t fo t t = » ; ”~ ; < THE PONTIAC PRESS The Weather ’ Tuesday: Fair, Cold : ' Pisce aaa Edition 112th YEAR eke kek PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, DECEMBER. 6, 1954 —82 PAGES i ey Te ‘78 | Headon Crash North af Oxford Takes 5 > St Ticeph Hospital Plans Big Expansion * Opens Drive for $4 Million for New Unit Hospital Would Boost Capacity by 200 Beds; - Now Has 310 By ARNOLD 8S. HIRSCH St. Joseph Mercy Hospital today announced plans to undertake a $4,000,000 ex- SLA ent 310-bed capacity. Funds to finance the program will be sought through a public subscrip- tion drive. Business and industrial leaders from the Pontiac- Birmingham area will meet with hospital administra- tors, medic&l staff person- Backs Safety Campaign Fireman Robert Olin ~(left) and Patrolman Robert Emery, first Pontiac resident to sign the petition for the “Army of 10,000,” Pentiac Press Phote FIRST S-D DAY PLEDGE—Larry B. Saxton, 35, flanked by was the nel and hospital auxiliary members at 8 p. m. today to map details for the drive. The meeting will be in the hospital auditorium. It is expected that a pro- fessional fund-raising or- ganization will be named to conduct the campaign at the session. The meeting will be the second held by the same community in- (Pontiac property-owners ap- proved the $3,000,000 city hospital expanion program, which is ex- pected to add 150 beds to that institution within about two years.) “We knew the vital need for more Pontiac General beds and agreed it would be best to wait | pledging safety loyalty on Wednesday, Dec. 15, which has been proclaimed S-D Day.by the President's Action Committee for Traffic Safety. The petition will be forwarded to President Eisenhower upon completion, singling out in the nation Pontiac's role in the national campaign to save lives. Over 500 persons signed the petition in downtown Pontiac the first hour after the drive got under way today. Pontiac Starts Collecting No-Accident Day Names By JOSEPH K. SFAIR Pontiac today began setting the pace for the nation in a challenge to eliminate all traffic accidents everywhere in the country on Wednesday, Dec. 15. The challenge came in the form of a crusade by the local Safe Driving Day committee, Pontiac Police Dept. and the Pontiac , cooperating in a petitioning drive to gain signatures for an “Army of 10,000,” pledging its responsibility on S-D Day. he safety day was officially proclaimed by President Eisenhower's aetion Committee for Traffic Safety. [Formosa Attack | Threat by Reds Called Ominous Possibility of Open War With Communist China Looms Large WASHINGTON (INS) — U. 8. officials took a “most serious” view today of the warning by Red Chinese Premier*Chou En-lai that ‘| the Peiping regime is deter- mined to capture Formosa “at all costs.” The Chiou statement made official the prope da attacks the ese ve mounted since the U. 8. signed a mutual de- fense treaty last week with the Nationalist Chinese ernment of Chiang - shek. U. 8S. experts admitted that the Chou warning made the situation omi- nous.” They lean heavily to the idea be trying deliberately to provoke the U. 8. inte war on the For- mesa issue. As the President put it, such a munists might think they cause a rift between the U. S. and Britain \through fighting over For- mosa, Other speculation included the thought that the Chinese may be- lieve they can win support and sympathy from non-Communist Asians by making a big point of their charge that the treaty ‘“‘con- firms” t the U.S. is occupying Over 0 90 bewr peried prior Chou's speech the Pieping radio had made the most blatant attacks on American Far East policy since the Korean War. The Communist mouthpiece beamed thousands of words of ac- cusafions against the Eisenhower administration as the ‘‘betfayer’’ to begin program,” said Dr. —* The 10,000 _ signatures, Joba R. Mubert, whe served as | expected to be gathered in| “pe a ate ales brought en- chairman ai the first meeting. onti 10 et 6 eight days, will be forward-| er attack the British government Dr. Hubert is former hospital | | ed to the President as a sign | after following a ‘“go-easy’’ policy chief of staff and now serves “on the executive board. He is director of public relations and the emer- Marjan Prayer Steady Improvement to Permit Broadcast of Blessing on Wednesday VATICAN CITY —The Vatican gave new evidence today that Pope Pius XII is continuing to improve, | announcing that the ailing pontiff will close the Marian Year cele- bration Wednesday with a blessing broadcast from his sickbed. The 78-year-old head of the Ro- man Catholic Church, still critical- ly ill with gastritis, spoke a sim- ilar blessing into a microphone yes- terday. The Vatican press spokesman announced today that “the Pope’s slow and gradual im- provement continues.”” A Vati- | eam source said earlier that the to Speed U. N. Moves Pope had spent his third fairty restful night since he rallied for Release of 13 from the severe collapse last UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. e—| Thursday which brought grave The United States scheduled an-| fears for his life, other conference with its 15 Ko-| rean War allies today to discuss been scheduled to officiate at the ti = push . es N. — ceremonies Wednesday which will or release o airmen end the special year of celebra- other Allied personne] in Red | tions proclaimed by the pontiff in China's hands. |honor of the Virgin Mary, gency department. He said St, Joseph is operating at capacity, “There has been a waiting list of between 20 and 25 patients at most times for the past year,” Dr. Hu- bert said, “It’s a rarity when we can bring someone in. without a wait. “If there was a three-car col- specs gs ed aspmice Jo (Continued on Page 2, Col Planning Action to Free Captives Allies Studying Ways | Within an hour 584 persons signed the petition. of Pontiac’s loyalty in the move to save lives. Stationed at Saginaw and Huron | Sts., police and firemen launched the dramatic campaign at 9 a.m. First to enlist in the Army of 10,000 this morning was Law- rence B, Saxton, 35, of 177 W. Ann Arbor Ave., who is assistant display manager of Simms De- partment store, toward London for more than six | months. Death, Destr uction ‘Spread by Twisters ATLANTA (UP) — Tornadoes whirled out of the skies into some 18 Georgia and Alabama towns last night leaving death, countless injured and vast destruction. One person was known dead and sags, e- a e2 2 a ie MRS. EDNA MAE KUCK met violent death early Sunday morning. The five- | car collision took place north of Oxford on M24 | _ Victims of Crash} | Near Oxford DEATH CAR— Shown above is the mangled {at the crest of a hill dubbed “Slaughter Hill” by remains of the car in which four Oxford residents | jaw enforcement authorities. A fifth victim, driver | of a car which collided with the one above, also died. | Traffic Kills 19 Others ClO. Head Raps Administration Reuther’s Keynote Talk Eisenhower Record LOS ANGELES (INS) — The Congress of Industrial Organiza- tions opens its 16th annual national wedding in Detroit. State Honeymooners Die in Fiery Wreck on U.S. 16 A h By UNITED PRESS young honeymoon couple died screaming for help’ at Convention Scores near East Lansing yesterday when they were pinned in | their flaming automobile less than 12 hours after their General Hospital with The victims were Marvin R. Forester, 20, of St. Clair, Shores, and his bride, the former Rhea Mae Schuster, 18. | Lives 5 Others Hurt as Autos Ram 'Into Wreckage Passing on Hill Thought Early Sunday — By WILLIAM H. THOMAS Death ended five lives early Sunday one mile north of Oxford on M24, when two cars crashed headon and three others slammed into the wreckage. During the past 18 months 19 persons have lost their lives in traffic __ | mishaps on this hill, accord~ il ut Hh RE convention in Los Angeles today and one of the first matters to come before it is a repoft blasting the Eisenhower administration and the Republican - controlled 3rd) Congress. Seven hundred delegates repre- senting 5,000,000 union members are in the city for sessions which will continue through Friday. Top items to be considered by | the big labor meeting include | merger with the AFL, to which) both the CIO and the AFL are | committed, and a stepping-up of | the drive for a guaranteed annual wage. After opening ceremonies, in- Ingham County Sy Harry ‘Leadiey said it was! Mercury Diyes; " “the wofst accident I have Winter Arrives ever seen.” He said it took | two hours to remove the | bodies from the charred car in- Earnest*Here on U.S. 16 aboutthreemiles, _ east of Lansing. Winter came to Michigan in State Police said they believed | earnest today and sent tempera- | the “bride was driving when the | tures in the state dipping as low as | car missed a curve, struck a pala below zero, reported in Peliston. and burst into flames, Witnesses | said they heard screams coming | In addition, a freak 14-inch snow- fron inside the overturned car but | fall descended on —— the intense heat kept them from | ‘six to eight inches blanketed trying to free the victims. | Thumb. Snow began falling in Pontiac The first weekend of December early this afternoon. tory condition today the Red Cross said two other per- cluding a welcoming speech by | Was marred by 19 other highway Until his illness, the Pope had Clyle R. Haskill, S-D Day chair- man, said over 2,000 persons are expected to sign the petitions to- day. Beginning Wednesday GMC Truck and Coach Division will cir- culate petitions among its thou- sands of employes, he said. Haskill explained the unprece- dented drive here will point up to the nation the importance of the President’s S-D Day. A letter informing the Presi- dent's committee of the current Pontiac action is being for- warded to President Eisenhower, Haskill said. Included in the letter will be a copy of the pledge to be signed by more than 10,000 Pontiac resi- dents, It will also note the names of individual organizations contri- buting to the success of the drive. sons were listed as possible vic- tims. At least 66 other persons were known to have been injured by the twisters that destroyed some 67 homes and damaged 218 oth- ers. ry] Money Problems Topic of New Press Series Do you have any money prob- lems? Want to buy a car—a dish- washer—or save money but can’t figure out how? A noted economist has taken a long look at today’s cost of living—at your way of life—and comes up vith some helpful answers, “You and Your Money” by Les Angeles Mayor Norris Poul- son, the convention's keynote ad- dress is te be delivered by CIO President Walter.Reuther, who ales te president of the United | Aute Workers. of taking ‘‘no tangible steps" to. relieve unemployment and charged | that some administration leaders devoted their time to criticizing the CIO for urging full employ- | ment. Reuther added that the admin- istration could take no credit for | averting a depression. He contend- | ed that the ‘‘present economic de- cline did not spiral into a full- blown depression” because of ‘‘the | legacy of social and economic | Merryle Stanley Rukeyser starts in the Press today, on page 7. legislation under the Roosevelt and Truman administrations.” deaths in Michigan, as well as three deaths in-a plane crash and two in miscellaneous mis- | haps. In Pontiac, the mercury dropped 'to 18 degrees early this morning j The appalling toll came as most | of the state began planning for He accused the administration | | Observing President Eisenhower's “Safe Driving Day’’ Dec. 15. In Oakland County, five died in a five-car pile-up that scattered wreckage and bodies over a wide | area a mile north of Oxford. The dead, all’ from Oxford, were Lynn | Best, 27; Charles Nelson, 25; Max Smith, 28; Mrs. Edna Kuck, 31, | and Harold Mangum, 21. Killed last night when their light be near 15, with a high tomorrow | mishap | Plane crashed and burned in a/| | between 25 and 29 to equal the record for the season | |} set last Friday. Detroit got a half |inch of snow last night. Traverse City reported a low last night of zero, and Cadillac hit orie above. Houghton's low was two de- | grees; Gladwin, 11; Grand Rapids and .Battle Creek, 12; Sault Ste. Marie, 13; Lansing, Jackson and | Flint, 14; Saginaw, 15, and Ypsi- lanti, 17, The Pontiac area forecast is cold jand fair tonight and tomorrow, with increasing cloudiness Wednes- day. Tonight's low is expected to | . Tuesday night's | marsh 15 miles northeast of Jack- | | low will be 20-24. son were Ed Gilmore of Gregory | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Today at 8 a.m. the mercury in | and Royce Porath and Thomas downtown Pontiac stood at 19 de- | grees, but rose to 25 by 2 p.m. The session was expected to de- Starting Today — — ‘Suspect’ later this week, and whether the United States would sponsor it alone or be joined by its allies. Later in the day the 15-nation Assembly Steering Committee, headed A Assembly oo. Jim Dunn lifted his six-foot three- E Eelco N. Van Kiefiens, © | inch oa offi i saat Pa ch body m the ice chair. |His wide but sloping shoulders gave him a deceptive air of slen- “I misunderstood,” Jim said. ‘I | thought I heard that Kit Carson question. was calling. I expected buckskins.” session Thursday His sriile vanished slowly as his anned. caller sat down, arranged herself Over the weekend, a State De- comfortably and subjected him to statement indicated the | careful serious scrutiny. Speen 4 senting U.K. 00| as pattove you wit be sbte t American tien | tion on the two vay whtet oem pass,” the woman said. “And along with the name is Mrs. oe Carson.” “Humor, I suppose,” she said. | have been told many timés I | | have no. sense of humor.” rious, ‘Business then. What did. you want to seé me about?” In Today's Press Ja NOE og so ccceescricsecs ce e | Uaheebe, 3 | ee re rire 6 detcidvorsdnesedercgeuege bd Patterns o copeeetccceopvevetons “, DUD Chee ccccccccccessnsese * is —,: + wb 00960 cee 000s 68 6 71, 22, Jim decided she was actually se- | | He’s | son.” Jim flicked her a searching cy here in Denver. I inquired of “You were recommended to me! by the San Francisco Police."’ “That would be Steve Johnson? the only one I know per- there. Captain Steve John- glance and added, ° ‘Of Homicide.’ “Yes.” “How ia Captain Johnson? And hig charming wife? You know it’s an odd thing but Johnson's wife is named Nan. My wife is named Nancy. Odd, isn’t it?” “I did not come here to discuss | | the private life of a San Francico policeman. Or yours. I wanted a reasonably honest detective agen- my local police.” “Fame,” Jim said, and let it go at that, 4 Mrs. Carison went on. ‘‘The job | I have in mind may take as long as a month. Two weeks, I would say as a minimum, You will have to go to the mountains with me, stay up there. If that is impossible, please say so now.” Jim thought of his bride of less By Hugh Lawrence Nelson | Jim's eyes opened wide. “That's blunt enough,” he admitted... ‘‘Do/| you want to start off by telling me something about your trouble | in San Francisco?” ‘““Trouble?”’ : “Certainly, Mrs. Carlson, you've said you had no personal interest | prof SHO PPING DAYS ILL CHRISTMAS PT Ht 2 J su! na | Young Woman Hires Detective fo Get Something on Mother-in-Law in New Whodunif in Captain Johnson. And even | thoug may be quite influen- tial, you don't get. the head of Homicide when you phone for a tective agency; So your contact with Steve Johnson must have been lessional.’’ “You show sam of having al certain crude int “Peasant For the first time Kit Carison || appeared to be having difficulty in putting her thoughts into words, “Have you heard of the Cartson family of Denver? The (Continued on Page 26, Col. 5) Wotes pv ym Sa moe a Piake and po Saad FE 6-0421 Oeman's Tel-Beren Store Open every evening "ti ® ' recommendation of a private de-| ” Jim said. 4 Vive the crash besides the driver, . A witness, Miss Joanne Mise. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Victims Leave Nine Children Youngsters Deprived of Either Mother, Father in Accident on M24 Sunday morning’s traffic acci- dent, in which five persons were killed, deprived nine children of either a or father. Traffic records show it was the worst in Oakland County since Nov. 6, 1951, when four teenagers and the parents of 11 children were killed in a headon collision on the same highway, about five miles south of where Sunday's took place. Sheriff's Deputies and State Po- lice also point to Sunday's fatal spot as the scene where three men were killed last June in a headon crash and another motorist's life was snuffed out at the same place about two months ago. In less than a year and a half, 19 persons have been killed on M24 near the spot, which has been nicknamed “Slaughter Hill,” said Depaty William Smith. Officials say the hill’s crest is deceptive to motorists who are unable to see the decline of the hill, upon which is a “Pass With Care Sign.” After arriving at the top of the | hill, the road appears to continue on a relatively levél course. How- ever, there is a sudden decline. Cause of M24 Accident wi inihicneent intial * hap ate " 53 poe te net ee re Pe s sTHE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1954 Officials Again to Tackle = ¥ Off-Street Parking Problém, From Our Birmingham Bureau BIRMINGHAM — Commissioners can't get away from the subject of parking and wil] continue dis- cussion in that vein at tonight's City Commission meeting. | Further reports on land acqui- sition and condemnation proceed- ings for the proposed $250,400 park- ing let on Pierce betweeri Merril! and Brown will be made by City Manager Donalg C. Egbert. Also under consideration will be a resolution authorizing the purchase of Detroit Edison Co. property which would be used for the let. A program which officials say | will ultimately result in better facilities with less conges- for the shopping area at Pierce and 14 Mile is included in the agenda. The first step would be construction of an alley behind the business properties. : . s s Once again the Y's Men's Club of the YMCA ‘is selling pine and bal- sam Christmas trees, beginning their sale today at the Y and con- tinuing activities through Dec, 23 Trees will be sold between 9 a.m. and 9 p.m. daily, with proceeds going to further the Y youth pro- —_ * * ¢ Birmingham sculptor Marshall Fredericks, whose works include the spread-wing eagle on Detroit's Veteran's Bdiiding and the group- ing of figures for the new William Beaumont Hospital, will speak on his current works and ideas at a 1 p.m. meeting of the Woman's Club tomorrow at the Commuinty House. Tea will be served by Mrs. Ira - Brewnell and her committee: Mrs Harry Smart, Mrs. Noel Mudd, Mrs. Earte Steele, Mrs. Ralph = Main, Mrs, George Johnston, Mrs Harry Sherwood and Lucy Purdy. . & 7 * j for the women im their life, | merchants will have | open for the third an- nual Men's Night, when stag shop- the only thing allowed. clerks, on hand to also model the latest modes and gift wrap any finery selected for placing under the Christmas tree. * 6 e A reproduction of an interview with Henry Cabot Lodge, ambassa- dor to the. United Nations, on “Shall the United Nations Expe! Russia?” will highlight tomorrow's 10 a.m. Community House meeting of the Ruth Shain Class in Inter- | national Affairs. Mrs. Shain will question Mrs. Winston T. Kellogg. taking the role of Lodge Two League of Women Voters unit meetings to discuss individual | liberties are scheduled for tomor- | row, Unit II will meet at 1 p.m. at the Franklin Community Church, with Unit IV holding an 8 p.m Mother, 3 Children Injured in Crash BIRMINGHAM — Mrs. Margaret | Draper, 38, of 111 Abbey Rd.. and | her three children ended up in the hospital instead of attending church yesterday. Police said Mrs Draper's car crashed into the rear end of a milk truck parked on Hunter boulevard near’ Wimbleton and quoted her as saying the sun temporarily blinded her vision Mrs. Draper and her daughter Susan, 11, were treated for con tusions at St. Joseph Mercy Hos- pital. Pontiac Peter > and Thomas, 6. are both in good condi tion with possible skull fractures Peter also suffered a possible col lar bone fracture and scalp tacer ations. while Thomas received lac erations of the face The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY —Fair and contineed celd tenight and temerres Lee tenight near 15. high temerren °5 ™ Light vartabie winds tenight Te merrew wight parti: cleudy and net quite se eeld. Lew t.t4 Teday in Pentiac Lowest temperature prececing ® ar i8 At @ am = Wind velocity mph Mirection North Bun sets Monday at § 00 7 Sum rises Tuesday at 147 ar Moon rises Monday at 14 p Moon sets Tuesday at 455 am Deewntewn Temperstaree €eam 18 1. e mr 8 Miiccocse is J2 9 4 SM WM. vscccae 9 r Sam ti) 10 a om Senday in Pontiac (As recorded downtoar Highest temperature Lowest temperature 21 Mean temperature oO 2" Weather—Partiy ciouds One Year Age in Pontiac Highest temperature S64 Lowest temperature Highest and Lewest Temperatures This Date in # Years 60 im 1884 Tin 1885 Senday's Temperatere Chart Raltimore 48 22) Memphis 7 % Bismarck % 2 Miami 72 (66 Brownevi 85 53 Milwaukee M4 Gille 27 «#361 Minneapolis 2 6 Cimeinneati =—s 43 «22 (New Orieans 78 46 Denver 2 New York 44°22 Duluth 4 q — 17 Houghton -2 tteburgh ar 13 Jetkeopvilie 72 61 Francieced 6) SO Lansing “ @ Merie “18 3 J oe so 8 62) ™“ 2 werse City 28 6 Williem 1. Cone, ee Sas ,aitled yesterday | tree he was felling near ag home in peme Cines traffic victims: Fayne. R. Hodgman Jr., 20, Clio, | injured fatally in a collision 10 | miles west of Flint. : Mrs. Peggy G. Elenbaas, 20, of p42, killed when her car ran ‘Pontiac Deaths seme i | Dr., died on the way to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Saturday. The son of Samuel and Janet Dow, he was born in Kilmarnock, |meeting at the Pine Hill drive! oe g rural road in Missaukee | | Scotland, and was married te Elis home of Mrs. John S: Hoppock. . * * Mrs. Milward Hewitt Service for Mrs. Milward (Ethel V. W.) Howitf, 57, of 28712 13 Mile road, will be held at 1 p.m. Tues- day at the Bell Chapel of the Wil- liam R, Hamilton Co., with en- | tombment in White Chape| Memo- rial Cemetery. She died Saturday in Detroit after a. brief -iliness Surviving besides her husband are a daughter,. Mrs. Clayton H. Lemon, and a son. Clyde M, both of Birmingham, also a sister and a brother. Mrs. Deiles Agier Mrs, Delles (Mary Jane) Agler, 87, of 30301 West 13 Mile road, died yesterday after a long illness. Her body was taken from the Manley | Bailey Funeral Home -for service land burial in VanWert, O. Mrs. Agier retired 15 years ago after working 44 years with her late husband in their photographic studio. She is survived by one ‘daughter, Mrs, Roy Bramson, of Bloomfield Hills, a son, Robert W. of Cleve- land and three grandchildren. Expansion Drive Planned at Hospital (Continued From Page One) w 10 _ | County. Early R. Archer, . 24, Saniord, | “killed when a car in which he | was riding struck a tree along | M30. | Joseph Cooper, 46, Detroit, killed | in a two-car collision in Detroit.) Paul H. Weit, 33, Detroit, killed when a car in which he was riding crashed into g parked | truck on Detroit's Kast Side. Franklin T. Jahr, 18, Fremont. _ killed in a two-truck collision near Muskegon on M20 Henry Koppman, ®, Detroit struck down-by a hit-run driver while oe a Detroit street, Earl B. Wilson Dies at Age 70 Birmingham Resident, Was Retired Sales Head of Chrysler Division BIRMINGHAM—Earl B. Wilson, retired director of sales of Chrysler Division of Chrysler Corp. and long-time friend of Walter P. |Chrysier, died at Harper Hospital | | Saturday after a long illness. He | had lived at 1314 W. Lincoln -Ave. Mrs. Wilson had been a book- | abeth King in Pontiac on May 7, | 1925. A member of First Presbyterian Church, he was a machinist at Baldwin Rubber ‘Co. and was a | life member of Kilwinning Lodge |22, Scotland; past high priest; | Royal Arch Masons; past patron OES 228 and a member of Pontiac Commandery 2 Knights T He was also treasurer of 'McInnes, Order of Seottish Clan | 277, and a 32nd degree Mason. He lived jn Pontiac for 31 years. | Samuel. Dow,. 55, 2219 Pontiac” in Clarkston. Isaacson of Royal Oak and a nephew, Harry Linabury of Pon- Pil grave in Oek Hill Cemetery. day after a long illness. The son of Lester S. and Eliza- beth Cole Ogtrander, he. was born in Pontiac and graduated from Pontiac High School In 1891. He was admitted to the Oakland Coun- | viously ty Bar in 1898. =F A member of the First Baptist | Church. he was a foreman at | Wilson Pattern Shop and was pre- on the Oakland County . Mrs. Guerin was cremated and| her ashes were put in her mother's Joseph Linabury, &., che was bere Wi Surviving are a niece, Ida May, Surviving besides his father and, “ircuit Court Commission in 1902 | widow are a son, Samuel K. Dow, | of Pontiac, and two grandchildren |, Also surviving are two sisters, Mrs. Jean Porter and May Dow, ‘both of Scotland. nian Gan Sparks-Griffin be held Tuesday at 4 iene will follow in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. ‘Marion Ferich Marion Ferich, 75, 775 Portland, |died Saturday at his home after lan ilines« of six years. | A résident of Pontiac for 13 | years, he was born in*Austria and came here from Standish. A re- tired farmer, he was a Member of St. Michael Church. - Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. | Joseph Bernard of Flint, and three a K \Srouae ‘iating people ‘in, I don't know where | keeper and salesman for the John sons, Emij and Michael Ferich, we would put them—maybe on cots in the emergency room, “Our crowded condition is such that we must treat some patients, at home when they ae be in the hospital.” When the hospital's 210 beds ana | 66 bassinetts are filled, cots are placed in wards. Making semi-pri- vate rooms out of private rooms has become so genera! that | it is now permanent in most cases, Dr. Hubert said. The hospital originally had 53 private rooms, There are now 16. Sister Mary William, hospital ad- | ministrator, joined Dr. Hubert {n | explaining the need for expansion. “In order for a hospital te oper- ate efficiently, there should be | a¢ beast 10 or 15 beds available in order to take care of any emrr- A compilation of figures _gath- ered by the hospital shows there are a total of 837 beds and 169 bassinets in all general hospitals in Oakland County. Another hospital report quoting a ! governmental agency which set up a guide of 45 beds per thousand population in populous areas, shows | a need for 2,303 beds in the county. The bed-need figure was based | on a population total of 513,000) persons in the county this year A total of 14,397 patients were admitted to the hospital in 1963, compared to 8,932 in 193 and 11,386 in 1958. Sister Mary William said the to- tal number of in-patients, out-pa tients and emergency cases treated in 1944 will be well over 44,000 Admissions records for 1953 re- veal that, township - wise. the ma- jority of patients come from Pon- tiac, Bloomfield, Waterford, Royal Oak and Avon township City-wiee, Pontiac led the ad missions list in 1953 with 6,437 patients. Second was Birmingham ‘with 1,415 patients, followed by Royal Oak with 1,051. Large numbers of patients also ston, Farmington. Lake Orion, Mil ford, Rochester, Walled Lake. Ox- ford and Bloomfield Hills Honeymooners Die in Flaming Wreck (Continued From Page One) Whitaker All were ”" both of Mumnith A passing motorist, James Knight of Jackson, said he saw the low flying plane while he was driving aleng M106 about _ mile south of Steckbridge., He said the plane. owned and piloted by Gilmore apparently was trving to land on the highway when it clipped a tree and plunged to the ground Knight said the plane burst into: flame ind he had ne chance te pull the etimes to safety. They were burned bevond recognition by the time authorities arrived A 31-year-old Battle Creek wom. an and a 9%month-old boy were killed Saturday night in a head-on ilision near Battle Creek The vic tims were Agnes Grumeretz and James Du Cap of Davison Mrs. Mildred Antetitf, 26, of Barryion and her daughter, Mar- cla, were killed Saturday when their car skidded into a ditch and overturned in Mecosta Coun. ty. A Coldwater woman, irs Mary lL. Beckwith, 39, was killed at the outskirts of Coldwater Saturday when her car collided with a New York Central train Ronald C. Kole, 21 was killed yesterday when his car ran out of control 10 miles north of Holland. Ruth Wolters. 19. of Holland, who was injured in the same mishap, died at Holland Hos- pital early today. Russell Fisher, 21, died of car bon monoxide fumes Saturday while sitting in a- car waiting i for a Middleville service station | 4 a Hudsonville. , Deere Plow Co. until 1915, when he ertered the automobile business as sales manager of the Chicago branch of Buick. It was there that |" met Walter Chrysler. Me became, sales director at the Buick heme office in Flint in 1919, In 1996 Mr. Chrysler named Wilson sales manager of the new Chryster Motor Car Co. in Eliza- beth, N. J., where work was being done on the engineering . development of a new car. | From 1922-1925, Wilson was vice | president of the Peerless Co. in’ | Cleveland. He returned to Chrys- \ler in 1925 as assistant director of | | sales of Chrysler Sales Corp., mov- ing in about a year to the post he | held until his retirement in 1949. He was a member of Philadel- | Mrs Lenda Linabury Guerin. 92. | phia Lodge No, 610, F & A.M., and Rite Bodies, also of Philadelphia; | and was a member of the Madison Golf and Country Club, Madison, Ohio ; Survivers include his widew, Edna; one daughter, Mra. George . T. Whitmore of (Cleveland; and - ene von, Earl B. Jr. of Birming.- ham. Funeral ser\tee will be held at 3:30 pm. Tuesday at the Manley, tion in White ane T Memorial C emetery Five Killed as Cars Crash Near Oxford — (Continued From Page One) ner, 4854 Lakeview Rd. Davis- burg, said she was ahead of the crash by 100 feet and passed a northbound auto, (presumably. Mangum's) when she heard a “terrible” crash and looked her rear-view mirror to see flame, shooting frem the cars. She hurried on to Oxford and notified Oxford Patrotman Rus- sell Tolfree who sped to the scene, jcame from Drayton Plains. Clark. | Oxford firemen and Lake Orion Police were summoned to direct traffic and put out a fire that | started in one of the cars. | Bodies and‘ debris were scattered over a wide area on both sides of the road near a, highway sign which ironically said, “Pass With Care Hundreds of people who visited the scene of the tragedy Sunday found off and bleed spots which silently pointed te positions of cats and victimes, Smith, a veteran, won five bronze stars for bravery, in World War II and again in Korea where he collected three more bronze stars, and the United Nations Servite ribbon. In Europe with the 90th Infantry Division from D-Day on Smith also Was awarded the purple Heart medal for battle wounds. At Simms the ONLY Difference Is Our LOWER PRICES *Savings of 10% to 40% *Freshest. Pure Drugs Experienced Pharmacists ®Certainty of Satistaction ompiete Prescription Service SIMAS.& aeCTMERS 98 N. Seginaw—Main Floor Bailey Funeral Home, with crema-- both of Flint, and Joseph Ferich of Cleveland, O. Also surviving are a step-daugh- ter, Mrs. Catherine Frost of Flint, a step-son, John Colowich of Eau Galles, Fla., 13 grandchildren and several nieces and nephews. Funeral] service from St. ‘low in | Ortonville Cemetery. Rosary will be said tonight at "| 8:09. Funeral arrangements are by Dodds-Dumanois Co. Funeral Home of Flint. ° Mrs. Lena L. Guerin Announcement has been received | ot the death on Thanksgiving of |formerly of 154% Orchard Lake } gency that may arise, " she aaid. | was a 32nd degree Mason, Scottish | Ave | | The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. | wevwvwewe-eerrrerere,?T SALE OF Genuine U.S. ARMY Folding Style Trench Shovel 2°: Steel Blade t reneh Shovels that cost $3.50 md 24-inch jong with wy Beg ened steel blade — for Foy oe aod use around t hh hi i hi Mi i hi hi i hi Li i Ob 44 by bt by bb bb bb bb bo bi i bh be i i i i ~wewerreerrerereevwvererey* ts Simms for Low Prices on | SNOW SHOVELS Compere prices anywhere — then come to Simms to learn how much more you save Big 18-Inch—All-Steel Snow Pusher. Long Handle Sy 89 No lifting, just push anow te one side Meavy gauge steel biade with hardwood handle 24 inch Snew Pusher . 2.19 18-Inch Steel Blade ‘D’ Handle Style Snow Shovel ] 89 Tibbed to reinforce at _—— = = «= «me | Oak Hill Cemetery. eel Clea Guaranteed Ist Quality Most complete selection of Re- vere Ware in weeks and weeks . kettles tionally advertised “fair-trade. ‘ prices at Gimmes 98 N. , Soynew —Main Floor MEN’S SET Zee Give handsomely . . . evervthing he needs for a pleasant shaving routine in the brisk, clean Old Spice scent a man likes. Mug of non-drying Shave Soap; skin- tingling, refreshing After Shave boxed. ECC CCC CCC CCC CC CCCCTC i $8 N. Saginaw —Main Floor i | } | } llie A. Spence aT i 5 gf |Pawnbroker’s Quizzing aw. | Reveals Theft of Tool ragould, Ark., 1916. A member of | same day. “Det. Lt. Merlin Holm- the First Baptist Church of Leach | cuist said the man fied, leaving ville, Ark. he came here from Leachville in 1947. 'the level behind him, when ques Surviving besides his widow are | toned by the pawnbroker. four sons, William and Gene of| The level was taken from a Pontiac, Marre! of Flint, Bryan of| Darin & Armstrong Construction Leachville. @nd two daughters. |Co. shed at the new Holy Name Mrs. H. H. Graves of Flint, Church site. Holmquist said the 's Better than pictured. Chair tray. Rugged hardwood struction in blond ah Vik: 98 North Saginaw y—BIRDSEYE or FLANNELETTE | Baby, DIAPERS es. Regular $2.98 Value Blond Birch Hardwapd Nursery Chair Complete With Tray $5.95 Quality complete with steel No Limit—Buy All You Need Sturdy Birdseye or Flannelette diapers at this low, low price for Tonite and Tuesday only. ie h on AEE 2227 inch sine, Ges gaed service ot law com. 2 77 FULL DOZEN service at low cost. {(@ BROTHERS A Exactly as Colorfully dressed in gay colors combinations. Mere Than A Dol} —It’s Like « Real Dancing Partner! Hours and hours of fun just like having brother for your daughter. | DOLL YOUR CHILDREN CAN REALLY DANCE WITH .. DANCING PARTNER De. su Pictured and another a Over 3\e Fe. Tall — yet light in weight, so easy to carry. i i i i i NT a Ne Na Na —For Boys —For Girls ee Buy Now During Pre- Christmas Scle/ == 7vwewrerrererrrrerererereeerrerererererrrrrrrrrrrerrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrre Gifts for the Entire Family Cost Less at; SIMMS . 4 4 4 Sises A. B.C. B | First quality pe- jamas in coat or pullover style. Gripper style pant with side elastic. Buy now and save. ands of $7 quall- ty Rayon bro- cade with satin collar. Sizes M-L. t Sizes 6 te 12 Factory damaged, but hardly no- Famous Brand Undies in Gay Christmas Gift Package dr ABANTEL ucts At Lowe MEN'S WEAR . — Basement ee “BRUIT-OF-THE-LOOM” “PRUIT-OF-THE-LOOM” “PRUIT-OF-THE-LOOM” é ° i . ° Men's Tee-Shirts Athletic Shirts Underwear Shirts Combed cotton yarn bedy with ex- Made from fleecy white cotton fibres Made to withstand pienty cf wear clusive NYLON neck collarette — that absord perspiration and punish- and laundering. Spring-needie knit guaranteed never to ment alike Complete of long staple cotton stretch out of shape 6 size ranges — Cc Bxtra large sizes in- 6 All stote GIFT BOX. tive GIFT cluded. “SIFT BOX. “FRUIT-OF-THE-LOOM” “FRUIT-OF-THE-LOOM” “PRUIT-OF-THE-LOOM” Boxer Style Shorts | Broadcloth Shorts | Men’s Knit Briefs @nug fitting, full elastic waist in | Popular tr a co style in GANPOR- [| Trimiy tailored with all-around elas- SANPORIZED broadcioth. In solid IZED broadcloth. Guaranteed fast f tic and stop-gap fiy colors and stripes. colors. All sizes 28 to 6 Finest knit cotton. All sives to $2. At- o~ $2. atttactive OIFT TS tractive GIFT BOX 6 BOX. ix 25'S" S46 6 SSS SS SS SS SS Ce CES Leather uppers. comp. F soles and rubber heels. dresses in many styles and ma- terials for holi- day wearing or for gift giving Fancy prints stripes and solid colors 2 for $3 Sizes ; Tte 14. $1.89 Girls’ Cotton $1.59 Quality | d solids or plaids @ Bites 3 to a ‘ Ideal gift! Beau- tifully tailored shirts with long sleeves for dress ; iTHE PONTIAC PRESS. *; Marion Hutton, Musician Superior Judge Orlando H, Rhodes Marry in'Santa Monica | sccm ckue peng ees maton 2 | of honor. director Victor Schoen, married | riage. turday night, will have no honey-| —_. — moon trip because he reports back | FOR BUDGET-BALANCING use you | Tent, sell, find a good job. Phone for work today on the musical| Classified ads! They help score of a movie: ae Even ot nai DISCOUNT PRICES You Can LAYAWAY an Electric Shaver ’til. Christmas! * All Brand New * All Guaranteed * No Trade-in St ost SQYS $23.50 Valve eG mS | be brine $19 Norelco S “Twin Head’ 19* Ladies’ Razor 314° 3 $21.50 Value we don't try to step you up to higher priced merchandise. We give you Schick $ New ‘Custom’ 19 3 $28.75 alue $24.95 Value Remington Simms sell what we advertise... at the ‘'Cut-Price” that is advertised . what you ask. for! BROTHERS i. TOU DERES DELIVERED | 4OB-FINDING’S EASY . teen | seveneeeesesensesnssessseensedaeeseecssees home of job-shop in the Classi os The Pontiac Preast For wha whatever | tion! ew oe eae | 3. Every Home Needs These SPACE SAVERS! you need, see Classified first! | appear daily. $ For en — . Workshop — Garage — Ete. SHRSCCRSSERSESERGneuRGeneneenEcanEm ; » PEG BOARD Sa. BRING THIS ADV. for EXTRA SAVINGS as * TONITE & TUESDAY ONLY! 3: a “4 : a" Rugged and Durable—3 Foot Size ‘i: ; 2x3 $ 29 s = : “Child's SHOW SHOVELS =: Nog cs \ey 33 . Be} % 2x4 : ; * Regular ny Value’ c a) : Feet $1.59 Built is ie: fot hears a> eet $6.48 rr i sane anne a’ s ins with Stach as Buy Now for Gifts is: M4 : and for-.Yourselil * TOYS = SIM AS.O%. ae © 3 Sureree race f as Sr ee : chop garage and utility rooms. Keeps : eceet i ——vws ° and brackets extra.) Serer For @ Limited Time Only! | /as SIMMS... “HAE or . = * ‘e 9 eZ / : 98 N. Saginaw St. —2ad Fleor 1¢ 1§ dl GS SOSHHSHSSHSSSSSSOSSSSSCOSSSSSSOSESSOESEESSSSCESE ‘MONDAY, ‘DECE MBER 6, 1954 Mi ___* THREE e COCOC COSCO RS EESEOLOSOSESOOSOO OS SOOOOOOSESCOEES JUR SNAPSHO] LAS Bring in the | Gas Negative of Cards $ With Your Favorite Envelopes Snapshot! for , For only 10c each we will make rsonalized Christmas Greet- : be Card | you, aml eh — any favorite oa Le envelope at i os * f ‘ Main i Floor; ‘ = WV kee i a i He TS te te Ge Re | Da eR Mt a CJ7A222 22222222222 2 Western Wear for ‘lil COW- Makes Your Gift Giving Easier GIFTS FOR KIDDIES We Believe This Is the Lowest Price You'll See on Children’s Western S Cowboy Boots Reqular : 98 N. Saginaw St. —Main Floor $3.95 S 98 Value eer N oh ) fe y were ee 4 51% to 8 give her GIFTS OF BEAUTY oy MAX FACTOR 1. beanty at hand... Max Factor’s soothing hand lotion in a tone refillable purse dispenser... will be the prettiest gift on her tree! $1.10 - 2. a gleaming, golden tone compact for Chaine Puff .its Creme Puff filler above. Set in satin...and beautifully wrapped in pale rose foil. $3.75 \ 3. dream box ... her shade of Max Factor Pan Cake or Pan- | Stik, face r, rouge, a hand — purse dis- penser, and Electrique parfum gologne . . . nestled on a dreamy cloud of pink satin. $8. 60 . "Ql! prices plus reduced tax COSMETICS ‘—Maia Floor | \ | WOOOOOIOIIIIIIIIOS Authentic western style boot. Rugged leather uppers, rubber soles. Choice of § <* brown or black colors ax ee ee a and GIRLS’ GENUINE LEATHER | COWBOY COWGIRL ~ 2-pc cowboy and cowgirl out- tits in gazes S-M-L. Boys’ sets have fancy chaps and jacket to match. Girls’ set has skirt with fringe: trim and jacket to match. oe Ap sl Black with White Trim Cowboy Hat $1.29 x, im black With white trim. Sizes 6-M-L. Peart Trimmed Buckle Western Belts Western belts with 59¢ peari ey deen trim is choice Real Western Style Neckerchiet wear, Western Sweat Shirt “9 a oe aa sep A EOC Big ot King-Kole’ Sanforized Flannel! - Boys’ Western Shirts Solid Colors with “ga : Western shirts with soljd colors 1? 95, Ig POU: ‘Gauze HOPALONG CASSIDY Boye Sanforized Black ae trasting piping trim 3 button cuff, 2 breast pockéts, chotec of several colors. Sites 4 to 10. ing J Unconditionally Guaranteed! @ Dungerees @ Jockets 2 to 12 Years 4 to 12 Years $39 $219 Kids Love ‘em aa Parents Appreciate the Quality / + Long wearing twill material, fa- mous for jong weer and easy laundering: Vat-dyed black with white trim just He Hopalong’s. Btue Bell. guaranteed by ne 4 Repeat of a “Sell-Out” — Same Low Price! 8-Pc.—4 Cups and Saucers Be SHACK SETS Why Pay $1.50? TONITE & TUES. 10” =—ss recessed plate holds metching cup fer im- dividual serv- ings. Idea) for TH BROTHERS VK: COCO SOE O ET wn a | Uv ° 2 =. ie) o Si. 4E0 55% a a ee ae ee Ce ee eae ee ee et ae a i at NN i i Ne Nh Nin Ni Ni Ni tie Nie Tt te i i i i i Ss * * TT SIM MS, a: nuine Viewmaster Needs: * pe ete ie _ Hey, Mom-Dead, » Children’s ‘Official Letter ito Senta’ FREE at SIMMS Camera Department! aE te eee Se For True 3-D Viewing GENUINE SAWYER taal Pw ont ‘They'l en- 9g seeing 3-D pictures in full color with thie .Viewmaster ster- “For Children, Adults, on . 