= ae poi on ‘Yacht Held at Gunpoint by 3 Teen Youths KEY WEST. Fla, (P—A Winter Park anetee noyaay FMES Sweep cruise turned into a 14-hour gunpoint ordeal when three teenagers boarded their yacht and demanded to be taken Through Lowell Business Area to Mexico. - A note smuggled ashore brought rescue for Richard » 6 . Buildings Destroyed ? and 2 Others Imperiled. Sias, his wife and four children. by Raging Blaze Officials considered bringing charges of kidnaping and even the archaic crime of piracy against the youths, all from San Antonio, Tex. | The three youths, Mike Moore, 17, Tommy Edwards, *15, and Johnny Cox, 16, |were to appear before Crim-. inal Court Judge Thomas : FAMILY SHAKEN through the Lowell busi- © | Sias. 53, a packinghouse ma- ness district today g destroy- - | Ichinery manufacturer, his wife ing at least six buildings ~ Phyllis. 50, sons, David, 4, andand threating. two John, 10, and daughters, Jane, 15, others. | ' and Bobby, 13, were shaken but Damaye is estimated at pavereny venateees. between $250,000 an d The three youths bearded the $300,000... cumptuews COtect power yeeht| icent County sheriff's Fiesta Ti at Craig in the Key* “Geputies said the flames New Year's Eve, They pointed a . ‘t-caliber rifle at the Siases ana Were Moving westward in said, “Keep quiet, we'll tell you destroying the frame struc- what te do,” Sins related. tures fronting on M2\ degrees, strong winds and snow “They were polite and didn't (Lowell’s main street) an ¢ * President LOWELL Up—Fire raged ~~ NEVER TOO EARLY — These two water skiiers wanted to Start the new year off right yesterday so, in temperatures of 16 q oman ice covered dock and glided | into Silver Lake. Left to right Fatalities Cut {2Pct. in said Banner Year . One Death in Michigan -30-Hour Holiday Traffic Against 142 in U.S. LANSING (—For @ sec- ond straight year, Michigan ‘posted a banner traffic ‘safety record in 1957, cut- ‘ting deaths an estimated |12 per cent. It appeared that high- way accidents and injuries also were down for the year, although compara- tively little. The year ended with only one traffic fatality report- ed for the 30-hour New \Year holiday period from i Pontiac Press Phete | are Duane Olk, 22, of 2776 Dixie Hwy. and Tyson Hodge, 14, of 2500 Silverside Rd., both of Waterford Towgship. They took two turns around the lake clad in wool socks, sweat shirts, gloves, life preservers and swimming trunks. covered backgrounds, they stood use any foul language,” he said- extending at the rear to “but they kept the gun on me and ‘the Flat river. my wife and made me do what they wanted ° They reported buildings already consumed included Mel's Tavern, TAKE ON FUEL L Sias said the boys first insisted YePman’s Clothing Store (a double building). two barber- they should take off right away frontage * ‘for Mexico. He persuaded them it shops, an unoccupied former wom- would be necessary to take ON en's apparel shop and the Show- more fuel. obtainable only the boat Inn. which is connected with CARACAS. Venezuela W — next morning Lowell's Showboat — a summer 1958 Officers Named. rts. xrat ie ta. sonst sicvin by Pontiac C. of C. Reports The, gavernment of President Marcos Perez Jimenez a before dawn today that it had crushed an air force revolt in less than Firemen frem at feast seven there, young David managed to nearby communities have joined slip ashere momentarily with a the Lowell department im the 24 hours note which he handed to Murry | battle. They were reported cen- * * * Elected as president of the Pon- Cribb, a docker. The note said: | eentrating efforts on Avery's The army chief of staff, Gen tiac Area Chamber of Commerce “We are being held at gunpoint. 4ewelry Store, in the western Romulo Fernandez, in a broad- for 1958 today was John A. Riley, Cribb rushed to a garage near. path of the flames. assistant advertising manager of °Y 24 telephoned the sheriff's The Levee Restaurant, at the &t Maracay. center of the revolt. The : department. Monroe County depu- eastern end of the flames, ap-h@d been taken Pontiac Press ties borrowed a motorboat and peared out of danger, witnesses forees at 3:36. a.m Riley, a member of The Press gave chase about 10 minutes aft- reported Ferenedec - added. teuever, since 1937, was elected to the en the Fiesta I] put aA with Firemen believed the blaze re-| that seattered pockets of rebels this morning by the Board of Di. D@Vid Peering anxiously astern sulted after the explosion of a-fuel, wege being mopped u rectors of the Chamber. wed pentinads chee and his mother tank at the rear of Mel's dormer . Other officers elected were: jing from a cabin ty, Neubecker's) Tavern. The army Edward A. Maier, preside of jon to watehes who already Abstract & Title Guaranty Co. “®™® hurrying to the dock. first vice president. ‘OVERHAUL YACHT B. Ralph Eastridge. manager of Deputies Norman Parker and p.m. er, the comnunity's ly calm. J. C.@Penney Co., second vice John Hovey overhauled the yacht! newspaper, sald apartments |” : « president. and as they came abeam, the above the tavern were evacu- | Toruahdex ccid be the 1 Harry J, Woodman, treasurer of Texas teen-agers dropped their ated, but were unable to = o m the General Motors Truck & Coach guns overboard and surrendered. | how Sand pemeren ecenpne’: Ss ployes | Credit U : pom — mon. Lt. Rene Raicte of the sheriff's living that Aurelio Ferrero Tamay, com-; mander of the Maracay garrison Government of | Venezuela Study Revision cast said the rebellious garrison term only last Dec. 15 in a ple-' by government chance to vote only yes or no. He' chiet we the| ak abou! 7 aa by President Perez Jimenez’ alarm was turned in at a iin a broadcast last night that the nat of the country—the world’s Employes of the Lowell Ledg- No 2 oi] producer—was complete- aders fled by air. He reported, TOLEDO, Ohio (# — A policeman who said he WAS jeaders in the Pentagon that the |6 p.m. Tuesday to midnight | Wednesday. Last year 20 |persons were killed in high- way accidents in a four-day holiday period. | Twelve persons were killed in ‘evo ,rus e 0 int ie S jauto accidents in the hour ‘Christmas holiday period a week ago. cane were disorganized from while New Year's Eve revelry, Senators May Shear State Police Commissioner Jo- lack of a single command and was still going on. For hours the, seph A. Childs said, “I am more warned the airmen to give uponly countermeasures were the! Three Service Heads than gratified that the state their fight or be slaughtered. The ack-ack fire and a steady stream of Military Commands achieve its goal of reducing traffic nation’s principa] airfield is at of threats and cajolery by the gov-, ideaths by 10 per cent. I hope it's Maracay ernment radio. a good augury for 1958.” WASHINGTON (@—The Senate fi * * * Preparedness subcommittee has! “The a: © and tele- The short. pudgy Venezuelan BULLETIN vision have done a fine job in general won another five-year! under consideration a series of safety education and certainly are proposals that could lead to legis- partly responsible for better driver - lation shearing the Joint Chiefs of‘ attitudes,” he stated. Staff of = mitary commands Pps appr tae suiead aiid 22 per cent last year, mostly re- LANSING (AP)—Gov. Williams said today he will make an emergency tax proposal to bail the © biscite which gave the voters a had no opponent * * * The subcommittee, headed by. ‘ The revolt caught the govern-, State out of a growing Democratic Leader Lyndon B.' Gecting an vce commas oe . er ment during the early morning financial crisis. ' Johnson of Texas, has heard con- ee Ohio Officer Shoots Selt, Wounds Young Suspect | ‘tradietory testimony from mili./*>0ut 770,000 for 195i. ‘tary leaders and scientists about) Provisional figures showed 138 jthe amount of service rivalry that, highway deaths in December, but jeetal exists under vy unifj-; delayed reports were expected cation of the armed forces, te raise the figure another dozen i Most subcommittee members) or so. Fatalities in December 1956 as ‘now are convinced there has been) totaled 158. , 'so much confusion and bickering “| among Army, Navy and Air Force! Plreg ny only emg _ i iday period was 47-year-old Clayton |Droulliard of Ecorse Township, trying to beat a 14-year-old boy to the draw yesterday nation’s missile and satellite pro-| grams have been seriously handi-| secretary. Stuart E. Whitfield. vice presi- dent of Pontiac State Bank, treas- » Urer. The new president succeeds out, ' department said the boys, before Lowell, a community of aboyt and governor of the state of ‘shot himself twice in a leg and wounded the boy in a hip. capped. iwho was killed in a two-car crash ordering Sias to sea, loaded his 2.500 persons on the direct roufe Aragua had been restored to his yacht with such a collection of between Grand Rapids and Flint. post along with his chief aide. Patrolman Frank Hayes, 35, and another officer had goods that the Fiesta fl actually is located about 17 miles east of Maracay is the-capital of Aragua gone to a residential neighborhood after receiving a re- Tuesday evening. While there is no unanimous fraffic deaths in the United opinion, the prevailing impres- States hit a record postwar high sion among subcommittee_mem- {or a one-day New Year holiday. bers seems to be that it might be = Final figures were not compiled, best to start at the top of the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) military structure in any eaand going president Howard O. Powers. tok o# a list. ern ee ee ee port of a masked youth hiding behind a tree. They ——— Among the articles were auto yt. john Pemberton. their two _ Ferrere Tamay and other of- found the boy two blocks¢— Ures. barbecue equipment. ammu- chidren. ages 5 and 4, and Clin. Metals had been seized by rebel away Hayes said he had a shots from his 23 - caliber re- nition. blankets. food and mot ait —_ ere at 5 a. m. yesterday, Fer- . . a Luncheon Clubs = = Raia Mrs _ Pemberton's fos abe . = mask made from a pillow- aver. 7 * * prother ev were evacuated — s ; : , Both victims were taken to St. Listen to Wilson Ruiole said the lads told him *!cly from an apartment above At 4 a.m. this morning. Fer. CASE In @ packer Vincent Hospital where they were - ae RE . "one of the destroyed barbershops. nandez continued, % air force Hayes said that as he searched reported in good condition Discuss Missiles ty ran avay from home Satur- day and drove to St. Petersburg bi n f Former Secretary of “Defense 8 an automobile owned by the UAdl€ to save any o Charles E. Wilson spoke on the parents of one lad. They sperit eo aS _ United States’ missile and defense Monday night camping on Miami @*‘e ice . rerow . program before some 700 members Beach and then headed for the S0uth of Lowell on M91 to US. 16. of Pontiac area Rincheon clubs at Keys. There they spied the Sias a noon luncheon held today at the Yacht and decided it would make smecats Pemberton said the family was planés from’ bases at, Pal onegro its posses- and Boca del Rio in Maracay * -were at the main Caracas airport traffic in the service of the government. * * In Caracas itself, streetlights) - ani gouge Were turned on, ending the brown- T ja first-class craft in which to Eiks aay i. ~ ‘reach Mexico. I n Toda ig ‘'s P If ess — as a defense against rebel planes. Wilson, who lives in Bloomfield ——————— : PREIS IR ES Air force wnils at Maracay . etrodaced & launched a. sudden rebellion Tete. ‘sh oe u Lh a Ford Lake Shipping High, Camis 222220 42 against the government early New. tiae es. punum ae Conaty News ............. 13..|Year’s Day, sending je} planes 50 Fitzgerald. DETROIT # — The Ford | miles east from Maracay to Cara former General Motors ,, a. Editorials 6 oe ee i _The : Motor Co.'s fleet of three lake cas, the capital, before dawn. Corp. president spoke on recent ais - Market Basket ...... 24 to 32 : ee chatges that he was responsible freighters hauled 2.913.682 toms | yo ats “4g Perez Jimenez said antixircraft for this nation’s reported lag in of iron ore. coal and limestone Qpituaries ............. 12 (fire hit one of the raiders and, missile development.’ | in the 1957 season. The total was | per ees esse $8 to 41 eee it & land at this skyscraper; 2 & « the second highest since the | Theaters - city’s airport. . After his “off the cuff” message, marine department of Ford was | TV & Radio ‘Programs ....47 TOLD TO SURRENDER Wilson. opened the floor to queés- established in 1924. The previous | Wilson, Earl . ......