3 am im + ‘Weather Baran Farias st Partly cloudy, miid (Detatis on Page 2) _- the Weather. ae 117th YEAR eK ek PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDN} ISDAY, DECEMBER 16,1959 ~-62 PAGES a ‘UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATED PRESE _ EASY DOES Ff — Barbara year-old daughter-in-law of the Pr _ down from an elephant after a ri in New Delhi. Barbara's stam ~ —e Hopes fer the big 12-to southeastern Oakland County Eisenhower, 33 Oat esident is helped her diplontatie de last Saturday = with the ina has amazed hostess. wn storm relief drain for. another | wer e dealt staggering blow. today when it was” ruled that costs to; Madison Heights were determined Circuit Judge William J. Beer said there was a illegally. “total | absence” that the County Drainage Board had weighed what.benefits the city would receive from the drain, “and the extent to, which¢-——————— it contributed to the condi- tions which make the drain necessary.” * * * The judge's ruling means another delay in realization of the $47,102,- 000 drain and also had county legal and drain officials in a quandary about what to do next. Since entering the planning stage in 1952, the drain has been a matter of legal action. Cireuit Judge H. and then the State Supreme Court had upheld as constitutional the! the county was follow-| proceedings ing creating the drain. . * * * After based on a time lag, Madison Heights songht a writ | of certiorari asking the court to search the proceedings to see if the law had been followed. “They are devoid .of any evi- dence, any: facts or any informa-' tion indicating this administrative tribunal (Drainage Board) took: into consideration the required statutory factors as complained. of by the plaintiff (Madison Heights),” the judge Juled. * said “he “unt: s defense) that the—same _ questions raised | this time by the city had gai settled in an. earlier court suit * not a defense.” Claude H. Stevens; the coun- ty's attorney throughout the 12- Town litigation, clairhed the He judge's ruling was somewhat of | a reversal of the high court’ 8 ruling, “It's-a reversal to the extent if. we're right in. claiming our de- fense of res judicata and the court claiming it wag no defense,’ Stev- ens said, * * * He said the county now has two alternatives: One, call another hearing to re- apportion new costs. for all com- munities (this would make the third set of costs), or second, ap- peal Judge Beer’s ruling to thé Supreme Court, * + * Stevens and Robert P. ‘Allen, assistant corporation counsel for drain cases, gaid they didn’t know what action the county. will take, “Pil say this, Stevens said, indicating -a_possible appeal, “I } Russel Holland: the high’ court's affirma-) tion of Judge Holland's ruling; the’ Drainage Board set up new costs. i: ‘LIZA BEAUMONT TAYLOR Liza Taylor Celebrates - l0th Year Michigan's oldest known. resi-. ident, Mrs. Eliza Beaumont Taylor, “ttoday at an open house at her home - in the heart of Highland Township. | Well-wisbing friends ~and neigh- a lady who was born during the | Gold Rush days, and who lived with her nine brothers and sisters’ in a two-room log cabin on White Lake so long ago. “Aunt Liza,” gs she is known ‘fo many, ‘says healthier now than when she reached the century mark -ten | white, and for some unexplained | long. “Must be the good eating,’ she. Said. The food and nutrition that, Mrs. Taylor refers to is provided by a devoted grand-niece, Mrs. . Olive Clarke, who has been Liza's. companion since _ the Keller, three years ago. Liza after another succumb to the. in- sick a day in her life, the - little woman revels in the fact that she is able-to be dressed every day, take a stroll around the’ house, then settle down for conversation. Liza maintains that “she never had it so good” as now, She does as she pleases, and, although “her cheating and“ eyes have dimmed, she is ‘beginning to at y the role of being Michigan's js ay living _. = h- +“ Pig fer -.0EL § ‘hosts during President. SSE a tm Court Edict Staggers Romney Blasts. 12-Town Drain Hopes Playing Politics “vis giis celebrating her 110th birthday | constant — death of her daughter, Mrs, Ella! watched one relative. evitable fate ef old age. Never). AP Wirephoto the marathon trek She has been his official a ee eT | on Resignation. 3 | Banking Chief Defies Williams. . Won‘t Leave State Job. Despite Flareup Over Conflict of Interests LANSING (®—Gov. Wil- liams says he has asked for! the resignation of State Banking Commissioner Alonzo L. Wilson because of a conflict’ of interests. The conflict of interest, stems from a Traverse City, bank case brought against Wilson last August, accord- ing to Paul Weber, the gov-. Wilson has refused to’ resign following a formal request by the, jgovernor in a letter Sept. 24.) ;The commissioner said he did not) ‘feel he had violated banking laws. | Two Traverse City banks | _ brought suit against Wilson last | t August, The: accused the com- | _| missioner of having given faver , and iflegal treatment to a bank ; in which his wife is a major | | share holder. Veber said Wilson had been ashe several times by Williams to resign,. starting when the bank came to light The governor said there was a ernoi’s press secretary. Spring's Spring Comes Unsprung; | i | ' i | a / 14 ct TWO — SHEARED IN Police called this The car was torn in balf spewing wreckage for wreck the worst they hud seen after Manue] many vards, Palaez was hurtled beneath another Palaces, (4, of OS Allison St had iost coutrol and gutomobile and dred before he could be admitted , collided into a tree on Woodward avenue near to St. Joseph Merey Hospital, i Opdyke toad this morning in Bloomfield Hills. Cc ar Is Sev ered ? Killed in Bloomfield ‘this. privately American. station are refu- igees from Iron. Curtain iN. Y., |wWar found Noy. | stance was analyzed ~ Deadly Powder. inSaltshakers at Radio Station ‘Free’ Employes Blame Commies; Story Told by Counterspy MUNICH. Germany (Fi— Radio Free Europe said to- ‘day agents of a “foreign /Communist power” have at ‘terhpted a mass. poisoning of its employes. . Most of the employes of financed, countries. - Erik Hazelhoff of Mount Kisea, - Radio Free Europe's Eus ropean director, said a poison 2] in a number of saltshakers at the station's cafe- teria, The director the snb- aml was found te be a puisonous drug de- rived from the deadly night- said | shade plant. at- a Radio Hazelhoff said the poisoning tempt was disclosed by | Free Europe ‘employe “who al- ithough ostensibly dsed by a fore feign Communist power for sabe. tage purposes” has been cooper ating with American authorities rom the time he was first con- itacted by the Reds. — ‘Basic conflict’ of interest in the Mild Weather Due REVEALS IDENTITY Says Business, labor Traverse City case.” “He also revealed the identity 5 5 f Should Stay Out of “Although I cannot agree that And suddenty its spring! A Pontiac man and a Mount Clemens man were killed of the person who planned these Government — | this. B— Cire To a ; . . , oe aa Hien bring al “iy fannri . jtold the Economic Club of Chica ham County Circuit Court by the Westerly winds at14-20 miles to- William Beaumont Hospital after at Gas Station 3 The, ‘ cote (ong ten aneneai 180 that such use of politics is a Traverse City State Bank and the day will diminish tonight. becom: ve a twp-ear collision on Big Beaver, Thursday “ “reopen iperversion of U.S. Citizenship, First Peoples State Bank of Trav- yestey dy at 14 Ik miles Thursda roid between. Litth Miss Weaver—the newest o * * * “lt is as wro far as | , jerse City. The lowest temperature in dows n- ~ Adams road and resident of Novi — was born this e delay int i” ' _ is as wrong as far as am | J he sult is scheduled for a Pre- town Pontiac preceding S a.m. was Oakland Woodward. Ave. morning at a Pontiac gas statien thi lay . a ae nee soe | concerned,’ Romney said, ‘‘for (trial hearing today. “36 degrees. The reading at 1 pm! HighWay nue in Bloomfield k * * is announcement has been due any os . . hie ¢ . vas 47. i |e * oe on to the necessities of the investi- any American tp transfer his | The suit stems from the com- “> * Poll in ’59 Township et nother, Mrs. Wardsn Weav- gation which are proceeding in personal rights of citizenship te | (Continued on Page 2, Col. Township. police cng EN Rall which are pi mg in re > — a A. 1 Aspen St.. was being close cooperation’ between RFE an economic institution or te ——— _——— WwW I W = All C G Ti d (2 sald Faner appar to t j tal bv ¢ h- Management and the aus use them primarily for economic e e et lire ently lost control ‘ : ver toe ; ve » a neigh- managers " Fy a we proper aus - wot sanford | aAawvel af ne Saj IUTPOSses, . on a patch of ice a , ‘ ~ a purpose — A. 5 Asks Moe | VERCELLI Haly (UPI.—Dis- ae 38 His pe on ung in They didn't t make | “Every aet of violence against * * * ' missed postman Er s Quarna ‘ “an, ae 4 I is . hor} mis ed_p stman Ermes Quarna to the path of an ™%B_ the corner of Telegraph RFE by the Communists dramati- The question is whether th a) admitted in court that he had | “4 cally demonstrates their deep con- | . of automobile driven and Orchard Lak@ reads, Sawyer “‘ democracy, based on the divine | kept 220 pounds of undelivered ~ . cem about the effectiveness of ue ; | ey by W iam Mead. 73 of 3172. frantically pulled into.a gas sta- , “ origin of man and his political i mail at home hecause the ad- . our broadcasts,’ Hazelhoff said . ) _ ‘Oakhill Dr., Troy: Mead was jaken tion. eo ‘ “es +freedom, the politieal rights of the | dresses were out in the country- |; the hospital with chest and fac : * ewe i | 2 4 i: - a tO OS Dited met oY é . , : ‘individual should be used primar. ' side and he didn't feel like walk- |, very shone ' About 15 people stood around) phe extreme character of the ‘ily’ for the purpose of serving his ; : ing that, far. The court sem Kondering how they could hetp. A | yastitu ; . : : oO | , ha Aa , ; \ ' i 0 latest act corstitutes adrnission selfish economic objectives. | Gates Warns of Soviet tenced him Monday ty 19 mionths | Police from four departments, fey minutes jater — without any- hy the Commmumntsts of the tmipore | p.. nan Communists OF THE THIPOoT * * * j Rocket Buildup, — Says and 11 days in jail, but pardoned trying to speed the curious who}, elp needed —lttle Miss Weaver tance to them of trying to destroy {| “Our obligations of citizenship) French Shirk Dut | him under ‘a recent amnesty. were halting the flow of rush ‘arrived RFE. Thev will find us a hard are superior to any of our economic y a noe ratte. termes ‘ne palace | + * * nut fo crack.” and social obligations and are » Postman Cleor, No. Fog seen i “ wors 7 Be er An ambulance took the mother Radio Free Europe which does aye 1 te x2 ett rT » Ts os “ ‘Hh, , jsecond only to those we have to PARIS (AP)—The ‘ATO na- j and her eight-pound daught®r to not broadcast to the Soviet Une jour Creator and our family,” tons received today a report. of KNOXVILLE, Tenn if Ply Going south on Woodward. Pa- pontiac Osteopathic Hfospitakion, began operating in 1951 uns | Romney added. a Sovi et buildup m rockets and’ Ry H. Miles “has rade up a laez’ car went out of controk and where they were reported doing der C. H. Jackson, President Ei- | fa new UY S. charge that yrance new jingle for never-say-die .skidded 221 feet into a tree. The nicely . ~‘senhewer's former advise? on psy | its not meeting her defense pledges -postmen: ‘‘Rain or fair, the. mail engine and front part of the chas-": — _ —- c hological warfare. ito os with Soviet threats. gets there’ Miles got a Ietter sis were ripped off, and the trans a “| mit! ic ts S. Secretary of Defense. Monday addressed to 922 Rain mission was thrown 25 feet. Who Made the Mistake? i Imo ynas §. Gates Jr. told the; Ave. There is no Rain Ave, in The rest of the car containing. i ‘North Atlantic Alliance that -the Knoxville — but the letter fin Palaey hurtled across the island, DALLAS, Tex. (UPI) ~ A car mp Lopited States needs more help ini ally had caught up with him at ‘and came ‘to rest against a car. drove around Dallas yesterday Prison Ual § keeping western defe mses modern-) his correct address, “922 Fair driven by H. A.C Anderson, gen- With a hole in its fender ‘and zed,. and endorses the military: Ave (Continued en Page 2 Cot. 4) i | this Sign: “Opetie a | by Mistake.’ , Grand Jury Charges Brutal Treatment of Convicts in Florida bors have been Coming and Boing WASHINGTON W — Atty. Gen. William P. Rogers announced that ia federal grand jury at Jackson- ville, Fla. ‘Tuesday indicted 14 present and former guards at the! ‘Florida State Prison on charges, ‘of mistreating prisoners in viola- she is much tion of a federal civil rights law. | (Defense Minister Pierre Gunllau- * * * | Rogers said a far-reaching in-. years ago. Her once-thinning vestigation by FBI agents preceded ‘ing and the fact that Twinine’s ray bair has turned ‘the. department’s. presentation of Speech reached -the press. . ata petbraitoas 4 ° ‘charged that Twining overstepped reason, has grown thick and isaid the evidence involved mis- Military bounds and cot into po- evidence to the grand jury. He |treatment of inmates of the maxi- ‘mum security building at the prison: at Raiford, The indictments charged viola: | tions of three sections of the U, 8S. Criminal Cede. which pio- hibit conspiracies to injure or oppress any citizen in the free exercise of any right or privilege - secured to him. by the Constitu- tion and federal laws, . ~ * * *. ‘The brutal treatment alleged consisted of shackling or chaining prisoners to the bars of their cells, {sometimes without food or cloth-! ‘ing, for periods ranging fyom 24) hours to a week or more. 2 In addition, Rogers some instances ¢ Tigh pressure, cr. Pree: Down te Per- Gallen | uy: &. Fariier Ges .& 00. Co. _ ‘at = id that in superiority, both with respect to. - — prisoners were sprayed with water. under | of their delivery. cubstance of a recent speech bv) Gen. Nathan F. Twining | Twining, chairman of the U. S.! Joint Chiefs of Staff, sharply at-. ‘tacked France last week in a se-' - .cret NATO military meeting for! refusing to go along with integra-/ tion of its forces. Secretary of, State Christian A. Herter Tuesday. insisted. that integration is a- vital) part of NATO, and in effect sup-| ‘ported Twining. | ‘Gates spoke today after French imat of fficially protested the Amer- ‘ican charge that France is shirk- He litical matters. * * * Gaies said he felt that the Unit- ed States is within “the compe-| tence, right and responsibility of its military to comment on the military effects of political deci- sions.” i Adm. Walter F. Boone, U. 8.) member of NATO's top - level! standing military group, gave the: jsession an intelligence . estimate 'that the Soviet Union has had, in- itercontinental rockets in’ service for. 17 months and has 100 missile i bases. | Gates told ‘the meeting. how- ever, that the United Statés i¢ ‘confident ot its presett nuclear nuclear weapons and to the means He said American-made | inter- ‘continental and intermediate Trange ballistic me are now "operational. ped ace 8 Mail ‘Stacks Are Growing _ AAPOR IP i a ic ds . ; Bora Rey pontine Press Photo RIDING HIGH — Pontiac's Acting Postmaster ” patio Hitned atop this load, Miller Robert. C.. Miller isn’t. perplexed, just .a- bit. ~ “We expect this will/he a record year for staggered at the size and wei t of mail his | us.” He eer the Post Office will lacs TY have had ; iffic street corners. / ne ane the respective had been performed this year at 4 ‘ GS is ¢ ~y ~ o ONLY 86 RETURNED / communities." Beer said fees getterally ranging from $300 a . to $400, but at least one running; Only $6 was returyéd. and that But thein equitable effort will up to $700. : by one man, officef's. said © Pro- not allow fatlure to follow. sta- ** ceeds from the ne wspaper sale, an tutory mandate annual event, are used to buy vule Madison Heights was figured to! Rogensues said Dr. Gilbert's books. listed names of those who gifts for children. have ta pay $2,848,803 as its Share. | referred patients to him and ‘the Fhe .Board had fixed credits at amount, usually. $50, paid by the Robert Thorne, one of the g299 yg a |doctor as a referral fee. @ivilian velunteers, arrested, Others named in th a n the con- Pieaded guilty to larceny hy con- . version in Justice Court. He was Muriel Anscombe, 71, epiracy chiropeactans "Du “Ray fined $25 and given one vear sprobation. given one ye Author, Teacher, Dies . | mond Emmerson, a Detroit osteo- The others pleaded innocent and DETROIT ®—Miss E. Muriel ___ DR. JEROME 4..ROBB ex-husband; Francis Schaenboen, were released -on $200 bonds. Al] Anscombe, 71, author, teacher and, | @ Harrison Township pharmacist; authority on hospital admi inistra ' and Vincent C. Lotz of Ferndaid * * * ‘tion. died Monday. night of ¢ ances Conviction carmes a maximum’ - Miss Anscombe was a member 90 days in jail, a $100 fine and two, of the American College of Hospital years probation _Administrators and American Hos- Capt. William Ware, acting police, pital, Assn. and was past presi ident | chief. and Capt. Samuel Mitchell,'of the Midwest. Hospital Assn. the fire chief, were among those) She once taught at Geor ge Wash- arrested, ‘ington University, Washington Floods Ease | of the Traverse City limits, More Rain, Snow in South. By The Associated Press rains dimi ~-Moere-rain and snow fell across-i#gten, easing flood conditions. Storm-whipped south central ~*~ * * ons- of the country today Snow falls up to 18 inches cov- ered areas in. New Mexico but the The Weather stormy weather which hit the ITU. S. Weather Bureau Report ITY state Monday and-° Tuesday Seat. Weatier Ba abated, Four inches of fresh snow Partly sna Thersaee ned mila teday. tonight le Las Vegas for a total of 10 an utsday esterly winds 4-2 Inches t miles today, diminishing tonight and. be- nches on the ground. waning westerly 14-18 Thursday. High. Cold ir moved into parts 7 $8. Lew tonight $6. High Thuts- Toxas and the worst ic ing condi- 3 ‘tions in 20 years slicked areas in the nished iy western. Wash- sec: but of otay in Pontia e forest getsperats € preceding 8 am western Panhandle, forcing Wind velocity 8 m pin the closing of many schools and at 8 am Direction: West. ‘some s. un sets Wedhesday at 5:81 pm. j roads Power and telephone is tikes Thursday at 7.55 arr ‘service was disrupted in hundreds Mess mets Thursday at 9:23 a.m Moon rises Wednesday at 642 pn of homes in the ice belt, Downtown Tex Temperatures *-* * Faw... a fem vs 43, Rains up to four inches that t OMe 36 OT pam aT soaked the dry soil in other-parts: Peg eae 3 ‘of Texas were welcorned by farm-| ers and ranchers, The wet belt! extended throughout Oklahoma, *48 and the lower Mississippi V ley. 30:5 Heaviest rains were in eastern Texas, Louisiana and. along the ;southefn border of -Arkansas. Tuesday in P in Pontiac (as recorded Goveneen! eetearerne One Year Ase 8 “ Pontiac + at vempereture er oenrenrerreeres * * ; tar Ta q. ighest and Lowest Temperatures Tot Wants Garbage Can; This Date in #7 Years 6) in isso -3' in 1981 thane Does Dad Refuse? * raged? roe i 38 year-old Gary Davis is giving his parents a difficitit time-as Christ- mas “ near. * ek apie Mr, and Mrs, Douglas R. Davis) have been ttyihg- to. get Gary| ‘Steamed up over wanting ~an elec 4s oa oe for pier ‘ " junction issued by Ingham County MEMPHIS, Tenn, (AP)~Three- ype “something less” than j ae Seottville, He has. been associat- Four others named in the .w ar: | Banking Chief Defies Williams on Quitting bétfig sought. Dr. Polk, Schaenboen, Vv: aile | stood mute. yesterday with Dr. i ‘Continued’ From Page One) ‘Robb, All junti! a hearing Jan. 5. Dr. Robb's office is at 1142 W,! iHuron $t., Waterford Township. | Harry Whitlow, - missioner’s approval of transfer. | ; ring the amain office of the Em- | pire State Bank from Empire to 'a@ temporary office trailer 25 / niles away and within 200 feet ‘Robb was not a member hospital's staff. The Traverse City banks said no “Six years ago he —applied for’ need for.a bank was shown and |Ptivileges here,” Whitlow _ said.’ charged a conflict of interest He was refused. We did not, and The -complaint_st: ted that Wik ‘never have invited him to make ‘use of -our facilities." Bloomfield Crashes son dawned about 1077 per cent of the Empire bank stock when he became commissione: * * The stock was tri insterred . Wilson's wife, now on the. Empire! | T ) ad bank's board. , cave Wo € The trailer office closed after” five days as the result of an in- {Continued From” Page One) #ral superintendent of Pontiac Mo-' itor Division, traveling north on | Woodward to work, The body of Plaez, an empfoye’ of a Detroit construction com: , [Pany, came flying free and Todged| *under Anderson's car, | In effect, it created three banks Anderson, 4216 Sheffield Rd., in Traverse City, he said, adding: | ‘Royal Oak, described it as he stood “There are no cities under 100,- watching Palaez while waiting for) (000 who in recent years have the ambulance~to artive. started a new bank.” | 1 ot bout 46 mit | “I was going a les NO FDIC. ACTION? / an hour when T saw part of this Calcutt said the suit also claims’ car coming at me from across ‘the Federal Deposit Insurance the island. I put.on the brakes ‘Corp. did not act on the request) and as T was stopping his car (for transfer by the Empire bank.| came against mine and I saw Wilson also served as president, him slide out.” f th ieeven pearehie Cty vom Bank gust then the ambulance arrived appoint: and they worked P ment. as commissinner, pan ey alaez out and onto a. stretcher asygdozens . of His stock .in this bank, curious people who had pulled over to watch looked on, -Handling the accident - itself, Bloomfield Police Chief. Walter Sleuter said witfiesses—t6ld him Palaez was “really arreling ‘ed with the Federal Reserve Bank /along.’’ State Police, Birmingham at Chicago and Detroit: : ‘police and Oakland County. Sher- He~ was ao guce state baring iff’s deputies” Bowed at ratte = ge Cireuit Judge Marvin J. Salmon. Harry Calcutt, attorney for the | Traverse City banks, said the | commissioner's action ran con- trary to precedent, sim re- 4 per cent, also Was ‘transferred to Wilson’s -wife. ; Wilson began his banking career ; Eastman Ouster ‘Try Called Off ion the payroll, * C ircuit who ) Lake, the sli | are free- under bond in cash and checks. He left -the |bag on a counter when a customer came in. Pontiac Osteo- returned to find the counter bare. pathic Hospital administrator. said) Coleman told Pontiac Police he: of the didn't see the thief enter or leave \ the store. Old Bailey Smells acre Landry Says Majority of Commission _ Still Loepenes His Plan -_A move to demand ‘the ouster of: George D, Eastman, Pontiac public safety director, night by City Commissioner Robert A. Landry. ' “Tt is obvious I still: would be opposed by a majérity of the Com- mission, * he explained, . ‘Landry has demanded _East- man’s ouster twice in the past year, each time being defeated by a 5-2 vote of the Commission. ¢ Last week, after Circuit Court |_ held that the firing of Police Chief! ” Herbert ‘W. Straley was. illegal under Civil Service regulations, Landry, announced he would once again try to knock Eastman out of his $17,000-a-year ron. * *. It was Eastman who marshaled | the charges against Straley,. Commissioner Milton R. Henry; who has sided with Landry against Eastman and in behalf of Straley, argued for '15 minutes that the city should reinstate the former police chief. However, Menry did not press _ for a formal vete on his pro- posal, either. In the meantime, City Attorney | William A. Ewart said that no final decision had been reached with Straley’s lawyer, Clarence” E. Smith, on details.of a-fanal. order to settle the Straley case. The -order, presumably, would force the city to put Straley back * * The order is being prepared ‘for the signature of Ionia County Judge Morris K. Davis, issued the the Straley ouster. If the city and Straley cannot} agree on a final order, it is pos- sible that there will be further litigation before Judge Davis. Walled Lake School Bus Hit; tree 0 mH Ww sted Oct... . -- ae f me ere arrested Oct. ‘No One Injured AY car rammed into the rear of; a Walled Lake séhool’ bus early this morning as it was vicking up children. No one ed, was reported injur | accor ding to Oakland County sher-' ‘iff's deputies. The accident was on Wise road/* | just west of Union Lake road in! Commerce Tow nship. Bus driver Boyd Burger, 26, of 164 Spring Park. Dr., Walled told deputies he had stopped to pick up a group of students. Driver of the car, Jr., 32, of Milferd, said he atte mot- ed to stop but his car skidded on ppery road, x Hardware Man Wonders Where Money Bag Went It pays to Be courteous, but no one knows how much it. pays like ; | path; Edward_Vaile,Mrs,-Vaile'’s .4 Pontiac store owner. It cost him of ie Bureau_of Dental and” Oral. more than $1,000 for being cour- teous to a customer yesterday, |, Jack Coleman, of 12 Downing Ct., Waterford Township, who rant were unidentified. They are) owns Fay Barker Hardware, 79 Iinistrator of the Northern Mich- 8. Saginaw St., was preparing to go to the bank. He had a bag containing $1,078 co After waiting on the customer he: LONDON (UPT) — Judge Les- lie Block didn't like the atmos- phere in his Old Bailey Court- room. yesterday. He said he would: refuse to sit in the court again until the ventilation is im- was called off last: ruling ‘upsetting , | field. Harry Laschen’ The Das t in Birmingham month was dimost identical.to the Octobér record, but considerably higher than that for November of last year, Police Chief Ralph W. Moxley reported today. x * * During the past month there were 60 aceidents compared with 59 far the previous month, This jeompares with 45 accidents in November 1958, Moxley said. “The bright spot in the traffic | picture for Nevember was the reduction in personal injury ac-. cidents and persons injured in these accidents,” Moxley said. “Only six personal injury acci- dents were” investigated. and nine ‘persons were injured.” * x * : ’ “This record was a very sub- stantial improvement over October when 19 persons were injured in ll accidents.’’- , Moxley warned that this month is the most dangerous of the year from a traffic accident standpoint. oO “All drivers and pedestrians are warned to be extermely. cautious during this period, so that a nous holiday is not ruined by a mo- ment of carelessness.” ~ — os Birmingham resident Mrs. Alan K.- Edelberg has been named as- sistant county welfare agent for the Oakland County Juvenile Court by Gov, Williams. Mrs, Edelberg of 1011 N. Woodward . Ave. succeeds Mrs. Margaret Knedel who resigned twe months ago to take a posi- tion with the Michigan Childrens Aid Society. As a county agent Mrs. Edelberg, FLOYD E. CREMER Veterans Have New Director: Floyd E. Cremer Gets County Post; Replaces Fred S. Galloway + Announcement was made today) of the appointment of Floyd E. ‘Cremer as the new director of the, Oakland County Department of Veterans Affairs. * * * Cremer replaces Fred S. Gallo- way who-has resigned - effective ‘Dec. 31 after being director since 1953. Cremer, Galloway’s deputy director since 1953, officially be- comes director Jan. 1. Replacing Cremer as deputy will be Jesse LE. Richter, 42, of 21560 'Frazer St., Southfield. He started lhis work as deputy yeterday. ‘ | Formerly a shipping-receiving specialist -with the American Brass Co. in Detroit, Richter comes to Oakland County for the first time after serving as a service officen for the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) in South- U: of M. Staff Checkups ‘Reveal Hidden Disease LANSING (UPI)~—Physical ex- aminations offered University of He is commander of the South-, Michigan faculty members detect- field VFW Post 9552. led a “high incidence of-previously Cremer, 45, of 1249 Featherstone, unrecognized disease.’: the direct- November Accident Toll 25 Pct. Above Last Year BIRMINGHAM—The total. num-!said she whould be working pri- ber of traffic accidents. here last: marily with delinquent girls and neglected and adopted children, ~ Before moving to Birmingha m from New York state six. months ago, Mrs, Edelberg said she had been a teacher and had done social work. ¢ Architect. Charles H. MacMahon ,,0f 3248 Woodside Ct., Bloomfield Township, has been elected first vice president of the Michigan Society of Architects at its annual meeting in Detroit. - MacMahon has-offices at 894 8. Adams St:, Birmingham. : Christmas Mantel Piece N-O-E- L ’ Angels & Candles SET of for 39° set figurines with candles | “the 4 in a Yow and they j “NOEL”. Complete with 8 Better then shown. >i te ae ee 3%4" —set | spell candles, ———— -$6-N. Saginaw -—Main Floor ; Famous WOLLENSAK Hi-Fi Tape Recorders Ave., started with the county six|or of the university's health ap, years ago after being a servicé praisal program said. officer since 1944 for Disabled Vet-| xk * erans and also doing sales work | Dr. C. J. Tupper told a health, for several firms. ‘department meeting that cancer | He is post commander of Dis-/was found in 12 persons and un- DR ponncanbninnnnds $1 99.50 Seller 149°" ea eee td ys Com plete with microphone, 10-watt His death followed a _ dong ill- ness. : z PICTURES ‘Yet! _ELECTRI-TENNA Television ; Antenna ~ Regular $4.95 299° -, Gibson formerly was directer - ‘abled American- Veteran’. Chap- detected diabetes in nine per cent’ amplifier, rewind Never and. index | counter. Lightweight. iters 101 and 16, andthe American of the 500 examined. ig g 8 ‘Legion Cook-Nelson Post 20. . x *« * | $239.50 STEREO ‘J 79": Cremer will receive $8,500 in “We believe the examinations, Tape Recorder..... ia new position and Richter, 4. finding disease early, will help ¥ our people live longer and also|y better by lowering their chances’ j of being disabled by | illness,” Tup- & 98 N. Saginaw —Main Floor X- qd e lea per said. DAMA RAIHM RRR TNA pS A Official Dies § : ‘ a Dr. Kenneth. Gibson. — & of Birmingham Held a Many Michigan Posts. ELIMINATES UGLY EUMINATES - Z y 9 }]} INEFFICIENT | EXPENSIVE UNSIGHTLY |, 4 Former president of the Mich- % RABBIT EARS ROOF ANTENNA q igan Public Health Assn.,. Dr. , 7 i jKenneth R. Gibson. 64, of Bir-|y Just Plug Into aT é imingham, died yesterday at his ¥ Electric Socket ° ; % ? jhome at 2075 W. Lincoln Rd. ' for Clearest TV F , é f * Hygiene of the Michigan Depart- ‘ment of Health, Director of the ‘dental division of the Children’s ‘Foundation of Michigan, and ad- — _igan Children's Clinic at Marquette jand the Central Michigan Chil- Idren’ s Clinic at Traverse City, | ee «He also had served as director , of the Michigan Assn. of Public Health, Dentists arid Dental | Hygienists, and president of the | School Health Assn. He was a graduate of the schoo! ‘of dentistry at the University of, |\Michigan. ' wiring into a giant TV SIMMS for the + $8 North Saginaw Street * + - Dr. Gibsoh is survived by his wife, Kathryn; two sons, Richard) J. and Dr. Kenneth R. Gibson Jr.; d ; Regular $4.95 seller—Miracle Electronic antenna turhs your house antenna—does not use any current, Stays neatly out of si nee , Compare: to other makes—then come to Electrical —2nd Floor ‘two brothers, Ralph and Arthur and two grandchildren. Funeral service will be Friday at | Christ Church Cranbrook, Buria will be at White Chapel Memorial proved: XH HNIVNIUNULUOUULNLUAUUUVUEGAUUE A 100% WOOL TOPS Genuine LEATHER Soles @ MEN'S @ LADIES’ Original to $2.95 Values— Sizes lee Everyone NOW ‘SALE’ PRICED Cholée of colore-and desi Rand stitched soles. bexed : * Slipper Socks (American Made ~— Not Imports) 4. iT NL Cemetery, Troy. E @ BOYS. - @ GIRLS’. OtITIL TT PAPSITL TS) a4 ve Fie“ a Value to $5—B nes ON $. end. ES 10% tax i? os North ~Ven ye Pain oF “alppet ‘tylens ete, The ite E FEATURE LOT! Men's and ladies’ leather © wallets in big style selection! Fine quality in © plain or zipper styles, pass case, etc. 210% tax. tabi ee? Bye Nes : wy SHWRS | { | i} * MAKE 0 Chicago Firm Gains - Canate Wi hn Ci Contcl ef Auto rat Senate Will Probe of control of American Auto Pet Corp., with two plants in Grand many pocket-, pas ‘sized recorders government agen-) the and what use by Morrie Chaitien of Chicago was/ Tuesday on how announced Tuesday. | An investment executive, Chait. cies have. bought len declined to disclose the trans- \is being made. of them. | aera The Pontiac Shrine Club will wt GRAND RAPIDS « — Purchase Illegal Recording ~ sal Dae Rel of 38 jarasy inight at the club's annual install- Ww ASHINGTON im — Investigat-: jation ceremony. Rapids and a subsidiary in Lyons, jing senators ordered a check up, Neal, first vice president fer the years. | ; ty ‘Shrine Club Installs | t_vear, has been a member of) Shrine Club here for seven) action details but observers es- *- *. * ‘ ‘timated the price in’ excess ot | The Senate Constitutional Rights) $500,000. The new owner and Subcommittec directed that its)§ president said he purchased a staff look into this after a demon- A majority’ of the corporation's | istration of how the device can be! i. stock at about $8 a share over lused for secret recording of -con-' the past two weeks. iversations. 4 Chaitlen said he sought control) The demonstration was given % of the firm as @ “business oppor-| by Harold Lipset of San Fran- 4 tunity’ and planned no changes in! cisco, a private detective. Lip- operations or personnel. | set argued’ that use of secret _¥ ; x * * | microphones by police and _ pri- ie The firm employs about 450 per- vate detectives is something that 4 sons in Grand Rapids to mane “serves a useful social purpose.” - yy facture interior. automotive trim, But from Edward Bennett Wil- ¥ cotton batting and bedding. It -has Jiams, Washington lawyer and a § operated 32 years. W. W. Hoag- director of the American Civil ¥ land, president of Auto Felt since; iperties Union, the subcommittee 1936, currently is on leave Of|pearq a denunciation of the use of absence and expected to rejoin] |wiretapping by the FBl.and other the organization in the future, lgovernment agencies. . * -¢ * The tiny soap fish of the West Williams and the practice “‘is Indies is so called because he wil) rampant’’ and that,.the agencies provide rich ‘suds for washing/engaging .in its are Violating. Ted- | when he is. agitated-in the, water./eral law. andi prominemworsureceennerreniyserets COREE Ideal Gift for Your Home—At SIMMS! H | BATHTUB SHOWER DOOR ; Double Fekiine-~ painted by you With paints, brushes, etc. .... 195 6.95 FORT APAGHE SET Fort Apache with soldiers, Indians, cannons, fort and Rin-Tin-Tin dog. 299 5.95 Construction Camp Sel By Marx—metal and plastic set with workmen. tables, lanterns, tools, road blocks, etc. . 299 6.95 MATTEL BARBELL SET Build muscles with barbells. 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Garibbean revolutionary. market aa aa In a Christmas letter to his staff, | as x k “Ty > * ' The Pacitic | There were 1541 rifles, 154 ma- Ovean covers about Black added, “If you want to put’ The. State Department made chine guns and 2] antitank weap 4 third of the earth's surface. It everything you've got into the job public a- note delivered Saturday. ons / as 60 miles wide at the Arctic for this coming year and push the by U, S. Ambassador John M, Al- i An audit of seizures by customs Circle and 12.000 miles wide at bonus up to 10 or u weeks, you lison charging that the exhibition equator won't t get me m ad.’ “seems deliberately calculated to{~ ‘disclosed the figures yesterday. the aD; Pa - re b)] Cine Tunl _ SHOP TILL 9 EVERY NIGHT TILL CHRISTMAS , Use a Waite’s Flexible CCC Charge! SCHHHEHSHOSSESHEHHOEOE seeoeoeseeeooeeeeeeeeeee Mr. Lloyd, BUXTON REPRESENTATIVE, will be ho ques at Waite's 4 TONIGHT / ONLY = =. to & 3jnitiel — ; 3 your j gift P Wallets ° FREE! ae. 