hold this job. She says Kennedy weighs 175 and has perfect blood pressure. She wants him to swim every day. Til shadow him in order to keep him ■ in good health," the doctor ' stated. Farm Program Set for Trouble Battle Looms for JFK Plan as Agriculture Group Fails to Unite WASHINGTON (UPIt - The Kennedy administration k n o now it will have a battle on Us | hands when it sends new farm 1 programs to Congress. The administration's farm conference Thursday furnished clear proof of the fact that the nation's major farm organizations are not ready to unite behind the Kennedy farm program. PretildenI Kennedy and Agrl-rnlture .Si-erelary Orville I,. Freeman have not anniineeil details of plan* In rediire Mur-pittae* and raihe lann Ine hy mean* ol «llffer marketing control*. e ,atherif''^/'"r“» » gereTlttUude y Paw- Communist regime toward his The President noted this at his: I news conference this week when I he spoke of Ihe somewhat belli- ROANOKE. Va, .. ......... ' ’ ........ of U2 pilot Francis Gary Pow- = communist China, ers said Thursday, he was quifo ] * w * optimistic" that his son "will I ^ . _ be released from a Russian i The subject came up Thursday prison soon " i "'Kht at an Indian Embassy re- "My boy " said Oliver Pow- icpptwn when reporters talked ers' "thinks he'll be released ibrefly with Soviet Ambassador soon. So do I. But I haven't Mikhail Menshikov, talked to any Russian author- | Men^ikov had a chat wUh W. ities sim-e last summer in Mos- Hamman, Kennedy s spe- icial roving ambassador, and then * * * ‘aid newsmen it depends on both sides to make progress in settling Oliver Powers, a shoemaker di.sputes. in the rural Southwest Virginia * * * lommunity of Norton, was asked jje soviet release of^Cann, Pasadena, Cadif.; Hugh about his imprisoned boy In view |the fliers and asked what thei Francis Redmond Jr., Yonkers, of Ihe release of two bther | United States would do in return. I N.Y., and Bishop James Edward American fliers by the Russians. ; * * * [Walsh of the Roman Catholic * * ♦ ' ! Asked if the Chinese Commu-iMaryknoll order. President Kennedy announced Wednesday night at his news j conference that the Soviets had ! released Capts. Freeman B. 1 Olmsteafl of Elmira, N.Y., and i McKone of Topeka, \ Kan., after almost seven months { in prison. TTieir RB47 reconnaissance [ plane was shot down by a Russian fighter last July. IN DIFFERENT CiATKGORY Kennedy was asked about Powers at his news conference. The President s^id “we have not discussed him at this time because he Is in a different rategory than the fliers that were released. One was an overflight, and the other was flight * of a different, nature. " The gray-hairerl Powers, In a cheerful mood today, has fought long and hard for the relea.se of his son, whose plane came down deep inside Russia last May. Oliver Powers and his wife allendc'd Ihe Moscow trial of THE GIRLS that: —Surpluses ought to be reduced. —Fhnn income ought higher . —Farmers should get more bar- i gaining power in Ihe market place., There was one thing couldn't a;:i' e on. That how to get any of tlios done. Meeting Kept District 7 Unit From City Hall District 7 Commissioner Robert A. 1-andry and his Civic improvement Advisory Commill<-<- mem her* had a meeting Wednesday mghl. I»ul not at City Mall Undry ‘aid that lie of niir local meeting tmi portani to rail It off," lamlry. "We re stinV to have missed the big meeting, but assiin* the rest of the advisory group of our keen Interest in its aelivities We plan to participate fully from now on " Landry and the 10-member DIs-' trict '7 delegation wi>re Ihe siib-ject of cnliewm w hen mine show»>d UP at the City Hall meeting ; Chryslef to Close 2 Platits lof a Week DETROIT ifi - Chrysler Corp said t'iday that it will shut its Hamtramck and Imperial assembly plants here for all of next' week. Plants closed thi* week at Newark. Del, St. 1/niis, Mo., and Loa Angeles will reopen Monday, the company said. The Humiramck |ilant blea Valiants, Dodge Dart* and Gives Them Example PHILADELPHIA M Pli -Richard L. Mahan. 51. of New York CUy, WHS held in SIO.OOU bail Itere I Tlmniday on charge* ol forging two checks in Ihe name of a pub-lirfiing firm which tie said nod imUisbed his maga/tne klorv. "How I became a check arUst. ’ Some del,lib of a m w Kennisiy program for Iced grams may la-drafted beginning today by a task i their fon-e appointed Thursday liy Free- year sentence, man, liie pirn will be to recom'-1 Powers' hopes have soared mend measures to raise feed grain | with the release of McKone and prices while stopping Ihe buildup Olmstead. He ^itnTeTiaJliearS of fe«-d surpluses. 1 fi-om Kranris Powers just two Ihe farm organization i (infer- weeks ago. ence warf called in hofas of get- ■ ting general agreement on goals for American agriculture .Some ^riO leaders ol large, and small farm groups turned out. They did agree on some things, including ' things ARTM A, IvaOVE, PUT ASlOe WOUR WORKADAf/ TOIL AblD UET VOOR MIMD SOAR TO TUB carefree south sea isles/ As SOONi ASXGET TOOTlt ESTABLISHED IM HIS MEW CAREER OF MAGIC,1 SHALL ( delegate- the details TO A SUBORDIMATE AMD HAvlE AAY MAMAGER'SFEE \j=orwarded.>^ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, JANUARY 27. 1961 TWENTY-SEVEN MY DADDY SAYS: "YOU CAN REALLY DEAL WITH EDDIE STEELE" USED GARS $5 DOWN! Low Monthly Payments NIW 1961 FALCON 2-OR. $41.52 Month NEW 1961 FORD FAIRLANE 2-DOOR $46.08 Month Tk0 Equity in Your Old Car Should Mako Ilin Down Parmont SPECIAL SERVICE - MOTOR TUNE-UP -8 Cyl. . . . *5.95 ,".S 6 Cyl. . . . *4.95 Al’. BETTER SERVICE — BETTER DEAL — GET BOTH FROM EDDIE STEELE FonI 2705 Orchard Lake Rd. Keego Harbor 1 MILE W. OF TELEGRAPH RO. STOP IH AND MEET EDDIE DVKKENtEltG OUR NEW SERVICE MANAGER There just isn’t anything like this new (A^rnstrong vinyl floor... It’s TESSERA CORION il, vouU — this nfw Anmtroni’ vinyl floor, Tfsser* Corlon, is unique. And different. It er-tusUy hits depth. You ran look down into it The softly colored vinyl chips set in translucent vinyl form fascinating random patterns. Tessera’s riatural textured effect adds elegance to any interior, available in monoihromalic stylings or with accent chips of contrasting colors. And Tessera can be u.vcd in every part of your home (even in a basement hideaway). If you can’t stop in to inspect this wonderfully new vinyl flooring — write or call ["R® today for samples and RcCAIIDLESS eARPHS 11 North Perry Street FE 4-2531 Pontiac General Hails its New Recovery Room AP Pketetii APPOINTED-Howard Morgan of Portland, former public utilities commissioner of the State of Oregon, was appointed by President Kennedy Thursday to the Federal Power Commission. He is the first Oregon man named to a position in Kennedy’s administration. I When it comes to fixing’ thin^jthe comic books and literature {around the house, nothing beaU aittot might be harmful to chiid^ Iman who's handy with a cheede- ihany adults’ wouldn’t have any-book. ... If they got rid of alllthing left to read.—Eari Wilaon. John Maraball. wl„ _____________ Oiief Justice of the SapresAs Ooort Pontiac General Hospital authorities said today that they are pleased with the first four weeks of the new recovery room for obstetrical patients. In operation since the first of the year, the six-bed unit with complete medical emergency equipment by each bedside has bwn used by 180 mothers so far, ■■ Harold B. Euler, hospital administrator. The service is designed to bring instant medical care in event of any mishap following delivery, he said. er gees to the recovery room ■ while the, father goes Id the ; noroery Where he watches the i weighing of the bnhy. i “The mother Is usually only in! the recovery room a couple hours. | The father is able to visit her there before^ she returns to her hos-| pital room. \ “Patients and their , husbands have expressed appreciation of I the new service. Wc feel that it [Offers better patient care. ” i "Mother and father see the new baby together after the mother leaves the delivery room,” said Euler in explaining the new routine. "Then the moth- Lana's Ex to Marry CLEVELAND. Ohio (AP) -Stephen Crane, former actor and one-time husband of Lana Turner, says he will marry Helen Redding DeMaree in Hong Koiig late next month. CABIOAD PRICES . ARMSTRONG CABIOAB PUCES VINYL ASBESTOS Unoleom Rogt I fgH 9x9 *1* *3” I Armitrong Tile All Colon Vinyl Floor Cevorinf CeaslM Vtoyl wsiiBf 49c 80 Pcs. >6 ARMSTRONG , ASPHALT TILE *34> Plastic Will TiU 1c BUY-LO Warehouse Linoleum-Tile Outlet CEILING TILE icwMttc I /Is n 9C rt. 102-104 S. Saginaw (Next Door to May's) Free Porkinq in Rear INLAID TILE 5K2C Eo. Ex-Communist Warns Senators Don't Trust Russians, Who Murdered Others' Aboard RB 47 WASillNGTON (UPI) - An ex-| pert on Communist affairs told Senate investigators Thursday that Amertcans should have no “illu.sions“ about peace avertures from Rus.sia, including Wednesday’s relea.se of two RB47 fliers, j 'The expert was Jay Lovcstonc.' an official with the international department of the AFL-CIO. Love- > stone was once general secretary; of the U. S. Communist party and-a member of the executive com-l mittee of the Communist Infer-' national beforo he broke with the' Reds some 30 years ago. viets were making no real con- cession In releasing the two pilots because they were shot down in blatant violation of Interna- i tional law in the first place. Lovestone said the Russians, inj downing the plane, “murdered” | the other four men on board thej U. S. military aircraft and then; “didn’t even express regrets.” Lovestone appeared before the{ subcommittee at a hearing to an-| alyze results of the InTernailonal: Communist summit conference | held last November and Decern- Why Settle for Less? FE 4-2531 Only $850 sq. va. Fri. - Safr. - Mon. Shop Comfortably, Ltiiuroly ot Homo! Our carpet consultant will bring samples to vour home so you Can choose the right carpet and color for your decorating schema. No obligation. Free estimates and decorating counsel. Deferred payment plan to fit your needs with no money down and 36 months to pay! 9x12 Oval 3x5 Oval $37.95 Eoch $ 4.98 Eoch McCANDLESS UN. Perry St. FE 4-2531 why there’s no water heater like an WATER YOU CAN PUT IT ANYWHERE —even in an air-tight closet. Because there’s no flame, an electric water heater doesn’t need air flow to support combustion, or a venl to carry off fumes. There’s even a table-top model you can put under the counter in the kitchen or utility room. Here’s the only heater you can always place close to point of greatest hot water use. < HOHER HOT WATER WHENEVER YOU NEED IT. Some laundering requires very hot water to get clothes really clean. Dishwashers, too, need water that’s very hot. Remember, an electric water heater can keep on and on. delivering the extra-hot water needed without burning out. OPERATING COSTSl ARE AMAZINGLY LOW. Thc-popular-50-gallon healer will meet the needs of 8 out of 10 families. L’siag estimated op(>rating costs for this size unit, a plentiful supply of hot water for all family need.s .should cost you less than 15c a day! PLENTY OF HOT WATER ROUND THE CLOCK. For dishes, laundry, baths, there’s always plenty of hot water available. Electric water heaters have two heating units: one for normal use, the other for those special occasions when there’s an extra demand for hot water. MAIL COUPON FOR MORE INFORMATION. DETROIT EDISON, ROOM 360. 2000 SECOND AVE. DETROIT 26, MICH. I WOULD LIKE MORE INFORMATION ABOUT ELECTRIC WATER HEATERS. ADORtSS_ OTY___ get it hot... get a lot from an WATER HEATER SEE YOUR PLUMBER, ELECTRIC APPLIANCE DEALER OR DETROIT EDISON WENTY-EIGHT , THE PONTIAC raESS. FRIDAY. JANUARY 27, 1901 usiness and Finance Lumumba Men Passengers Threaten Anew Soybean Futures Extend High Trend Wednesday. Detroit Produce CHICAGO w - The sharply higher trend in soybean futures was extended another 3 cents or more a bushel today at the opening of the board of trade. Again they hit new highs for the season, running the gains for the week to about 15 cents. raum Ap^i,’ t’orth'rn B~-I Applet. Mtclototh. Apple CMtr. 4 ft] VBOETABLES I, topptd, bu....... Ctbbise. bu. Ctbbbge.Rtd. The grains also were firm with|HOTiJ{.»dfih.'“ps. wheat and com advancing major rt to assist In transferring CHICAOO Jun Tumipu. I Poultry and Eggs blue chips gained impressively. 