3-D Color Reels 3 For ¥. 00 CHILDREN’S REELS .@ Redesiph. Red-Neve @ Rey Regers Reindeer @ Rebin @ Space Cadet @ Tem and Jerty @ Day at the Circus @ Night Before ‘@ Hawaii @ Hels @ Alaska _ WORLD EVENT REELS @ The Coronation © PEROT eR View-Master $ Library Box Has 12 index card View-Master Light, Attachment viewing 3-D reels (Batteries extra) View-Master Focus Viewer with extra realism. View-Master Projector k@ BROTHERS SIMMS Floor eur Stereo - Scope 2 Christmas @ Cleese Kid U.S.A. TRAVEL REELS @ New Oricans @The Mardi Gras @ Navaje Indians @ Painted Desert e ~— ee S an @ Washingtes in Spain @ Life With UT &. Cowbers Ratitighe wevs ‘400 OTHERS TO CHOOSE FROM V iewmaster Equipment Make Ideal Gifts! 4 J 2 | ‘ j 9” . é 4 2 The new viewer with the built-in lighter, New @| focusing makes ali your 3-D pictures extra big ‘ WTTTITITL TTT ft Projects brilliant images up to 16 x 14 inches. Lraflrewtuneedycsce UL approved. ideal Smartly styled plastic library box holds -@/ your viewmaster reels, and stereoscope ' seeeceeeceseescoseeeeeoseseesoeeeeeeese 2 ‘ For use with stereoscope to give illumination for Use with flashlight Batteries ORAL LANL EEE EES AEE SEER SELESE SEES UES SEES RSE LE ELSE ESSE SESE ESE SST eS SIMMS STORE HOURS 9 A.M. to 10-7. QGenuine ROYALITES with G-E (2-iach) bulbs Weatherpreef wire, clips, add-on plug 7 LIGHT $749 1S LIGHT $498 pe vy. ‘Cis iS]? Bubbling Lights These sparkling en ‘29 <—w beauties pay ~. Subbiinn 6 colors end white Por independent wir- Por outdo mp new, ing ar. Cheice of Finest Quelity HAND PAINTED Choice of many styles in all sizes, a'! colors and white BOX OF 12 Bells and novelty shapes Metal ring tops Boxed 1 Fe sheck - proof { taimer for year enter year storage 3-INCH box of 12.... .89 4-INCH box of 12.... .98 FROSTED box of 12. 1.19 5-INCH box of 12... 1.49 DECORATIONS Tinsel Icicles, pkg ....... 10¢ Angel Mair, pkg. 10¢ Paper Roping, 22 . .... 25c Tinsel Garland. 10 fr... ... 1S« Flemeproot Cotton . 2% Mica Snow Flakes, pkg... . 10c Plastic Snow, pkg 25¢ Snow Spray. can 88c< THIS WEEK ee All M 181 a5 Tree Stand [7 Se, led as pictured Water pan, wide base Every Size for Every Christmas Tree! ee eee Up to 8 Fr.. Deluxe STAND $1.69 Self - straightening, screw in base. able legs for com- Large base has slots for com- pact storage. plete light set. (Not included), ee Oe ae ee SNOT See Na Say sei Welles DT hia ay ur es ge i i A lh aA ys Samad bat a < - ‘ ' “ . . { . % t \ . ’ ' . ty . - ’ , aa : = 3 | | . Vo fe * THB‘PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1954 _. 2" 4.” ee ; “ ae _ — * ~ ee 7 a ~ ee - - - ms = ~ - ‘ + Tr — i= a ; = ; 7 turday. be ofa, however however. | , _ | 15-Room Mansion. i= the home's many valuable | Knitting Can Wait toh J ok zrome | ues ‘The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP of PONTIAC [fii endne we ver se Frail’ Coed Casts an Eye] - . on Olympic Skiing: Perth} Wood Baily, %-year-old widow. ; Attlee’s Son to Wed =~ == MOUNT PLEASANT (UP) —-A) She took up skiing instead. With More Comfort |« woman to whom he = LONDON #—Martin Attlee, 27, determined slip of a coed who once spina, simating 1584 to" the Isroom home. "| Only son of Labor’ Party Leader! ¥&#, ‘ld she was too frail to 40! ou “snow-water skier bet alee” pong) ent and talk tm more The house, located in suburban | Clement Attlee, has announced his | teaches swimming prodlg oor at < skiing schedule today with an eye TEETH on your plates. No gummy, Wayne, cost a reported $175,000 | engagément to Miss Anne Hender, on the Olympics. beach where she lost , Dasty taste or feeling Checks (when built in 1925, but it brought | son, 24, daughter of a Conservative| She's 18-year-old Bobbie Sherber-| >Sttle “ith the surt. eas ae ane counter: slightly less than $30,000 at auction’ party politician. ; neau, a Centeral Michigan College Bobbie's determination is reflect- freshman from Traverse City, 3 ed in the titles she holds ds through- | product of the recent surge of | 0ut the Midwest. skiing enthusiasm in Michigan. A former Michigan high school “I never want to grow up and : T want to ski until I'm 80,” sorraey act need pecan pr the Michigan and central states Famous Brands at Lowest Prices! despite a bruising ‘‘eggbeater’’ spill | ating champion sald. iduring a 50-mile-an-hour snow- | Bobbie, a petite five-foot, two | storm ‘ inch, 100-pound lass who also wa-| The shapely brunette is at her | j eter skis in the summer, was 4 best among hazards | splashing flop in her first attempt 7 . at sports. - She has more nerve than 16, Four years ago a swimming in- er iba ad conch. Evpets | | Structor told her she should “take "© — |Up knitting’ after heavy waves But Bobbie's chances of reaching | washed her ashore during a dis- the Olympics are slim “because = swimming test, ¢ youve got to live on skis tovbe big | time,” her coach warns, | i & | Meanwhile, Bobbie, who was | called ‘squirt’ by her brother un- til she outran him, isn’t discour- aged. ‘I'm going to set my sights high in Trade! Small Deposit Holds Until Christmes! j and hope for the best,’’ she said. bth | ’ ; Now—more than ever— {i : Gls Won't Forget Reg. $319.00 that does more than work on 1 heat? Bia Kina Gack eo ‘ want in a famous. ‘ iA JANA, U 822nd : : ; With infectious colds raging in your —_ up. The coughing spells lessen and you Aviation Engineers Battalion isn't AUTOMATIC WASHER make Automatic hood, this is no time to take = breathe easier. cred pind ge wonderful, Santa Says: | forgetting. ’ Washer! 7 rinses! chances. Don't gamble with unknown, un- warming t lasts for | In Korea, the earth-moving sol- ; tried treatments. Te family’s sake, 77 __ hours. “Ss Up for diers and airmen built the Dong | be AGIFLOW washing use the home-proved medication that AP So when an infectious cold | pruce Up Ifo | Chong orphanage with voluntary’ we action! Re-use of —— vgrer just work on the . Strikes mah ed Be family, insist the Season!” | contributions while stationed near ° FR Va rab oT yf a wong Mons fat nok tn Taegu. R washing water and ’ -, apoRub also brings relief ? chest. At the first or |g Be at your brightest for Recently transferred to Ander- suds. PLUS THE FA- |. q? in the cold-irritated breath- 4 \ sniffie—rub on relief... the season's fun... let }) son air Force Base on Guam, the . passages—because it acts / breathe in relief with Vicks us rejuvenate your ward- | &22nd has assembled a big pack- MOUS SUDS SAVER! two ways at once: VapoRub! robe so that you will feel | age of Christmas toys for the © ' 5 1. VapoRub relieves musca- -_ — ae ak owe | children in the orphanage. There'll 4 | sv lar soreness and tightness, | clothes ready for the | >¢ semething for each one. Your Old Washer | 2. At | the same time, Y ye She goer 13 Chinese Are Executed 0 mms) | HONG KONG u — The independ- | | ent Chinese Kung Sheung Daily) | FOX [ees ee ot sane tnd | Cle ny | fring squad in Canton and 23 “others were given prison terms. Best-Known Home Remedy for Suffering of Colds ee ee NO MONEY DOWN! = 4. them of spying, sabotage or trying | 719 W. Huren. FE 4-1536 to escape to Formosa. MAKE THIS HER CHRISTMAS PRESENT THIS YEAR! m| SAVE! REG. ‘171.95 Whintpoot | Automatic Electric \| | (© || DRYER “1 38" JUST PLUG IT IN TO USE! Only $10 Down! Easy Terms! Here is a gift your family will enjoy for years! Now a new low price gives you all the features of automatic arving at real-bargain- price figures! SMALL DEPOSIT HOLDS or DELIVERS JUST IN TIME? For Christmas Giving! OPEN EVERY NIGHT ‘TIL CHRISTMAS ——— eased es re REARS hes ps Se gots Pee + * a Sat “ 3 7 “@ © ‘ yw = AT FEDERALS! NEW TABLE RADIO REGULAR 269.95! Reautifully usiet FOS TRADE IN NOW! PLAcir chassis. Sensational Reg. $89.95 GE Swivel-Top Cleaner vf MOTOROLA 21" CONSOLE ) save $20.00 § ‘ is ir t A ‘ . Tike haarsict hondheld and Old terrific gift for the whole family ... and you save ; Cleening chores away vee ha at Federal’s if you trade-in now! This big 21” ! . ant coaster weuary otorola has the new ‘Big Look’ with lifetime focus : EW ——— Extended Area’ picture tube, ‘Glare-Guard’ tinted fil- N Ba eh c ~ | ““Srracmerrs $500 DOWN trode Wakes you to 2795 INCLUDED » ‘Power-Drive’ chassis, mahogany finish cabinet! PAY. ON EASY TERMS _ music. Colors | ; | . SAGINAW AT WARREN. PONTIAC & Te GOOD HOUSEKEEPING’ 7 OPEN EVERY NICHT TO CHRISTMAS ' of PONTIAC , : ' 51 W..Huron St. ‘Order by Phone- _— Phone -FE 4.1555 Lf) ‘ & : , neh me Ly Doty , eakness LOST 38 PCO NDS for Se Jan. 3 Be i from Pontia: rads 2 hooti ici mo — Kehing stination, Oe tin. vo mi rd : > Im Oakland County Circuit Court ne Tiana pers of ear| an, Sof OF Dinar Ave. Pos | Sade STE , today, three teenagers charged with | tets gp ge by the Pontiac police said Herron admitted Grerkx \abins 2 wrecking $20,000 in’ furniture and | Chapter the Society for the/shooting Freeman following an ar- aptety and succor Grugeist tor Seb , appliances in 18 homes at Wood- et aie te eee, ne One ees e's haan ot 20-den Ot Sco how mous Getler seu test eancaoeee "with Hanpel Concentrate but without - oe Decked in ‘lity ranging : to breaking and entering in the out boy or er is onsite, and ust ws | andy daytime. a oe ae ee OP "Gal Bt: Owongo Mich ‘writes, “I! now Robert Withey, 16, of #855 Lake- | SiN Di oe a tteted tear have used six ies of your won- | gone view, Weodhull Lake, had plead part “harmonics ia turn-cf > ois bane derful medicine, R. Concen- | man of me. ed guilty Nov. 24 te breaking and — Naa Same NS AEE tS Chee pepe cate aR cee ot trate, find it very satisfactory, and it | from 46 | century and popular numbers. - N foes.more than you claim it can do. the help Rennel entering in the nighttime, » stiff- | | ~ Lf toubled wih overweight and rou at Hs inal sen Onisaieaegy 0 eas |e Martowetes, wo cme ef wei = ‘i / = | | . r es, was one p § , matism for years, | have tried dif- | be sp t show's features. « ro Re 3 a ~*~ Besides The Harmony Knights, — The cthers are Hered Parker./ 1. isaq Hatters and The Key ae i 16, of 9410 M15, Clarkston, and | pits tin Ponting other ~ 9 ; ‘ Eugene ee es Mor tets were The Fou r-in-a : * Ciarkston-Orion from Cleveland, and The Aire- x - You will always remem- L. Doty reduced their bond from | tics trom Muskegon. $5,000 to @ $1,000 cash or $2,000 |" Others were The Four Hoarse- ber the fine service of property bond. Whitey is free after | men, trom Ypsilanti, The Michigan putting up $1,000. ’ our thoughtful staff. Sentence was delayed until Jan mid _— a vera, he . 3 to allow a complete report on | noroit ~ the three. Breaking and entering in . the daytime a maximum fi 1 Sparks-Criffin Funeral Home “Thoughtful Service” ~ | Lost ad ! _ 46 Willioms St. Ph. FE 2-5841 | the finder a way to reach you , Dies After Santa's Visit |timmi rane ie 3 Plead Guilt - * ( } in Vandal Case i; z z f Mi = ——— | = Ss \ a = <= _THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 9054.” Barbershoppers Rockwell Ave. Man |.» [Sing Out Tunes ~ |Arraigned in Slaying Hor Big Crowd. Charley R. Herron, 37, of 357 “A hear-capacity audience of 850 | Rockwell Ave. today stood mute in ~ MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS -@1Y— South Saginaw Se | Phone PE 8.0456 Proposed Expressway M _-« a : considered at a special meeting of | oney-Saving Sale! |.22:=::: constdered at a special meeting of y g @ || the Board of Supervisors Dec. 15. Shop Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday Reg. Can 9 Oz. jar LGS 9 Ox. Pkg. jiffy White Viviano 15% Oz. Can Hart Brand TOMATO JUIC Pine Cone Cut CAMPBELL’S TOMATO SOUP Cc APPLE BUTTER........ CAKE MIX........... SPAGHETTI........... Neo. 303 Cen s Tell fe: 10° ants today said Yhat Hartman is in satisfactory condition with deep eeess No. 303 GREEN BEANS *<-. 10° 10° |== 10 When Car Hits Pole. hospitalized with injuries suffered | 10° Sunday when the car in which he | Would Run Between Brighton, Farmington Oakland County's part in a State | way Department proposal to | mated at $11,000,000, with the The supervisors must give ap- | proval before the state can ~an ane st Liki slat AL oT: ir i z i a 4 : fic ow and have few intersections, Passenger Injured’ Franklin E. Hartman, 29, was was riding hit a utility pole off Franklin road, south of 13 Mile | road in Southfield Township. Pontiac General Hospital attend- forehead cuts, a broken ankle and | pains of chest, neck and head. Donald V. Bromm, 26, of 279 E. | Wilson Ave:, driver of the car, | Tall Can People’s Fresh Cu. PET WILK | “Seer |] SAUSAGE told Oakland County sheriff's dep- | uties that he lost control of his auto on a curve. Bromm was | treated for cuts. Deputies Puzzled ‘by Cause of Crash | Howard Ball, 48, of 230 Baldwin | | Ave., is reported in satisfactory | condition today with injuries suf- | “fered Saturday night fh an auto | B.C.C. Noe. 303 Can Baby Ruth Candy Bars Butterfield Van Camp’s lrish P otat Pork & Beans Kounty Kist Cream Kidney Beans... Ve tb. Ber eas No. 303 Cen 6 o cm Cream Style Corn 0: _ Domino XXXX, Brown or Yellow | oe Sugar b. Pho nee aeaee Cc Oakland County sheriff's deputies ' cause of his condition. 10° according to Pontiac General | Announce New Way 10° To Shrink | Cen ’ PC CE -@ =a Al SUT EE 08 1 oid New York, N. Y. (Special)—For the pote Cc first time science has found a new | healing substance with the aston- su . Cc In case after case, while gently | | Collision at Stanley Rd. and Baild- win avenue. : said they were unable to deter- | mine how Ball was injured be- Ball has a fractured skull, face cuts and possible chest injuies, pital reports. (Advertisement) ‘ i Painful Piles | Find Healing Substance That Relieves Pain—Shrinks Hemorrhoids ishing ability to shrink hemor- roids and to relieve pain—without rgery | relieving pain, actual (shrinkage) took place. — | Most amazing of all—results . were so thorough that sufferers \made astonishing statements | hike “Piles have ceased to be a problem!” | The secret is a new healing sub- atance ; Bio-Dyne*)— discovery of | & world-famous research institute. | Now this new healing substance for it at all drug stores,-money back guarantee, = “Bes. 0.8. Put. on. x. Pay. Ne Money Down Hi ; Join Waite’s Budget ° i} Credit Club Today... 4.f receive Up to $120 to / spend immediately! Take ¢ many months to pay! Wy of sleeve! 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' modite: for average size legs. 814 to WW! duchess: ‘for tail larger fegs. 9 to U0. \- . . — ” ai seal, otis dala CU OR Rie RR inte ak ie %% ~ ‘ MEL os ed j ae ili SSS * \ \ * . ‘i ‘ *“ { Sl MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Seer TAPS rg ces © He MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1954 Too Much Secrecy Figures compiled by Congressional Quarterly reveal a disturbing increase in the number of Congressional com- _ _Mittee meetings held behind closed : doors. ‘ Altogether 38 per cent of the 5,642 committee and subcommittee meetings during the 83rd Congress were held in executive session. This means that they were not open to either the public or the press and that our Government has progressed much farther along the road to secrecy than most of us realized. * * * In the House during 1953 the percentage of closed meetings ' was 28, and in 1954 it was 43 per cent. The Senate percentage in both periods was 39. In the mat- ter of joint sessions the ten- dency toward secrecy was much stronger with the percentages in both periods being 66 and 58. Other closed sessions which could not be tallied, adds CQ, would have boosted these percentages. For example, in two years thé House Appropriations Com- mittee and its subcommittees probably held 800 to 1,000 sessions, virtually all closed. Since these meetings are not announced and no records are made a available, they cannot be counted. * * * Allowance must be made for the fact that secrecy is essential to the conduct of some phases of Government business. In this category certainly are matters relating to defense, atomic energy, armed services and foreign rela- tions. Sessions involving those subjects, however, accoynt for only a small percentage of the closed doors. * * * Because Congress does most of its work in committees, the American peo- ple should have some concern over the growing percentage of closed door meet- ings. Highway Needs Urgent Husert H. FRISINGER, associate pro- fessor of finance at the University of Toledo, has examined Michigan's road ; needs and found them enormous and pressing. . | His report is constructively critical of a policy which has al- lowed our road building program to fall far behind the growth of the State and its great automo- tive industry. x * The report is especially interesting because it deals with the problem of road financing. Gov. WiLLIAMs cur- rently is advocating a $500,000,000 bond issue to bring Michigan's highway sys- tem up to date. With some reservations Prof. Fris- INGER supports this proposal. It is his conclusion that our highway program has fallen so far behind that it no longer is possible to finance it on a pay-as-we- go basis. In his opinion the only feasible financing plan is on a pay-as- we-use basis. That, of course, means borrowing, probably by the revenue bond method. * * * * It also is the professor's opinion that if the plan is to succeed there must be some specific pro- . Vision for repayment. He suggests a special tax on motorists or a 4.5 cents increase in the State gasoline tax, increasing the total to nine cents. So far the Governor is reported believ- ing that the bonds could be retired by increased revenues as a result of greater business volume stimulated by an ade- quate highway system. , “te ot * Whether one agrees with him or not, there isn’t any- doubt about the urgency of our high- 7 way needs. Nor is it easy to dis- highway financing is here. If Michigan ig tq realize its full possi- bilities, its people Government must lose no time in deciding how to pay for more and better highways. Bond Sales Set Records Treasury figures for October just _ made public show that sales of series E and H bonds were the highest for that month in nine years and three per cent above last October’s total. October sales of $368,412,000 exceeded redemption by over $44,000,000, the best net for any October since 1944. Sales for the _ first 10 months of this year, over $4 billion, also set a 9 year record for the period, and were 11 per cent above the 1953 January- October sales. * * * Other figures in the report show Americans put a high value on savings. For example, January to October sales of series E and H bonds exceeded ma- tured and unmatured redemptions by almost $359,000,000. This is the highest net since 1949 for a similar period. Ci * * * Equally reassuring 1s the fact that since May 1951 and through the end of October 1954, over $14 billion in series E bonds have matured. But three-quarters of this amount, $10.5 billion, is still being retained by bondholders under the optional extension plan. Incidentally, the people's faith in sav- ings bonds also is strongly emphasized by another fact. As of October 31, cash value of outstamding series E and H bonds received a new all time high of almost $38 billion. The Man About en Scouts Did Work Accomplished a Great Deal in the Conservation Line Unusual: Weather report from Flerida or California when it's any- thing but perfect. Last winter when the Honorary National President of the Boy Scouts, Dwight D. Eisenhower, suggested that they make 1954 a Year to con- serve our national resources, Clinten Valley Council fell into line. Reports just filed with Edward H. Leland, executive director of the local council, show that over one-half of the 6,000 scouts in the council have taken an active part in the program. They planted 10,346 trees, fought grass and forest fires, filled many gullies, planted 40 acres of grass, improved 54 acres of woodlot, built 60 nesting boxes and many feeding demonstrations, stations, gave dozens of safety besides much other work. Each of our four districts qualified for the national conservation good turn award, and 28 troops will receive certificates of merit. Oakland County was represented at the recent meeting of the National Association of Supervisors at Birmingham, Ala. Attending was rd James L. Gardner who is vice president of the Michigan As- sociation. Also present was Fred Wengers of Lapeer. its president “Why do all the parades‘in Pontiac start from the south?,” Walter J. Szeremet, writes who continues, “It makes It rough on us camera hounds shooting into the sun.” There's an Oakland County angle to the election of a new president of Michigan's oldest music house, Grinnell Bros., the position going to Lloyd G. Grinnell, who was chosen to succeed Eddy R. McDuff, who resigned to become president of an eastern piano company. The Grinnell Bros. piano has been made at Holly for a half century or more. Not many married couples each celebrate their birthday on the same day, but such is the case with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Marsh of Walled Lake Saturday was the day When he nailed up the hole through which they were entering his garret, of Scott Lake was surprised to see a pair of — Leman Briarson squirrels come down the fireplace chimney into the living room. Verbal Orchids ‘o— Mrs. Mary Lovell of 501 East Pike St.; ninety-first birthday. Mrs. Fred E. Ward of 1047 Boston Ave.; eighty-sixth birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Ross" of Crescent Lake; sixty-first wedding an- niversary. “, = Mrs. Elizabeth Woodie , of Rochester; eighty-sixth birthday. -% ¥ ‘a non-profit ' Wonderland? THE PONTIAC PRESS; MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1954 os Abas oe it CARUEA Service, Inc. Watiish fei ac ag oh i, “Gosh, Mr. Malik—I Thought You Were Vishin ~ bs ok sky” - Voice of the People € Has Perfect Site for Children’s Camp but Doesn't Know How to Begin One (Letters etapa 3 ee —— neces- Sakeues a Bae SS Bumber =< writer must letters but these will fot be if the requests unless the letter ts critical in tts nature.) How does one go about starting camp for all-age youngsters? We have 40 acres of beautiful land near Mariette, Mich., and we would like very much to have a children's camp there. We don’t know one thing about such a project and we have nothing to start one except the ground, a wonderful well, elec- tric lights and one cottage. Looking Back 15 Years Ago FINNS BOMB Russian port in Estonia. Claim new successes against Reds. ALLIED WARCRAFT § sink’ five subs in a week. 20 Years < 27 PLANES SEEK three lost Pa- cific airmen. STATE SUPREME court halts election recount. We would have to have every- thing from a spoon up. If any- one knows or can tell me where _to go to get help for this, please do so. Mrs, W. T. Billings 106 Lull Street 2 FE 5-6055 Motorist Is Puzzled About Traffic Ticket I was driving out Oakland Ave- nue and there was a police cruiser about a half block behind me but It nothing of it. I wanted to make a left turn at Johnson Avenue. When I got to the inter- section the light was green so I drove into the intersection as far as I could behind a milk truck that was also making a left turn. traffic started te move. A minute later, this officer waved me over to the curb and gave me a ticket for running red light against oncoming traffic. He said -the truck driver went through the light, too. What I want to ; I have to pay a fine for doing other drivers do everyday? I for over get it. 4175 Baldwin Rd. THOUGHTS FOR TODAY All eur enemies have opened The tongue of a fool is the key of his counsel, which, in a wise man, wisdom hath in keeping.— Case Records of a Psychologist Some People Make Up Dream World in an Attempt to Avoid Disappointment “Does the world seem unreal — ages who find that the world to you at .times? Do you feel as if you are like Alice in As if your sur- roundings were strange and unfamiliar? Read about the danger in such an_ escape amechanism. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case M-385: Louella R., aged 17, is a quiet girl who came to see me because her family. physician had pronounced her trouble psychologi- cal “This year we moved from a little town where I was in a high school of 100 students. Now I am a senior in a class of 250 students, not counting the other 800 pupils in the building “After about a month of school T began to feel that I was in a dream world. Things didn't seem real. I felt that I was even a different person and didn't rec- ognize my own appearance. “IT would be walking down a cor- mdor when, all of a sudden, I would feel afraid. Things looked so strange I wanted to get home as soon as possible. . “After a time I began to have headaches and dizzy spells when I was in school, so I stayed home and went to bed. My parents called in two or three good doctors, who said I was in good physical condition. They told me my trouble was mental, so, Dr. Crane, what is wrong with me?” Leuelia is not unlike many ether men and women of all Aunt Het happy with reality as they find it. What are the usual methods of reaction when we are unhappy with our surroundings? Well, some peo- ple move to another place, while others escape by means of drunken stupors or narcotic dreams. Again, a few may get away by means of books, so they read of foreign lands and distant people. — Louella tried to get away by means of manufacturing a dream world around herself. Since she could not or did not flee to another climate or back to her home town, she tried to alter her present en- vironment. She thus hoped to hide from a fearsome reality by masking that grim reality so that she could avoid recognizing her painful situ- ation. It is quite similar to sugar coating pills so that the bitter cen- ter is covered with a sweeter ex- terior. Thus it was with Louella’'s new school environment. Lotella now felt herself alone in a crowd, as paradoxical as this statement may sound. She was a student in a very large class, but few if any of her mates paid any attention to her. Without intending to exclude her or ostracize her, the other girls 4 . @ “ their parties because they didn't _ know her. She found herself suddechly a nobody where back in the home town she had been a somebody. Naturally her ego was deflated. She felt unhappy. She wished te flee to the old group, but circum- stances prevented her doing so. As a result, she tecided to change her surroundings by gloss- ing them over by this ‘‘phantasy of unreality."" Then she developed her headaches as a further device for staying home from the unpleas- ant school situation. Instead of fighting for recognition, she fled; first mentally; then actually by happy, send for my ‘‘Compliment Club” materials, enclosing a 3c stamped envelope, plus a dime. It will make you popular, if you faith- fully follow the rules, even though you are a stranger in‘a big city. (Copyright. Hopkins Spyndicete Inc) Deri Levinas Sars 7 = | | Congratulating Watkins May Prove Costly to Ike After i i : I I [: A Q 5 f E H i | i i He Mata rejected a good deal of the Watkins committee report. It eliminated, for instance, all reference to Gen. Zwicker or the subject of handling witnesses or investi- gations, and it took out the word “censure” in reference to the Wis- consin senator's “failure to coop- erate with’ a 1952 committee. In the final resolution the sec- ond part was taken entirely from hearing to establish the prece- dents. It was, indeed, an example of what Seti. McCarthy meant by the term “lynching bee,” But it is on the political front that President Eisenhower's delibt erate effort to line himself up with a minority of the Republicans in the Senate will have far-reaching repercussions. In the first place there has been for months a widespread feeling among many Republicans through- out the country that the President and members of his immediate I; <5 ; af ri F fi ili t i ¢ i Hi Hi A ul & eeeeatt to facts on q real “forgery.” So it all depends on whose ox is _gored—and the millions of Ameri- cans who do not like to see singled i ae tlle (Copyright 1954) Baering Down By ARTHUR “BUGS” BAER (Internetional News Service) Been following our hospitable list of invited alien dignitaries closer total President of all of Liberia barged in like Cleo on the Nile. And was given the full treatment including the Manhattan accolade of canceled confetti, hamburgered telephone books and deactivated ticker tape. Portraits By JAMES J. METCALFE It happened once, with frightful loss . . . And as it happened then . . . The snake of treachery could rear... Its ugly head again . . Without a moment's notice or... The warning of a breath... We could become the target of .. . Destruction and of death... It happened at Pearl Harbor and . Who knows but what today . . The foe may strike from Washington .. . To San Francisco Bay .. . Let us be ever vigilant . . . AS we recall this-date .. . That now our planning may not be . . . Too little or too late .., Let us be ready for the fight... And to outguess the foe .. . And Jet us never hesitate . .. To strike the freedom blow. Dr. Brady Considers Belly Breathing Most Valuable Health Advice He Gives By WILLIAM BRADY, M.D. When I met the jolly professor of something I can't spell, he told me he has enjoyed my column for many years and that his aunt, a widow of fabulous wealth and no ‘other poor relations, declares that my teachings account for her re- markably good health. The pro- fessor opined there was more truth than poetry .. . Woman with plenty of jack and no one but a retired teacher to Yahbut Three million? Ten million? Non- sense! It would be worth a much larger endowment, say forty or fif- ty million... The professor rambled on and on .. . when I tried to cut in with the wish that I might . meet aunt and acquaint her dreaming of a foundation or an which would insure maybe somebody's rich widowed aunt whé has learned from this column something to the advan: tage of her health and happi: will take it into her head to set 4 most valuable health advice I give is Belly Breathing. I was going to plump fer morn- ing rolls, but I know a lot of old stiffs get miffed when I talk about that, They consider it ri- diculous for one in his or her fifties, sixties or seventies to at- tempt to de forward rolls (what in my fighting youth I called somersaults) and therefore a doc- tor, so-called, who recommends and does six of ‘em every morn- ing must be nutty and not a re- liable health teacher, About the belly breathing — 1 mean just that, breathing with the belly (bellows)—May I suggest that before you jump to a half-baked conclusion you send me a stamped, self-addressed envelope and ask for the, pamphlet on Belly Breathing. And if you'd Tike to learn how belly breathing boosts your circyl- " ation, enclose 25 cents in addition “nd ask for Little Lesson 21 How to Breathe. £ ' say: “Th do anything.” Before your first job interview, truth, you will be lifted by cour- age—a big factor in advancement. | * If you stand erect and see you you can draw up a blueprint for | successful living without any trou- | ble, The scientific approach is to recognize the facts ef life and | not try te evade them. By way of {flustration, if you are a young husband with a de- pendent wife and a couple of young children, you should realistically | examine the risks you face. Your own energies and talents are the family benefactor, on which the continuing flow for money income for food, shelter, clothing and com- fort goods depends. Your nest egg, does not depend on the size of your current earn- ings, but on your capacity for self- discipline, Believe it or not, I have known | of many top bracket earners who spent. funds faster than they came in, while thrifty teachers and oth- ers, never earning large incomes, built up substantial portfolios of stocks and bonds through the years by steadfastly adhering to the principle of spending a little less than their income. The next egg is a civilized hu- man invention to take care of life’s risks and contingencies, in- cluding illness, permanent physical incapacity or major family cala- mities. i If you think of yourself in simple | bookkeeping terms, part of your cost in earning a year’s income | is a partial depletion or exhaustion of your human capital. On the basis of a 40-year work- ing life, you use up, or deplete, your human capital at the rate of 2% per cent a year. Thus, unless you transfer from income to your capital or savings, a minimum of 2% per cent.you are living in a fool’s paradise. You are living on capital—ea process which in bvesiness or family life inevitably spelis even- tual calamity. Obviously, 2% per cent is not enough, because that doesn't allow for sickness and other contingen- cies. You stay “‘hot’’ just so long, not forever. So you must greatly increase your rate of savings in| your few golden years. Alertness to the problem is made | all the more necessary under our | present tax civilization. Govern- | ment tends to confiscate in taxes | the funs. which you should retain for old age and other contingen- cies, You can save only out of your net income after taxes. The best way to do so is to give savings the first claim on your income—to put your thrift fund # YOU MAD A NECK AS LONG AS ts FeULOW AMD HAO | | expert. you can employ professional in- vestment counsel on g fee basis. - If you're a large saver, | you can .employ professional in- Ow the other hand, if you're emal] saver, pon aa op can get by me a 2 tae THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1954 + First of 4 Articles on ‘You and Your Money’ Face Facts of Life and Start Nest Egg, Invest Wisely, Plan for That Old Age = Sooner COUGHS ONCE MORE... ¥ r4 . . |) SEVEN” BEFORE : YOUR CHILD ting an old | Aside first betore the rat race | feel and kntw what ev man | wad fo starts fer rent, food, clothing, ot ee eg oe | EP see coo And that old person is yourself Here’s Relief So Different. entertainment, ang the general better . aoe. | wes Pepe poeple. oy | Mpable counseling firm. AD ad ogg ghee your for coughs of colds, it will change |: Some tentials: i aiden wil! caus able fet rom wc | ter bacage deals ae ari tamily budget.) all your ideas about cough syrups! and t TT = point pede: an S| |there are no . | and ‘mutual funds, And there are F Ton Club Popul | No longer does your child effectively. e. personal Corporate Like insurance ies, YOU/ investment brokers and banks|'OUF 'On Civ Popular | have to suffer needlessly That's why it's named“ comé tax is social security—federal | invest iy oe aa ice @ cee ek funds as they become avail-| which are qualified to provide sin- RICHMOND, Va. ® — One of from coughs of colds. Now Vicks Medi-trating Cough $5. This is of course true, but in| ale father than wait for a fime! cere guidance.’ the biggest clubs here is the Four you can give him this new Syrup. It medicates as it L me an when you expect to make a kill- ie to avoid the | Ton Club. You get out by reducing meant cough medicine penetrates. vide only minimum subsistence | "Sou dois iif a nest eg through sickness and go- |Your weight. Graduation exercises} Cony Tosa once ell ts This new cough syrup also i agogecon| ou don't hive to put off invest-| 40+ life financial plan| 8? held every few months, The Siisihon ‘bas cee one gf oetgect If you are accustomed to a good expert. The records show that stiould include medical and hospi-| adie who flunk the weight test} emarianle penetrating inn congeation Weer iee standard of living and want an oc-| vesting the same bonedieryhors tilization coverage, health and ac- parmay Sedes a ee Others. get) gredient with a medioating sseltoctively onaaeare casiona] treat of caviar, you must jars per month in — same securi. | “ident policies, preferably on a - formula. This combination coughs. Everybody supplement social security with in- | ‘| non-cancellable basis. means your child can get likes the flavor. Try it ties, produces good results, assum- Y's ACTION AT ONCE when | Vestments, insurance policies, and ing the- securities are seasoned and And your physical property— you order Help ads to hire work- more relief . . faster, more for your whole tumily. your own annuities, well selected. your heme your autemobile and For an e xperienced ad- writer it at _H at toe all of ws could | You don't have to be |_|_You dow’ have to be. your own| your other pemesions — shea \cah Fe 24181 For Sore Throat of Colds , tu VICKS meoi-rrarine THROAT LOZENGES WKC 108 NORTH SAGINAW | 4 | 9-Pc. BUNK BED $ A 9 NO MONEY DOWN! As a compact bunk bed, as graceful twin beds, it’s sensational at this fabulous low price. You also get the two luxuriously comfortable mat- tresses, springs, guard gail, and ledder! And colonial styling, maple finish’ enhance your room! 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Order YOURS tomorrow on this FREE TRIAL OFFER UP TO 20 YEARS - “COmponT omtY a “MEALTH-ENGINEERED” “UNIMATIC” OX SMOOTH.TOP GIVES POR PERFECT SUPPORT SPRING COMPLETES “postuat PROTECTION” , 30 NIGHT MONEY-BACK TRIALS TRY IT_IN_YOUR OWN HOME Come in and register te sleep for 30 nights on « Senta "Penrect Scseren” Marratss and Box Srame. If, after 30 nights you ere not sold— YOU MAY RETURN THE MATTRESS AND BOX SPRING FOR FULL REFUND! Phone FEderal 3-7114 108 NORTH SAGINAW ~ — oy & 1 ‘ ‘ TODAY'S ASSIGNMENT FOR: JUNIOR: EDITORS U. N, ‘ested to ‘Frisco —_ . i e _ THE PONTIAC PRESS, Top Democrats top Democratic leaders, including Gov.-elect W. Averell Harriman of s e MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, jyese ' *- LOOK! Pineapple DREAM DESSERT In fact Amazo is the only truly basic dessert...made with corn- starch to give you home-made y aoe ty wom m= es Hit Farm Policy |Z "erate, invitation to | policy of the Repub- General Assembly to hold & com- ‘ee licans of that day permitted a farm in an Instant! __ ee need Notes was 2 2 | Willioms, _ McNamara | session the coary hes crer scce,| ie, "e delicous trait dowerts fa born in San. Francisco “s oe . 4. | Among Signers of Note “r,. ciection results in farm acne | Amano bb the ference which began April Rapping GOP Program | precincts in Minnesota, Wisconsin} only instant dessert whicb sets with Xv and. ."" the statement con- fruits and fruit juice. NEW ORLEANS A group of | tinued New York, have attacked “the dis- in any creation. Try... To juice from canned crushed pny add cold milk to make . ade — into deep bowl; aes ahah rropachereachign 4 -‘Sleppienet ned aorve! "Be sure te vse Amore. So-called instont puddings will not work in this Gov. G. Mennen Williams of Mich- igan, Sen.-elect Patrick McNamara of Michigan and a number of other sop Democrats said the Eisenbow- er administration's s farm program RENT THAT ROOM through’ Rent Ads in The Pontiac Press. Call FE 28181 TODAY! . recipe. VANILLA, cnocotare suTveRscorcH — sccm encima BUY WITH CONFIDENCE AT WAYNE GABERT’S Here is a game for Junior Editors 1. Get a large square piece of cardboard picture. You'll find it easy if you divide the cardboard into the same number of squares as shown here, but make your squares Do not draw the’ apples shown in the lower corners of this picture on your cardboard. Instead, draw them larger on a separate piece and ‘tut them out. 2. With water colors or crayons, color your. game board. Make | the background blue, the tree green and the trunk brown. Make the | numbers on the tree black, so they are easy to see. Color one of your ~' | apples red and the other yellow. - CL . 