#7 | The President told the nation in tions. | high was 3,332,385 in 1955. - Women's Pages 18 to 23. a broadcast that the rebels at lout imposed by the government) ommended shakeup. This take the form of relieving tate te torm ot retevine be Chill in Pontiac Air The Joint Chiefs, consisting «May Gel Snappier him. ated ae away, | * + the heads of the three services a 25-caliber revolver from his lice an the boy told them have the dual role of over-all mi - : ‘pocket and shouted, “Copper, I'm} ihe had intended to grab a -wom- tary planning and of operating the Pontiac area residents had bet- , gonna shoot you.’ an’s purse, but meant only to scare individual services. This has led, ter prepare for some cold, cold The patrolman grabbed for his Patrolman Hayes after he was '© some ° suggestions that their| weather, the U.S. Weather Bureau swivel holster and fired three ‘caught. jloyalty to their individual services le “ has interfered with their decisions; | t ‘on over-all military plans, al-| Tonight will be cold and partly though Gen. Nathan F. Twining,'cloudy, with a chance of today’s ‘chairman of the Joint Chiefs, has ‘snow flurries continuing. The low idenied this in public testimony. will be 12-16 degrees. ' * * * ' Tomorrow's forecast is cold, In exploring the situation:/the partly cloudy and a chance of subcommittee’s . staff has «gone snow flurries. back as far as the 19849 Hoover’ The Oakland County Road Com- j Commission report. At that time,'mission reported at 10 a.m. that i a minority of which former Sec- Jocal streets and highways were e retary of State Dean Acheson clear, but outlying roads were still was a member recommended that,slippery in spots, : Congress create a single chief of .Fifteen was the lowest recorded staff over the Joint Chiefs. The temperature in downtown Pontiae present chairman of the Joint preceding § am. At 1 p.m. the Chiefs has 6nly. an advisory role. ‘mefeury had risen to a chilly 19. i | Bowl Games Scorecard Rose Bowl—Ohio State 10, Oregon 7 - Cotton Bowl—Navy 20, Rice 7 Sugar Bowl—Mississippi 39, Texas 7 | Orange Bow!—Oklahoma 48, Duke 21 Sun Bowl—Louisville 34, Drake 20 Prairie Bowl—Texas Southern 6, Prairie View 6 (Details in. Sports Section) - nna gaye Eyewitness to Death Starting Today . _By AGATHA CHRISTIE Mrs. McGillicuddy panted along the platform in the wake df the porter carrying her suitcase. Mrs. McGillicuddy was tligee minutes later, she was asleep. a short and stout; the porter was tall and free- striding. In She siept for thirty-five minutes and awoke refreshed. Re- addition, Mrs. McGillicuddy was burdened with a large settling her hat, which had slipped askew. she sat up and quantity of parcels, the result of a day's Christmas shopping. jooked. out of the window at what ‘she could see of the flying The race was, therefore, an uneven one, and the porter turned countryside. It was quite dark now, a dreary December day the corner at the end of the platform whilst Mrs. McGillicuddy _christmas was only five days ahead. London had been dark Way still coming, up the etreight. ‘and dreary; the country was no less so, though occassionally & °° -® lrendered cheerful with its constant clusters of lights as the. Mrs. McGillieuddy and her parcels were buffeted to. and ire, train flashed through towns and stations. * but ‘she arrived eventually at the entrance to No. 3 platform, ** * * . found her ticket and presented it. The man ¢lipped it, mur- mured: “On the right—rear. portion.” * a screech, making the windows rattle and causing her to start. . Mrs. McGillieuddy padded up the platform and found her wae train clattered over the points and passed through a porter, looking bored and staring sata eine ‘Gutside the door station. of a third class carriage: ' || Then. it began suddenly to slow down, ‘presumsliy in obedt- “Here you are, lady.” ‘ende to @ signal. For some minutes, it crawled along, then “I'm traveling first class,” said Mrs. _Meoittfeusy.» ‘stopped, presently, it began to move forward again. Another “You didn’t say 40,” grumbled the porter. He retrieved the train passed them, though with less vehemence than the first _ Suitease and matched with it to the adjoining coach where gne. The train gathered speed again. At that moment, an- Mrs. McGillicuddy was installed in solitary splendor. The 4:54 other train, also on a down line, swerved inwards towards was not much patronized, the first class clientele ete them, tor a moment with almost alarming effect. either the faster morning express, or the 6:40 with dining cars. ne oe oe sey" She settied herself back on the plush eudhions with a ‘yarn te. the two trains ran parallel, rio ‘eee shining SE ET DN Ie Ae LRM: A eR: IAN. erence . blew, and the train aertell The magazine slipped from Mrs. MeGillicuddy’s hand,- her head crepes a= . Another Agatha . Christie. Meraiary. A Wein traveling ih, tiie opposite direction rushed by with, Ei Gh serene ngs om ell pe ica cae meme cal cream what? 2 window through the windows of the parallel carriages. Most The door of her compartment was drawn back and a ticket of the blinds were down, .but occasionally the occupants of collector said, “Ticket, please.” . the carriages were visible. The other train was not very full Mrs. McGillicuddy turned to him with vehemence. ‘and there were many empty carriages. © “A woman has been strangled,” she said. “In a train that. At_the moment when the two trains gave the illusion of has just passed. 1 saw it.” i being stationary, a blind in one of the carriages flew up.with The ticket collector looked at her doubtfully. a snap. Mrs. McGillicuddy looked into the lighted Airst- class “I beg your pardon, Madam?” carriage that was only a few feet away.. “A man strangled “a woman! In a train. I saw it—through Then she drew her breath in with a gasp and half rose to there.” She pointed to the window. her feet. The ticket collector looked extremely doubtful. Standing with his back to the window, and to her, was | “Sttangled?” he said disbelievingly. | @ man, His hands were round the throat of a woman who | x *« faced him, and-he was remorselessly strangling her. Her | Sos, secegies I saw it, I tell you. You must do something eyes were starting from their sockets, her face was purple and congested. As Mrs. McGillicuddy watched, fascinated, |. bin ipmeal reperoed pe apologetically. | ee See Oe eee 0 Hey ae erupted $6 te ws oo adam, that you may have had a little nap man’s hands. and—er”—he broke off tactfully. ares ley tee ee : At the same moment, Mrs. MeGillicuddy" s train slowed down quite wrong. I saw it, I tell you.” 4 again and the other began to gain speed. It passed forward tue HES rare . and, a moment or two later, it had vanished from sight. i aid went to nine tying on the seat. On the exposed page, was a Almost automatically, Mrs. McGillicuddy’s h went up to po ‘ . ‘an the communicttion cord, then paused, irresolute. After all, the pair from an open doorway. He said persuasively: “Now don't you think, ‘she was close qu aveling? The horror of what she had seen at such , and the unusual circumstances, made her — ‘Promofions ei © Am attorney for three Pontiac Sergeants whose nie dvinponnntts , promotions, | ee been held up. by a Circuit) ‘Court restraining order has filed “a motion to intervene in a law ase. Attorney Paul L. Merideth filed “the motion for Sets. William K. Hanger. Raymond E. Meggitt and Fred Goines who seek to become “defendants with the Civil Service Commission in the suit brought by acting Lt. John DePauw - The wergeants, who outscored ~ DePauw on a recent civil serv- _ ite examination given for pro- ~ gpective lieutenants, want to be _. Jolmed as defendants in the case _ go they can file their vee Meri- doth said. They seek to quash the order restraining Police Chief Herbert) AW. Straley from reducing DePau “In rank or pay until a hearing ‘Circuit Judge George B. Hartrick “4ssued the order Dec. 23 at the “request of DePauw's attorney, Ho-, ward I. Bond Merideth said a hearing on the | sergeants’ motion would be held Monday before Judge Hartrick. DePauw brought the suit aa ‘the commission after it ordered he be reduced to the rank. of sergeant “since he had placed fourth, below “the three sergeants, in a list of 11 competing for lieutenant’s rank Doria Survivor Wins Damages Alter TV Show CLEVELAND (INS)}—A 22-year old Euclid. 0. girl received a $70.- 000 check for mental] anguish she -suffered from a TV re-creation of the sinking of the Italian liner An- -drea Doria. The young miss, Theres 2 a Bue- dell of 1346 East 195th St in the “Geveland suburb, was aboard the. Doria when it sunk. She suffered no injures at that time, but @ollapsed three months later while witness- ; ing the TV showing She sued the operators of the =Doria and owners of the Swedish | “Liner Stockholm for $250,000 dam ‘ages. Her attorney David L. Si- del! said Miss Buccilli. spent four “months in a hospital following her collapse. | By E. H. sIMs Should home owners with houses on the shores of the Great Lakes expect the water to continue to rise for the next few years or recede? The greater weight of evidence suggests that the water level of , the Great Lakes will continue to 3 Pontiac Sergeants File” Motions in Suit Over). Warns Acgains Spending Spree _ today to annual ion which their election campaigns FRAME BUILDINGS DESTROYED—At least six frame buildings were destroyed today as fire raged through Lowell, a Kent County community = oe Rep. Cannon Cautions About Using Defense as an Excuse WASHINGTON # — Chairman, Cannon (D-Mo) of the House Ap-' propriations Committee cautioned against a government) spending spree under the guise of national defense * * * “Where the national defense ts concerned, we cannot count the cost and we must provide all the; money necessary.” he said in an) interview, “But that's no reason why we should get hysterical and’ spend vast sums of money that arent necessarm i * * * “A great many people are go- ing to use national defense as a or bigger appropriations,” Can non eiaed a £ dsend. The pork barrel fellow, £ we stil must have our e ah * * * The port bills providing for local many Some Congress members al-! * * * Because of the obvious need for; more money for national defense, particularly in the ‘missile field, Cannon said, more we don't have to have “We must be all the economical with the things Cannon said he expected mands to be made for continue “a heavy spending as a means of spurring business and heading off deflation. reason to bolster their request s ed manager of Consumers Power Co.'s Kalamazoo Division, “To them, Sputnik was announced today by President Dany. was manager ‘ready are contending that such Oakland disttict. projects add more than their cost! org in Royal Oak. to the nation’s wealth, and must) ingt be: neglected. Lonely Elephant | i Decides to Make “New Year's Visit Mrs. Noreen Linley’s first new ~ Ade blaze resulted from an exploding fuel tank. coe ne a ee enaene gne = f Arthur H. Lee Appointed to Consumer Power Post ARTHUR H. LEE Arthur H. Lee has been appoint- BIRUM CAMPBELL it was Karn Lee succeed s Birum G Jr. who has. been Freh e es State Sets Record president of the company in charge barre] reference was of saleg and business promotion. f T ffi § f rovi Campbell, well known in Pontiac OF la Ic a e projects such as river and har- where his late father headed the \bor and flood control programs. company’s operations, will move to members base Jackson to assume ‘his new duties. ‘hut the count for the 30-hour period (Continued From Page One) Lee; a me of Birmingham, from 6 p.m. local time. Reng Consumers’ South night to midnight Wednesday hi with headquar- reached 142 persons. : The toll was higher than the A native of Romeo, Lee is @ National Safety Council's pre igraduate of Pontiac High School holiday estimate of 130. The and the University of Michigan. | dicted by the council. The colneil termed ti the New Year traffic toll ‘‘distressingly motorists to drive with extra care The previous high for a one-day New Year celebration since World NOTTINGHAM. , War Il was 110 in the 1947-48 Eng. (INS) “rise for some years to come. ae 2 39 transition. While the low mark for| year's visitor weighed 0 this : ie a eoees and is mere pounds " e a 30-hour New Year holiday in the! a caleulated guess Poa same period was 93 in the 1946- - Nevertheless, the water level re- Cardinal in Philippines | Mrs. Linley went to her front aa - ee eet ceded for a number of years and door early Wednesday when she, MANILA (INS) — Francis “ardinal Spellman arrived in the Philippines today for a two-day visit with American military per- sonnel. It was his seventh trip | to the Philippines in connection with his annual visits to the Far East during the holiday season jheard loud noises. She found an The all-time high in traffic | ‘elephant busily swishing his trunk deaths for any one-day holiday | ithrough what was left of the door. since World War fl was 253 in | | While her husband bravely kept, Christmas 1946. ithe elephant at bay with a vacuum! ‘cleaner, Noreen ran off to. get police. They contacted a local cir- ‘cus trainer and the elephant was ed off trumpeting happily if the rise is to follow a forty- year eycle, or an even longer one, home owners may be in for a num- ber of years in which the level will gradually return to a higher level. ; This, the majority of experts egeem to feel, is quite likely. It, = be a slow process of course. rain in New England were con- sidered added hazards to the heavy holiday travel. The New Year traffic Erratic Snows Hit Cleveland Cold Pelts. Eastern U. S. itoday. with the icy air extending deep into Dixie. Skies Were clear’ in most of th cold belt. although a showstovn hit the Cleveland area, dumping up to & inches of snow in some High Costs Hit Graves BRIGHTON, Colo. (INS) — The grave is ne escape from the high cost of living in Brighton. City fathers announced rates for open- ing and closing graves in the “town's cemetery have been in- creased from $65 to $75 because of additional labor costs. By THF. ASSOCIATED PRESS ‘in highway accidents. Fire deaths Cold weather spread across most numbered 15 and 27 persons were of the Eastern half of the nation The Weather for an over-all total of 126. places. : R t : = * * wa? = &. Weather Boreas Repor 5 me ‘ et a But in parts of the (Greater Still Tops Ferry Take sloudy pola ar cub Cleveland area you'd have to y chance ef snew flarries, Cold. Lew te ccrane to get fogether a decent s : - Seer te tact oe Bridge Revenue Drops Tedsy in Pontiac The Weather Bureau said a. _ Westerly winds &-!