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Bonus Draws canned We om a onan Three M arkers |chapet coinmemorating the 125t»| More Firmly in Place 70 if | Much of @ ; one of which, the department said, | anniversary; another gn the Delta) , Devs teise Yeoth annoy and em ) — Chock Fu was easily identifi Qs an Amer- I 4 ae are | Tau ernity lise com-| bling when arid ‘hove out: a einen. ne : ES ORR haley Chock F m= tean. an 9s [LANSING toe ” ane | of! oer ites ~~ he ee Old Just spriniis sat age tals? Bc S- 9' Nuts Corp. plans to pay out ~~ [Uer WAY ‘memorating t mn * ‘alkaline (non-acta Weapons and Planes jtomis warehouses under supervi- per cent of its pre-tax income for MacArthur Dookced as . The ~ picture was “captioned! [Albion College’s 125th anniversary|Rugged Vross” which was written powder he eke tales tant moos 7 Taken in Florida Worth sion of the governinent's General fisca} 1959-as a Christmas bonus, Mass , Murderer, Gls,‘American headhunters and their'in 1960, the Historical Society of'there; and the third erected at) Sovey. pasty taste ot fesiing Hone 2 Milli ; Services Administration. Its desti- Headhunte helpers. The methods of ‘colonial.’ ‘Michigan said today. ‘South Hall, where the song ‘Sweet- breatny = hm (denture .§ hon vation was net disclosed. But some to 1,000 employes. { as aanunters ists do not change. ” Included in | eeremonies will “be heart of Sigma. Chi" Was compose(,| drug counters everywhere oy St myson Was Tol daciosed. "' William Black, president ‘of. the; — Sreanrncaesonnannstiaanas pa cannons —= a eens seer is bemeg apt her or eV * i ’ - MIAMI Fla a — Enough guns 3 2Omé PPE here fF evidence 1M coffee company, said the figure] WASHINGTON (UPI) — The | “and ammunition to equip a 1344, . « « * adds up ove +2 weeks salary for ‘United States has protested to the . manarmy and give it alr and artis Josep Fortier, supervising “cus. ©VETY eMPlove \Communist Czechoslovak govern- (th lery support have been seized by tyms agents said 68 defendants Black said the policy of paying | ment an exhibition “Prague call- 1 Shop till 9 Every Night till Christmas Use a Waite's Flexible CCC Charge! CAR or hood zip and Street Floor Waite's own Quality LR A iis et ea LORD BUXTON © “Ascot” Wallet for Men - 1 ee.» $7 50 Matching Key-tainer 3.95 be TR + ay Fine English Morroco leathers and Buxton craftsman- 4 a ~ ship combine to give him a gift of durability and very good looks. 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Apenaver has tried to dis- ty native is the oldest person in courage such ideas and has urged ‘Michigan. - leading nations of Europe to realize that they are no longer io powers * ~ * Eliza Beaumont Taylor | One Person in a Million Born during the California gold rush of 1849, Mrs. EL1za BEAUMONT TayLor today is celebrating her 110th birthday. ‘than any other of ‘the million or more residents within its borders during. her lifetime. Rugged pioneer, school teacher, - housewife, mother, and general ex- ample of the American life, we marvel at the storehouse of experience and observations she has attained. wk k * ‘thinks France is as great a power as any, or even greater. Pres. de Gaulle is: carrying his grandeur of France version a hit far. Washington and London have humored him long enough. Western leaders must present a solid defense front against the Russian menace. De Gaulle’s lofty ~ We congratulate her and hope that = independence only strengthens we will be here to do the same on her Khrushchev's hand. llith milestone. ~ The Man About Town Good Grades and Autos 'T Te Seldom Go Together Today Is the Day If You Haven’t Sent Card Automobiles versus grades, accord Send One for Christmas ing to some surveys, produce some pretty conclusive- facts. It-just might Procrastination: What makes be that the American teen-ager car things too late. owner is joy riding himself right out of an education. shower for | x * * Mrs. Eliza Beaumont Taylor At least that’s the conciusion of _1s*passing the birthday phase today. This {8 the one hundred and tenth birthday of - studies showing the relationship be- this grand old woman, the oldest person tween car ownership: by high school, in Michigan. students and their grades. Here’s A iitelong resident of our ore Oakland ‘ ; a. . County, she will welcome a stmas car what one typical survey showed: . trom von. Her post office address is High- Not one single straight A land. Do not fail to include her on your student questioned owned a list. Let’s make it the biggest ever. She may not be with next year-—neither car. : may you. The Highland post office is ready Only 15 per cent of the B to frandle the extra mail. Send that card . students owned cars. Forty-one of the C students That birthday and‘ Christmas card TODAY. And of the failing students from —an astonishing 83 per cent were car owners. These statistics paint a pretty sorry picture for teen-age car owners. Cer- tainly you could find exceptions, but most studies on this matter point up . approximately the same thing. x * * We will admit that circum- stances today differ from a few years ago. Social pressures these days — particularly on boys — are strong. And there ar where students actually need cars _ for transportation. x *&k& * If your youngsters’ grades are not Mr. and Mrs. Orson Moody, which hasn't anything good about Florida weath@f It says: “The St. Pete benches should be equipped with smudge pots.” Please, oh -please; remember tLat the ice on none of our lakes is safe. This column will tell you when it is anything but foolish to venture upon it, Already too many lives have been snuffed out. “Where can you get calcium chloride to make your Christmas tree fireproof?” phones _ Mrs. Palmer Beeman cured for a few cents for a ¢upful at any ' drug or farm supply store. This is enough. to do the trick when mixed in\the water. in which your tree stands. ‘Christmas cards received from Governor G. Mennen Williams, . United States Senator __ Philip A. Hart, - and State Highway Commissioner John A. Mackie all feature their very attractive fatnilies. look for a correlation between grades and driving. Is Problem for Allies ‘A cock pheasant and harem of two who At a “secret” session of NATO's top took refuge in the poultry yard of military men, Gen, NATHAN TWINING, Elmer Oldfield chief of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, of Commerce during the open season are declared that foot-dragging in NATO remaining as permanent residents, and on endangered the West's military posi- ‘¢TY ‘Tlencly terms with the flock. tion in Europe. Going further, he placed the major blame on France. we Winter does not officially begin until next Tuesday. forenoon, s0 don’t get too chesty about this . “open” stuff. _ Let’s see what Gen. pz GAULLE has done to NATO in the year he has been President of France: . ' 1. Removed from NATO control A Christmas card from Houston, Texas, sent by Paul G. Presswell, says: “Alaska may beat us on size, but not on tall yarns—and wé also quite often ranean, have Alaska weather.” 2. ‘Demanded and. got removal of American military planes because of Verbal Orchids to- his wish to. control atomic. weapons based in France. The planes were - Mrs. Eliza Beaumont Taylor of Highland; 110th birthday. transferred to British and West Ger- _!_Mr. and Mrs. Welcome Seeder” man bases. . Of Rochester; 52nd wedding. anniversary. 3. Criticized the intagratall NATO Darius Brearley © command insisting “that France de-_ of. Bir iam; -8ist- birthday. 4 fend hersélf, ‘for herself. ed in her Mrs, Ann Oliphant ; 88nd birthday. “~~ . and Mrs, Elmer Shay - i Lake; Slst wedding anniversary. _ of Lake Orion; goth birthday. | Mins SWS Morrison oa St, State Shores; S4th persicae. fe : we y « i AY mo Say of Wall - ‘Further, ‘De Gaulle insists that France become a nuclear power and have an independent inter- _ sontinental net Site force.., \ Te a From St. Petersburg, Fla., comes a card ~ id a The Lone E | Eagle. . . David Lawrence Reminds Us: Ww ASHINGTON — Letters ‘from readers about recent proposals for legislation to prohibit industrywide bargaining and “restraints of ‘trade’ by labor unions are natu. rally divided be- tween those who think it would be a desirable re- form afd those who don't. But a curious thing is the rea- son given by Some critics for (fife =urging immunity LAWRENCE from legal! re- Straints for unions. They argue that workers are ‘human beings” while companies are just ‘'ma- chines” operated by people anxious to make a ‘‘fast buck.” __ This is the type of comment often used in elass warfare, but the odd part about it is that many union spokesmen actually their members with such antago- nisms—as if it will aid them in : maintaining unionism. But, it may be respectfully asked, aren’t employers “human beings,’ too? Do not the executives of a busi- ness work long hours and often at home in the evenings and on week- ends on their papers and office memoranda trying to keep-abreast of the fast-moving world of compe- tition? WHO INVENTS JOBS? Doesn't the governinent take a big slice of their -incomes, and wouldn't the treasury receipts from corporations shrink a good -deal if the inventive minds and geniuses of American industry who create jobs were to insist oh an eight-hour day. five days a week, with time- and-a-half pay for every hour given to business affairs after the day's work is supposed to be done? are CaS€S__ gf Clarkston, and others It can be ses There's a hue-and-cry-nona days about - expense accounts rendered by persons who are usually connected with sales staffs or management, and it is right and proper, of course, for the treasury to insist on the proper use of that deduction. “One wonders, however, what would happen to the size of cor- porate deductions if companies really began paying their execu- tives wages for the time they spent on trips away from homie doing company business, It so happens that the railroads are, in effect, paying their crews increased compensation te’ offset time spent in another’ city till the return trip home begins. ~~ Many businessmen do the same thing and never get paid for it. The fact of the matter is that, in the eyes of the law, workers at a factory bench and workers at a desk on the management side are the same—their rights are equal. Management is forbidden -to eriter into understandings with the executives of competing companies relating to prices or division of territory or other monopolistic practices. The law of the land for- _ bids it. _¥et unions can form combina-— The Country Parson ay man’s ehintanter tke “his bank _aecount, ean’t grow untess he” ae than. withdraws.” , * he 4 indoctrinate, tions that include the locals in -exgry competing plant and -they . cath thereby control the opera- tions of-an entire industry, For many years there was an ‘agitation to bring labor unions to book under existing antitrust laws but, when the Supreme Court of the United States came under the domination of so-called justices, a ruling was, proclaimed that, under the then existing laws, labor was not a ‘‘commodity.”’ The theory was. that the mote- ment of commodities in interstate commercé could be regulated but not the acts of the workers who make those commodities. FEAR FOR FAMILY Today few workers dare to cross a picket line. The fear of violence to the worker or mary family is widespread. uniomization exists to a. consider. to his. Voluntary ' ~~ Firms Are ‘Human Beings’ Too able degree, but often marred by coercive tactics. Millions of dollars of dues, paid by “human beings’’ in labor unions, are used to fight the “passage of laws that would guar- antee other “human beings’’ the -. right te work irrespective of “? whether they joined a union. ‘liberal’? Last” but not least: are- the “human beings’’. who save some of their wages each week and then buy shares in various companies. Their money helps to buy new tools and improved machinery and, if such capital were not forthcoming, Ameri¢an industry could not thrive and the government would have to furnish the capital, as is the case in all Communist countries—where, incidentally, the worker owns nothing arti loses his status as a “tuman being.” , (Copyright 1959) Dr. William Brady’ Says: Vitamin B1 - Deficiency Common to Americans It would be easy to fill this column with a recital of the signs and/or symptoms nutrition author- ities ascribe te the comparatively moderate vitamin B deficiency in Americas — the condition 1 cail Yankee beri-beri instance, Bicknell & Pres- 2nd For cott'’s Vitamins in Medicine, ed., published By Grune and Strat- ton, New York, quotes no less than half a page of symptoms which, according to’ Williams and _his associate show the parallel. ism between Bl deficiency and s0- called “neuras- thenia.”’ You name the symptom and leave it to your doc. DR. BRADY -tor to decide what it signifies. I’m who at the People drop in “clinic” for a ‘shot’ of vitamin B when they feel weary or de- pressed are just too credulous — they should not be allowed to be at large without a guardian. Signed letters not more page or 100 words long pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not dis- ease, diagnosis, or treatment. will be answered by Dr, William Brady, if a stamped, self-addressed envelope is sent to The Pontiac. Press, Pontiac, Michigan (Copyright 1959) the process is - them one . Voice of the People , Letter Praises Eisenhowe Asks Continued Bomb Bain ve aut the following letter to President Eisenhower: ‘ x & * 1 am one of the millions of Americans who have been qaceuraged. by your efforts to lessen International tension, ~ x * * a As part of your effort toward world peace, I urge that you continue tue ban on bomb tests which is due to expire December 31st. T hope. you- will do everything in your power to keep France and otherenations from starting again the vicious merry-go-round of bigger and better bomb , tests in the new year. Binom field Hills Offers Plan to Avoid Financial Quagmire After seeing the abundance of Christmas advertising, 'm_promt- ed. to write a warning to help some soul avoid the predicament_ I'm in, We do it to keep up with the Joneses, or to live in the man- -ner we did-—befere marriage, or just because we have little sales resistance. At any rate, we've sold ourselves to the finance company, and we'd like to find our way out . x * * The way te do that is to rec. ognize and pay your obligation to the Lord before all other bills you owe, Don't charge a thing until you're out of debt com-- pletely, and then buy for cash. “Pray to the Lord to heip you . live within your means, Shop for cash bargaing and make a game out of being thrifty, Vow — never to fall into the trap of spending your salary before making it, : * * * ’ Don't buy expensive gifts to make up for your neglect of family and friends throughout the whole year. I also want ‘to thank Ralph * Keeling for his letters: They're a comfort to me to know others share the same degree—pf what the real meaning of Christmas is, without all the fanatic dollar grab- bers “~ Clyde -E, Keiser Drayton Plains ‘Time Is Flyi ing; Mend Your Ways’ We're living mn perilous. times, and it behooves ts to stop and think. We should ask ourselves where we're going. When are .we going to 6top? Where are we go- ing to spend eternity? t & ; We're all so busy running. to and fro we don't have time to think of our soul's welfare, We don't realize the death angel is on our tracks, stalking us day by day. We have the Gospel tell- ing us what te do to escape damnation to Hell, yet we ‘go on our heedless ‘ways, turning our backs on God. It doesn't trouble us that God is grieved over our indifference to Hini, * * * ; But we are wrong. We fail to give God a chance to save us, so we're hurled into eternity with- out Him and without hope, with sins upon our soul. It was our choice and‘ have no one to blame but ourselves. Too late t@ hear the preacher, too late to go on our knees and pray, too late to make peace “with God, and now the Judgment. . Mrs, Wayne B. Hilton 303 Bal Idwin- Ave. ; — ¥ abner apnea entities Case Records of a: Psychologist: Cancer is usually an ailment of middle uge. Why? Research - ' ers say it is due to "some chem- ical deficiency.” Many afftic- tions of mankind also seem to be due to deficiencies, such as afraid if T name it you'll have te ~ baldness, gray hatr and dia- In the American Journal Médica Sciences, Jolliffe and his asseci- ates reported that the following signs and symptoms of avitamin- osis-B1 (vitamin B deficiency) ap- peared as early as the third day in human volunteers who subsisted on a diet supplying only 0.36 milli grams of B1 per day: - Constipation, lack of appetite. breathlessness on slight exertion, pain around the heart, palpitation, fatigue, lassitude, feet, muscle cramps, tenderness! , * * * vitamin B1 ~ alone calf muscle When -added to the diet all symptoms disappeared within three days and the objective signs within six days. It is my belief that a great many Americans get little if any more vitamin Bi from _ their everyday diet than Jolliffe’s vol- unteers got during .the experi- ment. Not the poor, but ALL Americans who subsist on what- ever pure, refined food they are offered. If any of the symptoms or signs of avitaminosis-Bl hits your case, supplement your diet. with’ thtee Bl-Nutron tablets or’ three tea- spoonfuls of B-1 Nutron ‘syrup for a month — it may do no good but it can’t do any harm. x FF If the patient han't fais vitamin Bi by mouth of course it may be giveh by hypodermic injection or “shot,” as the ‘customer calls’ it if he is not-sure how to pronouce the four-syllable words. It is childish’ to imagine that: vitamin B1 (thiamin) injected’ un-' der the skin, into muscle or direct- ly into a vein’ has. any different _effect ‘from vitamin B taken in the . . 29, burning of the . was: and other modern + science ‘saying that betes. Do you think the ocean's soluble chemicals might be the answer? Discuss this in chem- istry class. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE D-427: Lawrence T., aged is the Sunday School official who wondered why Noah could reach 950 years while we barely average 70. “Dr. Crane,” he ee continued, “if we used a little ocean water, would it combat eancer ailments? Well, that is a moot question that is challeng- ing modern There are some chemicals dis- DR, CRANE solved in sea water that may«not be as good for us as others, but certainly we know that many chem- ieals in the sea are vital to human health, _And our plowed land is almost entirely devoid of these. chemi- cals, ; * * * Since cancer researchers keep “cancer is apparently due to some chemical deficiency,” ‘and ALL water-solublé chemicals are in the ocean water, then Lawr- ence’s question may riot be far- fetched, after all. _ DEFICIENCY AILMENTS Many of you- readers: are , mow -bajdheaded oor with gray ‘hair, “though you had a heavy head of brown or black hair in your youth. So why are you. bald or gray at. | present? We medics dort. explain - * a opi the basis of aby germ or. ioe Will Sea- Water Bring Virus, No, we call ita ailment. “deficiency ' * * * The usual diabetic formerly made enough insulin in his own pancreas to handle all his needs Then, at possibly the age of 50, he takes a routine medical exam in connection with a new life in- surance policy, and suddenly finds that he may have sugar in his urine, Maybe he needs 15 units or 25 units of insulin injected by needie every day to supplement the lim- ited output by his own pancreas. But why does his pancreas now: fail. to produce ite former quota and thus demand ah “‘assist’’ from a hypodermic injection? ~ © And why do you have-a-cancer at 50 or 60 when you had none at - 25 or. 30? Again, we say ‘deficiency’ of one or more chemicals. TRACE MINERAL’ SALT At our agricultural colleges, re- searchers have experimented with trace chemicals and now farmers buy red salt for cattle that has 7 different ‘chernicals therein. This red salt is about 97 per cent ordinary salt, with the addi- tion of minute quantities of co- balt, magnesium, copper, etc. - ‘And the animals thrive far better on this “trace chemical” salt. They are less inclined to anemia, They grow faster. They are not as likely to be sterile. And their offsprin are not as ately, to be born dead. Those are sts, sendy we well es- tablished by modern research If a /bricklayer has his trowel and mortar and hod but no bricks, he can’t build a. restraining wall against. the waves that may yah his lake away,” - Our. bodies thus have glands to juice; : | ‘pieces in the produce thyroxine, gastric insulin, ete., but if the chemicals that serve as pends gga are. . Joanne Fireman ‘Are You Shopping In Right Attitude?’ - If the old Christmas hymns make Wary Mary Christ. mas tired and harassed, is she CHURISTmas sbopping shopping ? , lovely “ Mrs, Dan Woodfiil Highland ; ‘Why Subsidize One, Neglect the Others?’ Undoubtedly the Indians ‘are high- ly edified by efficiency of U.S. agri- cultural methods, As to the wisdom of a social system that. piles up surpluses amid want, at cost of more’ than a million a day, I can't be so sure, “ * * & If one group may be subst- dized, then why not all groups in difficulty? Then we'd have a nice, parasitic, capitalist welfare state. Please don't cali it social- ism, for ‘that horrible workers | society, believing in the equal . dignity‘ of humanity, would sys- tematize things so that each physically able citizen could make his own living and out of ensuing plenty become the ar- chitect of his. own life. a a In the matter of the aged and disabled citizens, al] errors would be on the side of Horrors! EW. ‘This Solution’s Much Easier’ - Quite contrary ‘statement, Shocked, terly’s Lover should not be banned to your idiotic Lady simple: don't buy it. Norman E, Genez Portraits 5 “ee, ‘By JAMES J. METOALF A penny is a little coin. ., We often toss away .. , And most of us are just like that . °. And do it every day ... A penny seems so little’ toward .”. . Some item we buy .. , With monetary value low... And prices all so high... And yet that lowly penny can. : . Perform a noble deed .. . If mul- tiplied from day to day . . e help the ones in need . . . If. evéty day each person gave , .., One cent to charity . . . The dollars would be millions to . . . Reflect So why not give » Each day of To rain them our sympathy ... one penny now . . every- year . . , down ‘from heaven with... A- neighbor's love sincere? (Copyright 1959) Longevity? the glands are handicapped just like that bricklayer, Could that be why we need out-_ side insulin after middle age and why we finally lose our earlier im- munity to cancer? A few years ago, the sheep in Australia were threatened with ex- tinction. The ewes wouldn't breed. And, if they did, they had miscar- riages. Their lambs were born dead. . ft was found that all they lacked was a faint trace of co- balt. Then they became healthy, fertile and bere healthy lambs, So this idea of trace chemicals as a dietary addition to build our resistance against deficiency. ail- ‘ments seems sound, It might even help us against germ. or virus- alseases, too. typing and p het ad (Copyright 1950) \ ase pct oo ot Xmas - abundance. * Chat- ° ateg saat re =e | g “or burned, Your solution is quite. TO MARRY AGAIN? — of the Shah of Iran, steps from a _ tn Rome. At right is her mother. is reported taking the way for a princess have Bubble Gum Appeals to Buster the Pooch NORFOLK. Va- o?—Buste: ' yeddish-brown spanmie! owned by the H. L) Nichols familys. likes his bubble gunr After~a bil, of chewing Buster vullx the gum cith bh s feet while tr tching his nes k * s “I hated gift-buying. Now I can hardly believe it was me!” i Lists and gifts and do-it-yourself wrapping. Bah! Humbug! Then / became knowledgeable. Imperial Whiskey comes handsomely gift- wrapped, free. Now I know holiday giving’s as much fun as getting—with smooth. popular Imperial. Gift-wrapped al no exire cast. $381 45 qt CODE NO. 408 BIENDED. WHISKEY + 86 PROOF + 70% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS © HIRAM WALKER & SONS INC, recently been displavi ing great affection “PEORIA, Lb . ~ UPI Telephoto Princess Soraya, former wife car in front of the Hotel Excelsior. The princess, raised a Moslem, Roman Catholic instructions which would smooth matriage to Prince Raimondo Orsini of Italy The ch 1urch does mot recognize her- Moslem marriage The prince and in public Prices of Drugs High: Says Vet National Tells of Discount. Given by One Firm WASHINGTON 4, Me er of the veterans of World 1 of the U.S.A. has charged that profiteering by seme drug firms is depriving many aged citizens of rehef from illness tUPT) arthy, mational Charles command- War McCarthy said yesterday these “unreasonable profits cannot be defended.’ He praised the sub- committee headed by Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn) week completed the first phase of hearings on drug prices. \ieanwhile, the Bakery and Con- fectionery Workers Union (Ind.) took «action to . combat what it termed ‘skyrocketing’ drug prices. The union announced it had ‘d to buy mail order medi- cal supplies at a 25) per cent discount tPrahve + * Organization of Washington had agreed prescriptions vitamins, baby sickroom supplies, general health aids and The union said “ug Service, Inc to, sell needs, other medical items. to the: est mated 80,000 members at a dis count . - \ Colorado newspaperboy . tra retired more recently as a. carrier 10 devote time to. college studies; accumulated a $5300 ~an jings* account in eight vears from his Raper route earnings MANY GIFTS ARE WORTH THE GIVING... BUT THE BEST OF ALLIS,’ u me MORE TIME FOR LIVING... . WITH A ” : , KitchenAid 5 Tone BY HOBART! » /// MAKE YOUR HOME - HAPPIER WITH A NEW APPLIANCE Ste) ) cae + Choose from: Bujit-in 2 YEARS 70 Si gees . THERE'S A KitchenAid MODEL FOR EVERY KITCHEN! Free-standing cabinet (illustrated) Dishwasher-sink combination \ - Open Every Night ve 9 P.M. ' ~-) Until “Your Appenee Spiilas Portable 2 PAY! — Convertibie-portabie a "Cash " 2 SEE-LIVE-DEMONSTRATION AT OUR STORE Commander which last - # Pose OE i ii ilk sail ati aaa te Ana tetas tes . if 2 * ws \ ae wi 8 " ‘ ee et as _THE, PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1959 a aig - 2 i . ~ _FEDERAL'S OPEN EVERY NIGHT cd 9 FEDERAL I dept. stores DOWNTOWN ANB <<. *- DRAYTON PLAINS. - Dream lingerie for wide-awake angels Take her breath away with -@ sheer nylon gift ensemble = The pegnoir floats from her shoulders, blooms at her neck. In lavish ruffles. Gown is waltz-length, exquisite! ea The set é poieti { boy f x Attractive, exquisite lace- : frosted precious nylon slips *s She'll feel precious as a jewel in these lacy, sheath beauties. White lace and matching. medallions adorn the bodice, hem .. . stream down the front. 32 too. Half slips, sixes S-M-L .................. 2.99 ype Gala sparkling quilted pop- over and tricot toreadors Lounging glamour in this pert gift pop- over that sparkles as she moves. Sleek tricot toreadors for slinking. Red or white and black. 32-38 in group. <<" fri 3 # - Di ol € Gift robes vee warm for winter comfort. AB Pretty new corduroy duster Cuddly and sweet, fashion beloved by all feminine hearts! Demure Puritan collar, rayon satin streamers, push-up sleeves. Washable. In pink or bive._ Luxurious quilted nylon robe | She'll feel pampered as o lomb in this lovely nylon tricot robe. It glistens with gay trim, a weled emblem. Assorted fashion cote Misses sizes 12 to 20. sinaeer rin 1 a just Say: at Federal's + RF IRI og Mejud nylons make fine gifts fer every ‘he 15 te 195 pr Sheer nylens fer all oc- easions in 15 and 30 denier evening and daytime sheers. New dark and light shades! Full-fashion and seam- free. In proportioned lengths. Sizes 8 to 11. Stretch tights for the gals of all ages ” Stretch nylons that are ; ‘knitted to fit your legs « properly. Gift-shop now! Tots',. 4-6 Teens’, 10-14 .....1.69 Women’s, $-A-T....1.98 Holiday headliners to top a brilliant season | “A. Roses blooming on this + damuray femi-__ / nine velvet pill BOX.........-ss-ongeeareen .99 B, imported pleated satin shell adorned with @ big rose... usecase 3.99 _C. Velvet clip covered with an array of multi-colored. BIOssOME, «0.00.0... cay el mA Pe spi Ny ge pet ary ciated, Pail i PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 16, ¢ fs By JIM LONG FARMINGTON. TOWNSHIP | “Justice of the Peace James P. Lawson said peor that he~ will/t® ag esasshe Jew d arrested last Friday. Nelsin was arrested. by. town-|ing ship police on a complaint signed by Township Supervisor Curtis H. Hall for not having a Pere an SST | ay into his new office at 31547 13- Mile Rd, Lawson ‘also said that he has granted Nelson's attorney, Alien C, Ingle, a 3-day postpone- “ment so that he may prepare~ his case. +e “As the. township justice I was) required *to issue the warrant against Nelson, but I do not have). to hear’ the case,’’ Lawson said. * * * | "Where two justices in a town-) ge ship are involved I think it would be best to drop out-of the hearing and call in a vigiting judge and that is exactly what I intend-to do,”” Lawson explained. "Ingle said he asked for the postponement to gather more information on zoning and. build- ing ordinances in the township. “Yesterday, I went to the town- ship offités to check their book of | ordinances and found that it hasn’ t} been kept up té date,” Ingle said. 3 wat buildinglof a building without a permit.” n newspapers,” Ingle saidy “but” a building code“ by reference in, don’t feel that I should wade January 1955 that had been set. eight years of old editionsjup by the Buildin Officers Con-: get the information I want.” ference of America, Inc. ‘7 * * * The state allows this ype al _ "Nelson has .béen charged jn |adoption, he said. atio ft Ingle ‘NO CASE? salle gig ton ote wikt,| “Since the township has not is- ing ordinance. However, they both |* sued zoning permits ‘and the build- = med. with, the occupaucy; eecupies was approved Nov. 4, 1. don’t think the. township has a case against Nelson, " Ingle. said. | * “Bat now. that they have start. | ed we will.see if we can niake them regret it,” Ingle said, The feud started last week after. Nelsgn had been arrested and stat es “told me. they zoning permit for years. Instead nny have been issuing building only.” W Naled Lake eVo ing Lis Faces Legal Technical WALLED LAKE — A resolution; contest their legality,’ Walled Lake) asking the secretary of ‘state to attorney Albert Herzog said, file a petition in Circuit Court re-' ~*~ we quiring electorates who. have not “A court opinion would solve registered since Oct.-1, 1959, to|the problem once and for ail,” " he’ re-register was adopted by the ‘said, Walled-Lake Council last night. The legal * * * about when Walled Lake became “The sole purpose of the move a city in December 1954, he said. * «x * Ingle added he would ask a writ) of mandamus in Circuit Court. against the township clerk to find out why a township ordinance book | isn’t made available to the public: as-_required by, state law. “There isn’t a zoning or agie | on record in the book,” _ ‘said. The Township Zoning Ordinance went into effect Nov. 22, 1951, he said. IN. NEWSPAPERS “The ordinances have appeared | Clarkston Church Plans Saturday Night Movie CLARKSTON — The third movie! of the year has been scheduled /™ for 7:30 p.m, Saturday in the safc-| tuary of the Clarkston Methodist, Church. L * * * A riotous Comedy, — Keepers,” starring Tom Ewell and Julie Adams, deals with a lovable’ two-and-a- half year-old boy who causés a dilemma when he‘ toddles, to his grandmother, pulling a little, _red wagon filled with real money. ; * * * Area residents have been invited to attend the film showing, spon-it sored by the Margaret Richards Circle of the Methodist church. | ners to prepare an urban renewal “Finders - is to put the voting rolls in order iin case someone should want to At*that time many persons living: within the boundaries of Walled Lake had thei voters’ registration 7 transferred from Commerce Town- Troy, Pushes *" TT he Urban doubted by the state attorney, who "Renewal said those persons who had their records trdnsferred may not be: ! & | ts « qualified to vote. Action on the resolution had been TROY — A move toward neigh-/held up two weeks by the council 'borhood conservation of the area until all members were present. ‘near 15-Mile and Livernois roads) ‘here would be no expense to has been taken by the Troy City, Walled Lake as far as the court Commission. : | ease is concerned, Herzog told we ok UF | the Council. Members. have authorized plan-; “The onk¥ cost to the city would be for the re-registration,’ Herzog said. The council rejected the ; ° lotfer to obtain two parcels of land | If approved, the plan will be ‘in Carole Acres if the city would submitted to the federal govern- pay delinquent taxes on the prop- | ment with a petition for funds. jerties, plan for the section bounded, by iLiverfiois, 15-Mille, Eastport And. also * * * James Carey, Planning Com- The two lots, one nearly three mission head, said other neighbor. sores. are under water and the hoods also may qualify for the .oyneil felt that should anyone get same type of improvement pro-jurt in the area they would be gram, ‘libel to any action taken against * * * ‘them, City Manager David Hasse re- An ordinance requiring all taxi lassured residents .of the area toi'cabs in the city to. have meters be included in the present plan was introduced and then withdrawn) in other communities could, nade borhood conservation rather than cabs (slum clearance. be : erin of court over a traffic ing permit for the offices Nelson'to return to his court with e-ticket: ~ \dismiss such tickets, if the person technicality came legality of the transfer was: that it “is a program of neigh- until a further check of, metered! Mrs, ved = at a press conteretibe that supervisor Hall was being viewlie- tive in signing the complaint. . Nelson said that Hall was “sore” ‘because he bad cited his son for | ticket j * * Nelson said he had cited Michael ball, 18, because he had told him: written for not having 4 drivers ‘license on his person. “I told him explicitely to return ‘to my office and we would sbe ‘what could be done about dismiss ing it. The.general practice is to i i | } | ean prove they have one.” “However; Mike went. to the state, police post jn Redferd te _ have the ticket dismissed. “T feel that he went against my, ‘word and [ cited him for contempt’ ‘of court.” _ Young Hall said that Nelson did | —not—tell_him__to_return,- 4 Supervisor Hall said. Monday that he had not been vindictive in -sign-; ‘ing_the--complaint: against Nelson. "The timing of these two mat-! ters was coincidental,” Hall said. MSUO Hosts Area Press at Banquet nh aa « land County area, their wives and husbands were hosted at a- ban- uet last night at Michigan State ‘University Oakland by college staff :members. ne '-MSUO Chancellor Durward. B. Varner and Mrs. Varner welcomed publishers, editors and writers to, ithe affair held in the newly dedi- cated student center. He expressed his appreciation for their technical assistance in launching the new! university before the public. * * ‘* Following hors d’eeuvres, a char-| . coal broiled steak dinner was'~ served. The student choir present-| ed a medley of Christmas songs under the direction of Mrs. Charles Himelhoch. Poinsettia plants were given to the women. a ————— Union Lake Association Discusses Various Art tic of and Abstract’’ was the subject f discussion at the Tuesday eve-! branch of the American Assn. of University Women. Mrs. Howard E. Scharfenberg was hostess, She was assisted by Mrs. J, R. Huntley. Taking part in the program were! Scharfenberg. Ellen Arro, Mrs, C,-J. Odell. Mrs, Donald C. _'Smith and Mrs. Wendell Strait. ag Sa oN oe Oe ee ey ee a CAST O—te—o = YOU’LL FIND THE SMARTEST IN CHRISTMAS GIFTS FOR BOYS, AGES 12 TO 20 AT Members of the press in the Oak-) iLyon Twp. OKs ‘School Bond $615,000 Issue, Wins Approval by 143 Votes;; § : Final Plans Due “LYON TOWNSHIP =~ Approval} ‘of 8 $615,000 bond: issue for cons struction of a 20 room’ elementary school was. given .yestefday by ‘property owners here. _The bond -issue passed 496 to School Superintendent Frank - Bartlett said that final’ plans for the new schoo| will be drawn Mp immediately and bids for its construction. will’ be advertised as soen as possible, “The new schoo] will be built.on property already owned by the school board just south of South) ‘Lyon city limits and east of Pon- tiac trail. 