3. lyon put the board on a table or of the floor between two ce : takes an apple, leans over the board, shuts his beseig aes and drops his apple on the board. Do not touch the apple after it falls. The second player does the same. : 4. Score by giving each player the number of the square in which most of his apple falls. Tee & first player t to get 5 points wins, 5 Fred Snite and Barrymore Had Courage in Common od posepageas prea Bde pee eer enc | oe aor a aeccaaed might | | him, which breathed for him. But i A } t a ' f i | have been astonished to find their | 't didn't live for him. ; hames in the same sentence. Or | He found life very full, a lot of | maybe they wouldn't, for doubtless| fun and very worth living. With | | they each had read a great deal| whaq must have been a God- | | about the other. They must have, given flexibility of mind, he ; am felt an ninner kinship, the kinship| turned cheerfully from the world | of suffering. | of aetivity toward those few Surely no one who has read the| things still left — his fantily, newspapers for the last 18 years, travel, the game of bridge. And has failed to marvel at the almost he played bridge gaily and well, | unequalled courage of polio victim | just as he played the game of Fred Snite, who spent those years life. ‘in an iron lung, He called himself} For what Fred Snite called life ~ —~————= | was a great dea) fuller than that of many whimpering folk who have what he lacked — the ability to stand and to walk. are many hundreds of po- lid victims, invalids of all kinds, who probably think keenly about Fred Snite. Many of these have | been given strength enough to go! on smiling, just by remembering his acceptance of what life brought. J je , ; | Lienel Barrymore, an aimest + “8 : JOIN NOW for a Merry Christmas in “55! Why pay for Christmas long after it is a over with? Join our Christmas Savings Club for 1955 now , ... save each week in regular amounts of your own choosing. Next year at this time you'll have a sizable check to spend on gifts. oaceet PONTIAC ‘FEDERAL SAVINGS 16 E. Lawrence St. ro, aS epi x SE — "KRESGE’S © What a jacket! What a price! Western “Dux Kin" |. JACKETS $ must have understood the par- able of the talents. Like the Bib- lieal character, he too was given e five. But he used his five—acter, composer, musician, artist, writ- Bee) er—even though from a wheel- S ‘Sie chair, on crutches, and with 3 pain as a constant companion. Somehow he also turned his back on pain, giving himself to the crea- s tive arts at which he excelled. | . > How many of us do just the op- 4, | posite. {| Perhaps it is ironic that these two men should be linked together, remembered for a quality they | never took time to think much | OLVL about — their sheer, wonderful | . one courage. & 7aa?. : (Copyright 1954, King Features) | Says College Heads Do Too Much Selling | BOSTON w—Prestdent Abram L. Sachar: of Brandeis University says today's college president must devote so much energy to finding financial support that ‘‘the tin cup is replacing the cap and gown.” ‘Increasingly,’ he told friends of Brandeis at a dinner last night, “the impression of him which is evoked in the public mind is ‘ the high-class mendicant, the nd | lic relations impresario ; ss Because our education in. | | situations are insecure, we divert the magnificent potentialities of our abl men into the task of promoting and salesmanship."’ ¥, Sizes 4-12 NO REGULAR PAYMENTS L FEBRUARY |! Small Deposit Holds Until Christmas ‘Norge Automatic Washer Norge Automatic Dryer with Built-In Suds Return! » ++ Large, Full Sizel ® Suds return permits re-use of suds and © Big 21” fan dries family-size wash water in minutes © Norge agitator action washes clothes e t f} t t ra- cleaner, (aster. Highest airflow with lowest tempera ture for economical operation. _ a ee eee , . , — — © Exclusive spray rinsing. Deep overflow Tender Blade Cut eN CHUCK ..4 hb, ROAST .... rinsing ® No costly installation—ready to use ® Automatic spin-drying removes excess when delivered. Gas model available. water from clothes in seconds. NO DOWN PAYMENT! = CASH MARKET Chunk Side Pork ‘Ib. 78 North Seginaw Street Junedsie Brond_ | LOOK! SAVE! YOUR CHOICE! | tenderioin portion 2 YEARS TO PAY —FREE DELIVERY REDI-EAT -— Biode “S Grede 1 PORK INCLUDES NORMAL INSTALLATION AND SERVICE PICNICS Skinless | ROAST IRA SH CHOPS Hot Do a2 c VEs aL 29: Fresh, nda pre a teas, . 45 STEAK f WAYNE GABERT Ss | Your Electrical "Appliance Specialist , \ Open Friday and Saturday Nights to 9 p.m. - . | 121 WN Saginaw Street Phone FE 5-6189 iy Veal Roast..." 25¢ [«.,, Veal Breast “= 121 This Veluable Coupon } Entities the Bearer I, = 242: ; | } to @ 2-Ib. Limit Bulk : ee eee ee ee ee ee ee eee eee Grede A LARGE EGGS SHORT with any purchese ba /_.__- THE "PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1956 ‘ : , i = reo ’ and-cars for G0 years with a clean claimed Boddy, throwing up his sweetheart, come to the | ot trees, shrubs’ and ‘Pepless' Cor Brings 1st * eae . rage Doctor's Name ag pat pent Fey Hawaiian College Given \‘ rere Don't Traffic Fine in 60 Years | +1 went through the ligtt, but 9. Not Often Misspelled increaged Chinese Red oppression. | 124-Acre Arboretum | The Urilversity agreed to main- Rot NORTH TORAWANDA, N. ¥.| SAY Stans my cor Gidpet have | Memory Dim.gn Lights CRESSON, Pa. @—The newest | 7 were married in New York. | HONOLULU th — The Hawajian tain it permanently as a botanical shin rouble (UP)—A local motorist’s record of! He that be waé‘afraid|; © DORADO, Ark. @®—A woman | appointee to the staff of résident And the Cat Got A Sugar Planters Aggn. has @eeded: be Heed te foot 60 years without a traffic convic-| his car would stall if it came to @ @ iver was stopped at a police | physicians at Cresson State. Sani- way to the University of Hawaii te! Mayor H nds Out Plums SALY tien wap broken seco Sechelt Oe: ==. roadblock, where .officers were tarium has the shortest name of| DOLORES, Colo. @® + Merton|124 acre arboretum and botanical a WONDER: dy his car had “no pep.” Because your car had no pep/ making a safety check. Asked to any doctor to serve the institution. | Taylor's red setter Amos got | garden in Manoa Valley. MANCHESTER, Conn. — The ‘ does not mean you can go through step on the headlight dimmer) Dr. S. H.-Ma and his attractive| wedged between two buildings, The 35-year-old Manoa arbore- plums that Mayor Sherwood Bow- | : Charged with going through a red) req lights.” the judge replied. “I| switch, the woman looked in vain | wife are Chinese. His wile is a | while chasing a-cat. Bricks had'to/tum, one of the most extensive ers passes out to his city hall Gunni h ns . Arthur I. Boddy. 16, told| must fine you $5.” : | for it, and then commented bright- | nurse.. be removed from the foundation U. -S. botanical gardens in the friends are not political. He raises [hd ng am the judge he had driven liorses| “My record is broken!” ex-/ly, “I thinks it's automatic.” | The physician and his wife, a let a hardware store to tree hie | tropics, — eS hobby. | ae ewe) ee a eect nee maaan = SHAKER BAR SET Famous decorated ‘Gay-Bar 1 378 P| 9 set! Shaker, lid, 12 glasses for your favorite beverage! Lipsy. BAR WARE All sizes from cordials to 15 coolers for hosting and c toasting! ‘Safedge’ rims! ec. ALUM. CASSEROLE Beautifully embossed alumi- 298 num casserole with 144 qt. pyrex insert! Gift-right. Sas EVER) LL CHT Cari BEVERAGE SET Learn the different poker ” hands! 8 tumblers welt pon pok- er decals, 8 plastic coasters! 14-PC. PUNCH SET Large crystal bowl, 12 matching crystal a large 298 server! Ideal for hase. Aluminum NUT SET Fiched aluminum bow! with 6 picks, nut cracker! Ideal 298 center piece, Perfect gift! by AIQS 0S FOR COO GooD WOU SEREEPING GAY LAZY SUSAN Revolving lazy susan! 6 colorful ceramic inserts! 49 5 Chartreuse, wine, green. PLASTIC TV 8 HASSOCKS 595 Durable plastic cover that wipes clean in a jiffy, never needs recoveting! Choose from a variety of colors, shapes! SMART CANNON®) 98 TOWEL SETS 3-pc. set: 1 bath towel, 1 face towel, 1 wash cloth! 4pc. set: 2 face towels, 2 wash cloths. ile embroidery ! FEDERAL cept GOLDEN CLASS! TABLE CLOTHS 2” - Beautifully woven prints with metallic threads! Generous 52x52-in. size! Matching napkins Ate CANNON 5-PC. TOWEL SETS 378 Solid pastel colors, double Joop quality! 1 hak toacl 2 face towels, 2 wash cloths! Gift-boxed and ready to give! RAYON DAMASK SOFA PILLOWS sx 439 Colorfully, patterned pillows in extra large size with plump, comfortable cot- ton filling! Neatly finished. 18x23-in. , A CHATHAM 79 BLANKETS Warmth and winter comfort! Giant 72x90-in. size in soft, luxurious pastels! Rayon bound. Nylon and_ rayon. Modern-style wreught iron _ MAGAZINE RACK: The newest decorative note in functional fur- niture! Ultra-modern and sleek wrought ‘er built to take lots of heavy duty usage! B them in any shape or size to fit your individ. ual decorating scheme! Big gift avin: sian BN KNIFE SET 3 98 nO hgh ener oO Six serrated stay sharp. A i Black trimmed in brass — kA _— spot 3-LITE TREE LAMP 13395 seticn dambigananaca WPF CHENILLE 95 BOXED PILLOW 998 BED SPREAD 3 CASE SETS 2 prone ager G rary Me und Se ee hes bedroom colors! Full size — patterns. All hemstitched, Full size. ILTED OMFORTERS Luxurious rayon satin. cover stitched for wool filling. 7 10 wear! Warm 100% in. size! Buy now! CASE SETS firmly CANNON PILLOW Use it for owns Snow white combspun percale with col- orful scalloped edges. Beautifully boxed and ready to give! 42x3814-in. size! Black wrought iron TELEPHONE TABLE oe by AIDS DS POR COO GOOD HOUSEKEEPING stand, snack table, bedside table or for plants, books, magazines! Here's a piece of mod- ern furniture priced economically enough for most any budget! Legs are rubber-tipped, won't mar floor! } ~ Sleek wrought iron wipes clean, stays new looking through the years. Buy now for Christmas ot Save! ELECTRIC URN SET Chrome “eo walla et =! tm 2QIS tray, suger CONE 3-PC. TOWEL SETS 19% 3 pe. set includes 1 towel, 1 guest towel, 1 wash cloth beautifully boxed for gift giving. First quality! The perfect gift! % ; ] i i ) | | | BATH MAT T AND 00 LID COVER SET Heavy chenille in colorful ome - 24x36 or 21x36. Mat with matching cover! Pastel colors! Washable! SAGINAW AT WARREN, PONTIAC StOreS OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO CHRISTMAS THE PONTIAC PRESS,, MONDAY, ones 6, 1954 7 ee Tn 3 DAYS ONLY Ina Beautiful NEW CONSOLE Eatery rhoimived i toed mie Keep Yule Tree. E ven Bootleggers Cash I. n Gy Oye Pam | ape Corrie Sey Moj ion Harvest of Yule Trees | Cool and Moist | tweroc— rr, srjs nom nin | Luther in the sixteenth century, or Ovle hol of ou Chsditenes for Lessening Hazard %7.\ne preustoric in nl aaa) NM cut, in northern te-’ of Christmas Fires De gece ow 5 oe eS — oo a & eee, ot Yule cheer are a scpulae in | 5 “TEN. i , ’ 2778, they were settled ih the | even from the mainland, says the CHANBROK — Whether deco-| cut their own Christmas “trees on Botanist Lists Hi 1S St. Bonitace in the eighth century, wees merteted tn the U. &. Undiapuyed. however. oe ive aia { and celé-ctered meathe ahead. CRANBROOK—Making a Christ- Aside from its distinctive spicy | mas tree last longer and reducing | atomic age households as they ever | order and thick pyramidal. shape, $ 95 fire hazard. are two problems fac- | were in German halls of other cen-| the balsam fir holds its leaves CABIN ET ing millions of families this time | turies. ‘| longer and stands cold storage bet- : of year. Sale. of 30 million Christmas | tet than most other Yule greenery. ROUND BOBBIN - Three general rules are offered| trees in the U-S, annually ts- |Table size trees are often cut in SEWING MACHINE by Dr. Marion T. Hall, botanist at| Volves farmers, conservation of. | August and bandied with branches Cranbrook Institute of Science, | ficials, timber firms, shippers, | tight against thé main shoot. When NOTICE Easy Terms Bloomfield Hills: and even bootleggers, according | ‘he branches are released several “Yhis same machine ‘ts . (1) Keep the tree in a cool place| to « report from Cranbreek tn- | ™onths later, they spring back into = a. aaa Soa | whenever possible. (2) Keep it| stitute ef Sclence, Bloomfield shape in a few minutes with fo stares fer 20 COMPLETE WITH imoist. (3) Fireproof it at least | Mills. “oe “ damage. — =e © Sews Forward © S-Speed Control — [+ Free bontlesuers are these fe | nam fir sill shares popuianty | WG & Sowing Machine Sunaly Co, trees, * 20. Yem The newly acquired tree should | scavengers who, without permits. | vin such favorites a ares ox ’ Guarantee be sprayed or sprinkled with (hack their contraband indiscrimi-| s-otey pine, Red pine, White pine, | 7s Soe Phone FE 2-9143 Tension sro Feed water. Then about an inch of nately from private and pul'lc| routs fir, cedar and hemlock. || Seeing is believing . . . this amazing low price is possible oa Regulater wooed should be removed from | lands. Their wares are usually | 3) o¢ which, if bought fresh. hold/] B/y because of our low overhead and a large, quantity . © Automatic ® Automatic Stitch - no home demonstrations. Bobbin Winder Control shoddy enough to warn off pros- ate’ luaven well iw tla week a6 pective buyers, but the institute urges that the public accept only = days of the holiday season. | — ee for dece- | Tee* tagged with official identifi- 7 — . a OPEN EVERY NITE “til 9 purchase .. Contains up to agents Legal trees, usually scodliogs ? Len millions rel thinned from timber stands owned by lumber companies, begin their trip to market in September or October as crews consisting of cut- ters, graders and bundlers select camp sites for their three-month harvesting operation. Axe-wielding cutters lead tke parties, They cut the chosen trees, trim off dead and injured limbs and square the butts. Then the bundiers drag the cut trees te double saw horves for grading. The grading device is made of | several Vertical boards arranged © | parallel at different distances and nailed securely to one of the sawhorses. The trees are across the sawhorses, and | the butts fitted into the proper | slots. When six trees of equal size are |lined up in this manner, they are | tied together into bundles that are hauled by truck or sleigh to cold storage areas. If the source is | PAPEETE, Tahiti u — The pop-| near the market, and the weather | ulation of. Tahiti and other islands | permits, the trees are often left in |nearby is being swelled by em- | the woods until selling time. Since magrants from France and froma frozen tree will break up when French colonies, notbly Indochina. felled, cutting must be done before | ;| Many French merchants got out of | hard freezing weather. Indochina before the Communists; Serve-yourself tree plantations, took over, and came to Tahiti. set aside in rocky or sandy areas | |by many farmers, have become Hawaii's sugar industry “started | | popular with families who like to ‘in 1835. | drive into the country and legally Partial Gccprenling may be ac- complished by spraying the tree with a mixture of waterglass (soluble sodium silicate). Use nine parts of waterglass to one part water. Add one teaspoon of de- tergent. While waterglass gives an attrac- tive sheen and helps prevent fire, the tree's rich supply of resin is still inflammable if . carelessly brought into contact with fire or excess heat. Reports that water solutions of various chemicals, such as am- monium sulphate, will prevent needle fall, have not been scien- tifically proved, according to Dr. Hall. An adequate supply of water alone should do ‘as — ‘French Flock + ia Tahiti ing & Co, Ime Ll Copsriah 1964. oF Trae. Lee RUB IN out! Ben: F ‘THE ORIGINAL BAUME "Va | : | | | ! — FINANCE CO. igetlloes and Fleer ® Lawrence Bidg., 7 WEST ST LAWRENCE sT.: Gerald Harvey, Manager » PONTIAC « FEderal 2-9249 . mode te idents of oll di eceoeeveoe *eeeeneveeeeeeeeneeee towns a e . \ e mercerized, Senforizedt, - | 4 ‘tm, Vou get tepered weiet fer hal ——.befter, more comfortable fit! - \ Zz) | oa ‘eu get sleeves mode in one plece—ne bulky extra seems! they're only ‘When it's an automatic bed covering, it takes only ONE to keep you warm—one electric blanket, or one electric sheet with a regular blanket. Either takes the place of the umpteen heavy, smothering covers you'd ordinarily use. Confidentially—and confidently too— we recommend automatic bed coverings as wonderful Christmas : ’ ] oun ow eguiar Por wm gifts for all the family! ne et ee | French Cutts ow Neck Band . Slotted Collar ‘ Tt ds _ Sizes, 14- 17. Sleeve Lengths 32-35 5 French or Button Cuffs + Maximum shrinkage 1%. + LS ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6.1956 [# * s Shrimp Cocktail Tickets and posters for a performance of The Vagabond King are of special interest | start are (left to right) William Lane of ) r 2 a — odo old Hanging of Greens en ‘dighttenndh ‘cam | Christmas season. Often on catire rings on her index fingers tapping|on a small platform, F This is done in honer of | village joins in a secular festival out the rhythm on the saucers. fnights the procession ie turned ae ta tet Be be nan Cae |cemtered around this major food) Im Mexico for nine nights be- |*¥8Y but on the ninth night — we * Ar hg The shins a| fore Christmas posada proces. Christmas Eve — they are invited defiled by heathens, . staple celebra ineludes sions prevail. Posada means to a central gathering place where its perpetual lamp | Special dance done at night-to the lodging in Spanish and repre. |# reverent ceremony is held. burning miraculously | glow of candlelight. — sents the hineday journey of | Throughout the ceremonial the eT nn edy | ‘The performer, holding in each| Mary and Joseph from Nazareth | P&rt of the ¥-Teen will be depicted wndetied ofl was fur | hand a saucer with a small candle | to Bethlehem. oy egey Moitiamy, te Lane melted into it, pantomimes the Queen by Nancy Nicholson, Jewish Asia one of the sev.| planting, growth and harvesting of] the streets of Mexico and statues | Scum sia und the Mecan pil harvests near our rice. moves to the tune of 'of Joseph. and Mary ere carried by Pat Lawrence. The scenes will be described by a voice choir composed of Miss Hayden, Mildred Burns, Mrs. Millard dames, Daphne Langford, Mrs. Costello, Mrs. * iy ao eee s «Take @ page from our book! Get your FREE copy of our a CHRISTMAS GIFT BOOK Seo Short Hair Popular for — EasyCare_ | Few women wear their hair long these days. The ease, good | looks and neatness of a cropped mane have made women get their | hair up off their collars. But just because it's bobbed | thinned, the hair can't be | FRESE z S i 2 then, ; Pentiac Press Phete is to members of the Pontiac Civitan Club,|West Walton boulevard, David Dunsky of — = —— cece! tp which is sponsoring the event on Jan. 15.|North Saginaw street and Dr. S. J. Chafets| Uttie home nibbling with a pair Making sure that things are off to a good | of South Genesee avenue. =e ae Ci . -— Once a month or every five) ° L how your | ivitan Club | Wearing It Is Art oe ee oe , to S | . . . the creator and let him trim and . : : thin. Providing you have been Genie cine aos a ponsor [Lipstick Is Basic Cosmetic ttn? i imere! ye aie sunny Gulf of Mexico — : : the way he recommends, a hair hoant waters of nature's best ome | Lipstick is the basic cosmetic.| tues and hiding their faults. The : y , style should improve with each tasting shrimp. Enjoy their | Practically no woman, eighth- inner part of the lips should not! cut. fresh sea flavor in cocktails, The Pontiac Civitan Club an-| grader to grandmother, goes| be neglected. | Each time you're at the beauty salads, main dishes nounced plans for a presentation | without it. But because it is so Then, it should be allowed to set| salon, if you're a busy person, KS Vt _ |of “The Vagabond King’’ when’ it very basic, many women think all | for five minutes. Don't smoke. eat) make your appointment for next oes rents b = Harare pes Hotel Fenune. It | they need to know about it is how or fuss with it during this time. | time and then jot it in your note- ” ae, = rst event | to buy one. | After setting, it should be carefully | book. LPB RR ERs of the pe The musical/ Actually, lipstick can be used) blotted with a clean tissue. Thor. This way, you'll have @ sure re- poops ng a by the Actor's | as offensively and wrongly as any | ough blotting will take off the ex- minder of your next time for aay ay ork City, sponsored | more complex cosmetic. Lipstick | cess and help protect you from | Shearing. You may not notice how _ oh usiness men’s lunch- | om the teeth or teacup is.as un-| leaving calling cards on cups, sil-| {9st it’s growing or how long it Sie | pleasant as makeup on the collar. | verware and babies. is in back, but your public notices. m Lane is chairman of the | Lipstick that is greasy shows a| rangements by David Dunsky, rFOR THE Howard Bond, Dr. Maurice Thome, | »MOLIDAYS | Theodore Wiersema and John Wil- | 4 sOt.. . 4 Proceeds from the annual affair Begins with « ; will be used fo improve the Camp | PERMAN ENT Fire Girls’ camp site near Clarks- | ton. The Pontiac Civitan Club $5.00 and Up sponsors the local Camp Fire Girls. | Tickets may be obtained from | members of the club or at several local stores. Judy Linn Tiberg | Has Birthday Party © Judy Linn Tiberg entertained at a dessert luncheon and hayride Saturday on the occasion of her tenth birthday. She is the daugkter | of the Williams J. Tibergs of Oge- | maw road. : Manicures—Hair Setting ' No Appointment Necessary = Appeintment Can t-ave i OPEN WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON HEALOI Beauty Shop Wilt, SN. Segimaw Rt rR 2 ee Ratlding, Next te Vardstick A Specialty Guests included Jerry Tiberg, | DOROTHY’S Ted Barrett, Karen Bronoel, James | Lat SROF Coad, Bruce Coleman, June Daly, Sue Ann Dorman, Heidi Griffith, | Tommy McGrath and Mary Lou McLaughlin. Others were Ed McLean, Vir- | ginia Norvell, David Petroff, Helen Bruce This Madeleine Fauth dress forms the perfect back- ground for opulent beads. Cut carefully as a diamond, it comes in yarn dyed black, navy or aqua taffeta. Custom Uphoistering WILLIAM K. COWIE } 21 Years ot Practical Experience {ms Orchard Lk. Ave. FE 4-2857 es ‘ . | HOLIDAY-WINKING ELE é 48) . & *» BLACK SUEDE. . | *| . * Grr : + CUSTOM MADE 4 + On your toes-—for this merry-moking season when there's so much doing alter tive—the tiatiery of little biackest onyx on a cling-strap pump Martinique magic tor your most opulent tashions ‘event and is being assisted with ar- | lack of cosmetics-intelligence. For what is lipstick, after air, Yule Message Heard yu Velvet and Nylon. An Ideal Xmas Gift, Assorted colors. Bises 3 to 16. JUMPER DRESSES BOYS’ 2-PC. SUITS $ All sizes from 2 to 10...... Washable Toys $798 . . from ; Pur Animals s FEderal 35-8415 15% 738 Hichies.Babylan | INFANTS TO 10 YEARS It is something to give the lips a by Wayside Gleaners SAVE $20 Reg. $79.95 The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING * S-.. | ite RT . warm color, to point up the —— redness here that contrasts with) A reading was given by Mrs. | the skin there. It is not something | Jack Stepleton and Dr. H. H.| = that stands alone. Lipstick painted Savage gave a Christmas message on the cheeks would be silly. Lip-| for the Friday luncheon meeting of stick that overexaggerates the na-| Wayside Gleaners of First Baptist tural lips is just as silly. | Church. The meeting was held in First principle is practice in ap-| the church's educational building. plying lipstick. Women who have; A Christmas theme was carried trouble may want to try using a out in the congregational singing brush, Careful attention should be! of Christmas carols led by Eliza- paid to emphasizing the lips’ vir-| beth Barnett. . Sb k 2 $ usa et seghi IT’S NEW! IT’S BETTER! IT COSTS NOTHING EXTRA! Think of . our marvelous Sta-Nu process actually replaces the -textile finishing agents lost from your clothes through me and wear. You can actually SEE and FEEL the difference. ou never knew your clothes could look so good... never knew they could last so long RESIDENTS OF LAKE ORION You New Heve o Huron Cleaners Store et 59 S$. Broadway ot Front Sts. (Next te Lake Orion Recreation) PICK UP YOUR FREE PENCIL Your Shirts Beautifully Laundered 4 HOUR SERVICE AT OUR MAIN PLANT | THE HATS CLEANED AND BLOCKED (FACTORY METHODS) 24 Hour Service at Our 11 Neighborhood Stores! Free Parking Will Pay Parking Meter in Lake Orion and Millord | STA-NU IS EXCLUSIVE IN PONTIAC & SUBURBS AT HURON DRY CLEANERS and SHIRT LAUNDRY | Main Office end Plant 944 West Huron FE 2-023! 1524 Union Lake R4 S14 Pontiac Traft 721 Nerth Perry St. Opposite Girows Next to Coffee Cop st Jostye 4212 W Walter 6 Mole St. Gites: at Sachadae 316 Main St. | 14 North Saginaw St. “Balinease” in the fitting room . BOBETTE Hosi Theatre « NEW WORLD OF FASHION: alimease | Pali This is the new “new look”... a higher, rounder, more controlled bust- , line. ..a fluid waistline ...a gently moulded, longer torso. Try . . and see how perfectly you fit into the new world of fashion. Made of Bali’s exclusive pre-shrunk cotton and nylon elastic and luxurious embroidered nylon marquisette. White only. A cup, 32-36; B cup, 32-36; C cup, 82-38. 12.50. ery & Corset Shop FE 2-6921 Plan For Christmas Beat the Christmas rush . . . brighten your home NOW with new or redone furniture . . . all work to your specifications . . . easy terms... 10- _ day delivery on all work this month. PHONE FE 4-0558 OR STOP IN TODAY oman willic h Chstmos = WiITLIaM wright Offer ; two seven or 11d lake avenue Six Dining Reem aig: Seats) ih “ALL WORK CUARANTEED 5 YEARS” Sete “Ordered PHONE FE 4-0558 Senior League Will Usher Pontiac Symphony Orchestra. Mac- Dowell Male Chorus members will be featured as guest artists for the 8:30 concert at Lincolr¥ Junior High School. . The ushers include Sue Braid, | Judy Dickstein, Judy Dunham, | Marilyn Goode; Nancy Lowery, | Joy Owen, Greta Phipps and Sally | Sebastian. Mrs, Charles Buck, Mrs. George Cameron and Mrs. Carroll Braid, sponsors of the group announce that membership is open to anyone of high school age who is actively audying © music Tally Club Meets Tf David Shermans were hosts Harmon road Saturday ‘evening. Mr. and Mrs. David Day were; guests of the group. Old Fashioned SL FRUIT CAKES The richest, most delicious fruit cakes imaginable! Light batter, brim full of plump, candied fruits and full flavored _ nuts. Three sizes. Deluxe oblong fruit cake (1% SOPT5 pounds) ribbon-tied, boxed... . pounds) ribbon-tied, boxed Deluxe round fruit cake (4% $ 50 im red metal box............. 5 Place Parcel Post Deluxe round fruit cake On $<) 85 pounds) ribbon-tied and packed Orders Now! “He wos chubby ond plump, @ right o by Sanders Into every Sanders fruit cake goes an abundance of rare spices, fruits, and nuts—and the experience of three- quarters of a century of making good- things-to-eat. Regular Fruit Cake (134 pounds) Boxed Regular Fruit Cake (3}4 pounds) Boxed. . - $185, $925 jolly old elf: And | lovghed when | sow him, in spite of myself.” Visit Your Nearest Sanders Store in the Tel-Huron Shopping Center Telegraph Road and West Huron Street, in Pontiex Members of théSenior League of Tuesday Musicale will sérve as ushers for Tuesday's concert of MARY. ESHKANIAN The engagement of their daugh- | ter, Mary, and Herman Pruyt is announced bf: Mr. and = Mrs. to the Tally Club in their home on (Charies Eshkanian of Detroit. He | 'to David Villereal, Juanita Villereal of East Pike | 'is the son of the Diederik J. MON DA Y; DEC . | i LUPE CASTILLO: Port Huron are announcing the en- | Sagement of their daughter, Lupe, son of Mrs. Prayts of Mary Day avenue. The | stréet. Lupe is a student at St. couple will speak their vows May. Joseph School of Nursing. No date oe eas ipl Sar’ Wa Seong Mr. and Mrs. Martin Castillo of | ‘EMBER. 6, 1954 BERNADINE NICHOLS Mr, and Mrs. Harold Nichols of Robinwood avenue are announcing | the engagement of their daughter, Bernadine, of Sterling to Stanley Zygiel of Steerling. No date hms been set Sor the wodting. SW Presbyterian Women Elect Officers Mrs. Ted Koella Jr. conducted the installation of officers and com- mitee chairmen for the coming year at the eighth annual Christmas dinner of the Women's Associaton of First Presbyterian Church. Mrs. Lyndon Salathiel entered hér second term of office as presi- dent of the association. Her corps ee —_ Best Gift of All . e Sone? rcsties @ Graduate Each Week lnstructers | BELL-FOUGHT | ACCORDION STUDIOS Call FE 2-5t01 of officers for the year include Mrs. H. H. -Pattison, first vice president; Mrs. Leslie Ellis, second vice president; Mrs. Neil Gray, recording secretary and Mrs. Eric- son Lewis, assistant correspond- ing secretary. Mrs. Eldred Mathes is cor're- sponding secretary; Mrs. B. B. Kimball, treasurer and Mrs. Hugh Little, auditor. Honorary president and vice president are Mrs. William H. Marbach and Mrs. Edward Auchard respec- tively. LOOP RiDPn, Tite N. Saginaw chard, missionary education; Mrs. Pattison, stewardship and spiritual life; Mrs. Robert Boggs, mission- | ary literature; Mrs. Bradley | | Scott, social education and action ‘and Mrs. A. L. Drury, foreign mission secretary. Mrs. Allen Monroe will Christian education; Mrs. Orley E. Hill, national and overseas sew- ing; Mrs. T. C. McFetridge, civic sewing, Mrs. Hugh Little and Vera Bassett are co-chairmen of mem: | bership. Completing the fist are Mrs. | 'Grace Shulz, transportation; ‘Mrs. Serving on committees for the Marvin Redmond, hospitality and 'year are Mrs. Koella and Mrs. Au- | Mrs. H. R. Fraser, Pontiac United | Church Women delegate. Music for the installation held | Friday at the church was present- |ed by Mrs. John Wilson accom- panied by Mrs. Henry Wissinger. Mrs. Boggs announced the pro-| ‘ Christmas play. This Thursday Night, Dec. 9th, Men’s Night at ALVINS @ Men Only @ Informal Modeling SA @/7 to lO p. mM. PPL @ Skilled Salesgirls to assist you @ Gifts beautifully wrapped at NO extra charge Park Free Rear Telegraph at Huron—Open Every Night ‘til Christmas—Sun. 2 to 5 a ene a Sele eames Queen Anne collar and jong tight pointed sleeves. A billowing skirt fell inte columns of lace which blended into a cathedral length illusion fingertip veil made by Mrs. William Gregory, the bride's sis- Emerald green antique satin dresses were worn by the junior bridesmaid, Kay Cosma who car- |ried a white fur muff trimmed gram which featured Mrs. Thomas | with a spray of holly, and Steph- head | Tillson and her daughters in aj anie Stevens, cousin of the bride- A peau de soie peacock blue _ cocktail dress featuring back pan- els faced with pale pink was chosen 'by Mrs. Mitchell for her son's wedding. She wore matching pink For a motor trip to Florida and Cuba, the bride wore a charcoal _ brown wool coat dress, beige cash- | mere coat and avacado green ac- | cessories topped with a white rose corsage. Upon their return the Mit- | chells will reside in Pontiac. Newivweds on , Honeymoon Trip to Florida, Cuba o's | Two Entertain Society Members Mrs. Donald B. Hogue and :Mrs.° Edith Roach Snyéer presented or- gaa and piano selections as enter- tainment for the Saturday evening Christmas get-together of Xi Chap- ter of Delta Kappa Gamma Society. Sally Adams, president of the chapter spoke briefly. Members of the party committee included Mrs. Snyder, Miss Adams, Mrs. Everett Peterson, Ruth DeCou, and Marietta Spring. Members of the chapter are plan- ning a meeting for Jan. 13. Theme of this meeting will be ‘Uniting Woman Educators." Hostesses for the event will include Ruth Wait, Mrs. Ralph Forman, Mary Gibbs, Katherine Kathaway and Maude Kempf. Esther Court Meets at Masonic Temple Esther Court 13, Order of Ama- ranth held its annual Christmas party Friday evening in Roosevelt Masonic Temple, Mrs. William C. Pfahlert, royal matron announced that advanced officers night will be held Friday Dec. 10 at the temple. A cooperative dinner, cards and gift exchange highlighted the | evening. | Sorority Gathers Mrs. Richard Anderson's May- crest road home was the setting for the recent meeting of Beta Alpha Chapter of Sigma Beta so- rority. Mrs. Jerry May will be hostess in her Auburn avenue home for the next meeting. PTA Activities Hawtherne Executive board of Hawthorne PTA will meet Tuesday- at 730 pm_ for Christmas party with Mrs Byford Laur 184 West Brooklyn Ave Owen Executive board of Owen School PTA will meet Wednesday at 930 am in the teachers’ lounge. ‘Happy Beauty Medium and an unyielding will, lady will look quaint and sweet. mother gives in, a little girl will becoming clothes. Somewhere in between is If daughter has the firm will and look like a shrunken siren, com- | plete with painted nails and un- the | WIGGS - - - iemmeir House of Royal Staffordshire @ PINK JENNY LIND @ TONQUIN BLUE 50 PIECES SERVICE FOR 8 Only a direct import from England get yours. They won't last long at this price dinner . . . it H make a gay occasion to get your set. . or Charge It for the whole family to enjoy . . . the quantity is limited to stock om hand Deposit Reserves Your Set Gifts : , A Direct Import from England Dinnerware 3 Beautiful Patterns @ RURAL SCENES PLUM (pictured) >20 Ould bring you this remarkable value Imagin O-piece service for 8 of genuine first quality English ware at only $20 ervice includes 8 dinner plates, 8 salad or dessert plates, 8 fruit or sauce dishes, 8 bread and butter plates 8 cups and 8 saucers plus vegetable bowl and serving platter These sets are all first quality each one individually packaged in a carton for easy wrapping or mailing come in early and PERFECT GIFT FOR MOTHER'S CHRISTMAS Mother will be thrilled to see such a lovely dinner service to serve her Christmas Be sure WIGGS 24 West Huron OPEN TONIGHT and EVERY NIGHT till 9 P. M. \ a Must for Sub-Teen If her mother has an iron hand | a young) happy compromise in beauty for the sub-teen. A young lady needs to be dressed like her friends, not ‘Nike a turn of the century picture book. But she should start early | learning the elements of taste— appropriateness, line, emphasis and subtlety. | The child psychologist's many- | aylimbled retrain — discipline through motivation—is the way to this end. It means that the | child wil] do most willingly what she really wants te do. A choice among a parent-selected Batch of dresses will give a girl a chance to exercise her own preference without allowing her to | go haywire in the slinky. clothes A present of some clear nail polish will encourage pretty nails and grown-up habits without pro- ducing the bloody-fingered look This is the essence of the method offer her what she wants in an | appropriate stvle and forestall |horrible experiments A new packaging of sub-teen | Jewelry and a record amply fills | these requirements. A little girt | Reeds no enticement to wear jewelry and will wear styles spe- cially made for her just as will- ingty. The record, which has a song about a little girl and her adven- tures with her jewelry, will give her added fun. —___ —— + Your Watch Sree $A150 © Regulated Eepenicenl Watch Bands Ladies’ —Men’s Special T 9 5 Georges-Newports lewelry Dept. \ Seaman 4 ae . ¥ vs ‘ ‘ A “ F ‘ : ‘os a ( 2 - ‘ ie ; a i t le re - pane Lee speciats! || Society Has Ss ess — || Yule-Party. ‘Sete “4.95 |/. Luxurious _- LANOLIN OIL . COLD WAVE Reg. 10.00 ‘7.50 Phone FE 2-0531 Appointments Not _ Alweys Necessary 50th Anniversary Is Observed - i : a single volume or a whole shelf-full will be attrac- ‘ tively gift wrapped at no extra charge, and should the Coming Events kins Temple 41 will meet at gladly exchange it for some other book of his choice. evening, 18% W. Huron 8t. Consult us about the gift that almost everyone prefers. | 12:30 A | exchange of gifts. 9 West Lawrence Se. | sasoeabene will meet Tuesday at 8 party. a = ¥ 2 | i aie fi 25 Fen recipient already own a book you sent him, we will Pythian Sisters of Panny E. — Circle of Capt. David L. Kim- ball Auxfliary 23 will meet Wednesday Old Prof’s Book Shop | 222! === tm the VFW Hall. 396 6 Gaginew &t., | for election of officers and Christmas This Could Be Your Fur Coat It is made from carefully selected pelts, matched for color, sheen and grain. Superb craftsmanship blended these pelts into a graceful creation of fashion. Would You Throw It Into the Washing Machine? Of course not! No more than you put all fabrics and colored garments into the washer at the same time on Monday moming. Many cleaners do just that with your garments when they try to give you short-time service. * Ogg Finer Cleaning selects the proper cleaning agents for the color and fabric of your garment. Like colors and mate- rials are cleaned together. This assures you of getting the proper, careful cleaning that item requires to get all the soil out, restore natural color and ‘lite’ to the fabric Ogg Finer Cleaning costs the same os ordinary methods. Be completely satisfied...call us today. Courteous PICK-UP G DE- LIVERY SERVICE — 3-DAY CLEANING AND PRESSING SERVICE—1-DAY Emergency Service. ]-Hour Service When Needed (At Plant Only) Ph. FE 4-9593 Oge CLENER Main Office and Plant $379 E. Pike St. COLD WAVE & OIL TREATMENT | || Teacher Depicts Sete: ALL FoR «| || Holy Land:Scene t e : ; F An. impartial survey shows that virtually everyone |) thur MacGregor, Ida St. Bernard prefers to give and receive books for Christmas pres- an a Gee Thera eircom a = ents. So, whatever the size of your gift list, let us Bernard was in charge of the guest help you make a wise choice. Your selection—whether || book. Od $ Mona Dumbrique of Loon Lake shores, James North of Oakland avenue and Mary Mount of Oliver street are making arrange- -|ments for a dance to be held Dec. 31 en- "|titled, New Year's Nocturne. The civic’ dance will be held at two places because of the huge crowd which is expected. High|9 until 1 a.m, | THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6; 1954 wompay || Educational Peatiac Press Phote school students and young adults through 20 years of age are invited to attend the dance to be held at Pontiac Senior High School or the dance ut the YMCA. Orches- tras will provide music for dancing frém In Pontiac Mr. and Mrs. William B.. Hart- man of Pitt road and Mr. and Mrs. James Corwin of West Iroquois road entertained 110 guests at two breakfasts held at the Hotel Wal- dron. The first breakfast was held Nov. 28 and the second was held . | Sunday. Ld * * Noyce W. Strait III was the St.|name chosen by Mr. and Mrs.| man of North Lake Noyce W. Strait Jr. of West Iro-' announce the birth Personal News of Interest Mr. and Mrs. Laura Ellen Nov. 30 in Pontiac General Hospital. Laura’s grandparents are Mrs. Irene Schieffler of North Lake An- gelus road and Mr. and Mrs. John (nee Phyllis Russell) of West Ypsi- lanti street are announcing the birth of a daughter, Nikki Sue, Nov. 20 at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. The Secret of Our Permanents Is the “Know How” of Quyur Operators MAGNIFICENT PERMANENTS $00 $750 $4400, : ts emia bail | | iets Aa Open Wednesday All Day — Friday ‘til 9 P. M. NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED IMMEDIATE SERVICE Andre Beauty CSalon and Floor Pontise Stale Phone FE 5-4490 Pett ar Se Pre- HT li ui E E 252558 i ‘tl Hl ; i oo E f ag season's ii ‘orward moving hats. tty Cornu % Riker Bide. FE 2-5221 ¥ ot As advertised in CHARM Gay New _ Dresses From Your Favorite Designer EW THIS SEASON. R & K's elongated torso gliding from a twist of satin tied around a square neckline to 2 bowed satin band at the hips. The skirt: flared, softly pleated,. buoyed over stiff net. The fa mering entique satin. bric: a sleek shim- Go straight °.. , Gift Boxed of Course! to her heart with *7 Give her one or several — choose from fine combed cottons, sparkling woven ginghams, silky pimos. They're all perfect- washing . . . have charming soft tailor-details! Wrap up your whole gift list now! Hundreds Just Arrived THERE'S A PRETTY ARMAS GIFT TAG ON EVERY BLOUSE! - e Ship'n Shore’ blouses aes aad 395 4 * 2 %¢ ? te. » Columnist J ust ~~ Bytes to Circulate © at Dances’ Seeks Formula for Leaving ~ Partners Without Offending By EMILY POST first letter is from a young man who tells me: “I am a junior in college and throughout the school “year dances are given by the various clubs and organiza- tions of the school. in the gym- nasium. “This is a coeducational school and the girls usually go to these dances alone, or in groups, and the | boys do the same. At the dance most of the boys find someone they like and stay with her through- out the evening. “4 like te circulate around and ever, this always creates a prob- lem as I never know how to break away from a girl after the dance is over without feeling as though I have left her strand- ed, and as a result I am often stuck with her for the evening. “Wil! you please tell me how this situation can be handled tactfully and without hurting the girl's Answer: This is a very difficult, ) problem to solve and the only thing § 3g i z 3 si ' A double row a Answer: If va is known socially a as professionally as Dr., then the envelope would have to be addressed to Mr. John and Dr. Mary Smith. iF “FP” line. coiffere— By MURIEL LAWRENCE Ted's grandmother says that the way her daughter is ‘‘spoijing” {him is causing friction in Ahe tamily. The other diy | tol. His mother spent 20 minutes The pert, round foce con go es- treme, but less tecelor, shorter | “sideburns” foreheed fringe @re softer for mony foces. Miss L. C. — Three separate lengths of hair—brushed forward over the forehead, a side length that has been compared with side- burns and down the back over the nape from scalp center to form the letter F—this is the newest coiffure. | in futile pleading with him to re- ‘turn it. Then his aunt teok action, She hit Ted, snatched, tie toy—and then attacked hee iter in-law as “weak and spineless.” Ted's grandmother writes, ‘My daughter is afraid of this boy. I don't understand it as I never had disobedience from my _ children They were good children Perhaps this daughter who was such a good, obedient child dares not oppose her son lest she appear “bad” in his eyes. Does this idea seem absurd? It isn't. Many of us fear to oppose children lest we lose “‘goodness in their eyes I suspect that it was a very painful experience that induced great fear of future’ isolation and abandonment. I have the idea that this fear is her fear of opposing | as a little girt under —e for ‘‘badness."’ Though we are not conscious of H, we are still working out the effects of childhood training that established us as “food” when We surrendered our wishes and condemend ts as “bad” when we defended them. So it might be profitable for Ted's mother to try to remember what actually went on in her mind Ted, and that she dares not take any firm actien toward him lest such fun! at Ted's every Monda Brother likes to dine at Ted's ‘couse the food’s mighty good understand boys and there, too! Sister likes to dine ot Ted’s ‘cause not only is the food to her liking, but the menus and coloring pictures are Jotn the families who dine Tuesday—Pamily Nights. Woodward et Squere Leke Rood Free Paved Parking Area they y and ' making Mother ‘Spoiled’ Child Is Trying to Make Mom Grow Up | it produce the old painful condem- ‘nation of her as a “bad"’ girl. This ts not an unusual problem for a parent who has been sub- te servere and unfeeling | | Jeeted for example, he | controls as a child. We all want | ran off with a cousin's water pis- our child to regard us as “good.” If we have been trained to be- lieve that compliance to others | wishes is ‘‘good’’ and any opposi ion to them is “‘bad,"' the com- phance is all we can give our child until we are ready to exam ine vurselves—and stop using him as the butt of our fears Ted is a good friend to mother—perhaps her first real one He does not like her compliance By his ‘spoiled’ behavior, he is refusing to encourage it. In his own way, her he is saving to ‘Mother. you are go longer a little girl to live on your parents definitions of ‘goodness’ and ‘had ness." For both our sakes, start your own, “Take this water pistol episode for example. Was it ‘goodness’ in you’ to subject me to hate today, because you dared not take a toy from me?" Ted, the good child, | to force his | her ghosts. ITurn Board Around A thick growth of shrubbery around the house might be a good is going mother to get rid of | project for your spring planting. | |If you are troubled with street noises, lack of privacy or papers that. blow on to your lawn, such shrubbery makes an attractive screen for ygur home Light Hurts Sleep Light on closed eyelids makes sleeping less restful. If your bed room is constructed so that the sun comes in on you before you're ready to get up, get a good dark shade for the window, move the bed or get a screen. his, . THE PONTIAC. PRESS, MON DAY, DECEMBER 6 6, 1954 She Returns By MARY MARGARET McBRIDE TAMPA, Fia.—lIt's too late to do anything about this time, but never again will I rush alj the way to sunny Florida just for 24 hours. Not that the 24 hours weren't fun. |Only there weren't enough of them. - I was down here to make a speech, but I also had to check a list of ideas for possible columns: I wanted a long, leisurely tele- phone talk with my brother who lives in Winter Park; I was look- | ing forward to sunbathing; taking a dip in warm. delicious Tampa Bay and, in between, reading a detective story. I figured I'd have How to Keep Home More Comfortable By HUBBARD COBB A good way to make your home more comfortable this winter than | it was last winter begins with the purchase of an outdoor ther- | mometer, | The next step involves installing | the thermometer at some point outdoors where it can be easily | read from indoors. the thermostat of your furnace or heater according to the out- door temperature. set at 72 degrees and the indoor air is at about 72 degrees. and the outside air is not too cool, you feel quite comfortable. But when the outdoor tempera- | ture takes a sudden drop, you be- | gin to feel cool in spite of the fact that the thermostat still says that | | it's keeping the place at 72 degrees. | And the thermostat is telling | the truth. Trouble is that as the - W onderful ne new o sleepers with plastic, non-skid soles are e¥tdoor air temperature drops, soft, pliable, long wearing and completely washable. need only wipe the soles with a cloth at bedtime to removes dirt. An elasticized ankle holds the boot firmly in place. | | the warm air in the house ts .-@rained away and pretty soon you begin to feei chilly, | If you have an outdoor ther- of snap-fasteners at the waist permits the ™ometer you can adust your ther- . sleeper to to grow with the child. _—s setting depending on she | Outdoor temperature. ———~ | During an average winter day sia te the outside temperature is around 30 or 40 degrees a thermo- | stat setting of 72 may be just | | right but when the sun sets the | outdoor temperature may drop to |10 or lower | When this happens. set your thermostat up a bit—about one de- gree for every ® degrees drop in outdoor temperature. You'll find that it will make a whale of a diflerence in your comfort. r NY | \ \ \\ (ib \ | \y <™~ ' Now’s Time By ELIZABETH HILLYER Tt isn't a bit too early right now | to start spreading Christmas | greenery all over the house—to make arrangements of evergreen for the mantle, for the hall. for a desk or a dining room server as well as for tables in the living room. entrance The woodsy fragrance of ever- green can be enjoved a long time if it's handled properly from the irst Plan the decorating so most of the branches can be put in wa- ter. = whl = meedies and C olf for Corel fal Dan the Pontiac Laundry Man Fluff Dry Just Send Your Entire Family Wash The flat pieces will be returned all ironed. The wearing apparel and bath towels will be fluff dried and folded. Very little left for you to do. _ Your Best Buy Is Fluff Dry ponTiac & CAREFUL DRY CLEANERS FE28/0O/ @= ca LAUNDRY ™ FE 28/01 Mission Unaccomplished The third step involves setting | Sit When you have your thermostat a ‘ se by eas a x aa —e ae ¢ ‘. : With Fragrant Greenery , Can’ t Cram F lorida Fun. tate. to New York’ time for, all this. and worrying E fie EZ: HT ii HH i i oe telephone began ringing. A newspaper woman wanted to ask me about women, A newspa* r man wanted to do ditte. They were* bringing photographers. A tion wanted me to talk about women, , I promised everything, then be- | gan to search frantically for my | list of column tips. It was gone— ke of all those wonderful ideas I could remember only one. A helpful friend had told me that ‘in the old days of Tampa a lot of \Tich people. built magnificent homes on a little cape which ex-, | tended’ out from the city. My in- formant said one rich woman who lived well out on the cape solved her transportation set by a nerves trolley car system Mey car wag a Fiaad’ up in- | | side with curtains at the win- dows and little vases with cut | flowers in them, and it was operated by a private, uniformed driver,” my friend explained. “Several times a week she'd ride into town. And when she wanted tq stop off and so some shopping, there were special spurs built from | the tracks so her trolley could | Move off on a siding and park.) “You check up on that,"’ finished | | my friend. “It will make a charm- | ing column and I've never seen it | printed anywhere.” I agreed that it was a ively | Story and so did all the Tampa) | people I asked about it. The only’ | difficulty was that nobody — hotel staff, newspaper editors, even an | Olde st Inhabitant I ran into — had |ever heard of the private trolley. | Could its home have been Tam- Pico instead of Tampa, I wonder? And if so, where is Tampico? Anyway, I got taken on a three-hour motor trip, made all the speeches and gave all the | interviews, proving successfully | that I'm not an authority on women or anything elise. I didn’t sunbathe, I didn't take a dip in Tampa Bay, I didn't read my detective story. I didn't even | get time to call my brother until I was in the hotel lobby on my way back to the airport. But I did bring home a superb pecan pie as you shall hear | NTT OW. ie _ to Fill Home small branches that won't show | know it would sell like crazy, and| | it would not be too expensive to| write and tell ey eet his advice. | they’re planning an identical prod- above the container tops, Then, with a sharp knife, scrape the bark from stems that will be: submerged, sc as much water as possible can be absorbed If branches are not freshly cut, cut them on a long diagonal. Even holly will have a longer and hap- pier life if it is treated this way. And jot down Christmas greenery on your gift list, for the family next door or for a thoughtful early gift for your Christmas hostess.. cs * * Mrs, C. G, “tT have pale gray bedroom furniture. Sometimes, the shade of gray seems tan- nish, sometimes it looks pink- ish and sometimes a bluish gray, depending on how the light hits it. What color should the, walls and a bedspread be? “T have a very dark = green spread now and this color’ just doesn't look good with the gray furniture."' Walls in medium bright colors, such as turquoise,- hyacinth blue, olive green, melon or rosy pink, | backgrouna gray bedroom furni- ture attractively. | The spread might be in the wall | color and white or gray, or a print in several colors which includes the wall color. | Mrs, G. H. “Can double fods be used on the new long high windows, one rod for a valance? | I think windows look better with a valance when the draperies are open, than with the rod showing.” “There's no reason at all why double rods can't be used. and | they can easily be made to fit ' llarge windows. They must be or- dered, of course. and in this case | with one rod rigged to draw, a oe ‘ A ot 24, Little Hours in Tampa This design, will mix as’ well as match, blending with | traditional flatware as well as making a matched setting. | The graceful serving piece is a complement to any table of holiday or festive modulating its use of light! and shadow in harmony with all around it, while lending | improvements of design and balance to the table service. r Twe can live as cheaply as one if you are talking about the par- ents of a —- SS Submit New By ANNE HEYWOOD baby ” Mrs. R. R. writes, | “but I have had no luck whatever | |in putting it on the market. I) manufacture. “‘But—first I sent the idea to four different manufacturers, de- scribed in detail and with a draw- ing. Each one of them returned it unopened, with a letter saying they don't take ideas from the outside, etc. “Next, IT made up a cing of the product and sent it to a manufacturer. New it has been returned, also unopened, with an- other form letter about ‘no ideas from the outside.’ Don't people want new ideas—don’t they want products that will really sell?” Most women who want to sell a product run up against this same problem. And yet you PETUNIA! The most delicious Tip Ive got Is-Spread your Cheese While your pie 1s hot / And if it's Blue Cheese | you're spreading on the top of that hot apple pie, it’s extra good. i | e —_ eu4late mood, | do you care if they say it? « her own local department store. | 32 Panatic Should Girl Wear Scarf Given by Ex? | | Former Beau Not ‘Likely to Get Upset Over Babushka I wonder if he thinks IP wearing it to bring back memo- ries, What you think?” buy Sauna Wher He's a doll! He's a “‘jama bag’’! Teaches children the neatness hab- it. See the slit in back — that’s where youngsters pop their P.J.'s, every morning. Use scraps for Humpty Dumpty “Dear. Miss Woodward: I went out with Fred for a long time, bag! Easy to make. Pat- tern 631 has transfer; directions, Send 25 cents in coins for this pattern—add 5 cents for each pat- tern for first-class mailing. Send to 124 Pontiac Press Needlecraft “Now there’ ss ino cl 1 want ask a boy and I'd like |Dept., New York 11, N.Y. Print very much to ask him. But 'm__ plainly pattern number, your name, afraid he'll refuse me then I'll | address and zone. embarrassed and all his be friends will talk about me. Please . tell me what I sheuld do.” If you keep up this state of panic you won't get around to ask- | Keeps Nut ing Fred at all. You'll wind up ask- | a SESS: dM particularly rea oist There's nothing to be so nervous | about. You know Fred very well. Mrs. Preseau Uses even though your regular dating Interesting Loaf for w m pered ie | calls you now and then, so yeur | Sandwich, Dessert relationship is still in existence. | : ahi ee amanforn lavor or two a t favors | res , he did for you. So gaily call him One of the intéresting breads for up and see what he says. You'll sale in the Baked Goods booth at te oe Nal mood, made by Mire c \§ . pa there’ Thomas Preseau of Drayton rel : . < ee Plains. You might like to have casa yee, Pion i hand fo A hae le there this delicious bread on c tor bis triends to say? And what YOUF holiday entertaining. vr 7° | Mrs. Preseau has a young son and a new house, both of which It's not life and death—it's only | keep her time well occupied. Read- {a party invitation. If Fred can't) ing is one of her favorite hobbies. accept it, dig up some boy |As a member of the Plymouth !Group of her church. she shares in the women's activities. APPLESAUCE NUT BREAD By Mrs. Thomas Preseau l cup applesauce 2 cups sifted flour will “Dear Miss Woodward: This boy asked me to a game. I like him very much, but before I knew him the way I do now. everyone talked as if he were ignorant, so I'm a little scared to go, Should Berpetareo ro I go and see for myself. or not ‘4 teaspoon soda powder go at all?" | - pond morvenine The impression you had of him 2 eggs. unbeaten before you knew him seems to| | SUP chopped pecans have changed already for the bet. ' Cream shortening and sugar, ter. Enough. at any rate, for 87d eggs, beat well. Sift the dry you to like him very much ingredients together and add al- ternately to the creamed mixture with the applesauce. Add the pecans. Bake in a greased loaf Go along and find out for your- self if your second impression isn't nearer the truth than those rumors that are worrying you. pan 1 hour in a 350 degree oven. Like all quick breads, this one will —Classified ads! To open a new slice better the second day. source of cash, Want Ad way! sell things the Serve as bread or as a dessert with whipped cream. Ideas to Department Store | |cannot blame the manufacturer.! one of the merchandising men in “T have a wonderful idea for a It might be that somebody on his staff has just worked out a similar idea which they are about to put into production. If they look at yours, and then your department store. explain to his secretary what you have in mind, and nine times out of ten get an appointment. Then you can show him your product and Either he'll know that it is not feasible, and explain to you why it is not; or he will like it and order it and handle the setup him- self; or he will give you ‘con- structive criticisms and suggest changes which might make it sal- able Many good sellers have been launched by a department store executive who saw a future for a product, and helped the woman to get it on the market. (Copyright, 1954) uct themselves, not a woman alive | would believe them. She would swear that her idea had been stolen, and probably try te sue. That's why manafac- turers don't look at outside ideas. There is one good source. how- ever, to which the woman with a new preduct can go. And that is If you have a product, and have made a sample, you can telephone te acCnoss 1 Franklin —-—Bonheur Men trom —— _ .. Empioy | Angers Musica! instrument 18 Uncooked 16 Showilest 18 Cattle thief 19 Prench city 20 Edgar Allan me oe *wvuae 22 Contend with 4 Enthusiastic ardor 26 Store 27 Mineral spring 30 Iterate U eigh 37 War god of Greece 39 Prank 0 Scandinavian -. territorial divisions pl dancoma fiuid 42 14s Seustosove rights rr) able 51 Mimeral, rock ‘$2 ss = ee : 53 who jeoremcneeed . Serceeethecnenementhieme inherits 3 Periodical 17 Occur 33 Make amends rty 4 Weapon 19 Shades 18 Glimpsed “4 erage 5 Meraidic band 233 40 s 85 Oceans @ Hunt 24 Ages 41 Roman r 56 Advantag Balaem and 3% Bon of Jaco 42 Knocks igi ned Weight ws India his —— end Leah 43 Small isiang ‘bows 8 Watered fabric ‘Bib; 44 Bewildered | 3 Hamilton's 9 Cain's brother 26 Begin “6 Bayer «4 slayer, Aaron ‘Biv: 7 Nooses 47 Woody piant 106 “Neue” 28 Orifice tr ekin 48 Burn 2 Brother of ington Square” %® Solar disk 50 Not t Jacob (Bib.) 11 Places M1 Cossack chief yevars { eA { THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDA ‘ 3 ~ : ai on wf Y, DECEMBER 6, 1954 + ‘FIFTEEe Members of First Methodist) | PERMANENT Church's WSCS are planning a = cial program for their WAVES | $ Fy) |) meeting to be held at the church. Music will ‘be’ provided by. the «++ Complete Boys Glee Club of Eastern Junior : High School. “The Message of the Angels” will be presented by Mrs. Paul Havens who will show slides’ of Bethlehem as it is today. Mrs. Havens took the pictures last) spring when she toured the Holy Land. An executive committee meeting at 11:15 will precede the} program. Permanent Wave ||Stick to Soapsuds Shop 12 Scheel St. If you have foam rubber up- FE 2-6039 |) holstery, don’t use ‘cleaning fluid It may deteriorate the rubber : Stick to soapsuds. _ are eauitel New Pillows Wash in the machine, are goad gh Riker Bidg. Lobby college rooms college 2 with little time. re : . Pentiac Press Pheto NIGHT SCHOO THE KISS THAT PAID OF F—Taken at the Wisner Stadium, just | the “big drum” in the school band, and also drum majors at times, L her a “Geed Lack see’ oan Ge gee. Chote gees cod Laan he tear ae sua." = son a * & won . 5 at SECRETARIAL—ACCOUNTING : Sea | Monday and Thursday }| What Religion Means to Our Family Sec oan epee ees neat Feeling of Unity, Security directs the Daily Vacation Bible fod iis io ae ok OP Sart uae” © sei St Oe aa Plan to Enter NOW VETERAN APPROVED feeling of unity and security. I like best."" the Hunting and fishing are the hob- Fe Gisintol 7 West Lawrence Street. Pentiac, Mich. - Call in person or return this ad for information Pere secre . 008” cannes Penge cgnge: cecee NAME ° “294 NO WOMEN ALLOWED 7 TO 10:00 P.M. Yes, gentlemen, you can wrap up the whole gift-choosing job in one evening ond hove fun et the some time. This is your night to do your Christmas shopping in leisure, un- . disturbed by anyone of the opposite sex. We'll glamour-wrap every purchase and moke it ready to put under her tree on Christmas morning. Part of Christmas is making others happy, and I think that Carolers play an important part in doing this. If you do not belong to |» singing group, ask some of your | friends in the neighborhood to go | caroling. Good voices are not im- A. In some singing groups people ‘ook ‘for wonderful voices, but any- | one can sing Christmas songs. It ond little evenings that begin Pertume 2.75, $5, $10, 18.50 Mood-maker for the big now . . . Golden Shadows, an impetuous fragrance of haunting beouty, a — magnificent blend of floral scents. Cologne 2.75, $5 Pius Ped. Tax Make Caroler’s Lantern You can use white tissue paper for more light, but green or red paper will carry out the Christmas colors. Perhaps you will want to have some of each color in your group. isk ; # 7 agfte Don’t Wait ‘Til it’s too late! MAIL TODAY Mary Loo CHRISTMAS CANDY *\ restful. It might make an excitable person more calm, but on the other hand, it might make a moody per- son depressed. Color a Weapon Colors are weapons in a home. Blue, for instance, is soothing and #5 x ais a2 . wes NOW OPEN— 605 Oakland Ave. | dust Nerth of Wiener Stadiem Plant and Store at 97 Ocklend Ave. We Give Holdens Red Stamps - Permanents es yf Haircutting and Styling ANNALIESE Beauty Shop 80% WN. Seginew PE 2-5600 Next te Bastey Market (Over Tasty Sekery) Open Evenings by Appointment “Thies of the family ee LANOLIN ENRICHED $4. $050 ‘by Oscar all way across, make the See y= FE 2-4959 regpe ay Eagle = gle! we 7 West Lawrence St. a Machine and Cold Wave , No Appointment Necessary _* Hair Cutting and Styling PARISIAN ©|— BEAUTY SHOP — ‘10 = aL 7th ANNUAL YEAR-END CARPET SALE! All Perfect Quality ROLL-ENDS and FULL ROLLS Tremendous Selections! UP TO 50%. SAVINGS! TERMS 15% DOWN! UP TO 24 MONTHS TO PAY! CARPET & FURNITURE CO. 932 W.HURON ST. PHONE FE.5-9211 PONTIAC MICHIGAN 1/2 BLOCK FROM TELEGRAPH : : : ° bd yer: | | | THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6.1956 : ) js - @n Top Quallity Living Roan Sarnitere sae - PRD THOMAS 7 _. . > $@ SUPERIOR IN CONSTRUCTION THAT IT IS GUARANTEED FOR 10 YEARS! . FURNITURE CO. con't sre thet ar tin nthe photoweps blow butt et you 569 South Sapindy Sevect show the su quality inner-constru ction throughout . . . quality features A Terrific Bargain at ~ This Reduced Price! HERE'S the REASON: The monufocturer of this fine furniture has selected Pontiac as the ‘TEST MARKET” for this special sales promo- : tiof®. . . and selected the Thomas Econ- | omy Furniture Company as the exclusive store to receive the monufacturer’s special “test promotion.“” This manu- fecturer’s special ‘TEST’ price made possible the bona fide $80.00 savings! Response to the manufacturers’ test was so overwhelming that we were forced to repeat this unbelievable offer. THOMAS YEARS OF SERVICE 4 361 South Saginaw Street FURNITURE CO. * A kl ee eee Lge ee a ee ere ° Se ED ep ae Se 2. like “ poe es our steel coil springs for instance, But the qoamy | is there, . that's why we can guarantee it for 10 years! 74-In. Davenport With Chair (Pictured Above) C H 0 | ( FE 0 i | 94-In. 2-Piece Sectional ( Pictured Below) 100% Du Pont NYLON FRIEZE Covers ~@ All Pieces Have Beau- tiful, Deep Fringe @ Wide Choice of Rich, New Colors The identical new wonder fabric you've read abort, heard about! It's 100% nylon frieze developed by Du Pont... so new, so revo- lutionary, so superior that it obsoletes all other covers. This amazing fabric positively will not fade, preserves its lovely color and new appearance indefinitely. Most important, it just can't wear out with ordinary usage, so you don't have to keep the children off. And, it's 100% mothproof, too! So why accept any other cover in this day and age of mirécles? + ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS en MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, , 1954 * Floats, Bands, Santa Claus * Sais 15 * * wie LEBARON SCHOOL FLOAT—Rudolph the red-nosed reindeer was LeBaron School’s subject for their Christmas Parade float. seven floats were featured in the parade watched by an estimated | of the page. LINCOLN SCHOOL ENTRY—The old woman who lived-in a shoe and her many | Christmas Parade. The parade, an annual event, was sponsored by the Pontiac Retail | children are depicted here by Lincoln Junior High School students during Saturday's | Merchant's Assn. / Ouster Move HIGH STEPPERS—Six area high school bands presented music | street is the Waterford Township High School Band. Others included for the parade Saturday. Shown above as they march down Saginaw | were Pontiac, Walled Lake, Avondale, Oxford, and Lake Orion. U.S. Determined to Help Stop- Disorders in Viet Nam SAIGON, Viet Nam (—Events| Vietnamese in an area west of; national army the government is, The recent removal of the rebel- have strengthened U. S. determin- | Saigon. lious chief of staff Gen. Nguyen ation to help form a small but; 4. The Hoa Hao religious arm of Van Hinh, has cleared the way efficient national army which can’ 15.000 which holds sway = for the Premier to exert his influ ence not only on the army but*in the country. Diem is listening to | the army's problems, calling on it to help in the work of reconstruc- tion and promising to take steps ; .| to alleviate economic and political these Of the Binh Raa smaller tha | = © paper, main Of these diverse groups the Cao | | of quality rather than quantity. eight-year Indochina war elements are implanted in the One of his biggest “jobs will be country, each a law unto itself: : ; * shay dedlpce vmglly he} district and county or- D| ists into positions of authority cooperation with the army, PON TIAC, MI MICHIGAN Thirty- | 20,900 persons. Part of the crowd is shown in the photo at the top __ SEVENTEEN Feature Yule Parade - * * + * io ee ' of Columbus depiction of a man kneeling “Santa's Workshop” and “Olid Woman Who Lives in a Shoe” by the Knights | Wever and Lincoln Junior High School \ CHURCH THEME—Depicting the real meaning of Christmas was Grace Lutheran Church's float At Least 2 Indictments Expected in Phenix City Murder PHENIX CITY, Ala., (INS)—The | Russell County grand jury, may showing an angel reading a Bible quotation. least two indictments, This would able to that Birmingham jury accusing finger of an avenging | “point today to the suspected killer, | mean investigators believe at least | from other sources? The jury sub- two persons, and probably more, | sequently returned indictments justice, throug through the ci the charge of a 7 of anti-crime crusader | — | were involved, and that Patterson | charging widespread fraud in the ‘Yoshida Fighting . . met his death as a result of a con- | election. “a pulled the gun trigger | spiracy. | Or, was there more than an which blasted two slags into the | The ing that they carrieqd %ttempt to steal an electign—as mouth of the man who dared -tell ae Loe ‘ie: Bireainats . ; Patterson te an undertaker's irmingham grand jury | vice and racket-saturatec - Phenix gasker tin enn to tans tevtitied charged—behind the action of the City it would have to clean up!’ bate = greed fery in Birmi g- | ‘tigger-man who apparently lay ham Which was checking into | in wait for Patterson to leave his charges of fraud in the May | office, knowing he must walk into Democratic primary. io alley to get his car? Did Patterson, who had probed Maj. Gen. Walter Hanna, com- the rackets privately for a long| mander of Alabama National time, have information not avail-| Guard treops which occupied Rotite of Toll Road | Sasamee ann seme Soe, Up for Study Soon crime brought $160 million a year inte underworld coffers. The Phenix City underworld was disclosed to have been somewhat jury the pest week. Detertatintitn of the er | unique, however. If there was one secretary general of his Liberal| Patterson was shot to death we for Michigan's first toll highway, | eames Preset loess party, Hayato Ikeda, threatened night of June 18. He toppled dead | to run somewhere east of Pontiac, | pation of the gambling dens, os anew to dissolve the Diet if his in an alley beside the building | is still six to eight weeks off, ac-| opponents win. That would force where his law office was located cording to Oakland County Road | Japan into a new general election, in Phenix City. | Commission Engineer - Manager something hia right wing opponents! The specially impanelied grand | Leon V. Belknap. national. The Phenix under- ore wring fe fry 10 itorore ter | TS Matern furs Apne, werd has Den shown thre had * 2 8 today to e its eo “| morbid fear of entanglement The no-confidence ‘motion was! the last hours of Albert Pat. ‘Y attended Friday by Belknap in) | federal law enforcement of filed jointly in the Diet’s lower terson. | Detroit. ficers. H th The 115-mile superhighway from ee ee | wins i snl behind the closed! Rockwood (south of Trenton)” toh! How high did the tentacles of crime reach in Phenix City, and Woodward avenue between Bir-| the state of Alabama? From mingham and Pontiac to continue | charges already filed, the evidence east of Pontiac and Flint. already uncovered election fraud “A survey which will the | is said to have touched, directly eS 8. ae. on < hae, eee 4% Japanese Leader Says) He'll Call New Election If Rebuked by Diet TOKYO W—Prime Minister Shi- geru Yoshida, fighting back in the face of a no-confidence motion | filed against him in the Diet, said tonight he will take his case to the people if the move succeeds. The vote is expected late tonight. Yoshida, speaking through the Those questions, and many oth jers may have been answered by the stream of 80 witnesses, guided | by acting Attorney General Ber nard Sykes, who have appeared | brothels, it was local rather than peggy The motion. accuses ia iis, viene She Bios Yoshida’s 6year-old regime of se-| testified, and from hints dropped irresponsibility, | by investigators during the long .| probe, speculation was rife that prosecutors were asking for at OO a ee ee a ee co a : t A “MUST” on Your List! Call fer Pick-Up Service Have Holiday Clothes Ready for the Occasions! Ples MONITE MOTH PROTECTION FATHER & SON CLEANERS FE 2.6424 Plant and Office, 941 jeslyn Ave. j | | } | | | i — a hos , # “\ By Charles Dickens ae SANTA “ MARS KING By Lucrece Hudgins Beale SYNOPSIS: A real live elf steps out of Handsome, the stone Tom stumbled through the tun-| big field spotted with haystacks. nel. The crashing noise and the dark and the aloneness terrified him. He expected to find himself gobbled up by witches at every turn. Instead, the tunnel suddenly ended. Tom found himself out-| doors. There, on the bank of a purple river, stood Handsome, the elf, calmly holding the bow of a funny little orange boat. “Oh my!" breathed Tom. But be- fore he could ask for more details of the dance Handsome was asleep. And before Tom could help himself he had done the same. The little boat drifted on and on. | big field. : | Tom. “The Witches’ Field.” The purple water turned to yellow,; He was so disappointed. 4 then to green and then to red. The | “Let's go closer,” said Mand boat moved to the shore and/ : “and look again.” stopped with a jolt on the edge of a | The two of them got out of tie | beat and walked across the field. “Here we are,” he said, nudging | ween rid Seuss the first = | started to sway from side to side. Tom jumped up. He gazed The elf awoke. Tom fell back astonished. ‘‘Why, around. All he.could see was mi ant 0 he k at all!” “I don't see any witches!” “Of course I'm not a haystack,” “Look again. Look three times Said the haystack. ‘I'm a witch.” and then tel] me what you see’ Sure enough it was a little old So Tom looked once, twice, three | lady covered with straw! Tom times and still he could see nothing | looked around and saw that all the except the fields and haystacks.'other haystacks were stirring and Coloring suggestions: Elf grey with red collar. Boy’ Jeans blue, Haystacks yellow. Faces fiesh colored. Spe: . t Ps : ~ ee $ 7 » See "I ee Ae % BRAND il La NEW—IN ORIGINAL CARTONS WESTINGHOUSE 21-INCH TV NO MONEY DOWN! “Why do you want to " Granny said sweetly. “I wanted to ask him about fly- ing saucers," said Tom. Now Granny's expression together and shook their skinny fists. Granny turned on Tom and cried, “What do you know about flying | saucers?" | thing that had upset the farmer in his town, how it was called a flying saucer although no one knew what on Granny's eyes and rolled down the deep lines of her face. Tom felt sorry for her. But he was excited, too |. “Could you show me a flying, | saucer?"’ “Fly with me tonight,” said Granny. “I'll show you.” _THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1954 ‘CD Evacuation Plan DENVER w—Civil ‘defense ol- farm belt were satisfied today that their area could provide food and shelter for 300,000 Denver residents for 30 days in case an enemy air attack smashed the city. They based their: appraisal on yesterday's mock evacuation of Denver by hundreds of volunteers Successful in Denver | ficials in the northern Colorado | QUICK RELIEF by its soothing effect on the throat her telephone, missing. ~ AS HEAD OF THE FAMILY | LIKE WHAT 1 SEEIN AN eo WILLS’ 1 LUE THAT ORIGINAL LOW COST / LIME THAT MORE POWER PER POUND OF CAR — GIVES FAST EXTRA PICK-UP WHEN YOU NEED [T YES: LOOK AT THE | 695 Auburn Ave. AERO WILLYS BEFORE YOU BUY ANY CAR Wy Kaiser-Willys Sales Division, WILLYS MOTORS, INC., Toledo 1, Ohie Willys Sales & Service Pontiec, Mich. Masters K-W Sales-Service 7675 Highlend Rd. Pontiec, Mich. STILL IN Originally Priced at 1953 Model UM 1734A > FACTORY CRATES 83-CHANNEL TUNER NO MORE WHEN THESE ARE GONE! ORIGINAL 979° » UPEN TONIGHT a 5 Hours Only---"til 9 P. M. BIG-PICTURE TV New Raytheon $ Table Model TV i) OPEN EVERY NITE The House of Discounts 125 W. HURON ST. purwry or rege parxinc ‘Where Wrigley’s Used to Be’ mrnry or rate Panxinc Fa ee a ae Ms Rag = . 7 # —— my asain re a Ss alt eaenoanelal on Pate Rema race oR ik a Ca saga? “y a Ft eS ee ce x ae ; ast eo NO MONEY DOWN! Hurry ! "TIL CHRISTMAS ! = - PH. FE 4-0581 . F , ge ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, BECEMBER 6, 1954- NOTICE of TAXES CITY of PONTIAC City of Pontiac, 1954, County Taxes, will be due and payable at the office of the City Treasurer, December 19, 1954, through casos 1955; without fees. made by mei must be postmarked not later than ie 1955, to avoid penalty. "alt AN County. Taxes unpaid as of January 20,- 1955, will be through ‘to four oot per cont collection fees, payable g = wae ge All unpaid aed Chis thal Thsecl hn lll Cry Tresmwer's office through February 28, 1955, with accrued i= cae NINETEEN — . Show Business ot Victor Borge Lett Europe. in Hurry, Got Start Here on Crosby Program ' By EDDIE CANTOR The Victor Borge success story is an old one by now. But for those of you who eame in late, let me tell you about this great Danish pianist comic who left Denmark in a hurry when the country was invaded. t Victor was starring in a revue, but thought he'd better get out quickly because the Ger- mans were well aware of the months he'd been VALUE DAYS) At the LION STORE” Silat MNS: thy ld a arn egal ribbing their demands that little Denmark M. M. cease menacing the Reich. Ashbaugh, City Treasurer . 52 East Pike Street” . Pontiac, Michigan 49 Mt. Clemens St. ‘SIGNAL THAT TURN =e H. R. Nicholie gem Call “BUD” AGENCY H. R. Nicholie—H. Delos ‘Bud’ Nicholie pictures. In the early days, ordering a meal was-one of his biggest problems. A fellow musician taught him to say, “apple pie and coffee.” That is what he asked for in restaurants day in and day out. He had so much pie and so much coffee he actually splashed when he walked. that would vary his diet, he was given these | two—“chicken sandwich”—and he memorized | them. He was so happy with the thought of | getting something new that he rushed to a | restaurant and ordered “chicken sandwich.” | the waitress asked, “Do you want it on rye or white?” Borge thought a moment and said, Opposite Post Office Ph. FE 2-2326 When he begged someone for other words | ment, he'll run into a heckler—someone who is out to have a good time at the performer's expense. One night at the “Coconut Grove” in | | Los Angeles he squeiched one individual with this line: “Mister, I have to be here—but | | you?” Today Vieter Mutips ti calling on tap of the shew business world. Doing a one-man show, he has ne company te worry about, ne temperamental leading lady to whom he must cater, ne costumes, no —just ‘+ the piano to keep in tune. He a home in Connecticut, a wife and children whom he adores, and neighbors whe are happy to point out, “Victor Borge lives in that house.” Whén he lived near Hollywood, he had a : ranch of 18 acres in the San Fernando Valley, but spent little time in the film capital itself. “Hollywood is a funny place,” Victor once re- marked. “There the brides throw away the grooms and keep the bouquets.” | “Apple pie and coffee.” (Copyright 1954) All wool boucles,. fleeces, velours, open > NYLONS alpacas, chinchillas. EVERY DAY - » S( @) U N TONITE S estgug | ‘Regular to $55 - FRI, — SAT. © = @ 15 denier bd @ dork seams Because we have opened this store with the idea of a REAL HONEST-T O-GOODNESS DISCOUNT STORE on everything. We! | lespeople -— so please serve yourself as much as possible — our displays are poor but this, * SAVE YOU PLENTY. Our policy will be Lesa a annin ee above cost with a fast turnover. rt OUR PRICES. will be short of sa ‘ ’ MATTRESS PRICES Mg DISCOUNT HOUSE J A i ee eR RRR in eR RR a RR ET OES IRS ARSENE aR RR © SURPLUS | FURNITURE— APPLIANCES 1S E. PIKE ST., JUST OFF SAGINAW © plus low rent will fon ohn | = rings, pins, bracelets. rere ey " x SRVOHEey Shs tae Ce ak 7 ast % ae 3 CS es 4 c z _ length. | Boxer style, plain, pastels or prints in a gift pack- | 7 Entire Stock Ladies’ Coats | " QUASHED for this Event! | fy % ne ie . e 4 5 id - .o ‘ F irst Quality Reg. $1.00 Value TT 3 Par $2.25 lite tient tia tie dient aaa an ane ene e aq") sim Men's Boxed a - | Fancy cotton patterns or se | rayon anklet or regular Se | Perfect for bowling or casual wear. Z Solids, two-tones, and checks. Straight © and half sizes. a PLP LPDAL LPL GOL oe ? u H.R. Nicholie P Call“BUD” AGENCY H. R. Nicholie—H. Delos ‘Bud’ Nicholie Opposite Post Office Ph. FE 2-2326 Show Business Victor Bosge Lett By EDDIE CANTOR by now, But for those of you who eame in late, let me tell youxabout this great Danish pianist comic who left Denmark in a hurry when the country was invaded. Victor was starring in a revue, but thought he'd better get out quickly because the Ger- |mans were well aware of the months he'd been ribbing their demands that little Denmark pictures. ; In the early days, ordering a meal was one of his biggest problems. A fellow musician taught him to say, “apple pie and coffee.” That is what he asked for in restaurants day in and day out. He had so much pie and so much coffee he actually splashed when he walked. When he begged someone for other words | that would vary his diet, he was given these | two—“chicken sandwich”"—and he memorized ] them. He was so happy with the thought of | getting something new that he rushed to a |restaurant and ordered “chicken sandwich.” | the waitress asked, “Do you want it on rye or white?” Borge thought a moment and said, Got Start Here on Crosby Program The Victor Borge success story is an old one| Europe in H urry, He is now in his second Once in a while during a nightclub engage- ment, he'll run into a heckler—someone who is out to have a good time at the performer's expense. One night at the “Coconut Grove” in Los Angeles he squelched one individual with this line: “Mister, I have to be here—but! © you—?” ¥ Teday Victor Borge is setting on top of the shew business world. Doing a one-man show, he has ne company te worry about, ne temperamental leading lady te whom he must cater, ne costumes, no scenery—just the piano to keep in tune. He has a home in Connecticut, a wife and children whom he adores, and neighbors whe are happy to point out, ee See eee Le ee house.” When he lived near Hollywood, he had ala. ranch of 18 acres in the San Fernando Valley, but spent little time in the film capital itself. “Hollywood is a funny place,” Victor once re- x marked, “There the brides throw away the 4 grooms and keep the bouquets.” EVERY DAY [/D) be ae UNT ZONE MATTRESS PRICES Because we have opened this store with the idea of a REAL HONEST-TO-GOODNESS DISCOUNT STORE on everything. We will be short of salespeople — so please serve yourself as much as possible — our displays are poor but this, plus low rent will SAVE YOU PLENTY. Our policy will be taal a — t pemsontage above cost with a fast turnover. tee OUR PRICES. a oy! oe As errr) fe § DISCOUNT HOUSE I po ee sae ee a / MERCHANDISE SURPLUS FURNITURE— APPLIANCES JUST OFF SAGINAW E. PIKE ST., alll F ae THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY,-DECEMRER 6, 1954 : Pores on _- NINETEEN . VALUE BAYS At the LION STORE | Entire Stock Ladies’ Coats } SLASHED for this Event! § * Ge Mi First Quality All. wool ‘toucles, fleeces, velours, PO OL LAA al g NYLONS | | SQUASH ctr BABY LIMAS cr, RED RASPBERRIES HYGRADE’S Honey Brand 70ST JDOLLAR / SA LE! FRESH FROZEN “FRESH FROZEN FRESH FROZEN A Oz. or $100 for spre ading - and cooking! ALLSWEET Margarine ® Nutritious @Vitamin Rich Fresh Lake Erie YELLOW PIOKEREL - amp _ flavoring DELICIOUS Lean, Young, Tender STEAKS 39. mot AQe \ ee. ¥ ios LF; f ul | Autopsy Ordered in Death of Redskins’ WASHINGTON ® — Authorities ordered an autopsy today in the death Sunday night of Dave Sparks, Washington Redskins tac- kle who collapsed about two hours after playing a National Football League game, > * . ; —Sparks, 26-year-old former Uni- Vetsity of South Carolina star, died Sparrow Paces Titan Victory Over Spartans Ex-Chief Turns in 30 Points as UD Springs 84-78 Upset on MSC Guy Sparrow of Pontiac paced the University of Detroit basket- ball team to an upset 84-78 victory over Michigan State College in - Jenison Fieldhouse Saturday night. tied 74-74 after regulation. Detroit quette last week. It gave UD coach Bob Calihan a win over his former teammate and roommate at Great Lakes Navy Training Station, Ford- dy Anderson of MSC. New Yorker Lands Record Ontario Bass TORONTO, Ont. @ — A visitor to Ontario landed the largest small-mouth bass ever taken in the province. Engmar Anderson of North Tonowanda, N.Y., pulled out the fish from Birch Bark Lake at 10 pounds, | eight ounces caught in Alabama | in 1950. Connecticut Dog Wins National Spaniel Test CARBONDALE, Ill. ®—The new national English Springer Spaniel trials champion is yian Bruce of Greenfair, an English- born 2%-year-old, the youngest champion in the trial's 8-year his- tory. Owned by Mr. and Mrs. .Joseph C. Quirk of Greenwich, Conn., the winner also is an international field trial champion, a title it earned | by winnig the required number | of recognized trials in both the | United States and England. Bob Is No Lemon Bob Lemon of the Indians had 23 wins in the 1954 season and 10 | of them were over first division | clubs. | Pro Gridder , after dining friend, Lt. Domenick Colella’ of tLe . Zannoth, | Huntington Woods, is the new sec- retary. Other board members are Fred C. Handren and Fred Falberg of | Bi , Gearge Greig of De- | troit and Ferd Broock of Bloom- | field Hills. | Since the club was reorganized last January it has grown to more than 200 members who have re- furnished and rennovated the club- house, rebuilt the swimming pool and kitchen and installed a chil- dren's playground. | With the golfing season over | work is expected to begin soon on a toboggan slide and a lighted skating rink. Football Results WEEKEND COLLEGE GAMES SUNDAY Refrigerator Bow] at Evansville, Ind. Delaware 19, Kent State 7. TURDA Bouth Citadel 6. North Car. Col. 19, Tennessee State 6, ! 