5 For the over-all market gains I were from fractions to about i s point. Steels, .Motors, eleelronles, utilities, nouterrous metals, eheniirals, oils, airlines, and tobaeros moved forward. Published reports that President he would agree to a meeting loo Kennedy would move swiftly to-| aboard the Santa Maria at the At the same time, it was re-* '*;ward checking the economic de-|poil where he lands the passen-■ ported that 500 Belgifn-commanded: Cline and assisting millions of un- geis. Katanga gendarmes had moved tol employed were credited by brok-' * * * IKongolo to reinforce the small po- i r.s as improving Wall Street sen- Dennison had suggested, Galvao ;litc post there. Galvao in his message also said U.N., Katanga Troops Regroup to Cope With Ex-Premier's Backers Reports reachiiig here said 300 pro-l^Umba trops were poised on the northern border of “independent” Katanga Province. Ethiopian If.N. troops al the railroad renter of Kabalo had reported earlier that Lumumbist forces were massing across the border In Kivu Province. U.N. spokesman said the Ethiopians in Kabalo were being reinforced, although there had been no officid confirmation of the reports. IWo aheriff'i depulka served u CMC Reports Record Sales midwives in the birth ci a baby girl to Mrs. LaVerne (iardner early this morning in her Spring-field Township home. "Everything went smoothly in the emergency birth." according to Deputies Fted Pender and Bob Taylor, thanks to their having recently completed a Red Goss first aid course that covered child birth. It was the first such emergency for both officers. When they arrived at the Gardner home at 9461 Cherrywood St.. the lather’s call for help at 1:54 a. m.. the baby waa already on the way. Pender and Taylor went to work tmniedlately. And the baby was delivered within 30 Both the 43-year-old mother and the 8-pound 4-ounce child were taken by ambulance to Pontiac General Hospital, where they are reported in "perfect condition.” Mr. and Mro. Gardner now have six children. They haven't decided on a name for their latest arrival yet. Minor to Join Brother-in-law's Television Firm . '60 Figure $12.7 Billion to '59's $11,2; Earnings $3.35 Per Share DETROIT (fk-Former Chrysler Cmp, executive Jack W. Minor said today that he is joining a Los Angeles television production firm operated by his brother-in- law. NEW YORK (fl-General Motors Corp. reported today record sales for 1960 and earnings second only to 1955. Sales were estimated at $12.7 billion, compared with $11.2 billion in 1959. The previous record waa $12.4 billion in 1955. Estimated earnings totaled $959 million, up from $^ million in 1959. This would be equivalent to 13.35 per share, of which $3 was paid out bi dividends and $1.35 retained for use In the business. Earnings equaled $3.0$ per share la 105$. r timoiil. ,11-30: Barred Rocki >«-30. Ebi pri'f East Dealt New Blast From Winter :nrwf-n-31; brow Urff .. ^check! 3IVf33 Livestock By The Aaeodaled Prose A wide belt of winter storms dealt crippling blows to winter-weary Eastern portions of the nation today and spread freezing rain or snow from the Pacific the Atlantic. nziaoiT iTvrSTOf K DETROIT. Jtn 30 (ARi r»((»r-Com-psrod l*»t *,rk cholc* >trm and heir- k.4„5v«.. gleidy Tlip frigid weather that has 33__________ ________... gripped much of die naton for|“5*l},‘7,, more than a week cdhHhur^TTitissa.-mo«i^ ‘L,?!*,.'**’,, ” siege. Subzero temperatures were, reported from the Rockies to Ncw JJj|^J, ‘put in at Bclom, Brazil. ' ““ *1 ♦ ★ * I Lt. (J. G.i Daniel L. L. Krausa, latest ri.se pilot of the first U. S. Navy plane 'hiiAjin the Cqpsumer Price Index sup-|to contact the Santa Maria, had ported the view of some observers' proposed such a conference on his DETMiT roos _ ____Ithai a more inflationary, periixf own initiative Wednesday. was in the offering The ship's radio operator re- * * * j layerl a n ply that such a meeting ........................jrssr- I.SIreet observers said that planr oft■ '■ lATfcT to put public telephones on^ airplanes drew renewed attention to this stock. A surge of more than 3 by Du Pont and gains of 2 points hy Union Carbide and more Ihiui a point by Eastman Kodak further bolstered the sloek market averages. Bt'thleig>m leaped ahead mort than a point in the wake of Its chairman’s statement that an im-‘ iprovement in output is indic;tfe 37 00-37 74; good xt* -.00-37 00; lUndtrd »t„r» 30 40-34. utility »tccr» 17 40-30 40. mo»t rho ■ 24 00-31 White Boycott Ends at School ^lOlher major sTeelin.ikers nd-■J'vanced fractionally^ Third Grader Enters McDonough No. 19; 2nd Boy Due Soon At least 25 Belgian offieers were reported with the gen-darmeih who wrould be in the path of any Lumumba troops trying to advance aonlhward Into Katanga. White men and women in Oriental and Kivu provinces had been warned earlier today to be ready to leave on shwt notice in case of fiulher trouble with Lumumba'i men. who have been mistreating whites In retaliation for the Imprisonment of the ex-premier. nilrty-eight American missionaries from Kivu had already moved to the Belgian-governed U.N. trust territory of Ruanda-Urundl, complaining that interference by Congo troops had made their work impossible., Speeders Facing Big Odds General Motors said unit sales of its cars and trucki in 1960 topped all years except 1953, the automobile industry's most productive year. Sales were estimated] 4.661,000 units, up 21 per cent from 1939. Minor, 40. of 1536 Dorchester Road. Birmingham, said he will be vice president in charge of sales and development for Don Fedderson Productions. Fedder-son’s firm has produced several shows fo|^ Chrysler in the past. Minor resigned last Sept. 30 as marketing director for the (umier Plymouth-De 8oto-Vallant Division. Clirysler said he had been asked to resign beenuse' of his Interests In advertising firms dealing with the corporation. Minor filed a suit Monday asking $200,000 in damages which he charged he suffered because of his ouster. He also is suing Chrysler for $25,000 he .saW he invested in company stock fund. Delay Hearing in Newberg Suit A news release issued in New York City quoted Chairman Fred-] lie G. Donner and President Johni F, Gordon, who issued the report in Los Angeles, where the General] Motore Motorama opens Saturday.] Final figures will be announced EAST LAN.SING MS—State po- inext month. lice nearly always catch their |-------------------- quarry in high speed auto , /s A A* I ' Pontiac Co-Op Picks; OPPORTUNITY UNLIMITEO rhalg himbirgrr i •tbrr •■!»» bgainni. Oir e*i ■lin liirluA,* * cMnylrttlT •*< (gliding wbirb ygg twn. ICt with *T«rythlng fgrnhbrd I these highway races reveals. Slate pollcf fcrently completed a check on 885 high speed pursuits during 1958 and 1959. In every case, the fleeing driver was roaring down the highway at more than 90 miles an hour. Only 52 of the 885 drivers got away, the check showed. VP as New Prexy state Police Svpti Howard Seller said the force was concerned both with the danger to the offk-cni and other iiiotor-iblH in high-speed chases. Joseph Fritrli wes elected presi-| dent last night of the Pontiac Co-op! Credit Union, succeeding retiring] president William L. Belaney.: Fritch was vice president last year. |I4.B«».|7»,#*A g,r . snil g»,r*ll»n n* llnll prlr,-------- I iPItx ln>UII«tl*n). England. The mercury plunged to 21 degrees below lero In Eastern South Dakota and S3 below in laramle, Wyo. Fresh snowfall that began _____________ Thursday was spread from me]’••‘"'"‘•te*' Great Lakes regions to the Atlan-j'* *** *’ *’** ***”' .. tic, dumping up to eight inches! ill the Carolina*^ FouT Main Riuks slgufhtei ______ glut chnic, 17 40-11 ihorn limbi mlxtd good 14 40-17 40: Cl ‘ 00-0 40. August Hoyt was elected 1961] vice president. William Maneck] was re-elected secretary and Ron-“Believe me,” he said, “we |ald T. Wilde treasurer. Wilde was] \i.u’ npi vAvt: I An -m. t Wouldn't ordcnntr tiffic^ Te-ireappwnied^nRnager.- ■in» p-rt.l.ir'J^'Againsf Chiysler '' ; al Business Machines ,segregated .MeDonogh No. 19 onTh/hXC - 7we S 'ran up more than 9 ,x,ints as itjSchool cracked slightly today with , DETROIT (UPI) - A showstponed lor at least three weeks. ^j^ver and occupants, as far i The credit union holds $1,24 mil-I Monday. Chrysler attorney Mason Gqod-| as the trooper is concerned, may ition in assets for abou^ 3.000 mem- * * * ]uow requested the adjournment to-i just have violated several other 'bei-s. A com|)leie while boycott has day before visiting Circuit Court, laws. I)cen in effect at the school Since Judge Henry L. Beers so that he ^ ★ shoi7ty“fiTler. if was integrated uh-;could Tfave inoie time to prepare] “It's "up to’ us to stop Them der fed! nil court oitlcr Nov. 14. his case. and find out. And the only way Dr .liimcs Redmond, super- New bcrg’.s attorney, Joseph Loui- to slop a car going 110 miles 512 intcmieni of Orleans Parish sell, consented to the delay. an hour is lo go 115 miles an ’’*schls, announced Ihe white .. ___________ how." 30 4 child's allcndmice Ifxlay, hut he (IkI not have his identity. 5!j| lie said the child's falhcr told 24 4 Stewart his son had been attend-IsSjing classes in adjoining St. Bernard Parish (eoiinly) where most of the white students went to "■school after the boyeoTt. Redmond said the Ixiy's father^ , Production workers at the Fisher 44 3 .said he was “tired of .seeing hisi PotltiaC Share ArOUnd B«ly aud Pontiac Motor Division 77 g boy go over the same work he Rtceivablct — Machinery Real Etlate — Equip. Leaoina PONTMC riNJUICE & MORTGAGE CO. Pontioc P. 0. Box 363 FE 2-8990 Open tor Skating Jl’in Waterford j;.. If 6 Hli^ Jin i.td 1 Cn'n " • S M^V" Kdy ri Mft bl .. n Motnrt . . n Smfit Ji'* l.onf 8 Om !!' , Lone 8 Qaii I-orlUtrrt^ n Tfl^A TH c ■ mco Btl . . Mf'rr ChAS ; EstilTiatB City S Pontiac, Fisher Body "Highway Costs 4 did last year." 4 pump houNT and In Ihe Ike Plays Bridge While Awaiting Weather Break L«rb4‘rta Lane. The flooding and snow removal is maintained by the township at the Hatchery rink and only the cUrJi fl'Rref , P E Maplev. W M iJ] News in Bfief T the Treasury G.cs.ige M ill-M»nnecl4-d i hliiinry pl|H- In Humphrey who came Trom his 'he allic of the James Gwlar Ixnin plantation at Thomasville. Ga.|«' 1-T4’2 Nokomls St.. Waterford Mr and Mrs. l|uniphi-ey and Mr.''rownship, was res[xinsible for a and Mrs Robert \V. Woodiulf, 1 *•• «* «' | P m. yesterday which who i 4>lM>rt Krmilllb i>f l« \. niih- to township [Killee that lOjvIndows '.aliBHl at $2R were sniash<-d in his.] Walker & Co. Has Elected house somelime yesterday. I John Wolters Treasurer •"«i Rummage Kate. First,] Ihiited Pentecostal Church, 178| 11 81. Sat. Jan. 28, 0-1 —Adv . Business Notes The Board of Directors of Walker & Co. has elec,led Jolm] D. Walter* Treasurer. Qarence D. B I egged, president madi- the announcement The LK-tnal firm Iwis an office al 822 .U'lxxiwiii'd Ave.. Pontiac. Walters, assistant treasurer for the past year.! joined W'alki r It WALTERH Co. in 1959. A certified public accountant, he was previously ena-ployed by Ernst It Erosl. lie was graduatf^ from fkiwling Green State University, Ikmling Ohio Pontiac’s share In the cost oP State Highway construction programed within the city limit 1962-67 has been estimated. at $450,000 to $500,000. cau.se of an “adjustment in production schedules,” according to \ plant spokesmen. They said normal operations would be resumed Monday. This includes the downtown loop highway construction scheduled by .State Highway Commissioner John C. Mackie in his new, five-year highway plan. Macmillan, De Gaulle Kick Off Leader Confabs LONDON (UPI) - Prime Min-j istcr Harold Macmillan travels to] Paris today for talks with French’ President Charles de Gaulle as a GOP and Dem Chiefs •• embraee* al*o the eo»r of an preliminary to an eventual meet-» ni B II Improved M58 on Ihe rlf.V’s east ing with President Kennedy. Agree Phony Balloting si,te. Macmillan 's mission to Paris’ Must Be Halted ^Iackie dul not break the cost beginning of a round of ligures down. ^sciu'duled ronf^ronees among Eu- •L.VNSNm -MiAigi.h-'74-«o-- '^Ma^^iffTheroTMia't^^^ publican and Democratic s found themselves in 5y;,y lypp.-iAment's planning divi-|agi4‘ement lixlay on one issue — sion in the development of plans honest elections. !'« fi'f’rt the area's mounting traf-j ^ ' fic problems. He said the loop, ,“will provide better distribution ol The matter came up Thursday traffic in the downtown area” ' wh..n COP slate chieftain Law- ^ The one-way street plan, Mai-kle said, ralla for Parke Htreel to earry norlhiMHind traf- •W'esteiTr cooperation" between Pon- anticipation of officials and the Stale lligh-|‘'®'"'*c'» '‘•'b Russia. ALL TYPES for any furnace ... or for any pocketbook You con chootc from any sixe, any quality including Kentucky, Blue Beacon, Stoker, Firequeti, Pocohontot plus many othere. FE 5-6159 Oakland Fuel & Paint 436 Orchord Lake Ave. FE 5-6159 InieNlIgBlIon Ki-miII* ha\e beei NIaIr Kl4-4 lions Division, he said. said Ihe Hiluallon l•alled for cormThp aetlon and legUlallim. Ntwi* V Asks Anti-Castro Help inieriftlT l7 94 4 Whltp Mot Ap|>ointmrnt of M. G. Ik*kkcr,iim bu« mcIi wiuon\ro 1136 Maryland. nirrhinKhani. h* |!ll n*c7 Ju Y^*”iillTow* head ol llie ni'wly-lornied Land'[l][ z.nitl)’'n.d ^ Mobility Research Uihoratory as |"* T'” * n'»n«*irii'' pail of General Motors fh-tcnsi- jnsn^u'."