4 x« * * “If éverything gées according to! plans we should have the school| ready for occupancy by Februar y 1961," Bartlett said. “Because of the increased en- rolintent, -however, the school, ' designed to house elementary pupils, wil) have te be used for both junior high and elementary students until we construct an- | ether new school, possibly three “or four years from now,” Bart- lett added. Long. range plans call for the | ‘construction of a new high school classes to the present high school. * + Members of the school board: have stated they are confident that | the new school can. be constr ucted | without increasing the present’! eight mill levy that has prevailed | in the school district for the past several years, Yesterday's eleetion was the second attempt by the school beard to have a bend propo- sal approved this year, ‘In--Mareh, two proposals went ibefore the voters, One called for ‘a 4-mill increase for operating | purposes, and the otber asked ap- proval of a $450,000 bond issue. Both proposals vere defeated then by less than 50 votes. (mill increase only. It was ap- ‘proved 843 to 603. “Art — Expressionistic, Realis-| + NEW YORK .(?—Beverly Aad-| jland, 17, has filed a $14,000 suit fe State Supreme Court against the, ‘Hayes Storage Co. here. She says the firm won't give: ‘her back the clothes actor Errol’ Flynn left there for her before ‘his death. and the shifting of the junier high ' In April the school board set/| lanother specia) election on the 4 ‘Beverly Files Suit to Get. ning meeting of the Union Lake ‘Clothes Flynn ‘Gave Her PIONEERS PLAN’ PARTY plans for a gala Christmas part officials of the Clarkston Pioneer members are all past 60 years of_age. * » — ~Completing ‘ Pontiac Press Phote vy, Thursday, are left, are Mrs. Charles Jones, secretary; James Club, whose Wright, treasurer; Lee Clark, and president; From Ada Scrace, vice president. Clarkston Pioneers All Ready i By REBA HEINTZELMAN CLARKSTON For several /weeks lively oldsters “tere--have ibeen planning their annual Christ-; mas party to be held at the Com-, /Munity Center-at noon tomorrow. | | The group is known throughout “lthe area as the Pioneers. The Orion Votes Jan. 27 LAKE ORION—Voters in Lake Orton will decide whether to renew the 30-year franchise with Consumers Power Co. in a spe- | cial election Jan. 2%. x *& In addition to setting the elec-_ tion date, the Village, Council Monday night amended = the town's water ordinance raising rates $1.50. quarterly. Water rates within the village limits will be raised from $3.50 | to $5 and outside from $7 to $8.50 per quarter. or * * new schedule into The goes | effeet Jan. 4, FREE PARKING!“ Authentic University Sizes 12 to 20 Tailored by ‘‘Dunbrook’’ they‘re, the most. popular suit on the campus today. Fine wool * hopsackings, worsteds and flannels: of the “xbetter grades. A suit he'll be delighted to own ond | proud to wear. . N NN ‘A Gilt He'll nee . By “Duitbrooke” _ he smartest styles including the popular blazers and ivys me g boys ue so much, A great’ down or ors are bright, the _ type. Basy to la IS Ofte Parking Ticket = at ve of dog ses : a " . ay "SPORT - By “Rob Roy” Your boy never has enough shirts Hke these — whether: he likes Ivy,- button- 2" °. cd BoY’s WORLD Styled STUDENTS’ SUITS 29° | a * +* PILE LINED TOGGLE COATS One of NEW BULKY KNIT ‘PULLOVERS By Robert Bruce the most popular. styles today fine quality lambs wool & orlon, Sev- eral choice colors. Sizes 12 to 20. ‘5” You Don't Need 60, on Consumers Power =" . stripes and solids. for Annual Christmas Dinner members past 60 years of ake in| ihias helped mi any members of the | clude retired people from all walks clab: ‘Wright’s wife Myrtle, 77, of life, Many, well past retire-|also a Pioneer and hoth walk the /ment.age, are still active business five long blocks from their home j people. to the Community Center. There is Lee M. Clark presi- _* * * ; deat we the group, whose gfeat- | The oldest member is Robert oe ather ar ane the Dossin with a healthy 95 year ston i one Village of Clark: | record. Myra Wieland runs a close ston ete second at 94, and “Uncle” Joe Ammand has hit a-old mark, His appearance belies his age, 78, and since his retirement as 'manufat turer he has catablished| Lan insurance business on _ Main) _ the 93 year The “main spring’ and orig- tnal organizer for the Pioneer elub is a young Clarkston ‘A Daroff of Philadelphia has i#ek captured all the European authenticity ae of line, yet has given it a genuine # > ¢ American flavor. See it today fr! in Espresso Stripes and Diagonals : specially woven for this model. $65.00 and $75.00 ee ee ee ae See your convenience... ovr Extended Payment Pian ChCke Va SO DAYS +: 6O DAYS ‘1 90 DAYS _ Both § Evening Until Christmas * + _* eee Re ee ey Stores Open Every a Woe A aE P Sm Bis a fa a sO Downtown Pontiac 51 N, Saginaw peetltelane Tel-Huron- Center Telegraph at Huron \ ee SN Oe are ge eee a eo 5 4 re * Youll agree the Continental is even beller when it has - ne you'll like Bie, 2 SS SSS ee =65% 46442545 a a ES ee Ee eee ee ee eS e's ee ee _ P sate 4 ae e COCOONS aa aaababaaahaoaah I For gift or your own home fibergias planter in) handsome “walnut finished stand. holds philodendron which i deco- ~rated with Christmas: toys and balls. Stands about 40 inches high + ee a a i Ee ee eee Beautiful, ‘crystal wédding ,bow! tilled to overflowing with Christmas greens, agtificial col- otful fruit and candle. - 2 Phone FE 2-0127 | Karras aamnanpmemboae.s ee Se oe oe riacndin aad Sane me JAS es e Philodendron ieltiial 7° _ Distinctive. floral arrangements to give your home charm, | “warmth, graciousness during this wonderous season. - is. . . Haeger tions white bird - cage s J r r * ae \ # Assorted Christmas the background for From the Workrooms of PEARCE. FLORAL COMPANY . , Carnations and Candle See how really lovely Ceramic ’ filled with natural holly, Christmas balls and beautiful carna- thts ar rangement container pine cones, Cheery Door Swag | $ B00 S Crystal and Fruit - ? Open Daily 8 A. M. to 9 P. M — Open Sundays Until Christmas ~ greens form the perky which holds brightly colored balls. APADARDAAD DDD BMWA vw ww ww Angels and Candles A milk glass bow! holds the. cherubs. 50 Yuletide candle, assorted Christmas ) green, and -variegated holly, flocked 50 branches Dey PMA HABA ARDMAG 2D hSBARIDEDDDdAzAMEAD EWM AzwWMDBD DVDs a Bh ReK wes WARES aes Ceramic and Carnations Usual yet striking because the _white ceramic container sets off the beautitul carnations, greery holly, cones and bright tree balls. A candle tops it all 5. wh FLORAL COMPANY a 559 Orchard Loke Avenue Te he >Re D RMD EA RC Deliveries to Detroit Daily i ha RMR RAR AAARARHRTT AI rei. ee eee ee re ea ee 4 & & ee ee Te ee en eee eee nee Pe | tt ill lieth re a = T f Leal | dy “day ry a THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNES DAY, DECEMBER 16, 1959. “Mow about’ a big smile?” says Lambertus VanTuyl as he snaps a picture of some very special, guests at the VanTuyl home on Lakeside drive. Posing are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Willem Cor- _nells VanTuyl of Landsmeer, Hollané#; who-will visit * with their son, daughter-in-law and grandchildren, Neal, John and Carolina VanTuyl until Dec. 27. couple will fly to Los Angeles, Calif., to visit a daughter before leaving for Holland on March 1 * Pentiac Fress Photo The 3. Pres byteri an Groups Complete Month’s Meeti tings Study groups of the Women’s Assn. of the First Presbyterian Church have completed their | De- cember meetings. The January-March group met) at the Pemberton Toad home ef: Mrs. John Main for luncheon Tues- afternoon. Cohostesses weré’ Mrs. Ed Rightmire and Mrs. Rob-| ert Will. | Officers installed were Mrs. | H. J. McGrath, chairman; Mrs. M. A. Benson, vice chairman; Mrs. John Peterson, secretary; and Mrs. Will, treasurer. A Christmas program under the direction of- Mrs. Benson - -included | a reading by Mrs. Phillip Meacham of a. Christmas story, ‘“The Boy in Nazareth."’ Canned goods were as- | senbled for a Christmas basket, and gifts were exchanged. | Following the singing of carols, | retiring chairman Mrs. H. E. Me- Culloch was presented with a gift! from the group by Mrs. W. Dz. Thomas Jr. The meeting concluded with the reading by Mrs. McGarth of John Peck's poem, “Rejoice.” i annealing a ; 1 Professional PERMANENTS Styled as YOU Like It! HAIR. CUTTING — raat TINTS i IMPERIAL BEAUTY SALON 219 Auburn Ave. FE 4-2878 No Appointment Necessary EDITH STENSON, Owner Start the ~-New Year With a Relaxing Cruise to the Sunny Caribbean “Let Us Help You Plan Your Trip” BIRMINGHAM: | TRAVEL SERVICE | GRACE PLUMMER REILLY 2 379 Hamilten Bi 4 * Lil ' MI 4-711 | ——_____——— | BONGO | DRUMS | | ‘From $3” Calbi Music ‘Open Mon, & Fri. Nights Tig N. Saginaw 'Friday: afternoon for Iuncheon. As- jand games. sell Eames, i) wood, ‘change of : poad-home-of Mrs._C,-J.Nephler. , A short business meeting was) , opened by Elaine Malone's read- Guest of the group was Mrs. L. S. Robertson. * * * Mrs. W. H. Marbath opened her ‘Neome. drive. home to members ‘of the February-December group sisting were Mrs. Robert Sigler, ‘Mis.' Frank. Wilson and Mrs. Da-| ‘vid Gilpin. Mrs. B. B.. Kimball presented | idev otions and directed group sing- ing of carols. Mrs. Ted Panaretos |accompanied Mrs. Kimball’s vocal solo. , Retiring president Mrs. Roy Fosbender was presented with a gift by incoming president Mrs. Willis Brewer. The program concluded with the distribution of Christmas surprises Guests present were Mrs. Pan- ‘aretos, Ella Reitz, Eleanor Kelloff, Mrs. Marvin Copeman, Mrs. Mack Burford and Mrs, Baqi VanDyke. Thirty- five members. of the July- August group gathered Friday at being studied by the Marbach stu-)} dy group. Committee chairman Mrs. Donald McCandless led dis- cussion on the charter at Thurs- day evenuing's: meeting at the home of Mrs. William Olmstead. Reparts were given by Mrs. William Cox, Mrs- James Wilkin- son, Mrs. Olmstead, Mrs. John Mc-; \Grath and Mrs. Richard Irwin. Following the meeting a sale was held of Christmas wares made by group members. Mrs. Donald Kennamer and Mrs. McGrath served dessert and cof- fee. Not ’Folly’ Season Now’s the season to be jolly; it's not the season for folly. ‘Turn off illuminated Christ- mas decorations before leav ing home. Admission rates in U.S, hospi- tals for the treatment of appen- dicitis have been cut almost. in - affection. | Secondhand . | Clothes Need Something New CHICAGO — Passing one ‘child's clothes along to a younger one may be psycho- logically damaging for both recipient and former wearer. That's what child ‘psycholo- _ gists, surveyed .by the -Gar- ment Dyers Guild of America, Psychologists said'the young- er child inwardly resents the fact that he -is not considered important enough to warrant new. clethes. The older child, meanwhile, may be harboring some ‘“‘nor- - mal jealousy” resulting from attention to this relative new- comer in the family—a younger | brother or sister+ And, say the psychologists. he may view the transfer of clothes — despite the fact he's . outgrown them — as another “sign” of transferred parental ’*~ * The psychologists didn't -rec- ommend elimination of the hand-me-down system. Rather, they suggested a change in . the clothes’ coloring, that buttons be changed. If the old garment has .silver but- tons, try brass ones when it's being handed-down. Wf a coat has a dog-eared fur collar, consider replacing it with another kind of fur. If no fur? Try adding fur — collar and cuffs — for a high fashion look. « There are six million ‘“compul- , sive gamblers’’‘in the U.S. today, . according to the Catholic Digest, | which says there were only three! and. 3 a | half million in 145. i half since 1980. STAY ALIVE LONGER VITAL HEALTH FOODS PAULTS SHOE STORE 35 N. SAGINAW STREET : Serving Ponftac Over 75 Years Open Friday Nights ’ul 9 | 8-1981 740 W. Huro FE ACEOSS FROM. NEW POST OFFICE | chocew: ee een) cee eee ae 6 ee ae | the West Iroquois road home of! |Mrs. Robert B. Oliver for lunch. | ;eon. Cohostesses were Mrs. W. Rus-/ Mrs. Harold Black- Mrs. Fritzi, Stoddard and | Mrs. D. b, Brown. Christmas readings, Light Through the Window” “What We Think Christmas Is,” were given by Mrs.,J. Léster Brown and = Mrs. Graham. Gifts were gathered for the na-, tional mission in Arizona. An ex-| white elephant * gifts among the members ‘followed. Mrs. W. Ross Thompson was “The The next meeting will be Jan. 15-af the home of Ethel and Vera. ; Bassett. * * * The annual Christmas tea of the | September-October group was held Friday afternoon at the Cherokee! ling of ‘‘Merry Christmas.’ Assisting were Mrs. Ira Haddrill,| Mrs..Frank Gerls and Mrs. Charles Allen. * * * A Christmas dinner was the set- iting for Friday evening's meeting, | | | i | | and — Edward || * guest of the group. : { of the Flora Shelly group at the) Cherokee road home of Mrs. Al- | lan’ H. Monroe. | Assisting were a W. H. Leh- man and Mrs. W. iAmong the guests were Mrs. Gels- ‘ton Poole, Mrs. Carol Boylé, Mrs. ‘Earl van Dyke, Mrs. C. A. Harris, _Mrs. Hugh Little, Mrs. Hubert Hill and Margaret King of De- troit. Program chairman ‘Adah. ‘Shel. ly presented. storyteller Laura “FE 53-8222 | ; Cobb who related the tale of the Nativity. Mrs. S. E. Minard gave the invocation, Games were- directed by Miss: - Cobb, followed by group singing of earols under the leadership of Mrs. Olive Lord. A dinner meeting Jan. 15 at the church is planned. * * * 4 A chartef for.Christian action is IRISTMAS % SPECIAL ~ a ay ge f \ oe ; "TONY’S * Main Floor Regular $10. 50 -Permanents Only 50 Reser _ Shop 35 W. Heren PE 9-7186. . van Riper: | In white, NYLON JEWEL CARDIGAN ~8.98 and 10.98 ~ Pearl and sequins trim our orloén holiday sweater. y or black, Sizes 34 to 40. And EXTRA SIZES. —ALOUSE \. +5, 98 and /, 98 - Thidked detail and feminine laces | jon nylon tricot, White pink, powder blue, beige! Sizes 32 to 38. pink, light blue TRIGOT 7 8.98 and 10.98 on 8.98 and 10.98 Hi bulk in cable stitch, “ % Pleated plaids or solid colors, small collar and decorator 2 e 5 ons « buttons. White, black, . 4% *\ and combinations. This > red, green, beige. E ‘ year's classic makes a - 4 Sizes 32 to 40 and welcome gift. ‘ EXTRA SIZES. ° <* & . Misses’ and junior sizes | 4 ‘ + $ \,...3.98 an 5: 98 / - \ eee and © - 7 Behold ..... the beautiful, : . colorful combinations in, ° Fi a ', & F pthilaielan blends or Trimmed to fit and flatter See. 32 . ae “ in plaid or Solids. Corduroy, oa ee aes oe’. flannel, or orlon blends. , : * Sizes 8 to 16.. * * g y. d \ ~" * es aAS { Linda L. Lankford Weds 400 he trek. In sizes 4-7-10, each ad. ,@ueen’s expression was habit- usts to the 2 next larger. sizes nally dour, the artist made it Rasy sewing a pleasantly pensive, Made of one piece Pattern x8! - She had a habit of thrusting trensfer pattern sizes smpl 45-6; out her lower lip; he’ does not medium TX large 1d1-}S in. Show this. He did not change luded .in one ‘pattern her coloring, bone structure or Send thirty-five cents veoms: the size of her eyes. But he tor this pattern—add 3 cents ior” did soften her whole expres- each pattern for Ist-class mailing sion so that what merged in Send to The Pontiac Press 124 ne ‘portrait Was" charming. Needlecraft: Dept. P.O. Box 164. put being a aoe with: ‘ } } . Old ¢ ¢ Cheisea Station, New York 11. In. reality, Queen Victoria X.Y. Print plainly Pattern Num could have looked much like -ber, Name,“Address and Zone this if shé had chosen te do New! New! New? Our 1960 Laura, so But she rarely smiled and Wheeler Needlecraft Bogk is ready habitually frowned. NOW! Crammed with exciting. , ro * unusual, popular designs to cro- More than 7.000 head of cattle chet. knit, sew, embroider. quilt, are condemned each year by the “free—3 quilt patterns, THE PONTIAC PRESS, Mr. and Mrs.! Cecil E. | Lankford of | North Sanford: street i marriage of Linda Lau to’ Lon’ Brown, | “son of Vr. and Mrs. C. Doughas - Broun of Going street, | Saturday at the First | Baptist Church. sl MRS. LQ\ BROWS Better Be Brighter ‘handing you, A couple of psychi- iatrists- at Duke made a study of the marriages of jolder couples and discovered that in the least-happy ‘much higher number of wives are’ ismarter than their husbands than riage can | be happy when the wife lin the happier marriages: | prising. A woman likes to look | | up te a man and it's net easy iwho defers to his judgment, iquotes his opinions, viously looks up to him is bound $4 Than Your Fiancee By RUTH MILLETT superior to her in, intellect isn’t, announce the | Memo to men: If you want to| likely. to. sit ‘arounii feeling that she has giyen up her own chances increase your chances at shaving, SP ‘at a successful career to make a * their daughter \a happy marriage, pick a girl whO/home for a husband, is not quite as bright as you are That is no old wives’ tale I'm That often happens when a very bright woman marries a University who tient. with his ress and begins to regret having given ed her own ambitions, = = About the only way that ‘a mar marriages a, is smarter than her husband is for ithe wife to pretend it isn't so. But that's a little hard on gbhe.wife wh) has ‘to keep up the pretense through the years. The results aren't really sur- to look up te anyone you know ivn’t-as bright as you are. ~~ ke Also,.a man’s ego needs a lot and who ob- is hen there's no preterise neces- Those are just same of the r WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 16, 1959 trisk. The girl who asks you for] _jhelp may be so bright she knows |when: to play dumb. ° , reach more ready-to-buy prospects): ‘jin their markets. Their newspaper not-so-bright_ man. She gets im- — To Mark 25th Year. Mr, and Mrs. Len Mogg of Dick avenue will observe their _ Dec, -24. silver wedding anni- versary at an open house Sun- day in the American Legion | all on Auburn avenue. y They will receive friends and relatives from 2 to 4 Laan Retailers know that newspapers ads are seen by more people—in-| cluding teen- agers, According to Gilbert Youth “Research, 94 per cent of tfem are regular news-' paper readers. ‘ DOOR "MIRRORS: A gift of true elegance* full length mirrors thade with So a smart man ought to be: « ‘of bolstering. And having a wife Smart enough to choose a wife — who! Who is not quite as bright as he twin-ground Pittsburgh plate