1. Southern (La.) 14. Xavier (New Or- leans) 13. Florida State 13. Tampa 0 Piorida A & M 67. Maryland State 19 Potato Bowl, Bakersfield, Calif Compton 7. Boise 6 MAJOR COLLEGE 8CORES SUNDAYS RESULTS LaSalle 85, Loyola (New Orleans) 71 St. Bonaventure 104, Ithaca 10. SATURDAY'S RESULTS Notre Dame 12, Wisconsin 61 lilinois 17, Missouri 4 Alabama 45. Cincinnati 06, Bradley 76. | Ohio State 98. Butler 80 iso 66 Bowling Green West. Ontario 87, lowa 89. (Chicago) 78. Marquette 113, Rt: Penn 69, a Penn State 81, Dickinson 63 Seton Hall 97, Albright 75 West Virginia 68, Carnegie Tech 60. Dartmouth 73. Middlebury 56 Holy Cross 71. Tufts 40 Kentucky 74. Louisiana State 58 Tennessee 82, Wash. & Lee Maryland 60. Georgetown 43 North Carolina 98, Clemson 66 North Carolina St. 70, Tempie 65 Baylor 80, Oklahoma 64 Oklahoma A & M 176, Texas 63 State 3, Sante Clara Stanford. 92, “s 71. Colorado 68, Brigham Young 66. | Ww 1 58. California €4, Oregon ¢ $ - + — Big 10 Handed Four Losses Saturday Iowa, Indiana, Badgers Play Tonight CHICAGO @®—Iowa, Indiana and Wisconsin tonight will be out to! improve on a 11-4 record posted | by Big 10 teams against nen-con-| ference foes in the early stages of the present basketball season. All four losses were suffered Sat- urday night, one of them a stun- ning 84-78 upset handed Michigan State by Detroit. lowa, Tilinois and Ohio State are undefeated after playing two games, and Indiana, Michigan Purdue split a pair of games in the East, defeating Rutgers and | losing to Penn, 69-68. Wisconsin. was dumped by Notre Dame, 72-61, in its opener as was , Minnesota, 94-93, in an overtime against DePaul. Wisconsin meets Western Michigan tonight. Iowa, No, 1 contender in the to make it three straight against Nebraska. The balanced Hawk- Wally Choice leading the way, Choice pumped in 29 points and Don Schlundt, playing about half the game, contributed. 20. Hoosiers play Missouri tonight. . Ohio State's Robin Freeman con- tinued his record-making pace with 38 points ted 42 points in Ohio State's open- ing 98-87 triumph over Pitt. } hy m ge ae a ee Fe ee ee ee & f 4 Fr i ee ee a ee ee Oe \ vay ; ‘ ' F y, =e F a ay AY : THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY,‘DECEMBER 6, 195° 1 TWENTY-ONE.__ a a a , . , az onan oe = ¥ r . , v. * €& 4 ° a | oe ® 8s «s8 8 ; ie | | Ark F He. i | As . If Ivisiond [ Own Arkansas fans Heap ; a TES: | A rs U Wyatt 4 A f a a fl |missed a field goal try in the Burk. hit Walston on another Eagles’ 30 to end Dorne Dibble and | . _ Statistics: Onors pol ; Y be Fscoreless opening quarter Line- | scoring toss—this one good for 75| interference was called on Phila- = FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (®—Less | sas, Wyatt won 3 games and -lost backer Wayne Robinson inter-| yards—on the 3rd play of the next | %!Phia's Harry Dowda 188 Mt | than two years ago Bowden Wyatt dienes ts Geotaeee eadiine wants al : , : ~ | arrived at the University 3 cepted a Bobby Layne pass on De- wearer. Walsten's kick wns. wide Mec gy ed ota way dan ee 42 | Kansas from Wyoming, driving a frora Arkansas in 1954, q quarterback Adrian Walker's 2nd ,| down . | truck. * * @ Set. ces kn he Ge ee tre puaharogenrlig here ter kniled eae eee ats dicwe the Razorback football| The young Porkers — overloaded the season to end Pete Pihos in| the margin to 134. regan heey ‘1 1 | coach ‘and his wife and daughter | with sophomores — surprised ev- the end zone. Walston converted. ee ak PR. * Sion ae ce te eryone. ra * ¢ «@ ; Lions’ touchdown came Philadelphia "3 %13|tomobile (Cadillac), a from} Success at Arkansas marked Walker booted a 23-yard field) three minutes 20 seconds to play.|off back 29 yards in $ Su | the people of Arkansas in recogni-| second time in Wyatt's short ca- goal late in the period after the; Tom Dublinski, who replaced| but Cari Karilivacz intercepted hy tion of Wyatt’s astonishing success | reer that he has built a winner Gone ce rn tek ea ere enmumnar ite £0) Dat pans op the Deteel aah Sette, | OME the Remetacte, out of a long-time loser. down on the Syard stripe. . quarter, rifled a pass from threat, Under tt, the Wyoming Cow- - i: That's not all that's in store for| pays won thelr first Sone. cow : the young. Cotton Bow! - bound) ference crown in history. Wyatt's ° coach. There's the matter of $20,-| wyoming teams won 39, lost 7 and “ Arkansas people in a whirlwind two-week Bowden Wyatt Appreci- ' : we coaches! wus wm ten] |UBSCAY S Pre By JOE MOSHEL sell A ely ce erally yen y p SOUTH BEND, Ind. @ — Coach voted a jay increase from $12, Terry Brennan is proud of his to $15,000 yearly by the universi- . 2 Notre Dame, football team and ty Board of Trustees, [ IX of the 1954 season. Also, the trustees hope to give Wyatt and his staff an extra ; But the 26-year-old successor to month's pay this year. That will U Frank Leahy already worried ak Sa kana toes SS é |soamn the trish whipped, Mabertay their Jan. 1 Cotton Bow! date with| Birmingham, Acorn Tilt — Georgia Tech in Dallas. 23 Games Set rey is: tanusaes-aiaers, ‘accel Among ta chather i's tape tor the ottee-) fae “Southern Methodist had a lot supported university to award an of fine looking juniors out there,’ extra month's salary. Six more Oakland County high rated b apy ps ples ‘In 1953, his first year at Arkan- | school pong oY age Pilg gree y some 2; 2 their seasons as | night at the airport. : part of a 23-game schedule in the cee Yawkey Hints |aea “We'll lose 8 of our starting 11 . Birmingham underway by. ct ie he ee Williams May catertuising Repel Gah, which — practically Pontiac last Friday, and line. So it's simple arithmetic that Be Back to Sox peck rede Bs =a Methodist will have the parton ~ “A 4. cies? ” right out and say so, but Boston| heme te Hartland and Ortonville Lpnhodeenitred gf Red Sox owner Tom Yawkey has| meets Goodrich. said Brennan looking back at No- ! tre Dame’s 91 record. The lone eit lodge — Lede ego wn Shrine opens at Troy, which got loss was a 27-14 decision at the ogee Diy magnate de back | going Friday with a 4932 victory hands of Purdue. . eee eed tae oun. Never Lake Gxten. “Things looked dark after that season that he wouldn't be back Clarkston and Waterford, both Purdue game but the boys dug in next year. At the moment he is| beaten in their first games, hook’ and got better to win eight enroute to Peru for some deep| UP on the Waterford court, while straight. By last Saturday the “| sea fishing. Walled Lake seeks its 2 nd straight team has improved 100 per cent Yawkey, here for the baseball | Win against Redford Onion, Mil- since the Purdue loss,” he said. megtings, said in reply to a query: | ford, which rolled up 78 points in what he thought Notre Daas “T'm leaving Ted alone for a| its opener, goes to Fenton. ; while. Let him get his fill of fish-| Oxford and Rochester, victorious would do if it had played Purdue ing and other business this winter | in opening games, go on the road at the end of the season. “Let's say and then see what happens in the | for tough ball games at Imlay City oe Say we payed Rens tay ware spring.” and Utica, respectively. Another ee Turning to Sox General Mana-| interesting match pairs South Lake "Brennan odmitted there wes 8 _|ger, Joe Cronin, Yawkey added: | of the Bi-County and Southfield of 2S 2S a “Contracts go out about the first | the Inter-Lakes. Onn a ce te ee _jof the year, don’t they Joe, and| All Tuesday games are non chia & cones 0 wniching ie | Ted's still on our list, isn't he?” | jeague affairs. Conference activ« Cronin nodded that a contract | jty will begin Friday. Keego will be sent to Williams in Miami.| Harbor, Avondale. and Clawson . delay their season openings until I 10 Sports Compton Captures |"; Tuesday's schedule: Officials Hold Potato Bowl Title | ges seas : 0 at yee yh | BAKERSFIELD, Calif. & — Vie-| San 'st Birmingham: " Gootrioh as ° torious in two previous appear- - gS oe - ox to Compton Calif., College 4 Perndale; Detroit : ; , | AP Wirephote |Tartars in the seventh annual Vecesr at, Mil gion; Lapeer” at Find | Det it | Site f ro aQu PLAY k Lew C penter of the |E re : - Back Bob H s the leg Shrine Potato Bow! football AMC | Clement at Warren: Lake Shere “ | row 86% °F | Detroit Lions made only a short gain on this play | tackle. No 66 is Eagles guard Ed Sharkey. Game | Saturday night. Marper-Weods; Lokeview ot Preser. | Winter Confab to Start | in 4th period as he tangled with two Philadelphia | ended in 13-13 tie. The Idaho team m scored in the ; Cli | | second quarter, wi foack ° ° ° 4 . . : * e ‘ Z pernorr «uP)—nig Ten wcuty Gavie Paces Detroit |DeMarco, Miceli to Attract |»»,:«iet wc ™ °°" cast, MY sare representatives and a’ direc- & , . ning early in the fourth i tors will hold their annual three- T | d Sel] C ad B potnts An immediate problem is how day winter meeting in Detroit fo ourney § Lea S out rowad 1n oston period. — Jim atau far to step out in going into stride, | Starting Wednesday. BATTLE CREEK w — Hank| By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS gate at the Boston Garden. But|pronene’ ‘oe plingerda later he| tmeectant. Irene me is ail . th portant. The faculty representatives and | Gavie led his. Detroit E & B beer oat ae Ge Geen featuring local ‘nad antioeel fone |Smmd @ hele ond rammed across | soctwork and timing. Yet is athletic directors are expected to (team to first place in the handi- | 4nd yll make turnst i" ; ional from the 13. Quarterback Roger j iL ? — no pattern to follow. act upon a program regulating cap and actual team events and | Whirr. — a Sam es Saoat erorditace a us wang | Daniels kicked the conversion. ald to athletes and a suggested ( went on to take top honors in the | Verman offers proof round 13, | football television plan fer 1955. | handicap and-actual all events this | Saturday night with an outstanding | a gate of $70,000. ; weekend in the Central States | fight card topped by a 10-rounder| Underneath the top bout, Silver- e esu ts huddle of footnall coaches sad coms Bowling Tournament. : ——e man bes moetehed MICHIGAN COLLEGE Games ; hard-hitting welterweight Tommy Collins, the idol of nussoner er, and Joe Miceli of New | nos aie ee h. State 78 (OT). Kenneth L. Wilson to| E & B's 3146 was top for the jolting ia Gad Leba Paaes 44 Gee 101, Pittevurgh 11 discuss the training and supervision | actual and held for the handicap. York. lyn; lightweights Georgie Araujo, —_ Ag - of officials and sessions of the | And Gavie, with 2002, stood alone * ¢ «@ former Ne. 1 lightweight contender pram “4 (OT) television and eligibility commit- | im both all events. That match by itself would have | from Providence, and Jackie Blair,| Pesuct whch “he tate, 8. on, tees. The Detroit team accounted for Sil { a profitable 'of Dallas; and sailor Ed Kalamazoo 79, North Central 72 Both faculty representatives and | 10 of 19 changes that took place assured — = ne _ Olympic | heavyweight Pear ann 87. West. Michigan athletic directors will meet jointly | thi® weekend in the tournament. | ~~~ and Boston's Willie James in a ROC enppentd ae Eray “ me weet } lj R Its 12-rounder lor the New England NPL. STANDINGS | ball, track, golf and tennis coaches It’ Ti O t! Ww ing esu title. EASTERN eyenence us meet Friday to prepare 1955 sched- | s ime ul: DRAYTON KINGS, QUEENS * * -« Ch veland $38 om mm atl NCAA program for next year Somebody s Fry Jesters 28 Once - beaten Carmelo Costa. ——— ° : ; 1 - oa will be reviewed by the television woe os ten Pine 77 Seventh-ranking featherweight con. Washington p 29 © 182 170 committee. Although the NCAA Eumsere 7 ona % tender from Brooklyn, is a 12-5 Cortina esTEaN CONPERENCE ’ a Ty = a 13, favorite to whip Bobby Bell, ex-GI | petroi 8 1 1 £80 299 hasn't made public its plans for Cripp pos 13| from Youngstown, Obie. is a te |Po- 7,0 mm | televised football in 1955, the group Gu oe 29 «Treys 13] . : = om a Ban Francisco 6 4 1 £00 303 has announced it would recommend Indiv. games, series tw) M May 218,| ounder at Brooklyn's Eastern | Leo eles : $ : see ad continued national control of tele- i os = nth terieens ws | Parkway Arena tonight. | Baltimore. . “3 8 © 273 124 vising the sport. 183, Ning Pins 2160, om will telecast at 10 p.m.,| vr seneat's a ‘ A proposal which would base all K Orc on ; Philadelphia 13, Detroit 13 (tie; aid to athletes upon scholastic Gocbei's oa Corder a Italy's Italo Scortichini and New York 34, Pitsueren - standings and demonstrated finan- Benard's 29 Pfeiffer's 22 Cuba's Chico Varona are rated Chicago Bears 29 Chicago Cardingis 7. Ward @ bit, or perhaps a full cial need is expected to come up | canes - a i even in the betting for their wel- perimere 32 Loe yp Penrt vs erpuch. for final action. | Drewry's 25 Credit 19 terweight 16- rounder tonight at Peo SAsKETRAU In any event, though, work to tae “ eel ia New York's St.Nicholas Arena. w vUNDAT'S BSSULTO = time the push-away and first step, OnPY, Wayne 24 Bimmon's 16 Scortichini. a busy little fellow, eg » Milwaukee ‘0". /They've got to be coordinated if Perfect ‘M’ Season | pete 4B te modo to, has a 25-14-4 record. Varona's rec- Rochester #1, Port. Wayne 98 | you're to get to the foul line con- Michigan's fabulous football eg Al orapy Toe agg at cng WV gsm | ord is 57-16. ON erg vores laa sistently smooth, And unless you team in 1901 won 11 games and | —Auburn Bar 2862 | Du Mont will telecast at 10 p.m.,| Fort habe. &. New — | accomplish that—well, I'm afraid scored 550 points to none for its ° NIGUTHAWES w 1 EST. | Sbweehes 68. Minneapolis 8s | bowling isn't going to be much fun, opponents, setting up a perfect ‘ = =a rye BE eects He , , et amet Galewand 219, | . 862; team series—Alley Cats 2281. | @ | had a 300 game... that was the NFIAC SOCIAL we . . tas evening I hit a pin!” LOOP. \ 3018 s 22 38 bd wey, 22 eee 220 Clinch at Least lie in astern Division ic * ‘w | Stroh’s Beat Ohioans Ss Fs Parmer os it i . Indt¥. game, series—C. s ae cong Sy teding atig elie od = ot BOWLERETTES By ORLO ROBERTSON Philadelphia next Sunday. , Bobby Clatterbuck, subbing for souri to 49 points in a 77-49 vic-| Toit won its 3rd 7 AN iS prench a __sCOne-half of the National Football | In other games Sunday the Chi- | the injured Charlie Conerly, fired tory. Earlier, the lini shackled match-game bowling SS Wilkins 30 17 Heidelberg 25 23 League's championship bracket | cago Bears strengthened their hold two touchdown passes, each good | Butler, 88-34. yesterday by defeating Maftach | Osu cc. js 20 | Was filled Sunday by the familiar |on second place in the Western Di- | for 42 yards, and accounted for 274 . Michigan smacked Pitt, 101-71. Furniture of Sterling, Ohio by a Cox 2621 Mo. 14 18 33 | Detroit Lions. | Vision with @ 29-7 decision over the yards in the air as the Giants took . , 1355 pin margin. Dee's : no! Srosk & Pt Md At the same time the Browns | Chicago Cardinals and San Fran-| erly. control of their game with os ths ts tok ae eee PP in ig age . See | i eal game, series—Helea | clinched at least a tie for the West- | cisco, stil) in running for second | Pittsburgh. The winners scored in te ' ‘e came : ern Division title—an honor car-| place back of the Lions, shutout | every period. .| 88 S743 opening victory over | the evening to outshoot the Ohio- | MONTCALM LADIES = ried off by Paul Brown's club the|Green Bay 35-0. eee oe The Bears made the most of | Western Michigan. Northwestern | ans, 3172, 2882. No.1 4 14 Kids 2 2% last five years. The Browns by defeating Los Angeles | seven pass interceptions in smoth- tances a stiffer test Wednesday ‘ NDINGS Tomkins = 3 ak Le ™ = 3,24 Cd out @ methodical 4-14 victory 22-21/Saturday» ering the Cardinals. It wasn’t until against Notre Dame. , 4 eG T Pts. OP OA Puller ses % 2 Hitlers eta? er the Washington Redskins. | A/ crowd or — saw heaped iim three pring! that = Favored Minnesota was surprised | Montreal ..... at +e ie wae teas ee "' The surprising New York Giants, skins give srowns a battle for dinals were a 0 cross by a well-balanced, hard hitting. Dernorr’ 7”: owt fe “ —-=-= ——— however, maintained a mathemati- he rae sprig -& Weal Ge bese Bears’ goat line. . DePaul team. Trailing 93-92 with 17 Boston, wwe. 8 11 8 21 SB — cal chance of tying the Browns by/ ing a 17-7 edge. ast Cleveland , , * seconds left, DePaul guard Ron |Se" $ BSR ST “a Lc, -% & defeating the Pittsburgh Steelers |backs dpened up in the final 30| Joe Perry passed the 1,000-yard Sobieszczyk stole the ball and’ hee poy S ae 23 25 24-3. The Browns, with an $2 rec-| minutes with Fullback- Maurice | mark for the second season as he scored to give DePaul.a 94-93 tri-| Montreal 3, New York 3 | Auburn 3 18 Theme 23 34, 0rd, meet Pittsburgh next Sunday | Bassett going over for two touch-| picked up 137 yards in 20 carries, umph. Minnesota's Chuck Mencel| 7°°"'S Rosen 2 sesuLts | --- 2 eb 11, 31/ and close out the regular cam-| downs. Otto Graham's passes, as | in pacing the (ers to their shutout and Dick Garmaker lived up to ex-| Toronte 1, Detroit © | Ind game, Uhan. Leathe paign on the 19th against Detroit. | usual, set up mo st of Cleveland's triumph over Green Bay before pectations with 25 points each, Salp putes ectieoaee, donne Neees, TB sezies—Dorit | New York, 74, winds up against | scores, 33,715. :. | ; % w Michigan’s Largest +. Tire Dealers! Buy ow Budget! No Money Down! One Full Year to Pay! - |DAYTON | ‘THOROBRED 1st Qualiiy-ist Line : @ All Rayon Cord @ Cold Rubber Tread for : Long Mileage : - GUARANTEED | WRITING AGAINST ROAD HAZARDS $20.10 $12.95 6.50x16 $25.95 $17.75 6.70x15 $23.20 $14.95 \ 7.10n1S $25.75 $16.75 7.60x15 $28.40 $17.75 GUARANTEE! 1. Lifetime Factory Guarantee 2 Mile Guarantee 3. 2-Year Written Read : : | | PDAYTON’S BIG 3 | against tall read hasarda cl ICE and SNOW Premium Ouolity . Rize . Price feu Pe 6.00x16 $58.35 $17.75 6.50x15 $34.95 $20.75 6.70x15 $31.15 $18.75 7.10x15 $34.50 $20.45 «| 7-60x15 $37.80 $22.45 8.00x15 $43.25 $26.00 FREE FRONT END INSPECTION! Front End Special! Complete Front End Alignment— @ Caster, Camber and Toe-in s ft ia Wheel Balancing Static and *] 98 Dynamic Inctuding Weights Seat Covers for Christmas 50% off . ‘7 95 _Fally Guaranteed All First Qualit INSTALLED FREE! Now or After Christmas Priced from MUFFLERS Priced = § 6” from INSTALLED FREE! TIRE KET OPEN 9 to 9 FE 8-0424 FREE PARKING 77 W. Huron St. Cor. Cass Ave. } | “ Kentucky, LaSalle 4 Gi. ' i “ s m : + yer ___'THR_PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1954 ~ Two Late Goals Provide Wings With 4-1 Win Leswick, Delvecchio | Counters Extinguish | Blackhawk Threat DETROIT «— Tony Leswick and Alex Dajvecchio scored in the final period last night to squelch a Chicago threat and give the De- \troit Red Wings a 41 National Hockey League victory over the | Black Hawks. | Wings picked up a 2-0 lead in ' the 2nd quarter after an unimpres- | sive 1st period with dast place punch came in the 3rd pe- riod. After a fist fight between Gus Mortson and Delvecchio, Wing captain Ted Lindsay was kicked off the ice for a minor and two misconduct penalties. Then while Detroit was two men short and Chicago was light one, tLe Hawks got back into the game on Red Sullivan's goal—the 1st Chi- cago hag slipped by Terry Saw- | chuk in three games. | But Chicago's pressing tactics backfired twice in the final min- utes. Leswick scored at 19:15 into an empty cage after Rolling was pinned to the .ice in a pileup and breakaway to finish with a high head-on 15-footer Rollins couldn't touch. Chicago lost the services of de- SHAMROCK DEFENSE—This is the view that St. Michael's opponents will face this winter when the Shamrocks move into a zone defense. Coach Bob Mineweaser’s Ist five, all returning lettermen, Head College Cage Fiel Pentiac Press Photo are (left to right) forward Joe Wilhelm, guard Bob Anderson, center Bud Schwartz, guard Marty Keller and forward John Keller. Mikes | Open their season next Thursday, Dec. 9, at ‘Ferndale St. James. Bob Swift Is Signed as Coach for Acorns OAKLAND, Calif. (UP) — Bob Swift, veteran Detroit Tigers’ eatcher today was signed as a free agent by the Oakland Acorns of the Pacific Coast League. He is expected to serve as a reserve catcher and pitching coach next season. fenseman Lee Fogolin in the game. Fogolin crashed into the boards in the 2nd period and suffered a broken elbow, It was the same el- bow he broke in training camp. The ist mishap kept him out of Chicago's ist 15 games, Se By WILL GRIMSLEY MELBOURNE «® — America’s Davis Cup doubles combination of Vie Seixas and Tony Trabert stageda stirring comeback today to beat Australia’s Wimbledon champions, Rex Hartwig and Mer- vyn Rose,\in the finals of the Vic- torian tenriis championships, 46, 5-7, 63, 64, 6-2. . The triumph, following the semi- final conquest of Australia's other tarmiem of Lewig Hoad and Ken Business Offices require AMERICAN SUHOOL, PO. Bex Piease send me -Page Balk High School Diploma You can ge fone at HOME in your spare tome, Which Will Prepere You for a Better Job Most government Offices, Public Utilities, Industrial and High School Graduation at least, for employment. (Also for college entrance.) MAIL THIS TODAY HANDS TIED? Because You Leck e« if you ere 16 years or over... ™, Kensington ——-, Detrett 4. Usede 1-048 Name Address My 7’ MEN’S Monday, Gentlemen, this is it! in “‘peace!”’ sex ’ and solve those TONIGHT! ¢ 7 to 10 P. M. Your only chance to shop Unhampered by any of the fairer No women allowed 7:00 to 10:00 P M., except our own skilled employees who will be on hohd td assist you in every way—gift wrapping, demonstrations, and helpful suggestions. hand tonight, in Birmingham. Bring your gift list ‘what-to-give”’ problems NIGHT Dec. 6th, Be on Rosewall, buoyed United States | cup hopes and virtyally eliminated =| Hartwig and Rose from challenge | round consideration. ‘ “I don't think the selectors would |dare take a chance with Rose,” said Colin Long, former Australian |player who writes for the Mel- bourne Sun. Leafs Closing in on Canucks Toronto Now Only 4 Points Off Pace of NHL Leaders By The Associated Press The hard-checking Toronto Maple Leafs, climbing fast on the strength of enough scoring and the standout play of goalie Harry Lum- ley, are within striking distance of the National Hockey League's first- place Montreal Canadieng today. In Sth place during the early weeks of the season, Leafs are within four points of the Habi- tants while nursing an undefeated string of five games. Last night, wingers Ron Stewart and Eric Nesterrenko scored in the 3rd period to give Toronto a 4-2 victory over the Boston Bruins. Montreal tied the New York Rang- ers 33 and Detroit jumped Chi- cago 41, Stewart's tally put the Leafs ahead as he beat Bruin goalie John Henderson midway in the finale and Nesterenko's insurance goal came with only %4 seconds re maining. Lumley’s string of 173 scoreless minutes was snapped by Ed Sandford in the 2nd_ period Pete Conacher's marker late in the second period enabled the Rangers to come from behind a 2-goal deficit to gain their dead- lock with the Canadiens, Bill Talbert, the U.S. captain, took the triumph calmly. He said he was “very pleased,” but was not interpreting it as a sure doubles point in the Davis Cup competition. “I thought the boys won without having to extend themselves,”’ Tal- bert said. “Even so it was too close for comfort. ‘Both Tony and Vic made sim- ple errors which hurt them, parti- cularly in the first two sets. “We can't afford the same errors in the Davis Cup.” ‘Reeves Asks Punishment for ‘Colts’ Joyce LOS ANGELES (UP) — Dan Reeves, president of the Los An- geles Rams, said he would phone National Football League com- missioner Bert Bell today and ask that strong measures be taken against a Baltimore Colt lineman who slashed the Rams’ Les Rich- | ter across the face with a helmet | The incident occurred in Sat- urday’s natiqnaliy televised | game,-which the Colts won 22-21. | Colt tackle Don Joyce, after be- ing blocked by Richter, hit the rookie guard in the right eye with his pwn helmet. Richter had 14 stitches taken in three deep cuts around the eye. Team physician Dr. Fortman said |‘‘there is no apparent danger to the eye but we cannot be 100 per cent sure at this time.”’ ABC Says It’s Easier to Bowl 300 Than 299 | MILWAUKEE uw — American Bowling Congress records show that it's easier to bowl a perfect 300 game, once a bowler has made 11 consecutive strikes and needs just one more, than it is to ‘bowl 299 or 298. | Since 1908 when the ABC began its award program for high scores, there have been 4,766 games with a perfect score of 300. There have been 2.644 games of 299 and 1,945 of 298 A Groza Injured Foot Lou Groza, Cleveland Browns’ ace place kicker, once injured his {foot in an elevator accident when | he was a boy, but the injury was | healed. COLLISION WORK le How f At OLIVER MOTOR COLLISION SHOP 36 W: Pike St. No Estimate Too Small FE 2-9101 See Robert Rector, Mgr. for Free Estimates on All Makes of Cars Ne Distance Teo Great (within reason) ‘Installed FREE! Brake Shoes Chevrolet $]().Q5 ond up STT.45 ons oe STT.9S onto AIRPLANE TYPE SHOCK ABSORBERS Motor Mart 121-123 E. Montcalm Ford Pontiac Complete Set of a $ 5% E Auto Parts FE 4-8230 ’ - Seixas and Trabert Victors + in Victorian Doubles Test Trot Officials Mull New Plan - Classification $ ystem Would Be Determined by Race Times + COLUMBUS, Ohio W — Board of |directors of the United States Trot- | |ting Assn. today was to act on a| |new national classification system | ‘for harness horses at a meeting | Mixup in Free Throw Found, | Tie Declared ofticial basketball scorebooks go into the records as a 67-67 tie. | John Orr. Wabash sports pub- > mS ie +. s Wildcats Near | scorers had credited John Thrapp with a free throw just before a group of substitutions were made. Coaches Cal Luther of DePauw and Bob Brock of Wabash decided New All-Time Winning Streak ne agreed arta Mage —y Ky Explorers Pass First '# ‘Substitutions. Nogera Team Laker 5 Wins Overtime Tilt By ED CORRIGAN Trips Hawks, 104-102, The Associated Press A A couple of familiar faces — Salle bE ball season entered the first full week of action around the country.| in Foul-Ridden Contest °*. ° = . The Wildcats, in fact, have an in NBA Sunday pos ao ay aoe — bestr ae By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS of Ohio on the enemy court.| The Minneapolis Lakers and | Milwaukee Hawks were enjoying a break in the NBA schedule Mon- Adolph Rupp can point to another aay. .s es . In between 73 fouls, including The reconstructed Wildcats have six technicals, the teams scored played only one game, but it was | 206 points between them Sunday an impressive 74-58 victory over | night with Minneapolis finally win- Louisiana State Saturday night. | ning in overtime, 104-102. The big gun was Phil (Cookie) | . *¢ 8 . se Grawemeyer, a 6-7 veteran from| In other league games, Roches- last year’s unbeaten outfit. iter - Royals snapped the séven | skein of the Fort The Wildcat triumph, combined same victory with Alabama's 50-45 defeat by | Wayne Pistons 97-96 and the po" St.Louis, left many a wet eye in | Cuse Nationals downed the - the Southeastern Conference. Ala- ®de!phia Warriors 89-72. bama was figured as the one team| Four Minneapolis players were with a chance to edge Kentucky out on fouls and a fifth—Jim Pol- out of the league title. The St.Louis | lard—was injured before the Lak- ‘game wasn't a league encounter, ers finally won out on seven free ‘but it proved Alabama a disap- throws in the extra session. Vern | pointment. | Mikkelsen of Minneapolis led both * 2 @ iclubs in scoring with 22 points. licity director, found six unofficial. La Salle, the-NCAA Champion last year, now shows a 2-0 mark and should emerge the class of the East. The Explorers got past their first major test last night when they thumped Loyola of New Or- | | here, | | A spokesman for the board said | l€ans 85-71 with All-america Tom Gola dropping 23 points. They have another dangerous foe on tap Saturday in Niagara. In fact, since Niagara dropped Ford- ham 75-61, it could emerge La lishment of 10 classes ranging , = from free-for-all to Class D, | 5#le’s main contender for Eastern Horses would be classed accord- . oe 6 ing to the average time of their On the subject of streaks, Notre last six starts, They would move Da has a _17-game ular-sea- up or down in classification ac- — = : ried cording to performance. The rules committee suggested the spread between classes be one and a fifth seconds. | adoption of the new system, recom- | mended by the USTA’s rules com- mittee ‘‘is considered certain.” The system calls for the estab- operations with a 12-61 triumph over Wisconsin. They play North- western, which should prove easy pickin's Wednesday, but must en- Rules committee said the new tertain Indiana Saturday. | Classification based on a_ speed The Hoosiers are the defending |rating formula for every harness champions in the Big Ten and cer- | track in the country would aid the tainly will be no pushovers while | public in comparing the perform. | big Don Schlundt is around. They }ance of all horses regardless of opened their season by turning where they have raced. | back Valparaiso 77-66. But the Trotting association officials are | Word is that lowa should win the scheduled to begin preparing speed | title this year, though. The Hawk- | ratings on the nearly 500 tracks in | Yes polished off Loyola of Chicago the United States next week if the 89-79. | failed to add to his son skein going. The Irish opened | Delaware Star Leads Team to Bowl Victo | EVANSVILLE, Ind. uw — Don Miller, the University of Dela- ware’s Little All-America quarter- back, today carried _home the 'Carson Trophy as _ outstanding | player in the annual Refrigerator | Bowl football game althugh he career total of 36 touchdowns. He sent Jim Zaiser, junior right halfback, across Kent State Uni- versity’s goal line twice in the ‘final period Sunday for a 19-7 victory. Kent, runner-up in the Mid- America Conference, took a 74 lead in the 2nd quarter and held it until Zaiser broke loose on scor- ing runs of 5 and 23 yards. SPORT Lion Superstition Coach Buddy Parker of the De- troit Lion champions refuses to let a player wear No. 13 or use a hotel | room on the 13th floor. | recommendation is adopted. | Yesterday, President La 1 ’ B. Sheppard of Hanover.-Pa. in Along Pontiac s) |his annual report said harness rac- . ing purses hit an all-time high in - MOTOR INN JUNIOR wt. 195 wt. {et Bicmar 32 12 Oliver 4 23 i a Risdon 28 20 «Vollmar 244 A & P No. 1 27 21 Schram 21277 i . Service 25 23 Kresge's 20 28 ar in | Saginaw 2423 A&P No.2 8 39 ’ ’ Team series, game—Gervice Window Cleaners 2803, 1028; Indiv. Hockey 256, series—E. Berney saa Enters Miami Open Pp) Bit B M4 14 OCBC. 4 MIAMI, Fla. (UP)—A record to- LL tars 28 19 Huntoon 22 26 tal of 254 golfers, including de-| Piston 30 30 Jomes non = ; 28 fe nding champion Doug Ford of ca os 23 Window 21 «(27 Yonkers, N. Y., were signed today Warwick 4 24 — i" 30 for the $10,000 Miami Open tour- Quality ogg a Lindsey 301. team game— Baker & Han- nament which starts Thursday. . sen Ins 905. series—Tru Bilt Block 2600 Approximately &5 of the pros will , be exempt from tomorrow's qual cae Reese Mian: “=” L fying round which will reduce petch 26 17 Temple ae the field tg 150 Clee” 6s 19 aici 19 23 The 30th annual Miami Open has a ame Meo Markeenk 716: attracted several top names in the | 574; team game—Camera Mart. | series—Gresham, 2388 golf world, including National Open champion Ed Furgol, PGA cham- WESTSIDE LADIES “B” wou = wou pion Chick Harbert, of Northville, | Girvin 27 21 Beven-up 24 «(24 Mich., Sammy Snead, five-time | Hank's 2.2 =. owlers winner of the event, and na-|R«& P 24 24 Woodman's 19 28 y Ind ame—I. Rouse, - 180, series—M. | tional titleholder Arnold Palmer mar ai: ia gene etek & P| — is making his professional de- | 134, 1961 ‘eco FISHER HTL a eaaeEaeRE EERE Ww t witL. . Lotan's 42 10 Pabricating 25 27 Redleg Farmhand Quits vs» #14 Baitwin’ a8 u , ‘ i o J & B 31 20 Humphries 23 «20 Mound to Hit Homers Liberal 21 21 Bteffen's 21031 . — Tavern 28 #23 Gang 17 38 CINCINNATI U®—Bill Thompson anpis 28 24 Bob's 16 36 See Pals 26 «26 «Mary's & 47 jis glad he quit pitching. Now he Ind game series—W. Francis, 240 /can hit homers instead of dishing 665: team game—Hilltoppers. 965, series | them out —Lotan's Market, 2827 | The Redleg farmhand, playing CooutY EMFLoTEs we first base, slammed three home x4, 34 16 Barts 3 21 runs in three consecutive times at = 29 : cee -$ ed ; = ets 7 «4S eads bat to set a Colombian Winter tardeci Saran (Nneaera |) Gi) oa League mark. | Puchers 25) IR Ameer 17 27 Thompson started as a pitcher Cuckr 28 10 Alley 17 9 aa . . Pureey 95 «61q) MT reets 10 & but an arm injury forced him to) gireer 2 10 Gems 2 41 TA ogee kerteg ff) Anitremant | ‘2 40% team game. series—Goria! Katz abandon his mound hopes. 723, 1931 Good Field, No Hit TT. Pre Pts As a player, Leo Durocher was | Ginevritie 19 Tarchsens ® ¥ } Auburn 11 X-Cel ® known as a strong and capable | snaws 11 Normens ~ i i Bourn, 169, series—A fielder but was generally regard- | _ Ind = wer bor neem |ed by his mates as a weak hitter. | Lon hatgh Agel gg oS CROSS-CUT FOR! EXTRA TRACTION and Mounted on Your Car! $2 Each . ‘MUD-SNOW CAPS, from $9.95 . ented cee pate Kegling Lanes ' BEMIS-OLSEN AUX. es Haskill's 29 Church's Ine 21 Spar-Mac 24 Team No. 3 19 Fowlers Bar 24 Powler's No. 2 14 Indiv. game series—M. Schram 168, 461; team game—Team No. 3 1480 PONTIAC HOUSEWIVES | Pts ts | Benards 35 Ace 20 | Jacks M «Lane 20 | Rec. No. 2 29 «Huron 18 Rex 26 Rec. No. 1 18 Tom's 22 No. 13 16 Bucks 21 No. 14 15 Burr 20 Superior il 2 Indiv. game. series—M. Townsend 192 30 | 840; team game—Team No. 13 986, series —Jack's Barber Shop 25094 LAKELAND LADIES wil wth. Oak 424 2 Cloverieal aa 24 9 19 Birong ° 24°23 Brige 33 : LaChic 20 28 Heler 17 Jl Owens Compton Keego Indiv. game—H. Viswat 207. series —A Chatterton 507 team game, series — Keego Cab 786, 2112 BALL AND CHAIN wte wil Jim's 35.17 Haskills 24 28 Mandalari 4 18 «No. 10 22 30 ec 33 18 Ernie 21 31 Excelsior 37 25 «No. 8 le 32 Calabrese 26 26) «=Liming's 18 33 Indiv. game—Pord Bird 200, Frieda | Loreng 181, indiv. seri:es—Pete Townsend 650, Frieda Lorenz 468; team game, series —Mandalari’s Market 704, 2135 White 3715 OL Tav 26 26 Avon 32 20 «Curnell's 24 «28 Btreeter's 32 20 Mandoiart 21 31 Acker 32.20 Spor 16 36 Chuck's 3220 G& W 844 Indiv. game—Florence Roth 196. series —Circie Gelen 460; team game—Streeter's Goods 927, series—Chuck s Shack 2674 ; LADIES Pts. Pts. O. Parking 31 Rip's 23 Joes Coney 30 «(Orbs ‘ 22 D. Nicholie 30 Bowmaster 21 Luttman’'s 29 «Hinckley 20 Country View 28 Cola Cola 18 Puertas 29 ~Voydanoff 13 No. 6 2 Pr 13 4 « Lasaroff 211. series— team game, series—Coca Indiv. game—l B. Medien 501; Cola 801. 2208 | C1e ES Rome | towns ste eee ST Gaukler Storage ® Orchard Lake Ave, We Courtney Goes to Chicago in ]-Player Deal Pitcher, infielder Also! Secured by Sox From Baltimore, Today NEW. YORK &—The Chicago| | White Sox today completed a sev-) én player deal with the Baltimore Orioles with catcher Clint Court- here as the major leagues opened The Reds have an alternate dea] with the St.Louis Cardinals brewing if they fail to land Gil- Brooklyn also is expected to do some business with the American League. The Dodgers finally have players of minor league caliber. New York Yankees and | + ‘Cards’ Farmhand Wins , | Batting Championship ‘THE PONTIAC F PRESS, ‘MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1954 ae White Sox, Baltimore Make rade loday North, South, Shrine Teams Add Players and South football squads added a ‘player today: to the teams being SNAKE-HIPS TO SMU SCORE—Southern Methodist |Saturday. Notre Dame's Joseph Heap (42, left) back John Roach (16) takes evasive action through | makes futile “tackle attempt while SMU tackle right tackle for 10'g yards to score against Notre | Forrest. Gregg (73) comes up at right to help clear ( Dame in first period at Cotton Bowl in Dallas, Tex., }Roach’s way. Irish won, 26-14. Toronto Extends Streak. Shaves Montreal's’ Lead By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS {the Canadiens. Montreal had led The hard-checking Toronto Ma-|3-1 on scores by Boom Boom ple Leafs, climbing fast on the|Geoffrion, Bert Olmstead and strength of timely scoring and the | Kenny Mosdell. standout play of Harry Lumley in Tony Leswick and Alex Delvec- the nets, were within striking dis- chio fired last minute goals for tance of the first-place Montreal Canadiens Monday. the hapless Hawks. Red Sullivan In fifth place during the early M Uncovers chosen for the Shrine's Christmas .| night game in the Orange Beli. Arch Cassidy of the University of Miami was selected by the South- ern squad for his outstanding de- fensive line play. Florian Helinski, voted Indiana University’s Most Valuable Player, was named as quarterback or the North team. His coach, Bernie Crimmins, will ‘aid Ivy Williamson of Wisconsin in coaching the North. Andy Gustafson of the University of Miami will handle the Southern Brilliant Soph, Tramples Pitt MIAMI, Fila. @—Both the North | TWENTY-THREE (Nesae? s* Speed, Week Attracts U. S. Drivers NASSAU, ‘Bahamas w®—Most of the American owners, drivers and ears entering this British colony's first annual “Speed Week’’ races leave Miami today. They will arrive Tuesday morning for three days of competition’ against some of Europe’ s most daring sports car ‘drivers, Speed trials are scheduled Wednesday and Thursday on the | ways of the abandoned Windsor Field. A 30-mile race ig achetluled Friday, the 100-mile Governor's Cup Race Saturday and the 200- mile Nassau Trophy Race Sunday, Lé No Campaign Needed NEW YORK #—Willie Turnesa, former U, S. and British Amateur Ey TUESDAY cry Corned Bee! and Cabbage Dinner All ¥« yn & JACK DECKERS in DRAYTON PLAINS guard and an improved starting in a overshad- | | q B scored 17 points in all, 15 of them the Panthers, but he was still be- | °7 weeks of the National Hockey League Season, the Leafs have moved to within four points of the Habitants while building an unde- feated string of five games. - s - Sunday night, Wingers Ron Ste- wart and Eric Nesterenko scored ATLAS @ SHOPSMITH goalie John Henderson midway in ithe finale. Nesterenko’s insurance IN THE MONEY — Arnold) | goal came with only 9 seconds| holds tract | remaining. aie pared aglncumnnic pawibng Pete Conacher’s marker late in makes the United States Ama-|the second period enabled the | Rangers to come from a two-goal | SSS Se ee |deficit and gain a deadlock with QUALITY TOOLS humbled Chicago 4-1 BROWNE-SHARPE @ MILWAUKEE Stewart's tally was the clincher for the Leafs as he beat Bruin RENTALS GLENN WING POWER TOOLS 1437 SOUTH WOODWARD AVE. Five Blocks North of 14-Mile Rood BIRMINGHAM, Mi 4-0444 glad to let you out! urnhamperd . @ DELTA @ DeWALT Sports Briefs DAILY 8 te 6:00 — FRI. 8 te 8:00 The North Carolina and Virginia NEW YORK ®—Bill Virdon, 23- football teams played two games | year-old Rochester Red Wing out-| against each other in 1892. The oy aaa |fielder, is the 1954 International | Tar Heels won the first 26-0, But the Cavaliers won the second 33-1. : BE A SMART SANTA... SHOP FS TUESDAY EVENING, DEC. 7th _¥ Red Sox were ‘reported to | @ague batting champion with | conversation regarding _™ark of .333 according to official rd baseman Gil Mc- | averages. Red. Sox reportedly | Virdon, who was acquired by the Kari Olson | St.Louis Cardinals last year in the ; Enos Slaughter trade with the New | York Yankees, collected 168 hits were almost | in 504 times at bat. meeting to reject | , adopted by the | last week, to.ban commer- Honesty Costly cial telecasts and broadcasts of | PLACERVILLE, Calif. u—Hon- baseball games outside a club's | esty proved costly to deer hunter — Glen Roach. He shot a spiked buck, not legal game. Roach re- There was a 530-50 chance, how- ported the incident and was fined Marks Keep Tumbling In the past 20 years an average of six world: track’ and field rec- ords have been broken annually. Bowling Results MOTOR INN HOUSE woe. two more players to be sent on option to the minors. . | Connie Mack who gained fame as r-manager of the par in once also starred in a catching $ we Benson's 22 14 «Green 18 i8 Steel 20-16 Figas 1s 18 Poole’s 20:16 «~Urch 4 = Drewry's 19 17 Btrohs Indiv. game, series- L Tipoit anes L Shew's 20 10 Stutdevant 14 6 Club 9 19 10 «~Perry 18 Carrier 17 13 Bteel lw Country 1415 Drewry’s 9 21 Indiv. game, series—Rex Todd 25¢, W. Rennhach 619. IMPERIAL Pts Pts Munro's 37 Oriff's 27 | Window 38 Poole's 26 Shaw's 33 «Lounge “ CLEANER! 