** , gr_* * .Systems Division is annouiiced. A native of .Slizyztiw, PoiRnrl. Mr Br'kker was grmJuutnl in 1929 from Warsaw Institute ol Te»h- , nology. From 1931 lo 1950 he X"®" worked lor three nationa] defense S.o departments. F'ree Polish. Free ‘J"* French and Canada. i looo-oi *higA * * * ILrUT Clare Utley and Van Phipps of Oakland. Mill Supply Co., Inc., 318l now ioaos jlrwin-Ave , last week atU-nded the “ r11m» now MM-higon Industrial Distributors J? ***». lAaaocialksi me4>lmg in lamsmg. The Di'moratir chairman, Neil .Slaebler, laler issued a statement saying that if Ihe charges are .substantiated, “wo most certainly 4 would siipixirl whatever corrective action is ncccs.saiy ’ He added: M40 1117 in.» m s 3J0 0 134 r nil 130r 133 3 113 0 111 0 330 1 321 4 130 7 MO 310 m !j?2 s .ni ISM • 010 lil.l Parke SliTct, he said, will be idened to four lo live lanes from .Saginaw to Ml. Clemens and then extended on a new alignment noilTl from Mt. Clemens along School .Street and around to Cass Avenue. Cass Is to be extended south from Orchard Lake to the intersection of .Saginaw and Parke. The entire project will cost an esth* matrel $26 million, Mackie said. “Then 3 Are Dead, 1 Missing e as Navy Jet Crashes no party line visions where honest eli'cllons are ninroined All citizens, regardless! cAwnon i-i . ki of party, arc united in their delef- . minallon to preserv.- Ila* sanctilv ‘'n'^hed and burned of Ihe ballot. We endorse any and “ I" bU efforts directed to this end. " 1“! 4. ^ ^ l■boa^d were killed. Little hope was Lindemc.. In dtscloidng Ihe re- ‘’‘‘‘I.'”;'. . suits of Ih.- GOP spot check, said T* , narrowly misied that carelessness mav have licen'? ‘‘‘"vclopment on San- SAN .SALVADOR m.nt co 4 4 41 ■lessncs.s may have licen , ., . j . mvidved in many instam-es ‘rashod in •But I don’t think the mass of "" swampy ihal we have uncovered can be , xplaliM’d as simple-carelessness, today for the, support of demo-day by Wdlmm J Blid, direetor!m Reds Eye Chile Copper Hits campaign to]oi fhs-t sales for- Chrysler Corpo- I Lakra Owmlr - halt the spread of SisIrolle-Coin-jiralion, munist "lorces and doctrines" in I Anu>ng them i the new world. Detroit • ' Dental floss is ns ca.sy to use^ .SANTIAGO, Chile (UPD—Mines yet much sinrnger Ihar^thifad. It]Minister Enrique .Serrano has corn] Rols-rt G. Allen, . lv.fn»r. (iiiifVf^l. Inc ., I ‘Nuoitnal quotklloDS 17* 112 '" "'■b iPHxi for s'trlnginOfBastnrmed reports ihar’TTu.ssla""Ts" '44 ’! J ""'* "tiW’bing stuff-dickering for a purchase of! ling into fowl. I Chi lean copper. I lOA/G LLOYD" ^ Lloyd Motors ^IM GOING TO SEE IF I CAN SUE this car FOH ALIENATIN8 MV AFFECTIONS. EVER SINCE YOU BOUGHT THIS NEARLY NEW CAR FROM *58 RAMBLER Radio, Heater, Whitewalls PICKUP >495 *57 GMC Vi TON *54 LINCOLN CAPRI 2-Door Hordfop, Full Power, Radio, Heater, Automatic Transmission. Sharp . .......... 58 ENGLISH FORD Radio, Heater, Whitewalls—No Down Payment '55 DODGE HARDTOP V-8, Automotic Transmission, Radio, Heater, Whitewalls ...... <395 IDTOP <495 '58 THAMES WAGON U.M.. *795 mCRClRY 232 S. SAGINAW‘-PONTIAC LINffllwl >=Ederal 2-9131 ^ i-taerai ;z-vi3i i . ^^.^^-'SAFE BUY-BEST DEAL'-^-^ ' MERCUHY-CONTINENTAL-COMET-ENGUSH ford / SOME THINGS YOU WANT TO KEEP FOREVER The weary little doll, exhausted and cominp: unstuffed from being loved too much, is not only a must companion at bedtime, but something the little girl has vowed 'to keep forever. Grownups have treasures too, objects from which they are inseparable, for reasons often more sentimental than practical. ' But vVhat about some of those things people save not for reasons of sentimental attachment, but more often simply because they can’t think of what to do with them? What about those things which are still useful to someone, but laying idle and gathering dust or rust around your home? Consider seriously the possibility of selling them, thus recovering useful space in the house and helpful cash too. Take a quick inventory of your “don’t needs” and sell them all through one low-cost Press Family Want Ad. Call FE 2-8181 and let a helpful Ad-Expert tell you how easy and profitable it is to place your ad. PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS PHONE FE 2-8181 A:,:- : f TIIIRTV THK PONTIAC PRl«jsS. FRIDAY. .TAXUARY 27. Red Relations Kennedy Worries That Public Will Expect Fast Easing of Tension WASHINGTON (L'PI' -Prosidonl KwiKHly uas rpport«*d today to be wmpwhat conromed Irst thp Amorican pooplp in particular and the world in Rcncral expcii too much In the way of improved re-! lalions with the Soviet Onion. ! Aides said the President and Seneiai>' of Slate Dean Rush fpai‘‘ that the wave of jubilation follow-1 ing releasp of the two I’ S. RB47 airmen held by the Russians may lead to e.xpectations of some early breakthrouRh. They do not helie\e .suih a v iew would be realislic. A leadinK Republican senator has demanded to kno\» whether there was "anj deal” between Kennedy and Soviet Premier Nikita Khnishehev on release of the two fliers. •Sen, Stylos Bridges, MI , . Iiau man of the .Sr-nale GOP fob. > Commitlce, wod Thui.-d.i.s lb. President should Rive a lull ac countinR of neRoimtions that b-d iii», to release of ('apl«. Freeman Bruce Olnistead and John R Me-Kone after seven months in Soviet captivity. RridRCs .sai.l in a S<'nate speeeli that Kennedv •'didn't moke it clear *’*’•' Poiillac Botiid of Kcliicalion went, to ^,ame.s A- Be nhriher .... anvlhinc of. I'*’*! night awarded contracts for IhnitlTtc ^fTiey fered Russia ■- or promi.scd in t nnsiruction oT” Two elcmcmary hid Of JW.TIO on llic return " He said , ’ the .seerecy should lie turn off ’ >»*1* *•. IMl. DAVID A.. OarlAad. SvItab Lake ii* Hin FudcfbI lervic^ wiM bo hold Monday. Jan M. iMt fr^ th« J Blvicki run«r*l Home. RuiuUton. Pcnniyivul*. Inter-cnent In Lakowood Monorlol , Qardciu Cemetery. Oorteyv'*' Ponniylvanta. Punerel arrai Help Wanted Male 6 I UN ovnt 31 imDED IM-medUtclr. Par Intormatlon caU Ur Teaple*. UA 4-MU to I p.m. telly. Coaimerec-Dnion Lake area 4il-;'rH THK SACK -- ItciHjsiled “for safekeeping, Joseph f'ipriano, 11 months old, is sacked as his parents go through customs in New York rcctmlly on arrival alxrard the Leonardo DaVinci from Italy. They are I'elurning to their home in I'nion, N. .1 , after a visit to relatives. School Hoard Is Busy Award 2 School Additions u piojecls . oftla.ssc.s and will meet increased needs at Alcolt and Wisner elemenlai-y schools. „f Oiiivion The Kmcrson piojeci calls for school additions and approved pie- btmnary -ptaos aw-4hrc«Lotlu-r re-_____liml. hahililation projects flams. Kennedy amt his nid.-s M.iighl „,p additions Hades bKlay lo wrhe a preacripll.ai Tor aIcoM and Kmnson schools Jli;„r.O. the nation's economic ills. Totaled _______________Tbcj-c lied Trca.sury I'ht' other projects Retting the for the general trades conlrad. •'••AN KOK Fl'TI RK dcfi the electrical' one kindergailcn room andThi'ee a bid of cla.ssrooms in lower rlemenlary , , .grades, sttbrnrlir-d The President SeciTtary rxmgla.s Dillon, 1-atwi gmahrad ate at Webster and nine for the tnechanical contraiT, Secretary Auhur J. Golrltaug and WhiHicId Klementary .Scliools and and five for the electrical Oiainnan Wilbur .Mills. D-Ark , of Lincoln Junior High School. Tr act, the House Woys and Means Committee to lunch at the While House. The announced purixr.se of the meeting was "to discuss the Bids were opened this week I the two new additions. The 1 r e e ennslruetlon eonlracls |K>SSll < lo McHugh Constmctii Holia Inspects Records in Case Against Himself ORLANDO, Fla iAf*r-Tcatn-slcrs' I'nion President .lames Hof-fa has joined his lawyers in going over records In the governmenrs mail fraud case against him and The addition has been designed to be expandible to one kindergarten and seven classrooms so that eventually Emerson can be a three-unit school containing 18 classrooms and 2 kindergartens. „ u ij L J ' The other three projects up for Both adddions i^ould he toady ........lAVehsP'i anil VVTiii field schools and— Lincoln Junior High School. "We plan lo liegln ennstrue-liun of the additions next week," said llr. Otto Iliifzlger, assistant sii|M-riiiten(lenl. R E S U L T S Hsrboi. : rULLRH, JAN 3S. IMir p ED- ' : ward Sr.. 73J Broadway. Davla-lm» la^aiUyf teiovad buaband ; ol Fern PuUer: tear father of Mra . Stanley iJonnl Wood. Ura. Clauda .RuthI Wilder, kra. Sari .Sbar- i on. Hall, Mri. Joaeph IMarctal ! Rehfua. Ulaa Jeannine Puller, frederick INUlfr Jr., Leo and Rodney Puller; dear brother of ' ••’a t-*o Halfpenny, i Mf* .Chteles .Mary. Stilt. MrV •""a Onyder and Mrs David (Dorothy. Lykint; alto survived by M srandchlldren. Racltatlon of the Roaary will be Friday at • p.m at tha Coata nneral Home. Drayton Platni. I Prayer aervlce will be held Saturday. Jap 33. at tO:J0 a m. at I the Coata Funeral Home. Drayton Plains. Reuuleni High Mass nt Our Lady of the Lakes Church at Ul a m. Interment In the Catholic tectlon of Lnkevlew Cemetery I PART TIMS JOB > AT ONCS 3 MEH uc work. Call Mr. P - . o^a P ____________________ APPLIANCB SALESMAN. OVER 3S years of Me wanted. Full time aiendy emptoyment. Salary plua commission. Employees benefits Include: pntd vncation and hoa-' pttallaatlon. Apply Monday thru Friday. Consumers Power Com-jaany. U West Lawrence. Pontiac.' A MECHANICALLY INCLINED Instruction*—Schools 10 EXPBtT PIANO INSTROCnONS In your home by aaaocUM of Dtereit Inatltut* of Mualcal Art. Scrioua atutenta only. Advanced, adulte. hatinnera accoptad. Mr. Cam^lf re 4-p4>l. HEAVY EQUIPMENT onRATOM' Men wanted. Up to 34 per hour upon completleo of abort trainlof period Trtlnltat on doaera. srad-ers. drag Hnes. aerapera. Reaaen-able ItriTlOB WeHe or eaU Key Training Service. iMtO LIremols, Detroit 31. U^NlywIty 4-3434._ WILL TUTOR: LATIN, ENGLISH. Arlthmetle. Reading. Phone Mon-te^^Wedneaday 7 lo I p.m. PE Work Wanted /^le II -1 WALL WASHING. CARPET CaJ^ PE_______ _ ___ CAB DRIVERS. FULL-TIME 30 or older 43g_Orcterd Lake CARTOONIOT TO ILLUSTRATE book. Phone PE 3 1114. Eit 33 or | wrIU a. Allv 31011 North Tele. and repair FE 3-7340. CABINET MAKER AND CARPIW------------------------------------ .......... specialty FE 1ST CLASS PAINTING Moving UOVINO SERVigj le Ratea rV 3-34M first CLASSMOVI caix — —YINO CO SMITP MOYINO C ________ 4-3334. HAULINO AMD RUBBl*^ >!**** vour price. Any time. KK 3-3038. odflTcartage Local and longjimwe *00103. ___ Phone FE t-Otee________ LIGHT AND heavy TRUCKING. RubWah flU dirt. ftaUlfl. ^ sravrl and front end loading. FK Steo.1___________________ REDUCED RATES NOW. DORINO off ackioo. OD movlnf. deliver-Inr end storaic. For Informetion. call re g-0131. Orappln'a Moving and Storage._ _______ TOWINO AND LIOHT TRUCKING. OR S-303TL_______________ Painting & Deci^^g 23 MELLICK. JAN. 33. 1361. LILLIAN ! Ruth. 43 Cloae St.: age 50: be- . loved wife of Oeorge Edward Mel- ! ...... ------- .... nonert I DRIVE IN SUPERVISOR Mildred WU- { coodltlona. son, Mrs. Beulah Bnaaell___________ Carmon Knialcy. Parish Roaary will be Friday. Jan 27, at 3 p.m. at the Melvin A. Bchutt Funeral Home Knighta of Columbus Rosary win be at g JO p m. Friday i at the funeral home. Funeral service will be held Baturday. ; Jan 21. at 10 a m. from St. i Michael Churcb. Interment In ,----- ---- bonilable. Write employment record. Armed Service. and martial status. Reply Puntlac Press Boa 107.____ EXPERIENCED SHOE SALESMAN right h a Thf Alfoll f>roji>ct c.ills for four (liissroorns awl a library It is lia.T pnmaril.v for up|ur l•l('^lpnla^.v arrangements are jrending by the Huntoon Puneral Home. THOMPSON,’JAN. 28. 13gl. MARIE ^ Helen. 34 Summit: age 64; dear | grandchildren. 4'uneral aervlce i will be held Saturday. Jan. 26. at 3 D.m. from the Voorheet-Slple e with Rev. Theodore t " elating. Interment : t Cemetery, i at ih.g Voorhecs-Slple Puneral Home _ _ Woolley, 3AN'"ar. t36t:~srthur^ C . 427 N. Saginaw. 66; beloved hu.,band of Oertrude Woolley; : dear brother of Plovd and Ed- ward Woolley. Mrs Bessie Mack. : Mrs Myrtle Dereamer. Mrs. Ruth Lucas and Mrs.' Marian Hendry. Funeral service win be held Mon- ; day. Jan. 30. IMl at 1 30 p.m. > from Voorheea-SIple Chapel with ' In Alemoriani 2 Tn beloved memory or my ' lather Aleaander O V Antona : ^o died January 27. 