glass — individually # cartoned, with clips for easy installation. In Five. Widths, All.68 Inches. Long .o ~ "Priced from $16.95. ‘3 (AS FEATURED ON THE GARRY MOORE SHOW) SORA OS a The curls ore soft and lovely. The hair is lustrous ond beau- ” tifully manageable: =. The styling is as. modern as tomor- row. Visit our salon for CUSTOM. “a $1750 aie $10” Includes Cutting, Oil Creme Svenipes: and Style Wave NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED — Immediate Service Open Friday ‘til 9 P.M. to make his ego purr with con- : . -. . tentinent. ~ sons why the girl you ought to PONTI AC Gl. ASS C0. , 1 7 . . _ ; marry isn't the one who offers to’ A dr 6B bey al In First. Baptist Ch urch SATISFACTION COUNTS help you get through college chem-: n e eau . on < oe : Then there's the matter of a istry, but the one who asks you bE 23.W - . : . ‘ | est Lawrence St FE 6441 “ “andlelight nuptials of Linda Lou el train featured a velvet bustle wife's being satisfied with her lot. to help her. ’~ > _ 2nd Floor, Pontioc State Bonk Bldg. WE 5.9257 Candienght nuptials of nga One a ‘ "|The woman who marties a man’ But even then you're taking some | Lankford and C. Douglas Brown bow. . we Sp pen _ _ were read beneath an archway of Her fingertip. veil was secured | holly and red berries Saturday in DY @ velvet headpiece: studded . _ with seed pearls. Mounted on aj . First Church. Whit sleighs, placed in the chancel, were Baptist € white Bible were white rosebuds, _stephanotis and ivy. ——_— _—_—— oo a + . filed with Sevtch pine and poin-‘~ Attendants in red velvet, “with settias. matching shoes and headpiece,’ carried white fur muffs topped fows were pledged to the Rev. ~~ , ve ers. Bicagee | . “with red carnations, holly and red werald HH. Rapelje of Memorial’ 4)eamers Baptist Church in the presence df tap nuren ui the} Patricia Brown, sister of the bridegroom, was honor maid, with bridesmaids, Mrs. Edward Lank- iford, Sandra Arnold and Mrs. E1- ‘don Moritrose, all of Pontiac. The ‘bridegreem's cousin, Linda Brown, | appearéd im green velvet and car-, ried a white, muff topped with, carnations. Parents of the couple are Mir and’ Mrs. Cecil E. Lankford of Nor th Sanford avenue,and Mr..and: Mrs Lon Brown of Going street. The floor-length bridal gown of white delustered satin, was stvled with fitted b&dice, appliqued with ». green Flower — girls: wi velvet and seed pearls. The ® . ok eve ne sed ne ; hap. Debby and Karen Landmesser4 ft LIFT ¥ ch swept into a chap- xe Wil SRITT Which eT i € E wore white floor . length -taffeta, sashed in green velvet. “§ Edward Lankford, stood as best man for the bridegroom. ‘The bride's brother, Donald and James Hefner, seated the guests. After a church reception, newlyweds left for a- motor trip to Niagara Falls, the Catskills and, New York City. A new home on ‘North Oimstead = street, Drayton 'Plains, awaits them on their re- turn. The bride was formerly in the circulation department of The Pon- tiac Press, the Her Portrai ts More Pleasing Than She Was j{NEAs — The Winterhalter portraits of Queen Victoria are charming, And they are a les- son in the creation of beauty. For in the same period that Winterhalter was doing court paintings of the English queen, she was trequently photo- graphed. There is a great gap between the reality of the photographs and the beauty of the paint- _ Yet no one could say that Winterhalter falsified or turned the queen into a pretty doll ‘Actually, his paintings of her are very close to the truth but with this difference: where the INS Slippers that stretch! Snaps do weave—fashioris, home furnishings, U.S. Federal. Meat Inspection ioys, gifts, bazaar hits. In the book ' service as unfit for food because Hurry, serid of “hardware disease" caused by swall owing sharp metal objects. 25 egnts for ee — your «Cups > O = Could Dreamier Than a JEWELED SWEATER Prices 10.95 tg 21.95 < Free Gift W rapping ROCHESTER MICHIGAN = OL: 1-1022 Oper: Evenings ‘tii 9 ‘til Christias i ‘ : * , “] wae sadpadaabain eres eared ~ball point fruit pen Stuff-and nonsense, our frivolous but practical ball point pen... treat yourself or somecne special with this new. ‘‘fruit’’ gift. Clusters gf multicolor fruit mounted on a white Your choice ceramic plate with bal! point pen bananas, lemons cr peaches 2.00 pears hand painted travel mirror Styled by Trina ; You know you are in fashion with Trina accessories. This is the gift that ist always Welcome, Cause what woman doesn't use one. Hand painted to give the . normal and In foam cushioned “Brushed Kid’’ . 2.50 feminine touch. Double lensed _magnified vinyl TWO WONDERFUL SHOPS of; FASHIONS and GIFTS: . 1662.5. Telegraph—Pontiac 245 W. Maple—Birmingham al o Ee) ere Se Bs 8 Rigg te ej soft sheer - PORES at wags wool sheath Ee pate See BE 5 he ds ae Ta The elegant basic | dress takes your © ; favorite jewelry to O Saee H _»-- dress up for the festive days ahead, or a gay scarf for the casual :- hours after! Beige, red and navy. give her the best seamless stockings. Her. favorite nylons in a- beautiful gift box, Regular "or stretch sheers: 1.35 ° 1.95. Gold Hose for Evening Wear 2.50 SRA Ce ose + Sizes 10 to 18. Fashion Gifts 22.95 Gift. Specials travel : alarms} Aluminous dialed travel alarm in assorted colors. Folds shut, Choice of genuine leather cases. Terrific Christmas value! ~~ fashion shop Te. -wash ‘n wear . with easy. care Our softest of soft white arnef and nylon robe. Belted or worn loose (as her mood fancies). Red insignia for a gay touch. Huge rodmy pockets, com- pletely washable, wrinkle resistant, and mat proof. Sizes 10 to 18. 17. 95. Christmas Shop Every Night ‘til 9 All Gifts Beautifully Wrapped! ao _ | We Deliver Everywhére | a, rn , . some ¥ . , > | Bo , . . | ne se AU ny } _ = | _ ___THE PON TIAC PRESS, WEDN ESDAY. DECEMBER 16, 1959” eye Mn sia fo : Hickory Smoked—Sugar Cured : : ) None Sold to Dealers | aOne a we Rose Brand Delicious End Portion Notionar s Fully Cooked ® ; : Canadian Style Bacon SMOK ED Fisher Boy -' Medium Size oe ~ . j Shrimp ......... 5 _ | tele) ») STORES , a Ocean Spray Strained or Whole | Ait berry Sauce .. 2 2 We reserve the right to limit quan- Cran erry auce *.@ | i tities. Prices effective through Sun- | day, December 20th. - : | NOW DOUBLE HOLDEN RED a) = | Pp EDNESDAY! STAMPS Every ° New Ere Powdered or Brown ~ Asparagus = 3°" 69° , ‘ Green Glo | Green Beans oe 49: cs iW 8 Fc tees haa Crites Golden , Cream Corn 4"%:2° 49° Del Monte Blended Sugar Peas 6"%:.)° *4°° Save 12¢ With This Coupon ES Delicious Ginger Ale : VALUABLE COUPON Save 12° R BROWN & ’ 24-0 0 DOMINO POWDERED OR BRO i Vernor’s... & 4-0 $4° Plus Dep 1-Lb. ¢ SUGAR Orchard Fresh Frozen ‘ 6-Oz. Boxes 1-Lb. Reg. Orange Juice 6 Cons 89: Boxes 2/31e¢ 3 Ce. Ks Table Top Frozen ; $ 00 ~ ‘ 6S oo Ba : — Re Coupon expires Sun., Dec. 20th , 5 10-01 1 — . . —— : Price with Coupon at Right ka aU OR OUP Strawberries Pkoe Z SS. aia Yt fo Orchard Fresh COTTAGE Beech-Nut Strained , Applesauce CHEESE Baby Foo ds = w= 35: - Philadelphia CHEESE. All 434-Oz. 29: _ Varieties ee _Jars Assorted Flavors ROYAL GELATIN 8-Ox. Pkg. Large, Sweet end Juicy CALIFORNIA NAVEL | n3 ‘39 c OR NGES .. Top Treat Choco., Vanilla, Strawberry or Neapolites | S44 of L597 ef) wan \ bed 4 rig f SS LIf7Z; “524; Me"! ’ National For The Finest Fruits & Vegetables During The Holey Season! U.S. No. 1 Finest for Baking or Frying Sweet end Juicy Floride Large Idaho Potatoes _. 10%. 79% Temple Oranges 6 « 3% . ICE Halverson Fireproof 3 to 4 Fr. Calif. Red Emperor Christmas at aad 9489 Grapes............ uw 2S Extre Fancy Washington Red Extro Fancy in the ‘Shell _, | Delicious Apples... 2 uw. 4Q* Mixed Nuts...... 2 i 99: . 64 Size Fle. Seediess Pink or White . Calif. Red Diamond Lb. Grapefruit ....... 3 = 35* WALNUTS...... 2 &, 9 cia) — VALUABLE COUPON 4 yy = gy! “ani moi t oot ene "5 With This Coupon |2 nATIONAR Free With This Coupon E is Coupon £ xtra “tc" Stamps |) | 50 Extra “es:" Stamps |: ra Meas” 8 | WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY "PACKAGE - WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY PACKAGE mp iS) 50 Extra nee Stamps : SKINLESS FRANKS | PORK STEAKS | “PURCHASE OR MORE |B ‘ Redeem This Coupon et Your "Redeem This Coupon at Your ; Es . © ES a * NATIONAL FOOD STORE - NATIONAL STORE . =, (Not Including Beer: Wine, Cigarette S) ‘esi wuiyee Set., hase 26th PP Coupon expires. Set., Dee.y 26th. ey Coupon Expires Sun., Dec. 20th I grraso. NY Rocks Pumerette. ot ‘wifale, me yt Hil: NEW YORK (UPL —Colloge toot i} ball attendance rase’ 1.74 per cent fi to-a near recerd of almost 2) mil i lion paid admissions in 1999 ; ii! +” A-national survey Of @20 teams, + a Hh ice Bureau, re -vealed a total attend. iManee of 19,615, 344—an increase of: 304.635 aver the 1858 season. Tt yowas the -sixth straight year om Lutieh attendance increased and| ‘} the ‘national tetal was just short ‘+ ) of the recard—of 19,851 995 set 2n, 2a40 when 34 more teams partick | | pated in the sport “On the basis of average atlénd: - 3 aoe ie anee per fear. it was the greatest 0: Vear ever. The 62. teams. averaged He 1 21,479 each for the season to top uli the previous mark of 31.199 estab. lished. in T95X ‘ $i) Sensibly FA Priced { Haviiiaod | Pontiac s Fas The Pacific Coast, Bast, South and Southwest all experienced sizable g¢ aias while aftendance in the Midwest, Midlands and Reckies was down. - per cent to 2ST 461 with an average of 9.077 fans attending the \ 24) Rames surveyed Other rises bowere 4M per scent ain) the feast, i § CLOTHIERS 1) 4.43 per cent in the South and 4.5] 908 W. Huron FE, 2-2300 || in the Southwest, Decreases were HY 8.95 per cent in the Midlands, 7.55 Finer Wress Suit KReotats il -per cent in the Rockies and a finy » a = : - e 6.21 in the Midwest B. F.;Goodrich ma Wide New Treads Kee70-15 $1245 Growing Store to: CUSTOM TAILORS Plus Tax and Retrmadable Tire € iA NO CASH NEEDED! MASTER NU-TREADS ° livenowne for 222 Fully Guaranteed Any Size Tires. tus Tax and Recappabte Casings ° WHEEL ALIGNMENT , @ Setentificatiy measure & correct caster & camer Attendance in the Far West rose S$9710-15 $1445: 3: Re ue ee apes le i = PS es oe 3 v { te ae : A Au ‘ ie - in See ° xa is * weaned enc pynh es a THE 0: NTLAL “PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DEC EMBER 10, 1959 oii = ulese pd Crowds Almost The. NCAA Service Bureau re ‘ported the national increase was sectional attendance .as 4,973,622 achieved in the face of “lan ex tremeis high incidence of untavor lable weather “’ Officials reported’ fans attending 9379 games. reteased today yy fhe NCAA Serv- fhat 37.6 per cent of their home East's total attendance was 2,99,- ‘games in 1959" were played under ‘unfaverable weather conditions” ‘compared. toe only 25.7 pér- cent in 1958 + De Paul Also Back in Pacific Coast’ # 2,187,461, the Mid. average attendance of 82,589 at | the top 10. - ~~ | lands’ 2,}71,658 and the Rockies! six games for a total of 495,536. | Attendance leaders "by asctions! 192,376 Michigan ranked ‘sscund with | iwere Pittsburgh in the East, with 20 The Soath enjeyed the largest There were 92 teams which aver-; 456,385 édeaeabiind and Landini eee 2. Ay B Soatiors 6). a fa, Lagole 6 aged more {han 10,000 attendance State was thigd with . 408,727. iM 62. Connecticut 60 South Dakota Arizona. St. Coll. 72 sae -d out for 592 games, The Per game, 67 which ayeraged be- | Michigan State (282,327), “Notre ee = Be ed at ine citi 4 s04.a73 tween 5,000 and 10,000, 214 between| Dame (281,153), Jowe (279,400), : The 2,000 and 5,000 and 250 under 2 000.7 Oklahoma (275,828), Hlineis (270, Ohio State was the national | 710), Minnesota” (263,983) and | | Wisconsin (254,972) reunded out * 156, “He Southwest's 2,390,598, the attendance “champ” with an | ~ 228, 282 for six games; Louisiana ~ $tate in the South, with 408,727 in’ ra P ae sewen games; Ohio State in- the ° ¢C age I ‘ieture’ Midwest, with 495,386 in six games; | U-of D.Quint Looks: for: Kreni Our Wire Services” When the first-weekly Associated Press eollege basketball poll comes - out next week, two ftemms who have been out-of the ratings fo! a long time, Detroit and DePiul will be trying to get top recogni tian ; ‘ The Titans from UU at Detroi make their bid to take a spot among the top ten with a pair of igames this weekend which should give the talented Motor City quit tet stérn tests. Detroit with a 5-6 record tras els ta_Bloemington, Ind., tor “a Saturday night engagement against the strong Hoosiers of the Big Ten, and then 18 hours later in’ the Detroit fieldhotise the Titans will face Boston Cot: lege In a Sunday afternoon mat inee, A 74) record by Monday could push | Retro into a high national position, Detroit last received high + werch in the ratings in 1950 when t was ranked 12th but if) wasn't for long “pePaul -the seotrrge cof tire col lege cage world when big Georg Mikan wes throwing his weight arpund 14 venrs ago, is also on the meéve again. * * * The Chicago school won its ath game without « loss by beating 4 Purdue. . 87-05 iast) omight with Howie Cart a o-10 guard hitting for 46 points NBA Standings “Oklahoma in the Midlands, -with | 275,828. in. five games; Texas in the Gj ional | atin ‘ Southwest* with 286:701 in six.-.. games‘ Utah in the Roekies with 76,310 in five games, and Southern " Piuddue suffered ity first lod minutes. But a fiel d goal 4 Dick California in the Fay West, with ..: at the hands of Detroit last week. Soergel "And --young IBA’s — free 999 966 jn! six games, = end and yesterday DePaul made throw carried the Cowboys home” ‘phe bigges¥ per-game average . its win almest as convincing. dn frant ; Sin Francises, “nother former us : westerm (up 12,692 per game) and : , . _iIndiana (up 9,244). The greatest) ~ onal pawer, scored iis {ifs Cade SI 9,2 patest national. power, scored) us 1 Rec. age ate ‘drop from a year ago was suffered Clory i starts Jast myght bj ; Victory in six Marts Jast myht Dy by Tulane (down 19,724 per game) 5 CLASS B Avondele Mercha Oklahoma Stat® edged Tulsa. 41-40, Commerce ‘Lakers. 7 pm Galts. ‘Gril Atlantic Coast Conferencé and the’ increases were enjoyed by North- BLENDED WHISKEY > PENN (downing Denver, 68-62. Canisius __ ,, WEDSSRAN and Rice (down 19,419). ___86 PROOF, 31% STRAIGHT WHISKEY 6 YEARS whipped Loyota of Chicago, 75-68 ; At Pontiac Central _. Three conferences, the Southeast.” ; OR MORE OLD, 69% GRAIN NEUTRAL ‘SPIRITS. 86380 "23° whe 4/S QUART Tee eee GOODREM & WORTS ATO, eae, aut, f of coach Hank Iba pros ided Okla- Hi Y 830 pm homa Stite with its narrow vie seanennll ; The Pistons put veteran” gare ———— tory oovel Tulsa. Phe Plu after trailing 2O17 ath Jfiime. Chucts Noble on the ° 1 , 187 bas , a GUARANTEED Monroe-matic Shocks =o s°..0° 0" ‘ dies’ end ba? ¢ ani “WEDNESDAYS “SCHEDULE he odies’ an en's n Brake Relining S 000 Mile. Guarantee ine k . a om e "¥ Sy 4 : ul euro. BS shad | ICE SKATES}; , “pat RSDAY: <8 HE DULI w ; 75 Completely No vames scheduled Ww a 4 f ‘ 1 . Y ~_ Ww Bs Ladies _§ Skates, 4 to | 4 fa. Installed ¥ & a while Clarenee Red, Loyola's leads prastor so are. tS pm. Speedway 49 Pacific 241 (2.187461 9.077 TA" 1157 W: Huron St FE 2-6967 vs White Swan pm i fi prone? : . Ing scorer, was limited to seven yWca COMMUNITY BASKETBALL Totals 2695 W.615.34 7.278 1.74 nts . At Pontiac YMCA Jeti ichewnaretesnsssndinsmnanicnnonconemnst sansa -ansoansnDUTRRATER seetarnaneanearaeinananmennmennnnnsnnmnseatl porn PCH Pistons vs Pirst C hristian, 6 a . ee rr t ‘ » Tb } rR estes Hi-¥Y vs. Clarkston Ht-¥ A free throw by Moe Tba MP Roe] hestes Hil) Be eee Oe on i iat Traction Proved in SNOW, MUD, ICE Here’s winter driving traction at its best’ and it’s at a new low price! Upto 51% more traction in snow... up to 17% better trac- tion in mud. . smoother, quieter ride on dry pavement .. . an extra season of wear for many motorists. Get Goodyear’s new 3-T Suburbanite now and replace -slip with grip! Also available in sizes for imported and new, compact U.S. cars } MORE PEOPLE RIDE ON GOODYEAR TIRES THAN ON ANY OTHER KIND! OPEN EVENINGS ‘til 9 P. M. + 30 S. Coss Ave., Pontiac GOODYEAR pieblciae STORE “FE 5-6123 PONTIAC MILFORD . “CLARKSTON STATE TIRE SALES ® ~ COOK'S SHELL Seve - BEACH'S STAND. SERV. 508 S. Saginaw 2861 Highland Rd. . Cor, US-10° & M15 FE 4-0687 . MU 4.5085 MA 79? } SPORTING GOODS; GENE-RICHTER’S acs ch beiehiainnieneatt pinintbninh een ras 2 BBB TE 7 SBD BREDA DIDI: RBBB WIT DD DB WS 33.25. “UTICA — 7 oe “HIGHLAND | 2 Storés to 24 E. Lawrence, Downtown | eae r rohieg on a Olt Co. | SMITH'S MOBIL SERV. ‘ Serve You Holiday Shop 696 W. Huron FE 8-3417 en wee | Rio ny sf pola ams ee PAD MPD BR BRB BDRM DP AaabpnndadimDbarrnn dnd dard nies: ae eee o . .. f i Vs we e ki ¢ " a THE PONTIAC: PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DEC KBE RAG, 1059, - Hit in Pocketbook New Jail Term Awaits | t Japanese Court for Painting Own Racist John Kasper . a a The Rambuti Pygmies, who live! ped og ge to Office at Cape boating yeaf for this area was in- jain, hing was requested by the ‘dieated as- Consummers Powe? air Force to permit gathering of Co. here reported 1,958 boats infor mation on color and intensity ‘Passed through its Cheboygan Riv- solid - propellant rocket ex- er locks compared to 1.642 last one ‘year. | This data is needed to de- Varaterehty L 2 : FLICKBAR £ HEATERS. ‘OPEN ALL WINTER Fri. -- Sat. -- Sun. are the. smallest..people in the, S f t Z | TALLAHASSEE, Fia., (Ph a world — not mich more © than four} alety Zone _ | Racist John” Kasper is scheduled © feet ae i ae =| iy ito be released today from federal 2 ee Vv ty P ae , 4 ee neneag VAN NUYS, Calif, (AR)—Paint--prison here and “imrnediately | . ; his own, crosswalk on “hes placed “on a bus for Tennessee i i | Finds ‘No-War’ Clause '* y pinced on a ow maeniee Map and Globe Major Yates Said he Lj Cc tituti P. .. Ventura boulevard: cost dentist Where he faces another six-month ; Misunderstood but UPI. in onstitution ermits Louis J. Friedman $73.55—a $16 sentence, . « ‘ e i | oN ’ Explained Story U.S. Army Stations fine and 963.55 to cover the cost of Kasper , will havé served five ' = : SS i. removing the lines meant he \, = : ; . . , . months of a Sx-month