50. Gotta ie, Gresham's 3 Cottage 18 Indiv. game, series—Mildred Molter | SLOWER! eget 222, 553, team game, series—Munro's it 8e4. 2502 : » ca f g LADIES ALL ALL STAR % Pts Pts. | . Craven 35 Mason 0 | Oakland Fuel & Paint Co. | 52%: =e 33 Ghaw's 33 No. 3 ia) 436 Orchard Leke Motor 31 Wohifiel 3 Team game—Huron Bowl 855, serie | be ag be 2377; indiv. game, series—Jean- Lokuta 223, 557. FE 5-6159 * Each team in a National Hoc- |key League is allowed three al- ternate captains. s 7 s Bill McKenna, captain of Bran- deis University’s football team, gained 40 pounds and grew six inches during his four college years. South Bend to Honor Brennan and Irish 11 SOUTH BEND, Ind. (INS)—The Notre Dame football team and Irish coach Terry Brennan, fresh from their 26-14 conquest of South- ern Methodist, will be feted Thurs- day night in the 35th annual civic ELECTRONICS INSTITUTE: Day ond E MEN WANTED Te Tre for H Se Positions in Electronics, odio 8 Telerise od Cee Ae Allow You to Remain Fully Employed Whi Training. ‘Mall Coapen ov Call ter Complete WI) 9.566] rye Up wong Bee 1 G. L Approved. Nerth ef Fos Theater testimonial banquet at South Bend. Officials announced today that Warren Brown, Chicago sports col- umnist, will serve as toastmaster. Notre Dame notables and leaders in sport are on the speaking list. Time Element Varies The average time to clapse be-| tween innings of major league *| baseball games varies from one and one-half minutes to as much as two minutes. Do you have the screening facilities and the time to positions in your firm? Are you wasting time interviewing applicants who qualifications to fill your positions? Let us handle this time-consuming operation for you. We Have the Proper Screening Facilities: PERSONNEL AND APTITUDE TESTS TYPING. COMPTOMETER AND SHORTHAND TESTS REFERENCES INVESTIGATED CHECKING OF FORMER EMPLOYERS CONFIDENTIAL SERVICE EMPLOYERS, ATTENTION Have you interviewed so many applicants that you are cnaiuad? { v BOND., Ld interview applicants for do not have the proper FE4-4469 | JAMES A. MARTIN, Mgr. ‘ f EMPLOYMENT AGENCY | Only Applicants Who Mest Your Qualificetions Will Be Referred to You | FOR INSURANCE SERVICE. See or Call Phone Maynard Johnson General Insurance 807 Community National Bank FE 4-4523 oe : * it, See... on living models Lingerie, Robes, Furs, and other Cift Selections, W. Pike, corner Cass . @ For Real Tool Protection @ For Trouble-Free Service @ .For Lasting Satisfaction MILL SUPPLIZS FOR INDUSTRY Phone re over it, ' TOOLMAKERS, MACHINISTS, PATTERNMAKERS Choose Your Gerstner Chest from Our New Supply Cutting Tools & Supplies, Inc. FE 2-0108 When the fights a on the family TV program , a Our most experienced and helpful employees will help you with your gift selections. Gather ? round our punch (77?) bow! and check your shopping list 6:30 to 9:00 P.. M. GIFTS | MEN'S. NIGHT | -YOUR ANGEL | WANTS Yes, Gentlemen . . . the one night of the yeor the missus will be It’s your chance to shop for gifts for her . SLIPS..... your life love to accessories, wear. packages. From the main floor, distinctively different you'll find blouses, skirts, sweaters and ski displays lovely gift slippers . . our second floor you will find glamorous furs, exciting dresses, suits and coats and gift millinery. Don’t forget our young folks’ gift shop on the lower level. *. unhurried. This “stag” shopping night ‘really allows you to concentrate on your gift shoppi ng. The Wispiest Lingerie of fragile beauty 3.95 ' 14.95 Cows .- 5.95 39.95 ROBES ... 7.95 49.95 § LOUNGESETS O5 to 45, 00 § Also other gifts that the ladies in tind in their Christmas a in the sports shop . Our mezzonine . and on Special Note Men, your selections will be gift boxed and beau- tifully wrapped and — ready for gift giving. © @ 3.5S.mile course laid cut'en hevun THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1954 ie be _ tigain, They'd greet them on the | DONALD DUCK © ie . “<< There the great New streets, ag these poor scarcrows |. Scarecrows of Grimstead |< yricma' sre pate | mnt nts comics nee ’ Learned to Start Life Over =."*“"" GEE, (TS Tax) Se le ne burned village held Saturday night dance (INS)—There are | had done in the past. But in the McIndoe would not permit mir-| whirling about with these effi- I me 8 z ‘ d fi Fee i i il i 1 if -t gl tT | & . z FERs : : 3 3 : : : F courtroom felt for him. H i g Zz ; & ‘ Aly F z ? hl agg! HE E at aif +h TE ira ae fl i | : = 2 it + it if knives and the luncheon club the | to help him try still another life. ep barven sell. needies could scarcely touch the. janc i : i Th : : i js iu FF : z Isl ? 8 if spirit of the men. Many wanted | , jent memory? Well, | to dié, and a few did by their own Room Key Turns Up | : not be! + \ charity and | the society of normal people. | ISHPEMING, Mich. ® — Post- | unspectacular sympathy which the ‘fe Me ‘ tron | aster John T. Burke received a .»| judge had wished for this man who of he had ‘cis, | @ach fine day through the town | notel key in the mail recently. ealled.en | had risen above his past and, with East Grins He The k ot the ‘ay 4 friend since the catastrophe no one knows what excruciating os sia ae =F ey, een Sones he said, aghast, “Goodness, | labor, had constructed a new life. whence * put pl pray on ogo return i arya at in a ” The inference was that such | On the Saturday afterfioon of She a a =-. a visit might taint him profes: | jujy 1, 1945, a German bomber sionally er socially. unloaded a bomb over non-strate-. All of which shook the dust off gic East Grinstead for some sense- ; a recent and a now bottled-in-bond | less reason never explained. It | memory. struck the local movie house, which The recent one has to do with | “4S rating “ Acacias — the first sentence of this piece. ‘Hardly a family in that When Judge Edward Blythin sent |o¥" escaped the loss or injury Manning on his way he scaled a|% & child. height of compassion and human- | But there was another cross ity that was most touching. Bly-| for the people of East Grinstead | ~ thin did not condone what the man| te bear, The Queen Victoria Cot- : ” BOARDING HOUSE | CHZAAALZ0-27. T WORK AS fe6aD Gays? rt euv ; ans 7 STEADY AS & a OF ; : 4 AN ASSEMBLY [] BROWN ALE TO EX- ) ae ve rT SVE YOU. CAN k THIS SIMPLE 4 ara WHY { + iF i : . ‘i g lt FE “i i E LFS i F ' FRA BUS HAL Bie WHAT'S SO FUNNY ¢ ie A | “I'm sorry, Mrs. Digby, but science still hasn't found a medicine Pe. = . @ . d to prevent people from worrying because something may be wrong z \ tere Lead with them that they don't know about!” THE BERRYS by Edgar Martin ah ETS ae °. S | 2 a vt be DIXIE DUGAN GEE ~ 11's Por’s KEEP AN EYE ON THEM = WRITING AND [T's t I'LL NOTIFY THE PO i K. \ GRANDMA VL DMA‘| [H-M.\’ SOME O° THOSE LUNCH | BOXES SEEMED MIGHTY A \ [SMALL / | MALL J! é No Matter What Good: Your Problem , May Be d Good A Quick Action WANT AD Can help you r ou solve it. DIAL FE 2-818) Chewing delicious - Ask for the Want Ad Dept. Ni MG [GOLLY, | CAN'T HELP BuT | ] [.. MavBE [D BET THINK SOME O' THOSE KIDS IT’ SCHOOL A’ UT RECESS ae MIGHT GET A BIT HUNGRY... | [MAKE SURE // tL ? es arte eC SO a |e ay a eee of a a. ms iho eee ee ‘ _ be 7 : * - 3 aa : “3 : e \ F ? : a . } nt } | 5 “ A ~ ‘ Y ne , » vo ” lu " ¢ : hi a i : ee | aot f° = = THE PONTIAC’PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6,71954 a ¢ . ; Buffalo Shoot Slated |ss0o:.i°t st'wea'bace xe|Echo Equipment | Sit) eee gs ThE Delicate Operation t Park in Canada ‘|r: Aer and te tora|Drorws Picture | Bi mY ted | sah at Park in not Seen, we pomone Bi Televised to Doctors OTTAWA, Ont, @~About 300|CVrY year by riflemen to keep of Sea Monster | NEW YORK @-~A film of buttaloes in the world’s largest| suport Ot ‘Me rence com GLASGOW, Scotland @ — The) Ha delicate medical operation ‘wes f , there'll be buffalo roasts on some | need of fresh to church mis-| 'd8y they have proved the exis-/ Git Be. audience last night, with a group , Canadian tables this Christmas. | sions and ’s Bay Co. stores tence of the legendary Loch Ness :ie of skilled surgeons an - Jn the far north. And, for the first|monster—or something about as| Ti a whee Christmas Prize Stolen time, vey tig Hye lhl pve weird—with their echo-sounding { + The . uf CURD DAS OP) — Se ritories. ‘ Their “monster,” they reported, Bild cep Ream : is 50 feet long and has approx- AL Then. a section ft imately eight legs and the silhou- ; F a i ette of a gigantic scorpion. a ri {i : e* © « @ sours before : pe to echo poe Ag eng some days ago Wi ——_—_—_—_— tacd’ns opera Sones ‘te Sweet-Toothed | feet above the bed of the Scottish PERSONALITY GLASSES |= dew peace | — 7 . offics and rooms ransacked. : small-head- bth body classroom : school , expert ome — - NOW Thru SAT. The Terror of @ Men ot Bay! The Best Story of | Features * ist QUALITY LENSES! ace * FULLY GUARANTEED ! DRY CLEANING = * SHOP US and COMPARE ! at Its Best sar © FAST SERVICE! 9:56 Avoid the Holiday Rush! () . GENE y DEBBIE AND HASTY PUDDING CHORUS — United Press Phete “F Actress Debbie Reynolds leads the hula for the boys | scroll as “Woman of the Year” by the club. Chorus wie at ot the chorus of Harvard's Hasty Pudding Club, | boys are Nat Cooke, (left) of New York City and CLEANERS ff cvriter teste termite was sven | Berne Gras of Nevis Nd Cinumascore Pickup and Deli FOR A HELPING HAND call a! }| Crescendo. All of Sammy's friends WARNERCOLOR -STEREOPHONIC SOUND u lver z > . ’ 8 Phase FE saier Pontiac Press ad-writer. she | MGM Disputes |} are ratying around him. ll ase with DIANA LYNN—TAB HUNTER | gy naps you sve oaens | Cee erehin of + |v Mate amt Day a mt|| “O° EOMEMASCOPE PARADE © MEWS ¢ CARTOON | | Open 9-5:30—Fri. ‘til 9 Phone FE 2-2895 12 West Pike Street through Want Ads! Phone FE|| \/WNCISNIpP O | took at each other when they met = | ‘Rainmakers’ im court. Vie agreed to pay 1200/1 S's ie Et Samm Oven > ot 10:00 By LOUFLLA 0. PARSONS |) ong SS ae HOLLYWOOD (INS) — Buying | an Phone FE 5-8331 the Broadway play “The Rain- 3 maker” isn’t as easy for Hal = Now Showing TODAY and TOMORROW! WHERE THOUSANDS SAVE MILLIONS Po BE | that they had asked for a bid on ROARING GUNS GUSTY ROMANCE! ' ¥ 23 ; ? “i € : is eM 3 to the new code of the Motion . t . ps pec riitent "4 4 Pict Prod Asso jation, a FANTASTIC MONSTERS g } % oe rborn ‘ Si market Ar w fac oT E, a eas Credit Corporation se bids betore it's woth” wy pat ! | fed Leute B. Cole 7 ownership of “The Rainnmker,” ke a a he is doing a little squawking on oo) 38 oe ae ompany 7% =) | his own about “Solid gold Cad- , ; ae nE eX for ly Holliday. says Christ th beet was still negotiating to buy it — for Shirley Booth when Harry istmas e Cohn offered $10,000 more and ' Robert R. Eldred Hal never had « chance to meet BIGGEST Ever! Sentor Vice reac . Communit a The George Sanders cy uavuape ' Sy q =~National Bank hes tenan mbesing from te siovies \N HAYWARD How about making next ; % and his usual haunts since be and | RORERT YI JANE CREE Christmas the most bountiful a Gabor were so much pub-| ue ——— in your family’s history ... »? | Now I hear that George, who | > | te | They Wont Believe Me! the Christmas when every- ‘3 5 The Pontiac Press a, |"Perever Amber’ trem re Lead ee > + one’s favorite dream comes CS ig i ee actors, is doing a repeat perform-|[ ’ Se we true! The time to take st ‘ Alfred C. Girard + 4 | ance of the same character in the ! | pipers ime . ake s . j cprgsident ni! set pred ges of ‘The King’s Thief” at. STARTS AT 11:13 — 2:27 — 5:41 — 8:55 8 ... Tight into this airman of the | MGM. sy Board i WED.: “Lure of the Wilderness” Also “ bank to join our 1955 Christ- - hs. ie Community | a aoe part practicality calls i a . ied ’ a ‘a an. 4 a re guest appearance, mas Club. A little money set Pd a of Pontiac ] | George is eager to do it because TODAY aside every 2 weeks will add a peng dh er apiapred ora | up to a great big Christmas pigreerarys a. are Ann Bithe and Edmond Par- || 08 POO + Dette $1. DOORS OPEN AT 10:45 ° Thru FRIDAY! ! Presiden dom. : sieaiaaas : for all! A. R. Glancy Ine. °° « Tues., Wed., Thurs. lameltion Car lah PANORAMIC Screen . . y Sydney Chaplin, the son of Lita|] “KNOCK ON WOOD” : nl 2 Weeks cern erie ey hee been In Europe with hic | Alse “BIGAMIST” “Tue coptosive svony oF A suancaa oaste oS COME 6 5 meakie betwen 2 | father for some months, is expect- WHO OPERATED BEMIND THE BAMBOO CURTAIN! $1.00. Next Year Receive. $25.00 ’ and Beier flava UG. . SA ul Oe gee year. . P b\° BE: 1 is Ka rd, the $2.00. Next Year Receive. .$50.00 actress “whose pettormane- in WOW Lake Theater F 4 ' “Genevieve” was unforgettable. 420 Pentiec Trail $4.00. Next Year Receive $100.00 | | ii. Vv. dl ti ao ies te Sere Gah | WALLED LAKS $10.00. Next Year Receive. $250.00 : | digency n\n son. ct tae ton me wond| $20.00. Next Year Receive $500.00. ccsceuMas Ga, & they are in love and that they'll TONIGHT mo ty marry as soon as it can be ar- | 4-G-M's Youthful, “°, ‘ ranged. He was once in love with ~~ i ed at random: Errol Flynn has at | The Community [95> pak National Bank [ia oe ™ of Pontiac i, S| Seaccteer se : Walter Wanger, who is making “Mother, Sir’ with Joan Bennett at Allied Artists, has been offered GASH. BUYSDAD, « JANINE PERREAU . BARRY KELLEY . PULIP AMD 5 Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Out of Town Keego Harbor PEATURES AT: 12:38 — 3:59 | 7:04 — 10:10 P.M. Walled Lake $50,000 for the sepa ees oeens ; ; Marilyn Monroe acques a “ for r. ” a ae Mecambearacl.... SAT. “REAP THE WILD WIND” Ale “MAN OF CONFLICT” , . ‘ . @ ‘ . y } ( : SG fe ee ee? a See ee CSS A Rese Re eee ere gm Sm ee ee eat de oy ae ts}el Fe ie SE GPS Wwe. oe “i 1 'N.™. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1954 : pir New Yorl St os “Te | | MARKE ETS |) state ments conten St | ‘Suspect’. . . By Hugh Lawrence Nelson) °™” sly something?” a +6 @4 Int Niek : a1 - H N von ; , ees 978 Int Pap 888 - . ' ‘ course.” Produce + fies HE BeBe oman H , - Allee ati ".: . ; Te ) WETROIT \ Aiea ‘Ch. ba tet Bel aT n I Ss T ate e} “Don’t let her hire you!” pape Dee. 3 (UP) — Wipleeaie Allied Sire .. set ieeues ..... ay c . What?” Jim . ported by Bureau of Markets: ~ ae, ine GS —— ee---- & , Oo j on | ; staal tiles Wie tedden : am eee a@uL.... M1 ; . E O e - - always bu: No 1 — 0 oa , fancy, 6.50 cm sean eee b 4 Kelsey Hay... 20.1 NEW YORK : P : : ; ter fancy 4G, bo, 13 webs bg AR Gite Sa igure «Shy | ket aurged ahead today dor ; Page One) [be explained at this Carlson ee ra fanc i 3 bu; La : by yan 611 oeee 5 ms * Motions. Saney, 359 be: Oe Tae lee tee Rt Kresge 68 .... 315) third straight session the! J. Oswald Carisons? The J. mil. | Place?” | eu: ageee eres Oye cus te (tn 7 tsk oP .... 3) girength in aw ton Carisons?” “1 am—ah—buying Cider No 1, 200-225 é-g0i cose. Pears, | Am M & Poy 252° Lib McNAL... 13 early dealings took) ,, a place near- Bose, No 1, 3 50-400 bu. lx - 121 Ligg & My..., 644 the market again into Yes." | by. Under Vegetables: Beets, No 1, 90-125 doz res AL . —E Lockh Aite +0 904] reund for the new high The « - Un another name, You are bcha, bests, topped. No 1, 1.00.1 40 bu | Am Beating ete? ng: as | oe peake of the 1909 since; . | grandsoll, J. Peter Carl- to act as my caretaker. That is . 0s- um i : , bull market , curly, No 1. 100-1.68 ou pees: Am Tel&sTel 1132 Lortiiera ..... 287) Gains went to around .| 90m, 16 my husband.” what I meant when I said I thought was a little initial strength in a/! 190-10 be. Correta , gorauta, Be | aoe 3} an Pid. 16 | Mey divisions ne geeceagh owen She glanced at her wrist watch you would pass. In different cloth “~* “ . ' . =, ee — iJ couple of wheat but this — carrots. topped, No 1, 1.00-150 bu jAm Zine “ rg Mart Gi .... 28.2 | beyond. that went on quicki * . be | quickly faded when it Coulitivwer. No 1. 280-3.00 dos Celery, Anse Cop ... “a7 Lao Str. 383 ee Se ees ee cena y, “The Carlson you could a caretaker. And you : - parent the general ven Eg ag a No 1 7, | Anse W&C .. 562 mia Cp ..... 514 . family is a matriarchy. Old Mrs should have no difficulties ° market ween't |r ent? Sas No 1 106-190 Armco Stl. G3 maid onl 4 Trading was hea‘ ‘Oswald ¢ . ~~" | tablishing in es- | going to advance. caéiahs eae bu Hore Pe peg 128 Monsen Ch 38 ,| er the opening, gph aft- Carison has control of the | ihe friendly relations with = a ‘ - 2 bt, | . . > « Seat near. the end ofthe fist Sk, Sa tir Attu’ ame Ment Wart. 384) unable to boop pace tape waa | money and is correspondingly de servants on the Carlson estate.” : was unchanged to % lower, | S04 Dag. Parsie; ry. We 1. 138-168 |au etme. ‘aya wetetele, floor transactions “ly rethey ignores “S ose.” For- first | Deretaber $2,25%; cora unchanged | £2°,.¢° Pereiey, curly. No 1, 7-00 ating tin... 371 Mueller Br... ie and fell be- | which is all right. But Mrs TM, | a. ned the the time - / Parsnips, N y root, G0-100 des. 1a +> 823° Murray © hind as much as four : . Hil impression she was | to % lower, December $1.56%; | {o*" a t's0-430 be bm pom: | cee: MES :-- 61 mes Blog: (he) was late for aa it | Carlson, my mother-in-law, She's| Midis something. “It might be oats * | toes. 7 6: pote- | See a ae) Y . : | nes ewe Devmee 22) moi adeStetantme pact ing: Beta OP BE Mek Ber ee aon wee shore veatiatio M the . , December Ne 1. 100-150 bu: radishes. hothouse. vor yy Mat Gros... @ | “A minute,’’ Jim said. “All these a wife.” | $1.19%; . soybeans % to 2 cents no lati don bene Rutabigee, Gael ...1 on. Mat Lead .... O08) Calend Mrs. Carlsons. It's confusing Mrs. Carl: ae lower, January $2.80%; and lard |, 71% Ag ng or nenge herd Air G82 Nat Thee os ar ing them apart.” = rs. Carlson considered the mat- : 5 to 25 cents a hundred pounds 17 bu.» Sy tags ol ise NY Alr Bre. 217] Regular meeting “It-won't be when you' ; na It she can lock the part. ——— te becca ase | Bee Ml we Rene St 21), Regular meeting nd Christmas hem” And, for that matter, they've te ee | | 10-1 bent “Turnip, Net, 100-138 dos Dline’ gis Nott @ West 41 | dinner 6:30, ' evolved : get the ; * = | behs: turnip, topped, No i, 100-125» Budd Co...... 147 No Am Av... 683 * December 8th. Pon- a simple gway of avoiding place ready for me ; | Grain Prices | Lettuce and salad greens: Celery ai Burroughs... 341 oe oe ae te any confusion. pag, “Aaa ircie | sible, st het if pos- “cumcane® enant aa. ede 180-200 bu. Endive, No }, Peocagy Med H... 10.7 Nest Airlin .. iss . Bessie Howell, Scribe, —Adv. | * least they're called by their lations with ae ey re a bu. endive, bleached. No 1,|Cdn Pac... sas = . 84 - husband's first names, becoming | 0 ! ee Capital Airl .. Dp “1 . . |. x understand you 2 Dee. .. . Hh] \coltera, mo 1, 180-150 ba 1 00:1 50, bu. Carrier Cp . os Lene ei a News in Brief wre. Oswald, Mrs. Hilton, and I employment?" are accepting 1s sib ad , No 1. q oO ts art we SSCS a: Matt ho Mba [Sauer Proc” HU tn i 33] Charen of courte was—am~called Mra. ,WHh one reservation. aes” ni, | No 1. 200-280 bu Swiss Oe re te ny parte Doe on rles M. Cutcher, 43, of 3758 wee aad “And that is?” " Corn— 82:4 100-125 bu. Turnip, No 1, 1.78-3.28 bu. centeea 247 Parke Dav 37 | Oakshire, Berkley, was y Mrs. Peter?” My talk with Captai aha se .. ry | ae a rs 4 243 Penney JC 90.2 and $15 od $85 “ of the San F: ptain Johnson | March le DETROIT BUUs Cee Nw... 133 Repel - 196 | pleaded costs Saturday when he You might say I am still on | She rancisco Police." May . ‘DETROIT: Dec 6 | Chile Oop. 3k Pah Cola .. 16.7" guilty to drunk driving be- probation. I have been stood up. ‘‘Of course. Y: _ . Detroit AP)—Rgge, fob |Chrysier .... pm D ., 44/fore W ng = married (ha ” _ : .. 1430 cases included, f ysier...., 654 Phiico aterford Townsh only about ve @ car? Osta— "el Tl gage | erades . Si-state | Cities gre 14974 Philip Mor i Willis D. Let ip Justice in a year. We were hav- | Carlson ” you com ”” mark ; , unchanged Holl engeone aed aaiimes nore | leering satistactority. Retail Cee Kia was Baier Sen ton roe J aoee Tees. eae to Dist “Probably tomorrow ait ofa cent. ; italy lira) 16% - ‘ re wement over the ; c:-- eway Bt i ustic ’ . Distan i f . : eo krona) eudo) KS, 5 cows around ported good week re- Cade = . %3 at Jos Lead po Ingle. Pp tice Allen C. by the But t it ive cook arrives F my _ wadhanged) Wilson & co bears —— peal aie ai or ck cae | Mrs. Carlson is hiring my serv- | and tig a for 30 days |} just phone us and | P*Latayette wireet, Pentioe. Michigan. | attend, Best said. |interiet tr 178 Youn, BAW. 308 Floods Claim 10 in Iran | ‘Sometimes,’ Jim ad nee ices and those of a female opera- ‘russ at no cost It voa a $3.50 'T the mon en we icen nave : Bay nd - yt YOUR SURE wn v 332 Zenith Rad | 90 + " | «Then you wie admitted. tive for the period of one month ‘entirely sa a un tha tn not ey waiting for you when i | — | S COURSE TO. SS SHRAN, Iran (UP) — F | taege jill want to know Make the neces: : * | tion — nven- | you call at our office | OF AUDITORS poarp | © en mt through Classified ads! | NO TROUBLE AT ALL to rent | [Csulting from heavy rains an | ay oe might get on rangements, ae aT | cae i wae bet a sure to | FE 4-1574. - Phonef || Se 6 th aia | call rE a re through with, | through For Rent ads! For an 10 eid and injured 50 over the la family ee only in “That I will,” Miss Wister said — If you are ruotured just | STATE . ’ . : | ad-writer FE weekend in the south Iranian city) ‘There’ ce es et grimly. ‘“‘Who are you = te the Physicians’ FINAN 4 : iter phone FE 2-8181. ‘of Shiraz, it was reported today. *| woe sre thine. = Your wife?” you taking’ io 4065 Koch Bidg., sAzplanoe| 702 Pontiac State ace CO. Death Flowers | : yam Ito, “Yes.” . Kansas City, Mo. fo Bidg. Notices sacaaeaeea sam . 3) ___ Help Wented Male 6 Help Wanted Male é| elo Wanted F ‘trial éffer. eee Phone FE 4-1574 : TREES (SMALL, ME- | oo EEO || OO AOI elp Want emale 7) BOW. DECEMBER 4. 1984, BAM- cae. tig aaire teres). Sree | ests CEMETERY VIRST CLASS MECHANIC FOR ae | ae Wenet See 2 aa Building Servic Pontiac , age 86; be- | or Stekonhowe cs | ~ aggro er part time ork on Pontiac and Cadillac wash RED DISH-| WANTED: ——™~ | . é eee g Service 12) F | . and automodi! ers and b Dee oent ~|—~-~ eiet) | 00 Spec ; dear A = ie, | oe Re’ _t | 67038 fo ae ee ee comes See re eee | _berinae. Geena’ cae i a a Pelle peck ont Rd | SE | PLUM BINO WORK WANTED. | PLOO , SA : lallet ISA | po Agee meg Des: he Boj GREENHOUSE, aaa : _ Birmingham Cadillac,| Saginaw | General housework Caldee | eee 1 = SANDING, LAYING FIN DR. A. A KANTER fea ise MayDowruneral wert! | 24 Jalaliaamaacshinl fe Soper Syne MT BE HONEST eee raeees Bt | ep Bescrmergnced gi chit | Tependanie man FE Sara gareeet wt Central FE Sint Say sechew OP . eerv- me. = ~ — .m t : in 3 to = ———— ee. 41 | GEN "a i will be held Tuesday, Dec 19) AQOBSEN's VLOWERS Robe ”., pereen. Mere ave the tects, This ta 0 | £10 00.08 8, Telogre FM-| Gleep in F to '¢ niente a week. | WANTED 4 OR 5 HOURS WORE GENERAL BUILDING REPAIR, ged Dr _— aca VE Sie sl all Clothes ee an | cea aan uae ay jt * referenee® ——i PE sent Pincterin snd tile wert, Fe | Furniture Refinishin: ry . | ——— 8 Saginaw bd ou probably won't care of TAKE | NEAT APPEARING LAD‘ - +2290 - FE). e < 16A officiating. Interment in | (2 _AUBoR: MON'PE 2317) EXPERIENCED RE. y: sare £1,900 the fet month. The eek ees S| Fesnine pADY te) UW. Soar liey oi core dhasge of grows sang DORSTAN'S FLOWERS, | Sew el En REAL Estate| 0 OUT waite per ee | x PE sate. ork Wed. Female 11 Kinda st 1016 OOF 8. ALL | Maly, PE Sela PE BTS2 j= tar. Bow ote be wm sate | ae ee. Be —- — if FULL OR PART TIME W NVOMAN COLORED WOMA =~ Cass, +3021. FE . a Bparks-Griffin Puneral parking eer Ine oon | ee ee ae ee ee fae bee | oe eg Co Pn eo ee : a : sacral | __Feneral Directors 4) iii’. Extra “commission poe | You ‘can easily arm over 813s Dee. ovey Boo | E2%: Bind, Sout’ Spin Sait | GST oaED ce Prt. werk, Bal- | Se tpedng, fevbtnr. 1s pias. | Garden Plowing 16B OOINO. DEC 5. 1064 SLAER, ooee | AMBULANCE, COURTEOUS eS een | eegiv.l318} W’ Maron J0 30 em | NSry TBome typing ah orice WOMAN WHO | WANTS | GOOD Cal eee GEN. | MODERNIZATION AND CARPEN. EDMUNDS Py va Pu = = “el wes, le C ee ee en ak oe cinclent _ PURSLEY FUNERAL FIREFIGHTERS MEN'S Dee 7 | ims a | a for 3 chlitree and | the pow. or_Cartvtmes. By | 7; Basements peeeac es teens Gitten bce bonne pe Ser dear father of hen. _HOME FE +1211. — 84.086 to 84368. sick “ wN a) UL LOl HIN¢ 1 _ 2-0206 om. ay in OR +2785 before ” ou: clock. +4507 tim at rE PY ipa and ‘Leveling sz Sees ~ hea . . re wee LE . : LORED | | ee Le 4 ‘ grt, Gring. jee tretter “st | Donelson-Johns are greets gile aed medical | yy Gay appiy mp OFNERAL, HOUSEKEEPING WHITE MIDDLE AGED HOURE:| FE’ sa ort dave week cay,| Atticn. Aitchens beta. aan es seas Going Funeral service will - amination, Dec 1@ 8 am R - ime Appiy in person trestng e children No eeper, must live in: Christian |»; 5-0720. . : 8, hens, baths, porches und held “Tuesday, ‘Dec. 7 at 2pm. FUNERAL ROME Quirements: age minus service Robert Hall C Digg pe weg, | ant eeeneree tan FC BOOKKEEPER. NOW LIV- ons ee Se Es . , at 2 pm. ge minus servic bert Hall Clothes Referenc . | lady preferred. FE_ 5-037. Cc. ; - | 48833 s. FE from the Gyerte-Grithe Suineel —Demona tron PonemaLe> | Une [138 nad school gerrce | ace N_ SAGINAW 8 _— eee. Nae z WOMAN TO CARE a ee) Ly. | or a * = (CURTAINS NYLON ® ALL MA- Heme oun Dr. Mines B Bank _BPARES-ORIPFIN SERVICE for “the. lant . feeident of Pontiac NEEDED BY “DEC. 6, 15 TRAC. | —°hild_3 $10 AnD CARE OF dren days, while parents wort.| engines eehip soos . Also “Oe er ges ee NO. OLD AND | quipmect Colton ruse ch ow Mount ee pode wi en Appl — | . ave air and vacuum. | 7 pre Se | WANTED SEAN FO FALL POs. pable 2 i weshed & sizes, grave _pervice, "Mr "Ging may Voorhees-Siple |itro» Mam" ApET Petrone etic, | He” in gon. imgcbamical cond | person BECK CLEANERS. 33 WANTED WOMAN Fo FICE FORE| Waneopratinn, Wavinir e000 | OTA Worn eunraseed. FE CAGNDRY "3 My Telegrape ona Mr may , HYDRAMATIC MECHANIC, MUST Call with tractor, 4823 me | Wood : . 332 | high school graduate, and oe Bas . Work guaranteed. FE el-Huron center. PE 5-680 geen at the “TINT R | . halaamertans ANIC, MUST Drayton P) . Dixie Hwy, ward. Birmingham. MI | bed some past . have |G DESIRES WORK Ag SHORT 17-9501. . LACE CUR - Fee wane BBS new | amtnace orien Pre or i pe cette cece nage | Sabi cain Cate taaPes On Penal ar wont ean FE | ASTERINO, FEW OD REPAR fed beautifully fished) Patios Ps tus ocetie at ne fe ats) etvice Plane or Motet mechanical jobs. Geod pay and | have own trans . MUST) ros | SOSSTTAL FRAENED PARCTICAL -2936 evenings, ry. Phone FE 28101 uneral — 2 ine condition ONE OF M . portation or live ome, Telegraph Rd... AL MASON & CEM: FOR PAMILY LAUNDRY BERV. _ home oad = ae oo bon Ghicmeeiie ene noe Be or tes tar aneuge ber te ee must have) 274 10 Opm. Tu arcre purse. Doctor's seference rE pecially rasoggelel WORK. FREE | ice ag LAUNDRY : MANGUM 6R DECEMBER 5 =a Pees men - 8 . 4A _ Rochester ain, Gucltees land Steactn i EM 3.0342 or appointment, cal! __ Wednesday soapty A.J, Webste a aes ee 2-8101 tiae Laundry, FE Marold 7 ‘@ Brabe Ra re a | ee " representatives im Oak! 8C HOO: v ee AL NU RG ee ee Ox- CH MEMORIALS INC | and and L TEACHER. ACCRE aide. Ref TRAINED RsEs | R. GO. SNYDER, FLOOR LAY La hand i a age hus- Perr since ten iy profitable pleasant ful fee cae Penge Mc vai 7 oar Help Wanted 8 I inoninos IN TR Tear OInT bore = . re eee dear father of Harold Wile m . CFE 53-6031 _ epression-free work No Bloomfiel rative school in ~ = ~nnw~~ | for baby sitting FE ——— __ TREE TRIM um n- | BUY DIRECT & SAV - : ‘ erce necessary expert eld Hills Part time work SALESPEOPLE = D | __FE_5-1471 WE SPECIALIZ | ft MING AND R . Give Bours tuanram sr dear deere emveroxmsc) = 2QO0BOYS Av aturrentue train peu tract galery” Call MA 63 Trine demand” Clg rca hat a Gaal oe ertmsio San | Moving & Truck re tae it ar eo E_ Silo ou need is will as to EE : ere ce demand Bi | r sSETT 1EMS a i a wether of Mise Josephine Man. | lend Ave,_F — | to work. and soimake money Bee a ee Semaet et -ommiaten | Tmne Dota) i Aft aCe: | ple wars. Classified ras! PE | anne & Tracking t9 = ion, ' ed oY, = THOMPSON a bel Py . E <> S54 5-4890 "| _ 2 o t : E LLL LLLP fon, Menges dr aad) Cave Cemetery Lots 5 we need 20 bore to © w= a nop m to tc TED; SALESMEN | oeOM scsect Fu 5 HOME, Cg see ea ASHES ANO RUBBISH BAULED, G. Mangum M : vid | LEDS EOE SL FCO STE noon only ai o work after. | only oo ; O SE T : ~ 4 _Work guaranteed FE_ 5-6340 . ‘ pe ee eee ee . ‘* gum. Mr. Mengum was |? LOTS WHITE CHAPEL Q00D ig eg ae aca STENOGRAPHERS | ERAT ie ARM CADY 31 DESTRES Basy Str _ Bushvess Services 13 og pe opp JOBS. reaham. N.C where ser p i co | 3-0075 | REAL . : . INEM Bro re ae vour home. Ex : w= |G ddl eet . wil be held Funere! arr vice PERRY MOUNT PARK L ESTATE SALESMEN | D SVeTE . b-1848. -: A & y Tes LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING rrange- | CEME- , Good rt - SYSTENX | A& B TREN \ HEAVY TRU _ Home. Eeavien Gane Fueeral _*r7,_S N. Perry. FE ¢156) | pe et lala EE OP ihn — ‘provect aud “sony fine ‘hee. | NEE ED | Needed s every ho nd O eea PHING. ING, | Pees water NE Es ae — OSTRANDER, ——— | , , ings. Prospects are plentiful. if | bussness Ev ier _retarial_ service. EM 3-2043__ Hace | ash NG. LEAVES AND NDER, DECEMMER «iss BOX REPLIE Bert Falkner | 7oW are ‘not afraid ‘of hard work, | 7 | | tele. Good very home & potential |RETIRED -NURSE DESIRES ALI MAKE® OF FOUNTAIN PENS | pane Fe oe From to 2, age 63, beloved hustend of Mrs | 9 S Circulation Dept Sa "ceae te aed tom ke ever , A NPerience Stod. Cons sale a) ee ee Lear Sectors trained men | seesemable fates. OM 34576 ans: mugeelge pln tate dear rae At 10 PONTIAC oa Pa ee +1549 for a can | Pret FFE pel, ae ane ¢ m. “ 23-4253. - a ea store. —s Printing & | —time, s. OR 34274 any- ¢ VC. Gera) F a. é REESS ALESMAN HARDWAR SS | eral pointme | Soa A MikG AND IRONING —— Offic ; 0. _ Law- x Ravin a ie raid. and ~ m. today j} | | Product Ce os up referred | eral Alarm eo Wir $-0833 : _Tence pg ~ ll FE 30135. O’DELL CARTAGE Service will be held Tuesday. Dev | re were replies at Couple, Hire is $300 up ‘| ~ Ww APPLIANCE SERVICE |" Prene'Pr' ss Pade PM atthe Munim 4 the Press Office in | — ofa Managr, Trainee Sr wp ___,_ Instruction 9 Sis | Scart orem Phone PE ses0e officiating 1 “iy Hakes | t mala | Salesm a Seon $216 up pry ~~ = WOMAN tors, washer. cere- RE ICE Cemetery. interment in Oex Hil the following boxes: || Intangible Salesmen Rump Pop ht gid aeeaaar re poe | APPLY REPEEATING bensshoaper Sar teterions home. | 2nd oll types ot canal tgmtianese, | LATS -DUCED RATES in state at the Huntoon Puner S14) Wee ice Clerk, part time $150 an hr ; | RATION : "8, 96 Oakland ave 23-4071 | _ Moving © you, Smith Sneeas— —_ _ ~ &, 12, 13, 21, 24, 29, 39 | Car necessary ery a BOND EMPLOYMENT AGENCY PONTIAC MOTOR Mechanically inclined men et WOMAN WARTS Da a BLOOMFIELD WALL open | SUDDEN SERVICE —AaNES ROS . Mary Jane piel A, leat 42, 50, 53, 56 * Tl Game ce wit tal ole craauce SERVICE SALES MEN. MU : | ete eee beans ee _perienced ¢! hour. FE_ 7-2861 Pree 0k. (ns satan Reasonabie. | _Dish, and |'gh! trucking. Gels terford Twp, age at gee 69, 70 pure FE Shite apiece be neat and courteous isinek DIVISION scare tie’ Geinies pa Weems WILL DO TYPING Y HOME ELECTRIC HOTOe GES PE 2-1631. | TRUCKING SaD WATLING SOR . e beloved . 70 71, 75, 78, 5-042) for appointment with ae iar . pet raining plan tte : SERVICE RE _Mish NG RUB. be ge Me eon Wo barra Ban 89, 98, ask ‘ m. %. IF YOU RE THINKING moules! | Ses ane. ee eeuc ia Souiues inst, Box Ly Pontiac WOM aN tenes OAT ———— a“ — 218 a Pie TOULMARS Mavinee FE ven08. Seeteriin. Mre wile Mra. Evelyn . ABOUT Tile FE a1! Wilson Pontiac Cadillac, Bir ESS __ | CE Xperience and DAY WORK | 5: asellabenta lt ING AND 8TOR- a Geea ides Wanon aes | caren cals euce El TURE , mineram PERSONNEL DEPT Work Wanted Male 10 _*'* and references. FE PLUMBING AND HEATING 8 tinea (alee vane Geen sister of Mrs. L. F. Hem: rar -< lccrse Tr IUnSS nationally known TWO SALESMEN WANTED oe , . . ~ Re WASHING AND IRONINGS. 3 I. 43761. OR United Staten Qui anywhere in Bis" Aaa' uncer. Paneer’ Help Wanted Male 6 corporat 9 yim jnusual mercnan- | Protement "salermen Phone, Fr OLENWOOD AVE A) CARPENTRY. PLAETIC. AND | gta RONINOS FE ic — Sewers Cleaned: NCiNFRATOR seer eerie om t uesday, Dec 7 e POSE ROS ; plus unique personnel p alts | «ase en Phone FF : _tile @ specialty FE 5-6964. WASHINGS. REASONA - — Sewers Cleane NCINERATORS CLEANED. ASHES Church Se eee A RILLION DOLLAR ure 1n.| coueer men terested. py uel Road Stor Tatormation Voorhets PONTIAC. MICK aioe rt con AND CEMENT ene ey: De gee 20 br. ae Noe results. no gaa paarea Ciena apo iad . ree . ot : onnection ru Frida, 8 : k. FE 46773. LD ime WORK : chemically tre . a ; fo Waterford Center Interment | ton ie tke Wamne: Ateae Turee hab wit artes “thorough training iol te se 8 Brouwer er woe. Fe D LIKE ANY KIND] Ge: practical marae. ineleaing ol Rots Re S a Truck t Sanford will Ite | etery very unusual opportunities 5 age inco fford him above aver- Man too Raa - ~ a = a nha __ FE_5-71094. L- 8. FE 44-5030, : oto-he oewer Cleaner S i Partacs Paceres tat state at available for men Lorie gl | Mp ome on an attractive Pci Bo 0 operate retail gro- LADY To aR AicarORaGE GAIT CARPENTER 28 YRS EXPERL uildin _ = s oO ent 22 P.M on Tend sore ee the onportunity of a long ran _ Ha de panei and comm pesis In-| cerry route . dc : den in my hor FOR 2 CHIL- ence. needs work aS tee B g Service 12) 8-1317 | TRUCKS TRACTO wm be taken to ay, then she; professional career bicccke Nk ing work, with fine advatce. | : _ age 25 to 45. _ own trans Sete Must furnish | CEMEN: work, FE $6338.00 | | EL ICAL | AND EQU RS wan Dect Grad” at least) Guarantors Salar ment opparunty Fotiewne gear) Must be married, A-1 en transportation OR 34508 0 | CEMENT FINISHER DE SLR ES | Pe Tarepince repatt, Cal after & SEWER CLEANING 77” tea" paieie Wile (A 334 W Buren St, acs | ees onfidential Write or under 38 with Seer cattee.| telerences, All per nal) SLENOGRAPHER Pel sree ie = repatr. Call after 6 | Sinks, Sunday ferv. Ph FE 42012 | Pont; Bere ma : beloved husband of Mrs. ) _ Huron Pontiac. Ph E 2 Aginative, aggressive ; : sona a ad | terations, kitchen . RX: aera aang eae pT Toe ntlac Far Spence; dear father of W Eva | ACTUAL | c. Ph. FE 27-1453. | «spoken. car f and soft) benetits ; rations, kitchen. FE 2-2733 aRicCK. BLOCK AND CEMENT PERT TREE TRIMMINO & arm and S William UAL JOBS OPEN IN U 8. int r for local use, Fer nefits, such as hospr- COOK WANTS JOB AS COOK IN| ¥° AND moval Ph FE RE- Industrial T . Mrs. OOH. G , Bo. Am Eu , 8. nterview wire collect ‘o Mr. | I CASHIIER om ‘ AS COOK IN rk Aise chimneys. No job too | _ 32000 $6593 or OR trial Tractor C nam tes. Wine meee) rope To $15,000 , Arnold | Noye © Mr.| talization-vac N , mercial or any kind of cook-| ‘'#rse oF too sma Fo ene | Open Datly ; 0. . Mrs. , Bryan Spence. | el paid. Write only. Employ. | _Fimt, Mic s, Durant Hotel, | acation with ing Good dinner cook. W' -| wee Ph GOUSsE Dally Including Sund : Vaden ment Info Cent ploy. _Fimt. Michigan. | : hee Pir ¢ tiac Pre . Write Pon- wok Ph FE 48604. RAISING AND FOOTINGS -—— FF. 4-0467 ays - Spence. carvie and Gene | 16 Stu nter Room 339, - || pav-retirement f maneri position f sik ss Box 38 CEMENT in Sept — — FE 41442 e uns held | — ee etaar: St _ Boston, M vs und. enced st or expert- MENT 18 OUR SPECIALITY ie tanks and field P : a pow Tn ay = Bd lao ot the | ATTRACTIVE OPPORTUNITY — LE ADS! (suaranteed salary-bonus some shortnan¢ sles sashior end CEMENT WORK £M anne ts driveways. Sraine. inte led PE 24137 Prec Painting & Decorating 20 with Rev. Herb ome man. stroag personality | ; . | or : N off!.. experienc = AA LAND ae or | : ARAR AR AA. ineermeni MF Commins | Hauer eer, cme. LEADS! oan hs ieee ea Eiriad’wetier than areface | fivewape laseaiia” and ‘cheep a he OEE LIN? i ttnring 1. Mr. & "i $100.00 a week o earn i a year. No lavoff s labor OR }-2579. BAND A +) omate FE pepering.-Call for est be sent tonight r pence will | time opport or more, or part : h 6, car] t] — 20702 4:30. 5 R SAWS e._ FE 4-0255 Howard Fune at midnight to! $1 “Pontiac Preses fully, Box | furnished. | IR CARPENTER WORK WANTED. : precision machine sharpened and | “-! PAINTING. PAPERHANGIE ° Milles Arkansas’ for”setvice eri ia ceboeronne WATTS MEN LEADS! — paid on sic io teaas| oon time . OR sae _—_ carpenters pie ° sais removed. Estimates i ay. Funeral arrange- | Who wish to e Sal 4 6 -. _* ame. For detatls | ’ ARPENTRY Term ; : x ; men ee arn $100-$150 ~| salest Se a ___’ 4 _N_ Sart . CABINETS. s. OR gaate ty Ge Merwin A, Schutt | iy. This opportunity srequiren ho | p nén for the Famous) see Mr. N. Ruth, Wal- Pere Sear a apo ied siding. D. M. Wright, | CARPENTRY OUARANTEED PAINTING & DEC — | Toes Witton “PPT Bornings dron Soanaieer $1 | CanPETNEA WORK EW 28S _ete _PE $0702. A PAINTING INTERIOR Oost Pe a ART Tne [Oe or, tern TV) trom Mote, 6 60.9 pm, RS Ree anes UES |r eee sey comma | Pe St re, ae Leche ee SerenOn 8 Ee e ™ 6 194 ° : » Pm 4 -— 2 arr he am ee o1732, ay men sfPrage, over. S180 pet | ——— and} ue sday ; BOND EMPLOYMENT AGENCY caine? MAKER AND CARPEN | "= 2-07. a = Pe dueranteed. Free estimate. WISH TO THANK OUR assemb! EPAIR MAN POR | [< 6. opportunity ko ot a ee Kitchens ax specialty. Pe | CUSTOM BUILDING P. CA. PL . | PAPERE a neighbors MANY . y work Must have the natio join one of Help W ~ - SEAN ae _ 2-872 : . HLA. | ERHANGING and nurse: bumiping experi : some ons fastest growing com- p Wanted Female SEAMSTRESS nancing. Modernizing. FE 4-5470 AND | Sandusk AND PAINTING of ha ek, eae wa et reas With our bonus aaa i eee LARA Raney 4 Must be- experie “ EXPERIENCED © CAR R SANDING O1.D pair. Cail Carl Buxton PE 4-0028. PAIN - Ft _ $3043 weuigieidi aut at tae red Without none plar you are acsured of ASSISTANT BOOK : Cleaning! feoaics nced in Dry Cadimet maker. References fur. | Specialty, Ce FLOORS A | SonERT A CHAPI> ee ee TING AND WALL. ne cagage anon ls do not :p Ting over $7,000 vour first y Nava aut KEEPER MUST. Apply to M Steady work _Sished. FE 5-1024 , Bi's.. FE 2-789. CHAPIN PLUMBING {2% © White. OA A pair’ Ine ls ~ pg Re oa over alierel couri aad hi ant —— Aealershie ax erience Cannar a ache mene MAN. 4). DESIRES GENERAL presenta od WORK. ALTERA- e Phone PE 53479. | 29756 . 63801 or FE es , ¥e vou h Wil- oO j j : moderniza i E | —— oe 2 oe FULL TIME FOR Eee le seid cad eal .™ fad oo sor Pontine Cuan. lrmingnam a ae os ipo ae cleo butiding. Ouive Sg = eae custom | = M : GET THE MOsT FOR YOUR TOoR te the “Sires ‘. Te2 tg so ey ~——~wr HAVE At our disposal tel purchase = = land for eliens, Bee me before vou oatl. | ASK FOR BOB MAHAN. YOU BUY ITLWELL INSURE IT :| MAHAN ety | LI po REALTORS MEMBERS Sih Sundays tsar Ph. On ean oT a Templeton, Realtor 2239 Orchard Lake R4 PE ¢-4562 Wanted Real Estate 32-A MAKE - EDW. M. STOUT TN. Saginaw St Pu. Pe S81 LISTINGS WANTED | — alle onggd and commer ROY K KNAUF, Realtor Robert D. Riley, Broker __ Ph PE 4st BS AP Newdesteres “Hey Pop! Can I plant the flowers new? i. thumb!” _Rent Apts, Furnished 33) Rent Apts. Unturniehed 34 m ares pores arses wer | Mar. 1 bores, Taare eee S00 pm. FE es MY osera ping Senes 3 ROOMS CHIDREN, ALL “TO DOWNTOWN, &Pa- utilities Turn. 111 Semipole. ctous 8 eine newly * sairaace. Heat Lh Was | fer Ww ituron 6. in. | so AN. welcome New York 3 0& BA AT! Lk. $80 month FE 86-1370 3 ATE end entrance W Christian couple—preferre~ a MAHAN HAS BUYERS ont rad Beil - - WE'LL MAHAN REALTY CO REA Member co Real Ext — Ine. 2-0263 Oper Eves ‘til §. Sun. 10-4 1078 ~W. we POsT OFrice DONE [T AGAR over 00 per ovat of eur’ Wistinns and ar. desperately tm need of al) types of property wo sell. Por cuick and courteous geen call Office per 6-8 A. JOHNSON. Realtor FE 4-2533 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. O' N home, city your or pag oe NB Call now for Ww side terrace, 2 bea- 2000 Decter ad. Walled 4, , adults only —— «oath. Write to Bes . BATH. “, he Press - eeteanes. 