@ miles en beur t jémperature preceding # 8" narrow band of heavy snow ex: | tended from Avon Lake, west of | | Cleveland, threugh the down. | | town area and eastward along | U.S. $22. inte Geauga County. At @ a.m.: Wind velceity 16 m Ly h Direction—West Bun -sete Thursday et $:1l-p m Bun rises Pridey et 861 am Moon sete Pridar a! $41 ar Moon rises Thursday at 2 42 ST. IGNACE (AP)—Revenue from the new Straits of Mackinac Bridge dropped $252,100 last month but topped the ferry take for the same month of 1956. ahoee: : . * x * 17 aig! i Ha ade nee ee In the first 30 days after the bridge was opened Nov. os ge” ie mulated hefore midnight. The 1. 140,500 vehicles crossed‘the five-mile span connecting storm tapered off into snow flur-- Michigan's two peninsulas, for a gross of $395,100. ries hy early morning. More flur- - : Wednesday In Pontiac os a : Inn “A Sere: were’ The ferries carried only 98,000 vehicles across the HD SR CA straits in November of 1956 and tock in $295,000. Highest temperature predicted for today, ~ The figures were contained in a year-end report yes- Newntown Temprraturcs So iS 1! am..... ‘Lewest tempereure Se ee saceeees i4 + * Mean tempere(ure Faveswiaié’s 23 — ee isa eee ee tac terday by Prentiss M. Brown, chairman of the Mackinac One Year Are tm Ponting _. New York, with snow falls from 6 Bridge Authority. a Roca warner Go 14 to 12 inches in prospect. * ‘ * , “Mean Rethperature Del eaenuacs 208 “The arctic air which has gripped - He predicted “straits traffic such as this area never er—Pal-. Mighest and Lowest "Temperatures This Date tm #6 Years “#9 im 18%6 -12 in .879 Wednesday's Temperatere Chari the Midwest for several days ex- tended into the Atlantie Seaboard. Temperatures in the Ghio Val. ley and from the Appalachians to: | the East Coast were from 10 to 69% degrees lower than yesterday | morning. Alpena Marquette = 67 © Raltimore Memphis 348 emerck Miami ri ‘ ry: Milwaukee 6 Duffato Minneapolis 12 bl 24 16 «4 : : 18 herles¢on uM New ‘ id il aly at! 6 “Cilevela, La ver i 16 Pittsburgh « St Louis 23)! ; Francisre 66 & Traverse C18 11 Weahingtos Seatile g Tampa St. 4uoMe: Qrieans 31 3? >i BS. Merie 24 2 The frigid blasts didn't reach the 3 southern half of Florida. but Tam- ; é pa's reading of 47 wag 15 degrees, s lower than 24 bours earlier. * * * 4 lower than yesterday in’ iheluding! |Atlanta, which reported 26. Readings were more than 20 de} a3 Brees 1 fy many southern cities, envisioned” with the coming of spring-and the bridge dedi- cation celebration in June. All money collected until January 1959 will go into a fund to give the bridge a cushion for future interest payments, The original construction fonds included _ money for interest payments until that date. . When the bridge starts making ifs own interest pay- ments of about $12,000 a day, any surplus will go into the cushion fund until it cOntains enough fer two years of interest payments. After that, payments will start on: re- tiring me bonds that financed construction: x -& ® Operation and maintenance of the bridge is thandiea i and paid for by the State Highway Department. THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSD: day. * *-.® €. fe Zvi urged Ben-Gurion to take photography, three in sculpture, tthe same five parties -bac into, aneticen two ip sewing and four in silver government. Js: work, = : Ben-Gurion provisionally . “ace Ip adaitti : ; : ‘cepted the assignment. He . said Lumber Dealer - on tithe edult program, AP Facsimile ‘crecy on all Cabinet of 2,500 in western Michigan. Firemen believe the ae to security and foreign pol- ‘Promise not to do it again. ' jtwo-year-old, (The old government is remaining A Pe : #resident Izhak BénZvi asked to try to put together a ‘he would demand that the new - "ministers maintain complete se- icy.. * * * The Tl-year-old Mapai party sation that two ministers “of the left-wing Achduth Avodah +Labor! Unity) party broke —a Cabinet - agreement to preserve complete: \seerecy in al] mattéers’.of security: Dickte™ witht uaa 7 in an effort to form ‘a new gov-) *' ernment for Israel. His five-party~ coalition Cabinet resigned . Tues- é age - = = Dies in Sleep Service : ‘Slated Friday leader quit with an angry acce’ for Former. Supervisor Hugh J.’ ‘Dickie, 62 Hugh J. Dickie, partner in the local Secrétary of State Branch Lumber . died in his office, ~\started. today feg. Packers } for Craft, Hobby Classes coi tediiiiie °Regiatrationthe for the winter series chipper Would follow the ieee rees of craft and hobby classes at the Showman, who is in charge of reg- 3 [tration ‘has asked everyone plan-, ining to join 4 class to enrol] as. Service for Amos J. Bertram, 59, early as possible. Classes-will be- | lgin the’ week of Jan. 20 The series will offer four classes in bridge, twe In ceram- les, single classes in ballroom | dancing for adults, enam- el, advanced first aid, T aF- at, and inter- special youth’ classes will include a choice, of three in painting and drawing and one class in puppetry. Miss Showman said all registra-: dons must be made -in person. Materials used in the-elasses, fir- ing chatges for the cetamics group and any field trip expenses, will be in addition to the regular class Delbert Ayles, managér of. the today urged motorists to ‘and foreign policy and refused to. sleep 4ast. aight ‘at ye home, 1600 obtain their 1958 license plates as * t- & ged has atso been feud-; -the left-wing -_Mapam: ing (oked Workers) over ~ @abivet'shiy, he ‘was the son of John and suleg of licenses considerably,” apd Achduth Are Sepa: nigenen Dickie. o£ junity. Mapam ayy idah each had two- ministers in the’ 16-membér- task). Parkway, “Sylvan. Lake. 62. ? * kk He was early as possible. | “The change in licensing syse _ tem going inte effect this year Born ip W est Bloomfield Town- is expected to slow down the is- Ayies said. “This applies when a person has A erent” $C" Pontiac’ High purchased a new automobile. Un- and. Ofivet.. College, Mr. der a new ruling. the owner re- tt (on a care aker basis until a né ! pai former vestryman of tains the plates, and we are run ‘one is formed. “ “All : * * The secret which Achduth Avo leaked concerned send a mission to West any” ito seek arms. Opposition mem- ibers of Parliament have hinted the government wanted to buy subs Egypt recently acquired. Housewives Hop | to Rescue for Hopless Hoppy member of: . + oe * a ership of ‘these plates when appli- * Rotary Chub, Vet-.cation for yo-tomne is made,” he ierans af Foreign Wars, Sylvan Said. Lake Council.and a former Oak-' land County Bodrd ‘supervisor. ‘At fhe ¢ime of trade-in, the title is surrendered. This often leaves the owner with no proof He had served gs president of tat the plates were issued to submarines to counter the Soviet Pontiac Dealers Exchange and the nim. |Keego Harbor Chamber of Cor- ' merce: and was ® ‘member of local er must pay for the tracking down draft board. No;- $ “Owing World of his Heense in lansing. It is also i War 41. ~ <- * + Pa - Hazel: childrens” “Fiaik: J.-aed Mrs. W i. day received major promotions at liam Doérr, both. df Pontiac; andthe Detroit Times. five brothers, FYahk"A> of Lapeer. He leaves Nis “Tt is expensive in that the own- time-consuming,” Ayles stated. Two Birmingham men .Wednes William H. Mills, of 1155 W. When Hoppy. didn't hop to the Allan: of Kent, Ohigi: Edmund of Lincoin, was named the paper's rescue of his female friend Lassie Farmington, Bruce. and Stuart. two Orchard Lake both of Pontiac. this morning, ‘housewives decided to take over.! Christmas traffic death toll was | | 2% as compared with 180 pre- jhesitated following his friend otto high.’ » the Harold Mitchell family, ‘and as the toll mounted. it urged Sutcliffe Rd. killed in miscellaneous accidents. and Reéreation Dept. * * * Bernice Puckett, |Rd., and Margaret Ridley, ‘Straits Lake about 9:15 am. || | They. shoved & row boat out on| lithe ice-eaveted ‘lake té where the ace @ fallen. through and ie into * * * Hoppy, the Ridley’s collie, had, the lake. according to Mrs. Puck- ‘ett. Lassie is owned by neighbors, 330 ‘Burning of Green’ school students returned to classes today following a 12-day Christ-; * * * Service will be" at 7:30 p.m. Fri- 7889 Eldora day from the: Donelson-Johns Fu- 75. nerat Home. ‘Eldora Rd., reacted quickly when'pey. they saw a neighbor's dog strug- ificiating. —_ service will ,gling in the icy waters of Middle | he ‘at 9: Chapel 3 ~ Saturday at White- a. Cemetery. ited City, Waterford Pupils oe , ‘en Return to Class Today general manager and Charlies Ce Obermeyer, of 884 Kennesaw, | Was made business manager, Mills had been business manager and Obermeyer assistant business with his rector, the manager. C. George Widdifield, * + * gor sol Gas the Times in serving hie{ agcountan oe pre, in . o ak jlar capacit, AF stinsion F alo and oe Obermeyer aa Y ini accountant on the Chicago Exarniner, another Hearst paper, before going to the Pontiac and Waterford public Times in 1937. mas vacation. Michael * * * & Two city parochial schools, Frederick, and St. St. Brian, will trees should be placed at the curb Beginning today, Christmas trees will be picked up during the regu- lar rubbish collection hours. DPW superintendent, said begin classes again Monday fol-.after all metal trimmihgs have jeve a vacation since Dec, 20.:been removed. He explained that SS a ee = "Scheduled Saturday Pontiac families who have not discarded their Christmas trees as lyet may still jon in aes lannual “Burning of thé Green"; ‘ceremony by taking the trees to. 'the softball field at Edison and Icy and snowy streets and high-| |Montcalm Sts. ways in much of the Midwest and_ “ £2 | At about 7:30 p.m. Saturday a group of torchbearers wil] light a ‘huge star made from thousands toll was of trees left at the field. ier in-excess of the total reported) A dramatics group from Pontiac nan Associated Press survey in a Central High School will echoliegy test period last month. a half-hour program on this tradi-' f In the 30 hours trom 6 p.m. Tues- tional end of the Christmas season. | day, Dec. 10, to midnight Wednes- A choral group from the school | day, Dec. 11, 84 persons were kilted Will sing carols. * + Officials ot the Pontiac Parks said trees mzy be deposited at the field any. time up to 7 p.m. Saturday. VA Closes Center ESCANABA (® — The. Veterans Administration has closed its last ‘counseling service center in. the ‘Upper Peninsula. The office, main. jtained here since 1951, was closed as part of a retrenchment policy. \Upper Peninsula veterans will now ‘have to contact offices at Detroit, Grand Rapids or Lansing for such, ‘service, Tom-& | Aocupled - Focketey: Department's ae ‘collection truck, » putting - |Community House. Miss ee 3 the chipper, = Amos J, Bertram of 2166 Wycliffe Dr., Birmingham, jwho. died yesterday at St. Joseph ‘Mercy Hospital, Pontiac, will be iheld at 10 a.m. tomorrow at Holy ‘Name Church, Burial will be in ‘Holy Sepulchre.Cemetery, Detroit. - The Rosary will be recited at 8:30 tonight at Bell Chapel of William R. Hamilton Co. ; Mr. Bertram retired in 1945 after 24 years. with . the. Detroit Fire - Department’ as “an engineer. He served. in the Army in Europe during World War 1] and was a member of the I See ieter VFW Post, E ‘RED HOT” Specials in Famous DRUGS & COSMETICS pe end a Contor— 5-GRAIN 3° ASPIRIN oO. Bottle of 100 Tablets umm 69° Reg. 89-—Full iM Ounces onatin TABLETS HOWARD JOHNSON'S NOW OPEN- ‘Brunch “time, lunch time, dinner or munch time—it's always ‘the right time to come to Howard Johnson's! - Whatever the hour, whatever your wish. Howard Johnson’s serves up the tastlest full-course meals, salads, sandwiches and delicious desserts. And, you'll be doubly pleased “with our Wide range of food at a wide range of prices to fit all pocketbooks, * Juicy charcoal broiled steaks ; * Grilled-in-butier Frankforts * Tendersweet fried clams * 38 flavors of pure, rich ice cream -womaRDJounsons — pad On Woodward (U.S.-10) af ‘Square Lake Road—Just South of Pontiac: .. > - ¢ ae * FEEN-A-MINT 20 V: 719° ewing Gum New greaseless 889 Value and: stainless Ben 6 2° Gay for safe, ef- 4 fective relief. CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER Og « PILLS f 32° of fiver-bile. WOODBURY'S Hand 49¢ Val. peueuseueesess $1.00 Val. Exactly as Pictured *ENGINE © * FREIGHT Can & GONDOLA CAR DELAYED. » SHIPMENT ‘Actives Toe Lobe for Chicas —because these trains were ‘lost in transit’ and--arrivedt too. late tor ere you 4 buy at way. ‘below wholesale cost: Don't. foal sorry for us... maker is taking the loss{.