1631 Janice IN U)VlNd'’ljrEMORY OF OUR ! son Steven Richard Oleyre who ------‘ awa^ 4 years - ago Jnnu- cars to fin vacancies. Pull < part lime Opportumts to eai good Income. IM H Perry, i: ure. *We ar"hiring *8 men^ wi are between the ages of 21 ai 48. sharp and Interested lo mil log at least 8138 a week. If y< are not ambitious and are n Interested In learning a career. . not contact us. Call between .... Kitchens 4-8000 _ _ __ CARPENTER WORK OP ANT kind. Reasonable. Call after 6 _p.m^re 3J430.________________ FIRST CLA83 CARPENTRY. COM* II and we do It. Terms. FE ___ ___ ____ Norm -. ____ anv time FE^-7204 or_EM 3-7376. MAN WISHES LIGHT TYPE OP Job_OR 3-8646 _ __ MAN WANTS WORK TOR ODD Jobs. Call FE 1-3314. MARRIED MAN DESPERATELY needs any work. PE 8-7417 YOUNG AMBITIOUS VETERAN ?u“ure**T‘year‘cSnn?“’ra™-OMA WALL WASHING 3V IST-CLASB PAINTINO, DBCORAT-Inf. Reas^ Don Beck. OL 1-3141. isf CLANB PAiNTINO AND MPIR hanging. Thompeon;_re_4:IP64 _ ___^ __________JH- 3-3040. A^ID"^HI0H~8PRIN0 PRICM, decorate now. Free esUmates. Oteranteed work. OB 3-*344._ itAA~PAINTINO AND DECOR/ Ing. 36 years eiperlence. Rea» aiSe. Prea esUmatea. Phone QUA13tY DECORATOR3; <-•1111.018. jpaper remoyal._wall washing Free eat. UL 3-3160. A lad'y interior decorator. Papering. PE 6-0343._________ INTERIOR DECORA'HNQ. PAPER hanaing, paint tinting, wall washing by master craftsmen. Free estimates Star Modernlaa- _tlon_Co. ORJ-2736____________ DON T FAIL TO CALL PE 4-7140 for quality^ painting at low prices. PAINTINO, PAPERING, REMOV-............. FE 2-2312 ; PAINTING AND DECORATJXG Work VV anletl I'emale 12 Television Service 2- . : I-DAY IRONING SERVICE EXP . 1 , rrf.. Mr.s McCounn FE 5-1471. I * A-I IRONINO. EXPERIENCED. PE 4-11136. ‘ BABYSITTINO WANTED. VICTN-; i ity of Ho&pUal Rd. FE 4-9746. I EXPERIENCED PBX. RECEPTION- CREST TV. 1 HOUR SERVICE DAY and nluht and Sundayk. FE 8-6078 NIGHT. TV SERVICE P 8TRAKA FE 5 upholstering Insurance Inspeclor Part time or permanent. Mu». _tlac Preai Box 66. L.MHKOPIiK.XTOK Mijst be tamlllar with large lathe. Apply Pbnnac~Pf6sit. Btnr Tl-- count when qualified. For personal Interview, write quallllca-tlons. address, and phone number to John Tanguay. Dept A102. F. O. Box 362. Dallas. Tesas 1 r'SALESMA.\“ Excellent opportunity ____ ______ relere- 5-1413. ' GERMAN LADY WOULD LIKE TO I be companion tn household for elderly fady Speaks little English. MArket 4-1373 eves OENERAL. CLEANING BY DAY. ; Own transportation PE 4-0466 MIMEOdRAPHING TYPING SEC- —----- -—tire FM 3.0a47 • JATE8~AnD pra?^ FE 3-8402. Auburn I ; Ave nurset Exchange. . ' I WASHINGS AND IRONINGS PICK ‘ 3-0822" *' _ _ WASHING. IRONING PICK UP , andJellvery. OR 4-0176 _ _ * WANTED IRONINGS DINETTE. KITCHEN CHAIRB Rl-covered. Vinyl or naugahyde. Free estimates pickup and delivery. _MA 6-1673. __ _ ______ Nursery Schools 2.SA CLARKSTON nursery SCHOOL Hr.- 7 30-6 MA 8-1731 TU 8-0861 Lost snd Found 2b BLACK AND WHITE. TAN Harel. Building Service Oeniens and Feathers!----- . 4-36^. Child's pet. Reward ' LOST; ■TAN PEKINOESI. VICINITY sSet Accused Slayer Free Captured in Jail Break oih.T fX'lr lloffa said Tlmrsda.v. ' I J kii.m .sfirni'thinK alxnit Ihi' ■SCI I ihiHiKlil I would .sil (low and lake a Irx.k at the l.■(.■r>tds fi ■ linn- afl.r Ma ! lo run ahoiil $'21.li.’>0. aiuipmenl costs remained the lie tiid a staicweli .'iddition. .sumc^ w ilJ Iw III eluded at the request of the .4181.' Kire Marshal'.s office. It had not la-en included m the original jilaiis. Similar additioii.il eonslruclion-lirohlems involving the remmal of n skylight and raising of the floor level upped the original con-sliTiclion pslimalr . for a kilehen at Wehsler to $17.0011 Hciha is al large, liclirvcd i.i Im-near Will Rogers Aii|Mirt MHithwesl edge of llklahoii Offlcci'* x|Kdtrd the car in whic l/iwery and Mike Marks, k Reno, were flcnng near the an (xiiT Hie fugitives cra.slii'tl the „ • HI into a telephone jKile and fled WA.SMINCTON' -m. Rep y,,.,,ks\a* 'aughi 01, an lirnr.v S Reus.x urged ‘ ongress ,.gn^vHv lie offcnvl no re- today to establish a $10 million si.siaiicr, "peace corps" of young Anieii w * x . ans who w.iuld help iinderde- uhIp |l,.sr,. 20, a ........ „. x. ....mh.-m. .o-siMancr velop4-d f/eoples abroad. serviee station atirndani in the; , The boaid approved the prtp Writing in the progre.ssive mag- w recked car. Rise said Marks and *•’"' *”•'* " 1 grams and Hufziger said conktruc- a/.ine, the Wisnmsin Demix rat Lowery robtx'd him a few minutes Douglas. U-llI - .iidiicting artion should begin in May or June said 2,000 young men ijnd women earlier of alioul $40. '.Sc-nale sulaommittce hearing on! The faeilities will be ready for; should be sent overseas to teach ||ise said Lowery, armed with!|he pro|)osal. Iu.sc^ by September, and give technical assislance in a gun he apparently got Inan; liackward areas — anif build good Sflll .1 |o|i'Ci-:iin lo W.ishiMUlon voinm: > .Inmu .Mipisul of a pro-, (HISIll I.I aiqmipriatr fcdrral (unds. for urea (li'Xrliipmi'iit assislaniT.. ; .'ywaiiiM >n sent hi.s wiir to Scn.|| The original rslimatr was I*..'in0. The estimate of .«t2..‘>tl0 for rquipnient will remain the will for They should be paid alHiut $SI) a Wanis More Power month plus exja'iises after sign .............. "■ for Racket Probers The board also approved long-The WU would be of great help range plans for educational speci-In easing unempio.wiieni In Mich- fjentions at Jefferson Junior High. Ignn, Hwainsim said. , Plans call for Jefferson to even- 11 will be particularly helpful"*«">' connected to the Whil-| to thttfir inrttcitrmi iitnin whichTin' Klementary Si'hool building, have cxiiencnced a pers'islcnl high "'’f* house oWy junior, high pupils. . lie III unemplovment during Ihc 'Ham' Operators Near 3,00G Mark in State ilHle - .WAMIIM.JON lI PIl --lohn I.. M.-dHIan. II Ark . asked Coiigres, lu give his ale rackeN ln\esllgaliirk •! Ing iMiwrrs lii liaik' Inin » ealeil atl.l orgaiilreil Inler 1 rime. Mi'Clellan Inlrialiiceil a res.. Iiillon Thursday which alvn ' sniigW 3T1NMNI0 In fInaiK e the work nf the .Senate lirtesllgalitig Siilienminlllee and the parenl gnvernnieiil tt|a-rallnns eninilIttTimr mini -Ian. M. IM!. He N chair man nf linlh grnii|e>. Ills ln\ektigatnr« wnmi.l lip hearinga Mi-dneaday Inin Ihe scandal aearred Teamalera I ntnn. Four Killed as Irish. AF Plane Crashes of Ihc rpi>ci I’cmi.ivu Rules Slitting Mailbags Just Due to Curiosity MOCNT n.lIMK^S il'IM ' New York Firm Gets Bid on Xway Signals LAN.4INC {fi -- General Railway ..Signal Co ..f RiH hcstci-; N Y . siih-inilled the low hid of $l6,r).'l on lequipnient to control traffic sig-nal.s on Ihe John C. Ixtdge free-, ■ , .r. J '"’Ry in Detiuil, the Slate Highway giiveiTimenl rhuisrisy I ag.niist a .'Kl- imuci M.iili.iii;, I the I'S alloi (■ decided he hai of cun.isily wi hags of mail 1 r New Bdliniort ol delaying Ihc Kl ycar (lid New The eqiilpmeni will lie used In 1 nnjiiiiclliin with telex talon mnn I was iilc.ivcl boring of Ihe fri-eway and will ornev gcneral'v »Unw an n|a'ralnr nl a cenlral imply a. led l•‘•tnl In cniilrnl all Ihe Irafflr he found slKHala. a highway ally ThurS; sialltxt this siinimn Fourteen lele-. , < RliTady are in op- alt'd tiajls o|-«(jyn f,.oni overhead btidgex MatliViTTa ci len with a |ien knife and ' found they were filled with mail he left them alongside the PrOdUCUOn .SHANNON. Ireland lAI'i -An roail, Irish air lorcc plane crashed at Macomb Cotinly sheriffs dcjni DoWT) 4*? Pr'f .Shannon AIi|mi'I today while giv-ties sisiilial Madonia wilh ihe mail- iinii radar li.iininK < lo iiriNirMl bai!x howrvi'i and pu ked him up (•ii-ws Kfiur of Iho lit. mni The Ian’s had fallen .mt of a alH.ard w4'ip killod mail tinek iiavelmn la'iween De- A A * troit and Port llunm when Ihe 1 The Hiirtivoi, Capt . latiirs l.id iiack door became unlatched, jais- DKTROIT lAP - American aulomohile production this week will he 42 per cent below Ihe similar 1960 week, Atilumulive News said Thursday jtmrnal said the in- Iraih air fon-e $15 Million in Michigan ■'"‘L' ____ _ X » M46 ears .this week for a 4 9 per MlSKKiiON Phe (thio Oil Co. ,< d>. 4:!. Ihe pilot, staggered out of lal iijsiKN-the wreckage with severe bumi Jhe jdane was on eight sealer Qhio Oil PlonS tO InveSt The'TrlT Dove, the largest lyfie us4al by ' Homer Man Is Injured HOI M) BK < ANAOlAV Rnbert Homwi Moi»i- III p|ta Idem and general manager Of Canadian Fairtian^a-Morse Co., has renooraed his American fit i/enahip and la-liijoncd Parlia-'tnenl to make him a Canadian citi/en special act. aniKHiiiced Thursday that i to inxesi II.') million in . ; n Albion Oil Well Blast iH-niit,d. cMrnsmns compared with 17.8.74 la-1 week Memorial Hospital here 3,,^ is'rtafton la. ihlifLa and addilionalpan JO. I960 Tlie explosion f cjH)iie«Jly was Maialljon and .S|>eedway 79 m ,i jl snid :t6..'i6l unit* nf this •auaed by a valve failure. >eiing fa/ llilirs. w A N T A D S FE 2 8 I 8 I Funeral Directors CO.M.S FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS OR 3-T757 SPARKS-ORIFPIN CHAPEL Thoughllul H»rvlce ^ PE 2-5841 Donelson-johns FUNERAL HOME D^MKned (or FuncraU ' Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL^^ HOMI^ TO 2-8378 Cemetery Lots 5 OTTAWA PARK CEMETERY. I |ravf_lot. FE 4-5243 PERRY MT PARK CEMETERY Beautiful S-grava loU Will divide. FE 4-9882 ^Wsllp»pfr ^snd qiixnry ICON* PART TI M B WALLED LAKE AREA. Nffdfd 5 DifO, mujt be »'clV'snd*wfmng''lo"")rk*'CALL Mr Puckett. MA 4-3411. 4 lo 6 PARKING ATTENDANTS. DAY aork. brtacMi sgrs 16 lo 20 ur 48 to 60 Apply 4 to 4 30 p m . 5» Wayne Si SALESMEN A-1 JlESipENTIA^ COMMERCUL modeling. *John W. Caples. MY Notices snd Personsis 27 xatlon work. Terms FE 5-6122 CERAMIC TILE PLATE AND MAR-ble repair ' " EXCAVATING AND TRENCHING BOX RKPLIES I I Al 10 a.m. Today there | were replies at The Press | off Ire in the following i h4ixea: | 6. 7, l'>. i:t, m. 17. 19, i 28, .91. 48. 65. 66, 70, 75, | 81. 88, 91, 94, 97. 107, 108, I { thfv mam. For pfrt.on vif«. phone FI 5-6115 will"train *2'^MEN~ reKentatives Full or p for a new and exciusiv unquestionable hi [ 2-6404. . ELECTRIC HEAT, and airmii Ratlin 3-62» or MU 4-8J23 ► TOEE ESTIMATES ON ALL WIR- mg. will finance R B ---------- Electric Co . 106l_W. Huror HOUSE RAISING. HOUSE 1 mg. licensed fullv equipped ehttmaUt. Ruf>KaU Marlon. DAINTY MAID 8UPPUES ~ 739 'Vndmlnee, Mrs. Wallace. FE [805 ____________ IN^DEBT? ' IF SO LET US (live \ Dll 1 Place to 1‘av I'Jisc ^■^.ll!- Mind . . A I.O.\.\ tOMI’.\.\>'. ' .MIC IIKI.X.V CKi:niT COL’NSI.LLOR.^ RM 702 PONTIAC STATE BANK nesa Sales Corporation. 1573 So .TrI'fiP''_, Help Wanted Female 7 CURB WAITRESSES The Pontiac Press I'OK WANT ADS DIAI. KL 2-8181 Krom * B.m. to S p.m. I ‘.™r^y ■dlalelv The Art^r^ofiier- al portion o' which haa brrn ren-Whrn rancellatlona kill number " Nn TED'S Woodward at 8q. Lakt Rd. DENTAL ASSISTANT. APPL'Y Pontiac Pre»« Box 86. _ BABYSiriro 8' DAYS WEEK Maradaj. Lake vicinity. Own EXPERIENCED WAITRE.S8 16 OR ' * b’iTH-(^DnY-Tfr rSS^Bixiv- H)*l*- EXPERIENCED MANICURIST 4062 W Maple Rd MI 4-0242 L()\ F. jl'WKI.HV? HOUSE MOVING. FULLY equipped PE 4-8480 f.’A YotinB LOW. idw PRICES EXPERT OR 4-1736. MASON. WORK. BLOCK BRICK and llreplace. floorh. Carpenter woi k of all_kinda_ FE 2 0530. PLABTEBINO, NEW AND REPAIR-Ing Vern Keller UL^-1740 ____ ROOF KLPAIRS EAVISTROUOHINO FI 4-0444 R O SNYDER FLOOR LAYING, aandini and (Inlahlng. Phona PE 5-0802. ________ ARI'-. YOU WOK RU'D OVER DEBTS? CONtiOlIHATE AI.L YOUR BILLS AND LET US GIVE YOU ONE PLACE TO PAY liLl'l.F.T SFR\ ICE 16 W mjROJ^______FE_4-0001 ‘ DON T LET YOUR BILLB OKT , you down — get profeaalonal II-. nsnclal management right nowl Homex Service!. 103 8. Broadway. I Lake Orion, or 308 National Bank Building, Rocheater, OL 1-1104. AEROTREDB ! KNAPP SHOES FRED HERMAN_______OB 3-4802 FOR YOU B PERSONALISED hair producta by Radell. call OR 3-1810 ___ ROMEX’cLIlfNn BRINO YOUR W-2 form lor Income tax aervlce Included without added charge. ALL---M-A K E S FOUNTAIN NOTH E TO r ASH WANT AI) RATER .inea l Uay 3-Davi 0-Daya 3 01 78 62 32 13 46 to promote the ^laa^lnaUnf ^woi Id older" WOMAN TO LIVE IN. rare for children and light house, work More for home than wage*. OR 3 0168 P^YSinAN 8 -*) * 28"VonUac*'pre«'*'‘ WOMAN TO CARE FOR INVALID ...... o 8 30^1. - . Help Wanted 8 ASSISTANT TO MANAGER Start at onre Full or part time. Car iieceaeai^ FE 4-M83 Tfnc i.l:si\ k salks Mr piovd V town. 8(air ntah- —um. A .Qfiicc. Jiuavii -Co. j7 Laa.ence St Pli^e Pg-34113.) BLOOMFIELD WAIL CLEANERS Wall and windoai. Reaionable. PE 3-1631 CAR WASHING AND POLISHING II 50 waeh 70IJI SAglnaw isin-clali Statloni re 3-6736 DRN WAU, Applied, taped and flnlehad. guaraiileed lu aatuly. LI I-71M ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE RE-panln^^ and^readnmng. 