term for ~ * ~ ‘ TOKY — The Japanese Friedmé leaded guilty Tue ; - GAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) Supreme Court rul :t alt at day to violating a. ity ontinane his part in integration violence at — May ae 2 je ome ‘uled «today 1a a) . . @ OY ANC oy nin T, ate arias — Dene Nat Raise the ‘‘no-war" clause in Japan's forbidding painting of streets or uo! : Tenn a 16. He faces . n peli ' constitution does not prevent the sidewalks vous month sentence | i | missile launchings because of a mar F cai bs i , Nashville, Tenn., arising out of a a stationing of American troops He said he. tried without avail : , “1 news service story, lifted the: ban here. The court also said Japan's for fwo years to get ‘the city t dot disturbance during’ school + ‘our? also said Japan's fer Pwo sears fo ge We CHY 10 aorati Here Tuesday. . _ fown armed forces are constitu. Pint acrosswalk for dhe safety Integration there The. commander of the missilp ‘tional of las patient ; — pn test center -said his action el The unt va ; no Crews drilling for off were the ~ fect 24 hours-—was based of a mis | ; \Sman court we ty Blow to. fett . first to dis coves sulphur deposits j i is | ow to fel * * lirs Q Sat , , PDOSITS anatinaratts 1 ine’ ban by. Yat wing hopes of forcing the U.S. Summerfield Mails along the Gulf{.of Mexico in about tescinding of the ban by Yates : | disar » the ; - Cy 1500 , came after a strongly worded. tel- troops out of Japan, disarming the Christmas Cards Early . j nation and neltralizing Japan in egram from Lyle Wilson, vice ithe cold war, WASHINGTON (UPL —Postmas CHRISTMAS ~ president of United Press Inter- I * t ter General Arthur Bo Summer ‘national in Washington, denying, — i At ies / held followed his own suggestion NOVELTIES Yates’ chargés that a combination produced many Lewis ‘said of en 8 : ® * * production of supply base : JACK LEMMON news briefing that the news service x able. ; 4 ful flights of 722? totally unfit for the posit 10M. te Will oe mae BILLY WILDER ‘had violated an agreement not to memorable and colortul Tig oO! His print iples are elastic and he is ne iam Green, as head ima production ~ s jlanguage on occasions ™ hen Lewis{ a | of the AFL Was 4 close friend and >: - : — “ release the launching date. 1c areless with the truth. He has KLAN eB " ) E | As a result, Yates said, for-the was in the forefront of the nationa [no special knowledge of any sub- ally of UMM pal irRed by nen Ate TT 30 a “-.s ge ” ‘Gree Wi t ) y 1:10 - 5:20 - 9: time being he would not brief re- St48* iject.. "L have done a Toto exploring “we LIKE iT ry ‘porters on future military launch-| - Probably the best knewn of all ways x *« * of Bill ism wind and ae ‘pe ue ee ee ol HOT: € Fy ( . 2 en. SECURITY BOX | fiings nor atiow them to cover such Lewis quotes was direéted | tn 1950, Truman, replying to a word there is nothing thee), | NOW! . -[launchings from the press site against the late President Frank- citizen's suggestion that Lewis be “OPO Mere THE BIGGEST BLAST OF ae een eo jearees for i | here “tin Roosevelt. Lewis was trying ‘named ambassador to Moscow, QUICK AND DEAD EXCITEMENT THAT EVER | |1 0 : perature ne ic 9} ee 3 V4" . nn to organize steelworkers and ex- said heowouldn't appoint Lewis dog Repeatedly... Lewis used vivid CAME. CRASHING TO THE PLUS 334" . i” D pected help from FDR, a political | ¢atcher language to. draw: the nation’s WIDE SCREEN! , ; ‘ONLY $1095 Says to ampen ally. Instead, Raosevelt voiced Lewis retorted that “the Presi- attention to the mine aceident toll. : Every scene of it, packed e) Shakespeare’s “plague on both On one occasion he spoke of with the daring” of the B h f T yolir houses” against beth Lewis dent could Ul afford to have more | world's greatest crime- neslihan chatnaeseel oug + 0 Fee and the steel con panies / brains in the dog department 2200,080 “muners Killed ov injured | = y fighters! . - BAROMETERS and Rather Than Base ~-.avor. ike 1 | has many{ (hat it fhe Department of State.” 'D “year period Ae ee eg sabor, Jike Israel, has any’. ; ade. fri “A millioi® and a quarter!’ he «! wrnaye , sari “ Yet wis later made friends milltor i * . ac wee Mass sorrows,” retorted Lewis. Its) I _ told a congressional. commiftee. ;' : one LONGMEADOW: ass. jwomen weep for their fallen arid “It Thad the powers of a Merlin, IN IN TEN | (UPI — yeu want to keep they lament for the future of the | 1 would march that million and | . 5 ; your Christmas tree looking children’ of the wace. | a quarter men past the Congress | TECHNICOL OF SECOND F fresh, sprinkle its branches with | «1 i) behooves one who has IS nm ep ores of the United States+the quick er ers is THOUSANDS water. ‘supped at labor's table and who | and the dead. 3 iad = WILL BE That is the advice of Herbert has been sheltered in labor’s house ; would have the ambulatory att BLOWN _ A. Johnsen, 32, one of New Eng: (4, curse with equal fervor and fine a nuale a je am i ory sranmne : v 70 HELL! | land’s largest Christmas tree ‘impartiality both labor and_ its rles 10° q eC injures c rag the dead after them, : dealers, He disagrees with the adversaries when they become so the Cong gress might see, and I ° theory that a. tree is better pre- locked in deadly embrace = ; would _ the men awhose eyes a served by putting its base in a * ee « Most Rev. Dearden of were shot out and who were dis- - . container of water, i emboweled in the mines crawl in . One time Lewis called fellow f -M c(t “ At 11:45 HUMIDITY x & a ; bor le 1 W alter Reuther “an Detroit Prays or ‘More that procession along the cobble- PLUS: REX REASON in UNDER FIRE 4:00 - 8:00 wag Se een OOF. JOAGED | WastOr i t that the Cong ight ; ; INSTRUMENTS d ‘As itch . i. vee ‘s cut earnest Marist .. inebriated by! to Feel the Call coe them ierailie ig “thelr * bowels SAT. ° « . own, pite vegins to flow to- jp, iberan of his own ver-! | ° ae 4 ; . . “ow “ With every barometer we give | ward the open wound,”’ he ex- ee xe meee after them, . : A ! ‘THE 4-DMAN FOUR FAST GUNS you a circular slide rulethat tells |) ptained. “Then it hardens around — , DETROIT | | Up— The Ro man’ -“Thou shalt not kill, Should that ; Py you how to predict the weather. |’ the base and prevents water = ©@SUgaling leaders of the Amer- Catholic archhishop of Detroit de- not run in the underground pas- - 4] See our weather station in opera- I! trom entering the tree from the #8" Federation of Labor as dolts pjored an acute shortage of priests sages of our great mining industry tain é 7 tion. bottom. at a 1947 labor convention Lewis and ‘deelared a hands off policy in our country?” ‘ “i STARTS } from $495 “I tell my custemers te sprin- said : toward Roman Catholics in public - * * EXCLUSIVE Ist RUN kle water on the branches about “| don’t think the federation ‘life in his first news conference And once Lewis gave tis own O ~ ~— every other day,"’ he said, “‘That has a head. I think its neck has * * * summary of bow his voier had lin the PONTIAC AREA! ! way the tree absorbs enough just grown up and haired over.” “We are working and praying for spoken. He said jf: Ge moisture to keep it fresh looking He ealled the AFL chiefs “fat an increase in vocations to the “I have never- faltered or fatled through the holidays.” and stately asses.” priesthood,”’ the Most Rev. John to present the cause or plead the * * * When Vice President John Nance F. Dearden said. He assumed du- case of the mine workers of this A NEW HIGH IN SCREEN Johnson said there's no harm (ane opposed a union-wanted bill ties of his archbishopric last Jan. country. I have pleaded your case | in putting the tree in a bucket of i, Congress, Lewis roared that 29. from the pulpit and from the public | water, “But it will absorb so lit. Garner was “a Ikbor-baiting ~* platform; . . , and in the. public A ° anniv lames wt} tle water it's hardly worth it,” ’ | oka. Jaying whisky-drinking evil! He said the acute shortage Is press of this nation—not in the ; iP playing. ren 5 ' cutting down expansion of the or} . “ he ald. . fold man.” quavering tones of a mendicant _s . DESK PADS Se ome * * * archdiocese of Detroit. asking alms, but in the thundering i'w | 7 ardo « ¢ i‘niere s os 4 F icr , : For the home and office. Brown, | Harvard has the largest endow-| When President Harry S.Tru- Archbishop Dearden said his aurivoice of the captain of a mighty )s) 4 green, red and grey - | ment-of any of the U.S. universi--man sought reelection in 1948-thority 1s_ ‘strictly * religious in: host, demanding the rights to which Mhealre . ag ties. , Lewis opposed him because Tru--¢ character.” “ free men are entitled al . $730 to $1700 « . oe He said ‘‘We have to assume —_— ' “S that a man in pubtic life is guided! _* ; _ by his conscience and he ‘is bound ' Polaris Blasts Of time for a change ‘ iby the rules of faith and morals | - ™ DRI VE-IN Shwe just as a man in one of the pro- ' sn {tessions in {st Night Test W2,; Oat oa | x we farting with a laugh ana | : , | is area (for a bishop) is not ADE PANAUE . aA ? | only liented and circumscribed, care AN ““ rnirioe’ ae we oda da ia ot tree terror! It-all adds-up to -30- | : _ vy launched it Polaris DUITOING a Mote OF leezing terror! afi adas up i Enjoy Outdoor Pe nl fa J ‘bit the element of compulsion is “submarine * missile on its ‘first | : : fy Wit: always present. A man must follow Aark tact Tupedav nig , Movies All Winter \ # as the dictates of his own con- after-dark i st Tue sday night. Our Theater Eau uF science." It was the first solid-fuel mis . eater ; pped . * a ent . — sile fired at night here and. ap- CON VERTIBLE * With the Famous 7 = af — peared as 4 bright white shaft in : . BERNZ-O-MATIC 1 Mf Ch eboygan River Locks the sky in contrast to the orange i . : ‘ as ball effect produced by liquid-fuel ; 7 | eports Booming 1959 pucker with : N CA ea 8 ume I ™ R 4] troy eo . * * * ‘ CHEBOYGAN (Ph — A record. sources reported the night _* x Oe termine the optical tracking re- ib The locks, closed for the season quirements for the Air Force ds Monday, enable beats to sail be-- Minuteman, a solid-fuel intercon-- 3 3 tween the Great Lakes and inland tinental range ballistic missile . lakes in the northern Lower Pen- which is expected to start. tests ; insula by way of the river. here late next year i] i ge . . _ . HURON [Papa M Starts at THEATER 7:10 -- 9: 15 A flick of the golden berand - you're in control...add more windows, remove any you don't. need, or replace with fresh refills when worn! Re- movable picture case is leather-covered for separate aoe os And Io handsome il OFFICE FURNITURE - ; » ig Buxton- ; longer wear. Complete line of Buxton Watters and Key Cases, $3.95_-to $10 ENTERTAINMENT. | General Printing _ THAT PUTS A GLOW and Office Supply || General Printing & Office Supply ~ IN-YOUR HEART! Shevatcors Dion |, Ue sa : : eae ao oo » es , oe aes 1 Sa * ie Soe ee ' bei id f° _WILLIAM CONRAD - DAVID NELSON = wincyav-souscswcrsvesecu werwome ] FEATURES AT_ 1:13 -- 3:20 -- 5:29 = 7:38 =~ 9:45 ADDED: “LAND of MAYA” (Travel) Sunday: Pat Boone in ; & BUGS BUNNY CARTOON | “Journey to the Center of the Earth". i AMPLE SOMMER. PARKING IN REAR OF ree $a our : getbnd floor of office. rurnitire . in both wood and steel. =e | i" me Pry “A SUMMER PLACE" # Paste *y ed Enos nan romg covet “2 DETROIT ww — w. Harold Rowe has been elected president of Yel- low Manufacturing . Acceptance J €orp:, General Motors announced ™y Mil today. a eiidbes Gor Cool; | Rowe, formerly. executive. “vice Grain Prices : Outstate Cheers Take president, succeeds Arvid E. Kal- ‘x ; : iY ’ E Off Chi iI len, who is retiring. GO GRAIN age me The tan ion fi canoe © GRAIN ning! = acceptance corporation fi- cae wie | ts . nances wholesale and retail sales wheat Dee os ies The following ave top | rece MILWAUKEE, Wis, (AP)—Gov.'of trucks and industrial equipment Maro. ves 202. Mayes, 0D 7 7 P Nelson A. Rocvefeller started his!made by GM divisions. May .e.se. 201 Rye-- covering sales at io tne grown — S etpias : ; a YT Lge Dee 1289 Seduce brow ‘second round of political probing Bee 166% Mar ry in Wisconsin today, after running . . pee veete Moe 134i Market by eevee sold by. _ into a very_ mixed reception on p) thN 2 oe ¥ 5 eit 448? rt . . - Mar. . Lis rd — ,them ‘in wholesaie ie kage lots. .NEW YORK «Pf — Motors and his first day in the state Qa 0 ices- May secre Tite Oe £2 (Quotations are furnished by the electronics made moderate gains Reactions ranged from studied Z » } Lidia Mar 8-2 Getroit Bureau of ‘Markets, as of in a mixed stock market early: to- c ini . BAUROTH, DEC. 14, 1959. CHARLEY bau _May . 893 ; us coolness to admiring applause. Brooks, 105 8. Andrews Ave, Lake ‘Friday. day. Trading was fairly active. Milwaukee Republican officials Orion: ge Bs. Me besband yy a jmade it crystal clear that the of Mrs. Alb ‘Nichols, : . | - . mL t slat 'y &. Albert (Deliangac) Nichols, Detroit Produce _ Pivotal issues showed gains or want Vice President Richard M. Mrs, Wilism (Joeume) Miller and | 3 ‘josses of fractions to about a point. | -|Nixon as the party-s candidate for Berle Brooks Bauroth; dear broth- | FRUITS president e of Mea. Priggincd WK ; sls0 ~ i . en i . ches a | : . v nine gran dren. o | Apples Beli fous by bu. . $3 9 Chryster and American Motors 4 Other Wisconsin Republicans, peral gervice wil b be eld Thurs- ee ee ore hy ‘ . . — m rom Apples, Jonathon, BU. wiecee-reees 350 were up about a point each as however, indicated they might Siicns Panera Foene, tite’ Orion, Apples. MeIntosh bu or, 2 the automotive ‘stocks continued kefel ‘ with Brother W. A. Luckett offi- ‘Apnies. Northern Spy, bu. ..%...8.. 3.00 i ractional support Rockefeller for the nomi- ciating. Interment’ in East Lawn (Apples. cider, 4Ral. case ........-5 229 in risk demand, Fractiona nation. Canetery. Laks Orion. Mr. Bau- . gains Were scored “by General” . * roth will He in state at Allen's VEGETABLES * * __Puneral Home. oe Eastern College Faculty seers topped, DU. es eveeeseee. #2 0 Motors, Ford and Studebaker: .|. For the first i ig - BROOKS. DEC. 141059. ANGELO = vee seeeeeeen 500 Packard or the first time on this tour G., 4021 Los Angeles, Warren: age * Votes Not to Endorse Cabbaze. Curly bu... .. 206 . of the Middle West, Rockefeller 51; beloved husband of Alice Cabbage, Red. bu rr 23) : . Brooks: dear son of Pearl Brooks; ~ Dr. Sittler’s: Hirin “| Garrois, topped Bun sees sess ia Collins Radio again took the cer- failed to draw capacity crowds for dear father of Mrs. Charles Holt- . ~ T Ty, . OE. a ee ee > age oe ; . ‘or vee an ear TOOKS @n g ‘or Laan nes steersers oe ter of the stage among electron- his appearances. _ There were George Brooks Je. Punctal serv. ks. doz. bens eecenssee ts.ics. The opening was delayed un- empty seats in the Marquette Uni- ice wu be held Thursday. Dec. oe 1 v 3¢ ag . ED Ger yop \ arders ; the ipynet Stevysl ; at I p.m. from East Bethlehem BROOKVILLE. N.Y. (AP) = Qn Ny coot aus ‘ba ee 1.38 der ' rush of buy ond rs ang versity auditorium and in the Lutheran ‘Church, Outer drive ' . . ~onkle ag P eurly, doz. behs, .. - 96 stock finally aded on ai block, in fi airs e The faculty of a trotibled Long ohned oR Nie Pek dew... it we a ily vs ‘ oe - | | oeeung of the orld Affairs Schildt and Rev, N. K. Gresrath Island college has refused to en- Cersnip.. ve Du nag mnt ie Of 10,000 shares, Up tO va at id. | ouncn. ene at homenary, in Glen ° I ‘ a “fy akp y } SHe re: aie . tor , vgs > ae + es ig £ * dorse the hiring of a professor Fortes. ue ee $23 Philco picked up a point. Speri | JUST CAN'TAWAIT —SXour-year-old Paulette Pontiac Press Photo Some Democrats- say you are Mr. Brooks will lie in-state atthe x oe arte al . ! rp + ’ . © “ 1 Q > Ti 1. eat who once renounced his American Radishes. herhouse dos. debs. ..... 168 Rand and Radio Corp. showed ytartin of Waterford Township just Couldn't wait with’ graham crackers, powdered sugar paste, |“ reaftionary as Nixon,"’ said a N Woedverd, RevatOee citizenship. to serve Nazi Ger- Squash, Acorn. cece es DBD small plis—signs. | to nibble on the luscious little Christmas house gum drops, candy canes, Christmas cookies and ; man, vand other people call YOU} PRICK, DEC__15, 1959.3 CHANCEY . [Squash, Butternut, DU. verseceeveeee 128) 7 * * * | ; - ; ja Democrat in Republican cloth- L., 11211 Green Rd., Goodrich: many. ‘ | Sauast: Buttercup. bu. ... - 128 / | made by her’mother, Mrs. Leroy Martin of 7400 shredded cocontt. The unusual cake-is topped ing. Which are you?” pee Bh: belov oved husband of Bessie 7 URS eliciout vt ‘ ~9 | ~ Lea digs 5 ayer 7 . oy : . * oy . : . : { a r * * Sauach Hubhard bu 150 Some disappointment prevailed) S. Shaker Dr. After a cardboard house was put off with Santa Claus stuck in a big fireplaee | ke * * Mrs. ee Veukines. Metbur and But the school says. it-will re- Turnips, topped bu » 290 over the failure of the Dow Jones) together with cellophane, Mrs. Martin covered it chimney. — - - Lloyd Murphy: |, deer pprotner ot - tain Dr,-Edward V. Sittler one- GREENS industrial average ~ vesterday to i . : ; During the question-and-answer Harris: also survived by 10 grand- theléss. —_ ‘Collards No. 2 bu, / oss4 $200 remain at a level above the record an period af the World Affairs Coun- ghildren. | Funeral service ye be _— The administration at” Long’ SALAD GREENS closing high of Aug. 3 but the firm cil meeting Tuesday night, a man from the C.-P-@rrérman, Puneral Island University’s C. W, Post geiery Cabbage, doz. ........5066 $175 action of rail shares was encour- || Aspi irin ( "i tizen Steals prefaced his question: by describ- bert Patrick. officiating “Intere College asked the teachers Tues- | ; ‘aging to those whe looked or lor 10 ing Rockefeller as ‘‘a new arrival, ment in Ortenxille Cemetery. oN: day to endorse hiring Sittler last} _ Li t k ‘further rally. The rails and a very brilliant one, on the Sherman Puneral Home, Orton- September as assistant professors: :— Iwestoc narrowly mixed following. yeste oth ler Needed } lelp’ political scene.” : AUTCHINE NOV. 39. 1959. CHAUN- of English and German, i * CK \day's moderate advance. | | The audience exploded with a 108 Ottawa Dr.: age 84; ¢ 4 DETROIT LIVESTOCK . 