-°~ eee , mane. NEW—Full oy Guarantee 5 jabs vil Less than Vy price. azel Bishop Nail Pah” Regular 60¢ - Charles Ante! Banas wor th Lotion : 9 et ae LONDON (INS)—It may be even harder to cath the. Kremlin napping by the year 2,000. Soviet biologist V. Engelhardt predicts that by then Rus- sian science hopes to have whipped the problem. of spend- ing “nearly a third of our life sleeping.” To do so the biologists must solve the riddle of the “fatigue toxins” Se were ape Rvs 0 putes the day. If they can be neutralized chemically, the body can “eoncentiate on regenerating the nerve cells. This can be done with much less sleep than at present. -The result would be another 20 to 30 years of effective life. : i? In an article in “Soviet Weekly” issued by the USSR embassy in nen, Professor Engelhardt says the “great- . Roska " itedae. Sleeping | Problem| tech vickory we a6 eniiled torenpect froin slopes ta the | near future” is the defeat of cancer. = _ He adds that by 2,000 AD “mankind will begin to for- get the menace of cancer as it has forgotten the menace of smallpox. In another article in the “Soviet Weekly” roundup «|come in handy when you start of Soviet scientific crystal-gazing, Russian rocket expert Prof. K. Stanyukevich sees the development of a “photon” rocket engine te carry men toward the stars. Physicist. Stanyukovich forecasts that a gigantic engine harnessing radiation as a‘ propellant will be set up on ohé of Saturn’s or Jupiter's pease to launch the first_men into interstellar space. Not by the year 2,000 howeyer. The professor says it may even take until the end of the 21st.century before o proto- type comes off the drawing boards. To Visit Sons Held by Reds Mothers Head for China LOS ANGELES W—Three moth-;Army civilian employes. Red- ers of American sons jmprisoned)mond, sentenced to life, was em- by the Communists on spyjployed by an American export- charges take off today by Pan-jimport firm in Shanghai. American Clipper en route to Red -_ China for two-week visits with . * * *: their sons. . | Spectacular Fire Guts They arrived last — from) . : New York ing little car- Mme nang me ane se Chicago Warehouse socks, fruit cake—and hope-—for their sons. CHICAGO #®—Firmen fought a The hope is that somehow they'stubborn, spectacular fire in an can obtain release of the young unused seven-story cold storage Chinese warehouse near the Loop for 12) men, However, the - government, extending an invita- hours yesterday—the coldest day tion for the visit, offered only that'of the season. and no indication that they intend) — x* * & to release the prisoners. x * * The mothers, who appeared un-/discovered at 7 a.m. on the Chi- afraid over prospects of entering cago river front. hostile country, are Mrs. Mary V.) Some 600 firemen responded to: the extra-alarm fire, which was]. Fire officials said the cork in- | Downey, New Britain, Conn., wid- Sulation in the structure's thick) ow and schoolteacher; Mrs. Philip, walls probably would be burning” Girl Catches Fire, Dies on Year Eve Omer Cottle spent much of New Year's Eve visiting her husband, at Blackwell where he has been confined since) October with injuries received in) DETROIT an oil ee, port Virginia Cottle apparent- flames oll pcmtbageli, 0 ata age : ll-year-old brother Alan stopped 43 the previous year. j Virginia as she ran screaming from the house and suffered mi- nor burns smothering the flames that had engulfed her. Virginia died at the hospital “BLACKWELL, Okla, wm — Mrs. where her father is. confined: General Hospital. Fire Deaths Increase - ® — Detroit firemen had fewer calls last year than ly got too close to the they + did in 1956, but the number of fire} Whie her mother was , &- deaths was up. There were 16,616 i oe alarms last year compared to 16,- of 992 in 1956. During 1957, 48 per- sons died in fires, compared with for 8 foxes. The detailed lehsintiied will making out your 1958 income tax returns 15 months from now, | oe * * i The law requires that expense. accounts be reported, but the law’ has been thoroughly ignored—and | with serenity ty most taxpay-/ ers. internal Revenue Service| ‘gave many of these a scare when’ it indicated in October that the 1957 ‘returns would have a blank for listing the totals. j x ~* * i .Ih_the face of widespread pro- tests that few taxpayers had the | records they would need for such. reports, the - Revenue Service| backed away from any major change for: 1957 returns, but a The taxpayer ie now on notice com i YOU HAD A NECK AS LONG AS itis FELLOW that he must hencéforth Isep rec ords of his expense accounts,’* « Baby Waits Too tong hinge ee Ky. @ — “Pre-Inventory — CLEARANCE | LIVING ROOM. SUITES | and SECTIONALS | Quality at Basement Prices - Unbelievable Discounts — ihc aac HWA aid ad, aa VOCE Y FURNITURE MART WARD AVE, BIRM ING! A ht WEICM a 440 Charge It Budget Up To 24 Months or Lay-Away 30-60-90 Days - Fecteau, Lynn, Mass., housewife,|@™4 smoldering for two or three) and Mrs. Ruth Redmond, Yon-48ys. Two fire boats and 40 pieces! kers, N. Y., housewife and die.|f fire-tighting equipment, ticlan. than a fifth of the city’s total, «+ .¢ fete cont Sate fire ox Oe boul Their sons are John. Downey, 27; of the blaze. . Richard Fecteau, 30, and Hugh! -_ * * Redmond, 38. | Two firemen suffered slight in-. Downey was sentenced to life juries. imprisonment by the Reds and) Quinn said the blaze apparently Fecteau to 20 years, Both were W@% Started by vagrants who had) ‘been sleeping in the abandoned ‘building. The amount of damage was = estimated. Ice Cutter Scheduled CHEBOYGAN (®—The Coast ‘ : Guard cutter Mackinaw has bees Hom r assigned for four weeks of serv — fo Homeless to shippers in the lower lakes and DETROIT @—An Ohio Naval rivers around Detroit. The work Reserve anti-submarine squadron, will be during the period from Jan eft homeless when ‘he Naval air 13 to mid-February, The big cut- station at Akron was closed re- para ; } ter then will perpare for its regu-| cently, had been moved to the’ lara* ice breaking operations in Grosse Ile Naval Air Station. Com- March and April in the Straits of posed entirely of Ohio men, the | Mackinac, St. Marys River and squadronw ill train at Grosse Ile’ Lake Superior. lone weekend a month. AFTER INVENTORY SALE | R&H FAMILY SHOE STORE | FLIGHT BOOTS Red -- Brown Sizes 9 to 3 $944 One Lot ‘WOMEN'S PLAY SHOES | $438 _ BOYS'— YOUTHS’ 4 Buckle Arctics Sizes 11. to 6 + : est SIZES All. Sizes 5 to 10 BRAND NEW MODELS, DEMONSTRATORS, FLOOR MODELS, USED! | ‘TERRIFIC SAVINGS! LOW DOWN PAYMENTS! EASY TERMS! Home Furnishings LAUNDRY EQUIPMENT | REFRIGERATIO New 1957 Medels— Fleer Meodels—All w/3-Yr. Warranty Automatic WASHERS Vo OFF ® Floor Samples! @ New in Crates! | @ Famous Makes! _ © Delivered and Installed! @ Low Down Payment! — @ Easy Terms! 4-Deluxe Easy Automatic Washers with Temp. Control, Water Selector—_ New in Crotes......... Were 299.95 NOW $188 3-Super Deluxe Eesy Automatic Weshers w/suds ‘Saver, Push Buttons, Water Selector— Raa, SO99S cic vo ce. cise. cesses NOW $244 | . 2-Push Button Control Automatic Washers Deluxe Modeis— Reg. 200,95 ...... gees eucaeeaseee NOW $228 3-Deluxe Model Wrinaer Washers, Double Tub, Porcelain, Heavy a Reg. 149.95 .000 0. oes. eauaewn de NOW. $88 3-All Automatic Electric Dryers, Includes Piatail— Were 149.95 ..... Se ee ee NOW $88 _ -2-Deluxe Modet Easy Automatic Electric Dryers— - Were 229. Cel Pe oe eg eee NOW $138 30-Gel. Ges Autometic Water Heater 1-Yr. Guar. heriedt Lined— Floor Sample . .. Were 89.95. .....0... .NOW $48 2-30 Gal. Pocemuueh Water Heeter, ‘ Automatics, _ Yr. Guarantee— Floor Sample . 2 Only! Washer-Dryer “COMBINATIONS. | Were 119.95........ _NOW $88 | 1-Kelvinetor 8 Cu. Ft: Refrigerator Apt. Size . . Reg. 239.95 Ow. NOW $168 2-11 Cu. Fe. Admiral Push Button Defrost Refrigerators Reg. 269.95 ere eer NOW $198 1-Kelvinator 11 Cu. Ft. Refrigeretor with Automatic Defrost . . Reg. 399.95 NOW $238 1-Deluxe Kelvinotor Refrlgerater, 14 Cu. Ft. Auto, Defrost . . Reg. 449.95....... NOW. $258 1-Crate Marred Dehumiditier— Rae. SROO ies. enc se becacs ..NOW $55 RANGES ! 2-Deluxe Model Electric Kelvinator— 30” Size, Light, Timier, Auto. Ovens— Reg. 24995 200 eee NOW $188 3-30" Ges Ranges, Alt Porceleia— Reg. 149.95 ............. -...4...NOW $88 1-36" New Ges Range— Reg. 139.95 00.0... eee cee NOW $88 1-30” Deluxe Ges Rengo— Reg: 16995 ..........226----- ... NOW $88 4-Lewyt Tank Sweeper with VACUUM SWEEPERS All Hoses and Attachments, New— - Reg. 69.95 eee ee em ee eae avi ope REES NOW $38 2-Deluxe Lewyt on Wheels with All Hoses and Parmchenerts—F toe Samples— Reg. 89.95 © ee NOW $48 Semi-firm and orthope- dic styles. Heavyweight ticking, air vents, pre- built borders. Full or Twin Size ‘MATTRESS or BOX SPRING2 te, Z 2 WAN aareny ie RUGS Room Size 9’ by 12’ HOOKED. RUGS 58.00 3 9* Value © Imported Cotton Hand Hooked © Slightly Irregular ® Green, Brown, Wine, Black Washable Non-Skid 6’ by 9’ Low Loo Cotton Rugs—Reg. 29.95 .. P i ree NOW 18.88 Washable Non-Skid 9’ by 12’ Cotton e Sue Low Loop... Reg. 29.95 .... _.NOW 16.88 RADIO—PHONO-TV 1-Philco Deluxe Clock Radio— Was 69.95 .......... 02. ee eee eee NOW $28 3-Three Speed Record Players, w/case— Were 19.95 ....... ccc cc eee eee eee NOW 15.88 1-Three Speed Auto. Changer, Portable Carrying Casé ....< Wes 69.95 «oc cssceweecn oc NOW $38 .1-Magnavox Console Combination, 4 Speed, AM-FM Radio... Reg. 345.00 .............. NOW $288 1-17" Lenbesseder Table Model ee Was 119.95 NOW $78 2-21" Used Consoles ...... se blenes essen NOW $58 1-Philes. 17" Console .. 226s escccsceus. NOW $88 25- Indoor-Outdoor TV Antennes— Were 995.25 6 ees: ....NOW 4.88 3-Swivel TV Bases .. Wee $3677. 46 NOW 14.88 6-Mahogany Step Tables for TV and Lamp— Were 29.95 ©... ccc we eee NOW 18.88 AND EVERYTHING! 4-Cycle Snow dor w/Briggs & Stratton Engine—Was 139.95 22006 c cece ee ee. Official Size Bumper Pool Tables, Floor Samples . . . 99.50 Value. .NOW $48 Several Sixes Ladies’ Lightweight: Luggege— Washer ; Twin Size Foam Rubber and Mattress and a 95 Values ....... Pe oe NOW 9.88 . Fleee to 2 ics $3 88 Box Spring Set—5 Year Worranty— . 14,95 Golf Bog... et NOW 10.88 hee ‘ Reg. 99.95... see eee ee sees ve eepNOW $77 Ree, 9.98 Gell Cot ole seell) NOW 688 3 Full Reg. 139.95 202227! cae outeeee! “NOW $99 Reg. 37.98 45-Piece Tool Set... .... NOW 18.88 Yours ‘for Easier, Faster Ironing . at a Special Low Price! : lroning ADJUSTABLE HEIGHT IRONING BOARD © peng honing easier a) t for you tye. adjusts to 7 positions © adjusting your table to just the | is lightweight yet sturdy ironing usts to 7 positions! All metal construction... ph two-tone green finish .,, and you save! Charge Yours 0} Weite's «ss Filth Ploer: cgi THE ; PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 2. 1058 MR. AND MRS. CHARLES B. BROTEBECK Patricia A. Perkins Wed to Charles B. Brotebeck ROMEO — Patricia Ann Perkins) and Charlies B. Brotebeck were united in marriage in a 10 o'clock ceremony Saturday morning in St Clement Catholic Church here. The Rev. Fr. John McMillan performed the rite. The bride is the daughter of “ Mrs. Phyllis FE. Perkins, 128 Church St. The bridegroom's par- ents are Mr, and Mrs. Bernard Brotebeck of Flint. Escorted to the altar by _her brother, James, the bride was ra- diant In her waltz-length gown of white lace fashioned with a high, scalloped neckline, bouffant skirt and long sleeves ending in points over her hands Her tucked cap, ou’ 4 witl iridescent sequins, held a fingertip veil of French iDusion. She carried a colonial arrangement of feath ered white carnations centered with a white orchid Maid of bonor was Ellen man and bridesmaid was Perkins, sister of the bride Al Horn of Muskegon served as best man. Seating the guests were the bridegroom's brother, Robert aliases of Flint, and Ray Gam- elin of Romeo. Heide- Judy 2 Royal Oak Shops Looted by Burglars ROYAL OAK—Thieves who. hid slay City Basketball | in a basement before closing time) looted two shops here New Year's holiday, Royal Oak| police ota ‘ a Officers pa burglaries Ted Widgren’s Barber Shop, 104 S§.| Main St., Store, 100 S. Main. * * * Twenty dollars was taken from the barber shop. The gain entrance to the undetermined immedi: ately i 'where the bridegroom is employ- ed. over the Leagues Form Saturday League basketball will be spon-| were sored by the Imlay City Beard of - discovered yesterday morning at Education beginning Saturday. : and Romeyn’s Drug by school coaches, is designed for burglars|10 a.m. Saturday. Boys must bring then smashed through a wall to forms showing their parents’ ap- adjoining proval, drug store. The loss there was ition and contribute $1 toward the’ | ROCHESTER — Dr. John A.jbe Hannah, president of Michigan State University, will give resi- dents here a first hand report on| the new MSU branch to be located near Rochester when he addresses a public meeting here Jan, 14. Heonret by the Rochester Area Chamber of Commerce, the talk will be given in the Rochester High School gymnasium begirming at 8 p.m. The public is invited, free of charge. . : * * * The gym seats 2,800 persons, and chamber officials are hopeful it will be filled to capacity, Welcoming Dr. Hannah wil) be Jack Tayler, president of the chamber; Miss Sarah Van Hoos- en Jones, former membér of the State Board of Agriculture, and Donald Baldwin, superintendent of Rochester Community Schools, Dr, Hanhah recently was. ap- Hannah to Report on Oakland MS be at the Meadow Brooks Farms, exroibenees of $00 0 1.000 shatentn just west of Rochester. A 1,400-|Enroliment may be — to acre estate, it was granted to MSU by-Mr. and Mrs. Alfred G. Wilson, |¥°@"8, MSU officials say. along with a grant of $2,000,000 to get building underway. - eS Mothercraft Classes The university branch is expect-Will Start January 8 ed to open in the fall of 1959 with LAPEER — aggre ‘classes will start in| the auxiliary room at the Lapeer | County General Hospital at 8 p.m. ' Jan. 8. Sponsored by the Hospital Auxiliary, the classes will meet. Darwin Muir to Speak to Southfield Optimists SOUTHFIELD — Club, will address a -meeting of Thursday at Fruitridge Inn, South-iquring the series. field road between 12 and 13 Mile|pe oe and grandmothers ae invited, roads, It begins at 6:30 p.m. Esther Weldon, a> “registered * * * His topie will be “My nurse at the. Lapeer —. is| these lessons, with color slides, pointed chairman of the Civil|~ * ff Pontiac Press Phote The new university branch we iRights Committee ty President Ei-/become one of nine Northwestern |senhower. ne members to attend the ington Crossing the Delaware” by * The Optimist Club“ hetped.Muir| ences at the U.N.,” supplemented The original painting of “Wash- eighth annual Detroit Hi-Y aot eas Leutze was destroyed in| Nations study tour. 1942 Allied air raid-on Bremen, A new series of Darwin Muir,jeach Wednesday from 8 to 10 p.m.