216 E HEATING FURNACES CLEANED ’ and .erviced. C. L NeUun. PE .,1786 HOTPOINT. WHIRLPOOL AND Kenaiore^ waeher repair' aervlce SEPTIC TANKB CLEANED PE 4-4343 DressmskinK, Tailoring 17 ALTEHAl IONS Mn J Manning PE 4-4074 TAILORING ALTERATIONS Drevk Maklni-Pur Renglri EDNA WARNER R 8-3830 , ANY SEWING JOB. ALTERATION^x. jay and February. Clip Ihli ar. your W-3 |N)riii Homex Serv-205 N^uonal^jtenk Building. TOkir ■^biHjtt ■ SATELT“'"X>nt ■ ____'ring, r I i DRESSMAKING. ALTERATIONS - ' 073 E Kennett ,Road. FE 0-3310 ; DRESSMAKING. TAILORtNO AL- Help Wanted Male (i .\ttrntion: Salrsmeii Whfn you^pUn a permanriit ca-thing! wg offer ir life I I nSre’moiSj i ' ■elllng campaign No financial Inve.tmeDl requTdpd m\\ coneWer advaneemenL"No* experience nec- to eucceed into a permanent future with high Income bracket Mmt own car and be willing to travel state of MIchlaan with . «ale* manager ^^llcant mtet i one aelected will be taught the | Contact Mr Lowo Uila week only. ! at the Waldron HoUl Phone FE I 8-0101. In jrour^ome by qualified Appolntm»t re 2-7834. ACCURATE " EXPERIEifctD BOI.IN TAX SKKVICE I Available Year Round. __^CORNER PIKE^ Ol MILL ■"to FIOURFAfbuR lN-ax. Frisndly. poraonal lerv- Pleaaanl, dignified ■ aorlatlon with Ihe i tuccettful company earning ili 13) Aa-aUbla. .41 Steady. .. ------ month after tecurlly rejjardleu of FE 2-3171, 380 P > opportunity I pie who atah to earn n average living 118 no collecllna Make money for “youifell''* ”l"l K K* BCXDKKEEPER bookkeepingf 8-dav aeek Excellent atatiing aalary Muri have good ref^ence* Mldwe)l Bldg re 8-023t" * I'M'I.VN KDWAKDS' ' "VOCATIONAL COUNSKCINO BERVICK' ' BOOElOntPINO. ALL TAKEfl. ’ EMpIre 3-3416 __ ED HAWLEY LandRcapinx 2lj> L S LANDSCAPINO -TREE RE- ‘ movtl and trimming, land clearing and complete landact ping > rt 4-4»6 or OB LEARN TO PAINT BEAUITFUl. ne"r‘“rr^'r;4r"'"*‘- Ol'FlCI'l.^UPPljF.S GRADUATION CARDS NAPKINS. TABLE CLOTHS VALENTINE CARDS NAPKINS TABLE CLOTHS l!;u krn>losf I’.oiik Stun* 16 EAST LAWRENCE fX laiU COOK (JK CLERK . . . the -help you nccti is quickly yours tlirougli THE PONTIAC PRESS WANT Ali COLUMNS. For the Want Ad Dcjjart-ment just dial . . . - lust Dial FE 2-8181 5 totsl^ would tie cninpiids. Tree r bid. PI imlng Oft B 1-6738. THE POXTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. JANUARY 27: 196r Apti, Furni«hed 37 Rent A|rti. Farniihed 37 Rent Apti. Unfurnished 381 CARNIVAL _____ ■ , 71 THIKTY-OXB ^ ^ I CALL WILL BELL ALL YOU hATAa-nralturt. •ppUaocM, TV«. ■Uc. Hlfbcit dolUr. Quick Mn-lec Allen c. n T I _PIEC* OR HOOSErOL W+D* Quick c»»h lor__ furnlt^!^ cppU- AND an> FLOOR. 4-ROOM KsficTr^*^ Ft «-mL AWLIANCES PORNrrORE”li^iD P* by ™ piece or houieful. ImmMlcte , eervice. Ooue'e. FT LET OB BOY FF OR BELL IT POR YOU OXFORD COMMUNITY r auction, oa »-3wr ■ ^ > roomb 'and bath. _J1«_», $» week. IM Plerence * ^'VATB BATH AND iPifAAM- Cloee In. Baby —•--- _tU.50 a week. FI |-B»tf. > CLEAN ROOM,8 I *—^qulet cou^e EdUoo. FT MaM. _____ I ROOMS AND MTH. PtUTATB entrance, W I. BWB. South. ■ 1ST ,FTAX>R, new, I BEDROOM, (let. For 'couple. Lincoln Jr. Dlt-Carport »7 pincree. FE FRONT. 3 ROOMS AND bath. Will decorate t« ault. Oa- HM5. t .pr lady. AwryMO. rntVi ---S"----------I ’1 ®- Jewle. Wsnted Miscellaneous 30 i RooMrcLBAN: PRIVATE bath, ad- j PORN 18HED WARM, ii kitchintti. adults. ^metal'«iulDroenl” tn'^Li 1 * ROOMS AND BATH. u5?‘ NS^”"br“e*ak “ iSJ “”1*: * 7•.'■,'1. “““““ _former. IM l-TW. _ i _« 'B-0«4:Vrur“s:3V£ " »-»«i-------j a laroe rooms. pRTvMTTiN. Wsnied to Rent 32'-“i5**-S“4_*'ath, ra s-sisa. —_ 3-ROOH BASBMBNt AF'ARfidENT. CAREFUL TENANT WANTS! i!Ti‘ “■ •mall unfumitbed bouse Good ( ™ condltltw In Baldwin W Walton 2 ROOMS AND BATH til b.'2 BEDROOMS LOWER. LAROI --------- and nvini ^uiNQER lit llENDERSON (31 2-and ----------- unlurnitbed _ FE k-2045 furnished anartm---- leek. K u. Heimwieao. Hur^n street ._FE 4-^4. _ 2 ROOMS. OnUTY ROOM, MOD-. I- em, gas heat. tlO week 36U d Crooks Road. UL a-2tli. - 2-BBDROOM. 8TOV1 AND RI-^ frlferator. ID minutes from Pon- 1 heated, < _7» Clark^appfy Apt. 1 Huron Street. FS 4-IU4, Onll FS 4-74t3 H«9=j^s;YEwrY~^c: i *’^irh''Tmfie?‘Mhi^”pc MA 9-12M nUiied. 8Ute StreeL Pi 3-M77. ROOMS. PRIVATE BATH AND entrance. FE t-42t0 RMSr AND BATH. FRIVATI, CONOENI^ BUBIN188 OR PRO- I orat^-srpiiT^J. feulonal (Iris, share beautiful ________ - j Rd. a? 30? n"Saglnau'^^PS | ’ "ba™a^d^ent**’u”s' TO SHARE HOMI -- a^rf^MS ~ aND - _ evervthlni PI.E WIT a.rsss . lower, clean, heated, dote uliatle. furnUhed. Pontiac. ^ furnished 1st floor, pvt. entrance. ATTRACTIVE EFFICIENCY APART-1 ment kitchenette, living room,! _riE - furnished. 3 rooms AND BATH. PRIVATE _ OR 3-0880. MANOt Everything’" CLIAN, : bedroom, thower. m 227 W. Plk^ FI 2-7 _ BACHELOR NORTH END, MAIN! V _______ ____ ___ ___J _w Rond 1 uP>l^man:m^ple 2 ROOMS AND BATH. UTTLITTES rooms, bath beat, and laundry' a month FE 3-7008. ”” ■ •• - ........... " ROOMS. PRIVATE ENTRANCE eicept“&:'';i.£‘';?ce‘*u5 iris? 0 MORTGAGE COST I kitchen. Only ady for occupancy It location oft Bald* small family Well ( and JUst like new Te 8I0l300 SELL OR TRADE - N N TWP off John R Rd E«-lent 2-B.R. home on Jaige lot t 28' long 88 300 with 81.500 ►tormih Lorg< Paved St Will COMMERCE LAKE dote to si Id type porch Alum, le 85 1 141 ft lot. ‘ ‘ mseUatler. FOR THAT YEAR AROUND RE- i sort living In the very heart ol . Oakland county 3 bedroom ranch ' type. lake privileges, fireplace. Room ^or Urge I ll OOo'd '^Possesslum y.r H*U’I)E.\. Realtor Open Eves. Bun 10-3 LAKE FRONT - 4 bedroom ■ ■'cU-e^nl'enl? FI i-04 d coodlUon 13s VI Forest rt 2-7M2 CASH Land contracts, equities gages Don lose thst r your paymen Let an expe Pd McCullough. ARRO REAL1 - t in. PE "In this job, Mi.ss Smithers, you will, of course, have the run of the offirt' — oh, ^ou can run. can't you?" attached i ___cor"---- 8-6475 f« ( iOT A ' minute; If so, I would III O'NEIL SELL OR TRADE - Country UV-ine St It.s best Only l'> yrs ®'a Well designed Roman brick _ 5143 Cass-Ellsabetli Road. IMMEDIATE ACTION 2'1,-RM . PVT ENTRANCE *NDL ’J*' ^ I Welfare tenanti^lth l%lld wel-l 2 and S-R«>pM. (3A8 -HEAT FE cqme. No drinking. FE 2-2181. I - iPPlCIENCY APARTMENTS, NEW- 2 ROOMS. PRIVATE BATH AND ly decorated, new bath, near OM _ entrance^385 Oakland. , Truck, Baldwin Rubber and OM ' 2-5.41.' J‘erra?.>S‘!l‘-'?sVl.'“:!' . j J-8870 FIRST FLOOR, 4 ROOMS AND' 3 ROOMS AND BATH, UPPER >I ba‘h, 4-Room - 3-bedroi Kent Houses L'nfurn. 40 For Rent Rooms LARGE ROOM PGR 2 MEN ^-1 ?5f. MULTIPLe~ITS TING SERVICE OTTAW A H I I. 1. 8 4 bed- Partridge 4i Associates W Huron FE 4-3581 E ROOMS OVERLOOKINO Tel-Huron. Adults 5-0303 OeL'ofated.'iM’peVmonih’"’ LARGE CLEAN ROOM FOR OEN- NICHOUE - llAKCl'.R ' ,&"st ra'V-W”*""" I'l '. .=I-818J 55!9” •'OR GENTLEMAN 3 SEDROOM RANCH. CARPETEp, near airport. '885 ' good buy at $13 500 terms Call _J A Taylor. Realtor. OR 4-0308 HOUSE. 885 DOWN. 185 MONTH TEN ACRES I LAND — Only BEDROOM FULL BASE and UUe._____ __ K. L. Templeton, -2338 Qrbcard Lake Roao rg 4 4583 CASH y^R LAND CONTRACTS. H. J. Van Welt. 4540 Dixie Hwy. .n“'TeS,7etr 7a‘i\,!?nX FOR COLORED ^ 1. Re:i>tOr : 3 c?eLt blinds, carpeting. i SEE SEABOARD 'i'W^ScE CO 1186N Pen , SI r E 3-701 IN OXFORD- It rooms 2 bsllli _________.OR T_____ LAND CONTRACTS TO BU - -n. Earl Darrels. EM only. PI 4-1781. V-iM3 Toi 8 Jes^I ...______ DIXFE HIGHWAY _Hne^ Call ajfter S pm.________ FOR RENT, 3 ROOM APART- ir EUt 3-40S8___________ Wanted Real Estate 36 f-3L: ROOMS AND Am, LPRIVATE entrance, lights, gas. steam heat Heights. PE ; eiursnce, ngmi -Mil ' In A Streel 885 W ICE^^SLrapiNO ■ RdbM~CLdSE MI 8-6238 'Blfml'nghim'!'" •“'“"* j 2-m';nKno.\i di'pi.iyN 'bu??S“®i74'’Sute'™■ PiE VROdM APARTMENT. WEST SIDE. “‘^Ie S"402°^“ ’7'' --- gas heat and garage. FE 8-f'lJg. I HR .MU.Nlll II, 1*. ll()i,Ml',S, IN(. 5 ROOMS AND BATH FULL; FF 4-78.CV Rooms With Board 43 a. Lauder ad- FE 6-a Dasem^nt «as neat, FE 3 9243 , 544 Ea.,t Bird N al Valencia 'LEASE WITH OPTION TO Bl l°.?°37TSr Augusta;3 rY—WPUftNlBHED BP A-C laU-B--I 5-473^ or*"rE’“4“736^‘‘“ MENT. oak floorN. plaiiterf Prned at only'^ 828,^^'^ LIST WITH US - W, need appealing IN IE V E R Y »mt d°*w n!***”^' •’’••I'''''* 111 cat big* aouble"1ot *’ei- 1. II HROWN. Realtor FE 2 88M I ROOM APARTMENT, t . GROUND FLOOR. 2 , 5 ROOMS. T ■ CHILDREN Val-U-Way u -EX a-hiia. i LI8TIN08 WANTED CLARK REAL ESTATE M W Hurdn EE 3-7888—EE 4-4813 _ OR 3-4708. 3 ROOMS AND BATH! private entrance, util BUILDER 45 CL1N~ i vate batlv »nd entranc __ I 5-4151.____________ upper: HOlJsETRAILER AT ' Telegraph Hr '' — R<30MS, PRIVATE BATTl j LAKEFRONT A^AR'THENT LAKE JWWN^ 3_BEbROOM8 -5y,,,_ai5 ROOM DUPLEX,' OfiLlfliSS --°*‘''*35.------------------------------- ww •“'I Leat furnished. Newly dec- : 2 AND 3 BEDROOM HOMES .....- '■''.4-81*. _________ 7t*^,“9JP.,ii.„L‘*wiN. Realtor __________ Reasmiaw'e.. M'LTjakUnd' Convalescent Homes 44, C.^.SII 4S HOURS FOR YOUR HOME EQUITY OR LAND CONTRACT. -jlm -wi4u;i4a7RRRito4i-: 34a Oakland Av^ Opfn til I 30 FE 5-7M1 f r ' FE 5-0441 private nuKi i tw After a JU J ROOMS AND BATH BABY WEI- ..... utilities. rm FE 4-1310 4100 1 LAROE NICE 3 AND 1 airport, adults. OR 3-BEDRM. yiiiuitt _ - ____ _ 3 CLEAN LARGE ROOMsT !8T BUYERS WAITING WE NEED f®<''338 pioprriy sell them Free apprals- *®3 Fairgrove. als LAUINOER REALTY. OR 3-ROOM APT PRIVATE ENTRANCE .U APARTMENTS t oKni.\h:i) COURT TH, NEAR----'ItmrNow Greatly Reduced ' 43 - AIR CONDITIONED itrance *'p^Ik'^I'i M^d^??In Bvfrv'Diufl OR 3-4555. p m MANAGER, 18 SALMER 9T apt 8 Open Dally A Sun. 10 a m tc 9 p m CLEAN 2-BEDROOM, STOVE AND idroom ^ ^ _ _ _ „„„„ iughT ROOM AND BOARD WITH OR wijho^ut. 136's Oakland Ave. PE WALTON7'*7rE^J-7«3 9'^ION*'- 2-MDROa^ RANCH. CAR- Kd s'love, dll he*a*t‘gara'ge'^enced DraXn ^Uln, ’’iSfe ‘ Lm"e ° mfnfb?r i .February. OR 3-4468 ______ AmTrtcan Sursery homl .i.«L BEDROOMS. PULL BATH NEW * alien Beautiful furnished seml-pe '* momh*** privileges |55 f..',•*'*■ U. TaN(iU.^. Realtor fC.c“JrDiMii?“‘iM2??d"' fe ; _ ORTONVILLE wsvnwn i --- - 1 I SOUTH SIHEET NA 7-2815 ilDBOOM. BASEMENT AND • fur Yt ^ronev "Quality I I homi —Anywhere -AV JiOJSffl... FRONTAGE * Lovel* ^ personaltied tc........ \'\. I I. lL\.sS, Realtifir under FE 3-7210 XKAR I.AKF 2 3 and 4-bedroom homes. large .... ----- ^ jg - ----BUYS AND TRADES U 8 GOVERNMENT FINANCING —VA- APPROVglV BALE» RBOKEB ^ Hnine.s With $i200 l)o\vn I'OR FVFRYONE Urban Renewal People SPECIAL MORTOAOEB FOR YOU with ^x‘'MF,Ri^Tl•;^• Prlvat. refrigeri I floor Chll- 5. Bald Mounlaii AIrpor -FAMILY 5 ROOMS EACH. OAS waL CARE s‘'8fo*5S(r''‘'’'’‘""‘'““’“^'”’' Pan! M lone.v Real I st 832 WBBt HURON HTHEEI. '»«>"« ' PE 4-8s50 I F. 8-12... •r ^ j NICE 3^-BEMOQM^ HOME DRAY KAMPSEN CA.SII Have buyer for small home Not over 85.000. Elwood Realty. FE 4 520., iSPECIALIZED BEAUTY SERVICE I LAROE CLEAN ROOMS PRI-vate bath and entrance Near — ' ' Body. Couple preferred. NICE Call Louis Borst. Realtor. 5,.1842 Rent Apts. Furnished 37 FE 5-*7054. i ROOMS FURNISHED COUPLE with 1 child. 850 mo 60 Close, br- oad. PE 8-2828 Ho'vt Realty CLEAN 4 ROOMB AND BATH A FURNISHED stove and refrig. FE 8-1417. Kf "c?u" e w-lth 'one^ t' 11J1. H R 1{ X W MI .U() M I 'I 1412 Vlnewood FE 6-8216. _ | M i?d e r n 5 room auartmenl. NICE 3-ROOM APARTMENT 17. 'H!**’’'''’ Cottage and Os- *** monthly. Apply at 103 Bloom- n PE 5-8848 l-BEDROOM HOME. FULL BASE-mene located ,n Ponllac OA I-RIX3M MODERN GAB HEAT. 810 F MArket 4-] Rent Storefr -46 JOBLYN Rent Office Space 47 HtiiU.-SclLGc •- I nu'ulti ji. Ilii;h l-ROOM KITCHfNETTE ADULTS only 290 N Paddock' FE 2-2088 1 3-ROOM 812. MODERN WARM WALTON FE 3-78 J ROOMS AND BATH, AUTOMATIC hptt. dlAposal, for coupla only. BEDROOM APARTMFNT AIR CONDITIONED rc. MoOrn In Bvrrv Detail 3 ROOMS AND BATH FOR WORK-mg ^couple, pvt cnt:.nce 17 Flo.. KK 8-f3*»18 3-ROOM APARTMENT ON GROUND Opcn'DaflV'** Sun'^O^Ajli.' lo’i p.m. . ____________ROOM OR APARTMENT FOR PRO- 3 ROOMB. NEAR CITY HOSPITAL. rcssTonal girl. Inexpensive Many utilities fui Kfticiun Living r NORTH S.WI- PXT.RCiY, USE W AXT .\I)S! To find a Fir , adults FE 2-4378 3 LARGE ATTRACTIVE ROOMS WEST BIDE -lor-2„UreplaM. nice view, de- . private enl sirable Ideation. FE 4-5388 eled walls. 3 ROOMS,' NICELY FURNIBHIDL dccora^d^l Rood used ca fied XOW! ew« FE 2-7284 after DRAYTON PLAINS. EXTRA NICE • ----- refrigerator and ed. OR 3-2414 .\l>artincnts . -lichen, bathroom Paddock FE 2-2088. iantagfU FE 5-1428'after 6. ' FOR RENT POUR-ROOM UPPER REAL WARM. CLEAN. 3-ROOM. I one-bedroom and Murphy K.Ktf mml.*ewinm V£ 4-7353 1 fitting TOOm. »lOVf ftHd ff- KiMB AND BATH, I NV^'^ RVaRm' Pl“ s’-w'o'l^^ !. mahogany pan- - - 'ondlttoned. newly FIRST FLOOR. 