2 . ipl d ch ; Geary father of Mrs. George, Zim- x * | DETROIT. Dec. 15 (AP) —Catt le * * rs 4 ;plause and cneering. merman and Mrs. Paul Ziegél- Salable 550. trade not established on} Ik _ " : So it w 1 day, t I an baur: dear brother of Mrs. Jennie Sittler. 43 renounced his citizen- ‘slaughter steers and hetfer quality Steels also were uneven. show- DETROIT ne PI) Stanley’ stole thin: gs to: «send to his mother} h oO : ent all d 3 we ce d McBride: also survived by stx ship in 1939 to become a member see ee Hye nowa “opening ing slight changes. Tobaceos were Simas, a Lithuanian désigh engi- Maria, 62, back home in Kaunas, ithe warm, a day wholly unlixe| grandchildren and five great- of the Nazi party in Germany tendyooll head high choice and prim Gown slightly. : One of Three Linked to neer who stopped in a large de- Lithuania, jany others Reckefeller has had as | erirde held Thursday. Dec. 17. at é 1135 Yb. steers 2706. these steady with SHLG ATELY. | : . artment stor . ) . _.- {the moved through Indiana, Mis- 2 p.m. from Sparks-Griffin_ Pu- and eventually an enemy broad- vesterday's decline: utility cows 15 00- * * * | Shooting That Crippled partment store for a little. shoplift | Sima, a $150-@-week engineer, cour; and Mi ae bef a | neral Home Interment in Perry | easter during World War It. | 16-90 few 00-1800 16.50, canners and, . ing hefore being sworn in as a was arrested in the J. L. Hu /sourl an Minnesota, eiore’ com- | Mt eat Cemetery. If friends “ , gutters 12 ' US OG ir ‘dg a0 SC piti ; ; ay : a 7 j into Wis $i . would care to make memorials to After questioning him in a‘ Hogs—Salable 450. Butchers 240 1b LU, Gypsum dropped about a. Gas Station Attendant tus citizen, admitted today he has, son Co, store trying to stuff $72 ing inte Wisconsin. | Tee ceed, Ne would be appre- losed-d ss the teachers 2OrB, Strone $0 25¢ higher Oe point. Du Pont added about 2. Al. been stealing from stores about - Rockefeller's smile seldom) ciated by the family, Mr. Hutch- | closed-door session, the eachers established. mixed lots US. number 2). 0) Vy . a sy | worth of merchandise under his. | ins will lle in state at Sparks- erased his namie from a resolu-!&, 3, 190-240 Ib. butchers | 1435-12.25 lied Chemical and American Cy-) ap odore Mendoza. 16. stood three years. - t. faded and he showed no signs of, Guerin Funeral Home. + * cal * . » ‘ Cc cay I, * GO “ , aa ap a wane c mixed number 1 & 2 190-239 lb. 1250- anamid were up slightly. el * *« ot overcoa ‘being discouraged. McEACHERN. DEC. 15. dae, , JOHN vider’ 183 new age ear tion offered by the administration 12.60; number 1 absent mute onswa-eharge of armed rab- , ne ‘e : Vealers—Salable. 125. Steady: — choice . | The 38-year-old man said he; “She needed help so I began father of Milton and Blanch Mc- and endorsed only the school’s’ ,n4 « Slight losses were taken by bery before Highland. Township: prime 34-41: standard and good® so : Y bery ore ighlan ewnship 6 ine oy i ” Fachern: dear brother of Mrs. ~ Tight to hire its own teachers. The 24.34; cull and utility 14-24. | Phelps Dodge, Kennecott, Inter: |Justice Roy J, Carl Tuesday oniy sending her things,” explained Fred Gumney. and Hugh Me Sheep—Salable 1.000. Slaughter lamas! , : Simas who is married and the fe Fachern. Puneral service will be vote was 27 ‘for, 3 against and 18 steady to ase lower, most good | and mational Paper, American To- |g few hours after Juvenile Couct ther of two all children ri0 ing U t0 .) held Friday, Dec. 18, at 10 a.m. .i choice wooled lambs 1 sma " , 7 . sm. GPE, t Pu Home with abstentions, Eighteen other teach-, “fot high choice to prime 1950; about 3! bacce, Lorillard, Pfizer, Schering | Judge Arthur -E. Moore waived. Soars High; came to this country about eight Dr'Willlam Merbach offic! Dr, William Marbach officiating. . a | . : j r abstained> jloads choice shorn:!ambs with iber! Juteh. risdiet ey . ° ers neither voted nor abstained joads Jc neice shorn ier . umber! nd Royal Dute In the early jurisdiction over his case. lyears ago. . Jatermeat tn Chandler Cemetery, * * * lambs 14.00-17.00. cull to choice slaugh.| Push of trading the ticker tape Thi . ; lie in. state at Huntoon Funera iter ewes 4.00-7 50. was two minutes behind trans- e youth ts charged with No : ime * ®t Home. Sittler, who has been ‘fighting tions { f inute 1, | taking part in a Highland Town- ac Si said he mailed “k McINDOE, DEC. 14, 1959, WILLIAM for 13 years to stay in this“coun- - th ns for a “— nute spell. ‘ship gas station holdup Nov. 30 . C ctole Sac of men ed packages 4} Wesley. 3 8. Bai th: ® e £3: ot . . . ae Paes : yer ¢ *k ' and o a 2 - try, to regain his citizenship and Poultry and Eggs en turnover slackened. in which ‘an attendant was shot . for Look . . . so feos to his mother and . _ loved | beloved, won of Mrs wi: - to hold a university job, spoke in’ petrorr pouLTRY Open blocks included: Servel up in the back, becoming para: a © tok ¢ FERNDALE — An autopsy was) Vatu ‘Be Seven brothers and ‘ene his own defense. . | DETROIT. Dee 15 vAPi Prices per © at 1674 on 5,000 shares; AlU-’ pyzed from’ the waist down. | Los ANGELES (AP)—The man’ to be held today to determine the) Si. 'Pwi' be. held. Thursday, Under close questioning by_ his pound fo.b. Detroit for No. 1 quality minum Ltd. up's at 3 on 3,500: | ho. h: , cd. hist hi He told police he was on his way cause of death of a Ferndale man) Dec 17, ‘at 2 p.m. from Farmer- fellow teathers he denied that he heavy ts pe hens 19-21: light type aNd Royal Dutch off *s at 42's o y Examination was demanded for he hu an cant ave wach Ma to the Federal Building to be sworn who lost control of his car yes-| Snover (Pusersl Home, rit ner: < ever swore allegiance to Hitler, hens 8-9. heavy type brotiers and froers 2,800. the Lake Orion youth. He is sched- a rer uiman cant ee en ° in as a U.S. citizen when he de- te rday. afternoon. It: careened) — ment in Perry, Mt Park, Cemes . rise 28 8 20-2 eese If urkevs ( ’ , : e e 8 . that he was aware of Germanys heavy type young, hens 37-30; heavy, : le d to aoe ar pany _ we ; OO aie bowe the * to s many Y' cided To stop off first at the de- across a hundred feet of lawn and at Parmer: Snover Puneral Home. concentration camps or that he young toms . . wo- accused CO Jons » friday ,- . ‘partment store. _ {struck a ranch-style home at 711) PETERSON. DEC 13. 1959, BILLY - had acted traitorously. perme DETROIT BAGS | «New York Stocks FR fat 1:15 p.m . oo didn't have time for a good) s W. Oakridge Rd. fo “of ay Peierson Tage as * * * Detroit in ca “Tots federal. tke graded Late Morning. Quotation: * * * “y 7 : rie om: “and Jo Pet 80 dear tr se lo deral-state graded ‘ Morning. Quotations: ; _ . Jana t was still blue—but percepti-. RCA | F Ferndale police believe the vic- Sammy and Joan Peterson, — . Cr , ¥ s—Grac y e 3 ge Figures r deci i points eight! C as , ed to the aklai ‘ Pete d Adm. Richard L. Connolly a3 es OF te A extra large 38 larg Figures after decimal points are eight oll was turned ne Oakl nd bly darker.” said Capt. Joe B.| § Or | en tim had suffered a heart attack brother of, James Petersen ont (Ret.),* president of the college, Prowns—SGrade A large 35, medium 26. Admiral 6 227 Jones & L .. 642 oe ‘00 a auc ailing tO Pest jordan after piloting an Air Force "| and was either dead or dying ice wit oe em Sharks Griffin . : . . . ’ id Ch ...-- 12 - enough money to meet tomorrow's Cont Mot Ma Parke Oe! iis port road at 1 am. today. ithe top.” TuUSUC LO Ors; final business meeting of the year; — Draytos_Fisine__ ; ; payroll for 26.000 state employes cont Ol 335 IR tk ; ; . at 8 p.m, tomorrow in the Ladies : os A ] ™ truck driver 4. A Butler. a ; ae PIO. " ‘ Cola... 383 The driver of a car heading — Police See Red | Men : Voorhees-sip e 30, of Lineotn Park admitted to “It's never been worse," ie ) 2) 35° forth en Airpert road, Donald , Members will work on plans for/ FUNERAL HOME police that he was in the vicinity - Brown said. “bor the first time, e. ae a : Davis, . 29. of 6248 Rowley St, Poniiac Man Injured ST. LOUIS, Mo. ‘%The own their Jan. 7 meeting and the sec- Amtninces Service Plane or Motor of the aceident on Stephenson the ageregate balance of all ; are G8) Drayton Plains, told Waterford of five commercial buildimgs ond annual Ladies Night to be} ~ FE 26578 ee highway at the time it occurred | funds will be in the. red. Bow Chem "998 Rey or ats Township Police he saw ture as Car, Truck Cras | painted city parking meter posts (held inthe high school gymnasium) , “ : ut knew nothing of if. | Checks would bounce all over Eas Air 23 ; Republi Bu .. sf cleveland a approaching e ae the building fronts— Feb. 4, Feb , BOX RELIES ment He got in touch with police here the place if we tmed to pay all Eaton Mfe . 476 Rex Drug ..... 4) ac e on the wrong urqueise, mustard and forest | ./he February inner meeting ~ mers oy ae Lt nay 6Reyn_ Met 65.3 . ‘ae . ; ; - ; ; . when he learned they were look-bills.”’ (Fl Auto Lo .. 542 Rey Tob. fae side of the road. He said he was | ‘Louis W. Humphreys, 58, of 261, greén—and_the police saw red. will feature the return engagement At 10 a.m. Today there ing for the driver of a diesel truck | * t * Emer Ra yo ia Rovat frat = be H unable to avoid ‘being hit. by Whittemore St., was taken to St) €entrat figure in the colorful jof the Chrysler Imperial Choir were replies at The Press ‘similar to his. | Michigan will have an estimated Brie RR ere! St Reg Pap Me 85.6) the oncoming car. Joseph Mercy Hospital this morn-} police case is Francis Doll. from Detroit, which proved such a office, in the following * *& * ‘Q-million-dollar deficit by the end Firestone’ .- 135) Sears Roed <°:-48.7' | Both men’ were taken to Pon-/i7& for treatment of injuries suf) a ae successful drawing card last year.) boxes: A check of Butler's truck showed of the year. Ford Mot ‘886 Sinclair o..... : $06 tiac General Hospital with head/fered when his car collided with I used the utmost taste.and | Results of the local Goodfellow fibers resembling human hair! The Legislature has been ‘squab- Freep Sul rd : 40, injuries. Cleveland was. still un. 2 Pickup truck on U.S. 10 at Scott! diseretion without knowledge of |Paper sale also will be announced 5, 17, 34, 35, 57, 58, 59, near the right door. These are bling for months on’ new taxes Gardner Den 4 - 366 conscious and listed-.in fair con- Lake Rd., Waterford Township. | violating any ordinance,” Doll |fomorrow night: Special refresh- 60, 63, 70, 73, 75, 77, LOL, being checked today by the Detroit t cover rising expenses. ; los eee _4¢.7:dition late this morning. x * all protestéd, “but I suffered the in- |ments-will be served. - . 103, 116, 118. police crime lab for‘analysis. | to ok Gen wiih ‘12 Davis was treated and released. Oakland Gomty sheriff's depu-| dignity’ of riding in the paddy a 1 4- ‘ » Mitlis 27 41 ; 2 7 ” ; . : == | Despite a fund shortage, Brown Gen Meters -221 Mrs. Beatrice Wood, 55, of *719 Hes sat arles R. Boice, 30, wagon. . . : . insists the state is not veake. " Gen tine 54° Grandview St... Drayton Plains.” of 1381 Union Lake Rd., Commerce: . ce Ral Oldsmobile Engineer s % ‘Babs Hutton Scorns Idea | We're the nation’s sixth 2, Tire . . escaped serious injury at 7:30 a.m, ,Township, was- uninjured. He was) Doll, a native of Missouri who Gets Top Buick Job } The Pontiac Press She’lt Wed Dou las wealthiest state” he said. “What Gilette ee RRS 7 when she was driving south cn driving the truck. | serves as St. Louis consul for the | a _ g : with buddings, parks and other re- Goedye an a4 Airport road. ' | stu ohiriee cut ; ? : broken| nepebie of Honduras. played his FLINT * " Lowell A. one FOR WANT ADS NEW YORK Ww — Heiress Bar. Sources we have more than two Grah Paige vt Mrs. W ic m s_sutlcred a broken trump card upon arrival at the |assistant chief engineer at STnO- “ EW YORK Pm ritess Bar von dollars in acccte.” a a Wood told police. she had | collarbone. Deputies said the truck) district police station. He {bile, has been named chief engi- DIAL FE 2-8181 Paris today, denying reports 1 figured it would enhance (Corp. announéed Tuesday. From S'a.m. p.m. , \Hooker Ch v. 4tg EE. Par 383] ; ne ment. city property,” Doll explained. |, He succeeds Oliver F.. Kelle iid be son of Air Force Secretary James DI Michigan Oilfield Induct Ray 0021) Ghit Al Lin. 35.31 4 5 , mes s ; y Alf errors should ye H. Douglas g g ling Rane oo ary Ua Als, BS ont neontrel of her car and Police said residents of the |who has been appointed technical rted Immediately, The . 8. ; Extended 5 Miles More [Inspr Cor |) 404 Un Gas cp 012 mal crashed into the side of a house neighborhood ress assumes no bape op Reporters told her at Idlewild [Interiak Ir. 284 US Lines 11. Zi leaving a torn up lawn and Fireti ht ers’ U it elg' had complained. |assistant to the general manager greiite La Airport .that unsigned telegrams! LANSING (UPI) — The Albion- tnt Here ip US steel 8 é) broken picket fence in her wake. g nl Doll was skeptical. of the new GM Defense: Systems for that portion of the first saying she intended to announce p Nick 0 tong Upsohn $22) ° They: love it,’”’ he said, Division. -2 insertion of the advertise- u ulaski- ‘Scipio oil field, extending | Int. Paper as4 West Un Tel sf i| The } t 880 A Elects Officers ‘ment which has been ren- wedding plans had been received about 25 miles into three Southern. m Tele Tet gag Woolworth |. G2 ow ned by Vict rs deroeks Srl . dered Veynen’. cancellations tcke Vale & r 35 is OW y Victor, Sederoski, an , : error. on at newspaper offices. ‘Michigan counties - Ish Crk Coal .. 38 | Youngst ShaT 1322 ‘ ; are made be sure to get ear eg iss Huts SUCDIEAN counties, has een en- Kosctyin Hy ZENSnkstT HEE the extent of damage is not yet 12 Waterford At Troy High School Thursday mth ES ws determined. ry adjustmen' iv ~ton*who has been married six, | | ; r times. “It must be a practical a ~ * * . ! compile OOS AVERAGES | Mrs. Wood was treated at Pon-| Waterford Township Firefighters . ‘ without . | Divector of wells Gerald Eddy ‘Compiled by T 30s iated presi | itiac. General Hospital for body) Assn. held its-annual election of of- a. one Sue ie aavertise issued spacing. patterns and pro- |. _Inaust Rails Uni Stocks bruises and released. ficers last night. Everett Draker|- . larger than regular. agate Siaiuness ———— iration orders for ‘an additional fivewes S83 0. 3433 Bod See 2 i . was elected president type “is 12 o'clock Boop a ‘the “Ay eS PUBLIC sa LE stem. ipso Miles .of the field into parts ci Month ago wy 3343 172 83 22 Firt vice president will be Ray . a . \ “7 previous to publication. > a com @Br EO wee. eed . . 1 . ? is Ford: ate Pickup. Serial No. Lecuio7 o Cctea aoe townships | 19O high »..++. 368-6 1418 102-6 3.8 { Detroit Goodfellow’ . |Allen. Richard Lawson was elected TROY—The Troy High School] at Mary. College peten Nine ANOHICE 30. tiac, Mich. that address “eS ee 312.0 1365 98.7 2143) Fyn ort second vice ‘president, Edward) grove ’ ae pint aeadline tor cancelia- ; wire the, hice is stored and etd producing — “ ad 1088 ew cies. 234.7 80.8 72.9 186.6 Smith, treasurer;' Bernard. Torr,/Music department will present its) ®§ guest piano soloist. ie new eam eaay : ° 59 e rom wes : - - F ; 2 gaclie Dec. 16,- 17, of Albion about 25 %S tile : southernt| iat ZONES 11 A. AVERAGES DETROIT (UPD) — Goodtellows assistant treasurer; Gregory Mil-|apnual ‘Christmas concert at 8| She will play the first move-| aa efter the + first | 20 Rails 155.27 up 0.42 said ‘today that more than 4,000)/ler, recording secretary: and Ken-|p.m. tomorrow in ‘the high school ment of Mendelssohn’s| “‘Piano} . C SALE - jto the east side of Jonesville in| 3 Utils, 87.20 up 0.03 ® | oungsters in Detroit ma ith-| neth i P pes CASH WANT AD RATES Dece . i | Stocks 218,91 up 0.5 v% ’ secre’ other Fedor, serial mater 3 Hillsdale County. — fot! aim. 640.000 ' out any” Christmas, “wee _—_~ reas “Y-/auditorium. scletions BS es: rane Lines 1-Day 3-Days 6-Da: A be sold a: public sale at 23157 | oe “ e+ ok . 2. $1.60 $2.04 8.13 tl Ave. Ferndale that aay al * an * nat DETROIT STOCKS The board of directors of the Old). Also elected were, trustees Lewis The high school choir and lee! Among ‘the numbers’ to be per- 7 18 39 sina Hi vehicle is 6 y also said there had béen - Pigures after decimal potnis are eigh ,, Newsboys reported Monday's sale|Goff, Gerald Webber tnd Jamies lub, directed by Don Berhd. and formed by the band are “Music|. a eae ya ite. “Bee. 18 & 16, 1959/80me evidenge there was under- - Roulp. ¢ High lew Noon lof Goodfellow newspapers was. at. Donaldson. Guides will be Douglas. club, directed by Don Bernd, an for a Festival”) by Gordon Jacobs, al $ 348 540 6 -8,.20 2a =|ground waste from somg wells in Alen Elec, & Bauip Co" 43, et ileast $15,000 short of a $225,000 Schlutow and Carl Dale. Ernie Lat- ithe concert band, under the di-/ang “Symphony for Band” by s 409 Tae thos PUBLIC SALE .; \the field but evidence uced at Ross Gear Co." 3 26.6 27.4\ goal. - ‘timer and Lloyd Gidley were electé rection of Victo¥ Bordo, will be Erickson. : ® ery 8.10 $9.49 . doronet 4Goor, wernt aumbgr (8 session was “inconcllisive.” The foweit les Gren 60-1112" as a result, the board voted noted guards. featured. The choir and glee ciub will sing) | 7 *%, 0 BO FO st public sal ration. order remain at 150 P M. Prod. Co.’ 16 Sito e chor oe sing Ant additional — - nd Ferndale, Mich, pro mains a The Prophet ‘ca... : 2 17 | ( send gift packages to more than! The township: fire department An adced attraction will be traflitional Christmas. carol = BOe will be made for use of $ where the vehicle te/barrels a day and 200,000 cubic Rady Mig. Co... wieeeniee 116 isan children whose names were has 33 volunteers and nine full: ‘| the appearance of Judy St. jother favorites of the holida _ Pontiac Press bor . . we 16, snalfeet of gas. "Ne sale; bid ‘and asked. j still heing Processed. time paid firemen.': Aubin, secqnd year music major json. — an a“ ss untum eceamiteneansiie Po ‘ * ° + . ! . + . : oe f \ : ’ ¢ eo | ' . . Fs rae - a . oO see “ acl aa , oe - _- a - . r . : . ° a a ~ a. ‘ “ ‘ . | af ‘ . “ Be & —_ , \ ae » ’ : ‘ : X + “ ‘ : a ‘ m ate , : ~ “e - . mo ~ : : 4 \ ‘ 4 4 . 5 f