| president of the Southfield J-Hi-Y\for seven weeks, the Optimist Club of Southfield), aaa aan on a = 10,000 within the next 10 or 25 i i] i i { | i — PRICED! SUSE YOUR CREDIT YOUR CREDIT4 ENGGASS JEWELRY co. 25 North Saginaw Street OPEN FRIDAY AND MONDAY EVENINGS ; A reception was held in the Vet-/ erans’ Hall later in the afternoon, after which the newlyweds left on a) brief honeymoon trip to Canada. | Upon their return, they will be at home at 261 Church St. The new Mrs. Brotebeck is a former uirlines stewardess, and her busband is the baseball and basketball coach at Romeo High School. | Connie Hennis, | Raymond Dewald Wed at Au Gres | ‘SEARS Y ROEBUCK AND co. “onnie Lee Dewald | afternoon Li ORION TOWNSHIP—C Hennie and Raymond were married Saturday at the Au Gres Lutheran Church. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hennis, formerly : of Newman road. The bridegroom x eS “se is the son of Mrs. Leona Dewalt) of Au Gres The ceremony was followed by. | a send cla at the Au Gres Town- | ship Hal pa The - ide wore a white woo! | < ‘suit and an orchid corsage. Her maid of honor was Geraldine Case lof Lake Orion. Del McCort of! 'Au Gres was the best man The couple will reside in Flint | IMLAY CITY—Pony and Midget | as 7 ° The program, which is handled) boys from the fourth through | eighth grades ti Registration will take. plece at) Don’t Be Fooled by have a physical examina- ‘expense of the program. 7-Diamond Set — Was $69.95 334” NO me! Down! “discount” price! — you'll find it values. Now Phony List Prices! Unlike many merchants — SEARS does NOT establish artificially high list prices in order to allow an extraordinary reduction to a so-called SHOP ANYWHERE IN TOWN hard to beat Sears for honest Move New 1958 TV from Room to Room Effortlessly on Special Mobile TV Cart! out easily for cleaning your home... on wheel the fine audio” system gtain metal cabinet. a1-i. 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Sears Basement All the “Extras” You'd Find ina Sewing Machine Priced at *200 or More! * Kenmore Portable Sewing Machine © Convenient numbered stitch regulator. © Hinged presser foot eliminates basting. : st ee OT eT See. ee ee ike Pe se yee 2 Sige mr ? * + 3 ‘3 ai r Ss ‘ = ‘< we * c THE PONTIAC PRESS..TH THURSDAY, JANUARY 2.1958 , i: : ie Shrimp Uiguid ; iin nm he se hcg Cor sd Beet Dr : 4 oe a sure see Qvitk Gelatne Sola cic chee woh sae diced gore for example, es. Stir and THURSDAY, JANUARY 2. : Thre SUNDAY, sRRUARY 5 Blue Label RED CABBAGE = 10° Blue. Label Sliced _ ins C PICKLED BEETS. > 10 Chocolate SYRUP ==: 10° L & S PURE APPLE BUTTER 9 Oz. Jar 10° ) DAWN FRESH 9 i lt i lin Men Mi i, sl til Min Le Mn, ie | KOUNTY KIST - “Whole Kernel =o Steele Brand PORK & BEANS > NORTHERN BEARS } BUTTER BEANS |. KIDNEY BEA LUMA. BEA HOMINY MUSTARD GREENS TURNIP GREENS BLACK EYE PEAS PINTO BEANS = . 12-Ounce Vacuum 1 814-0r. 10° Mp CORN MUFFIN. MIX _ | .A recent study of milk distribu. Drain cherries; ‘mix cherry liquid, Cook tender thin ‘a of beet gravy and add croutons as above. - Begin th menu with cannes, ‘tion costs by an Indiana Univer- and orange juice; gradually stir get in butter or margarine. Com- asparagus topped with a golde, Sity professor showed that farm- mixed liquid into flour mixture so bine with paper-thin strips of onion sauce, made from canned cream of €ts ot 50 cents of the milk sales sauce is smooth after each addi-itha: have been cooked until tender Funnels Are Necessary celery soup. - Parsley buttered'income dollar received by. fluid’tion. Cook and stir constantly, over|jn bytter, Add sour cream. and canned potatoes are another quick) milk dealers, or more than 12 cents. moderate heat until thickened and season with salt, pepper. a: little to Well-Kept Kitchen item. Brown and serve rdlls, a/® Lene in et Mae deaters = — prete —— nl ‘tomato paste (or catchup) and _, tossed-green salad, and a canned|#50uU cents processing and ing and cherries. Reheat. Serve Worcestershire sauce, Reheat but cits “A Phas as ate chen ham put in the oven earlier to heat distributing a quart of milk and with ham. Makes 2%: cups. .|do not boil—so sour cream won't transfer vinegar and oil to the through. with cup cakes for des- kept slightly more —- one-half jcurdle, beef won't toughen, decorative cruets that go to the sert. Found out the menu. he fom peg hm ee. table. You use it for filling the) Asparagus with Geléen Sauce | . ‘Tom and Jerry Pie Don'ts of Meat Cooking baby's bottles and the vacuum} 3 slices bread iL Liver Sausage Canapes | Tom and Jerry pie: Use your = jugs. A funnel, also, is indispensa-} Pocmmg region rey or mar cari |tavorite chiffon pie recipe but sub-| A roast should never be ¢ov- ‘ble in saving the corn oil left over rors Mash liver sausage and combine! stitute 2 cups of commereially pre- ered . . . water should never be with corn flakes, minced onion and pared egg nog in place of milk for|added .. . meat should Ye roasted from trying cup condensed cream of celery t A funnel is handy, it makes uel "he teaspoons prepared mustard ‘horseradish. Mix well and shape the liquid. Flaver-with brandy and fat side up to eliminate basting. a a neat kitchen and a thrifty purse.) Remove crusts from bread and into patties. Wrap each-with a freshly grated nutmeg, -garnish Searing does not keep in the juices . iar In shopping for one, look for the cut into small cubes. Brown cubes slice of bacon, fasten with a wood- with candied cherries, angelica and but actually increases the cooking . : _ kind with a removable gtrainer in butter. Heat asparagus. Com-'en pick and broil, - . ‘almonds. _ losses RICH BROWN sTEW Emphasize the men joy this cold-weather fare with its touch of chef's : —— ee noe Ricci: stenosis - a ee uta SR Rie Re, 2 Ea on vour menu Try this heartv beef stew with. magic in the sauce. cheese croutons The man in your life will en . Guaranteed Fresh © TI EV Tender Sliced Neither snow ney rain nor siect onions and continue cooking 20 to tablespoons flour blended with 3 LARGE . yay BEEF | Cc. ° mer gloom of night should stay the 0 minutes longer, or until vege-tabléspoons fat and 1 teaspoon : tables tende Worcestershire sauc Place in bb. cook of the tamiy Trom th swith Remove’ ment , and vegetables eek HA ‘auetle aaanis lead EGGS ie C ASH M ARKE. Ls LIVER completion of appointed round thicken liquid for gravy. (Use ¢ triangles arouly edge and sprinkle 78 N, Saginaw . _ Open. Friday “aH 9 = tee —pleasing the palates of the men : —— = in her life . r] = e How better “deliver these males C h T , ti d P Pan-Redi BAZLEY S BIG LIT TLE PORKER SALE! Tender Beef than with a Hele tioned beef runc y Oas e ‘ ecans ; ' fem 2 but wall mois F RYERS Choice, Center Cut Extra Lean ' Blede Cut CLUB STEAKS Pie eaai wor ave’ se GROOM in Rich Rice Ring . 9 9: PORK CHOPS | Pork Butt Roast PORK CHOPS|- ,, . fo make it a red letter day — ee ere een eek _Salien eal erga Lb. ¢ Lb. Lb. <9 | 4 59 their stamp of Oper Pecans and rice combine it ‘ ften gelatin in %%4-<« wintertime on ‘eal Good fiearty sired other kinds of mu nay be Combine remaining milk. : A PEC : ALT y NOT beef, vitamin-filled vegetables and, yee Prepared in a rine jq. brewn sugar and salt and heat BAZLEY’S WHERE Mi EA i | Is S r A SIDELINE! @ soupcon of something different filled with aseeited fiuced to sealding, stirring constantly. 4 Remove from heat. Add softened Rich Brown Stew With Croutons ;.;; rtially thas nti ; 7 . fruits (partially thawed until sep z See et check ete eunee ! : P gelatin and stir until dissolved. Milk Cured 3 Ibs. Lean Beef Lean, Meaty | tablespoons fat s « rated!) Toasted Pecan Rice Chill aptil partially set. Beat a ; : . ¢ cape Letins eater Crean pict in teiume Dar oe eee li for SHORT RIBS i tablespoon Worcestershire , brown sugar adds caramel flavot Combine whipping cream and ! ease caine nion. sliced to the eream)-rice toasted-nut Vanilla and chill thoroughly. Beat Lb € 2 Day leaves combination for a dessert too Unul stiff.” Fold into gelatin miix = twee. ane tempting to pass by ture together with rice and tuasted acon : me chopped pecans. Pour into one- loasted Pecan Rice Mold quart ting mold. Chill until firm ’ . ne fle * . . [nmold onto chilled pl itter and . , red triangle : fll center with partially thawed Tender Juicy Tender Beef Se ; oe “ sorted frozen fruits Garnish Brown meat in hot fat. add rest: fol enippine cre with additional whipped cream and SIRLOIN c POT Cc of ingredients except carrots and ! ; = = ke a e chopped pecans if desired smal] onions. Simmer 2 hours. stir- ,1 packace assorted froven fowits a - STEAK bb. ROAST Be. ring occasionally to keep from Toast chopped pecans in mod- Rosemary is a fine seasoning te ; sticking. Ad d carrots and smaii « fe Ven (500 degrees! about o use when cooking veal Don De Fresh Vacuum Packed pee © Per | a —' 3 ! = ON or Silex ‘4 . {1 AG On _ - ac oy ‘ TPERNARKETS feel ~~ Comeand Get It! BEEF ROASTS and MICHIGAN SEBAGO POTATOES The Most Economical and the Most Flavorful Beef and Potatoes You Can Buy . . . Anywhere! Phillip’s Tomato or | - Vegetable Tall C€ Can Mel-O0-Crust Enriched Rye Bread 16-01 € Sliced Loaves Not wveileble ot 45 §. Telegraph Price alfedlive , Thakeasy Jan. 2 through Sat. ‘ Jan. 4. We reserve the right to limit quantities. Kounty Kist Whole Kernel Golden Corn 412-02. ¢€ Vac. Can Lily Brand Grade A Large ALL WHITE Dozen in Cth. cae b * tae: + £ ewe a kkk Middies Drub Owls, 20-7 with” headed home today wit 20-7 Cotton Bowl victory over * * * Tom Forrestal passed and pilot DALLAS a—A Navy squad, Eddie Erdelatz calls “the greatest! five appearances for Rice. team I've ever been associated Sand ran for 34 in leading the in ee Oot bet ee Forrestal passed for 153 yards *|Middies, Ned Oldham and Harry |Hurst chipped in 50 -yards and a -'touchdown each for Navy. Sec- Stier Boats Osu to kk Cotton Pickin’ Navy Ea 's Rice ree ever been associated with,” !dr Erdelatz, in coaching since 1936, | \has coached. at St. Mary's and said of his squad. ‘ky all = |with the Deo San Francisco 49ers. xk ke * drive, desire, and fun."' Erdelatz suiher Kids Field Goal to. Defeat Oregon ‘Fired Up Ducks Give Big Ten Champs Scare Before Losing ‘iRice surged land powered on a 95-yard drive} |against Midshipman reserves be-| - 5 ford each have had 13 bays swish * the nets. x* * * j : If T-footer Warnell Jones, who} Jeft Duquesne for UCLA, should’ Top in basketball he might be tried. gn football. He was a good high ‘Behool tackle and also did some. passing. ithe Navy two as time ran out. * * * Navy; Eastern champion, now has a victory in the Cotton Bowl, one in the Sugar Bowl and a tie in the Rose Bowl in. post season iplay. woe AP Wirephote REBEL ROLLS — Mississippi quarterback Ray Brown (15) eludes Texas fullback Don Allen (31) and picks up eight yards in | the Sugar Bowl where the Rebels whipped Texas, 39-7. ied the Midtlies to a 20-0 lead byjond stringer Roland Brandquist \the early part of the third period) picked up 36 yards for Navy andi |yesterday. Then Navy hung on as recovered the Rice fumble which to ene touchdown. set up the first Middie touchdown. ‘hind quarterback Frank Ryan tol got the first Navy touchdown on la one-yard plunge. Hurst went 13 jfor his and Oldham 19. PASADENA, Calif, % — Ohio State’s Buckeyes, if they want to be fair about it, should chip in to third-string halfback * * * -awa sent. Soph quarterback Joe Tranchini a green ” The 1} senior came off the bench to boot .a fourth-period field goal from the 24yard line yesterday, giving the nation’s sec- ond-ranked team a squeaky 10-7 verdict over- Oregon's underdog Webfoots before 98,202 in the 44th Rose Bowl game. Without the kick the, Bucks, clean-record winners of the Big | | Rine’g te “™ geome on an | eight-yard pass play from Ryan ~ ‘to Ken Wituascn. yan Vied ror | stardom with Forrestal with 151 | yards passing and ¢€9 running. | King Hill, Rice’s All-America | * * * Twenty-two Oakland County ca-— SPORES Moos top the group with three | , ing 13 yards passing and iM land the Middies went to their first! each, Best