3 LARGE ROOMS, enl location. Udy private, utilities. FE 4-1178. _ 101 WEST ■ SIDE. NEAR WEBSTER School, 3 rooms and bath, extra _ ELIZABETH LAKE PRIV. BABY WELU \bWM3. CHILDREN^ WELCOME ^?'''mo"nth. ■ROOM APARTMENT. NICELY Jf^^^week luin-, adults. 8i.5 FE 2-5151. WILLIAMS LAKE FRONT 2 RMS. ROOMS AND BATH. UTILITIES. c. an mod k tehen. g?r. preirr FURNISHED AND UNFURNISHED Inquire 85 DwIghI 1, teacher. 855 mp OR 3-487* 53 N PARKE ST. ..... ...... ....................' FE4-r" ' AFTER _5 AND SI '/•' '■VVc.f OR 3-0505 4 ROOMS AND BATH, UTILITY Ilium near Auburn ai.il Dcqui idrc 568 a 1110 Alter .5 p m. OL 1-0188 4-BEDR(XlM NEWLY DECORATED ............. Open --------- .12 t . rfc 2-5887. Depos ROOMS AND BATH UTTLITY room. 2213 Bncllbrunk Koail oil 2 OFFICES FOR RENT 4540 DUIc Hwy OR 3-1355 CHOICE LOCATION ON TELE-graph Road 450 square foot office Heal and waier furnished Ample parking. 1100 per monlh Rolfe H Smith, Realtor FE 3-7848 OFFICE SPACE IN THE MILLER Building F'E 3-8881 THIRD LEVEL OFnCE SPAGF; on'S^WSs" * ’ ' inorigaKc ■' Of’RX SUXI).^^• 1-6 TRI-LEVEL BIARTEH MODEL K I. il'ulvi \ AI.UF.T Rcalt.ir I' l': 4-35.U ,n avenue LFD: I’.iiitRuAVatkm^ Suit PIONEER HIGHLANDS Open 8 I HAGSTROM RIVER FhoNTAGE * I apart 4-5188. I ROOMS AND BATH, WILLIAMS - Woodwird - i «VLVAN^_^ l-or Rent Miscellaneous 48! rosevill; l.AGE, 3 BEDRMS gas heat. PE 8-2730 3-BEDROOM brick wllH pay f ROOMS AND I GOOD CONDITION, | (. child w win Avenue Phone ni 5-1051 Wallpaper .SUamer Mulilple I.isling S 2111 Elicabell, lake hd JOHNSON )OM ROOM ROOM - 8 large riiiim- 2 sliiry older home Haid- FTrl, aJ'e’^’oi?*''^"'r"* '''*' I"irtli ol Ponllac Low down pay- c mother worl 5 ROOMS UNFURNISHED. CLOSE II utliltles furnished I ap.vr'tment? ■ Oskland Fuel Ai Paint, ■ FI 8-8158 i-or Sale Houses 49 ra^r 828.000 Also FE 4-5090 or FE TO BUY OR bell 8 SLATER APTS. SUNDAYS. SEE inissLic mR CARROLL. A i PARKE STREET DECORATED, L A R O E Wroom, full-sised bedroom. ' eloaeta. Pine reception , nail. Dullt-ln bathtub, tile ffoors. i large dinette alao slaeable kitch- I — — heated building. Just 1- NEWL lYTnquVre 23 'BEDROOM HOUSE 77 EAST .burn. tuquire u Brooklyn FE 8 3847. after 8.30 GGMS. OAS HEAT, OARAOE * ,“d *'"vn?g'^®bom‘TiJuSimf ^and iminum tldlng,*"ne*^°sh1n: -w aluminum atorm* and all new Interior, oil fur implele price $8,880. 81.0(10 .... ...s -. qjn p ------ Call UL (l..\KKST()X GOGD_ BUY GOOD LWAT70N v*“;addscaped''*87 I'o Semi finished home HANDYMAN Oak NK.\I. I'LS l ATI',. |-\( . 6-KOOM MODERN. 1430 'VINE-' FE 3-2171. 5 ROOkia. TILED BATH AND OA-rsge. Oas heat. Just redecorated. ShuwD by appointment. FE 2-0118 7-R(X)M~HOUSE. MODERN, CLOSE y waU-u ■■ 5.*'* “ c gas h 7 K0O5IB AND OARAOE. DAB i heat. 288 Auburn Ave. FE 2-5346. AVAILABLE HAZEL PARK. 3-BEDROOM HOME NEAR BT! 4-3019. s Churcl 1:30. F Automobile Repairs I loor Sandinx IX.sTAl.l.KI) I'KEU Apto sprints, mufflers, tall pipes. rjtBuf generators, starters, shock ab---- aorbert wB*n--bougnt at lagular H0LLEBBA*CKA A*UT0 PARTS 273 Baldwin _ FE_3-8477 TRUCK A TRAILER SERVICE A I FLOOR SANDING WITT THE FLOOR 8A.NDKH.-FE 5-3723 -----oS ■ WATERLOX - BRUCE We service and repair all make L BILLS 8R OLD AND A* Wt -flonr-^inishinr Px.j^Haa-,------j^ck Rental - ' Furnace Dealers North side — Whitfield room upper 2-bedroc 3-bedroom lower nt 4-3521 .5-1173 after 5 p m Truck and Trailer Service WEST side lower. >, rooms -BEDROOM BRICK. PULL'BABE^ mcot, 3-car garage, 11.000 down. 6850 Transparent Ur MA 5-1549. L-BIU!R(X)M HOME. 8300 DOWN. Opel) Dally • to 8. Junday 13 to 5 MAplc .5f»2i tKI-l.l'-.VI'.l. ST.MM I-.R NO MONEY IXIWN On your lot Trl-Levcl or Ranch Your plana or ours Have model. O Plaitley, Builder EM 3 0483 WILL^TI^DE OR BELL FOUITY It from there iorVlO.500 m “ermi" II \< ll.\(;,STU()M REALTOR 4900 Highland Road ■' " 4 0351 WILLIAMS LAKE ARIA Price ,\ lOlIXSOX vY SOXS Ri;.\i.Tt)R.S FK 4-25J.U 1704 B TELEGRAPH u.xku.Mx......... XOWOPI'.XIXC THE ALL NEW Corvette WIXDIXC DRIVT. Ranch| 3-brdroom. basement, a B 8 *822 •HW lieal. Mr Mills. Boats irs LATER t; YOU 'THINK' PURNACE8 ALL KINDS BEST buys AAH Sties. MA 5-lMI NEW a USED EQUIP. 24 HOUR Serv. Ja^ka Heating FE *-3tll. , Janitor Service COMPLETE JANITOR SERVICE Pgliulng, paperhanging, vail WIXTKR I‘KK F.S On all boats, motors, trailers aod marine supplies. 0034 Dixie Hwy — On Loon Lake PAUL A. YOUXU. IX( Lui OR 4- 85(5 ei Building Modernization jjj AAA BUILDING AND POXTI.XU LUMBER CO. MODERNIZATION CASH AND CARRY TOM LAHEY * BON (3i Oakland Ave PE 4-08I3 PAnfTIN6-PAPElliNd-«Aa, ■ CUSTOM HOMES AND REMODEL-! Cleaning OR 3-7001 Tuppei ■~-~CU8TbM'PAlNT7NO - ' _________________ - FULLY INSURED - COMUEMIAL AND REBIDEN'nAL--------- “ ------ — ............. remodeling and building bv outll- und *"|d"”” '"'tl eatlmatea. plans, design aervlf. a-1 PLA.8TERINO AND REPAIRS ..It «... Modernliatlon. OR Rcjs Pat Lee^ FE 2-7021 1X2 FURRING STRIPS 2‘ 2x4 Utlllly Fir ( 2x4 -0 Economy Studs "—"— Wool Insulation Dump Trucks- Pontiac F'arm and ________________ Industrial Tractor Co. Painters & Decorators *' .* Open Dally Including Mark LAKE, MODERN 0 wTuToprion ' _ lel- Strictly pri- FE 2-725* Schucli Rental,L ._. . _____ Rei?%"; * “QJJW PMmeiui. ,’aiLaia *balai*w_“K MArket 4-2704, J!j37| uil neai ca)l an nm 8*1 Peacock St PE 54250 - - lllJUBE wmi 5 BEDROOMS ’ c^JSfJd llmo!JI*hoo7 ------- eouT*:'; itmheM:; "nrr*. rTr&^ ersiTv aim Kotneaier •utomatic washer, gat heal 2-rar ENT IN BIRMINGHAM. . ?TultrpoVseJ?l°on^^"'* Jar'^Tr “preVee ‘'and''sirn^um * o"'iYll\cT?-.”f--l‘PV» 9« Srhoola. Call Ml 4-3014 lor ap- orchard Lake 3-BEDROOM home 575 A month! VFAn anOttsm s ..Orchard Lake plus utilities FE 8-3455. ’room utility **c'arporYim^ S.''0(> ,M()\'I lakciront EM 3-4870 888 per month plus lai « VICINITY OP ROCHESTER Insurance 3-bedroom, bi modern 3-badroom home, newly cariK-iing and gtraie Th ........... decorated, lull basement. 1100 V..Located i rn 1 1 O I .Ultlltifs not included FE 5-2.11 monlh UI. 2-4910, MichMli Parish. Call Bro 1 rueks • to „a,oBD _ . ?„««oms WI'ST .--UIU RI'.AX' I..XKI I’RIMI.Litl'.s' 2 AND i* STORY BRICK I ROOMS PHIVATF-F. N TR^CF. UP8TAI1IS FOR INCOME CARPFI INO AND DRAPES IN 2 HlXlMM DOWNSIAIHS FURNITURE FOR- IMF UPSTAIIIS FUI L BASF MF:nT 2 CAR (lAKAGF. pavf:d street ex $11,660 uwra pAMiiY ROOM wmi IV\K<.AI\ Coi.nKI I) l.AP HIDING. Rent a Truck r _ .f _ • _ Rent Houses Furnished 39 By Hour, Day, . , . . y one. uuiiiirs lurn rai 2-«a60 Week or Long Lc"?‘mW3«8i”°‘’“"'' Term Lease F'l.ooii.M GA.S rURNAt F: PAVED SfHEET EX ( F l I.EN I I (N ATION PAYMENTS .I.ESS THAN MLLOW THE ( .lll.llcWU-k W(I.h1, •TO MODEL W.XRD'S ()R( li.XRI) WRI'iin , Rraltoi J-BEDROOM MODERN YEAR LJ/Mates around cottage EM 3-4l.5g , -ROOM HOUSE AND GARAGE. 850' S.=;tx> M()\ F..S XTIU IX f TtVi^ d Buii- 3-BBDRM . COMMERCE plus uttnties, * AUBUK^ HEIGHTS. 1 .HOUSES , J.\( K LO\l,l..\XI 100 Cass Lake Jtd. FE 2 UIMSIDI'. 'BUD" livtT^ room Xcirt rl Hrrlmnrn JRI (isiiiiiti Upholstering Plastering Service . 3RTH PERRY ST _____FE 5-8888 __ WAHL 'uPHOLSTERTnO ------------ riihltbbM. M O D E RTI. GAS 13-ROCIX MARRIED COUPl.t OiaY modern 3-BEDROOM HOME ' I Excellent location EM 3-4885 I NEW 3 bedroom' FOR LEASE I Ponllac area near 3 aclioola TRinIty 1-1873 4 U> 7 p m NEW 7-ROOM HOUSE 3 BID-riwgif. 3 bath). Loon Lake prn i-le^^ Shown by appointment MI LOW RENT IN . EXCHANOX POR --------------------------- H. ( XFWIMill.XM AND AUBURN PI 4-5383 m s.iiin AUBURN HlIGHTi!- WEBSTER' lleagad $9,500 ... .. ... .... .. ..... .........UL 2 2850 _______ _ ---- . ...............PLASTERING ' PREE' ES-nMATES EAlctE a CUSTOM UPHOLSTXR- DO IT NOW, REMODELING. NEL- D Meyers EM 3-0183 ' ">f ■ •d* Cooley Lake Road. EM _yn Bids C0_OR 3 8181------'PLASTXRINO - VrORE'dUARAN-------LsUL ---- _teed_242:N^ilijaw_F:E_Lwt4, j Washer Service | Saw and Mower Service r ROOM HOUCE I per week rt BEDROOM Cerpet Cfeaners A-l RUG AND PORNITURE Cleaaari. Por pick-up " Dressmaking, Tailoring ALTCKA'nONS. ALL GARMENTS. I Inc Knit Dreaiei Olf 3-7183 ; AUTOMATIC WASHER SERVICE. I'V and radio ttor Salts A Sorv-, SAW a LAWN-MOWER SERVICE I ---- ! MV_FWJ. _i0Le;_MUierdRi j Water Softener Service 1 Television, Radio and "717' YY , ' ^ ' HI-FI Service I Softener Service BEDROOM FURNISHED ---- Drayton Plains 875 per mo ♦rator c,. ^ llejies. PE a-lu88 a SMALL CLEAN HOUSE II electric range I e prlv- I McNAB art MEYER A SAnx’ IFICF'; ' a 4-brdrm 3 bath home Nice Dry Wall (ETS TV antenna SERVICE I In-talltllon and repair, lowest ^rl^.s. I year guarantee. PE II Makti. fOHXSOX RADIO & TV ii E Walton B!vd FE 1-4588 This space reserved for your Business and .''crvicc Directory Ad. Call Realtor Partr._... Huron, Pontiac. ____ ; SAM' WARWICK HAS 3 BEDROOM "Rler imalieV'hom; 4 R005U. ADULTS fr»m« houae In Sylvan Lake 18481 J®®®. Realty — ______ PE 4-588*. Lakeland. PuU kaaement. recre-1 i ROOMS, COMPLETELY ~PUrU JSS""' *"* , --------- nlihed, full baaement and gt- I 4-soto.____ _ Investment Co ...., . _ Cloae to town. 127 N Perry WEST SIDE BRICK. * ROOMS ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE ' 7,*ner’^rL.pVi;rrt4^'sivj**Y‘'T.,°’^^^^^^ For Rent Rooms 42 ‘*'®*'*“'* ; J;*k>»oom HOMi! FE *-*g«3 FE l-23«*_ _ Elioo ’narbor, clean i' bid- -as beat Dtllltlea fur-Innulre fIM Willow 1 STUDIO ROOM POR WORKING lake OWON. C<»Y i-BEDiiOOM -, I*d4UUhU ao«l. MYI-12*«, ft ^ii.^' sr PE'4-I7n‘ 4-BKDROOM House, FUR* BtlHINKRII VKOvt v w*r vm't nished or unlornlshed 511 Ells- lot, rood will caOfidtr free and rUar P;.T”ij»%,r’*,?% T."r A. \M:BS'I I:’H, RraitTir'- >A 8-312J MY 3 2281 I'liriidly l.ittir H,.„se Quiet .ubufban locattoa ? bed*Iomr"full*bIth''*c' lagF--baaemeM -4s* battu- PUa. t* 'WILLIAMS LAKE PRIVII.KI ‘■Hnte!ed wall, bullt-ln oven and ranve carpeting and drapas. storm* sod scrMni. stain to unfinished second floor CouM have 4 bedrooms. Waterford Tvp. Cloa* to schools. 87* per month laelud-Ini taxes and Insuraac*. JOHX I. YER.METT Rm| KsiaU and Insuraa** f- —. THIRTY-TWO THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. JANUARY 27. 1961 i ®SS miSf SSli IS®i HOYT Gl ,iSI& J™;;«mS;. '“,r,;'r.'K No Money -=-•-... « STATEWIDE ..... .ri,n=• AMMrrr ■ Down - -. -, Glints: ?rS,« .........''"“■..................... M-Ii- If" ) .t' nOVT KF.ALTY ■ :t’s tai. LSI NESS' S^S ; DORRIS iflps ^'J%L«S:-aS^«£“r: „^"ST’;£ur%; " K IIK.AN BUSINESS 1 SALES (OKI’ORATION^ CIVILIANS $99 DOWN ifr 1.^1,oom °T1'" ST5..»n,rr.l “' ''""* ..s;r5:s*= IVM, «AT,«UN, TO,...., rir,r/i;?d,T.' 'W! 3 BEDROOM ' KAV O-NEIL. Rcallor see for Voursdl ' r^DriVT :-.-l.«-. K. ^ ai,.,KOKi.:K mi LS, OFLJN , l;— ';::. homes „ ...;L,Umm ...................................... M&MM $10 DN. nil. ,.:.. p^rtriHnP c ARPnlNo ..i..:L,"' .";r«"lnA.vi 4 .TARTS nrAi, «’.S», ?,h,!.«0'ot" idnriQQ© FE 8-0466 N- M"rlKape ( os(A rV .'.in ! VAKIETV STORE , 'L::~;L:r , ,"x,;ri,i.""HSiiAiT.: ?r..7;.?'-Ms;;,;i;: IfpT\T'-p ,,, .i»^•»■s.'■v.r.^^.. i.uuks ..................................; !r:i.,T„‘j.-i'![.7bu*;i‘d,:.""'‘’^’ ;:■ ■ ■".•'rr,prast.‘‘a....y REoucrn 9',>»"'L.ro>4« •l'!' «<><>iu »t |« io(i SMK i\(>nlj^ Walkini (In ............................. Partridge DORRIS ■SSf-'»S ‘sfiiiSS T.r I l..\il Knit Im:.. keallor '■"'“rs*""" uErrl Urban Renewal Area'^^'S^ ........... arro ';;3£: -«£?: =' (iareiire t , Ri, „«rv.c';? ■■'■p.s;s? K^lly (..m|,„, I |T.“«“iffl4'^°"|. “3‘5(4 . u.n«T;aiv> I oSf. 'ft"j.'".r,'s.?T:. For Sate MI»cdlancoM« 67 CLECTMIC LIO R T FIXTURES all rooBi IMl dailgni, duU Sano«. H-lo. bard eassar N-la. lencthi ____ «i-la. aalt amm M-Id. ianaffit .... %-ln. aelt ooppar ^“*tS[i^LUia3a*suppLY m I _ra_i-iioo GARAGE DOORS Pactorjr aaconda all • t a n d i •laas In atook from tit and Soaar'd^JST atalrwap. Wa ttra aatlmatea on tarage i BERRY DOOR SALES Opan from t to t Noon on Baturdajr 111 a. Paddock hc l-oioi HOT WATER HEATER. 30 OAU »*• »« ralua M.M and WM. narrad Alao aleotnc, oil nnd bottled tM, Mcblgan riuoreaeent. 103 Sale Mwakal Goods 71 BWimPUL SPINET PIANO. RX-CONDinONU CUT-DOWN upright piano. Good tona. Osar-antaod and dallaared. tilt. CHiHUAHUA PUPS ___ cirdt Rd Highland. Mich Rt I. -----------------------lOMX. , GRINNELL'S »1 a. Saginaw____FE ! HMfO INSTRUMENT REPAI lit N. SAOINAW ___t-t»l c^le nelson spinet piano. LEW BETTERLY music CO. ________MI t-t003 conn C8ED OROAN'. Sw BITTERLY MUSIC CO. MI t-stta FREE; 1 Months Rent Rant a new piano of your choice —you pav only the cartage tha flrit month. Than glO per month, money paid will apply If ‘'ated. Including cartage coat. GRrNNELL’S l^S Saginaw_______^PE 1-Iltt Ilistow Repeats Itself > player pi Spinet. “For Sale Pets 1HK PONTIAC PRKSSy FRIDAy, JANUARY 27. 1961 Poodtoa tt tt. Pick up aiyl de-llyery. SUOARLANO nCHNELS. _ EM_j0141. ________________ con. tfAIX PUPTIES. tl TO A _good home. Ha t-ttg* ” ^ * FREE PUPPIES TO GOOD HI .