965 per month bed. Adulte only. 25 Monroe. | Rent MNouses Purnished 35 FE 54-5738. No drinkers. - _—e ROOMS, NICELY FUR- N e Saas | ow a couple, 437 N. Gag- go new ' Porest rr | WATERFORD. CLEAN 4 ROOM an g ‘ste entrance Main ro. Tots welcome. Russel! = Share beth with tag cung Renta: Agency. e146. erences. Call between 6 and @ Clark 6t. Call before 6. _12 om. only, OR 38047 __ | CARE ORION § ROOM MODERN. a ROOMS FURNISHED HEATED 16) Heights Ra. MY 30472 ¥ —T. i oaraan in Keego Harbor Adal — SOUSE TOR RENT. 1470 enly. Inquire at son ie —wouas 3087 OUTali DESTRABLE 4 ROOMS & mati . arace. West side. Avail. bie Ca PE 20004 or PE 6-063 4 ROOM FURNISHED APT. HEAT end lights furnished. Couple pre- ferred. No ¢rinkers, 4211 Dixte _ Hwy. OR 3-1621. © Gor Betnas Sehoteent. Dull Same Furnished or unfurn. $90 a 3 reoms Modern. Completely furn entran-e 1 ch. weleome. 710 W tla wees Year around at Elizabetu Lake. $18.50 weekly. THELMA ELWOOn REALTOR re °-1266 BACHELOR APT. WEAR ie . Very re 1 GARAGE, HOUSE A PARTMENT. flse, 3 new —— one of our qualified sales- AUDIVOX HEARING 101‘) N Saginaw ANY GIRL OR WOMAN | TEeLIRG ® friendly arse contact Mee | Vernon Vie c 2-A734 fideritial. The Saiveticn Army. warts te 40638 | BOOKKEEPING—TYPING ot kinds. i =! service. | 210 8 legraph Rd. PE 5-0678 CHRISTMAS Soest 6. WONDERFUL selec tion for ev BACKENSTOSE 15 or Lawrence. DAINTY MAID [OR ES. Mrs. Burnes. FE 4. 63 Mark. woe & commercial MAole 5-Taat "beg serve A Pious servic 2, Mg for "whe care Lincoin 6-0080 REDUCE ARE, YOU OVERWEIGHT? Individea out ones rograms. CALL FF. ¢-4i31 Pid tel ecrpigte INVIFA TIONS $7 80 ‘Sutherland 1 Ww uron “YOUR a OF BANDS.” HAR- id s Royal Tones. music m. Waite’s No- Wtd. Child. to Board 26 PPAR A AOA BOY BETWEEN! 2 2g & FOUL time care CHILDREN Wes AND CARED _for, Also baby siiting, FE 31730 ONE ‘OF | yas Oakland Ave CASH . ’ FOR YOUR EQUITY IN 48 HOURS | JIM WRIGHT, Realtor FE 5-044! After © cell FE 45-5783 | Co-operatiy: _ Real Estate Exchange | NEEDED AT ONCE. } BEDROOM |) ~~~ Good sized lot. Within 5& oy — of Pontiac. Up to C. HAYDEN, Realtor 86 E. Walton Bivd. GREEN LAKE OFFICE Cottages. homes and estates MAN F._ RICE 7070 ERCE RD EM }-4412 ___WOodward 5-7744 Rings here TRADES Larger homes for smalier, vere, for suburban or farms. | mes for imeomes, large down payments sre scarce. trade your a Trades made to satisfy — copeerned. Call us obligation DORRIS & SON REALTORS CO-OP MEMBERS| 752 W. Huron FE +1557 LISTINGS WANTED | itm We need listing: all types of real s ine ao ye wait efficient persone’ and serivce on your call Also have investors who wil!' per cash for our equity on wWe' a PAUL D. HAMMOND 26% W Huron 8t Realtor | FE 5-7741 Eves. FE 5-4714 | WTD FARMS OF ALL KINDS | _ _P_W. Dinnan, 66 W_ Huron St SMALL HOUSE, LOW DOWN PAY. ment for buver Geotee L. Scales _ Mm 8, N. Saginaw, FE WILL 1 BUY © OR List FOUR LAKE ade i F. Puretasers wa, ey McKINNE Office 8890 Comme Pontiac EV S551 or UNiv. Ph. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES NEEDED Fave immediste sales for BARS, STORES gfe type 0° ‘es at once M. Stout) Realtor 77 N Saginaw st Ph. FE 56-8165 Open Eves ‘til 430 LISTINGS WANTED ED. NORDMAN Sa FE 86-0441 |; men to appraise your your prop- erty with no obligation to | rou | RAY O'NEILL, Realtor 7 W Huron n 0 Phone FE 3-7103 Co-operative Real Estate Exchange Rent _Rent Apts, Fur Furnished 33 one ROOM, SUITABLE FOR y. Near Genera! Hospital, per_week FE 40339. Pies ll $ wan. “Weed E. Partridge ow. uron St.. FE nol Ref “j rking wo ict. Private faa on = v en J ROOMS. BATH. ALL PRIVATE. 161 Mt, Clemens. 2 ROOMS OR 3-1813 (‘TROOMsS CLEAN, ? NICE MEN, __bus line _319 Orchard Ls Lake Ave. | ? & BATH #6 INCL meat of | lights 3708 Lone Pine _chart Lake 2 ROOMS, BATH AND PRIVATE | entrance, furn. own heat, $12.50 week. Clean couple, no children. _36% Joslyn Rd 3 ROOM {AND iD 4 ROOMS ALSO small neues. ba>y welcome, 3616 Auburn vate entrance, 2 aduits Trooms NICELY EORN NEAR __bu . Prances. 3 ooagErG —Otua Close in. Everything furni: : Men. FE ¢5837 7 2 ROOMS. PRIVATE ENTRANCE. hia” or working coupie. | 2 ROOM APT WEST SIDE. FE 66277 2 ROOMS welcome. 3-7263 AS HEAT CHILD Lake Orion “VY 2 FURNISHED ROOMS PRIV. PRIVATE Tv entrance. Baby welcome. 5-56eR 3 ROOMS CLEAN CLOSE IN. | 7 "_FE 5-160. 2 ROOM FURN APT. ADULTS ROOMS. SLEEPS 3 eet downtown rE +7 * REN? J) NOW through For Rent ads! House, apartment, rooms, any- thing. Dial FE 2-8181 for an ad-writer. BE 2 a= ik e = & or ANULTS ONLY. poss ealth. | LOVELY 3 ROOM TERRACE WITH icture window overlooking Dec ist to re o Cass | WEsT OF PONTIAC QUIET COU- | a no Drinkers. FE Rent Apts. Unfurnished 34 1 BEDROOM PRIVATE BATH entrance. See m r in rear, 142 W. Columbia APARTMENT HEAT. as. Kitchen stove month. lights | per $4 west side No E & HAROGER CO. REALTORS am | Huron 8t re sein | FRANKLIN APTS 3 pony and bath. Adults only. B58 month 1K. CG. Hempstead, Realtor | 102 East Huron Street +0764 Eve. FE 21317 | 1 LARGE CLEAN ROOMS AND | tilities furnished. Nea a aduits EM 32-4775 Y ROOMS, UPSTAIRS, HEAT AWD elect. Sirnished. PE 2-1430 after 6. 3 —— 7 | es NEW | hoo e. Or nd eee. _Beat cture winerw OR 7 ROOMS AND BATH SOOPLE gigs entrance. 1 Henderson 200M AND Scomka” HEATED 3 bath under | Redecorated 8 «months oo _month FE #1337 | 4 ROOMS AND BATH, MODERN New - eremnees: MY 33-7871 _Call 4pm 4 T hoous AND BATH. @ NEW- Do ft. yourse# and 2 m 5s rent are free. Call us for ormation BROS. Open Th h mor OR hg — san 4 ROOMS 165 &. MERRIMAC 8T. $00 . per; _! GARAGE HOUsE Lig td ‘ child Also 4 new apartm furnished or rished neat Rent Houses Unfurn. 36 SALE AKC cCOLLIES o% MO. OLD. SABL 2 og white. male. Blue Merie eS — Merle stud er ? HOUSES FOR RENT ise White Lake Ro 1 mile east of Clyde. J ROOMS AND BATH. #43 MONTH. ton Brunswick near Crescent 2. J RoOMs AND BATH Ne decorated. Par*i . Near schools & 4 ROOM “HOUSE NEAR FISHERS j and bus. FE 50730. 27 Parkdale. _ FE 61667 § ROOMs, ? ACRE OPTION, _ $150. Owner F NEW HOUSE. 5 ia a “PER month. Inquire 730 Mt. Clemens. | Worki ROOMS BY WEEK On | Deposit_and_ references required. month Near Clarkston. MA © Ses, La cares | Fab x a @ ROOM HOUSE FOR RENT. 04 Rent Stores 40 yor Hi, 01 OR ° ed a HOUSE 16x80 STORE A STORE, pore Vat EPUne, BEAK 2615 and 2619 N Dixie. % mile toilet with shower. LU| _N. of Te _ i SEDROOME a TRORETIC GaAs eae ieee hot water and heat. FE 4¢0s08. Pika or On 82008. 5 A mM. | BRICK STORK BOILDIN 20 Imoaern and new home, Ful 122 East Pike. FE 5-2555. ™m beth. vileges el eae aus. | for Sale Houses 2 RAND NEW 4 BED saute. gas heat =~ base- £ . Refer- Immediate Possession | Modern 2b 2 bedroom ranch ‘Lan Pena on rE TN. Shginas a nova von RENE IMMEDIATE z : | 2 buddies of more — and "us Day shift FE 2-68) : E bathroom for 1 or 2 gentle _Bicomfietd iia. Mt” een ad eee Selves, pesesatlo 113 Hudson. cd On side. 18 | PE 2-828, ROOM TO R NE CHhis Oe eee Or ee oe re man 9 & week. Close Roo, Oy PRIVATE ROME, HOT Room ant ND GARAGE. WEAR _ bug and factory 61 Home & SLEEPING ROOM EITHER bow- ble or single Reasonable FE 2-3263 “iraetbeare n6O6wM . PLEASANT a ee Home privileges. . ‘aaah ae dL EPINO ROOM. 15 CHAMBER: VE 34001 EVE FE die | SLSEPiS bey ae ae SLEEPING ROOM NEAR PONTIAC NEAR PO AS 1 ROOM “Bae | —HHetet._FR_o-ress. = ern unti' June 1965. Nicely fur- Rooms With Board 3 et ee + peace eo wou | EAN CUT . TO ROOM AND Ai modern. Ot! heat “MY 200. | ROO TKD OAR 0 € ROOM HOME PURNISHED On 5 beds Close unfurnished 47780 Ryan Rd., Uti- ~— bu: lines, 105 Rae- ea. a a pare of 8 w. Phone PE utilities furn, Sleeps 4 :| oom A yin PRIVATE home. close to Fishers and Pon- _ Ra. on See Motor. S-e0ss. 105 Auto ol] heat. corpeied. Near | RO FT meDRoOM _ lotte off E. Howard. feinenaibie, euple trom Dee. it |" soutnerm preferred. 1 Pinegrore. ys | ROOM AN A NICE DOUBLE Capind BY WEEK “Pome Mi Owe i SR ag PC FURN WINTERIZED Gra | Pe Sines “ee ‘ aires Selenme MNS Ols!? Rood, BOs AWD LAUHDRY | Close ei6 tx AND ROARD $15 WEEK. 6-0300. CONVALESCENT ope FOR EL- hr, pursing service. Now taking bed patients. FE 64-7512. servic 1 —_—— or en 24 hour e. Fiexibie rates, OR } STA acanc for elderly er ed Hotel Rooms _ 39 ‘HOTEL PONTIAC It's W the be-t m town EEKLY RATES $10 and $12 FE 56-6171 HURON HOTEL CLEAN mod “ Ww rooms by ger oe or wk. Huron 8&t. rE ~ HOTEL AUBURIN | “HOTEL ROOSEVELT” a a home are jooking for stmoronere ue a hotel and hote! service W EEKLY RATES $12 and up ROOMS WITH TV PE 5-8126 OXBOW LAK GOVT. 8U Read!-Bilt MODERN RPLUS eae UNITS en FE 8-0001 ORCHARD LAKE AND JOHNSON © large rooms. 3 and bath up. | af pe iste a fg 3 af yo] ts > 32 72 iBe' 10 mi. west of New Low Down Payment COMPLETEL FURNISHED GAYLORD eat e Paes a ™ GILES . NEW HOUSE $1500 dowa wil) buy this real sharp 2 bedroom home cove oak floors and window. Full 0. immediate rtat $10,000, wi terme NEAR ST. MIKE’S CLOSE IN Tacome a theese’ per month Located pear sc’ vou approx orl percent on your lorostsen Don't miss this good deal GILES REALTY CO. SANTA THELMA’M. ELWOOD $143 Cass Elizabeth Lake a CLAUS Landlords te ‘em! PONTIAC BOMES! “IN YOUR OWN HOME” rs. mating Neneats searce. A LIMITED (NUMBER OF] "dca Semeses cal Gr + HOMES ARE AVAILABLE ice sat ae ae PUR CHRISTMAS OCCUPAN. tive es — on te CY. SPACIOUS 4 BEDROOM, | ments oni 044 ‘plus low tenes. : aged =— oe SUNDAY 12 te a a R RA ROME , ' BENT. HEAT. LAKE PRIVILEGES. |... BENT RICH oe ee, ee ee NE ARLY NE ~$14, 380 INCLUDING LOT a home meaptes ves &@ ALL MORTGAGE COsTS. Avaliable space 2 aro FURNISHED EXHIBIT plastered walls, ‘sak heater. HOME OPEN DAILY aT 2328 teday. MIDDLEBELT NEAR ORCH- LAKE HOME eau. ARD LAKE RD. PHONE, tii, Inadecaped THE NORTHWOOD GI ORGANIZATION , homes ton "i ag eucee VETERANS select oak tigors, Fl bem. with John K. Irwin INC i035 GI's $500 Only 5 Left yment 2 BEDROOMS aay 5 room bungalow state. | Sco Gat dostya. low down payment. Low can swim, LARGE LOTS from eity ae ee ee ee we fre let us ort mt pour eal ‘“ RUSTIC HARDWARE. PHL Se ae PLASTIC TILE BATHS. AUTOMATIC Off HEAT. ATTP‘CTIVE BRIKCRETE EX- TERIORS KINZLER FULL PRIE $10,000 will find center Pay ments one. 903.00 mo. bait =~ eluding (anes A —Boa ar. ‘ s OF OUR 6A WHITE BROS. _ Prone O8 Sidi OF 2 Open 6 to 8: to get gen from ae ae | city lote? If so, let show es "bungalow on ? nee GL. a Heats Crescent Lake Sylvan Lake bagged Estates James k Bigs’ Bivd ra Spacious #5 Se po built Newly ne Oe bed- hares ‘tee alg = basement on ‘sarge commer mor clonets Also ‘ecouien $12.500 % 180 sand = . _ Du atet Acereeattocee | Sosuahi"SSYacemanen ree $5,800 WM. A. Sat al tinka"ihy Teas KENNEDY kk ee Evesings “tl 6 m. GATEWAYS to John Kinzler, Realtor 6% W. Huron &t. rE 2 W. Huron rE 66175 | Open © Till 9 CLARK UNION LAKT. AREA 54 room'* contemporary home, consisting ot 2 bedrooms nice kitchen large living room and beth. This home needs some finishing work down such as trim and septic tank sacrifice his equity leaving e@ balance of month heat, 1% car erage, paved ihe one biock rom bus line. $1,406 down pbetclgere ye FOUR ROOMS. Con- | a bedrooms 12222 ft bigs ~ modern kitchen, 3 ee th full besement laundry tubs, eos! heat fully tneulated and 2 car garage Large jot $10.500—terms . WEST SUBURBAN 54 rooms 2 bedroums moder. kitchen, dining area nice living room with na- tural fireplace 3 pe bath and utility room Built on large cor- per jot Electric hot water heater. Only $1,600 down ESTATE CLARK REAL FE 46492 1342 W. Huron Evening* 2-9239 | Co-Operative Re Real Estate _Exchange BROWN $750 DOWN — Lovely large cedar shake bungalow shell home Fin- ish the interior yourself. ‘You ll save money.’ Located at Lotus ake ! i $1100 DOWN -— “Income &pe- | cial’ Large 7 room home and a | 3 room bungalow that rents for | per month Look this one | over. $2,066 DOWN — 7 room modern home near St. Fred's “Excel- lent location for rooming house.’ Could be used as income. OS Vann oe = “Onl years old." Storm seach « sarees Paved street. ; $3,000 DOWN ‘Clean as a ." Two bedroom bungalow in szabeth Lake Estates venrent wall-to-wall ear peting “You'll !ove this one’ | pool ~~ —. _—— $200 aoe gy pols aa your own rters free A good ‘ing. us show you this one. L. H. BROWN, Realtor wo lots, } uss, ay 4 ca ‘ Li / } \ * ee cd a ate al eee ae ct ce ea eat dal eae oe cans, eee tees re HAPPINESS ttt oo snenge | Co-operative — Rea) . SPICK AND SPAN NEW! Y DECORATED North side near Walton and apa vin Snug 4 room beth, bedroom on fleet plan built “ 1960 Decerbies, tes oe trie ff Established 1916 | | Sie, rem cane ul ceguabakes arian ea NEAR WISNER SCHOOL 7.1m | or 60.150 b1.089 dows, YOU'LL modern me ental | —— sek e will make | —- = , monthly payments ae ment Paved street 68, 750, ( LARKSTON Mme | Ue Seve ea moe Ino Near Baldwin 7 oon ae . hoot. Here is your ¢ e faa tocatoten, 4 room soa’ bath, inp eo Ug quartets us| 2 bedroom, semi « with _ ox | cate e nego dl lene —— ——— = an attrac- sider good land contract as pert j moses geet papa ela bese: payment $11,100, 62,100 down. | ment oil beat, space for — WEST SUBURBAN RANCH TYPE in S cay gutaae, Gorea saree ome & new locat . . eae kitchen 31 ft. living a oth olin au ona tiled beth full basement,| FRIENDLY NEIGHBORS a ce. rec rm, alumipum storms = gical hapa 4 Buy To Sell Te to attached ar ge over- head doors Double jot 413 S00, vou ‘buy z- be INSURE * terms« #1.s09 DOWN Immediate posses. | MA TAN sion. Nearly new 2-bedrm ern home in ingetvine Otee beet, full basement, floored REALTY CO. REALTO attic, “» acre lot. One biock | Member Coop Real Estate “Exch, to school & stores. Only $8,500. I EK 2-0263 : , ’ Open Eves ‘til © Sun. 104, FLOYD KENT, Realtor "073 Ww. 4 W. Lawrence FE 54-6106 aeet TO johnson TRIPP | Seminole Good 3} bedroom frame all n fine condition “% beth FOR BETTER HOMES $959 DOWN On this & room modern home with a large screened and glassed pastel Rial poral = Gas in sun rch. ie cer garage, Garage Excel a pored ce gi pote A= By —— street: location 30 day pos- pane 5 [aed € call Mr. Os. session. Extras m 2069 Corner Lot Estate goes Can brick is iy 6 room new bric Exctusi F - ranch home with 3 nice bed- Country “Ch vopest Lene Lake rooms, gas furnace and 2 car at- 200° Ideal Este! tached garage Situated on Eo tiful lot 139x200 ft. Only $29,500 with wonderful et eu after 6 call Mr. Bloom, MY 2-0806. LA SALLE PARK Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor 4 room mod m large a %2 W_ Lawr@he> Steet Eves. in lot with screened in patio. and | FE 5-813. or FE extra big utility = - pom f| fs 2 level need bome sur- rounded by pines. Priced for quick sale. gerage. aluminum screens. Pyll price poring * 57,200. —— = ee ‘WHERE TO BUY IT? OFFIC’ OPEN 0-6 A. JOHNSON, Realtor FE 4-2533 Fr 1704 S. Telegraph Rd, +: See the Want Ads! They lead you straight to bar- gains! { i \ \ ‘ » , A a ‘ for Sele . , 8s” ' Fi \ Th Red Houses = at f ot ' now I Pon Its Sasea Cat FE THE ‘ : Pn, A Seb PO + yon ; D Ho NTIA 3 “ ‘ \ 82 650 oy 4 large ‘ON 4&3 RESS ' Need bome s PI A CAR ESS ‘ Lak and 2 with room IN NIV oo, MO } ear repairi pri J room car Fh me By oo S e AL = XD : ae oom ir F . end ae, Pr a «od : » : —— AY, D. " ag age 8 | xcelteat exprolties 1 ¥ ° E P pris home. RI ved ceilings oe . Cc ; +783 ET ws | Slesr f : t IN pee. Nore D tees | —— wonerenen ror Mg = : MBE bag NCO bil w oo hout by Ix’ ede ME ip © R | pow cel os Dick 6, 195 | —-= te ry enene Qn { f we « Turher - oll ag win fam Pots ROOM rE tzabeth tot : . | oe Fotile gas, two aera: gee om Do ee LAD =| For . ¢ . # _ AUBU pag income Con +P pa PULL eal fe sane " DD . ‘Sale: tt * \ : | em hed UBURN A\ cash or m FI 2 MEL LJ L ae * 352061 Open Sunde z Acreage ' oo . bd Loctnces TE — - GOOD ne pen Sund Pi : % ~ : +| an PR pat all E. S | oot HAVE pundays 17 4 2 = ° | : . k 3 ‘with in 4, mod $1500 all es A Busin A : ' 4 W .G. venti som ern nome* OU S00 feet cr ‘ aterf Hempste moot a as down | oom Se co oer aaa * ron * 1 emps do! at At, . 2 aus tate pa : STORE t ront Aa st] VIL aaa tae, apa aan ’ . ecrooms with I ~ te F Realtor | — we JELAGE shectrss "hot Sa Ps =n = =. ma Beh no . 1 ; a ah w » : ; uwY, i ie te . eee age en| BE ye ane ae = we wie G. Porrit _ite! SW, fares = Fe my ty 8 = Ley 2 car heareun PRIV Eotiul — — o 3 and eins trna'e.. ai ay | ritt a comer ‘ te ? eluded of liv- automatic gas ILEGE bree es Gl cent yisee foot ne Bltld oe, widiag eed a ae i ‘ 3 t ter Peon heat. ro a tak * waahe heat “GES esaie conn — knotty ster ne. be cone Sigpe ag se in AGRE ane ME . : 53 ms. only table intl 2, ver Privieae carpetin ner contr sComplete” . het sudd on ja setlect sink On . ES The A La : N La $10,980, * 00 dows an a installed. Pee one i Tecate vison. Set Rage 4 good. road — ottest m MEN! —_ ; befront . , went 2 FAX geet 4, 24 0 ts gree wih noe RTC Selltea ‘ "ACRES int Mas er yeasty soret ct Te a Mon | Fetes Brick thy" baths 6 pala pe WY | ws fiz. pe ee rt nee Leke Rd DAVIS wy re parcels W OODED ser- a Komplete $200. 900 _ imag- ao | ad on ey? pare cet . heat Pe eee . Pe Fata 2 ; _ OR 31614 ere hot aa paved Boke ess makes ad se your | ae —— onan moe cele ey i RBAS on, ae Me hy She iy - t 5-8 fern, deluxe 0 enjoy tn oT with onl meg ce! peed. wi, ™ ee Beout CRE down. ods and jown, Phowa saute ne A Po een e roonn ITF yi @ ts - = 1. is VH : gee PA tor —o pay The : — ~~ sone xan 1% beth LAKE ah pl gpetnes ae ail Ex- V AL the bu» Y (excell level RCEL A whe = more bermest. gro 3 even m- 000 t at the E . Gok “4 New lands. and 4 UE of ha can bi § ac S Sag. MEN purpos ground. level todo dow he ed grog , |e . — mamonee? Binge the grow esden 96 oo amg Nit! bed eted sows ond ope s . ment ; eee Pe ™ buy wee = most Ss . apat toon! a on 985 and rae 6) sis a garage git — Bi cihouee. at hire 24, “CON et ss000 « . id of a Pere food afc teae t keented w your Cape ee Iv . rmi roads. r coulo Gros, bet at only = eager rec: polled | Sees a mingh Comen STRU with 6 A re 10 A down ne — s ie e a couple of and pointm 926 : . for and al t hed t bi CT 1200 a al CR in. Bu by ine xcellent t of repay ent 300 — Pl gry plastered © bed cation ‘ 4. 0 a ION 1 . co nice 10 ES — s eet ee oe om ' wR ane ree ing I. usted heoate a were pare | Teplatem arene, ° wae ed LeBa = 1 E 5-506 i x te ‘7 Feng 4. He a ee SCE) $4200 el with ement otte ter puvolee |e OOD = ‘ Cnapecative Nor FE oes pee wYARI riemacte ae SCENIC irom, downlows S Sere es | Co uto | ry eae ih 5.2564 aa Lod) RD | uacsTonaa HOMESITI | STATEWIL pa mpany ardweod Paco aged EAS’ Estate Realto Ol Hor - owt j 5. P win lake p from pang esite ITE Rent E- TEA fy ~-—*, mest pissieree od oie SU | wrchange OT” Homes, “mortease ies fg rom downto romenite with som Batats Bo IDE. GUE at deen’ Re eo im the BUR as remmens” soon | rows Nb untoon ageing OTE 4-4516 Bids eg ae foots, reach Brood BD.CH $ eee edge of bai rae living — == nediaiely: prisueees. Suede aera . 173 L. H Cole Wy ‘payments i plex to and 4 ¢ street “A nor . ‘ 53 } arag abethea ‘ A ; 1 | ¥ ieext0 joo aad 7 “Es. WEs TESTATE aa r ETTE you thi a ms ane : Aitets | fi i : tod ad ith i ae ga a or ma: pa sm R d th ap sraberrie ame? sae es Casement Tare mans FR Seis: | Gove cen S| Se a a wr ee ate — 5 ie of watertroot rtri kim Soe planned : : car home ® sarge bung i 4 rative R ot. EIS . | Co-ope Tele, 405 . Realt . up to roo eGo eae “T bce 2 kato ae tua TM Gooa bu right wen HOME VS gas 6 Sears ie N — Lesoed a wand") 0 jlvine vow burning 3 ery een seldom eS cKLI Priced at ANT throu tn ICA : and _ w * ine | = ‘4 petri Neate med Daerah ern heat. Bep ont Pog A wine = E righ bee | a bee 4 « ry = | ne a : t T reom rm ens - m. * sob een horn Muane’s i oe | vcomplote nMeher Sg ee Living ave E es RE ee tion “th ultr meet on, 85 RL W your she neice farm nie eae lake. whn 3 < rs coma MM : w vac TT ved | be reat! sf 8 tte ri ° D es rt 300 spa. ful amo yr oa €o: site . _ EM Ji m ho mod t's : Qe room ment. ort Close 4 ORTH E rms. — | pothap a by * pe ton Btn = — te vmirdew ell REST 6 Al TY total” att kites ce af PE 4 a BIRD, R [ 3-2357 ne me reba down heey tray‘, gare med: gage foom. ‘a EN yire| os bike ved strect, u be deutae 7 Compe h AUR 10 rE , a pole eines iDE y Ne Sa ; tor 500 gaa tom bin also L Loans it END egg |) Bere Seen | Aw rete eit a cag Meee ealtor | =| BOWLING f Sreees|* Ow rooms —o e lew of, tink wo $1800 "se A ves I eee 816. v rs — = or | ~~ B owns OW Ty $10,000 altm I $4 Motor w ted ust tu of 1d oun — I ND 8 1 | RE IR ry ea Lb! ves nk ~~ usines r. W $10. tted NT = EEG: ew 5 Pont l le bal th. 13 M ter | 1000. 061 mmed Po 12. {7 ALTO RI 4 Co stre ING ¥ Bid wus Loc LIN 000 aw ER 3 ptec: k Li pal tak ina ea wueee ~ ube aste Bwsdl iat x sa W. Rs = Par case D Se den s _—— tae are ANG pba _—, E Se ae Tienes. § on one of oar’ be =| tek Lon anan notions | \- Bantors x ROOM | 5 Mur ee PE Saves tear St Jo ee | s Propert ine ee soa egg iiaga morgage ae fete ° $900 E role ae aa tens ' | ! —— Se od earner A TIOME ssion Roos a P ‘ON tamae Ww mel * ise ere Lous - M59 FRO rey 40 B tiptep Best of of _EY vay G. Te family Seem siaes \ — R ome trea 813 shad. eee OF | _ men Be ATH Lt BF at a ae As har \ a ‘ . Woe srocard ick eieh ptt te. Section T | down VN u bal ove | sen vot oe FY — sieco. F AND U gir eee ee w nee 3008 we. | olds on NT ay tg cere, Lan ment all __Phone_ FE ER | ‘ tou. i. ° : OD wane 1387 5 © er a itt 5905 Real- of bur A Bac tage Lago s ment al | Scheele 7 sse] EAST SID OU ‘be Ne OWN OUR cee ne Pn Pie eas Sede we wih | mac , Pontiac tha vl2 Buy sow to ¢ plock bide, ital rE $000 N , ee SE 412 pasren K—B ar | | _down. phason ansors TY soutien VILEG | nae en ae Hi W oo oy « attree or 7 bus thin w R oO tt Pr igay | Aa me | aC A agervene pn sha gt WILL ine — LEGES | ao ee A ht ehwa VA enjoy origt Offered Sagan | és ——. _Open urea st ung pe re tle xt new 2 hoc et ingoln Ir J ; ri on = a ove in 1s M, BRI oa on | Terms an” cues =e Pode 21 E. F Bg) gp thon cA Swap Bald EW Pie por, Sang too bath griow | Gs ee ene lis ti have | KE ville ents RN- +51 velt EWE en | \V feue er pea | GAN 2A ason MPIN' $s —- o- re boleares Ou with | Attr lean tra tid} gh | y have E ¢ 1-18F $375 ~~ Oo Ay ‘oF RO AR for back: | PEC BU: RT G TR. | AY puoany i jocation "On vith | builtin x frame nome Lk IRION a Wes res 2D EF nome Speedin: RIDG a TE Ar 55 e : a ay * 28 ° . rnac ti Nt ott hom int« lege s. 1 RION = - ls EB 2-85 RE EF me T [o) TS GE = 2 rT LER Rea! a a nme ay_ “ul 6 2 Only Paved get vorth—Of te ane > - ae re atat selon - N | ¢ Aree lot RD AR 2 REAL T - PAR’ a eee s REA IE | CoM om = FOR E tate Ex 44203 uns 2 WALKIN 450 ee ont a {f Ba — eet Boe sy ediale pos oy A — ov ‘<— \ EA -TOR TRIDG | wimg ae ITT — oe | — TE ora what SALE liz lak 2 | sre aac paLee ere | rie Baldwin ag ora teas "Ph vr i | _ Sele BE tony mre setae sae a reom ears, rage ip wah TANCE N at ame lore | ‘iPad Cais 1 O berg leah ce Mu ike ee st -& 16! a: FE a rs tube > AND TV & = hrsews pungaiow = — ree S-ro e ” full, Dasem as atora Mat 7 for eat ay ~ e Land 2-8316 MOD R v0 ing ° vd adhe to ar G apres aaeee car ain | ( Con ‘Se A iia tui 3 Esta e t poedongy anu ow new R $50 per $i Face Ow: Imm C,ener: sement \ a Mi REAL see chot Mx J ee WELL tract face pew ERN paaiee p or poe] wid ® old tes ee J <9 - newly decorated AY O'N month Hong sd term ea) Ho . | 8 VEST Leve SPr ° =e Saeroale| ie “ET mae SECURE “ s 52 i948 hue FE Py ag B fap bese 1M | ww we terms. eluminum | ec! NEII ent. See spital | niga SUBU i te suwea CIALS. —— cation aster ce Real Bpergent 6 PE S| nave poner trated ame mieety 7 | oe Fro , ere | Co-operat Huron R Sy ee Bost tle we ge RB sities eed” ecre FIC cea ba ecuee, Paie a cin acs iy SLEE = R ee vesties e ylv h Pa scagas a 8 I \ 6 a ou PE - Inkeside i nod beet ce agar cates ee Ope alt ylvan Vi ——— otiea || es Sings room SAN ache is per me O*’ way en 63 = We nu on bal. Some —_ onl ‘and eet $75 aged in | ve Reel’ “« 2 iad 5 aes n Vill 8. Tu | ——— irae livin res | a . rice rb Ciel MW D KEN y at = Be arg eT —— rol CAB firicted a ae i | [RW emo © Snare T "estate Excha vestibule. ft st echisolt vat pletely" ins in ‘porch, Beanie month Very) ae KES, Oe | 2 sarap, | aedivalena : ose ’ fine m Pacha. pili . fire 2u « | ton and xtra | meulanea a WA Hur \ res | ext , ealt | Pp | 4 eres), tog late LA fine: RE IN & nge reh at —— p and | Dow chur are ted nd TKIN ‘on N, Rez —— te C a Ey Fr or fe} d be ND Biced s im this ny Al EST . R & garage, 1 2 aiming” down | Fx Y pepahcnae . beens | pion Yet LAKE ealtor a Sconined E 5-6105 | er e DEN elt Bajpai J CON- With $35 ft S11980" Pic |" \ tae Baldwin SA a | 2 “yend00 rece | roomy : ORTH oe Bie, oe jocati kw FOOT L ton | Ret —e los isco nt eu a TRACTOR ar cash. oie P . el ae araveed ne Lok are ba hasan a an MOBO. 2 s 500 ote Le aad A MPM BES F trul Ill at 4 wood teh reo! term. at ity LAKE ase — m Ho u “we DE = _ Sem B caer t s as a hen m bh Lake s a to B — mar me Sha Dow OME tart = T ae BoB ts home, Watki an fei coun ssitnap aoa met eae nt las ene ron VM n ie E-HA “FE 22 UY ret ri every th room | best ne cord Basement ree) out mie Pa mM 34432. a a l= cial B op 4A. = wt tod material gual wav “wu ool we — ENN A edith icin RMONIO wa | TO Ss cette voetat me m fomiir or beole sis, ee nt "sith beautiul pa aan as ee vA | 3 a sei r Work. | OIL OIL FE y ~~ 5 cass LA OTAI “emer EA AMILY CALL Pine i ae ireplac ane om hres | oe vod floors B me with b nice eighbo ot the Di s ‘seso| For S = wie aed oe | GET So Ju. trailer oF Ha gi = Al. : a cupbe . epics liv > £8 hy m lot ase “ vaild in: 1X1 ase a F - | - Cc FE 3 [ late con- potas = SI » S5 call Kpeee er nes HE arg po reget ee borheod 8 1¢€ . ale La AS 1 m ly eed devorated | gm hom et thew IRINKING Gas ‘baie ne woriay ae ca ie to bes oors "and restricted [come aon Exchan 7 Up i QUICK | mea aes R | bh > ®o ea rent f ete on e cht e n- 2 Py te ric rad H < L ve = eho vor omar . wen corte Bd ees eae a” Ms ae noise low bigger peon Apes ge 50 1946 O vi p-operatit at oa eal . garage puabege poy el \easea refully | Sea Swituhe ie 7 pub- “No se ce Is to far IN So po hgh $ 18 FI tive call tor ee. sene a cadea y coal kite lly land ( nD xcel Be r $750. good aor w PO - at e Real FE re -R. HI =| alana a aa) DD se a ena \\ EERS wetter | jaa eu Ee tet eta, ih peat hom Loan ie eg etre re san _"%t! TZ SUBS Stee tn ‘ree =H ere N gle ntiac wanves ic See Aley.% tag ease ee Sel — —— ST it ere =O) ms. ’ ae, IN a vice stri ‘or 00x eant D wood A anor tnuti AD ili wi ere w bles TANT mak is | RS be 82.04 ele | s $760 am ected bet 190 TO ve turn’ es. | t z | sell 1or th t Ww : vy hb i e a S lo dr x Jos! 60 hoo te 1 m land 34405 of itu) ools “7 $950 late rail P ee fae ‘Renee i ore soe con ee REALTY Lc aoe ee omy TGRES OF Ve AND a es 3° Ob. ntial ew g F S salts and a At ty le . al Ee 1 1 he — — < for quic i dieped RAT = ‘i legr — ; Fut ca + om SD atte Ros i ee Gal was sweeten hones ries 8 oad ee oe EWER | "SE a) eee snireoey venice For Sale os very pric rage tm ved ome ot Bu ood H ent ei Pha tan lars hom | ere _Toom RES n alread ith on th : a FOR” : 2.5508 vic ka SER Lpa ere D caine & sare keel H y good res I hp as qcoce ea erg Le we hecs mode: Sh mee in Pp ate __ba tion f REN F YOU VICE A or Clot ne kit A. an }: : n ay ne fireple 1552 sets late Bc hoc res ern more Ex water st sid parking or saenolld »” E N , o ouP hin - WE bie term s5.000" ca um , Ph nar Ke fail ais none wastel cet ee ea. Clnameggr ae cua sewer ace a XB EED re g 56 EST rms 500 ing REA ph . ia I] 1 bedroom foe Fe h nat mie! cal ener Wa 1a oon dw es. Onl site sew f pace 738 ss Pl BES stock is A tet : : Ace he! as Gey ze di Vv $75 ie 6 tertord “ ; y Pe ope w sonra w a aa sy 8 TOPCO _ nee BURR ao THOR ries be ce \\ kRID beat el epg furna ape ay “0 scoot 7 ON. mes Stout .. “ena sett ER TA\ “Muron_ ar colle O 0 = Soe a aot DATS & Exeeiient DO AN Co-operati graph 3 hee . both now eee ane Aro on ree ce ni igi uity aw st. Fi e = si8 eq reet on is ‘ER and ome Baa = at oy es cia guiar e we 2 WEN . BR ve R Ope 2-047 ving big, home seer eaceteree or heal ee eeeicien e jan ba n § alt i Hcy basy co N | aa. ou ce ith ¥ =>: ition. I bu st A ——— t see ms ef fru eat « de b Mecanee E un or On: ent sy T ts i an ou . As =? Pp t me sist Pete panes as aie eras toe eda ee es me bane et Beg oer tor | ob tants | Bittgy ets te sei need ft garag oi) walls wane petra ‘oom sa os oD chance i ; with and ome chen arge es M ; cst = 98, axr CRI vileges ruit 100 — | obe down. y ou pool s or cal thly ue grou with / Me a. fall bac = tome ape C C)\\ ee = oan : room the see bares Metar rms trawber at ao \ ; bisa nae ie a rt dD. , heat | 1 at ou y- pow: OS\ ; p avail W rs fae a i areata e od serie . heat meen ct tot hag'® natur auractve 7 roo rac mode ae am Commercial oct nt _Po ors B r offiee. | excel E 5-068). G min RES t ma&S UTO 8 s - Po : weler. Pox ra ' t Brig betw off : Pri Re alto afer hacer Feb > ee F T SU BU R xchan 3 mes pcrade no ES | Located on ne SD | % Corpors | ani N OLA ise oe A, +2811, P e . ve F 1 n ne r ni e } ae i rth it \ South poli M , Pad KE me $35, SAVE ee n cine ee ry bome itch room. wait) 3 3AN ea section alton Ls of Pon » with a. bu gs lots f ewe Sos of \3_ rachel Nanderined” FE = : AVE ~ Jie. scones . ee vero bed poe en t Boe — Pon! ere Pe wusad fre bt eryday cies SUE i. ea ca Bie ioscan ie | FLOYD ate Nae |S “ee ie te areas 2 =e jallitaial te ae, & tor Ad prob 2! Sol nlastere fur bath it rey $ eady eal fet on asemen cheery wil KEN lad s.) ae bu: TV X ase. SH tera! hey A een Fo OV 56 : 4 lem ve cy rel degarace. lat ators | 13,000 ‘with avatlablontt auto pwre eT he La ces & SD\ | OPPIN plaid te GAR Nex soe : . Ww sth ev- carp and rage att ary re wi mme able lot ° nee ,R roo y _neighborhoo< { ING usk t LA 712 noon. ATS. ‘ i> 2-818 ay ! P e W “a6 peting «er Alu ached rot] th $3 diat if a Ap Next Ope: eal rots a rhood NG F A re: cond ND OAR 5S 1 f ho ant ck inc shrough Hummuim woS 000 down speetees — “tee FE tor ill Eggers roe “YES LO OR Ww ae ie ‘ca z cud ; ) = fo e : -U: pee $15 $50 STOVE. ‘ Or an ne F R nsamhont Ds ae I. ‘se ne eoneress 4108 | veil ont coiane.t ce rout A men, women AN? A | DDING aa ana Me ad-writ Y An pre Cyne ator ie oe | orme rom Bing'e women matried 4 Siz an vane ér = n 3 St der ———— | S IVA . e = oA vis ered a em WE e 10 AN 135 el ° E - ae 7: 2 _____| NW it — or ployed DDIN le tan | as Inc. |La or Sale Lak wow 4al8 ml af AGRE ; H . LOANS We ooio a “rine sown ww ws PE = ening k < 6147 cone \ ( = F - ein rst. INT Seren “NYL , seed Eee aKe MZ Pr be cee 0) rE S Sil toda ALBO™ “Fr white —_ oo pusdey 1-4 Rear & W rop. 44 mere of wae RO mu 5-501 BEN O'$x0 _tiee “COAT 8D Donne Mad a oe So pene ace ate a (peepee iene a BENEFICI Pitre “tee eer os . OT NES ter Frontage: sr es oa crm er tea ea dees AL QUARTER 1 aE ton . estes S BAR Ne ‘ow ae Faw. 4 cane nthe prom WAC foal Ketnie, Kachang | «4 rence CE co tion. F al Lema Rt SIZE " Fo “SE. Sisk, pre H iso: Seeesaes FE 2a Som ermal: sine rm way TRAM Open Stout. t- OO TINE c e | | Sele size oy 4 SILVER TRAM 7 ™ Open Sup Re mE te a Sele Homsehol va ede. . @ eine ‘ae a or PI die sb $25 to 500 S carson sashata ae ~ ~ » R Ld TIQ ee 4 Ph PE 58 oy A Le eel % E ee UNITY oa cccasion wieini | Goods R hel ~—— va & , ANNE L FRIENDLY irr Loan co} pie a able oil eee } Herr REAL t | OAN LY SE Pao $22 So tert wal eolid VAL | Open E . TOR nc. On - S $2. RVICE 27131 x ps et mat bea piv § - f. , 7 and dera’ e wte ST O $500 817 META — “ eae ‘4 | ' 7 . j ony ae BEN or re ~ ANTI picid Wan uone . ii » 4 FIN EFICIA see “Gulred me RORG RE at ' rE tw AN L oday | A lee nian noe ve on : ares INCE CO. Pa eee cS * aoe as, iaaee peaties | REP Vit ven ae Ma oe -_ — ves , te i i $228 and Punta LEVON. . Tesh ’ ) - } on ee i oy ' . ‘ t an | . , ? ates . _ m8 | ff seeded THE amkoraee MONDAY, DEC EMBER 6 6, 1954 = . ) ae . ‘ = en : ra ~ we ee : i :, - . AuroMATIC ELEC Sroeten| Ses Soeopeneet cunts Oy) Ror Sate Bioeth 60) For Sale M | MODEST MAIDENS oes. By Jay Alan ___ For Sale Pets | For Sale Housetrailers 74 4 A ont gs Fe I ’ . ARE TER “y — ~ . Ne dow ne al , ot ; GOOD GAs AUTOMATIC Wa ‘ SPRINGER SPANIEL PUPPIES L GOOD CONDI es neni Us New Furniture Specials get con cusp. 7 GEL £¢ AKC registered, Reasonable. Law. ar LIBERTY Soe a eee s Mee , a 7"ALso |" store, 1 miles. out are , | Tov Fon TEAR PET LE iota PP NEW MOON FRATTER ; 5 ; setae "Teubie dress. . PE 40st. . st : : 2 proms end beusebrebes MY. oly lo tan Ga & gal | Seas. tie Sun. cotton mattresses | 1) VENDING MACHINES FOR _ 218d after ¢ ater 6:00 pm. Sain oie, : PS oe a TOY Boers BULL TERRIER. 61% Pt HOUSE: | ces - ane ES F Hees Ee. 1 ; ae — toe paves zIL _tratier | Geog cond! coud ition rE $ i268 Ree: asipee ane extomatic fan. meter. and Gusta. r 5 rahe A vag, A ye Pp ti 2S Sash ST wae aa tas: : Soar ee) FONUAC Toe Foivtgr Pore 4 M08. SPUN. Sol ae es ee, eet 4 tran tired, by pail te 1e a anges, gue : bode, | ‘ BNOLI Pure Mos. MOBILE HOMES - ell sisca, @3 wp: San Gas up: 0 1S Guna Bd. Roch | MO a & — v 48461 : ‘ radios, $3 up; new chrome dinette _ ee El ome phove MA ¢17¢) sets. 5 pe., $49.95 up: chests, new RROreTERED Cpa eee : 4 & used, iil; bedroom suites, poy right for tree conditions trailer as low as $00 | TRUCK GOING WORTH, POAT ; et 649.95 ‘Nivin rm aati, 3 2 | down load :. i: up dining rood sultan, 8 50 up. PURFBRED PRMALE ox | Ww 4 other items, ating pene —" Hutchinson’s Trailer Sales anted Used 88 e: a Doge Tretmed, Reersos 20) sa Duy san tis Fee] CALIF. BUYER HERE 4 BOARDING BATHING AND CLIP. | Core as ~ Mound, NEENA snany Ae, a: pik, ve» FE Sei | 080 8 Dort way, Flint Pn be or Pee: . \ Néat_ Bury-shel! 3188. Tolerant |S PT. ie ZIMMER TAN ‘GLENN NEEDS ee Hi Grain & Feed = 71) 516 Good use~ cars. Now. the cf a: BER 108 my Mote eit care ie KINDS STRAW, WooD f\ modern bousetrailer, enn’ otor - i= “ an pee $i ‘ow cone. _iey bevment On 30081. | ase 8. Gaginne st. PE oo B! Zz se ee | i ll N — OATS — HAY — 8TRA or verge or mail quanti. “Od raller BILL SPENCE , Pye USED CARS : E h €2 Oakland Ave. PE ¢-7333 = | # plece colored bath se a: a tt XCNANGE (“THE HIGH DOLLAR HARDWARE - PLUMBING Tetrigerstor, Hallet-Devis ea, 10] Authorised Sales “& Service Sone thom. Beste as caen moan, ay DELL, DING TS LOUEE STORE tink nen : . Anderson Royal Champion. Rits- ee & yea Buy 8 new retrigerstor | IF YOU ARI A | Kitcit sin aa | | | (2-6 "Fer Sate Livestock 72) Croft. Prairie Schooner, Beemer. Be ewer machine. mere my AND ecg To oaks ald — — ——— rap Tini-Home and many other 1 & 2 AJ. 393 Orchard Lake Ave. MATES tA ome mixing taucets. $1495.; "Do these old ones have any trade-in value?” — rt) EWES; 2 YEAR OLD - > . | SScener Reparnn,_ Pe Yoon fut Pisorescont” "Ss" “orchard <—|- Sag. Nmiama icy secs, SKY ; SOFA BE) 61450; 2 PC. SEC. BURMEISTER Tike ave: : For Sale Miscella Pr 62 $She 1248 Hemmingway Ra. ; tional. $0.89" Wicker dav or neous Sale Musical Goods Giesteh Witte Boars. of b age ont, eae Northern Lumber Co. KENTILE a aan | ee ee nh chough for service, Ph. MAple { dinette“ CO | Boca tll? Conley Lake BE, 4, |. 500 Flush Doors 2 ft. $6.50 | MUSE §ACRrICE 9000 RY COWS AND WEIPERS. ietib oo: dresser, #9 50: | Pontiac 34371 Avobait ile. marbleised — Se oa. >, dian, Reasonable, Call FE . | Bair q ore eaport an! pets feeraon and 8 Mile Rd. ig, | arm ; “py too Pon. Tred Wal ig Pye Me TROMBONE. oriced te . Milker “as. | | BANK FURNITURE CO, | sarunoom FIXTURES sor. FLOOR SHOP io GALLON OAs HEATERS, 636 = sipore 4 42 ORCHARD LAKE AVE. NEXT| Pipes and fittings. automatic Oper ee 8. 52 gallon electric heaters, $87.50. ; oe aoe 0. A. Thom : TU FARMERS GAS STATION and gas water heater, oti on > UP . peon 60 8. Perry. E-Z TERMS coal “furnaces, seam (and hot sinks from SHOE “eS ROLLER oe — ok skates, . $7, eee? Bigvea BOOS SOUR BEX prter mee HEICHT’S SUPPLY ‘SEE US" BEFORE YOU | BUY Gram. 2 4 a rsion. e fe changed Turner's 602 Mt. Clem- alligg4t Ge LIONEL % AMERICAN] 2200 snmail all types of furneces | shes ; ens. FE 3-080). ail Poene_ 76 4-0633 FLYER TRAINS with flat duct. PRA terme. staan 7 THOR GLAD IRON. LIKE NEW. BRICK—used—BRICK AUTHORIZED FACTORY 8ERV- __Garwood. _EM: q a _PE 5-456 Brick-Fire Brick ies and genuine factory parte. SINGER ADLE MACHINE, TELEVISION, PERFECT CONDI- Coew & Used Lumber . Pree on er $15. red and chrome 4 _ tion. $25. 138 W. Huron. Excellent used ~ixte- |_ Tasker's 03 W Yuron table $15, mans suit UNCLAIMED LINOLEUM SALE tuts —‘Saias- Seles sine 30. $7: mans grey 5 beapeps : 2x6, T. & G. & Sheathing LOOK !! _SE: 4, $0 FE 60178 i Be" Ovid LINOLEUMS, $198) yt eteutine oa fast STOP! LOOK1 | “thes *itenSd-Matar "pa" eras® | Fens 4 a b S ee - fare 4 Armstrougs Iga"? ruce |... staff | on complete lumber” tists HOME OWNERS | | VINYL, TILE 10¢ EACH Sporting <) ] Plastic wall tile .......... te each. SURPI US LUMBER | EXTRUDED ALUMINUM SELF- = “ an ia $4.95 bouse pair’... |... $1.40 gai! ~ 2 STORING STORM SASH? | SMITH’S DEERSK! N ite counter top... 5. ite | | AMD MATERIAL 8 SALES CO. $12.95 | m2 NS TANNED, NATURAL 3 5.95 inside ename! .. $1.95 gal. Highland Rd. (M-50) OR 3-7002/peravy EXTRUDED ALUMINUM 257 S. SAGINAW 0, dyed 3 _ Head ; Pe 2eio. Fy “Open! = Se 919 Bacon Soreers— Te. STOKER. IRON FIREMAN sUIT- purse: fuse ete et, ioe E,W PE 2-5480 Pre- Delivery , a ee * Rd. q U8sFD WASHER. Blackett’ S WINTER SPECIAL 1 ‘Parke tn furnacé, 630. ate om.) Ra A oert ‘ rT ALUMINUM AWNINGS TERR TRACF 2% OR 30 BULL- — B its ; 7% USED GAg RANGES” G30 AND (WINDOWS, PORCHES, PATIOS) | dozer condition. a very good rr Ghell, 318 & Telegraph. FE ¢ af E . Munre i lectric. 1060 Ott FE 4-6089 _ buy 9826 Cedar an rd. Na UY sec Rape > = TVs (a6 AND OF RB. er 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. ihe tile Beptie tanks for “gle ach, 10° : : Knott: 140M VATORIES, COMPLETE WITH jae evenings. : ee ee “neta foe vay Siu0 "Ato | itp Ger POMPE Moni GH | fiitgaage tp atten sn ue Frigidaire range ..... lets, thtubs, talls, eal < nile y é ’ ‘6 Brewton’ lace renee. Sanaa) Boatleese bug, t™ tanger: phee avn | “tee Goa gt memes wm | Gay ee tee Be Co eee matet os Hae | Balirane ary Rest tebe ae OA _Thompenn, 8-8. Perry — | Waar including sla it se Wee Gece Teot Hiecar $898 | Complete tine ot building materiais LUMBER TALBOTT LUMBE tor ie or Dt in bine i —— nrg - — ia ot bel: Hey pte “PALL SPECIALS * Lamber doors, windows, bard . i 900.50 A 88011 | 18 white pine boards M. sq ft. | Sere, plumbing. 8. P. 8. paiet. Sand, Gravel & Dirt 66 j CLAY *TON'S 2 NEARLY ae KENMORE OTL | fe eee eee ne aC 1) | evetem ter wes Geceksegie. Sheet | bg F A heaters, 1 twin 63,400 BTU a rock. rock lath and floor and | 4) TOP 6OIL, BLACK fs urniture, ppliances ead single pet 1.090 BTU. Bar| °C. $9.30, wall plank & tile varie Gravel and fi) 3 . . ated colors. 8c sq. ft. in. carten wail frnaces. 10235 Oakland Ph. rev ie: ag, sag ges I Al one BL fos, Matt thick tsulation. 169 sq. |__"E 4-262. PE 28572 of PE 41112, ie PE 5-8811 or PE 5-s974 Equipment Co, $60 8. Telegraph ee ee ee eo ca ic | Gees coed ack DRIVEWAYS -- R ia Used Trade-in Dept. Seats (Sar ot OnRent ese better fir lumber, | get our movtat and camper Au| Good erevel, 9 yards 61. De ' ' = e ew insula’ ducts Rea- . A Washer guarantees... $28.98 CHOCK's USED FURNITURE AND riding "Geo we for Bee low prices. |__sonoble. EM }-3963, : - 4 saute tes) ges vanes $40.95 | PC igh FOR FURNITURE | 15a14 lav with fittings $16 96 TRACTORS & M-E TILL- . scale $30 130 8 5, MES featy comalee. | COAL 2 ‘ponpmo raorELY, £9 KELLY’S HARDWARE | So ccerp a da use tn tamer ere. Reto Hee. Jeri enow Dies. | ore (eee). for ia Buick V-4. eo @1_Orchard Lake Ave. I 39% Auburn et Adams. FE 2-8811 bing and builders suppiies. . snow plows. — 00. _Fusne : ’ iusaslt se . ment. Chain saws. 6607 LE ‘ es >| EsF wow 3 5 RANGES 3 i TUBES, 1 —T won . BENCH, HEAVY | —A! priced rigt'! Hwy. MA §-7878. OR 3-9508. Meee ee gees? wpageirete era Gallaher 46 FORD > hss © ene ee cay tie Mi 61308, vy, aT, ARLE PRATT YERS suALLOW WELL PISTON YEAR END CHAIN SAW m “~ V; Ton Pickup 5 pump . tank, = wer Eves 1 days & week ersior aon REPE |Veceey tod eases te | Opouman Sess drone FE|_fise'nee eysser™ "| CLEARANCE « iAceRe armee, on | fish iy cre Sea eel) eee i nary wee $195 Avenue. _ ss new STALL, BATHI- * Douglas and ; = use* oarts for “#6 cars UE G500 he ;| WINE SOFA BED LIKE” NEW. TNO ey, Gh gua Ohad | Barre cher gate and bee of SALE Sorvitec, ‘Juniper. “Relive. tree, TEE: fies | ont Oaulee' Ace Ph. PE 44513 | tion Cheap PFE %9843 win. Bald e Giri s bike, 65. 3 used mixed clotning *E 40867. 9 gai clectrie bet wate Diz your own Bring burlep We only nave, s a tew left so! Aut _Servic 8 LARRY FOR SALE 1 PLATPORM ROCK-| warpnope sii Tone] trains MI40908 __ iNew Gag STOVE. FUR COAT. | “sin ater heaters, | and tools 932 Bleeth Rd. go hurry. call us todas sone sc r and 1 barrel x chair. oe Ca cont aa STUDENT DESK DEEP WEL! jer PUMP FOR size 12, both cheap. MA 66079. 5) ga) electric not water heaters, straig:t Wee 3 miles from Com- | FE ¢073 PE @1112 ~~ | Cheap. 143 W._Lengteliow Form cha. 9. Kitchen table, $2.| 20iSp, Lite, Bey, ip. Nortavile | kew ANI | USED ELECTRIC | | 28s Sores Vanes Sn gravel re. beer KING BROS Sor Cyunsere peusrek Mpen ae: JEROME FOR SALE GUARANTEED RE| $ or. _5 pr lined diapes $10 MI 64688. 