one-game showing has | been -30 for John Herrington of | Waterford. | *e *& © burban Christmas Invitational basketball tournament, which con-) cluded a three-day run at Farm-, ington High on Monday, was a success at the box office. An es timated 4,000 persons paid to see; - the eight prep schools play. Louisville Wins Sun Bowl, 34-20 Strong Passing Attack Defeats Air - Minded. Drake EL PASO, Tex. W—The Univer-| sity of Louisville stole Drake's. thunder in the Sun ~Bowl vester-' day by taking a 34-2)- football Victory on an attack built arqund). jong and accurate passes. * +> Drake had been expected to use the aerial route. The Bulldogs did pass frequently but they were able to complete. only 10 of 3 Lge most were for only short gai Louisville hit 6 of 10 ced three ‘went for touchdowns. A below capacity crowd of about | §,000 saw the battle in bright sun-| . AP Facsimile was Sutherin’s kick which made possible the 10-7 victory for the Big Ten champions over Oregon. Immediately behind Sutherin is fullback Galen HAPPY BUCKEYE — Halfback Don Sutherin of Ohio State's Buckeyes displays his happiness as he holds the shoe and football he used to boot score just before the end of the first pericd. Forrestal's passing really mart ed clicking in the second period. jHe hit Pete Jokanovich regularly on a 66-yard TD drive with Hurst! scoring on a run from the 13. | Another sticky fingered Navy fumble by Kay Chilton on the | Rice 2 and Oldham scored | from the 19 to make it 20-0 Navy | early in the third period. Brand. | quist missed the first Middie conversion try, but Oldham hit on the other two. Late in the same period, Booty Williams of Rice intercepted — Forrestal pass on the Navy |Ryan’s passing to Buddy tal and lKen Williams put the ball on iNavy 8 Ryan then hit Ken ae iiams on the one and he dove lover. Hill converted. | Navy drove to the Rice 10, but a penalty kicked the Middies back jin the final period. Oldham tried ia field goal ‘vith the ball placed jon the 20, but missed. Earlier, ‘Bob Reifsnyder had missed a back Raymiond Brown gave ifield goal try from the 36. Ryan ‘guided the team to mid- field, bat fumbled and Navy teok over and drove back to the | Rice three, where the Owls held. Navy two, where time ran out. “I think it’s the. greatest team shine. the winning field goal in the Rose Bow! ame. It —— ond at t Sr left is tackle Bistho Arnold. Drake tedk a 17-6 lead at = | poeaes the first period. The Bulldogs moved 5@ yards in 12 plays and Duke Bobbles Orange Bowl Game quarterback LaBrasca ran over from the 7 after failing to find a receiver on an intended pass play. Louisville tied the score in the Same quarter on a 40-yard pass play from freshman back Pete! Bryant to halfback George Cain. | * * * a of his two touch. 0" Duke and launched an Oklahoma! i#te a hectic fourth quarter and who went the rest of the way. riciergealinal pala he ham ae senna ‘touchdown avalanche which gave, that tricky play of Duke's started | — * * * quarter. He stumbled while run-\the Sooners a 48-21 Orange Bow! fe steady end some parade, = wi Oiahoma was ning downfield but regained his football victory. ; Duke coaches had noticed Okla- breaks for points, the Blue Devi footing in time to grab the toss. “Sometimes they work, from Dale Orem. jtimes they don’t,”” Duke esach Bill itheir touchdowns. The Bine Devi | Murray said. “This time it didn't.” halftime Murray and his staff outgained the Soo: Three Southwest | Bud Wilkinson, coach ef the whipped up a play they mers I]'s Strike Out for Duke. , * * * Sooners, acknowledged that his work for big yardage. The Blue nad team didn't need much offense to nevild got a chance to use it early, * in Bow! Efforts New Year’s Day game. a * * DALLAS ( — There was no | “The things that Rappened to) wp, beat the Bite. Devils because Ok- i, the fourth period when Okla-' lahoma get the breaks in the jhoma was leading enly 21-14. joy im these parts today—the Duke normally don't hapen . . -12-yards to go, mighty Southwest Conference had ['ve never had so many touch- quick kick. The ball was supposedido™. was Sooners Romp, 48- 2! | MIAMI, Fla. & — A tricky play) had a hand in the seventh. Four the Sooner 32, dashed to the Duke Navy defeated Rice. 20-7 Louisville end Ed Young worked up at halftime backfired of the Sooner scores were packed 3) and lateraled to Dick Carpenter, | little glory fr cashing some-|homa players dropping back swift-/had to get theirs the hard way—' ly on quick kick situations, so at @riving 65, 78 and 8 yards for 231 yards; eee would 4 165 on the ground. Oki: ahoma) had an edge in passing—114 yards! jand two’ touchdowns to 97 yards) Aside from the long interception! third down at its 26 and returns, the longest distance Okla-| Duke faked a'homa had to march for a touch-| yards—and on that! quarterback, showed litte gain | end, John Ruth, recovered a MIDDIES HAPPY — Coach Eddie Erdelatz, Navy rounded by his happy Midshipmen after the Middies whipped Rice in | | AP Facsimile coach, is sur- the Cotton Bowl, 20-7, yesterday. : BrownPuts On One-Man ' Show as Ole Miss Wins *: NEW ORLEANS — Quarter- Warren V. Miller Trophy as the for their first touchdown, quar- one outstanding player as Mississippi of the greatest one-man perform.) ®Venged frustrating Sugar Sow! ances in Sugar Bow! history to losses to Georgia Tech (24-7) in end Mississippi's frustration in the, 1953 and Navy (21-0) in 1955. New Year's Day football extrava-, ganza. ing. | The Rebels’ 39-7 victory over season, rae ees gy ae a | Texas yesterday was a tribute to team beat Rice and its All- Amer-/ the first-secon Brown's driving power, his master- ica quarterback King Hill by a 19- sion, with hal \ful passing and his deceptive fak-|14 margin. He scored two touchdowns, jone on a record-smashing 92-yard | Cotton Bow! Mascots Are Brushed Off DALLAS @® — The mascots at yesterday's Cotton Bowl, where got ym the game. Rice's }-foot-tall owl, made of | fiber glass, disappeared right in run, passed for one.and Set UP AN completed three passes for other with a pass interception. “tHe played better against than any other quarterback this: " said Darrel Royal, whose’ \ * *® * Brown gained 1.7 yards running, lyards, intercepted = 190-peund | senior won the passes and managed a 34.7 yard Stiff Schedule for Y' Tankers © First of the new pufiting gverage for the sidelines. He had one kick * go out on the seven. The rugged quarterteck, weet aoe had a professional offer, | | wasted no time in showing Texas | ie Mississippi earned the No. 7 | | spot in the final AP rankings and posted .the nation’s eighth best | offensive mark. - year’s swim-| US verted. although aiming i\Ten title three times in the last ‘four years, could have been tied j | running. ip Mca thrice-beaten 19-point un- | Brandquist covered a Ryan As it turned out, Coach Len bobble for Navy on the Rice 33 'Casanova’s Pacific Coast Confer- ence were given pecks of praise for their showing against what appeared to be un- 'surmountable pre-game odds. The | shaky coast conference, which has~ |seen its representatives drop 11 of ‘the 12 games with Western Con- ference foes since .the™p@ct was ‘signed in 1947, figured this jwas a moral victory. And it came close to being more ‘than that as the Webfoots out- gained Woody Hayes’ stalwarts | 351 to 294 yards and had 21 first ‘downs to Ohio's 19. It was the | most first downs scored against ' the big, bad Bucks this season, 'and the Ohio point total was its lowest of the campaign. Even Hayes, who after his 20-7 win here over Southern Cal in the 1955 game roused coast fans’ ire with some free-hand criticisms of \this and that, reversed his field and added his plaudits to the per- formance rs the losers, mao * was short and | weet. g~ Bucks took the open- ing kickoff 79 yards im 43 plays terback Frank Kremblas sneaking for the counter after throwing a. 37-yard “third and 18" i The Ducks 10 plays, in a . Jim Shanley taking a pitchdut from quarter- > j back Jack Crabtree and circling | erid for five yards as halfback 94 Charley Tourville swept Kremblas three Texas Out of the scoring path with a bowl-shaking block. Jack Morris, balding fullback, booted his 14th —— in 19 attempts to tie * * in the third quarter, ‘had kicked four of five field goal attempts in the 10-game regular iseason, missed by inches a three- pointer from the 24-yard line. The | Bucks took over on the 20, and in /13 plays, all on®the ground, bat- * the middle of the game in full ming tests for Pontiac YMCA’s| Texas halfback Rene Ramirez) jtered their way to the Webfoot 17. Is' view of 75,504 fans. It was dis- patators is set for Saturday, when|fumbled midway through the open-| With only 58 seconds gone in the covered minutes later being cart- ithe city's Red Triafigles face a ing quarter and linebacker Ken inal period, Sutherin came ae oll the - ed away. by a group of Midship- men. After a sharp tussle and a tug of war, the bird was returned to the Rice rooting. section where it was guarded for the rest of | the game by two policemen. | ‘Texas Bill, the white billy goat given to the Navy here after the Midshipmen couldn't bring their | own mascot from Annapolis, fin- | ished the game with even less | Is strong. Lansing “Y” squad. Sear: ‘Kork recovered for Mississippi on day’s meet is not only the first;the Longhorn's H. A 15-yard per- Hor 1958, it is the first of the winter sonal for Pontiac, ncaa oeyececenatiednitel On Jan. Pontiac’s team will be away from home also, on Jan. 11 at Flint, then returns the following | Saturday at 2 p.m, for its. first \drove 45 yards for a touchdown, | home showing, against Saginaw. 25 Pontiac goes to De- \sissippi move to the one, from! where Brown Hit tackle for the first ; | Score. In the second quarter Mississippi |with Brown runhing 24 yards on |four plays and passing twice to foul penalty helped Mis-' bench, and with Kremblas hold-~ iing, angled a 24-yard placekick be- itween the uprights for the winning — \margin. It was a thrilling career ifinish for the Toronto, Ohio, sen- ior, who has been unabe to prac- ‘tice kicking for weeks because of a lame back, * * * Oregon’s sharpshooting quarier- ‘back, Crabtree, was voted the |-troit Northern YMCA to round end Don Williams for 16 yards.' game's outstanding player, and 7 > - ee ae ae diss us kaeury ae downs given to me.” he said. 'to go to quarterback Bob Brodhead|one the rs did it in just one| glory. out the first month’s program. Vondiepees = = Secure ee Raraepiaiy Pigalle si ryt in histor; * * * for a pass down the middle to end play, a pass from Brewster Hobby Just before the final gun, his | Rest of the schedule includes: : e le rt; po S as good as any lerence had teams in three a . : x | Pebruary — 1, Bay City: here: 8 Flint, Khayat booted the first of three! who graced the rugged Big Ten major bow! games—and lost them | Lady -luck joined the Sooners Dave Hurm. But in a mix-up into Baker. Other Sooner scores came two handlers sold him to a small |, Fe! 18, at Bay City and Lansing here. ¢ ithis season. Crabtree completed 10 all. No whe conference could 2" ly. With Duke threatening, Okla- signals on the new play, the ballion a 13-yard double reverse by) boy for 50 cents. But fhe lad ‘Feb 22. All home meets 2 pm onversions. lot "7 See A se Sar = m she ¢ that statement or wanted Ma quarterback Dayid Baker,was snapped to halfback George Clendon Thomas, a l-yard sneak by, changed his mind and the Navy |city’"Yacca ‘championsnizs, at Toteco, Mississippi took a 19-0 half- \Gacked 4 yards in 16 rushin e stole A pass from third unit quar- Dutrow, who had stepped into quick | Dodd and ‘a 9-vard pass-run from, had fo return the. 50 cents and onto: pov ce ag ya Rae a time edge after Brown inter- tries. - ™ s . i j 2 © Sast Saterday Texas AGM | jterback. George Harris and racedikick position. Caught by surprise,’ take Texas Billy back. championships ‘Baker to Hobby. 94 yards for a touchdown before Dutrow fumbled and Dennit Mor-, - ithe game was 11 minutes old. It ris recovered for Oklahoma on the, was the longest sprint in Orange Duke 24. Five plays later soo F + Bowl history, surpassing. the 90-Sandefer swept three yards for a eons a = oman se ard kickoff return by Tulsa's|touchdown afd after that almost Sean avy ab8 Scans abecrbed jcame Wilson in 1945. everythifg Duke did seemed to go a 39-7 shellacking from Mississip- Six of Oklahoma's touchdowns — started the slide by losing to Tennessee 3-0 in the Gator Bowl. Yesterday Rice and Texas com. pi in the Sugar Bowl, resulted from breaks and Iuck | “If’ was a coaching error,” Coyle and a high snap from center Murray insisted, shouldering the . blame for the foul-up. Chief Wrestlers Meet Strong Ypsilanti Friday (za ier sao irom cue Another Duke fumble—also recov- ered by Morris—another intercept- ed pass, a punt blocked by Ross Pontiac Central jumps the gun when the Chiefs travel to Ypsilanti) Even more datiting than Baker's on the 1958 portion of the area ito meetsone of the state’ 's annual record run in the first period was wrestling schedule tomorrow night mat powers. ia long pass interception play that! ‘ey : i 4 “ft } a at _ Arthur | cepted & pass by Texas quar- terback Bobby Lackey and re- | turned it seven yards to the fifth play | Texas 20. On the halfback Kent Lovelace sprinted nine yards on a seers slant across left end. Mississippi added a touchdown in the third period on a 52-yard offense clicking against the na- tion’s 10th best ‘defense. The Mis- sissippi score was on a three-yard ‘sweep by reserve quarterback) ‘| Bobby Franklin. | The Longhorns, No. 11 in the jfinal AP ranking, moved 33 yards. \for their touchdown, with haif-| back Max: Alvis smashing the final] march before Texas could get its: Field Goal Win Rose Bowl's. 3rd. PASADENA, Calif. @— Three “times. a field goal has won the Rose Bow! game for a Big Ten team, twice for Ohio State. Don Sutherin's 34-yard boot did it yesterday for Ohio State over Oregon, 10-7. - Once before Ohio State did it, | in 1950, with a 17-yard field goal | by Jim Hague to win from Cal- i Hfornin 17-14. And in 1956 Dave Kaiser's 41- | yard kiek brought victory to Michigan State “ever UCLA, 17- ; two. Lackey converted. 