___________PE_t:0 BALES 0 INSULATION All Types. Call— M. A. BENSON __Pontiac. PE 4-3421 ■ JANUARY SPECIALS Small Orinbell piano 113-pedal board organ . Hammond chord orgar r. Alton Orr, >e«. Plateau 3-3162. _ _ second’ CUTftNO 34-Mile Rd., iMi Models Sale House Trailers OXFORD TRAILER SALES n Shakespeare's ... ......... ...... Birmingham MI 1-6331 ______ ' 66 BUICK TONVEItTlBLE SHARP --- ! Quality Motor sales FE 3J041 _ . . f»66 BUICK CONVER'flBLE RA- Boats and Accessories 97 *>“**.'• ---------- ..... NORTH CHI________ lOM 8 WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM. MI 4-2735 ________ IIM CHIVBOLET BEL AIR 4-bOOR. s?*di«“*Y§f‘“i‘‘2Vi.*‘“i§5r. Steele, Ford, 2706 Orchard ' Road. owner Only I16M Easy terms -NORTH CHEVROLET CO 1000 8. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINO-..... ... 1M7 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 4-door sedan Royal blua finish V-6 engine Powergllde, like this me Stock No IIOt-B Only $M6 Easy Urms NORTH CHEVROLET CO 1000 a WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINORAM, Ml 4-2736. ' 36 electric, loaded. ..... Brown. Oarden City. OA 2 !%0AT INSURANCE—2 PER ( — Hansen Agen- . white wall ceiien, condition, no down, full price |20l payments of $I2 25ji ------- ..j.2^er month. CALL MR. WHITE CREDIT ___ MANAGER. PE 0-0401. FE : King Aulo Sales 116 8. Saginaw ; ^O CHEVROLET iSEUAIR S^RP ____ ___ Quality Motor Sales. J-^PeYji041 ’.so'CHEVROLET 2-DOOR. t-cyllod< ..... St MI e-3000. BIRMXNU- 1 ---' - HAM-RA] LET’S MAKE ROOM *63 Pontiac and ’k4 . tot up '63 Naan. '50 Ambastador .. 04S up '61 Plymouth and '6d. iS uu ’62 to 66 Nash 146 to 0106 100 MAKES AND MODELS Economy Cars_______11 Auburn ■56 CHIVY STATION WAOON~4 door. 4 cylinder, SUlomatle trans-mtsston. radio, white walls Or-^ Iglnal owner $680. MI 0-3176 1066 CHRYSLiul W1ND8oO[aDi6 ■—* *•“— “cellent condition. No I W»5 paymen :e Call Credit Mgr , Mr. i 2-DOOR. 0-cylln .£a?lV R*^WOOD-' llhT8"*'l»rarp^^"lM5' CRlMli^^ CHEVROLET RochesUr, OL , I**"* S*'" . '>> * Saginaw 1057’ CHiVR6Lrf~ 2-DOOR^ RA-i - ______ 1063 0.^0 GOOD CONDITION. DIO A HEATER ABSOLUTELY 1064 CHEVROLET STATION WAO-I9** ____ _____ -------------- --------- ON, RADIO AND HEATER, i whitewall tires ABSOLUTE- I WABD._ : MI g makes, all TransportaCn Offered 100 I_,LC3YD S Used Car PLAZA , ENGINE AIRLINER, LOS AN- ... slses. See the latest with living 8»".8sn Diego I SCd C l room 20 by It. also 2 story. Many | W »«J «*f» New York, good used all sire, and reaUy | HO . Perry Service Inc. OR 3-1264 priced right 1 mile 8. of Lake ; CARS TO NEW YORK Orion on M24._________| BONNIE S DRIVEAWAY FE. Credit Mgr.. Mr. 4-7500, Harlod Turnt., . •64-'66-'80 PORDS-CHLVS. ' O ' DN Lloyd Mtr. Hales, Jnc.. PE 3-0131 1063 CHEVROLET CONVKRTIBIE. very elean. OR 3-6664. Carlton Manning. ■67 CHEVY. 2-t)OOR V-0, POWER glide, very sharp. OL 1-6317 116$ CHEVROLET IMPALA SPORT payments of 41 Credit Mgr , b 4-7500. Harold Turner. Pord. 1666 CHEV . 4 TUDOR. BAROAIN. S. WOODWARD 3-7642.______ 1651 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 8TORT sedan, t-cylinder, powergllde. ra-! dio. heater, whitewalls Stock No. 1013 Only $1115. Baay terms. SURPLU.S LUMHLR & ,, , MATERIAL SALES CO. _... • - . 6340 Highland Rd J M66| OR 3-70131 SPECIALS MEYSRS PUMPS AND REPAIRS CLARINETS^from '*. uU60 KELI.V HARDWARE 5? 1 choice beep. 13260 I •- larobsoiys Trailer Sates ' PE 4-422, pr^RJ;0m. -----, • 1 For Sale Livestocl^ 82 lARTBR. HALF. Special winter price. 6806 William, La :e Roatl, Dray-' Eor’high’grartr'u»ed' ...4 AUBURN RD. irolTlT5“lt7Trom . ,mV6” I _________i 'OWN SUN JO-2------j Rental - Layaway - Payment Plan ’ CUTE*LITTLE CHESTNUT OILD-I T™ **'*'** ! To NEW io-HP EVINRUDE. 1276. FI4-34I0. ohT^purhacx. tank“akd cop- J^rp.pe.^.o30-g^,^n^ PLASTIC TILE. EA Ole EDWARDS _ ' II S.' SAOII^W | ' iniT 1»XLMER_ TENOR^^SAX mng’EM 3-04E7 i; ! FOR*sale, 3 YEAR r. cheap MA 6-1631 Palomino' sUUion ASPHALT TtLB, EA 102 t condition. 4 Icc condltionft * al. Skis, s. Persljin combination' SAVE i DETROFXER “9HT.: PO.XTIAC CHIEF _____, _____________ ..... MIDWINTER CALBI MUSIC CO ' '•** __ MOBILE HOME N SAOlNAW PE 5-1222 ; SPOTTXD MARE TOAL. BAY MARE CJ-lARAJlCIv Quiet lor children. 3006 Dry-Rd Swift 6-3611 _ 1150. OR 3- T UNI NO AND REPAIRINQ. ! hour Mrvlce. all work guaran- OOINO PART WMb^lfed tar8~101 •'ariltoii.j ; p o w c f equipment, radro, licater, auto, trans,, white-1 ?.EJ'T_ . ... I wall tires. $1895 2.52 S. .SAGIX.UV braid . _____CA8S_ AT PIKE^ ST FE 2-OlM I' i >*??!. ’statign_: *12**. AB80Lu'tElV*NO MONET Dml^! CHEVROLET C _ WOODWARD MUIUUAM. Ml t:2736, ______ 1168 CHEVROLET* ST ATIOIT'WRtJ-, __ ___________________^ on. radio and healer, automatir ju, CHEVROLET NOMAD 8TA-aval No monev down. Call Credit ! t.nn ■rstfon ‘rt.* ..r ii.. n*. BIRMINOHAM MI ! WOOD- I Aiaume 4640 Dixie Hwy. _«L_dR M386 . AS MU’c'd As 150 TOR JUNK AND -g^-yE ! <*•»* ^00111, rough 1 Rocheater. SAOINAW X^LLENt’ USED LESTER SPINET PIANO 1315' eacrllent, For Sale Poultry 8.i ' BOTH ! r AND USED 6 ttool. Skla. iki p PIANO TUNINO-ORC.AN REPAIR 6-0116 PORTABLE STEREO HI-FI ELgin^ \\ cigand Music Center . MIRACLE MILE PE 2-4924 il's'cVl- VIOLIN. 8TRADE COPT. 1, 114 tlj„2 p~ Sale Farm Produce APPLES - MANY VARIE' . ---- __________ length* NO GIMMICKS WE USE THE _omClAl. MOBIIE HOME MAR-oO KET “ California .Market > need *00 Pontlaca, 0!di. uicks and Cadlllacft. Also sharp 7. '58 and *50 models. AVERILIJS 2020 Dixie Hwy. FE 2-9131 1667 BUICK 2-DbOR HARDTOP. hydramattc. 6800. Ft 2-0176. 19tl BUICK LeSABRE 4-I)6oB ; Do You .Xeed .Monev? WE HAVE IT' for extra clean USED CAR.S TOP DOLLAR PAID ■ Glcmr*.; Motor Fales- 182 W HURON 8T _ FE 4-7371 JUNK CARS PLYWOOD , ■■ Mawnlte 9. FE 8:^0616 U.sed Organs V Hullday. like new on East Commerce Rd OAKLAND COUNTY MARKET Open every Sat. 7-l M nm An. fi!,'w*'e ............ 1- this s PANELING mnisnea exs 13 05 ; PONTIAC PLYWOOD CO Sale Farm equipment 87 FE '2-2643 HOOF l.I':.\K.< „ 1 yout. idvlsor jor a free ea-| Hob lliueliin.son Mobile Ib nie ."'ales 1 Dixie Hwy Drayton Platt Open 7 Da FOR TOP DOLLAR ~ON LATER mtylei car, 1 See M & M Motor .Sales ' I 2527_DlxJe Jlwy OR 3-1103 ■ ; HIGH i FOR LATE MODEL ’ OR 3-121 JUNK CARS. _____ ___FE 8-2406. i;TOP BUCK-JUNK C FlSClll'-.K HUICK. IXC ' 101 a WOODWARD * BIRMINOHAM i ----- Ml.^100 . ! 1655 CADII.I AC ELDORADO CON-verttble. Exceptional condition. I 0lf0 down Call Mr Murphy. Credit Mgr . FE 2-2529 Eddie Steele. Ford. 2705* Orchard Lake Road 1950 CADILLAC 80 ' COUPE ONLY $195. Ba«v terma North Chevrolet Co . 1000 S. Woodward Ave . Ulrmlnitham. MI 4-2735 • stA'hox w'Afiox _ _ Credit! ' Mgr. Mr. O'Brian at MI 1-3600. , BIRMINOHAM-RAMBLIR IM 8 ! WOODWARD ____ _ CHKVIFS 1955-’56 : FORDS BUICK8 PLYMOUTHS H.\D CREDIT? XO CREDIT? XFED CREDIT? No cu-,leners. Immediate dellv. , ery Weekly paymU. on lot. low as 160 down. Walk In. Drive out Inter-City ^l<>t()r Sale.s tKLi ... from itarllng at only 11.265 term* NORTH CHEVROLE7 1000 8 WOODWARD AVE , M^OHAM MI 4-2738 »ii'l CORVAIR* MONZA, 3-81 of 120.75 per mu. uau W.C.U* **gf.. Mf. PhCka at Mf 4-7500, Harold Turner. Ford _ _ _ _ S ED8EL. MUST SELL. NBEt» A little body work. Beal otter over IMS. PI 2-0048 « N OAKLAND AVENUE WE HAVE 13 ^ OUR BEST FOR LESS ' list PONTIAC station WAOON^ e top 1961 Dodge $1961 I960 niF.VY DEMO-S AND LFl'rOVEKS ALL (.OlXTr THIS MONTH .\T YOUR PRICE. ' iiw*ctovr8lct"’ ’2-DOOR. RA-dlo. heater, light blue 1140 down 1156 CHEVROLET 4-DR STA'nON ; wagon, radio and heater. A Uttlt K m . IM dy»n PONTIAC CA'fALINA 4 DR Hydramatic Radio Heater. White wall, A lOwner car While over I Cri.AlX SAW mWTARS . Used Tr:4iei s TRUCK. l03 1 beige. INCLUDES HEATER WASHERS SIGNAL LIOHT8, Olte FILTER MR FOAM, ETC ALL TAXES FREE LUBRICATION FOR 25,-000 MILES Plus F Terms 1%1 DEMOS AT GREAT SAVINGS CATALINA VISTA BONNEVILLE CONVERT RANGE HOOD AND FA COP- ■WANTED HIGHEST { I MODEL-S TO Ch3o8E FROM! SPECIAL itomatlc garage doOr ( , 11.50 liytallatton, P ___I. Terms. Hcrry Door Sales Co. 371 8. Paddock _ fX 2-0203;, SPACE HEATER NEW Jts-OALLON oiljyk FE 0-0013 _ SPACE HEATER FOR SALE FE 2- 6l4J^after 1._ _ SMALI. METAL LATHE. DOUBL’eI doo*r,.*'l3.* 51?o"Dlxre ' Hwy.’**OR 3- 1302^ BINOER 2ilZ ZAZ EQUIPPED SEW-, >1 Tag-A-Long lift. 10 Tour-A-Home 14-f ‘5 Ponllae Chief . 11 8-FT . Real clean! i3 Pontiac Chief and usetf trailers^ i lollv Marine yV Coaeb WE HAVE FACTORY TRAINED ! 1*310 H(5LLY RD MX 4-6771 8ERV1C1; - MEN TO SERVICE HOLLY. MICHIGAN BANK RATES ........................... VACATION TRAILERS T9h-tTTTrvT?rn tt ' Honiis RAMMLEK-D.YU1-AS NORTH CHEVROLET HAUPT PONTIAC CI.ARKflTON »mplete 'line < BEATTIE DODOE-CHRYSLER-TRUCKS Open Eva, Until I “or's'-imi " 1655 FORD TON’PICKUP ’ EW NATIONAL CASH REOIS-j ter, from 1166 up. New National | addlivg macinne, from 166 un The ’ only far lory autho office. In Oakland authorliad branch ; _OA 8-3783. _ ! Rent Trailer Space 90: BRAND NEW SPACES PONTIAC t heater-. This Is really a pice one. Stock No 1645-B Only 1565 Easy NOR'TH CHEVROLET CO. County, where y -- - WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM J1I 4-27.75 'ORb '57 F-600, TRACTOR.” The National Cash Register Co 562 W Huron. Pontiac FE 2 0216. lot, Mt Clemens. HOw- jardJ-4213, DKEYFR GUN 1 & SHORT CENTER : 15210 HOLLY ROAD HOLLY. MICH ME 4 1771 1 e mile ei e'nsoi'e m’i;L-’’’h‘-“l"n"hnie, de ADU MACHINES, NEW ELEC-•leni blind henr. Vte Pav 14 50 t.'ci. add, subtract. tlN.50. Type-per month, or ' total balance. | 1176 50. ■**'"* Center., ‘^ponTUC CASH REGISTER 8 -TA lT* showers bOMPIETP 337 8 SAOINAW_____________FE_l-6 * luh'-fLceU Id ® ur~n. 6?V5® US?P_ADDJN0_JMACHJNM vftlu« $34.50. Lavatorifs comploie; «'ith faucpti $14 96. tollfts $21.50.1 Michigan Fluorescent. 393 Orchard: Uka Ave. - 37 ' ..... . _sAwy«HARp^NEpJ^ I Sale Sporting Goods 74 i__________________pontiac rd at opdyke ulie Roa u Lake- « TON STAKE. GOOD PHint $4j0 I ton plr FE 8-9601 i _____________ tCHINES USEChCASU REGISTERS RARG.AfXS USED CHAIN SAWS $65 EACH used ONTlAC FARM AND I ._»»<«' 3'-01li or MA 1- irtODSTRlAL TRACTOR CO I FURNACE AND FIREPLACE WOOD. 025 Woodward Ave. ____Pontiac j $7 a cord deUvarad. XX FJ17D. .. INTERNATIONAf.' TD U, DOZER, i FIREPLACE’ A N D FURNACE gOfld, cMldlUpil. *3.000 laah NA i w.qo FE 11040 - ^ __________________ - FURNACE OR Fll ! Kentucky Lump Poca Brlqueti. Cameras, Equip., Serv.JO ??i*^ jFIREPLACE CANNEL CO 1 -----^ flr—‘-- Every Auction Laic dreda««h FE 4-6505. Wooli, Coal ami Fuel 77 saturdatt "f,’*', ' dining room.” kitchen an3 Proulg. Ma^ PHOTOORAPHY INSTRUCTION I ru^;,7:"7|r.nmce kindling wood SulSl?rn’d*gl'‘udm"“"* '.Tl''Plk. 8^ie"d*;;y''m.?ml. Oaffl’FS?! * I a Palnl_ Phone FE 5A1M._______ - 1 , , „ . GOOD ”bRY SLAB WOOD FOR Sale Musical (ioods 71 Ilreplace and lurnace 2 eorda. A World of Xew Sounds | "‘gCrnf c.”e"v'nm«^‘FE'^2^^ GUI-BRAX.SEN TRANSISTOR ORGAN - _ OOD OB FIREPLACE wood 3 cord 120 del Alberto Lumber Mlll^ FI 1-1131^ SHOP LOADS WORK BEHC*Hi&. ■We ni THK FABULOUS thi:atkr ok*gax Price, atart tl II105 PIANO TOWJin-GROAN REPAIR Woigand Music Center j 5011 Waldon Rood. OR For Sale Pets 79 -YEAR-OLD M A LE HERMAN Clean MIRACLE MIIE BAZAAR AREA Phon FE 2-4924 ACROSONIC SPINET PIANO. 6465 REOISrKRED POODl. « Eaay Terma FE 4-.. AKC DACHSH’UNDS. ‘POODLES LEW BITTERLY MUSIC CO. _ MI 1-6002_________ ACCORbiOH SALE *ALL iUZES at'ra wilh liraaoni. 'ft 1-1420 . second hand clarinet? d9H$| to OaUand. Apt. B-4 eoadlllOD, IM. FE 1-20S2. altei 1 CHIHUAHUAS; chi-(«i pup, Na 7-nii. arc cocker puppies. rEas SuiarlandJCennel,. EM j 0242 T STtID REOISTERTO ENO’------------------------- I day renter irlM. 31" 'round'*wood iai ’ ble with 4 bent wood chalra, wall ! cupboarda wlth^ ^laaa^mra, lot | lamp,, picture,, mirror,, etc.'sam I Proulx. Auctioneer at Oxiord OA l-Ml. Boats and Accessories 97 ACCKSBOniES RALE O.NKLA.Ml .AT_CASS ■59 INTERNATIONAI. PICKUP With VI Slandard Trana 1 (Hll actual milea Radio and Healer SHAOP' 11,215 I..\RRy IKRGMF. ROCHE8TFR fioHD DEALER RSTREAM - vel Trailer SI ed for IKe. Be ■monalration al 1-7. C Trai n’and“«i FX'FANSIOX SAf-E" ler Trailer ‘^Ig Reiucllnn on new and need laiea, 3oaa w Huron. iPlan to : oin one of Wally Byam', exciting .