1200R12 afer 6 PM peo shallow jet. $75. | Detroit Edison end Consumers bp Babyy Sha leags collin f Shine ee aS need. oe PE frigerators ij ss... $39.95 up 7 HIGHBOY COUNTERS, 8 FT. 3 Ever-Ready pump 4 gal. electric hot water heatess,| * to 7 Greenridge Farm Nursery. YOUR I-H DEALER $2800. . Rochest = rd Deale me od $39.95 up Christmas Gifts __ 59 bie maole booths One six| part nat Fix-It Shop MUtua! ¢8030 . ra oc o~a o ealer Bpinner washers“... e098 up i mG ofrner Garland gee srl. One 3 _Airpor R4., OR 39022 2) sal natural gas hot water heat ~ Christmas Trees ~ OBA Pontiac Road at Opdyke oad sy Soak st PO ieee remit Bar's 9 Onkinns — ae $-c0n| | AEC REOWTERED COCKER double Bein fuargeceat ngete. |. EW OALVANIZED FIPS 20 gal, bottle gus hot water heat ins DEC. SPECIAL FREE ESTIMATE 73 Te 2 boy“ GAs RANGE, DETR JEWEL LMOST NEW 3 io HP] er | ee % in 131 ft iene 13¢ ft. ‘l. nat SS ae We will steam clean, tune-up en- “. | AN table fully auto, BaYTON SHALLOW-WELL JET UMB UPPI 20 gal. natural gag hot water heat- Pare i J timer. is. 9, ,, Wiggins ‘ aX — 5 atthe RC ne.e. | 10's Saguae. Fe 6100 | ge "%e: Foe, gu bot water beet Ra, Walled Bae $5" sae Tepgint worter He only | BRAID MOTOR SALES WILSON GMC oF Bee noe: y SCOUT UNIFORM. size ia | DUPCT Mat wat paint Oo fal | ONE BIRCH YOUTH BED, COM.| ers $50 20 Tike ha aco Tac aT sesee New and HOLIDAY SPECIAL | _Bilis,'” * fred coed. om |"’" Nt Bride Hardware — | Girth tune end Schair se |, Sune, ie AM. og pace FM nc nad parmay ace| eee a Went Bus te TRUCKS Frietaire, 95m, pance ute. | GIN 8 IN BICYCLE ow PE | OPEN AUNDATS ¢ 70,12 Pe nao |< 0 lunes yh diog "| ter Mik” Orlonzie” Paope i | MEQ COCEEM CURPIER. BEA. | pinta preva oT | SERVICE ON ANY A 018 tke ncor metal tas | SUPT FEMS FOR WEN AND | DIAMOND RING AND WEDDING | OU SPACE a tr'to tog bru aut We deliver —_ ™ all ap eltpe | | TOMATIC TRANSMIS. | & Woogeeed, 7. Murve Domestic swag mockine = “| omen on your Christmas jist_ | band, never_veed. PR $7333, fey ge Do It Yourself 61 “Grandlatver RED ce KING BROS.” SION; POWER-GLIDE | Witt¥s isa % Ton PANEL floor model... . $19 deus. Counselor cosmetics FE |_ month. $55. 73 8 Parke st a cea a DEALER OR DYNAFLOW. ¢ 7% assume Ga treme’ sl os 1m $s | HAMILTON DIALOND— WATCH. | 90° EXTERPRIsE « BURNER GAS ONE, ples gay a iid en 2 7m: ORRMAN SHEPRE ao BOF BE aca eee es Ae ec ao ae _ #19, CRUMP EI. fctric PE S102 8400, sacrifice for ‘s | Range Good condition. $6500 Ph ONF BAIR MEN'S CHICAGO ROL: | $39 00 pi 10 weeks vid +9202. | CARDEN ere “GEAR DRIV. | _AUBURN AVE down h assume payments. 604 2 Awe 5 Ba FE 63913 RALLPIX CAMERA. CASE AN OR 3-6129 | ler skate. i ae” * awe)” ~RORTON TERRIERS TOR, APARTMENT, SIZED as STOVE. Siu, Sarrores, ve bien. — Sot 00. Praline Mgrs gc pe BABY PARAKEETS, WITH CAOE =e — wet farm equipment. atthe or baoke pote egal lh gry rr pests 4 BAR STOOLS, DINETTE SUITE, ee Sate Wao 5S ELS, ALL SPRaEOn, 1488 Baldwin PE %-2%43| snd Paint. 496 Orchard Lake pg ge Only .<»-$5.98| Tepes = Seto ot Masters £5. terms lersewer _ _Gressers, linoleum, etc. OR 31768.| Sale on used building materials. | FURNACES USED COAL IN Ave. PE 5000. 2.4028 Closed fun. Pontiac Farm Supp! 422 8 Teles SEAGLES REGISTERED. SiRED ouppy 28 _Teleresh LIVING ROOM. KITCHEN FURN.| D riline ier Suumbing, seth | foods 00 up Cog arrange for |"tane Pe On pies Te Cameras, Equipment 61A “) Tad champion ¢ months cid | JON DEERE DEALER LOOK CW ca Call between 47 40: - oe ee wwe | _ FE 22068. ot ey re Se oe ’ —Call_bet +1 p.m. FE Fi83l.| Ww wight Mile : Saree : aeaeeachines ROTARY OTL BURNER WITH ALL |ARGO-PLEX MODEL £ WITH BOXER PUPPIES FOR SALE. PU FOR SALE | CORN CRIBG” CORN CHIBBING | 4 1. 1 Peet + ieee ns ' LOVE SEAT AND CHAIR TO| ington 026" or KEnwood S100. G & M COMPANY | controls Can arrange for instal-| carrying case tripod $55. MA| prom é ine of Corn pickers, new ond used tle | ig HP Sco Altwater motor In Buying match, meple lounging chair. odd | ALL ELECTRIC TOOLS. APPLE | AWS AND scissors. macntne | lation 73 8. Parke. a+ tes _ Phone. OR 3-255 . fillers. Nevis Machinery Ph. 45 | Sterling boai tratier ghaire end tables, apt. size but |“ ances at who'esaic prices to ail| SHARPENED ALL WORK IB ROME a TH. cot ‘ge PER BATTERY OPERATED SLIDE | COCKER SFAMEL PUPPiIEn 3 | Cor" All brand new $595 U ed C chevis of drawers, articles for| $350 Ducts Mey PARE PRES.” | PEST. 2820 Opdvee Ra | STEAM BOILER Take | oe recat ae Sey | weeks old, reasonabie. OR 42-1602. Auction Sales 77| Harrington Boat Works Ss ars invalid; walker, | toilet-eomode, | 22+ _Dixi-_f oe SNUEREION | move rust end lime. $262 per| *',9% |GHAMPION SIRED AKC REO | ~~~. ~~~. ~~. | 1090 8. Telegraph Ra FE 2-0033 Now You C deside ‘table. mise, items. Ve ALUMINUM COMBINATION (GUN TYPE Ofl, CON ON ae = EPPERT® CAMERA SHOP olack cocks. spaniels, FE 5-6722 ee Now You Lan Teasonable. FE 5-1567 Mi . $29.95 burne- wit) cont d,| can: G. A Thompson, 00 8) q PE 800s FAWN MALES AND PEMALE | °A7,.ORC_ ll. NRAR GOODRICH. JOHNSO OUTBOARD MOTORS. . Used Storm Windows § room Heatrola with fuel tank. | _ Perry. _ — he FAWN. MALE AND FEMALE| Roy MeDermitt Prop. Bob Starcraft aluminum boats Tee- Buy Them etna ear wor ae | re eats’ OO" pre Fe sag | Pe ta sae "one OOTrER—ii Cans | PARE, ROOM, COMPLETE, ars pecereed onems" Wa EBs | Woe asctoscer_ a” Byrin Gt | ec irre Hrerrtine tor te furniture only 4 months old. Ip —TOVE GOUN-TYPE-OIL BURNER WITH | Warwick 2078 Orchere La. See mes eye ene | GERMAN SHEPHERDS MALE, 3| AUCTION SALF PPI NIONT AT| “Owiey “MARINE SUPPLIES By the ludes" living room guile, me- lamps, snd chine. FE| il controls. Uséd 1 month, Can | _R4. PE” «San "ater “S50 Ve, oid, ate bet offer. Ce cei: Sree Anetion | 398 Orchard Lare ave FE 2-8020 ; * ~sELL — BUY — TRADE : 4 TRY Cc RD MOTORS a ae ae fie oR FENCES Pore stn Lar eters GERMAN SHEPHERD, FEMALE, | _Drayion ena Watertor? “°°” | MERCURY, OUTROARD MOTO Pound set, walnut bedroom guite with at EN Ga 10-Inch Lathe grrrkt's CaMERA snop | 21% ee Age les For Sale Housetrailers 78 78 Poa ne ree went today and cwhasen “Saas! Rargemnest erent | Garage Doors | liad a ala ck at rotate Mhnate Petbaom | Be ten “heat tae Maple bunk beds. Also ifn. tele age ge ig art BR — gl ee Di Lg a Pick , | BOATS. TRAILERS BUY. SELL OR | thrours W's ° oe! : reduced prices. We do garage hours. Complete! uipped ifieation_pumbe — : — : : WAPLE DINETTE TaBtE GOOD | Artist's supplies, hobby| frost teasteog sot “neiing | fscisdie quis change gears | ~"euubenum sumer Bea, ___ | Papaxenre, Cananize, cadee | TICK Cl Bargain} _ trp. Priced to Move £ Mancheld, : supplies, see Classification | mf" sg" Paddock _< _ FE 9-020 Fe sts : , ann nnn nnn | PARAKESTS, OPALINES, CANAR FROM MERCURY OUTB/ UD MOTORS.| Sareuins ‘thn could be Ge, heen. MaTTRESSES ANI’ BOLLYWOOD | 24A “HOBBIES & SUP. BERRY DOOR SALES CO. ACCORDIONS FACTORY PRICES tes. 1304 Mt. __ PE 40060. wy used all mode trailefs. 28 to) Specia Christmas deal om lay-| est 13 miles be ever drove. - beds. All new. You save. Closed fla & HEAVY DUTY MOTOR, XMAS la on eae | PARAKEE CS apt i MEL ft Priced ‘» mcve with low, away: while they last. For 10 _Pagtt Were 6 eumne FE) PLIES.” ‘ on single phase. used only 2 months, | Enroll is’ our geboot ‘low SSecog | rose FE i040 s ae terme td interest vais | flerd ‘Genesce “sues Tel Dae, DAVE DAWSON, INC. i m enrsee ee xte , é a é . iN, a6 Eves oe 1] rr ae Garage Doors Hee win. enertt tsenal Prat aw . Hares PE bbs. Kaas s. 398 Oakland rE 6-603) ee i tea bad —_ — | COR. OF ol aoe s 0-08 -| STROH FLUSH DOORS 2 Ty Time will teil you , BALDWIN ‘UPRIONT FoR SALE. REOUTERED — hE D COCKER, | TOT? ' pear tant a oe ee ae QUALITY COSTS LESS *) VO yg PE 5-800. REGWTERED RED COCKER. | aus sco me vem stevar's,, EVINRUDE MOTORS MY 2-3111 MY 2-6211 mr co pereelain ‘hints a= vue ee: Th ee = Orent’ Labes 0 rh jan Oe hal, . PAID O ihe GRINNELT FF" BABY GRAND PI Piet me General's Holly's end . Skyline! Wolverine Caiillac and Feather: ‘ Bow eeed Wal secritice, Phone tor ‘ectiee tables, $3 and | 210 Dinie_ Hwy. reeses; PRETTY through Classi- condition. FE _ 2-821. sonenes Storing” traiers. Gia" Town and ALL-PURPOSE HELP. : &. flush doors, $3 to = .| fied ads! To sell or rent. Parts and accessories Grumman canoes, Water . & h hH Want- 3 , POOERELI snd up. Suitabie for partons for only $15. Wet cell A : ; ; ling of marine hardware ers throug elp Wan tapestry. Ovigine . See S| Fes orcas sous Lane Ra. tot trpe. Needs new : swap or hire, dial FE Oxford Trailer Sales BS ington Be ; Werkn: ed ads. That’s how Pon- oie i: we pa = cook Hal has “Cea, 2-8181. ee Som oo ee | a Peon Bae ru aemn.| tiac Press did it tool! | J ' . ; ¢ - is * , & > hs fe 2 3s | | ; Ss . . 4 (7 , . a ee ep ean pen ton derwerren eet eos 5 illic 7 ad _— , 4 a 4 i a ’ t ; VJ oi 4 | , } a paneling saosaly angen lh For Sale Used Cars 9! — TO Two Eleven These 9 Orphans Need a Home! Well Behaved | 211 S. Saginaw St. for those better “OK”. Used Cars MATHEWS. | HARGREAVES, 1952 Chevrolets. Formerly Jacobson | Pontiac’s Exclusive : i ‘ as. 101 W taxicabs. Reas 1 Hudsoa Dealet Huron. Cass at Pike FE 2-6090 F Ss E ‘4 D! M0 OA WiTh BARGAINS boa EYO, LOADED WiTh 1953 Ford, 4 door Fordomatie|_ $oir5 ie F Radio and beater. | owner. Beau-| 1 aKE ORION 5 DTOR SALES 1983 gag mo a M-24 at Buckhorn Lk. MY 22611 ioe Hien Pinch, venuty re eas seme payments wa MORTAR PONTIAS AUTO SALES |_ Birmingham __ | W. Montca'm FE _¢0151/ i962 FORD V-*, 810 DOWN & AS- “a ; —..,, $97 | sume payments 464 South Wood- “a mout* fire $e7 ward. Birmingham 41 Pontiac $55 | GONVERTIPLE FORD — 1950 - Pienty Other Models and 10 down and assume payments. _ 464 8. "Woodward _ Birmingham. _ $55 8. Ad __| {91 FORD TUDOR CUsTOM @ feeds seme re- _ nice Ee a ae aia Good con- , 2 cies as TTP. T P $650 USED CARS! | oars eonvertibie 1061. Re- | io, healer, Powerglice. mechanica! condition ‘#1 Plymouth Cranrrook 4 door, ra- fair top. OR 3-1140 ; — dio aod heater A nice running car | DoDdE *S ‘ or | $795 51 Chevrolet 4 dr. luxe. Very clean ready to go. 51895 $3 MButele Rivier@ Hard- top 2 dr., radio, ‘heater, brilliant yellow finish. -$1395 $3 Chevrolet Bel Air Hardtop with spotless 2 tone brown finish. Only % down. 479 $1 Ford Sedan, radio, heater, good engine and tires. New fow price. De- and ~ 51 Buick Special 4 dr., radio, heater, 2 tone green and thoroughly re- conditioned. ‘$2 Plymouth Sedan, 1a- dio, heater. 2 to choose | from, $445 | 50 Chevrolet 4 dr. luxe, radio. heater, black finish down. $1295 De- neat Nothing | "00 Nash 4 door redo and heater. Belling cheap for cash. $386. ‘48 Ford club coupe See and drive this car. It came from California ‘No rust, $295 82 Chevrolet + door, deluxe, radio: and heater Trode your old car. Oe es “tak CLARKSTON MOTOR SALES CUR YSLEB- PLYMOUTH DEALER | radio “end . 406. West Side Used Cars 2 «OW —, PE ¢2185 3 w "SS mode's choose from BU) SELL J nD TRADE CORNOET AND ‘64 39-3615 Rosemary McMeans 7. TUDOR, A-i radio heater wre bt FE 60371. = ane nang car. 546 et practically - new FE 4-4546 . car @t very much reduced CHEVROLET COUPE 1940. rates DESOTO Ti MARD~ TOP 78D 16} BUCY QUPER FOUR tone paint, radio heater. auto DOOR V-6 Extras ou tonto: name ‘em, 4 has ‘em, Now — cA ENER'S ote new low price, come oe s —— in today ' Brats you will through the Winter. 1962 PLYMOUTH UR DOOR Jet biack finish, ha, beat covers, whitewall tires ana very low ees Has 1065 plates 1953 DODGE CLUB COUPE Radig, heeter snd Gyroma- tic transmission. Very good ‘#0 Pontiac 2 dr. 1955 license "4 Plym heater. $2 Jord 2 door v4 "@ Olds ‘O8" 4 And many others Riemenschneider Bros. Dodge- Plymouth “The Cars With The Forward Look” 232 S. Saginaw St. Phone FE 2-9131 ‘ti KAISER, SPOTLIGHT, ae & heater, overdrive 6363.50 _ Montcalm. KAIBEP ‘@ 4 R AN RA- dio heat r new muffler, tail pipe. new tle Best offer, FE 4-6848 OUR FINEST CAR This Ad Is Yue - . . a { 1951 DE SOTO Mard top Beautifully finished with Ivery and blac? engme| immac- ulate interior leather exce'ient transmission large - of pride and pleasure. $445 WE HAVE Over 180 os makes and models. from 945 $3400 «with ‘smal! down eaanees arranged to suit Economy CARS. 72 AUBURN | SFE PAULSON | For A Good Deal | 66 S. Perr FE 4 A uno a COSTOLINE Y' all Come See Us! We Finance EVERY BODY’S Credit Is Good Here NATIONAL MOTOR SALES 171 S. Saginaw St. WILL TRADE MY EQUITY IN ona Ford for an earlier model car Foub 3 DOOR i060. HEATER, new cout covers yey side walls a ». FE 58-1920 “SHERIDAN BLUE. 4 inside end out time owner anc driver Very low mileage Write Portiac Press, te DeBoto- eM ew -Ply mouth aS RADIO. HEATER, $323. )608 W Huron ise) =6FORD Overdrive FORD ‘54 6 CUSTOM VERY clean, mius sell $1 450 EM 3-2180 3 Cy Owens 1952 Plymouth 4 dr. se- dan. Radio and _ heater. Yours for $595 1948 Pontiac 4 dr. sedan One of those good ones, $195 1954 Ford 2 dr. sedan. Like new. One owner. Ra- dio and heater. $1295 149-Ford Station Wagon | box 86. 1950 MERCURY 2 door. radio and heates $545 167 CHEVROLET 2 door. crigina) paint zie 1951 PLYMOUTH 4 door sedan $516 | 1991 OLDSMOBILE ; | Holiday coupe $1006 Huron Motor Sales ; 002 | wl Huron _ FE 2-264) Jerome '52 $1295 Buick Super Riviera 2 @r. hard top Radio, heater and Dyna | flow 2 tone green oye) Mudson Wasp 2 dr conditioning heater rs $1145 sedan Aijr and seat *53 Ford Custoimnline 45 dr., radio, « lessly clean, 299 °S1 Studebaker 4d: dio, heater. Here's a real mileage maker for a thrifty buyer. $1495 *53 Pontiac 4 dr.. Deluxe, Hydramatic, nadia, heat- er, 2 tone blue, whitewall tires. OLIVER BUICK Open Til! 9P.M. heater, spot- one owner. 5 id 210 Orchard Lake Ave. | FE 2-9101 i [OL .222,:. BO00! | Ford custom 8 ‘ dr with green | fintsh radio. heater, overdrive and | premium tires ‘92 $895 Deluxe | Chevrolet 4 dr Styline 1 Among a few of the accessories are radio and heater ol $895 Buick Super ‘ with radio eater DineflioW and a itso tone paint b i Ford Convertible ish radio and Fordomatic ‘90 Jet biack fin heater Aiso $745 | s 8 ee we adiop, heater Hydramatic white Walls and green paint ‘SO $695 Chevrolet State Wagon wW Pp Tédio heater Power Glide ‘and directional signals Jerome's Bright Spot Orchard Lake at Cass FE 8-0488 a _. $795} remiss Chieftain 8 Delute with | [ One of thove hard to tind. $295 JOST bord 2 dh condition and vours $495 Lxcellent for 19M) bord 2 dr. sedan. (3) to choose from. Real spe- cials at only 149 Katser One ot our lest Cc $175 LOS] Studebaker 4° dr. Ready to “ with radio, | heater, and overdrive. | $350 1951 Studebaker Coupe A| fice car and yours. tor only 1983) Pontiac 4 dr. sedan The Deluxe Chieftain nodel at only | $995 | | | 1931 Mercury 2 dr. sedan It’s hard to find one like this for only, $595 1933 Dodge 4 dy | Original 2 tone finish, ra- dio and heater. $850 sedan. | Cy Owens “Your: Ford Dealer” 147 S. Saginaw St. FE 5-4101 | i *. aiid a 22> aS “The weather warped the slide!"’ S For Sale Used Cars on iss HENRY J 6 CYLINDER heater, new tires. 123 / __For Sale Used Cars _# | aos PONTIAC ‘st ARcuEy ed with accessories private individual price FE 2-000). cane: wit sell to et wholesale ‘$1 KAISER 7 I". RADIO HEAT- pach pM] turn signals, good tires, body Os, nae M-15. _Giaruston, "Md MAple TAYLOR CH TEVROLET bes Chevroet Bel Air 4 adr. ' '53 Chevrolet Bel Air 2 dr r 93 Se Deluxe 4 dr. tole Deluxe 4 dr. sare =| BUY ‘@ Chevrolet TAYLOR'S AT WALLED LAKE Phone Arter 61861 ~ ’ TRANSPORTATION THESE CARS WINTERIZED Qs - SOTC READY TO DRIVE. 1954 DE SOTO 2: ‘48 Pon*t'acs | Ford. with fully automatic trans- 1, '@ Chev | mission power brakes, power 4, ‘47 Creve steering. clean neide apd out 1; '47 Pontiac Birmingham owned Many actes- 2 ‘@ Fords sories «uch as directional signals. 1, ‘47 Willys Station Wagon back up lights white wall tires 1; '46 Pontiac Station Wagon radio and heater air foam cush- Pre-War cars fons, end windshield wasbers Credit Arranged Cash price. AUBURN MOTOR SALES $2 195 Corner of Pike & East Bivd LARRY JEROME Rochester Ford Dealer ! ail Ford Tudor PONT‘!aC 1964, STARCHIEF 8 cylinder radio and heater, blue hydrematic 4 door sedan . $6 A5 F300 miles *Giaso™ ie Sean “*O*" Get Set Gore _ for Winter Rochester Ford Dealer | With a Good Used Car . PU OL 9711 From FOR ie OES 30 seen 4 A *% MERCURY ? DOOR. $10 Down Community ward Birmingham. | Motors SCHUTZ MOTORS Desoto Birmingham: an PONTIAC ‘% SUPER DELUXE wer sedan Fully equipped. FE i663 PONTIAC ¢ DOOR DELUXE a radio, heater, etc 5-1380 NASH es VERY VERY CLEAN | month $20C do’ Uy LAKE ‘OR! iN MOTOR SALES M-24 et Buckhorn L* MY 2-261) | POR SALE BY OWNER. we | 8 Po Olds hydramatic. 4 doo ie » a _Funning condjtion $125 “rE 214 48 T N PIAC Streamiiner “8° four door radio 19% OLDSMOBILE 2 DR $10 | heater, Mydramatic, motor just dewn § assume payments 464 8 overhauled - _ Woodward Birm-ngham $395 PETERSON ; ‘$1 BUICK oon ati Porc | Buper, Riviera four door radio 1951 Kaiser 4 door sedan heater & Dynatio- 1940 Kaiser 4 deer sedan | $945 1961 H a4 KAISER 8 Bales a sERVICE | = “nm ‘82, CHEVROLET NASH $1 AMBASSADOR 4 DR | Bel Air with 2 tone paint radio Mydramatic very clean 8460 heater and Powerelide Sharp car MAyfair 63048 ee $1,005 6LDs ‘¥) CAN BE SREN at 387 WwW Muron _Tnquire Ird floor apt | OLDS SUPEP 8& 1931. FULL Ac- "4c cessories Firestone supreme 49 CADI LI AC ture proof tires One owner Fieetwood fou- door radio heat xeellent condition FE 2-6318. er, Hydramatic & whitewal) tires. ios PILYMOUTH ? Dk SEDAN A radio, heater excellent running condition $125 OL 2-008. is? PLYMOUTH 4 DOOR , . . condition. $155. 614 Argyle. 42 CADILLAC Club Coupe, radio, heater & Hy- dramatic, GooD rE iss PLYMOUTH CAMBRIDOE 4 dr clean con‘ition 1 owner $345 _ MAple 1. 3 PLYMOUTH nati e003, Reraae stim mtv 4 DOOR 49 FORD Hydramatic Fully equi All Station Wagon with radio & access 29° ftw rE heater €395 $4 PONTIAC CUSTOM STAR DS Chief 4 door Lots of acces sories 3000 miles OR 3-2915 _ 47 DODGLI ) PONTIAC 8 DELUXE Deiure two door Wilh fadio aid 4 door A-1} Condition Hy- heater ; . dramatic tow mileage $145 Phone FE 5a383 after 6 = Dm 1954 PONTIAC & Db. UXE HYDRA, | 5] STUDEBALALER matic lots of extras 4% doo tone green Call before 2 o1 after | R 31108 6 loss «CHEV. 1 OWNER shape $300 FE _ 37247 _ 1954 PONTIAC ¢ DP STAR CHIEF | Custom Secaan fully equipped .. Special paint €600 miles. OR "<3 3-7982 oo s : 49 PONTIAC 4 DOOR. SILVER streak Radio and heater Clean FE 2-8405, Good _ eondition PONTIAC 1953 HYDRAMATIC rull accessories, 194Mt_ Clemens PONTIAC ‘52 DELUXE & HYDRA- matic radio eater exceptionally *3] clean $s 5 7 2-2783 - - PONTIAC 44 CHIEFTAIN 2 DOOR sedan 7000 miles, well jeautvees FR 2-2045 Poa Tiac 47, GOON CONDITION Reasonable FE 46195 1954 PONTIAC STARCHIEF CUS tom 4 dr hvrdramatic. excellent _ Shape 185 Raeburn, after 5 pm. 1956 PONTIAC 8 4 DOOR STAR- ehief custom Pully equipped $2 000 Phone OR_3-1643 and automatic transmis- $545 heater sion. FINE Olds Super &&8 4 dvor 7 tone paint radio, heat er Hyrdramatic power steering and power brakes 1.805 Pontiac Convertible coupe radio heater Hiv irathatic and white wall tres S895 = » 7 33 BUICK Four door. 2 tone paint radio heater, whitewall tires and BDy- nafiow $1,095 1954 DESOTO V-8 SPORTS- | MAN Beautiful Cherokee | rea finish with contrasting red and bleck leather fabric "S09 PONTIAC Streamliner ‘8 '-two door and heater ragio aaa interior Power steering. ra- $345 dio heater urn signals back oun ants and etc less tha € 000 actual miles Le « : ar cost $3,705 when but now vou can on it. for only $2,795 BRAID SO CHIEN ROLET Convertible radio heater and whitewall tires ° $495 ‘S|. PONTIAC Streamliner “8 -two door with Motor Sales radio, heater and whitewal! tires DeS8oto-Plymouti Dea'er 3 3%) Years Fair Dealing Cass ai W Pike St a FE 2-0186 Community | Motor Sales | Ince Continental Lincoln Clit Coupe toaded 54 Pontiac Chieftain deluxe 32 Mercury haro top Autho rised’ rebuilt ehgine. radio, heater, 1931 CHRYSLER direction signals, clean inside NFW YORKER FOUR DOOR and’ eut . You and vour family will enjoy $495 all the comfort of this wonder- ful gutomcbile. Perfect mechan- tca y, fine tires, low mileage, radio heater, power brakes, 195} HUDSON automatic transmissinn. direc- tion signals and windshield CLUB COUPE This ts really a washers. One ownet NICE car. equipped with radio, I: heater direction signals. back- $1.025 . up lights, beautifully finished inside and out - a $65 1033 DE SOTO o00 TOWN AND COUNTRY 8TA- = TION WAGON car that will 1953 MG ftt every cieed Fquipped with power steering. torque trans- ENGLISH SPORTS CAR eitth misston large 8 tube radto, newly rebullt engine. dual car- large heater direction: stenals, buretors ignition and exhaust. finished in a dark metallic , FULL PRICE — green intertor like new. low ‘ $925 mileage, excellent tires. one V7e owner $1.825 . 1930 CHRYSLER WINDSOR FOUR DOOR. Beau- tiful Nght green finish, interior ts factory-new. low mileage, 1952 PLYMOUTH FOUR DOOR CRANBROOK. A fine white wall tires, automatic car worth more than the transmission radio, heater. money Delightfully two toned windshfeld washers. turn sig- erev and blue new tires. low rails and many other acces- mileage, one owner. radto, heat- sorties “One Car in a Thou- er and direction signals sand.” ame $725 Pick out the car you want and drive home ina real bargain. We must make room for more new car |) trades. Immediate Delivery | KELLER - KOCH Birmingham's Largest Chrvsler-Plymouth Dealer WOODWARD & 13°; MILE RD. ROYAL OAK [| Liberty 9-4585 MIdwest 6-1200 | P. S.—Comie in Tonight, We're Open 9-9! o Payments + UNTIL FEBRUARY 1955 Bargains Rock-Bottom Galore Prices THEY GOTTA GO! 53 CHEVROLET 530 FORD A nice clean sedan with radio and heater. $989 "52 CHEVROLET | hd roy sae wena cans tne good miles left in eke eeea. runs $767 $179 ‘51 CHEVROLET 48 LINCOLN in Here's — ot er bogged esasontton Ss yen ye et price will " aaviens wu. $149 $589 54 CHEV. PICKUP a ton pickup. $1,287 = PACKARD with Ultra-matic 53 BUICK A Super Hardtop that pas) had excellent care. &$1 589 53 BUICK sera, ean and heater. Pegged with power — $867 onl resin, nage, wateewels ane me $4789 ‘51 CHEV. DUMP , See this one — @ fine truck at the right price. 54 CHEVROLET $489 Bel Air Sport Coupe, radio, ne winecshs cad EE ys '53 WILLYS ciass. Station Wagon with front wheel $1,989 drive, radio and heater. $1,089 : ‘31 FORD '532 PLYMOUTH Soe ee Se SORES ven Gould Uhlek WM ln Gow and it's mechanically perfect. $798 '52 BUICK > A very fine Special model. Come in today and give it a trial. $989 $449 52 CHEV. ‘PANEL ‘4 ton model that will deliver miles. many good $589 Hurry! Hurry! Hurry! YOUR TRADE IS WORTH MORF THAN YOU THINK AT — Michigan's Finest ~Used Cars . \VWOODWARD AT 13 MILE ROAD LIncoln 5-1100 REVERSE CHARGES PONTIAC RETAIL STORE GOODWILL USED CARS “NOT A NAME BUT A POLICY” PONTIAC 4 door, Hydramatic, radio and heat- er. (Stock No. 3764) .eccseeececeeeee $1,495 FORD Sedan with radio and heater. (Stock Wo, Q7U-A) aececredsescenscessgeseges. 9025 FORD Sedan with Fordomatic, radio and heat- er. (Stock No. 3741) . . $1,100 53 PACKARD Sport Coupe with all power equip- ment. (Stock No. 3790) «eacsascnesnes $1,395 ST STUDEBAKER Club Coupe with radio and heater. (Stock No. 3632) ...........005- $345 "49 DE SOTO Sedan. automatic transmission, radio and heater. (Stock No. 3646) ...........$395 31 DODGE Sedan with radio and heater. (Stock No. 3008-A) 2... eee eee . Sete cee $495 32 BUICK four door sedan, radio and heater. - (Stock No. 3796-A) oo... cece eee eee $995 "53 CH EVROLEI Bel Air four door, radio. heater, Powerglide. (Stock No. 3797) .. - $1,245 52 CHRYSLER Convertible, Royal Master tires and all power equipment. (Stock No. 3799) oe mean GRRE TEI a Riale Sais we UGE dome « $1,195 ’S4 OLDSMOBILE “98” four door, like new, all power equipment. (Stock No. 3801) ...$2,575 ’°53 BUICK Roadmaster Convertible All power equipment. (Stock No. 3667) .... $1,795 “Buy Your Car From A Dealer You Know” ~ PONTIAC RETAIL STORE FACTORY BRANCH 63 Mt. Clemens at Mill FE 37117 & _ ‘THE. PONTIAC PRES aie Success S’. MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1954 Was Hard Work for A - 4 t -- Today's Television Programs -- Channel 2—WJBK-TV Channel 4—WWJ-TV Channel 1—WXYZ-TV Channel 9—CKLW-TV’ vengeance in “Outlaw Warning.” ¢:15—(9). News. Austin Griint. (4) News. 6,00—(7) Wild Bill Hickok. Adven-” éure film. (9), The Passerby. Drama. (4) Showcase of Stars. Cliff Arquette in ‘“‘Return of Van Sickle.” (2) News Ace. » ¢:45—(9) Frankie Conners. Music, 7:15—(7) Detroit Deadline. News. 7:30—-(7) Name's Same. Quiz with , Bill Cullen. (9) Motion Picture . - Ava . Dick Hames in.“One Touch of Venus.” (4) Tony Martin. Sings “All of You,” “Teach Me Tonight.” (2) Doug Edwards. 7:45 — (4) News Caravan. John Cameron Swayze. (2) Perry Como. Songs. 8:00—(7) Playhouse. Mary Sinclair in “Case of Marina Gooodwin” Matching Wedding Band Caesar’s Revue with Nanette handsomely “tailored “bands Fabray, (2) Burns and Allen. in 14K y gold. George tries to escape attending lewelry Department @ concert. by getting Gracie in- 8:38 — (7) Voice Program. Rise Stevens, mezzo, sings, ‘‘Say Not Love Is a Dream,” “Some Day My , Prince Will Come,” aria from Mignon. (2) Talent Scouts. Arthur Godfrey host to soprano, baritone, vocal quartette. 9:00—(7) Wrestling. (4) GEORGE'S NEW PORT'S FAST RELIEF i she has cancer in “The Wild In- Young girl about to marry finds; truder.” (2) I Love Lucy. Ten- Ricardos 10:45—(9) Ringside Review. Chris Schinkel. . 11:00—(7) Soupy’s On. Variety, Chet Baker Quartet, guests. (9) National News. (4) News. (2) News. 11:15—(7) Armchair Theater. Con- stance Moore in “Mexicana.” (9) Late Feature. High Beaumont, Cheryl Walker in “Blonde for a Day.” (4) little show. George Petrie in “Operation Sunshine." (2) Featurette. 11:30—(4) Tonight. Variety with Steve Allen, Bibi Osterwald, guest. = TUESDAY MURNING 7:00 — (4) Today. (2) Morning Show. 8:30—(2) Morning in Detroit. 9:00—(7) Break ab. (4) Romper (2) Welcome Traveler. 9:30—(2) Breakfast with Murphy. 10:00—(7) Beulah. (4) Ding Dong School. (2) Garry Moore. 10:30—(T7) Wixie'’s Wonderland. -(4) A Time to Live. (2) Arthur God 19:45--(4) Three Steps to Heaven. 11:00 — (7) Creative Cookery. (4) Hime. "| 11:30—(2) Strilge It Rich. ines. Variety. (4) Robt. Mont- gomery Presents. “Dr. Ed." true’) - TUESDAY AFTERNOON | story of doctor who fights his/12:¢9—(7) 12 O'Clock Comics. (4) ee ee ae Betty White Show. (2) Valiant S ae ee ee uy of Life. friend’s friends, Spring Byington |12:30—(7) Story Studio, (4) Feath- stars. er Your Nest. (2) Search for To- morrow. 1:69— (7) Lunchtime Drama. (4) Bob Maxwell Show. (2) Portia Faces Life. 1:15—(4) Sonny Elliot. (2) Seek- ing Heart. 1:30—(4) Good Cooking. (2) Ladies 1:45—(9) School Broadcast. ’|2:@8—(7) Stars on Seven. (4) La- dies First. 2:15—(9) Film. 2:30—(9) Myrtle Labbitt Show. (2) House Party. 3:60—(7) Theater, (9) Paul Dixon. (4) Greatest Gift. (2) Big Pay- off. 3:16—(4) Golden Windows. 3:30—(4) One Man's Fahhily. (2) Bob Crosby Show. 3:45—(4) Concerning Miss Mar- lowe. 4:00—(7) Captain Flint. (9) Justice Colt. (4) Hawkins Falls. (2) Brighter Day. 4:15 — (4) First Love. (2) Secret Storm. 4:30—4) Mr. On Your A : 4:45—(7) Rickey the Clown. Modern Romances. &00—(7) Auntie Dee. (9) Go to the Museum. (4) Pinky Lee. (2) Robert Q. Lewis. (@ Doody. (4) Howdy Doody. (2) Pi- rate Pete. COLDS 4 -- Today's Radio Programs - - Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject te change without notice "s World. (2) | - 5:30—(7) Rocky Jones. (9) Howdy |. Janis Paige Reveals Her Thoughts on Stage . By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—Some actresses think noble thoughts while emoting—so I asked lovely Janis Paige what brainstorms crease her red-cropped brow when she faces audiences at The Pajama Game.” ‘ “I think of all the new furniture I'm going to be able to buy!” this practical-minded doll retorted. Janis, this year’s B'way success story, has a new apart- ment at a swank address . . . four rooms and two baths. Her escort in Sardi’s, Herb Seegal, one of New York's mer- . ehant princes, commented: ‘ | “Her dog's the only one in town with a rrivate bath.” ° ~x« *« * * Jimmy Durante—here fof a Max Liebman NBC spectacular —says the most common re- action to his recent TV pro- gram was “We enjerred Mar- garet Truman.” * * * - Bishop Sheen said maybe women: are called clothes horses ‘cause they're always nagging. * * * Pretty Carol Bruce and I've been reminiscing about the British Royal Family ... about how we never met them. Carol didn’t meet them once, but I didn’t meet them twice. ; I Carol—recently back from Lendon where she was a big hit in “Pal Joey”—felt Lis and Phil stayed away because the shew was controversial. Margaret saw it in Oxford, and sent a nice note back. . “Don't feel bad,” I told Carol. Twice in London when I was deliciously close to Princess Margaret, her escorts beckoned me. I was to be presented! “Waiter, some more champagne!” the escort said . . . each time. Carol has a new-hairdo—“short without being messy"—which has been copied by Marlene Dietrich. * * * * Can y’match this? A University of Connecticut prof traveled 90-odd miles to a Boston convention, then—deep in thought—took a train for home. . After getting off near the univer- sity, he phoned his wife, “I’m in Willimantic, dear. Drive down and pick me up.” “Are you kidding?” shrieked his wife. “You drove the car to Boston!” THE MIDNIGHT EARL... Irving Berlin just gave the Actors Fund a personal check for $5,000—this donation being separate from and hav- ing no‘connection with the Actors ome miere of “There's No Business MARJIE MILLAR Show Business.” Explaining the whop- ping contribution to a friend, Berlin said: “I like actors.” * * * * : “Mama Gabor gave Zsa Zsa and Rubi a party Friday... . Serge Rubenstein's in for a $4,000,000 lawsuit . . . Jean Rios, Liberace’s ex-gal, has a new night club act . . . Marjie Millar, of Ray Bolger’s TV, is another Tacoma honey whe made good. “A WISH I'D SAID THAT: “For every guy who thinks he knows the score,” says Bob Hope, “there's a girl who's got the game down to a science.” ‘Was Newsman Son of an Accountant, He Got His Big Break in ‘Hire’ Movie Role NEW YORK—Alan Ladd, who %°! made his TV debut on General | Electric Theater Sunday, lan Ladd ‘Aquatic Champ i ill é a1] ees 8 F ug ‘ he was signed for Paramount's in 1941, sensational held since. September where accountant. years old, his Hollywood, out in the ‘ernando School, 220 yard dashes ef and shot put, He was a brilliant swimmer, still holds the local 50-yard free style inter. scholastic record and became West Coast diving champion in 1932. In his senior year in high school he sang the role of Koko in the school ‘a presentation of “The Mika- d : i : é : Fy Ss é He n he got i? : station. | & week, playing all- sorts | It was valuable experience, per- it Hi i lf i i Hi i i STARTS TODAY . DECEMBER 6th The Pontiac Press USED TV SETS $10 to $15 Down TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: “We know this about the speed of light—it gets here too early in the morning.”—Mike Connolly. (Copyright 1954) Red Television svn exc Moving Ahead beginning of 1%. Russia Reports First. N \ N \ N \ \ \ prompt PICK-UP and DELIVERY SWEATERS and _ SKIRTS 30°. wise, (708) CKLW, (888) ww, és) WCAR, (1138) WXYZ, (179) WsBK, cee) “s CKLW, H'wood Date 0:15—WJR, Kitchen ; , Hw 2 t ite! Club wip New — a wi. Weis Bs WJBK, News, Don McLeod wean, Slows. + cone ll XYZ, Wattrict-McKensie | wwJ. Two in Balcony 9:38—WJR, Mrs. Page 1:15—WJR, Ma Perkins CKLW, News, Sports CKLW, News CKLW, Geod Neighbor 1:33—WJIR, Dr. Malone WJBK. Don McLeod CKLW, Stery Time 10:45—WJR, Reserved 9:45—WJR, Pete and Joe WJBK. T. George €:15—WJR, Clark Quartet CKLW, Dream Music CKLW, Good N r WCAR, News, Hall week toes 11:00_WJR. News WCAR, Temple Academy 1:45--WJR, Guiding Light CKLW. Eddie Chase WHYZ. sports, Top 10:00_WJR. Arthur Godfrey | 2:06—WJR. Mrs. Burton CKLW. Kuren, Spotre WWJ. McBride, Smith CKLW, Davies ¢:29— WIR, Reynolds Wiha.” Lore oentine WXYZ, My True Story WJBK, T ae aa ee CKLW. Homechats WCAR, News, Hall 11:15—WJR. Pro-file WCAR, News, Temple 2:185——WJR, Perry Mason WJBK. Dinner Muste Ww, Mayer, Musie eas Save. Wile WWJ, Plain Bill . own i _ . iperin, €:45—WJR_ L. Thomas SL Wane wine, Wwd, Pron Marre |: %:38—WJR, Nore Drake mee 11:88_WJR, Dulles WAR: Gent Poreae vi sna Block . ‘ t House —— : . : "wwa) near extra CKLW, Feller, McKeller | ; “— WCAR, Hail, WXYZ, Red Skelton —- :15—WWJ, Break Bank CKLW, Pulton Lewis Jr ; irt Marries gy ae 2 Day WJBK, L. le —_——* 11:00_WWJ, Strike tt Rich | WCAR, Marmeny Holl 1:15—CKLW, Guy Nuns ¢:30—WJR, Agric. Voice Modern ? WWJ, Nation Bus. WWs, Boo Maxwell CELW. Florida USA. nr ee , Wweeees . oO. . . _ be mart « Pacmag soe | CKLW, Guy Nunn WCAR. News, Song cule Fall 4 ey wzyi, Lene Ranger, WIBK, ews 11:15—WXYZ, Bver Since Eve| WCAR, News, Carousel CKLW, Geb ~ | 7300—WJR, Jim Vinal 11:30—WJR, Make Up Mind| 3:18—WJR, Aunt Jenny 7:45—WJR, E. R. Murrow WXYZ, News, Wolf WWJ, Phrase That Pays CKELW, Davies WWJ, One Man's Pamily W, News, David WXYZ, Curtain Calls CKLW,. In the Mood WJBK, Gentile, Binge CKLW for Day oe Young Ww. . Cows ent ot An TIS —WIR, Mesto Mall oem pee: 3:45_WJR, Gel Sunday BES cere itet: MM | wean Cottes WWJ. Second Chance WW4, Right to Happiness =e meee world CKLW, Terence O'Dell WJBK. News, McLeod 6:00-—WJR, Music Hall | §:15—WXYZ, Show Wor . ‘i 12:00_WJR. Jack White ww, Wife == T eeeke ? aware red Wolf WWJ. News : WXYZ, Wattrick-McKeunie ied and Jax. Binge CKLW, Break the Bank oe: - yoaee CKLW, Bway Cop 7:45—WWJ, News WJBK, News, McLeod wCAR bon Cannas 8:45—WXYZ, Ghow Stoppert| 8:00—WJR, Jack White mesh. Deve _— S00. Deity: ‘Cols WWJ, Bob Maxwell 12:15-—WJR, Farm Roundup | Wel, Ta ‘aooen ww, Te e Hour CKLW Tob cuLw Ta cae — ELECTRIC CO, | St cee | SRE EE TL | Sok eo, | ar mute arom Ps . WCAR, News. 2 WCAR, Your Land, Mine 9:15—WJR, Bing Crosby 12:30—WJR, Time Out, Musie ” ‘ 825 W. Meren FE 4.2525 : bd 8:15—WJR, Bud Guest WXYZ, News Music 4:45—WW4J, Woman in Home 9:30—WJR, Amos ‘n’ Andy WXYZ. Fred Woit | CKLW, Bud Davies CKLW. George Wright WWJ. American Band WCAR, Coffee WJBK, McLeod WCAR, News WXYZ. Reuther WCAR, Harmony Hall CKLW, Reporter's Rounvup WJBK, Gentile 10:00—WJR, Frank Pace WWJ, Fibber McOee WXYZ, News. Top CKLW, H. Piannery WJBK, Mouseparty 10:15—WWJ, Gildersiceve WCAR, [ COCKROACHES One Full Yeer Guerentee From Houses, Apartments, Gro- | cery Stores and Restaurants. Re- ww). wxyYz, 9:00—WJR, News Minute Perede WJBK, News, George WCAR, News, Rhythm 8:3%3—WJR, Music Mall 6; -—wwJ, +2:43-WXYZ, Charm Lady News Radio Revival | 1:00 WJR, Road Breakfast Club WXYZ, Paul Wint TUESDAY AFTERNOON of Life WWJ. News, Mulholland CKLW, Musical Airs 5:00—WJIR, News i WCAR, Sign Off 6:15—WIR, Reynolds, Music CKLW, Eddie Chase 5:38—CKLW, Eddie Chase ar main out only three hours. No |) signs used. Rox Ex Company 1014 Peat. 64. Bk. Bidg. FE 4-9608 2-8181. | SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSISSSSSSS" STAPP’S ... Special Selling... for Young Okes Genuine authentic cowboy boots. Decorated in contrasting colored inlay Tots’. sizes 4'2-8. Regular $4.95 $95 | pr. JUVENILE BOOTERY STAPP'S 28 E. Lowrence St. SIFTSSSSSSIISISIIVIISIG4 PONTIAC’S FIRST TV SERVICE DEALER! | BLAKE RADIO AND TV SERVICE Authorized Fectory Service for 15 Ditterent Manulacturers 3149 W. Huron FE 4.5791 || | CASH FOR SURPLUS CLOTH. | |ING through Classified ads! | Coats, suits, tux, gowns or furs, | |now’s the time to sell! Call FE) Seek ‘Phantom’ in Dual Slaying Want Escaped Burglor for Quizzing in Murders of Wife, Companion HOLLYWOOD, Fila. »—Gilbert Mead—the “‘phantom burglar’ of Stamford, Conn.—was being sought by police today for questioning in the death of his wife and Dominick Albanizio. s s s Mrs. Evelyn Mead and Albanizio were killed by an intruder in the house they occupied here. He had been beaten to death and she was shot twice in the head. Their bod- ies, clad in night clothes, were found sprawied on the floor yes- s The boy first reported the slay- ing to neighbors when he rushed next door and sobbed that a man/ had broken into the house and killed both his mother and Alban- izio. Mead, about 46 and balding, be- came known as the ‘phantom giar”’ of were taking him to state prison for a burglary and forgery charge investigation when he escaped Nov. 5 and disappeared. Burros Developing Taste for Rail Shipping Tags CLEVELAND #—Three Mexican | -burros, probably intended for | Christmas presents, were billeted ; temporarily in Cleveland Union Terminal last night with no visible | destinations. The animals had eat- problems every Christmas season, | said three at a time sets a new | States at the England, Scotland and Wales had | 3,248,892 licensed TV sets at the end of March, 194.) Receiver production apparently has picked up considerably in the past few months. New sets appear in the shops more frequently. Experimental Program. os this hatha lp Done in Color lomatic meighbors bought one of the new 15-inch table models re- MOSCOW (INS) — Soviet tele- cently fer about 3,500 rublee— vision has made steady strides! five months pay for an average during 1954. semi - skilled worker or 3% Riga, capital of Soviet Latvia,| menths pay for a truck driver. opened a TV studio on ow: a Russia's pioneer teieviewers still Previously only Moscow, Liningrad have technical blems to cope and Kiev had stations. Another with as.well as gripes about pro- new station is scheduled to begin sraming. Tir anu e “Berka telecasting in Kharkov before the A apepe Culture” recently printed a page end of the year. Colter television also came to The Mescow TV center mam- | owned a television set—and the ger, A. Donatov, announced in ® | boredom that set in soon after. newspaper article Nev. 12 the Arlazorov said he was tired of | old concerts, movies and relays 16 years after its first biack and | theater .performances. His biggest white telecast. grouse was a telecast of a com- The best estimate of the number poser conducting one of his own of television receivers in the works, during which the camera U.S.S.R. appears to be something focused steadily on the composer's. over half a million. back, TWICE THE NUMBER OF GIFTS... and much nicer too. . . when they are handmade. Let Us Demonstrate ELECTRIC PORTABLE Sewing Machine Call FE 2-7848 EVENINGS CALL FE 2-1048 COMPLETE INSURANCE COVERAGE BRUMMETT- , LINCICOME, Inc. | Hard to Pronounce— Easy to Settle With 367 East Pike St. FE 4-0588 227 Auburn Ave. Phone FE 4-3431 i khhhedikdidididdadededide de Wrought Iron Gift Specials MONDAY -- TUESDAY F TV Stools, Plastic Tweed Seats and Kids love to sit on ‘em, too! Gift Special $ 22 A $5.00 Value Our 18th Year of Greater Value Giving! ~ MILLER FURNITURE “Where You Honestly Save” | 144 Oakland Ave. - Growing plants give freshness cut flowers on Gift Special $13 "ee eezedktdedtidztititiiai WII Las. SEWING MACHINE SALES | é t ’ F he - SOR ee Rt er Fe eee grog AM et gage i ae oa. ati- hh Lat cee) ee a ie. ads a Sites ioe = + Free Parking : , A \ ~ 4 a | re | he eRe wis - _ — . * ’ Q * = agen rg eee ee x ‘ 4 4 ty ; ‘ . ‘ ; = ae . * oe A ‘ 2 . * 3 ‘ad . . , \é ‘ © Pal : A ee | j ; 4 ; . F : : t P - - . eA al Fd S ; - : . i ” + . \ * . , 5 ‘ ; ‘ . - 4 . \ > ~ MPHIRTY-TWO s+ THE PONTIAG PRESS, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1956 —_—— Oe : lesson early im life. It's an old, |» Cha: was dri across the| hurt. A big fish popped out of 3 } : air of trains Gang Up opel, wes driving Father Hooks Whopper | &** a 200 LO. e en W. ist] old Ipeson, but if | happensd to be tracks and hit the third car of | yy. the water and daddy threw his ES 1, ie Colleg M h e talking directty te ouch 0 git Just lon Car; Driver Unhurt westbound streaihtiner. His gar | His 3-Year-Old Son | ine, but the hook caught in M/s TV Troubles?: e at Coed: 3 Times a Week CHAPPELL, Neb. w — £4) was slammed partially around.) ALTON, Ill @®—Little Michael) chael's scalp. “Ward's TV Service ae “Crocodile tears, honey,” I'd | Wolf's car was hit by two ditferent | Sti am ine rinsed pimgedlere ms | Bucher, 3, is the biggest fish| Following removal of the hook at Open Evenings (a og egy agg popular,” more talented, richer, | “§ust wreck your mascara— | trains but He walked away un- | walking away” from the scene| bis daddy-ever caught. St. Joseph's Hospital, Michael was FE 2-2976 » ' | MEW YORK “Shattering | happier =. and make your soul look water- | injured: : hen an eastbound freight train| Michael was sitting-close to his| reported making satisfactory re- experience” is what a pretty tirl That lucky girl must learn one | jogged and puffy. Dry up.” The 1 qareld fetkane mayer of! conaied the our, father in a boat so that he wouldn't | covery, | E at the University of Kansas calls ; i — — : ~ — : . getting a wolf call from 1,200 col-| . pounds, measures 5 feet 544, and [72 that even in a faintly blurred 3 newspicture her dimples abso | 93 Mag". i ; oS lutely belt you one right in the | sE7% weld ; e a3 3 ; A te A on a So Simple to Apply, You Can Do It Yourself! Homart Vinyl-Asbestos Tile a / © Beautiful Marbleized Colors c Lal ©@ 9x9-In. Size Priced at es ,. 6X One “ ye ° , Rubber Floor Til Amazing new plastic tile shines without waxing. Sheds Durable, Comfortable Luxury = it, wipes sparkling clean with a damp cloth! Resists 6" x6" 12¢ Ea. acids, alkalis, oils, greases and fire. Ideal for any room A Thick, springy \% in. rubbers —even basement! Resiliency softens surface noises. tile for longer wear, comfort. 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