14. Pontiac has ‘beaten Fitegeraid| gave Oklahoma its final touchdown, and lost a close verdict to Cran-|Third- stringer Bennett Watts , | R | — in two regular season starts;|grabbed a Brodhead pass about t ‘ D; Bo and made an impressive showing C t d F' ( P If ed W esu tS in the Southeastern Michigan tour- ee! : on e ela e ag I er nament, Loe C R | ROSE BOWL ‘The rugged Friday match will age esu ts NEW ORLEANS « — Losing a; ‘pi band, said. Mississippi Southern . Ohio State 10, Oregon 7 be the ist of a heavy list of 13 2 “7 flag 90 feet Io nd 60 feet wide be taken : ORANGE BOWL scheduled for the Chiefs during the} Wednesday's Callege Basketball ta weighing. 0 pounds tay tect wae ion "ohn rary - Oklahoma 48, Duke 21 next two months. Two with the TOURNAMENTS 2 ne pest rey but the Unive ity ; alana. adamiae SUGAR BOWL yet untested Waterford tedm are re Beane | { Mississipph did. it a ‘flag * dete: mOSAs bows ac? rr Sie i° i pp g on the wrong. as, meee ts BOWL ‘Most of the other Oakland Coun- “"Niiw'n pe E ENVTTATIONAL j Navy 20, Rice 7 _ ity bien Hg teams resume action peevarg le : ees next week, One exception is Cran-| amherst ie = SUN BOWL brvok which will remain idle until} | adh ~ Louisville 34, Drake 20 om, 3. : TANGERINE BOWL eed te a4 rn ees ee “a « = = RIE VIEW 4 Sports Pages EF HARD WAY — Oregon end Ron State. Doing “Prairie View A & M6, "Ved Pre Murray, ae “a gets spilled hard after taking a pass from quar- back Joe Cannavino whilé Bill Jobco (65) a =>. Texas Southern 6 (tie) in jay’s. ress Grambling, Lt, Arkanane AMAN 69 terback Jack Crabtree in the Rose Bowl game . guard, moves in to lend a hand. OSU won, 10-7. {eine = Morris, who ~ ee a ‘ ain ic ies bel he Ae a Ed + a “nly Asa pe rg . ie THINGS ARE CROWDED — | jersey) of Louisville steals the pass away from and Tom Newell Drake s Roger LaBrasca (12) | STRIKES AND SPARES | By Joe Wilman How long has it been since you bought a new bowling ball? If your hand hasn't been measured for several years or more, you may need a new ball or at least new holes drilled in your old ball Young bowlers, in particular, will find themselves faced with changes in their span as their hands and fingers. continue growing In choosing a ball, most bowlers have a tendency to choose one with too narrow a span. The finger holes and the thumb hole are too close together for effective. deliv- ery. That’s why it's important for a qualified person to measure and fit you for your bowling ball. When your hand is measured in- correctly and your span is too narrow, extra strain is placed up- on your thumb and fingers. They are holding the weight of the ball themselves. Wf the span is correct, your en- tire hand holds the ball, spread- ing the weight of the ball evenly. It also helps you get better finger lift with more stuff on the ball. So. if you haven't hed your bowl- ing ball checked lately, you might be hurting vour scoring chances. (Copyright 1958, John F. Dille Co.) NBA Standings EASTERN DIVISION Wen Lost Pet Rinse! or 4 . Cogs Sy rec sd 14 Li ow ® € té c Philadephia 1% «6 448 WESTERN DIVISION Won Lest Pct Tl hs ear Cw 13 BP) yo4q Det can sCOeEa 12° % 375 Minneapolis alas 8 3 242 d Young (dark (28) in the Sun Bowl yesterday. Young scored for Louisvite which defeated Drake, 34-20 at El Paso. Howe's? Goals Fail to Avert New Year Loss | Litzenberger Scores 2 as Black’ Hawks Square Holiday Series SUGAR BOWL ACE—Mississippi coach Johnny Vaught is shown with his quarterback Ray Brown after the Sugar Bow! victory over. CHICAGO # — Gordie Howe| Texas, 39-7..Brown was named the outstanding player in the classic. that AP Wirephote Motor Acting oe ye : SLUGGISH ?? we ' s Better ee it right to Wohlfeil- Dee for the tune-up of its Jife »»..we'll givé it a going over - brand new. WOHLFEIL-DEE 2” S36" ¥ se Ye eee 2 ree eg will make it run like MOTOR OVERHAULS opened the new year last night just like he closed the old one the night before—with a pair of goals. But the all-star right winger’s 18th ard 19th tallies of the season couldn't pull the Detroit Red Wings from behind a 4-3 defeat by the Chicago Black Hawks. wont wtonty wwe «FTIay Resumes 10-game scoring drought with a pair of goals in spoiling Howe’s| The ambitious Inter-Lakes Con- ieffort. Gordie’s two goals on New ference jumps the gun. on post-va- iYear’s Eve gave the Red Shirts a cation high school basketball ac- 3-2 triumph over the Hawks at |tion in the Oakland County area Olympia Stadium. jwith a complete three-game sched-' A, t - jule Friday night. - The loss kept the Wings in a ; Waterford faces the unpleasant | 4th-place tie with idle Toronto in the National Hockey League | | standings. The Hawks are in last | ce—23 points behind the front- | - : = Montreal Canadiens who | row's league activity. defeated the Boston Bruins 4-3 | Al!l other league teams as well | in another NHL encomter at |2S independents remain idle until Boston. jnext Tuesday. x * * Both of Howe's tallies came while| Berkley, defending Inter-Lakes Chicago was shy a skater. He got! .o champion and title favorite this his first of the night at 17:34 Of Season will be a strong choice the first period ras oe eck over the Skippers. as had moved to 2 20 Wed on nls Waterford dropped its too re ee = - | opener to Farmington and has ley’s jum, vades Walled Lake and Farming- advan ton visits Van Dyke in tomor- slight AP Facsimile Buchholz Net Victor - TAMPA, Fla. —Earl Buch- “rescent L. 41.23 Bagles 2087 34 40 /Detroit put on a frenzied drive The improving Jays, fresh from : : ; Lane 37:27 Drewry's 1 , - — : holz of St. Louis, eighth seeded CMin’c's 3331 Mace MS 3044.00 Overtake the tailenders in the i) championship in the Christ- player in the Dixie tennis tourna-) ! |ment, beat the rain and Bill Heyck lof Tampa 6-2, 6-0 in a first round match yesterday. - | Litzenberger pushed in his first tt tally to make the Hawks’ lead 3-1 cee padlbiirard —_ ed win od ad LE Bears, who started their L-L cam- ae 8 _—*) paign by downing Southfield. 28 36 WESTSIDE MERCHANTS wil R & BRM. 43 21 Budweiser 43 21 Pontiac L Dean's PF re] | Marr 267 V. Shatwell 695: Bua- final frame. weiser 1077, 2970 . = ——— Billy McNeil pulled the Wings FEOHESS A - UEYEORON | to 3-2 when he tipped in a long Pieet Carrier 4321 Mr. Bob 3024, shot by Alex Delvecchio, but mas Invitational Tournament at. Farmington, rate the nod over) Walled Lake, a 57-54 victim of Southfitjd during the holiday tour- Peggy's No. 1 42 22 Stardust DI. 20 35 nbe' jCass Air B. 32.32 Motor Inn R. 27 37| LAtzenberger put the game away ney ~« WEDNESDAY NIGHT MEN'S jMold-A-Matte 32 32 Oxford Shop 27 37| with a backhander 10 feet out * wit w Le ne 18 “OF Peesys No. 2 after taking a pass from Pilote. | Both teams: lost their I-L open- Oskland OW] 4123 Vernors G31 33 — ~*~ * * ters. The Vikings, who show oc- iJ. & M H 3826 Pontiac HS. 28 3¢ PIONEER B - DIVISION a 2 i > \V. Wagoner's 38 26 Strohs 27 37) We wt Howe's last goal came at 17:39) Aso a Hashes ot briitionce ao [Red Star 35.29 Jacquins 8. 25 39 Pontiac Pi 3826 Lion Store 31 330% the final oa shaded by Van Dyke while South-| | Drewrys 1 Marlowe F 24 40|Jerri's Mkt. 3430 Commerce D. 28 36/0! the final period. i | 2884 Ring Out the Old. Ring in the INEW ‘06 PONTIA Top Trade-in Allowance COMPLETE LINE OF SKI EQUIPMENT Call °Us or Come in and See About Our SKI RENTALS SPORT SHOP 16S.Cass FE 2-762: Again... Detroit plays Montreal at the field fell before Berkley. Forum Saturday. a a — Van Pabst BR. 3331 Hardware|- F. Colgate 177, M (Grill 626, 2167 Berts Gril) 22 43 ; y 4ar: ert’ Bates 60, Beets Southfield, figured to be Berk- ~ ae 1 a + our Best Buy in 1958 ]]_ Full Inter-Lakes Schedule erown, had its troubles with the Vikings in the Farmington tour- nament and could stumble at | Walled Lake's hostile gymmas- | | Farmingten and Van Dyke enter | task of tangling with Berkley on their game with identical loop rec-! | the Berkley court, Southfield in- rds of 1-0. Van Dyke's home floor! i j | Cage Play top contender for the EL | tage makes the Falcons a/ underdog. os. siontpsnediatitieca patie “Guaranteed for the Life of Your Car” Protects your car from rust- out. Qu Pontiac Undercoating 136 S. Seginew © ‘Hot Spray Undercoating “14° FE 4-5453 We have been able to purchase a. group of nationally advertised ‘brand first line, first first run tires and tubes (sorry, we are not permitted to adver- tise the name) which we want to sell before inventory. If you are in need of tires, we urge you to drop in and compare our price! _ Attention: Ford— Chevy and Plymouth Owners! 95 / Y= // MOP hee ff, i se quality, Tire and Tube _ Plus Tax & Exchange It No Exchange Add $3.00 Per Casing a Come In and Drive —. One of Our Bold New Pontiacs Wheel Alignment _ on Our | enn John Beon $ : 50 : . Be: ve These Mufflers are all double-seamed, Electronic Tax | completely baffled and meet all factory Visual-Liner : Plus | specifications, eo. i saneetiennath aetna atenednmaadiamaiemmanateetemedtibaamaninmaensttt “ MUFFLERS Installed FREE # * ntiac Retail St 65 Mt. Clemens \ ¥ 1 ; rs \ ‘ 1 a. a \ : 3 + MARKET TIRE TT W, Haron St. ? = oe gs om / “ : . a0 Loew's i...) _ ment demand from. big ‘new £2 ried‘ e% eth) ‘ t's eve ‘session out. ‘Martin set) —' e } News of a 100 : don eo 2914 tosh, eaane stares i De germaregs LCD -.: Apples, Northern Spy, bu. ......<4 948) ) fighter plane act mil di 1 Ward g | ser cen . pn , ’ . Sees we = iS , Vought, announcement that Grum- ji lie Br. hits eee cc i » Man had pgpevengh the winning |i, ‘Gros 23, - Snare. pits cscitecaeess 3 } sign new pline Nat Le “ " os arrots. top ID ca tasseseetes> ; po niki ue had Rees ae eee Th “be peers. san Pie based 2200000: is “The idsrnediate economic sit- oe « a ore 31. 2 ites oe eee tae 180, ] authorized to develop: anti-missile 33,.4%,4" » 8* ig | eee (nels. des sob, 1. UIT vag) Sation may not be as rosy gt we | al mS ae gs ids 33 all want,” he said. “Bu missiles ‘boosted these stocks to er sie'pe Ht ag Parsley. Root. ihebs.) dos. - Lae! a : ¢ from : = 3 st Atrlin - 2 j27 Parenips, ‘& bu. ..... orsecense LBL wa 127 ips, 2 where I sit the 12-month outlook gains of well over a point apiece. |i ¢ Oil a . eT iptiacese fancy, 80-Ib. beg -....+..- L60, ba inetn a oo Pac ....... 244) Radishes. phgteses, tbehs.) doz, re, 180 is far better than nail-biting pes- ; ms: nit Air Lin |; 21.2) squa clous sree hink. The [Nese Yark’stocks | hee aE a ats Baiematen non nh 6 te 1 vee gel, bet the ous shame signa | 4 i E . 146 , 38.4) Ture top Af onioc + ' a: ‘Late Morning Quotations) ipa Pret Pd _ aes Be ‘Guesas = ss Sorta through the clouds. ‘ ¥ | Penne met reves BEB, coativese: samepnagntee BOS ‘eeks sald 1957 the fy ooo? Sevier Ra He Wate Racoon a i eae : 3 Pepsi Cola tot a i pomagerens cs. 8 i. ; é at on “ 4 a2.t Ehelos D 2, Soe oP res is | . : a : history, and that no new year oo Be E ‘ ba Bat Pun co ne Wilson” Co 361) . Poultry ever started with the over-all Am Airlin .... 144 Deere. NHpoee © (434 Yale & Tow |) 25.5 economy on such a high level as |and four books of trading stamps. Ce 414 Deae to | Pare On a2 Se ae ae DETROIT POULTRY it ts today. : Am Cysn 1... 432 Dow chem 596 RCA, 0g Zenith Req. ..190 : (AP) —Pri id . ~ Charles L. Proxell, 1519 N. Tele- Am Gas & 42 tne 14 | Remi. sti 405 Garden Den 332° DETROIT, Jan, t= (AP) Prices Pie! = ; Am M & Per 333 Fast Air 38) Rex Drug 82 pat peand tue Be) we guy . ‘graph Rd., reported to Pontiac a pie &. ¢* par STOCK AVERAGES - "Heavy type hens 23-25, light type hens Livestock ‘police that someone entered his Ain Seating .. 224 " NEW YORK. Jan ‘Compiled by 12: heavy tyne broilers and fryers 2'9- ‘home yesterday with ss ke’ An Smet 8 Eee RR Sidi une Associated Press’. 3, t. ehites 20-22; Barred Rocks 25- meTeorr Livestocu nd ¥ * pees Be) “me 7 _ STOCK » took frigerator, a chro Tel & Tel 168 r t 2 3 18 19 = 60s MH: caponeties over 5 Ib. 23-26, swan # a reirige’ chrome | A Tov . ny So mid at > ‘ Indust Batis oie Cocks’ geese 22 ecgRTROIT. Dec. 31 (AP) -- Cattle— dinette set,/an occasional chair and ' At scoge 4° ® TeT ay 23 Anaconda 44 Pord Mot... 31) Week ago. 22% mS Te. isa8 DETROIT EGGS is6 heed stauehhee ce nen at a throw fug. Value of the items | Armco St! 422 Freept Sul T2 (Month age 432 S27 715 i305 DETROIT, Jan. 1—iAP)—Eggs. {0b |@bout 100 cows: early trade on steers (stolen is’ $150. Armour & Co 124 Prueh Tra 92 Year ago 1 1316 72-6 1814 petro cases meiuded. federal state ™Dderately active. steady:- cows active, Aras Ck #33 Gen Bak 03 190t-36 “Wish wee ee Te ieee aredes fully | steady. other classes scarce. | ut a! rn tchiser Dy A e 164 aw os € ae ew ¢ an iw steers fee .. 