■aravene i_ _ _______ SHORT S iiOBlLE’homes BALES AND SERVICE SPECIAL 14 ft. Oem, IMS. 17 It Oem. H.2M. Alto " ----- Complete tin rnoXF. FF4-3.5.V) We alao write clnrelad aulo FRANK A ANDERSON AGENCY 144 Joalyn — ------- Evea FE 2-4i A WhltehouM wlrbd ■ I bottla I hltchet 1 FEJM741 1I71W Huron IIM pontTac* CHIEF mV eq6i-^^Aiul^toke ovat tow paymanu. “buy li)us“w Ai Tl nc“' CRUISE-OUT BOAT SALES 13 E WaltoO_ 6-1 FE 6-4402 JOHNSON OUTBOARD ~MOTOR8, Starcraft boala, Oalor tralleri. Owim'll MaJunC SlfPPLIBB 260 Orchard Lake Ave. _______ F8 2-l020_ __ OWENS CRUISERS SKIFFS-FLAOSHIPS -FtBERGLAS OUTBOARDB buy ^>r trade now WINTER BARGAINS MAZUREK MOTOR * MARINE EXCELI.I alter I 1600* OPEL S'TATION "tAOSOB. brand-new. Only a cauple left! Cloar-out price tlttO -- Includea evarythini Low monthly pay-nmta or 151.01 will put. one of FISCHER mTCK.lXC. 101 8 WrrODWawD BIRMINGHAM ... TRAVELER TBAII-- --- SIZE FROM IV TO U ALSO WE HAVE A VERY OOOD SBCTIGN or NEW and USElr SOUTH BLVO AT >Af>INAW‘ IF YOU HEED 1500 ....... .._.............., lor any emrrteacr TRAVEL-TRAILERS, AND SOME ! ** Iwlp r<>u 10 WIDE. MOLLY MARINE k SEE SEABOARD nNANCK CO i 1050 VOLKBWAOEN SUN ROOF. COACH SALES jsilO HOLLY AO , __________JC8 J.5210 HOLLY ME 4-0771 ParkbufM Trailtr Sales | - FINEST IN mobile LIYINO - i Featurlnf New Moon Owotao— Venturi - Buddy Quollty Mobile Call Mr Murphy. PE 2-2530. Credit Mor Eddie Bterle. Ford, 3706 Orchard Lake Road 1255 HI1J.MAN STATION WNOON l»nd running condttMn, 1225 FB Inboard power for tbe price of : autboard. The BBA TOwiUI out- r ^vc ean be Inatallod In any 1 Moat wllh chillre of cnglnea to ! IM M P Convert your outboard kXlOAND tlARmi Exf^ANOI* I For Sale Cars t SELECnON .1201 S. Bagtnaw LINCOI.NCONTINCNTAU SEE Btib Frost, inc. 266 Hunter Blvd BlrmlngHan JOHNSON OFFERS WEEK-END SPECIAL! ,BK.\XD XKW l'«)l l’()XTI.\C CAT.MJX.V II.XKniOl’ cnuRi': FOR oxi.v $2466.42 PRICE INCI.UDE.S healer, defroalera. back-ui washert. turn tigiials. oil IIP - ------- ■■ ■ axle. Syncliromch IranamI li:Cae -Wagon Specials- ’(/) Ratnhlor ’.S9 j’lvmoutli Wa(ri)ii ... .Save $1000 Wapon________________.... $1195 New Car Warranty Cuatom. Suburban. Auto V I ’.59 C'licvroirt' \\a(run ......... ’.58 Rainlilrr WaROM ............... $I.V>5 Cuatom, Automatic. Sharplt VI "“Sb l^cJirtriatT''"'-^^— ' -r.—’47-|ccp. W-ajrbii ............ $ .19.5 Waijou $ .<95 $395 - FULL PRICE - $495 ’.5.5 riy. .Srrtan .. $.W.5 i’56 Buick ir'J'op $495 ’55 Mure. SHali .. $.595 ; ’.56 Olds 11’Top .. s«495 ’5.*? Clirv.’2-nr. .. $.595 ’.56 Olds 4-Dr, .. .$495 ’.54 Buirk I I’Tup ■. $ffl5 ’55jTJirv. Srd. .. $495 - CHEAPIES - -RUSS JOHNSON- LAKE ORION 2 low-ovi:riifad i.ocatioxs North Broadway at Shadbolt "Pontiac Division" MY 2-2871 M-24 at Shadbpit "Rambler Division" MY 2-2381 THESE VALUES WILL WARM YOUR HEART ON THE COLDEST OF DAYS! THE RETAIL STORE l'>5') l‘nN ri\C heater, Hydramatic lran,mlt,lon. $1795 19,5'» rtiNTIAC ........... $1M5 ............. $1195 he Dana- $1095 195f. I’ON'TIAC . 4-Door Hardtop. Radio, healer and Hydramatic . ...... $ 695 ... $ 595 PONTIAC FACTORY BRANCH "GCXDDWILL USED CARS" Retail Store Value Lot 65 MT. CI.i:MEN.S ST. tORN’ER CASS. TIKE FE 3-79.54 FE 3-7954 / THIRTV-FOl R THE POXTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. JANUARY 27. 1961 For Sale C«r« OMATIC. RADIO AND HlAI WHITIWALL TIRES LIKE CONDITION ABSOLUTELY NO For Sale Cart 1061 For Sale Cara 106i For Sale Cars MARMADUKE ?TrA."___________ tUfold Turnfr, Ford. 1»M FORD J-DOOR. ' $SW TOLL prlc». C»ll Mr. Mur^T. Credit, -—, --- M»r FE »-»». Eddie BUele. duo»»e M< , rord,IIO.^c^rdUE.R^. , FORD I*M 3-DOOR. CLUB COUPE. I lual mild tlM lull price Term». Cell Mr : equity ui O'Brlea. credit m*r.. At MI state. For (-»0« BIRMINORAM-RAMBLER. churic .1 1 «»8 WOODWARD. ____________ U FORD CUSTOM 3-DOOR. «- : I*H MERCURY MONTEREY. RA- MERCURY, ft OOUM SI.. Itick. DO rust. like ae». ro- i dlo and beater, ckcaltcot coadl-: station vafop. lir* -- 0 and healer. No money dofrn.! tlon. No money doom. lull price owner OR 3-tMl assume paymenu of EM.N per ■ t3*S. Assume payment gf »I»' MERCURY WAGON. BRET JltUST-SELL- ' Htt MEtROTOLifAS 3-D ®o L sleerins and brakes, radio, heatei - , . - - .-It at and vhltewalls. Don't pass tbli 00 b!rminoham-ram-’ upatiitH. MB WOODWARD ~ ^ 'I fisqu-.K BUICK. INC. INVESTrGATE LLOYD'S HSCHl'.R HIMCK.IXC. 108 8 WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM MI 4-8100 _ :857’ rOifD ' COUNTRY SEDAN 8-cyIloder. Mudard plus overdrive Low mileage Too AiMfif 8800. Ml Htghgl _________ Fordo ........ white flotfh. Only 8485. Tis North Chevrolet Co . t B Woodwari" ‘ 1 MI 4-8735r Vsed Car PLAZA 5') U.\C01-\ C citiliiKTital 4-1^. Hardtop ill sjiarklinfr red and white 'Econoinr' caf' _ fiiii>,h. See this like-new.^ .‘iL“ Eddie Steele. Ford I Lake Road_____ _ IPM NA8H_ RAMBLER. EflCK. ; , . i,-., *•* ■oil*' Saaini ]>loom(iel(l I nils executive 1953 nabr 3-door. radio - Credit P ai or Sat FE »-7#40. ' KJIte 1987 S-DOOR. RADKk AND ne« tires recently orerhauli ■ healer No money domn. A»tun-.e brakes. transmission. en»iii pasnienis of 17( 80 per mo Csll . I«00 Ml (-0035 'SfRMl’SLlfiMMiB' : " 6^6 WOODWARD_____________ il^erbrVkes Alter a OR 3-3(1 fom CONVERTIBLE. 1987 RA- poRD VICTORIAr R ADIO'AN car todav, ^•KK■■KI) TO Sl'.I.L 2.^2 S. S.XiilX.WV FE 2-9131 834 50 Call e t»5 a a-t»oo. ] ■ « « CRFDIT MANAO^" F^t ofw *•« __________ King HUU gni,., ,15 g ssginsw 19jO’ FORD 8-DOOR RADIO AND * IF YOU NFED 8500 HtATER. V-8 WHlTFWAUefl Vm emeriencE ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN he'D voj .?KE.,seABOARp FINANrtro, irs sYiakttt) i.ha.se COMPACTS TO CADILLAC8 FROM 189 MONTH r/~v8f 1.-I ‘f I II-A . ...Jllent condition. .. down. Full prUe tl9k. Assume aiymenls of M per month Call r WhiU. credit Manager. FF g-0403 King Auto Bales____118 B Baglna; 'U OTds }« Har TO.M SULLIVAN AUTHORIZED DEALER Fenton. Mlchlgsn _ MAln 9 2288 1987 MERCURY'station WAOON.! * like new. low tnUeage OR 3-WSL ^OPLES AUTO SALES MERCURY «;l«^ •• Oskland FE ^2351 , . . u r. oLDSMOBILE 'sHARP. CLEAN MERCOMATIC. RADIO • 7500. Harold Tun FORb'cfXJNTHY SEDAN S HEATER 1987 POBD rUBTOM 2-DOOK (49avmenii For Sale Cars 106 Superior Auto Sales A cboka of N can Wo fair 550 Oakland -FE 47500 iw^i un. r. Fk »-im. TONTIAC CATALINA *1.. real, by owner. FI FONTMC 4-b6bl(. AUTO, radio and heater. No ftnloln -Mereury-Comet.' Bajlnaw. FE MJ- 331 B. roNTTAC CATALINA HARD-top. radio and heater, axcellent condition. No money down, full price 1398. Aaaume payment o( 913 38 per month. CaU Mr. White. Credit Manager. 1-0403. King Auto Balea 118 B. Batlaaw •H FONTTaC CAtAUNA SHARP! Quanty Motor Bales PONT1AC8? WHY NOT TRY SUBURBAN-OLDS! 893 8. Woodward. Birmingham^ MI 4-44M _ _ ___ •89 FONTMC 4-DOOR CATALINA. ----------gQg brakaa. other After 4 pm. OR i. I. ! -84 PONTIAC 4-Dbdh SEDAN. • _________________MA 8-1017._____ loss PONTIAC 3-DOOR. NO MONEY full price 1708 Lucky Balea. IPS South Saginaw. For Sale .Cart 106 W FONTUC ton#^iah"^iAjr'M John J. Smith Do(^ ' SaBlnaw Et. FE 3-7098. ITim: .. Ilia RAMBLER STATION WAOON. CD8-tom model 108*.--- iS'Wrm 1989 rambler AMERICAN, door, radio aod beater, rad and white. Stock No. 3M. 8100 down. Assume parmonta of 833J9 per monta. CiUl Mr. O'Brien, credit manager. MI d-MM. BIRMIMO-HAM-RAMBLER. «d« 8. WOODWARD. _____________________ -d66b station a 1. Very c ____________ price 8l.i98. 3d month! on balance. Call Credit Mar,. Mr. O Brlan.....* nniMINORAM- — WOODWARD. ’58 RAMBLER 4-DOOR. dCyllnder engine, atdnd-ard traaamlsalon. Only 3d.d00 mllet and snatleaa. Wat $971; NOW $999. CRISBMAN CHEVRO- LET. Rochester OL 3-9731.__ RAMBLER. 1990 CUSTOM STATION wa|w. rsdlo ^^d^hMMr, down.' Assume paiyments of '$89.80 per mr “ *" 9(9 8 WOODWARD___ POXTIAC (-DOOR AUTOMAHC I windows. Oreen Oualitv (QK) Korndrs DI3(IB USED CARS ___Dlkle Hwy --------- .For Sale Cars SPECIALS New II CAT far dl^.M daUvei etf. 9101.(9 down. M9.U por m( Iheladao fwdto. hadler abO vhiti walls. Wo baea 39 aaw Raablai - " ------(OH la januBiY. 1988 BTUDEBAKER COUPE, full prloe. Call Mr. Murphy, ' It lar.. PE 3-3831, Eddie I ^-narj L "----------- Ford. 3708 Orchard Lake Hoad. 3BED CARS _|80 TO 99M. NO MONET DOWN. OUEEN AUTO BALES. 171 a. BAOlMAW,_____ $1995 R & R MOTORS 734 OAKLAND AVE. FE 9- WOODWARD '83 OLDS 89 HYDRAMATIC. NEW gAn,l fnnrt FR 8-1373. __ i( OLDS. 91. HOLIDAY HARD* 1068 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE. 4-door. radio and heater, automatic, runs good Full price t34S. No Sf‘’Yl3 a“m" Call* Mr.**^'Brlan at MI 1-3000 BIRMINOHAM-RAMBLER, OM 8 WOODWARD _ -DOOR SEDAN. 10 ana heater. (300 down. As- i'kP.’^o'Brlan.* ^dH ffgr.^at (-3900. BIRMINOHAM-RAM- __________________ _ _ _ IR, (14 8 WOODWARD________ full/r\c’?*8aT7Mr M^hy Cr*e^ : ‘*?(5K“&n —^ ".*“r?dio." h??t!™’Jumm‘;Ylc: It 8^r FE 3-3829 wcIii. m..i. ; . 2708 Orchard _____ Jcluai miles. 12.198. MI i .(-7363. after 9 ti.m^ j | 53 PONTIAC. 4-DOOR. BTRAIOHl- ^ HASKINS New Used Car LOT FE 3-3829. Eddie Steele, IS Orchard Lake Road. j '68 PLYMOUTH. VA. AU'TOMATIC *ONTMC VENTURA HARD- • I Pull p 1395. FE INVESTIGATE wdy and tli __ 384 TUmor. PONIIIAC WAOON OR VIBTA; PAS- 195.8 01DS HARDTOP, HYDRAMA- 87 PLYMOUTH 2-DOOR’ TOM BOHR........ 120 8_Maln._MtlIord _ MU 4-1715 1089 CATALINA. HYDRAMATIC, i power steering and brake.i, good i condition. FE 8-7137. ______ ___________ .... calf tween 10 and 2 p m FI 2-2830. 1940 PONTIAC VENTURA SPORTS Coupe, shoreline gold, palamlno beige, power, deluxe accessories. MI (-1737 after (. _ _ _ 1088 PONTIAC CATAUNA, 4*-D06r, hydramatlc. - radio and heater, whitewall tires, low mileage, one-owner. 14 Frank. FE 8-0795. _ 1957 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF 4-door. hardtop, In esceUen' — LOOK! BUY! SAVE! heatM...ai>ltd, whjte I 1989 Pontiac 8-Chle( 4-Dr. . 81898 . 1957 Pontiac 8-Chltf Convt. (1098 ; 1989 Pontiac convertible .81396 1 Acrosa From Show Room 1988 Ford "500 " Hardtop 1080 T-Blrd. V-8. All powe 1086 Bulck Special 4-Dr... ---Bulck Century 4-Dr I 1981 PLYMOUTH. BE>»T OFFER '51 Chev. 3-door stick .53 Chev. 4-door powergll .52 Hudson. (. club coupe S3 Olds II. 2-door. t 2-dr. sporU coupe 12371.89 met 4-dr. sedsn .... 13399.39 me 4-dr . VIsts 83951.40 Plus taxes at cost Call FI 2-1394 Keego Bales and Service. Inc. 3080 Orchar Lk. Rd. ____Keego Harbor. Mlch._ 1955 PONTIAC 2:bR .-SHARPTNO ' ol\"lo‘i5“'' ’‘”*- - rust Interior and exterior like i O'* _____ -............ 1989 PONTIAC STATION WAOON. Ford .............., - - Bulck LaSabre Convt.. 11995 —. Bulck “febSal - 97Dr“ ;7YIWJ 1957 Hillman Button Wagon 8 898 19M VolkMUgjtn. iun^ prool. .11895 Saginaw 8I FB 3-70M._ 1935 PONTIAC CLUB COUPE. HY- I DRAMATIC. RADIO AND HEAT- I ER AB80LUTELT NO MONEY | DOWN Assume payments of I S3L98------- "" —— " - ' 19W Pontiac BOTnevllie 4i6r. 1988 Ford 4-Door. Pordomatic 1957 Bulck Century 3-Dr...... 1988 Ford Station Wagon . 1984 Chrysler. Very clean.. -----MT 4-7800, Harolii i Ford. _ _____ SHARP Vri I '&» >3 Bulck. Oood condition..8 148 I5( PONTIAC CLUB COUPE, HY-DRAMATIC. RADIO AND HEATER ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY roUO, IHADE POH BOAT I ' sell FE 2-2637 dfairia; WE MEAN BUSINESS Call Credit Mgr.. rificr 8718 UL 3-84 1984 PONTIAC BTAR CHIEF door, 8395 lull price. No m— down. Call Credit Mgr.. ..... OBrlan at MI (-3900. BlRMINO-HAM-RA81BLER. IM 6. WOODWARD. SHELTON HASKINS CHEVROLET SHEFS WEEKEND SPECIALS Jill *7 noDGr roNV I 2 nil HOMER MIGHT -M©T©RS- ..... STICK 8 I. FORD VICTfIRI.A ■r>6 FORD WAOON V, DK FOTO 4-DH »5 FORD KAIRI ANF 5 FORD r^ONV .4 FORD VRTORIA .6 CHEVROLET Br.l, Alft MARIMOP " lo.--'.'; BUICK ;fxv)R Hahdiop 19.'fi DODGE ■ $795 $495 $545 SHORT 0.\ c.\^||? W l'i W II.I. I'.UN; ^nl'R ( AK” John FORD AAcAutiffe INC. i I'O.MI.ICS O.M.V l OUIl IJI.ALIOK , 630 OAKLAND AVE. FE 5-4101 w -LAST CHANCE!— ONLY 2-DAYS LEFT TO BENEFIT BY OUR JUNE In JANUARY II OPEN UNTIL LAST CUSTOMER SATISEIED TITU.D IX in-al .Motors' .Xai •9 CHEVROLET Be!-Air 2-Door $2279 JUST LIKK N V-g with Powergllde. directional slinalt Lu-illver blue finish. Really tires, wheel disc, bsby blue finish. (-cylinder, radio, healer, plastic covers. Ivory and dusk grey finish. Really therpl $2660 $1288 $1389 oO C ADlU.Al 'Y.2" 4-Door 'h7 ( HKVROLKT Mel .\ir Sport Sedan $1245 $2388 '60 POXTIAC Ventura Sport Coupe $1045 • $3788 no CHl.VROl.l'.T Impaia Sport Coupe ■,Vf ( ADil l AC MlkuElK'Villc : fi'poo $3488 ’.-'*■( i IKVR(.)LE I' liiipala Spoil Coupe l HI'A IOil.I.I I .\ii 4-1)00!' SAVE $1000.00 1961 IMP ALA HARDTOP 4-DR. SPORT SEDAN I)8:MON.STRATOR Solid lurquolee WAS $3680.90-NOW $2680 THIS IS JUST ,VN EX.5MPI.E - many fine New Car Values featured this wrrk lu fw Csr Department. Bee them NOW! Power steering atjd brakes, drajnitlc, radio, heater white tires. This Is a like- '?7 CHEVROLET 210 2-Door (-cylinder engine. Powargllda transmlaslon. radio and beater. Ivory and pearl lucita flnlah. $2395 $985 ’.^8 CHEN'ROLKT Delray 2-Dr. Sedan '57 FORD Station Wagon •asxenger Couiitiy Squire, iwer steering and brakes, ra-5. hea.irr. Ford-O-Matic. while '5b BUICK Special Sport Coupe '57 CHEVROLET Bel .\ir Wagon Automatic transmlasl $1488- $1789 '5'i CIll'iVROLET Bel Air 4-Dr. Sedan '(lU CHEVROLET Kinghwood Wagon $489 $995- ( IH'A ROI.E'i ,\ir 2-Door IJ) CirF.\T