50 Gen Bee. cS ee Bien 26.3 18hi «6768 1915 ut ines tee eh wTarwe th, 22:00-2635; utility ‘and standard steers, The New York City Department | Arco atts ot Gen Fas, ¢? 1956 Lew 2440 12623 696 1716 Gy wid arg. hs nesta tontt wid ies 00: load hug fe coms Jew choice | of Sanitation has a 250-man “navy’’ | p ite ave 42!e: small 35-39 wid avg Grade a - | ; Benquet Av ..15-16 Gen Moters .. 217 DETROIT STOCKS B large 43-45 wid ads. 42%. canners and cutters 12.00-16.00. ito’ keep the waterfronts and an-| Beth Steel .. 65 Gen Tel 46.5 ‘C. J. ‘Nephier Co! Browns: Grade A extra large 49: large lage bakers carie nee ‘tun end pris | chored boats clean. Beery 1 Gen Tire... a8 PirurA ater decimal points are eighths 444g wid avg Ate: medium 39-44 wid 100,0i 29.00-37.00: few late Monday up, } eed irs +) S* ometw ..... 99 High Low - Noon'avy 42s. Grade B large 45'a. Checks 34. 15 38 00. good to low choice 2400-29.56 | Bore We ‘9g Goebel Br... 24 led Ble -@ Bev, Co* 28. 3 | Commercially graded: utilit® and stenderd 16.00-24.00. culls ° ; Brun Baike 33.4 Goodrich ms ~iaeide UO uy: Co oe pe ou Que Aa extra large 4¢: large 1}.00-16.00 Grain Prices Goodyear & i ‘ cs * 42- nedium Hogs—Salabie 400. Butchers steady to : ey H ne Grah Paige 1 'G.. 4 4% Chem Co*.. 13 14, Browns Grade A extra large 45, | mostly 2he higher: sows. steady No. Sena cmicaga 5 AGO GRAIN ; Comp Soup 334 Gt No Rrs 65 pete gee a Fae sa es an large 41's-44: mediam 39-41 3 10-060 Se, 19.3018. 08, tye mined, we. te en 62--(AP) — Opening | M4 O] 143 1s deer od. Co* ——. and 2 bs ; tad No { an Pac m4 Gat ou 197.3 The Pr co” 71 84 l2r7 Ibs : Wo. 2 and 3 240-300 Ibs = prose MAY sce 69 Safrier Cp. 323 freee 385 Togo Bilson Co st st and : [$50-1838; gained rodes, cows 's00-9n0 (MAY... 218%, Rye _ ca 2 * m Co I it : 8 2 a 658 3. = Cater Tree. $84 acta, > lk) Wayne & Predd co. 14 ‘43 ‘73 Eat Less Potatoes lbs. 13.90-1625; stage apd doers 1200-:July . <.. 186% sagen 128% , «SEB TN Ms... HT tng Rand ... 622. “Ne sale: bid and asked. jp Ne a : Chrraler 684 oe a ae WASHINGTON — Americans now Se ieee as eo os ier amos _ bes eo eg he +. bjéty ; 4 2 7 The first ‘ ew ce woo . ez lam A Bose — ( gor Suits. Spf Interlak Ir | to3 street lighting by gas consume a yearly average of 105/{s", shois Prime absent Quly 20° 121% Jams... 11.60 | Sis m3 i = Meh = in the U.S. was in Baltimore in pounds of potatoes each — from sone rang id nei ee 122% pareh sie sree ig Palm... Vues - choice 6 — Yo secsee El. Stes sts te tet “Een th a18i6. with 134 pounds in B 1957. March, .... 62% July ae 11.35 INVENTORY WE'RE lei ANG ¢ Pa The Store That Values Built” Wholesale Prices] Stel! Showers Complete... $32.95 Up Wesh Basins with Fittings........... .$9.95 3 Wars TO BUY: = we accert commiruents = Steel Fipe | Medicine Cobinets wi rms tm .....$22.95 Open Fridey Nights : 5 es geet - n %4-in. Galy,. $3.68 io Saeed ; . 0 Fe, SO FREE STANDING _ .| 2 Compartments Vine Golv. $5.25 sclos Wal Poros with Tank a= mn. “is TOl LETS LAUNDRY TRAYS 1%-in. Galv. $6.93 | White or or Colored 2 Seer Sinks $12.95 ‘ Complete with sturdy stand 1¥%-in. Golv. $8.19 ar aera ; . Men’ value- | ond fovea. Fieet qocttty| 2-10. Golv. $11.34 — _—— Enclosures Reet w torus $28.95 veieewe ie” CASH AND CARRY onty | Stainless Steel | Kitchen Sinks... ..... . $39.95 si) 993.95 | ees Kitchen Wall Cabinet... _. $14.95 PIPE Laundry Trays wie stand, resect a strstr... $15.95 - 2 Compartments : |] Bath, Tubs. ‘suet icretisues <=... --. . $12.95 GAST IRON SINKS || 22-7. Lenetis }Gorboge Disposal ex. me... ........ $39.95 ‘2Mx32-inch—AGrede |] v2 in 196 F |] Both Tubs cm mens —...........$19.95 Up ‘27 95 . % In 28s re || Apt. Size Electric Ronge........... . :$89.50 fe Electric Range and Oven. . 1 oy $159.95 } SOIL PIPE | Dishwoshers Wi.."Du” .............$159.95 Fully $29” 42-inch : P UM PS cucraniece SINKS || WHITE TOILET) KITCHEN wos tuce || SEATS — | STOVE HOODS . . Plug-in Electric S896 Up spire $3.79 SUMP Room Space Nesters Aleo 30” and 36" Cabinet Sinks in Stock 30 Gallon: Famous Make Completely Automatic Gas Water Heater: Reguler ae Frage tub, wash basin ano ¢ @ ufge you to compare this outstanding bargain. Com- ‘Powder Room | ]|. SPECIAL Set: theludes:” ‘Large china | lav. complete with chrome mixing faucet, chain ond drain plug. Free standing |} reverse trap closet, Green, | Pink, yellow, grey. While They Leet o res See WITH CAST RON TUB ler $219.95 ¥. Y se 76" RE RESE an gos EVANS. DEC 30 iT WERE ae: 45 Leone 0 Ire £ beloved “husband of Ma velyn Evans; beloved som of Mrs. Add- Collins; dear father of Merle ns, : yle Eugene and c) ay Sy church” Priday at 12 noon. where he will lie in state until time of service. A FARRELL, . ii, 1967. BERT, 255 State St.; age 86; beloved busband of Mrs. ra UL wrell; dear brother of Elmer Parreji; one granddaughter and one nephew ing. Interment in ford. Mr Parrell will in prs at the _Sparks-Griffir Puneral Home NBORN. DEc. 31, 1957, HENRY | loved husband of Ethel ‘Sanborn: eral Home with Dr. Joseph 1. = ao officiating. Interment Cemetery. Mr. San- * ill lie in state at the ani bvinn GF Punera] Home and may be seen after 8 p.m. Wednes- day. WILSON. JAN, Deire. 2006 «Lakeland, Sviven ge 8: dear mother of Clifford ond Baird Wilson, Kathryn Butler and Flora Treadwell; dear sister of Wolegr | Baird. Mrs. Wilson was eral Home to Eicbholts ral Home. Bellefontaine. Ohio for service and interment in Grove Cemetery. Kenton, Funeral Directors 4 “_— Donelson-Johns FORERSL HOME for Fumetais” aim A SSLAR GROUND Pursiey ‘Venere Nome PRS #121! +121! GR CHAPEL gute Serves VE. 3400 Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME bulance Service—Piane or Motor = : FE 3-8378 NERAL HOME meas Pactihies OR 3-71737 Orayicn Plaine — Wat terford Twp. 4, 2%, 28, 57, 60, 63, 64, ) 66,' 68, 76. Help Wanted Male 6 A PEW MEN Accountants $4,900 to Start with Merit Increases to $5,500 B ginnin. level accounting pegi- thon wich puditing Unit, pe } property. tax equalization = = as engineering office. Applicants = have — * callege Mero he or eorr eee ses in eccounting and at least one year of accountin; po Mh 0 oftee Bidg, VE bhst Sis, Pontieé ay — ee DAYS OR NIGHTS 33 Tears of old or older. FE 232-0005. Ex Pp ERIMENTAL AUTO- hee I Frand a layout, aa have 3 years expert . Apply in verson M1 E. Wilsen tiac. EXPERIENCED APPLIANCE salesman. Apply Federal Dept ® Pontiac, NITY SALESM seeded Wer to increase in de- —— Good a set-up, EAL ESTATE Ra. FURNISHED Were “ see ‘ Oe recnhonse.- ave REWARD "aR Bese sm ‘1, GOOD APPEARANCE 2. RECORD OF HONESTY 3. ‘SALES ABILITY : . DESIRE TO WORK We want this man immediately to start selling new cars uperwues ’ this like not necessa We asa CHRYSLER aegis peauen PE 43520" ve * SEARS, ROEBUCK & COMPANY satoomen tor field. tepre- ae Eek oo ome “Are required 1. Age between 21 and 60 years. p> & _ meeting and talking — Pdhroa Pts Better than average income. for interview 10 om Kignae Hh ee oe i, 1988” HALLIZ 4 ng" Peatins ‘aren. ugads _ tig lee Woodie 21684 or loodward Ave, 9 a.m. dealer. Exp. OCS e end ref erences, Write Pres Box 67. ae Female 7 AMBITIONS WOMAN. WELL gy + with pleasing : Core gy t “nad og te incom roe" 3 me 7 Ld nas. car. FE 63736 or FE FZ, eaecicieail vieinity of Willow ane Rei Ra Union Lake pe 30 4:20, Call after 7 p.m Eat 38132 CLEAN. CAPAB 40 to take charge of nice home & 3 school-aged ren.. Must live Good home & Wages, Refer- ences, | Reply to Pontiac Press x HOUSEWIVES 7 AND MOTHERS ‘art time, without i nw hi your family responsibilities, or full employment. Local as- signment, With nationally knows organization uumber one in its field. Definite guaranteed income for those acce . Pleasing per- sopalily and best references re- —— This is not a traveling r usual canvassing position. For focal interview One Mrs, A W Mallory, OL 1-1 Friday or Sat- urday morning @ to 12, Baturcay _fYening 7 to 6 HAVE . YOU MET THE PUBLIC IF YOU ARE Between 20 and 32. and pote had sales or similar be “y ‘be Se kine of io yor bed # een looking for : as pews represéntative 5 our Lo ay {fice at 84 East aren st. "ON THIS JOB You'll be of ‘canton your ofn group ot = You'll req you'll find « . stimulating challenge tn Lip py om a * of telephone psa l 2 te Tt each of your customers’ needs THE JOB Requires the combination of @ good high school: record and some buriness experi- ence in the public contact fleld .. . Of some college ining YOU'LL WORK With friendiy, helpful pee- ple in attractive offices. A 5-day week, with no evening night or Saturday work. i YOUR SALARY Will range from $64 to #76 to start, depending on your educational background and businesé experience, and you'll get regular salary in- creases, IF YOU QUALIFY contact work et full pay. FOR MORE DETAILS Or to arrange « personal interview stop in and see m., Monday through Fri. + oad Michigan Bell Tele. Company. GRILL GIRLS AND WA ATTRESSES. _ Buttercup. 916 peo eriene canes Tecords clerk, oe typing. Ca Midwest 44760. for appointment. LADIES is EXTRA MONEY needed fm your home? Four hours a day as an Avon Representative wilt bring you an_exeellent earn- ine opportunity Phone or write tedar. FE 4308 or . Drayton Plains P. O. Box 536 MIDDLEAGED HOUSEKEEPER— m= men, Live in. PE EPER, 5 days week. Room an board, an, ) Johnson. NEAT GIRL TO CLEAN BEAUTY — Steady, Andre Beatty &a- 200 Pontiac State Bank Bldg Opening Jan. 6th For women with poise, personality & car work hrs. a day or PART TIME Ladies to do telephone Survey from ae —— re bre.. dafly, Monday << Must have __g00d aon salary. roan Ld §-9683. SALESL. ADY Experienced in better sportswear and bg ee To , evenings € to 9. Apply in BLOOMFIELD FASHION SHOP WAITRESS WAN NTED- ina 7 p.m, shift Ap vi nase White Stan Driv _tiac Lake Rd. WHITE HOUSEKER? — lor home than wages, No ¢ dren, MY 22-4042. er = 4 : for 2 —" More’ for ue me - at weet. OR 3-327 after 6 WAITRESs FR wate ~ HOU ripanehea — Moke ~ a ore than. wages. No chil- s 2-4942, @OUAR TO HELP WITH HOUSsE- work & cooking’ No laundry. Nice <. = vt. bath 2 adults. $20 Help Wanted 8 or part see _™. Perry 8 to 12 “f amon wine - ee. CARL L. BiLig SR. A : GIRLS! With ANEW CAREER MISS SHARPIC | 4238 —- ae seat, altrect! vee is ve werve *s RECEPTION- ae Y¥- beautiful build- ing. tps w.p.m. 7 omar. OPERA on a : wom. meat bype3e setup for the GIRL IN THE AD ome re be you a you qualify OGRAPHE: "tor s nearey ‘Advertising frowotly You must 3 neat and attractive, shorthand ~~typing 5. i THE DR.'s CALLING For s SECRETARY whose ose typing 4s $0—shorthaod = to local medical institution, . Be . =n _imeresting work capable EVELYN EDWARDS IN ROYAL OAK ITS 308 Main Professional Bldg, LINCOLN 84400 IN PONTIAC ITs _ 02 Community Bank Bidg PEDERAL 40604 RECEE Attractive sirt whe WPM Ig. Seat ‘ad Yikes piuble contact. 5 day Week. to. tart. Midwest gnronie o State Work Wanted Male 10 a Youna MARRIED pete ag WOULD any enced in truck driving, Qo +s thon, and iibrication. EM }-3273. ai CARPENTER WORK - repair, FE 4-4210. AVAILABLE NOW! ¢ & cabinet work. New & repair _D. B. Murdock, PE 32-1061. pre! Man No job ‘ak oe S e o pe gaan. Winter rates. gt gin Mn gf MLE | CABINET MAKER AnD eee ite P Ser, nuchane _ specialty. . Scaik lege a like Le “ot : _kind. PE 8-266? before noon. eal INSIDE PAINTING, DECORATING, eal rd plum Fe Meet gt tnd. Cal engine work of an _ FE 4-0431. : ae MARRIED MAN WOULD Tike time tex Eves, Weekends. ¢ OL 6-1087. YOUNG MEN. is. WILL DO ANY _*ind of work FE 54-7103. “Work Wanted Female 11 On YOUR. LAUN- : te | Work aranteed. White ae rts expertly done. FE 43841. = T DAY SERVICE IRONINGS, PICK _up and deliver, EM 3-0059 ry Ri WANT WALL WASH- ng and houseclea _ PE 37551. Pa NG MOTHERS Intelligent sare. We ys Happy times for youn * 2 te 5S yrs. els. 3 y home. ange. | ec. erences turn, ise.” At WASHINGS ® IRONINGS. $2.50 £ i. Pirk up ant ‘eliver. FE i & G8. $2.50 er Mas aan off iframes $1.00 BU. i DAY. service, Refi . FE 31471. BABYSITTING . FOR WORKING y, —- Large ‘fenced-in yard. “ ¢ . or - era Teles ae _Tovable e SABY & Y OR Ger sed seein! mare pot * ctical mu re 5 2002, e aubura Aves Werese ange GIRL, Ee WANTS chersk ove tat job. $25 Call after 5 SPOTEELING GEN HORE Sr tivestn 8 care fi veliaa t lave n eaigh IRONING | DO NG. DONE IN MY HOME. na sroeaty LADY WANTS sitting wit children s é we ond e. Dey or night. " MIMBOGRAPHING, TYPING, SmC- retarjdi service. EM 33842. 2 OTHER WILL DO LIGHT oo at te sitting or tron- ing, days rae ates RURSE AVE AILABLE sacorRae NURSE AVAILABLE. Out of state p licensed. $-1241. TRAINED NURSES neat day or night. ee _Care & Nurses’ Bureau. WOMAN hoagie DAY won Mon, Tues, and Wed. only, rE -WOMAN WISHES WORK BY DAY _OF week, FE 5-3157. WASHING AND TRONINGS—CALL WASHINGS AR aD D TRONINGS . $2.50 Building S Service 12 AAA Floor Sariding o_ BUD Bits ~ ee. A-A TRENCHING _Footings. Septic Field. OR 3-4943 “A & B TRENCHING Fer pba, Water Line; Field _ b aia me & ina sbte, R ing as Bee = > erations. | ceux oon cia Floors, basements, MM 3-4879. RICK, BLO A oe eameerrt aa ciaf™ Quarante Guaranteed work. Pu. MY - MENT WORK and fireplaces, MA ge BULLDOZING oe = 52853 rls CARPENTER SEP ATRE AND DAL - “CUSTOM PLUMBING . pecs REPAIRS D&M BUILDING - SERVICE